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Show stood very high in the estimation ot the compaoy and his fellow-workmen. Since the washouts In January he had been employed at Callente, Nev., as a pile-driving engineer. In the reconstruction recon-struction of the company's lines. Mr. Mason owned about $8000 worth of property in Salt Lake, which he had bought from his earnings. He was a single man, and the only relatives, rela-tives, of which anything is known, are his mother and one brother, who live In Paris. 111. Mr. Mason was a member of .the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, having Joined this order at Callente. and one of the brotherhood brought the body here to be embalmed and accompanied ac-companied it to Paris. 111. SALT LAKE ENGINEER KILLED AT CALIENTE William K. Mason Meets Instant Death Under a Pile-Driver. Salt Lake, July 12. The remains of William K. Mason, who was accidentally acci-dentally killed near Callente, Nev., Sunday morning, by an overturning pile-driver, were shipped to Paris. 111., from Evans' undertaking parlors, Saturday Sat-urday afternoon. Mr. Mason, who was about 31 years of age, had been employed as a locomotive loco-motive engineer on the Salt Lake Route for the past eight years, and |