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Show 1AILY UTAH STATE JOURNAL, FOUND IN HIS SOH UTAH lOBaanaicamBiai Moquette, Saxony, Hartford, Middlesex, Savonerrie, Bigelow IN THE SMELTER AT MURRAY. ARRANGEMENTS BEING PUSHED FOR GREAT EXHIBIT. Mothers Intuition Load to a Sad Train Load Discovery in Salt Lake. The family of John S. Garrison, who la a well known mining man In Salt Luke received a terrible shock yesterday. Mr. Garrison had been absent in the Deep Creek district and returned home Thursday. Upon his return he was surprised that his son Charles, aged 17 years, waa not at home, as it was understood vyhen he went away that the boy was to attend school. His wife informed him that the youth had gone to Murray for the purpose of obtaining wlrk in the smelter. The father was not displeased with the boy's action and acquiesced in it Yesterday morning when the family received the ''Herald" Mrs. Garrison, in looking through the death notices, observed the folowlng: "Howard At Murray, Utah, Nov. 12, 1902, Charlie Howard, aged about, 20 years." With a mothers intuition, a fear for her absent boy arose in her heart and she communicated her fear to her husband. From the fact that the son's name was Charles Howard Garrison and the death having been in Murray, she could not rest easy until her bus-ban- d, at her earnest solicitalon, went to the morgue to view the remain. Mr. Garrison went to Hall's under- taking parlors yesterday morning and asked to view the remains. When he was taken into the rear room where the body was lying on a marble slab, his features became convulsed and he ejaculated: It cant be; it cant be! but nevertheless it was the body of his 8 7. er TEXAS LABOR FEDERATION Reports of Officers 8how Organization ConIs in First-Clas- s dition. FORT WORTH, Tex., Nov. 16. The sixth annual convention of the Texas State Federation of Labor began in this city today with a good attendance of delegates, representing the organized labor bodies throughout Texas. President Max Andrew presided over the opening session, which was devoted to addresses of welcome and responses and other formal proceedings incident to the opening of the gathering. Several days will be devoted to the business of the convention and numerous questions of paramount interest to the labor organizations will come up for consideration. The federation is in excellent shape, as is evidenced by the reports of the various officiers, and the convention will discuss steps to of Material Will Lmis on Jan- Start for uary let. No woman clasps h(s hands Within her twain; No children swell his pride Or soothe his palu. He has no memories sweet To brood upon; No ecno of little feet Before him gone. Time's wintry winds lay bars His massy head; The weight of age and cars la in hia tread. How will ha meet that hour. When, overthrown Hia dreams of place and power. He falls alone T -Frank Putnam, in the National Magazine. Taxes Hard to Down. Though London bridge has had no houses upon It for about 150 years, taxes are still paid on he houses that formerly stood there. When about the year 1766 It was decided to clear the houses from the bridge certain taxes and tithes survived and have been paid ever since to the rectors of SL Magnus and SL Olave churches. Not less than 8300,000 has been paid to these two parishes since the decrepit houses which formerly yielded them were pulled down. They survived not only the houses but the old bridge Itself. And now there Is a movement to stop this serlel ghost story of taxation. A Natural Question. LieuL J-- suc- ter. Feat of Endurance. At 8t Marys church, Grundish-burg- , Eng., on a recent Sunday, eight members of the Norwich Diocesan Association rang upon the bells of the church a true and complete peal of Bob Major. When It Is considered that this consists of 6,040 distinct changes and occupied the performers two hours and minutes, It must be regarded as a feat of con nderable endurance. A fifty-thre- e Travels Par In Balloon. Heins Ziegler, a Bavarian 5ronaut la aald to have traversed 766 miles In twenty hours In a bal-Jgoing with the wind and cross-th- e Carpathians on his Journey. ? attained a hlght, it Is added, of .818 yards, finding currents with a eioclty of alxty miles an hour. Herr n, Her Deserved Revenge. They were husband and wife, rad aa they stood before the monument In London she asked, Whats that figThat's a goddess, he ure on top? And what's a goddess?" answered. A woman who holds her tongue, he replied. She looked at him sideways, and then began planning how to make a peach pie with the stones In It, for the benefit of hls sore tooth. London Answers. German Bank Capital. aggregate capital of 122 German banking Institutions Is, according 254,250,-00to the German Economist, More than half of this capital la located In Berlin. Woman Lawyer and Doctor. Dr. Mary Chandler of Lowell, Mass., is said to be the only woman In America who is entitled to practice law and ' The 0. medicine. Swimming In Dead 8ea. rue human body being lighter than he water of the Dead sea, swimming U not d,fflcultbead alone tending to sink In the water - Good solicitors wanted for the Dally Utah State Journal. Apply to Horace & Foster, city circulator. 10 Wire TAPESTRY BRUSSELS AXMINSTERS GRANITES, COTTONS UNIONS Amber, Smiths, Beattie, Stinson, 2 and 3 Ply WOOLS VELVETS Acco and Other Kinds if You Cannot Be and Lowell Suited With This BODY BRUSSELS Assortment Prices That Require No Comparison Patterns to Suit All See Our Window Display Ogden Furniture Si Carpet Co. 3C 0 DC cIhe Journals Daily Short Story Prove It, Ladies! Sonic day just go shopping arouml town. Took A BIRTHDAY GIFT at the Best $3.50 'Shoes The Count de Bonneville was sitting one morning at the breakfast table in his chateau near Paris. The count was a widower, and the opposite end of the table wus occupied by his daughter Lizette, fifteen years old. There was a commotion without, and the butler announced that a poacher had been caught the night before and had been brought to the chateau. The count gave an order that the offender should be brought to him, and a young man of perhaps twenay wos led in backed by the gamekeeper, by a gardner and stable boy. The count questioned both the poacher and hls accusers, and since he had been caught diected that he be taken to jllll. Papa, said Lizette. I have a favor to ask. Tomorrow is my birthday and you give me the selection of my gift. I ask the forgiveness of this man. The count, who had no wish to punish the poacher, except as a matter of duty, complied. to become one of us, for Women he aald. She will give us the hiding places of her fellow aristocrats and you can find. Fit them furnish a dozen heads for two. That's ! a good bargain! Six on and soo how tho feel. Drink! he said forcing the cup to Then eomo here and let us Llzette's Him. Lizette, with a shudder, seized it fit on a pair of and, shutting her eyes, forced herself to drink every drop. Then she and her father were thrust Into the and driven away, the man who had been the chief actor in the strange scene mounting the cart and taking If our Shoe a hotter Shoo than any the reins from the driver. For a while it was doubtful whether the crowd youve seen for four dollars or oven four fifty if it would permit their departure, but, a better fitting than any youve seen at any priet cartful of new victims driving up, were for the first the last. forgotten if it tho easiest Shoo you ever tried on if it Ten minutes later the man who had hotter stock in it and more stylish and saved Llsette and her father ordered the driver to get down. He did so, and the man drove bn till he juissed the barrier, where they 'all descended and stood a moment in the road. "Now, M. le Counte and Mile, de Bonneville, fiy for your lives. This Is then well give up tho Shoe business anil pay, you for the road to Boulogne. Travel by night ? and hide the time spent in looking. All sizes and widths. Why did you kill pupa's by day till you reach the asked Lizette of the man. then for boat coast, take England." "Because, mademoiselle, my mother "Who am I to thank for our lives? Dee-Stanfo- rd Is ill and needs dainty food. I have asked the count, and why have you to else her. give done this?' nothing "Take the birds you have shot, Do you remember yeurs ago a said the count, and call on my butler poacher being brought before you for what else you need. when you sat at one end of the breakTen years passed. France was in fast table and your daughter at the Each day other? the throes of revolution. the Paris prisons gave up a number No, replied the count; I don't of the crowds of aristocrats who filled remember." them to be led to the guillotine loIt was the morning, mademoiselle, cated . In the Place de la Concorde. before your birthday. You chose for Paris was literally drunken with blood. your gift my pardon. As each cart was driven from the Now I remember, said Lizette. In return I give you for your next prison to the guillotine crowds of revoutionlsts followed, hooting and birthday your life and the life of your OGDEN, UTAH father." jeering the victims It contained. from was driven One morning a cart with Lixette, her eyes swimming the.Condergerle to the Place de la grateful tears, put out her hand. Concorde containing but two people, Carry the Largest Line of Sporting Goods of Every Description Was it only for this that you have a white haired old man and hls daugh- returned so much? of any House in the Country, and Sell at the Lowest Possible Prices. ter, the Count de Bonneville and The count gave me the birds for Send for Their Large 154 Page Catalog it is free. Lizette, the later now a woman. As my dear mother." the cart was driven up to the guilloAll this is very little for two lives. tine a party near It were pouring a I wonder that you remembered us. red liquid from a bucket into cups, That morning I took an lmuge into drinking and singing a song in which my heart that I shall never forget." the words wine and blood frequently Lifting her hand to his lips he occurred. Llsette held out her hands kissed It fervently, and, turning, jumpimploringly and begged them to spare ed up on the cart and drove back to her father and be contented with her Paris. The count and Lizette escaped own life. They only hooted, and the to England. When they returned to A fine bargain! they all say about two were taken from the cart and led France their preserver hnd been exup to the guillotine. Then a man In ecuted for the part he hnd taken in the crowd suddenly called out: saving them. "What say you citizens? Shall the cltizeness save the old man by drinkSaved from Terrible Death. breakfast food. ing with us a cup of blood? The family of Mrs. M. L. Bobbitt of some of trowd. no! cried the "No, Burgertown,- Tenn., saw her dying and Five pounds of delicious, creamy "Yes, yes, were powerless to save her. The most Spare no aristocrats. and skillful remedy every physicians cried others. Let her drink what we use failed.whlle food and chinaware vou will he consumption was slowdrink. ly surely taking her life. In this Meanwhile the man who had pro- terrible hour Dr. King's New Discovproud to have on your table. ery for Consumption turned despair posed the draft filled one of the cups Into Joy. The first bottle brought ImAt your grocers.. with the liquid from the bucket and. mediate relief and its continued use completely cured her. It's the most said: to it Llsette, handing certain cure In the world for all throat "Drink with us, cltizeness. Wash and lung troubles. Guaranteed bottles 60c and 21.00. Trial bottles free at out the blood of an aristocrat become Jesse J. Driver Drug Store. father a commoner, and you and your shall go from this wearing your heads Attention! on your shoulders." The drugs we use in our prescripThe crowd laughed and jeered and tion work are the freshest, purest and howled as if each individual were a highest quality that can be obtained. fiend and had been dispatched by want the best results have If you bis this to at him satan represent carnival. Several of the moat violent your prescriptions prepared by us. Do will worry less pushed forward to stop this stay of this and your doctor WALLACE about recovery. your death, but the man who held the cup DRUG CO., Druggists, Prescription au of waved them back with an air 2249 Washington Ave.; phone 24 X. thorlty. This girl la for-one- Our $3.50' Shoes isnt isnt isnt hasnt red-hand- ed Col. Be ton Churchill of the British army recently told a good story at the London Missionary societys meeting. In the first Boer war, he said, they were holding a religious service In the open and a Kaffir asked what all the noise was about He was told that they were worshiping God further increase the membership and because they wanted to go to heaven, strenghthen the state and local bodlesl which was a very nice place. The native then Inquired: Why, then, does not England annex heaven? FIELD TRAIL8 FOR POINTER8. NEW YORK, Nov. 16. HolmedeL N. Responsibility of the Oyster. , thirty-fiv- e miles from this city, was would be worth while to know It today the rallying place of field dog whether there Is any good basis for fanciers from many states. The octhe persistent rumor that oysters are casion was the opening of the fourth responsible for s great deal of typhoid annual field trails under the auspices fever, at least to the extent of being of the Pointer Club of America. The the passive vehicle for the diffusion entry list this year is large and of high-clas- s, of the microbe of the disease, to Immune. and as the preserves are re- which it la Itself presumedly of one doctor is hardly The testimony ported as well stocked with quail, the to be accepted In so Important a matcessful. 7, 8, 9 and X Alone. He has not any horns Save what he hires; He warms his weary limbs Aa alien firea It seems the young man had obtained work in the smelter and was employed to wheel the pulverised ore from a pile a considerable made by dumping-froheight above. He was engaged on the night shift and while standing directly under the chute, a load of ore, estimated at several hundred tons In weight suddenly slid down and completely' burled him, ' so that when he was removed life was extinct The shock to the mother when she found that her fears had foundation are bet-hworst fears realised are better imagined than described. . hilaker, who lias in charge the exhibit to be made by Utah at the Ft. Louis world's fair, has Just returned from the east and reports that splendid progress Is being made and that Utah will stand out prominently at the exposition. All the exhibits are being concentrated at the building of the citizens' old electric light plant liiv.r the Rio Grande freight house, and it Is expected that everything will be ready for shipment to St. Louis by January 1st. Fifty tons of material of the resources and products of the state have already been collected, and when all is completed a solid train will be to convey the exhibits Mr. Whitaker recently spent several days In the Navajo mountain country, in the southern part of the state, making arrangements for thee olle ting cf an exhibit of gems from that section. He has employed a number of Indians to bunt up garnets, which are to be found there, and several local residents of the district have been commissioned to secure specimens of topaz, selanlte, Jasper and petrified woods. These exhibits will make a splendid showing of Utah's undeveloped resources, and it Is intended to have everything thoroughly polished so as to enhance the appearance of the specimens an 1 show the world the wealth and variety of the states products. son. trials are expected to be very NOVEMBER ST THE THE MORGUE A BOY KILLED A MONDAY, isnt All Around the Best Shoe pheus-ants- Shoe Co. BROWNING BROS. CO. 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