hawaiian i the js star newspaper - university of hawaii · 2015-06-02 · whether stevens was...

8
v TELEPHONE 365 STAR Business Office VOL. XVII. SPAN M. O. Lelghton, division ciiiet of the Geological Survey, and V. 0. Mendenhall, head of the Division or Ground Waters, arrived in the steam- er Mongolia from San Francisco thls morning. At the steamer neither ot the gentlemen was Inclined to talk about their mission until after they had conferred with Marston Camp- bell, the Superintendent of 'Publio Works, on tho preliminaries of their work here. Up to noon it appeared as it the conference had not taken place.' Mr. Campbell had gone out of tho office with Hon. A. S. Cleghorn at an earlier liour. Governor 'rear when seen by a Star reporter inquired whether the conservation experts had arrived. "They are going to look into the proposed hydrographlc survey of the islands," the Governor said when ask- ed just what their visit Implied, "and map out work for us to do. "Yes, the actual work of water de- velopment will be done by the Terri- tory, one-four- th of the special incomo tax proceeds being appropriated for the purpose." This visit of Messrs. Lelghton and JAPAN W T St IZE WOULD HAVE MADE THE ISLANDS A JAPANESE COLONY IN 1S93 BUT FOR PROMPT ACTION BY THE UNITED STATES FORCES THE REASON FOR STEVENS' ACTION IN '93. y SAN FRANCISCO,July 22. The Call says: , Frank A. Hosmer, now a member ot the Massachusetts legislature, tells in the New York World an Interesting story ot the plan almost consumma- ted of Japan to seize the Hawaiian isl- ands during the revolution in the isl- and kingdom in 1893, that ended in the annexation of the archipelago by the United States. This plan was on- ly frustrated by the timely and de- termined action of our minister, John L. Stevens, who at the crisis of the revolution raised the American flag, although tho city of Honolulu lay at the moment under' the guns of two Japanese cruisers under command of Togo, tho subsequent victor In the great naval battle that destroyed the Russian fleet In the straits ot Tsushi- ma, Mr. Hosmer describes tho situa- tion: "The government passed into tho hands of the 'missionary element' on the evening of January IS, 1893. Tho moment had arrived for which the ml-ka- had patiently waited and prepa- red for years, and ho was not slow to act. Tho revolutionists awoke upon a morning in February to discover two BASIS OF Ascenden cy INTEGRITY COURTESY ABILITY Guard ianJiL Trustee Hawaiian Trust Company, Ltd. 923 Fort Street. I The Star Js An Intelligent, Progressive Newspaper HAWAIIAN STAR CONSERVATION FACING HAWAII Mendenhall marks the beginning of Hawaii's participation in the national movement for tno conservation of na- tural resources. What has been done in Territorial forestry with incidental wnservation of water, will work in with tho national cheme although it has been all done Independently and much of it in advance thereof. Ha- waii's snowu competency to place It- self in the vanguard of progress in this respect has no dougt had influence In gaining attenttou at last from Wash- ington to the rights ot this Territory to participate in tho national facil ities for conservation. It has been a long pursuit to arrive at the stage indicated by the visit ot Messrs. Lelghton and iMendenhall Governor Carter, It will be remenv bered, worked hard for a hydrographlc survey by the federal experts. Once In his administration he had almost induced Mr. Lelghton, visiting tho Pa ciflc coast, to extend his trip to Ha waii. Governor Frear has been no less persistent in the cause ever since ho took office, the special legislation of last session being among the fruits of his endeavors. HAWAII LUTI Japanese battleships at the entrance to the harbor. Beneath tho decks of the Nanlwa, tho flagship, were 20,000 modern rifles and mobilized in1 Hono- lulu were approximately that number ot former soldiers ot the Japanese ar- my who had deserted their farm Im- plements and pruning knives with tho expectation ot securing tools ot anoth- er variety." This was the cri3ls of the l evolution and It called for daring action. Al- though Minister Stevens had hut a, slender force behind him slender la a material way ho ordered out a com- pany of marines and hoisted tho Ame rican flag over the government build- ing. Some people would characterize It as a grand bluff ,and In fact Togo had the situation in hand so far as the iBlahds were concerned, had he chosen to resort to force. But he knew that the whole force of the Unit- ed States would be employed to back up the act of Stevens. After some deliberation and a sullen exchange ot grudging courtesies the Japanes cruis- ers drew off. Whether Stevens was acting under instructions from Wash- ington is not known,' but the result ot his coup was a triumph of moral force, GREAT SHOE Bargain LOT 1. Ladies Sorosls Patent Kid Oxford tres In five different styles. Regular $4.00 grade. at 2.35. LOT 2. Ladies' Sorosls Patent Kid Lace shoes light and heavy soles'lte- - gular $4.00 and $3.00 grades at $2.90. LOT 3. Broken lines of Ladles' ls Oxford ties $4.00 and $5.00 grades at $U95. LOT, 4. 100 pairs of Ladles' colored canvas Oxford ties. Regular $2,50 grades at G5c. I iLB.Kerr&Go Ltd AIXEAvSTREiST. HONOLULU, HAWAII, WEDNESDAY. CHARGES CONSPIRACY TO MAKE HIM M CHAMPION OF DELUDED DOCTOK BELIEVES HIS REPUTATION IS AT STAKE BECAUSE OF PRIVATE QUAIUIEI BETWEEN HIMSELF AND AN ABSENT REPAIRER, OF CLOCKS POLICE RECORD SHOWS HIM INNOCENT BUT GOSSIP WORKS HARM. Attorney 'J Mt Harrison, repre- - sentlng Dr. Atcherley who is at pre- - sent confined in the asylum for. the insane under the jura of Dr. Emerson. ,0 and who has been' retainedrbyJMr Mary H. Atcherley, wife of the'al-'t- o leged paranoic physician, today stated to a representative of The Star that last he Is seriously considering the institu- - tion of proceedings against certain' persons, including primarily ,1. W. A. Redhouse, a repairer of watches who recently left the country, on a charge of conspiring to get him, Harrison, put nmro mo nmmnp uivco mo unmufto REV. CLAY MacCAULEY TKLLS OK FINANCIAL CONDITIONS IN THE ORIENT AND PROSPECT OF RECOVERY DOES NOT FAVOR BETWEEN JAPANESE""' AND " KORKfllNERS HUT , FINDS EXCEPTION THAT TURNED OUT WELL. ' Among the passengers traveling through to the Orient on the Mongolia is Rev. Clay MacCauley, one of the best known educators Mn Japan and who Is returning to that country to accept a professorship In tho Keio University. He has been connected' with Keio since 1SS9, filling the chair of poltical science and sociology. In talking with a Star reporter this inornlng he said: ' "Yes, the financial situation in Jap- an Is still very serious, but it Is a country which can recover from such depression more quickly than any oth-- el that I know of. Tho Japanese are ready to deny themselves everything, if It Is necessary. They have had the lesson ot self-deni- al taught them for hundreds of years and it is a most va- luable asset. ',In the four hundred years of civil war which they had, there were times when the country was almost without resources of any kind, yet they still kept on fighting. "I do not look towards seeing an- other war with Russia at present. Jap- an does not wish any war until she has fully recovered. I look forward to the Japanese policy of fortifying as far out as. possible In .Manchuria and of developing the country behind the lino thus made. War will have WOODRUFF IN TOWN SECOND FEDERAL (JUDGE ARRI- VES ON MONGOLIA THIS MORN- ING FROM COAST, Judge George W. .Woodruff, the sec- ond Federal district judge of tho Ter ritory of Hawaii, arrived this morning on the Mongolia, accompanied by Mrs. Woodruff. He was met at the wharf duufg uuju aim uutviuui i'ivhi and tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock will meet the members of tho local bar In the Federal courtroom. Judge Wooaruff Is a rather hand- some' man, tall and well built, with a slight mustache, brown tinged with grey. He Is a fluent and rapid talk- er, expressing himself very clearly. When Interviewed this morning on board tho Mongolia lib said: "I have really ivory little of Interest o"tehJyou save that asjsoon as I have. in the insane asylum. H. W. Kinney formerly city editor of the Bulletin and now editor of the Hllo Tribune is put Harraof, the pupule ,10MSe. Tne original circumstances, leading this idea ot Atclierley's attorney, existed In October and November of year when Redhouso got Harrison placed under bonds to keep the peace, Redhouso claiming that Harrison threatened him. Harrison claims that Redhouso was not alone In this affair (Continued on Page Five.) to bo forced by Russia and then will not amount to much unless done with the assistance of some one of the oth- er powers, such as Germany, for In stance. j 'Do I believe in intermarriage be- tween Japanese and whites. I do not care to pass judgment on the question but certainly would not favor, it. I very strongly disapprove of marriage between' a Japanese man and a white, woman. At tho same time I have seen a number of marriages ot Japa-- : nese women to white men, of higher rank, which have turned out very hap-- 1 plly. The children resulting from ' these marriages have showed no signs of degeneration and are very strong) and healthy. It is a question which j lias never been decided and which Is bound to come up more and more strongly all the time. I ' "When r first went to Japan In ISS'J the children of these mixed mar- riages were under great disadvantages. They were not approved ot by either white or Japaneso races and had a hard time. Since then there have been n number of legitimate marriages which have been very happy ones and ten years ago a number of the comm- on-low marriages were legitimatized with good results. had an interview with Judge Dolo and liavo settled with him what matters are to be taken up I shall try to set-th- e right down to work, in an effort to clean up the back work which I un- derstand needs attention at once. "I have made no arrangements In regard to clerks or anything of that kind, wishing to talk such matters over with Judge Dole. I did ask at the Department of Justice about such matters but from what I was told de- cided that it was best to wait till 1 got here before thinking much ot what was to be done." While In San Francisco Judge Wood- ruff was made much of. As the le- gal adviser of tho department ot the Interior he had much to do with the ,ega, 1)h.lB0 of tho 1)ropo8ed Lako Kleil. nor and Hetcli Hetchy grants for tne San Francli.c0 wator 8yslen)( uml n8 the result was made much of In that city, He was dined by the San Fran- cisco supervisors ut the St. Francis hotel and was also the guest ot a num- ber ot Yalo men at a luncheon given at the Pacific Union club. Among those present at tho "St, Francis din- ner wore: James D. Phelun, Doctor Galloway, Warren OIney, Colonel Bergen, Elmer Smith, J. 'K, Moffltt, Supervisor's Ban croft, Booth, Burdock, Center, Jen-- iilngSj Murphy.MqLeran, Hocks, Pay. t JULY i 28, iqoy. EXPERT'S 0 PR6F. DEN1NG TELLS ABOUT ADDRESS HE MADE TO STRIK- ERS AT WAlPAnU. Professor Walter Deniug surprised even Messrs. Kinney and Ballou, coun sel for the prosecution in the strike conspiracy case, when he mentioned at the very close of his the fact that he delivered an ad- dress to the striking Japanese laborers at Waipahu. It was defendant Negoro who in- stigated' the question put by Mr. Light-fo- ot after the attorney for tho de- fense had seemingly concluded his ot tho expert inter- preter. Kinney fairly started in as- tonishment at both question and an- swer. J'rofessor Deniug, after saying he addressed a meeting of strikers at Waipahu. denied in answer to tho next question that he told the strik ers he was a representative of the Japanese government. 'T did not tell them,'' he continued, "that it was the desire of the Japa- neso Foreign Office' that- - they should return to work. I said it was Iho general opinion of the Japaneso at home that the strike was unwise." Professor Deniug testified that Tie received permission from the govern- ment of Japan to come to Hawaii to make translations for the Government of the Territory. Being employed by the Education Department of Japan It was necessary for him to obtain per- mission to leave. His examination iu chief in (tho verification ot translations from tho Higher Wage prints nnd documents having concluded at this morning's session, Professor Uenlng was cross-examin- by Llghjfoot mainly on the definitions of Japanese words with interesting results. Editor Negoro, who has latterly suc- ceeded Makino as chief coach of coun- sel, primed Lightfoot with a series ot words from which to extract all the shades of meaning in which they might he used. Tho declared object was4p h1ow that whore the transla- tion had given English equivalents of sinister and ghastly important the Japanese words iu the originals might not have borne innocuous siugnlficauco or lie employed in what English speak ers would characterize as a Pickwick- - have took such sense. rules of Professor Denlng, taking or Y. Klinura, editor ot the Japanese these a Dally Chronicle, was next ' tho lable'and then two more tho prosecution. of different authorship, reading there- from a dozen or more dellnltions such as to destroy, to eradicate, to suppress as cholera, to' nut down ns an Insur rection, to make a thing as if It never been, etc., the great majority of meanings being fur removed from the realm of airy persiflage. Witness declared that he had made the translations after exhaustive stuily of all tho circumstances in which the 'writings were conceIved de- clined to answer a question as to whe- ther a certain word In Japanese might not be used in such as that of a Republican proclaiming his intenton to destroy the Democratic party or advising his fellow-partisa- to en- gage iu such an enterprise. Tho cir- cumstances being entirely different ho informed Ills questioner that lie was under no obligation to ansyer tho ques- tion. When asked what English word ho would uso to translate a given one In Japanese, Professor Denlng said: "It would depend on the circum- stances. I do not go to a dictionary wwwAmw.v.sw.v. ot, Johnson, Sanderson: City Attorney Percy V. Long,l F. H. Dockwelier, M. Manson, John E. clerk of the board of supervisors, Curtis H. Liud-le- y, Michael Doctor d'Ancona and H. Connel. the Yalo luncheon: William Crocker, Judge Joseph W. 'Al- len, L. Coleman, E. F. Green Henry Lves, G. L. Rathbone, Prot. E. B. Clapp, James A. Hallentlno, John 1. Sols, Allen Kittle, .1. C. Kittle, Knox Maddox, Thornwell Mullally, Frank U Owen and Cadwallader. Judge Dolo presented many callers at his chambers to Judgo Woodruff this morning. On taking his confrcro to visit tho Government Law Library ho introduced him, at a recess iu the conspiracy trial, to Judgo Do Bolt, Judge Baljbu, W. A. Kinney, J. Llght-fft- bt and others. tart ... '. - MARTIAL IN (Associated Press SECOND EDITION No. LAW ALL The MADRID, July 28. The King proclaimed martial law and the sus- pension ot constitutional guarantees throughout Spain. BARCELONA, July 28. Outbreaks here aro regarded as revolutionary and are spreading. Anarchists are In tho leadership ot the riots. church schools and railroad bridges been burned by tho re- volutionists. MELILLA, July 2S. The Spanish General Pinto and a number his officers have been 1 HAW'S SHOWING PLEASES FRIEND WHITEPLAINS. N J., July 28. Harry Thaw today the wit- ness stand to testify In his own behalf In the hearing as to his sanity ana the showing lie made was as to please his friends HT TAKES TEST THE AIR TONIGHT WASHINGTON, C, July 2S. test this evening with his aeioplane JEFFRIES POSTS $5,000 TO FIGHT JOHNSON fun the evident:. one words, called for dictionary the wlt-fro- m bar uess for He related had He case Hehan, Casey, At Robert George has Several NEW YORK, July 28. Jim Jeffrie Johnson. for every word I want. 1 make my own dictionary as I go along." Answering another question lie stat- ed that he took the meaning of u worn as the Japanese used it and turned it into English sucli as English-speakin- g people would apt to understand it. Besides quick forenslcal defensive ability Professor Denlng showed that he was no stranger to. what he remembered his memory prov- ing not very exact, ot a play given at tho Japanese theater on January 15 Inst. The scene purported to be In Formosa and the central topic ot tho play was higher iWages. ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE. Sachs Dry Goods Co. are making ac tlvo preparations fo rthelr grand an nuul clearance sale to begin soon. It will be a record-breake- r. Watch for announcements. Mecente Rodrlguea was this morn ing. In police court thirty days In jail for, breaking a mirror over tho head of another. Fine Job Prlnrrnftr var offlc POWDER Absolutely Pure Tho only baking powtfoifl ma do witta Royal Grapo Qroarn of Tartar No Alum, No Lime Phosphate 5403 SPAN Cabl to Star.) engaged ot killed. K. D. be evincing given Orville Wright will undertake a speed for the government s has posted $5,000 forfeit to tighfJack HAS L Fushiuo, one of the false Imprison ment defendants In connection with the Waipahu strike troublei, produc- ed the required hall ot $200 before .lutlgo De Bolt this afternoon. NEW RICE MILL. The K. Yamamoto Rice Mill Is the largest as well as the finest In the Islands. All tho machinery' Is ot the very latest pattern. The famous Tengu Rice Is cleaned at this mill. With tho large cleaning capacity they are able to handle considerate outside wortk. REMEMBER THE NAME. Chamberlain's Coltc, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Is Just what ita name implies. For pains in the Btom-ac- h, cramp colic or diarrhoea, it has no equal. Benson, Smith & Co., Agents for Hawaii. RED CROSS SHOES Now In stock In several styles. Tho kind" that bend with the foot. A New Sensation of FOOT COM- FORT awaits you in the R O O v o s s Shoe si 1ST J t (if i LIMITED 1051 Fort Street, .Phone

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Page 1: HAWAIIAN I The Js STAR Newspaper - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · Whether Stevens was acting under instructions from Wash-ington is not known,' but the result ot his coup

v

TELEPHONE 365STAR

Business Office

VOL. XVII.

SPAN

M. O. Lelghton, division ciiiet ofthe Geological Survey, and V. 0.Mendenhall, head of the Division orGround Waters, arrived in the steam-er Mongolia from San Francisco thlsmorning. At the steamer neither otthe gentlemen was Inclined to talkabout their mission until after theyhad conferred with Marston Camp-

bell, the Superintendent of 'PublioWorks, on tho preliminaries of theirwork here.

Up to noon it appeared as it theconference had not taken place.' Mr.Campbell had gone out of tho officewith Hon. A. S. Cleghorn at an earlierliour. Governor 'rear when seen bya Star reporter inquired whether theconservation experts had arrived.

"They are going to look into theproposed hydrographlc survey of theislands," the Governor said when ask-

ed just what their visit Implied, "andmap out work for us to do.

"Yes, the actual work of water de-

velopment will be done by the Terri-tory, one-four- th of the special incomotax proceeds being appropriated forthe purpose."

This visit of Messrs. Lelghton and

JAPAN W

T StIZE

WOULD HAVE MADE THE ISLANDS A JAPANESE COLONY IN 1S93

BUT FOR PROMPT ACTION BY THE UNITED STATES FORCESTHE REASON FOR STEVENS' ACTION IN '93. y

SAN FRANCISCO,July 22. The Callsays:

, Frank A. Hosmer, now a member otthe Massachusetts legislature, tells inthe New York World an Interestingstory ot the plan almost consumma-

ted of Japan to seize the Hawaiian isl-

ands during the revolution in the isl-

and kingdom in 1893, that ended inthe annexation of the archipelago bythe United States. This plan was on-

ly frustrated by the timely and de-

termined action of our minister, JohnL. Stevens, who at the crisis of therevolution raised the American flag,although tho city of Honolulu lay atthe moment under' the guns of twoJapanese cruisers under command ofTogo, tho subsequent victor In thegreat naval battle that destroyed theRussian fleet In the straits ot Tsushi-ma, Mr. Hosmer describes tho situa-tion:

"The government passed into thohands of the 'missionary element' onthe evening of January IS, 1893. Thomoment had arrived for which the ml-ka-

had patiently waited and prepa-red for years, and ho was not slow toact. Tho revolutionists awoke upona morning in February to discover two

BASIS OFAscenden cy

INTEGRITY

COURTESY

ABILITY

Guard ianJiL Trustee

Hawaiian TrustCompany, Ltd.

923 Fort Street.

I The Star Js An Intelligent, Progressive Newspaper

HAWAIIAN STAR

CONSERVATION

FACING

HAWAIIMendenhall marks the beginning ofHawaii's participation in the nationalmovement for tno conservation of na-

tural resources. What has been donein Territorial forestry with incidentalwnservation of water, will work inwith tho national cheme although ithas been all done Independently andmuch of it in advance thereof. Ha-

waii's snowu competency to place It-

self in the vanguard of progress inthis respect has no dougt had influenceIn gaining attenttou at last from Wash-ington to the rights ot this Territoryto participate in tho national facilities for conservation.

It has been a long pursuit to arriveat the stage indicated by the visit otMessrs. Lelghton and iMendenhallGovernor Carter, It will be remenvbered, worked hard for a hydrographlcsurvey by the federal experts. OnceIn his administration he had almostinduced Mr. Lelghton, visiting tho Paciflc coast, to extend his trip to Hawaii. Governor Frear has been noless persistent in the cause ever sinceho took office, the special legislationof last session being among the fruitsof his endeavors.

HAWAII

LUTI

Japanese battleships at the entranceto the harbor. Beneath tho decks ofthe Nanlwa, tho flagship, were 20,000

modern rifles and mobilized in1 Hono-

lulu were approximately that numberot former soldiers ot the Japanese ar-my who had deserted their farm Im-

plements and pruning knives with thoexpectation ot securing tools ot anoth-er variety."

This was the cri3ls of the l evolutionand It called for daring action. Al-

though Minister Stevens had hut a,

slender force behind him slender laa material way ho ordered out a com-pany of marines and hoisted tho American flag over the government build-ing. Some people would characterizeIt as a grand bluff ,and In fact Togohad the situation in hand so far asthe iBlahds were concerned, had hechosen to resort to force. But heknew that the whole force of the Unit-ed States would be employed to backup the act of Stevens. After somedeliberation and a sullen exchange otgrudging courtesies the Japanes cruis-ers drew off. Whether Stevens wasacting under instructions from Wash-ington is not known,' but the result othis coup was a triumph of moralforce,

GREAT SHOE

BargainLOT 1. Ladies Sorosls Patent Kid

Oxford tres In five different styles.Regular $4.00 grade. at 2.35.

LOT 2. Ladies' Sorosls Patent KidLace shoes light and heavy soles'lte- -gular $4.00 and $3.00 grades at $2.90.

LOT 3. Broken lines of Ladles' ls

Oxford ties $4.00 and $5.00 gradesat $U95.

LOT, 4. 100 pairs of Ladles' coloredcanvas Oxford ties. Regular $2,50grades at G5c. I

iLB.Kerr&Go LtdAIXEAvSTREiST.

HONOLULU, HAWAII, WEDNESDAY.

CHARGES CONSPIRACY

TO MAKE HIM M

CHAMPION OF DELUDED DOCTOK BELIEVES HIS REPUTATION IS

AT STAKE BECAUSE OF PRIVATE QUAIUIEI BETWEEN HIMSELF

AND AN ABSENT REPAIRER, OF CLOCKS POLICE RECORD

SHOWS HIM INNOCENT BUT GOSSIP WORKS HARM.

Attorney 'J Mt Harrison, repre- -sentlng Dr. Atcherley who is at pre- -

sent confined in the asylum for. theinsane under the jura of Dr. Emerson. ,0and who has been' retainedrbyJMrMary H. Atcherley, wife of the'al-'t- o

leged paranoic physician, today statedto a representative of The Star that lasthe Is seriously considering the institu- -tion of proceedings against certain'persons, including primarily ,1. W. A.Redhouse, a repairer of watches whorecently left the country, on a chargeof conspiring to get him, Harrison, put

nmro mo nmmnpuivco mo unmufto

REV. CLAY MacCAULEY TKLLS OK FINANCIAL CONDITIONS IN THE

ORIENT AND PROSPECT OF RECOVERY DOES NOT FAVOR

BETWEEN JAPANESE""' AND " KORKfllNERS HUT

, FINDS EXCEPTION THAT TURNED OUT WELL. '

Among the passengers travelingthrough to the Orient on the Mongoliais Rev. Clay MacCauley, one of thebest known educators Mn Japan andwho Is returning to that country toaccept a professorship In tho KeioUniversity. He has been connected'with Keio since 1SS9, filling the chairof poltical science and sociology. Intalking with a Star reporter thisinornlng he said:

' "Yes, the financial situation in Jap-an Is still very serious, but it Is acountry which can recover from suchdepression more quickly than any oth-- el

that I know of. Tho Japanese areready to deny themselves everything,if It Is necessary. They have had thelesson ot self-deni- al taught them forhundreds of years and it is a most va-

luable asset. ',In the four hundredyears of civil war which they had,there were times when the countrywas almost without resources of anykind, yet they still kept on fighting.

"I do not look towards seeing an-

other war with Russia at present. Jap-an does not wish any war until shehas fully recovered. I look forwardto the Japanese policy of fortifyingas far out as. possible In .Manchuriaand of developing the country behindthe lino thus made. War will have

WOODRUFF

IN TOWN

SECOND FEDERAL (JUDGE ARRI-

VES ON MONGOLIA THIS MORN-

ING FROM COAST,

Judge George W. .Woodruff, the sec-

ond Federal district judge of tho Territory of Hawaii, arrived this morningon the Mongolia, accompanied by Mrs.Woodruff. He was met at the wharf

duufg uuju aim uutviuui i'ivhiand tomorrow morning at 9 o'clockwill meet the members of tho localbar In the Federal courtroom.

Judge Wooaruff Is a rather hand-some' man, tall and well built, with aslight mustache, brown tinged withgrey. He Is a fluent and rapid talk-er, expressing himself very clearly.When Interviewed this morning onboard tho Mongolia lib said:

"I have really ivory little of Interesto"tehJyou save that asjsoon as I have.

in the insane asylum. H. W. Kinneyformerly city editor of the Bulletinand now editor of the Hllo Tribune is

put Harraof, the pupule ,10MSe.

Tne original circumstances, leadingthis idea ot Atclierley's attorney,

existed In October and November ofyear when Redhouso got Harrison

placed under bonds to keep the peace,Redhouso claiming that Harrisonthreatened him. Harrison claims thatRedhouso was not alone In this affair

(Continued on Page Five.)

to bo forced by Russia and then willnot amount to much unless done withthe assistance of some one of the oth-er powers, such as Germany, for Instance. j

'Do I believe in intermarriage be-

tween Japanese and whites. I do notcare to pass judgment on the questionbut certainly would not favor, it. Ivery strongly disapprove of marriagebetween' a Japanese man and a white,woman. At tho same time I haveseen a number of marriages ot Japa-- :nese women to white men, of higherrank, which have turned out very hap-- 1

plly. The children resulting from'

these marriages have showed no signsof degeneration and are very strong)and healthy. It is a question which j

lias never been decided and which Isbound to come up more and morestrongly all the time. I

' "When r first went to Japan In ISS'Jthe children of these mixed mar-riages were under great disadvantages.They were not approved ot by eitherwhite or Japaneso races and had ahard time. Since then there havebeen n number of legitimate marriageswhich have been very happy ones andten years ago a number of the comm-

on-low marriages were legitimatizedwith good results.

had an interview with Judge Dolo andliavo settled with him what mattersare to be taken up I shall try to set-th- e

right down to work, in an effort toclean up the back work which I un-

derstand needs attention at once.

"I have made no arrangements Inregard to clerks or anything of thatkind, wishing to talk such mattersover with Judge Dole. I did ask atthe Department of Justice about suchmatters but from what I was told de-

cided that it was best to wait till 1

got here before thinking much ot whatwas to be done."While In San Francisco Judge Wood-

ruff was made much of. As the le-

gal adviser of tho department ot theInterior he had much to do with the,ega, 1)h.lB0 of tho 1)ropo8ed Lako Kleil.nor and Hetcli Hetchy grants for tneSan Francli.c0 wator 8yslen)( uml n8the result was made much of In thatcity, He was dined by the San Fran-cisco supervisors ut the St. Francishotel and was also the guest ot a num-

ber ot Yalo men at a luncheon givenat the Pacific Union club. Amongthose present at tho "St, Francis din-ner wore:

James D. Phelun, Doctor Galloway,Warren OIney, Colonel Bergen, ElmerSmith, J. 'K, Moffltt, Supervisor's Bancroft, Booth, Burdock, Center, Jen--iilngSj Murphy.MqLeran, Hocks, Pay. t

JULY i 28, iqoy.

EXPERT'S

0

PR6F. DEN1NG TELLS ABOUT

ADDRESS HE MADE TO STRIK-

ERS AT WAlPAnU.

Professor Walter Deniug surprisedeven Messrs. Kinney and Ballou, counsel for the prosecution in the strikeconspiracy case, when he mentionedat the very close of his

the fact that he delivered an ad-

dress to the striking Japanese laborersat Waipahu.

It was defendant Negoro who in-

stigated' the question put by Mr. Light-fo- ot

after the attorney for tho de-

fense had seemingly concluded hisot tho expert inter-

preter. Kinney fairly started in as-

tonishment at both question and an-

swer.J'rofessor Deniug, after saying he

addressed a meeting of strikers atWaipahu. denied in answer to thonext question that he told the strikers he was a representative of theJapanese government.

'T did not tell them,'' he continued,"that it was the desire of the Japa-neso Foreign Office' that- - they shouldreturn to work. I said it was Ihogeneral opinion of the Japaneso athome that the strike was unwise."

Professor Deniug testified that Tie

received permission from the govern-ment of Japan to come to Hawaii tomake translations for the Governmentof the Territory. Being employed bythe Education Department of Japan Itwas necessary for him to obtain per-mission to leave.

His examination iu chief in (thoverification ot translations from thoHigher Wage prints nnd documentshaving concluded at this morning'ssession, Professor Uenlng was cross-examin-

by Llghjfoot mainly on thedefinitions of Japanese words withinteresting results.

Editor Negoro, who has latterly suc-ceeded Makino as chief coach of coun-sel, primed Lightfoot with a series otwords from which to extract all theshades of meaning in which theymight he used. Tho declared objectwas4p h1ow that whore the transla-tion had given English equivalents ofsinister and ghastly important the

Japanese words iu the originals mightnot have borne innocuous siugnlficaucoor lie employed in what English speakers would characterize as a Pickwick- -

have

took

such

sense. rules ofProfessor Denlng, taking or Y. Klinura, editor ot the Japanese

these a Dally Chronicle, was next'

tho lable'and then two more tho prosecution.of different authorship, reading there-from a dozen or more dellnltions suchas to destroy, to eradicate, to suppressas cholera, to' nut down ns an Insurrection, to make a thing as if Itnever been, etc., the great majorityof meanings being fur removed fromthe realm of airy persiflage.

Witness declared that he had madethe translations after exhaustive stuilyof all tho circumstances in which the'writings were conceIved de-

clined to answer a question as to whe-

ther a certain word In Japanese mightnot be used in such as that of aRepublican proclaiming his intentonto destroy the Democratic party oradvising his fellow-partisa- to en-

gage iu such an enterprise. Tho cir-

cumstances being entirely different hoinformed Ills questioner that lie wasunder no obligation to ansyer tho ques-

tion.When asked what English word ho

would uso to translate a given one InJapanese, Professor Denlng said:

"It would depend on the circum-stances. I do not go to a dictionary

wwwAmw.v.sw.v.ot, Johnson, Sanderson: City AttorneyPercy V. Long,l F. H. Dockwelier, M.

Manson, John E. clerk of theboard of supervisors, Curtis H. Liud-le- y,

Michael Doctor d'Anconaand H. Connel. the Yalo luncheon:William Crocker, Judge Joseph W. 'Al-

len, L. Coleman, E. F. GreenHenry Lves, G. L. Rathbone, Prot. E.B. Clapp, James A. Hallentlno, John1. Sols, Allen Kittle, .1. C. Kittle, KnoxMaddox, Thornwell Mullally, Frank UOwen and Cadwallader.

Judge Dolo presented many callersat his chambers to Judgo Woodruffthis morning. On taking his confrcroto visit tho Government Law Libraryho introduced him, at a recess iu theconspiracy trial, to Judgo Do Bolt,Judge Baljbu, W. A. Kinney, J. Llght-fft- bt

and others.tart ... '. -

MARTIAL

IN(Associated Press

SECONDEDITION

No.

LAW

ALLThe

MADRID, July 28. The King proclaimed martial law and the sus-

pension ot constitutional guarantees throughout Spain.BARCELONA, July 28. Outbreaks here aro regarded as revolutionary

and are spreading. Anarchists are In tho leadership ot the riots.church schools and railroad bridges been burned by tho re-

volutionists.MELILLA, July 2S. The Spanish General Pinto and a number his

officers have been

1 HAW'S SHOWING

PLEASES FRIENDWHITEPLAINS. N J., July 28. Harry Thaw today the wit-

ness stand to testify In his own behalf In the hearing as to his sanity anathe showing lie made was as to please his friends

HT TAKES TEST

THE AIR TONIGHTWASHINGTON, C, July 2S.

test this evening with his aeioplane

JEFFRIES POSTS $5,000TO FIGHT JOHNSON

fun the evident:.one

words, called for dictionary the wlt-fro- m

bar uess for He related

had

He

case

Hehan,

Casey,At

Robert

George

has

Several

NEW YORK, July 28. Jim JeffrieJohnson.

for every word I want. 1 make myown dictionary as I go along."

Answering another question lie stat-ed that he took the meaning of u wornas the Japanese used it and turned itinto English sucli as English-speakin- g

people would apt to understand it.Besides quick forenslcal

defensive ability Professor Denlngshowed that he was no stranger to.

what he remembered his memory prov-

ing not very exact, ot a play given attho Japanese theater on January 15Inst. The scene purported to be InFormosa and the central topic ot thoplay was higher iWages.

ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE.Sachs Dry Goods Co. are making ac

tlvo preparations fo rthelr grand annuul clearance sale to begin soon. Itwill be a record-breake- r. Watch forannouncements.

Mecente Rodrlguea was this morning. In police court thirty daysIn jail for,breaking a mirror over thohead of another.

Fine Job Prlnrrnftr var offlc

POWDERAbsolutely Pure

Tho only baking powtfoiflma do witta Royal Grapo

Qroarn of TartarNo Alum, No Lime Phosphate

5403

SPANCabl to Star.)

engaged

otkilled.

K.

D.

beevincing

given

Orville Wright will undertake a speedfor the government

s has posted $5,000 forfeit to tighfJack

HAS L

Fushiuo, one of the false Imprisonment defendants In connection withthe Waipahu strike troublei, produc-ed the required hall ot $200 before.lutlgo De Bolt this afternoon.

NEW RICE MILL.The K. Yamamoto Rice Mill Is the

largest as well as the finest In theIslands. All tho machinery' Is ot thevery latest pattern. The famousTengu Rice Is cleaned at this mill.With tho large cleaning capacity theyare able to handle considerate outsidewortk.

REMEMBER THE NAME.Chamberlain's Coltc, Cholera and

Diarrhoea Remedy. Is Just what itaname implies. For pains in the Btom-ac- h,

cramp colic or diarrhoea, it hasno equal. Benson, Smith & Co., Agentsfor Hawaii.

RED CROSS

SHOESNow In stock In several styles.Tho kind" that bend with the foot.

A New Sensationof FOOT COM-

FORT awaits youin the

R OO v o s sShoe si

1ST Jt

(if iLIMITED

1051 Fort Street, .Phone

Page 2: HAWAIIAN I The Js STAR Newspaper - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · Whether Stevens was acting under instructions from Wash-ington is not known,' but the result ot his coup

two

Oceanic Steamship Company

tiHAVB 8. F.

Alameda ScheduleAIUUVB HON. LEAVE HON. P.

JULY 17 JULY 23 JULY 23 AUG. 3

AQ 7 AUG. 13 AUG. IS AUG. 24

AUG. 28 SEPT. 3 SEPT. 8 SEPT. 14

DjjPT 18 SEPT. 24 SEPT. 29 OCT. 5

0CT g OCT. OCT. 20 OCT. 2,6

OCT. 30 NOV. 5 NOV. 10 NOV. 1G

NOV. 20 NOV. 26 DEC. 1 DEC. 7

1110.

Rates from Honolulu to San Francisco. First Class, $00; Round Trip,

FOR PARTICULARS, TO

W. G. Irwin & Co., LtdAGENTS FOR THE OCEANIC STEAMSHIP CO.

Canadian-Australi- an Royal Mail Steamship Co

Steariem ot the above line running In connection with the CANADIAN-PACIFI-

RAILWAY COMPANY between Vancouver, B. C, and Sydney,

N. . W., ad calling at Victoria, B. C Honolulu and Brltbane, Q.

cnw piji AND AUSTRALIA. FOR VANCOUVER.

t a to a t a ATTf. MAICURA AUG. 17

MAKURA SEPT. 17 AORANGI SEPT. IB

CALLING AT SUVA, FIJI, ON BOTH UP AND DOWN VOYAGES.

Theo. H Davies & Co., Ltd., Gen 1 Agents

American - Hawaiian Steamship Company

From New York to Honolulu Weekly Sailings via Tehuantepec

Vreliht received at all times at the Company' wharf. 41st Street, SouthBrooklyn.

PROM BAN FRAN. TO HONOLULU.. FROM SBATTLH AND TACOMA TO

S. ALASKAN to sail July 25

a S. PLEIADES to sail Aug. 10

received at Company's wharf,Greenwich Street

mOJt HONOLULU TO SAN FRAN-CISCO.

PLEIADES to sail July

11243010

J21

11

S.

15

20

S.

25

to sail July 22

VIRGINIAN toH. HACKFtLD

C. P.

Pacific Mail SteamshipToyo Kisen Kaisha S. S.

Y , -

8 ol the companies will call at HONOLULU and leaveIhls port o r the dates mentioned

LEAVE HONOLULU FOR. ORIENT.TBNVO MARU AUG. 3

KORHA AUG.--KEYiSfcHHW, AUG.SIBERIA It... AUG.CHINA ..JfMANCHURIA 14

CHIYO . SEPT.ASIA f. SEPT. 30

MONGOLIA ...OCT.TENYO MARU... OCT. 19

KOREA OCT. 2G

NIPPON MARU. . '. NOV. 9

IvRRlVE

HONOLULU DIRECT.S. S. TEXANS. S. asil.. ..Aug. 5

& CO., LTD.,Agents, Honolulu

Morse,General Freight Agen

Co.Co.

teamen aboveabout below:

SEPT.SEPT.

MARU

LEAVE HONOLULU FOR S. F.NIPPON MARU JULY 31

SIBERIA AUG.CHINA AUG. 17MANCHURIA AUG. 21

CHIYO MARU AUG. 28

ASIA SEPT.MONGOLIA SEPT. 18TENYO MARU SEPT. 24KOREA OCT. 2

NIPPON MARU OCT. 16

SIBERIA OCT. 22CHINA 30

FOB FURTHER INFORMATION APPLY TO

H. HACKFELD CO. LTD

nATSON NAVIGATION COMPANYSchedule S. S. HILONIAN in the direct service between San Francisco

and Honolulu.Arrive Honolulu. Leave Honolulu.

S. S. HILONIAN AUG. 4TH AUG. 10TH8. S. HILONIAN SEPT. 1ST SEPT. 7TH8. S. HILONIAN SEPT. 29TH OCT. 5TH

S. S. HILONIAN OCT. 27TH NOV. 2ND

S. S. LURLINE of this line sails tor San Francisco, direct, carrying bothfreight and passenger, on or about August 1st, 1909.

Castle & Cooke Limited, Agents

TRANSFER CO., LTD

ts6 KING ST.

APPLY

Vnlght

G

OCT.

BAGGAGE, SHIPPING,

STORAGE,

PACKING, COAL.

8

AND PIANO MOVING.

Smith-Premie- r

VISIBLE) YFESTOTJEfcl'IVESKThe manufacturers of the Smith Premier "VISIBLE" have delayed

putting their on tho market until It has been proven inevery respect. , This carefulness has resulted to tho benefit of boththe purchaser and the manufacturer. Satisfaction for tho one andgood will for the latter. The Smith-Premi- er "VISIBLE" 'is tho besttypewriter on the market today. Double key-boar- d.

Hawaiian Co., Agents!ALEXANDER YOUNG BUILDING.

Leemann ft Gatty's

WOOD,

machine

LINENS AND DUCKS,PONGEE AND FLANNELS.

n nr, W,W,AHANACO,,LTDuiiBinai wanes er mmmv mm s"" King street

.U J

7

7

NO BRANCHES

5FURNITURE

News Ltd.,

HAWAIIAN STAR, WEDNESDAY, JULY

(Later Shipping News Page Five)

TIDES, SUN AND MOON.

monn, 1st at a. m.

27

30

aP u

1'. M

10:60

P. M.12:3!)

1:24

.2:02

IMS

3:fiS

IU

1.5

l.T

1.H

2.1

3

Ul

1'. M.

10:01

I lit.

A.M0:47

1:4'

2.11 3:"1

PET

A.M,

on

7:M

8:22

11:0.1

fl:37

10:10

THE 28, 1909.

Full Aug. 10:43

PIsr

Ms

SetsHMO1 Ui.fl

1:33,0:411 lXi

1:aiilMli 2 10

V:n:8, ,1:13

1:34ti:4M 4:12

S:34 6:47 Hlses

Times of the tide are ftffen from tbeU. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey" tables. The tides at Kahulul and Hllooccur about one hour earlier than atHonolulu. Honolulu standard time is

hours 30 minutes slower than Green-

wich time, being that ot the meridianof 157 degrees minutes. The timewhistle blows at 1:30 p. m. which Is

the same as Greenwich, 0 hours, 0 min-utes. The Sun and Moon are (or localtime (or the whole group.

Shipping in Port

(Army and Navy).U. 8. S. Iroquois ,Moses, station tug.Kukui, Jobson, Lighthouse tender.

(Merchantmen)Bk. Alden Besse, HiloS. S. Columbian, San Francisco.Manila, Gaskey, Wllapa.Sell. Alice Cooke, Underwood, Port

Ludlow.S. S. Ocean Queen, Johannessen,

Ocean Island. .

'

I The Mails

(INCOMING.)From Yokohama, Nippon Maru July

31.

From San Francisco, Tenya Maru,Aug. a.

(Outgoing.For Yokohama, Mongolia, today 5

p. in.For San Francisco, Nippon Maru,

July 31.U. S. A. TRANSPORTS.

Crook at S. F.Dix sailed for Seattle May 25.Buford, at S.

Loman sailed for Honolulu from Na- -

gascakl, July 21.

3:4!

fl:lf

Ml

10

30

8

P.

Burnslde, at Puget Sound.Thomas tailed for Manila, July 15.Sheridan, sailed for S. F., July C.

FORMER JUDGE

HENRY B. BROWN, IN ADDRESS

TO LAWYERS, TAKES ISSUE

WITH CARDINAL.

OLD POINT COMFORT, Va., JulyHenry G. Brown, a former Asso

ciate Justice of the United States Su

preme Court, from which ho resignedIn 190C, took sharp issue with Cardi-

nal Gibbons on the subject ot divorcetoday.

Judge Brown addressed the Mary-

land Bar Association, his subject be-

ing "Tho Law and Procedure In Di-

vorce," and he declared openly for aliberal law for the regulation of mar-

riage."It is not perceived," ho said, "why

the partnership created by marriagoshould so far differ from a commer-

cial partnership that one may be dis-

solved at pleasure while tho other isabsolutely indissoluble. A proper re

whole

feated foruncontrollublo conduct of either par-

ty, and that relation shouldrepresent the acme of human happi-ness is made to stand all that ismost repugnant to desires

a severance of tho tloshould permitted. Tho story ofdomestic unhapplness is only too fain-llia- r.

for myself, I can onlysay that cannot recall afairly obtained, without fraud, andupon due personal notice to theother that did not apparently re-

dound to tho the partiesand prove a' blessing. They arodoubtless sometimes granted upon in-

sufficient factsanxious to curry favor theand litigants. the power to grandivorces must be reposed in someone, if the Legislature definesthe tho procedure jjjith suffl:

INTELLIGENCE

DIRGE

clent strictness it cannot bo held res-ponsible If weak Judges occasionallyoverstep the limits marked by thewords of the statute. Judges cannotbo made competent nor mankind mo-

ral by legislation."It Is perhaps unfair to say that

there Is more domestic infelicityamong the wealthiest class, but thegeneral consensus of opinion amongthoughtful men seems to Indorse theprayer of Augur. 'Give me neither po-verty nor riches,' as the touchstoneof good fortune. The most beautifulpicture of bliss In tho lan-guage is taken not from the marblehalls of the rich but from the eveningfireside of an Scottish peas-ant in 'The Colter's Saturday Night- -

"Tho head of the Roman Church inAmerica, a man for whom I liave pro-found respect, has painted divorce as'a monster, Ilccnsovl by the laws ofChristian States 'to break hearts,wreck homes and ruin souls. This iscertainly a gruesome picture."

PHENOMENAL LEVELREACHED IN LONDON

FOR INDIA RUBBER.

LONDON, July 20. The price of In-

dia rubber has reached phenomenallevels, heavy buying for consumptionbeing the cause, and, according to au-

thorities, manufacturers had refrainedfrom making purchases as long as pos-sible, drawing upon their stock. Des-pite the recently planted areas theprices have steadily increased. Pararubber has reached 6s. 3 1- -2 d. a poundand fine plantation rubber Cs. 10 d.;Cs. 9 4 d. and 6s. 3 d. were the recordprices during 1906 and the day is stillto be remembered when fine Para rub-ber was unsellable at 6 d.

Perhaps the most cogent reason forthis amazing growth is that fresh usesfor rubber are constantly being dis-covered. All the rubber that can beproduced is in The modernuses of electricity require great quan-tities in the manufacture of insulatedcables. The cycle and motor tradesuse largo aniunts for tires. Vulcaniterubber is employed extensively in thoarts.

The rise In prices first started in1D0C. In 1907 the November paniccaused a heavy fall. During this periodof depression, stocks amounting to 11,000 tons accumulated in Europe andmany rubber and tire factories in theUnited States were forced to close. Thegrowth of the market, however, wassuch as not to permit of a protracteddepression and this week's quotationsindicate that the demand is greaterthan ever before.

.Tine Job Printing. Star Offlco.

2S52S5E55H5SEi2E52E2cSH55E52E55i

for the of the

for

by

above

Union

Thiee trains daily,

first and second class

3acific

Railroad

SUGGESTS

Comfort

through cars,

to ail points.

Reduced rates take effect

now.

8. Jb Booth

GENERAL AGENT.

No. 1 Street,SAN FRANCISCO.

Writ

Oahu RailwayTABLE

OUTWARD.

For Walanae, Walalua, Kahuku andWay Stations 9: 15 a. m., 3:20 p. m.

For Pearl City, Ewa Mill and WayStations f7:30 a. m 9:15 c m.,11:15 a. ra., 2:15 p. m :15 p. m,

J9: 30 p m., til p. m.For Wahlawa 9:i5 a. m. and 5:16

p. m.

INWARD.

Arrive Honolulu from Kahuku, Wal-alua and Walanae 8:36 a. m., 5:31p. m.

Arrive Honolulu from Ewa Mill andCity f7: 46 a. m., 8:36 a. m.,

10:38 a. m., 1:40 p. m.. 4:31 p. m.5:31 p. m., 7:30 p. m.

Arrive Honolulu from Wahiawa8:3:6 a. m., and 5:31 p. m.The Halelwa Limited, a two-ho- ui

train (only nrst-cia- ss tickets honored)leaves Honolul uevery at 8:22a. m.; returning, arrives Inat 10:10 p. m. The Limited stops onlyat City and Walanae.

Daily. fEx. Sunday. JSundayG P. DENISON, C. SMITH,

Superintendent. P. & A

WEEKLY WEATHER BULLETIN

FOR THE WEEK ENDED JULY io, 1909.Honolulu, July 12, 1909.

GTNERAL SUMMARY.

mean temperatures were higher than during the preceding weekin the Honolulu district of Oahu, the Puna, N. Kona and portionsthe Kau and N. Kohala districts of Hawaii, and in the Lihue districtof Kauai. In the remaining districts of the section the mean tempera-tures were lower than last week's. The excess over the pre-vious week's was 1.3 deg., and the deficiency 1.4 deg.

Theveek was showery, excepting in the windward and Hono-lulu districts of Oahu, the amounts of rainfall were generally belowthe average. The following are the amounts in inches, in the severaldistricts: Hawaii N. Kohala 0.72 to i.bs, Hamakua 0.14 toN. Hilo 2 2.64, Puna 0.87 to 1.70, Kau 0.00 to 0.67, and theKonas 1.49 to 1.72; Maui Makawao 2.80 to 3.03, Hana 2.07 to 3.28,Wailuku 0.13 to 0.33, and Lahaina trace; Oahu Koolauloa 0.38, Koo-laupo- ko

0.54 to 1.61, Honolulu 0.47, and Ewa 0.02 at the lower levelsand 1. 91 to 2.25 the higher; Kauai Hanalei iio, Lihue and Ka-waih- au

0.31 to 0.48, Koloa 0.45 to 0.85, and Waimea 0.12; and Mo-lcka- i

Molokai 1.05.The following are the departures, in inches, from the average of ten

or more years: Hawaii N. Kohala 0.34 to 0.14, Hamakua 0.24to 0.80, N. HiTo 0.73 to 1.27, S. Hilo 0.47 to Puna

34, Kau 0.21 to 0.32, and N. Kona o-ii- ; Maui Maka- -gard interests State, wa0 3.1.67,, and Lahaina Oahu Koolauloa 0.07, Koolau--as wen us me Vn.ivui.u.. ul u- -,

poko 9 I02 Honolulu 0.16, Ewa 0.06, and Waianaewould to require Jt c happiness, seem--18- ; a Kauat Hanalei Koloa0.02, -0-.12, and Waimea 0.00.that, when tho object ot the

matrimonial compact had been de- - the following table shows the weekly averages of temperature andby the habitual, persistent and raintall lor the principal Islands and the Group

which

our andanticipations,

bo

''SpeakingI divorce

andside,

wolfare otreal

easygoing Judges,with bar

But

andlaw and

English

humble

Is.

demand.

Hawaiit

soon

'

Montgomery

Pearl

PearlOnly

V.

G. T.

The

of

greatest

yet,

0.87,to

at

18;to

1

Temperature. Rainfall.72.0 deg. 1.29 inches.

Maui 71,2 deer.Oahu 74.4 deg.

Kauai 75.5 deg.Molokai 74.9 deg.

1.66 inches.0.90 inch.0.55 inch.1.05 inches.

Entife Group 73.2 deg. 1.17 inches.At the local office of the U. S. Weather Bureau in Honolulu un-

usually showery, humid, cool weather conditions obtained showersoccurring several times each day and totaling 0.47 inch, 0.16 abovethe normal for the week, and 0.44 more than during th'e precedingweek. The maximum temperature was 81 deg., minimum 67' deg., andmean 74.1 deg., 3.6 deg. below the weekly normal, and 2.3 deg lowerthan last week's. Th'e mean daily relative humidity varied from 64to 76 per cent, and Tor the week was 69.1 per cent. Easterly windsprevailed on four dates and northeasterly on the remainder; the aver-age hourly velocity was 11.4. The mean daily barometer ranged from30.06 to 30.08 inches, and the mean for the week, 30,08, was 0.09inch normal.

V

SundayHonolulu

u

HAWAIIAN

Mnii lias 31 rn

Reretania Street near A Street,

MANUFACTURERS OP

MACARONI (HOI UDQH

--AND-

BUCKWHEAT (Mi SOU)

The largest and only incorporated concern of lti klI(n Honolulu.

A new pnterprixe launched by enterprising merchant!.

YamamotoHALES AGENT.

hut

fTV.l Ulf n,...1 kJt nn tfnnonn D Tt D.. Q1A( OilV. UU1C1 UL. 11CU1 XT UUUUU. i V. UUA OJLVa

St. To ATTRACT THE JAPANESE TRADE advertise In THE DAILY

NIPPU JIJI, tbe most popular and widely circulated evening paper amongthe Japanese colony.

JOB PRINTING A SPECIALTY with either language of Japanese, Chinese,Korean or English.

The Nippu Jiji Co., Ltd.,

Phone iNo. 48

Y. SOGA, Manager.

Comfort

Hotel Street near Nuuand

Ono ManOno Hammer

and the roll. '

So runs the brief andsimple story of gettlnz

a pcneci root wun

REX I

FLINTKOTEROOFING

It Is made on honor and backed by ay firm with a business reputation coverlnithe 'past 70 years -

What Should a Good Roof Do?Protect from water, cold, heat, sfiarts and

fumes be laid with economy, and wear without, expensive repair.

Unlike shingles, REX Flintkote ROOFINGwIll notblare up at the first spark unlike slate, It will not yieldto the gale of wind unlike tar, it will not melt and run

unlike tin, It will not rust nor leak at the first chance.

Unlike them all it may be laid by any ordinaryworkman with a hammer everything else needed is

in the roll. .

Unlike them all it is suitable for every kind offarm building. 1

Wt. lta. Rtorlr. nnii henrtitv recommend thtaroofing to all who believe economy payfair price for superior article.

iiEiiimi,Ivixxxitecl

Corner King and Fort St., Honolulu.

1

! In !

it is to aa

MEANSEconomy

A Westlnghouse Electric Fan in your Olfico means comfort andcomfort means economy. You know the whole offlco force works bet-ter nnd gives you a better return for your pay roll on a cool day,Westlngh-us- o Fans make all days "cool days." Wo have all types offans ready for you to carry away with you.

The Hawaiian Electric Co.,

Page 3: HAWAIIAN I The Js STAR Newspaper - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · Whether Stevens was acting under instructions from Wash-ington is not known,' but the result ot his coup

DR. F. SCUURMANNOsteoiiftthlc Physician and Ocullat.

Offlcc; 222 Emfiia Square. I'liouo: 33.

Hours: Consulting, i. n., Siitur-tloy- s

cxcciitoil. 0cratlng: n. m.3 0. i. m.

Aloha1 CafeJunction Borotnnla and King Streets.

MEALS 'AT ALL HOURS.Best Wines, Liquors and Beers.

- HARRY KLEMME, Prop.

CLEANING and DYEING. X

Agents ror F. Thomas Cleaning & Dyeing Works, S. F.

THE FRENCH LAUNDRYPHONE 1491.

Territorial Board

of ImmigrationOFFICE: 405 StangenwaTd Bldg.

HONOLULU.

WWAWiV.VWAV.VJV.V.V- -S Latest Novels5 All the most popular books of J

i the day at C

. i n ATJT.tTnti jr. ti i.TnHotel Street, opp. Union.

WAV.W.V.ViV.WAVAVA

MurderIN (PRICES OF

CREX RUGSSPECIAL SALEBEGINNING

JULY 19 AND CONTINUING TO JUU 24

CASH ONLY.IS by 30 40c24 by 48 GOo

27 by ,64 ?1.0030 b 60 1.103G by 72 1.3554 by 90 3.00G by 9... 4.50S by 10 G.509 by 12 8.009 by 15 11. SO

FIGURED RUGS. -

3G by 72 U.G054 by 90 3.516 by 9 ..5.00S by 10 , . 7. 50

9 by 12 .' 9.00PLAIN RUGS, NO FRINGE.

C by 6 ..?2 ,50C by 9 3.50G by 12 4.50

Ooyne Furniture Co.,Limited, '

YOUNG BUILDING.

Nth e boohIS COMING

SIGNSTELL YOU OF IT

SharpMakes Good Signs

Elite Building. Phon l S97

0Y. WO SING COGROCERIES, FRUITS.

VEGETABLES. ETC.

California Butter. 40c lb.; Cooking

Butter, 35c lb.; Fresh Dried Fruits.1186-115- 8 Nuuanu Street.

Telephone Main 235. Box 15Z

BEAUTIFUL ROCKERSChain; Bureaus and Furniture of all

kinds m4e from select Koa.

Wing Chong Co.,Corner King and Bethel.

W. G. CHALMEBSGENERAL CONTRACTORAND BUILDER . . m .

Estimates Furnished Free.Telephones Office 60; Resldonce 1220.

Honolulu, T. H.Offices 1059 Bethel near Hotel.

No butter equal toPURITANBUTTER

HENRY MAY & CO,, LTDAGENTS.

COLOMBIA ON VERGE

OF GREA T UPHEAVAL1

REVOLUTIONARY MOVE AT BAR- -

RANQUILLA SUCCESSFUL, AND

CRISIS REPORTED IN BOGOTA.

PANAMA, July 8. Mall advices received from Colombia report a verycritical condition ot anairs n uiai re- -public. As tho resuy of tho depart- -ure of Ptcsldent Reyes tor Luropethe various political parties, which a.

tew monins ago seemeu 10 ue uuncu,are now completely disorganized, andthere are indications that Colombiais on the verge of a great revolu- -

tion.The movement on July 4 at Barran- -

qullla was successful ,tho revolution- -

Ista capturing the forts, the 'Magda- -

lona River boats and the customhouses. About SO per cent ot the Im- -

portatlons into Colombia pass throughBarranqullla, so that the revolution- -

Ists will not lack for funds.At first it was believed that the

movement was headed by a coalitionof Conservatives and Liberals, but Uis now learned that the Liberals ro- -

fused to Join In the rising, which wasengineered by the ultra Conservatives,

No advices have been received hereas to how tho movement has been ac- -cepted uy tho rest of Colombia, butthere are rumors that a serious situa-tion exists at Bogota. There is a ru-

mor also that certain influential Colombians are publicly in favor of following Panama's example and constituting a new republic, to bo formedot the departments of Cauca and An--tlonult arid a part of Bolivia. Fears,are entertained by Colombians whoare Inclined to peace that the situa-tion will get beyond the control of thepresident designate, General Holguln,1who, however, Is considered an ablestatesman.

It is considered probable that Congress will not convened on July 20,'as was intended, as it would be liableto elect a successor to President Reyes, who, under the existing circumstances, will not be likely to satisfyall parties, and tho desire of Presl- -dent Holguln and his advisers is todo nothing that would serve to furtherdevelop political passions.

GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador, July S. Advices from Colombia state, that a revolution Is brewing In tho Depeart- -m.ent of Cauca, and that within a fewdays all tho southern part of Colombia will be' in arms.

WASHINGTON, July 8. Two dls- -

i""u,ra wum uuiuuiuiu reacneu moouue uepanmeiu today. one wasfrom Elliott Northcott, t.ho new Unit- -ed States Minister to that country,paying that Americans .are" In no dan- -ger as a result of the revolution, whileme bcluiiu, irom rnvon HiDiien, sec- -rotary of the legation at Bogota, stat--ed that the capital bad been cutoff from communication with the out- -side world. The dispatch did not con- -tain any Information as to whetherthe revolutionists wero advancing onBogota, but it is thought that the ab- -bciil-- oi communication with the ca- -pltnl is due to the wires being cut bythe rebels and that this may bo Inpreparation for an attack upon It.

ihe tatato Department has made norequisition on tho navy for the dls- -patch of warships to tho affected (lis- -

',tS:. .?.,h.e!"e nre -- number- of ves- -

CaSt' 1,11,1inTinZl M.aS' r.eam,nK dls"'

of Barranqullla, which from alladvices appears to be ttie centro otme insurrection. In view or the rc.assuring message from MinisterNorthcott this Government will tako'no action toward sending vessels un-til there are further developments'

John Barrett, Director ot tho Bu-reau of American Republics, is of theopinion that the Government will puta quick end to the uprising, which hebelieves is not serious.

WALKING A FAD ON LINEK.

Mrs. Robert Goelet Inaugurates It onVoyage from Europe

NEW YORK, July 10. Among thopassengers who arrived today on theHambujg-Amerlca- u liner Cincinnatiwas Mrs. Robert Goelet. Mrs. Goeletstarted a now fad on shipboard, fa'hois much given to exercise, and eachday or tho voyage sho appeared oudeck and walked miles.

Walking soon became the rage.There were a number ot followers ofMrs. Goelet until tho vessel was aboutthe third day out, und then many orthem dropped out.

URIftJAKYDISCHARGES

RELIKVEDIN

24 HOURSliiich Cap. x-- v

culu bcui IMinVl:the iMim-0?- jJkvarecfccMterftiU)ALI, DUCOUSTS i

The Rejycalaro tho shoes that prove.

REGAL SHOE STOREKing and Bethel Streets.

PROGRESS OF THE

HANDBALL IMSI I

rit. It. I I I. - rm-- " ""nuuaii imucii m uiu x.

ed for ast nlght( wa8 postponed un-- jtil next Tuesday night. Chris Lewis,who was to have met St. John, hasn bad foot and It was deemed only

..!.. i ii . . ... 'uu iu wiui lor uiiu 10 kul in uuitercondition.

Tho match ton, ht wH1 bo DecoitoFerreira. and Saturdav nlcht In

wlll lm nnlnnf TnvnrDoth of thegQ contcsta should ,)0 rlp..., . onp

Th Herrlot-No- tt mntch. which waspostponed from the first of tho series,will ne pinyed 0It between tho firstnnd fourthvoellcr forfeited his match tn Mnr.callino, which lets the former out orit.

These matches are twenty-on-o

points, and two games out of threemust he won to decide a match. "Ityou lose one same, you are out otthe tournament" Is llm munirpntn nnsr.ed up by Dr. Hand. And then thoinstructor adds: "Be sure to make anappointment with your opponent."

This tournament. Is proving one ofthe most Interesting ever nut on atthe Y. M. C. A. and the interest Init is general among the Association'smembership.

.

VATICAN DEMQUIMCE5

FEMALE FS HOIS '

,

TENDENCY OF DRESS SCATHING

IL ASSAILED. AND CATHOLICS

EXHORTED TO OPPOSITION

offices

the Super- -

evening", contains scathing denuncia-- J

tlon of tendencies or femininenfi.1,.i..., p ni,io- n mvt n'

, ,nst ,mmoral for.warde(1 uy tue Catholic ladles of Ber-- ,gamo to Minister of tho Interiorand signed by several thousand ItaUnn The Osservntoro says:

"We hope that competent authorl- -

ties will the law against these'new augean stables. I

"At the same time we butdeplore another dancer rood mo - ;

rals which come to from other

mui,t wpII nnttn. AVn rprer tn thefooi.inns ivn,-.- , t.v u,n tront h.. wnraen of alI ages and by young gll.Is.

wllo ,lrofesg wlth ar(i01. Cath0.iin fni.ii nnd morals Riirmiri tint hnindulgent toward women who walk'about tho streets wearintr immodestgarments. ,

"All nresent-dn- v fnRlilnns :,va itpsiim- -ed to excite the passions. It is a'slilrnvrnnl.- - nf vlr,.n ti, r0i,in nrnhiiHrini t ti.o i.om.tv i.a reflection of the bounty of God andtherefore fruitful In material and mo- -ral well-beini- r.

"Cleanse these unholyrid them "of Hhe dress malms

'

angels of Its wearersyour wives and daughters mako

their own rlnthoa mtim..dresses which grieve Holy Spiritand the Father of truth."

FIne Job anting, star Offlca.

Ga s

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, JULY 28, 1909.

RAIN OF FROGS.

Thousands Fall In Heavy Storm InGouvemeur, N. Y. Delay Trains.

UTICA, N. Y., July 11. A messagetonight from Qouvonieur states thatin u Heavy winu ana ram siorm inuril .1 P ... tfirn t. I nnirno.. -- .

walking was difllcult.The rails on Rome, Watertown

and Ogdensburg Division ot the MewYork Central Railroad for half a mile

.. .. .,t .1 I pwure cuvurcu uuu "- -

trains was lessened.

A CERTAIN CURE FOR BOWELCOMPLAINT.

When attacked with diarrnoea orbowel you want a medicinethat acts quickly. The attack Is atways sudden, generally severe andwith pain. Chamberlain'sColic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedyhas never been known to fall. For sateby all Dealers. Benson, Smith & Co.,Agents for Hawaii.

B 1 AUTHOR1TORDINANCE NO. 5.

AN ORDINANCE TO CREATE ABUREAU OF SUPPLIES IN THE

THE CITYAND COUNTY OF HONOLULUAND TO DEFINE ITS PURPOSES

Bo It Ordained by People of thoCity and County of Honolulu:

Section 1. That a Bureau of Suppliesho nnd Is hereby established in thoGovernment ot the City and County otHonolulu for tho purchaso and dtstrl- -'

bution ot material and supplies neededin various offices ot the said Cityand County, and the control of mech- -

unlcal work required by such offices.Section 2. That tho material and

supplies mentioned in the precedingsection shall comprise all stationery,both blank and printed, printing of allkinds, typewriters, pens, pencils, eras-ers, bands, fasteners and any otherdevices needed in the clerical worlcot

visors, pieces ot furniture and furnlsh- -B lu

tides ot theseother material or supplies not hereinenumerated for which requisitions may

e 11 aB v uny u .uinternal work of any office main

tained by tho City and County otHonolulu.

section d. unac tne ueru, mo aitdltor and the Attorney the City andCounty aforesaid shall he the Directorsof tho said Bureau ot Supplies, theCleric to he tne custouian ami purvey

provisions ot UU3 ordinance,Section 4. That the Clerk as cus

todian and purveyor shall keep account of all requisitions made uponand filled by Uio caid Bureau, charg,nS against the appropriations for ma-

terial and suppllea granted by thoEoard of Supervisor to any office thoactual cost of material and suppliesdelivered to, and any work done Tor,such office within tho srons of thisordinance, and renderintt bills ot ac- -

'count therefor to the offices receivingsuc" material and supplies of havingsuch work performed for them res- -pectlvely, which shall bo the only demands against appropriation for ma-

terial and supplies oi tho kinds men-- ,tloned In this ordinance recognized asduo and navahlo bv tho of Su- -

I'ervisors.Section 5. That in tho months ot

Juno and December In each year thoCleric shall by letter advertisement i

before mentioned books otosservatorevthePARIS. July S.-- Thoreference required by any o the muni- -

of theRomano the semi-offici- al organ.,.!,, .VDrt I,. Pm-- I tills clpal services or Board of

the

the

women.

annly

cannotto

has usfln,i ,,,rAi.,ct wi,i,.h ivmnnn'or material and sunnlies under the

Those

wardrobes;which

guardian weenLet

i,

the

the

the

OF

tho

the

omix-- i

tho

of

Board

or

of

solicit from mercantile houses andconducted by citizens of

tho City and County ot Honolulu bidsfor material and suppliesand for work

In this for thoperiods next ensuing,

July 1 and January1 ot each year, material of suppliesto bo delivered at tho olllco or

such, or at thotho Clerk, In as may

bo ordered at any tlmo and work tobe when required, accord-ing to schedules to bo prepared by thoDirectors ot tho Bureau ot Suppliesvhlch shall Indicate classes ot mate-rial and supplies, nature of mechani-cal work and minimumfor single and tho departnients or offices, or tho Clerk shallmake and order servicesfrom tho lowest bidders that assure

in all other respects.Section C. That It shall he the duty

of all persons in cbnrgo ot City andCounty offices when to fur-

nish tho custodian and purveyor withestimates and samples ot their prob-

able of material and sup-

plies for any ensuing pe-

riod.Section 7. That any bidder for ma

terial and supplies or work under thisordinance who shall bo found to haveentered into collusion with anotherbidder to fix prices shall forfeit allright to bid and contract for any ser-

vice to tho City and County ot Hono-

lulu during twelve months from thodiscovery of such collusion, and In thoevent ot bids not being.when requested from mercantilehouses conducted by citizens of theCity nnd County ot Honolulu at prices on a par with those offered tomost favored customers of such housesthe directors of the Bureau of Sup-plies wlll not bo hound by tho provi-sions of Section ot this ordinancewith respect to sources of supply.

Section S. That tho Directors shallaward contracts for material and supplies or for mechanical work, exceptwhen tho Board ot mayauthorizo them to do otherwise forcause shown, and the Clerk shall keepa record ot all such contracts for thodirection ot officers nnd employes Ingiving orders for material and sup-pil- es

or for vfork, and shall causeall bills for tho same to be made outto tho City and County ot Honoluluwith notation ot tho oroffice for which the orservice Is furnished.

Section 9. That the Bureau of Sup-plies may Incur necessary expensesfor the custodian'-- account books,postage, carrlago of goods, printingand and storage

but no other expenses of op-

eration.Section 10. That this ordinance

shall tako effect on its approval.Introduced by Daniel Lo-

gan.

I, JOSEPH J. FERN, Mayor of theCity and County of dohereby certify that tho foregoing Or-

dinance having been therefore vetoedby me on tho 25th day of June, 1909,was on tho 20th day of July, 1909,at a Regular Meeting of tho Boardof of tho City and Coun- -

by motion duly made,seconded and carried, bysam uoaru oi supervisors, ana uponsuch was passed bytho affirmative voto of not less thanlive members of said Board.

JOSEPH J. FERN,Mavor of tho CItv nnd Countv of Ho- -

nolulu.Dated this 21st day ot July. 1909.lOts-J- uly 23, 24, 20. 27, 28, 29, 30, 31;

3.

-

The Star Did It!Writing from Seattle Will Cooper

the Hawaii Promotion Committee says:much pleased to see Hawaii

folder, which we received bundlesAlamed'a. I think it looks very

Well, worked better thanI .had hoped."

This refers the Hawaii folder justprinted colors and half tones the Starprinting office.

The Best Work DoneThe Lowest Rates

Hawaiian Star Newspaper Association, Ld:

IVIc xiclle

WEDNESDAY,

materially

complaint

Increasing

GOVERNMENT

description

workshops

furnishingperforming contemplat-

ed ordinance, half-year- ly

respect-ively beginning

de-

partment requiringquantities

performed

quantitiesdeliveries,

purchases

satisfaction

requested

requirementshalf-year- ly

forthcoming

Supervisors

departmentmerchandise

advertising, conve-

niences,

Supervisor

Honolulu,

SupervisorsHonolulu,

reconsidered

reconsideration

it..J. of

"I was theof two

by the lastand the cuts up

toin at

At

s JBixilcHxig;, Bethel Street

You Want the

News First ?

You wantYour AdsRead ?

Here is some advice

THRUJ

Honolulu more than any other city in the World, ia place where the EVENING PAPER gets the new.first. The clock here is over two hours behind thedock at San Francisco, five hours behind New York

aud ten to eleven hours behind the clocks in the Euro-pean capitals.

This means that when THE STAR is going to pressThe Day Is Closed In Washington, Chicago, New Yorkand Europe and almost over in San Francisco. Thenews of the day is here for THE STAR.

Under modern conditions it takes practically no timeto prepare and transmit news and

The Star gets everyEvening the CableDispatches giving

The flews of all tiie World

For tlie day just ended

Here are some of the features that go to make theevening paper the predominating factor in an advertie-in- g

campaign:t

It is delivered at the home each night when thewhole family has plenty of time to read it.

It is carried home by the business man when hisday's work is done and it stays there. A morning pa-per is usually carried down town by the head of thefam,ily and hurriedly read., The evening paper is not read hurriedly, but thor-oughly,' so that all the advertisements receive theirshare of attention.

It presents the store news a little ahead, giving, the.prospective purchaser time to plan a shopping tonefor the next morning.

The evening paper presents the news the day it hap-pens. The morning paper the day after.

The evening paper presents the news first. The morn-ing paper merely elaborates it.

The Evening Paper

Prints Daylight HewsThe morning paper takes what is left.

Y

'SiIS

'v.

II

Page 4: HAWAIIAN I The Js STAR Newspaper - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · Whether Stevens was acting under instructions from Wash-ington is not known,' but the result ot his coup

oon

Tfa HLaro-iiOLi- m StairDAILY AND SEMI-WEEKL- Y.

Babliihed every afternoon (except Sunday) by the Hawaiian StarNewspaper Association.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES.(Local, per annum $ 8.00ffjwreign, per annum 12. oq

Payable in Advance.BntarU at Pott Offlea at Honolulu, Hawaii, as Mcond clati mall matter.

Bubicrlbart who do not Qtt their paperiy notifying th Star Office; Telephone StS.

reQularly will confer a favor

The Supremo Court of The Territory of Hawaii ha declared both THEHAWAIIAN STAR (dally) and THE SEMI-WEEKL- 8TAR newrpapenf general circulation throughout the Territory of Hawaii, "suitable for

proceeding, orders, Judgment and decree entered or renderedIn th Court of th Territory of Hawaii."

Letter to THE HAWAIIAN STAR should not be addresned to any Indlvl- -

I connected with the oftlce, but simply to THE HAWAIIAN 8TAR, or toChe Editorial or Buslnei Departments, according to tenor or purpose.

GEORGE F. HENSHALL MANAGER

WEDNESDAY JULY 28, 1909

If Hawaii is a Japanese colony, as the Star contends, thenit is only a few years since 'that Arizona was an Indianonly and New Mexico a Spanish colony. Advertiser.

The Star has never contended that Hawaii is a Japanese colony.On the contrary, it has earnestly pointed out that Americans here arcawakening to a new determination that it shall not become one, at thesame time pointing out the danger, so long ignored. It has said, andrepeats, that we have to thank Mexico and associates for drawingtimely attention to the situation. It has said, and repeats, that theiragitation has struck the hardest blow possible at the future prosperityof the most prosperous colony of Japanese on earth, the one in Ha-

waii. They have given us a boom in Americanization, and it is notgoing to die out.

Our morning contemporary has now come strongly to the viewso long herein expressed, that the transportation difficulty is the greatproblem of the "small farmer" movement here. As long as Hawaiicounty's vapt idle areas can only connect with a market over roadswhich half the time arc almost impassable and by a steamship servicecharging rates that put Huntington's "all the traffic will bear" in theshade, the lands are likely to remain idle.

In reading the accounts of efforts to cross the English channel inan airship, who wouid have guessed that Latham has the Frenchmachine and Lotus TBleriot the English-Airship- s

are developing fast. One reads now of airship garagesin Paris and Berlin. The accounts constantly recall what used to behe accounts of the first automobiles of but a few years ago, "horse-es- s

carriages," they were called then. At that time, as now, theFrench appeared to lead, especially in the pleasure autos. In the autodevelopment, as now in airships, the Germans seemed to take a leadin putting the device to army use. But when the business waslished on a commercial basis, and automobiles came into general use,the great factories of the United States began turning out the most,the best, the swiftest and the cheapest machines of all.

THE REAL SIGNIFICANCE.

'f. ..."The Nippu Jiii's expressions "colonial foundation of the Japanese

nation in Hawaii" are only of real significance, except as affectingthe trial now in progress, and as to the effect there the matter maybe left to the jury, when considered in connection with recent de-

velopments- of Japanese journalism here. Up to the time when it be-

gan this sort ,of utterances the Jiji was an unimportant local paper.But references to the colonial foundation of the Japanese nation here;repeated urgings that a stand be made against the planters for higher'wages for all Japanese, and excited declarations that all who opposedsuch plans were betraying "their country," this sort of stuff, madeits circulation advance by leaps and bounds. A contemporary whichtook the other view found itself boycotted and rejected at postofficcsor returned in dozens with vile epithets written on its wrappers. Thisis the paper which stands in sympathy with the idea of making Amer-ican citizens of the rising generation of Japanese. It supports thefoolish notion on which our school system is founded, that these chil-dren will grow up to be Americans. The Japanese paper vlych holdsthese ideas is boycotted, its issues torn to bits, rejected at the postoffice or returned' to its editor with obscene and threatening inscrip-

tions, and is editor's very life is in danger.The mere utterances of the editor of the Jiji are not of so much

importance, do not carry as much meaning to the. public here, asdoes the enthusiastic responding support from the Japanese. Thisannlies to all classes, laborers and the wealthier class alike. No rebukehas been uttered. There has been only manifestation of support,moral and financial.

These facts speak for themselves. They should be plain to the un-

derstanding of all. They show the home influences amid which Jap-

anese children whom in our schools we teach to sing "America" arebeing reared, and should shatter the dream that the rising-- generationof Japanese 'will ever be anything but Japanese. Tin's, it may be re-

peated, is not at all necessarily to their discVedit.

Thaw has been held insane, by a verdict which was the only possible alternative for condemning him to death, the case under suchcircumstayccs. ought to be one that could not he reopened.

President Diaz of Mexico is a very old man. A thousand riotersarrested yesterday, following disturbances directed against him, is ashowing of conditions .which may mean that Mexico's long period ofpeace, so unusual among the nations south of American boundaries,will end with his death if not before. When the dictator goes, Mexicomay, break out in revolutions like her neighbors. Such possibilitiespromise many a problem for American statesmen, ending with expansion dreams of vast proportion.

Hawaii is not a Japanese colony,is the point.

The Japanese here arc. That

Perhaps a day is coming when airships will carry freight. In thatevent small farmers on other islands may liavc a chance to get theirproducts to market at a rate low enough so that they will get some-thing for them on the final account sales.

Query: Will those Filipinos have citizenship rights here? AskTaft. It will be remembered that, he insisted upon giving them a votein their own land, whereupon they elected a couple of legislatureswhich rcsolutcd as quickly as possible for independence.

Except as Filipinos are relieving a situation made intolerable bythe arrogance of another class of laborers here, we do not hear anyloud cheers, over Hawaii's large acquisitions of Filipinos. However,be it nbted, that "except" is a pretty big one.

What, seems to be lacking in all the flying machines is an emer- -

Jj.

STAR, JDLT 1909.

fcency apparatus to keep them safely and Serenely aTlSat righTsidc upwhen the propelling and steering devices have cither or both beenput out of commission by accident. Inventive genius that has doneo much in the other requirements of aerial navigation will surely

not he long wanting in this one.

MA1NLANDERS FOR HAWAlti

THE HAWAIIAN

The following is a Washington special to the Philadelphia PublicLedger :

The unemployed of the great cities, according to the belief' of the Department of Commerce and Labor, arc not desirous

of obtaining work, This conviction has been forced uponthe department officials through the failure of the territorialgovernment of Hawaii to secure laborers in New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Chicago or others of the populous centers.As a result, the department is now preparing to send an im-

migration inspector and a marine surgeon to Lisbon, Portu-gal, whither the Hawaiian authorities have been driven afterrepeated failures to recruit labor in this country.

The experiment with the Portuguese has been tried beforein the islands and with success. As a result, recruiting in theold country is comparatively easy and nearly enough em-igrants' to fill a modern steamship comfortably have signifiedtheir intention of going to the former kingdom of QueenLiliuokalani. As soon as the agents have got their full quotatogether the department will send an inspector and a surgeonto Lisbon to make the necessary inspection of the party.

"It is a source of wonderment to us," said a high officialof the department today, "that the unemployed in the citiesdo not jump at the chance to get employment in such sur-roundings. The climate in Hawaii is delightful, being some-thing .like titnt of Southern California, the wages arc goodand, on the plantations, the living is very moderate, for thecountry is remarkably fertile."

It is news to .most people here that efforts haVc been made to geilaborers in these Eastern cities. The failure is due probably morethan anything else to our reputation as atropical country of coolielabor. However, it is not at all certain that we would have benefitedfrom an influx of the mainland metropolitan unemployed. Many ofthem would have been found to be a pretty tough lot." The kind ofimmigrants from the mainland these islands need, and ought to be.able to get, is seen in the great rushes of homeseckcrs whenever thefederal government announces the oneniner of a new tract of land.This Territory, has large areas of most desirable land that is idle.the mainland has tens of thousands of moderately well to do farmersseeking such areas. These, and not the men who line up at the soupkitchens or on the bread lines of the big cities, arc what Hawaii wants.

PERFECTING OF ORDINANCES.

To throw a proposed municipal ordinance open to' public discus-sion after its introduction is liable to bring a confusing multiplicityof counsel to bear on the propositions involved. Then, if an ordinancebe amended in any way after its introduction, the law requiresa republication of the measure for ten times 'before it goes to theMayor for his approval; which may cause delay of an urgently need-ed ordinance besides the considerable expense for advertising. Aproposal to have the publicity provision amended at the recent sessionof the Legislature, with a view to having no handicap on amendmentsto ordinances after introduction, was discouraged by some of theolder legislators on the ground that a great Hegree of publicity was agood thing. Often,' "however, amendments are proposed whichmerely the product of captiousness or self-intere- Such should' notbc treated seriously when the pviblic welfare is at stake. It is differ-ent when amendments born of practical experience in the subjects atissue arc proposed. There neither time nor expense should be toonarrowly considered. . '

The present system cannot be changed without' jicw legislativeauthority. Yet the disadvantages and objectionable rfeatures of publichearings after introduction might be avoided by holding such, whereit seems desirable to hold them, before instead of after introduction.Public hcarjngs of important measures are quite common in both fed-

eral and local legislation, but the measures arc not subject to the com-pulsory embargo of requiring a publication while pending wheneverthey may he amended. This is a handicap upon the perfecting of or-

dinances cither with or without public hearings. Until it is removedby an amendment of the municipal charter, the Board of Supervisorsought in each case simply to be sure it is right obtaining public opinionin modes the most convenient and then ahead! Anyway, thebest test of the value Of a law is to be found in its working, and in.

the case of a municipal ordinance any defects its operation reveals maybe remedied within a few weeks unlike a Territorial statute foundto 1" defective or "positively bad, which must await the next biennialsession of hc Legislature to be amended or repealed.

Jas. W. Pratt,V

125 Merchant Street, adjoining

240,

WEDNESDAY,

' eloplionc 002,P. Bex

Stangenwald Building.

Real Estate For Sale and LeaseCITY AND L OTS. FARMING LANDS

CandyFrom the Palm allthat's good in sweets.As pure as the Lily

1 . r 1 1ana iresn every aayHOTEL STREET NEAR UNION

OldGovernment PlantationCigarsA Smooth Even Cigar

451

is

Always samo-r-n- n elegant smoke In Relna Victorias, Panetellas; Pu- -rltanos Finos; Regalia Brlttanlcas, P erfectos, Ben Alls.

LEWIS & COMPANY, LTD.,Telephone

SUBURBAN

and

CIGAR POR1UM.Solo Agents tor Hawaiian Islands.

28,

are

go

0.

the

EM

169' King rStrcei.

,1 t;"Mi.

Level Dp

Your Lot

P . MPHONE 890.

don't

Soil, black or Walanno sand, coral

or rock furnished tq up depressions

or build up terrace!

)Also men to do the work.

PONDP. o. BOX 162.

AUSTRALIANMutton and Spring Lambj Cottontails.

Island Mutton, Primrose Pork Sausages, Island Beef, fatand tender.

Brand new shipment of Crystal Springs and WhiteClover Butter.

Metropolitan Market

W. F. Heilbron, Proprietor. Phone 45.

IT'S THE BESTHundreds Of Satisfied

Housewives AreUsing The

Leonard CleanableREFRIGERATOR

get a LEONARD If you Intend to buy a Refrigerator ffi

H. Hackfeld & Co., Ltd.HARDWARE DEPARTMENT

Cor. Fort and Queen Streets. ,

TAKE YOUR OWNMOVING PICTURES

The wonderful little Ernemann Kino, just on the market,is a1 complete and perfect moving picture machine. No largerthan a small hand camera and requires no more skill oper-

ating. You can take pictures of the children playing aroundyour home or do any work done by a large moving picturemachine.

PRICE OF MACHINE COMPLETE, ONLY $75 00.

COME AND SEE IT.

HonoMu Pin-S- it Co

1057 FORT STREET. JUST BELOW HOTEL STREET.

Why does the FRANKLIN win all the important economy contests andoutclass all other automobiles In' reliability trials, if it is not the mosteconomical, most efficient and strongest automobile made?

1909 FRANKLIN RECORD CONTESTHARRISBURG RELIABILITY AND ENDURANCE 'TEST. Franklin Mod

el D won tho Governor's Trophy, the highest award ot tb-- contest. thisthe Franklin's nearest competitor had OG points penalization.

NEW YORK AUTOMOBILE TRADE ASSOCIATION N MIL-EAGE CONTEST. The Franklin won its class prize, also grand prize, andestablished a world's economy record carrying the greatest load thegreatest distance on one gallon ot gasoline.

PITTSBURG ENDURANCE RUN.-Fran- klin Model D was the only automobile to make the run ot 450 miles without penalization for repairs or adJustments.

nwicoi x tkiau Franklin Model D won the onlyperfect score. The technical examination after the contest eliminatedmirteen contestants wno naa clean rord scores.

CLEVELAND ENDURANCE AND ECONOMY CONTEST.-Fran- klln Mou u nuu vuo msiwai awaru. it naa a perfect road score and also thelowest eaaoiino consumption.

n T I T n A nr mAA irrm tttt t n. i"'"uauu mwmuia iuaunimuij. x xiiai. Frnklln Model D won aperfect score. The technical examination after the contest caused thepenalization or many entrants.

BRETTON WOODS RELIABILITY RUN.-Fran- klin Modal n won r.feet score. In this run it was the only 1909 stock model that was ship-ped direct from the factory to the contest route. It went through the 1600- -muu grma wunout a single adjustment

IT TTriTT ...

fill

in

run

by

uuiuuiun luuu. uranium Model D and Model H botn won perrectscores this contest they were acknowledged to be the easiest-ridin- g otall motor-car- s, and they had no tire trouble

All which proves that an automobile constructed so that it rides easilyiuo .uub omomoDiie mecnanically and the most reliable, that great

weight is not necessary for strength, that Franklin non-Jarri- construc-tion and light weight mean comfort, economy and safety, that tho Frank-lin air-cool- engine is without a rival for efficient work and stayint;power.

ASSOCIATED OARAGEL nil

0

jj

In

In

of

H. ltHOI.I.ISTKU ' j

fChemist Shopj13 iflj AT THE FOUNTAIN

"asms soiljj! A Delicious Summer Drink J

I mm niLIMITED.,

STREET.

Established 1S79.

Don't UseGlasses

Unless yon need them and when yoido need them to sure they fit youWe will give you a thorough examination, and if you don't need glasseswill tell you; If you do will sell yoithe best

H.. F,

FORT

& CO,, LTD

Optical Department

STEINWAYSTARR AND OTHER PIANOS.THAYER PIANO CO.156 Hotel St., Opp. Young Hotel.

Phone 218.TUNING GUARANTEED.

COLORED MATS.Beautiful designs In

Filipino and TahitianFibres, t Post cards,Fans, Baskets, Tapas,Oriental Goods.

HAWAII SOUTHSEAS CURIO CO.

Bishop St I

(Under the Electric Sign,next Cable Office.)

All kinds WRAPPING PAPERS andTWINES, PRINTING and WRITINGPAPERS.AMERICAN-HAWAIIA- PAPER A

SUPPLY CO., LTD.0 EC. Q. GUILD. General Manager.

Fort and Quean Streets.Honolulu. PHONE 410

K

AND

mm m n z

BEDS !New shipment ot patterns and X

styles for 1969 Just received.

J. Hopp, & Co. IJ 185 King Street

ra in

At JORDAN'S

Fort Street

THE CELEBRATED

MAPAI IRENE

orsetPOPULAK MODElj

at- -

$7.50, $12.50 and $15.00

fine Job Pmcm. tjtar pmc,9i,

Page 5: HAWAIIAN I The Js STAR Newspaper - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · Whether Stevens was acting under instructions from Wash-ington is not known,' but the result ot his coup

AMUtEMENTS.

THE

INew FeatureFilm

Lady Meg's secret

Three changesa week

MONDAY,WEDNESDAYand FEIDAY

Park TheaterFORT BELOW BERETANIA ST.

Open Ail? MovingPicture Exhibition

HAWAIIAN ORCHESTRA.Program Changed

'3 TIMES A WEEK 3

Admission 10 centsChildren 5 centsReserved Seats 15 cents

POPEN AIR

n pt inroMOTIONMi

OPPOS'lTE'THE EMPIRE.

Admission ; lboReserved .., .77777.150

THE MARVELOUS

0 ctODhoneCOMENCING

Thursday, July 29

TarAdmsslon i..lOc and 20c

THE EMPIRE

MotionPictures

Thorough ventilation, com-

fortable chairs.TWO SHOWS DAILY

Admission 10c, 15c, 25c.

OR PHE U M

The Big'ShowFor LittleMoney

Moving Picturesand Vaudeville

General Admission 10c

Reserved Chairs 25c

Seats can bo resgrved In advances

Phono C81.

Fine Job Printing? Sbir Otto?

CHARGES

CONSPIRACY

(Continued from Pace One.)

niul j he now contemplates prosecutionfor conspiracy to have hlin landed Inthe bug-hou- and Is thinking of start-lu- g

proceedings for the reason that In-

cidents horn of tnls former case seemto tojnd to prejudice him as an attor-ney In the eyes of his clients nud ofthe 'community. All Kinney had todo lu the premises was to report thepolice court proceedings in his paper.

"TJie circumstances of the troublelast' fall," says Harrison, "were suchthat Tledhouse made much of them toother people while I remained silent,not having been guilty of anything outof the way. His talk and the talk ofothers growing therefrom, and fromtho undue notoriety of the affair Inthe police court, means that sonic K

are prejunicea against nio unu, wiienI happened to accept tho Atcherley de- -

fense the public, a certain represen-tation of the public, is pleased to poke(fun In my direction by such remarksits that it Is worth tho price of admission to see Harrison defending Atcher-ley, evidently Insinuating that I amcrhzy and that a crazy man Is defend-ing a crazy man. All this Is calculat-ed to place me in a very embarrassingr,light with the community and to pre- -judlce my efforts In Atcherley's bo--half, and It Is going bo far that"'!must think of defending myself, forclients are coming to my ofllce andasking me if It is true that I amcrazy. It Is amusing, of course, In away, ,but exceedingly aggravating tome, I 'can assure you.

Of course, I don't want to be revenged, or anything of the kind, butIt Is about time I was looking aftermy own Interests. I have a right todefejid Atcherley and to see that .hegets all the benefits tho law allowshim on appeal. '

If Redhouse returns to Honolulu,as he says he will, I shall take stepsto have It shown that his prosecutionof me about a year ago was In fact apersecution and a conspiracy to haveme, placed In the asylum for reasonsIjest lniowp to himself. Kinney reported the "case in a manner unfavor-able to me.','

The police- - court record will showthat Redhouse's prosecution, of Harri-son fell through, that the County Attorney's onlce entered a nolle prose-

qui in the case against Harrison andthat the prosecution had no case, butthis fact did not receive the publicattention that was received by thoatpry of the alleged trouble:Ij'lt may be remembered that Harrisonwas unegea lu muve uiRiiieuuu ;ihousehold of women and others inKallhl, with a gun. Harrison, whether he had a gun, .or not, paid xentfor the house In question and whenhis house was taken possession ofagainst his will by a gang of men andwomen he arose on his hind legs nndchaser everybody out.

If- Harrison was crazy in what hedid on that particunlar night, nearly ayear ago, there are others Just ascrazy, for similar things have beendone since in connection with thesame gang which Harrison Is said toJiave terrified. Harrison has given upa honPe' that was not haunted by dis-

embodied spirits but which was thescene of trouble for the reason that toomany hearts tried to beat beneath thesame roof.

Just how Editor Kinney of the Tribune can be connected with any "conspiracy" does not begin to appear andthe wnole affair seems to have been aprivate quarrel between Harrison andRedhouse.

ALCOHOL IS A PERSERVATIVE.

Alcohol is recognized the world overas the proper, most efficient and wholesome preserver ot medicinal compounds, and while some journalists tryto alarm the world by the cry thatpatent "medicines contain more alco-

hol than beer," they neglect to statethat proprietary medicines are takenIn doses from a teaspoonful to a table-spoonf-

while beer is a beverage thatIs consumed in quantities from a glassto several quarts a day.

Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound contains only 18 per cent alco-

hol, simply enough to preserve theroots and herbs from which it Is made,.and may be relied upon by every woman In tho land as a reliable, honest,and sure remedy for the Ills peculiarto her sex.

ONLY TWENTY ROUNDS.

Jack Scully stated this afternoon thattho match fight between Dick Sullivanand Jack Cordell will bo .twenty In-

place of twenty five rounds. Thechange Is made on account ot tholnrgo amount ot monoyx asked by thefighters for tho longer go. There will'bo one short preliminary of four orsix rounds contestants to bo namedabout tho middle of next week.

LATESTIP1GAVednesday, July 28.

San Francisco Sailed July 28, S. S.Hllonlan, for Honolulu...Yokohama Arrived, July 27, S. S.

Asia, hence July 17.Newcastle Sailed July 20, Sch. Ad-

miral, for Honolulu.

COUNTY I

COUNTING

WHEEL

' ' ' ( it- - -.II f (

THE.HAWAIIAN STAR, .WEDNESDAY, JULY 28 1909. f'lVB- -

KEEPING TAB ON VEHICLES OVEU

oil: HOAD FORSAKE.

Day by day Ben Dole sits on a benchKing streets and counts everything onin a Japanese fruit stall at andwheels that goes by.

. . . .

tie aoea not count cveryunng umtwheeSi but kc(lpg tab cn every

thing that runs on wheels, and this fortho purpose of ascertaining how muchtralllc the oiled road will stand, evenfor the purpose of establishing ascientific statistical basis for tutttroroad operations In this ClU and Loun- -

a,.c,. wnonn--nrS-;n

uui;v( " - '

man at the station now lor nearlythree months, and wheeled machinesare still going by and statistics are.... ... ,, R.nEtIn,nn J. o. An- -'onii yiims !., uv".m.,

dersou ot the road department Is kept,busy In odd moments tabulating thorepbrts of 'the wheel watcher and Ina few days thero, wilt be ready forpresentation to tho Board ct Super--visors and to the Mayor a most com- -prehenslve It not useful system of. fig- -ures for their understanding or. ar--guraent. ,

On July 11 for example, said ekam- -pie being a Sunday, tien Dple'jdlscov- -ered that between:'slx','ln. the'mo'fnlngand six o'clock In the evening theropassed along King street, going west,37 bicycles, 15 automobiles, 24 car- -rlages, 21 delivery wagons, 3 big ,wa.

n : ,goiia, i, uruys, iu bwiii wagons anu' aunattached horses. GoIng''cas', in thesame twelve hours were 28 bicycles, 14autos, 28 carriages, 28 delivery wa-- 4

gons, 4 big wagons. 3 drays, 21 swillwagons and ono unattached equine. ,

July 21, Wednesday, showed, goingWest, 12G bicycles, 124 autos, 131 car-riages, 115 delivery wagons, 27 bigwagons, 39 drays, 21 swill wagons and9 unattached animals; ' while goingeast, were about as many.

The Idea Is to find out what affecta certain amount of traffic haBon the

road and be complaint reeardjiuiu mat now long tne roaa win lastunder oiled conditions and whether ornot ii pays to on tne roads.

THE THEATERS

The crowds the moving pictureshows last night and the night beforewere satisfactory, considering the time

the weeif, and counter attractionsthe city. At the Orpheunl the big

audience of Tuesday night was al- -most duplicated last night, and indi-cations are bright for a highly suc-cessful season there.

THE ORPHEUM."The big show for liitie money"

will have continuance at the Orpheumthis evening. For good, clean vaude-ville and moving picture entertain-ments, nothing like the sow" tit hoOrpheum has ever been seen Ho-nolulu beforo for the money. Thegeneral admission and reserved seatcharges have been fixed so low that- -

fany purse can stand it.THE PARK.

will be the featurefilm tho Park oppn air theater thisevening. This Is tale of love and ad-

venture, and as the scene and inci-dents are of California they rome veryclose home. Manager Congdonfeels that this film will more thanplease his 'patrons and he certainly

SATEMENT OF

The BankOF HONQLTJ

ItESOURCES.I

Discounts and Ov- -I

erdralts ?2,383,3C9.S9Bonds 592.1S3.87stocks 39,829.01Heal Estato and Bank Fur- -

nlturo .' 10,530.Duo from Banks 318,474.11Cash SC9,827.49'other Assets 1,593.80

?4,221,808.51

G. ,R. CARTER,E. F.

Tilrwfnrfl

has reason feel proud ot It. In addition to tho leader, thero w;:t bo speClal comlcnl sketches and muslcnl solection.

DON'T BE MISLED.If you have not f.een tho Actophono

at the Gem theater ou have not seenI he greatest invention cmlnatlng fromthe brains of Europo and America'sforemost inventors. It Is marvelous,astonishing, bewildering nnd perplexing. Tho Actophone brings youreves and ears tho greatest llvlnc stars

' , .. ..r.M-ln- l,1 n,..l !'..UL liei until , ,llf;iuilu unu riunuu tinoriginally presented In grand opera,burlesque, drama and vaudeville. It isrefined, pleasing, amusing and Instruc- -tlve.

THE ALOHA PARK.Manager Lovo will offer his patrons '

nt Aloha Park tonight a new program,with sneclal films, comical selections

.and good music. The Aloha Is openair. and Is just tho place which tosl'end a warm evening.

i

Said a patron of this old stand-b- y

Inat nlcht: "Show nmv ronin and--cn rma mov rrr lili t no 'Am' ntt LUl W 111 It J UUI HIV 111 U V. lO Ul t

.. y" " "" --

" ra ict or ino n Uon ant ryou visit the Art tonicht. von willbe convinced that nowhere In Hono- -lulu do you get better satisfaction.

.. .1,. ...J'i.wfc3i .nil IUI HU.J , nif iiiu Jlltlll.l&e- -ment nsgeverafeSi l3 lhe most carefuI.!y- feIe.Cicd J0r. ,at J.en8t .slx monthsin. i tin ipnriirn ii in p vna n vivtn

of that most famousaU of jIlsg Braddon's W0rj.3 ot flc-

tIon r ad ";tUo.S?!!?".fec., .coioreu n m "iiernarn i'n ssv vnn

nnve someti,ng that will delight tho,nost Wbs0 ot the Mthetlcniiv inriiii- -pd, while the Chinamen's visit to "Gayparee" and what liaDnened to til Pilltheir will make you almost die withlaughter.

Is very good music provided.'and nltnirethpr' if vn i, .!

will not full tn si, Repeatedtomorrow only.

. ji

thw rimptuit!At the EmDire- tonicht- mere will bo

a .splendid leader and a largo number,of short specialities. Manager Over- -end has exercised areit in. .. . l,UO 111 BG- -lectlng this program nnd feels certainthat he will be able please yuoay.

i

ITSCLEANER CITY

,

rrtrit them ia nn ,on0n ti.

the handling of garbage If the mer- -chants will see to it that their storesweenlnes and other rubbish la nut o,.tas soon after closing hours each even- -lng as possible. The garbage wagonswill collect If all ilnriup-... th n.M.t" aaiQftftV!

specially oiled to compirro'Should any In to

AT

at

ofin

in

"Shanghaied"at

to

of

3i

to

to

in

representation of

to

is, he says, that Ugarbageafter In all

Reynollls-other.civlllze-

Jl01oom,.... v.v......, ... VJ

'per TZt IZ Mp

during night.

Mr, Thomas of this city, whohas been on tho mainland for someweeks, rptiirnpil tnrinv

E. M. Walsh, formerlynf AinUnaii mnntnttnn .v.,, m rntho Mongolia for a visit in this city.

on,i h.t v at a,vr,n.,4ndnv frnm n trln tn ihn Pnnnf

Mr. and Mrs. H. Baldwin return- -ed from mainland this morninghv th Mnnp-nii- Air Tini.iinthat he simply went for tho benefitof his health and that he now feelsIn the best ot

NelsonFrancisco he for G' H.

the morn- - Brash,ly, Robert

to this city to stay.C. A. ni nnii Tim rn'wwrin-h- t

werer among to returnMongolia. made... ...rounu trip on tne steamer, going for

benefit of health.Mr. Mrs. E. A. Jacobson have

moved out to Walklkl for n summervacation change.

OF

Hawaii, LimitedLU,

Capital up ? C00.000.00Surplus 400.000.00Undivided Profits C4.010.90

Fund 31,721.30Deposits 3.124,852.25

uncalled for .. 1,224.00

ii 09i enu ki

AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS JUNE 30,

Loans,

There

J3;

manager

"the"

O. H. Cooke, solemnly that tabovo statement"

is true best of my knowledge and belief. .C. II. COOKE,

Examined and correct:CIIAS. II.

BISHOP,-

, 1ZENO K.

Subscribed'' and sworn to before me this 1st day. of July,'

J. D. MARQUES,Notary Public First Judicial Circuit.

SHIPPING IIin r

Wednesday, .Inly 27. 0.P M R S. Mongolia, from San

ijrnm.8C0 ' q.q Hi C.

DEPARTED. lunTuesday, July 2(i. laud

Str. Maul, for Mahukonn, etc., 5:45P. 111.

Mlkaliala, for Molokal, 5:30 p

in.Str. Klnau, for Kauai ports, 5 p.

in.Noeau, for Kauai ports, 5:15

Wednesday, .July 27.Fr. hk. Montcnlm, for Portland, y

n,J,1'c,j. q. o. .tiiiiiii;uut uunuuii, lur'O.iu

F ,' ' '

SAIL lODAi. ,

ii .i. r c if it . I iiM' ' MU,1K""a' IUI wlBm, "

DITR msmnnnwgu. fnjm MnM, , n

ni''

c tr n n.TTTir-- . vt I

OtlllJ OAI UHUlll. IIT. K. K S. S. Nippon aru, tor llelranclseo p- -

SAIL FRIDAY.Clnudlne, for Maul ports and

H"l 5 p', m- -

DUE FRIDAY. '

S. S. Nippon Maru, Kilmer, fromt blv n m

.

PASSENGERS ARRIVED.

Per S. S. Mongolia, fr,om San Fran- -

Cisco, July 2 Mrs. Charles E. Anaer- -sn. Master Edmun.i Anderson, n. v,Baldwin, Mrs. H. P. Baldwin, S. A.Baldwin, Mrs. S. A. Baldwin, A.Bowles, Mrs. C. C. Bowles, H. D. Uow- -man- - Mrs- - H' D' Bowman. Master: :fk Bowman, S. L. Bushy, MissIrene DuSby' M'SS Amy Bl'sby'ter Paul Bllsby' n''uc0 Cartwrlght Jr.,Mloo Q T ni.nmlin. tfuu",""i"'1Chambers. Miss Alice .T. Chnmbers. W.' j

L. Coltharp. Claude Cummings, Mrs.Claude Cummings and Infant, Jliss 1.

,Dahm, Miss V. Damon, Miss G. Dunn,Miss E. Faye, Mrs. W. Is. Foster, Ben

Oscar H. II. leave, a vn-In-

Mrs. H. Miss It. S.for will

J. D. In Na-dirs. .1. D. Hawkins Mlss.Teanetto Hawkins, Master J. D. Haw- -kins, Hill, W. Hill. C. H. Hunter,

- D- - Ka8' Miss Kanne, Mrs. D.A KlnSsury. Jlllla Kingsbury,

. nu commenced his senM- - jail.

The trouble stores H,enry Fl Maupal, W. O. Mendenhall.do not put until M?"; MI, S

opening in tho morning. ,ary P.h""?8' MJSs ucommunities the refuse ?haf: t' ce' X t Sin.

Is left Olltsliln i

ZiJZthe

Wall,

the

prl

P.

tntp,i

condition.

C.

In

Lansing returned from - "where has been pv- - c- - Blaclf' L- - lackman, W.

Bradley, Wm. Brash, Mrs. Mrs.er a year ,on MongoliaInc. Ho states that ho. has rnmo h.iMr A. Brown, Miss I. Buch

the passengersby the They the

the Mr. Cartwrlght'sand

CONDITION

LIABILITIES.

paid

Pension

Dividends

1909.

I, manager, do swear thoto the

Manager.foundATHERTON,

MYERS, Auditor.

1909.

Dr.ARRIVED.

Str.

Str.

c,nmlln0)

Sn"

Str.

'on

ncVss

MaS"

Ulloo

Gard- -

representO.

v- -

Mlss

their

"K' ' '

Ia"e1' M Dr" "C"ry .tat.th.ey ",ss0K1" 'i""ey, easier i;ari wauney.

B- - Schoenfeld .1. R. Ferguson, W. I.C. Smith, F. P. Stone. Mrs. F P.Stone.F' jr Swnnz'. M F. M. Swanzy,i.noa uiisa iu. o. uiamucr,i? T,Y " 4, J '

a,rd' ,K- - Vard,' I,siLMaPweir, o. wne, ur. fj. u. woou, u.,TIT II 1 re ,r T1 T II', m ; J""",uYo' Kwong, Master E. N. Snow, B.F. Mr'. B. F. Mrs.C. P. Bliss, Mrs. N. K. Dunham,J. H. Dwlght, Miss Florence it.

.w,Sht; w- u Hubbara. Mrs. O. Ii.

Per S. S. Alameda, for San Fran- -

Tc'sc' J",y 2,8rK;,Afbo JC' Mra. Abel and 2 children.

lon uuo- - A,,e" IIUl- - iu- -

Buckholtz, Miss A. Cassidy, MissMiss Bella Chalmers, Geo.

Chalmers Jr.. Joe Miss MaryChafers. Robert Chalmers ThomMi nnlmoa 'I'n I iTnrTi 'lica f" ' " "Chln&- - Ir3' ' r- - Chlllingworth, Miss

" ,7Miss M. CrolgMon, Mrs. D..Douglas. J. Roy Douglas. Miss M. M.

c,f"-- f E. G. Fcrrelra, Gibson,Mrs. Gibson Miss J. Gicbcl,E. JI. Mrs. F. E. Haley and 3

I children, Miss G. Hathaway, Miss M.Hawthorne, A. W. Hecn, Miss S.

R. S. Hosmer, A. G. Iverson,S. t" Johnson, L. B. Jors, G. E.Kelly, Mrs. M. Kelly, Mrs. M.Langton, Miss J. Lazaro, F. H. Leo,M. H. Levy, Mrs. Levy, E. W.C. J. Ludwlgsen, A. T. Maby, Mrs.J. W. MacDonald, Mrs. C. D. Maynoand d'11'1' J-- w- - McCarthy, Mrs. Mc- -C!rt"' 0. Medcalf, E. Mlllhauscr,Ge0, Mlntz, Mrs. Mlntz and child, Misslj-- A Peterson, L. C. MissAT- - Up9, MIbs A. Porter, Miss M.

uInan. Miss Heldy, C. A. Reed, W.n. nice, euaconess .1. u, scnao-fe- r,

II. Schulte, Miss E. Smith,S. Spauldlng, W. C. Stewart, J. T. Tay-lor, Mrs. Taylor, Master Taylor. YoungKlm TonB' Mrs- - w Topham, L. B.

, .... UIIIVI, .1. 1 Q.l

M. Tuttle, Mrs, E. Wallace, MasterWalaco. Mrs. L. A. nnd Infant,Miss II. Williams, Mrs. J. H. Wil-liamson.

PASSENGERS.Booked.

Per Str. Claudlno, for .Maul and Hlloports, July 30 Miss M. B. Bakor, MIbsJ. Pierce, H. L. Cbaso, D. II. Lewis,Miss Agnes Alexander, W. C. Emory,Richard LJulo, Cj JB. Cpoland' andwife, N. Constablo, Wife and

Per M. N. S. S. Lurllne, for San

Francisco, Aug. 2 AdJ.-aoner- J. W.'.Jones, N. G. II., Col.. .1. H. Fisher, Mrs.Fisher, and Airs. A. W. Neely,

JelllugK, Mrs. .fellings, Ed. Ing- -ham, .MIss Turrlll. Miss C. Walker, S.

ilunilock, wife nd 2 children, Mr.ami Mrs. Morse, Mrs. Scott. Miss M.

Alexander, .Miss Edna Henry, Mrniiif Mrs. 12 members ot Mnwul-- !

National Guard Kllle Tteam, Mr.MrfC-cV'- O." MumuUy, Cordan

Wntt. Miss pfulln MeKtocker, MissLjdlu Mctocker'.-'Mrs-. MV'fi.' Prime.

I. .

OS NGU SHED

JURIST CALLS

.ludKe Elliott, appointed to the Su-

preme Curt of the Philippine Islands,(called on Governor l'rear this morn- -

r. miuuvlun- mi nlil npnii!ilntnnpishtii.

Since ho has been an associatejustice of the Supreme of .Mlnnc- -

sola, and once has' declined the Ma

nila position to which he Is now'going. Charles Burke Elliott Is In

1.- 1- C.... l..l. .. 1..... ! fll.l,.IB I Ul I i -- II I II III etll, il llilllXl "I Villi.the degfwH uuu.

and PhD., the Hist two from IowaState University and the last from theUniversity of Minnesota. Ho wassuccessively Judge ot theand tho District courts beforo going

tlio supreme bench of Minnesota.For seven years he was professor ofocrporatlon and International Intho University of Minnesota. A mem-ba- r

of. vnrious national and Interna-tional societies, .lodge Elliott Is alsotho author of several law books, ad-

dresses and magazine articles.

1 EDA GONE. . . - . . .

Tiie Aiameua got away mis morn- -

nig at ju o ciocic ior me uonst,hundred tons of cargo and... ,

"eariy unu unnureu cauin p;insengers.Thn TTn urn I Inn ltnrwl wno linrwl i.-' .i ii uati wutiit nuo "ii intuit W

play her off and the regulation assort- - j

ment ot lels wore nlaced on tho do- -'

parting passengers by their localfriends. Mrs. W. M. Langton was

Chlllingworth went; to tho Coast on a'

pleasure trln. Mrs.' Km Wniinw ci,nmarried Bigamist Baker left afterseeing her affinity for the last timo!

F".ne Job Star omo.

ew AdvertisementsTO THE OF THE

DEPARTMENT.

Business Houses, patrons of this Department, are hereby notified to havotheir Rubbish, nnd Waste material.

for removal not later than C a.m' otherwiso cannot bo disposed or,"ntil 1,10 succeeding morning.

por orderJ. H. WILSON,

Siipt. Garbage Department.

Kulton, Gaarden, P. among thoso to going onP. Gardner, Helen cation trip to the Coast. Hos-- 1

Gay, Edwin Gregory, Mm. Edwin Ore- - mer left Spokane whore hogory, T. Seymour Hall,. Hawkins, tho Territory the

and nurse, .'tlonal Irrigation Concrese. Mrs. V.

L.

not, -- . uiunub ciuiu servingIjelShton' Mrs- - - Lelghton, Mrs.jlence

out

San,ulB- -

this

HAWAII.

oan,

'

Crawford, Crawford,

Abel.

F.Cassidy,

Chalmers,

Clark

Cha3.and child,

Gosling,

Wm.

Low,

Nnnlcas,

snnis,Mrs.

Wills

child.

Capt.

Fosis,

T

1901

Court

IloldH of

Municipal

law

laKlllgfittcen

Printine.

NPATRONS

GARBAGE

ready

rs.'T)A7" A TTTfTT rvTiTrntrX A I. J A AlVJItl A A

SEALED TENDERS.

Sea'"d Tenders will be received attho ofnce of ,IIenry E cooper, Judd

.Building, until 12 m. of .Monday, August 9, 1909, for tho construction of anengineering laboratory for the Col-lege of Hawaii, at tho corner of Bere-tanla, Young and Victoria streets.

Plans and specifications aro on file, . . ,t, nmnPuWI(J Wor8 and a ten an

''of Public Works. x

The right Is reserved to reject anyor all bids.

HENRY E. COOPER,President, Board of Regents, College

ot Hawaii.Honolulu, July 2C, 1909.

King Street near Nuuanu.

Dealer In Crockery, Hardwaro andSporting Goods.

Lowest Prices i Tho City.

NEW STOCK

Iron. BedsMattressesFurniture

Coyne Furniture Co.fLtd.

Bishop Street, Honolulu.

Fine Job Printmi, star Offloe.

:dla&lk&ii

SLCOMPANY.UMITtD:V-- ,

For RentMagazine Street .

Matlock Avenue . .. 3t.w,Lunalllo Street .. .. so.obPeretanla Avenue .. 25.00Knlakand Avonue . . HO.OO i

Lunnlllo Street .. .. 22.50Cottage Walk .... .. 15.00

'

.' !

t"1

jUt

Furnished 'v?Walklkl 50.00Prospect Street 22:60 Mi

For SaleTwo lots at Kalmukl, corner lota.Two blocks from car line on Nlntn

wenue. uwner desiree us to submit Joffer.

"In Trust"Corner Fort and Merchant Streets.

Sr ' rtrf-S-i

g Don't "Wkitk. Sknd a

WIRELESS

Classified AdvertisingFOR SALE.

Trio Bult Plymouth "Rocks J15.00.Trio Black Breasted Red Games 515.00.Trio of Roso Comb Whito MInorcas?15.00. Also Buff Leghorns and Japanese Shamo Game eggs. All imported birds.

JEFFS,1SS1 Beretanla Ave.

A few thousand plncapplo suckers'A No. 1, delivered at Wnhlawa stationin sacks at ?15 per thousand. Applyto Hugh Galbraith, Wahlawa, Oahu.

PIANO-TUNIN- G AND REPAIRING.JimesSnerlilanr" tuner ana "reBalr- -

lng of pianos and organs. No. lta,Hotel street, orders left at HawaiianNews Co., Young building. Goodpianos to rent or sell at cheapest rate.

WANTED 10 BUYOld booKB, magazines, Hawaiian

stamps and curios. Books exchanged.Weedon Curio Bazaar, Masonic Tem-ple, Alakea street.

FOR RENT.First class furnished rooms central-

ly located. Hot and cold batbi, Ar-lington Hotel, 215 Hotel St

FOR A Iv EKA1MUKI DISTRICT.

Almost now house, 1 rooms. Bothlot Improved u pretty homefine view Ocean and City. Near C Ave.Price $1,200.

Another aud this ono is just whatyou aro looking for. A ReaJ Bargain.Up to dato stylo Bungalow 5 largo-rooms- .

Both wide verandas. Two lotsft. large front lawn planted with

hedges plants many kind of fruits. Ho-

nolulu can't produce a better ono fortho money for homo or Investment.Price $2,200. Picturo at office. '

PACIFIC COAST REAL ESTATE CO.,

FRANCIS B. MUNROES4S Kaahumanu Street.

Striped PinaOR

Pineapple Silkft a

Whito grounds withvarious colored stripes,fast colors, best quality.

G5c. PER YARD

Enlers

m

- 5S

a

Page 6: HAWAIIAN I The Js STAR Newspaper - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · Whether Stevens was acting under instructions from Wash-ington is not known,' but the result ot his coup

4

'I- -

ss- -

ir

'' s'

flIX THE HAWAIIAN STAR, WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1909.

Sounding tho praises ofAyer's Huir Vigor. That'swliafc every one does who uses

this splendidpreparationfor tho hair.

r i iBHS!LiVS5SSR 11 you uon c

(mFmu .want tolV"v nraisoic.then

uso it. You see,you will be so pleasedwith it that you willjust hnvo to tell yourfriends all .about it.

tiller'sflair Vigoremoves dandruff, makes thehair grow thick and heavy.

Handsome hair, rich, glossy"hair, always attracts. Youmay have just such hair ifyou will use Ayer's HairVigor. Accept no substitute.TdSired by Dr. t. C Ayer & Co.. lowill, Man U S A

SPREADING CAPACITY

WP FULLER

FUR! PREPARED PAINTrovers more surface to tho gal-lon than any other brand, Mixedready for use. The best housepaint .

lewers t cooKe, Lid.,

177 S. King St. Phone 775.

HOURSTo Chicago

From San Francisco, The

Fastest transcontinental train.

OVERLAND

LIMITEDElectric Lighted, Buffet," Li-

brary and Drawing Roomobservation car, with

diner. Telegraphic ncs post-ed on train.

Southern Pacific

lEW ARRIVALS III SILK GOOD

For years our line of Silk goods has

beta the best In town and our lastthlpmant proved no exception.

Iwakami & Co., - - Hotel St.

Watch SpringDONIJ BY US IS FULLY QUARANTEBD

PopujarPrices

J. A. R. Vieira&Co.J1S Hotel St. Phono C12

Contractor Davis will build ,tho two-stor- y

annex to t.h Pleasuntln Hotelwhiah is to cost ?IS,000.' It will lmvotwenty rooms and bo exclusively formale gnosis. .

4V

SPORTSANOTHER FIGHT

8ENG ARRANGED

Dirk Sullivan and Jack Conlell liavobeen finally matched to light at 25

rounds, the bout to lake place In tho.Star theater off Liliha street n weekfrom Saturday night. This match Isthe direct result of the two result-les- s

goes at 15 rounds, the friends orboth men having a desire lo have asquare, longtime test of the stayingqualities of each.

Jack Scully has been arranging thomatch, it was tho intention of Cor-de- ll

to leave for the Coast In a fewdays, and, in consequence, he hesi-tated about going into the affair. He .

finally yielded to the pressure of his'friends, however, and the mill will bea go.

The promoters of the contest haveno) yet arranged for a preliminary,but will probably nnvo one If the rightparties can be brought together.

charlieTeilly.

TO FIGHT N

Charlie Reillv. formerly of Honolulu, will have another light in SanFrancisco on Friday night of thisweek. Of the matter the San Francisco Call, of July 17, says:

Charlie Lercari has an announcement to make at last. He is out withu card for this mouth. Instead of onematch the Pacific promoter will puton three of them .consisting of 40rounds of action. The main setto willbe furnished and by Lew Powell andChick Hudson; Jack Clifford and KidHarrison are on the list for the nextone while Charley Reilly and RoscoeTaylor will meet for the second timein a 10 round mill. The first two will I

be over the 15 round course. Sol Lev-ins- on

will referee them all. Tim Helitsare to take place at reainland, Friday evening, July SO.

All the fans know Powell. Ho liasbeen fighting around this city for sev-en or eight years. He started out as afour rounder In the old days and sincethen has done practically all of hisfighting in his nallve town. Thoughnever rated as a champion, Powell hasbeen plugging along at a very shandyclip, and last mouth he easily beatYoung Erne of Philadelphia In a 20round mlxiip before tho North Endclub.

Hudson started only once herethree months ago against ohnnyMurphy, whom he outpointed in 13rounds. Hudson is a tough, ruggedlittle fellow who fights after tho man-ner of Cyclone Johnny Thompson. HeIs not a graceful performer to watch,but he manages to keep in action alltho time, in Powell he will meet avery clever, defensive fighter and hewill require all his streimth anil rush.ing ability to bring home the money.

I he Clifford-Harriso- n mill is a fairsort of one. Clifford has been makingmuch capital out of the fact that he

The Caddie Say, Mr. President,'em all for you If you'Jl appoint' mo

CAPT. PAUL BURNS

MAKES STATEMENT

Paul Burns, captnin and managerof the Kalihl baseball team, author

izes the following statement"The statement In the papers that

Eddie Fernandez is president of theKalihl Athletic Club Is wrong. Fer-nandez held the office of presidentsome time ago. but resigned fully umonth before the Oaliu Daseball Lea-gu- o

was organized. I am not presidium, aim am aiso cupmin ami man-ager of our baseball team.

"Since lie has been olllclatlng asumpire of the League, Mr. Fernandez

...... . . .1.(1 f. .ml l.nn. nn nfll.n. - f 1 Iuna ilUk IflTUM an UlilUUr Ul I'lll C1UU,and so far as I know docs not concern

'himself in anyway with the successjor failure of our baseball team, if.be has felt any partiality for our team.

I certainly have had no reason to'suspect It; and I deny that he hasever favored my team In any manneror at any time whatsoever."

The Japanese members of the Jap-iane-

Athletic Club have, from all accounts, charged that Fernandez hasworked against them on several occa-sions. And there you are.

TENNIS CONTESTS

5TARLSATUBDA!

The tennis tournament for the Wallcup will start on the Beretania courtsnext baturday afternoon, and prom- -1 KPQ in llO fn v inn t'n t n akiu tli.r. U r.- - iiuviuouny Hid llany pulled off In a Ions while. En- -tries are now being received for the

'handicaps. Players desiring to entermay leave their names with Kay 13.

Rietow or R. B. Booth. The draw-ings will be made on Friday.

As the matter now Klnnrta w T.

Warren holds two legs on the prizecup. He is regarded as an rypppcI.ingly hard player to beat and has a su-perb chance of wlnnlnc Ollt. Thornare other good players, however, whoare determined to block his great leadif possible, anions them lislnn- - a t.Castle, E. S. Geo and Captain Low!

me ueretania courts nro in nocondition, and if the weather conti-nues favorable tho crowds in mtmn.dance upon the contests will undoubtedly be large.

was "robbed" In that fight with BatNelson in Oklahoma City last month.ne nas never fought In this city,though the fans In most of the otherimportant towns of the state haveseen him in nction. Clifford beat Har-rison once in four ounds, and he ex-pects to repeat this time, though Har-rison has improved much of late.

Taylor and Reilly fought 10 roundslast month and RellU- - received thedecision, it Is barely possible thatLercari may have to substitute an-other bout, for Iteilly is going againsta whirlwind In Ton McCarthy at Coff-roth- 's

this afternoon. Reilly is veryclever, but lacks a punch.

A BRIBE

I've learned some of the finest golfto some olllce.

PEARL WIS THE

BABY YACHT RACE

There was another pretty race otflip amnll vnnlilo In thn hnrhnr Insf.

Sunday, and this time the maneuverswere witnessed by many lovers of thosport, positioned upon the various

(wharves. As on the prevloin Sunday,tho race was from a position oppo-site tho Myrtle boat house, out thechannel, around the farther buoys,back, around the dolphins at the ma-rine railway and quarantine Island,repeated the necessary number oftimes to make the desired distance,

t The boats entere-- were the Pearl,owned by Luther Hough; Inu, by Ro-be- rt

Henry; Irmgaid, by Max Bolster.(The Florence did not race on account'of the absence ot the Crozler boys,from town. Tho Pearl gave the otlieryachts a handicap of 20 minutes, but,in spite of this large lead, came outahead.

The time of tho Pearl was one hourand twenty minutes. That of the ina,which was second in thn men. wnhours, six minutes. The time of thelast boat was not taken.

The trophy put up for these' racesmust be won five times before it be-comes tho property of either yacht.As the contest now stands, the Pearlhas two legs on it. Next Sunday af-ternoon, beginning at 1:30, anotherrace will be sailed. At that time itis hoped thnt the Florence will alsobe out.

The oarsmen of the Myrtle BoatClub arc still anxiously awaiting somottdlllfrs frnm. llm TT.,1, ...!... .wau ullllI,.1Wlj. mu airathe Healanl Boat Club respecling ashell raeo nt PontO TTn-i,,- .,. t.t .i...iiuiuui, nuw LUULyoung Withlngton is hero they thinktlint 11. tt..l. ... .U1M l" universities ought to bo ableto come through with the project.The club certainly bas the makingof a fine crew.

DEMOCRATS BEAT

THE REPUBLICANS

Democrat and Republican membersoi congress engaged in a game ofbaseball at Washington on the after-

noon of July 1C that the papers des-cribe as one of the most laughable onrecord. Tho Associated Presu sent outme lonowing, thrilling account of the'battle:

I WASHINGTON, July 1C Wltn Un-cle Joe" Cannon looking on and pow-erless to call the minority to order, orbring In a special rule shutting offbasehits, the Democrats of the houseof representatives walloped all sortsof tariff schedules out of the Repub- -llcans at American Leaeue nark-- tn. '

day, and won the' most famous con-gressional baseball game on record bythe thrilling score of 2G to 10. Theminority wanted to make it 1C to 1,uut tne Republicans defeated thatproposition again. -

The crowd which witnessed thisgame was as weary as the players

cuss words on tho world and I'll uso.'

from laughter. Tho throng present in-

cluded most of tho government off-

icials. President Tnft did not attend;he was at Chevy Chaso with vice Pre-

sident Sherman playing golf.The Democrats put up n rattling

game In tho field some limes. Roprc-entatlv- o

Heflln of Alnbama, playingIn one ot the outer gardens, once hadu chance to be a hero. The Repub-

licans came to life In the fifth inningand were scoring 8 or 0 or 10 runswhen a line fly went winging out intoleft field, straight at Heflln. The port-- 1

ly Alabaman cast one eye at the balland another nt his bare hands, and"ducked." The hit ought to havo beengood for a home run. but Representa-

tive Howland of Ohio fell exhaustedon tho second sack and yelled for(somebody to como on out and finishthe run. .

Representative Nicholas LongwortU

of Ohio failed to llvo up to his ad-- 1 Solar Water Heaters, 30 to 120 gal-v,,n-

notices. Ho nresented a natty Ions, Galv. Iron Tanks any size andappearance In his golf trousers, buthe "Caseyed" out twice with two menon bases, got a base on balls once,nnd then In the last half of the sev-

enth showed a flash of rare speed whenhe beat out a tiny little infield hit.His only other acquaintance with theball was a couple of foul tips andseveral long runs after two baggers, '

slammed out bv the eDmocrats.The republicans stuck to their orig-

inal line up throughout, but the dem-

ocrats wore themselves out making 10

runs In the second, nnd after thatsubstitutes were called upon with

frequency an1 the bat-

ting order was shifted ever inning.The nearest the newspaper scorerscould come to the basehits and errorsWas to give tho democrats 23 ot thoformer and live of the latter. Therepublicans are credited with 20 safehits and 9 errors.

Representative Burke of Pennsylvajnia, who was at the receiving end forthe majority, is of slight build ndwhen ho crushed into Pitcher Ualnesof West Virginia the little catcherwas sent heels over head to theground. He picked himself up un-

daunted, and then while ho and thepitcher were doing an "Alphone andGaston" three democrats with a warp-ed idea of chivalrous courtesy, racedhome and added three runs to theiralready opulent total.

The republicans were captained byRepresentative Tener of Pennsylvania,who played short. RepresientativesGaines and Burke were the battery.

The' democrats' leader was Renresentatlve KInkead of New Jersey, whoplayed second. Representative Webbof North Carolina pitched for the de-

mocrats and Representative Oldtleldof Arkansas was the catcher. Rev.Father James Reynolds of Red Bank.N. J., was umpire. The s:ore:

R. H. E.Democrats 2 10 2 0 0 5 7 2G 23 5Republicans ..2 0 1 0 10 1 210 20 5

The line up:Democrats Aldfield (Ark.), catcher;

Webb (N. C), pitcher; Hughes (N. J.),first base; T. Kinkead (N. J.), secondbase and catcher: Garrett fTenn.Vright field; McDermott (111.), lefti'eld and center field; Robinson (Ark.),right field; O'Connell (Mass.), short- -stop and third base; Dan Driscoll(N. Y.), shortstop and third base; He- -flin (Ala.), left field; Cox (O.), center,.,, !

Republicans Burke (Pal. atelierGaines CW. V.n l nUnii&p. n. I

(la.), second base; Longworth (O,center Held; Cole (O.), right field$Ames (Mass.), left field; Tener (Pa.snortstop; Howland (O.), first base:Thomas (O.), third base.

KAPAA AND LIB E

PLAY BASEBALL

In the last game of baseball betweenthe Lihue and Kapaa nines, playedat Kapaa, Kauai, the former won bya score of 19 to 4. Following is theway the game progressed:

LIHUES.ABRBHSBPO A E

Sam Aula, 2b G 3 S 3 0 4 2W. Opunul, us ..C 3 3 2 2 0 0Mnkananl, 3b ....'J 2 2 2 110J. Mallna, lb ....C 1 C 0 1F. Kanae, cf G 2 10 0

'Ben Kamaka, if.. 5 3 0 0 0i

Glalsyer, c 0 1 15 3 1,

H. Mallna, If ....5 1 0 0 0Ed. Desha, p .,..5 3 2 1G 0

Totals ....51 10 21 1G 27 21 4

KAPAA.ABRBHSBPO A E

Bettencouit, 2b ..4 2 2 1 3 2 0Smln, If 1 0 10 2 10C. Liwal, lb ....4 0 1 2 1 14 1J. Rodrigues, rf ..4 0 1 0 110Bettencouit, ss ..3 0 0 0 1 3 1W. Rodrlcnps rf l n i n in,.hblnger, c .......4 0 0 0 fi 1 uL. Rose, n 4 i 1 1 n i.1. Neenee, 3b ....2 0 0 0 1 2 "

A T.1..1 n. - -i. iiLmriKiies, JU..1 0 0 0 0 1 0

Tol!1 jK 34 3 7, 4 27 24133 4 50789LI hue: Runs.,1 7 0 1 3 0 0 II - 1!)

B. H...2 7 0 2 4 1 0 5 321Kapaa: Runs..l 0 0 0 2 0 o o n (H- - "...1 100400107Three base hits: Ben Kamaka, J.Bettencouit.

Two base Iilis: w. Opunul, AV. Mn-kananl, J. Mallnn.Struck out liy Ed. Desha 14; by j.Rose 5.

L,nRosoL ba,,S b' K1 ki lino of gnmo: 2 hours.Umpire: John Victorino. G. Ah BuoScorer: V. Yoahlinoto.

Envelopes!by the Million. Call and get our

wholesale price.

i iliiCorner Fort and Merchant.

FOR BALE.

weight, Shee Metal Work of all kindsmade to order on short notice, Waterripe ana jfitungs 1-- 4 to 2 In. In size,Plumbing and Pipe Fitting.

Job work given prompt attention.EMMELUTH & CO., LTD.

Phone 211. 145 King St

e 4 . ePANAMA HATO

Newest Styles.

Silva's ToggeryKING near FORT.

PACIFIC PHOTO GALLERYWaverley Block.

(17 Hotel St. makal side.)Photography in all its branches, pic-

tures enlarged.Kodak developing ano printing a

ipeclalty.

Dr. J. H. RaymondPHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.

Office with Dr. C. B. Wood, 160 Bere-

tania StreetOffice Hours 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to 4

p. m., 7:30 to 0 p. m.Telephone Office 21; Residence 14C0

ZZlElTiniVfi Olirm.... HnncQ- w J W

(Lately Palace Grill.)Bethel St. Opp. Empire Theatre.

Open Day and Night. Cuisine Unsur-passed.

BEST MEALS AT ALL PRICES!

PARAGON PAINT AND ROOFING CO

PETER HIGGINS, Manager.

Estimates Free of Charge.PHONE CO.

Office No. '039 Bethel St. near Hotel.

SS?!A THE BEST ROOF PAINT 8ffi . $$ 1S tho suaranteed for five years $

EUREKA PERFECTION PAINT k? Kj!

qom1 booklet to P. O. Box 93

Latest Paquin Models

FOR

The Swellest Gowns

DavisonYOUNG BUILDING ROOM 72

For a fine glass of beer go to the

Orpheum SaloonFort Street above the Orpheum Theatre

CDHSOLIDHTED 50DH WBTEB

'IS ABSOLUTELY PURE.

PHONE 71.

WE INVITE INSPECTION OF OUR GOODS

K. FUKURODA

noiei near Nuuanu. Honolulu

611 KM BO LID

CHINESE NEWSPAPERPUBLISHING AND

JOB PRINTING.

No. 49 Cor. of Smith and Hotel Sti.

Fine Job Printing, Star Office,

! t

Fraternal Meetings

HONOLULU LODGE No. 61G,B. P. O. ELKS.

Meets in their hall on King Street,near Fort, every Friday evening. Visit-ing Brothers are cordially invited toattend.

E. A. DOUTHITT, E. R.H. C. EASTON, Secretary.

HARMONY LODGE No. 3, I. O. O. F.

Meets every Monday evening at 7: SO

In Odd Fellows' Hall, Fort Street. Vis-iting brothers cordially invited to at-

tend.F. D. WICKE. N. G.E. R. HENDRY, Sec

DIVISION No. 1, A. O. H.

DIVISION No. 1, A. O. H.Meets every first and third Wednes-

day, at 8 p. m., in C. B. U. Hall, FortStreet. Visiting brothers are cordiallyinvited to attend.

FRANK D. CREEDON, Pres.JAMES T. CAREY, Sec.

BESTTYPEWRITER

PAtEROAT & MOSSMANMerchant St. near Postofilco.

C. BREWER & CO., LTD.

QUEEN STREET.Honolulu, T. H.

AGENTS FOR

Hawaiian Agricultural company, Ono-m- ea

Sugar Company, Honomu SngarCompany, Walluku Sugar Company,Ookala Sugar Plantation Company,Pepe?Ueo Sugar Co., Kapapala Ranch.

Charles M. Cooke PresidentGeo. H. Robertson.V-Pre- s. & Mgr.E. Faxon Bishop.... Treas. & Secy.F. W. Macfarlane AuditorP. C. Jones ..DirectorC. H. Cooke DirectorJ. R. Gait DirectorAll of the above named constitute

the Board of Directors.

Sweet VioletBUTTER

C. Q. YEE UOP TEL. 251

Honolulu Iron Works.

TEAM ENGINES, SUGAR MILLS,JOILERS, COOLERS. IRON, BRASS

AND LEAD CASTINGS,

Machinery of Every DescriptionUde to Order. Particular Attention

raid to ftnip'e Blacksmltnlng. JobWork Hxecuted on Short Notice.

I.B. IRWIN & Co.

AGENTS TOR THBRoyal Insurance Co. of Llveroooi KnScottish Union ft National Ins. Co., ot

Edinburg, Scotland.Commercial Union Assurance Co. oi

London.I"he Upper Rhine Ina. Co.. Ltd.

Fire InsuranceATLAS ASSURANCE COMPANY OF

LONDON.NEW YORK TTNDERWRITERS

AGENCY.

PROVIDENCE WASHINGTON IN-SURANCE COMPANY.

The B. F. Dillingham Co,, Ltdueuerai agents ror Hawaii.

Fourth Floor, Stangenwald Building.

Auto Fenders, ?2.50 up. WillExamine Gutters free ot chargealso do Plumbing Work. Low-est Prices. Work Guaranteed.

JOHN MATTOS.1175 Alakea St.

The Two JacksThe Most Popular Salojm in the City,

THE FASHION.Jack Scully, Prop. Jack Roberts, Mgr.

Hotel Street near Fort. Phone 481

Y. Yoshikawa1G3 King Street, opp. Young Building.

Good, new bicycle, ?25; second hand,any kind, cheap. Tricycles for sale.Motorcycles repaired, and d.

Page 7: HAWAIIAN I The Js STAR Newspaper - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · Whether Stevens was acting under instructions from Wash-ington is not known,' but the result ot his coup

SendingMoneyAway

Whenever you have occasion

to send money away, you can

do It through the strongest hanlc

In Honolulu both easily and

cheaply. "

THE BUI OF HAWAII. LTD.

Capital and Surplus, Jl.000,000.

Fort and Me: chants Sts.

Claus Sprcckels.

(ill n Ei

.Win. o. Irwin

HONOLULU T. H.

San Francisco Agents Tho NevadaNational Bank ot San Francisco.

DRAW EXCHANGE ONSAN FRANCISCO Th Nevada Na-

tional Bank ot San Francisco.LONDON Union o London & Smith s

Bank, Ltd.NEW YORK American Exchange Na-

tional Bank.CHICAGO Corn Exchange National

Bank.""""""PARIS Credit Lyonnala.

BERLIN Dresdner Bank.HONGKONG AND YOKOHAMA The

Hongkong 'and Shanghai BankingCorporation.

NEW ZEALAND AND AUSTRALIABank of New Zealand, and Bank otAustralasia.

VICTORIA AND VANCOUVER Bankot British North America.

TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKINGAND EXCHANGE BUSINESS.

Deposits Received, Loans Made onApproved Security, Commercial andTravellers' Credits Issued. Bills of Ex-change Bought and Sold.

COLLECTING PROMPTLY AC-

COUNTED FOR.

i YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK

LIMITED.Capital (Paid up) Yen 24,000,000

Reserve Fund Yon 15,940,000

HEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.The bank buys and receives lor

collection bills of exchange, IssuesDrafts and Letters ot Credit, andtransacts a general banking business.

Tho Bank receives Local depositsand Head Office Deposits for fixed periods.

Local Deposits ?25 ana upwards torone year at rate ot 4 per annum.

Hea dOfflce Deposits Yen(25 and up-

wards for one-ha- lf year, one year, twoyears or three years at rate of 6 1-- 2

per annum.Particulars to be obtained on appli-

cation.Honolulu Office 67 S. King SstreetP. O. Box 168.

al. TOKIBDA, Manager.

ESTABLISHED IN 1830.

BISHOP a CO.

BANKERS

Commercial and Travellers'Letters ot Credit issued on theBank ot California and The Lon-

don Joint Stock Bank, Limited,London.

Correspondents for tho Amer-

ican Express Company, andThos. Cook & Son.

Interest alowed on term andSavings Bank Deposits.

The Latest ParisianGOWNS!

atVADAMB LAMBERTS

Harriion Block. Beretania ft Fort Ht

IP Yflll UMCII Tfl AnVFRTISF 3ft IN Nc,wbfftny.a

ANYWHKRB AT ANYTIMflCall on or Writs

? 8 C. DARE'S ADVERTISfflG AGEHCI

2 134 Sansomo Street

L6AN PBANCI8CO, CALIF.

OF

L TiAUTOMOBLES

HAWAIIAN SEVEN

a dozen people, tre majority' nn airship for the United Slates Uov-bei-

practical ohauffeufrs, attended eminent which will carry 200 personsthe public meeting to consider the,, for 3000 miles without landing.proposed automobile ordinance held Uoerner is a resident of Brussels,in the municipal assembly room last Belgium. He is at the Hotel

Mayor Fern presided at the Ansonta. Mr. Uoerner figures the costrequest of Chairman Quinn of the of building an airship, according toroad committee, the latter reading the ills designs, One of bisbill section by section and rlsciisslng proposals, as contained In athe provisions with those hav-- , which he sent to the Secretary of Waring objections or suggestions to make, today, Is that he will build such a

Among noted for further .vessel at his own expense, providingconsideration by the committee was .the Government will agree to pay hima proposal to extend the fifteen mile when it ;s proved that thesneed limit bounds, making them from airsnip munis an jus guarantees,Palama numnlnir station Kalakana I or somo weens air. Boerner, witnavenue, and from the waterfront two draughtsmen and an engineer, hasJudd street. Outside of those bounds at work perfecting his designsa thirty-flve-ml- le speed limit was sug- - an improvised drafting room ongested, but Quiin contended tlmt .

tIle 13Ul "oorofthoAnsonla.eighteen miles on the Pall road wasfast enough for public safety and tho Dredging from the slipprotection of the road from unduo.wiil be to fill the Ktiill pondswear and tear. j Campbell will ask the

Delegate Kalaniaiaole fought Va- - city to dump its bargabe in the samerious sections of bill with ardor . ponas. ho it is matter oc tme wnenand persistence, besides contending torprovisions he did not And in it.

HAWAIIAN BOYS

ONThEIIUThe following letter was received in

the last mail:G7 South Clark St,.

Chicago, 111.,

July 10th, 1909.

Mr. H. P. Wood, Secretary PromotionCommittee.

Dear Mr.. Wood.Your favor and always aloha letter'

from is at hand, and I assureyou, I was very glad to hear fromyou. I wish to thank you a thousandtimes for the literature and the Illus-

trated matter you sent, the postal cardsI got were Immediately taken away bythe Theatrical Booking Agents, thereason being that the Hawaiian actstoday are commencing to be very pro-

minent in Theatrical lines. We havenow in America July Paka, aboy whose act is considered today asa standard one, or in other words it Isa feature or a head line act, representing Hawaiian music and dancing,The dancing is represented as the hulahula dance of Hawaii, but it Is faraway from it. It is more on theSpanish dance order.

I arrived here and to my surprisefound four musical organiza-tion consisting of Hawaiian quartettesand quintettes, they were all comingin for the different sections ot the country and we had quitea of Hawalians. My act willbe completed about September and itwill be booked through the WilH&mMorris Circuits which brings me inHonolulu about 1911, that is making acomplete circuit of Europe, Australia,Asia and Hawaii.

I have been requested by the different booking agents and by the scenicartists to ask you to give them twomore complete sets of the colored pos-

tal cards, if it is possible for you tosecure them. Kindly send themthrough me, C. O. D.

Very often here I see advertisementsof lectures on Hawaii. Again I wishto thank you for the favors. Withsuccess to you and loha nul from allthe boys and my aloha nul to allat home.

I am yours,In songs and Hawaiian melodies,

W. S. ELLIS.P. S.Kindly say to the press that

Hawaii will be well advertised by thedifferent musical organizations here,and me they are in demand today.

Aloha to all,ELLIS.

THE RAINBOWThe nreliminary examination of

Tollefsen, captain and owner ot theRainbow, for negligence causing tne,loss of life was continued by Commis-sioner Davis, after evidence, toMonday next to enable Attorney Weaver for the defendant to file a brier.Evidence , given yesterday showed' thatthe man at the tiller r tho schoonerwas carried overboard by a wave,

when the vessel no longer under con

trol wallowed In tho heavy seas andupset. There was only one' experienc-

ed sailor aboard and he was forward.Contrary to law the vessel while car-

rying passengers had kerosene, thirtypniinns of it. aboard. Captain Toiler--sen on his own behalf attempted toshow that the freight in tho hold wasRiifflclent uallast against tho forty- -fivn nnssencers on deck. Mr.

raised the point that the defendantwas not liable under mo siaiuve Be-

cause his passengers did not pay fares.

TAKE A VACATION.

Mnm la tYii. timo to take a vacation,get out Into tho woods and mountainsand visit tho seashore, but do not ror-g- et

to take a bottle ot Chamberlain'sColic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedyalong with you. tt is almost certainto bo needed, and cannot bo obtainedm railroad trains or steamships. Itis too much of a risk for anyone toleave home on a without it.For sale by all Dealers. Benson, Smith& Co., Agents for Hawaii.

THE STAR, WEDNESDAY, JULY 2S, 1009.

PLANS MONSTEK AIRSHIP.

Government Offered Craft 'J'hat WillCarry 200 Persons 30011 Miles.

NEW YORK, .Inly 8. Arno Uoerner,n German, who claims to luive solvedthe problem of avIaMon, offers to build

About

stayingnight.

at ?GOO,000.

letterpresent

matters

.$1,200,000

toto

itee"

Hackfcidused

Superintendent

the a

Hawaii

Manoa

different

summer from

loa

believe

INQUIRY.

taking

Weaver

Journey

one mosquito breeding swamp will bowiped out.

tne Joh Pintinfe. ai. offlca.

CRACKERS,CRACKERS,

FINGERS,

CCjyWMENT?5

GUIDE TO

GOOD HEALTH

Eat properly Sleep pro-

perly; Drink properly.

As much as you can.Sleep: As much as youneed.

Drink: RAINIER

Rainier Bottling WorksTKLKHHOHK 1331

PEEK, FREAN & CO., LTD.CELEBRATED LONDON BISCUITS

A Large New Shipment of these CelebratedBiscuits, in Tins, JUST RECEIVED, including:

Plaseon (Plain and Sweet), Pat-a-Cake- s, WaterbiscuitsCREAM

MARIECREAM

'PHONE 22.

A

Eat:

Beer.

OATEN CRACKERS,MILKBISCUITS,

CRACKLETS.

HENRY MAY & CO., LTD,

Be Hot DeceivedThere Is only one cleanablo Refrigerator and therefore GERM PROOF,

and that Is the Gurney Refrigerator handled by us.

No other make has ever stood the test and by means of the removableIce chamber as well as removable shel ves, drain pipes, traps, etc., wo havesolved the problem.

Assail us where you will you cannot help but admit our claim. All othermakes fall when it comes to keeping the ice chamber pure, sweet, clean andgerm proof, but

. RemovablejlUND let

MANUFACTURED ONLY BY

llplike- -

$NlY(pABlE

KEFGEpI(.

Cornet teiim!i tofetaVb

THE GURNEYListen to idle talk and arguments put forth in favor ot cleaiiable pro-

vision compartment. All refrigerators have this feature. You cannot denythat unless ALL COMPARTMENTS c an be kept absolutely pure and whole-some that a refrigerator is germ-pro- . Go from the provision chamber to thoreceptacle for the Ice and it is hero wh ere all other makes fall. There's theweakness that cannot be overcome by them.

Tho Gurney with Its removal Ice Chamber featuro has supplied tho greatwant and therefore.

Is the Only CleanableCome in and bring forth your arguments and if wo fail to convince you

we are ready to tako your decision. A full line always on hand. They aroused in almost every household. Do you possess one? If not why not, itcosts no moro than other makes.

GREATEST ICE SAVERS.

W. W. Dimond & Co,, LtdKing Street.

INDIGESTION COMES FROM

POORLY COOKED MEALS..

COOKING WITH GAS IS THE

ENEMY TO THAT DISCOM-

FORTING AILMENT. THERE

IS NO DYSPEPSIA WHERE

GAS IS USED AND THE EX-

PENSE OF COOKING A MEAL,

IS LESS THAN BY ANY OTH-

ER MEANS.

Honolulu GasCo., Ltd

ALEXANDER YOUNG BLDG.,

Bishop Street.

MViiniMember Honolulu Stock and Bond

Exchange.

We buy and sell Stocks and Bonds.

We have money, to loan on listed su

gar stocks.

Bishop TrustCo., Ltd.,

Bethel Street

flirarawiN lid

OFFICERS and DIRECTORS.H. P. BALDWIN PresidentJ. B. CASTLE 1st Vice-Presid- ent

W. M. Alexander... 2nd Vice-Preside- nt

J P. Cooke.... 3rd Vice-Pro- s. & Mgr.J. Waterhouse TreasurerE. E. Pazton SecretaryW. O. smith DirectorJ. R. Gait DirectorW. R. Castle ,.. Director

SUGAR FACTORSAND '

( OMISSION MERCHANTS

AGENTSHawaiian Commercial ft Sugar

pany.

FORCom

Haiku Sugar Company.Pala Plantation.Maul Agricultural Company.Hawaiian Sugar Company.Kahuku Plantation Company.Kahulul Railroad Company.Haleakala Ranch Company.

Your Picture TakenWith Greatest. CareHONOLULU ART PHOTO GALLERY.

Hotel near Nuilanu.Honolua Ranch.

QOOCCaCCC4K39C09CCaOC

NEW ENGLAND

MUTUAL LIFEINSURANCE CO.

ot Boston, Massachusetts.

New PolicyThe contract embodies, In an

absolutely COMPLETE andPERFECT form, the principleof strictly MUTUAL life insurance. (

CASTLE & COOKE, LTD,

' AGENTS.

Also representingAetna Insurance Co.National Fire Insurance Co.Citizens Insurance Co.The London Assurance Cor

poration.

i cooocooooooooa

Par anoia ?5

is a disorder of the brain. Likewise-i- f

your linlr is getting thinner every,day; If you have Itching scalp, or irtho white Hakes of dandruff aro con-tinually fnlling from your head, youare suffering from a parasitic diseas&of the scalp.

PACHECO'S DANDRUFF KILLER.'will destroy tho dandruff germ and pro-mote a luxuriant growth ot hair. Itwill stop that awful itching.

Sold by all oruggists, ana at Pacne-co- 'sBarber Shop. Phone '232.

Henry fl. Williams

Funeral DirectorAnd Bmbalmer

Love Building, 1142 and 1144 Upper- -

Fort Street.OfflM Telephone 64. House Telephone- -

1020.

A- h fk .iffc W A A A A A dki rftfc A rflT. Jthi rt

"Why have yourTypewriter '

tinkered with by in-

experienced men ?Let us do it! Weare fully equippedfor this particular

i. i

aiiu we

Swuik onlyn A rnnn'trarc

1 -- IOffice Supply

Co., Ltd.Ml Fort Street

T. H.

Phone 141.

i I fill IHonolulu,

SHIPPING AND COMMISSION MER-CHANTS.

SUGAR FACTORS and GENERAL INiSURANCE AGENTS.

representingEwa Plantation Co.Walalua Agncuiural Co., Ltd.Kohala Sugar Co.Walmea Sugar Mill Co.Apokaa Sugar Co.. I.tt.Fulton Iron Works of St. Louis.Blake Steam Pumps.Westonsl Centrifugals.Babcock & Wilcox Boilers,Green's Fuel Economizer.Marsh Steam Pumps.Matson Navigation Co.Planters Line Shlpplnng Co.New England Mutual Life Inaur- -

ance Company ot Boston.Aetna Insurance Co.'National Fire Insurance Co.Citizen's Insurance Co. (Hartford

Fire Insurance Co.)The London Assurance Corpora

tion.

Tho Beer that's brewed to suit'the climate.

ForcegrowthWILL DO IT.

Carriage manuracturor and repairing

in all Us branches.

NEW OAHU CARRIAGE CO.Quen Street near Rivera

M. OHTACONTRACTOR & BUILDER

Estimates given on all kinds otwork.

636 South Hotel St, between Punch-bowl & AlapaL .

V1

Page 8: HAWAIIAN I The Js STAR Newspaper - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · Whether Stevens was acting under instructions from Wash-ington is not known,' but the result ot his coup

mom

...CURIOS...!Tapas, mats, fans, Beeil, shell, cat--j

eyes, moonstones and white and pluk

coral lets and necklaces and In fact!

tverytblng In the curio lint at the

Woman's ExchangeHotel and Union Stretts.

W.G.lrwin&Oo., Ltd- -

iUGAH FACT0R3, COMMISSION AGENTS

Wm. Q. Irwin.. President and Managerohn D. Bpreckola. First Vice-Preside- nt

Vfc. 11. Glffard... Second Vice-Preside- nt

It. "M. Whitney Treasurer(Uehtrd Ivors SecretaryD. Q. May Auditor

AGENTS TORPeonlo Steamship Co., San FrancUoo,

Cal.

Baldwin Locomotive Work, Phila-delphia, Pa.

Dakalau Plantation Co., Hllo SugarCompany. Honolulu Plantation Co.,

HutchlntOD Sugar Plantation Co.,

Xllauea Sugar Plantation Co., Olo- -walu Company, Paauhau Sugar Plantatlon Co., Walmanalo Sugar Co.

For Your

House Party

Phone 59for Ice Cream

and Cake Dainty and

I Ftesh. Alexander wm

Open G a. m. to 11:30 p, mr

Oatton, Neill & 'Co.LIMITED

Dneloeari, Machinists, Blacksmiths

txai rjollermajcera.. First class work at reasonable rate.

FINE ROLLS AND CAKES, BUNS, PIES

and all the delicacies of the table at

ASAHI BAKERY

Beretanla near Alakea.

Paragon MarketF. W. KLEIN. Prop.

SPECIAL DELIVERY SERVICE.Give Us a Trim ror Prime Cuts.Beretanla and Alakea. Phone, 104.

J nvali d sandNursing Mothers

will find the-- new

rnalt food

AN EXCELLENT AID IN

REGAINING STRENGTH.

Sold Only By

Benson Smith Go. Ltd.

'Hotelland Fort Sts.

Artistic Framing

Pacific Picture Framing Co.

1050 Nuuanu St.

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.

Cf irbuge Notice, Pago 5

Henry May & Co Page :t

H. Huekfohl &. Cfy Iago 1

Metropolitan Mnrket Page I

"

T i IE WIS ATI 1 Ell.

Local Olllco, U. &. Weather Bureau,Young Building.

Huolulll, T. H July 28, 1909.'lenipcratureb, tj n. it; s a. m.; 10

a. in.; und morning minimum.75; 77; 71; 70; 75.Barometer reacting: absolute humid-

ity (grains per cubic foot); relativehumidity and dew point at S n. m.:

110.03; 5.077; (ill; G2.

Wind: Velocity one direction at 5 a.m.; S a. m.; 10 u. in.; aud noon:

15 NI3.; S SE; S E.; 15 E.Rainfall curing 21 nours ending 8 a.

m. : trace.Total wines movement during 24 hours

ended at noon 277 miles.WM. D. STOCKMAN,

Section Director.

NEWS IN A NUTSHELL

Paragraphs That Give CondensedNews of the Day.

Edward Hopkins has been appointedcaptain of Co. F., N. G. H.

Hopkins of the N. G. H. scored 98

at the Shaft er rifle range onSunday.

Bids for jail supplies will bo opened at the meeting- - of the Board ofSupervisors tonight.

Tlie assortment of meats carried atthe Metropolitan Market is not equalled anywhere in the city.

J .Roy DoukIus and Ted Tracy leftin the Alameda to resume their studies at the University of California.

Chief Clerk Matheson has gone toHawaii to .take evidence on Chineseand .hmanese applications for certificates of Hawaiian birth.

Chief of Detectives Joe Leal yesterday nrrested Mrs. Turn Koudo, theJapanese wife of a Chinese, and KungYum. both charged with adultery.

Kiku Kuneshige a Japanese woman,was granted a divorce by Judge DoBolt from her husband, Masachl

on the ground of nonsupport.When you buy a new refrigerator be

sure to got a Leonard Cleanable. It'sthe best refrigerator, made. Soldexclusively by H. Hackfeld & Co.

Hardware Department. '

The best butter sold in this Terri-tory ,is "Puritan" California cream-ery butter. It is sold by Henry May

& Co., who have a new supply just tohand. .

The Olaa crop is reported to bo

estimated this season at 19,400 tons.This is only 000 tons short of the manager's estimate made before the grinding season opened.

Business houses, patrons of the Gar-bai- re

Denartment are requested tohave their rubbish ready for removalnot later than G a. in. otherwise itcannot be disposed of until the following morning.

Possibly the University Club mayacquire the government stables lot adjoining in addition to the HaaleleaLawn premises lately bought. Inthi.it event the entire Hotel streetfrontage of the block would be

0HU DID E

IS GUT

Cciniineneinu with the August di

vidend the stock holders of Oahu Sugar company will receive thirty centsper share each month instead of fortycents per share. This means that thedividend is cut from two per cent toone and a half. It is stated that thisrate or payment will be kept up rorthe next twoyears. From the gossipon the street, however, it is believedthat 'before that length of time is over,unless some unforeseen events occur,at last one oi two extra dividends maybe expected.

MOTHER IDEA

1

5

CORPUS CASE

U. S. .Judge Dole Is this afternoonhearing a case of habeas corpus, thematter having to do with the execu-

tion of the immigration laws. ThreoChinese boys detained 'at HonoluluImmigration Station are the subjectswhose release Is sought, and RichardL. Halsey, inspector of lniniigratoil, sthe respondent commanded to bringthem into' court. '

DANCE AT HALEIWA.On Saturday evening there will bo

n moonlight dance on the broad lanalof Halelwa. Music will he furnishedby the Halelwa Quintet, which playsall the old quaint Hawaiian songs,without mixing in the ragtime. Sat- -i.wimr la nlirtdon nn ita full lnnnn nlchtl(UUJ ' - -- " " 1

and motor parties can make the tripback to town by moonlight, If they donot desire to stay over.

There will be a special dinner serv-

ed Saturday during which the Wala-lu- a

band will give a concert on thelawn. This er event at thopopulifr Halelwa should bo well withgoing down from town and no doubtmany auto parties for tho dinner and

SB tdnnco will be made up.

THE HAWAIIAN STAn, WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1909.

BOY HIT

PORTUGUESE CONFUSED BY

HACKS FROM OPPOSITE DIREC-

TIONS ON MERCHANT STREET.

wmio riiiiwell. thirteen years old,PnrtiiPtipRP. wn run over at 10 o'clock June

Dat. LIJune 1 O..

1

JuneJune 4 cents.....June

June11 cents.

this morning on Merchant street nearjJune H 3.89 centsJune 11 IS. 92 centsFort as result of becoming confus- -

ed while crossing the sheet when N'me 14 3.92 cents

hacks were coming opposite 1G

reetions. He. dodged one to bo June 21 P.. 905 cents..struck by the horse of hack 120, drlv-'Ju- ne 22 3.92 cents...en by Manuel Coirea. He was not July 2

. . . ... ...-.- . T..1.. r.seriously nijureti, uemg more irigiueu- -

ed and shaken than hurt, though he July 12 ....was bruised. July 1G ....

Dr. Brinckefhoff. U. S. specialist, JJy 20 cents

picked up the boy and took him into J" v 21 ;. Jo cen s.

the Bank of Hawaii Avhere he made uly 24.- 19 cents.nn pvnmlnntlon. nftnrwaril tnkinir nim July 26.

in his auto to his home for further j

examination. Bystanders nnd policeagree that no one was to blame,

N60LIAPS (fo ff"87"DD DD DB

I

CAPTAIN DIXON TELLS OF "RACE"

OF HIS VESSEL AGAINST "THE

ALAMEDA.

The Paclllc Mali steamer Mongolia,Captain Dixon, arrived, from Shu

PT er3.S9

3.02

.S.fcG

fromhack

.

3.935

July 27

;

F

LEWIS RETURNS TOUR-

ING WITH ALLAN

HERBERT.

returned Coastthe a

of about weeks. went withAllan Herbert, the plan spend

Francisco this morning at 9:45, bring- - considerable time lu automobile tourslng very large of passengers through" the state of California, thenthis city and also carrying many for running up through Oregon to thethe Oriet. She leaves Yokohama Alaska-Yuko- n Exposition. It wasthis afternoon at Slie found, however, that the trip wasbrought down 3S5 sacks of mail for, much for Mr. Herbert an ho gaveHonolulu aud-- a little over a hundred his up and icturned to Santons of miscellaneous freight. Captain Francisco. Thero he and Mrs. Her-Dlx-

reports line weather and plea- - "ert have taken a there ana willsant trip. In speaking of the "race" remain for tome little time,between Mongolia and Ala-- . Lewis did not bring back Stude-med- a,

he sail: baker with him when he came,"To call that race is ridiculous. J !,s R got to the wharf too late to be

I have order in regard to what Placed on board Mongolia. It willspeed the steamer shall make, as has come by the next steamer. He statesevery other captain of this line. Wo tll!' 'iey had lino trip spendingfollow those order-- , and cannot dis-- bout four weeks in touring throughregard them. Wo had no pressure of Northern California, fishing, shootingsteam. I don't wunt to take any an(1 traveling about 4000 miles in theirdjt away from the Alameda, how- - machine. During the last part of thoever, for If anyone thinks that she Is time. the roads were so bad, however,not a fhie little vessel they bad- - '1,lat t,le strain of tiuto traveling be-l- y

mistaken." j camu too much for' Mr. Herbert andme urougut more tlian "V rip A rest of

cabin passengers, Including tourists ln San i Francisco allowed himfrom parts or tho world, business- - ,0 recover his diealth again.men, missionaries, government off!-- 1

ciais and army and navy ollicers.Bishop Seth Ward and his arepassengers as far as Yokohama.M. Milne, who brought the Chinese,junk Whang Ho to the coast thepurpose of exhibition, is going to theOrient again on the Monogolla, ac- -'

companled his wife. Their

bysix He .up

being

for

foro'clock. too

the hiscar

my

ere- -

are

200 sa,D

all

sonW.

tor

by destination Is Singapore. Among . the Tllls morning's cable gives the news

are a large number of Fi- - t,lat Count Zeppelin with his big alr-llpl-

students who have been at ship made a successful flight, andschool and college In this country. he German government JiaveQuan Kal, the flour king and com- - l"t their stamp of upproval on' thisprador at Hongkong for the Pacilio 8'Ie or airship. also read of theMail company, is going homo on the successful flight of Wright Brosf.Hrriiiian liner. T. Hlrose, Japan- - airship and that Hubert Latham, theese merchant in business in Now French inventor came within twoLi anolner Passenger. Hlrose miles of crossing the English channel

W fnLTopean ,w,te- - w" Is going in his airship. It will only be mat-hiisba-

TV'1 her lltUo brown ,er or a sllolt t,,lle when the airship- f ayer. an'1 hls w111 ,)e nn everyday convenience asIs Thayer '"Vch ils automobiles. Whenn

ZwI wlf-- Ta"yer' Who-- m,i 1,e, fecte'1 "Is the mostg0l"S t0 vU Sllccesf'" Installation for commercialthe OrJent purposes was in the Territory of Ha- -

.- t.i...i nn

ilALUA SHOWS

BACK

OMR 0U0TATION

TEST

ROM

AUTO TRIP

COUNT ZEPPELIN

FLIGHT

ne'nhfw'nrT11;6

TItt

nTTTMi the on mayI nl 80011 1,1 V08,,e- - 'ine location for an

uLl rUrn expelimen,nl' u" I IIUIB I now. and the consensus of opinion

ANNOUNCES INCREASED

lots cqn be had, from the realUP l"016 eighty-tw- o

at reasonableAny Idea that the late might

have effect of reducing theof plantation was

nt rest this morning by announce-ment office of the

Mongolia

passengers

wlleess.

airships.

companyairships

UlI-,vle- w

STRIKESHOWS exchange

divt-den- ts

Walalua

that tho dividend forthwith Robinson conflrnwd deedincreased Xrom per and adPtIo whereby William andiiiui uio larger figure would be con-tinued indefinitely.

From the beglnlnng of the strike thobears used that unfortunate blun-der in their efforts discredit andpull down Walalua the market; butconservative Investors the. sit-

uation better and their; efforts har-monize quotations and values wouldseem hnve been In view the an-nouncement this morning, fullyJustified.

Another announcement this morn-ing of interest was Ewawould pay an dividend of percent In Xugust. Heretofore Ewa haspaid per cent a month regularly, andthis extra per cent will totalof 3 per cent to be paid out Innext

These notable enlargements of dlvl- -

at this seem to Indicatethat tho has not done tho

some had expected of it; andsljpw the In the

86

Ton.

June cents...'..,.

5

June 7

9

a

ED. FROM

CALIFORNIA

Ed. Lewis theafter stay

to

a list

5

plans

a Hat

the

atho

a

nner aweelc

hasUmt

Wethe

a

a

wire

tho

thethe

nun. lUCill CUUUIUUIIS UXISl IieTO lOTexpermentlng in the flight of

.Some talk is being made about form-jin- g

a here, and travel be- -tween islands

! I TinI llrliy grouno is being dlscuss- -

LB LI .ed

nmenlflpmitDEND SPITE OF 'ellentEWA STRONGER King

street, prices.

striko

fionr comnanv.would Judge

cent, Kulla

have

knew

great' thatextra 2

3 make aprollts

month.

dents periodstrike dam-ng- o

tainly plantations

2

V

fromtoday"

i..a

from tlipra Ih nml pv.IN

'.

set CHILD. ADOPTED

Un a or2 to 3-- 4

toon

to

to ofnt

cer

Waolele Kuhia adont as theirchild Elizabeth Lei Kekona

In file suit of Honokaa Sugar Co.vs. Hawallian Irrigation Co., tho defendant is given ten days from July27 to file its answer and cross bill.

Pullcntlon of summons Is ordered inthe divorce suit of Louisa Ng Kong vs.Ng 'Kong.

An execution for $241.33 with In-

terest since 1904, In account of bal-nn- ce

unpaid on a fine lu a criminalcase, has been issued from the Fedoralcourt against Fukushlml to bo leviedon the $2000 he has sworn to be worthns a surety on the bond of Yokogawa,the JMJaul Shlnbun editor held for

crime. Fukushlml was released fromserving time to, pay the fine on talc-

ing tho poor, man's oath,

strike zone to be far healthier thanmight reasonably .have "beon suspected,

:

L ONDO B EETS

Price.

10 shillings G 3-- 4 pence.10 shillings, 7 2 pence.10 shillings, 6 3-- 4 pence.10 shillings; 7 1-- 2 pence.

.10 shillings, G 4 pence.

10 shillings G" pence!

10 shillings 7 2 pence,10 .shillings 5 4 pence.

10 shillings G ponce.10 shillings, 6 pence.

' 10 shllllngs.5 1--4 pence.10 shillings 6 pence.'10 shillings 5 4 pence.

10 shillings 6 3-- 4 pence.10 shillings, 9 pence.

Capital Stock 1100,000.006000 Shares Par Value $20.00

Subscriptionoffice of

list now open the

HARRY ARM1TAGEHtoolc and BeadBrolcep .....

Campbell BlocK, Merchant Btrset,Prospectus may te had on applies-tlon- .

JAMES r, MORGAN

STOCK andBOND Broker

Member of Honolulu Stock and BondExchange.

Stock and Bond Orders receiveprompt attention.

Information furnisned relative to allSTOCKS AND BONDS.

LOANS NEGOTIATED.Phone 72. r, uox. ea4.

DAILY STOCK REPORT

Session Sales: G Walalua $99.00:Walalua $99.23; 20 Walalua $99.50; 10Hawaiian C. & S. C. $32,125; 5 OahuSugar Co., $2S.75; 30 Haw. C. & S. Co.$32.00; 10 Haw. C. & S. o., $32,125;5 Walalua $99.75; 10 Walalua $99.75;11 Waialua $100.00; 5 Oahu Sugar Co.?2!).O0.

Between Boards: $25,000 HamakuaDitch Cs, $101,00; $2,00 Haw. Irr. Co.Ob, $950; 25 Waialua $98.50; 100 OahuSugar Co.', $2S.25Tibo Oahu Sugar CC.$28.25; 150 Oahu SugarCo. $28.25 ;

10 Ewa $28.75;-9- JSwa $2S.75; 50 Hut-chinson $17.375; $4,000 O. R. & L. Co.5s, $101.00;' 50 Oahu Sugar Co., $2S.25.

"Quotations. Bid. Asked

Ewa Plant. Co 28.75 29.00Hawaiian, Agri. Co.... 179.00 185.00Haw. C. & S, Co 32.25 32.50Hawaiian Sugar Co.... 42.50Honomn Sugar Co 150.00Honokaa 'Sugar Co.... 17.25 18.-0-

Hutchinson . . 17.00 17.50Kahuu 29.50 .......Kakaha Sugar (Jo 185.00Koloa Sugar Co 150.00WcBryde .... 3.375 3 025Oahu Sugar Co 28.75 29.00Ononiea Sugar Co;';.. 45.00 46.00Ookala Sugar Co. 14.00Olaa Sugar Co 3.50Paauhau 25.00Pioneer Mill"Walalua Agri. Co.rWalmanalo S. C...Waimea Sugar C.I. I. S. N. CoHon.' R. T.'Co. pfd.Hon. R. T. Co. com'Nahlltu Rub. CoHllo R. R. Co., (is.:.;,Hon. B. & M. Co

Pineapple Co. . ;

CaL Rof. Co. 0s(is

Hamakua Ditch (is....Haw. Ir. Co. 0s 25p..Haw. Ir. Co. 0s pdvHllo R. R. Co. 0s..Honokaa (is

Kohala Ditch Gs.....McBryde S. Co. Cs,

O. Rl & L. Co. 5s..

at

171.5099,75

235.0070.00110.00102.0080.00

Haw.' 24,00- -

101.50Haiku 100.00

101.002G.0095.0096.25

102.50

101.00uahu Sucar 5s 101.00Olaa Sugar Co. Gs.... 99.00Pacific Mill Gs 103.00Pala Plant. 6s 100.00Pioner Mill Gs 101.00

Flne Job. omc

4.002G.00

175.00100.00250.00

40.0014.5024. in)

100.0097.00

101.50

Sugar, 3.99cBeet, IDs, 6d

Henry Walerhouse Trust Co,

Members Honolulu Stock and BondExchange.

FORT AND 'MERCHANT STS.

TELEPHONE 736

Printing, mat

9

5

We are making prepara-tions for Our Grand An-nual Clearance Sale. Itwill be a Record Breaker.Watch for the Announce-ment .... ...

VySF '1- T'r'

N. S. Sachs' Dry Goods So., LtdCORNER FORT & BERETANIA STS. Opposite Fire Station.

Best

Draymq

Facilities

When you want to get work done thecheapest and have it done to your en-

tire satisfaction, go to the people withthe best facilities. That's us.

Honolulu Gonstruction & Draying .Co., Llfl.'

Fort St Opposite W. G. Irwin &'Co. Pnone 281COCfaOOGOOOOOOQOOOGOOQCXXSOOCXXra

1? JDjUnless a Safe does all that it is supposed to do ,it Is worse than

nothing, because you trust itA safe should be absolutely fire dnd burglar ' proof. The many

severe tests which the

Herring -- Hall -- MarvinSAFES

have undergone have proved it absolutely & A F E.Its makers have beerr Improving and testing it for over sixty-fou- r

years.THE NAME IS A GUARANTEE.

THEO. H. DAVIES & CO., Ltd.

Praying and Heavy Teaming

'PHONE 295Hustace-Pec-k Go. LID

SAME OLD NUMBER G3 QUEEN STREET.

We are always equipped to handle any thing in the draylng line,from a keg of nails to a sugar mill.

S3f SPECIAL ATTENTIONPEOMPT DELIVERY

6f.

lift, .

"Success" Garden

It certainly Is a. "SUCCESS" Just what its name implies, tor a longtime we have experimented in hose to produce just what will last longestunder tho peculiar conditions found here. The results of our investiga-tions are highly satisfactory. In the "SUCCESS" hose we combine all the-goo- d

points and eliminate all the weak ones.

IT IS RED; IN AND WEARS LIKE IRON.

If you doubt, look about you ln seven out of ten yards you find theRed "SUCCESS" hose used, not because it's red, but because it wearsTHE BEST ui TEST, j - , . -

,11150. ft. $8.50; in. 25 ft. $4.501

W. W. Dimond & Co., Ltd.,53 , 55 57 Kinff. Street Honolulu

If .1 m

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