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Sj Jf. r BISBEE DAILY REVIEW REGULAR MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. (METAL MARKET.' I WEATHER FORECAST. Washington. April 11. For Arizona: Fair Tuesday and Wednesday. few York, April 9. Silver : Mexican dollars. 43c: JytolVrnZ ""-"vand unchanged. sry ctt - no. zn vou vii. BISBEE, ARIZONA, TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 12, 1904. It will be well to Remember that the Review is the only Paper receiving and publishing Associated Press Dispatches. These are received Eleiy cHight, hence authentic Itoar news makes the Review Valuable as an Advertising Medium - ,. --" tfK m BBbait f i SWkw ir TELEBBAPHI MARKET EPORT REVIEW ADDS A DAILY MARKET LETTER OF INVALUABLE SER VICE TO INVESTORS. IN IMMEDIATE TOUCH With Michigan, New York and Boston Markets Placing Business Men cf Bisbee and Vicinity in Intimate Touch With the Financial World and Stock Markets of the EasL COURTS AND MILITARY CLASH IN COLORADO OVER CONTEMPT CASES JUDGE STEVENS, SITTING IN OURAY, DECLARES ADJUTANT GEN- ERAL BELL AND CAPTAIN WELLS IN CONTEMPT FOR NOT COMPLYING WITH WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS AND,PRODUCING PRESIDENT MOYER IN COURT. , Court Orders Sheriff to Arrest the Two Officers Judge Severely Criticizes Governor Peabody Declares Them in Insurrection Against the Courte General Bell Stated "That Only Way the Sheriff Can Take Him Is Over the Dead Bodies of Every Soldier Under His Com mand" Governor Defies tne Courts, Too. RUSSIA STILL HAS DELAY MICROBE OBJECTS TO PRESENCE OF CHIN. ESE TROOPS ON MANCHU. RIAN FRONTIER. FLOODS IN MANCHURIA . 4. . . . -: BATTLESHIP KENTUCKY. The U. S. S. Kentucky, the model battleship of the United States Navy, after serrlco rs tiagshlp of Uncle Sam's fleet In tno Orient, ia to bring back Admirai "Bob" Brans, whose term of sea du ty has expired. En route home the Kentucky will be visited by the German Emperor, who has long desired to see this ship, and will also have an opportunity to renew acquaintance with hl-J favorite Amer ican. "Fighting Bob" Evans. ...;. 4. . .2.4.A, 4.AAAA. "SIC 'EM" THE BULLET! M SAYS SOLOMONVILLE PAPER FURISHES INFORMATION ON STATUS OF RAILROADS. BUILDING INIO GRAHAM CHICAGO TO TAKt OVER STREET RAILWAYS CITIZENS VOTED OVERWHELM' INGLY AT ELECTION LAST WEEK TO TAKE OVER ALL STREET RAIL WAY LINES OF CITY. Tv.o Surveying Parties Now in the Field Above Solomonville Two Lines Trying for Right-of-Way i Through Box Canyon, Like Two. Trains Trying to Pass on Samel Track. TheTe Is just one item or real inter est. In this section at present, and that Is rallioad news. It Is becoming .nm.n wiimpTwipo for a KnrvevhlC 4Jk LUUUUVU ww.".- -w Jlfc,C.U,U& V. owwm " w. .- - 4 party composed of from four to six. as can not be taken over by the city Chicago. April 11. Chicago shows the way that will lead the cities of America to municipal emancipation. Today the first step3 were taken to ward the acnulsition by the city ol that control of the street railways, for which ihn citizens votea over whelmingly at last Tuesday's election. The citizens, by their votes in favor of the proposition submitted to them on the little ballot, have declared in favor of municipal ownership. They have declared against the re newal of any street railway franchise. i nev have declared in favor of the licensing of such street railway lines persons, dressed in Khaki, and armed to the teeth, to drive Into Solomon at the earliest practicable moment under the law, The street railways now operated -" w The street railways now operaieu vllio late In the evening, and strike jby prlTate corporaUons will be llcens out up the river the following morn- , ordmances f0r (Special to Review ) Boston, April 11. The copper shares interests laic low today, fnghteneo. apparently by a. Lawson letter, ia a ..ew York Sunday paper, which sug gested a million dollar lawsuit against .togeis and the gas interests, fao tar .nls controersy has signally failed to jring any new selling in copper s'..ia. .1 is only a mark of influence, te rg o discourage the bull interests trom working lor the advance. Thore is ,omo new investment, luy.es f ruP ..ors eery day, and the floating eup ly 13 getting ery small. Conditions -ro all favorable to an advance lu ..rices, and we cannot help thiokio. hat the market will be higher betu e .t is lower. Amalgamated is burp-Ib-.ng everybody by its firmness, as ra l3o Corper Range, Shannon and Bingham. Rai'road Stocks. New York. April 11. The stock market marked time today, specula Hon is waiting upon the government report. The concensus of opinion- is that" it '-woald make an unfavorable showing for winter wheat, possibly no tetter than SO. The condition of the crop, however, has improved since that compilation of the government'3 figures. At this hour, the report has not been published, and traders sold today because the market was dull, and lost their stocks. As soon as prices begin to harden they will buy back. Conditions have not changed. Wo expect to see the UDward movement resumed tomorrow. and It is our belief that the next up swing we shall have a greater and more legitimate advance than has ever been seen. The sentiment of the best interests here are decidedly bullish. The -people who are buying the market are in evidence of that side .or the' first time in many months. It means something; We are still bull ish on Union Pacific. We think it3 weakness deceptive, and that It will have another sharp advance this week. We are bullish oo Rock Island com mon for a turn of five or six pr cent, and that is all that we can reasonably expect at this time, but after this stock has been put to 30, conditions seem xll right, and the price will be carried further. The right people are behind the stock again. Would advise Its purchaso on all weak spots. Total sales today 467,500 shares. o Ouray, Colo., April 12. District Judge Theron Stevens today declared Adjutant General Sherman M. Bell and Captain Bulkley Well3 to be in contempt of court for not compl)Ing with the writ of habeas corpus which required them to bring beforo the court' loaay Charles H. Moyer, President or Blocking Roads Flooding Railway. Rendering Country Impassable Nt Enough Russians North of Yalu to Stop Jap Advance Long Expected Engagement May Never Occur. the Western Federation of Miners,; whom they are holding in confinement j at reiiunue. xae cuuci ucucu u; it Corbett to arrest the two officers, and Judge Stevens severely criticised the course of Governor James II. Pea body and the military authorities, say ing they appeared to be In Insurrec tion against the courts. President Mover was arrested on March 2S, on the charge of flag dese cration, and when released under bond several days later, was- Immediately 3elzed by the military authorities. General Bell has said that thB reason for holding Mojer as a prisoner is a "military necessity." After refusing rr iwrmlt the fillnc of a return to the writ today, Juage Stevens -ordered that VjOyer be discharged from custody, and Issued an order of- attachment against General Bell and Captain Wells', and assessed a fine ot $500 each, and expressed regret that the Governor was not before the court, as he considered him equally guilty with Bell and Wells. Bev'l Defies Court. Telluride, April 11. When General Sherman M. Bell waa informea today that Judge tetevens, of the District Court of Ouray county, had ordered himself and Captain Wella arrested and confined in the Ouray county jail on the charge of contempt of court, he said: "If Sheriff corbett takes us to Ouray, It will have to be over the dead bodies of all the soldiers undei my command In this tvmnty. Moyer will never be produced In court until Governor Peabody orcers me to do so, unless he escapes and goes over the range on snow snoes." o Russia Still Protests, fcondon, April 12. The Tientsin cor. respondent of the Standard" says: "Rus3ia has again protested against the presence ot Chinese troops on the Manchurian frontier, and has demand ed thlr withdrawal to within the five- milo limit ot the Great Wall. Peabody Defies, Too. Denver. ADrll 11. When Governor corpus in the Moyer case, he said: Judgo Steven3, of C-uray, in ordering the arrest of General Bell and Captain Wells for contempt of court, in not complying with the writ of habeas cornus I nthe Mover case, he said: "Wo will not recognize the writ of at tachment, and the military authorities will not appear In courL Neither will wo give up Moyer. If the District .Court of Ouray lis to be allowed to In terfere In carrying out the plans of the military under martial law, there is no reason why justices of the peace might not, with equal authority, inter vene and render the military absolute ly powerless and impotent." Heavy Rains in Manchuria. London, April 11. According to the correspondent of the Times at New. chwang, who cables from there under date of April S, says: "Heavy rains have flooded the railways and. blocked the roads throughout Southern Maa cauna. Held telegraphs have been Interrupted, and the country is im passable. "rtjiKsfan offiwr.3." save tho eorre. apondeat,',conslders the Japanese lost the chance ot occupying rsew vnwang, where the defenses are now amply supfficient to repulse any attack." .Not Enough Russians. London. April 2. The correspond ent ot the Times at Seoul, cabling un der date of. April 7, says: "jt is oe lioved the Russians, north of the Yalu are not sufficiently numerous to wlth- stand the Japanese advance" for any considerable distance beyond the river. FEARS DF ATTACKlSTEEL WORKS FOREMAN BY EXILES IN HAYTI Port Au Prince, Haytl, April ii. Fear is felt here of an at- tack by numerous Haytlea ex- lies, organized by General Jim- inez, the former president of & the Dominican Republic, and now gathered in Dominican ter- rltnrv. The government baa h declared a state of siege in all the departments ot the repub- He, ana the frontiers are guard- ed by strong forces. The feeling ! of unrest is very marked, and ! the imminent possibility of an outbreak is causing serious ap- prehension. ing. Two such parties axe new located above Solomonville. One Is in the vicinity ot the Brown ranch, and an other located at the Box canyon. These parties are represents uic a- 8lgat ona Ejistern. We never heard of the, vll Arizona Eastern until the other cay, ed to run only until ordinances for . . . ... J , -. t... l.n their acquisition can oe uraa u u Mueller law and submitted to a rote of the people. ThU Is a. condition so close to muni cipal ownership that victory Is already Marking also the day tiiat showed the city of Chicago in the van ot the ShOT BY UNKNOWN PARTY Pueblo, April 11. Whilo . nhotit to hoard a train at Beaso- mer Junction this evening. C. A. Smlti, foreman at the Steel Works, was shot-In the head by an unknown party, and will .. nMt.nM. Ala. as (Yin raanlf nf the wound. His assailant is supposed to have been one ot the number ot men with whom ho had quarreled over the 3ub- Ject ot using coal mined by non- union men. So far the police have secured no evidence that would warrant the arrest of any one. ' May Never Occur. " London. ADril 11. The correspond. ent ot the Times with Japanese head quarters, sends the following, dated April 11, by wireless telegraphy via Wei Hal Wei: "It Is doubtful wheth er the long expected engagement for possession of the Yalu River t?IU over take place, and certainly not unieis the Russians have been reinforced more heavily than my information leads me to believe. It must bo re membered that unless the Japanese se cure the north side of the Yalu, with a now base by July, the land move ments from Korea will become practi cally impossible." "The Russians desire to get th.4 Japanese forces inland, with the hops of enveloping them, while the Japan, ese want to get inlana because the country affords a more suitable thea tre ot operations." hon a brand new -railroad presloent flght for mumicipal ownership of street appeared on the scene in Tucson, and ranw.aygt u,e fight'to secure 7fcent -was intxoducea arouna as tne presi- TO renewei &&, denL I without wasting any time, Corpora- All the time, however, the president U(m Counsel 0man. today directed of thl3 new railroad (on paper) was , w Browning, special coon- Jn close company with E. A, McFar- geJ f(jr ti(j cUy to take 3teps for an Jand, assistant general manager ot the appeaI 8upreme court in the Arizona Colorado railroad, and Epes Mnu casg decided jinst the city by Randolph, president of the Gila Valley, Ju(go Grcsgcnp ta ae United States Globe and Northern, and it may be cQur put down now that the Arizona East- 0 ra is an offspring of the Southern Pa- jhiie. Sinners. dfic The FIsk Jubilee Singers will be at The first clash between the railroad n Kouie next Tuesday even- .forces occurred in Pinal cornty it . . d c Tne attrac -week. The Sant Fe people had four U(m wm j,key dfaw ft crowded house . j a ., nmrir nn the north side h. r.iii River, near Kelvin, when a ... ,,.,. aim ni deputy sheriff arrived and served an here Jagt eTen,ng of Mr. iajancUon xaworn. to br tke officials MacKenile will probably mark at the Arizona ft Eastern, who claim- cl09iag a ltLfKe deaj tor a mining ei ttat particular spot as the property 1 ,a ArUona waiCB the am ot - .. tlMit iinatnftr. Thn lttl w ,- - .-- . . .-jt of tne new ru - - - - lead to blia a ne from Demlng on tie go'ntiera Pacific down the Olla (Coatinaed oa Pe Eight,) Mnrmn-' S, "MaftCenzie have had hand 'for "some time. The matter will likely be doged up within a few days. o Curb Letter. IshDemlnc. ADrll 11. Today's was another day of Inactivity in the curb market. There was a very heavy de mand for Calumet & Arizona at $112 being bid for large blocks, but this, failed to bring any out, $115 to $117 being asked. 1 The demand is duo to the report that the recent strike cf ore in the Oliver shaft is cuprite, or ore that runs 881-2 per cent copper. The strike ot ore in the same shaft two weeks ago was sulphide, or ore that runs 67 1-2 per cent copper. This In creases the value of this property thousands and thousands of dollars. and we predict that it will sell much higher very shortly. L. S. & P. was also in good demand, and sold from $158 to $160, closing at $157.50 bid for small lots. It is on its way to the $200 mark. Watch it Strength was perhaps more appa rent In Junction than any of the Bo nanzas, that Is, when range of price Is conceded. It opened with sales at 26 1-4, and sold at 29 14c during the day. closing at 28 old and 30 asaea. Fifty dollars Is predicted for this by people who should know something about this property. We consider it cheap. There waa nothing iolnif !n Calumet and. Pittsburg, or Pittsburg and Duluth, tut we feel fiat both ot these stocks will soon show eome'ac- WINNlPtG IS BLING BADLY WASHED BY RED RIVER FLOODS St. Paul, April 11. A special to the Pioneer Press from Winnipeg says: "At midnight the flood water from the Red River is flowing down Main Street, and the barns ol the Winnipeg Electric Railway are being washed by a strong current, and It i expected they will be swept away. The water is rising -rapidly, and is endangering the bridges. Since yesterday the Red River has risen nineteen feet, and the people along its bank, arc fleeing to places ot safety. From the Land of Snow and Ice A. M. MacKENZIE ARRIVES WITH SMALL PARTY FROM MICHIGAN. Funeral of Shorty Corson. Tho funeral of W. C. Corson, the officer who was killed In Douglas, will be held in that city today at 12:30, and the ceremonies will bo under the rharce of the Bisbee Lodge of Elks, of which he was a member. Exalted Ruler W. B. Kelly and the officers ot the lodge will go to Douglas tnis morn Ing to carry out the ritual ot the dead. I Spiritualistic mediums are adver tising spring styles in raps. raiia delptfa Record. Calumet Still Has Four Feet of Snow. Chicago Freed From Winter Element and Was Clear and Fine Floods An. tlcipated en Rcute, But Did Not Ma terialize Michigan Strong . In the Faith as to Bisoee. tivlty when a few facts about tieee properties, aro made known, -which I understand will be ,soon. They are bargains now. Don't, wait until the move. Meeting of Council. The Council will hold a special meeting tonight to consider the bonds of Marshal Snodgras3 and City Clerk HIck3, which were refused at the last meeting because of errors ia tho man ner in which tho bonds wero drawn. Th bonds have been made to comply with the law, and there Is no doubt but that they will bo accepted tonlghL Besides the business above the aud iting of the old Council's books will be attended to. Thn committee aDnolnted at the last meetlug will make their report tonlghL o -Washington, D. C. April 11. Frank Ooddington was today appointed 'post master at Parker, Tice Louis W, Sin clair, Tcaoved. A. M. MacKenzie, of the firm ot Mor row ana 3lacrt.enzie, tho mining brok ers of thU city, arrived in Bisbee last evening with a small party ot Michi gan people, who come to Bisbee and Southern Arizona lor arlous pur. noses some to look over the field with. a view ot investment, others to look over the business field, and others to remain and make Bisbee their homes, Mr. MacKenzie left Calumet last Tuesday, and. came directly through. from tho North. When tho, party left CalumeL there was four feel ot anew and ice on tho main streeV of that city. The people wero going aboct in fur and frieze overcoats,.and wear ing ear muffs. About 200 miles north, of Milwaukee, however, the .white cov ering of the earth was left behind, and on arrival in Chicago the-wot P-- "as. (Continued oa rags'-Four.; t. .. i I. u id i? '! ? m , L s I: