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Show NORTHWEST NOTES. MasachufUs and New York Btates have decided to erect state buildings and Clark centennial at at the Portland. Francis M. Finch, who cane to Seataccitle two years ago from Cl dentally shot and killed himself at his home In Seattle while cleaning a reJx-wl- i. . hlgh-powe- Sun-day- i . J I ? ( t oh, tear tin tight bound fetters off! And mat forever from your sight The cruel, rusted chains of pain, u f woe, of sin, of shuma, and blight! He free! y volver. I. T. Mayfield, one of the oldest engineers In point of service on the Oregon Railroad & Navigation lino, died at his home In Tinker Citv, Ore., last week of typhoid. Martin Connelly, a fireman at the Waahoe smelters at Anaconda, Mont, was struck by an engine, dragged under the wheels and cut completely In twain at the waist. Two Northern Pacific freight trains collided at Roy, twenty miles west of Tacoma, derailing several cars. Two tramps, William Ryan and William Martel, were Injured. A. L. Jenkins of Seattle has broken all city and state ten-pihowling records for a single game and equaled the worlds record. He made twelve strikes in succession, his score being 300. L. II, Ruddeman of Portland, Ore., dropped dead while watching the football game between the freshman teams of Stanford university and the University of California, at Berkeley, Cal. W. F. McDonald, an electrician In the coal mines at Dawson, Wash., while at work adjusting the funs on a r dynamo, received a shock from which he died almost Instantly. A Tacoina stevedoring firm has loaded the German ship Peru with 124,857 bushels of wheat In seventeen hours, an average of 7,341 bushels per hour. It la considered a record-breakeFrank P. Lunt. one of the firemen who breathed nitric acid fumes In the etching room of the Denver Post several days ago. Is dead. Lunt was out of danger, but suffered a relapse a few of 1902. days ago. It Is the third victim of the A report has reached Halifax, N. S., acid fumes. that the steamer Call, bound from Tra A. W. Long, a prosperous farmer N. B., for New London, P, E. I cadle, living near Davenport, Wash., shot his been baa sunk near New London, and neighbor, Henry Gunning, In the breast crew ot seventeen the that near the heart, with a revolver. In- were lost,captain and The men flicting a serious wound. Fred J. Kefferty of Atlantic City, In have been enemies for some months dieted for killing John Biddle in a over a land deal. quarrel over the latter's wife, in New Jim Burrows, middleweight cham- York City, last May, has committed pion of Nova Scotia, and Jerry McCar- suicide in jail at Mays Landing, N. J., thy. who claims the championship of but cutting his throat. Washington, fought twenty rounds to That the canteen is of great moral a draw at Spokane on the 14th. Both benefit to the army Is the claim made men were on their feet and fighting General G. II. Burton in by Brigadier well In the last round. his annual report as inspector general An aged Chinaman who fell dead on of the army, to the secretary of war, a street in Denver was Identified as made public last week Lung Jung, grand master of the MaWinnipeg, Mann., has been visited sonic grand lodge of California. He by the worst fire in its history. Two had been making a leisurely tour of Of the most important business blocks this country and was on hts way home were destroyed, entailing losses agwhen death overtook him. gregating $700,000. Insurance, $300, Nearly four hundred telephone oper- 000. No lives were lost. ators employed in the main offices of The recent Yaqul Indian troubles in the Pacific States Telephone and Tele- Sonora have been very much exagger graph company In Portland, struck one ated by some newspaper correspondday last week, hut returned to work ents. Only ouo district was involved when Informed that their grievances and It is now thoroughly patrolled by would be investigated. The strikers and federal troops rangers alleged cruel and unjust tieatment by Clifford Ragel, 14 years of age, of a supervising forewoman. Fire on Sunday night at Salem, Ore., Edna, Kan., died at Sedalla, Mo., hosns the result of injuries destroyed a flax warehouse leased hy pital Saturday in received the collison near Warrens-burgEugene Posse. Flax valued at $40,000 in the Missouri TacHlc wreck. Was destroyed and the property loss This makes the list of dead thirty. will reach $50,ono, The buildings were The of the London owned hy Portland capitalists and Times correspondent at Tokio the Mikado has says were fully insured. Posse carried but $3,000 insurance on his store of flax, warmly thanked the Manchurian army which was the result of four years for defesiin ih offensive movements work, being the nucleus of a scheme of the Russians and driving them to establish linen mills here. It is beback after of severe fightmany days lieved that the fire was oi incendiary ing. origin. During the recent flood in New MexThe safe of Pat McGurka grocery store at Phlllipsbnrg, Mont., was blown ico, details of which have just been sethe Cinnamon river roso to the open and about $150 and a gold cured, In Its history. Several towns, highest watch ralu ini at $150, a draft for a including Chihuahua, south of Springsmall amount and n Colt's revolver taken. The safe door was blown from er, were wiped out. Three deaths are reported. Its hinges hy nltro glycerine. A logging train on the railroad conAt a conference between members necting the lumber camp and mill of of the Portland Kennel club and President Goode of the Lewis and Clark ex- the Lamolne Lumber Trading comleft the rails several miles west position, lust week, it was decided to pany of Lamolne. killing James Wright, the the show gfve ever held greatest dog conductor, and Mrs. A. Chapman, a In the west during the opening month pasenger. of the Lewis nnd Clark exposition. Private advices received In WashThe police are searching for Wilfrom Venezuela are to the efington liam Thompson, a bartender for fect that many arrests are being made William Winters, of Portland, who with $1,200 in cash and diathere to check a revolutionary movemonds valued at $.00 which he. It Is ment on a large scale, which Is being alleged, abstracted from Winters' while the latter was off on a hunting directed against President Castro's administration. n ; General Oku reports four officers wounded and two killed, thirty-on- e missing for the engagements of October 10. 11 and 12. The Paducah and Evansville packet sank eight mien above BoJ) Dnrb-Paducah, Ky by strlkug a sunken wreck. All the passengers were saved, The Prim-daminister of public works, the Interior and commerce, have just rejected a petition for the erection of "skyscrapers" In Prussian cities. It is reported from Seoul that the Japanese minister to Korea is lining every effort to induce ihe Korean government to agree to flttyyea leases of public lands. A powder magazine nt the fort on One Cochons Island has exploded man was killed. Fortunately a cham her., containing 3,000 fifteen pound shells did not explode. Seventy dwellings in San Marcial eighty miles south of Albuquerque, N M., have been wrecked by the floods of the past week and there Is great suffering and destitution there. Wllhelmlna Masur, 35 years old, the wife of John Masur, one of the oldest newspaper men of Pittsburg, Pa., ha been stamped to death by a bull In the stable at their home In Allegheny. The revolution In the Republic of Santo Domingo is extending. Azua de Cocpostpla, near the south coast, and all the depart raents of the south have declared In favor of Isidore Jimlnez Dora Meek, aged 18, who slept nearly six months during the winter of 1901, died at Centralla, Ills., as the result of a general decline following an attack of measles last March. The Ilaytlen exiles have gathered noar the frontier, preparing to Haytl, and attempt an insurrection against President Nord in favor of Gen. Flrmin, leader of the insurrection Free as the sea, To move win-rTo dwell in his To breathe, to In love as broad, God would have you be! LATE GALT THROUGH pure atmospheie; live, and to be free. CITY ADO SCENIC COlOiSAu! TO THE WORLD'S FAIR lie free to lend a helping hand, To eu-some heart's distress . Time Is ho .short; filri would enslave-Wake haste! Arise! Again, I say. lie free! Frank Llewellyn Browne in Brooklyn Eagle. FAST FLYERS DAILY BETWEEN OGDEN AND DENVER: CHOICE OF ROUTES. PULLMAN THROUGH AND SIFrti TOURIST FROM OGDEN OR SALT LAKE TO ST. LOUIS WITHOUT CHANGE OF -- Free Reclining Chair Care. Dining Car Service a la carte on all through trains. For Folders, Illustrated Booklet, etc address y Y ' Noel Thornton, feeling very much a martyr to vluty, walked up the old street In the gray gloom of the winter afternoon. He wondered Irritably If there was any corner of the globe where the family had no or friends for him to connections hunt up. "And while you are in Exmonth," hla mother had said, be sure and call on Miss Emmeline. You know she was one of your grandfather's stanchest friends. It was she, you remember, who wrote those charming quatrains at the time of his death. Be are you cad on her, Noel." A delay In forwarding girders had temporarily stopped work on the bridge, and back at the hotel be had so reluctantly quitted the other engineers were starting a game of pitch. Instead of enjoying that game with and the them, as hy all the law-prophets he should have been doing, he was tramping up this endless street to call on a lady of much Intellect and many years. The fact that Miss Emmeline bad been a friend of his pLlosopher grandfather (Noel termed Us ancestor A brainy old boy, but way beyond him") filled blm with dismal forebodings. He fancied himself endeavoring to keep pace with Miss Emmeline's conversation, aid groaned inwardly. Nevertheless, h walked briskly on, and presently stopped before a huge old colonial bou se on whose polished door plate shone the name "Calvert." He mounted the steps and gave several resounding blows with the brass knocker. To the portly colored woman who answered his summons he handed his card, and was shown Into what evidently was the reception room. It was huge and dim, but furnished modernly ai-- d with quiet taste. A fire cheerfully on the broad heart h, and by the windows were azalia bushes In full bloom. On the wall be vaw a large oil painting of bis Intellectual grandfather. He had risen and was standing before this when a soft voice said: "And this Is Mr. Noel Thornton. Im charmed to meet you." Noel turn'd. There was a faint smell of lavender In the room. In the doorwaj stood Mitis Emmeline. It seemed to him that some beauty or several d trades ago had come suddenly to lit? from some old canvas, and had wilked straight from the frame to him. Her dress of green silk was rut in the absurd tuition ot the early fifties; her fresh, p ump hands were half hidden in blink mitts; her gray hair made atranje little corkscrew curls about her temples. But her fice bore no trace of wrinkles, her rcund cheeks were touched with deli at j color, her lips were full and red, vn 1 her dark eyes sparkled like a girl . "Good 1 ri vons," Noel was thinking to blmsell, and the woman is 76!" He tooi her extended hand and bowed low. "Miss Calvert!" was all he was ab'e to murmur. "It's so g Kid of you to come, she elm-llne- d L A. BENTON, Q. A. P When the tea came In Miss Emmeline had Just finished a capital golf anecdote, and they were laughing together like a gay young couple. Noel glanced at his grandfathers portrait "Old Boy," he said to himself, I never envied you until now." When Noel departed it was not until he had received Miss Emmeline's permission to call again the following Thursday. He walked down the street in an entirely different mood from that which had possessed him earlier In the afternoon. And 7G! "Such eyes, he repeated. CAD ' BALT LAKE CITY, flTj MISSOURI Ei ff Ar Popular Route to the Tbe W ff At Ei ST. LOUIS FAIR Ni To So Ii and Points East ii : It V 'll s trip. Tho will of the lute Postmaster General Henry Clay Payne bis been filed for probate. Tho estate Is estln-awere cut, bruised and burned. The exIn value at $700,000, of w hlch $tiu0,000 plosion wus caused by a miner who Is for the benefit of his wife, Mrs. was carrying a ran of fifty pounds of I.ydla W. Payne, and his sister, Mrs. powder coming in contact with a live imogene P. Cameron. wire. While experimenting with a patent A masked highwayman entered the fire escape, swung from the eighth , and with depot saloon at Bow, story of a building iu St. Paul, Minn,, two big revolvers held the barkeeper P. M. Hcannou and wife of Mlnneapo and three other men at bay. The bartender could not open the safe and tho Us fell from the third story to tht robber departed, after hating secured stone sidewalk. Mrs, Sen mum wa only $7.50. He left no trace of his killed and her husband fatuity injured Identity. Miss Bessie Stone nnd Robert Gill Mayor Williams of Portland has vewho eloped from Ashland, Vn., were toed the ordinance passed a few days found with their hands clasped dead ago hy the city council licensing pooa pear All the at pond In that vicinity by a $.100 lrooms per quarter. poolrooms In the city were closed by aearchlng parly. A bullet hole in the the police several mouths ago. Ho head of each toll the story of s ipposcdl bolds pool selling to be one of the most double suk-lior murder pud suicide, . vicious forms of gambling. THE TOURIST'S FAVORITE ROUTE terrific explosion occurred In mine No. 8 of the Union Pacific Coni company at Rock Springs. Seven miners A 1 Pullman and Tourist Sleepers Oi from Ogden and Salt Laka to St. Louta noon. said. "Won't you sit down? Molly will bring u tea In a moment." They talked of commonplace things tho weather, the town, the new bridge he was helping to build. Miss Emmeline showed a livt-linterest In things modern, and as the talk ,u 0,1 forgot his misgivings end embarrassments. w A.- - Tt Nt "S THROUGH 8CENIC COLORADO w WITHOUT CHANGE OF CAES. Bi It Cam Everything Dining Cara. Free RacMning-Chai- r For berth tickets, folder etc, address Ki A 81 First-els- a I' Tt Sir H. Al H. C. TOWNSEND, G. P. & T. A., ST. Drew her hand away rather abruptly. Why don't they raise girls like that now? he burst out. Noel called again on Miss Emmeline the next Thursday and the next. After that he went often. Whether it was her soft, vibrant voice, her gentle eyes or her girlish manner that drew her to him he could not say. There was some exquisite, indefinable charm about her, and beyond that point he did not attempt analysis. One bleak afternoon as he was about to take his departure they were standing together in the ball. Noel suddenly seized her hand and pressed it to his lips. Some day. he said quietly and firmly, "I shall find her, and she will be like you." Miss Emmeline drew away her band rather abruptly. Noel looked up to find her blushing furiously. She murmured something Indistinctly about "hoping he would find her," and left him there alone. Noel went out ex- A A B ARE YOU GOING Yorlds Fair? To the If to, you OREGON SHORT UK endoubfidly van! to fit thiro Ia Coaoactloa with the V as quickly Union Pacific ilailrs:( at possible T. exrr.t, 1C. BCHUMACBKft, A. ftM a, . a . tad FAST ROUTS ten1 Ii ( EAST To ST. LOUIS and all polnta Ask Short Lin Agaata about Excursion Hate. MAvric n. a. Brexcea. .M, . Uu Citv, Vuft Bp fte San CMl San son ati1 tin box are 4ri fhi THE NEW WAY OF " THE OLD WAY" Four New Worlds Fair BW Train EQUIPMENT, ELEOTKIO LIGHTS AND ELECTRIC PARS BETWEEN KANSAS CITY AND ST, aCIIEBCLE, lm 4JUfB ' flM p m nih-- k SSw. la Wlilox euiwrtnr wrvloe le uZO?, wmm HtWMa (totolTa? , New Language, Tho last man to propose a universal language is Prof. Plano. It I. ex"u w ithout Infliw 'Vt,'" & UquI ' fcifcl ALL TRAINS DAILY la.ao m m Bvv LOUIS :" liAH V 0t 2 Rlttn RUOnehw, New New Uttwirveito hie. pin. Care, nr.nted. " , and tear Si Lout via ew rmU a M.U Bore and w,a Gunl'ieaa, Mo. kUiuM Ulj, Utah, Ida ha haft Aeh whi.1, mmM aHUUl the ThlH N or tunnel brl.lge 411 Sb. Louta ond RooMo1 am AnI In threat ..ue Make wiia " via CHICAGO AND ALTON tnSi ea-- stor SHORT a. x. Boner. A --- Ai la tha of Miss Emmeline. "The face of a girl and the mind of a sage," was iniong the things he wrote. Two days later he received an answering letter from hts mother. "I can't understand about Miss she wrote. "She Is here la New York, and the house is in charge of her grandniece." cases nnd numbers are also at!o'lhhi It looks but it orj9L. may no duneem... W Ti TI "I tremely puzzled. That night he wrote his mother a long letter setting forth the charms Noel waited impatiently In the reception room. Presently he heard the swish of silk and Miss Emmeline ennie In. IU took her hand and held it firmly. Ive found her," ho said abruptly, the tme like you." She looked at him narrowly, "Will you marry me?" he asked. quietly. Her eyes opined wide In amaze ment. My dear Ihiv "Pardon mo," has slipped back." It was a choice bit of fiction, but it worked bemititiilly. she gave a little "F of dmay and sank Into a chair. "Oh." sin said, almost la tears "I was masquerading In these clot hr s'the first day you runic, and-wp an awful temptation." Noc-came over to the chair took one ot the hands In his. Will you marry me?" Mo felt tho little hand tight. n about his own. "You'll never till Aunt Emmeline shp whispered.-Bost- on (llnho. LOUli Xi I In the gray gloom of a winter after- V w ell, Wn-di,- A Ni y, W a8!1,LAKET r M,auny riTY, UTAH, H. H. MttPPEFjjvl.l' BBNVftB. |