looo childretvs gardens nlrnvxlthe rock on the east breakwater en-tirely overhauled, and has made...

8
) lOOO CHildretVs Gardens On Nlrnvxl MAILS NEXT WEEK LATEST SUGAR QUOTATIONS ' (To Arrive and Leave Honolulu) Honolulu, April 25th. From Coast: Sierra, 30; Wllhelmlna, r 1; Nippon Maru, 3. Cents Dollars For Coast: China, 1; Matsonia, 2; U. S. T. Sheridan, 4. per lb. per ton From Orient: China, 1. Today's quotation C.13 $213.00 For Orient: Nippon Maru, 3. LaHt previous price 6.27 $125.40 For Austrilia: Sierra, 30 EIGHTEENTH YEAR WAILUKU, MAUI CO., HAWAII. FRIDAY, APRIL, 27, 1917. NUMBER 894 Thousand Children's Gardens Is Big Plan Fair Committee Votes Money For Trips To Honolulu For Six First Prize Winners Committee Chair- men For Districts Named Endorsing the report and plans of Its committee on children's gardens, the Maul County Fair & Racing As- sociation, at Its meeting on Tuesday afternoon went further and appropri- ated $50 for current expenses of the committee in carrying out Its plans, and an additional $225 to be used In taking 6 first prize winning boys In the big Maui garden contest to Honolulu during the next Christmas holidays. Director Mathews, who has general charge of the organizing for the big work, stnted that the committee plans to have 1000 gardens started by chil- dren on Maul, all working through or- ganized committees in different dis- tricts. The first contest will close be- fore the first of the year, when an- other will be at once started with a view of being ready for making a big showing at the 1918 Maul county fair. Following is Mr. Mathew's report: Report Of Childrens' Gardens Committee The General Committee will be com posed of some thirty members in as many communities in the county of Maul. Each locality will have a sub committee of which the member of the Garden Committee from the locality will be chairman. The Gardens Com mittee will meet once each week for a general discussion of plans. The Executive Committee, compos- ed of five members, is as follows: D. H. Case, chairman; W. J. Cooper, secretary; L. It. Mathews, director of gardens; William McClusky; Dr. W. D. Baldwin. The size of each garden shall be not less that one hundred square feet. Prizes recommended are as follows: Six first prizes a trip to Honolulu ; Six second prizes choice of the fol- lowing articles: ball and bat, baseball mask, pocket flashlight, fountain pen, set of garden tools, doll, hair ribbon (Continued on Page Eight.) Kahului Breakwater WaitsOnWashington Railroad Company's Bid Recommend- ed Approved By Local Army En- gineerCompany Ready To Begin At Once On Word To Start Unless some unforeseen delay oc- curs in Washington, actual work on the new west breakwater at Kahului harbor should begin in the next month or six weeks. The bid of the Kahului Railroad Company of $2.10 per short ton of rock in p'ace, was forwarded to Washington last week by Col. R. R. Raymond, U. S. engin- eers, with recommendation that It be ftCCGptcdi Superintendent Wm. Walsh states that his company is ready to Btart work the minute the contract is final- ly awarded, but that pending this nothing can be done except to wait. In anticipation, however, the company has had the big crane which placed the rock on the east breakwater en- tirely overhauled, and has made some surveys for the extension of Its tracks past the electric powerhouse near which place the new breakwater will start. Whether or not the present status of war with Germany will have any effect in delaying action on Col. Ray- mond's recommendation is something that nobody in the Islands is able to answer. The engineers estimate that 86,000 tons of rock will be required for the big job. FEEDS HIS HAWAIIAN COWS ON COCOANUTS Feeding his cows on the meat of cocoanuts may be the secret by which John Walgen ,a dairyman of Glenwood, near the Volcano of Kilauea, won the first prize at the recent Hawaii Coun- ty Fair for his butter. Mr. Walgen told Judge C. IC. Quinn last Saturday, that cocoanuts were about $14 a ton cheaper than mid- dlings, and worth about $14 a ton more as food for butter making cows. And the cows shred up that cocoanut as though it was cow candy. "You see. Judge," asserted Walgen, "I have some guernsey cows, but most of them are just plain Hawaiian cows. I give them about three pounds of co- coanuts with their feeds every day and so I get pretty near five percent butter-fa- t in the milk." However, there is no flavor of the cocoanut In the butter made from the milk of these Hawaiian cocoanut-eat-in- cows of Glenwood. But he cannot make enough for his customers'. Hilo Tribune. What County Fair Got From Race Assn. Technical Joke On Somebody Due To Fact That Lease On Race Track Has Long Since Expired Will Have No Real Effect The interesting fact developed yes- terday that for over two years the old Maul Racing Association has been without a title to the race track grounds and building at Kahului. By the same token the directors of the new Maul County Fair & Racing As- sociation have also discovered that legally they bought from the racing association only some $1700 worth of liabilities in form of notes in bank and some current accounts. The discovery came about when the lease of the property from the Haw- aiian Commercial & Sugar Company was hunted up Tor the purpose of mak- ing the necessary formal transfer. Then it was found that the document, instead of being for 99 years, as many had believed, was really for but ten years, and that time had elapsed in March, 1915. The lease not only in- cluded the ground but also all build ings upon it. The annual rental was Of course the "discovery" is more Interesting than serious, in that the new association will simply secure a new lease on the same terms as the old one from the Hawaiian Commer cial & Sugar Company, instead of continuing under the lease of the old association as had been intended. The real situation is not changed in the least. There is no question whatever as to the securing of this new lease, if the association wants it, there being little use for the land except for the race track, and besides President Frank Baldwin, of the Maul County Fair and Racing Association is on particularly good terms with President F. F. Baldwin, of the Hawaiian Com- mercial & Sugar Company. Will Celebrate Golden Wedding Anninversary Maul friends of the Dickeys (form- erly of Maui), received last week golo printed invitations to attend the golden wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Dickey which will be celebrated on May 29, from noon till 5 p. m., at the home of their son, Charles W. Dickey, in Piedmont, (Oakland) Cali- fornia. The following children will be present at the happy and momentous occasion: Mrs. Grace Merrill, of Cal.; Mrs. Belle Dole, of Ho- nolulu; Chas. W. Dickey, of Piedmont; and Judge Lyle Dickey, of Lihue, Ka- uai. Machine Gun Men Be Infantry Officers Many Promotions Announced Among Maui Guardsmen Captains White- head And Henry Robinson Are Now Majors The following national guard orders were issued last week affecting Maui guardsmen: Subject to future examination, in conformity with section 75, national defense act of June 3, 1916, the follow- ing promotions in the infantry arm of the National Guard of the United States and of the territory of Hawaii are announced: To be majors, with rank from April 19 Capt. Orlando J. Whitehead, 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf.,.N. G.; ,Capt. Henry Robinson, Jr., 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G. To be captains, with rank from April 19 1st Lieut. EuVurd Walsh, 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., K. G.; 1st Lieut. Al-vi- Robinson, 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G.; 1st Lieut. H. R. Sloggett. 2nd Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G.; 2d Lieut. Seabury Short, 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G. To be first lieutenants, with rank from April 19 2d Lieut. David Town-send- , 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G.; 2d Lieut. II. Waiwaiole, 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G. ; 2d Lieut. Wm. K. Peters, 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G.; 2d Lieut. F. P. Uosecrans, 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G. The above named officers are as- signed to the 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G. The following named enlisted men will be honorably discharged to accept commission in the National Guard of the United States and of the territory of Hawaii: 1st Sgt. Caleb Burns, M. G. Co., 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G.; Sgt. Fos- ter Robinson, M. G. Co., 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf.. N. G.; Cpl. Samuel A. Baldwin, M. G. Co., 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf.. N. G.; Pvt. George Murray, M. G. C, 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G. ; Pvt. J. S. B. Mac- kenzie, M. G. Co., 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G.; Pvt. Wm. R. Makaena, Co. E, (Continutd on Page Eight.) "Obey The Law: Keep Your Mouth Shut" Is Advice Of Attorney General To Germans In United States Cover ment Will Not Molest Alien En emies If They Obey In a letter to the Maul News from U. S. Marshal J. J. Smiddy, of Hono lulu, he says "Enclosed herewith I beg to hand you a copy of a letter received this day from the Attorney-General- . Pub licatlon of the same in your paper may be the means of keeping certain peo- ple out of trouble." The Attorney General's letter is as follows: "Washington, April 18, 1917, "United States Marshal, "Honolulu. "Sir: "You are hereby directed to give full publicity to the following state- ment: "No German alien enemy in this country, who has not hitherto been implicated in plots against the inter- ests of the United States, need have any fear of action by the Department of Justice ;o long as he observes the following warning: OBEY THE LAW; KEEP YOUR MOUTH SHUT. ' "Respectfully, T. W. GREGORY, "Attorney-General.- " " : WILL ATTEND FAMILY REUNION F. N. Lufkin, cashier or the.Lahai-n- a branch of the Bank of Maui, expects to leave for the coast about the mid- dle of next month to attend the annual family reunion at the home of his mother in Normal, 111. He will be ac- companied by Miss Charlotte Smith, of Illinois, who for some time has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Luf- kin, of Wailuku. C. D. Lufkin will be unable to make the trip this year. ORGAN RECITAL FOR WAR RELIEF FUND An organ recital will be given by Mrs. Villiers, assisted by the choir, and several friends, in the Church of the Good Shepherd, Wailuku, on Wednesday next, May 2nd, in the even- ing at 8 o'clock. This recital is for the benefit of the Hawaiian Allied War Relief Fund, a working organization in the Islands for the wounded soldiers, in hospitals. The public is very cordi ally invited to this recital. Racing Department Submits A Program Fourth Of July Meet To Be Held As Usual New Associatien Pays Debts Of Old Organization Purses May Be Pared Dawn At the meeting of the Maul County Fair and Racing Association on Tues day afternoon, Treasurer D. C. Lindsay was authorized to pay off the notees of the old Maul Racing Association, which under agreement of consolida- tion have been assumed by the new organization. These notes aggregate $1500 with some accrued interest. The treasurer Is also to pay a number of other small bills outstanding. D. T. Fleming was named a com mittee of one to study the matter of filling in low lands about the Kahului race track preparatory to erecting the necessary fair buildings on the pro- - erty. Race Program Presented F. B. Cameron, for the racing de partment, submitted a tentative race program for the coming Fourth of July races, which was discussed at some length. The program had been drafted by Dr.J. C. Fitzgerald, or the committee. The directors were of the opinion that the races would be more popular were they interspersed with other exhibition features than solely horse racing. Because the purses for the program submitted aggregate some $3000, the directors were In doubt as to its abll-t- y to raise such a sum from the gate receipts and entry fees ,and accord- ingly asked the committee to go over the matter and give some further light on this subject. The program suggested follows: 1st Race: 10 a. m. Juvenile Plate: imile for 2 year olds. Hawaiian Bred colts and fillies: colts 118 pounds; fillies 115 pounds. Silver cup and $200 of which $50 goes o second. - , . 2nd Race: 10:30 a. tn. mile Hawaiian Bred, weight for age. Purse $200 of which $50 goes to second. 3rd Race: 11 a. m. Pony Rac: Half mile for Hawaiian Bred ponleg, 14.3 and under. Purse (Continued on Page Eight.) Married Men To Be Let 0ut0f Guard Order From Washington May Cause General Reorganization Of Local Militia Officers Not Included In Change Married men or those having rela- tives depending upon them will not be enlisted In Uncle Sam's army for the present. Moreover all such al- ready enlisted in the national guard will have to accept their discharge un- less they can show that they have in- comes other than they will receive as soldiers. This news came to Maui on Wednes- day in the form of a 300-wor- d cable order to Col. Frank Baldwin direct from Washington, and also through an orucr irom Adjutant-Genera- l Johnson, in Honolulu. It goes into effect at. of KPn.men ?hVrt fected will be sent to national guard headquarter in Honolulu tomorrow night from which the individual dis- charge orders will be issued. Reorganization Possible Coming close on the heels of the order calling for the recruiting up of all companies to a war strength of 150 men each, or more than twice the average present strength, the new or- ders were a distinct surprise. How it .will effect the organization is not at present clearly known, though it seems quite possible that a general re- organization of the whole Hawaii Nat- ional Guard may be in order. Just how many men will be dropped will not be known definitely until the company lists are collated this even- ing. It "Is known, however, that some of the companies will be much" reduc- ed in strength, a striking instancebe- - Ing the recently organized machiria. gun company which was mostly made up of married men'. ..On the other hand some of the companies are com- posed of Filipinos who are not marri- ed, and these will consequently be lit- tle effected. Officers Not Included The order does not included officers for the reason that their pay is pre sumed to be sufficient to maintain an ordinary family. There is also the question to be set- tled as to whether or not the men in the employ of the territory or counties who may have their salaries guaran-- ' teed by law or otherwise will be dis- charged. The county of Hawaii has adopted a resolution making such pro vision, while a similar resolution is now pending in the legislature as to territorial employes. No Hint Concering Wireless Service Commerical Business To Hawaii And Kauai Resumed Over Week Ogo Press Service To Cost More Money NoiJuards At Lahaina No intimation has heen received on Maul as to when wireless communica- tion will be resumed. The plants on both Kauai and Hawaii are reopened for commercial messages last week, and the wireless press service was resumed to Hilo papers also, though not to Kauai. Maul has no service at all as yet except for ollicial communic ations. On Kauai a national guard company has been guarding the wireless plant, and a detachment of the 25th Infantry sent from Honolulu Is performing the same office at the Hawaii station. No such precautions have been taken re garding the Lahaina plant. The why of all this is a sealed book. The service may start again to day or next week or next year. No body on Maul knows or can more than guess at the reason. One guess that has hern hazarded is that the naval authorities liae not yet solved the problem of collections. Tim Mutual Company, becau.se of the fact that its plant is in an out of way place and it has no relay station, was obliged to do an extensive credit business, mess- ages being transmitted to the wireless operator by telephone and the cost charged. It is rumored that an ollice is to be opened in Wailuku when the naval authorities get around to It, which will be In telegraphic communi- cation with the Lahaina plant, la the same manner as business is at present handled between the Kawaihae sta- tion and Ililo. Higher Costs The Maul Publishing Company has mado arrangements to have the Daily Wireless resumed as soon as system is opened for it, though it v ill depend on the Maul public as to whether or not it is maintained permanently. The new service is to cost over 50 percent more than before. Inasmuch as the Daily Wireless has always been pub lished at a loss it will be impossible to maintain it unless the increased cost can be met in some manner. CONGRESS DEBATING CONSCRIPTION BILL No Fight Against Big Army Plan But Against Method Of Raising It-- La Follette Has New Scheme Joffre Arrives For War Council WASHINGTON, April 25 Senator La Follette li as another plan. He wishes now to amend the Army Bill so as to provide for the recruit- ing of soldiers by a referendum vote. This was the outstanding feature of the debate upon the measure in both houses yesterday. The house hopes to reach a vote not later than Friday, but pessimists put the time still later, as there are more than sixty addresses still to be made in the lower house. In the senate also there remains much talkinc to be done hefnre the lime mmec fnr a vntp n im ri..-.r,- , bill. oi'cdKcr viidmp iarit aeciarcu mat tie opposed to the principle of the "selective draft" in raising the new army and declared that he does not Relieve this plan of conscription will pass congress. WASHINGTON, April 2-- 1 The raising of great army to defend the United States and to fight Prussianism is certain. This became ap- parent yesterday in the course of the debate that was begun in both houses on the Army Bill. The debate demonstrated that there will be no fight against the plan of the administration to raise and train an army adequate to needs of the Nation. The only question is as as to what strength can be muster- ed by the opponents of the selective draft system which is strongly insist- ed upon by President Wilson. It is regarded as certain that the senate will pass the bill with this provision virtually unchanged but what the house will do is still problem- atical. It is expected that the house will vote on the measure tomorrow. Senator Chamberlain may ask that the senate vote on the bill either to- morrow or Thursday. WAR CONFERENCE IN PROGRESS WASHINGTON, April 23 Foreign Minister Balfour of Britain, President Wilson and Secretary of State Lansing conferred today. To- morrow will be devoted to social events and the conferences will be re- newed on Wednesday. GRREAT BRITAIN TO GET LOAN WASHINGTON, April 24 Preparations are being made by the treasury department for the issuance of the first American loan to Great Biitain. Secretary McAdoo announced yesterday that he would, within few days, make public the amount of it. and the details of the bond issue. JOFFRE ARRIVES FOR CONFERENCE WASHINGTON, April 25 France will need the loan of one hundred million dollars month, from the government of the United States. The French government also wishes and hopes that the United States will be able to send armed forces to combat the Huns on battle fields of Europe. These are two salient features of an interview granted to the As- sociation Press by "Papa" Joffre, who' for two long years carried the burden of directing the war upon his broad shoulders, and is still the nominal commander-in-chie- f of the French forces. The famous French commander, is at the head of the French commission which reached the Virginia Capes on broad French cruiser yesterday after- noon, and which is expected to arrive here on board the President's yacht, Mayflower early today. Hilo Men Want Gas Franchise For Maui Chamber Of Commerce Declines To Favor Or Oppose Case Favors Idea Attorney Russel Explains 11th Hour Introduction Wailuku may, in the course of the next two three years have gas plant, provided the plans of James W. Itussel and other Ililo capitalists do not miscarry. Mr. Kussel appeared before the trustees of the chamber of commerce on Tuesday afternoon and sought to have the backing of the body to franchise bill which Is now pending in the legislature. After some little discussion, however, de clined to take any action on the pro ject either for or against. Has Built Plant In Hilo Mr. Itussel, who is an attorney from the Hay City, is also one of the lead- ing members In the Hilo Oas Company which has just completed plant in his home town. Acting on the advice of their engineering expert who re- cently looked over Wailuku as field. the Hilo company got busy and had bill introduced In the senate last week which passed, and endorsed later by congress, will grant franchise for supplying this part of Maul with gas. The bill known as Senate bill No. 157, and was stated that it had al- ready passed the senate and is now being considered in the house. Would Absorb Island Electric Mr. Russel stated that his franchise bill provided that gas shall be supplied to Maui consumers at not to exceed $2 per thousand cubic feet, with 10 percent discount for cash, and that Maui people will be given chance to (Continued on Page Eight.) T i t is a a ' v, . "' - '- -- a - . , a or a a a a a if a is it - a Maui Is Motorists' Paradise Says Ford Hands Around Man Will Work For Haleakala Road And Observatory On Summit Says Engineer Balch Would Take Contract Alexander Hume Ford, who last week made the ascent of Haleakala In company with L. W. de Vis Norton, tourists agent of the Ililo Board of Trade and C. II. Vicars the Hawaii member of the promotion committee, left for Honolulu on Wednesday after- noon full of plans for exploiting Maui's great crater. One of these plans is a road up the mountain, end another is for having a great observa- tory located on the summit. "Within a week," said Ford, speak- ing about bis mountain road scheme, "A motor car has approached to with- in less than 3 miles of Haleakala's summit. Engineer Raich has studied every foot of the route over which it traveled, and earnestly assures me that he would like to have the con- tract for building a road over the route of four miles above Olinda for $13,000. And he says the road will be as good as any part of the new roadway be- tween Makawao and Olinda. More- over he believes a serviceable road for automobiles can bo bult entirely to the bummit for $50,000." A Record-Breakin- Trip Ford was referring to the fact of the Advertiser pilot car which has been on Maul for the past 10 days in charge of J. F. Ness, of the Advertiser staff, and Tom Duggan, of tho Von Hamm-Youn- company, which suc- ceeded in working its tortuous way up the mountain side S5U0 feet above Olinda, or to an eleva'.ion of C500 feet (Continued on Page Eight.) i

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Page 1: lOOO CHildretVs Gardens Nlrnvxlthe rock on the east breakwater en-tirely overhauled, and has made some surveys for the extension of Its tracks past the electric powerhouse near which

)

lOOO CHildretVs Gardens On NlrnvxlMAILS NEXT WEEK

LATEST SUGAR QUOTATIONS' (To Arrive and Leave Honolulu) Honolulu, April 25th.

From Coast: Sierra, 30; Wllhelmlna,r 1; Nippon Maru, 3.

Cents DollarsFor Coast: China, 1; Matsonia, 2;U. S. T. Sheridan, 4. per lb. per ton

From Orient: China, 1. Today's quotation C.13 $213.00For Orient: Nippon Maru, 3. LaHt previous price 6.27 $125.40For Austrilia: Sierra, 30

EIGHTEENTH YEAR WAILUKU, MAUI CO., HAWAII. FRIDAY, APRIL, 27, 1917. NUMBER 894

Thousand Children's

Gardens Is Big Plan

Fair Committee Votes Money For

Trips To Honolulu For Six First

Prize Winners Committee Chair-

men For Districts Named

Endorsing the report and plans ofIts committee on children's gardens,the Maul County Fair & Racing As-

sociation, at Its meeting on Tuesdayafternoon went further and appropri-ated $50 for current expenses of thecommittee in carrying out Its plans,and an additional $225 to be used Intaking 6 first prize winning boys In thebig Maui garden contest to Honoluluduring the next Christmas holidays.

Director Mathews, who has generalcharge of the organizing for the bigwork, stnted that the committee plansto have 1000 gardens started by chil-dren on Maul, all working through or-ganized committees in different dis-tricts. The first contest will close be-

fore the first of the year, when an-other will be at once started with aview of being ready for making a bigshowing at the 1918 Maul county fair.

Following is Mr. Mathew's report:Report Of Childrens'

Gardens CommitteeThe General Committee will be com

posed of some thirty members in asmany communities in the county ofMaul. Each locality will have a subcommittee of which the member of theGarden Committee from the localitywill be chairman. The Gardens Committee will meet once each week fora general discussion of plans.

The Executive Committee, compos-ed of five members, is as follows: D.H. Case, chairman; W. J. Cooper,secretary; L. It. Mathews, director ofgardens; William McClusky; Dr. W.D. Baldwin.

The size of each garden shall be notless that one hundred square feet.

Prizes recommended are as follows:Six first prizes a trip to Honolulu ;

Six second prizes choice of the fol-

lowing articles: ball and bat, baseballmask, pocket flashlight, fountain pen,set of garden tools, doll, hair ribbon

(Continued on Page Eight.)

Kahului BreakwaterWaitsOnWashington

Railroad Company's Bid Recommend-

ed Approved By Local Army En-

gineerCompany Ready To Begin

At Once On Word To Start

Unless some unforeseen delay oc-

curs in Washington, actual work onthe new west breakwater at Kahuluiharbor should begin in the nextmonth or six weeks. The bid of theKahului Railroad Company of $2.10per short ton of rock in p'ace, wasforwarded to Washington last weekby Col. R. R. Raymond, U. S. engin-eers, with recommendation that It beftCCGptcdi

Superintendent Wm. Walsh statesthat his company is ready to Btartwork the minute the contract is final-

ly awarded, but that pending thisnothing can be done except to wait. Inanticipation, however, the companyhas had the big crane which placedthe rock on the east breakwater en-

tirely overhauled, and has made somesurveys for the extension of Its trackspast the electric powerhouse nearwhich place the new breakwater willstart.

Whether or not the present statusof war with Germany will have anyeffect in delaying action on Col. Ray-

mond's recommendation is somethingthat nobody in the Islands is able toanswer. The engineers estimate that86,000 tons of rock will be requiredfor the big job.

FEEDS HIS HAWAIIANCOWS ON COCOANUTS

Feeding his cows on the meat ofcocoanuts may be the secret by whichJohn Walgen ,a dairyman of Glenwood,near the Volcano of Kilauea, won thefirst prize at the recent Hawaii Coun-ty Fair for his butter.

Mr. Walgen told Judge C. IC. Quinnlast Saturday, that cocoanuts wereabout $14 a ton cheaper than mid-dlings, and worth about $14 a ton moreas food for butter making cows. Andthe cows shred up that cocoanut asthough it was cow candy.

"You see. Judge," asserted Walgen,"I have some guernsey cows, but mostof them are just plain Hawaiian cows.I give them about three pounds of co-coanuts with their feeds every dayand so I get pretty near five percentbutter-fa- t in the milk."

However, there is no flavor of thecocoanut In the butter made from themilk of these Hawaiian cocoanut-eat-in-

cows of Glenwood. But he cannotmake enough for his customers'. HiloTribune.

What County FairGot From Race Assn.

Technical Joke On Somebody Due To

Fact That Lease On Race TrackHas Long Since Expired Will

Have No Real Effect

The interesting fact developed yes-terday that for over two years the oldMaul Racing Association has beenwithout a title to the race trackgrounds and building at Kahului. Bythe same token the directors of thenew Maul County Fair & Racing As-

sociation have also discovered thatlegally they bought from the racingassociation only some $1700 worth ofliabilities in form of notes in bankand some current accounts.

The discovery came about when thelease of the property from the Haw-aiian Commercial & Sugar Companywas hunted up Tor the purpose of mak-ing the necessary formal transfer.Then it was found that the document,instead of being for 99 years, as manyhad believed, was really for but tenyears, and that time had elapsed inMarch, 1915. The lease not only in-cluded the ground but also all buildings upon it. The annual rental was

Of course the "discovery" is moreInteresting than serious, in that thenew association will simply secure anew lease on the same terms as theold one from the Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Company, instead ofcontinuing under the lease of the oldassociation as had been intended. Thereal situation is not changed in theleast. There is no question whateveras to the securing of this new lease,if the association wants it, there beinglittle use for the land except for therace track, and besides PresidentFrank Baldwin, of the Maul CountyFair and Racing Association is onparticularly good terms with PresidentF. F. Baldwin, of the Hawaiian Com-mercial & Sugar Company.

Will Celebrate Golden

Wedding Anninversary

Maul friends of the Dickeys (form-erly of Maui), received last week goloprinted invitations to attend the goldenwedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.C. H. Dickey which will be celebratedon May 29, from noon till 5 p. m., atthe home of their son, Charles W.Dickey, in Piedmont, (Oakland) Cali-fornia. The following children will bepresent at the happy and momentousoccasion: Mrs. Grace Merrill, of

Cal.; Mrs. Belle Dole, of Ho-nolulu; Chas. W. Dickey, of Piedmont;and Judge Lyle Dickey, of Lihue, Ka-uai.

Machine Gun Men

Be Infantry Officers

Many Promotions Announced Among

Maui Guardsmen Captains White-

head And Henry Robinson AreNow Majors

The following national guard orderswere issued last week affecting Mauiguardsmen:

Subject to future examination, inconformity with section 75, nationaldefense act of June 3, 1916, the follow-ing promotions in the infantry arm ofthe National Guard of the UnitedStates and of the territory of Hawaiiare announced:

To be majors, with rank from April19 Capt. Orlando J. Whitehead, 3dRgt. Haw. Inf.,.N. G.; ,Capt. HenryRobinson, Jr., 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G.

To be captains, with rank fromApril 19 1st Lieut. EuVurd Walsh,3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., K. G.; 1st Lieut. Al-vi-

Robinson, 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G.;1st Lieut. H. R. Sloggett. 2nd Rgt.Haw. Inf., N. G.; 2d Lieut. SeaburyShort, 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G.

To be first lieutenants, with rankfrom April 19 2d Lieut. David Town-send- ,

3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G.; 2dLieut. II. Waiwaiole, 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf.,N. G. ; 2d Lieut. Wm. K. Peters, 3dRgt. Haw. Inf., N. G.; 2d Lieut. F. P.Uosecrans, 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G.

The above named officers are as-signed to the 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G.

The following named enlisted menwill be honorably discharged to acceptcommission in the National Guard ofthe United States and of the territoryof Hawaii: 1st Sgt. Caleb Burns, M. G.Co., 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G.; Sgt. Fos-ter Robinson, M. G. Co., 3d Rgt. Haw.Inf.. N. G.; Cpl. Samuel A. Baldwin,M. G. Co., 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf.. N. G.;Pvt. George Murray, M. G. C, 3d Rgt.Haw. Inf., N. G. ; Pvt. J. S. B. Mac-kenzie, M. G. Co., 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf.,N. G.; Pvt. Wm. R. Makaena, Co. E,

(Continutd on Page Eight.)

"Obey The Law: Keep

Your Mouth Shut"

Is Advice Of Attorney General To

Germans In United States Cover

ment Will Not Molest Alien En

emies If They Obey

In a letter to the Maul News fromU. S. Marshal J. J. Smiddy, of Honolulu, he says

"Enclosed herewith I beg to handyou a copy of a letter received thisday from the Attorney-General- . Publicatlon of the same in your paper maybe the means of keeping certain peo-ple out of trouble."

The Attorney General's letter is asfollows:

"Washington, April 18, 1917,"United States Marshal,

"Honolulu."Sir:

"You are hereby directed to givefull publicity to the following state-ment:

"No German alien enemy in thiscountry, who has not hitherto beenimplicated in plots against the inter-ests of the United States, need haveany fear of action by the Departmentof Justice ;o long as he observes thefollowing warning: OBEY THE LAW;KEEP YOUR MOUTH SHUT.

'"Respectfully,T. W. GREGORY,"Attorney-General.- "

" :WILL ATTEND FAMILY REUNION

F. N. Lufkin, cashier or the.Lahai-n-a

branch of the Bank of Maui, expectsto leave for the coast about the mid-dle of next month to attend the annualfamily reunion at the home of hismother in Normal, 111. He will be ac-

companied by Miss Charlotte Smith,of Illinois, who for some time has beenthe guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Luf-kin, of Wailuku. C. D. Lufkin willbe unable to make the trip this year.

ORGAN RECITAL FORWAR RELIEF FUND

An organ recital will be given byMrs. Villiers, assisted by the choir,and several friends, in the Church ofthe Good Shepherd, Wailuku, onWednesday next, May 2nd, in the even-ing at 8 o'clock. This recital is forthe benefit of the Hawaiian Allied WarRelief Fund, a working organization inthe Islands for the wounded soldiers,in hospitals. The public is very cordially invited to this recital.

Racing DepartmentSubmits A Program

Fourth Of July Meet To Be Held As

Usual New Associatien Pays

Debts Of Old Organization PursesMay Be Pared Dawn

At the meeting of the Maul CountyFair and Racing Association on Tuesday afternoon, Treasurer D. C. Lindsaywas authorized to pay off the noteesof the old Maul Racing Association,which under agreement of consolida-tion have been assumed by the neworganization. These notes aggregate$1500 with some accrued interest.The treasurer Is also to pay a numberof other small bills outstanding.

D. T. Fleming was named a committee of one to study the matter offilling in low lands about the Kahuluirace track preparatory to erecting thenecessary fair buildings on the pro- -

erty.Race Program Presented

F. B. Cameron, for the racing department, submitted a tentative raceprogram for the coming Fourth ofJuly races, which was discussed atsome length. The program had beendrafted by Dr.J. C. Fitzgerald, or thecommittee. The directors were ofthe opinion that the races would bemore popular were they interspersedwith other exhibition features thansolely horse racing.

Because the purses for the programsubmitted aggregate some $3000, thedirectors were In doubt as to its abll-t- y

to raise such a sum from the gatereceipts and entry fees ,and accord-ingly asked the committee to go overthe matter and give some further lighton this subject.

The program suggested follows:1st Race: 10 a. m.

Juvenile Plate: imile for 2 yearolds. Hawaiian Bred colts and fillies:colts 118 pounds; fillies 115 pounds.Silver cup and $200 of which $50 goeso second. - , .

2nd Race: 10:30 a. tn.mile Hawaiian Bred, weight for

age. Purse $200 of which $50 goesto second.3rd Race: 11 a. m.

Pony Rac: Half mile for HawaiianBred ponleg, 14.3 and under. Purse

(Continued on Page Eight.)

Married Men To Be

Let 0ut0f Guard

Order From Washington May CauseGeneral Reorganization Of LocalMilitia Officers Not Included InChange

Married men or those having rela-tives depending upon them will notbe enlisted In Uncle Sam's army forthe present. Moreover all such al-ready enlisted in the national guardwill have to accept their discharge un-less they can show that they have in-comes other than they will receive assoldiers.

This news came to Maui on Wednes-day in the form of a 300-wor- d cableorder to Col. Frank Baldwin directfrom Washington, and also through anorucr irom Adjutant-Genera- l Johnson,in Honolulu. It goes into effect at.

of KPn.men ?hVrtfected will be sent to national guardheadquarter in Honolulu tomorrownight from which the individual dis-charge orders will be issued.Reorganization Possible

Coming close on the heels of theorder calling for the recruiting up ofall companies to a war strength of 150men each, or more than twice theaverage present strength, the new or-ders were a distinct surprise. Howit .will effect the organization is notat present clearly known, though itseems quite possible that a general re-organization of the whole Hawaii Nat-ional Guard may be in order.

Just how many men will be droppedwill not be known definitely until thecompany lists are collated this even-ing. It"Is known, however, that someof the companies will be much" reduc-ed in strength, a striking instancebe- -

Ing the recently organized machiria.gun company which was mostly madeup of married men'. ..On the otherhand some of the companies are com-posed of Filipinos who are not marri-ed, and these will consequently be lit-tle effected.Officers Not Included

The order does not included officersfor the reason that their pay is presumed to be sufficient to maintain anordinary family.

There is also the question to be set-tled as to whether or not the men inthe employ of the territory or countieswho may have their salaries guaran-- '

teed by law or otherwise will be dis-charged. The county of Hawaii hasadopted a resolution making such provision, while a similar resolution isnow pending in the legislature as toterritorial employes.

No Hint ConceringWireless Service

Commerical Business To Hawaii And

Kauai Resumed Over Week Ogo

Press Service To Cost More Money

NoiJuards At Lahaina

No intimation has heen received onMaul as to when wireless communica-tion will be resumed. The plants onboth Kauai and Hawaii are reopenedfor commercial messages last week,and the wireless press service wasresumed to Hilo papers also, thoughnot to Kauai. Maul has no service atall as yet except for ollicial communications.

On Kauai a national guard companyhas been guarding the wireless plant,and a detachment of the 25th Infantrysent from Honolulu Is performing thesame office at the Hawaii station. Nosuch precautions have been taken regarding the Lahaina plant.

The why of all this is a sealedbook. The service may start again today or next week or next year. Nobody on Maul knows or can more thanguess at the reason. One guess thathas hern hazarded is that the navalauthorities liae not yet solved theproblem of collections. Tim MutualCompany, becau.se of the fact that itsplant is in an out of way place and ithas no relay station, was obliged to doan extensive credit business, mess-ages being transmitted to the wirelessoperator by telephone and the costcharged. It is rumored that an olliceis to be opened in Wailuku when thenaval authorities get around to It,which will be In telegraphic communi-cation with the Lahaina plant, la thesame manner as business is at presenthandled between the Kawaihae sta-tion and Ililo.Higher Costs

The Maul Publishing Company hasmado arrangements to have the DailyWireless resumed as soon as systemis opened for it, though it v ill dependon the Maul public as to whether ornot it is maintained permanently. Thenew service is to cost over 50 percentmore than before. Inasmuch as theDaily Wireless has always been published at a loss it will be impossibleto maintain it unless the increasedcost can be met in some manner.

CONGRESS DEBATING

CONSCRIPTION BILL

No Fight Against Big Army Plan But AgainstMethod Of Raising It-- La Follette Has NewScheme Joffre Arrives For War Council

WASHINGTON, April 25 Senator La Follette li as another plan.He wishes now to amend the Army Bill so as to provide for the recruit-ing of soldiers by a referendum vote.

This was the outstanding feature of the debate upon the measurein both houses yesterday. The house hopes to reach a vote not laterthan Friday, but pessimists put the time still later, as there are more thansixty addresses still to be made in the lower house.

In the senate also there remains much talkinc to be done hefnre thelime mmec fnr a vntp n im ri..-.r,- ,

bill.oi'cdKcr viidmp iarit aeciarcu mat tie opposed to the principle

of the "selective draft" in raising the new army and declared that hedoes not Relieve this plan of conscription will pass congress.

WASHINGTON, April 2-- 1 The raising of great army to defendthe United States and to fight Prussianism is certain. This became ap-parent yesterday in the course of the debate that was begun in bothhouses on the Army Bill.

The debate demonstrated that there will be no fight against the planof the administration to raise and train an army adequate to needs ofthe Nation. The only question is as as to what strength can be muster-ed by the opponents of the selective draft system which is strongly insist-ed upon by President Wilson.

It is regarded as certain that the senate will pass the bill with thisprovision virtually unchanged but what the house will do is still problem-atical. It is expected that the house will vote on the measure tomorrow.Senator Chamberlain may ask that the senate vote on the bill either to-

morrow or Thursday.WAR CONFERENCE IN PROGRESS

WASHINGTON, April 23 Foreign Minister Balfour of Britain,President Wilson and Secretary of State Lansing conferred today. To-morrow will be devoted to social events and the conferences will be re-newed on Wednesday.

GRREAT BRITAIN TO GET LOANWASHINGTON, April 24 Preparations are being made by the

treasury department for the issuance of the first American loan to GreatBiitain. Secretary McAdoo announced yesterday that he would, within

few days, make public the amount of it. and the details of the bondissue.

JOFFRE ARRIVES FOR CONFERENCEWASHINGTON, April 25 France will need the loan of one

hundred million dollars month, from the government of the UnitedStates.

The French government also wishes and hopes that the UnitedStates will be able to send armed forces to combat the Huns on battlefields of Europe.

These are two salient features of an interview granted to the As-

sociation Press by "Papa" Joffre, who' for two long years carried theburden of directing the war upon his broad shoulders, and is still thenominal commander-in-chie-f of the French forces. The famousFrench commander, is at the head of the French commission whichreached the Virginia Capes on broad French cruiser yesterday after-noon, and which is expected to arrive here on board the President'syacht, Mayflower early today.

Hilo Men Want Gas

Franchise For Maui

Chamber Of Commerce Declines To

Favor Or Oppose Case FavorsIdea Attorney Russel Explains

11th Hour Introduction

Wailuku may, in the course of thenext two three years have gasplant, provided the plans of James W.Itussel and other Ililo capitalists donot miscarry.

Mr. Kussel appeared before thetrustees of the chamber of commerceon Tuesday afternoon and sought tohave the backing of the body tofranchise bill which Is now pendingin the legislature. After some littlediscussion, however, declined to take any action on the project either for or against.Has Built Plant In Hilo

Mr. Itussel, who is an attorney fromthe Hay City, is also one of the lead-ing members In the Hilo Oas Companywhich has just completed plant inhis home town. Acting on the adviceof their engineering expert who re-

cently looked over Wailuku as field.the Hilo company got busy and hadbill introduced In the senate last weekwhich passed, and endorsed later bycongress, will grant franchise forsupplying this part of Maul with gas.The bill known as Senate bill No.157, and was stated that it had al-

ready passed the senate and is nowbeing considered in the house.Would Absorb Island Electric

Mr. Russel stated that his franchisebill provided that gas shall be suppliedto Maui consumers at not to exceed$2 per thousand cubic feet, with 10percent discount for cash, and thatMaui people will be given chance to

(Continued on Page Eight.)

T i t

is

a

a'

v, . "' - '- --

a-

. ,

a

or a

a

a

aa

ifa

isit

-

a

Maui Is Motorists'Paradise Says Ford

Hands Around Man Will Work ForHaleakala Road And ObservatoryOn Summit Says Engineer BalchWould Take Contract

Alexander Hume Ford, who lastweek made the ascent of HaleakalaIn company with L. W. de Vis Norton,tourists agent of the Ililo Board ofTrade and C. II. Vicars the Hawaiimember of the promotion committee,left for Honolulu on Wednesday after-noon full of plans for exploitingMaui's great crater. One of theseplans is a road up the mountain, endanother is for having a great observa-tory located on the summit.

"Within a week," said Ford, speak-ing about bis mountain road scheme,"A motor car has approached to with-in less than 3 miles of Haleakala'ssummit. Engineer Raich has studiedevery foot of the route over which ittraveled, and earnestly assures methat he would like to have the con-tract for building a road over the routeof four miles above Olinda for $13,000.And he says the road will be as goodas any part of the new roadway be-

tween Makawao and Olinda. More-over he believes a serviceable roadfor automobiles can bo bult entirelyto the bummit for $50,000."

A Record-Breakin- TripFord was referring to the fact of

the Advertiser pilot car which hasbeen on Maul for the past 10 days incharge of J. F. Ness, of the Advertiserstaff, and Tom Duggan, of tho VonHamm-Youn- company, which suc-ceeded in working its tortuous way upthe mountain side S5U0 feet aboveOlinda, or to an eleva'.ion of C500 feet

(Continued on Page Eight.)

i

Page 2: lOOO CHildretVs Gardens Nlrnvxlthe rock on the east breakwater en-tirely overhauled, and has made some surveys for the extension of Its tracks past the electric powerhouse near which

TWO

The LegislatureFORTY-EIGHT- DAY IN HOUSE

Bill IntroducedH. B. 446 Relating to the salary of

the chairman and executive officer oftlu board of supervisors of the Countyof Maul Tavares.

II. B. 447 To amend n (b)of Section 992, R. L. II., 1915, relatingto food Jarrett.

H. H. 448 Providing for a city plan-ing commission for the District of Ho-

nolulu, City and County of HonoluluPetite.

Resolution! OfferedH, R. 13o That land commissioner

infonn house "whether or not it Ispracticable for the territorial govern-ment to agree with Waianae Company,o furnish water to the homesteadersf.t l'ahoa from Its reservoira raid Pahoa" Kelekolio.

II. B. 134 That land commissioner:iforni hoiire why patenfi have not

been issued to parties who have had"heir binds surveyed Kelekolio.

II. B. 135 That attorney-genera- l

"urnish house with an opinion on Sec-io- n

16, Organio Act Kelekolio.It. R. 136 For appointing of select

committee of five house members toinvestigate supply, storage and saleof fisd foods (Mossman) JudiciaryCommittee.

II. It. 137 Requiring Mayor of Ho-

nolulu to furnish house with statementof expenditures under two recent abortive bond elections (Miles) uaDiea

It. C. R. 25 That seven prizes, ag-

gregating $1000 be offered for successive aeroplane flights between Islandsof the Territory Marquez.

II. C. R 26 Instructing OahuLir;aor License Boprd to adopt a unii'oini hour for ciosinr; places dispensing liquor (Ahuna) Judiciary.

Received From SenateS. B. 91 Creating the olftce of regis

trar of firearms and ammunitionsShingle.

Passed Third ReadingII. B. 356 Requiring the attorney-genera-

and deputies to aid poor with-out .charge Lyman.

H. B. 337 Requiring the county andcity and county attorneys and theirdeputies to aid the poor withoutcharjre Lyman.

II. B. 411 Providing further penalties for heedless driving Andrews.

It. B. 411 Relating to salaries andexpenses of circuit courts, districtmagistrates and clerks County

S. 15. 70 Relating to highways Castle.

S. B. 79 To extend for a period often years Section 1250, R. L. H., 1915,relative to exemption of property fromtaxation Shingle.

S. B. 104 To provide for the publication of the decisions of the UnitedStates district court for Hawaii Pa- -

checo.S. B. 114 Providing for the display

of the National Emblem in alf courtrooms uasue

S. B. 127 Making appropriation tocomplete and furnish Bay View Home,"lolokal Cooke.

Failed To Pass On Third ReadingH EL XUEv4din

courts of the Territory of HawaiiAndrews. Seven nyes, nineteen noes.

Bills TabledII. B. 136 Relating to salaries of

county officers Brown.H. B. 363 Appropriating money for

freight moving and handling by Klpa-hul- u

Sugar Company at KipahuluLanding, Maui Joseph.

II. B. 425 Relating to disqualification, absence, etc., of district magis-trates Silva.

Signed By GovernorH. B. 101 As Act 88, entitled; "An

Act to amend Section 6 of Act 117 ofthe Session Laws of 1915, entitled 'AnAct to provide an additional incometax of one per cent upon all corpora-tion incomes and upon individual

in excess of four thousand dollars.' " Kupihea.

II. B. 288 As Act 89, entitled: "AnAct to fix the minimum pay of personscoaching In the public schools of theTerritory of Hawaii." Kelekolio.

II. B. 65 As Act 90, entitled: "AnAct relating to the release by theguardian of an insane married personof his ward's courtesy or Dover inrealty." Andrews.

II. B. 126 As Act 91, entitled: "AnAct to amend Chapter 141 of the Revised Laws of Hawaii, 1915, relating toprobate jurisdiction and procedureby adding certain new sections thereto to be known as Sections 2506A2506B, 2506C, 2506D, 2506E, 2506F and2506G." Mossman.

H. B. 336 As Act 92, entitled: "AnAct providing for an appropriation byway of advancement forand certain low lands inKapiolanl Park." ;Marquez.

H. B. 364 As Act 93, entitied: "AnAct to amend Section 2404 of the Revised Laws of Hawaii, 19X5, relatingfo civil procedure." Andrews.

H. B. 361 As Act 94, entitled: "AnAct to compensate J. S. Ka'ajdela."Andrews.

H. B. 164 As Act 95, entitled: "AnAct to compensate Francisco Dlna."Kawewehi.

H. B. 368 As Act entitled: "AnAct to construct roads to and throughthe homestead lots of Watauili of Pithonua. County of Hawaii, by makingan appropriation by way of advancement out of the general revenues ofthe Territory of Havaii. the same tobe reimbursed out of the proceeds ofthe sale of public lands upon the Island and County of Hawaii " FinanceCommittee.

II. B. 272As Act 97, entitled: "AnAct adding a new section to the Revised Laws of Hawaii, 1915, to beknown as Section 288A, relating to theappointment of truant officers withinthe district of Honolulu." Miles,

II. B. 343 As Act 98, entitled: "AnAct to amend Chapter 189 of the1te-vised Laws of Hawal, 1915, relating tothe registration of copartnerships, byamending Sections 341V" 3412, 3413and 3414, and by adding thereto anew section to ba- - known as Section3415A." Andrews.

S. B. 82 As Act 99, entitled: 'nAct making' an emergency appropriation of ten thousand dollars. $10,000.- -

compensation for judges or the circuit 00) for maintenance, additions, land- -

UP FEED YOU

MAKE EVERY YARD OFSUNNY SOIE FOOD

FOR YOUR FAMILY

Make your work for you and the Nation,idle ground is waste; this is no time for waste orullcness.

KEEP YOUR SOIL ALL SEASON

1. Keep your garden working all season.

2. Get your ready for planting as soonas the soil is dry enough to work.

3. Make plantings of lettuce, rad-

ishes, Leans, and other short-seaso- n crops.

4. Start crops between the rows of plantsthat are soun to Le removed.

5. As fast the ground is cleared of one cropstart a new crop.

YOUR TOO, CAN HELP

iioys and can help to make the soil in your'gardens, Lack yards, and vacant lots foodlor the lamiiy. L,ast year tney raiseu in their gardens and helped to can more than 4,000,000 packagsiof valuable food.

reclaiming

90.

ground

ground

ground at all.

THE MAUI 27, 1917.

Ings, wharves and oil iijo lino, Oahu."Coney.H. 13. 405 As Act 100, entitled: "An

Art to cront a trade and vocationalschool at Lahainaluna, Maul." Educational Committee.

FORTY-NINT- DAY IN HOUSEBill Introduced

II. B. 449 Appropriating $3000 forroad, Puuanahulu Homesteads, NorthKona, Hawaii Kawewehi.

H.- B. 450 Directing officers of Territory to make certain al-

lowances to Honolulu Rapid Transit& Land Company in estimatingamount of income due Territory undertermn nf pnmnnnv'c rlinHnr .Tnrrnlt

H. Appropriating $1000 for al uuaruui an ivoukoho.crwnnvncrr.mr.nt nf a lit Ina lr Tor. OignCQ or

H. B. 452 $2500 and I'loi'""'"; sum m fmu imnii,,i,w .nnini..nHnn, nf Tnrri. i construction oi aspnait macaiiaiu. .... ..... ...... ...... ..v.. ....torial Marketing Division to distribute roan .uioumi i ui iu m x u-

seeds for food uuapu, Hawaii,IT. Tt 453 Roliitini? to nnnn.il n:iv- - man.

ment by Honolulu Rapid Transit &Land Company, under its franchise, ofa per centum of its gross annual re-ceipts Miles.

H. 454 a life savingpatrol for Waikikl Wilder.

Received From Senate109 Providing for public im

provements Coney.

NEWS ArRIL

accounting

Established

Passed Third ReadingII. B. Relating salaries of

district magistrates BrownH. Providing pension for

Judge Vj. Aikue of Koolaupoko,Oahu Wilder.

H. B. 366 To fix minimum pay ofpolice officers Kawaha.

II. B. 370 To the selling ordealing in the capital stock of othersecurities of other foreign corporationsby persons non-reside- of Terri-tory until persons shall have subjected themselves to the jurisdictionof the Hawaiian courts and An-

drews.II. B. 377 To provide for registra

tion of nurses Wilder.H. B. 378 Authorizing Secretary of

Hawaii to make disposition ofHawaii Building at the Panama- -

Pacific ExpositionH. B. 380 Relating salaries of

district magistrates and certain clerksTavares.II. B. 421 Providing for the regis

tration of certain vessels operatedthe waters of the Territory of Hawaii

Lyman.H. B. Authorizing president of

territorial board of health to Issuemits to qualified persons to admjjjlsterand use of medicines ,pf -- Hawaiianherbs and plant

II. B. 429 Authorizing attorneywho holds license practise in dis-

only appearcourt volunteers

warIf. B. 430 Relating thepublic employes Ahuna

M.' B. 431 commissionAdminister emergency-T- r contingentfunds, funds for relief of dependentsof National Guard have been call

tribution ,of supplies within theTerritory Walsh.

H. B. Appropriating fornay substistence of officers and

men of National Guard whenfor service Lyman.

II. B. Relating to of notaries public

shall

RSELFMake Home Gardens and Back Yards Productive

SQUARE FERTILE,PRODUCE

IF CAN'T RAISE YOUR OWNAT LEAST

RAISE SOME

idle ground utilized in the production vejremore food those who have

You some vegetables for family, matter how small a of ground you

new

FRIDAY,

this

Somebody Has to Raise Everything You Eat Do Your Share

WORKING

successive

CHILDREN,

produce

VEGETABLES,

SAVE SURPLUS FRUITSVEGETABLES

If garden at produces more thanyou can use immediately, do not the surplus tosnoil.

produce.

HOW TO GROWVEGETABLES

The Station, College ofHawaii, County Gardens Committee

tell you simple methods forordinary utensils.

DEMONSTRATE THRIFT IN YOUR HOME

Maul for $S4f8 pnld for constructionof homestead road in Kulnha TractTavares.

S. B. 80 Fixing the ofMaul county officials Robinson.

B. 108 Appropriating $100,000for relief of of nationalguardsmen called out active service

Baldwin.S. B. Ill Relating to garnishmentCastle.S. B. 117 Relating to the

of persons to military dutyBaldwin.

Bills TabledH. B. 3S2 Appropriating $100,000 as

special fund for benefit or relief offamilies of certain members of Natlon- -

B. 451 nallOVCrdOr

Appropriating

tirodnets is.on.ua,

B.

B.P.

forbid

Cooke

H. B. 150, as Act "An Act apme

an......m.- - ueeioau

feoutn uy

S. li.

135 to

313

such

laws

final

to

in

426per;.

to

who

food

433

435

Allfor

S.

101

FIFTIETH DAY INBills Introduced

II. B. 455 To appropriate money($5000) for the purpose of defrayingthe of the regular session ofthe house of representatives of thelegislature of the Territory of Hawaiiof the year 1917, from the public treasury Cooke.

Resolutions OfferedII. R. 19 That item "Inspector of

restaurants, hotels and boardingper annum be inserted

in appropriation bill for current expenses Kawewehi

H. R. 139 Instructing board orhealfli to release Miss Florence K.Silva from Settlement.

II. C. 27 the employment of only cllizens, pnd those eligible to become such, on fortificationand other federal work:-- Andrews.

II. C. R. 28 Requesting fitting representalion of United States warshipsat opening of rrarl Harbor naval

June, 1918 Kelekolio.Received From Senate

S. B. 103 Authorizing BLymer, A. W. Mather and others toestablish and conduct, maintainonerate an automobile bus line orlinos upon and along certain streetsMakekau

S. B. 128 Providing penaliJor violation of any origination madeor promulgated, J'board of healththrough its firesident Cooke.

S.-- 130 Relating to advertisement"of notice to creditors ofKnmminbn..

S. B. 131 To const ructionds to anathrough homestead 4o1s of Kukuiopae,Sn-nl- Kona.-Hfva- ii Hind

J tx mnfiAppropriating iuuutrict courts to on appeal JL ni,iiKV mmnnien in inof cases from district or judge. "rinR to nacnamners m supreme courtarown. . . mlrslinnt to policy of

to vacationof

$25,000

enlistedordered

Lyman

YOU ALL

tables means

: raise have

girls

ALL AND

your timeallow

. .

AND

fruit with

salaries

families

subject

Paschonl.

Creatine

special

HOUSE

expenses

houses, $1500,"

Molokai

sta-

tion,

William

decedents

.

department and proclamation ofConey.Passed Third Reading

ti tv 340 Relating to the openingand improving of new or existing

ed service- - and to regulate the dis- - ways n Honolulu Cooke.

and

fees

of

can no piece

any

Hawaii

enrolment

Favoring

and

rule

Governor

highinto i Tt S7fi Making special appioprl

ation for payment of unsettledunder Act. 55, Laws or 1894 lirown.

H. B 416 Appropriating S0,0UU torpurpose employing necessary tem-orar- v

substitutes in all departmentsr.f in which officials, sub- -

nrriinntes or employes, members of theH. B. 442 Reimbursing County of national guard, be called into ac

no

your

or

on

R.

claims

tive service ijj nun.vt n 44fi Relating to the suary of

the chairman and executive officer of

the board of supervisors. County ofMaui Tavares.

tt n 447 To amend suVsection (o)of Section 992, R. L. H., 1915, relatingto food Jarrett.

Failed On Third ReadingS. B. 27 Relating personal taxe.--

Kamauoha.Third Reading Today

II B. 107 Making appropriation forbenefit of George Waipa Mossman.

H. B. 137 Appropriating !uuu iorreconstruction of homestead roaa,Waiohuli-Keok'.- a beich mis, jviauiBrown. . ,

H. B. 176 Appropriating iuiconstructing fill and road3 tnrougnPonahawl Lots, Hilo Lyman.

H. B. 198 Making appropriation 101

of Capt. John C. LorenzenWilder. .m

II. 260 Forbidding ouicers huuemployes of Territory and politicalsubdivisions to become interested inpublic contracts Marquez.

H B. 419 Providing for additionalcompensation for judges of the circuitcourts of the Territory anuiewa.

II. B. 420 Making iuibenefit of Frederick it uocKeuMiles.

w n 434 Relating to the disposition of personal property belonging tothe Territory Lyman.

it n Providing aisposiuuuof certain public lands within the tractknown as the Papaaloa womesieaua,

Tliln Hawaii Lvman.Relating limitations

real estate ChillingwortnTabled

RelatingLvnnnuns piroiiH court officers Silva

uCu,,S) pea. coin, to.uaioes, Varies Hawaiispinach, pumpkin, and squash. 5F-Xin-

g

yea-r-livery can oi vegetables lruit and every tar of Kelekolio.

to

appropriauon

438 ior

S B. 107 to m

RillII B. 10 to salaries aim

.. i.. t .. . , ., u.y.us ueeis, ofa

T-- f . .or

r

preserved fond moans tli.-i- t vnu 1i:ivo ,t I Sinned Bv Governormaterials that would have otherwise been wasted. D- - 281-- As Act 102, entitled: "An

Act appropriating the sum of five tnou-La- n

or store root crops, cabbage, and other san(j dollars ($5,000.00) for theproperly so that they will keep well and pletlon of a survey, map and plans of

supply you with food when the garden ceases to certain lands in "f)j'",u-'- 'entitled: "An

LEARN CAN

Experiment thethe Fair will

willand at home home

of

Tnrritnrv

?zu,uuu

benefit

B.

it n )nq As Act 103.

Act to amend the law providing forth narole of prisoners, as embracedwithin Chapters 107 and 216 of the Revised Laws of Hawaii, 1915.

H. B. 315 As Act 104, entitled: "AnAct making an to pay.James L. Coke for services renderedand expenses incurred in behalf of the

you explicit directions for raising Territory of Hawaii at WashingtonIgive canning

appropriation

vegetables,City during the months or January anuFebruary. 1916.

S. B. 71 As Act 105, entitiea: "AnAct to amenu section an a oi lue iwvised Laws of Hawaii, 1915, authorizing the issuance of municipal bonds."

S. B. 90 As Act 106, entitled: "AnAct making an appropriation by wayof advancement out of the general

MAKE SAVING, RATHER THAN SPENDING, YOUR SOCIAL STANDARD KSno'fh.'lSi'ulaiJ'S!I district of Makawao, County of Maul,to be reimbursed out of the proceeds

of sales of homesteads in said

S. B. 94 As Act 107, entitled: "AnAct to amend Section l of Act 14 ofthe Session Laws of 1915, prohibitingthe operation of aeroplane, balloon andother air craft in the Territory of Hawaii with certain restrictions.

S. B. 96 As Act 108. entitled: "AnAct to amend Sections 666 and 669 ofChapter 48 of the Revised Laws ofHawaii, 1915, relating to eminent domain."

S. B. 70 As Act 109, entitled: "AnAct to amend Section 1881 of the Re-

vised Laws of Hawaii, 1915, relatingto highways."

S. B. 79 As Act 110, entitled: "AnAct to extend for a period of ten yearsSection 1250 of the Revised Laws ofHawaii, 1915, relative to exemption ofproperty from taxation."

S. B. 104 As Act 111, entitled: "AnAct to provide for the publication ofthe decisions of the United States District Court for Hawaii." Pacheco.

S. B. 114 As Act 112, entitled: "AnAct to provide for the display of patriotic emblems in the courthousesand courtrooms of the Territory, aiylto make an appropriation, to be immediately available, to carry out thepurposes of this Act. Castle.

S. B. 127 As Act 113, entitled: "AnAct. making appropriation for the completlon and furnishing of the Bay ViewHome at Kalaupapa, Molokai.

FIFTY-FIRS- DAY IN HOUSEBill Introduced

H. B. 456 Authorizing counties andcity and county, by ordinance, to regulate and prescribe the construction ofchimneys and smokestacks and tocompel the building and cleaning ofsame, and to regulate and prevent theemission of dense smoke or poisonouscases therefrom, and to declare thesame a nuisance. Miscellany Committee, substitute for Fernandez' H. B365.

Resolution OfferedH. B. 140 Requesting commissioner

of public lands to open any availableland at and near Kalihi. Punchbowland Palolo, Honolulu, for the purposeof raising food products during the duration of the war Kelekolio.

H. C. R. 29 Favoring system oftruck-gardenin- and fancing in publicschools Lyman.

H. C. R. 30 Requesting Congress toenact legislation-fo- r increase of compensation of certain territorial officers

Lyman.Petition Presented

H. P. 44 Requesting land commis-sioner to set aside government landsin Kalihi, Punchbowl and Palolo forraising of food products during con-tinuation of war with Germany Hol-stei-

Received From SenateS. B. 62 To provide for public im.

provements Shingle.S. B. 113 Relating to immigration,

labor and statistics Shingle.S. B. 129 To provide prison labor

for public work in Kapiolani Park andTantalus Road, Honolulu Shingle.

S. B. 135 To prevent corporations,joint stock, trust and fiduciary companies and doing businessas trust or fiduciary companies frompractise of law Judiciary Committee.

S. C. R. 14 Requesting Congress toamend land laws of the TerritoryChillingwortn.

S. J. R. 4 Directing the Governorand the commissioner of public landsto set aside water for the use of the

Titti

County Farm and Sanitorlum, Kauai,without charge Coney.

Pasted Third ReadingII. B. 107 Making appropriation for

benefit of George Waipa Mossman.II. B. 137 Appropriating $5000 for

reconstruction of homestead road,Waiohull-Keoke- a beach lots. MaulBrown,

H. B. 176 Appropriating $20,000 forconstructing fill nnd roads through

Lots, Hilo Lyman.H. B. 198 Making appropratlon for

benefit of Capt. John C. LorenzenWilder.

H. B. 260 Forbidding officers andemployes of Territory and politicalsubdivisions to become Interested inpublic contracts Marquez.

II. B. 420 Making appropriation forbenefit of Frederick K. CockettMiles.

H. B. 434 Relating to the disposition of personal property belonging tothe Territory Lyman.

II. B. 438 Providing for dispositionof certain public lands within the tractknown as the Papaaloa HomesteadsNorth Hilo, Hawaii Lyman.

II. B. 449 Appropriating $300 forroad, Puuanahulu Homesteads, NorthKonn, Hawaii Kawewehi.

H. B. 452 Appropriating $2500 andauthorizing superintendent of Terri-torial Marketing Division to distributeseeds for food products Paschoal.

H. B. 454 Establishing a life saving patrol for Waikikl Wilder.

Failed On Third ReadingS. B. 107 Relating to limitations of

real estate Chillingworth. 2 ayes and20 noes; reconsidered later and plac-ed on order of day for third readingagain on Monday, April 23.

Bill TabledII. B. 28 Fixing a minimum wage

for road laborers Miles.H. B. 70 Making compensation of

second district magistrate of Honoluluand H"ilo seven dollars a day whileserving Kelekolio.

H. B. 130 To regulate legislativeappearance Leal. ,

H. B. 267 Making special appropri-ation for paying cost of diverting Apu-akeha- u

Stream, Hamohamo, WaikikiAndrews.

H. B. 296 Providing for payment ofcertain services for Oahu Loan FundCommission Kelekolio.

H. B. 320 Appropriating $5000 forwalling Alenaio Stream, Knkuau, Hilo

Leal.H. B. 365 To regulate chimneys

and smokestacks Fernandez.H. B. 427 Relating to the salaries

of district magistrates and certainclerks Andrews.

II. B. 432 Appropriating certainmoneys for the expense and mainten-ance of prisoners Silva.

H. B. 445 Appropriating $20,000 forconstruction of ditch to carry waterfrom Kawi headwater to Kapaa, Ka-pa-

and Mailehuna homestead lands,Kauai Lota.

H. B. 451 Appropriating $1000 forencouragement of aeronautics in Ter-ritory Marquez.

S. B. 89 Relating to equity jurisdic-tion over estates Castle.

Signed By GovernorH . B. 131 As Act 114, entitled: "An

Act to amend Section 297 of Chapter25 of the Revised Laws of Hawaii,1915, regarding maintenance ofschools" Marquez.

H. B. 92 As Act 115, entitled: "AnAct to provide an insurance law for the

(Continued on Page Seven.)

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TELEGRAPH NEWS OF

VON BISSING DEADLONDON, April 19 Despatches from the Reutcr correspond-

ent at Copenhagen last night announced the death in Germany of Generalvon Hissing, at one time governor of Belgium. He is reported to havedied last night.

WOULD BAR BREWERS USING GRAINKANSAS CITY, April 19 The hoard of trade yesterday formally

adopted a resolution calling upon congress to put a legislative ban uponthe use of grain of any sort for the manufacture of alcoholic liquorsfor beverages.

SENATE STANDS FORApril 20 By a vote of forty-thre- e to thirty-thre- e

the senate this afternoon defeated a motion to strike the entirecensorship clause from the espionage bill. By a vote of forty to thirty-fou- r

the senate rejected a substitute designed to modify the provisionsof the censorship.

NEW USE FOR SHELLSApril 20 The war office last night made known

the last German trick to influence the Russian soldiers in the field. Shellsloaded with a small charge of explosive, and containing copies of the ad-

dress delivered in Berlin by Doctor von the Germanchancellor, in which he declared that the Kaiser had no intention ofi t deavoring to restore the Romanoff dynasty, have been fired into theRussian lines. They are burst open by the charge and the copies of theaddress scattered among the Russian troops.

SPANISH SHIPMADRID, April 18 The Spanish steamship Tom was torpedoed

today unwarned. Eighteen lives were lost, according to late reports.This incident is expected still further to inflame Spain against Germanyin spite of the persistent efforts of the Government to keep out of thewar.

WILSON DEMANDSApril 19 The administration came out flatly

for conscription by selection yesterday when the President in a state-

ment declared that this means only justice be done to all and a greatand effective army raised for the work of crushing Prussian militarism.

BY AUTHORITY

PUBLIC NOTICE OFPRIMARY ELECTION

Notice is hereby given that in ac-

cordance with the terms of Section 28of the Revised Laws of Hawaii, 1915,as amended by Act 152 of the SessionLaws of 1915 and Act 3 of the SessionLaws of 1917, a Primary Election forthe purpose of making nominationsfor city and county and county officeswithin the City and County of Hono-lulu and Counties of Hawaii, Maul andKauai, as more particularly hereinaf-ter set forth, will be held on Satur-day, the 19th day of May, A. D. 1917,throughout said city and county andcounties, between the hours of eighto'clock, a. m., and five o'clock, p. m.

The city and county and county of-

fices in the said city and county andcounties for which candidates are tobe nominated by each political partyof such Primary Election are as fol-lows:

COUNTY OF MAUIOne SheriffOne County ClerkOne AuditorOne TreasurerOne County AttorneyFive Supervisors, four to be elected

as members only and the fifth to beelected as chairman and executive of-

ficer of the Board.The districts, precincts and polling

places in said counties are as follows:COUNTY OF MAUI

Third Representative District Theislands of Maui, Molokai, Lanal andKahoolawe.

First Precinct The Island of Lanal.Polling place, Kahalepalaoa store-house.

Second Precinct The portion of La-hai-

District on the Island of Maui,northeasterly of the north boundaryof Honokawai. Polling place, HonoluaRanch Store, Honokohua.

Third Precinct The portion of La-hain-a

District on the Island of Maul,between the second precinct and thonorth boundary of Olowalu. Pollingplace, Lahaina Courthouse.

Fourth Precinct The remainder ofLahaina District. Polling place, Olo-walu schoolhouse.

Fifth Precinct The portion of Wal-luk- u

District south of Waiehu andwest of a line from the mouth of Wai-luk- u

Stream along the sand hills tothe sea at Maalaea Bay. Pollingplace, Wailuku Courthouse.

Sixth Precinct The portion of thethe Wailuku District north of thesouth boundary of Waiehu. Pollingplace, Waihee Schoolhouse.

Seventh Precinct The portion ofWailuku District between the fifthprecinct and the Makawao DistrictPolling place, Puunene Schoolhouse

Eighth Precinct The portion of theMakawao District bounded on thewest by the east edge of the Malikogulch; on the north by the sea; onthe east by the west edge of the Hale-hak- u

Gulch; and on the south by aline along the Makawao-Huel- o Roadto its junction with the new llamakua ditch in the bottom of the Hulu--

bulunul or Kaupakalua Gulch, thencealong the new Hamakua Ditch to theeast edge of the Maliko Gulch. Polling place, Kuiaha Schoolhouse.

Ninth Precinct Honuaula and theisland of Kahoolawe. Polling place,Honoaula Courthouse.

Tenth Precinct The portion of Makawao District between the ninthprecinct and the bed of Waiell Gulch.Polling place, Keokea Schoolhouse.

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BY AUTHORITY

Eleventh Precinct The portion ofMakawao District bounded on thewest and north by the Wailuku Dis-trict and the new Hamakua Ditch toits junction with the Makawao-Huel- o

Road In the bottom of the Huluhulu-nu- ior Kaupakalua Gulch, thence along

said road to the Halehaku Gulch; onthe east by the west edge of the HaW'haku Gulch; and on the south by thetenth precinct. Polling place, MakaVwao Schoolhouse.

Twelfth Precinct The portion ofMakawao District north of the Eleventh Precinct south of the sea andbetween the east edge of the MalikoGulch and the boundary of WailukuDistrict. Polling place, Paia School-hous-

Thirteenth Precinct The portion ofMakawao District east of the bed ofHalehaku Gulch. Polling place, Hu-elo Schoolhouse.

Forteenth Precinct The portion ofHana District northwest of the Kapa-ula stream. Polling place, KeanaeSchoolhouse.

Fifteenth Precinct The portion ofHana District between the fourteenthprecinct and the Hana-Koola- u bound-ary. Polling place, Nahiku Schoolhouse.

Sixteenth Precinct The portion ofHana District between fifteenth precinct and Kipahulu. Polling place,Hana Courthouse.

Seventeenth Precinct Kipahulu.Polling place, Kipahulu plantationhall.

Eiahteenth Precinct The remainderof Hana District, including Kaupo andKahikinui. Polling place, KaupoSchoolhouse.

Nineteenth Precinct The portion ofthe Island of Molokai north of a linerunning along the bed of the Honouli- -

wal gulch, the southern boundary ofHalawa and the top of the ridge tetween Wailau and Halawa. Pollingplace, Halawa Schoolhouse.

Twentieth Precinct The portion ofthe Island of Molokai bounded on theest by the nineteenth precinct and onthe west by the east boundary or Kawela and the Kalawao Distrfct. Poll-ing place, Pukoo Courthouse.

Twenty-f'rs- t Precinct The remainder of the Island of Molokai exceptingthe Kalawao District. Polling place,Kaunakakai Schoolhouse.

IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF,have hereunto set my handand caused the Great Seal ofthe Territory of Hawaii to beaffixed.

(Seal) DONE at the Capitol in Honolulu this 18th day of April, AD., 1917.WADE WARREN THAYER.

Secretary of Hawaii(Apr. 27, May 4, 11.)

LODGE MAUI, NO. 684, A. F. A A. M

Stated meetings will be held atMasonic Hall, Kahulul, on the firstSaturday night of each month at 7:30P. M.

Visiting brethren are cordially invited to attend.

H. K. DUNCAN, R. W. M.W. A. ROBB1NS. Secretary.

ALOHA LODGE NO. 3 KNIGHT8OF PYTHIA8.

Regular meetings will be held atthe Knights of Pythias Hall. Wailuku, on the second Saturday and fourthFriday of each month.

All visiting members are cordiallyinvited to attend.

A. C. RATTRAY. C. C.J. II. PRATT, K. R & S.

THE MAUI NEWS, FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1917.

BY AUTHORITY

HOOLAHA KOHO BALOTAWAE MOHO

Ma kola ke hoolnhala aku nel i ku- -

ike ai me na hoakaka a ka Pauku28 o na Kanawai i Hooponoponoia oHawaii o 1915, a i hoololi ia e ke Ka-nawai 152 o na Kanawai Kau o 1915

nie Kanawai 3 o na Kanawai Kau o1917, ho koho Balota Wae Moho no kawae ana i na Luna Kulanaknuhale meKnlana a me na LunaKalana no ke Ku--

anakauhale a me Kalana o Honolulume na Kalana o Hawaii, Maui a me

Knuul, e like me ia 1 hoike maipo- -

poia niahope iho nel, ke malaniaia anama ka I'onona, ka la 19 o Mel, M. H.1917, maloko o ke 'Kulanaknuhale ame Kalana a mo na Kalana 1 ololoiamawaena. o ka hora 8 o ke kakahiaka

me ka hora 5 o ka aulna la.O na Luna Kulnnakauhalc a me ka-n- a

a mo na Luna Knlana iloko o keKulannkauhale a me Kalana a me naKalana 1 olelola no Iakou na moho ewaeia ana e kola a me keia aoao Ka--

:iinina i ke koho balola wae moho ekuliko no la me keia mahopc iho nei:

KALANA O MAUIIlookr.hl Makn'-nu- i

Hookahi Kkauolelo o kellookalii Lma-hooi-

Hookahi PuukuHookah! Loio KalanaElima Lunakiai, eha e kohoia i mau

ata walo no, a o ka lima hoi e kohoiaLunahoomalu Lunahooko no ka Papa.O na apana, na maliele a me na wa- -

hi koho iloko o na knlana i oleloia ekulike no ia me keia mahope Iho not:

Apana Lunamakaainana Ekolu NaMokupuni o Maui, Molokai, Lanal ame Kahoolawe.

KALANA O MAUI

Mahele Ekahi Ka Mokupuni o Lanal. Wahi koho, Haleukana ma Kaha-lepalaoa.

Mahele Elua Keia mahele o kaApana o Lahaina ma ka mokupuni oMaui, ma ka aoao akau hikina o kapalena akau o Honokowal. Wahi ko-

ho, Halekual Honolua Ranch, Houo-kohu-

Mahele Ekolu Keia mahele o kaApana o Lahaina ma ka Mokupuni oMaui, mawaena o ka mahele elua meKa palena, ftVau o Olowalu. Wahi koho,-

-Hale,. o Lahaina.

.' Mafc'te.h'arrJva lefieha.. iho o kaApaaa. o: LtyaJjut; f Wahi KohoA Hale-

Mahele Efmj Ja 'mtthele o Ka- Apana o v aiiuku- - ma; ka "oio- - hemrf oO

ka palena o Waiehu ltoetoitama(ioikekahi laina mai ka waha" mat c

ka muliwai o Wailuku a holo m&'lulaina o na puu one a hiki i ke kai make awa o Maalaea. Wahi koho. HaleHookolokolo o Wailuku.

Mahele Eono Ka mahele o ka Apana o Wailuku ma ka agau o ka palenahema o Waiehu. Wahi Koho, Hale- -

kula o Waihee.Mahele Ehiku Ka mahele o ka

Apana o Wailuku mawaena o ka mahe-le elima me ka apana o Makawao.W'ahi koho, Halekula o Puunene.

Mahele Ewalu Ka mahele o kaApana o Makawao nona na palena ikulike no ia me keia mahope iho nel;Ma ke Komohana ke kae hikina o keKahawai o Maliko; ma ka akau kekai; ma ka hikina ke kae komohana0 ke Kahawai o Halehaku; a ma kahema oio no kekahi laina e holo anama ke alanui Makawao-Huel- o a hiki1 ka hui ana me ka auwai hou o Ha-makua i ka papaku a Huluhulunui oiohoi ke Kahawai o Kaupakulua, a mailaila aku e holo ana ma auwai hou oHamakua a hiki i ke kae hikina o keKahawai o Maliko. Wahi koho, Hale-kula o Kuiaha.

Mahele Eiwa Honuaula me ka Ma- -

Mokupunl o Kahoolawe. Wahi koho,Halehool-.olokol- o Honuaula.

Mahele Umi Ka mahele o ka Apana o Makawao mawaena o ka maheleeiwa ma ka owawa o Waiell. Wahikoho, Halekula o Keokea.

Mahele Umlkumamakahl Ka mahele o ka Apana o Makawao nona napalena i kulike no ia me keia mahopeiho n"i; Ma ke komohana a nie kaakau, ka Apana o Wailuku a me kaauwai hou o Hamakua a hiki 1 ka huiana me ke Alanui Makawa.o-lIuel- o

ka papaku o Huiuhulu-nu- i oia hoi keKahawai o Halehaku; ma ka hikina,no kae komolutna o ke Kahawai oHalehaku; a ma hema, ka hema kaMahele Umi. Wahi koho, Halekula oMakawao.

Mahele Umikumamalua Ka maheleo ka Apana o Makawao ma ka akau oKa mahele Unukumamakahi, hema oke kai a mawaena o ke kae hikina oke Kahawai o Maliko a me ka palenao ka Apana o Wailuku. Wahi koho,Hale Kula o Paia.

Mahele Umikumamakolu Ka mahe-le o ka Apana o Makawao ma ka hikina o ke kahawai o Halehaku. Wahikoho, Halekula o Huelo.

Mahele Umikumamaha Ka maheleo ka Apana o Hana ma ka akau komohana o ke Kahawai o Kapaula. Wahi koho, Halekula o Keanae.

Mahele Umikumamalima Ka mahele o ka Apana o Hana mawaena o kamahele umikumamaha me ka palenao Hana me Koolau. Wahi koho, HaIekula o Nahiku.

Mahele Umikumamaono Ka mahe-le umikumamalima me Kipahulu. Wahi koho, Hale Hookolokolo o Hana.

Mahele Umikumamahiku KipahuluWahi koho. Hale Halawal o ka IlulMahiko o Kipahulu.

Mahele Umikumamawalu Ke koe- -

na o ka Apana o Hana, hui pu ana iaKaupo me Kahikinui. Wahi koho. Haiekula o Kaupo.

Mahele Umikumamaiwa Ka mahele o ka Mokupuni o Molokai akaukekahi laina e holo ana mawaena o kapapaku o ke Kahawai o Honouliwai,ka palena hema o Halawa a me kahokua o ke Kuahlwl pale la Wailaume Halawa. Wahi koho, HalekulaHalawa.

Mahele Iwakalua Ka mahele o kaMokupuni o Molokai 1 apoia ma kahikina e ka mahele umikumamaiwa, ama ke komohanao ka palena hikima oKawela a me ka Apana o Kalawao,Wahi koho, Hale Kookolokolo o Pukoo,

Mahele Iwakaluakumamakuhl Kekoena o ka Mokupuni o Molokai a koe

BY AUTHORITY

aku ka Apana o Kalawao. Wahi koho,Halekula o Kaunakakai.

I HOIKE NO KEIA, ua kau ihoau i ko'u lima a ua hooplli puhoi i ka Sila Nui o ka Ter-itor- i

o Hawaii.(Sila) H AN, A LA ma ke Kapitola ma

Honolulu, i keia la 18, o April,M. H. 1917.

WADE WARREN TIIAYER,Kakauolelo o ka Terltore.

NOTICE OF SALE OF GOVERN- -

MENT LOT.

At 12 o'clock noon, Saturday, May12th, 1917, at the front door of theCapitol Building, Honolulu, there willbe sold at Public Auction, the follow-ing:

That certain Government Lot, situ-ate at Lahaina, Maui, situate on thononh sido of L. C. A. 387, containingan area of 1605 square feet, more orless.

Upset price, $200.Terms, Cash.Purchaser shnll pay cost of stamp.For maps and further Information,

apply at the offlco of the Commission-er of Public Lands, Capitol Building,Honolulu. T. H.

B. G. RIVENEURGH.Commissioner of Public Lands.

Dated at Honolulu, March 28th, 1917.(April C, 13, 20, 26, May 4, 11.)(Apr. 27, May 4, 11.)

NOTICE OF SALE OF GOVERN.MENT LEASE

At 12 o'clock, noon, at the front doorof the Capitol Building, Honolulu,Tuesday, May 29th, there will be soldat public auction, under Section 380of the Revised Laws of Hawaii of1915, a General Lease of the followingdescribed Government land:

A parcel of 1 acre, within Lot 74,Waiohull-Keokea- , Kula, Maul, oc-

cupied by the Chinese Y. M. C. A. Up-

set rental, $5 per annum, payable inadvance; term of lease 21 years fromMay 29th, 1917.

The purchaser shall pay the cost oradvertising.

For maps and further information,apply at the office of the Sub-Agen- t,

Mr. W. O. Aiken, Paia, Maui, or at theoffice of the Commissioner of PublicLands, Capitol Building, Honolulu, T.a.

"... , B. G., RIVENBURGH,v Cmftmlssioner of Public Lands.Patad aft Honolulu, April 12th, 1917.

' Apr. 2 27, May 4, 11, 18, 25.)

NQTItr tK?3ALE OF GOVERN-."'-

MENT J LEASE

At 18- - o'clock, boon... Tuesday, May29th, at the;fronfc door'oj6,tU Capitoluuiiaing, iiouoiiuu, mere wi.uat public auction,, the.; ltiilpwiw Government remnant : , r . i. . ,

That certain GoveraUieut ,rmnantlying between Lot No. 47, ana u CA. 1217, Pulehuiki, Kula, Maul oniaia-in- g

an area of 2.5 acres, more or ldsa";upset price, $40. U'1--

Terms, Cash.Purchaser shall pay cost of stamp.For maps and further information,

apply at the office of the Sub-Agen- t,

Mr. W. O. Aiken, Paia, Maui, or atthe office of the Commissioner ofPublic Lands, Honolulu, T. H.

B. G. RIVENBURGH.Commissioner of Public Lands.

Dated at Honolulu, April 12th, 1917(Apr. 20, 27, May 4, 11, 18, 25.)

NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATOR'SSALE OF REAL ESTATE.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THESECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,TERRITORY OF HAWAII.

n the Matter of the Estate of GeorgeEdwin Miner, Deceased.

Notice is hereby given that actingunder an order of the Honorable W. S,EDINGS, Judgo of the Circuit Courtfor the Socolvd Judicial Circuit, Ter-ritory of Hawaii, made on the 19th,day of April A. D., 1917 authorizing,empowering nnd directing me to sellcertain real property belonging to theestate of George Edwin Miner, Ueceased for the purpose of paying debts,claims, and expenses of administration of said estate; on the 12th day orMay A. !., 1917 at 12:00 o'clock noonof said day at tho front door or tneCourt House of the Circuit Court atWailuku. Maul, T. II. offer for saleand sell to the highest bidder for cashU. S. Gold coin;

Two-tent- h interest, undivided in theEstate of Annie Miner lands situatedon Vineyard Street in Wailuku, County of Maul, Territory of Hawaii.

Terms of sale, Cash.Deed at Expense of purchaser.Dated at Wailuku, Maui, T. II., this

21st day of April A. D., 1917.J. GARCIA,

Administrator of the Estate of CeorgeEdwin Miner, Deceased.April 27, May 4, 11.)

VOTERS, ATTENTION

The General Register (Official)will be closed at midnight Wednesday, May 2, 1917, for the registeringof voters for the County Primary, tobe held May 19. 1917, and again willbe opened on May 21. 22. and 23, 1917for the General Election to be held onJune 12, 1917.

Wm. FRED KAAE,County Clerk, County of Maul.

(Mar. 23, 30, Apr. 6, 13. 20. 27.)

FOR SALE

Household furniture for sale.- Mrs. J. C. FOSS, Jr.

FOR SALESecond hand Bulck Touring Car,

guaranteed in best of condition, self-

starter, lights, etc., J. C. FOSS, Jr,

Baby ChicksAND

Laying Hens For Sale

Phone Puunene School.

GRAND HOTEL

The Henry Waterhouse Trust Co., Ltd.

BUY8 AND SELLS REAL ESTATE, STOCKS AND BCNBt.WRITES FIRE AND LIFE

NEGOTIATES LOANS AND MORTGAGES.

SECURES INVESMENTS.

A List of High Grade Securities Mailed on

CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED.

HONOLULU, HAWAII.

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E. O. HALL &DISTRIBUTORS FOR THE

ih.'-.-u -, V

1

IT

THE REXALL

THREE

INSURANCE.

Application.

WAILUKU, MAUI, T. H.

Reasonable Rates

Dinner parties given specialattention.

r. o. box til

Cash Installments Tirms

$295.00 $305.00 $130.00 cash andseven monthly

of$25.00 each.

$335.00 $245.00 $145.00 cash andmonthly pay-ments of $25.-0- 0

each.

$100.00 $110.00 $50.00 eash anda 1 x monthlypayments o f$10.00 each.

$110.00 $50.00 cash andsix monthlypayments o f$10.00 each.

SON, LIMITEDTERRITORY OF HAWAII.

ii'r ?'. ;.,., ..,. ., . --. ...

BY

EVERY SECOND

HONOLULU

le First Bank

TERRITORIAL

HonoluaWailuku Hardware & Grocery Company, Ltd.

"Save tha Cash Coupons"

ORDER MAIL!

National

BRAND

RURERanch Coffee

Our MAIL ORDER DEPARTMENT la ex-

ceptionally well equipped to handle all yourDrug and Toilet wants thoroughly and at once.

We will pay postage on all orders of 60c

and over, except the following:Mineral Waters, Baby Foods, Glassware

and articles of unusual weight and small value.Alcohol, Strychnine,

Rat Poisons jodine, Ant Poison, MercuryAntlseptlo Tablets, Lysol, Carbolic Acid,

Gasoline, Turpentine, Benzine and allother poisonous or Inflammable articles.

If your order Is very heavy or containsmuch liquid, we suggest that you hare it sentby freight

Benson, Smith & Co., Ltd.SERVICE

STORE

payments

$100.00

Page 4: lOOO CHildretVs Gardens Nlrnvxlthe rock on the east breakwater en-tirely overhauled, and has made some surveys for the extension of Its tracks past the electric powerhouse near which

FOUR THE MAUI NEWS, FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1917.

THE MAUI NEWS FRIENDLY' ADVICE AND A PROMISE

Entered at the Post Office at Wailuku, Maul, Hawaii, as second-clas- s matter. The Attorney General's advice to German aliens to "Obey the law :

A Republican Paper Published in the Interest of the People keep jour mouth shut," doubtless voices the sentiment of the nation,Issued Every Friday. however differently the idea might be expressed. The promise of safe-

tyMAUI PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED, in person and projerty which goes with this adv ice will also be echoedProprietor! and Publisher! in the American mind. President Wilson's declaration that our war is

Subscription Rates, $2.50 per Year in Advance. not against the German people but against the. German government, isWILL. J. COOPER, EDITOR AND MANAGER one of the truest things in the United Slates today. It should make easyFRIDAY APRIL 27, 1917 the healing of the breach when this conflict is over.

REORGANIZING THE NATIONAL GUARD

The order from Washington discharging from the national guardall enlisted men who have families dependent upon them, will relievethe Islands from an embarrasing position. Also it will go far towardsstrengthening confidence in the fairness and wisdom of the army depart-ment. The order doubtless applies to every national guard company inthe United States, but it touches Hawaii almost as a special reliefmeasure. Here, in an excess of patriotic zeal or local pride, a militiaorganization was built up several times the proportionate strength ofthat of any other part of the United States. Just what this meant toHawaii's industries was not realized until a general mobilization orderimpended. But Hawaii's men are not quitters. In spite of the factthat private and public business must have been most seriously disrupt-ed, there was no disposition to squeal. Preparations have been goingon steadily, and had the order to move actually come any time in thepast two weeks, every company in the Territory would have respondedpromptly.

But a successful war depends upon industrial organization quite asmuch as upon great bodies of armed and trained men. There is evidenceto show that the administration is profiting along these lines by the les-

sons which England had to learn the hard way. If it can get past by aprecedent-hampere- d congress its conscription policy it will be in posi-

tion to organize a fighting force with the least possible disturbance ofthe industrial body of the nation. The men who will be taken will bethose that can best be spared. It will be no blind haphazard selection.Men who can best serve their country in the shop or behind the plow,will not be permitted to take the place on the battle front of an un-

skilled laborer or shirker from duty. The spirit of a volunteer armyis a mighty fine thing, but it ought not to be given its head.

The Territory should now be in a position to reorganize the guardon a basis of about one third the previous strength, and have a morehighly efficient organization as a result. And Hawaii can spare thisnumber of men, and will gladly make the necessary sacrifice to do so.

RUMORS

These are the days of rumors. They are air-plan- ts that thrive onnothing and which multiply as the spores of a fungus carried on thebreeze. Unless backed by absolute authority it is best to doubt any storyhowever plausible; and een then it is well to cross-exami- ne the authorit'- -

Newspaper men are a unit in believing that the large part of thesewild and oftime harmful reports might be avoided by the healthful disin-

fection of simple candor and broad publicity. But this we cannot hav-- uotil official minds and particularly military minds have become jrt)"pre

enlightened than they are today. I here is doubtless, little, going' on inHawaii even now that would be injured by being known to all the world,but no man weajrlae uniform mar onen his lins1 without Permission

.' froru'Jumirle higher up.'AThus it is Xat atmosphere ideal for the"development of mischievous stories is created! Mo one may even contradict them. '

Extravagant spy yarns involving two well known Honolulu menhave been retailed throughout the islands for several weeks past withan ever-growi- infinitude of detail, only to fall into nothingness whenthe men concerned returned home from ordinary business trips. Aword from proper authorities would have checked these stories beforethey could have well started.

It used to be the theory in territorial official circles that public in-

terest would suffer by candor on part of public officials, and the lack ofthat candor on one occasion destroyed half of Honolulu through a sense-less plague panic. Now days such crises are handled differently. Whatthe army heeds what the nation will some day insist upon is a realpublicity bureau. But army-traine- d men could never successfully runit.

ETERNAL VIGILENCE IS THE PRICE OF SAFETY

The epidemic of anthrax which has suddenly appeared among cattleon one of the most isolated ranches in the whole territory, should serveas a sharp reminder that in vigilence only is there safety. That thisjustly dreaded livestock disease could thus find a foothold in the Islands,would probably have been denied by all authorities two weeks ago. Butit is here, and may never be entirely eradicated. It is now up to notonly the paid experts of the territory, but to every rancher or otherperson who may have the responsibility of transporting animals oranimal products from one island to another, to neglect no precaution.The Kauai epidemic is supposed to have been brought from the main-land in bone-mea- l. It is also well to know that anthrax kills humans aswell as livestock.

The Hilo board of trade has just grounds for being sore with thelegislature for saddling the county of Hawaii with a loan for buildinga portion of the Volcano road. Like the Haleakala road project, theVolcano road must always be of more value to Honolulu than to anyother part of the territory and it is therefore unfair to expect the entireburden to be borne by any one county. The territorial roads bill seemsto have been lost in the shuffle for this session, but the principle shouldnot be lost sight of for the future.

0

A prominent army officer in Honolulu is reported to have said thatthe army has no interest in the children's garden movement. Probablynot. The children of Hawaii will not be able to feed many soldiers.But they and their parents may learn how to feed themselves better,which means better living, which means better citizens. The army, how-

ever, is taking some lessons in helping feed itself which is somethingthat it should have been learning a very long time ago.

0

The Ford is the same old stand-b- y this year as heretofore, but itmakes a better impression and a lot of the rattle has been eliminated.'

OUR ISLAND CONTEMPORARIES

A Socialistic PropositionConsiderable interest is being shown

in the proposal, as Bet forth in HouseIH11 M r Alill 1 1i"" i.w, ri'w. jiii i uuuv ru ill i ui uby Representative Norman K. Lyman,to have the Territory purchase theWaiakea Mill and establish a govern-ment rpntrnl fnr tlio TinTT)neloiHriia nfthis district, after the WaiaVea landsare subdvided into homesteads. Thisis the gist of the measure now beforethe legislature.

Such a proposal is a most radicalone and should be considered in itsDeanng upon tne prosporr.y ot tnc'Pnrri i ni'V rutVior tVinn immt tho tlnrsonal benefit it might be to a compar-atively few homesteaders. As it is,we do not believe that the time is ripein mis leimory ior me esiaunmi-ritii- t

nf aiinii a nylprnnl nntprnriKP- -

lt is more than probable that withsuch a diversity of interests as wouldbe sure to prevail under the proposedplan there would follow nothing buttrouble, financial loss to the Territoryand political wire puinn;.'.

The lease to most of the Waiak-'- n

lands ends next year. At present theplantation is srleiuliuiy orgamzcu,now anil imiirovemeu' 3 haverecently been installed in the mill andunder the expert management ot r.ir.r.,,.M MnH LVirhna the pnternrise isproving a financial success, which isreflected In the taxes paid, ana pro-

vides employment for a thousand ormore persons, unuer inese cucuiu-stance- s

we believe that the best in-

terests of the Territory would be ad-

vanced if the plantation is permittedto again lease its lands, or a large partof them, for a limited term of years

.v, q rental lis would return a

steady and proper income to. iw Territory. Hilo Trioune. "t ; , r ; ?

Misprision: Of Teason 'VFollowing is ft claused the United

,(iyItii rniln dealing With

treason-- , which i not generally known,but which ougui w re.

Eyeij person owing allegiance'"itf"'UM' United States and having

' knowledge 'of the commission of'''any tmiROn against them, who

conceals, and does not, as soon asBatty be, disclose and make known

'''the spme to the President or tosome judge of the United States,or to the governor, or to somejudge or justice of a particularState, is guilty of misprision oftreason, and shall be imprisonednot more than seven years, andfined not more than one thousandilnllnra.The greatest asset any country can

have is the loyalty 01 us ciuzenu, miit will overcome all oDSiacies.

rr,a mora fa rt of being loyal constitutes every citizen an inherentr.nrnt onrvlrp man of his country. Hedoes not have to sole his shoes withrubber, but let him be alive to tneinterests of the nation at all times,and let him go to the proper placeswith his knowledge or tacts or evensuspicions of danger.

witn oil or the citizens or ine l nu- -

ed States working together alongthese loyal lines, bomb plots and other

would indeed be more hazardous for the perpetrators than theyare already. The service.

Hilo IgnoredIt surprised Hilo citizens to lParn

during the past few weeks that whileHonolulu was well guarded by regulartroops, national guardsmen, a Digpolice force and a naval unit of sub.marines, Hilo got no care at all and itwas up to the citizens to do the workthemselves and have the county payfor the guards. It Is estimated thatthere is on the island of Hawaii, Inproperty of destructible nature, atleast $90,000,000 Invested. This doesnot take into consideration growingcrops and what they might bringwhen placed on the market in the formof sugar.

To think that this island was absolutely ignored and that when effortswere made to have some protection afforded the citizens the scheme wasblocked, makes people wonder whorethey get off as American citizens whorely upon the American governmentto protect them.

The company of regular troops thatarrived yesterday morning will helpout, but why was not this done before?

Hawaii Herald.

Nothing In A Name?Dropping the word "conscription"

entirely, the people of the UnitedStates of America Fhould adopt theterm "universal service" exclusively.Conscription savors of force from au-thority, such as Is encountered in anabsolute despotism, while universalservice indicates that equality ofstatus which Is the intent of a repub-lic, such as ours. The Service.

The legislature ha sheen merelyflirting with the temperance question.

Iiy and by Congress will get busyand put over a war prohibition measure like Russia's. Kohula Midget.

Gov. Pinkham's call on the Hawaiian Planters' Association for

in growing food supplies, puts, itup to them. With sugar at super-wa- r

prices, which will pull stronger divid.ends or patriotism? Kohula Midget.

Why Not Sell Land At HomeMr. David McII. Forbes brought an

interesting matter to the attention ofthe board of trade on Monday lastwhen he said that he thought thatwhen land was advertised to be soldby the government at public auctionthe sale should be held on the sameisland as the land Is located on. Hecould not see the sense in advertisinga Hilo lot to be sold in Honolulu andasked why the sale could not be madein Hilo.

Many times someone who wished tobid on a property for lease, or out-right purchase, had to proceed to Ho-nolulu and there put in several dayswaiting around until the sale cameoff and the land for sale, or leasewas, all the time, located in Hilo.

It is the opinion of several peoplethat there is really no need to holdsales of Hilo lands In Honolulu pndthat if the attention of the land com-missioner and other authorities Isbrought to the matter a change willbe made. Hawaii Herald.

Turned Out At 7Turning men out of the saloons at 7

in the evening means turning them in-to the moving-pictur- e shows, probablywith their families; means turningthem next day. into grocery-stores- .shoe-store- ;, butcher shops: meansturning their wives and children Intodrygoods and clothing stores.-

There Is not the slightest, questionthat prohibition helps general busi-ness. That holds tnie..ven In touristcommunities.' Knnhliihf has tobon astep toward prohibition ' and shouldnevpc o DacKwara. u is, moreover,the sort of a step which satisfies themost jealous advocate nf "h nine mlpMin liquor legislation. Star-Bulleti-

Having adopted the 7 o'clockhour, Honolulu's clubs show them-

selves fully as patriotic as the saloons.Star-Bulleti-

Salvation Army Officers ToMake Inspection On Maui

Lt. Col. and Mrs. Dubbin will maketheir annual tour of inspection of TheSalvation Army work on Maui, beingscheduled to arrive tomorrow evening.During their visit they will conductservices in the Makawao UnionChurch, next Sunday morning and atthe Wailuku Union Church at 7:30 P.M.

Col. Dubbin is the commanding of-ficer of The Salvation Army work onthe Hawaiian Islands with Mrs. Dub-bin who holds the same rank as herhusband and shares his responsibil-ities. While the Colonel has visitedMaui previously, this is his first op-portunity to speak to the congrega-tions of the churches of this island.

On Monday, April 30, the Colonelwill welcome the friends and com-rades of The Salvation Army at theCitadel, on Market street where agrand rally will be In order. TheWailuku Salvation Army Band willmake its bow to the public duringthese meetings. Band instructor Jos.eph Hannon is to be congratulated forwhat he has been able to do with theboys In so short a time.

Following the custom of severalyears, the offering at the WailukuUnion Church, in special envelopesmarked for the purpose, will be devot-ed the Salvation Army work on Maui.

Officers of all Maul Corps will be inattendance while Ens. Chas. Puckextends an Aloha to the Maui publicand invites all to be present at anyor all services.

STEAMER

WilhelminaMnnoa . . .

Matsonia .

Luiiine . . .MauiManoa . . .

Matsonia .

WilhelminaMauiManoa . . .

Matsonia .

WilhelminaMauiManoa . . .

Matsonia .

WilhelminaMaulManoa . . .

Matsonia .

Wilht'lruinaMauiManoa . . .

Matsonia .Willu-lmin- a

MaulManoa . . .

3

934042

1071

414394

2424495

3434596

4444697

5454798

546

LeaveSan

Fr'sco

Mar.Mar.Mar.Mar.Apr.Apr.Apr.Apr.MayMayMayMayMayJuneJuneJuneJuneJulyJulyJulyJulyJulyAugAug.Aug.Aug.

ArriveHonolulu

Mar.Mar.Mar.Apr.Apr.Apr.Apr.MayMayMayMayMayJuneJuneJuneJuneJulyJulyJulyJulyJulyAug.Aug.Aug.Aug.Sept.

5 33

GENERAL ELECTRIC CO.

MOTORSGENERATORSMAZDA LAMPSWIRING SUPPLIESINSTALLATION OF ENTIREELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT.

DISTRIBUTORS

Catton, Neill & Co., Ltd.ENGINEERS

TOWAHDS

5 23 13 20

5S o

S 095 oo

4 54 52

4 5i4 45

4 444 4oi

:

3 3

3 17

3 07

3 05,2 55

2 532 47

a 46a 40

1392 35i

1 51 15

TOWARDS

PissMftr

5000

vv o v iimu Diicm, 01, iDiauu yKji .n vi Call.

8 428 30

8 a78 17

8 158 o5

8 037 57

7 56.7 5

7 497 45l

6 356 25

6 006 10

16

13

'

8

22

july'"6

20

3

31

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15.3

8.4

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..A.. Kahului..

A JLL" "ASpreck- -

a" ."lL.. ..A

PaiaA .XL" -- AHama- -

U. Za.. ..

..Lh.. ..A

1. trains daily except Sundays.

CASHAlways

ecessaryordering

Footwear

approval,

established

assortment

shapes materials.

MANUFACTURERS' SHOE STORE, HONOLULU

Sfime SableJCaliului Slailroad Co.Daily Passenger Train Schedule (Except Sunday)

following schedule

WAILUKU

PUUNENE

STATIONS

A..Wailulcu..L

A"kuapoko

15--

PUUNENE DIVISION

STATIONS

Iv..Kahului..A

A..Puuneue..L

TOWARDS KAHULUI

"Special leave Wailuku Sundays.:ou connecting

train Puunene.BAGGAGE RATES: personal bafgage

baggageexcess cents part

charged.Information Local Fassenger

no. , or of Depots.

ATSOW NAVIGATION CO.1917 PASSENGER SCHEDULES AND PORTS OF CALL

Honolulu

Apr.Apr.Apr.Apr.MayMayMayMayMay

June

JulyJulyJulyJulyAug.Aug.Aug.Aug.Aug.Sept.

30

Apr.

Apr.

May

May

June

June

July"

Aug.

Aug. "17

Aug."

mill- "-

Apr.

Apr.

May"

May "18

June

June

June

July"

Aug.

Aug.

Sept

shoes

stock. will

send have

us. Itwill well so

have larne in

latest

went rFect June

L..

Haiku

17

31

'14

'

May"'

May 26

June 9

June 23

juiy'"7July" 21

Aug. 4

Aug." 18

Sept"i

Not

from large

winter

account

Distance

o

3--

9--

11. 9

littlKI

Train Train) exceptKahulul

carriedwhole ticket, ticket, wkea

Ticket Fares other Tarif

LeaveArrive

"27

Arrive

with

"STille

dally,

holder Uekel

inquire

Leave

Apr!

Leave Arrive

Zii

Apr. 7

Apr. "n5

'May

June

June

June 30

'July 14

'July

AugV'ii

Aug.

Sept."' 8

TOWARD HAIKU

2.50

Apr.Apr.Apr.Apr.Apr.May

MayMay

June

JuneJulyJulyJulyJulyJulyAug.Aug.Aug.Aug.Sept.Sept.

4050

6 527 02

7 37 15

7

7 24

7 257 33

7 357 40I

Paitiitir

2212

(Labor willarriving and vlth

6:00160 pounds will

charge each and pounds each halfcharge and same train the

For pounds thereof

For and a'any

Mar.Mar.Mar.

JuneJune

June

Hilo

Mar.

Mar.

2.5

Kahului

Mar.

you

now.

We

and

Pauwela

Hilo

Mar.

Mar.

Apr." '28

:

Mllit

6.9

139

Mll-it-

free

will

Kahului Honolulu

Mar.

'28

Mar. 181 Mar,

May

June

June

18

2229

6

8 59 00

M

66

Mar.

May13!

June

June

1 31 40

1 421 52

1 532 05

1523

25

3l

3 353 45

3 473 57

3 58

4 10

2 4 12

a

2

2

2

a

4 19

ao4

34 35

Paueagei

P M

3 153 05

lt

2. A

i a. m., at at 6: El a. m.,the a. m. for

of beof on 75 on

Is in of on the as tke ofbaggage 26 per 100 or k

see L C.at the

il25

23

15

29

10

24

12May"

19

2

16

25

66

7

25

15

LeaveHonolulu

Apr.Apr.Apr.Apr.May

May20 May

May

JuneJune

JulyJulyJulyJuiyJulyAug.Aug.Aug.Aug.Sept.Sept.

0714

428

4

ArriveSan

Fr'sco

21 Mar.27 Apr.

4 Apr.10 Apr.18 Apr.24 May

2 May8, May

10 May22 May

JuneJuneJuneJuneJulyJulyJulyJulyJulyAug.Aug.Aug.Aug.Sept.Sept.Sept.

Schedules hown above are exact between San Francisco and Honolulu, and vice versa, but are aDDroxImate

""I

5 35 4

273

101721

18

152229

5121926

310243117

7

142128

41118

Page 5: lOOO CHildretVs Gardens Nlrnvxlthe rock on the east breakwater en-tirely overhauled, and has made some surveys for the extension of Its tracks past the electric powerhouse near which

ft

On The Other Islands

8No More Harbor Lights

At the request of the army andnavy authorities, the Honolulu harborlights will no longer be displayed at j

nigm unun pronaoiy alter tne war.

A Hawaii policeman shot a Filipinogambler in the leg when the latterrefused to halt when, ordered to doso. The shooting occured during araid at Hamakua.

Harmon E. Hendrlck, a Well knownbusiness man of Honolulu, died In LosAngeles on April 20, as a result of anillness for which he left the IslandsBome months ago in hope of relief.He is survived by a wife.

No Mall Now To GermanyHonolul postofflce received instruc-

tions last week to accept no mail here-after pddressed to Germany, and toforward any such deposited to thedead-lette- r office.

J. M. Kaneakua, county clerk of Ka-uai whs taken to Honolulu laBt Sun-day under arrest of the United Statesmarshal to answer to a statutory of-

fense charge. He was admitted tobail on cash deposit of $500.

Reports .from Honolulu are to effectthat garden and farm seeds are al-

most impossible to obtain in the is-

lands at. any price, due to the recentimpetus toward gardening. Largesupplies have been ordered by theMarketing Division from the coast.

The funeral services of the lateJames Lyle, of Honolulu, whose deathoccured last week .took place from theMasonic Temple last Sunday afternoon, and were attended by an unusu-ally large crowd. Owing to feeblehealth the widow was unable to attend the services.

Dairy Interests ThreatenedClaiming that the dairy interests of

the islands are threatened unlesscheaper food can be obtained, Chas.H. Belina, a prominent dairyman ofHonolulu, departed last week for thecoast with a view of securing directshipments of stock feed.

Sampan Fired UponA fishing sampan, returning from a

long cruise, was fired upon by asentry at Fort Armstrong as it entered Honolulu harbor last Sunday night.The occupants of the boat had notlearned that the harbor Is now tabuat night to all vessels entering or leav-ing-

Auto Thieves SentencedFor stealing Bishop . Restarick's

Ford automobile, Joe Correa was sent-enced by Judge Ashford to serve 34year in the penitentiary, and his ac-complice, Antone Pachedo got 2Myears. Correa got the heavier sent-ence because the offense was the sec-ond of similar nature for which hehas been convicted.

H

Army Takes Walmanalo LandWord has come from Washington

that 1510 acres of government land Inthe Walmanalo plantation has beenset aside for army purposes. Twoother pieces on Oahu have also beentaken over. One of these comprises274 acres above the Honolulu Tlanta-tlon- ,

at Alea, and the other of 31.36acres at Nanikuli.

Can't Save The MaulAfter several weeks work it has

been prnctically admitted that the Inter-

-Island steamer Maul, which wentashore on the Kona coast, will be atotal loss. Good progress was madeto floating the ship until last weekwhen a strong swell arose causingthe bottom to be pounded out of thehull.

German Aliens Turning In ArmsIn response to Marshal Smiddy's

proclamation calling upon alien enemies of the United States to surrend-er all arms in their possession, asteady stream of weapons of all descriptions have been pouring Into theMarshall's office for the past week.All of these are being receipted forand will be restored at the close of thewar.

Farm Products By MailD. H. MacAdam, the new postmaster

at Honolulu, is investigating the possibilities of having the parcel postservice much more used for shippingfarm and garden produce direct toconsumers. Much success has attended this work in eastern parts of theUnited States, and Mr. MacAdam believes that something may be accomplished in the same way here.

New Business Center For HonoluluA number of leading business firms ofHonolulu have combined to rceate anew business center in Honolulu centering around the corner of Bishop andMerchant streets. ' All four cornersare to be occupied by imposing buainess sfructuren, while the other streetfrontages of the Manuka site are to bebuilt up. Louis Chrislan Mullgardt, afamous mainlaud architect, is nowpreparing designs for this scheme.

New Service Through HawaiiAnother new steamer line for Hono-

lulu was announced last week in theextension of the service of W. RGrace & Co., steamers between SanFrancisco and the Orient with theparticular view of serving the Philip-pines. The first of this fleet has already passed through Honolulu, itsmaster verifying the statement that ifthe trial voyage proves a success thereis every possibility that it would be-

come permanent.

Montana Contest Girls Come And GoA party of eight young women from

Montana, the winners in a newspapercontest, arrived last week by the GreatNorthern and left on the same vesselon Sunday on their return. The partycomprises The Misses Lois van Dooz-er- ,

Nellie Sullivan, Helen Magson,Mildred Irvine, Mabel Zinn, MargaretMcBride, Mary Burk, and Edith Web-ster. Mrs. Byron E. Cooney, wife ofthe publisher giving the trip, ischaperone of the party.

BUY

BEST

I

THE MAUI NEWS, FRIDAY, APRIL, 27, 1017. FIVE

War Precautions InconvenienceThe Fort do ttussy military reserva

tion is now under complete guard andthe parts of it which had been pre-viously open to the public for the useof short cuts to beach homes has beenclosed and the bridges across themarsh destroyed. This has made itnecessary for Plerpont and Cressntyresidents and for residents on the Ka-li- a

Road between the fort and JohnEna road, to get off the car at JohnEna, adding about a half mile to theirwalk.

Wants Territory To Build VolcanoRoad

Because the legislature has turnedthe proposal for a $400,000 concreteroad from Hilo to the Volcano, theHilo board of trade is hotly indignant.The Hilo commercial body does nottake kindly to the plan either of plac-ing an appropriation for a part of thisroad in the loan fund bill because thecounty of Hawaii will have to foot thebill in that case. It. is held that theroad to the Volcano is a territorial as-

set rather than a county one.

Makee Plantation Gets New ManagerH. Wolters, former a head overseer

on Libue plantation, has been appointed manager of Makee Suger Companyplantation to fill the vacancy causedby the resignation of G. P. Wilcox.

Mr. Wilcox resigned, planing an ex-

tended visit to the mainland. At thesame time he resigned as a colonel inthe national guard regiment on Kauai.War was declared soon after and Mr.Wilcox withdrew his resignation andIs now devoting his time to the coun-

try's service.

Porto Ricans Want To VoteTo compel County Clerk Kalauoka.

lanl to permit him to be registered aa vnior Mpniiel Oliver Sanchez, a Porto Rican, has brought a mandamus action in the circuit court at Honolulu.Sanchez bases his claim to citizenshiptA tlio art of ronirross nassed recentlywhich gives Porto Rico suffrage rightsthe same as on the niainiana. snouiuthe court sustain Sanchez's conten-tion it will nnen the wav for some 500

or 600 Porto Ricans in the territory toget a ballot.

Little Danger Of Anthrax SpreadThat the epidemic which already

has destroyed upwards of 100 head ofcattle on the Frinceville plantation,Kauai, besides a number of horses andother domestic animals is really an-

thrax, was determined by Dr. Nor-gaar- d

,who investigated last week.Owing to the isolated position of theinfected district, however, Dr. Nor-gaar- d

does not fear that there willbe a spread to other islands, or evento other parts of Kauai. A big supplyof serum has been cabled for to theC'ist It ii a mystery how the dreaddisence iM'nd lodgment on Kauai, butDr. Norguird is inclined to believethat it was brought the- - , in bone-mea- l

from the mainland.

Home For Defectives AssuredAs soon as the Governor signs the

bill, $35,000 will become available forthe establishment and maintenanceduring the next biennial period of aschool for blind, deaf, dumb and de.fective children, of whom, the depart--

ment of public instruction estimates,there are some V,iH) in the Territory.

A clause providing that the moneyshall be spent "as the department maydeem proper," safeguards the merelyunfortunate children from enforcedcontact with the insane or viciouslydegenerate.

Until this year, Hawaii has had nomeans of educating these unhappymites, or fitting them to lighten theirown deprivations.

Kamehameha Cadet Lost At VolcanoJohn Kahae, a student of the Kame-

hameha School for boys, who with aparty of his school mates had beencamping at Kilauea, was lost In thefern forest, adjacent the volcano onFriday of last week. Searching part-ies have given up the search ,and hopeof finding the boy alive lias gone. Areward of $250 is offered for the recovery of the body.

Army Officers Must Pay TaxesOn the grounds that it would be

class legislation, and for the reasonthat no showing was made that armyofficers are required to use their ownmachines in the discharge of theirduties? the house finance committeethis week recommended tabling An-

drews' bill to exempt such automobilesfrom taxation. The report was adopt-ed. The supreme court has held thatofficers of the army are not exempton legal grounds from taxation.

Gus Schuman Spoils RumorGus Schuman, of the Schuman Car-

riage Company, who has been on thecoast for some weeks, and who. according to widely spread rumor hadbeen arrested on the mainland as aGerman spy, returned to Honolululast week. He has had no piliklawhatever. Schuman also nailed arumor of like nature concernns Bertram Von Damm, now on the Coast.He saw Von Damm in a San Franciscorestaurant two days before he sailed,Schuman declared. Von Damm is ex-

pected back shortly.

DIED

BATTELLE Marjorie Janet, in her8th year, on April 5th, in New YorkCity, beloved daughter of E. Erieand Cora Janet Battelle.

LOST

' Two Panama hats between PioneerStore and Waihee. Return to MauiNews. Reward.

General Auto Repairing

House, Ltd.JAME8 N. L. FAUFATA

U. S. License EngineerProprietor

General Repairing to GacollneEngines, Generators, Batteries,

Selfstarters, Etc.Market St. Walluku, Maul

Phone 1692.

CUDAHY

CUDAHY

REX' BRAND

CANNED MEATS

Timely Farm HintsNo. 6.

By F. G. KRAUSS, Supt.Haiku Extension Division,

Hawaii Experiment Station

tt aEssential Factors In Maximum CropProduction, And Their Control Under

Hawaiian Conditions.

1. Fertile Soil: 2. Ample Moisture;3. Favorable Temperature; 4. GoodSeed; 5. Proper Culture.

These factors are essential to maximum crop production. The degree towhich each is supplied limits the cropIn amount and quality.

While the term "soil fertility" is noteasily defined, the potential fertility,which may be measured by the totalcontent of plant food in the soil, ismade available in proportion as con.ditions for plant growth are favor-able. To produce maximum growth itIs necessary that the soil contain in anavailable form an excess of those ele-ments or constituents which go tobuild up the plant. Cropping exhauststhe soil to the extent of the crop'sremoved. Hawaiian soils appear to be-

come much more rapidly depleted ofavailable fertility than do the soils ofthe mainland, although their potentialfertility, especially in the es-

sential chemical elements is oftensurprisingly high.Plant Food

Fortunately It is not necessary toburden the lay reader with the com-plex theories which underlie soil chem-istry. For our present purpose it issufficient to point out that nearly allour soils not naturally highly produc-tive may be made so by liberal applic-ations of animal manures, vegetablematter, sewage, garba-re- , might soil,street sweepings, wood ashes and(numerable other materials too oftenwasied. When these are not sufficientthey may be supplimented by com-mercial fertilizers, determined bysimple field tests, to show the consti-tuents lacking.

Not alone are the ofthe farm and the city, as well as thespecially grown green-manurin- crops,direct food for the plant, but their de.composition aids materially in liber-ating the locked up elements of aninert soil. Furthermore, this is oftentheir greatest function, they improvethe texture, or physical properties ofthe soil, as no amount of chemicalfertilizer or tillage is able to do.

A fertile soil is one rich not only inplant food, but it must also be in favor-able physical condition to make theplant food available.Moisture

Moisture Is of course one of the do-

minating factors in plant growth.Plants utilize food material only whenin solution. The effects of heavy fer-tilization may be wholly lost by in-

adequate moisture supply. Not alonedoes the soil moisture assist in dis-solving the mineral plant food, andact as a carrier from the soil to everypart of the plant, but It also suppliesthe two essential food elements, hyd-rogen and oxygen. When plants wiltit is simply the result of cell callapse

PACKING w.

For Sale at Leading Markets and Grocers

awaii TVloot Co,, LtdSole Distributors Territory of Hawaii.

due to lack of moisture. Furthermore,transpiration of large amounts ofmoisture through the leaves tends tocontrol the plants' temperature attimes of excessive heat.

The amount of moisture required byplants depends vpon Xi) whether ithas a larpo or small leaf surface; (2)character of the climate, under whichmight be Included the season ofgrowth; (3) size of the crop, etc.

Each pound of dry matter contain-ed in a mature crop will have causedthe transpiration of from 300 to 500pounds of moisture during the grow-ing season. Tims woubl an arre yield50 bushels corn, with its accompanying stover .transpire something like375,000 gallons (1500 tons) of moistureduring the short season of say a hun-dred and twenty days growth. It isfair to assume that through soil seepage and evaporation a like amountwould be lost under most Hawaiianconditions.

This brings us to the great importance of moisture conservation, first bythe selection of drought resistantcrops such as bi sr, sweet potatoesand o'lier crops t j require a minimumof moisture for localities of low rainfall, second select ins. so far as pos-sible, crops suited to excessive mois-ture for the wet low lands and regionsof heavy rainfall, that none of the pre-cious fluid be let go to unnecessarywaste.

Where irrigation is possible itshould naturally be developed to theutmosl, but here is where conservationcan best be practiced. And this willbe dealt with under cultural methods.Temperature

While we may not be able to con-trol temperature and season in thecommon sense, we can at least selectour crops to the season.

Temperature is largelv a matter ofaltitude, so that we may also controlthis factor in so far as we may benble to select the elevation at whichihe various crops are planted.Seed And Varieties

The importance of good seed, andiimier this head wo would lay partic-ular stress upon suitable varieties,cantiot be over emphasized. In theiivnumbcrable tests of beans, potatoes.corn and other fnod crops conductedby the Hawaii Experiment Stationsince its establishment ,the comparatively few varieties that succeed wellis markedly pointed out. On the otherhand no class or crops should be condemned until every available varietyhas been tested out under varying con-ditions of soil, season and culture.

It Is one of the important functionsof the Hawaii Experiment Station togive advise as to varieties best suitedto a given condition. Often times it. ispossible to supply selected strains, butin any event necessary informationcan. be given ns to the best scourcesof supply. In the matter of importedseed potatoes, the Station pathologistis always readv to examine for hid-den diseases. Alfalfa and other seedswould be examined for impuritled andparasitic weeds such as dodder. Ger-mination and purity tests are alsomade upon request. No extensiveplantings should be made without firsttesting for at least vitality of the seed.Culture

After all other factors are amplyprovided for, failure or at least un-profitable results may follow fromwrong cultural methods. Thus, in afertile soil, under optimum moistureconditions, and in a favorable locality,the best of seed may fail to material-ize a profitable crop. Not unfrequent-l- y

do we find that the seed has Teenplanted much too deeply, or not sufficiently covered. Or the seed may besown much too thickly to permit ofnormal development. More rarely isthe seed spread too thinly to givea maximum stand. Some times thecrop is planted in furrows when ridgeculture should have been practiced.More often the simple and more econ-omical method of level culture is en-tirely ignored. Often the initial cul-tural operations have been well cci.ried out only to become wasted bysubsequent inattention. Mellow soilsare permitted to become compactedand parched, when judicious surfacecultivation would have maintained anearth mulch, which in turn would haveconserved the pnrlous moisture at acritical time. On the other hand thetoo zealous cultivation will stir theground so deeply after the crop isadvanced as to destroy the tenderfeeding roots which now occupy theentire space between the rows.

The essential factors of crop pro-duction have now only been touchedupon. It is hoped that this outlinemay prove suggestive to those whomay bo willing to with thecommunity at large to grow thingsduring possible times of stress if atno other. To all such the ExtensionDivision offers its best service andentire resources-Apr- il

25, 1917.

MAUI BOOKSTOREBOOKS, STATIONERY

NEWS DEALERS

Hawaiian Views and Post CardsSouvenir-Jewelr-y

Koa NoveltiesFineCandies

WAILUKU, MAUI

WAILUKIRAHAINA

AUTO SERVICECars leave Market street,

Wailuku, daily, about noon.Leave Lahaina, 8:00 A. M.

daily.Good ComforaMe Cars

Careful Drivers

Uchida Auto StandPhone I 772 Wailuku

Page 6: lOOO CHildretVs Gardens Nlrnvxlthe rock on the east breakwater en-tirely overhauled, and has made some surveys for the extension of Its tracks past the electric powerhouse near which

SIX

Go Easy On Green

Vegetables Longley

Home Gardens Will Reduce Demand

Potatoes And Beans Should Be

Grown Scarcity Of Chicken And

Hog Feed Threatens Industries

Honolulu, April 23, 1917.There has been particularly no

ehanne in the condition of the eggmarket during the week but the priceof feed has advenced about 15 per-cent. Poultrymen complain that iffeed does not drop very soon they 'willhave to go out of busiuiss. The feedpiestion is also bothering the hograist'is and even at the advanced priceof pmk they claim that it is a losing

In order to protect them-selves, as well as the consumers,farr.ivrs must raise more of their ownr ; Tie. V. S. Experiment Station

mini n-- i Suj,ar rrip Sorghum asoni- if the best crops to plant forquick returns in both grain and forage.Four crops can be cut a year andac'i crop will yield from 13 to 20

bushels of grain and about 12 tons offorage. The Division is ordering ala'Ki supply of this and other seed totake care of the greatly increased de-

mand.While the price of green vegetables

Is very high at the present time farm-ers on the other islands should notplant them to any large extent. Themovement to have consumers plantvegetable gardens will greatly reduceihe amount of green vegetablesbought in the market so that farmersproducing for the market should e

their efforts to such crops nssweet potatoes, Irish potatoes, driedbrans and peas, pumpkins, corn andhogs. Hogs should not be raised un-

less the farmer can produce the mostof his feed on the farm. One glanceat the feed quotations this week con-

vince the hog raiser that he is not.naking much money if he is buying allhis feed.

Rice has taken a big drop during,he week. Hawaiian rice is quoted atJ7.00 a bag and California rice at $6.25.Australian onions are selling for from$3.25 to 3.50 a hundred. Irish potatoescan be expected to advance nextmonth to about $6.50 a hundred. Peo-ple are buying the simplest foods thesedays so do not plant crops lor whichthere is not a ready sale.

The Division needs more hogs, sweetrind Irish potatoes. A. T. LONGLEY,Superintendent.

Lahaina NotesInspector General Geo. S. Raymond

came to Maui Saturday night and re-

turned Monday night.

Mrs. George L. Keeney substitutedin the public school last Thursday andFriday.

Mr. and Mrs. V. C. Schoenberg andson, Erling, were the guests of Mr.nd Mrs. Decoto over the week end.

Miss Florence Whitton was confinedto her room last week with grippe.She is in school again this week.

Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Campbell of Puu- -

:;ene, were the guests of the Keeneyson Sunday.

Mrs. B. O. Wist, who has been sub-

stituting in the public school, is conIned to her home with grippe.

Miss Tomllnson is still unable toeturn to school. She is at the home

if Mis. Hose at Honokawal.

Mr. nnd Mrs. Wm. Robertson of' Tnnnlna T?anch last Wednes3py from a two weeks visit in Honolulu.

T,vv. and Mrs. "W. B. Coale went toPaic, OTi Wednesday to attend thoinciting of the Hawaiian Board representatives on Maui.

F. N. Lufkln, accompanied by MissCharlotte Smith, of Illinois, and MissJune Mitchell, of Wailuku, went toMilo Saturday night to visit the Vol-- ano. They returned Monday night

The Bay View Study Club met onFriday aftfrnoon with Mrs. CockcroftMrs. Gannon was the leader. Theladies have taken up the new book"American In Ferment," which pro-

mises to be even more interestingthan either of the books studies be-

fore. It discusses labor problemsconservation of our national resourcesand many other problems before thepublic mind at present.

Mnndav afternoon nt two o'clock(ho vt.rv Ttntttv rprpnlnnv of launching the Etesu Maru took place nearthe wharf. The launch was Deautiruily decorated with flags and pennantsArrnriUne tn the Jananese customrice cakes, cones, oranges and applesxere tossed toune spectators iroiuthe boat. After the ceremonies weremw th Fbesit Maru went for a cruisenround the bay. She is owned by theKoraae flBh market.

Yankee Fodder.Senator Hoar used to tell with glee

of a Southerner Just home from NewEngland who said to his friend, "Youknow those little white round beans?"

"The very same. Well, do youknow, sir, that in Boston the enlightened citizens take those little whiteround beans, boil them for three orfour hours, mix them with molassesand I know not what other ingredients'.jake them, and then what do yousuppose they do with the beans?"

"They""They eat 'em, sir," interrupted the

first Southerner impressively; "blessme. sir, they eat 'em!" ChristianRegister. i

floaolulu Wholesale Produce

Market QuotationsISSUED BY THE TERRITORIAL

MARKETING DIVISION.Wholesale only.

Week ending April 20, 1917.

BUTTER AND EGOS.Island butter, lb. cartons 40Eggs, select, doz 42Eggs, No. 1, doz 40Eggs, Duck, doz 35

POULTRY.Young roosters, lb 43 to .45Hens, lb i 30 to .32Turkeys, lb 45Ducks, Muse, lb 28 to .30Ducks, Pekin, doz 28 to .30Ducks, Haw., doz 5.75

VEGETABLES AND PRODUCE.Beans, strings, green, lb 06Beans, string, wax, lb 07Beans, Lima in pod 05Beans, Maui Red 7.50Beans, Calico, cwt 7.50Beans, small white 9.00I'cas, dry Is. cwt. (None)Carrot.?, doz. bunches 40

ahbage. cwt 03Beets, doz. bunches 30Corn, sweet, 100 ears 2.00 to 2.50Corn, Haw., sm. yel 6S.00 to 70.00Corn, Haw., lg., yel 65.00 to 68.00Rice, Jap. seed, cwt. irsone)Kice, Haw. seed, cwt 7.00Peanuts, sm. (none)

reen Peppers, bell 07reen Penners. Chili 05

Potatoes, Is. 1 04

Potatoes, sweet, cwtPotatoes, sweet red, cwt. '..1.50 to 1.75

Taro, cwt 75 to 1.00Taro, bunch !Tomatoes 12

Green peas, lb. (None)Cucumbers, doz 50 toPumpkins, lb 01

FRUIT.Bananas, Chinese, bunch 30 to .50

Bananas, cooking, bunch .. .(& to l.uuFits. 100Grapes, Isabella, lb HLimes, 100 li to l.uuMneapples, cwt

Papaias, lb 0

Strawberries 15 to .20

LIVESTOCK.Beef, cattle and sheep are not

bought at lira weights. They are takenby the meat companies dressed andpaid for by dreied weight.Hogs, up to 150 idHogs, 150 and over H to .i:

DRESSED MEATS.Beef, lb 12 to .13

Veal, lb 13

Mutton, lb lo to .1Pork, lb 18 to .18

HIDES, Wet Salte.Steer, No. 1, lb 20

Steer, No. 2. lb 18Steer, ha r slit) n sKiDB. lb 2

float iklni, white, eacn IV to .itFEED.

The following are Quotations on

feed f.o.b. Honolulu i

Corn, sm. yel. ton 72.50 to 74.00Corn, lg., yel., ton 7J.5UCorn, cracked, ton 73.00 to 73.50Bran, to bJ.oVBarley, ton 64.50Scratch fooa, ton 79.00 to ku.uuOats, ton 63.00 to b5.uuWheat, ton 80.00Middling, ton 60.00 to b.r.uuHav. wheat, ton 39.00 to 45.00Hay, Alfalfa, ton 39.00 to 42.00

NOTICE

On and after April 23, 1917 TheMaul Wine & Liquor Co., Ltd., of Wai-

luku will not make any deliveries after5:00 P. M. and will also close at saidhour.

'4

X

M. V. &. L. Co.. Ltd.,Per WM. B. LOWRY, Mgr.

(Apr. 27, May 4.)

THE HOME OF THE tf

3 Stcinway nd StarrUl IV 1 1 fci I.

We have a large etook of

Inside Player Pianosat fair prices and easy terms.We take old planoe In exchange.

Thayer Piano Co., LtdHONOLULU, HAWAII.

N. SANOCONTRACTOR AND BUILDER

Juit received a new stock ofMattresses, poultry netting,paints and oils, furniture, etc.Coffins and General Hardware.

PhoneMarket Street Wailuku

THE MAUI NEWS, FRIDAY, AFRIL, 27, 1917.

1L

KAHULUI RAILROAD CO'SMerchandise Department

When a country finds itself in-

volved in war the best it cando is to make itself as effectiveas possible with a view to sus-

taining its rights and reachingan honorable peace as soon asmay be.

Telephone No. 1062All Departments. Kahului, Maui, T. li.

3C

--it

1L

Page 7: lOOO CHildretVs Gardens Nlrnvxlthe rock on the east breakwater en-tirely overhauled, and has made some surveys for the extension of Its tracks past the electric powerhouse near which

The Legislature(Continued from Page Two.)

Territory of Hawaii: to regulate theorganization and government of in-

surance companies and insurancebusiness; to provide penalties for theviolation of the provisions of thisAct; to provide for a fire marshal andto define his duties; and to repeal allexisting laws relating to insurancePetri?.

H. B. 110 As Act 116, entitled: "AnAct to amend Section 1204 of the Re-vised Laws of Hawaii, 1915, relating tothe revocation of licenses to practisemedicine and surgerv." Andrews. '

H. B. 171 As Act 117, entitled: "AnAct relating to the pay of, and serv-ices rendered by, second district mag-istrates, and repealing Sections 1753and 1754 of the Revised Laws of Ha-waii, 1915." Brown.

H. B. 367 As Act 118, entitled: "AnAct to provide for the protection offrogs and tadpoles." Wilder.

H. B. 384 As Act 119, entitled: "AnAct making an appropriation for re-imbursement to Capt. N. C. Neilson."

Miles.H. B. 391 As Act 120, entitled: "An

Act to provide for the appointment ofa commission on game and fisheries."

Wilder.

FIFTY-SECON-D DAY IN HOUSE

Bills IntroducedH. B. 457 Approprating $10,000 for

construction of pipe line to carrywater from ruhawai to LualualelHomesteads, Waianae, Oahu Fin-ance Committee.

Resolutions OfferedII. C. R. 31 Requesting congress to

amend Section 421, R. L. H., 1915, re-lating to right of purchase leaseLand Committee. Adopted.

Received From SenateS. B. 63 Provding $60,z00 for ac-

quisition of additional property forCentral Grammar, Normal, Royal and

' Kalihiwaena Schools, Honolulu Shin-gle.

S. B. 119 Relating to constructionof roads to and through homesteadsand lands opened for residence orbusiness purposes Shingle.

S. B. 120 Authorizing City andCounty of Honolulu to loase for cer-tain purposes portions of area com-prised within limits of Tuunui ParkCastle.

S. B. 139 Relating to primary elec-tlb- o

Castle.S. B. 140 Making appropriation for

control, suppression and eradicationof diseases known as anthrax and

septicemia Coney.S. C. R. 16 Requesting congress to

provide ways and means for dredgingKalihi channel (Shingle) Lands.

S. C. R. 17 Memorializing congressto authorize Territory to ratify agree-ments of certain persons made withcommissioner of public lands and toissue patents to those eligible underterms of said agreements Baldwin.

Passed Second ReadingH. B. 456 Authorizing counties

and city and county to regulate bysmoke nuisance Miscellany

Committee. .Passed Third Reading

H. B. 223 Relating to salaries ofmagistrates and clerks of districtcourts, Oahu Ahuna.

H. B. 371 Empowering warden ofterritorial prison and sheriff's to carryInto effect identication systems ofcriminals and criminal suspects Jar,rett.

H. B. 372 Providing for establishment of systems of identification ofcriminals and criminal suspects Jar-ret- t.

H. B. 385 Relating to public utilitycorporations and the assignment andtransfer of their franchise and prop-erty Cooke.

H. B. 392 To provide for the Insti-tution of certain payments to prisonersfor reproductive work done by themand to appropriate moneys thereforJarrett.

H. B. 413 Relating to right of purchase leases Kula.

H. B. 443 Relating to reports ofcounty and city and county auditorsTavares.

H. B. 444 To permit registered voters while on military service to exercise the right of suffrage when absentfrom the precinct in which they areregistered Lyman.

H. B. 450 Directing accounting off-

icers of Territory to make certain allowances to Honolulu Rapid Transit &

Land Company in estimating amountor income due Territory under termsof company's terms Jarrett.

II. li. 455 Appropriating $5000 ad-

ditional for excercises of present ses.slon of house of representativesCooke.

S. B. 52 Making appropriations fordepartmental expenses for biennialterm beginning July 1, 1917 Shingle.

S. B. 83 Appropriating $560 for therelief of E. M. Watson Chillingworth.

B. B. 85 Relating to dentistr- y-Castle.

S. B. 88 Relating to the employ-ment of prisoners on public worksDesha.

S. B. 100 Permitting territorialtreasurer to make best terms obtainable on premiums for official bondsShingle.

S. B. 101 Creating territorial in-surance fund for payment of damagesby tire and under the workmen s

act Shingle.S. B. 102 Reimbursing Kahului

Railroad Comnany in the sum of$722.41 for expenses incurred in con-

nection with pilot services, KahuluiMaui Coney.

Failed on Third ReadingH. B. 419 Providing additional pay

for circuit judges out of territorialtreasury Andrews. 12 ayes and 14noes.

Indefinitely PostponedS. B. 92 Forbidding any officer or

employe of Territory to retain Bpeclalcounsel out of territorial funds without approval of attorney-genera- l

Coney.Bills Tabled

H. B. 196 Making appropriation forwater pipe line to Lualualei Heme- -

steads. Wainae. Oahu Mossman.H. B. 211 Creating revolving fund

to provide for advanced education

Lyman.H. B. 278 Relating to close season

for game birds AndrewsH. B. 359 Exempting army officers

from payment of taxes on automobilesAndrewsH. B. 373 Increasing salary of

chairman and executive officer ofCounty of Hawaii board of supervisors$3300 Kelekolio,

H. B. 379 Relating to right of purchase lease Tavares.

H. B. 395 Relating to school booksand supplies, giving free use of theseto children of destitute Lyman

Signed By GovernorII. 13. 318, as Act 121 Entitled:

An act to prevent, suppress and eradicate bovine tuberculosis and to pro

ide for the indemnification of ownersof cattle destroyed under the provisions of this act." Miles

FIFTY-THIR- DAY IN HOUSEResolutions Offered

II. C. R. 32 Requesting treasury department to insert in contract for conduction of federal building, Honolulu

provision requiring employment ofpersons who are citizens of UnitedStates or are eligible to become such

Lymun.H. C. R. 33 Requesting congress to

amend Organic Act relative to landlaws of Territory in respect to cancel-lato- n

of homestead agreements andforfeiture of lots Kula.

H. C. R. 34 Expressing deep appreciation of legislature to Delegate Ka- -

anlanaole for his service to Hawaiiin congress Holstein.

H. R. 141 That items aggregating$490,000 be inserted in loan bill forIsland of Hawaii belt road Lyman.

II. R. 142 Relating to roads tolands of Halekou-Waikaluka- i, Koolau-poko- ,

Oahu Fernandez.II. R. 143 That land commissioner

Investigate Whether water of HaaoSprings, Waiohinu, Kau, Hawaii, isbeing use by Hutchinson Sugar Planta-tion Company Kawaha.

H. R. 144 Directing superintendentof public works to turn over to Na-tional Guard of Hawaii old oak desksformerly used by house of representtlves Accounts Committee.

H. R. 145 Directing land commis- -

loner to Investigate through bureauof hydrography possibility of securingwater to be used for the benefit orhomesteaders, Waianae, Oahu Miles.

Received From SenateS. B. 118 Making additional appro.

priation for completion of Oahu Prison Coney.

S. B. 132 Providing for sewer andcesspool fund Ways and Means.

S. B. 136 Relating to the NationalGuard of Hawaii Coney.

S. C. R. 18 Relating to apportionment of representation Castle.

Passed Third ReadingH. B. 388 Making appropriation for

relief of Capt. F. Mosher Lyman.H. B. 410 Directing department oi

public instruction to establish nighschool at Honokaa, Hamakua, Hawaii,

Lyman.H. B. 412 Regulating appointment

and removal and fixing compensationfor Interpreters of first circuit courtAndrews.

II. B. 422 Appropriating $3000 forinvestigating medicinal properties andvalue of herbs and plants grown inHawaii Lyman.

H. B. 424 Conferring additionalpowers upon public utilities commis-sion Kawewehl.

H. B. 456 Authorizing counties andcity and county to regulate by ordi-nance smoke nuisance Miscellany.

S. B. 95 Relating to curbs and sidewalks Chillingworth.

S. B. 107 Prescribing that actionsto recover possession of land or makeentry thereon must be initiated with-in ten years after the right to bringsuch actions first accured

Bills TabledH. B. 44 To regulate hours of labor

in territory Kupinea.Signed By Governor

H. B. 133, as Act 122 Entitled "Anact to amend Section 2068 of the Re-

vised Laws of Hawaii, 1915, relatingto pedlars" Jarrett.

H. B. 406. as Act 123 Entitled: "Anact to appropriate the sum of fivethousand dollars ($5000) for repairingand widening the Pall trail lending toand roads within the leper settlementat Kalaupapa, County of Kalawao, Mo--

lokai' Brown. - ....S. B. ll.as Act 124 Entitled: "An

act to amend Section 2801 of the Re-

vised Laws of Hawaii, 1915, relating toCastle.

a B. 117. as Act 125 Entitled: "Anact. to amend Sections 226 and 228 ofthe Revised Laws of Hawaii, 1915, re.lating to the enrollment of personssubject to military duty" Baldwin.Prizes For Inter-lsian- d plying

Representative Marquez has introduced a bill in the house appropriation$1000 for the purchase of 7 medals tobe given to the ilrst aviators wnomake sustained flights between thevarious islands.

FORMER MAUI BOY WEDS

Many Maul friends of the groomsfamily have been interested In themarriage of Mr. W. L. S. Williams,son of J. N. S. Williams, formerlysuperintendent of the Kahului Railroad, and Miss Martha Tuliock, or ko-hala, which was celebrated in thebride's home town on Saturday, April14. A. E. Parmelee. of Puunene actedas best man at the pretty ceremony.The wedding took place in St. Augustine's church, the officiating clergyman being F. W. Merrill, of Honolulu,Following the ceremony an elaboratereception was held in the Kohala Social Hall.

S

SMALL CROWD SEESGAME

By a score of 4 to 3 at the end of 11Innings of hot play, the Mauia wonlast Sunday's game from the StarsThe game is said to have been one ofthe most exciting seen in Maul for along time, but it was witness byvery poor crowd. Another game isscheduled for next Sunday, whichshould be better attended.

THE MAUI NEWS FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1917.

BY AUTHORITY

NOTICE CONCERNING FIREARMS

On the sixth day of April A. D.,1917, Woodrow Wilson. President ofthe United States, issued a proclama-tion which reads in part as follows:

(1) An alien enemy shall not havein his possession, at any timeor place ,any fire-arm- weap-on or implement of war, orcomponent past thereof, am-munition, maxim or other si-

lencer, bomb or explosive ormaterial used in the manu

(2)

(3)

facture of explosives;An alien enemy shall not havein his possession at any timeor place, or use or operateany aircraft or wireless ap-paratus, or any form of sign-alling device, or any form orcipher code, or any paper,document or book written orprinted in cipher or in whichthere may be invisible writ-ing;All property found in the possession or an alien enemy inviolation of the Joregoing re-gulations shall be subject toseizure by the United States.

That pursuant to the above all per-sons subject thereto, which includesall persons owing allegiance to theEmprror of Germany, shall forthwithand within forty-eigh- t (48) hours here-after deliver to the undersigned Unit-ed Slates Marshal, or to persons dulyauthorized by him to receive the same,all articles included in the above.

That in those parts of the Territory,other than the Island of Oahu, thetime of delivery is hereby extendedto Saturday, April 28th, 1917, and allof the last named islands the severalsheriffs are authorized to receive andreceipt for said property on behalf ofthe undersigned.

WITNESS my hand this 19th day ofApril A. D., 1917.

Signed J. J. SMIDDY,United States Marshal for theDistrict and Territory of

Injustice"The spelling-book'- s all wrong, ma

ma! It don't look right for a little thingike a kitten to have six letters and a

big cat to only have three." YonkersStatesman.

refused their

come

about

Who

Per str. Mauna Kea, Apr. 20 Mr.and Mrs. Gooding Field, A. Enos,Mrs. J. Ferreira, Miss M.Rocha, Mrs. R. C. Bowman, Mrs. O. J.Whitehead, Miss Whitehead, F.K.Mac-Donal-

T. B. Lyons, T. B. Lyons, Jr.,Amos Mazotta. Sister Leopoldina, Mr.and Mrs. Pfafilo, I. J. Hurd, Sea-man, Dr. Bell, Dr. Ludy, G. W.

Y. Ting, O. Kiashima, G. Horita,R. Sasaki, Mah Sing, Wong Hin, M.

Mrs. H. Kaleoall, Mrs. K.Keanu.

Per str. Mauna Kea, April 23 L. W.de B. D. Slegman, Geo. S.Raymond, Dr. J. C. Fitzgerald, W. A.Chan. J. Medn, S. Saito, Talahashi,Mrs. L. Palia, Mrs. S. Takabashi, Itao-k- a,

Taniguchi, Tamashiro, Akamichi,J. R. Coplho, Jr., Thomas Dunn, Mrs.O. Yamada and two children.

Sptfsr j

The

CoroNAthe lightest, handiest type-

writer made. Weighs alone,6 lbs. Weighs with travelingcase, 8J4 lbs.

Universal keyboardPRICE $50.

HAWAIIAN

Bishop St. Honolulu

TELEGRAPH NEWS OF WEEK

TO GET ANOTHER TRIALSAN FRANCISCO, April 23 Superior Tudee Griffin todav an

nounced that he will ask the attorney-gener- al to confess error in theMooney trial and ask for a new trial.

This is presumably because of the affidavit of one of the erovern- -ment witness against the labor bomb-plotte- rs that she was approachedwith an intended bribe by F. C. Oxman, star government witness in thetrial of Mooney.

GERMANY PULLS DOWN THE BLINDYORK, April 23 A pall of silence has fallen over the Cent

ral Empires the reports of grave troubles.Despite m the German press that the Berlin strike, involv

ing 300,000 people, is over there is evidence that the agitation is continu-ing. The Tageblatt admits that members of two munition unions have

to return to

II.

following reports that Count Tisza, premier of Hungary and theforemost exponent of the policies of the Dual Monarchy, has resigned,all information of conditions at and Budapest ceased. No morete'egraphic reports are allowed to out.

Departed

Ferreira,

Dr.Patter-

son,

Corderin,

is

NEWinternal

assertions

plants.

Vienna

The Socialists and radicals of both empires have been drawn closerby recent events, and language is being used with an im-

punity in the earlier days of the war.TRUE

EL PASO, April 21 At a session today of the Mexican chamber ofdeputies American Fletcher was greeted with a hostile

by the being hissd by the while signalhonors were accorded German Minister Von Eckhardt.

Six delegates escorted the Teuton minister to a seat while the assembly went wild with the ovation lasting thirty minutes.

uLRMAJM KAlDliKSApril 21 The British announced today that

two, and possibly three, German were sunk on Friday nightduring a raid on Dover. A flotilla of five war vessels formed the attack-ing force.

One hundred and hve German sailors were picked up after theirships were Two Dover patrol boats fought the raider andescaped undamaged, with few casualties.

Those Travel

NEWS

CO., LTD.

THE

MOONEY

accentuating

inflammatoryinconceivable

MEXICAN ASSEMBLY EXPRESSES FEELINGS

Ambassador de-

monstration delegates, assembly,

enthusiasm,KEULSliD

LONDON, admiraltydestroyers

destroyed.

TO ADVERTISE BOND SALEWASHINGTON, April 23 Secretary McAdoo, head of the treas

ury department has definitely decided upon a gigantic advertising cam-paign to place before the greatest number of people in the country the"bonds which the government intends to issue to meet the need for fundsto carry on the war. He wished to dispose of the five billion dollars issue as quickly as possible.

It was announced yesterday that the secretary has already receivedassurances from all quarters of assistance in his plan for an advertisingcampaign. It is likely that more than 150,000 different places will beused as stations for the sale of the bonds which most likely will be placedupon the market June 1.

SCAVENIUSTHE FAMOUS DANISH PIANIST

WILL GIVE A PIANOFORTE RECITALAt the PAIA COMMUNITY HOUSE on

Thursday, May 3rd, at 8:30 P. M.UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE

MAUI MUSIC CLUBMRS. LOUISE CHISHOLM JONES WILL APPEAR AS

VOCALIST ACCOMPANIED BY SCAVENIUS.

PROGRAM WILL INCLUDE WORKS FROM BRAHMS CHOPIN,GRIEG, SCRIABIN, WEBER

And The

"Moonlight Sonata," Beethoven(By Special Request.)

TICKETS SI.OOTHIS WILL BE THE FINAL APPEARANCE ON MAUI OF

SCAVENIUS.

Newest.Coolest Motel in HawaiiFort Street Honolulu

HonestyIn Selling Shoes

means offering you footwear ofknown merit, verified styles, atsmall profits.. The honest shosmerchant believes in making hisbusiness an Institution; in smallprofits, a busy store, permanentcustomers.

THIS IS REGAL POLICY.

Parcel Post will bring suchshoes to your door from

REGAL SHOE

STOREFort and Hotel Sts. Honolulu.

SEVEN

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has published a booklet, describing 27 hard drives,typical illustrations of the daily performance of

Spartan Leather Beltingexposed to water, steam, oil, heat, chemical fumes, etc.

The Spartan Book will interest you.

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Page 8: lOOO CHildretVs Gardens Nlrnvxlthe rock on the east breakwater en-tirely overhauled, and has made some surveys for the extension of Its tracks past the electric powerhouse near which

EIGHT

Ford's Tourist Plan

Favored By Chamber

May Adept The Hilo Idea Of Person-

al Representative In Honolulu-Comm- ittee

To Raise Funds Ford

Tells Trustee All About It

Maul is coins to get into the tour1st business. At least this Is to beInferred from the notion of the trustees of the chamber of commerce onTuesday afternoon in voting to appoint a committee to look into thematter of raising a fund of $1000 ormore a year to maintain a representalive cf the Island in Honolulu.

The motion for the committee wasmade by Frank Baldwin, and carriedwithout a dissenting vote. The action was taken after Alexander HumeFord had addressed the body with arequest that Maul with theother islands in taking care of visitorswho come here, as well as towardsmaking it more easy for our own people to "see Hawaii first . In makinghis motion Mr. Baldwin stated thatregardless of personal views on thedesirability of having tourists come,the fact Is that they are coming thatit Is up to Maui to see that they areproperly treated.Committee To Draft Budget

Following the meeting of the trus-tees, President Wadsworth appointedas the committee D. H. Case, F. B.Cameron, and Will. J. Cooper. Thecommittee will probably prepare alist of business concern on Maulwhich will benefit by an increase oftourist business, and endeavor througha canvas, to secure subscriptionsequaling about $100 per month for aperiod of a year. If the committeefinds that the plan is feasible, it willmean that Maui will maintain a paidrepresentative in Honolulu in similarmanner to Hilo and the island ofHawaii, and which has proved an un-

questioned success.Hilo's Return For $4800 Per Year

Mr. Ford cited the success whichHilo has made. Starting 2 years agowhen L. de-Vi- s Norton was employedby the Hilo business men to drum uptourist business for Hawaii in Hono-lulu, the work has grown so that oneman can scarcely handle it, and dur-ing the past year Hilo has been ave-raging 60 tourist per week. Norton,according to Ford, has made 84 tripsto Volcano with "personally conduct-ed" parties. ,

If Maui along the linessuggested, It is the plan to have Maui'srepresentative work under Norton,who now knows the game, and tour-iut- s

are to be directed and conductedto both Maui and Hawaii.

Machine Gun Men

Be Infantry Officers

(Continued from Page One.)

3d Rgt. Haw. Inf., N. G.; Pvt. V. C.Schoenberg.'M. G. Co., 3d Rgt. Haw.Inf., N. G.

Subject to future examination, inconformity with section 75, nationaldefense act of June 3, 1916, the fol-

lowing appointments in the NationalGuard of the United States and of theterritory of Hawaii are announced,with rank from April 19, and are as-signed to the third regiment:

Samuel A. Baldwin, to be captain ofinfantry; George Murray, to be firstlieutenant of infantry; Frederick A.Clowes, to be first lieutenant of in-

fantry; Caleb Burns to be second lieu-tenant of infantry; Foster Robinson,to be second lieutenant of infantry;J. S. B. Mackenzie, to be second lieu-tenant of infantry; Wm. R. Makaena,to be second lieutenant of infantry;V. C. Schoenberg, to be second lieu-tenant of infantry; R. Searle, to besecond lieutenant of infantry.

That portion of par. 1, S. O. 40, AGO,T. H., dated April 17, 1917, which re-

fers to the promotion of 2nd Lieut.David W. Townsend, is revoked.

That portion of par. 3, S. O. 40, AGO,T. H., dated April 17, 1917, which re-

fers to the appointment of A. L. Bur-dic- k

as second lieutenant of infantry,is revoked.

Subject to future examination, inconformity with section 75, nationaldefense act of June 3, '1916, the fol-lowing oppointment in the NationalGuard of the United States and of theTerritory of Hawaii is announced forthe information and guidance of allconcerned: Ralph Walker to be firstlieutenant of infantry, with rank fromApril 20, assigned to 3d Rgt. Haw. Inf.,N. G.

Frawley Company ComingTo Maui Next Week

Manager Pharos, of the Weller &Vasconoellos circuit has just made ar-rangements for the appearance of thenoted T. D. Frawley company of NewYork players for a single engagementon Maui. The company has beenmaking a big hit in Honolulu for seve-ral weeks, and is said to be one of thebest dramatic a.ccregatlons that hasever been in the Islands. Accordingto present plana the company will arrive Tuesday of next week, May 1,and will play in Wailuku thesame evening in the comedy-dram- a

th same evening In the comedy-dram- a

"Fair and Warmer." This play hashad a run in New York, andas handled by the Frawley is said toleave little to be desired.

i II i

A New BurdenCawker "I've had another addition

to my family since I saw you l ist."Cumso "You don't say! Boy or

girl?"Cawker "Son-in-law.- " Puck.

Good Morning Have

You Had The Dengue?

It All The Rage Just Now, Don't You

Know Even Molokai Is Right In

Style Lahaina, Wailuku And Paia

All Passing The Germs Along

For two weeks or more Maul hasbeen in the throes of an epidemic ofdengue, or grip. No particular sec.tion seems to have a monopoly of thedisorder, but reports are coming infrom all districts. Molokai also seemHto have It severely. Sheriff Crowell,who returned on Wednesday from atrip to that island, evidently pickedup the "bug" while he was there, forbe has been in bed ever since he gotback.

The Malulanl hospital is overflow-ing with dengue cases, among thesebeing Rev. Father Francis, of Kuau.Paia school recently Had 25 pupils ab-sent at the same time from the maladyand last week the Weekly Times wasa full 24 hours late in getting printedbecause everybody in the shop fromforeman to devil was laid up for oneor more days.

Chairman Sara Kalama is among thelist of those complaining, and thereare a number of vacanies in the seve-ral county offices.

Lahaina supplies her quota of suf-ferers from the distemper, amongwhom are several teachers in the pub-lic school. The higher districts of thecounty, including Makawao, Kula, andHaiku do not seem to have been soseverely affected.

--ft.

Thousand Children's

Gardens Is Big Plan

(Continued from Page One.)

and sash, sweater, bicycle lamp, wagon, etc.;

Six third prizes small set of gardentools, one years subscription to "MauiNews", base ball, baseball bat, book,school companion, subscription to"Boys' Life" or "American Boy," etc.

Method of making awards decisionupon this has been deferred untillater.

Budget The . Childrens' GardensCommittee recommend that the sumof $275.00 be set aside .for a budget forthis committee, to be expended as fol-

lows :

Printing $ 20.001st prizes 220.00Office and

incidentals . .. 35.00

$275.00The committee plans to request the

merchants of Maul to donate the artic-les selected for the second and thirdprizes.

The contest will begin at once andclose at Christmas.

List of chairman subject to their ac-ceptance: Wailuku, Mrs. Weddick orMrs. Crockett; Waikapu, Mrs. FrankHoogs; Waihee, Mrs. Mary Austin;Kahului, Ellis G. Pleasant; Kihei, R.B. Walker; Olowalu, Valentine; Lahaina, Puuklli, Honokawai, L. Weinz-heime- r;

Puunene, Brown; Keahua,Burns; Sprecklesville, Jas. T. Fantom;Paia, A. C. Bowdish; Hamakuapoko,W. S. Beeman; Haiku, Dr. W. D. Bald,win; W. F.Pogue; Waiakoa, Robert von Temps-ky- ;

Keokea. David; Ulupalakua-Mak- -

ena, Dr. Raymond; Hana (all Hanaplantation) Mrs. John Chalmers;

- Honolua - Kaha- -

kaloa, D. T. Fleming; Haou, Wm. Ha.ia. Jr.: Klpahulu, John Fassath; Kau- -

po, Mrs. Lillie Marciel; Makawao,Rose Crook; Molokai, Pukoo-Kamalo- -

Halava, C. C. Conrad; Kaunakakal,David Kaal; Lanal, G. C. Munroe.

Racing DepartmentSubmits A Program

(Continued from Page One.)

$100 for 1st and $50 for second. 1

4th Race: 11:30 a. m.One mile Hawaiian Bred, weight

for age. Purse $300 of which $50 goesto the second.5th Race: 12 noon

mile, free-for-al- weight for age.Purse $250 of which $50 goes to se-

cond.6th Race: 1 p. m.

Maui Cup: lVi mile rree-for-al-

weight for age, for a silver cup andpurse of $350, $100 of which goes tosecond.7th Race: 1:30 p. m.

Oriental Race: Half mile for Hawai-ian bred horses, owned and ridden byOrientals. 'Purse $150 of which $50Roes to second.8th Race: 2 p. m.

Half mile free-for-al- weight forage. Turse $250 of which $50 goesto second.9th Race: 2:30 p. m.

Simile Hawaiian Bred: weight forage. Purse $250 of which $50 goesto second.10th Race: 3 p. m.

Half mile for Amateur Riders. Fora silver cup.

MUSIC LOVERS PLEASED

Sravenius, the talented pianist ofLondon, who has been on Maui forthe past week, delighted a good siz-ed audience at the Maui Hotel, lastSaturday evening, and on Thursdayafternoon he nterpreted in truly cap-tivating manner a number of famouscompositions for the Maui MusicClub, at the home of Mrs. H. B. Pen-hallo-

Next Thursday he has ar-ranged to give another concert, assist-te- d

by Mrs. Jones, vocalist, at the PaiaCommunity House .under the auspicesof the club.

Candidate List To Close

At Midnight Tomorrow

The time within which would becounty olllclal may get In the race,will expire at midnight, tomorrow.Most of the candidates have alreadyfiled (heir petitions though there areseveral who are known to be aspirantswho are evidently holding off till thelast.

Among these is George Weight,who has announced himself a candi-date for Sam Kalama's job as chair-man of the board of supervisors. An-ton- e

Garcia, who is to try for BillKaae's county clerkship job has alsonot filed his petition.

Eddie McCorriston, of Molokai, whoannounced himself as after a super,visors's seat, has withdrawn from therace.

The candidates now listed are S.E. Kalama, for chairman; Chas. Wil-cox, for county auditor; L. M. Baldwin,for county treasurer; E. R. Bevins,for county attorney; W. F. Kaae, forcounty clerk; Celement Crowell, forsheriff.

For supervisors: Molokai Jos. N.Uahinui, J. Nakaleka, Chas. Kaanol;Lahaina D. T. Fleming; WailukuChas. Lake, J. W. Kalua, Pia Cockett ;

Makawao G. S. Goodness, M. Mahl-apo- ;

Hana R. A. Drummond.The primary election occurs on May

19.r

ANNOUNCEMENTI hereby announce myself as candi

date for the office of Chairman of theBoard of Supervisors for the Countyof Maui, subject to nomination on theRepublican ticket at the coming Pr-imary Electon. I pledge my supportto the ReiKiblican platform, and ifplected I shall endeavor to accomplishthe following results, namely

1 To work for the establishmentand maintenance of an honest, econo-mical, progressive business administration of the affairs of the County orMaul.

2 To advocate the payment ofwages and salaries to all employeesof the County to-- the full extent oftheir worth and to demand of them inturn the highest standard of efficiencyand proper respect for the office heldby them.

3 To maintain and improve tneroads and bridges we now have and tocomplete new one first where theyare really needed the most.

GEORGE WEIGHT.

In its campaign to make the National Forests in California accessible andinviting as recreation regions, the Forest Service Is planning to spend $6,000this summer in clearing the groundsand establishing camping places on themost traveled roads within the Na-tional Forests. The improvementsplanned include suitable sanitationequipment ,and signs along the high-ways that will call the attention of thepublic to the camps.

FERGUSON CASE RENAMED

In a decision handled down on Mon-day by the supreme court, the case ofT. W. Ferguson, who was convictedin the Makawao district court of steal-ing pineapples and carried to thehigher court on appeal, was remanedto the lower court for a new trial.The court found that the record of thedistrict magistrate did not show thatthe pineapples in question belongedto the Maul Agricultural Company, asalleged in the complaint.

minister Peking.

Personal Mention j

g aMrs. O. J. Whitehead has returned

from a short visit to Honolulu.H. D. Sloggett, of Hamakuapoko,

was In Honolulu last week on busi-ness.

William Searby, superintendent ofPuunene mill, was a business visitorto Honolulu for a few days last week.

Enos Vincent will leave this even-ing for Honolulu on a several daysbusiness trip.

T. B. Lyons, of Wailuku, accom-panied by his son, was a passenger toHonolulu by last Saturday's boat.

Mrs. C. D. Lufkin, fo Wailuku, hasbeen confined to her home by Illnessduring the past week.

Mrs. H. M. Wells, of Kuiaha, whowas in the hospital at Paia for severaldays la-s- week, Is again able to beabout.

Mrs. E. Soner, of Waihee, returnedhome last Saturday by the Manoa fromHonolulu where she underwent asevere operation in the hospital.

Harold Itavselden. of the Water- -

honse Pomnnnv Honolulu, snent several days in Maui on business thisweek.

G. W. Patterson, bookkeeper of theAmerican Can Company's plant atHaiku, was a business visitor to Ho-nolulu this week.

Mrs. O. J. Whitehead and daughterof Wailuku, were passengers to Hono-lulu by last Friday night's MaunaKea.

Mrs. Harris and Mrs. Collins, of Ku-iaha, have gone to Honolulu for thesummer. They have leased their placeto O. J. Whitehead.

Mrs. C. C. James and children, ofHonolulu, arrived last Saturday tospend several months on their home-stead at Kuiaha.

F. K. MacDonald, manager of theGrand Hotel, Wailuku, was a businessvisitor to Honolulu from Saturday tillTuesday of this week.

Deputy Sheriff George Cummings,is able to be about after being confin-ed to his home for several days withdengue.

Mrs. Rrlph Walker, of Kibe!, accompanied by her little son, sailedfrom Honolulu by the Great Northernlast Sunday for the coast, where shewill visit for several months.

Mrs. Edwin Soper, who was suc-cessfully operated at the BeretaniaSanitarium some time ago, returned onThursday to her home in Waihee,Maui. Advertiser.

H. Rex Hitchcock of Molokai is avisitor in the city. He was In earnestconference yesterday with Clarence D.Pringle, candidate for the Democraticnomination for mayor of Honolulu.Advertiser.

Mrs. R. C. Bowman, of Wailuku,was a departing passenger from Ho-nolulu for the coast this week, whereshe will spend the summer. She willbe joined by her husband at the closeof the present school term.

Dr. J. C. Fitzgerald, of Spreckel-sville- ,

was on Kauai this week wherehe and other veterinarians of the is-

lands are studying the anthrax epide-mic which has already killed about100 head of cattle on the Princevilleplantation.

TELEGRAPH NEWS OF THE WEEK

AUJES MAY RECRUIT IN UNITED STATESWASHINGTON, April IS The Webb Bill, to permit the Allies

to recruit soldiers and sailors in the United States, passed the housetoday.

NEW YORK TUTS LID ONNEW YORK, April 18 All-nig- ht license for saloons, hotels, roof

pardens, restaurants and cabarets were today cancelled by the city forthe duration of the war.

RUSSIA WILL NOT MAKE PEACEWASHINGTON, April 18 Assurances were received here today

that the provisional government of Russia will not yield to overtures ofGerman and Austrian socialists who have been moving for a separatepeace.

ALIEN ENEMIES MUST MOVEWASHINGTON, April IS Instructions were sent out today by

Attorney-Gener- al Gregor to United States marshals that alien enemies'residing within half a mile of any fort, military camp, air station, etc.,will be required to move prior to June 1, under penalty of arrest.

PARLIAMENT ENTHUSES OVER NEW ALLYLONDON, April 18 With cheers and handclapping the house of

commons today gave unanimous approval to a resolution by Chancellorof the Exchequer Bonar Law, seconded by Asquith, express-ing appreciation of the action of the United States in entering the war.A similar scene took place in the house of lords.

TURKEY BREAKS WITH UNITED STATESWASHINGTON, April 23 Official notification was received at

the state department today that Turkey has severed diplomatic relationswith the United States, following the lead of Germany.

BERLIN SAYS BRITISH DRIVEN BACKBERLIN, April 23 Official statement by the war office today says:

"Northwest of Lens the British penetrated our first line trenches fora width of 500 yards but were driven back by our counter attack."

CHINA INCENSED AT GERMANYPEKING, China, April 23 The war sentiment in China is increas

ing. The Chinese are incensed at the action of Germany in detaining theChinese minister to Berlin pending the arrival of von Hint, the German

atThe Chinese military governors will nie.--c on Wednesday. It is

believed they will declare an independent war on Germany.BIG DRIVE OF ALLIES SOON

LONDON, April 23 Tlv; armies of the British and French aremassing for another tremendous thrust against the German line inFrance. Huge supplies of munitions and hundreds of thousands oftroops are concentrating at supposedly ulnerable points opposite theGermanfront, ready to be combined into the same crushing offensivethat smashed the Teuton lines along the Aisne, at Soissons and inChampagne.

It is believed that Gen. Haig. the British commander, will make an-other effort to smash through to Cambrai and Douai.

Pertinent Paragraphs

The legislature will exnire nextWednesday.

E. C. Mellor and Fred K. MacDonaldwere on Tuesday elected members ofthe Maul Chamber of Commerce.

A1nhn T.oriVo Nn 3 Knlirht of Pvthl- -

as, will hold its regular meeting thisevening.

Ah Kin Hill Chov has filed a suitfor divorce from Hiu Choy.

Tr wltihpa In Announcedthat he has his dental officein Wailuku. Adv.

Tko WnnMin'o P.iilld of the Phiirrhof the Good Shepherd will meet withMrs. Nelson, Wailuku, on Tuesday,May 1st, at 2:30 P. M.

TVio nnlrv list fnr candidates forpreferment In the primary election tobe held on May 19, close tomorrowevening.

Ifnp a nnrehnse nrlce of JfiOOO thehomestead of J. W. Manning, at Kuia- -

(too Vionn Irancfnr to rl t ft V T T Pfirt- -

ridge, of Haiku. Manning has gone tothe mainland.

in ttin second circuit court yesterday morning, D. C. Lindsay was ap-

pointed administrator of the estate ofDr. K. Soea. who died In Japan somemonths ago.

Thn onnreme court has linheld thederision of Judze Edings in grantinga non-sui- t in the case of Namai Lei-aloh- a

vs Mahiai, an action in ejectment.

vr r Johnson, chemist of the Hawaii irivneriment Station, will addressthe Haiku Farmers' Association tomorrow evening on "Soils ana fertilizers." The Association's meeting isset for 7:30 o'clock.

r:ilo MrPorrlston. who entered therace as n candidate for the board ofQimerlvlRnrs from Molokai. has formally withdrawn. Four in the contestfrom Molokai are several too many,Eddie says.

riv on amendment Introduced in thesalaries appropriation bill by Representative l'ascnoai, me saiary oi mesanitary inspector for Maui was rais-ed from $150 to $175 per month. Thebill carries a total of $3,811,225.

Welirht makes his formal an- -- c

nminxomont o s candidate for chairman of the board of supervisors inthis issue of the Maui News. He presents a little platform or nis ownwhich he promises to stand on if elected.

rr fJen S Aiken - wishes to announce that after the first of May hisnew Wailuku ofiice will be on HighStreet, adjoining the Wailuku PublicSchool. He will continue, however, to

Vila nnnolntments at his Paia office during the first 10 days in eachmonth. Adv.

nr w n Baldwin, who is a mem- -

i tv. oViltHron's denart- -Ut 1 VJl LUC V. II 'J O "

ment, has already about, completedthe organizaton or nis commm.ee mih TTniirn district and expects to soonhave a busy bunch of youngsters atwork making gardens tor me uig cuu- -

test.RotHnninir next Tuesday. May 1,

the First National Bank of Wailuku,the First National Bank oi ljaia, anuthe Lahaina National Bank, will ceaseto exist as national banks, but will be-

gin their new existence as branches ofthe "Bank of Maui, Limited," undera territorial charter.

Rehearsals of the little play to berivon tomorrow evening by the Women's Aid Society indicate that some-

thing very much worth while is instore for those who attend. One fea-

ture of the entertainment from whichmuch is expected, is a dozen "livingpictures" depicting famous subjects.

One hair or tne memoers oi aiuuo,rriiro Knle-ht- of Pvthlas will eatriinnor nt thA WftilukU Hotel nextTuesday evening at the expense ofthe other half, who win eai aiso umat their own expense. The affair isiho roQiitt of nn attendance contest,just ended, in which the "reds" putit over the "yellows" Dy a goou mm em.

MARRIAGEApril 23, 1917 T. Higashl, 46; and

Chlnyo Nakasnima, aa; Doin oi i.

Ceremony by Rev. K. Mat- -

April 25, 1917 Macario Mariano, 21;

and Marcelina Flores, z&; uoui riu-plno-

both of Wailuku. Ceremonyby Father Justin.April 26, 1917 Akana Ah Cheong,47; Wailuku; and Mrs. Mele Brown,49, Waihee. Ceremony by FatherJustin.

WORTH AIKEN HAS A BIRTHDAY

arnfh n AlVen the genial cashierof the Paia branch of the Bank ofMaul, celebrated his birthday wun alittle family dinner at the WailukuHotel last Tuesday tugni. some mmof his ace may be gleaned from thefo that therp were 12 candles onhis cake. Those present were Mr.

and Mrs. W. O. Aiken, JJr. ana mrs.Geo. S. Aiken, Bertram Aiken, Mr.and Mrs. E. S. Smith, of Haiku. Mr.,n1 TMt-- s w A Tlaldwln. oi iiaiKU. .

D. Lufkin, Miss Charlotte Smith, andMiss Stanley.

.Savage Hunger.

Mary and Tommy had been to heara missionary talk at sunaay-scnooi- .

"Did he tell you about the poorheathen?" father Inquired at the dinner-tahl-

"Yes. sir" answered Mary. "Hesaid that they were often hungry, andwhen they beat on their tum-tum- s itcould be heard for miles." NewYork Evening Post.

Not Crowded.Coasting Skipper (to interviewer)

"Yus. From your papers you d thinkthe sea round the coast was full ofGerman submarines. But it ain t soreelv. W'v sometimes we goes foras much as an hour, without Beein'p'raps more than one of "em." Cartoon.

Hilo Men Want Gas

Franchise For Maui

(Continued from Page One.)

buy stock in the company which willexpect to spend $75,000 In getting theplant started. The company wouldalso consider taking over the IslandElectric Company's plant, he said, andcombining the two utilities. This lastwould not be possible, he stated, un-less the Owners of the electric com-pany revise their price from some$110,000 to about half that amount.Favored The Franchise

D. II. Case offered a motion that thetrustees endorse the plan of Mr. Rus-se- l,

and ask the legislature to passthe bill.

Frank Baldwin wanted more timeto consider the matter. He did notbelieve that the trustees should passon so big a question for the wholecommunity or for the whole of thechamber.

Case's motion receiving no second,was not put. ,Bill Was Surprise

To most members present the factthat such a franchise bill had beenintroduced in the legislature, came asa surprise. Asked why the matter hadbeen delayed until the legislature wmabout to adjourn, Russel stated that.hiscompany had not seriously consider-ed it until ther engineer, Mr. Berkeley,who just finished installing the Hiloplant, had made a trip to Wailuku lesshan two weeks ago, and his report

hRd been so encouraging that it wasdecided to make a try to get a franchise throim'h at this session. Shouldhis be achieved, however, he stated

that It will doubtless be about twoyears before actual work could bestarted on the plant.

nam id MuiuiidiaParadise Says Ford

tContinued from Page One.)

above the sea. D. F. Balch, engineerof the loan fund committee, accompanied the Advertiser party on thetrip when all altitude records for'motoring on Maui were broken.Will Head Subscription List

'If Balch will give bonds to buildfor $15,000 a motor road from Olindato the sign post 2.8 miles from thesummit," continued Ford, "His offershould be snapped up, and I shouldlike to make the first subscription of$100 to such a fund.

'Maui is the motorist s paradise ofthe Islands and will probably remainso for there is more to see by autohere than on any, or all of the otherislands. But first you need a roadthrough to Hana. That is a necessity.Let us all work for that. Let us helpYOU to get that, and tln let Mauihelp US to get the Halaakala roadconstructed, for that should belong

to all of us and the whole world, oneof the wonder rides that should beknown and famed to the furthermostcorners of the earth."Observatory Project

Ford told the trustees of the chamber of commerce all of the above, buthe did not tell them of his observatoryscheme. This is to interest the scientists of Vancouver and Mt. Wilson ob-

servatories, who have been consider-ing establishing the largest telescopeIn the world near Honolulu, in puttingthe great observatory on Haleakala.

'Those men are only asking $5000,declared Ford, and I believe I canraise that money if the observatory islocated on Haleakla. From a lay-

man's standpoint Maul's mountainshould offer a site superior to anyplace in Hawaii or possibly in theworld. It is first of all more easilyand quickly accessable than most ofthe larger observatories on the main-land. Then it is well above the usualcloud stratas, and with Its 10,000 feetof elevaton the atmosphere is so mag-nificently clear and transparent thatstar study should be possible underideal conditions. As soon as I getback to Honolulu I shall take thematter."De Pleased With Road

L. W. de who had neverbeen on Maui before, was also muchimpressed with what this island hasto offer the tourist. He returned toHonolulu on Monday night. What hethought of Maul's roads Is summarizedin the following brief interview in theStar-Bulleti-

"Maui has set an example of goodroads," said L. W. de Vis.Norton whorecently returned from a visit to theValley Island. The roads there aretruly magnificent, and all of the otherislands must hand it to Maui for roadconditions.

"There are perhaps five times aamany miles of roads on Maui as thereare on Kauai, and as far as Oahu isconcerned the local patches cannotbe compared with those on the ValleyIsle. Tourists should take their ma-chines to Maul and try them out on,the roads there, and then they willnot have such a poor impression ofthe roads that are found in the islands," he concluded.

GOODING FIELD BOOSTINGMAUI'S CORAL GARDENS

Secretary II. Gooding Field of theHawaii Tuna Club Is baok from Maulwith good news of the fishing off Ki-

hei and also with reports of the dis-covery of a wanderful marine gardenin the submerged crater of the littleMololcinl, in Kihei waters. He saysthis is the greatest coral garden any-where In Hawaii, about 20 acres in ex-tent, and is teeming with fish of ka-leidoscopic colors.

l' E. Hughitt of Auburn, N. Y., hasreturned after a successful fishing tripand intends to go back with a partysoon. Star-Bulleti-

LOSTHeavy gold signet ring. Between

Island Electric Power House and Wai-luku oilice. Return to Maul NewsReward.