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Show THE CITIZEN 10 W. Moreland W. II. Childs 1931 G. 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 .... A. M. Cheney Joseph D. Mercer 1 67 114 105 . . 410 George T. Peterson.. G. P. Pack. G. P. Pack G. P. Pack. . A II. B. Cole 122 115 ........ Cole II. B. Cole II. B. Cole IT. B. II. B. Cole.. ......... II. B. Cole. II. B, Colfi II. B. Cole II. B. Cole IT. B. Cole E. J. Evans E. J. Evans E. J. Evans 1.03 .30 .29 .31 .31 .31 124 .30 .30 .32 .32 .32 11 110 128 128 1- -7 2T .32 127 127 127 .32 1 1957 C. E. Cline 1958 N. J. Sheckell 412 599 186 215 M. W. Edwards 1,000 1,000 4,800 71,600 10.00 10.00 48.00 716.00 And in accordance with the law and order of the Board of Directors made on the 3rd day of March, 1920, so many shares of each parcel of stock as may be necessary will be sold at the office of the company, Room 1110 Newhouse Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah, on the 2nd day of April, A. D. 1920, at the hour of 2 oclock p. m. to pay delinquent DELIN' Q V BN T X OT1 C'E. Nevada Zinc Alining Company, principal place of business, 404 Newhouse Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. Notice. There are delinquent upon the following described stock on account of Assessment No. 10 of one-ha- lf cent per share, levied on the 6th day of March, 1920, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective shareholders, as follows: Cert. (c) 41Z Fraftces Andrews .. law and an And in accordance with of directors board the order made by on the seventeenth day of February as 1920, so many shares of such stock at sold pubbe may be necessary will comlic auction at the office of the Saton pany, 609 Newhouse building, 1920. of April, tenth the day urday, at two oclock p. m., to pay the delinthereon togetherquent assessment with the costs of advertising and expense of sale. g g poXD, Secretary. First publication, Saturday, March 1959 F. Snyder John Knox Lake City, Utah. .32 .10 .32 .07 .09 .10 .54 .45 1.03 1.50 1.03 127 27 3o 41 183 W. F. Snyder 184-W- . assessments thereon together with the cost of advertising and expense of sale. R. L EDWARDS, Secretary. Office, No. 1110 Newhouse Bldg., Salt .31 41 215 Truman Orton .26 123 125 A. P. Slichter A. P. Slichter 1955 B. B. Gray 1956 .27 .20 .17 .28 107 1929 II. B. Cole 1930 J. Hodges 26th. 1920. D BLIXQUEX T X OT1CE. NortiT" Point Irrigation Brighton & Company. Principal place ofSalt sin8S Lake Brighton Meeting House, NotlVe. --There are delinquent upon stock on acthe following described count of Assessment No. 39. leviedsev-on the the 24th day of February, 1920. names the set amounts opposite eral folas of the respective shareholders, lows: Ppif Name 467 J. II. Craig 658 I. H. Candland No. Shares Amt. .00 203 -j Evans 73S Arthur Peck 13 ,i2 698 O. R. Dibblee 1 604 Lewis Schrader And in accordance with law and of the Board of Directors made on the 24th day of February 192;). so many shares of each parcel soil stock as may be necessary will beLoom at the office of the& company. Trust Companj 302. Utah Savings Utah at pubLake Salt City, Building, 30th day of the on lic auction, Friday, M.. to la A. April. 1920, at 10 oclock with assessment together thereon, the ond expense of the cost of advertising L. CORU..I, BEN e;ia Secretary-Treasure- r. First publication, April 10 1920 732 E. W. 15-.- -- an-orde- DELINQUENT NOTICE. Miter lleed Con sol I dnteil Mine Company. Principal place of business, Salt Lake jtv Utah, are Notice is hereby given that there certlii-ate- s the following upon lelinquent of stock, on account of Assessment X or. 5, of one lc) cent per share, levied on the 3rd day of March. 19-- 0, the several amounts set opposite the lames of the respective shareholders is follows. Cert. r And in accordance with law and an order made by the Board of Directors on the 6th day of March, 1920. so many shares of such stock as may be necessary will be sold at public auction at the office of the Company, 404 Newhouse Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, on Wednesday, April 2Sth, 1920, at 12 o'clock, noon, to pay the delinquent assessment thereon together with cost of advertising and exnense of sale. GEORGE BAGLIN, Secretary. DELINQUENT NOTICE. Carson River Mills Company, prin140 South State cipal place of business, Utah. Lake Salt City, Street, Notice. There are delinquent upon the, following described stock on account of Assessment No. 1, levied on the 9th day of March, 1920, of twenty cants (20c) per share, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective stockholders, as follows: Cert. No. Name Shares Amt. THE THIRD TERM (Continued from Page 7.) emment may render a rotation in the elective officers of it more congenial with the ideas (the people have) of liberty and safety, that I take my leave of them as a public man The first years of his second term were marked by sharp disagreements between him and several members of his cabinet, distinguished men wK6 had shared with him in the glory of achieving independence for the colonies. While it is not recorded thatt there was a break between him and James Madison, their relations grew formal and Washington notably turned more and more for advice to Hamilton. The draft of the Farewell Address, which was originally prepared by Madison, was submitted to Hamilton, who, as has been pointed out, leaned very strongly toward the view that a president should hold office for life. To the influence of Hamilton is commonly attributed the exclusion from the address of Washingtons words regarding rotation in office. It must not be assumed that the Farewell Address, in its first or in its final form, was anything other than the work of Washington himself. All of its propositions had been thought out by him and imparted to both Madison and Hamilton. At a later date Madison expressed a fear that, in spite of the fact that the Farewell Address was all Washingtons except the turns of the phrases, the public might lose some of their Teverence for the Father of His Country by the discovery that it was even in a minor degree the performance of another held in different estimation. During the second term of President Jefferson circumstances arose which might have excused his acceptance of a third term. Perhaps the similarity of those times with our own may have led Mr. Wilson to believe it possible to obtain a Then, as now, Europe was suffering from violent upheavals which involved the United States. It was the time of the Napoleonic wars, a time during which the United States bore about the same relation to the conflict that it bore to the European struggle of the nations between 1914 and 1917. England issued an edict that no merchant ships should be allowed to land in France and Napoleon proclaimed a blockade of the British coasts. It was a singular coincidence that in the recent war our interests were affected in much the same way. True, our ships were not sunk by submarines, but our ship of war Chesapeake was attacked off our eastern coast by his majestys ship Leopard and part of her crew impressed into the service of England. England, more than France, was the aggressor in those days, and finally the United States became involved in the war. Meantime Jefferson had established the embargo which ruined our trade and caused a domes n. And in accordance with lav and an order of the Board of Directors made on the 9th day of March. 1920, so many shares of each parcel of such stock ns may be necessary will be sold at public auction at the office of Grant Hampton at 140 South State Street, Galt Lake City, Utah, on the 26th2 day of April, oclock p. m., 1920, at the hour of to pay the delinquent assessment thereon, together vith the cost of advertising ard the expense of sale. GRANT HAMPTON, Secretary. Carson River Mills Co., No. 110 South Slate St., Salt Lake City, Utah. By order of the Board of Directors, the date when the above delinquent stock shall be sold, is hereby extended from April 20, 1920, at 2 oclock p. m., to April 26th. 1920. at two oclock p. m. GRANT HAMPTON. Secretary. Carson River Mills Company, No. 140 South Stale St., Salt Lake City, Utah. tic disturbance which threatened to tear the country to pieces. At one time he was informed that New England was for breaking away from the union and seeking reunion or, at the ( least, an alliance with Great Britain. It was a crisis that might well have warranted Jefferson in changing his views regarding another term, but he remained true to his ideal and when, in 1806, the Vermont legislature passed a resolution urging him to become a candidate, he wrote the following in reply: Believing that a representative government, responsible at short periods of election, is that which produces the greatest sum of happiness to mankind, I feel it a duty to do no act which shall essentially impair that principle, and I should unwillingly be the person who, disregarding the sound precedent set by an illustrious predecessor, should furnish the first example of prolongation beyond the second term of office. Only a mind strangely out of tune with the times could consider the parallel between those days and our own as in any wise a warrant for giving Mr. Wilson a third term. The precedent established by Washington and perpetuated by Jefferson and, in our own era, by McKinley and Roosevelt that a president of the United States should serve only two terms consecutively still sways the judgment of Americans. Mr. Wilson deludes himself if he believes that either the gravity of the times or the nature of his achievements have earned for him immunity from the application of the century-ol- d principle. With due respect for the fathers the American people believe that now, even more than in the age of Washington and Jefferson, the country has many leaders most capable of serving the public as president. To concede that a nation of a hundred million cannot find more than one man in a crucial emergency capable of administering the office of chief executive would be to admit that our republic had ceased to progress and had begun to decline. If that day ever arrives when but one man is deemed capable of serving the public in the presidency, then will it be certain that Americans have lost the qualities which have made them great andj caused their fame to be mighty among all the races of the earth. castanet For spring at last has come, And on my parapet I clink my Of chestnut, gummy-wet- , Where bees begin to hum, I beat my little drum; I clink my castanet, you say, suns set.'S So be it! Why be glum? Enough, the spring has come; And without fear or fret I clink my castanet, And beat my little drum. Spring goes, James H. Cousins. |