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Show THE CITIZEN 22 linquent assessment thereon, togetherwith the costs' of advertising and ex. pense of sale. . A. HUDSON, Secretary. First publication, November 8, 1919. - . - 11-8-11:- 29 DELINQUENT notice. Treasure Box Mining Company. Principal place of business, Salt Lake City, Utah. Notice There are delinquent upon tne following described stock on account of assessment No. 3, levied on the 27th day of September, 1919,. the several amounts set opposite the names of respective shareholders, as . follows: . Isabel M. Pitts, no certificate issued, shares; amount, $72.81. E. J. Harness, no certificate issued, 1941.75 shares; amount $194.17. Martha A. Vanness no certificate issued, 3084.75 shares; amount, $308.47. Tell W. Goodhue, no certificate issued 1542.35 shares; amount $154.23. No certificates have been issued for the above described stock since the amendment to the atlcles of incorporation, dated July 25, 1916, reducing the capital stock of the company from There are out$125,000 to $25,000. standing certificates of stock, representing the ownership of the above described shares before said amendment, described as follows: 728.10 No. No. Cert. 103 91 92 106 115 Shares Name Isabel M. Pitts E. J. Harness E. J. Harness Martha A. Vanness 3640.5 4854.75 4854. 15423.75 7611.75 Tell W. Goodhue And in accordance with law and an order of the Board of Trustees (directors) made on the 13th day of September, 1919, so many shares of each parcel of such stock as may be necessary will be sold at the office of the corn-pan- 1 Kearns building, Salt Lake City, Utah, on the 1st day of Decern-- , ber, 1919, at the hour of 4 oclock p. m., to pay delinquent assessments thereon, together with the cost of advertising and expenses of sale. J. W. CHERRY, Secretary. 808 Kearns Building, Salt Lake City, 808 .10-25-11-- ASSESSMENT NOTICE., Muncy Creek Mining Company. Principal place of business: 222-2- 3 Judge Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. And in accordance with law and an order of the Board of Directors made on the 27th day of September, 1919, so many shares of each parcel of such stock as may be necessary will be sold at the office of the company, 230 West Second South street, on the 24th day of November, 1919, at the hour of 12:30 at noon, to pay the assessment thereon, together with the cost of advertising and expense of sale. GUSTAVE VELTZ, Secretary. West Second South Street, Salt Lake City, Utah. 230 11-8-11-- ""notice OF ASSESSMENT. Principal place of business, Salt Lake City, Utah. Location of mines: Dutch Mountain, Clifton Mining District, Tooele County, Utah. Notice is hereby given that at a meeting of the board of directors of the Garrison-Monste- r Mining Company, held on November 1st, 1919, assess- cent ( cent) ment No! 12 of per share was levied on the capital stock of the corporation, issued and Notice is hereby given that at the regular monthly meeting of the Board of Directors of the Muncy Creek Mining Company, held Tuesday, November 4th, 1919, an assessment No. 1, of one cent per share, was levied upon the issued and outstanding shares of stock of the corporation, payable on or before December 20, 1919, to S. A. Greenwood, Secretary, at the office of the corporation, and that any shares upon which said assessment shall remain unpaid at the close of business December 20, 1919, shall be delinquent ana advertised for sale at public auction, and unless payment is made before, will be sold at 2 oclock p. m. on January, 27th, 1920, to pay the delinquent assessment, together with the cost of advertising and expense of sale. -- ,S. 222-2- 3 one-ha- lf outstanding, payable immediately to the Secretary at the office of the company, 212 Utah Savings & Trust Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. Any stock upon which this assessment may remain unpaid on the 6th day of December, 1919, will be delinquent and advertised for sale at public auction, and unless paid before will be sold on Saturday, the 4th day at 12 oclock noon at the Secretarys office, to pay the delinquent assessment thereon, together with the costs of advertising and exof January, 1920, pense of sale. GARRISON-MONSTE- R MINING. CO. H. B. WINDSOR, Secretary. -6 DELINQUENT NOTICE.'. UtaTi Nursery Company. Location of principal place of business, Salt Lake City Utah. Notice --There are delinquent upon the following described stock, on account of assessment levied on the 13th day of September, 1919, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective shareholders, as follows: A. GREENWOOD, Sppv fir TrPflR Judge Building. 11-15-12- -6 NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT. Eureka Lilly Mining Company. Location 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 sale. GIDEON SNYDER, Secretary. Judge Building, Salt Utah. 414 Lake City. CONFESSION OF THE . OLD REPORTER (Continued from Page 16.) , ironed the clothing on the ground floor. He dreamed that he was at home in China paying honor to the gods with sweetest incense. He heard the tinkling of the temple bells and felt the warm rush of spring air coming in at the window. He was young again and life fas dear. His dream was suddenly broken and he awakened smoke filled his room. He was the fire. His by trapped sons and their wives had forgotten him as they ran into the street and when they remembered they were almost paralyzed with fear. Then their senses returned to them and they effected a magnificent rescue, taking the old man down a ladder in his chair before the firemen arrived. That evening my city editor, was congratulatory. The organ of the hated or shall I say admiringly detested Bickheyser had been scooped. Next day Harmsley was smiling. As Bickheyser passed us he radiated scowlishness, if I may say so. He stood it for three or four days and then he said to Harmsley and me: Boys, we might as well be friends. I am faking, I admit. Youve got to fake in this dull town to hold your jobs. I am going to keep on faking. You can do the same, but we ought to get together. It will make our work easier and life pleasanter. : Offhand Harmsley and I agreed and we formed what we called The Fakers Congress. It became an institution in that town among the day police reporters and lasted for nearly a year. I flatter myself that if it had adhered to the rules I mapped out it would have lasted much longer. I come of a canny race and my counsel was for prudence. I was the balance wheel. I exacted a promise from each of the reporters that we would consult the city directory conscientiously every time we were concocting a story so that we would never choose names of real inhabitants. I further stipulated that the characters of our stories must be strangers in the city whenever there was danger that the city editors would order us to follow up the story on the following day. This enabled us to invent a sensational story and get the dramatis personae out of town in hot haste. Those companies, so to speak, played only one night stands. It was necessary also to be very careful about street numbers and while I was a member of the congress we got into no trouble on that score. We usually selected a vacant lot or some blank space jn the suburbs. Sometimes we got the proprietor of a downtown hotel to stand for a harm-les- s story. I think our most daring news story was that about the mysterious burglar who kept robbing the same hotel night after night. We put the hotel in a suburb and told our city editors that it was an apartment house which had been transformed into a kind of family hotel. We kept up the excite ment for a. week and finally fastened the crime oh a girT masquerading as a bellboy. And no ope: thought to look up the hotel. There was. not I the slightest suspicion of. fake. never before thought city editors so easy or so dishonest, if they really were wise to what we .. were doing. And the public well, you know what Barnum said. ' Some of our stories made hits all over the country. The correspondents seized upon them avidly and sent them out over the wires. I remember that the story about the young man who was jilted by his fiancee because he whistled at his mothers funeral had quite a vogue; also the story about the man who had his face changed by surgery and went back to his home town and lived at the board-in- g the wife who house conducted-bhad divorced him twenty years before and who did not recognize him on his return. : ! . . : y The old reporter sighed. All good things have an end, he said, and The Fakers Congress ended in disgrace. I had been taken into the office for a week to work on the copy desk. My successor willingly joined the congress and the three members proceeded to get ' careless. Thy thought it would be funny to tell a story about a Swede who beat his wife. They gave him the perfectly good name of Ole Oleson and located the drama in East Omaha, a sort of peninsula surrounded on three sides by backwater from the Missouri river. And a perfectly good Ole Olson and a perfectly respectable one and a perfectly husky one went into the News-offic- e the next day and announced that he was from Erfst Omaha and had not beaten his wife. The city editor turned him over to the managing editor, who summoned Harmsley, who lied out of it for the time being, thoroughly impressed by Oles size Ole kept and general demeanor. coming back and one day brought a lawyer with him. There was talk of a $20,000 libel suit and more questioning of Harmsley. Unable to bear the strain longer he confessed told the whole truth about The Fakers Congress. Of course the managing editor straightened out the affair as well as he could. Then he summoned HarmsYou had better ley and simply said: adjourn congress. That was where I received the rudiments of my education, said Humbug Harry meditatively, and it helped me in many a pinch in the good old days. HOW HE GOT How did EM. get so many wounds? the corporal in the bathhouse, seeing his body covered with scars. Accidental discharge of duties? Naw; you see it was this way: I was standing on the edge of our trench leanin up against our barrage, when they lifted the barrage and I fell into the trench. Everybodys. you I asked r |