OCR Text |
Show THE CITIZEN 18 N Location of mine, Tintic Mining District, Utah County, Utah. Notice. There is delinquent upon the following described stock on account of Assessment No. One (1), levied on December 12th, 1919, the several amounts set opposite the respective names of the shareholders, as 105 A. L. 106 A. L. 115 117 118 120 127 131 138 147 148 157 160 163 164 165 169 And in accordance with law and an order of the board of directors made on the 12th day of December, 1919 so many shares of each parcel of such stock as may be necessary will be sold at room 414 Judge Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, on February 14th, 1920, at 2 oclock p. m., to pay the delinquent assessment thereon, together with the cost of advertising and expense of sale. H. G. SNYDER, Secretary. 414 Judge Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. By order ofthe Board of Directors, the date when delinquent stock shall be sold, is hereby extended from Feb- ruary 14th, 1920, at 2 oclock p. m., to February 28, 1920, at 2 oclock p. m. H. G. SNYDER, Secretary. Salt Lake City, 414 Judge Building, Utah. DELINQUENT 27-2-2- 1 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: 171 187 188 189 190 192 194 197 205 210 212 214 231 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 Burns 500 6500 Bums 500 A. L. Bums Frank P. SherwoodL 1000 1500 C. W. Kirk 10000 A. L. Bums M. Eugene Holt 5000 2500 E. C. Deakin 600 W. Stortum 2000 J. E. Taylor 500 H. C. Hilford 1000 Vincent Shurtliff 6000 J. M. Fowler 9000 P. O. Barker 2000 Brig. Clegg 2000 Alford Slack 2000 P. O. Barker 1500 J. W. Cromanes 2000 James Pack 1000 Wilford Longston 500 H. George Hyde 1000 J. W. Krump 2000 Wilford Longston Lawrence Lemmon - 3000 : 3750 A. P. Popp 1000 Henry Bridges 500 Chris Mullery W. F. Smith 500 1.25 16.25 1.25 2.50 3.75 25.00 12.50 6.25 1.50 5.00 1.25 2.50 15.00 22.50 5.00 5.00 5.00 3.75 5.00 2.50 1.25 2.50 5.00 7.50 9.37 2.50 1.25 1.25 8.75 2.50 25.00 25.00 25.00 12.50 12.50 6.25 6.25 3500 Waldo Lansing 1000 Henry Bogan Thomas S. Fowler -- 10000 Thomas S. Fowler --10000 Thomas S. Fowler --10000 Thomas S. Fowler - 5000 Thomas S. Fowler - 5000 Thomas S. Fowler - 2500 Thomas S. Fowler - 2500 And ,in accordance with law and an order of the Board of Directors 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. DELINQUENT NOTICE. Union Realty Company, a corporation of Utah. Principal place of business, Salt Lake City, Utah. Notice is hereby given that there are delinquent upon the following certificates, on account of assessment, number one, levied November 21, 1919, the amount set opposite the name of each stockholder, viz.: No. Shares Name Amt. 3 J. D. McGurrin 63 $157.50 4 Catherine T. Mc 450.00 180 Gurrin 9 D. O. Mahoney 215.00 iL 86 8 10 Hannah Lee 20.00 12 Annie V. Hendricks. 11 27.50 14 F. S. Bascom 238 595.00 450.00 15 E. W. Woodruff, Co.180 100 18 F. E. McGurrin 250.00 100 19 F. E. McGurrin 250.00 20 F. E. McGurrin 250.00 .100 100 250.00 21 F. E. McGurrin 22 F. E. McGurrin 78 195.00 23 R. C. Gemmel 2.00 of 1 24 F. E. McGurrin 14 35.00 27.50 25 Maurice Ennis i. 11 250.00 26 Jane D. McGurrin 100 22 56.25 27 Mary Hickey 28 D. D. Hickey 22 56.25 . 8-1- 30 A. B. Gibson 31 A. B. Gibson 0 268 268 670.00 670.00 And in acordance with law and the order of the board of directors made on November 21, 1919, so many shares of each parcel of said stock as may be necessary, will be sold at public auction on Monday, February 16, 1920, at twelve oclock noon, at the office of R. C. Gemmell, the president of said corporation, room 1402 Deseret National Bank building, Salt Lake City, Utah, to pay the delinquent assessment thereon, together with the cost of advertising and expenses of sale. R. C. GEMMEL, President edward mcgurrin, tern. Secretary, pro ARE THE STARS CALLING US? I am extremely sorry- to - have dis' turbed you, sir, but the matter' Is mbst - urgent" (Continued from Page 7.) though they be utterly distinct and different in their substance, do come into contact The mind and the body operate together. It is the idea of the spiritists that our senses are limitations. The body and its senses merely . obscure the spirit intelligence. The senses are simply little windows that look out Tear off dimly on the universe. the flesh, let free the spirit and it understands. It cannot communicate back its intelligence because it must communicate through our senses. Materialists think that spirit is ' only another side of matter, that spirit cannot exist without matter. Many of them say that spirit is simply a higher form of motion. These two schools are today appealing to the intelligence of the world. One believes that the beings of different planets must struggle millions of years to communicate with one another by material means. The other believes that spiritual means of communication are at hand all of the time or, at any rate, that the human being has but to step through the door of death, after a few moments on earth, and come into communication with the spirit world. The spirit world, however, is not the world of the planets. When we speak of signaling the beings of the stars, we assume that they, too, aTe material, that they, have bodies of some kind and that they must use material means of communication . so long as their minds operate through a material medium. NEW BOOKS (Continued from Page 9.) lived and made his way to the apartment occupied by the father of the "Cape to Cairo project Quite by accident he got Into the financier's bathroom. A strange sight met his gaze. Rhodes sat in his morning tub vainly trying to wash his back. Quick as a flash North-cli- ff e said: "What Is ItT" demanded French. "General Joffre Is below, sir, and sires to see you." de- The British commander-ln-chl- ef scended to the dingy main room of the' cafe. Wrapped in' his blue1 cape stood "Papa" Joffre with only one aide. . . . , , "I have decided to take a stand. 'Here the Frenchman. . table and by the light of a guttering candle, Joffre unfolded the plan of the engagement that ended the Kaiser's dream of conquest for- ever. He then showed his colleague that Immortal ."order of the day", which Included the phrase, "The hour has come to advance at any cost and to die where you stand, rather than give way," and which was read to the French army at dawn. I doubt If the whole spectacle of these two chieftains seated In that zhabjA'i by room of an obscure country tavern on the eve of one of the world's epic eventj. Is the plan," said On a wine-spatter- . ed t Mr. Marcosson was in Russia when America entered the war, and it was from a Cossack officer that he learned the news: For thirty hours we traveled through Finland, reaching the. real Russian frontier late the next night. It was a small town with a name about a yard long. Here the weary traveler got his clearance Into Russia. I entered the reeking customs house through a lane of unsterlllzed Russian soldiers. My name was called out; I advanced to a desk where a Cossack officer sat ready to give me my final vise. When he saw the American eagle on my passport he rose, stool at salute, and said In flawless English: "Welcome to our new ally." I had been cut off from the swift march of war events for days, so 1 asked: "What do you mean?" Your country went to war yesterday," was his reply. first saw Lenine when the Bolshevik chief was heading a procession in Russia to protest against Russia's continuation in the war. No one in Petrogad regarded him then as a real menace, and it was a fatal and mostly neglect: Mr Marcosson Lenlne's mode of existence during the first few months after his return was not exactly In harmony with the Idea of the simple life of the proletariat. I was returning to my hotel from a dinner- at the house ef an American long resident In Petrogad late in April. We passed a brilliantly illuminated palace out of which came sounds of revelry. "Who Is having the oy party? I inquired of one of my companions. He re- much-vaunt- ed - Youre wasting a lot of energy. I know of a brush with a long handle that In the world." is the best Rhodes was much Interested in this suggestion. It opened the way to a conversation. The net result was that these two dominating personalities became Intimate friends. back-wash- er Mr. Marcosson tells us of one dra- matic incident before the first battle For days General of the Marne. French had manoeuvred his retreat, fighting a rear guard action against tremendous odds. No one knew what the morrow might bring to the already exhausted army: Accompanied by three staff officers, one of whom was with us .that evening at dinner, French had reached an old inn not many miles from Paris. He had not slept for fifty hours. To his chief of staff he said: "I am going to take a little sleep. Under no circumstances must I be dis- turbed." After what seemed to him a few minutes there was a loud rapping on the door. Opening It with a vigorous protest at being roused he found one of his officers, who said: plied: "That palace was occupied before the revolution by the Czar's favorite actress, who lived In splendid style. When Lenine and his followers arrived they took possession and are still celebrating." When Lenine, whose name is pronounced without the final "e," and Trotsky, who arrived after I left Petrogad, succeeded in deposing the Provisional Government, they instigated a carnival of crime which had not been equaled since the French revolution. The consequences will affect all posterity. Q A new world's record was recently' made by Tommy Milton when he racdrove an ing car at Sheepshead Bay speedway for one hour, traveling 113.5 miles. The foreign record is slightly over 112 miles per hour. eight-cylind- er 300-inc- h |