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THE ARIZONA Itltt'UlUilCAU: SUNDAY MOJJfJIUU. JANUAllV 18. 100.1. THE ARE011 REFUBUC1X. ' PUBLISHED BT THE ARIZONA PUBLISHING CO. GEO. W. VICKERS. Pres. and Gen. Mgr. Exclusive Morning Associated Press Despatches. The only Perfecting: Press In Arizona. ' The only battery of Linotypes In Ari tona. Publication office: Sfi-2S East Adam Street. Telephone No. 47. Entered at the postofflce at Phoenix. Arizona, as mall matter of the second clasa. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By mall, daily, one year $9.00 Weekly, one year 2.00 Cash In advance. BT CARRIER. Dally, per montn t .75 Arizona visitors to the coast will find The Daily Republican on sale at the following places In Los Angeles: Hol lenbeck hotel news stand, and B. F. Gardner. 305 South Sprlne Street. UNlON!jP)LABtX PHOENIX. ARIZONA. JAN. 18, 1903. Corporations and Individuals. According to the statements of the demagogue, a corporation is but a syn onym for rapacity and greed. But demagogues have difficulty in making their assertions square with the facts as brought out by the coal famine in the east. Railroad corporations are to day charging five dollars per ton (2,240 lbs.) for coal at tide-water, while the independent companies and private in dividuals are charging ten dollars, eleven dollars, and as much more as they can get, for the same quantity. Reports from all sections where the coal famine prevails are of the same tenor. In no instance can extortion be c harged to the railroads and the great corporations engaged in handling coal. The robbery is all perpetrated by local concerns, individuals and firms, who have taken advantage of the scarcity of coal to put the screws on consumers. The fact is, when a howl against ""corporations" is made by an honest man it is nine times out of ten the out cry of ignorance; and when it is made by the demagogue and the grafter, level-headed people should refuse to ba stampeded. When any citizen of the United States undertakes an enterpiise which is too large for his individual strength, his first thought is to form a corpora tion, or to seek assistance from a cor poration already formed. Had all enemies of corporations suc ceeded in having their way, Arizona until now would have been little more than a breeding place for Apaches. discussion of the matter. Some of them wanted to substitute a resolution ad vocating the admission of Oklahoma, but it was finally decided that the com mittee on federal relations be in structed to bring in a report adverse to the resolution. Emmons, a minority member, will endeavor to make a scene by supporting a minority report, but the action of the caucus settles the matter. " "It .was not a question of what our personal opinions may be In this mat ter,' said Senator Hahn tonight. 'It was a political trick, pure and simple. We cannot afford to have the repub lican party in California taking any at titude which is opposed to the stand taken by the president, and on that basis the caucus decided that the reso lution was not to be adopted.' " Had the resolution prevailed it would have placed Senator Bard of California in an uncomfortable hole, for It would have shown that the United States senator from Hueneme misrepresents his constituents. As the Times naively admits that the resolution "would pre vail if it came to an open question on the floor of the senate," it was up to the Bard crowd to do some thimble rigging. Bard and the Los Angeles Times are the only influences in Cali fornia against the omnibus bill, and the underground wire running from Bard to the Times and from the Times to the fellow Hahn accounts for the readiness with which Hahn bobbed up when the string was pulled. However, the friends of Arizona have accom plished their main purpose; they have demonstrated that California is for the j admission of this territory, and Bard is still further discredited. Start a Brokerage Business We offer an excellent opportunity to one leliable representative in each locality to start a lucrative stock and grain commission busi ness. OUR PROPOSITION. We furnish all market quotations and market news by telegraph free of charge. We also furnish market literature of the highest order and full instructions how to handle th business. We allow you a liberal commission on all transactions. Our business is strictly legitimate, and every trade made through us is placed on the New York Consolidat ed Stock Exchange or the Chicago Open Board of Trade. OUR COMMON-SENSE SPECTUTIVE IE1IIKS are the clearest speculative letters ever written. They are free. We furnish the highest banking refer ences and require same from ou: representatives. We treat specula tion as a business, not as a get-rich-quick scheme. This is the chance of a lifetime to enter a good paying business with a first-class house. Write at once, as we will consider only one representative in each town. Full particulars on application. CRIM. BRltl IE & COMPANY 141 La Salle St., Bank floor, Chicago. Money to Loan at Low Rates For imi'.dine or on improved city property or in good outsMe towns. JUSI WHAT YOll WAST Now plan of payment. latereot decrease? If you pay. Our loans are made and arc pni' off fame t with a bunk, only you pay month ly. You do not mature stork to pay off a loai as in other IxiiMine aud loan associations .A borrower can piy off a lon any time ith . . : . .!.. i -i i . - - i r mil mm'-, ijrti4jt or iore-i ui ji .u wtllj' a Ion n oh 11 on or write our agent, E. K. VAM 'OK, Phoenix. J. KRXKST WAl.KKK, phoenix, or MARTIXJMI.E A HORSE t .. IVcveott o A. ORFILA or WII.LW 1'. HAYXEH. Tu.-son Stats Mutual Building & Loan As-cciatior C. J. WAi.E, rkx-., Ml P. Broadway, Lot) AUKelea. Cal. Ballard Pulmonary SANATORIUM for the cure of Consumption. PASADENA. CAL. M ElUCAL DIIIECTOI1. Dr. W. H. Ballard, Wiite for Free Illustrated booklet. Embarrassment for the Bard Push in California. For a week past, as our quotations from the California newspapers hav? shown, the members of the Californii legislature have been urgently request ed by their constituents to adopt a resolution requesting congress to pass the omnibus statehood bill. There was no politics in this demand for action by the statesmen at Sacramento, as it was clearly the wish of the people of California to have Arizona admitted, and republican papers insisted even more strongly than the democratic pa pers, that the legislature make a for mal expression of the sentiments of the state on the question. . In obedience to this general demand, a resolution was introduced in the state senate, and would have been adopted on Thursday had not the en emies of this territory invoked without authority the name of the president in opposition to the resolution. The reso lution happened to come 'from the hands of a democratic member, and this gave a fellow named Hahn from Pasadena a chance to charge that If the motion for adoption prevailed it would give the democrats a lot of "glory." This argument appealed to a few nar row republicans, but most effective was the argument that President Roosevelt was opposed to the omnibus bill. Even then, it was only possible to defeat the friends of statehood by resorting to a caucus. The Los Angeles Times, in a special dispatch from Sacramento, gives this account of the affair: "Senator Hahn of Pasadena turned a neat little political trick today, by which he deprived the democratic min ority of an expected opportunity to make political capital at the expense of the majority. It was all about a seem ingly innocent Joint resolution intro duced yesterday by Senator Sanford, a democrat, directing that the Califor nia senators and representatives In congress work and use all possible means to secure the passage of the om nibus statehood bill, now before con gress. The resolution seemed inocu ous, an' more of a gallery play than anything else to the majority, who paid but little attention to it, until Sanford tried to have the rules suspended, and the matter immediately considered. This the senate refused to do, but re ferred it to the committee on federal relations, of which Hahn is chairman. "Last night, Hahn saw the joker In the thing. If the resolution , prevailed the democrats would have much unde served glory. That it would prevail if It came to an open question on the floor of the senate was manifest, and Hahn therefore decided that it would be better for the republican majority to get together and consider the reso lution in caucus. Otherwise the repub lican majority might be placed In a false light, and might be subjected to some ridicule. "Accordingly a caucus was held this afternoon. At first some of the sena tors did not know what it was all about, I ut when it was explained io them that by adopting the resolution they would be opposing the policy of the executive of the nation, they woke lip, and for an hour there was a lively New Phases of an Old Question. London correspondents of American newspapers have so often predicted another clash between Russia and Tur key and a general European war as the result, that the reading rjublie is no longer inclined to take alarm at the repeated cries of "wolf." However, accounts from Russia describe popular feeling in that country as stirred up by the reports of the Bufferings of the people of Macedonia, and that the gov ernment is beginning to feel the same pressure that drove the emperor Alex ander II into the war of 1877. Now, as then official Russia, and for cogent rea sons, is unwilling, to have recourse to arms, and has therefore associated it self with Austria to bring" their joint influence to bear at Constantinople to try to induce the sultan in his own in terest to remedy the ills affecting the long-suffering Macedonians. All over Russia the Slavonic Benevolent society is making appeals to the people and receiving large sums of money for the relief of Macedonian refugees in Bul garia, and the Russian government is being urged to send the Red Cross agents into Macedonia to render aid to the sufferers on the spot. It all de pends upon the sultan whether this agitation will have a serious issue and take things out of the channel of di plomacy at an early date. The present is not the moment, how ever, that the Russian government would choose to begin warlike opera tions, even were it so disposed. The Black sea harbors are encumbered with ice, and for at least two months more the Balkan country is unfavorable for campaigning; there is, therefore, still time for the griefs of the Macedonians to be settled peaceably. Buf associated with them is a matter which in any case is likely to give rise to some dis turbance in the politics of southeast ern Europe. It is no lunger a secret that the Rus sian government considers the time ha? come to release itself from the obliga tions concerning it3 Black sea fleet im posed by the treaty of Paris in 1856 after the Crimean war. The clause binding Russia not to construct a war fleet in the Black sea was denounced Immediately after the Franco-German war. but that forbidding Russian war ships to enter into it from or pass out of it to the Mediterranean re mained. It is now intended to get rid of this last restriction, and the formal demand on the sultan for permission for four torpedo boats to pass from the Mediterranean to the Black sea is the first step in raising the question. The British government, being nat urally interested in preventing a dis turbance of the equilibrium in the Med iterranean, has protested vigorously at Constantinople but up to the present has not been supported by any of the other powers signatory of the treaty of Paris. Under the circumstances, therefore, there does not appear any reason to apprehend disturbance of the peace of Europe over the military as pect of the question of the Dardanelles; If any trouble should occur it would be in the event of an armed interven tion by Austria and Russia to put an end to the disorder in Macedonia and Albania. The other, question is a mat ter for diplomatic arrangement unless the British government sees fit to fol low up its protest single handed and oppose the passage of Russian war ships through the Dardanelles, either way, by force. But that is hardly probable, for no one government un supported would venture lightly to break the peace when there are so many jiowerful reasons for maintaining it. It should not be difficult to find other means for redressing the balance of power in the Mediterranean which would be deranged by the new conditions. eject Congressman Roberts from his seat in the house of representatives, will protest against the seating or Smoct. For awhile, it was rvipposed that the opposition to Mr.' Smoot had been si lenced by the statement that he Is not a polygamic in practice, especially when it was pointed out in his behalf that his case was not on all-fours with that of Roberts. Roberts was proved to be a polygamist, and upon that ground he was excluded from congress, although there had been no qu.'-stio'.i as to the legality of his election, and it has oeen assumed generally that Sni-.ot would be regarded in a different light. But the reply has been promptly mice that Mr. ctinof.'t is, it possible, a wore offender than was Roberta, sO:rv Avlu-reas Roberts was a mere individual and was guilty of practicing polygamy personally, Smoot as one of the apos tles ol the Mormon church is chirgea Hr with upholding the practice as an r.rticle of faith and is largely responsi ble for the practice by the membership that, in other words, Smoot Is at fault In not seeing to it that the practice or polygamy is not abandoned in I'tah. It is. of course, impossible to predict v.rat the attitude of the senate will be toward this contention. The senate has always been very Jealous of i s prerogatives, and is never disposed tc permit outsiders to Interfere with its affairs. It is th? sole judge of the qual ifications of its memliers, and it may choose to ignore the clamor for the re jection of Senator Smoot. The argu ments In favor of seating the new suti flor will be strengthened by the fact that there has been no suspicion of cr luptlon in connection with his election, and by the further fact that personally he is an estimable citizen and a it it'.e-r.-.an. But tefore he gets through with the Woman's Christian Temperance Unl -r ho wijl know that he has been in a tight. . mm When you want fin INCUBATOR Get the 10S ANGLLES. It will suit you. Send for New Catalogue HENRY ALBERS, Los Angeles, Cdi. $890 to Loam on Real Estate or First Class Chattel Mortgage Oldest and largest bnnK in Southern California ISU4S W. I! LI MAM, Pr sident IIERVUN W. IIILMN. Yice-Prt sident J. A. CKAVCS, 2nd Vi e-PrcsiJent CHARICS SEVUR Cahirr CI STAY HEUHNN. Asst-CsWer MARIO H HuLlMlN, 2nd A-st-Cu hur the national BanK cf flrizoiu PHOENIX, The Farmers & Merchants Sank OF LOS ANGELES', CAL. Capital Paid Up - - $500,000.00 Surplus CSL Profits - - $ 1,093,213.25 SPE(IL SAFE DEPOSIT DEPARIMENT and ST0R4CE VAULTS jj CAPITAL paid up) W , a ,n wu i f i n r n r-1 v c $1000,000 50,000 EMIL. OANZ SOL. LEWIS. S. OEEHFELDER J. J. SWEENEY... President Vice President Cashier ...Assistant Cashier THE VALLEY BANK OR I' II ) B N I X PAID UP CAPITAL SCKPLV'S W.M. CHRISTY. Ptes'.dent. V. O. FU1.WILER. Cashier. JIOO.tXH) 2."., OiiO J. C. KIRKPATKIOiv, Vice President. LLOVJ P.. CHRISTY. Asst. Cashier. Drafts Issued on all of the Important cities of the L'riltd S'ates and Europe. Dij-'-omit commercial paper and da a Kenerel banking buness. Office hours, D a. m. to 3 p. m. DIP.ECTORS: J.I. 11. Sherman, Wm. Christy, E. J. Eer.nltt, J. C. Kirkpatrlek K. C. Hatch. V. L. Pulwil. r, Lloyd 14. Christy. CCHP.ESPON'DKNTS: Amer'cin Erchanijo National Rank, Now York; Ameri can Exrhatifo National Rank, Chirnto: l-'irst National Hark, Los Armies; Rank ot Arizona, Preacott, Arizona; tiio Anrl -California Rflk. San i'rancisco Cal. Kodaks and Photo Supplies OF. VII OPiSG PKISIIVG EVLARGIVG VitWS ."!)f:l Atlirn f-ivfti to -'il r(tw HAWS AM? P C! 213 SOU!! BROADWAY 3 VT L.rM Jt K,J. LOS ASGELES, CA. U)Q SixtK Average Hotel Only Home-Like Hotel iu Phoenix Kverything New, Neat and Clean Elegantly Furnished Sunny Rooms II. M. CHIP' I AM, Prop. Transacts a General EanLing Business Home Savings Bank and Trust Company PHOENIX. AP.IZ. Charles F. Ainsworth Pi ' sident K. H Greene Vice Prrsidt nt Frank Ainswoilh Ca?h. and Sec'y. Authorized Cap'ttl $100.00". Ilsvrs 9 a. in. ti 3 p. m. Interest on deposits. No tomniiseicii on Loans. Dirt j-tois Charles F. Aln? worth, Harvey J. Lee, W. C. Foster. Frank Air.sworth, P.. II. Greene. THE PALACE Barber Shop and Bath Rooms Should receive your patronage when In Prescott. Everything strictly modern and first-class. Palace Buildir.fr, Mon tezuma street. I N BAIILV. Proo.. Better known a "rv." ;ir.p;e Meals ",0 cents. Table hjiti'd week. A it I Sanitary Plumbing When in nerd of a Porcelain D,:th-Tui. Ptationary Wash S.;,nd ot to date Lath Koom Fixtures, cal! arm ht us estimate the u.fi. up E. S. THOMPSON Licensed AUCTIONEER. office 1 South .First Ave; auction room 33 South First avenue Garden City Restaur ant Trouble Beginning for Senator Smoot. Apostle Reed Smoot has been elected United States senator for the state ot Utah, but his troubles" have only bepun. The Woman's Christian Temperance Union, which has a large membership throughout the country, and all of the allied organizations which aided to It seems to be the prevailing opinion in Washington that the fate of the omnibus statehood bill will be deter mined this week. The outlook is not discouraging, by any means. Senator Quay is standing pat and says he will win, and he is seldom mistaken as to the outcome of his own enterprises. R. H. GREENE, 42 N. Center ' i We cordially approve of the sugges tion that if a new county iw created by the Twenty-second legislature It should be named Quay. In view of the great Pennsylvania senator's gallant fight for the admission of Arizona, all repub licans in the territory have forgiven the "Quay letter" of the last campaign. Little Jame (Concerning the Legislatures Which Have Sat In Arizona). Th' Twenty-Secon's on Hands now an' they is no tellin' what's goin' to happen to Arizor.y in th' next two months. Th lart Legislachcr was call ed by Governor Hugus, th' Tin Horn an' th' name stuck. Th' wun before that was called th' Mewl hocas a man came down here f'um Jeroine what said he was a agent of th' British Gov ernment gettin' in Muni"hins fer th' war in South Afriky which was goln' on then. Hs said some oT his frens was buyin' Mewl.- In Miasoury tut thoy was cheaper in Arlzony than they v.v-j's any wheres else. They was wunst anuther L'-gisl-u her which Iips commanded th" Respex of th' Whole Territory. It didn't h.tva nuthin fer rail. It wasn't a Commer shul IJ idy but it was gatherin' in things fer a Rainy Day. Sorre of th' Pnliytishur.s who didn't like it called it th' Thievin Thirteenth. Xmi? of Its members succeeded in brak'n' into th' Poor House but some of 'cm rrot par doned out of th' Penit"nshary an' was restored (o the Rite" or Citizenship an' others is a fngitif f'um Justice jit. Th' members o.' th' .Twenty-r.cccn' who Is now In town soz they isn't goin' to do anything to put a Stun; on thvir E:cuchon so's 'at Posterity'!! lo k huh on 'em with Contcmp' an' Disdain. Th' best way fer a Lep-isla her to do to a kwlre Iminoi tallrty is to do nothin' a' tall. As sron as a law makin' body gits to makin" laws they puts their Feet into it. They's too many Laws now. This Twenty-Socon' Lcg'.slarhcr se, th' only trubble they h-ive is to git start i'. They rrz "T .: ' r : u:i of ur. 'at kr.ovv.-; how In WiX? ch" L-.v-d !'n' tl-al';! Sc-r.ter lvc. which !" rrnt how la New York. I; they was r-f.r.'.e wun else of us "at Knvle how we Pruther hav,- him f r Senior Ivu is agin th' Ate Hour law a-.' th' .iir.eis' l:::on which was th' H":st of our Strcnth in th' last F.!v kh'i:i. but we got to g-t Rrar.es whrrever we can rind 'tin. S ve gess we git to elect Sorter Ivus but wp aint goin' to do nothin' cbv in th' n'xt sixty days 'at we'll be s;shamed of." LITTLR J AMI'S. o I CURRENT COMMENT 1 Y Sensible Fouth Americans. Argentina ar.d Chile are ( l. tively poor nati:;r.s. The f.j ir.-.T ha: i'.evel ope I lapidly. but It has m t with mi--fertures wfc'th iiuvc :.ct given it financial aial commercial prngcss ac c rding to the measure o," i t increase in population. Chile, en the ether blind, has been ginvi'ig but slowly and is today les pn.spercus than v, her, it seised the famous filiate beds to guarantee itself p.ji!st bankruptcy. On these accounts the agreement whbh the countries have entered nto to dispose cf their win Miles is u matter icgarding which thty are to gratulated. They have be abcut territory dining tle la; years, and an end th: ships. The by the way. which would not discredit the best navy in the world. Th"y can row devote thlr naval money to other purposes nr leave it in the hands of the people, v.ivi are pretty heavily taxed. 11 evidence Journal. fa iet a good meal. Private .'corps for K famine. 22-24 Kat Washington Et l WILLIAM EVANS, S.-'X'. ma. St. CI1INU FUN Proprietor ft X& i i rv ' r-x :s . -.i OF THE nA'.lf (1 m K. A. DSEIIL SI 25 p m h it ii Ol CDs u to SO per cert discount. The greatest opportunity ever offered to the people of Mari copa County to secure the best makes of footwear at and below factory prices. We do this to make room for our Hew Spring Stock, which will soon be on the way. Below is a partial list of the good things. Come early before the sizes are broken. Oft? ft mm mmm f U9 01 a AND CONTINUES UNTIL F03THER NOTICE . b- cm- , W mi angry j ist fifteen I 1 as this jealousy Is r.nw 't IS loy v. ill nt net d their war- M iey have soti'.o excellent ones. j Aldrich Euyg Some Ccal. Senator Aldrbh. xvho opposed th? Klisttr.fiiin of the tariff on coal in the h debate in congress last week, has been caught short of fuel at his Warwick ivecK castie. tri His agent went gunning for the rc- f2 rjuisitr supply in many directions, and 1 1 J finally in the little factory village- of j M ("entreville in the Pawtucket valley a purchase cf sfveral tons win made at :H $lr a ton with $3 a tor. for cartage. The 1 1? total price of $18 a ton Is one of thojfi highest paid hereabouts since the coal ! famine becam? a quct!on of national fc) tm porta nee, j The coal dealer who supplied Sena- 1$ tor Aldrich j-aid to an inquirer, "And 'w he pai l the price. M..." Which brought I 19 ... . . 1 iiif iui k i ":.p';nse: .ni ne nas got it to iay with, no matter if it g es to $l.M'i) a ton." Provilence Pispauh. o i KO I if 1 1 " TIT AUDI T IT. CJO pairs nurt & PacUanl s $;".0.1 nu n's !".:ie : ho s, cut price Srt pairs Lilly I'.rackett s fr,.i ni.-n':; tine .-iio.-.-, cut price 0 pairs Torr y, Curtiss & Ti :-. il full iii-.vs patent leather, $7.CT grade Hucklngham & Hecht Army f-in.es, f1..") grade, cut price lh:ckinghatii & Hecht Mciiiilai- i : s, fr.'.O grade, cut price All our Men's Patent Calf and Ideal Kid shoes. ..Ot) grade, cut price All our Men's I'atent Cal." and Ideal Kid Shoer. $r,.00 grade, cut price (2 pairs Men's Vcloiir Calf. V.ttx Calf and Viei Kid ha Is, latest style, ?!.0U grade .' Men's roliil leather workinv shoes, $3.00 srade, tut price Men's Satin C'.f dress pliocs, lace or congress, $2.e0 grade, cut price Men's solid working shi?s. $1.7.1 grade, cut price 118 pairs Kdwin C. Hurts' women's S'i.00 shoes, all styles, cut price 40 pairs N'ewburypoit Ideal Kid. l.ouie heel, turn shoes. So. 00 grade, cut price 40 pairs Women's Velour Caif. i:ox Calf and Vici Kid. wcit sh. es, $.",..",0 grade, cut price SO pairs Women's Ideal. Kil and Pat. I.ea., welt lice, ?".."0 and ?:!! grade, cut price Women's Advertised Vicerine JJ.r.o shoes in Patent Leather a:e! Kid. tut price 7j jiairs women's turned and welt shoes, small sizes, regular $3 00, $1.00 and $.".00, cut price IS,'..."!! $:;..- :,.;.' ; t .'?.". o 1 .s. Sl.OO AH Our Warm Holiday Slippers, All .New Goods, f Aetna Cos! 56 pairs of Misses' AVelt and Turn Spiir.g Heel Shoes, $'.ro grade 40 pairs Misses' Shoes, Good Wearing, cut price Child's Shoes, S'i to lO'i. $l-"0 grade , Child's ftutton and IJice Shoes. 5 to 8. per pair Ha. by Shoes, 1 to 3, per pair $i.ro ... ."( ... :$.! II Aside from this you will find many Special Bar gains in our Bargain Bin "They say that artificial light and baldness ate co.vely alli:d." "They are." "TIrw do yen know?" v. ny. any nx.i can see tint the bald- ! ii heads ::re always next to" the foot-i C' lights. I'.rooklyn Kagle. o Our "little hin'vn brthors" In the Philippines lind 'I .'.i'"eidty in un derstanding why the I'rJted States should prohibit chicken fighting and applaud prize fighting and foot ball. fii il I IB I il 1 1 H S E M . .H U U a CD H B0HSs'Ny 71 mm LOWEST PRICE MAKERS OF SHOES IN MARICOPA COUNTY .. . ; -. p SSSB