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'- jyfc -y mSPKier&rZ2Sgl jjjt"'-1 ' ""WWU! ! Ai-' m I t P,EIGHT THE BISBEE DAILY REVIEW, BISBEE, ARIZONA, SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 16, 1909, .i ii $- "art- .'" . mmm 7" . , '," ' ' ' . "' i i .i i ' ' ii i . hi J i J j ii .-m-CTja,- fcB J' - J pj" " , ' - - - T i. gjg- ff if , it r i m '4i I r--s in r: .1 .4 i Hi i Special for Today Furniture Department. Thirty Cane Seat Golden Oak Finished Special $1.00 IT 3 No Decision In Ten Round Bout. ''Packy" of Chicago Appar ently -Had Better of Go Opponent Strong. LOS ANGBUES, Jan. 10. Packy McFarland. 3t Chicago and Dick Ilj Jand, of San Francisco foaght ton rounds with eo decision before the Taclflc AthVstlc cJub tonight. McFa--land did lh6 . cleverest fighting hut Hiland waa strong throughout, coining ack after every exchange with the exception of ,thc final round. Mc Parland landed maaj more clever liloirs on. hig'OPiwaent and was strong tst at tho-Bnish . Tho Chicago boy started right after his man 1c the until round, fighting nlai from one aide of the rics to the itl-r. Tho onlr thing resembling a knock down oceumd In, the seventh round, wliort Hyland fell. Hyland was hanging on throughout the last half of tho tenth, rouad. DESULTORY TRADING FEATURE OF MARKET NEW YORK. Jan. 15. Desultory trading by professional traders made tp a great portion of the sttcsk uiarhct today. Tho feature of today's money market was the reported lending tf a round amount for thirty d.is nt l' ler cent, a rato cons-4erably below the prevailing call loan rate and a arguing (ie expectation therefore of lower money rateB. I lends firm. CHICAGO, Jan- 15. Liberal sWp uifcuts from. Aubtralia and Argentina inspired free &ellin? of wheat, re sulting in a weak market throughout the day. Tho exports for tho week from Argentina u-re oiScIally plaevr dt 112,C05 busKl which V.;ts foi HATARLAND ID MIUD I eg is draw Uncle Sams PJs MONEY LOANED ON EVERYTHING. MINING STOCK Especially. A large stock of Jewelry and Sporting Goods always on hand. Main Street - New Building JWi'- STAGE (except Sundays) to and from Leadvilie, Courtland and Gleeson. Leaves Brophys staBles, Lowell and Lead-1 vilie at 8:00 a. m. sharp. Fare each way S3.50; 50 s pounds baggage free. . Bisbee Improvement Company, MANUFACTURERS OF ICE, ELECTRIC LIGHTS AND POWER. office 'opposite oepot ewintt Rockers Worth $2.00 and $2.50. Several Patterns toJChoose from S e Them in the ShowjWindows BISBEE'S BIGGEST, BUSIEST AND BEST half :i million bushels mors than had Is-en cstiniated yesterda, whlio tlio lota' TOovemest from Auatrai.a was f-ivtii as 1,880,000 bushels. Tho fac 8ko that the bull leaders gae tjt nrarKet a very jkwr support contnly u cd t the weakness. Pricet at the s j't tvtro 1 to 3-S fkiloiv thf irc r iji close and before tle end of tlit lx further declines of near j.c had bttn effected. The clobt- v.i3 t. ak and only a trlCe abo 'le 1 w tst po'nt, with Jlay ?1 05 5-Sft:M,Jnd Juli $L0C 53.4. Heavy sales by loading longs caue 1 waUnices in corn Tho close -weak and at tho bottom. May CO 7 Sff 61. end July 61 1-S0W. VeaknesH of -wheat and corn as cliieflv resiwnsiblO'for a ruoIprate de cline In th6 price of oats. The mai ket closed easy 1-SOW to l-4f.T-3 lor.er than yesterday's cloo. Final nuotatiens: May 51 1-4 and Jul 16 Metal Market. SCY YOnil. Jan. 15. There was a or fcharn break in the London tin market today wltlr spot closing at 125 15b Cd, and futures at 125 10s. The local market was weak In conse nuence with spot nuotcd at 27.70. Copper was lower In London with spot Quoted at 01 7s 6d, and futures at 02 15s. Locally the market was weaker with lake quoted at 14.271AQ1 14.50c; electrlytic 14.0QSM4.12& and castings, 13.8714 00. Lead unchanged nt 14 2s Cd In London. Local market easy 4.15 11.20. Spelter remained at 21 7g Cd in London. Locally the market aj Jn!l and unchanged at 5.12 3.17. Cattle and Sheep. CHICAGO, Jan. 15. Cattle receipts 3,000 head. Market quiet. Beeves. I4.00S7.25; Texans. ?1.155.25; west erns, $4.00&5CO; btockers and feed crs, $3.2505 00; cows and heifers, ?1.755.50; calves, $7.509.50. Sheep receipts, 8,000 head. Market steady. Natives, $3.2305.55; westerns $5J!55.75; jearlings. $C.157.10; lambs, natives, $5508 00;; wcfcterus $5.23?8.00. Stock List.. XnV YORIv, Jan. 15 Amalgamated Copper, SO; American smelting, 83 1-S; Atchison, 99; St. Paul, 148 3-8; New York Central, 129 1-8; Pennsylvania, 135 5-8, Reading, ex. dlv 136; South ern Pacific 118 7-S; Union Pacific, 27$ 1-S, SUcl, 514; Steel pfd, 113 18 ssrr i DAILY j TELEPHONE SERVICE. Each tzzvansimzf Tsatra STORE. LATE PARISIAN FASHION .ot& kit Tt.u uii-cmy. AOMiRAL DEWEY SIDES WITHIPRESIDENT Wants Marines On Land Would Have Prevented the Philippine Isurrection. "WASHINGTON. Jan. 15 Admiral Dewoy, president of the general loard of tho nay has f.ent to Secretat., New berry, of tho navy, a letter In uh'cb he cordially appnek of to withdrawal of the marine .from the ihlps of the navy recently ordered by ehe president. Ho says It ib tho policy of the dc oartment to employ these men as an Integral part of the navy, and war plans arc worked out accordingly; but when embarked they will bo on tho ghlps and especially to carry uxie dlencry forces and advance base ma terial. If there iaj been 50,000 ma r'nes under h!j command at Manila bay, the admiral says, tho city would hato surrendered and there would liao been no insurrection. C4rViP PERRY IS TO GET BIG SHOOT COLUMBUS, Ohio, Jan. 15 Camp Prry, on Lake Erie, gets tho big na tional rillo shoot Uiis year. This in formation was telegraphed to Adjutant General C. C. ".Vcisbrelcht today by Assistant Adjutant General J N itlcg cr, who Is In Washington. SIX REPORTED KILLED IN RAILROAD WRECK GLENWOOD SPRINGS, Cola. Jan. 15. The westbound train of tho, Dei.-' ver & Rio Grande Xo. 13 collided with the castboucd freight ?b. CO tonigli near Dotscro, twenty miles .cast f here, and it is reported 'that sis pe. ns were killed and many Injured, o BOILED TO DEATH. DENVER. Jan. 12. John C. Realty, aged forty-flve, of Mount Vernon. N. was found dead in tho bth tub in which, hot water was running .lato to day. As far as is known the body bed been in the water since mIJn'sht last sight and was literally boiled. Mr. Bcatty was a large hBd o-ner. cwning much property in Nevada, Cal ifornia, Arizona and Old Mexico. Tho difference between, hunting canvasbaek ducks ae-d Vcacauclan slil pa of war hi tht the canvs&Uick is taoro tiffictiK to bag, br w(Vmore when you get him. jWrr.1- iglftf - - -wig c-EKiTJiMyj nrp f i' Old TiDit Qusck. In the right hamk it H :i jxr root that will uoLwqrk U)tii 'w-'iyK- Anold iniek: doctor, areonlltig to Hie W:lfi!i luston com-oiitindeat i the J"oston Herald, was uuce railcl ii a Inty wlio tad chlilJ awl fever. . L . UeproteeiledHTiSir.iWi the la-k off a root and putorae Iti ou glass it water mid nonie In anolber glar of water "GlTe tho inedieluo "jr ttife -has for th 0111513," lie then said to tle lad's mother, "but giro this in thi other g'.iss w hen the fever eoraf-s on " "Rut, doctor, the mother proteatei' "It is exactly the wime In IkiIIi glass es' "Oh, not at all," declared the rn.uk. "lint I saw you scrape the birk off the same root and put It In each g!as " "Icj," admitted" the qu.ick smoothlj "but jou didn't ee Imiw- I did It, my dear ladj. This for the chilK I scrape np on the root, hud that makes it high eockalorum. This for the feicr I yrape down on the ix-ot. and tlut makes It low cockahlghnim." Tobacco end Tin Fod. General Wiuflcld Scott was rcs.iKinl blo for tin foil being wrapfied around tobacco. TLat fact came out In the legal contest oor the will of the ec centric millionaire tobacco dealer, John nderson. Early In the forties of tlie last century Mr. Anderson kept a jkp ular clg:ir store on Broadway, l'ellx McCIosky, for rhuny years the tobac conist's salaried companion and agent, testified that one day, in IS; he thought. General Scott came Into the store and asked Anderson If he couldn't devise some way of keeping tobacco so It would not be affected by ago and changes In cjlmates. Ander son thought about it and shortly after hit upon the plan of wrapping cigars and chewing tobacco In tin foil, there by keeping ihe tobacco moist for a longtime. Ills tin foil coders became popular, and his preserved tobacco was ranch in demand during the Mexican war and the California gold ni3h, swelling his business to enormous pro portions and soon making him a multi millionaire. A Comprehensive Word. The word "vermin" seems to have become exceedingly comprehensive In scopt- now that the society which Is devoted to the detraction of tucli creatures has included not only rats, mice, cockroaches and mieh .small deer among them, bnt even cats, dogs, spar rows ami canaries, on the ground that all these irun.sruit disease to man. Ily derivation! Latln "icrniis") lermhi ought to mean only worms and the like. lu whMt literal sense Tcjinysop writes of the "lermln in n irat, lint the term hax constantly lecn loosely applied to all sorts cf objectionable anlcnls. from crocodiles to foxes. I'urclias told of the ieople of Java how they "feed on cats, rats and other Terrains, and Izaak "Walton denounc ed "those base vermin, the- otters." He used the rojrd exactly in the tem per Iq which rl nanghy little loy M berattsl as a "yonug varmint." Ixm dnn Chronlck-f Belated Kevcoe. "0n e when I was a rcail lail on my father's farm In Ohio. said a jndgc, a peddler got me to help him make same repairs to his wagon. I did so without nny thought of pay, bnt when the vehicle wast mended as he drove off he told mo the next time he came by our honiM oh hte rounds he would brlnp mo a gift In the shape of a copy of 'ItoblasoR-'Cnwoe,' a book I had long coveted. now I waited for him to come again and how ray heart fell when he failed to bring me the rol umc! Again ami again be promised, .but never Ewwle good his word. Tears passed, ana T'grew to manhood, but The memory "of that cruel disappoint ment never vanished from my rated. I was made a sckool trustee of ray district, sod qsc day a man applied for a posIUoa as teacher. In him I recognUed the lcdHer who kal Mast ed n.y yoathfnl hopes. There was an other cindld.ttn for the job. ami mine was the ttccldiiis- vote. Nothing la We wov gave -hkS iww ficasare than la voliag against the ex-pe4dlcr, who for hN CtrtiiUon on a bsy lout a "good lJ-"-e. it u jcrlMf crryi the spirit of revenge Js fnr. bnt tlre are not itiT, veJhw' hT 44Me other-wK,'-;,,fi ,5 "-. - , - ,iEiAx. CHAJ-rcivi-.Loa m 1 h.epa3oi.. "I wonder wh it is," remarked tl MTHJ!gr t.M.l.H -. "Why eti-eifrl IUerfelt He xrormol aial yxiilaluedtlms: "Why Is UUiaf chefs at -mnatrrani"! think Utt. tbVjjTucg: ndditiwi of a ru tmto tn,j'lli1nguiidf5 tlif jthi jiwij' Acs their (tilJIiig tto combluatioii "rae thing M riNiKignoIe";' "I :ce "irgs .t l'Jip lgnolf " Mj ur! oslty is a--iie nrousttl 'Win ' I ;r- myself. M 11m SiuiulariN ! t e i So 1 order "estcs u I"Ki'b" 'n' are they? Egja wit'i s"iat. "I mc vhukei frk-a""' a ITrftT"!' gnole' Nothing but touinl inlxctl -villi chicken An! thus It goes .n a :d in through life, a conthiiutl runol ' hojes decelTL-d. Spanfjii sauce is in inato catchup. It is absurd: Ir-i oare Ions. Chefs have no right U be Li7j Why. if the same degree sf rs"v-lo-!mes. Is allowed t niu r"jtis i tiirough othe1 e!as-e. of men Iwldi- chefs I do not doubt" IIen the granger get HjltIvdv tragic. "I do not doubt Unit the gord M phrase 'wnlkUtf; SfmaWt wl ! no piled to stepping hi a tomato. I fear It; 1 four it." And lie failed tlicnie. 'Liiig M head with s!joniy foreiMnlIng Now York Timeo. Tennyson and Lowell. Mrs. Procter tlie wife of Ptrry Com wail, wns'a great flgure In I.hIi lit entry cociety when Mr. Ijwj1 niu. United States jniuister at tlie eonrt of SL James. Mrs. Procter was moat anxious to lirlng Tennyson and Mr. Lowell together. Tennyson, wlm wa whimsical in his prejudice, made va rious excuses and affected to liellcve that Mr. Lowell was a ioet of little lmiiortauce and an after dinner orator whose graces of tyle were oierrateiL One day Mrs. Procter told Mr. Ten nyson thut Mr. Lowell had written some llres on her birthday and that she must insist upon reading them to him. The I'uglUh iioet looked nt her askance and submitted with bad grace. Mrs. Procter did not go further tlrin the opening line, "I know a girl thy say she's eight" Tennyson scowled and sprang to his feet with n gesture of Impatience. "Too familiar!" lie growled out iu high disdain and re fused to lislen to the remaining lines. Mrs. Procter persevered In her efforts to bring the two jioets together, and they finally met and became intimate friends. Mr. Tennyson was a man of many caprices and had a touch of shy ness and cold reserve which made him unwilling to meet a stranger. A Sly D03. Tlie late Dr. James Freeman Clarke nsed to tell thin story of bUs dog: "At one time my dog wras fond of going to the railway station to sec tlie people, ami I always ordered him to go home, fearing he would be hurt by the cars. Ue easily understood that If be went there it was contrary to my wishes. So whencrcr he was near the station If he saw me coming he would look the other way and pretend not to know me. If he met me anywhere else lie always bounded to meet me with .great delight Rut at the station It was- quite different. Ue would pay no attention to my wh!Hc or my calL jie even prcienueu 10 oe anouicr oog and would look me right in tho face I without apparently recognising me. I lie gave me the cut direct In the most impertinent manner, the reason evi dently being that be knew ho was doing what was wrong and did not like to be found out. l'ossibly he may have relied a little on my nearsighted ness In his maneuver." The Car of Goldfish. The Secret of success in caring for goldfish Is to keep the water they are In fresh and sweet Their globe should be emptied and Its water renewed as often aa every second day. Lift each Ssh out xcatly in a glassful of water, empty thf globe, wash It out. thea pat Is fresh water and' put the Ssh back agala. Clear, sweet rainwater shcmkl be twed, and Ha tesperatare should be rained to 75 or SO degrees by warming a part of it. Sparkiteff well water is too e&kl for the flsa to thrive In and too pare, for the aalmalenlae of rain water form an Important part of the food of these Ssh. They need bo other truMenance than a very few bread crumbs sprlalled la tbtlr water dally, for overfeed wW ktll -thn t TOBTO SE SHELL. The Way tha Platas Aro Removed From tho Animal. The comb of tortoise shell his a very pale and translucent yellow, the only really valuable kind of shell. "Many people thlnfe this palp, un mottled shell the cheaper kind." the dealer said "Do jou know why? Be--uise the imitations arc all nude like "That H one tulgnr error abont shell. Vnolher is that tlic turtoiso Is Lilted to get Its ohell cjsing. That is as absurd an error as it would be to say a bheep was killed to get Its wool. "What U done is this: The fisher men, having- caught a tortoise, tie him and then cover h!s back with dry grass and leases. They m fire to thU stuff. It bcrnf.Blowly. mid th" Heat causes the thirteen platiTif the sliell to Iqoseir at th joints. Willi u kulfe the plhtes aro pried off. and afterward the tortolso is set free. The base, or root, of hi? hell Is intact and will .grow again. If tortoises were killed to get their shell they would long since liave become extinct. "No, no. Every tortoise is. as It were, a furm a shell farm. Fishermen catch lilni regularly and with heat and a knife .gently remove bis shclL- New Orleans 'rirnes-DeuioTnr. COLORS IN THE OCEAN. Various Causes For the Different Tints of the Water. Sky and cloud colors are often re flected In the sea. but just as the an nas its hunvjt glory w water has its changing tlutb quite itpjrt from mere reflection. I Olhe and brown Hues in the wates off the coast come from the muddy SiHlIment washed from the shore, as blues arise chiefly from reflected hky. Hut there are many other colors in the ocean. On i.Imost every lon,j 03 age at sea t-iots of reddish brown color are noticed at one time or another. When" a few drops of the discolored water are examined under a mlcro scoie myriad of minute cylinder shap ed algae are seen, uonic separate, some joined together in fceorca. It is this organl&m "omeilmes called "ea iaw tJust which li.is given the name to the Red sea, although It also nlmunds in other raters. Sometimes the wa ter f.tr from laud will le seen to be of a chocolate hue for an extent of s-cvi eral miles, and tills is caused by mil Ileus upon hiilUous of minute oue eel ed animals whlcli lash tliemsclvcs along, each on his erratic individual course, by means of the finest of hair like threads of cilia. Pearson's. The Traces of the Beasts. On every side in the Malay wilds "the traces of tho beasts wldcli here 'lire -as scheduled, as safo from moles tation, as did their ancestors Iu pre A da mile days are Aisiblc on tree trunk, on beaten game path and on tlie yielding clay at the drinking "places b the hurrying stream. Here a belt of mud nine, feet from the ground shows that ait elephint has rubbed his ltch'ng back against the rough bark of a tree, and, see, coarse hairs are still sticking in the hardened clay. There a long, sharp scratch re pented at regular lntenals marks the passing of a rhinoceros. Here, again. Is tlie pad mark of a tiger liareljr an hour old, and the pitted tracks of deer of all sizes and varieties surround the deeply punched holes which are the footsteps of an e'ephnnL (Vrnhlll Magazine Settled the Sign. "Wlieu "William M. Uvarts was see retar of state a new elevator man had lieen employed in tho department who did not know Mr. E arts by sight In his car wan a conspicuous sign to the iffect tliaf by onlcr of tlie secre tary of state sniokinj; was prohibited. One day Mr. Earts lioarded the car In cotniuuy with :i famous senator, the latter smoking 11 cigar The new man promptly touched the smoker on tlie elbow and said, jiolntln,! at tho no tice. "Can't you read that siui" Mr. Evarts promptly tore down tlie of fending notice and, turning to the ele vator man, said: "What sign? I don't J- any." The atteiidant. suspecting scmetairs. wisely held hLs iieace. but he followed tlie pair out and asked the guird at ije vhor who the chap with the large he."l was-. The guard told him. England's Pret'iest Villages. After a very earefu: survey we ven ture to write down tbv names of the six English villages lliat vrc consider the prettiest In tlie land ru ar as our own opinion and wide evcerience are concerned. Tlie choice is tijado impar-' tiaily and witli full knowlcd?? 'ud due recognition of the claims of oneh to its high place. Hero are tin- s'x- 15on churcli. Isle of Wight; CJocU. Devon shire: Witchaiupton, Dorset; Manning. Oxfordshire: Shore. Surrey, anu Clap ham, yorkshirc London Htrand Maga zine Accomplished. '" "She's got a future." "Can she cctV "No, but she can work her eyes let ter than any lady in the business, and a3 for wearing swell clothesgee. she couldn't do better If she was twlnsr Life. Very Careful. Indulgent Undo Jack, are yon care ful about yonr personal cxpensca these days? Jack Voj. sir. 1 manage, with some effort, to make them balance my income to the exact cent. Chicago Tribune. m 6k).toaQC2 HcatEstatc andMines BiSBEEmBE 1&J$& The Poor Ensijjn. Tho follow lug story of German mili tary officialism Is published In Lou don: One Ensign Pluggc claimed com pensation for damage to kit caused by a mouse halng gnawed a hole iu lib best tunic. The officer who had to de cide the point dismissed the claim and ordered tho ensign to bo scverclypun Isued ou the ground that, contrary to orders, he had hung bis best tunic on a nail when going on guard at night In an Inferior garment instead of pack ing it in bis knapsack, thus enabling a mouse to gnaw a hole Iu it "without having to overcome the slightest lm IKKllment" Ensign Pluggc appealed, and oti further hearing it appeared, tlint tho officer who first dealt with the case was mistaken In the facts, the tunic having been stowed Iu a knapsack at the time when the mouse defaced It and not hung upon a nail. The first decision was therefore net aside by higher authority, and Ensign Flugge was ordered to lw severely punished for ha ing stowed hLs tunic In his knupsack Instead of hanging it on a nail, thereby ghlng opportunity to the mouse to knaw a hole in. It "un der cover of the darkness." The senti ments of En3lgn Fluggu arc not re corded. The Arab Mare. .The Arab Is regarded as the first of horsemen and the Arab inaru aa the perfect steed. The Arab's idea of horse taming is of tlie simplest. The colt is treated from tho first as a member of the family. It goes in and. out of the tents and Is so familiarized w ith the doings of that extraordinary creature, man, tliat there Is ncer any necd of breaking It iu. The IJedouln Is ery careful of hLs mare. lie does not mount her when he sets out to play his usual tricks upon travcle'rs. He rides a camel to which the maro is tethered. Not until the caravan Ls In sigiit does lit! mount tlie marc and give chase. There Is, by the w.iy, an Impression that the IScdouin Is a bloody miudeil person who would as lief taLe your life as not. Tills Is un fair to him. He is a thief of very peaceful Inclinations and mnch pre fers to effect any necessary transfer ot property with as little lwither as pos sible London Graphic'. -s.icl,k sEawrtJf, nm f rwrxl aWrhTmt C-, January 16, 1909. Dear Friend: We like molasses so well at our house that Mama sent me downtown to get a jug full so big that I could hardly, carry it home. I made an ugly face while I was carrying the molasses home, but when 1 had some on my cakes for breakfast this morning you ought to have seen me smile. I got a whole gallon" jug full for 75 cents. Your friend,- MJ ,v Jacob. - P. S. You can get the best molasses and the best of everything to eat at . ' Bisbee Commercial Company Opposite Orpheum Brewery Gulch. Pnone 97 airs. "Window's Seething Sjrap fM tTi nl for orr CTXTT-TTVE TTAES Mir MOSS of MOTU.KT.8 for thtr CIHtJUO WHlIETEEinisn wlih PFUKECT SIfct1H. socrrur'tb.mit,p softknsh.oum.sjiijjc tn rust crni ui ('iiutiuii wit i- rrnwlIorHIAiU.lKKA, Holrt br Unvri'tln rartoftbrvCTkl. Bo sure and alc for-'Mnt.W.lr Hit Srtitfnir HTrap.' uul take so otb-r kli rrni7.nre rc-nta ft battle. nQarantd tra4(r t Ue. AN OLD AMI WI.LL. TRIED KKMibv. '-? --' ft 9 I I m 4 1 1 ii