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Show THE CITIZEN 18 DELINQUENT LANSING'S LOST CHASCE NOTICE. Western Union Consolidated Oil Company. Location of principal place of business, 313 Judge Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. Notice. There are delinquent upon the following described stock on account of assesment No. 1 of cent per share, levied on the 17th day of December, 1919, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective shareholders as follows: one-quart- er () No. No. Name Cert. 1 3 8 Sam McKinnon E. R. Davis A. F. Spengler 14 D. A. Candland 18 W. D. Donohue 19 R. E. Smith Shares -- 100,000 100,000 30,000 - 5,000 1,000 2,500 Amt. 1250.00 250.00 75.00 12.50 2.50 6.25 And in accordance with law and an order made by the Board of Directors on the 17th day of December, 1919, so many shares of such stock as may be necessary will be sold at public auction at the office of the company, 313 Judge Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, on Wednesday, the 25th day of Febr uary, 1920, at 12 oclock noon to pay the delinquent assessment thereon together with' costs of advertising and expense of sale. E. C. CANDLAND, Secretary and Treasurer Western Union Cons. Oil Company. 313 Judge Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. DELINQUENT NOTICE. Metal Mining Company. Principal place of business, 503 Utah Savings and Trust Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah. Cottonwood Notice is hereby given that there are delinquent upon the following cer- tificates of stock, on account of Assessment No. 6 of one-hal- f cent per on levied 5th the share, day of January, 1920, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective shareholders as follows: No. No. And in accordance with the law and order of the Board of Directors made on the 5th day of January, A. D. 1920, so many shares of each parcel of stock as may be required will be sold at the office of the Company, room 503, Utah Savings & Trust Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah, on the 23rd day of February, A. D. 1920, at the hour of 11 oclock a. m., to pay delinquent assessments thereon together with the cost of advertising and expense of SalG S. J. TRUMAN, Secretary. Cottonwood Metal Mining Company, 503 Utah Savings & Trust Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah. DELINQUENT7 NOTICE. Tintic Paymaster Mines Company. Location of principal office, 414 Judge Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. 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 (Continued from Page 7.) carried out bis plan he would have grown bigger month by month until today he would be the biggest man in the country. We learn from William C. Bullitt that Lansing caught the sinister, significance of the League covenant while in Paris and said: If the peo ple knew what was in the treaty they would reject it. The Secretary of State displayed a keeness of understanding which was denied former President Taft and scores of other patriotic statesmen. In fact, most of the American people welcomed the covenant as a means of preventing wars and they continued to look upon it as such an instrumentality for some months. Gradually they came to understand it and to be frightened and dismayed by its perils. Had Lansing taken advantage of his opportunity his sagacity would have loomed ever larger and larger as the people progressed toward the light. He had the vision to see that the treaty was wrong, but not the vision to see that he might make himself renowned by warning the American people and resigning. The covenant surrenders American sovereignty and places the army, navy and financial resources at the disposal of foreign powers, he should have said in his letter of resignation. It is destined to involve us in all the wars of Europe. It does not provide for disarmament and it creates a great war monopoly of conquering nations bent upon holding vanquished As a patriotic races in subjection. American I cannot lend sanction to such a pernicious document by seeming to give my assent and, therefore, in the interests of my country I am compelled to tender my resignation. That would have been a propretic tour de force. The fame of it would not have been great at the time, but every month would have seen Robert Lansing a more notable figure in the eyes of his countrymen and of all the wrorld. No man would have been more talked of for president than he. Instead Lansing goes into exile eating out his heart with humiliation and the regrets that cannot but torture him when he thinks of his lost opportunity. necessary to muck him, as of course all the radicals are merrily doing today, with the first of his fourteen points, "open covenants of peace openly arrived at. ' One needs only to recall how again and again the president preaches the vir- -, teus of "taking counsel, and expressly says that the only lasting and lmportai decisions of policy must come as a resuH of frank communion of many mens minds. In this respect, clearly, the presl- dents practice Is and always lias been In flagrant contradiction to what hie ,lias publicly preached. Once. more.:, the. president can not endure criticism of- - any kind; he is uncomfortable in the presence of any one his intellectual superior who does not entirely agree with him as the make-u- p of his cabinet painfully reveals. It is not so much that he is unfair to his opponent; he is almost pathologically unwilling even to hear him. The political prisoners now in jail as a consequence of the operations of the Espionage Act bear inglorious witness to the truth this assertion. Yet from none other than . sold at room 414 Judge Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, on February 14th, 1920, at 2 o'clock 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 of the Board of Directors, the date when delinquent stock shall be sold, is hereby extended from February 14th, 1920, at 2 oclock p. m., to February 28, 1920, at 2 oclock p. m. H. G. SNYDER, Secretary. 414 Judge Building, Salt Lake City, 1 Utah. 27-2-2- NEW BOOKS fur- Of his first visit in Europe, both in his speech at Manchester, England, and at Rome, Italy, the president made the assertion, obviously ridiculous as a political proposition, that what kept naor tions together was, not mutual Interest, but spontaneous liking and friendship. We must take tills public praise of the inherent virtues of friendship together with the' Indubitable fact that In his private life the president Is the loneliest of men and that he has very few friends himself. Or again,, it is hardly neecssary today to point oulj that President Wilson is by temoerament one of ilie most secretive of men; it Is almost painful for him to make decisions except when he makes them alone and In the privacy of Ills study. Vet It is not self-intere- J i . , ' Woodrow Wilsons lips do we hear more eloquent professions of the virtue of free speech. Mr. Amos Pincliot was not so wide of the mark when he said of the president, "He puts his enemies in office and his friends in jail. This perverse moralism in politics led the president to believe that he had not only the whole of a standardized people behind him, but that he could become a dictator also in Europe. He referred to himself constantly as interpreter" and spokesman, giving to himself the characteristics in w'hich he was lacking, seeing that he had already been repudiated: During the war itself this tendency to follow the the drift of events and then to idealize the decision was illustrated again and again. It was coupled, of course, with certain other personal qualities of the president which must be briefly mentioned his vanity, his stubbornness (for like all weak men Mr. Wilson is stubborn), his way of suddenly yielding to a proposition after he had repeatedly stated he would not entertain it, his perverse loyalty to those whom lie liad appointed to office (an outcropping of his stubbornness and hl3 intellectual inferiority complex), but chiefly his inveterate ignorance of relevant fact and his hatred of administrative detail. Perhaps the most evil consequences of the amiabie habit of enunciating noble platitudes Is that it soon gets one into the habit of ignoring details. Now that the war is over, it has left the spirit of militarism behind it. It shows itself in the violent and intoler- ant solution of problems previously believed to be susceptible of peaceful solution: o The four years of war have hardened people to the method of achieving ends by force and threats of force. The violence hitherto associated with international imperialism has been incorporated in more immediate domestic problems. When the union officials conducting the steel strike say "We will tie up the entire country before we lose the strike, and the corporation official retort "We will shut down every mill and stop the entire industry before we yield," it may nut be militarism in shining armor, but it is militarism none the less. . (Continued from Page 9.) not surprising when we look a trifle ther. -- . . 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 . st BLISS. Did you have a nice time Carl: on your wedding trip? It was a Wedding-tripEarl: lecture tour! ? |