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Show - !!! eaiim i. nm.... ; T -a NORTHWEST NOTES Fire broke out in the Hyde block nd Fiaternal halls, two of tho largos' buildings In Spokane occasioning 'f heavy monetary loss. The strixo on the Tonopah & Gold field railroad Is over and trains an again running as usual. The men went back to work on the company's terms John Healy committed suicide on s Union Pacific train between Shermar and Cheyenne, while en route from Sai Francisco to Fort Chester, N. Y.. cut ting his throat with a pocket knife aft er locking himself in the toilet A man supposed to be HJnlmar Nllls son of Yacbet, Wash., committed sul side In Portland by Jumping from tht Ford street bridge Into Jorfcrsor street, 117 feet below. His body wa reduced almost to a pulp. Two large Industries of Taconn wero swept away by flro on tho 10th -'mailing a property loss of about U25, 000. They wore the mill and plant o' the North Shore Lumber compnny. ant the Llndstrom-Ilerg Cabinet Works, in corporated. Hen C. nellamy, of Laramie, Wyo., '.r been granted a first-class license is n civil engineer and surveyor by 'he dtate hoard of examining engi teers, being tho youngest engineer in 'he west. Mr. nellamy Is not yet 21 ears of age. Frank Tucker has been arrested a Granite, Ore . on auspiclon of being ar tscompllrc to the Harvey K. Drowr murder nt Daker City Tucker made i statement while under the influence of liquor and this caused his being taken Into custody Judge Ira A. Town, a prominent member of the Tacoma bar. was stricken strick-en with paralysis In his omce and is In. a serious condition at his home. He came to Tacoma from Albert Lea, Minn., in 18S4 and was one of the early mayors of Tacoma. The Jury in the Hlnes murder case, at Goldfleld, returned a verdict of not guilty. Hlnes wHa charged with rout-der rout-der in the first degree for Killing Count Podhorskl, a Russian nobleman, who bad ruined Hlnes' wife. The killing occurred In Goldfleld, March 21 laat John McOurn came Into Carson City, 'Nevada, bedraggled and exhausted, and relates a series of thrilling adventures adven-tures through which be declares he hat passed during throe days time. i saya for hours he floated In the swamps of Washoe lake and escapea only ty crawling through mud to dry land The houso of bishops of the Eplsco-I Eplsco-I pal church has oreatcd the missionary (districts of Utah, Idaho, Novada, Wyoming, westorn Colorado nnd Kearney, comprising western Nebraska. Ne-braska. Bishop 8paldlng Is assigned to Utah, Funston to Idaho, Graves to Kearney. President Fred A Miller of tho Lar-nmle, Lar-nmle, Hahns Peak & Pacific, whoso offices are In Laramie, Wyo., denies emphatically the report from Donvei that the Union Pacific has made an offer to buy the road to prevent competition. com-petition. Ho saya the story Is "simply hot air." The Great Western hotel, built In 18GS, tho oldest hotel building In Wyoming, has been condemned by the building Inspector of Cheyenne nnd will be torn down. At the time of erection erec-tion It was the flncat hotel In Cheyenne, Chey-enne, but for many years it has been an eyesore. The Union Pacific Is rushing a spo clat train of canned salmon from San Francisco to Chicago in competition with the Santa Fc, which received a similar train at tbe same time. The distance by way of the Union Pacific Is 2,338 miles, and by the Santa Fe It Is 2,578 miles. The Christina saloon In Butte wa held UP flnd M19.3S, together with three gold watches, carried off by the three masked men resembling the three men who held up tbe Cash saloon sa-loon twenty-four hours before. There wero nine men in the place when the robbery occurred. Owing lo tho great number of sheep which" bavii been dying on the range In Wyoming, tin exhaustive diagnosis of the cause has been made, and In the heads of tho dead animals havo been found small grubs which were supposed to lmvo caused denth by bor lng Into tho brnln. Stomach trouble, Iljurt mid Kldnc nllmeiHH, rim Iki iilckly corrected with it ir.'4t:il lion known lo drugglHtp every w lie runs Dr Sluxm'a Itcjdornllve. The prompt nod sur ri lng rvlb-f which thW rumolv liu'iicdliit-lv hrlugi U en llrely duo lolt.-t H'tonttlvn iiclTou iimmi tin- co itrollliig ncrvrH of the Klmiincli, elo. Fortalu by I'. J Wndiwnrth. The annual meeting of the Wyomlnj. Sheep and Wool Growers' association will be held In Laramie in January, and Colonel E. J. Bell, the vice president presi-dent of the association, estimates that between 300 and 400 delegates ano visitors will be present, including sheep men from every county In the state. Montana railroads must obey the law relative to the posting of delayed trains and the reporting of accidents In which lives have been lost or prop; erty of the value of 2,000 destroyed, or they will bo prosecuted. This Is the essence of two ultimatum Just Is sued by the state board of railroad commissioners. The physicians attending John D. Ryan, In Butte, reported that th patient shows marked signs of Improvement Im-provement Dr. Billings, the specialist who came from Chicago, expressed the belief that Mr. Ryan, while still dan 6erously ill, would recoveu There are no great alarming symptoms, bot the patient has become weakened by his long fight against typhoid. Colonel John G. Boylev aoldler. lawyer law-yer and Journalist, dle$ at North Yakima, Ya-kima, Wash., on Oct. , aged 62 years. Colonel Boyle was born In Ohio ano served through the civil war. After the close of the war he studied law. After being admitted to the bar he became be-came assistant attorney general ol Texas, becoming one of the editors of the Post. At the time of his death be was manager of tho Daily Republic oi "Suflered day and ulght the- tor i ent of Itching plies, Nothing helped me until I used Dqaji.'s OJilmciii. It surod me poruiauei.tiy." Hon. John R. (Janet, ftlayor, Glrartl, Ala. |