hawaiian star. · 2015. 6. 2. · waialee plan! taken up with the superintendent of public works...

12
1 SUGAR WBATMBEft 1 Cnnoi 4.42c. lb., $88.40 per HAWAIIAN STAR. Ther., mln., 67 . ton. Hnr.T 8 m., 30.10. Hoots: 14b 9d. per cwt., Wind, lm 10 8. B. 102.G0 per ton. Itnln, Jlli., 8 a. tn., .00. Telephone 2365 Star Business Office. The Largest Daily Paper in The Territory SECOND EDITION. VOL. XIX. TWELVE PAGE8. HONOLULU, HAWAII, FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1912. TWELVE PAQE8. NO. 6233. THE TRUST'S WIDE CONTROL TANT0N HAS OPTION ON LANAI Tho Island of Lanul is likely to bo sold again within tho next few months. An option has been secured on tho property by Chas. A. Stanton, of tho Kalmukl Land Company, and If tho deal goes through which he has in mind some extensive develop- ment of Charles GayVs ancient king- dom is promised. Mr. Stanton stated this morning that ho is leaving by tlio Wllhelmlnn next Wednesday for Now York, and perhaps will go to Lundon, presum- ably In connection with the Lana) SCHOOL COM APPROV E Superintendent Pope, of the educa-aio- n department, some weeks ago for- warded copies of the plans and speci- fications of the new Waialee Indus- trial School to all the school commis- sioners. Tho approval of the plans by the commissioners was asked. A majority of the controllers of the edu- cation department havo sent in re- plies to the effect that tho plans meet with their approval. Ouo commis- sioner suggests sorao changes which might b(S mado. This matter will be Nm en New Homesteads Governor Prear this morning signed, the patent papers of nineteen home- steaders. Of these, four are on Ha- waii, one on Oahu and fourteen on Kauai. The Governor looked pleased over the signing of tho patents. An amendment to tho board of agri- culture regulations, regarding the fruit fly, was also approved of by the Gov- ernor. The amendment refers to tho gathering of all fallen fruit, and di- rects the owners of fruit trees to see to it that tho ground under the trees is kept clear of fruit. Colonel Z. S. Spalding was a caller on tho Governor thlB morning, and Kauai land matters were discussed. AUTO BREAKS COIFS 1 William Levi, a convict In the coun- ty prison, broke his right arm above tho wrist last night whilo cranking an auto at tho Jail. Tho machlno did not belong to Levi and h0 was cranking it for another larty. WIGGED 1 Howard Moore, a soldier, was fined $20 and costs this morning for com- mitting assault and battery on Annie Sllva, the wlgged wonder of tho un- derworld. It appears that Mooro was drunk and attempted to enter tho domicile of gentle Annie at Iwllel. The latter refused him admittance, whereupon ho beat her about tho body with tho butt end of a whip. Mooro's frlond testified, that he and Mooro wore Bitting on tho latial of Annlo's house, when the latter sud- denly called Moore an unendearlng name, told him to beat It, and followed up her instructions .with a fusillade of vases and a slop-bucke- t. Annie's lady friends assisted In get mattor. Ho was reticent concerning tho terms of the option, or his fu- ture plans, and further than tostato that the option had been secured, and that ho is going East, ho declined to talk on tho subject. The Island of Laual was purchas- ed a few years ago by a local syn- dicate, of which J. T. McCrtfjson and Frank E. Thompson were prominent spirits, from W. G. Irwin, who had secured title to the greater part of tho Island through a trade with the (Continued on page four.) ss I0NEI WAIALEE PLAN! taken up with the superintendent of public works when he returns. The Kahuku Industrial School mat- ter is progressing well, and it would seem that, by the time the commis- sioners meet in Juno next, all tho toys will havo been secured, the prin- cipal appointed and the buildings well on their way to completion. Inspector Gibson is hard at work on tho Kahuku proposition and he has dally visits from boys who wish to enroll as students at tho agricul tural school. M'CAEf LESS A DEMOCR Tho First of the Fourth Democratic Club met last night In tho rear of AUIolanl College, Palolo. The reslrnatlon of Fred TurrlU as county committeeman was read and accepted and Sam Hardesty was elec- ted to fill tho vacancy. C. D.Pringle, Kelkl ana Kamaka were elected Judges of tho coming election. Link McCandless wus present and addressed tho gathering in English and Hawaiian. Ho explained his attitude in tho dual convention matter, paid his com- pliments to Colonel C. J. McCarthy, advocated tho Inclusion of a plank In tho local Democratic platform urg- ing Uncle Sam to uso only citizen labor on federal work, and frankly intimated that ho was In favor of an anti-fre- e sugar plank m the same platform. He spoke of tho bulldlng-u- p work that ho had done for tho party during his threo campaigns for tho office of delegate and cited the voto on those occasions as an Instance of how a man's vote-gettin- g value goes with each campaign. Ho said that he felt tnat the tlmo was at hand when' tho Democrats FINE ting Mr. Mooro down tho steps of tho lanal. Witness saw a slapplng-mntch- , but didn't seo Mooro belabor tho girl with a whip handle. Prosecuting Officer Brown said that tho Iwilei girls had a hard life. Thoy deserved protection from drunken sol- diers. Annie and her sisters in sin had shown a proper spirit In refusing to harbor a drunken man on tho premises. Ho asked for a salutary fine. Bob Ross and J. J. Ryan were charged with affray in tho police court this morning. Ross sported a gaily decorated beak. Prosecuting Officer Brown said that extenuating circumstances connected with tho caso warranted a suspension of sentenco for thirteen' months. And It was so. 1 aiamana ""I. havo not decided," Delegate said in reply to a question by a Star reporter at noon, as to whether ho was going to leave In tho Mongolia for Washington. Prince Cupid returned from his visit to Hawaii in the Klnau this morning. "I havo had a good time," he said A VERDICT MAY BE IN FIRST SITE CASE If everything goes as the attorneys for both sides say they think It will, the Jury that for long and weary weeks has listened to tho great mass of testimony in tho Manuka site case will return Its verdict by tomorrow evening. There Is the possibility, however, that Judge Dole may decide to givo tho Jurymen n day's rest be- fore consigning tho case to them. RESSES ATS AT PALOLO would send a delegate to Congress and wound up by stating that he was not working for Link McCandless, but for tho party, first, last and all the time. David Martin and Solomon Mehoula also spoke. Eighth of Fourth. At tho meeting of the Republican Club of tho Eighth precinct, Fourth district, last night, officers wore elected as follows: A. D. Castro, president; E. L. Schwartzborg, t; Vincent Fernandez, Jr., (Continued on page Four) VSITOR ADM Y. M. Tho now Young Men's Christian Association building was favorably commented upon this morning by D. J. Harris, one of the founders of tho Harris Trust and Savings Bank Company of Chicago, visiting Hono lulu while his wife is recovering from Iho effects of serious illness. Mr. and Mrs. Harris have taken a cottage at tho Colonial Hotel and will remain In Honolulu for some tlmo. Ono of tho first things that Mr. Harris did upon his arrival to this city was to Inspect the local Young Men's Christian Association building and to Inquire Into the work with which tho local Association Is occu- pied. Since his retirement from active business, Mr. Harris has been Inter- ested in Y. M. C.' A. work and was ono of tho contributors to a ono hun- dred thousand dollar fund to bo de- voted to furthering Y. M. C. A. In- terests In Evanston, Illinois, a city of thirty thousand population situated twelve miles north of Chicago. It was there that Mr. Harris saw tho need of a Y. M. C. A. for col- ored people, nnd, whon he discovered that tho ten thousand dollars sot aside from tho bulk of the fund for this purpose was not enough, ho set to work to raise tho fund to tho ne- cessary amount. Mr. and Mrs. Harris, left Chicago 016 Is IU ci About g on Sunday about his trip. "No, I did not do any politics. I made no political speech whatever. "There was a big luau at Miss Par- ker's birthday celebration at Walmea. A very great crowd was present, I could not say how many." An appolntmant was made with the reporter to give him tho Delegate's decision, If he camo to one, at a later hour. GIVEN T 10 1 Argument was begun this morning, Attorney Clarence H. Olson address- ing tho Jury on behalf of the Cum- mins Estate Interests. Mr. Olson fin- ished his argument at noon and this afternoon Attorney It. B. Anderson, representing tho Castle & Cooke will prr-- .i his sldo of the casr; to" thV.pa'iJjit '.rrrfn Mr. n- - J doraou says he does m ' expect to J make a lengthy argument. He will do followed by United States District Attorney Breckons, who snys he does not expect to speak moro than an (Continued on page Four) "I am absolutely In favor of a re- duction in tho water rates charged tho shipping in this port," said Gov- ernor Frear this morning, "and tho matter should bo treated in a busi- nesslike manner. The department should pay for itself, as far as ex- penses, Interest on bonds and sinking fund aro concerned." Tho governor denied tho Insinua- tion conveyed in tho morning paper A. for California on tho fifth of Febru- ary, later coming on to Honolulu ' "Your Association building here Is a model structuro," ho said on comple- tion of his inspection of the build- ing. "It Is well laid out for both social and physical purposes and is a good indication of tho of tho city. (Continued on page Four) This morning Dr. Shepherd, of thoi ! board of health, Surveyor Wall and I Land Tucker Journeyed over to Knilua, on tho other sldo of tho Inland, and looked over tome lots that aro said to bo land, and which aro occupied by natives. Tho Hawallans aro said to bo creating a nuisance, nad tho owners of tho summer lots adjoining tho government land object to their nolghbors, Tho surveyor will bIzo up tho situ- ation and, If the Hawallans aro resid- ing on tho government land, they will bo told to move As tho nuisance part When the tlmo arrived, tho reporter was informed that positively no an- nouncement on the subject would bo given out this afternoon especially before- tho first edition of the Star went to press. Delegate was In con- ference with some of his moro Imme- diate political friends ever since com- ing Into town from his Walklkl resi- dence about twelve o'clock. Paia Still On GOVERNOR TALKS ON WATER RATES AND MISREPRESENTATION RES C. progressive-nes- s HAWAIIAN ALLEGED THREATENED Commissioner government Kalanianaole Strike (Special Wireless to the Star.) WAILUKU, March 22. Threo hun- dred Japanese laborers Oklnawans on Pala plantation walked out yester- day, claiming to havo a grievance against a luna. They aro still out. Old Resident Dead. W. P. Mossman, a well-know- n and manager of tho Hamaku-apok- a plantation store, died of paraly- sis at the Pala Hospital yesterday afternoon. He was aged seventy-eigh- t years. An obituary notice of the lato Mr. Mossman, wrlcn when his death was Imminent, is reprinted elsewhere from the Weekly Times of Walluku of yesterday's date. that, if ho had known of Commis- sioner Wakefield's private water scheme tho commissioner would novcr havo been appointed. "I never said anything of the sort; neither did I hint at such a thing," said tho governor when asked if that portion of the Advertiser story wa3 correct. Tho proposition that an appropria- tion bo mado by the legislature to make up a doflclt In tho water depart- ment was declared by tho governor to bo an attempt to go back to the old way of doing things. "It would change ho whole fiscal policy of tho government," concluded tho governor. "Tho water works department Is better now than over boforo, and Is being run on a g basis," remarked tho governor later on. Tho governor said that ho was In favor of tho water motor system. Ho also said that tho rates In Honolulu aro low, and that It is Idle to talk of dry lawns being seen if tho motor system Is put Into force. "It is only wasto that will havo to bo avoided, and tho water rates hero will bo as (Continued on pago four.) SQUATTERS WT EVICTION of tho mattor comos under tho Juris- diction of tho board of health, Dr. Shepherd will do what Is necessary In backing up tho other government au- thorities. Things at tho board of health office r.ro qulot now that tho weekly moot- ing Is ovor. Tho question of ceme- teries Is being taken up, nnd, although Protldont Pratt has a largo amount of data on hand at present, somo more will bo gathered In order to see what can bo dono In connection with tho subjoct. That tho problom Is n se- rious ono Is tho opinion of Dr. Pratt, who Is Boeing what can be dono In tho matter. EVIDENCE IN THE FEDERAL (Associated Press Cables to the Star.) NEW YORK. March 22. Evidence In tho Sti duced in court today to show that tho most-- of tho refining business of tho tween tho American Company and tho snowing tnat tho former controlled tho per cent of the beet stock. ASQUITH REFUSES TERMS. LONDON, March 22. Premier Asqulth has refused to includo in tho government's bill the minimum men .ipnio $1.23 per day for men and 50 cents Kt 1. 1L. ilf . uiuuk iuq souieiuent. MINORITY WOOL BILL. 'W WASHINGTON, March 22. Tho Republicans of tho House Ways and Means Comralttco havo Introduced a minority wool bill which would re- duce the duty 40 per cent COAL STRIKE INQUIRY. CHICAGO, March 22. A national inquiry into tho coal, trust, radiating from Chicago, covers Illinois, Pennsylvania and tho South. BATTLE IN PARAGUAY. " fmfS, BUENOS AYRES, March 22. A fierce battle is raging in Paraguay bb- - H tween revolutionists and the government AGAINST SACRAMENTO, March 22. Tho resolution against the free sugar bill. DEATH OF FORMER ST. LOUIS, March 22. John 1 der President Harrison, Is dead. BODIES FROM McCURTAIN, March 22. Eighty - from tho mine. SAN FRANCISCO, March 22. A fivo deaths. (Morning Cable Report on Page Twelve.) JAPANESE Y. lifl. C. SECURED The Japaneso Young Men's Chris- tian Association will piovo Into Its new quarters on Smith near Hotel street some tlmo in April. According to Paul Super, general secretary of the Y. M. C. A., tho di- rectors of tho Japaneso department havo rented tho second story of tho new brick building Just across tho street from tho Hawaii Shlnpo of- fice. Its own building Is now in course of erection and will be completed by April 1, when the "Japanese Associa- tion will movo Into its new homo. Reading rooms, study rooms, the secretary's ofllco and hall for gen- eral social purposes will bo provided In tho arrangement of tho depart- ment's headquarters and, according to Matsu Zama, the corresponding secre- tary, threo hundred Japanese havo al GATHGART WILL INTERFER E A wild and woolly rumor was In circulation this morning to tho effect that the county attorney's offlco had taken a hand In tho g stunt advcrtlsod to tako placo at a local theater tonight, and had threat ened all concorned with nrrest should the Bchemo bo carried out. County Attorney Cathcart stated this afternoon that the matter had not boon brought to tho attention of his department nnd that ho had glvon it no attention. Tho concensus of opinion on tho streot appears to bo that tho baby to bo given awny to tho holdor of tho lucky ticket Is a baby rabbit or somo other four-legge- d klddlo. M ll Midi COURT CASE American Sugar Company controlled?! country. Contracts were read be-- i American Beet Sugar Company, output of tho latter and owned 39 j vwv uuitauvu J VI U UJlUUkD WJL for boys. It is believed that this will : FREE SUGAR. Chamber of Commerce has passed CABINET MEMBER. Noble, Secretary of tho Interior un-- i O THE M.INE. four more bodies havo been recovered Tong war hero has caused a total off J A. TEMPORARY QUARTERS ready signified their desire to enroll their names on tho books of the Jap- aneso Y. M. C. A. f Tho building was choson after Paul Super and the Japanese directors had Inspected the premises on Wednesday and Secretary Super was notified yes- terday by Matsu Zama that the direc- tors had leased tho second story of tho building. "Meanwhile," said Mr. Super, "tho directors will continue tho search for a lot in a suitable location upon which to build. A permanent homo will then be erected and, if tho ap- plications keep coming in as thoy aro at present, the Japanoso Y. M. C. A. ought to havo a much larger member-- , Bhlp than tho Central department Tho officers and directors of tho Japanese department aro: Dr. Iga Mori, president; Rev. Mr. Okumura, ' t; Rov. M. Fukao, rec- ording secretary; M. Nakamura, trea- surer; Dr. Ochlal. Mr. Ozawa, Mr. Kawasaki, Mr. Tashlro, directors. Last Year's Auto Bill Hawaii last year Importod 367 auto- mobiles, valued at $730,089. Besides this, '$237,087 was spent for rubber tiros, nnd $83,298 for automobile parts. Those figures nro gjvon by tho bu-roa- u of statistics of tho dopartment of commorco and labor. Thoy show that tho averago value of tho ma- - chines Importod was $1989. Our auto oxponso bill for. tho year, based on population, was about $5,50 for evory man, woman and child In tho Torrltory. During tho calendar yoar 1910, tho Imports of motors was hoavlor, 401 machlnos being brought to tho Terri- tory, having a total vnluo of $773,737, or a slightly lower average price $1929 each. Mil liHiMWmOTIIMlT MIMIliBI

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Page 1: HAWAIIAN STAR. · 2015. 6. 2. · WAIALEE PLAN! taken up with the superintendent of public works when he returns. ... business, Mr. Harris has been Inter-ested in Y. M. C.' A. work

1

SUGAR WBATMBEft 1

Cnnoi 4.42c. lb., $88.40 per HAWAIIAN STAR. Ther., mln., 67

.ton. Hnr.T 8 m., 30.10.

Hoots: 14b 9d. per cwt., Wind, lm 10 8. B.

102.G0 per ton. Itnln, Jlli., 8 a. tn., .00.

Telephone 2365 Star Business Office. The Largest Daily Paper in The Territory SECOND EDITION.

VOL. XIX. TWELVE PAGE8. HONOLULU, HAWAII, FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1912. TWELVE PAQE8. NO. 6233.

THE TRUST'S WIDE CONTROLTANT0N

HAS OPTION

ON LANAI

Tho Island of Lanul is likely tobo sold again within tho next fewmonths. An option has been securedon tho property by Chas. A. Stanton,of tho Kalmukl Land Company, andIf tho deal goes through which hehas in mind some extensive develop-ment of Charles GayVs ancient king-dom is promised.

Mr. Stanton stated this morningthat ho is leaving by tlio Wllhelmlnnnext Wednesday for Now York, andperhaps will go to Lundon, presum-ably In connection with the Lana)

SCHOOL COMAPPROV E

Superintendent Pope, of the educa-aio- n

department, some weeks ago for-

warded copies of the plans and speci-

fications of the new Waialee Indus-

trial School to all the school commis-

sioners. Tho approval of the plansby the commissioners was asked. Amajority of the controllers of the edu-

cation department havo sent in re-

plies to the effect that tho plans meetwith their approval. Ouo commis-sioner suggests sorao changes whichmight b(S mado. This matter will be

Nm en New

HomesteadsGovernor Prear this morning signed,

the patent papers of nineteen home-steaders. Of these, four are on Ha-

waii, one on Oahu and fourteen onKauai. The Governor looked pleasedover the signing of tho patents.

An amendment to tho board of agri-culture regulations, regarding the fruitfly, was also approved of by the Gov-

ernor. The amendment refers to thogathering of all fallen fruit, and di-

rects the owners of fruit trees to seeto it that tho ground under the treesis kept clear of fruit.

Colonel Z. S. Spalding was a calleron tho Governor thlB morning, andKauai land matters were discussed.

AUTO BREAKS

COIFS 1William Levi, a convict In the coun-

ty prison, broke his right arm abovetho wrist last night whilo crankingan auto at tho Jail.

Tho machlno did not belong to Leviand h0 was cranking it for anotherlarty.

WIGGED 1Howard Moore, a soldier, was fined

$20 and costs this morning for com-

mitting assault and battery on AnnieSllva, the wlgged wonder of tho un-

derworld.

It appears that Mooro was drunkand attempted to enter tho domicileof gentle Annie at Iwllel. The latterrefused him admittance, whereuponho beat her about tho body with thobutt end of a whip.

Mooro's frlond testified, that he andMooro wore Bitting on tho latial ofAnnlo's house, when the latter sud-

denly called Moore an unendearlngname, told him to beat It, and followedup her instructions .with a fusilladeof vases and a slop-bucke- t.

Annie's lady friends assisted In get

mattor. Ho was reticent concerningtho terms of the option, or his fu-

ture plans, and further than tostatothat the option had been secured, andthat ho is going East, ho declinedto talk on tho subject.

The Island of Laual was purchas-ed a few years ago by a local syn-

dicate, of which J. T. McCrtfjson andFrank E. Thompson were prominentspirits, from W. G. Irwin, who hadsecured title to the greater part oftho Island through a trade with the

(Continued on page four.)

ssI0NEI

WAIALEE PLAN!

taken up with the superintendent ofpublic works when he returns.

The Kahuku Industrial School mat-

ter is progressing well, and it wouldseem that, by the time the commis-sioners meet in Juno next, all thotoys will havo been secured, the prin-cipal appointed and the buildings wellon their way to completion.

Inspector Gibson is hard at workon tho Kahuku proposition and hehas dally visits from boys who wishto enroll as students at tho agricul

tural school.

M'CAEf LESS A

DEMOCR

Tho First of the Fourth DemocraticClub met last night In tho rear ofAUIolanl College, Palolo.

The reslrnatlon of Fred TurrlU ascounty committeeman was read andaccepted and Sam Hardesty was elec-

ted to fill tho vacancy.C. D.Pringle, Kelkl ana Kamaka

were elected Judges of tho comingelection.

Link McCandless wus present andaddressed tho gathering in Englishand Hawaiian.

Ho explained his attitude in thodual convention matter, paid his com-

pliments to Colonel C. J. McCarthy,advocated tho Inclusion of a plank Intho local Democratic platform urg-ing Uncle Sam to uso only citizenlabor on federal work, and franklyintimated that ho was In favor ofan anti-fre- e sugar plank m the sameplatform.

He spoke of tho bulldlng-u- p workthat ho had done for tho party duringhis threo campaigns for tho office ofdelegate and cited the voto on thoseoccasions as an Instance of how aman's vote-gettin- g value goes witheach campaign.

Ho said that he felt tnat the tlmowas at hand when' tho Democrats

FINE

ting Mr. Mooro down tho steps of tholanal.

Witness saw a slapplng-mntch-, butdidn't seo Mooro belabor tho girl witha whip handle.

Prosecuting Officer Brown said thattho Iwilei girls had a hard life. Thoydeserved protection from drunken sol-

diers. Annie and her sisters in sinhad shown a proper spirit In refusingto harbor a drunken man on thopremises. Ho asked for a salutaryfine.

Bob Ross and J. J. Ryan werecharged with affray in tho policecourt this morning. Ross sported agaily decorated beak.

Prosecuting Officer Brown said thatextenuating circumstances connectedwith tho caso warranted a suspensionof sentenco for thirteen' months. AndIt was so.

1

aiamana

""I. havo not decided," Delegate

said in reply to a questionby a Star reporter at noon, as to

whether ho was going to leave In thoMongolia for Washington.

Prince Cupid returned from hisvisit to Hawaii in the Klnau thismorning.

"I havo had a good time," he said

A VERDICT MAY BE

IN FIRST SITE

CASE

If everything goes as the attorneysfor both sides say they think It will,

the Jury that for long and weary

weeks has listened to tho great massof testimony in tho Manuka site casewill return Its verdict by tomorrowevening. There Is the possibility,however, that Judge Dole may decideto givo tho Jurymen n day's rest be-

fore consigning tho case to them.

RESSES

ATS AT PALOLO

would send a delegate to Congressand wound up by stating that he wasnot working for Link McCandless, butfor tho party, first, last and all thetime.

David Martin and Solomon Mehoulaalso spoke.

Eighth of Fourth.At tho meeting of the Republican

Club of tho Eighth precinct, Fourthdistrict, last night, officers woreelected as follows: A. D. Castro,president; E. L. Schwartzborg, t;

Vincent Fernandez, Jr.,(Continued on page Four)

VSITOR ADM

Y. M.

Tho now Young Men's ChristianAssociation building was favorablycommented upon this morning by D.

J. Harris, one of the founders of

tho Harris Trust and Savings BankCompany of Chicago, visiting Honolulu while his wife is recovering fromIho effects of serious illness.

Mr. and Mrs. Harris have taken acottage at tho Colonial Hotel and willremain In Honolulu for some tlmo.

Ono of tho first things that Mr.

Harris did upon his arrival to thiscity was to Inspect the local YoungMen's Christian Association buildingand to Inquire Into the work withwhich tho local Association Is occu-

pied.Since his retirement from active

business, Mr. Harris has been Inter-ested in Y. M. C.' A. work and wasono of tho contributors to a ono hun-

dred thousand dollar fund to bo de-

voted to furthering Y. M. C. A. In-

terests In Evanston, Illinois, a city ofthirty thousand population situatedtwelve miles north of Chicago.

It was there that Mr. Harris sawtho need of a Y. M. C. A. for col-

ored people, nnd, whon he discoveredthat tho ten thousand dollars sotaside from tho bulk of the fund forthis purpose was not enough, ho setto work to raise tho fund to tho ne-

cessary amount.Mr. and Mrs. Harris, left Chicago

016 Is

IU

ci Aboutg on Sunday

about his trip."No, I did not do any politics. I

made no political speech whatever."There was a big luau at Miss Par-

ker's birthday celebration at Walmea.A very great crowd was present, Icould not say how many."

An appolntmant was made with thereporter to give him tho Delegate'sdecision, If he camo to one, at a laterhour.

GIVEN

T10 1Argument was begun this morning,

Attorney Clarence H. Olson address-ing tho Jury on behalf of the Cum-

mins Estate Interests. Mr. Olson fin-

ished his argument at noon and thisafternoon Attorney It. B. Anderson,representing tho Castle & Cooke

will prr-- .i his sldo of thecasr; to" thV.pa'iJjit '.rrrfn Mr. n- -

J doraou says he does m ' expect toJ make a lengthy argument. He will

do followed by United States DistrictAttorney Breckons, who snys he doesnot expect to speak moro than an

(Continued on page Four)

"I am absolutely In favor of a re-

duction in tho water rates chargedtho shipping in this port," said Gov-

ernor Frear this morning, "and thomatter should bo treated in a busi-

nesslike manner. The departmentshould pay for itself, as far as ex-

penses, Interest on bonds and sinkingfund aro concerned."

Tho governor denied tho Insinua-tion conveyed in tho morning paper

A.

for California on tho fifth of Febru-ary, later coming on to Honolulu' "Your Association building here Isa model structuro," ho said on comple-tion of his inspection of the build-ing. "It Is well laid out for bothsocial and physical purposes and is agood indication of tho

of tho city.(Continued on page Four)

This morning Dr. Shepherd, of thoi!

board of health, Surveyor Wall andI

Land Tucker Journeyed

over to Knilua, on tho other sldo of

tho Inland, and looked over tome lotsthat aro said to bo land,

and which aro occupied by natives.Tho Hawallans aro said to bo creatinga nuisance, nad tho owners of thosummer lots adjoining tho governmentland object to their nolghbors,

Tho surveyor will bIzo up tho situ-ation and, If the Hawallans aro resid-ing on tho government land, they willbo told to move As tho nuisance part

When the tlmo arrived, tho reporterwas informed that positively no an-

nouncement on the subject would bogiven out this afternoon especiallybefore- tho first edition of the Starwent to press.

Delegate was In con-

ference with some of his moro Imme-

diate political friends ever since com-ing Into town from his Walklkl resi-

dence about twelve o'clock.

Paia

Still On

GOVERNOR TALKS ON WATER

RATES AND MISREPRESENTATION

RES

C.

progressive-nes- s

HAWAIIAN ALLEGED

THREATENED

Commissioner

government

Kalanianaole

Strike

(Special Wireless to the Star.)WAILUKU, March 22. Threo hun-

dred Japanese laborers Oklnawanson Pala plantation walked out yester-day, claiming to havo a grievanceagainst a luna. They aro still out.

Old Resident Dead.W. P. Mossman, a well-know- n

and manager of tho Hamaku-apok- a

plantation store, died of paraly-sis at the Pala Hospital yesterdayafternoon. He was aged seventy-eigh- t

years.An obituary notice of the lato Mr.

Mossman, wrlcn when his death wasImminent, is reprinted elsewherefrom the Weekly Times of Wallukuof yesterday's date.

that, if ho had known of Commis-sioner Wakefield's private waterscheme tho commissioner wouldnovcr havo been appointed.

"I never said anything of the sort;neither did I hint at such a thing,"said tho governor when asked if thatportion of the Advertiser story wa3correct.

Tho proposition that an appropria-tion bo mado by the legislature tomake up a doflclt In tho water depart-ment was declared by tho governorto bo an attempt to go back to theold way of doing things. "It wouldchange ho whole fiscal policy of thogovernment," concluded tho governor.

"Tho water works department Isbetter now than over boforo, and Isbeing run on a g basis,"remarked tho governor later on.

Tho governor said that ho was Infavor of tho water motor system. Hoalso said that tho rates In Honoluluaro low, and that It is Idle to talkof dry lawns being seen if tho motorsystem Is put Into force. "It is onlywasto that will havo to bo avoided,and tho water rates hero will bo as

(Continued on pago four.)

SQUATTERS

WT EVICTION

of tho mattor comos under tho Juris-diction of tho board of health, Dr.Shepherd will do what Is necessary Inbacking up tho other government au-

thorities.Things at tho board of health office

r.ro qulot now that tho weekly moot-ing Is ovor. Tho question of ceme-teries Is being taken up, nnd, althoughProtldont Pratt has a largo amountof data on hand at present, somo morewill bo gathered In order to see whatcan bo dono In connection with thosubjoct. That tho problom Is n se-

rious ono Is tho opinion of Dr. Pratt,who Is Boeing what can be dono In thomatter.

EVIDENCE IN

THE FEDERAL

(Associated Press Cables to the Star.)NEW YORK. March 22. Evidence In tho Sti

duced in court today to show that thomost-- of tho refining business of thotween tho American Company and thosnowing tnat tho former controlled thoper cent of the beet stock.

ASQUITH REFUSES TERMS.LONDON, March 22. Premier Asqulth has refused to includo in tho

government's bill the minimum men .ipnio$1.23 per day for men and 50 centsKt 1. 1L. ilf .uiuuk iuq souieiuent.

MINORITY WOOL BILL. 'WWASHINGTON, March 22. Tho Republicans of tho House Ways and

Means Comralttco havo Introduced a minority wool bill which would re-

duce the duty 40 per cent

COAL STRIKE INQUIRY.CHICAGO, March 22. A national inquiry into tho coal, trust, radiating

from Chicago, covers Illinois, Pennsylvania and tho South.

BATTLE IN PARAGUAY. " fmfS,BUENOS AYRES, March 22. A fierce battle is raging in Paraguay bb- - H

tween revolutionists and the government

AGAINSTSACRAMENTO, March 22. Tho

resolution against the free sugar bill.

DEATH OF FORMERST. LOUIS, March 22. John 1

der President Harrison, Is dead.

BODIES FROMMcCURTAIN, March 22. Eighty -

from tho mine.

SAN FRANCISCO, March 22. Afivo deaths.

(Morning Cable Report on Page Twelve.)

JAPANESE Y. lifl. C.

SECURED

The Japaneso Young Men's Chris-

tian Association will piovo Into Itsnew quarters on Smith near Hotelstreet some tlmo in April.

According to Paul Super, generalsecretary of the Y. M. C. A., tho di-

rectors of tho Japaneso departmenthavo rented tho second story of thonew brick building Just across thostreet from tho Hawaii Shlnpo of-

fice.Its own building Is now in course

of erection and will be completed byApril 1, when the "Japanese Associa-

tion will movo Into its new homo.Reading rooms, study rooms, the

secretary's ofllco and hall for gen-

eral social purposes will bo providedIn tho arrangement of tho depart-ment's headquarters and, according toMatsu Zama, the corresponding secre-

tary, threo hundred Japanese havo al

GATHGART WILL

INTERFER E

A wild and woolly rumor was Incirculation this morning to tho effectthat the county attorney's offlco hadtaken a hand In tho g

stunt advcrtlsod to tako placo at alocal theater tonight, and had threatened all concorned with nrrest shouldthe Bchemo bo carried out.

County Attorney Cathcart statedthis afternoon that the matter hadnot boon brought to tho attention ofhis department nnd that ho had glvonit no attention.

Tho concensus of opinion on thostreot appears to bo that tho baby tobo given awny to tho holdor of tholucky ticket Is a baby rabbit or somoother four-legge- d klddlo.

M ll Midi

COURT CASE

American Sugar Company controlled?!country. Contracts were read be-- i

American Beet Sugar Company,output of tho latter and owned 39

j vwv uuitauvu J VI U UJlUUkD WJL

for boys. It is believed that this will:

FREE SUGAR.Chamber of Commerce has passed

CABINET MEMBER.Noble, Secretary of tho Interior un-- i

OTHE M.INE.

four more bodies havo been recovered

Tong war hero has caused a total offJ

A.

TEMPORARY QUARTERS

ready signified their desire to enrolltheir names on tho books of the Jap-aneso Y. M. C. A. f

Tho building was choson after PaulSuper and the Japanese directors hadInspected the premises on Wednesdayand Secretary Super was notified yes-terday by Matsu Zama that the direc-tors had leased tho second story oftho building.

"Meanwhile," said Mr. Super, "thodirectors will continue tho search fora lot in a suitable location uponwhich to build. A permanent homowill then be erected and, if tho ap-plications keep coming in as thoy aroat present, the Japanoso Y. M. C. A.ought to havo a much larger member-- ,Bhlp than tho Central department

Tho officers and directors of thoJapanese department aro: Dr. IgaMori, president; Rev. Mr. Okumura,

'

t; Rov. M. Fukao, rec-ording secretary; M. Nakamura, trea-surer; Dr. Ochlal. Mr. Ozawa, Mr.Kawasaki, Mr. Tashlro, directors.

Last Year's

Auto Bill

Hawaii last year Importod 367 auto-mobiles, valued at $730,089. Besidesthis, '$237,087 was spent for rubbertiros, nnd $83,298 for automobile parts.

Those figures nro gjvon by tho bu-roa- u

of statistics of tho dopartmentof commorco and labor. Thoy showthat tho averago value of tho ma- -chines Importod was $1989.

Our auto oxponso bill for. tho year,based on population, was about $5,50for evory man, woman and child Intho Torrltory.

During tho calendar yoar 1910, thoImports of motors was hoavlor, 401machlnos being brought to tho Terri-tory, having a total vnluo of $773,737,or a slightly lower average price $1929each.

Mil liHiMWmOTIIMlT MIMIliBI

Page 2: HAWAIIAN STAR. · 2015. 6. 2. · WAIALEE PLAN! taken up with the superintendent of public works when he returns. ... business, Mr. Harris has been Inter-ested in Y. M. C.' A. work

TWO THE HAWAIIAN STAR, FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1912.

THE HAWAIIAN STARDAILY

t

Dally published every afternoon (except Sunday) by the Hawalla Starnewspaper Association, Ltd., MeOandlesa llullding, Dethel street, Honolulu,V. H,

ntcroil at the Postofllco at Honolulu as sccond-clai- mall matter.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES, PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.

Dally, anywhere In tho Islands, per month f .75Dally, anywhere In the Islands, three months 2.00Dally, anywhore In the Islands, six months 4.00Dally, anywhero In the Islands, ono year 8.00Dally, to foreign countrlos, one year 12.00Beml-Wookl- anywhore In the Islands.ono year 2.00

aidI.WoaVIv tn Fnrnltm countries, one Tear 3.00Advertising rates supplied upon request.

L, D. TIMMONS MANAGER

Business office telephone, 2365; postofllco box, 3G0.

Oceanic Steamship Company

EBAVB S. F.Sierra Schedule

ARRIVE HON. LEAVE HON. S. F.

WAR. 8 MAR. 16 FEB. 28 MAR. B

MAR, JO .. ... APR. I MAR. 20 MAR. 26

APR. 10 APR. 1G

RATES from Honolulu to Ban Francisco: First Class, 65; Round Trip,

fllO. Family Room, extra.Reservations will not be held later than Forty-Eig- hours prior to

ka advertised sailing time unless tickets aro paid for in tulL

FOR PARTICULARS, APPLY TO

Brewer & Co., Ltd.GENERAL AGENT8.

Canadian-Australi- an Royal Mail Steamship Go

Bteamera of tho above line running in connection with the CANADIAN-PACIFI- C

RAILWAY COMPANY, between Vancouver, B. C, and 8ydney,

ft. 8. W., and calling at Victoria, B. C, Honolulu and Auckland, N. Z.

FOR FIJI AND AUSTRALIA. FOR VANCOUVER.

. S. MAKURA MAR. 27 S. S. ZEALANDIA MAR. 26

B. S. ZEALANDIA APR. 24 S. S. MARAMA APR. 23

B. 8. MARAMA MAY 22 S. S. MAKURA MAY 21

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

. - i saga?

Theo. H Davies & Co., Ltd., Gei'l Agents

Pacific Mail Steamship Co.Steamers of the above company will call at Honolulu and leave thlB

port on or about tho dates mentioned below:For tho .Orient: For 8an Francisco.

B. S. CHINA MAR. 18 S. S. MONGOLIA MAR. 23

B. S. MANCHURIA MAR. 25 S. S. PERSIA APR. 16

Will call at Manila.

For general information apply to

H. Hackfeld &' Co., Agents

Matson Navigation Co.'s Schedule, 1912DIRECT SERVICE BETWEEN SAN FRANCISCO AND HONOLULU.

Arrive from San Francisco. Sflll for San Francisco.B. S. LURLINE MAR. 13 S. S. LURLINE MAR. 19

0. S. WILHELMINA MAR.. 19 S. S. WILHELMINA MAR. 27B. S. HONOLULAN MAR. 26 S. S. HONOLULAN APR. 3

8. S. LURLINE APRIL 10 S. S. LURLINE APRIL 10

30.S. S. Hyades sails from Seattle for Honolulu direct on or about March

CASTLE & COOKE, LTD., GENERAL AGENT8.

ARRIVE

American-Hawaiia- n Steamship Co.FROM NEW YORK TO HONOLULU, via Tehuantepec, every sixth day.

freight received at all times at the Company's Wharf, 41st Street, SouthBrooklyn.

FROM SEATTLE OR TACOMA TO HONOLULU DIRECT:S. S. VIRGINIAN TO SAIL ABOUT MAR. 20

B. S. MISSOURIAN TO SAIL ABOUT MARCH 31S. S. MEXICAN TO SAIL ABOUT APRIL 11

For further Information apply toH. HACKFELD & CO., LTD., Agents, Honolulu.

O. P. MORSE, General Freight Agent

Toyo Kisen Kaisha.f... -

Steamers of the above Company will call at and leave Honolulu on oran ut the dates mentioned below:

FOR THE ORIENT: FOR 8AN FRANCI8CO:CHIYO MARU APR. 2 NIPPON MARU MAR. 29

B. S. NIPPON MARU APR. 23 TENYO MARU APR. 5

B. 8. TENYO MARU APR. 30 8. S. SHINYO MARU APR. 30

Castle & Cooke, Ltd., AgentsWHEN THE

UNION-PACIFI- TRANSFER CO.

HANDLE YOUR BAGGAGE IT GETS ON THE RIGHTSTEAMER.

Office King St., next Young He tel. Telephones 1874 and 187S.

Shipping And Waterfront NewsTIDES, SUN AND MOON.

Now Moon March 18 at 11:88 n. m.

JfJS 4J w 5J Jf5 a a 3 J " ga' A M. It. P.M. A. M. 1'. M..

18 3:88 1.4 4:06 10 08 10:00 0:09 6 '11 Bets

Jo;0flil219 4!04 1.4 4:42 10:38 10! 7:18

2016ii 1.5A4-s-

i 11:10 11:87 C:01 6:12 s:m

21 8:04 1.6 4:M 11:10 59 6:12 9Wj

2S 0:56 1.7 5:31 11:36 Aulw,6:M f,.)3 '00

2.1 7:56 1.7 0:03 lis:07 2:006-51- fljia 11

21 9:10 1.7 6:45 12:46 3:5S 5:5; 6:13

Times of thn tlfln nrn fnvnn frnm ttinD. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey tables.The tides at Kahulul and Hllo ocourabout one hour rarller than at Hono-lulu. Honolulu standard time Is 10hours 30 minutes slower than Green-wich time, being that of the meridianof 1E7 decrees 30 mlns. The timewnistie mows at i:so p. m., which isthe same as Greenwich 0 hours 0 min-utes. The sun and moon are for localume lor tne wnoie grout).

THE MAILS.To San Francisco, per Mongolia,

March 23.

From San Francisco, per Honolulan,March 20.

From tho Orient, per Mongolia,March 23.

To the Orient, per Manchuria,March 27.

To Australia, per Makura, March 27.From Australia, per Zealandla,

March 2G.

HHirPIXQ IK PORT.

(Government Teasels.)U. S. N. tug Navajo from Mare It- -

land, July 20.U. S. R. C. Thetis, from Seattle.

February 11.

(Merchant Vessels.)Mary E. Foster from Port Town- -

send, February 26.

12.

14.

Cumberland, from Hamburg, March

Prometheus, from Makatea, March

Alice Cooke, from Port Gamble,March 13. i

S. C. Allen, from Port Ludlow,March 14.

Restorer, from Midway Island,Heleno, from Aberdeen, March 18.R. P. Rlthet, from San Francisco.

March 19.

VESSELS DUE HERE.From San Francisco

Manchuria, March 27.

Honolulan, March 26.

From Australia.Zealandla, March 26.Mararaa, April 23.

Makura, May 21.

Zealandla, June 18.

Marama, July 18. . i

From the Orient.Mongolia, March 23.

e

PROJECTED DEPARTURES.For San Francisco.

Siorra, March 20.Mongolia, March 23.

Wllhelmlna, March 27.Nippon Maru, March 29.

For Australia. 'Makura, March 27

Zealandla, April 24.

Marama, May 22. '

Makura, Jun9 19.

Zealandla, July 12.

Marama, August 14.

For the OrientManchuria, March 27.

INTER-ISLAN- SAILINGS.For Hawaii Ports via Maul.

Mauna Kea, I.-- I. 8. N. Co., everyTuesday.

Claudine, Inter-Islan- d S. N. Co.,very Friday.

For Maul, via Molokal.Mlkahala every Tuesday.

For Kauai Ports.W. G. Hall, I.-- I. S. N. Co., every

Thursday.Kinau, I.-- I. S. N. Co., every Tuesday.

For Kona and Kau Ports.Kilauea, I.-- S. N Co., alternate

Tuesdays and Fridays.

WATERFRONT NOTES.The lighthouse tender Kukui car-

ried Harbormaster Foster and a par-

ty of officials to Pearl Harbor thismorning to Inspect the now buoyswhich tho Kukui recently Installedthere.

The Mongolia will arrive hero fromYokohama at 1 o'clock tomorrow aft-

ernoon.The bark Heleno has finished dis-

charging tho 75,000 feet of lumborconsigned to Allen & Robinson andhas gone over to railroad wharf toget rid of tho rest of her lumbor.

Tho schooner S. T. Alexander Is

off port waiting for additions to hercrow and her clearance papers fortho Sound.

i

In somo states when a man Isn'tgood for anything else, ho is sent totho legislature.

How a woman enjoys doing some-thing for charity that sho thinkswoudn't bo right to do for anythingolso!

lill KEAjOi IN SERVICE

Will Probably Run April Second CaptainJensen's Denial Captain Miller's

Exploit Arouses Comment.

Tho work of cleaning up the MttunaKca and removing tho marks of herducking in tho harbor havo nowreached a point where it is possibleto prophesy her return to servlco andIntor-lslan- d oftlclnls stated this morn-ing that they hoped to havo her backon the regular run by Tuesday, April2nd.

To prevent tho rusting of tho steelshell It has been necessary to chipand scrape tho entire Interior of thehold down to tho keel, scrapo thewhole surface and paint It with'" bw bot,om'

white lead. A great deal of varnish-ing nnd painting had to bo done totho furnishings also and tho wholetask was ono of thorough houscclean-in- g

rather than repairing. Tho en-gines came through tho accident inperfect condition and with steam inthem from tho time the steamer wusbrought to Bishop wharf they haveBliown no sign of a flaw. The dyna-mos arc tho only parts of the ship'smechanism about which tho lntcr-Isl-an- d

people aro at all doubtful. SincoMauna Kea was floated they have

been undergoing a basing and whenthey are thoroughly dried out theywill be put to n severe tost to dis-cover whether or not they have beendamaged.

"In addition to the work which theflooding of the hold necessitated,"said President Kennedy this morning, "we are giving tho Mauna Kea

general cleaning ,j which wasdue her this year. We had intendedtaking the steamer off for two weeksas soon as possible and now we aretaking advantage of the enforced

COMMENT ON CAPTAIN MILLER'SEXPEDITION.

The account which apiieared in thoyesterday of Captain Miller's

expedition to Guatemala tooff tho Cosmos steamer Sesortris liasaroused considerable comment andspeculation along the waterfront and

concensus of op! ion dems, to bothat while work is of the greatestimportance commercially and wouldredound greatly to tho credit of Cap-tain Miller and Honolulu if it wereaccomplished, it can not bo done for$35,000 nor without an elaborate equip,ment of dredges and perhaps a marinerailway.

A

2

Tho conditions aro familiar to anumber of Honolulu shipping men andTiro described by one harbor officialwho has been on tho ground in nfashion which puts Miller's undertak-ing on a par with moving mountains.Tho wreck of the Sesostrls occurred ata landing on the open beach about twomiles from the town of Ocos. ThoSesostrls, which was then practicallya new steamer, was moored off shoreby two anchors. Tho bow anchorchain parted when n heavy swell came

over an? tho touched tncn

tho

tho

Startake

thetiio

mo imur c: lienor uruggeu anu mo oigsteamer was beached broadside. Sometlmo later, before she could bo takenoff, a heavy storm carried the Sesos-

trls up over tho beach and droppedher high and dry nt the edge of thdwoods, where photographs In CaptainMiller's possession show her now.

At Ooos, pccordlng to those whohave been there, there is an outer barwhich would have to be cut throughto got tile steamer away. Then thereis a stretch of good water and thena big belt of heavy surf and dry sandintervening between tho steamer anddeep water. To dredge a channelthrough the surf would bo almost 1m

possible, claim the local oracles, onaccount of the heavy swell whichwould carry tho dredges ashore Inspite of tho stoutest moorings. Sincetho Sesostrls has been on shore sheha.s been kept in perfect conditionby repeated applications of paint andher dynamos have been used to lightthe town of Ocos. Tho distance thatdredges would have to bo brought, thedifficulty of gotting coal and thoamount of sand that would havo to boremoved to reach tho steamer havoimpressed shipping men as overwhelm-ing odds.

Captain Miller, however, 'a quitecertain that ho can do the work wellwithin tho cost and such is tho faithin his ability to accomplish the nearlyimpossible that tho men who rehoarsothe difficulties of the work also admitthat if any ono can do the job CaplnlnMiller will and a"e quit ready to bo-- onvinced.

CATTLE AND SUGAR ON MAUI.

Tho Inter-Islan- d steamer Maui ar-

rived this morning from Hilo and o

with 0000 bag.s of Kohala su-

gar, 5000 bags from the Union MillCo., and 75 head of cattle from tho

Parker ranch. From Illlo tho MnulMiss Iiraa ; from

Krnost Knal, James Hen-

ry I). Sam Manunnd Tlobcrt Kanwa. Sho lighttrado winds and a swell.

SAILSTho stcamor

which a cargo of rockto this port from

will finish andcargo today and will get away

for a second voyago tofor more

Jensen desires to deny thoetory of the escape of twoof his crow In andsays that the one man who got awayhe back within a fowhours. to tho story which

amongthree tho

in and the wasforced to pay a forfeit of $500 eachfor these. to thoown he was ready to putto sea on tho of31, when Jt was that onoman was Ho himself went

found the man nnd had himback in the ship by 9 o'clock. Ho de-

nies that he had to pay any forfeit,nnd is more or loss abouttho of the yarn In thisport.

KINAU IN PORT WITHWith a big cargo of sugar and a

good list of from Hawaiiand Maui, tho steamerKinau arrived in port thisShe has on board 7800 bags of sugar,

,4800 from the H. A, and3000 of the Intho big aargo thero aro 750'cases of 221 sacks of cof-

fee, thirty head of . cattle,of hides, bales of

sisal and minor of otherisland Tho Kinautho Niihau at March 21,and also 10,795 bags of sugar awaiting at and 11,078bags at Tho ontho Kinau were the

From F. W. Bates.From Kona C. Bolte, R. E. Eyre,

F. A. J. do Mello, Kimma, Miss Mary E. liw, J.ole, J. A. Luis, II. S. Moon,and wife, R. Hind, J. J. Dias. C. II,

and wife,Mrs. I!. O. Nilson.

From W. F. Pogue.From Lnhainn II. D. II,

F. and Mrs.From to Y

Van Hing.From to ICailua C. Mein- -

icke. Sr.From Kailua to Miss

A. Paris.

Thsre were also forty deck paason

Rem on tho Kinau.DIG TOW

Tho tug tbo big

ilredm was by thein

son and all woll. iionouuuwns loft at .1 o'clock last

whontho had mndo nn

avorngo of moro than milesa day. to tho hull of tho Is

n squaro barge, anil Its burden ofhuaw. this is very

good tlmo. Tho news comes In thomcssaco from Lap- -

tain of tho Lurlino to Cap

tain Parker:"S. S. March 21. To

Passouiirnilcn Tnrblno and tug 457

miles from 9:20 a. m. today.sea, all woll.

OO March 31

O opens.O May 5 Oahu LeagueO season opens.O March 24. Asahia vs. Alea,O 1:30 p. m.; vs. All--

O Army, 3:30, Park.OO March 23. SchoolO field and trackO meet, Field,O March 30. BoyB' Club annualO meet, Boys Field.QO March 21. Manoa TennisO Club for G. G.

O GuildOO March 27. uunO Club's shoot,O traps.O Golf.O March 24. CupO OahuO Club. vOO March 23. Bar- -

O racks bouts.OO March 22. vs.O Y alleys,O 7:45 p. m.

OOooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo

CROUP CAN BE

When given as soon as tho croupycough appears Cough

will ward off an attack ocroup and all andcause of of moth-

ers use it For salo byall dealers. Smith & Co.,agents for Hawaii.

It's all right for a man to bo coolin the hour of danger If tho

all In h'.s feet.

I

Bijou" HOME GOOD SHOWS Bijou"

The Biggest Sensation of the Year.

REAL

brought Knwnlhao,Kamakatii,

Knlllmul, Makaona,roports

moderate

Norwegian Prome-theus, broughtphosphate Makatoa,

coalingtomor-

row morningMakatea fertilizer.

Captainmembers

Oriental Sydney,

himself broughtAccording

circulated waterfront oracles,Chinese deserted Prome-

theus Sydney skipper

According captain'sstatement

morning Decemberdiscovered

missing.ashore,

indignantcirculation

SUGAR.

passengersInter-Islan- d

morning.

CompanyHutchinson product.

generalpineapples,

sixty-tw- o

bundles twenty-on- o

shipmentsproducts. reports

Mahukona

shipment PunuluuHonuapo. passengers

following:Honuapo

Manchester,Kalanlan- -

Hlroyamn

McIJride William McBride,

McGregor'sSloggett,

Williams Williams.Honuapo Napoopoo

Honuapo

McGregor's

Herculos, towingTurbine, sighted

steamer yesterday morning,smooth

Saturday

afternoon, sightedyesterday Hercules

nlnoty-sl- x

dredgo

considered

fnllnwlne wirelessWcedon

LURLINE,Captain Parkor, Honolulu.

HorculcsHonolulu

Smooth"WEEDEN.

Baseball.Plantation League

Senior,

AthleticAthletics.

GrammarAthletic League

Alexander

Tennis.

tournamenttrophy.

Shooting.Hawaiian

weekly Kakaako

ClysmicCountry

Boxing.Schoileld

Bowling.Honolulu

Remedyprevent danger

anxiety. Thousands

Benson,

coolness-isn'- t

All is it.

Holder Lucky NumberThe Honolulu

Co. will forfeit

If do as

4 Vaudeville Acts

PROMETHEUS TOMORROW.

discharging

Where

consequently

WHAT'S DOING

ooooooooooooooooo

Tournament,

Brunswick-Balke- ,

oooooooooooooooooPREVENTED.

Chamberlain's

successfully.

The OF

Honolulu Talking About

Goes

PROGRESSING.

To the of theAmuse-

ment 1000 in gold cointhey not positively and absolutely give this baby away exactly

advertised

4 New PicturesHEAR EFFIE JOHNSON SING "THE HOLY CITY" ILLUSTRATED With the FAMOUS $7000 SET OF SLIDES.

1 r

I

Page 3: HAWAIIAN STAR. · 2015. 6. 2. · WAIALEE PLAN! taken up with the superintendent of public works when he returns. ... business, Mr. Harris has been Inter-ested in Y. M. C.' A. work

--v

1

Another Success

Marry Corson ClarkeAND

Margaret Dale Owen

Another Success

Hanley, Margueriteand Hanley

AnotEer Success

Jourdane Quartette

Another Success

THE WILKSALL TONIGHT!

In Addition to

4-:N- ew Pictures-- 4V

Big Matinee Saturday

COMING!

The Four GrahamsPositively tho Most Wonderful Act

Ever Seen Locally.

TONIGHT- -

WRESTLINGPICTURES

GREATEST MATCH OF MODERNTIMES.

Hackenschmidtvs. Gotch

GIANTS OP STRENGTH.

OTHER GOOD PICTURES.

ALL AT POPULAR PRICES.

Bijou TheaterLOOK

AT TONIGHT'S PROGRAM.BABY GIVEN AWAY.

See $7000 sot of slides accompanying

Effie Johnson's"THE HOLY CITY"

Varin and VarinComedy Musical Skit entitled

"FOOTBALL"Miss Varin Is America's Foremost

XylopUonist. Direct from OrpheumCircuit.

Curtis & La VanIn "COUNTRY BOY AND MAID.'

Comedian Bowen

Robert AthonFOUR REELS OF PICTURES.

Biorkman's

Gymnasium139 Merchant Street

Phone 2747.

f .Cable Address "Takapu," Honolulu

Telephone 1675. P. O. Box 968

Y. TAKAKUWA.'Commission Merchant and Manutaeturers Agent. Japanese ProTiulon

and General Merchandise.Nuuanu Street, near King.

eUARkNTKCD watch FRSEEflLV.mA MTV XHiNEW MOTTO PICTURES

Blum liil t4f. we mar(hfBM4tMld. Wb.l Mli.Wl

BAD

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1012. thr

SPORT NEWS Classified AdvertisementsOno Cent Per Word. Five Cents Per Lino.

Per Line. One Week, 30 conts; Two Weoks, 40 cents; One Moath,Dy H. M. AYR E8.

CO cents. No chnrgo for ads undor head "Situation Wanted."

WEATHER AT TRAIN!

HAS DELAYED THE WORK OF MOST

OF THE TEAMS IN BIG LEAGUES

ITOSSINGThis is the time of tho year that tho

on tho training camps in Georgia, Arkansas, Mississippi, Texas and othersouthern states. All of the big leagueof St. Louis have gone south. Tho two St. Louis teams will get in conditionon their home grounds and will play a.ierles for the city championship beforotho regular season opens. Tho work of tho athletes at the training camp isnot easy even when tho weather is bad. They aro taken out for long runson the road even on stormy days and they toss the medicine ball indoorswhen they can't exercise in the open. When the grounds are dry enough forpractice much time Is spent In teaching tho recruits how to slldo into baseswithout breaking their legs, end they aro also given practice stopping ground-ers knocked by the best batters.

THE KAMEHAMEHA-- ST.

Sporting Editor Star: I, as a loverof clean isport, think it my duty tomake kuown to the public the fictaof tho foccer dispute between theKams and the Saints.

It was us follows.: The refereethinking tho ball outside blew hiswhistle. Immediately after the blow- -

ing of the whistle tho Kams kicked theiiIesMn between tho posts.

Tho Paints stopped playing at the '

sound of the whistle. The goalkeeperdid not oven move toward stopping thoball.

Tho referee said tho ball was not infair territory, but tho Kama said itwas.

Tho Kams consented to play on condition that the goal would bo counted,but tho Saints said "nit" as the goalwas scored after the whistle ha'lblown.

After a long discussion both teamscamo to terms saying that game wouldnot be counted until a committco ofthree uninterested persons should de-

cide.

SCHEDULE OF

SENIOR LEAGUE

The Oahu Senior Baseball Leaguomet last night and adopted a schedulefor tho coming season.

The season will open on May 5 andthoro will be two series of ten weeksduration each.

Two games will be played on Ka- -

mehameha Day and the second serieswill run from July 14 to October 20.

Tho Asahls, winners of tho Juniorleaguo pennant last year, will playwith tho senior league this seasonand this will make live clubs in thoraco for tho championship, tho re-

maining four being tho Hawalis, Jap-anes- o

Athletic Club, Stars and Por-

tuguese Athletic Club.Tho schedule or tho first series fol-

lows:May 5. Hawaii vs. J. A. C; .Asahi

vs. Stars.May 12. J. A. C. vs. Stars; P. A. C.

vs. Hawaii.

GAMPS

THE MgCrtCiwfe BAlSeyes of baseball fans tie focused

teams except theBrryvns and Cardinals

LOUIS IMBROGLIO

A few days later the Kams decidedthat one judge would bo sufficient andthat they would appoint him. ThoSaints again said "nit." .

Now, In tho Advertiser of March 20

I find that a "board of governors"awarded tho championship to thoKams, and in the Bulletin of the 21stI find that tho "leaguo committee"awarded tho championship to thoKams,

The question now arises "Who madoup tho board of governors and tholeaguo committee?"

In order to secure justice thereshould havo been at least one representative from each team present atthe meeting.

What is tho use of a referee in agamo if ho is not to bo heeded? Hisword ought to bo law.

I ask the public to look upon thisfairraindedly and to judgo for thornselves to whom tho title rightly bolongs.

"A CLEAN SPORT."March 21, 1912.

May 19. Stars vs. P. A. C; Asahlvs. J. A. C.

Mav 2C. Hawaii vs. Asahi; J. A. C,

vs. P. A. C.June 2. Asahl vs. P. A. C: Ha

wall vs. Stars.Juno 9. Stars vs. Asahl: Hawaii

vs. J. A. C.June 11. P. A. C. vs. Hawaii; J,

A. C. vs. Stars.Juno 10. J. A. C. vs. Asahl; Stars

vs. P. A. C.Juno 23. P. A. C. vs. J. A. C.

Asahl vs Hawaii.July 7. Stars vs. Hawaii; P. A. C

vs. Asahi.Tho sarao order of play will be

maintained In the second series.

ooooooooooooooooooO FURTHER PROOF. oO When Noah camo up for a lark,O And went to tho Boston ballO park,O "Groat Caesar" he sungO "If there Isn't Cy Young,O Tho best guy I had on theO Ark."OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

THE IMPORTANT ATHLETIC

SEGT10NS0F OLYMPIC MEET

Tho Olympic games track meet at ; competition that is an ab- -

Stockholm will start July C and endJuly 15. A number of new eventshavo boon added to this part of thoprogram by tho directors of thegames which will provide a largofield for those who seek Olympic hon-

ors. Tho cross-countr- y runnors, whohave never had a chance to competein shorter distances than tho Mara-thon at Olympic games, now havo achance to compete In n cross-countr- y

raco of 8000 meters about five miles.This has been added to tho list' torboth individual and team competition.

The individual events coino first ontho program and aro twenty-fiv- e innumber. Tho first three men to placein these events will be awarded gold,silver and bronze medals respectively.Besides these there are several other

iawards to bo given, including severalchallenge cups. His Majesty tho Kingof Sweden will give a cup to tho win-

ner of the pentathalon. The EmperorNicholas of Russia has offered a sim-

ilar ono for the winner of the Decath-alon- .

Tho others aro Hia Royal High-ness tho Crown Prince of Greece'sprize to the winner of tho Marathonrace, now held by Joun J. Hayes ofAmerica, and tho Montgomery statu-ett- o

to the winner of tho discusthrow, which is now in the possessionof Martin Sheridan of the UnitedStates.

The Pentathalon.Besides the regular track and field

events are the pentathalon andTho first is a series of tests,

live in number, as tho name wouldindicate, which aro intended to show- -

pretty good d training. Thosecond is! a stiffer series of tenevents, which are picked to bring outthe best athletic qualities, and issomething similar to our national A.A. U. meet held each year. Two daysaro set aside for this event, which i3

considered one of the chief attractions of the meet Besides tho regular pentathalon, tticro will bo wJiatis hereafter to bo known as tho mod-ern pentathalon. This contest Is an

HONOLULU ENTERS

IOWA CITY (la.), March 4.

North Liberty, a town .of 250 popu-

lation, just north of Iowa City, claims

to havo the largest percentage of big

men of any town In the Middle West.

Five men in this village total anaggregate weight of 1580 pounds, thoaverage being 316. The Mayor todayissued a formal challenge for com-

parisons and declares the record can-

not bo beaten anywhere throughoutthis part of tho country.

Honolulu may not b exactly in theMiddle West but, nevertheless, shecan show North Liberty a thing ortwo in the fat man line.

Yesterday's mail took a communication to the Mayor of tho Iowa vil

Entries for tho Grammar SchoolAthletic League's meet to be held onSaturday at Alexander Field, closedon Tuesday.

There will bo a division of contest- -

ants Into two classes: Boys over andunder 100 pounds.

Tho College of Hawaii students willlook after tho management of themeet.

Entries:Mills School Awan Chiu, August

Kaweio, Sau Nam, M. Yamachlro, Willie Nlm, Lum Kun Yei, Sau Yee, N.Yokudn, C. Tsuklyama, Juichl Mlyn-kaw- a.

Iolani Bau Kim Wong, Honry Men- -

gler, T. K. Kott, Wlllto Searle, AhKong, Clarenco Blake, Wm. Mitchell,Wat Chong, Wat On Shin.

Punahou Ralph Girdler, GordonWakoflold, Gordon Glbb, Joro Smith,Roland Gay, Mark Bertelmann, Herbert Mclnerny, Georgo Llndley, WI1-lar- d

Abies, Geo. Bromley, Ferrln Ells-

worth, Burrows Ilonsball, Fred Peter-son, Min Hin Li.

Central Grammar Stanley Thompson, Clifford Mellu, John Leo Kual,Ah Chong, David Bent, MaholaulRosa, Allen Roach, Jack Leo, Geo.Chlllingworth, Noblo Kauhano, Nel-

son Robinson, Chas. Aoroalu, VernonHarris, Albert Bush, Otto Meyor, Tal-JIr- o

Mlyahara, Andrew Chang, TalTong, Robort Boyd, Harold Lewis,Robert Holt.

tm.iM.&B. jnii.Mii am. in iiimiMftiri t- - -

solute test of tho athletic ability, nsIt includes a swimming raco, cross-country raco and tests on fencing,shooting and riding ability of thecompetitor. It is an absoluto test ofathletic ability, as It Includes triesand will form one of tho most Inter-esting of tho series of competitions.

Cycling Events.Cycling enters into tho meet and

the contestants will bo sent over a200-mlI- e course around Lake Malar.Fencing, covering fivo events, is nextin line. An Association football tour-nnme-

is scheduled for July 5, andnlrcady a great number of teams havoentered. Scotland, England, Francoand Australia aro down to representtheir respective portions of tho world.Rowing, shooting, yachting, all comein tho order nnraed and cover everypossible branch of tho sport Theswimming events aro quite extensive,there being nlno for men, two forwomen and two team events.

There has been some talk of thomatter of Swedes naturalized InAmerica competing in tho games ascitizens of tho United States. It wasthought by many that tho rules com-

mittee would bar them unless theyentered the competition under theflags of tho land of their birth. How-ever, the book of regulations clearlystates that "natural born or natur-alized subjects of a 'nation' or of ustate of which a 'nation forms a part,aro alone eligible to compete andrepresent the 'nation' in the Olympicgames." That about settles tho littlematter, and, all tho American Swedeswho want to can tako points in themeet and count them on the UnitedStates side of the ledger.

This year's Olympic games will un-

doubtedly be the best and the hardestfought the world has ever seen. Inany case for the athletes it will betlie supreme test, as tho men whowin out will have mado good againsttho best athletes in the world withouta doubt, and for this reason an Olym-

pic medal means everything to itsholder.

FAT MEN'S CONTEST

lage submitting the following localnames in r.esponse to his vauntingchallenge for comparisons:

Paul Isenberg, Sonny Cunha, AlbertJ. Greene, P. C. Jones and "LittleBoy" Hurley.

Greeno works in Hllo, but his homeIs here and Honolulu proudly claimshim as her own.

The weights of tho above-name- d

quintette of local colossi have beensubmitted to the Mayor of North Lib-

erty but aro withheld from this arti-cle by request. The aggregate pound-age, however, is 1699.

This gives the Honolulu championsa pull in tho weights of nineteenpounds, though these figures mayhave to bo readjusted after tho warmweather has set in.

Kaiulanl Thomas Leslie, JosephCosta, Edward Aklna, Peter Lee, AhLce' Ah hconS- -

Kamehamcha John Makanani, P,Wright. F. Shinman. Sam Peahu. II.stowart, K. Hipa, H. Spencer, W. Pal- -

kuli, C. Akana. J. Koani. G. Bush. SLlndsey, W. Mchikoa, S. HaiualanlJohn Perkins, Wm. Delanux, A. Kalal,E. Akia.

St. Louis College Geo. Frendo,Geo. Hughes, Ed. Poepoe, J. Ah Kong,Enoch Lovell, Antone Kuhlmann, Ju-liu-

Wery, Chas. Llzama, Chris Stow--

ard, Albert Leo, Lai Hipp, L. T. Sing,Richard Lopes, Herman Wehsolan.Chas. Eklund, Chas. Akana, Don AJu,Tealtly Fernandez, Hong Lai, AndrewMcCabe, John Bottencourt.

ATHLETE SNEEZES TO DEATHPHILADELPHIA, Pa., March 8.

Androw Herd, a well-know- n athletefor many years a lifo guard on thobeach at Atlantic City, N. J., sneezedto death at his homo thoro last nightHo was suddenly seized with a violentr.ttnek of snoozing which ho was unabio to control In any way. It contlnued until ho expired from a rupturcd blood vossel.

At Collogovillo, Pa., Robert Thomison, a Urslnus collogo student, famedas a football player, choked to deathwhile oating in tho oollego dininghall yostorday. A plcco of moat lodged in hia throat and ho was unable todlslodgo it.

ENTRIES FOR GRAMMAR SCHOOL MEET

WANTED.Saloaman for leading clothing storo.

Address P. O. Box 589 In own

Wo want you to try Crudo Oil Scalptreatment If your hair is falling. Opetreatmont stops it. Jeffs Barbor Shop.

FOR SALE.

Fivo hydraulic barber chairs forsalo. Apply Pacheco's Barbor Shop.

of

Cocoanut plants for salo. Samoanvariety. Apply A. D. Hills, Llhue,Kauai.

Ono Buick roadster, single rumble,in Al condition. Can be seen at RoyalHawaiian Garago. A bargain at $450.

Beautiful residence, 1071 Beretanlaave. Furnished if desired. Half aerolot, royal palms, etc. Inspection in-

vited.

An elegant Grand Square Steinwaypiano, and other pianos. James Sher-idan, tuner and repairer, 1C2 Hotelstreet. Phono 399G.

Bargains in Real Estate, on sea-shore, plains and hills. Telephone1602. "Pratt" 101 Stangenwald Build-ing.

FOR RENT.Two furnished rooms for light

housekeeping suitable for refinedcouple. Apply 1381 Beretanla street,phono 3234.

LOST.

Pocket book containing money andMooso Lodgo receipt. Return to Staroffice and received reward.

Between Schofield Barracks and Ho-

nolulu; light waterproof coat Capmarked C. W. C. D. in leather case Inpocket. ?10 reward if returned to C.W. C. Deoring, 1141 Kinau streot.

Silver chain purso on Beretanlastreot, between Pumping Station andSachs'. Return to Star office and re-

ceive roward.

AMERICAN TOOL AND MACHINECO.'S

DRILLS, LATHES, PLANERS,SHAPERS.

HONOLULU IRON WORKS CO.Agents for Hawaiian Islands, Honolulu

RIVATE WALKER

WANTS A MATCH

Private Walker of Company I, Engineers, challenges anybody In theislands at 140 pounds, eight to fifteenrounds.

Walker is at the Army Hospital atFort Shatter and will be glad to hearfrom any local promoter. Walkersays ho is in good condition at pres-ent and claims that he used to boBenny Yangor's trainer and also KidBlack's of Chicago.

SPORTDRIFTC jC )C tjS tiX tt .C

On Sunday at tho Athletic Park thoAsahls will play the Alea nine at 1:30and this gamo will bo followed byono between tho and an

y nine.

Johnny Williams pitched in a practice gamo on March 9 for Sacramentovs. St. Mary's College. Thirteen hitswere obtained off him, but ho won hisgame, 7 to 6.

What's becomo of tho Transpacflcyacht race.

Carl Gardner, tcnnU champion oftho Far East, Is singing at tho Christian Extension Movement meetings.Ho ought to make somo racket, any-

way.

McKlnloy High School freshmanbaseball team defeated tho senior nineon Wednesday afternoon on tho Ma- -

klkl diamond by tho scoro of 16 to 9.

Sergeant Dougherty will probablyreferee tho bouts nt Schofield Barracks tomorrow night. Tho card willbo: Swaggort vs. Greene, Blx rounds.Mullen vs. Morlarlty, eight rounds;Cunningham vs. Kradlac, main event.

Tho Hllo olovon defeated n Scotcliteam at soccer Inst Sunday, 3 to 0.

Many" a man romnlns in tho bachelornlags boccauso ho Is skoptlcal as to theability of a woman to support him.

1

. CABINET MAKER. .("Little" John Ilodrirue, eablnetij

maker. Picture framing and furniture!repairing. Stringed instrumentpaired. Miller and Punchbowl.

AUTO FOR SALE. JS1911 Ford Tourine Car. KerthnofS

Valcanizlng Co., L'd. t

NEW MILLINERY.Blackshear, Harrison block, corsor"Fort street and Beretanla. New,.

stock, latest styles, reasonable prices. f

"itfUY AND SELL.

Diamonds and Jewelry bought, soldand exchanged. Bargains In musical Iinstruments. J. Carlo, Fort street

AUTO STAND. 'Nuuanu auto stand. Two six- -

scat Cadillac cars. Lowest rates.Phone 319C. Beretanla near Nuuanu.-- ,

LACES AND FANCY WORK.Salvo's laco store. Irish, Cluney,

and Armenian laces and various otboi;European fancy goods. Fort St., noaaiBeretanla.

MERCHANT TAILOR.Tho Pioneer, corner Beretanla and

Fort Sts. Phono 3125. Clothes cleaned.pressed and dyed, Work called ton' ?

and delivered.

DRUGS.Hawaiian Drug Company, Ltd., 42

Hotel street. Phono 331S. Barborsupplies, toilet articles, photographicsupplies, etc. Phono orders receiveprompt attention.

MEN'S WEAR.Kam Chong, Fort and Beretanla,

carries a complete line of hats, shoes,hosiery, neckwear, collars, etc. Nowgoods on every steamer.

ROOMS AND BOARD.Handsomely furnished, mosquito-proo- f

rooms, single and en suite, allmodern conveniences, with board;'also table board. Apply 1366 Kingstreet Phono 2C99,

EMPLOYMENT OFFICE.Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Filipino

help and contracting done. 1039 Bethelstreet. Telephone 1871.

TIRES REPAIRED.Honolulu Vulcanizing Works on Ala

kea street is now prepared to makerepair to any size tire for any vehicle.Prices reasonable and quick delivery.

NOTICE..Subscribers not receiving the Ha-

waiian Star regularly or promptly willconfer a favor by telephoning 2366.

CALIFORNIA FARM LANDS.16 Electric trains dally running

through and having stations on prop-erty.

19 miles from Sacramento, CAPITOL OF CALIFORNIA.

Soil sllty sediment loam.No overflow, malaria or alkali.Land level, clear, ready for culti

vation.STINE & KENDR1CK.

23 Montgomery St.,San Francisco, Cal.

OPEN A CHARGEACCOUNT AT

fif t iiif itrfiiTif

HHHmmHsmiini

NO SECURITY.

J. Carlo

1

;

1117 Fort Street j

Page 4: HAWAIIAN STAR. · 2015. 6. 2. · WAIALEE PLAN! taken up with the superintendent of public works when he returns. ... business, Mr. Harris has been Inter-ested in Y. M. C.' A. work

IT H E HAWAIIAN STAR. . I.UI I - .. ....

Newflfpr AfWMlRUen, Ltd., MaQaMllaa

WALTER 0. SMITH

FRIDAY

WAKEFIELD

Harbor Commissioner Wakefieldttter. mrtlv inherited, which was

BWtilu cotlv to shinnimr. The details

U.MalUH

father day in the news columns of the Star. They showed that the irre-- r

sponsible rales for water to shipping here were so variously high thatRfrteutar liners were on the point of, Msupply. In all probability the cable

llltt

, inolulu its home station, lctt here to stay at Vancouver uccausc oi inef.; "Water incubus. It was Minted out that the Honolulu charges were 500if nor' cent, greater than those of auv other Pacific port, and that the wa

st; 'torfront customers had paid $34,000could have had the same amount for

. . ...

I... It.

as an oihcial bound to protect tnc interests oi snipping, neucveu mat uyencouraging private competition in the water business, the board couldbring the Department of Public Works to its senses. Some drasticmeasure was needed. Superintendent Campbell had said for years thathe favored reduction of waterfront rates, except that it would make rateshigher to private consumers ashore, and under these circumstances hehad done nothinc to protect shipping. Instead he had provided for

V sewer 'deficits by legally overcharging commerce. It was the businessof the harbor commissioners, on their side, to look attcr the interests otshipping only, and if Mr. Wakefield wanted to accomplish results evenby encouraging private competition in water, he docs not deserve to beabused for it. He simply did his duty as he saw it, and if he went fur-

ther than some others in his method that was because he could sec noother way to mitigate a long-tolerat- abuse which was making Hono-lulu a port to be avoided rather than sought by shipping interests.

This matter of equalization, for which he contends, ought to beremedied in some way. and if fairplay for shipping may be had withoutprivate competition, we assume that Mr. Wakefield will perfectlysatisfied and in that case be permitted to go along in the uninterruptedenjoyment of his official rights as well as his religious opinions.

PORTUGUESEr

The maladroit reference to the Portuguese by John Lane is a com--,mon one among those who make it a business to do half-whi- te politics.These cheap politicians undertake to visit a sense of racial inferiorityupon a class of Europeans whose national history has added glory toliterature and arms and to the achievements of colonization and dis-

covery, and it is well that a representative Portuguese has taken thematter up. To deny that the Portuguese arc white, is to fix a standardof color against all Latin races including the Spaniard and Italian andto some extent the French. Neither in the eye of the law or by thefindings of ethnology docs a departure from the blue-ey- e and the blondehair of the pure Saxon and Scandinavian necessarily deprive. a man ofhis high claim to be while. If it did every brunette among us would bea "person of color", and as the scientists say that the blonde is fast dis-

appearing from mankind, we should all in time be tarred by the samebrush. But the white race is going to hold on, and the Latin strain init has no occasion to debate any question of color with outsiders whowear the "burnished livery of the southern sun."

As for the intrusions of Lane and his kind the Portuguese andtheir fellow-whit- es may be trusted in the long run to make proper pro-vision against thcmC The members of both are growing fast by bothnatural increase and immigration. It is not well to flout them,

FOR PROTECTION OF BUYERS.

;

the

not

was

n

.

.

s

lMlt, Matliel Street, Honolulu.

EDITOR

MARCH 22, 1912.

AND WATER.

found cxtrfrtion in clinrjrcs forhelping to the port of Hono- -

of this were revealed the

making plantation contracts forship Restorer, which first made Jlo- -

when shore customers?la00. Commissioner Wakchckl,

. ...1 it; 1 1...

ARE WHITE.

RIPENS.

Cochin China and Koreaand Mongolia may both from

the English will take

may judge of some of

we had the tinner neht in the first

drydock bug? Perhaps the rightgrove.

the record of one referendum nnrl

come to during his own wake.

It seems to the Star in view of the fact that fifteen buyers of townreal estate have forbidden to build on their lots by the Board ofHealth, that some general rule in such matters should be made for theprotection of innocent purchasers.

That is to say, land should be condemned for building purposes inadvance of its sale instead of afterward. If so condemned the fact willgo on record and will be found out in the usual search of title which apurchaser is supposed to make before paying his money. It will thenbe his fault if he buys and that of the sellers if conspiracy to concealessential facts can be proved.

To let land be advertised and sold for building purposes and thenfor the Board of Health to step in and tell the buyer that he cannot getthe worth of his is quite apart from fair dealing. The Boardshould do its notifying first, not last, especially after an innocent pur-chaser has begun to build.

THE PLOT

system

money,

Greeks bearing gifts in the guise of European financiers have cometo the new Chinese republic with money to loan in large sums. It isbadly needed there and the finances of the country are said to be inchaos. There is no sign of financial experience of a modern sort, notto speak of financial genius, among the revolutionists. Still, moneyalmost equal to the sum set aside by the Congress of the United Statesto begin the Spanish war is offered China with the assurance that it mayhave more. Tang Yi thinks the republic will need a quarter of abillion dollars to begin with.

If these loans arc made, China- - will be in the hands of the bond-holders, as Egypt came to be, and will be practically administered bythe powers representing the financiers. Then if interest and relays ofprincipal arc not paid the bond-holde- rs will have China as collateralsecurity for the loan. It is the old game over again first the loan andthen the foreclosure. Manchuria,are gone from the old empire Tibetthe republic, for if Russians get

for

One

been

Stao

'Tibet as an offset and if Europe bonds the rest of China, one may look.forward to the partition ot the rest as inevitable, i'erhaps nothing couldbe better for the land than that, for it would open all the means of employment of which the country is

Mongolia,

the good to be had trom iorcign ownership by regarding the fact thatthere is neither war nor famine in those parts of China where the whiteman and the Japanese hold possession.

Wc warn arrogant foreign powers that the Hawaiian militia is prer paring a way to get recruits in time of emergency. Japanese and Ger

man papers please copy. If the armored nations have an idea that theHawaiian militia has sworn never to leave the country except in timeof war, they arc mistaken. At the first shot the militia will take poston every mountain top and roll rocks down if any foe dares to follow,

cBoth the Frog Lane question and the John Lane question arc up

the same day. Frog Lane is differentiated from John Lane by beinglong anu crooKCd. wow stop that,

if' Place- -

Why get a parasite for theone could be found in a navel orange

Five elections in seven months isf recall city.

mnkc

a

water

Formosa,

capable.

l

, Money for more reservoirs if need be but cheap water for

It mean of La Follctte to

go

WaltThe Poet

There arc certain simple rules taught by and schoolswhich the man who would be healthy must obey. Eat the things that

you detest hemlock sawdust is the best andHEALTH HINTS for breakfast drink a code made of hay. Chew

your victuals for a week, chew them till yourjawbones crenk, and you'll gain a pound a minute by the watch ; orsays t'other swallow anil fishes whole, and you'llsoon be fit to take a fall from Gotch. If for years of 'ifc you hope,never touch a drop of dope, and you're sure to live forever, gay andblithe; but (say others) for your ills let the druggist furnish pills, andthe cut your leg off with a scythe. Leave your couch at earlymorn when you hear the rooster's horn, for the early the one thatcatches worms ; but by other schools it's said that you ought to stay inbed, for the air is simply rank with germs. Follow all thehelpful ru'es of the and schools, and the flesh will soon begrowing on your slats, and you'll warble wildly well in your cozy paddedcell, while you take your head apart to count the bats.

1912, by George Matthew Adams. WALT MASON.'

W. T. POPE Tho fire escapes atthe Normal school when Installed willmake tho place absolutely safe.

JUDGE HARTWELL 1 do not expect to sail in tho Wllhelmina, al-

though I am booked "on suspicion."A. II. FORD Tho press club idea is

being revived, and It would not ap-

pear to bo a hard job to form a clubnow.

J. A. KENNEDY Judging fromphotographs which I have seen of theScsostris I should think that CaptainMiller's undertaking was a most diff-

icult one.JACK WEDAY Liquor Is the curse

of tho waterfront. It transforms thebucko mate into a ferocious taskmas-

ter and has been tho ruin of manya good sallorman.

CAPTAIN PARKER The voyage oftho tug Hercules tho dredge!Turbine hence to San Francisco con-

stitutes one of tho biggest tows overmade in this ocean.

S. T. STARRETT I am going overto ,the other side of the island to-

morrow to seo if it Is sti;l thero. rwant to make a llttlo trip of Inspec-tion besides.

JOHN MARTIN Tho Christian Ex-

tension movement Is getting an 'oldon the people. When 1 'ear 'em sing-

ing together so 'armonlous and 'eartyI feel liko throwing my 'at in the hairand 'ollering.

CAPTAIN H. JENSEN Whoeverinvented tiat yarn about my China-men In Sydney and the fines I wassupposed to havo paid on account oftheir running away had a most pro-

lific imagination.CANON AULT There were twice as

many men as women at tho Extcn- -

slon meeting last night, which is anencouraging sign, for usually mendon't turn out to a relrglous serviceas well as women do.

FRANK E. THOMPSON Will youplease say that I am not intending toleave in the Wllhelmina with mv i

wife, as the morning paper announces.I find that Mr. and Mrs. T. Thompsonare booked to leave In that steamer.

C. F. CHILLINGWORTH I am taking a much-neede- d course of exercise.Every morning I do an hour's work j

with dumb-bell- s and medicine ball. I ;

feel a different man and am nearly ,

down to my normal weight onceagain.

A. L. C. ATKINSON I did not'ofknow that the Federal authoritieshad given a decision on the Russians, although there was a meetingof the Territorial board of immigra-tion going on at the time, until theStar reporter asked mo a questionabout it.

CAPTAIN F. C. MILLER I cannotconceivo of a more delightful vaca-tion than a cruise through tho SouthSeas. I wish I could take my littleschooner, a camera and a few rifles,and just cruiso around off tho beatentrack for a few years.

JACK McVEIGH Last time I left!Honolulu tho steamer sailed at onoo'clock In the afternoon. At five-fif- -

in anon ranch- -

'Molokai. going

some, and breaks every record I've j

made, so far, in traveling in Islands.

H. MERRIAM If Hawaii cangrow onions in quantity like thoseSuperintendent Starrott is displaying,tho success of farming is

Th creation of tho market-ing division of tho government tohelp the produce grower get startedis, I believe, tho biggest thing of tho

A. H. DONDERO I surprisedto hear that I had sold a lot of lots

upper Fort street, that can't bobuilt on until a Bewor is laid. ThoBoard of Health bo mistaken,for I never handled any prop-erty In tho location named nor Infact any that by any exaggera-tion bo called unsanitary.

CHAS. A. STANTON If you'veheard a story that I'vo my pileout of Kalmuki property and now amshaking Honolulu, just don't you be-

hove it. I'm by no means quitting

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, FRIDAY. MARCH 22. 1912.

MasonPhilosopher

syndicates

rigmarole loaves

sawbonesbird's

morningsyndicates

Copyright,

LITTLE INTERVIEWS

towing

administration.

not for tho present at least. I amstill manager of tho Kalmuki LandCompany and when I get back In MayI shall tako up tho work tho samo asbefore, with perhaps a number of otheriprctty big project.? besides.

LINK McCANDLESS The sugar ta-

riff stares us In tho face. There willprobably bo a plank dealing with thematter in tho platform of tho localDemocratic party. I, for one, don'tsec how that plank can be other thanopposed to free sugar, taking the bestinterests of Hawaii Into consideration.I .am also favor of a plank callingfor tho employ of citizens of theUnited Stntes only in federal work.

OFFICER SANDERS I was remind-ed by Chairman Qulnn at tho precinctmeeting last night that it would beunseemly for mo to take a certain of- -

co In tho club seeing that I am anofficer. I wish to state that I am asindependent as any in the matter ofpolitics. No one has any string onme. .Freedom in politics Is the God-give- n

privilege of an American citi-

zen. If a man can't accept an officewhen it is offered him he had betterceaso to go tho meetings and stayat home.

I ADMIRES

r (Continued rrom rago One.)"Tho Association woVk Is well done

and in a businesslike manner. Espe-cially is this true of tho way you argoing after this Japanese Y. M. C. A.proposition.

"I can see where you must findtho need of such an institution hereas we do of a colored Y. M. C. A.Evanston You havo twice as manyJapanese In proportion to your whitepopulation as we have of negroes athomo ana when it has been put onits feet vou will have done somo- -

lag."That was my first Impression of

this city It seems to bo a placewhere tho peoplo do things. I wassurprised and astonished at the mag--

"Itude of the Industries here. Thereis a lot ' money here and thereseems to be a vast opportunity fortlle man wit som3 capital.

"I was a llttlo bit surprised at thoway this free sugar panic took hold

tho city. I don't ihink that the

teen that samo afternoon, I was sit- - effort to make the Island pro-tin- g

the lanai at tho Cooko duce something besides a sparse pas-hous- e

on That is ture for sheep' and cattle. Owing to

these

C.

small

present

was

on

musthavo

could

made

in

to

In

Scnato would ever pass such a billIn a hundred years,

"No, I haven't seen the volcano. Mywife and I went over to the OperaHouse tho other night and saw somemoving pictures of it and I guess thatthat will have to bo enough volcanofor me."

STANTON HAS OPTION

(Continued from Dago One)Territory during Governor Carter'sadministration. The syndicate, It Issaid, has spent a great deal of monov

lack of water, however, the undortak- -

ing has not been much, of a successthus far. It was believed that cottonwould bo a good commercial crop forsomo time, and sugar oeets were alsotried, an expert In beet growlnir being brought here for tho purpose oftnis test.

Stanton Coming Back."I wish to deny that I am out of

tho Kalmuki Ltand Company," saidStanton thls morning. "I am ;tlllmanager of tho company, and thebusiness will go on as before, undermy direction. Tho only change Isthat tho compauny has been reorgan-ised, through tho Henry WatorhousoTrust Company's having bought acontrolling Interest in tho business.

"Also, I am not leaving Honolulufor good. I will bo back hero in May,and hope to bo ablo to say more onmo j.anai proposition when I getback. My option covers everythingon tho Island land, Improvementsand stock. Of the latjer there aro

nIkhiI 20,000 sht, M0O aattta nnilnm loo horara.

"When 1 gat Imek 1 axpaet to Inkup my work mitnli the mine hm baforo.I have juat made m piirehaaa, parson-ally- ,

or $18,000 worth of Palolo Hillproperty, and 1 have some pratty bigplana for n numhar of projects, bothin Kalmuki and other parts of Hono-

lulu when I got back."

MINDLESS(Continued from pago One)

mombor of executive-- committee; E.M. Cheatham and A. L. MeKnyc,judges of tho primary elections.

Tho club voted for sending a delegation to Chicago Instructed to votfor Taft as long as his nnmo Is beforetho convontlon, also for keeping thoKuhlo-Froa- r fight out of tho Terri-torial convontlon. A mcmorlnl resolution, including condolence with thofamily on tho death of James F. Mor-gan, who was president of tho clubwhon ho passed away, was adopted.

Fifth of Fourth.A meeting of tho Republican club of

tho fifth precinct, fourth district, iscalled for seven-thirt- y tonight in thohall on Beretanla street, rear of thoRapid Transit car barns. Instructedor uninstructcd delegation to Chicagowill bo put to tho meeting.

Tenth of Fifth.A special meeting of tho Republican

club of the tenth precinct, fifth district, is called for seven-thirt- y thisevening, in the building at corneV ofHockley street and Gullck avenue.

GOVERNOR TALKS.(Continued from pago One)

low as anywhere In tho UnitedStates."

If the county had to pay tho Territory for water and tho power devel-oped from tho water works, therowould bo a big Income and generalwater rates would be very low, Is thogovernor's opinion.

MAHUKA SUE

(Continued rom page Ono)

hour and a half, and perhaps not thatlong.

If these expectations are realized,the arguing of the case should beconcluded before court adjourns fortho day. In such eve-n-t Judgo Dole

will probably instruct the jury tomor-row morning and then either handthe caso over to tho, jurymen or continue it to Monday morning.

Notwithstanding tho immense vol-

ume of testimony, it is not expectedthat the jury will be out a greatwhile. Both sides express confidenceas to the verdict. If the Jury shouldgo over all the evidence that haFbeen given It would, of course, takea great deal of time. But the prob-

abilities are that the jurymen al-

ready havo formed a pretty fair notion of the value of the property incontroversy and that It will not takethem long to arrive at a figure whichthey think the government should payfor It.

Mr. Olson's argument this morningbristled with figures. Ho went, In considerablo detail, into the evidencegiven by tho various experts who testified, and contended that their testlmony all pointed to tho value of theproperty being what Is claimed by therespondents.

NOTICE TO BONDHOLDERS OFKOLOA SUGAR COM-

PANY.Redemption Entire Issue.

In accordance with the terms of that

BE

103-- 4 Bldg.

aartatn Ami ot truit, dntwl May 1,

190ft, matla lif the ICoIoa tftiRHr Com.pany to 111 ltank of Ilawnll, Llmltad,undar which lmiiila of said KolonSugar Company ware Istued and areto bs redeemed and paid, tho anlil

Koloa Sugar Company will on the firs'day of May, 191, redeem and pay allof lu remaining nnd ouutnndltiRbonds and tho accrued Interest there-on to said date of May 1, 1U12. Thenumbors of said remaining bonds to

bo redeomod and paid aro as follows:7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 14, 15, 19, 23, 2G, 32,

33, 34, 3G, 39, 45, 47, 49, 53, C3, C4, 07,

C8, C9, 7C, 77, 79, 84, 88, 89, 01, 9C, 97,100, 102, 10G, 107, 113, 115, 11G, 120, 122,12G, 133, 110, 149, 151, 154, 1G5, 1GG,

107, 1G8, 1G9, 170, 171, 172, 179, 181.

182, 18G, 187, 195, 199, 203, 205, 210,211, 213, 215, 217, 220, 226, 228, 233,235.

Notlco 1b hereby given to tho holders of the bonds, whoso numbers appear above, to present tho samo forpayment at tho office of eald TheBank of Hawaii, Limited, in Honolulu,Hawaii, on said May 1. 1912. Interest on said bonds, whoso numbers ap-

pear above, ceases on and after saiddate of May 1, 1912.

Dated at Honolulu, Hawaii, this second day of March, 1912.(Seal) W. PFOTENHAUER,

Treasurer, Koloa Sugar Company.THE BANK OF HAWAII, LIMITED,

TRUSTEE UNDER SAID TRUSTDEED.

(Seal) By A. LEWIS, JR.,Its Vlco President.

ZEAVEJust received by S. S. Sierra tho

very latest In lingerie gowns, also afino assortment of morning dressesand spring tailored suits in all colors.

Young Hotel.

SparklingDiamondsaro being sought every day. We

sold a number of them last

month.

A new assortment just receiv-

ed are ready for your Inspection.

J. R. i Vieira & Go.

JEWELERS

113 Hotel Street

HIGH-GRAD- E SHOE REPAIRING

The Best of Materials and

MANUFACTURERS' SHOE CO.1051 Fort Street.

TAILORFor Particular Men and Women

J. E. RochaElito Bldg., Hotel St., next Y. M. C. A.

EMMELUTH & CO., LTD.

Plumbers and Sheet Metal WorkersSTOVES AND RANGES.

Phono 30G7. Cor. King and Bishop St.

SAFE

Phono 1884

Invest YourMoney Now

A,s Banks Do TheirsIn collateral stock loans. For a limited time only,

we will furnish you with a short term (three, six

or nlno months) note, yielding you

per cent jneton your Investment, amply secured by collateral

stock; payment of such note guaranteed by us.

Island Investment Co., Ltd.Stangenwnld

Workman-ship.

The Successmet by the management oftho COLONIAL HOTEL laduo to the careful attentionto detail paid by overyonoconnoctod with this cxcol-lon- t

hotel,

MISS JOHNSON, Prop.

Emma St., abovo Vlnoyard.

LADIES'PANAMA HATS

Hawaii & South SeaaCurio Co., Young Bldg.

FOR RENT orFOR SALE

Dwelling houso on 10th Avenuennd Kalmuki Street, 2 blocksfrom car lino. Eight roomsthreo bedrooms. Partly fur-

nished. Piano, etc. Suitableterms can bo arranged.

Bishop TrustCompany,Ltd

Bethel Street.

INJURED?Yes, ho nerer upecicO to be, to as

failed to take out a

Standard AccidentPolicy

Before you sail, why not do the wis.thing and get somo real protection?

STANDARD PROSPECTS.

Insurance Department,

HawaiianTrustC o m p a n y ,

Limited & jfi jMfc FORT STREET.

HOUSES FOR RENT.

Furnished

Tantalus, 3 B R $40.00

Kalmuki, 8th Ave., 3 B R 40.00

WalElae road, 50.00

Kahala, 35.00

Unfurnished

Walplo, 3 B R $12.00Wilder Avenue, 6 B R .... 60.00

Wilder Avenue, 4 B R ... 20.00

Kalmuki, 8th avenue, 15.00Walkiki, 2BR 25.00

Judd street, 50.00

Kinau St., 5 B R 42.60

Kalmuki, 9th avenue, 2BR 18.00

Waialao road, 30.00Pua lane, 17.60

TRENT TRUST CO., Ltd.

HenryWaterhouse Trust

FOR SALE.7 Acres land In Manoa Valley,

less than a mile from end otcar lino $3000.00

Lots on Palolo Hill, $600.00 and'up.New Bungalow at Kalmuki. . .$25QO,00

HOUSES FOR RENT.Furnished.

14th and Palolo Aves, 2 B. R... $40.00Keaumoku and Domlnis, 2 B. R. 60.009th and Pahoa Aves., 2 B. R.... 40.W

Unfurnished.Manoa Valley, 2 B. R $50.00Kalakau Ave., 4 B. R 45.00Klnau St., 4 B. R 37.60Luanllilo St., 3 B. R 35.00Luanalllo St., 3 B. R 32.5012GG Matlock Ave., 2 B. R 27.50Beretanla St., 3 B. R 27.50Pawaa, nr. King St., 2 B. R. . . . 25.00Kalakaua Ave., 3 B. R 20.0010th and Palolo Aves., 2 B. R. . 25.00

NOT A MINUTE LOST WHEN'-jTH-

wireless'IS USED.

Offlco Is open on week days from 7a. m. to 5:30 p. m. and on Sundaymornings from 8 to 10. Ships' mes-

sages received until eleven '"every

night.

Fine Job Printing a tho Star office.

- -- h i 'Vwrt' Wittilym ;m-- i

Page 5: HAWAIIAN STAR. · 2015. 6. 2. · WAIALEE PLAN! taken up with the superintendent of public works when he returns. ... business, Mr. Harris has been Inter-ested in Y. M. C.' A. work

CHICAGO PACKER

IS GOING IW. F. UuriowB, secretary of tho

great packing company of Llbby, Mc-Nol- ll

& Llbby, of Chicago, nnd who Isof tho local corporation

of tho samo name which Is buildingup a big pineapple business In tho Is-

lands, will loavo for tho mainland Intho Mongolia on Saturday. Ho willbo accompanied by his wlfo. Mr. Bur-row- B

has boon In Honolulu for sev-eral weeks, looking after tho affairsof tho company here, it Is reportedthat extensive expansion of the busi-ness Is contemplated within tho nextfew years.

Tho Llbby, McNeill & Llbby Com-pany, while originally a meat packingconcern, Is now very extensively en-gaged In fruit canning. In California,during tho past few years, the com-pany has erected a number of can-ning plants which aro said to boamong tho finest on tho Coast. It isstated that tho entranco Into California of this firm, with its jvellknown almost limitless resourccB, has occa-

sioned some apprehension among thesmaller packers.

10 BOOST BUILDING

Tho "building dinner" to be held attho Commercial Club this evening promises to be a most interesting andImportant one. Tho chief topic willbe tho proposed building to house thevarious commercial bodies of the cityGovernor Frear and tho heads of thevarious commercial organizations together with others are expected tospeak on the proposition. It is hopedthat tho dinner will crystalizo scntlment on some definite scheme for carrying out the general plans which fora year or more have been approveaby most of the business element oftho city.

HALF MILLION CAPITAL.Tho Pearl City Fruit Company has

been granted permission, by tho territorial treasurer to increase its capi-

tal stock to $500,000. The company'scharter previously provided for an increase from $50,000 to $150,000, buttho growth of the business makes astill further increaso desirable.

SERVICE DISPATCH

WesternracihcRAILWAY THE

FEATHERRIVER

ROUTEFor particulars, passengers or freight,

see

Fred L. Waldron, Ltd.816 Fort Street

James F. Horgan.Stock andBond Broker

Memeber of Honolulu Stock and BonExchange.

Stock and Bond Ordera recelnprompt attention.Information furnished relative to all

STOCKS AND BONDS.LOAN8 NEGOTIATED.

Phone 1572. P O, Box 514

KAIMUKI LAND 00.

lly a reorganisation of the KalmuklLand Company, the Henry WaterhousoTnut Company become tho controlling factor, c. S. Stanton, Mm presentmanaicer, retains his position in thatcapacity.

Tlilg change was forecasted someten days ugo by tho Star. Mr. Stan-ton, who was largoly responBlblo fortho formation of the company severalyear ago, leaves for tho Coast noxtweek to bo gone several months. Hewill rosumo actlvo management of thobusiness, howovcr, upon his return.

The new officers of tho KalmuklLand Company aro: It. W. Shingle,president; A. N. Campbell, treasurer;E. N. Campbell, secretary; F. ti.Stccro and C. S. Stanton, directors.

GUAYULE, THE RUBBER PLANT.Guayulo was for years overlooked

or despised; its rubber content vtvaconsidered of littlo or no value, andwhen at last acknowledged this wassaid to bo Inferior to other rubber.because it did not come from thetropics. Yet in spito of all guayulohss becomo an Important .source ofrubber supply, millions of dollars havobeen Invested in the industry, fac-

tories havo been erected closo to theguayulo fields and towns havo grownup for the operatives and field laborers.

Every process of tho production ofrubber from tho plant has been de-

veloped Into a system; even gatheringtho shrub receives more care than atfirst; but the essenco of tho wholeproblem, that Is, tho propagation ofguayulo so that a continuous supplymay bo assured, is as yet unsolved,and if once tho land is completelycleared and tho chances of renewallost tho industry will wither and die,and the busy areas of today will be-

como depopulated and revert to thowilderness.

LOUISIANA AND SUGAR.

Washington Star: The people ofLouisiana, regardless of party, arogreatly disturbed by the action of theHouse majority in recommending freesugar. That policy spells ruin to tholeading industry of the state, in whichmany millions of dollars aro invested,and upon which many thousands ofpeople depend for their living.

All tho harder falls tho blow be-

cause delivered by Democrats. Louis-iana is a Democratic state at alltimes and against all comers. Shevoted three times for Mr. Clevelandand three times for Mr. Bryan. Forwhom would sho mot vote for presi-dent if labeled Democrat by a Democratic national convention?

Though disturbed and reproachful,the Louisianans, however, are notwithout hope. And truly their hopo isin the Republicans and especially thoPresident. They are persuaded thatno such sugar schedule can become alaw at this time. The New OrleansPicayune says: "President Taft is tooconscientious a-- statesman to give hisapproval to such measures."

Most probably ho is. And not onlytoo conscientious but too consistent,too logical, on the tariff issue. Mr.Taft is a protectionist, and as suchmust regard the tariff as a nationalpolicy. A meritorious industry, re-gardless of its location or tho politicalcomplexion of tho locality, has claimsupon his attention. Both the caneand the beet sugar industries aro inour midst, have long enjoyed protec-tion, and without it would be placedat a ruinous disadvantage. And whyattempt their ruin through the agencyof an income tax, but slightly if at alldisguised under another namo?

While tho Republicans control thoSe'nato and Mr. Taft remains in theWhite House the sugar industries willnot be offered up as sacrifices on thealtar of free trade. That Is reason-ably certain. When In control of the

OAHU

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, KR10AY. MARCli 22. 1912.

AUTOMOBILE

IS SUED

The Pacific Oil Transportation Com

pany has llled suit In tho circuit courtngalnat J. K. Miller, doing business asthe Oahu Automobllo Stand, with .loe

Loal, Tommy Dunn and others name 1 1

as garnishees, to recover tho sum of I

?S27.45, allogod to be duo and imparl I

on merchandise sold by tho plaintiff!to tho dofondant.

The summons was originally Issuedlast August but was not returnedsorved until today. One roturn wasmado by Deputy High Shorlff Glea-so-

In which ho stated that Millerwas thon residing in San Franciscoand could not be Berved. Ho hudbtJtt'dr" luck recently, however, secur-ing service on Miller, who Is nowhere.

Final Accounts.James William Robertson, adminis-

trator of tho estate of Rose Robertsonpetitions tho probate court for tho al-

lowance of his final accounts and forhis discharge. He states that he hasreceived, as administrator, the sum of$3839.63 and has expended the sameamount.

The Kukalau Case.Tho Kukalau caso is to be heard by

Judge Cooper on the merits of thepetition of Robert Horner to dismisstho temporary Injunction issued bythe court, which restrains him fromdisposing of his stock to T. H. Davis& Co. The caso comes up next Mon-

day morning to bo set for hearing.Belt Road Condemnation.

Tho Territory, by Marston Camp-bell, superintendent of public works,has brought an action in the circuitcourt, under tho eminent domain act,ngainst Libby, McNeill & Llbby and alargo number of ofticr respondents tocondemn for road purposes a strip ofland fifty feet wide and 10.072.G feetlong, comprising a total of 12.59 acres,at Kahuluu, Koolaupoko, for road purposes. The strip is- wanted as a partof the contemplated belt road aroundthe Island.

government the Republican party hasalways been a friend of sugar as ofother industries making a good claimto protection, and thero is no indication of a Republican change of view.The most advanced insurgent demand-ing lower tariff duties makes it plainthat his aim is not free trade in anyimportant thing wo as a people areproducing.

Cut how about noxt November?What will Louisiana say at the pollsthen? Will she voto to turn her pro-teco-

out, and put her enemies in?Mr. Bryan and Mr. Underwood differabout some things, but agree aboutsugar. When Mr. Underwood retaineda duty on raw wool Mr. Bryan kicked,and called the chairman of ways andmeans a Now, whentho chairman takes the duty on rawsugar, Mr. Bryan applauds. So thatboth factions of tho Democratic partyare on record against further protec-tion of sugar. Knowing her friends,and at present depending upon themfor her salvation, will tho Pelicanstate help the movement to disarmthem, and call to power in their steadher enemies, armed cap-a-pie- ?

SHOULD BE PLEASANT TO TAKE.When a medicine must be given to

young children it should bo pleasantto take. Chamberlain's Cough Rem-

edy is mado from loaf sugar, and thoroots used in its preparation gives ita flavor similar to maple syrup, mak-ing it pleasant to take. It has nosuperior for colds, croup and whoop-ing cought. For sale by all dealers.Benson, Smith & Co., agents forHawaii.

No, Alonzo, spot cash Isn't alwaysspotless cash.

STOCKS BARELY

HOLDING GROUND

About the best showing any lotalstock could mako today wiw to holdlis ground, and only one or two woreable to do even this. There was ageneral weakening in prices all alongthe lino. About a normal amount ofsales woro rocordod, but all at yes-terday's quotation or below.

Ewa Is holding firm at 32 2 bidand S3 asking. Hawaiian Commercialand Olaa aro also firm.

Walalua sold again at 130, andthere la a very slight indication ofadvance 129 2 bolng bid and 130 1-- 2

asked at closo,McBrydo is going begging at 9 1-- 2

a few bharcs selling at this price.Oahu is down to 28 at which

figure some forty shares in smallblocks wero .sold on tho Board.

Olaa opened at 7 but droppedto 7 1-- 8 at which price several hun-

dred shares wero sold.Honokca is also suffering tho gen-

eral depression, opening at 11 7-- 8

against 12, last previous sale, and drop-

ping to 11 3-- 4 beforo tho sessionclosed.

EG E

Friday, March 22, 1912.

Ewa Plan Co 32.50 33.00Hawn Agrl Co 350.00Hawn C & S Co... 43.50 44.50Honomu Sug Co... 150.00 1C5.00Honokaa Sug Co ..i 11.75 12.00Haiku Sug Co 185.00Hutch g P Co 20.00 21.00Kahuku Plan Co 19.50Kekaha Sug Co ... 210.00McBryde Sug Co... 9.50 9.50Oahu Sug Co 2S.50 28.75Onomea Sug Co ... 48.00 50.00Olaa Sug Co 7V& 7

Paauhau S P Co.... 25.00 2G.00Pacific Sug Mill 145.00Pala Plan Co 185.00 21000Pioneer Mill Co.... 237.50 245.00Waialua Agrl Co .. 129.50 130.50

Mut Tele Co 19 20.00Oahu Ry & L Co.. 154.00Hon B & M Co 23.00 24.50Hawn Pino Co 37.50Tanjong O R Co 40.00Hawn Pine Co 17.25 17.50O B S & R Co 6b.. 100.00Hon Gaa Co 6s 100.25Hllo R R Co Gs... 100.25 101.00Honokaa Sug Co 6s 103.00Kauai Ry Co 6s... 100.00Kohala Dltcli Co Cs 100.00

McBrdo S Co 6s... 100.00 100. ?5Mutual Tel Cs 104.00Pioneer Mill Co 6s. 100.00Walalua Agr Co 5s 102.50Natomas Con 6s . . . 93.50

STOCK SALES

Honolulu Stock Exchange: Sales be-

tween boards 50 OnomeOa, 49; 5 Wai-

alua, 130; 5 do., 130; 20 Ewa, 33; 45

do., 33; 37 Oahu Sug. Co., 29; 23 do.,29; 5 do., 29; ?5000 Hllo Ex. 0s, 95;$24000 Natomas 6s. 93.50; 10 Mut. Tel.Co., 19.75.

Session " sales 5 McBryde, 9.50; 5

do., 9.50; 15 Oahu Sug. Co., 28.75; 10

do., 28.75; 100 Olaa, 7.25; 60 do., 7.25;5 McBryde, 9.50; 5 Oahu Sug. Co., 28.-7-

5 do., 28.75; 5 do., 28.75; 5 Wala-lua, ISO; 100 Olaa, 7.12; 100 do.,

7.12; 25 do., 7.12; 50 do., 7.12;6 Mut. Tel. Co., 19.87; 70 Honokaa,11.87; 30 do., 11.87 20 do.. 11.75.

An old bachelor is a man who hasnever met tho ono woman ho couldn'tlive without.

A good many people do not believein tho efficiency of prayer because theLord elves them what they deserve

' Instead of what they ask for.

You can't afford to missthe inspiration and the help of the singing andthe sermons at the meetings of the CHRISTIAN

EXTENSION MOVEMENT, in the Empire

Theater.Fred Butler will sing--"- A Voice of God's

nprYTT UT f Creation," by Evans, and the sermon will beI Jl IVjll 1 on--"T- he Master"

COME AND BRING YOUR FRIENDS

NEW WINE GO.

IS INCORPORATED

ArilfloB of Incorporation wore tinn-ed and Hied at tho treasurer's officethis morning, or the Itldgehouso Wineand Dtotllllng Co., Ltd. The businessis to lie carried on at South Kona,and tho capital is $o0,000, made up of,2500 shares of $20 or.ch. Tho officersof tho company are: Hnrry Armitago,president; J. 11. Hertsclic, vice presi-dent; G. It. Kxvnrt, secretary and treas-urer. Tho other Incorporators areJacob Coorper, David Dowsctt nnd R.A. Lyon. Tho last named ia auditor,of tho new corporation.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFIRST CIRCUIT, TERRITORY OFHAWAII AT CHAMBERS IN

PROBATE.ORDER OF NOTICE OF HEARING

PETITION FOR PROBATE OFWILL.

In tho matter of tho Estate of C. TAkana, alias Chun Hlng Chee, Deceased.A DOCUMENT purporting to be thr

Uit Will nnd TMUmrat of r. T.Akana, aliu olran Htag GkM,

having on the nth day ofMarch, A. I), 1HI. bwm prMontott toaald Probate Court, and a Petition forProbate thereof, praying for tha Iwra-anr- e

of Ijottara Teatamantary toItnnry Smith, the proponent havingbeen filed by Henry Smith.

IT IS OHDKRKD, (hut Tuaaday, the16th day of April. A. 1). 1912, at 9

o'clock A. M., of said day, at theCourt Koom of aald Court in the oldY. M. C. A. Building in the City andCounty of Honolulu, be and the sameIs heroby appointed the time andplace for proving aald Will and hear-ing said application.

By tho Court:JOHN MAUCALL1NO,

Clerk First Circuit Court.Dated Honolulu, .March 13th, 1912.

GOOD WEATHER.Thero is good woathor at Haleiwa

and tho crowd Is going that way.Follow along to peace and content-ment for Haleiwa Is the beet place inthe islands for rest or recreation. A

week there and the rich red corpusclewill grow thick In your body; youwill feel like a new being. Addressletters to HALEIWA. not Waialua.

COPYRIOHT HARRIS AND EWING. WASH.

VISCOUNT S. CHINDA.Now Japanese Ambassador to tho United States.

TODAY IS OFFERED AN OPPORTUNITY TO INVEST

IN A GREAT MINING ESTATE IN THE STATE OFNEVADA.

THE NAME OF THE ENTERPRISE IS THE

Queen RegentMererer M Co

The Property is located in Mineral County, which is recognized

as one of the richest gold producing district in the world.

IT OWNS 36 CLAIMS COVERING AN AREA OF TWO

MILES AND A HALF LONG BY A HALF MILE WIDE.

Tremendous interest occasioned by new methods of promotion.

Financed and developed along new lines and approved by the

financed and mining world.

Intelligent Stock Buyers Approve the Plan.

SIX HUNDRED THOUSAND SHARES ARE NOW OF-

FERED FOR SALE AT TWO CENTS PER SHARE.

What Your Money Will Buy1,000 Shares $ 20.00 Cash or $ 5.00 a Month.

2,500 Shares 50.00 Cash or 12.50 a Month.

5,000 Shares 100.00 Cash or 25.00 a Month.

10,000 Shares 200.00 Cash or 50.00 a Month.

YOU SHOULD BUY THIS STOCK and get into legitimatemining on a safe, sane basis and restore your confidence in REALMINING, the GREATEST INDUSTRY IN ALL THEWORLD TODAY.

Do you know that dividends paid by mining companies far ex-

ceed the dividends paid by all the banks in America?

Get in now and buy on the ground floor, price of two cents,before the advance in price j begins; i

Write or callffqr .litcraure.,!';' ',U

LIONEL R. A. HART,AGENT

F1V

When we

repairyour watchit will keep correct time. Much

thought and care is given every

movemont intrusted to our oare.

Our watchmakers are thorough

mechanic ot many years ex-

perience.

Wo tolerate no guesswork hero.

H. F. Wichman

& Co., Ltd.LEADING JEWELERS.

Harry Armltago. H. Cushman CartonSamuel A. Walker.

Jarry Armitagel& Co.,LIMITED.

Stock and BondBROKERS

Member Honolulu Stock and BondExchange.

P. O. Box 683. Telephone 2101.Cablo and Wireless Address:

"Armltago."

REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT

C. G. Cunha78 Merchant SL Phone 35SI

Royal9

--

1

Insurance Co.Leading Fire Company of tho Worltf

Place your business with a com

pany that knows how to face a crista

and is in a position to do so.

Losses Paid, $222,951,358.

C. Brewerjjci Co., Ltd.General Agents, Torritory ot Hawaii

Jas. W. PrattReal Estate, Insurance, Loans Ngo

tlatod."PRATT," 125 Merchant St

, James LHoltOffers some flno lota near the ems

line at Palama at a bargain, also tiebalmy sea-beac- h home of the late A4-mir-

Beckley at Aqua Marine.

PATROINIZBTHE

Home Insurance Co.OF HAWAII, LTD.

and wo will soon havo a company aalargo as any west of Chicago. '

Underwriters andInsurance'Brokers

O'Neill Building.

OC King St., cor. Fort. Tel. 3523.

Cable Address "DulienOero," Honolulu

E. G. DuisenbergSTOCK AND BOND llllOKEH

MEMBER HONOLULU 8T0CK ANDBOND EXCHANGE.

76 Merchant St., opposite Bishop A

Coa Bank, Honolulu.Telephone 3013. P. O. Box S21.

Sugar 4.42cBeets, 14s, 8I4d

Heniv ttitae Trust Co,

Mombera Honolulu Stock and BondExchange.

FORT AND MERCHANT ST3.FORT NEAR KING STREET. TELEPHONE 365S

Flno Job Printing at tho Star office.

imii'tiiiiifiiiiiMit

Page 6: HAWAIIAN STAR. · 2015. 6. 2. · WAIALEE PLAN! taken up with the superintendent of public works when he returns. ... business, Mr. Harris has been Inter-ested in Y. M. C.' A. work

Honolulu is quick to respond to the call of the suffering; and while theremay bo an occasional Mns. .lelleby In the city who Is quicker In answeringthe demands of the far off heathen than the one close home, the masses lookwell after the family next door, and the man on the street hns more atten-tion from religious and well-far- e bodies thnn he has on the mainland.

Mr. Hyder, at Kakaako, whose voice is seldom heard In supplication, hasbeon a father to the waifs and neglected children in that forlorn locality, butthe public nets to him with clothing and money to aid him in his charitablework. Mr. Ryder seems to be going alone; his mission has not reached thedignity of a corporation such as that over which Mr. Hath presides. It seemsto be the center of a lower level of humanity, and more poverty stricken.From what I have learned from ladies who have gone among the poor of Ka-

kaako it would seem that a law might be passed that would ameliorate thecondition of the people of tho tenements there. Hut it would take a powerfuluplifting to put the inhabitants, or a majority of them, into a sphoro whichwould mean plenty to eat and wear, through their own efforts. I doubt Ifmany of them over knew anything better than they are going through. Theirlives have been lived amid surroundings of a kind that most of us know noth-ing about. Their elders havo hugged closely to their bosoms tho dice whichlured the little money they had earned by day's work and their families areleft to struggle. Honolulu Is not in need of a Mrs. .Telloby. What is neededIs moro women who will go into the dark places, and encourage and help thoover busy worker already there.

SOCIAL NEWS OF THE DAY.

That portion of Honolulu society

which lends its ear to music of ahigher quality than 13. found In all butono of tho local playhousos gathered

at the Young Hotel yesterday after-

noon on tho occasion of the song

under the direction of Mrs.Bruco McVean Mackall. The programwas carefully selected, each numberand each singer having special ad-

mirers. Some of those who sung ap-

peared for the first time at a publicconcert, yet they evidenced none of

the weaknesses usually found in the'novice. Miss Alice Hopper, whoseBongs, "Retreat" and "O Don Fatale,"admirably suited her rich mezzo-sopran- o

voice, rendered both In a man-

ner that called forth prompt recogn-

ition of her talent.Mrs. A. G. M. Robertson won the

'hearts of her Carers with her songs"My Laddie" and "Gay Butterfly."

As Mrs. Walbridgo was unable tosing, Mrs. Hall consented to appeartwice. Her rendering of "Valzer Di

Musetta," from "La Boheme" wasexcellent.

Another favorito was Mrs. F. T. P.

Watorhouse who sang "SummerNight" and "The Wedding Morn,"two selections that are always wellreceived.

Mrs. Charles Weight, who is al-

ready far out of tho class of begin-

ners, won Instant success in her songs""Wind and Lyre" and "O Love of ThyMight," a recitative from "Samson:and Delilah."

The best qualities of Mr. Sedg-

wick's rich baritone voice werobrought forth in the song "El Cantodel Presidlarlo."

Mrs. Frank Atherton took her audi-

ence almost to the door of tho child

I

garden with "The Wood Pigeon" and"Tho Yellow Hammer," from "BirdSongs." Both songs wore well adapt-

ed to the high quality of her sweetsoprano voice.

Mrs. D. Howard Hitchcock playedtho accompaniments, and her artis-

tic phrasing, comblno-- i ivith excellenttechnic, contributed much to the suc-

cess of the program.In every respect tho recital was

ono that should bring a full measuroof praise to Mrs. Mackall, and abund-ant credit to those whose voices havoyielded to tho excellent training shohas bestowed upon them.

& & &Mr. and Mrs. William Burrows gave

a dinner at tho Moana Hotel lastevening. Violets and maiden hairfern were used for tho table decora.'tlons. Covers were laid for Mr. andMrs. Frederick W. Macfarlanc, Mr,and Mrs. F. W. Macfarlane, Jr., Mr.and Mrs. Clow, of Chicago,, Mrs. Lib-

bey, Mr. and Mrs. Klamp, Mr. GeorgeRodiek and Mr. and Mrs. Burrows.

t t

Mrs. E. B. Waterhouse who hasspent tho past fortnight at tho Pen-insula has returned to her home onWyllte street.

tSfi

Commander and Mrs. Chester Wellsentertained nt dinner on Wednesdaynight. Covers were laid for six.

5

Mrs. Thomas E. Wall was hostessat a tennis tea yesterday afternoonin honor of her sister, Miss IreneGrace Davis. During tho Lenten sea-

son tennis has become very popularwith the younger set.

There will be a dance at tho MoanaHotel this evening to which the army,

THtt STAR. 22, 1QI2.

OVER THE TEACUPS.Society Editor.

Telephone 2793.

O CALLING DAYS FOR HONO- - OO LULU. OO Mondays: Punahou, College OO Hills, Jlanoa, luaKiKi. uO Tuesdays: Walklkl, Kaplo- - OO lanl Park, Kalmukl, Palolo. OO Nuuanu, Puu- - OO nul, Pacific Heights. First and OO Third Wednesdays above Nuu- - oO anu Bridge. Second and Fourth OO Wednesdays below Bridge. OO Fourth Wednesday, Pacific OO Heights. OO Thursdays: Tho Plains. OO Fridays: Hotels nnd town. OO Fourth Friday, Fort Shatter. OO First Tuesday, Fort Ruger. OO Saturdays: Kallhl. Thira and OO Fourth Saturdays, Kamehame- - OO ha Schools. O

navy and local society folk are Invited.

&Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Rietow (neo

Gibson) entertained at dinner onTuesday evening for Mr. and Mrs.Stoll, of Los Angeles, California. Thetable was prettily decorated with vio-

lets and maiden hair fern.S J

Mrs. J. W. Nawman was hostess ata card party yesterday afternoon. Thoroom was decorated with hibiscus.Among those present were: Mrs.Charles Bon, Mrs. Otto Bierbach,Mrs. Guy Gere, Mrs. William Goetz,Mrs. Blake, Mrs. Marston Campbell,Mrs. J. D. Marques, Mrs. Falrweathcr and Mrs. William Schmltt.

& J J

THE

Babies at Bijou.Today Is tho day they give babies

away at the Bijou.Will wonders never cease? Some-

one has said that there is nothingnow under the sun, but right here InHonolulu wo have proof of the falsityof that statement, for the management of tho Bijou has certainlysprung a new one. We havo seenthings of all kinds given away, butnever before havo we heard of giv-

ing away a real llvo baby. Yet oneIs to be given away tonight, or iheBijou management stands ready toforfeit $1000, so there must be some-thing in tho truthfulness of theirstatement. Excitement ie runninghigh over this event, and every man,woman and child will bo on hand toseo who wins the baby. There willbo four new acts and four new pic-

tures In addition to the main event.Effle Johnson has made a tremend-

ous hit with hor beautiful song, "ThoHoly City." It is illustrated with thoprettiest set of elides ever seen here.

Wrestling at Savoy.Tho fight fans wero out In forco

last night to see tho Hackenschmldt- -

R. JR.'S I

IW. Novel I

IT M Ireen

THEATERS

CASTLE

VaseWe have sold out our first supply of the above.

Two shipments on the way.

Crossroads Bookshop,Young Hotel Building

HAWAIIAN FRIDAY, MAIC1I

ooooooooooooooooo

Wednesdays:

OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

additional

The Ltd.

i

(Ifllch wnmtlliiK plettirn nt th Bavoy.which proved m lu(rmtitiR hh I ho.IsmlefcJolnitKMi picture. The bal-

ance of tho program wm devoted locomic and sentimental pictures

CAMPBELL SCOREb ON HILO.Marston Campbell haH finally got a

good ono on Hllo. For some timepast It has been complained that thogovornmont failed to live up to Its ob-

ligations, as It did not build tho aide-wal-

outside the Ponahawal swamp.Finally bids wero advertised for, butlast Saturday, when tho time camo forthe oponlng, thoro wore none In sight.It nppoars that Contractor Will hadgone to Honolulu nnd that ContractorWory thought that his son had kmuin his bid. But In tho meantimeCampbell can with nbsolute truth re-

peat his assertion that Hllo does notnppreclato what he is trying to dofor hor. Hllo Tribune.

Anyway, a bachelor doesn't havo toHo about his whereabouts tho nightbefore.

only

THE KIMONO SLEEVE HAS PASSED.All the now spring have set-I- n sleeves, and most women ara

glad that this neatly fitting, stylo of sleeve has returned tofavor. fresh, pretty blouse is made of white batiste and narrow crochet insertion, of being set between rows of insertion down the front. On one side of this front panel is a group of pintucks, running tho length of the blouse; on tho other sldo is a flat, ungath-ere- d

"jabot" made of a strip of with lace set under tho edgeof scallops. Blouses of this neat, practical character are being sold forwear with spring traveling sults of mohair and worsted mixtures.

THE y. I C. A.

Following is tho final account of thobuilding committee of tho Y. M. C. A.,1

which has been discharged, after morothan two years of service:

Receipts.Collected on subscriptions. $203,670.60Interest on deposits 3,425.87Proceeds of sale of old build- -

lng (net) 27,500.00By note, to Bank of Hawaii. 6,000.00

Total receipts $204,590.47Disbursements.

Net cost of building campaign $ 1,040.95

Cost of collecting subscriptions 5G7.60

Y. M. C. A. current expenses 6,451.75Real estate for building site 56,108.00Cost of building and archi

tect's fees 151,989.22Sundries 1,736.99Rent of old Y. M. C. A. build- -

lng G07.76

Furnishings 21,862.77Balanco on hand 231.43

Total disbursements $240,596.47Original estimates for tho cost of tho

building were exceeded owing largelyto tho fact that It was necessary toadd fire escapes and Etandplpes aftertho building was erected, In ordor toconform to newly-enacte- d

For th!,3 purpose $6000 was borrowedfrom the Bank of Hawaii. Part of thismoney went to tho enlargement of thoY. M. C. A. cafeteria. Tho associationoxpects to tako up this note In a shorttlmo.

In the subscription campaign the as-

sociation reserved tho right to uso$5000 a year for two years, from thosubscribed fund, for current expenses.Only $6451.75 for tho two years waaused. Had It not been for tho

of tho money in this way aloan of $6000 to complete tho buildingonterprlso would not havo been ne-

cessary.Tho uncollected subscriptions

amount to $1829.95, or olghty-sl- x

of ono per conk Tho UBual

of this sort Is from ono tofive per cent.

Tho building committee was com-

posed of T, Cllvo Davles, chairman;

POWDERAbsolutely Pure

Tho baking powdernuatio from Royal Grapo

Dream of TartarNo Alum, Mo Lima Phosphate

shirtwaistssatisfactory

Thismedallions embroidery

embroidery

ordinances.

em-

ployment

shrinkage

I IA. Gartley, vice chairman; R. A. Cooke,cecretary; W. G. Hall, F. J. Lowrey.W. A. Love was treasurer of the com-

mittee, although not a member. Theaccounts of tho committee were audlted by W. J. Forbes.

It was in October, 1909, aftermonths of preparation, that tho

campaign for 'a building fund was in-

augurated. Tho plan was to ratoo?1 00,000 In ten days. At tho end oftho first six days. $144,000 had beensubscribed. With $50,000 gift of C.M. Cooke, nearly $200,000 was thenavailable for tho building.

METZGER'S BROTHERKILLED BY AUTO

D. E. Metzger received a cablegramtolling him that his only brother,Ford Metzger, was killed Instantly onMarch 14, by his tutomobllo upsettingon him at Redding, California. Forsome unaccountable reason tho cable-gram, which was addressed to Hllo,was sent by mall from Honolulu. Metz-

ger, who lived at Gresham, Oregon,had been touring all tho winter In Cali-

fornia, with his wife, In a fifty horse-power American roadster. He was re-

turning homo when tho accident oc-

curred. Hllo Tribune.

DOESN'T PAY FOR ROOTING.Editor Star: In your I&iuo of yes

terday appeared an article "McCandless' boys aro on tho war--

path." It was stated, or intimated,'that a number of gentlemen (givingI names aro in my omploy and that I

am paying thom two and a half dollars per day to root for mo at meetIngB.

Permit mo to say that tho abovestatement Is a mlstako. I have notpaid one dollar to any porson for anysuch purpose. ,

L. L. McCANDLESS,

BORN.DONALD At Honokaa, March 17,

1912, to Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Donald,a' daughter.

Sdmo men think they aro gettingahead If they keop from getting anyworse off.

REXALL

Kidney PillsDiuretic and tonic pills which act as a

stimulant the whole genito-urinar- y tract.

They are reliable for all diseases of the

kidneys.

50c for Sixty Doses

Benson, Smith & Co., LtdFORT AND HOTEL 8TREETS.

JHE REXALLSTORE

SALE OF

THIS WEEK

AT

JORDAN'S

Week-En- d SaleNOW ON

1000 Yards

NAINSOOK INSERTIONRegular Price 20c and 25c per yard

Sale Price .... 15c per yard

750 Yards

NAINSOOK EMBROIDERYRegular Price 30c and 35c per yard

Sale Price .... 20c per yardAll Matched Sets

v

N. S. Sachs Dry Goods Co., Ltd.

Banana ClaimsPersons whose banana plantswere destroyed and who de-

sire compensation for the lossshould communicate with

HARRY T. MILLS,at thePAST DUE AGENCY,

848 Kaahumanu Street

EXCLUSIVE PATTERNS IN HANDSOME GREYSEntflah and American Wcares. Made to your order wrtt at andtyle unequalled.

W. W. AHANA 62 South King Street

Page 7: HAWAIIAN STAR. · 2015. 6. 2. · WAIALEE PLAN! taken up with the superintendent of public works when he returns. ... business, Mr. Harris has been Inter-ested in Y. M. C.' A. work

T

MakesTheHairGrow

AVc are talking about AVer'sjHair Vigor. Just note that wordI "Ayer's." You are perfectlyi safe with it. No harm to you or

your hair. Makes the hairgrow? It certainly does. Stopsfalling hair, too. Remember, it's"Ayer's" we are talking aboutAsk your doctor about your hairand about Ayer's Hair Vigor.Get his approval. Your owndoctor and "Ayer's" make astrong combination. It meansfaith, confidence, satisfaction.

Ayer's Hair VigorDOES NOT COLOR THE HAIR

fiwvi bt Dr. I. C. Aim & C- o- UwtU, Hut., U.S. A

SPRING

filiilipi Opening

MONDAY, MARCH 11,

and following days.

Our now designer. Miss Starkey,will have on display the largo stock of

Pattern Hats and MillineryNovelties

which sho has Just purchased fromleading Mainland millinery establishments.

B. F. Ehlers & Co.A LAUNDRY

THAT IS SATISFACTORY TO ITSPATRONS

FRENCH LAUNDRY

J. ABADIE, Prop.777 King St. Phono 1491

SOLAR HEATERwill save you money. Call and see

one In operation.ACETYLENE LIGHT & AGENCY

COMPANY.Hustace avenue, off South St.

COOK WITH

FIRE INSURANCE

ATLAS ASSURANCE COMPANY OPLONDON.

NEW YORK UNDERWRITERS'AGENCY.

PROVIDENCE WASHINGTONINSURANCE COMPANY.

Tiie b. F. Dillingham company, Ltd.

General Agents for Hawaii.Fourth Floor, Stangenwald Building.

FRATERNAL MEETINGS.

HONOLULU LODGE NO. 616,

B. P. O. ELKS.Meets in their hall on King streot

near Fort, every Friday evening. Vis-

iting Brothers aro cordially invited toattend.

PAUL II. ISENBERG, E. R.GEO. T. KLUEGEL, Sec'y.

HONOLULU LODGE, NO. 800,

L. O. O. M.

Will meet in Odd FoIIowb' Building,Fort street, near King, every Fridayevening at 7:30 p. m. Visiting broth-ers cordially invited to attend.

AMBROSE J. WIRTZ, Dictator.E. A. JACOBSON, Secretary.

THE

WONG WONG CO.

Builders ana Goniractors

Office, Maunakea SL

Bowers' Merchant PatrolAnd Confidential Agency

Reliable Watchmen Furnished.

Phono 1051. P. O Box 284City Headquarters, Club Stables.

Men of the, Fleet and Tourlati.The best place in Honolulu to buy

Jade and Chinese Jewelry of all kinds.63 HOTEL AND SMITH 8TREET8.

Fino Job Printing a tho Star office.

I. TIMMONS JELLS

THE

Uy fur the most Interesting meetingyot hold by the Honolulu Ad. ClubwnB that of yoBtorday at the rogularweokly luncheon In tho upstairs dining-

-room of tho Union Grill.Considerable routlno business was

transacted, after which soveral shorttalks wore mado by members. Geo.B. Curtis, manager of Jordan's, gavohis Ideas of prolltablo advertisingfrom pcrsonnl oxporlonce. Mr. Shat- -

tock, who is here In the Interests ofthe Koystono Typo Foundry, and whoIs tho newest member of tho club,read a pnpor on tho vuluo of discrim-ination in the uso of type faces inpreparing advertising copy.

L. D. Tlmmons, who wns scheduledto address tho members on tho sub-

ject of other ad clubs he had come Incontact with during his recent tripto the mainland, was unable to bopresent, and his paper was read byChas. R. Frazicr. This paper was asfollows:

Honolulu, March 21, 1912.Tho Honolulu Ad. Club, City.

Gentlemen: I wish to thank you fortho Invitation to address your internottnc nnfl Imnnrtnnt olllh tnrlnv. nnrlup to this morning anticipated withpleasure tho prospect of being withyou. Since my return from tho East,however, tho pressure of business hasbeen so insistent that I really havonot had tho time to formulate in aconnected way tho various data whichI should like to present to you. And,although unable to be with you In per-

son, I am heart and soul with thoaims of your organization, and maybo counted on to assist in furtheringthe same in future.

I wish to thank you for electing meto membership in your club, and fortho further honor you havo conferredIn placing my name upon your list ofdirectors.

I came in contact with tho Ad. Clubof Chicago beforo I was aware thatsuch a club had ever been thought ofhere In fact, as this was In January,you probably had not really taken up

,tho subject.Tho Chicago club is a monster in-

stitution.i

It has Its social halls, gamorooms, Horary, conference chambers,cafe, buffet- -in short everything thatyou might expect to find in an

institution of the kind in n bigcity. Its membership includes ad.writers of every kind, managers ofadvertising institutions, magazines,papers, etc.; ad. managers and copyi

ABOUT

CHICAGO AD. CLUB

PIantatIon was S""11"? removing taowriters of all sorts of largo businessinstitutions; managers and officers 0ftaborerB from the I'rcsnn,t, ,cam,,s t0

almostprofessional

Hnkaa. is conductingyers,the

who mayImportant

on of club functions.Tho Chicago club is alert at

of tho compass. It is a "livowire" indeed. Its midday luncheonhas become a function of note, em-

bellished, as It always is, withspeeches, music and other features.The activity of Its entertainment com-

mittee Impressed me. day somoman of noto Is fished out of tho hotelregisters of tho city for an address.The program is always new, and fsvaried. There is never anything stale.In short, every member of the clubfeels and knows that he has a pleasant lunch hour awaiting him fromMonday to Saturday. Every holidaytho club throws out a particularly bigchest. On my second visit to Chicaeo

happened to arrive an hour beforolunch-time- , February 22, Washington'sbirthday. A telephoned invitation wasaccepted, and a member of the clubcalled tho hotel for

I was surprised at tho elaborateness, and beauty of tho decorations,and tho evidences of preparation forthe function. Several hundred gentle

sat banquet, and wasa sprinkling of- - the fcir sox at thotables away from tho main hall. Thowaitresses appeared In red, white andblue, with caps of tho Wash-ington era, perhaps. Soveral big, ring-ing appropriate to tho day,were delivered, ono of them being byJudgo Cavanaugh, of tho supremo

There wero splendid andinstrumental numbers, and specialties.It was a great affair; and as I lookedout on that throng of ad. writers, ail.managers and ad. users hobnobbingtogether, as were, a sort of com-

mon brotherhood, my thoughts, flowback to and I was Impressedas never beforo with the desirabilityand importance of even a small pertof tho samo " spirit here.And you can readily tho gen-

uineness tho pleasure felt by mowhen, a few days later, I learned fromtho papers that a club tho samosort had been organized In this city.

Tho entertainment feature of thepresent day ad. club is not, however, itsmost important function. This featuresorves to bring togothor all mon Interested in tho subject or business ofadvertising, and has its place. It Is avery big But tho real object of

tho organization Is tho study of advertlslng along scientific lines. Ialong scientific lines, becauso advor

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, MARCH 22,

lining lift.- - beeomn a tclonco. It Is nolongor a lmphnr.anrd buslnosfl. Anoth-er object, of almost equal Importnuco,)h the bringing of ml. writersand ndvortlsors In n social way, and

interchanging of In lolsuremomontf. Thiw, In Chicago, tho nd.club has become tho ono Importantmeotlng placo of mon on both sidesof tho advertising business, and, asnear as I can describe It, a sort ofadvertising clearing houic. As I fol-

lowed out the idea Its scope seemedto extend and broadon, and Its valuobecome something Immense.

Honolulu, being such n very smallcity, can not, of courso, hope to eitherInaugurate or maintain an nd. clubon anything like those lines. But, tomy mind, a modest copy of tho Chi-

cago idea, or the adoption of lf.3 moreImportant features on a reduced scale,is easily possible. From what I havelearned of your club, I am led to bo-lle-

that It is shaped out In this way,and I feel that H may, reasonably hopefor a useful and succcrflful career.

Let all tho ad. men and tho men interested in advertising get togetherin the ad. club. It Is not a one-ma- n nora one-side- d proposition, but is mutually advantageous In a desirable degree. It would bo a good thing forHonolulu and Hawaii if all of thebuslner.3 men of tho city took an actlve, personal Interest in the club andits purposes.

Sincerely yours,L. D. TIMMONS.

MATTERS BEFORE

BOARD OF HEALTH

At tho meeting of tuo Hoard or

health yesterday afternoon, the re-

quest of James Fitzmaurlco to bo al-

lowed to visit the Kallhl ReceivingStation was refused. Tho boardthought it better not to allow the

to enter the station,President Pratt read a short report

of his trip to Hawaii, and told of therat campaign that is being carried onthere. He stated that a mongoose,infected with plague germs, had beenfound.

George It. Carter made a partial report on the conditions of Walpahu,saying that the management of the

up much of his time.Major J. M. Kennedy, Medical

Corps, U. S. A., was given a licenseto practice medicine in tho Terri-tory.

The board took up tho matter ofthe new tract just opened on upperFort street, and decided that all build-ing permits be refused until a sowerbo installed. This will have to bo aprivate sower, and could be connectedwith that of the KapiolanI Estate atan estimated cost of $500.

Tho question of cemeteries alsocame up at the meeting and, as It isa fact that all tho available land Iscrowded, and' that some day tho citycemeteries will have to be removed,

board instructed Dr. Shepherd togather all possible data on the subjectand report later.

GENERA L FIGURES

ONLY FOR PUBLIC

All tho work In connection with thetax assessments of tho islands is nowfinished, and this morning tho boardof equalization got down to businesson tho last stage of Its duties. Themembers were busy all tho forenoonon the work of equalization, and It isthought by tomorrow everything willbe finished and tho general flguroswill bo ready for publication.

It has been decided that only thetotal assessments for tho different is- -

lends will be given out. Further detailscannot bo made public, and thereforetho people of tho Territory cannottell how much each Individual firmhas had its assessments increased ordecreased.

Comparisons of the totals of thisyear and of last can, however, bomade, and tho figures Bhould bo interesting, especially as TreasurerColliding expects to raise tho totalassessments by somo $25,000,000.

It somotlmos happens that a womanis almost as sorry sho married a certain man as sho is glad that sho keptsomo other woman from getting him.

Every time a man makes a luckyguess ho boasts of his good judgment.

every line of business in the new nouses m oeuur CB"e-city- ;

Dr- - Taylor- - Government physician atmen, including law- -who a lot o:judges of tho courts, government

bacteriological work lr. rat cam-l- y

officials, etc.; to say nothing Of a jolwlU bo cxtra for his1,aiB"' 1alu ser-rate- d

bunch of good fellows, bovIcca 1,1 futl,ro- - as the work takesas outsiders, but aro

occasionsevery

point

Every

at me.

men at tho there

Martha

speeches,

court. vocal

it in

Honolulu,

imagineof

of

card.

say

FRIDAY, 1912.

togothor

the Ideas

correspondent

tho

THREE IDS OF CONSCIENCE

DESCRIBED BY CANON AULT

"Conscience" was the topic upon

which Canon Ault pronohml his ier-mo- n

nt the Ghrlsttnn U.xtoimlon move-

ment yesterday evening.

It was a very brief address but pow--l

erful and tho doath-llk- o stlllnras whichheld tho nssomblago in its grip for thomomont following tho conelutlon oftho sermon showed tho effect thnt ithud exerted upon its listeners.

In nnalyzlng his subject, Canon Aulttook up tho discission of tho threokinds of conscience live, false anddead. In illustrating his points, thespeaker took a number of incidentsfrom tho Scriptures each time allowing wherein tho dlffcrenco lay betweentho live, the falso and tho dead, andhow ono gradually passed Into theother. '

"A livo conscience Is that part ofthe soul which control tho will," saidtho spcakor. "If It is false, it willspeak n.3 an echo of the will, and, Ifthis Is persisted in , the consciencewill finally become silent and die.

"Let us go back to thoso earliestdays that we can remember the timeswhen wo knelt at our mother's kneeand were taught the little praycra sosweet and mild and childish that wehavo since, perhaps, refused with our

manly lips to utter. Then

MANY WOMEN AMONG THE STRIKERS

ARRESTED BY THE LAWRENCE POLICE

show

EasterWE INSPECTION OF OUR

HAWAIIAN COMPANY,

Performed hero at a saving

to tho Interesteddono by expertBwlth

compressed nlr tools righthero in Honolulu at our

splendidly equipped

KING AND ALAKEA STS.

1

Works, Llmliea

Importers and Manufacturers

Memorial Daywill soon here. Your

bo placed atonco. Call and seo our stock.

cm in e the flrtt demlly tin and we couldnot look our mothers In tho fttce thoMine way as wo iiMd to. That wyour conscience talking.

"There Is not a man here tonightwho, if one told him his mother hadlied, would not light. And yot everytime that you scoff at the rallglon thatyour mother taught you at hor kneo,you aro giving the llo to your ownmother."

night's meeting was exception-ally woll attended. It was the 1 argot tcrowd that was present nt any ono ofthe meetings slure tho opening meet-ing.

Mr. Butler snug woll, tho choir sangwell and the congregation lit Into thoold hymns with an enthusiasm anda zeal that threatened to raise the roofof the Empire theater.

Mr. Butler sang, "Somebody," "AClean Heart," and "Shall I Let HimIn?" C. J. Day offered the prayerpreliminary to the tormon.

Yostorday noon a mooting woa heldnt tho Honolulu Iron Works and todayMr. Butler sung for the employes oftho Cntton-Nell- l Iron Works.

It has been announced that Sunday'smeeting for men will be In charge oflaymen exclusively. Mr. Butler willsing and T. Clive Davles will addresstho meeting.

CardsSTOCK OF EASTER CARDS

LAWRENCE, Mass.. February 25. With tho renewed rioting and dis-

turbances among the textile workers on strike tho police havo been makingarrests by the wholesale. A number of women have been arrested, alongwith a larger number of men. Tho police no distinction, but claptho offenders into jail In their efforts to preserve the peace.

INVITE

WHICH WE BELIEVE TO BE THE DAINTIEST. PRETTIEST

CARDS EVER SHOWN IN HONOLULU.

NEWS Ltd.

lex. Young Building.

parties.

Carving

plant at

bo or-

ders should

v'HP. .1812

MOSES KCKURWA .. v.'

,rX.M'"'"""i,niiu nwiinwiunY,VICTORIA KAMAMALU, NllEMMA ROOKE.BUECN "EMMAf'WAM 0 tUNAlllO'

i Imi. u...i..i.rwM.rar.ninu AAtuA4 IY0IA rAMW.EHA,6UEEII UUUOKAUHI

A Trouble SaverAn Electric Iron in the HouseSAVES THK TIIOUHLK OF 1H0N8.

SAVES THK TROUBLE c;' ATTENDING FlltlCS.

DOBS AWAY WITH THIfl H1SAT OF A 8T0VIB.

DOES AWAY WITH SMUT ORDINARILY DBl'OSlTRD ON TUBIRON.

SAVES THIS TIME AND TUMl'Klt OF THE OPERATOR.

The Ironing can be done whereverthere is an electric socket

The Hawaiian Electric Co.,LIMITED

ONE TRIAL OF

CRYSTALWHITE

GAPWILL YOU THAT IS THE BEST SOAP FOR YOUR

YOUR GROCER SELLS IT.

ForcegrowthWILL DO IT.

If You Wish To Adver-tise in Newspapers

Ajwhre tt Anytime Call on or write

E. C. Dake's AdvertisingAgency

124 Sansomo St., San Francisco.

Sun Yun Wo &Company

Chinese Meals and Banquets Preparedto Order.

1122 SMITH STREET.

Kona CofteeBorries and Ground.Retail and Wholesale.

HAWAIIAN COFFEE CO..1147 8mlth. near Pauahl St. Tel. 1391

Hunt's Quality

FruitsThe kind mat is NOT

. M. LEVY & CO., :

Walk --Over Boots hopBLOCK

HOTEL STREET.

BROS.,Proprietors.

StationeryFOR EVERY NEED.

A. B. Arleigh & Co., Ltd.HOTEL NEAR FORT.

Pau ka HanaHAS NO RIVAL IN SOAP.

IB96 sr't V:

PAUAHI BISHOP t'.'&ifS5OT "WANUU PRATT ' frvJANt LDEAU JASPER -

'ABAGAIL MXHEHAPETER YoflMfr KirnJAMES KAUDIlliai Mfcmi ".t-

"r.- -

JOHN P TT K HAU

MY PAAAINA

March 17th, 191 2

THIS WORKIN MEMORY or

AMOS STARR COOKE1810 1871 j

ANDJULIETTE MONTAGUE COOiE

CONVINCELAUNDRY.

JACOBSON

ruuMJtjt:, of THE ROYAL SCH00L.AN0, INSTRUCTORSOF THE FOLtqwiNC. YOUNQiCHIEFS ' " ,'

-

XrtZruKUHINA

UMAULQ.KINGr.Avm altmiii

HWVBN

CHANGING

IT

Distributors.

PANTHEON

.'fftRNICE

'

'

.

'

'

COOKL2 TABLETUNVEILED KAIWAIAHAO CHURCH,

By n Lllluokalanl

WTyandotteTho groat Washing coda, used la

Hospitals and the Home.Cheaper than Pearllne.

SANITARY STEAM LAUNDRY.

Phone 1973.

Tie Motama specie BatLIMITED.

HEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.

Capital Subscribed ....Yen 48,000,00Capital Paid Up Yen 30,000,000Reserved Fund Yen 17,150,808

General banking business trammel-ed. Savings account for $1 and up-

wards.Fire and burglar proof vaults, with

Safe Doposlt Boxes for rent at S2 poiyear and upwards.

Trunks and cases to be kept ocustody at moderate rates.

Particulars to bo applied for.YU AKAI, Manager.

Honolulu Office. Bethel and MerchantStreets.

Tel. 2421 and 1594. P. O. Box la.

Now O penSUNRISE

RESTAURANTMEALS 20c and 25c

-- HORT ORDERS AT ALL HOURS

Nuuanua Street, off Chaplain Lane.

xxxxxxxxxxxxxaSTEINWAY & SONS AND IOTHER PIAN08.

THAYER PIANO CO.156 Hotel Street. Phono 2313.

TUNING GUARANTEED. HxxxxxxxxxxxxxCOJeeHop&Co

Meat Marketand

ImportersTelephone 3451.

C. Brewer & Co,,LIMITED.

Fire and MarineInsurance Agencies

Royal Iniurance Co. of Liverpool, ,

London Auurance Corporation.

Commercial Union Atsuranci Co, elLondon.

Scottlih Union and National Inturtanc Co. of Edinburgh.

Caledonia Insurance Co. of Editburgh.

American and Foreign Marin Intmance Co.

Page 8: HAWAIIAN STAR. · 2015. 6. 2. · WAIALEE PLAN! taken up with the superintendent of public works when he returns. ... business, Mr. Harris has been Inter-ested in Y. M. C.' A. work

IN TH1 OPFtOI Of TH1 TrUAURlR Or THB TtHHITOKY

01 HAWAII, HONOLULU,OAHU.

In DMMOlallon of THB 'JUDO1I0ILDINO COMl'ANY, LIMITKD.

mi Hawaiian CtiqwraUon.WHBM1CA8, THB JUDD liUILDINO

COMPANY, LIMITKD, n corporationltilr orgnuiiwl unit existing titular and

liy vlrtua or tli Ikwb ot the Tarrltoryof Hawaii, ban, pursuant to 1kv inMich cum mad unci provided, dulytiled In the office of the Treinurer otthe Territory of Hawaii, a petition fordlaaoluthm and dlalnoorporatlon otthe said corporation, together withthe certificate thereto annexed ae

by law.NOW, THEREFORE, notice Is here-

by given to any and all persons thathave been or are now lntereited In

'any manner whatsoever In the saidcorporation, and to all creditors there-

of, and any persons having olaimagainst said corporation, that olJjeo-tlon- s

to the granting of said petitionfor dissolution and dlstncornoratlonmust be filed In this office on or be-

fore twelve o'clock noon, May 17,

1012, and that any person or personsdesiring to be heard must be In at-

tendance at the ottlco of the under-

signed, In the Executive Building, Ho-

nolulu aforesaid, at twelve o'clocknoon of said day, to show cause, If

any, why said petition should not begranted.

Dated. Honolulu, T. H., March 11,

1912.D. L. CONKLINO.

Treasurer, Torrltory ot Hawaii.

NOTICE OF INTENTION TO FORE-

CLOSE AND OF SALE.

Under power of sale contained In amortgage dated August 18, 1903, made

by Wm. Hepola Harbottle of Hono-

lulu, Oahu, T. H., to Mrs. M. Mc-Iner-

ot said Honolulu, recorded in

the Register Office, Oahu, in Liber247, pages 481-4S- which mortgage

was assigned by said Mrs. M. y

to E. L. Schwarzber'g of saidHonolulu, on July 29, 1910, by assign-

ment recorded In said office in Liber339, pages 132-3- ; and by him to theundersigned on July 10, 1911.

Notice 's hereby given that the un-

dersigned, J. Alfred Magoon, intendsto foreclose said mortgage for condi-

tions broken, to wit. of

principal and interest when due;Notice is likewise given that the

land covered by the said mortgage

will bo sold at public auction at theauction rooms of James F. Morgan,

Kaahumanu Street, Honolulu, City

and County of Honolulu, Territqry ot"Hawaii, on Monday, April 1, A. D.

1912. at 12 o'clock noon of said day.

. 'ToraJH: Cash, TJ. S. gold "coin, deed

at the expense of the purchaser, to"be prepared by the attorney for tbeassignee of mortgagee.

J. ALFRED MAGOON,

Assignee of Mortgagee.Honolulu, T. II.. March 2, 1912.

"The property covered by the saidmortgage, and to bo sold as aforesaid,

consists of all the land situate in

JCeoneula In said Honolulu, describedin Royal Patent No. 1228, L. C. A.

831C, Apana 1.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE

FIRST CIRCUIT TERRITORY OF'

HAWAII. At Chambers in Probate.

In tho Matter ot the Estate ot Malle

Hiram, Deceased. Order of Noticeot Hearing Petition for Administra-tion.On reading and filing the Petition

of David K. Kahea of Honolulu, alleg-

ing that Mallo Hiram of Kailua,died Intestate at Kailua,

Koolaupoko, on the day otFebruary, A D. 1904, leaving property

within the jurisdiction ot this Courtnecessary to bo administered, andpraying that Letters of Administration issue to him.

It Is ordered that Wednesday, the24th day of April, A. D. 1912, at 9

o'clock a. m., bo and hereby is ap-

pointed for hearing said Petition In

the courtroom of this Court in thoold Y. M. C. A. building in the City

and Of jnty of Honolulu, at whichtime and place all persons concernedmay appear and show cause, if any

they have, why said Fetitlon shouldnot bo granted.

By the Court:JOHN MAR CALLINO,

Clerk, First Circuit Court.Dated Honolulu, March 21, 1912.

THOMPSON, WILDER, WATSON& LYMER,

v

Attorneys for Petitioner.

PROPOSALS FOR SERVICES DUR- -

ing fiscal year beginning July 1, 1912,

and ending Juno 30, 1913. Office DepotQuartormastor, Honolulu, T. II., March8, 1912. SEALED PROPOSALS in

triplicate wilfbo received at this of-

fice until 10 a. m., April 9, 191!f, andthen opened for tho following ser-

vices: Printing for Department Head-quartor- s

and Quartermaster's Depart,mont, Honolulu, T. H.; furnishing anddelivering Ice to offices, etc.; launder-ing towels for offices; laundering linenfor transports. For blank proposalsand further Information apply to theDepot Quartermaster, Honolulu, T. H.

Havo you aeon the line ofSt Patrick and Easter cards at Wall,Nichols Co., Ltd.? Don't mlaa It

MtW ASViRTtatMIMTt.Pag

Bijou Ttewtor ILmi A4a (I) a

flalttmiH Wanted aI,. R. A. Marl r,

15 R RKNT.Furnished fire-roo-m colUtffe liy tier-ma- n

church, $16.00. Phone 10IT.

LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN.Ronton Terrier; answers to name

Tech." llwnrd. Alfred S. Hartwell.

THE WBaTHHR.

Looal Offlee, U. S. Weather BureauFriday, March 22, 1912.

Temperature, R a. n.; S a. m.a. m and morning minimum:

08, 7-- 7C, 77, 07. ,

Barometer reading: Absolute

JO

hu- -

mldlty (grains per cubic foot); rela-tive humidity and clew point at S

a. m.:30.10, 00, 01, 5.140.

Wind velocity and direction at G a.

ai.; 8 a. ra.; 10 a. m and noon:3 E., 2 N. It., 9 S. H., 10 S. B.Ralniall during 24 hours ending 8

a. m., .00 rainfall.Total wind movement during 24

hours ending at noon, 170 miles.WM. D. STOCKMAN,

Section Director.

NEWS IN A NUTSHELL

Paragraphs That Give CondensedNews of the .Day.

Atlas Geography, Weekly Call, ?2.60Tweedle.

A furnished cottage Is for rent Seeclassified ad.

No "waits" at the Silent BarberShop. Six chairs and six first-clas- s

aarbers.The Sight-Seein- g Car will, tour the

Island next Thursday. Fare $3.50.Union-Pacifi- c Transfer Co., Ltd.

If you save green stamps you canfurnish your house free. Call at theshow room, Fort and Bcrctanla St.

The Metropolitan Meat Co. has justreceived by tho Hllonlan a lot of freshhalibut, smelt, sole, flounder and crab.

Dr. MacLennan has returned andresumed practice. Office, King St,opposite Advertiser office. Hours: 10

to 12, 2 to 4, 6 to 7.

General Macomb Is issuing an order setting dates for small arms tar-get practice and the use 'of the mortars at Fort Ruger.

Request the Cosmopolitan WellDrilling Co., P. M. Pond, pres., to furnish you estimates on artesian welldrilling. Phone 2890.

The Spanish War Veterans, havingbeen invited to use the N. G. H. meet-ing room in the Bungalow, will holdmeetings there Saturday evening.

Construction of the permanent cav-

alry post at Schofleld Barracks is tobe rushed, In accordance with recentorders from the War Department.

A pocketbook containing papermoney and Mooso lodge receipt waslost Wednesday evening. A reward isoffered for Its return to the Staroffice.

Tomorrow at noon at Morgan's salerooms, M. T. Slmonton, commissioner,will sell a valuable strip of land InSchool street pursuant to a courtdecree. ,

The Royal Hawaiian Garage Is offering an almost brand new, four-cy- l

inder, four seatcrtouring car for $900. This Is a bigbargain.

Round-bac- k pews of mission pattern are being installed In tho Meth-

odist church, and a cork-fabri- c carpetis being laid, under the direction ofO. II. Walker.

Ladles of the Outdoor Circle of theKllohana Art League are planning tohavo a plaza constructed where Ala-pa- l,

Luso, Klnau and Lunalilo streetsconverge.

A light water proof coat was loston tho way In from Schofleld Barracks. A reward of ten dollars Is of-

fered for Its return to C. A. C. Deer--

ing, 1144 Kinau street.In accordance with orders from the

War Department, Colonel Jones, ad-

jutant general of the Hawaiian Na-

tional Guard, has Issued an order pro-

viding for enlistment in time of war.

FO A

DAYS

DECISION

According to Ralph Kearns, secretary to tho territorial board of Immigration, it will be at least fourteondays before the decision of tho depart-ment of commerce and labor at Wash-ington, D. C, can bo communicated totho local federal board.

"Since the local federal board hasrofused admittance to the detainedRussians owing to alleged violation of'tho labor contract laws, it will bo noenssary to await tho decision of thodepartment of commerce and labor, towhom tho appeal will bo referred,"Bald Mr. Kearns. "The appeal will bosent by mall and this means a waitof thirteen or fourteon days for tholetter to reach Washington. The find'Ing ot the department ot commerceand labor will probably be cabled toFederal Superintendent Halsoy," Mr.Kearns concluded.

THfl 23, If11

MORTAR STANDS FILED FOR RECORD

The sort of the final three abols totest the guns at Fort Ruger was firedthis afternoon at 2:30. A gun pedestalof the tame type as tho two that woromashed In tho tost yesterday and tho

day before was r.ied hut no accidentresulted, although an excess pressuroof ten thouar.nd pounds was broughtto bear on the carriage.

The test will be completed hnlf-pas- t

three this aftornoon whon tho ilnaltwo shot.! will bo fired. According toOrdnanco Captain Waller, who Is inohargo of tho firing, tho tost has al-

ready proved that tho present guncarriage Is not strong onough forheavy work and should be made outof something stronger than castlron.

Tho rango for this afternoon'sshot was 14,200 yards.

GUN

ONE SHOT WELL

T

UNOER THE BED

Mr. and Mrs. James Snlffen, resid-ing in tho O. K. block, Iwilel, had aquarrel last night which developedinto a fight.

When tho scrap was over Mrs. Snlf-

fen the police station foran officer to come and take awaysome dynamite which her loving hus-band kept stored under tho bed. Shestated that she couldn't sleep withthe stuff there and her husband inhis present state of mind.

Officer Nohriga went to the placeand found three sticks of giant pow-der, som0 fuse and caps which hebrought to headquarters.

DANG E

1

SVAR, MARCH

01

telephoned

THE

T

The management or tho MoanaHotel announces a danco tonight forits guests. Tourists, Army and Navyfolks, and society generally, are in-

vited to attend. There will be musicby tho Hawaiian quartet during thedinner hour.

MILITARY TOGS.Tho Honolulu Merchants Associa

tion will probably abandon the Ideaof making an attempt to get the(,WarDepartment to modify its orderswhich require officers to wear uni-forms at all times except when inbed. Tho merchants say that theorder will hit local clothing men andtailors to a tidy little sum each year,since officers will no longer havo anyuse for the conventional "cits." JuliusUnger, who was appointed at a recentmeeting to look into tho matter, hasdone so and will recommend that thomatter be dropped.

FUDGED

In tho polico court this morning W,Dallman and A. Hestad, drunk, werelined $3 and costs each.

Yesterday afternoon John O'Brien,F. Munson and Harry Berger were runIn for drunUennera..

HAWAIIAN MWDAY,

AT

RE

TONIGH

They wero given a chance to shipon the schooner S. C Alexander and,on tho understanding that they woulddo so, they wero given their freedom.O'Brien and Munton kept their wordall right, but Berger failed to reportto the agent of the Seamen's Union at5 p. m. as arranged.

At first Berger refused to entertainthe proposition of getting clear viathe schooner route. Then ho experlenced a change of heart and promisedto bo aboard at .sailing time, providedthe launch didn't sink.

"If I ship I won't have to sleep Intho park," ho exclaimed.

Ho was probably decorating thesamo old bench last night.

Leading hat cleaners formerly of1154 Fort street removed to the newC. M. Cooko building, Beretanla streetnear Nuuanu avenue.

With the approach of hot weatherparticular attention should be paid totho quality of milk given children.The milk supplied by the HonoluluDairymen's Association Is perfectlypure. y

NOTICE OF LOST CERTIFICATEOF STOCK.

Certificates Nos. 3667 and 3673 forten shares of the Capital Stock of Mc- -

Bryde Sugar Company, Ltd., havobeen lost or destroyed. All personsare hereby warned against negotlatIng or otherwise' dealing In or withsuch shares. Application has beenmade to the Treasurer of said Company for tho issuance of a new, certlflcato.

Dated March 21st, 1912.GEORGE. SANDERSON.

Deeuments Enetered for Record.March 11, 1812.

Trent Trust Co. Ltd. to George 1).

Russell and wife, Rel.A. N. OampUoll Tr. to IL Nonalm,

L.

C. Ito to Shulohl Tannkn, IS. 8.Pint and wlfo to Samuel Johnson,

D.

Samuel Johnson and wife to Benjamin J. Khholo, D,

Benjamin J. Kahelo to PlonoorBldg. & Loan Assn. of Hawaii, M.

Fred Harrison and wife to ChnrloR. Fraztor, D.

March 22, 1912.Ksthor K. Cookott to Joaquin Gar-

cia Tr., M.Hawaiian Trust Co. Ltd. to John J.

Combs, Rel.J. A. Lucae and wife to J. 11.

Schnack; D.Pohaku and wf to Ohucmfw cmfwaPohaku Ohulenul and wf to Pioneer

Bldg & Loan Assn of Hawaii, M;Lots 2, 3 and 4, Blk B, Ultr Tract,

Oahu, $800. B 357, p 281.bated Mar 1, 1912.

E L Hutchinson to Mutual Invest-ment Co of Hawaii Ltd, M; por Lot8, Blk 23, and bldg, Kalmukl TractHonolulu, Oahu, $1000. B 357, p 283.Dated Mar 2, 1912.

C F Merrill and wf to Hannah KBruhn, D; 0 A of Lot 11 Gr 5118,rents, etc, Palolo - Valley Rd. Hono-lulu, Oahu, $1650. B 3C2, p 240.Dated Feb 29, 1912.

Hannah K Bruhn and hsb (W C) toBishop Trust Co Ltd, M; 0 A ofLot 11, Gr 5118, bldgs, etc, Palolo Val-

ley Rd, Honolulu, Oahu, $G50. B 354,p 395. Dated Feb 29, 1912.

Kaplolanl Estate Ltd to Jesse PMakalnal, Rel; Lots 11, 12 and 13 Gr3504, Kallhi, Honolulu, Oahu, $5000.B 357, p 285. Dated Nov 22, 1907.

Jesse P Makalnal and wf to Ella AC Long, D; por Lots 11, 12 and 13

Gr 3504, Kallhi, Honolulu, Oahu,$1700. B 362, p 247. Dated Nov 22,1907.

Ella A C Long to Rufus Pickett,D; Lot 3, Blk 2 of subdlv Lots 11, 12

and 13 Gr 3504, Kallhi,

monthscrop

exlhlbtion.and adv-t- o $280. B 354, p 388. DatedJan 1, 1912.

L Marklewlcht to OlaaLtd, C M; crop on Lot A Olaa

11, "Olaa, Puna, $1

adv $576. B 354, 390. Jan1, 1912. ,

Madero

C. BOLTE roturned in Klnau thismorning.

H. D. SLOGGETT arrived in KlnauLahalna.

m m m

C. H. McBRIDE, attorney, wife ar-

rived in Klnau Kona.

J. COOPER, of Star staff,celebrating his thirty-sixt- h birthday.

DELEGATE KALANIANAOLE return-e- d

tho Klnau this

F. chairman theot supervisors, In the

Klnau.

P. W. SHATTUCK, representative ofTho Keystono Typo Foundry, gavoa dinner at Commercial

gr I mil and cam eropt mm, HmwhHamaetaart trart, OIm, Pun, Hawaii;$1 to $400. tl S64, p Ml l)alml Jan 1, 1111.

Hmrie Lovatail and wf (o Joe Mar-

lines Jr, I); gr (1618, ltflaimhu, llama-ktiH- ,

Hawaii; $0. 11 101, p Dat-

ed Feb 1U,

Jbo Mnrqiioa and wf to Frank NOomee, 1); gr BfllS, Kanpahu, Hama-kua- ,

Hawaii; $110. II 302, p 24ft. Dat-

ed March 4, 1012.

John Konloha wf to F ASohnefor, D; IiUb in por R V C674,

11119. Knauhuhu, Hamakua, Hawaii;$3S0.60. B 302, p 310. Dated Fob 16,

Ohas Kaanol to Hul Land of Unla-pu- e

and Kahannnul, Doolar.it Ion; In roownership of leasehold of lands ofUalapuo and Kahananul, Moloknt. B

366, p 147. Dated Fob 17, 1912.Helokaha Hoopll and hsb to Eddlo

D; lnt In gr 139, Kulaha,Hamakualoa, Maul; $20. B 300, p 227.

Dated Fob 24, 1912.Manuel G Cambra and wf to An-ton- o

R Souza Jr, D; lnt In 1--2 of 1

share In land, Ulumalu, Hamakua-

loa, Maul; $240. B 360, p 228. Dat-

ed Fob 27,

Kalawala Pomalkal and to W HHano, D; lnt In R P 5153, kul 6456,

Kahakuloa, Kaanapall, Maul; $40. B

302, p Dated Fob 6,

Kokulanul Mtnamtna and to Em-

ma T Gray, D; lnt In kuls 6381 andand pes land, Makawoll, otc,

Walmea, Kauai; $1, etc. B 362, p239. Dated March 1, 1912.

Court of Land Registration.Recorded March 4, 1912.

Wm R Castle and Emma M Naku-in- a

ci al, R P 4547, Ala-ke- a

St Honolulu, Oahu; $6000. C. L.

R. Doc No 308. Drtcd March 4,

ilii OR ONIONS

Market Superintendent Starrctttook a trip to tho other side of theIsland of Oahu today to Inspect someland which Is said to be suited forcultivation ot the Bermuda onion,which has proved a success ontho island of Kauai.

Results of the Territorial board'sexperiments In Kauai

Honolulu, piaced on exhibition In several of theOahu, $200. B 362, p 249. Dated Mar downtown shop windows and Mr. Star--

1912- - rett expects that it will not bo manyJakub Marklewltch to Sugar before specimens of tho Ber- -

Co C M; on Lot E at muda onion grown in Oahu will be onLot 133, Olaa, Puna, Hawaii, $1

Sugar Cocane of

Lot Hawaii, andto p Dated

to

board

the

m

and adv

Jr

and

hsb

242.hsb

Par near

cano

A shipment 1500 bunches of ba-

nanas will bo sent to tho coaBt in theMongolia tomorrow.

NEWS BY WIRELESSTO MERCHANTS' EXCHANGE

NAPOOPOO, March 21. SailedM Toma to Olaa Sugar Co Ltd, M; bsrk Albert for Port Townscnd

PHOTO UNDERWOOD ft UNDERWOOD. N. Y.

GENERAL PASCUAL OROZCO,The aggressive of the generals who aided against Diaz.

has now turned rebol and is leading the fight against Madero.

BSHS2SZSHSa5SSilS2SESESHS2SSSE5ci25iiSH5 25?.SfcSHFd5Z555ESESfl5HSHS2S2SaSES

tlio

thofrom

andtho from

W. tho 13

town In morn-ing.

W. POGUE, 'of Maularrived

Club

11)111.

Kkul

1912.

Tarn Loo,

hul

1912.

1912.

236E

Rel;

1912.

such

havo been

OlaaLtd,

Olaaof

most He

last night to several heads of localprinting offices.

LESTER PETRIE gave a St. Patrick'dinner In honor of Gerald Hugheawith moro than a dozen other guestat tho board.

W. PFOTENHAUER, manager ot HHackfeld & Co., Is booked to leaveIn the Wllholmlna and may visitGermany before returning home,

MR. and MRS. ROBERT LEWERSare bpoked for tho Wllholmlna.They will visit their son, WilliamLowers, who Is playing in MaudoAdams' company.

JAiYits u. dole ana family arobooked to loavo In the AVllholmlnaOn tho mainland Mr. Dole will attend to tho distribution ot this season's pack ot pineapples.

I

AXy

); Shingle DecayDoesn't Pay

Particularly when it can beprevented at small cost bythe use of

Sherwin- - WilliamsPreservative Shingle Stains

Made with Croosoio)

The use of creosote, gives these stains ex-

cellent preservative properties, greatly increas-ing the natural life of the shingles.

The colors are all of good tone and maximumpermanency. The wide experience of TheSherwin-Willia- Co. in handling pigments andoils in the manufacture, of the finest paints andcolors, is worth a good deal to you in shinglestain.

Twenty-thre- e handsome shades.

Sit colors on mood at our ttort.

E. O. HALL & SON, Limited.

Anniversary Sale ofMillinery

To celebrate the closing of the seYenth year of a successfulbusiness in Honolulu, we will, commencing SATURDAY,MARCH 9th, conduct a special sale in all our lines of

Millinery and Men's Hats .

This sale is not for the purpose of disposing of odds and ends,but will enable our patrons to realize a handsome saving on anyarticle selected from our large and carefully assorted stock.

IC. Uyeda,Nuuanu Street near Hotel.

FINE ORIENTAL GOODSOriginal Designs Large Assortment Crepe and Embroideries,Kimonos, Carved Ivory, Brasswaro, Vases, Carved Furniture, etc.,etc.

The Japanese BazaarFORT STREET near Convent

CLOSING OUT SALE OF MENS'FURNISHINGS

This department of our business will be discontinued, so, whilethe goods last, will bo sold regardless of price.

K. ISOH1MA,30 S. KING STREET, between Nuuanu and Bethel.

DREAP MAKERmixes and kneads Bread perfectly

IN THREE MINUTES.Hands do not touch the. DoughsDoes away with the old laborious

method. Simple, Easy,Sanitary.

$2.50

$3.25

W. W. Dimond & Co.GLASSWARE CHINA,

KITCHEN UTENSILS.

r

Page 9: HAWAIIAN STAR. · 2015. 6. 2. · WAIALEE PLAN! taken up with the superintendent of public works when he returns. ... business, Mr. Harris has been Inter-ested in Y. M. C.' A. work

S

SECOND SECTION

PAGES 0 TO 12. HONOLULU, HAWAII, FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1912. PAGE8 9 TO 12.

NATIONA L CONVENTION GOAL MINE CRISIS FILIPINOS MAKING IRE BAR LASHED IRE POPULARITY OF ROOSEVELT

WILL DRAW HORDES OF BOOMERS AROUSES GERMAN Y A RECORD FOR COLOR LINE DU MU TO ADVERTISING ART

DEMOCRATIC

WASHINGTON, D. C, March 7 A's

tho tlmo for tho Baltlmoro conventionApproaches Democrats who aro llkoly

'.,to bo In attondanco upon It nro Rettingworried about tho hotel accommoda- -

tlons and even mora about tho hotelprices. Immedtatoly aftor tho meetingot tho national committee at whichBaltimore was selected tho Wilsonboomers wired for thirty rooms at oneof tho principal hotels and tho Har-mon people for twenty. That seemedllko "going some," to UBe a slangphrase, but since then tho OscarUnderwood forces havo rented an en-tir- o

hotel the Eutaw, one of tho oldest, but by no means the worst, of tho

,.1. .u t.tindication of the probable slzo of thocrowd at Baltimore.

castwlthln a

arofor visitors

tho tho

Others to Send Crowds.Big oi. favorcvon to somo otherNever has a state like Ala- - figure. Missouri, Illinois, Ala-

bama needed space of this to bama, Indiana, New Jersey,Its convention atton- - chusetts and Now York all havo

Probably at neither Denver vorite sons entered in the race, andnor St Louis wore there moro a every state candidate means a fewfow of Alabamlans This thousand boomers from home,year they talk of thirty carloads from All Wish a Short Platform.Birmingham alone. Virginia, The desire for a short platform thiswill send its delegation diplomatically year Is real and generally expressedInstructed for Senator Martin, will public men here. opinionhavo thousands of visitors. Pennsyl- - i8 practically universal that the fightvanla, tho delegation from which will should bo made on the tariff question,be split between Harmon and Wilson, and that the tariff can bo expoundedwill probably have its tens of properly from the Democratic view-sand-

but as many of them can go to point in a paragraph. That seemstheir nearby hpmes at night they will reasonable, but all experienco Isadd only to the congestion of tho against The Denver convention.streets and not the pressure on tho was dominated by Mr. Bryan, and hehotels. I wanted a short platform. What ho got

Thoy are saying in New York that Was the longest over adopted,tho Tammany crowd, even without a formulated after an all wranglereal favorito son to boom, will foot in the commlttteo on resolutions,nip nearly 30,000 and it is readily be-- j At Baltimore no one will dominateliovable. Tammany had one-fift- h as the convention at the start. It is

at and that meant a 2000 likely that any candidate will enterroilo railroad journey, besides a con-- ' the convention with a majority of thevention at end, the of which delegates pledged to him. Moreover,was a foregono conclusion and which while the aspirants all are sterlingno number of boomers could change Democrats, there is to bo ain tho slightest particular.

Some Forgotten Resolutions.After each national convention for

the last sixteen years two things havo !

been agreed upon solemnly by tho.nIace for scar Underwood.press and by tho politicians. First, itis time to limit tho size of the con-

vention hall so the orderly de-

liberation of the serious minded dele-gates shall not be disturbed by thoclamor of tho emotional rabblo In thegalleries; second, political plat-- 1

forms must be made shorter orderthat the busy man may read themcarefully and judge of the merits ofthe rival programmes.

As a of this really unanimousexpression of opinion after every con-

vention sinco 1896 tho convention hallshave continually grown larger Balti- -

party ox- - Ifquestion

ofof Sherman antitrust impo-th- o

personalIt violators

In

DESIGNS

UPON PORTUG L

PARIS, March 8. In connectionwith the news of a deadlock

Prnnco-Spanis- h Moroccan negotiationsa strange rumor 1b circulating inFrench diplomatic circles. It no-

thing less than that Spain is contem-

plating intervening In Portugalfinally the smalied nation.Some of tho careful students of dip- -

loraacy bolievo this Is tho only'

explanation, of the doggedobstinacy with which Spain is holdingout In tho negotiations with Francoon tho Moroccan

Spain's attitude Is said to bo basedon tho theory that the situation InPortugal will soon an impossibleone. It said that already well dress-

ed persons cannot appear onstreets without Insulted bymob. It Is Is In-

creasing dally and willsoon bo necessary . Spain, keeptho other powers Interfering, will

In and manage affairs. With thatview It will withdraw Its troops

'from Morocco .use In thoneighboring, state; It Is expected

that tho Portuguoso republic will fadeInto history. Spain Is said to bo es-

pecially anxious for this consumma-

tion because It that there Is al-

ways danger that strenuous neigh- -

HAWAIIAN STAR

tho in half a century. The city Isa fw hour8' rldo ot half

dozen of tho biggest cities of theJUnited States. Sleoplng cars notessential from Boston on

north, Richmond south.

bofore Ohio,extent

thanscoro present.

which

among The

thou- -

it.

platformnight

y

Denver

tho action

likely

that

thatin

result

bolng

then

Pittsburg on tho west nnd tho conslderablo towns that Ho between.

Many Candidates Excite Interest.But more. It is the first convention

of that party since 1892 In which alarge number of widely known candi-dates aro bo discussed, and re-

sult of which three months before Itsdate is wholly In doubt. No man cansay with certainty, or withany reason for the faith that is In him,today, whom that convention willnominate. Tho chances shifted from

.Harmon to Wilson, from Wilson toU1,t

wide diversity In the issues they desire to discussed. , The platformfor Governor Wilson, for example,would hardly mako a good standing

Cannot Limit the Issues. '

Moreover, much the wisermen In the party wish to holddown Issues of the campaign tothe tariff discussion, It be impos- -

slble. Congress is putting that prudentprogram out of commission. TheDemocrats will have to indorse thoaction of their majority In the house,and that Indorsement will compel ut-

terances on on the Russiantreaty, on the monetary trust investi-gation and now on excise tax onincomes. With Wilson or Clark thonominee the Initiative and referendum

bor will incite revolution in tho king-dom.

"What will the rest of Europe say tosuch a move?" asked tho correspond-ent of Tho Chicago Daily News today

a man ot high authority Inaffairs.

"Only three powers can object," hereplied. "Thoy England, Francoand Germany, but thoy will bo com-

pensated by getting territory In Africa.Franco will get the whole Morocco,England will bo given thp Azores andMadcrla, and Germany will get An-

gola."

ARCTIC EXPLORER ABANDONED.

NEW YORK, Marcn 9. Harry V.Radford, arctic fellow of theAmerican Geographical society andmember of tho Arctic club, who left

city in February, 1909, for fouri . I i n rtjrt;uiO Ul 3AJIUIU11UU 111 UUllUUlll VjU'

nada, Is reported to havo been forsak- -

en by his guides in the heart of thebarren lands, near Greet Bear lake,about 500 miles Inland. Ho Is believedto have been left without provisions.

A letter telling of Radford's plightreached tho Arctic club hero last night.It said that two IndlanB hired by Radford accompany him had visitedFort Reservation last month and saidthat they deserted Radford last fall.

WOMAN SUFFRAGE IN OHIO.

Tho fourth constitutional conventionof Ohio has adopted a proposal toamend the stato constitution so rsto permit women to participate In allelections.

4

Flno Job at Star office

more promises 16,500 seats, and tho necessarily will fill much space In theplatform continually have j declaration of principles. Harmon

panded until they mako fair sized shall bo a dominant force thepamphlets in themselves. of tho literal enforcement tho

Tho really colossal proportions law and theexpected attendance at Baltimore sition of penalties on.lndl-ar- o

easy of explanation. Is the first vldual will come In forconvention to be held tended discussion.

in the

Is

andannexing

thatplausible

question.

boIs

thetho

Anarchy, declared,Intervention

tofrom

stepend In

and thom

feolsIts

onall

to tho

prophesy

have

however,may

thowill

pensions,

tho

of Inter-national

are

of

explorer,

this

to

Printing tho

BERLIN, March D. The situationin tho Westphallan coal mining dis-

trict of western Gormnny is becominga source of anxiety throughout thoempire, which is awaiting in BUspcncetho outebmo of the meeting In Dort-mund today when representatives ottho threo leading minora' organizationswill decide whether to strike. Con-

sidering tho temper among tho work-men sinco tho ownors refused to meettheir demands for wage Increasesranging from five to ten per cent, ap-

prehension has been general and thoauthorities have been preparing fortho worst.

Tho strike, if ordered, would affect350,000 men more or levss directly,though, as somo of the organizationsaro unwilling to quit work, It is supposed that at first only about half thatnumber would go out.

Men Are Being Imported.The owners are importing miners

from other parts of Europe and thehostility that Is bound to ariso betweenthc.io and the strikers is an ominousfeature of tho situation. Whether ornot a strike is ordered, tho situationwill remain serious nnd, taken in connection with ho strike in England, itis causing much uneasiness In busi-

ness circles."It Is manlflest," said Herr Gode-froy- ,

director of a great coal distribution agency in Hamburg, to the correspondent of The Chicago DallyNews today, "that even If tho Englishstrike is s'tled soon, the consequen- -

cm will be felt for many weeks, esiecl-all- y

as tho immediate resumption of

English exportation wl'l be impossible.Expect Advance in America.

"As for the Westphallan mines, orders for export no longer are except-

ed. Tho owners are hoarding theirsupplies and as a consequence we ox-po-

a great advance in tho prices of

American coal, which will undoubted-

ly bo shipped In considerable quan-

tities to South America and the Med-

iterranean countries. Itfty especiallywill need great quantities of coal to

'maintain Its Industries." r

Herr Delbrueck, secretary of the In-

terior, is making strong efforts to ef-

fect a settlement In Westphalia, butwith little prospect of success. Theauthorities have ordered detachmentsof mounted gendarmes to the miningcenters.

Socialist Proclamation.Leaders of the Socialist Miners'

union issued a proclamation, after ameeting today at which the replies

of the mine owners to tho demandsof tho men for an Increase of wages

of fifteen per cent were thoroughlydiscuFsed, saying over 200,000 minerswould go on strike In the Westphallan

coal district next week unless themine owners reversed their decisionnot to grant the advance. Efforts of

tho government .to bring about media-

tion aro declared by the miners to bo

too late.Miners in the Hanover coal district

havo followed the example of those intho Westphallan and Slleslan Holds

and today demanded a minimum wage

of $25. They threaten to sirmeMarch 15 unless this is granted.

"WITH WINGS AS EAGLES.."Tho old Hebrew prophets were

given to daring Imagery. Looking up

Into the deop blue of the Syrian sky

Isaiah saw an eagle with almost In

credible speed mounting up In long

spirals toward the sun. Finding in

the great bird a fit symbol or strengthand buoyancy, ho said: "They thatwait upon the Lord shall renew theirstrength; they shall mount up withwings as eagles."

In all ages men have dreamt of exorcising dominion over tho air. Theprophets and the poets have droameddreams and seen visions of the con-

quest of the skies. At last man hasattained what for ages seemed the un

attainable. In tho most literal senseman today mounts up with wings aseagles. It Is Indeed an open question

whether any eaglo ever flew at thespeed Vedrlnes attained a week ago

in France when ho covered 100 kilo-motor-

or 62.1 miles, in 37 minutes.Nothing that man has heretoforemado neither steam engine nor mo-

tor car, nor electric locomotive, noriceboat, nor ballon has been able totravel at tho rate of over a hundredmiles an hour nnd keep up that speedfor any lengthy porlod. It Is antici-

pated that Improvements now beingmade In French aoroplano engineswill IncreaBo tho speed to 125 milesan hour. Toronto Globe.

Wo sometimes think the fool-klll-

should bo prosecutea ror criminal negJlgenco.

WAILUKU, March 21. (Weekly

Times.) Tho Filipinos are making a

record for themBOlves along the linoof potty thieving. Thcro Is not aweek but ono or moro of thom In andaround Walluku are arrested for steal-

ing something, moro trllles mostly,from Chinese stores.

Last Friday, about 9 o'clock In thomorning, Ah Leong, who keeps a storeIn Wnlkapu, had to leave It for a shorttime and going off carefully locked thodoor. During hls absence a Filipinoappeared on the scene, broke a panelIn the sldo door and entered the store.Once inside ho selected about 15

good cigars, 10 cents in money and aflash light. Making a hasty retreathe' repaired to the camp with hisbooty, which ho generously dividedwith a friend, tolling him all abouthis little expedition, and giving himto understand that mum was thoword.

In 1a little whlio Deputy, SheriffFerreira camo on the scene and tookboth men In charge, after which fol-

lowed a full, detailed account of theburglary. Pedro will go before thejury on a charge of burglary In thesecond degree, and his friend, the re-

ceiver of stolen goods, was taken be-

fore tho district court, nnd on hisplea of guilty was given 6 months InJail and a flno of 10.00.

Hawaii may, in some distant future,succeed In tho reconstruction and re-

demptionof

of these little brown men,make good citizens out of thom. Sofar It seems a long way off, andthose now living may never see it.They steal from strangers and fromeach other. It Is a common thine forthose of them who go to work dur-

ing the day to come homo In thenight and find that somo fellow, whopretended to bo sick and stayed awayfrom work, has take.v everything Insight in the way of money andclothes, nnd gonio on his way re-

joicing: As a Ttilo hit! joy is short-lived. A free ride in tho elegant M.

P. D. Cadillac by the side of SheriffCrowell is the end of all festivitiesfor some time to come.

Last Monday there were a numberof gambling cases, eighteen in all,fifteen of which forfeited their ballof $5 each, and three others at $15each. SImizi of Kahulul donated thos'um of ?5 for riding a bicycle withouta light on the public road at night.

Hirata of Kahulul asaulted ono Ta-ka-

with a pocket knife, lnfllctlugtwo deep and dangerous cuts on thebody of his victim, for which ho isnow In prison and facing a charge ofassault with a weapon. His case will ,

come up for a' hearing at tho presentterm of the circuit court.

Last Saturday night Polico Officer.loo Souza and camp boss .Tutaro wentinto tho hitter's camn for tho purposeof bringing to a closo a very noisygathering of Japs, known as Oklna- -

was. There were about a hundredor moro of thom at a grand feast, andthey were having a high tlmo, revel- -

Ing In a big spread of their naUonaldainties, when tho noliceman andcamp boss stepped In and demandedthat festivities cease In order to al-

low the rest of tho camp to sleep.The host and guests refused In a lan-

guage that was readily understood.A free fight followed, In which tableswere overturned, delicacies dumpedon the ground and Souza and Jutarorather badly used up, so badly infact, that Souza is now in tho PnlaHospital and Jutaro wearing severalugly cuts about tho head. The campboss must havo been an unwelcome,guest at tho feast In tho camp overwhich he has long held undisputedsway.

TWO WIVE& LEGAL; I

WHAT CAN MAN DO?

PITTSBURG, Kan., March 9. PeterSharp, who recently tried tho oxperl- -

mont of living peaceably .with twowives, both regarded as legal, todaywas refusod a dlvorco from Cellaohnrn wifn Nn

Colla Sharp was not In court and.. , , . '1. - 1.. .1 I I.- - U n n.ntluu juuu ttmu no vuuiu nut. giuui mo

decree unless sho agreed.Peter Sharp's first wife, Anna Cath

arlno, became separated from him Intho confusion of tho great Chicago

Anno Catharine appeared.Sham tried to solvo tho dilemma by

giving two women equal rights Inhis house. Dissatisfied with tho re-

sult, filed action against tho last

NEW YORK, March 8. Oswald Gar-rlso- n

Vlllard, ns chairman of tho boardof directors of tho Natlonnl Associa-

tion for tho Advancement ot ColoredPeople, mado public today a letter hehas written to Lewis Cass Ledyardof this city, president of the AmericanBar Association, protesting againsttho action of executlvo commltteoof Bar association, which recentlyrescinded tho membership of WilliamH. Lewis, a Boston negro, now nnassistant United States attorney-genera- l.

Ho was elected a member oftho association while ho waB an as-

sistant United States district attorneyIn Massachusetts. Attorney-Genera- l

Wickcrsham has denounced tho actiontaken against Lewis and now Mr. Vll-

lard officially appeals to Mr. Ledyard.Text of the Letter.

Tho letter to Mr. ledyard follows:"My Dear Sir Tho board of direct-

ors of this association wishes to ex-

press to you its profound regret attho action of tho executlvo coraltteoof the Bar association In regard toWilliam H. Lewis. Wo believe thisaction to be illegal and contrary tothe principle of justice, for which yourassociation must stand. Wo cannotthink that It reflects tho opinion ofthe body of high minded, intelligentmen who make up your membership.

"There is a growing criticism todayof tho cttitdue of tho courts In thoUnited States toward colored men. Woourselves havo found numerous cases

dlsrlminatlon solely because ofcolor.

Would Justify Crlslclsm."If an organization pledged 'to ad-

vance the sciencco of jurisprudencce,to promote the administration of just-

ice,' shows its raco prejudice by ex-

cluding a man regularly elected IntoIts membership when it finds that heIs colored this criticism will bo justified; and it will be justified as applied to men high in the legal propassion who wo have had a right tobelievo stood for tho impartial administration of the law to black andwhito alike.

"We wish to express to you pro

found conviction that tho effort to dismiss from your membership becauseof his color a man of merit and high

attainment Is a denial of justice and ablow at democracy."

CONSTITUTIONALISM

OR GERMANY

BERLIN, March 8. German libernls, as tho iirst fruits of triumphIn tho late elections, hnvo assured thoadoption of legislation which practlcally gives tho reichstag the right to

censure acts ot tho government andpass judgment on lie policies of thosovereign and his ministers. An

amendment soon to be adopted pro- -

vides that tho reichstag, at tho requestot thirty of Its members, must iche

vote on the question of approvingor uisapprov.ng an B"vu,muCurcs which havo been made tho subject ot Interpellations.

Heretofore Interpellations in theGerman parliament have been futile

tho chancellor merely answering In

terrogatorlcs and the deputies beingpowerless to tako further action. Thomeasure marks the most radical Btep

taken toward tho Introduction of constitutionalism, as tho chancellor, who,nriuiiimnlilir In rPRTinnKitlln nnlV tO thO

ka nQW ust 8Ubm,t to tho crltlc.

lama Qf tho pcoplo.s representatives,Pln.n,.Hvn. hltterlv oonosed

to tho measure. Had it been In cfTect

at the tlmo of tho Morocco debate,they point out, Chancellor Bethmann-Hollwc- e

would havo been put In thom,inBHnRanir nosltlon of carrying on

a oregn poiCy that was being openly

denounced by a sweeping majority ofreichstag members.

Radical Reichstag Speaker.BERLN. March 8. Johannes

Kaempf, tho radical deputy for centralTipriin. was elected sneaker of thoreichstag today.

SHOULD BE PLEASANT TO TAKEWhen a medicine must bo given to

young children it should bo pleasantto take. Chamberlain's Cough Item

a flavor similar to maplo syrup, makinir It pleasant to take. It has nosuperior for colds, croup and whoopIng cought. For salo by all dealers.Benson. Smith & Co., agents forHawaii.

fire. Thirty years later, believing Mer'edy Is mado from loaf sugar, and thodead, Sharp married again. Last year) roots used In Its preparation gives It

the

howife.

thotho

our

their

tho

CHICAGO, March 8. Adeptness ofCol. Roosevolt In coining oxtremelypopular word phrases Is ascribed byono of tho country's foremost educat-ors as the reason for tho colonel'sIKjpularlty with people of all classes I

in thr United States. Tho educator,who was a Chicago visitor last week,Is a personal friend of Col. Rooseveltand asked that his name bo not dis-

closed."My hat Is In thq ring," "out patients

of Bedlnm." "naturo fakers," "malefactors of great wealth" and a hostof other bywords emanating from thoformer president were cited as examples ot his unique, ability.

People Like Snappy Phrases."People like these snappy phraBcs

that Col. Roosevelt hits off so aptly,"tho educator declared. "The newspapers take to these 'feature expres-sions,' play them up and they make agreat hit with thoso who read them.Take, for example, the colonel's lat-

est, 'My hat Is In tho ring.' It washis way of hinting that he was aboutto declare ho would bo a candidate fortho nomination of president. Therewas hardly a newspaper In tho landthat didn't have that phraso in head-lines on its first page.

'Whenever Col. Roosevolt has anything to say It may bo relied upon thatho will say It In a popular way andthat somewhere In his remarks therowill be a now phraso that will fit Innewpaper headl'ncs. Tako tho phrasoof 'nature faker-- ' Theso are two wordsthat often can bo combined with otherwords into a pleasing headline fortho 'Roosevelt story.' Tho same istrue about tho expression coined byRoosevolt, 'raco suicide.' I believo

BANK OF ENGLAND

CAN

Marco Polo found bank-note- s in i

China ages ago printed on paper madofrom the bark of tho mulberry tree.One of the notes, upon which thegreat Venetian traveler himself mayhavo gazed, Is on exhibition at thisday In tho office of an American company. It Is ono of a series issued bytho Ming dynasty about 1399 A. D

current anywhere under heaven'seems

thirteen billface than any man could cover withboth It is goodfor "ono string of cash."

The provision against forgery in

simple tho point of"Counterfeiters hereon will bo

Persons information ofwill bo rewarded with

way tho

gave the order and thoheads the have longsince mouldered dust,tho property of tho vanishedand left not so much a shade, but

carven teak, still croaks Its harshwarjilng can under-stand

Tho ot continental Eu-

rope depend exclusively upon color- -

work, protect their paper currency,and several of the ofi,.,their bureau of and print-ing though what connection theromay be between and en-

graving myBtery. Many Italianbank-note- s are easyTho Bank ot Spain has of lato aban-doned Its own plant, because its notes

imitated bo thatcounterfeits by thobank without question. A con-

cern now doesTho Bank ot England notes, accord

ing myth that probablycannot be As a

matter of fact, they can bo Imitatedreadily enough, but little attemptmade protect the notes beyond thoUBe of a water-mar- k paper. The

can be easily copied. A sengelatine fllm, soaked In

water, contact with originalwater-mar- show every detail Inclear relief. thin fllm of copper de

upon this basisupon which a matrix celluloidmade. is pastedupon matrix and rubbed withglass-pape- r exact water-mar-k

produced.practical safeguard of

that the former president has donomore In the of coining nowphrasos than any wrltor of tho day.

He Outclasses Sherman."In all his phrases thcro Is tho snap- -

py, straight from the shoulder char- -

ECierlstlc of the man. Ho uses posl-tlv- o

words nnd comb'nes thom moateffectively. Gen. Sherman'sstatement, 'War Is h 1,' has boon out-

classed by many of Uoosevelt's utter-ances.

"Col. Roosevolt knows the publicityart and tho value It as otherpolitician of the time," educatorwent on. "Ho knows just what tho

will play up hardestho knows when they will bo able toglvo his utterances and actions thomost space. In measure, he govornshimself

you remombc. the day Roose-velt declared that he would acceptnomination the he normally

In thorace? It was a Monday morning.Roosevelt choso tho day when thopapers could give him the most spaceIt be possible, by consulting thofiles, find scores of coups that thoformer president execute' Mondaymorning.

Hamilton Club Incident."Many people havo doubted his sin-

cerity. I believe that he Is sincere, butthat combined with his sincerity hispublicity method. Ho makes thogo hand In Remember tho tlmohe refused sit at the Hamilton club'3banquet If William Lorimcr waa pres-

ent? That a example. Ho prob"

ably what hp said and meantit honestly, but I'll wager that ho alsohad an eye publicity."

NOTES

EASILY BE -- IMITATED

fectiveness is the custom of the Bankof England cancel every note thatis returned the bank nnd issuo an-

other its place. and prac-tice of keeping a record of tho num-bers of all bank-note- s used in everybusiness establishment, keep alive akeen senso of responsibility, whichadds security. The custom of cir-

culating soiled bank-note- ot course,

than rumpled and one.

ON WAY AS TRAINS CRASH.AUGUSTA, Ga.. March 8. Beforo

two trains the Central Georgiarailway wore speeding headtoward eaccji had actually crash-ed early today a wrecking train was

slon.A freight who discover-

ed the error which he wouldcause wreck, gave the alarm and be-

foro the doomed trains crashed, help

tho wreck.

GROWLS.LONDON. March 9. The Times this

morning editorially tho sur-prise with wh'ch charge

lof P'nn ftnd tho Eoiith pole lnstoadof the north pole was received. saysthis change and the unnecessary sec-recy with which it was surrounded

felt bo at variance with thospirit of fair competition and that thoenterprise appeared In the light of amere dash tho British ex-pedition. It adds that although Brit-ish feeling have been In sym-

pathy with such nn enterprise Ithad been openly declared, tho circumstances of its Inception had produceda less favorable

POKE8 FUN AT COL. ROOSEVELT.LONDON, March 9. "In view ot Co

Roosvelt's shy disposition and hatredof publicity," says Punch, in his decision accept tho nomination forpresident tho Interest ot his country docs credit."

GOOD WEATHER.Thero good at Halclwa

and tho crowd going that way.Follow along to pence and content-ment for Halelwa Is tho best placo Inthe Islands for rest recreation.

there and tho rich redgrow thick In your body; you

will feol llko a now being. Addressletters to not Walalua.

and have been printed from gives the counterfeiter his best oppor-woode-n

blocks a sheet of paper tunity. Forgery Is much read-nin- e

by Inches a bigger sur- - Hj' detected in n crisp, stiff, new

hands outstretched.

severityexecut-

ed. givingcounterfeiters

meant

would

taels 250, and in addition, will re-- ! hurrying on its to point,celve the property belonging to thoSvhero the passenger and heavycriminal." Tho head of tho Emperor freight were expected to bo in colli- -

who loppedof counterfeiters

Impalpablecriminal

as

famous

himself

tho faded old bank-note- pressed bo-- j was speeding toward Four per-twee- n

two sheets of glass and framed ' sons were killed and n dozen hurt Inin

to him whoIt.

governments

tolarge banks is- -

.. i i r

engraving

engineeringIs a

to counterfeit.

wore successfullywere accepted

privatetho work.

to a will neverdie, counterfeited.

Isto

sitized coldafter an

willA

posited thoin is

If a sheet of paperthis

tho Is

One great ef- -

way

of notho

newspapers and

aaccordingly.

"Dotho

daypresidential

on

toon

istwo

haud.to

is good

to

toto

in This, the

to

in a dirty

HELP

on ofthat on

other

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THUNDERER

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Page 10: HAWAIIAN STAR. · 2015. 6. 2. · WAIALEE PLAN! taken up with the superintendent of public works when he returns. ... business, Mr. Harris has been Inter-ested in Y. M. C.' A. work

TUN THB HAWAIIAN STAR, FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1912.

House

NubeisGet In Hue for mall delivery by

numbering your Iioum. Stand-

ard aluminum numbers now in

stock.

Handsome and inexpensive.

Lewers &Cooke, Ltd.

177 So. King St.

IT'S ONLY IN THE

Regal ShoesTHAT YOU CAN GET QUARTER

SIZES.

R.ejl Shoe StoreKing and Bethel. King and Bethel

Wright-Hustac- eLIMITED.

;, Phone 1148.' Gor. King and South Sts.

Successor toW. W. WRIGHT & CO., Ltd.

i also

Kellogg & DempseyAuto, Motor and Carriage Repairing.

, Painting, Trimming,Horseshoeing.

Does Your Scalp Itch?Are you bothered with the dandruff

scale? If you are a sufferer seekingrelief, try

PACHECO'S DANDRUFF KILLERand you will find immediate alleria-tio-.

Sold by all druggists and atPACHECO'S BARBER SHOP,

Port Street ,

C. Brewer & Co,LIMITED.

Sugar FactorsanS

OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS

E. F. Bishop .....Presides!Geo. H. Robertson

Vice-Preside- ManageIf. W. North TreasurerRichard Ivors SecretaryJ. R. Gait AuditorGeo. R. Carter M DirectorC. H. Cooke M ...DirectorR. A. Cooke DirectorA. Gartley Director

"DUXBAK" LEATHER BELTINGby Insuring a minimum loss of yower

SAVES FUELCatton, Neill & Co., Ltd.

Sole Agents.Second and South Sts., Honolulu.

NELSON B. LANSING, Distributor

FOR S-A.JL-E

Bridge and Beach Stores tor Goalor Wood.

Quick Meal Blue Flamo Oil BtoveiPerfection Oil Stoves.Giant Burner Gasoline Stoves.

EMMELUTH CO., LTD.

PinectarSold Everywhere

STORIES TOLD

HI THE CAPITAL

WASHINGTON. 1). v.. March 7.- -

Senator Wesley I.. Jones of Washing- -

ton atate halls from the busy littlecity of North Yakima, t lit heart of oneof the most luxuriant Irrigated coun-

tries anywhere on oarth. Withoutwater the Yuklnm valley would he asand country with anno brush for Itsonly earthly anchor. Its warm summers are good for the fruit it producesand tbo soil and the irrigation ditchesdo the rc.it. The senator takes spe-

cial delight in tolling a stock storyon North Yakima which illustrateshow deeply irrigation has made anImpression on that section.

The senator says thnt a certain mandied and wont to hades, carrying withhim the common notion that tho un-

known habitation of undesirable citi-

zens was about the hottest place onret'ord. instead, the senator says, hefound It abounding in magnificentforest trees and thickly studded withluxuriant shrubbery, which kept itsgreenness despite the warmth of thoatmosphere. Tho newcomer, says thosenator, made inquiry of tho propriet-or of tho place for the reason hadeswas not as advertised.

"Oh, that's easy, responded thoproprietor. "Wo had a man como downhere from North Yakima who com-plaine- d

that we were not making thomost of our opiortuultics, so. he Jiwtdug a few irrigation ditches and thereyou are."

Angels Chained in Heaven.Senator Hobert L. Taylor of Tennes-

see tells a story on his section of thecountry which well matches that ofSenator Jone.3. Accordlm to SenatorTaylor, a Tennessee man died andwent to heaven. As he was about toenter tho gates he espied a number ofangels chained to tho "alabasterwalls." The man was much struckby this picture and inquired of St.Peter it.3 meaning.

"Oh, those people are all from Tennessee," said St Peter, "and if we didnot chain them they would all go backhome."

1 T 111

BUYS INSTATES

Hawaii bought from the mainlandmarkets during tho calendar year end'lng December 31 products to the valueof $21,017,747. A very considerableportion of this amount was paid forfoodstuffs, much of which it is claimed might be raised locally to good advantage. For instance $25,04G went toCalifornia for onions, while MarketingSuperintendent Starrett claim.? thatHawaii should bo furnishing onionsto California, and appears to bo de-

monstrating that it can be done. This$25,000 does not by any means represent all the onions imported to theIslands, probably even a greater quantlty being brought frcm Australia, andnot Included in the government statistics from which these figures are obtained. Poultry and eggs to a valueof over $50,000 it would also seemshould be raised cheaper and betterright at home.

Following Is a partial list of our lmports for 1911, a part of which, itwould seem, might well bo of localproduction:BeanB and dried peart, 1C.CG4

bushels $ 43,425Onions, 29,500 bushels 25.04G

Potatoes (Irish), 127,901 bushels 140,037

Vegetables (canned) 66,930Other vegetables (inc. pickles

anu sauces) 49,635'obacco, cigars, clgarets .... G31 3551

Starch, 445,977 )n 18,098Butter, 658,887 lbs J77.771Cheese, 239,004 !bs 38,388Milk (condensed) 2,485,85.

lbs 214,lf.lBeef, canned, 307,400 lbs 42,130Beef, fresh, 318,897 lbs 29,551Bacon, 148,605 lbs 31,229Hams and shoulders, 425,125

lbs 74,707Lard, 223,389 lbs :.. 23,025Lard compounds and substi

tutes, 1,002,689 lbs. .' 85,243Poultry 28,828Eggs, 115,380 doz 29,993Hay, 14.4G4 tons 274,293Oranges, 34,409 boxes 83,074

Fish and fish product! 428,882Coffee, 81.545 lbs 14,689Brooms and brushes 34,111Barley, 1,004,278 bush 671,755Bran, middlings and mill feed,

19,717 tons 515,398Corn, 55,202 buBh 48,943Oats, 218.430 bush 112,077Wheat, 88,227 bUBh 78,717Horsefl, 743 120,864Mules, 610 123,810

Leading hat cleaners formerly of1164 Fort street removed to tho now0. M. Cooke building, Beretanla streetnear Nuuanu avenue.

Tho way to get a reputation for good

ness la to be good.

IN THI CIRCUIT COURT OF THKFIRST JUDICIAL OfROUIT, TERRITORY OF HAWAII 'AT CHAM-BHR-

IN PROBATE.In the Matter of the Estate of Mary

Mist, Defleaied.On reading and filing the petition of

Herbert W. M. Mist, 't the City andCounty of Honolulu, Territory of 1 In.--

wall, Executor of tin Will of MnryMitt, late of Honolulu aforosaid, de-

ceased, wherein he asks to ho allowedthe sum of $671.42 and charges him-

self with the sum of $478.26 and asksthat tho snmo may bo examined nndapproved, and that a final ordor maybo mado of distribution of tho prop-

erty remaining in his hands to thopersons entitled thoroto and discharging him from nil further and futureresponsibility and liability undor trustas auch Kxecutor.

It Is Ordered, That Monday tho 8thday of April, 1912, at nlno o'clock a.m. beforo the Judgo of said Court attho. courtroom of said Court at Honolulu aforesaid, bo and tho samohereby Is appointed as tho time andplace for hearing said petition andaccounts, and that all persons interested may then and there appear andshow cause, if any thby have, why thosamo should not bo granted, and maypresont cvldenco as to who arc en-

titled to tho said property.Dated, March 1, 1&12.

JOHN MARCALLINO,By tho Court: '

Clerk.Holmes, Stanley & Olson, attorneys

for petitioner.4ts March 1, 8, 15, 22.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFIRST JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, TERRITORY OF HAWAII. AT CHA-MBERSIN PROBATE.

In the Malter of the Estate of Thomas S. Kay, Deceased.

Upon reading and filing the petitionof Henry Waterhouso Trust Co. Ltd.,an Hawaiian corporation having itsprincipal office in tho City and Countyof Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, administrator with tho wil land codicilannexed of tho Estate of ThomaB S.Kay, late of Honolulu aforosaid, deceased, wherein It asks to bo allowedthe sum of $7198.11 and charges itselfwith the sum of $27,715.47 and asksthat the samo may be examined andapproved, and that a final order maybe madoof distribution of the prop-

erty remaining In its hands to thepersons theret entitled and discharging it and its surety from all furtherand .future responsibility and liabilityunder trust as such administrator withtho will and codicil annexed.

It Is ordered that Monday the 15thday of April, 1912, at nine o'clock a.

m., beforo tho Judgo of said Court,at tho courtroom of said Court at Ho-

nolulu aforesaid, Do and the samehereby is appointed as tho time andplace for hearing said petition andaccounts, and that all persons inter-

ested may then and there appear andshow cause, It they have, why thosame should not bo. granted, and maypresent evidence as to who are entitled to tho said property.

Dated, Honolulu, . this 7th day ofMarch, 1912.

By tho court: .JOHN MARCALLINO,

Clerk.Holmes, Stanley & Olson, attorneys

for petitioner.4ts March 8, 15, 22, 29.

ELECTION OF OFFICERS.Laupahoehoe Sugar Company.

At the annual meeting of the abovecompany, held In Honolulu on March1, 1912, tho following officers wereelected to serve for the ensuing year:President Mr. F. M. SwanzyVice-Preside- .Mr. G. F. DaviesTreasurer Mr. W. H. BalrdSecretary Mr. E. H. WodehouseAuditor Mr. H. W. M. Mist

E. H. WODEHOUSE,Secretary.

Honolulu, T. H. March 1, 1912.

4ts March 8, 15, 22, 29.

ELECTION Os OFFICERS.Pepeekeo Sugar Company.

At the annual meeting of the share-

holders of the Pepeekeo Sugar Com-

pany, hold In Honolulu, T. H., on

March 6, 1912, the following officersand directors were duly elected toserve for the ensuing year:E. F. Bishop PresidentW. H. Balrd Vice-Preside-

Geo. H. Robertson TreasurerW. W. North., SecretaryS. M. Damon DirectorT. R. Robinson Auditor

All of tho. above named, with thoexception of tho Auditor, constitutetho Board of Directors.

E. A. R. ROSS.Acting Secretary, Pepeekeo Sugar

Company..Honolulu, March 6, 1912.

4ts March 7, 14, 1, 28.

NOTICE.Notice is hereby given that a spe:

cial meeting of the stockholders of

tho .Pinectar Sales Company, Limited,will be held at the ofilco of tho com-pan- y

at room 203 Boston building,Honolulu, on Saturday, tne 23d day ofMarch, 1912, at 2:30 o'clock p. m. forthe purpose of electing officers for theensuing year, and for tho transactionof such other businoss as may prop-

erly come before it.EMIL A. BERNDT,

President.R. A. WOODWARD,

Secretary.

Commissioner'sSale

OP

Valuable Real EstateS1TUATI8 ON

SCHOOL STREET, HONOLULU, CITYAND COUNTY OF HONOLULU,

TERRITORY OF HAWAII.

Pursuant to an intorlocutory Do-cre- o

mado by tho Honornblo HonryE. Cooper, First Judgo of tho CircuitCourt of tho First Judicial Circuit ottho Territory of Hawaii, on tho 18thday of January, A. D. 1912, at Cham-bor-

in Equity, In an action entitled,"Rebecca Lukua and Stophon Lukua,petitioners, vb. Kolupalna Manala, N.Manala, David P. Waiwaiolo, LukaManula, P. Manula, Abraham Panul,Sarah Panul, James Kalona, JamesKalona, Jr., a minor, Kawahaloa Kal-

ona, a minor, Kalaohawall Kalona, aminor, Solomon Kalona, a minor, anaKalawaia Kalona, a minor, respond-ents, Bill for Partition," (Equity Di-

vision, No. 1809), the undersigned, asCommissioner, duly appointed andconstituted as such by Bald Interloc-utory Decree, will sell, at public auc-

tion, to the highest and best bidderfor cash, subject to confirmation bytho Court, on

Saturday, the 23rd Day ofMarch, A. D. 1912

AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON OF SAID DAY,at tho Salesrooms of James F. Morgan, Esq., 817-85- 7 Kaahumanu street,In Honolulu, City and County of Ho-

nolulu, Territory of Hawaii, all thatcertain piece or parcel of land situate on School street, Honolulu aforesaid, being a part of tho land described In Royal Patent 2G78, LandCommission Award 1146, and moreparticularly described as follows:

Beginning at the North corner ofthis lot, on tho makal side of thepresent line of School street, tho trueazimuth and distance being 341 06'100.4 feet from the Street Monumentnear the East corner of Liliha andSchool streets, said monument beingon an offset of 17 feet to tho Southeast side of Liliha street, runningNortheasterly, and an offset of 14.5

feet to the Northeast side of Schoolstreet, running Northwesterly, andrunning by true azimuth;

1. 322 50' 154.9 feet along presentmakal lino of. School Street.

2. 75" 50 77.4 feet along fence;3. 146 35' 6.6 feet;4. 52 25' 76.4 feet to a stake;5. 145 10' 127.0 feet along fence;6. 236 10' 142.3 feet along fence

to the point of beginning.Area, 19,250 square feet.TERMS OF SALE: Cash in United

States Gold Coin; ten per cent (10)of the purchase price to be paid on

the fall of the hammer; balance uponconfirmation of sale by the Court and3xecution and delivery of deed by theCommissioner. Deed to be at expenseof purchaser.

For further particulars apply to J.Lightfoot, Esq., attorney for petition-ers, at his offices, McCandless Build-

ing, Honolulu; Messrs. Smith, War-ren & Heraenway, attorneys for re-

spondents, at their offices, Judd Build-ing, Honolulu; James F. Morgan, Esq.,auctioneer, at his salesrooms, 847-85- 7

Kaahumanu street, Honolulu, or tothe undersigned, at his office in theCircuit Court Building, corner Hoteland Alakca streets, Honolulu, afore-

said.M. T. SIMONTON,

Commissioner.Dated: Honolulu, T. H., February

23, A. D. 1912.5ts Feb. 23, Mch. 1, 8, 15, 22.

NOTICE.All members or tho 10th Precinct,

Republican Club, of tho 5th District,are respectfully requested to be pres-

ent at a Special Meeting to be heldon Friday evening, March 22nd, 1912,at 7:30 o'clock in the building, cornerot Beckley Street and Guliclc Avenue.Business of importance.

Per order of the Chairman.ED. HOPKINS,

Secretary.2t

ELECTION OF OFFICERS.

Honolulu Iron Works Company.At the annual meeting of the stock-

holders of the Honolulu Iron WorksCompany, held at the offices of Theo.H. Davies '& Co., Ltd., In Honolulu, onThursday, the 29th ot February, 1912,

tho following officers and directorswere duly elected to serve during thoensuing year:

President and Director Mr. F. M.Swanzy.

First Vice-Preside- and DlrectorpMr. G. H. Robertson.

Second Vice-Preside- and DirectorMr. E. D. Tennoy,Treasurer and Director Mr. G. F.

Davies.Secretary and Director Mr. E. H.

Wodehouse.Auditor Mr. H. W. M. Mist.

E. H. WODEHOUSE,Secretary, Honolulu Iron Works

Company.Honolulu, T. H., March 8, 1912.

4ts March. 8, 15, 22, 29.

Gurney Refrigerator

Price $26.50 (Porcelain.)

CLEANABLE.SAVERS.

Refrigerator Weather,knowledge

Satisfactory Refrigerator

Celebrated Gurneycannot at once to that circulation feature, which, all is only factor

give refrigerator standing, is absolutely complete in Gurney. compartments

can be kept scrupulously and wholesome.

Prices range from $7.50

the the

the

the

fail the the

the

pure

ON EASY TERMScan become proud possessor of Gurney at once.

One-thir- d is down; -3 in 30 days and the 1- -3

sixty days.

45 STYLES IN STOCK.

W. W.HOUSEFURNISHINGS.

THE FINEST MEATSWE SELL BEST MEATS IN MONOLULU BECAUSE

THERE IS SECRET IN KEEPING AND CUTTING WHICH WE

POSSESS. CAN NOT BETTER QUALITY AN

(MetropolitanHEILBRON

Proprietors.Telephone 3445.

BY AUTHORITYRESOLUTION.

No. 630.

Be Resolved by tho Board ofof tho City and County of

Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, thatthe sum of Eight Thousand One Hun- -

dred and Forty-nin- o ($8,149.00) Dol-

lars, ho and tho same hereby appro'priated out of tho Permanent Improve-ment Fund of the Treasury of the Cityand County of Honolulu for an ac-

count known as "Construction, Nuu-

anu Avenue"; provided that if thereat any time bo insufficient money

In said Permanent Improvement Fundfor such purpose, money In the gen-

eral fund be used temporarily there-for, the amount used of moneys ofthe general fund to bo thereafter re-

imbursed to said general fund by trans-fers from such permanent Improve-- 'ment fund.

Introduced by Supervisor,EBEN P. LOW,

Dated, March 19,

Tho foregoing resolution was, atregular meeting held by tho Board ofSupervisors of tho and County otHonolulu on Tuesday, 1912,

on first reading and ordered toprint on .the following vote of saidboard:

Ayes: Amana, Arnold, Dwight, Kru-ge- r,

Low, McClellan, Murray. Total,"7.Noes! None.

E. BUFFANDEAU,Deputy and County Clerk.

ELECTION OF OFFICERS.

Kahaluu Pineapple Ranch Company,Limited.

At tho annual meeting of the stock-

holders of tho Kahaluu PlneapploRanch Company, Limited, held In Ho-

nolulu on March 20tfi, 1912, the fol-

lowing directors wero to servo

ONE

Permanent

THE ONLYKING OF ICE

It is now and with this fact in mind

and with that you want Best and Most

on market, we offer for your

inspection s

You see after

that a All

You a acash final

in

THE

A

YOU FINDWHERE.

AND LOUIS.

It

is

shall

so

1912.a

CityMarch 19,

passed

City

fi

elected

to $150.00. according to size.

1 1

DimondLIMITED

53-5- 7 KING

MeatTelephone 3446

for the ensuing year:Mr. F. W. Macfarlane, Mr. F. Wal-

ter Macfarlano, Mr. George Rodiek,Mr George H. Robertson and Mr. C.J. Falk.

At a subsequent meeting of theBoard of Directors, tho following off-

icers wero elected to serve for theensuing year, viz.:Mr. F. W. Macfarlane PresidentMr. F. Walter Macfarlano. .Vice-Pre-

Mr. C. .1. Falk. .Secretary & TreasurerMr. George Rodiek Auditor

C. J. FALK,Secretary, Kahaluu Pineapple &

Ranch Co., Ltd.Honolulu, T. II., March 20, 1912.

ELECTION OF OFFICERS.

Hamakua Mill Company.At the annual meeting of tho stock-

holders of tho Hamakua Mill Com-pany, held at tho offices of Messrs.Theo. H. Davies & Co., Ltd., in Hono-lulu, on tho 1st of March, 1912, thefollowing officers were duly elected toservo during tho ensuing year:President Mr. F. M. SwanzyVice-Preside- nt Mr. Cecil BrownTreasurer Mr. G. F. DaviesSecretary Mr. E. H. WodehouseAuditor.' Mr. H. W. M. Mist

E. H. WODEHOUSE,.Secretary, Hamakua Mill Company.

Honolulu, T. H March 7, 1912.4ts March 8, 15, 22, 29.

RELIEF AT HAND.

Many sufferers from rheumatismhave been surprised and delightedwith the prompt relief afforded byapplying Chamberlain's Pain- - Balm.Not one case of rheumatism In tenrequires any Internal treatment what-ever. For sale by all dealers. Ben-

son, Smith & Co., agents for Hawaii.

Fino Job Printing at the Star office,

OF

Satisfaction

Line

Market

T

pH 1 pgt!

Price $42.50 (Poredata.)

& Co.,STREET. HONOLULU.

JAMES GUILD CO.

We have just opened a largo shlpment of

Cast Iron Goods.WAFFLE IRONS 3 Sizes.

$1.00, $1.25, $1.50.Gas or Oil Stovo Waffle Irons S1.60- -

DEEP SKILLETS i Sizes.60c, 75c, 85c, $1.00.

HOT CAKE GRIDDLES.50c, 60c, 85c.

Mrs. Pott's Nickel Plated Sad Irons-- 3

Irons, Handle and Stand$1.75 Set.

LEMON SQUEEZERS,With Strong Aluminum Bowls

50c, 75c.

JAMES GUILD CO.King St., near Fort. Telephone 3591

AUTO LIVERYMESSENGER SERVICE.

Agents Sanitary Steam Laundry.

UNION AND HOTEL. PHONE 1326.

SpecialtyAT

Love's BakeryBEST FRESH BREADS

that can be manufactured anywhere.

Prompt delivery throughout citysuburbs.

Phone 1431. 1134 Nuuanu St.

Hnnivs rsary SaleNOW ON

REMARKABLE REDUCTIONS INALL LINES OF HATS FOR MENAND WOMEN.

NUUANU ST. NEAR HOTEL.

is

"la

r

Page 11: HAWAIIAN STAR. · 2015. 6. 2. · WAIALEE PLAN! taken up with the superintendent of public works when he returns. ... business, Mr. Harris has been Inter-ested in Y. M. C.' A. work

Alexander &Baldwin

LIU1TKD.

Su-gra- r FactorsCOMMISSION MERCHANTS

andINSURANCE AGENTS.

AGENTS FOJt' HawaII an Commercial A injurEtomp&ny.

Haiku Sugar Companr.Pala Plantation.Haul Agricultural CompanyHawaiian Sugar Companr.Kahuku Plantation CompanyMcBryde Sugar Company.

'

Kahuku Plantation CompanyKauai Railway Company.Kauai Eloctrio Company.Honolua Ranch.Haiku Fruit & Packing Company.Kami Fruit & Land Company.

f

JUST TWO

Half Dollarsdeposited in our Savings De-

partment entitles you to a HomoBank in which you can deposittho small coins that otherwisewould be spent foolishly. Starta Savings Account today. Everycent depostcd will earn interestand before you reallzo it youwill have a nice sum to yourcredit.

START SAVING NOW.

BANK of HAWAII. Ltd.

Capital and Surplus,

$1,200,000.

ITTRESS

Ttls the quality of cotton used and theway they are made that give Stearns &Foster Mattres&es their perfect comfort andwonderful life. An exclusive 'web process- -

Let us show them to vou today.

We are sole agentsJ." HOPP & COMPANY.

BEFOREtaking a policy of Ufa lniur-anc-e

in any other companyask to soe tho

CONTRACT

in tha

NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL

LIFE INSURANCE COM

PANY OF BOSTON, MA8S.

and compare the many adTantagai It offers with thoaoof other companies.

Castle& Cooke,LIMITED

General Acents.

81 GIP9 iMl BO, LtQ.

CHINESE NEWSPAPER

PUBLISHING AND

JOB PRINTING.

I X

No". O, cor. of Smith and Hotel Stt

xoxocccjj unun6 MAY'S OLD KONA COFFEE,v Best in the MarketY HENRY MAY & CO.9 Phone 1271.ooooooooooooooooo

T.M.S..Makes special rates

paackages.PHONE 1862.

for

Y. WO SING CO.

ParcelDelivery

delivering

Groceries. Fruits. Vegetables, EtaButter 36c lb.: Fresh Dried FrultB.

1186-118-8 Nuuanu" Street.

Telephone 1034. .Box 951

TYRANNY WILL FOLLOW UPSET

OF JUDICIAL DEGREES, SAYS TAFT

TOLEDO, O., Marchrait upoho bc:o :.ibt n:.,Ut ou ;ho recall nf JiiJ.ica ami ;iic rccnl! of Judicialdoeklar.s. ills rem:.:i' could bo in- -

lerptctsd r.j a roi.iy to tho recentspeech of Theodora Roosevelt at

at which the colonel advocated those pollclos, although the prosl- -

dont did not rofor to Col. ltooHovoltnor to his speech by word of Inference.

Utterly without merit or utility andreactionary Instead of progressive,"crudo, revolutionary, fitful and un-

stable," wore the tornvs In which thopresident referred to the recall moth-o- f

rovorslng judicial constructions oftho constitution.

"I hnvo examined with care this pro-

posed method of reversing judicial de-

cisions on constitutional questions,"President Taft said.

"I do not hesitate to say that Itlays tho ax at the foot of tho tree ofwell ordered freedom and subjects theguaranties of life, liberty and propertywithout remedy to the fitful Impulse ofa temporary majority of an elector-

ate."President Taft's Speech.

Mr. Taft began with a reference totho development of representative gov-

ernment in the United States. Thebest government, ho said, and that(which Is most certain to provide forand protect the rights of every class,Is that government in which everyclass has a vote.

"Government by unanimous vote ofthe electorate," ho said, "Is Impossibleand therefore the majority of tho elec-

torate must rule. Wo find that gov-

ernment by tho people, therefore, un-

der our present system, Is governmentby a majority of one-fourt- of thosowhoso rights and happiness aro to bo

affected by tho course and conduct ofthe government. This Is the nearestto government by the whole peoplewe have ever had.

Says Women Will Change It"Women's suffrage will change this

and it Is doubtless coming as soon astha nlAotorate can be certain thatmost women desire and will assume Itsburden and responsibility.

"it wns lone aco recognized thatdirect action of a temporary majority

of the existing electorate must bo limited by fundamental law that is, by

constitution lnteuded to protect tho individual and the minority of tho electorate and tho non-votin- g majority of

the people against the unjust or thoarbitrary action of the majority of thoelectorate."

President Taft quoted at length fromDaniel Webster's speeches on the ne-

cessity of maintaining checks and balances in a constitution to securo thoguaranty of Individual rlght.s and well

ordered liberty, and then led.up to hisdiscussion of the judiciary.

The judiciary, he said, was not rep

resentative In the sense that the executivo fimi the legislators were, whetherjudges be appointed or elected, be-

cause they mu.st enforce tho law as

they found It.Many Times a Real Party.

"In many cases before the judges

that temporary majority Is a real partyto tho controversy to bo decided," the

president continued. "It may bo seek--

Inc 'o deprive an Individual or a ma

jority of a right secured by the funda

mental law. In such a case u tne

judges were mere representatives or

agents of the majority to carry ouc

its will they would lose their judicial

character entirely and the d ad

ministration of justice would be a

farce."It Is said that courts aro Inter

posing their obstructive power to tho

enforcment of legislation looking to

the relief of tho oppressed by declar-in- g

laws unconstitutional and byjudicial legislation in Interpret

ing Into statutes words not Intendedby the legislature."

Such charges, If reduced to specincinstances, tho president thought, could

bo shown to be unfounded for tho

meat part, but for tho purpose of his

discussion he might admit that courts

had erred In that regard, had unduly

broadened constitutional restrictionsto invalidate, useful statutes or had

given to statutes wrong construction.Says Courts Sometimes Overreached.

Tho president then took up tne pro

posed remedies, first tho recall 01

judges and later the recall of judicial

decisions. There could not bo a sys-

tem better adapted to deprive the judl- -

clary of "that Independence withoutwhich tho liberty and other rights of

the individual cannot bo maintained

against tho government and tho ma-

jority" than tho recall of judges he

declared.If tho Impeachment wore too cumber-- j

ft Kcwaloremoval Judges for cause

Of the recall judicial decisions,

Presldont Taft said In part:"This is remarkable suggestion

and ono Is so contrary to any-

thing government horetoforo pro-

posed that It 1b hard to glvo to It tho

Berious consideration which It de-

serves becauso of Its advocates and of

tho conditions under which It Is ad-

vanced.Would Suspend Constitution.

"What this recall of decisions will

A.

fl'Itt HAWAIIAN STAR, in H

amount to If applied to coimtllutlotmliiuestlotig Is tlmt there will be h

of the constitution to enablen temporary majority of the electorateto enforce popular but Invalid net."

President Taft minted out that theright of habeas1 corpus might be

or that a rich corporation seek-

ing prlvliogCYj In tho dovolopniont ofstute and ho cited Alaska might usesuch a condition to at' untnge.

"A most sorlotiB objection to the re-- 'call of decisions Is that It destroys'all probability of consistency In con-- !

stitutlonnl Interpretations. Tho ma-- !

Jorlty which sustains one law Is nottho majority which comes to consideranother and the obligation of consist-ency of popular decision Is ono whichwould .sit most lightly on ench recur-ring electorate and tho operation ofthe system would result In suspensionof application of constitutional guar-

anties according to popular whim.""Prepares Way for Tyranny."

Can It be that tho power of a temporary majority of the electorate by

single popular vote to do away withrights secured to Individuals whichhave been Inviolable .since the daysof the Magna Charta, approves Itselfto those who lovo liberty, and whohold dear Its sacred guaranties?

"Would we not in giving such power-

ful effect to the momentary Impulseof a majority of an electorate preparethe way for tho posslblo exercise oftho greatest tyranny?

"Finally, I a.sk, what Is the necessityfor such a crude, revolutionary, fitfuland unstable way or reversing judicialconstructions of tho constitution?Why, If tho construction Is wrong,can It not be righted by constitutionalamendment?

"An answer made to this Is that thesame judges would construe the'

amendment and defeat the popularwill, as in tho first instance. This assunics dishonesty and a gross viola-

tion of their oaths of duty on the partof the judges, hypothesis utterly

FILED FDR RECORD

Entered for Record March 20, 1912.

Sadaikl Motojlro Co to Sadaiki Motojlro, P A.

Sadaikl Motojlro Co by atty toSugar, C M

J K Kaluhlokalanl to S(dalkl Motojlro Co, Grant.

Henry F Damon to Oliver G U-m-s

Ing, Par Rel.Trent Trust Co Ltd to Frank E

Howes, D.Kaimuki Land Co Ltd to E L Hutch

inson, D.

D.

Au Lin Tim and wf to Trent TrustCo Ltd, C M.Entered for Record March 21, 1912.

Kukuau 2nd, owners of by tr to H

Hackfcld & Co Ltd, DJose Quintal to Elmtra M Johuson,

Elmtra M Johnson to Justina Quintalet al, D.

Recorded March 2, 1912.Flavlus J Cook, Will. B 3CG, p 143.

Dated Jan 2, 1912.Tanaka Miakichl to S Kushlma, C

M; int in lire insurance polices, lease'holds and bldgs, Bridge St, Hllo, Hawaii: $1900. B 3G1, p 132. Dated Feb27, 1912.

Rufus A Lvman and wf to II B

Mariner, D; int In real and personalproperty of Rufus a Lyman, deed, etc;S7393.3C. B 3G2. p 222. Dated Doc 29

1911.Maria D Cummings and hsb (J H) to

Lawrence A Kerr, D; por lots 2G and27. Pawaa tract, Honolulu, Oahu;$1400. B 3G2, p 224. Dated Feb 29

1912.Est of W C Lunalllo by trs to Maria

D Cummings, Rel; from liability on

promissory noto In re por lots 2G and27, Pawaa tract, Honolulu, Oahu. B

3G2, p 22G. Dated Fob 29, 1912.

Lawrence A Kerr and wf to Est ofW C Lunalllo trs of, Addl Chgo; porlots 2G and 27, rents, etc, Pawaa tract,Honolulu, Oahu; $250. B 357, p 2G5.

Dated Feb 29, 1912.

Est of W C Lunalllo by trs to Law-

rence A Kerr, Extn M; por lots 2G

and 27, rents, etc, Pawaa tract, Ho-

nolulu, Oahu; $1250. B 357, p 2G7.

Dated Feb 29, 1912.Fernandez & Froltas, Co P D; gen-

eral building colitrnctons and carpen-

ters, Honolulu, Oahu; Capital $5000, 20

yrs. B 3GG, p 144. Dated Feb 1, 1912.

Klulal (k) to Walwal, L; 4 acrland, Puheeralki, Koolauloa, Oahu; 20

yrs at $3 per yr. B 3G3, p 1G7. DatBedDec 18, 1911.

C S Crane and wf to Mutual Bldg &

Eome a proceeding to apply to corrupt Loan gocy 0f Hawaii Ltd, Addl Chge;

judges, he proposed a tribunal for tnp , 27000 sq of lot 37G, St, Hoof

of

awhich

in

. .. A

I l l

a

a

n

,

a

.

nolulu, Onhu; $2000. B 357, p 271.

Dated Fob 19, 1912.Henry Waterhouso Trust Co Ltd tr

to Frank Rodrlgues, D; Int In lots 13

and 14, blk 115, New Ocean View tract,Honolulu, Oahu; $800. B 362, p 232

Dated Fob 9, 1912.Roso Rodrlgues and hsb (J P) to

Frank Rodrlgues, D; 12000 sq ft of

kul 8559B, ap 29, Walklkl road, Honolulu. Oahu: $1. B 3G2. p 233. DatedFob 2G, 1912.

Frank Rodrlgus ami wf to Lusitana

NORMAN E. MACK.Chairman Democratic National Committee.

Benefit Socy of Hawaii. M, Lots 13'and 14, Blk 115, bldge, etc, NewOcean View Tract, Honolulu, Oahu;12,000 sq ft of Kul 85598 Ap 29. bldgs,etc, Honolulu, Oahu, $1500. U 357, p274. Dated Feb 26, 1912.

S S Paxson and wf to Susan G

Clark, D; Lot 8, Blk 9, College Hills,Honolulu, Oahu! $1275. B 3G2, p 235.Dated Feb 5, 1912.

E L K'inslea to Bishop Trust CoLtd, Addl Chge; por Lots 13 and 14,Blk 5, bldgs, rents, etc, KalmuklTract, Honolulu, Oahu, $200. B 357,p 277. Dated Mar 2, 1912.

M Nashlwa to Von Hamm-Youn- g

Co Ltd, C M; Model "18" Packardopen car No 18835, Tor of Hawaii,$1400. B 357, p 279. Dated Mar 1,

1912.

S lido to T Kongo, C M; furniture,fixtures, drugs', mdsc, etc, In GaietyTheater Bldg, Front St, Hllo, Hawaii,$589.55. B 3g4, p 386. Dated Feb 20,1912.

F Sekido to M Tanaka, Rel; leaseholds and Int In bldgs, Br'dgo St,Hilo. Hawaii, $1200. B 361, p 131.

Dated Feb 27, 1912. .Lau On to Tom Wal Kim, C M;

leasehold and bldgs, between Frontand Bridge Sts, Hllo, Hawaii, $200.11 aoi, p 133. Dated Fob 29, 1912.

1912.

Kn- -

yrs

(S)

Chai

No.

the

tablo land. Manyhad constructed.

Sir John of thotho line, tho

tho world. linesBolivia a thoPacific was constructed fortho governments,

accordance with treaties1901.

I '

THE RESIGNATION OF

MANAGER KENNEDYof

thohas sent in his

resignation. .be attho

"Yes, I have resigned," said Mr.Kennedy,

yesterday. "However, Ifor a

a life a man docsnot any liko

ten miles a and thnttho reason why I have I In-

tend resldo Hllo. Iretain my theand In town

No, I have notany long journeys. I

travel, but I not very far fromhome."

I

Kameki, C M; fronptho Honolulu Iron Works during2 int In cane crops 8 of Lot tho early part of AprlI 1879i At tho

30, Olaa Tract, Puna, Hawaii, $350. tlmo the iato Richardson withB 3G1, p 135. Dated May 30, 1911. Benjamin Macy had started planting

Sarah C Waters Amr Est of but was not a in- -

Rufus A Lyman, Rel; pc land, Koac, sm0 the fence which now surroundsPuna, Hawaii, $200. B 361, p 137. the mill the plantation headquar-Date- d

19, 1911. ters. Mr. Kennedy has conducted thoEst of by Trs affairs the plantation over sinco

Wells; D; Lot 7, Ap. that first year, when tho crop amount- -

4475, Kul. 7713, bldgs, rents, etc., ed 350 tons until now,Keauhou, N. Kona, tno plantation turns out annualM2 n :27. Mar. 1. 1912. between thirteen, and

Martin Campbell and wf Annie thousand tons. Ho ono of the old- -

T. K. Parker, D; sq yds land, est plantation managers In tho Is- -

Waimea, Hawaii. $650. lands point of service, and has dur- -

B 362, p Feb 1912. ing his long career a prominent

William Tr Peter part tho work has Ha- -

Rel; Ap 3 of R P Kul wall one of tho most coun- -

Pahoehoe, N. Kona, $500. In, tho matter of sugar cano pro- -

B 357, p 268. Feb. 20, 1912. ductlon on tho most modern plan.

Born Isematsu Nakamura, his achievements has been

D; int por R. P. 8520 B, tho a cano which

rents etc. Pahoehoe, N. Kona, Ha- - haB been used successfully by tho. .... t... ... 1 .. . e ,

wall. $2000. 230. Feu. 2G, wuiukuu iui mjuui .1 u

Isematsu Nakamura and wf to Po-te- r

Born, M; por P Kul.S520 B, bldgs, rents etc, Pahoehoe,N. Kona, Hawaii. $1400. B. 357,

209. Feb. 27, 1912..William Hook to Carrie K. No and

hsb, D; Int in pc land, rents etc,paau, N. Kohala, Hawaii. B.360, 226. May 21, 1906.

Joso G. Henriques to K. Toyooka, '

L; 7 A land, Kalama-uml- , S. Kona,Hawaii. 12 4 at $50 per an. B

363, p 168. Aug 29, 1911.

Jose G. Henriques to K. Toyooka,Consent; to of leasehold, Kala-ma-um- l,

S. Kona, Hawaii. B 363, p.

171. Feb 17, 1912.

Urn! Keahiena and hsb to GeoA. Smith, D; 22 A in share In hulland, Kaanapali, Maul. $5. B 362, p231. Mar 1, 1912.

Henry Watorhouao Trust Co. Ltd.to Ju En; D; Lots Al O & AlP, Honolulu, Oahu. $2700. C. L. R.Doc 367. Fob. 27, 1912.

and

on tho rail neartho Chill-Bolivi- a frontier Jointed.The 270 miles length,nttaltvj in au elevation of about1400 feet.

contract pr'-- i was 2,750,000($125,750,000). Tho has taken

miles tho a desert,Andes, tho

Inst two miles or so over

high short tunnelsto

Jackson, firmwhich built says Ishighest In Tho gives

much shorter tocoast.

Chilian and Bolivianin signed In

fter thirty-thre- e servicemanager of planta

C. C. KennedyIt Is to effective

end of June.

when asked about tho mat-ter will re-

main In charge while yet. Therecomes time In when

feel longer riding someor day, Is

resigned.to continuo to in

interests in plantation,have other Interests to

look after. decidedto make may

will go

C. C. came toH Tagiri toMaida

on A

chus- -

to of sugari there thing

andDec

Bernlce Bishop to ofGeorge S. of 7,

R. P. to sugau, whenHawaii. $75. B. crops

of fourteento Is

3357 of

S. Kohala, In

229. 2. takenSavldge, to Born, In which made

1663, 852011, leadingHawaii. tries

Peter to Among

1GG8, Kul invention of loader,

i....B. 362, p. iiimiiuuuii

R 1668,

p.

$450.

p.

4

Mtge

woreIs In

places

It

It

It

as

in

cade. Hllo Tribune.

ARCHITECT FRM EXPANDS.

Ripley, Reynolds una Davis, will bo

tho name of tho firm heretofore knownas Ripley & Reynolds. Owing to therapid Increase In business andanticipating a still greater increasein tho future. Mr. Davis, whois well and favorably knownby those having business deallngs with tho has become anactive member of tho linn. The now

member Is from San Francisco, buthas been hero about a year, where

, has mado himself known as an ar-- 1

chitect of exceptional ability. Ills cn-- ,

trance Into this firm of well knownarchitects gives assurance that thowork of the new firm will bo of thohighest character.

In addition to Mr. anotheraddition to tho will arrlvofrom San Francisco Home time InMarch. He is one of the most

architects and structural enirl- -

HIGHEST RAILWAY Iieors on tho pacInc Coast.LINE IN THE WORLD, wlth 8kiHed experienced

March from 'cIa,i8t8 cv!ry ne of work tno

Chill announce tho great railway flrin of UIpiiKY. REYNOLDS andacross tho Andes from Arica, In Chill. DAVis offer their services to the pub-t- o

La Pas, In Bolivia, was completed jj0Monday, when ends

line, which

Thowork

aro

be

routo

years

tion,

their

firm,

he

staff

that

CROUP CAN BE PREVENTED.When given as soon as tho croupy

cough appears Chamberlain's CoughRemedy will ward off an attack ofcroup and prevent all danger and

less than three years, despite tho o of anxiety. Thousands of moth-ficultle- si

presented by tho nature of era use It successfully. For salo by

tho country through which tho lino! all dealers. Bonson, Smith & Co.,traverses. In tho first fifty or sixty agents for Hawaii

railway crawsthen crosses while

hundred

head

Walakea

eight

Kennedy Walakea

Davishero

com-nete-

Even a wise man never gets overbeing a fool to a cortain extent.

Business Care Brings Nervous WearThe petty onre of bttflncew life wear away nerrous strength, and this

nppllee aa much to tha elerk at the deak ai to tha manager In Ma tamrieuaofflee. A ibouaand little detalta of duty requiting atteaUoa exkMMt thetionrtrae energy and cauae one to fret orer trifling thlne--a that would not re-ceive a aecond thought under conditions of perfect health.

Nervous fretful persons of either aex are usually poorly nouiiahed and Inall such cases the surest and quickest permanent relief la to be had by theuse of

Stearns Wine of Cod Liver Extractwhich first quickens the appetite and aids the digestion and enriches thoblood, thus provldlnK the tired nerves with the nourishment they need. Thiscondition banishes tho wakefulness that so many nervous peopl? suffer fromand permits tliPin to enjoy so ' -- 'v! sleep. Get Stearns' Wine of CodLiver Extract at your druggists and be sure you get STEARNS' thagenuine.

Cosmopolitan Well Drilling CoP. M. POND, Presldont

COMPLETE EQUIPMENT FOR ARTESIAN WELL DRILLING.

ESTIMATES FURNISHED.

Telephone 2890. Telephono 2890

j Firewood and CoalC Best Grades Always On Hand

II Concrete Brick, Crushed

Rock and Sand

i HustacePeck Go. LID.

I Phone 2295 63 Queen Street

FIGURED TO MATCH IN TWO-TONE-

Sizes 18x36, 21x45, 27x54, 30x60, 36x72 54x90, 6x9, 8x10, 9x12.Colors, Green, Red, Blue and Brown.

COYNE FURNITURE CO., Ltd.H BISHOP ST.

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN

We will prepare (embalmed) bodies for shipment to anypart of the United States and Maui, Hawaii and Kauai forless than one-ha- lf the price asked by any of the local under-takers. We have had the United States army contract overfive years and are still holding the same today.

If you want good work done economically, give us a call.

M. E. SILVA'S UNDERTAKING ESTABLISHMENT.

JACOB ORDENSTINE,

Undertaker and Embalmcr, also Business Manager.

Great Club Offers

Hawaiian Star ' Garden Island

The Gardem Island, the bright, newsy paper of theIsland of Kauai, has been doubled In size and Is now

a more desirable publication In every rcspoct thanover.

The Hawaiian Star (dally) Is $8.00 and GardenIsland $2.50. We offer both, one yoar, for 19.00;

fix months, $4.80. Or, Beml-Weekl- y Star ($2.00)

and Gardes Island ($2.60) will be seit to any ad-

dress for $1.91,

Address: Hawaiian Star, Honolulu.

BLACK SANDWE CONTROL THE VISIBLE SUPPLY YET WE ARE NOT IN

THE TRUST. ORDER NOW FOR YOUR LAWNS, PATHS OR I

DRIVEWAYS.

Honolulu Construction & Draying Co., Ltd.Robinson Building. Queen Street, I

Page 12: HAWAIIAN STAR. · 2015. 6. 2. · WAIALEE PLAN! taken up with the superintendent of public works when he returns. ... business, Mr. Harris has been Inter-ested in Y. M. C.' A. work

jrwiLvi

ICBTAni.tMHKD IN 110.

BISHOP & CO.

BANKERSCommercial and Travellers'

Letters of Credit Issued on thoDank of California and tho Lon

don Joint Stock Bank, Limited,London.

Correspondents for the Amer-ican Express Company, andThos. Cook & Son.

Interest allowed on torm andSavings Dunk Deposits.

BANKOP

Honolulu,LIMITED

Issue K. N. & K. Letters ofCredit and Traveler's Checksavailable throughout tho world.

Cable TransfersAT

Lowest Rates

Phone 3184. F. J. McLoughlln.HONOLULU FORGE CO.

General Ship and Machlno Blaak-smltliiln- g.

Tools and Springs madeand repaired. Estimates given onFlro Escapes.

211 Queen St., near Alakea,Honolulu, T. H.

"PAP Hi KAll kinds Wrapping Papers and

Twines, Printing and Writing Papers.AMERICAN-HAWAIA- PAPER &

SUPPLY CO., LTD.

Fort and Queen Sts., Honolulu.Phono 1410. Geo. G. Guild, Gen. Mgr.

GUNTHER'S0 Celebrated Chicagoo CANDIESa PALM CAFE.

aa

WOULD WIDEN

CHICAGO, Marchschool children mayheroes not otih George

WORSHIPMarch 22. HIiik Kong

nlaht attacked lighters of the Klin Mini Hoy Tong, and after a Unlit killedone of the latter.

li. American Mnrch 21. David Johnston Fostor of Unmet, diedclaim as their ire yesterday.

SAN Mnrch Will two womon to thoand Abraham Lincoln but tho noblest glntB Hopubllonn With Instructions to vote for thoor uio Historic cuarsc'era or those imi r Prnnltinnt Tnfcountries from which their parentsemigrated, in the opinion of JudgeHugo Pa m, who addressed the IrishFellowship club nt the Hotel LaSnllothis noon on the Influence of the paston tho prosont, with reference to thocosmopolitan character of our popula- -

Hon

Virginia?indopond-eticc- o

constitution?

Napoleon?

enthusiasm

commended

understanding

ENGLAND'S

sentiment

discouraged

HAWAIIAN STAR, FRIDAY, MARCH

Morning Cable Report(Continued Page One.)

FHANOI8GO, Gunmen last

WASHINGTON, Vt.,

Washington FRANCISCO. 22.Onkland sendconvention, ronomlna

WASHINGTON, 22. statement yostcrdnyFolletto, Wisconsin, announced Presidential

LONDON, 22. Financiers Institutions$45,000,000 agreement ratified by

council.nnmlnit

Pain pictured the Amorl-- . .'... ,,.,..can child born of foreign parents sing--

recovered. Lato tho aftornoon working parties rescued twenty- -the Hnev

slx tho ontomuea minors. One these died as was being takenwhere mv fnthors died,Land the pilgrims pride--" ,thc surfce-"Wh- at

does the little school child NEW YOItK, March 22.-r- ioar Admiral James Itufus Tryon died last

whose parents came from Poland think nlht nftor an ,Ihe8B lasting many years.

ot when are sung?" asked NEW YORK, March 22. Charles Ezra Spraguc, banker this city,

the speaker. "Of the pilgrims In NewEngland and Of the men whosigned the declaration of

or wrote the Whynot also of Sobleskl and tho greatPolish heroes? Has not tho Americanchild born of French parents the rightto claim kinship with Amer-ican children have glorious heritageacross the .lea as well as In the landWhich their parents have adopted.

"I think wise plan to encouragotho study of the history of these foreign nations In our public schools,

an ho

do to

up

me

of

of the

In an'ho tho

fight to stay.of

no as tho bus'

Ctmn VI tin will .w.ntl Afld flRA Att-r- rr tit a Vnnt!. ,.. ,

" '"" '",In

I ot of to

those of

a

it a

lastCLEVELAND, demands by for ton

per In pay reduction of by tho op-

erators.LONDON, minimum scale bill Introduced by

Asqulth reading yesterday.

embassador to Germany, Dr.D. inthe university

"In no of tho worldthere prevalence ot homicideas here. the of statistics

Judge Polish to murdered has an

tricts I encourage this country In the comingstudy of i while In but overof Bohemia. This acquaint iooo thus condemned tochild of race the year therewhich him that wcro but murdcr.s of theseprido in of but of wore punished,

excel. The child wnIi0 jn York there werewould feel whichcannot about heroes."

Judge Pam theof the Gaelic league to aboutbetter of the Irish lit-

erature and declaredwould much to bring pub

locked in libraries.

SWIFTseems that this

that from such greatgiven

trials should andanneals to a jury such

THtt 22, 1912.

KAN Tons

March open KobortSenntor from In

March Husslnn and Belgianwill lend China soon beenthe national

Tntinr onvaJudge ,,.;

Ing"Land

of

linos

efforts

twelve

died at Homo night.Mnrch The made the minors a

cent raise and a hours have been refused

March Tho wage Pre-

mier passed second

Andrewa recent addreE.3 before

Ethical club o Cornellsaid:

oher country Issuch a

By law 4000

a ndistricts a

thowith the n past

and andthe tho two

New city

feel

a

men,

through the are fresh be-

fore the They have a goodjudge v;ho paid keep him

his position and is notto a

a trial and then a sentence.Ho executed inBido thrco

continued Pam. "In dls- - people are sentenced be weeks and that effect on thoshould closer year,Toland, Bohemian Great Britain few

would aro death,the history from London during

ho sprung give fifteenglories past which .three

encourages efforts to

Americanefforts

bring

and language its

now

allcomes

ourall

Lu

Of.n

ho

nis22.

22.

Its

an

whilo' factspublic.

enoughlooking

forward They haveplain plain

human mind.'Arlington 111.

B.

LATE ARMY ORDERS

some 125 only a small percent of which wero reached by law. j By command of General

I "A British crowd the most brutal Macomb tho adjutant general, MajorIn the world. would that Campbell, has Issued orderscrime would bo 'prevalent and it is, but to tho effect:tlm TtKHHVi lnw wiitnh in tim nirnncMi ' Corporal John H. Com- -

' - ..... . . If 0.l T t ... . CUnttm laswmest ana most certain in tno worm, i"j ''"!

W.

lie notice works of great literary merit has reduced tho crime of murder to transferred as a to Company

JUSTICE.It to morbid

publicity as is to murderbe

Is

White,

murders,Brigadier

suppose Archibaldfollowing

Ferguson,

nrivttcalmost nothing. Tho 'greatest cause 2nd Battalion Engineers, tortof crime Immunity from punishment, DeBussy.

Is toin

Is of

Is

. orIs

and that is what wo havo here. Leas First Clara Private Vlolla B. Adams,than one out of every 100 murderers Company G, 2nd Battalion of EnglaIs here punished with any severity. Wo eers, Fort DeRussy, Is transferred tocannot have imprisonment for life, for the 105th Company, Coast Artillerythe worst wrtcches aro those who have Corps, Fort Buger.political pulls and you keep private Frank Dalton, 105th Com

as we have recently heard, should be them in jail for life

from

who

Heights,

Yourecently

cannotpany, Coast Artillery Corps, Fort Rug- -

nrohlblted by law, tho law of justice "In Great Britain they call a jury of er, is transferred to Company G, 2ndand common sense. hard-heade- d men in twenty minutes. Battalion of Enginoora, Fort DeRussy.

Our venerablo American and former An English tr'al goes straight Private Fred G. Kelsey, 105th Com

THING

mr, Ownit Artillery 0n. I'm Man-or, to irHNffforrwl Ui Com fmnr (I, tailttattsllon of Ifitmlneont, Port JXritUMr

First Claae Private Donald F.Comtmny (1, Ind Hsttajlon of

Hngltieers, Fort Delluiay, Is transferr-ed as n private to tho 105th Company,Coast Artillery Corps, Fort Hugcr.

Tho following named enlisted menof Company, O, 2nd Battalion of En-gineers, Fort Dollussy, H. T., aro transferred to Company I 3rd Battalion ofEngineers, nt thoaamo station: Cook,lilnior J. Williamson,, as 1st classprlvato; 1st Class Private Clay Smith,ns 1st class prlvato; 1st Class PrlvatoErnest Teogan, as lBt class private;2nd Class Private John E. Walker, as2nd clr.r.3 prlvato.

Tho following enlisted men of Company I, 2rd Battalion of Engineers,Fort DoBussy, H. T., aro transferredto Company G, 2nd Battalion of En-

gineers nt tho samo station: 1stClass Prlvato Hugh G. Mlddloton, na1st class prlvato; 1st Clans PrlvatoBenjamin Lojcek, as 1st class private;1st Class Prlvato Joseph Wardmann,as 1st class private; 2nd Class PrlvatoLoroy E. Paine, as 2nd c'ass private.

Prlvato Gus James, Troop M, fithCavalry, Schofleld Barracks, H. T latransferred to Company B, 2nd Infantry.

Prlvato Edward Honsloy, CompanyB, 2nd Infantry .Schofleld Barracks,H. T., lei transferred to Troop M, 5thCavalry.

W. F. MOSSMANSTRICKEN WITH PARALYSIS

W. F. Mossman, manager of thoHamakuapoko Store, last Tuesday suf-

fered a stroke of paralysis. Ho wastaken to tho Pala Hospital, where hehad a Becond stroke. At tho time ofgoing to press we telephoned the phy-

sician In charge of tho hospital, Dr.W. F. McConkey, and were informedMr. Mossman would not llvo till noon.His wife and two sons, Willie andHarry, are with him. Mr. Mossman'sonly brother, A. H. Mossman, died afortnight ago In Honolulu as chroni-

cled in "Our Honolulu Corner" oflast week.

Mr. W. F. Mossman was liked byeverybody with whom ho camo in con-

tact, and his death will bo sincerelymourned by all who know him. Hohas lived a long, useful llfo and diesnt a ripe old age, about 78 years. Hewas once a judge and later on be-

came collector of cuatoms at Kahulul.Thence he went to Hnmakunpoko asmanager of tho plantation store.Weekly Times.

Fine Job Printing at tho Star office.

IN THESAY THOSE WHO HAVE A COPY OF

j

jl

This indespensable kitchen accessory is a collection

of choice but eminently practical recipes, and were

formerly published in the Household Page of The

Star.YOU SHOULD NOT BEWITHOUT A COPY.

THEY MAY BE OBTAINED FROM

MAUI MOOSE LODSB.

Olm. V, Lund riiiI J. It. Mullen,organiser ot the Mooe Lodge nuMaul, left for Lahalnn last Tuesday.Mr. Lund Intends to start a Moosomagazlno In Honolulu. As tho orderof tho Mooso now counts about 2000mombors In Hawaii tho magatlno nodoubt will provo a success. Later onMr. Lund mny go to Japan, China andAustralln and organize now lodges Inthose countries. Dr. W. F. McConkoy,or Pala, will act as physician for thoMul Lodgo of Mooso. Messrs Lund andMelton wore delighted with Mnul, andhopo to return some dny and find thoLodgo in a flourishing condition.Weekly Times.

Wo will make tho island trip, withparty of threo or four at fG.po each;and party of llvo or six at ?S00 each.Our per hour rates aro $2.50, J3.00,$3.50 and 4.00. Holidays, 5.00 porhour. Sllva'B Auto Stand, Chaplainstreet, opposite Catholic Mission.Phono 3CC4 or 1179.

Castle & Cooke,LHOT8D

Honolulu X. S3.

Shipping and Com--mission

SO

SUGAR FACTORS and GENEBAL1N8URANCE AGENTS.

Representing ,,'Ew Plantation Co. :

Walalua Agricultural Cd l&b .

Kehala 8ugar Co.Apokaa Sugar Mill Ga,Fulton Iron Worka, of 8L LonS&Weaton'a Contrlfugala. '--

Babcock A Wilcox Boilers.Graen"s Fuel Economizer.Mataon Navigation Co.New England Mutual Life Tnssrama

Company, of Beaton.Aetna Insurance Co. iMfc'UNational Flro Inguranca !

Clthten'o Inauramo Co. HwWatfflPI re Insurance Co.

The London Assurance Osrper&trsni

Consolidated Soda WaterIs Absolutely Pure

TELEPHONE 2171.

BUGOLEUMTho Leading Disinfectant, Deodor

ant, Germicide, Insecticide and Antlseptic for all purposes.

ABR. FERNANDEZ & SON.

FarBetter

Fresh milk, absolutely

aad rich, is superior tevery way to tho teat of

preserved milks.

Freeh milk Is Nature's own

food and tho milk RUppUod

by us is absolutely aaroaad very rich. One trial.will convince you.

Honolulu

Dairymen's

Association

Tolephono 1542.

GheeYouShinBoALSO KNOWN A3, THE

Llleilg NewsTHE LEADING CHINESE NEWS-

PAPER IN HAWAHy; Ton Pages.

The Paper for the Chinese Trade.

JU8T OPENED

Boston CafeBIJOU ENTRANCE.

Day and Night Service.

Flno Job PrlnMng at the Star office.

ITCHEN

A. B. 'Arleigh & Co.; Crossroads Bookshop; H. Culman; Wall, Nichol sCo. andHawaiian Star. ' The Price Is But Twenty-Fiv- e Cents