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IHIHBHHIHIHBHHHHBJHilHIHHiBI 3k t wih m as jh wm f m mk L x VOL LIII NO 45 HONOLULU TERRITORY TUESDitf JUNE 7 1910 -SEM- I-WEEKLY WHOLK NO 8172 i iiiihj ihuijui -- - imiiiiiii mmm3mmmummmmBmmmmmmnmmmmmmmmimmmmmKmmaM HAT TO DO WITH THE SALOONS A Liquor Problem Independent of the Prohibition Campaign UP TO THE LICENSE BOARD Salooners or Antjsalooners May Ask That Action Be it Deferred While tho plebiscite aa becn tho main topic of discussion adjlo tho local liqUUr H1LUHV1UU It 13 Ul gLUUlU IU IlrttU a rival in the matter of consideration of applications for renewals of licenses for tho coming liquor year which be gins with July Tho Board of Licenso Commissioners has cloven applications up for consideration at a meeting to bo held on June 15 and fourteen to be considered on Juno 20 It is understood that tho Anti Saloon Leaguo Will have something to say bo foro tho board as to tho policy that should bo pursued regarding theso re ncwals It was thought by some that as thero is to bo a special election in July tho matter did not call for special consideration now It has ibeen point- ed ¬ out however that no action con come as a result of tho July election for a year from July Hence the Board of Licenso Commissioners has to act Continued on page Foun M BOARDS ARE UMEDjr PREfiR One on Maui and Two on Big Island Will Hear Appeals of Property Owners Governor Frohr yesterday appointed the tax appeal boards for tho three districts in which appeals have been mado from the assessments of this year Tho total amount of the appeals is not very heavy but nevertheless it necessi ¬ tates tho appointment of boards to pass upon tho anneals Tho tax appeal board appointed for tho second taxation district winch is on Maui consists of G D Lufkin chair- man ¬ W L Decoto and P Cockett For the third district on Hawaii tho board is George P Tulloch chairman E A McWain and L 8 Aungst The members of tho board of tho fourth taxation district on Hawaii aro Judge E W Barnard chairman William McKay and R T Guard B Information has been received at tho naval station that tho cruisers ¬ and Chattanooga left Guam on June 5 for Honolulu and Ban Francis ¬ co Tho warships will arrive hero about June 17 and will coal prepara- tory ¬ to leaving fpr tho Coast The two vessels and their complements of offi ¬ cers are as follows The U S 8 Clevelaad a protected cruiser of ten guns 3100 tons register twin screws and 4700 horsepower U 8 8 Cleveland Commander Hugh Hodman commanding Lieut Austin 8 Klbbee Lieut Benjamin K eon Ensign John B Rhodes Ensign Wovman Beehler Easn Richard T Keiran Ensign George W Konyon Ensign John M Sehelling Ensign Georgo H Laird Ensign Grattan C BOTHA STARTING AS BRITISH PREMIER Appointment General S of former Boer With Enthusiasm 4RffiraHraffipMIMi hIBP tfe cfr felBfafSMBKi GENERAL BOTHA CAPETOWN June 0 General Botha is proceeding with the organiza- tion ¬ of a government of tho South African federated British states His appointment as premier has been re ¬ ceived with enthusiasm WANTS TO BRING MANY EDITORS TO HAWAII In tho opinion of Secretary Wood of tho promotion committee the people of Honolulu could not - invest 3000 or 4000 to better advantage than by bringing the national editorial associa- tion ¬ to Honolulu and ho believes no efforts should be spared to bring tho 1111 convention here Ho believes that not only would the hotel interests and those who obtain revenue from the sale of curios etc bonefit from the convention but also the larcer and vital Interests or tuo Territory would bo advanced by such an arrangement it seems to mm sucn a visit would be cgually as important as the visit of congressmen Wo want a riglit understanding of our conditions on the mainland ho writes and no hotter way could bo devised for securing same - FISHERIES ARBITRATION THE HAGUE Juno C The British American fisheries arbitration has opened Professor Xaumasch of Aus- tria ¬ is presiding Thto English case is presented by Sir Robert Finley The regular monthly meeting of the Ministerial Union and tho last beforo vacation took the form of a picnic to the Peninsula yesterday certain ousi ness was discussed but tho greater part of tho day was given to merrymaking and nn enjoynuio mncn TWO CRUISERS ON WAY HERE U OBTJISER OLEVELAND BISTEB SHD OP THE OHATTAKOOGA Cleve- land Is John P Dlchman Asst Burgeon Herbert L Kelley Passed Asst Paymaster John II Gunnell Gunrcr Henry Eieck Chief Machinist Charles A Howe Machinist Martin Huber Tho U 8 S Chattanooga is also a protected cruiser carrying ten guns is 3100 tons register 4700 horsepower and is driven by twin screws Following is tho complement of offi cers on each vessel TJ 8 8 Chattanooga Commander John I McDonald commanding Lieut Chandler K Jones Ensign Nel son II Goss Ensign John J London Easign Hoy L Lowman Ensign Georgo A Alexander Ensign Hoy Le C Stov- er ¬ Ensign Cortlandt C Baughman Asst Surgeon Harry L Smith Passed Asst Paymaster Robert B Lupton Boatswain Charles II Foster Chief Ma ¬ chinist Francl P Mugan Machinist narry Choropcno pzm j r HAWAII Received CONTRACT FOR A NEW OHPNEMI The Bonine to Take the of the Burned Theater Place THE OLD SITE IS ABANDONED Cohen Signs Contracts for the Remodeling of Hotel Street Place 3j Joo Cohen last nlcht lot cOTracts for tho remodeling of tho Bonino Thea ter on Hotel street to bo known in future ns Tho Orpheum and tho architects and contractors will start work this morning to transform tho littlo playhouse into an oporahouse to bo ready June 27 when tho Casino musical company arrives on tho Sierra Enough spaco has been leased back of tho Bonino for tho jxtension of the stago to make it as large as tho old Orphoum stage and about tho BfO of the oporahouse stage oxcept -- i to width Tho roof will bo raised ovor tho tago section so that a gridiron can be installed for raising and loworing drop scones At tho sides of tho orchestra next to tho proscenium arch boxes wil bo put in a lower and an uppor on each side tho Dame as those in tho onornhouso Tho front of tho houso will bo re- - modeled and tho entrance mado double its present width and transformed to look like a Broadway playhouse The seating capacity of tho is to bo eight hundred and fifty and there is enough additional space on iho Ewa sido to give two hundred and fifty moro seats of nocessary Tho old Orpheum site has been gvon up as a theater site BRITONS WILL -- BE CARETAKERS Enalish Government Decides It Prefers to Tend to Cook Monument The British government has decided that it wants to toko care of tho Cook manumont after all instead of having Uncle Sams lighthouse keeper ocrapo oft tho moss and keep tho plot in good shape Governor Trcar yesterday received a letter from tho interior department in-- closing a letter from tho state depart mont rank enter alter monuiucui It has been years since tho government sent Hawaiian caro for and tho latter was bad state of until ¬ when ncTeomont two countries lighthouso was to look it it costs nosed government would bo to leave in statu now this not case i H MOVING PIETIES OF LUG FISH advantage of His experience RESPITE AGAIN ilRD E E Washington Gives Another 1 Chance of Life to Wynne Murderer Wynne is to lmvo clianca his life Last niorht United States District Attornoy Breckons re coivtd csblo from Washington which practically reopens ease far as Wynnos for a commutation Is concerned nnd movement will bo made for carrying tho sontenco of hang ing into effect until still nnother ro port ias been mado to Washington Tho cnbla was from tho pardon attor oy of tho department of justice It Arlrllf trtnnl nnnnro Wvnnn 4WVllflWV4 4UW UW forwardod for roport and recommendation Wynne wns to havo boon brought intoHho fcdoral court noxt Monday for formal proceedings Betting a his execution As thoro will bo no action until Breckons has tho documents now on tho way sent in report and until tho has boon ngain taken up and nctod on by the bureau in Wash ¬ ington Wynnes defenso was undertaken by thdongincors association of which ho was member Tho of which was tonvicUd was committed ou board the Bteamer Bosocrans in Hono ¬ Ho was drunk at tho time His1 now think thoy will get acommutation of for him -- H ROOSEVELT AT LUNCH WITH KING AND QUEEN LONDON Juno C and Mrs Roosovctt took luncheon as the of King Georgo V and Queon Mary II TNEJJ INf The Warship Kaimiloa Star of Rotten Row Changes Hands Again The entire royal navy of tho monarchy of Hawaii passed into tho ownership of ono man yesterday after noon and ho is a junkman Admiral Klondike C H Brown was the pur ¬ chaser and tho Associated Oil Compa ¬ ny tho seller tho navy being tho warship Kalmiloa onco tho pride of the Kalakaua dynasty and now in which it was stated tho a mero hulk stripped of nil hor American chorgo daffaires at London glory In her timo tho Kniml- - hnd boon advised by tho that loa was the only warship belonging to rule tho British empiro that tho an independent nation between Occl- - mont of Great Britain has decided that dent andiOrlent tho junkman it prefers look nfter tho caro and has by his purchase raised bimsolf maintenance of the monument from tho ranks of mero civilians to This comes somewhat in the nature commanding and may soon hoist of surprise as was tacitly agreed his fl admiral oyor ft some timo sinco between tho twogoy- - Vnimin flf hv ir trnmonts that the government of the nkaua flg a j and Bent t0 6a umm owes bUBu b- - moa in tho hopo that Bamoa would nouso jiuepor ucutoHi iuiioau ji into lOOK mo several British has a war ves sol to waters to decorate the monument and in a neglect re- cently bv betweon tho tho keeper directed after as that the British content the matter quo appears that is the 0 Still nnother for a tho as appeal no said IHUVIU today further dato for it is recoivod has a now matter pardon a murdor ho lulu Harbor friends sentonco Colonel today guests - dofunct former that harbor former powers govern- - Brown to a it huk Thn Jbu a union with Hawaii with Kalakaua as tho supreme monarch ovor all ibut tho mission of tho commis- sioners ¬ on tho Kalmiloa failed and tho warship was soon sot asido as useless Admiral Brown no doflnito plans as yet for tho Kaimiloa but ho will remove tho oil tanks from tho hulk --fc about 12000 to send a cruiser from mmrM D All I nv Vancouver to Ao tho work it was sup- - DUnUUHn HH UU I but it IS LANDED ONCE MORE Eeturning to get a coat which ho had left in his restaurant on King stroct the Chinese proprietor last night dis- covered ¬ a countryman going through the till and helping himself to tlio con- tents ¬ Ho made a rush for the man and after a short scuffle secured him His culls for help wore answered by Ofllcer Wells who was just retorting Tbo moving pictures of tho fish at for ty an ft0 blKllr Bkon to police station and charged tho aquarium taken by R K Bonine 1Ie m Bent up to McDuffie for n were put on tho screen for tho 41rst timo veatigation and turned out to bo Au last night at his studio before Pro- - Loy an old jail bird who has already feasor Bryant and his friends Mr served four or five sentences for similar inl0S- - ld Bryant leaves Wednesday for the Coast J6 him had been against as he caught on a lecture tour and Trill take these in tjl0bact nnd t0 mako roatters worse pictures with him Ia Philippine coin which had been In They upon development havo turn- - the till was found on his pernon ed out to be among tho most remaTka- - An Ly JlttS been oa Hawaii for four Wb vr taken Thera i nothlnrr to teen months and returned a week ago Indicate in tho maioritv of them that Saturday Sinco that time he has boon thn ramm wa turned on tha fish in living in a tenement near the Palama anv other nlace exeent their natural junction He swore solemnly beforo abode and there is wonderful action in the chief that this was his first job all tho films Borne of them THl be since he returned to tho city but tho colored to make them more attractive chief on tho strength of a past pc- - This work of Bonino s has opened quaintanceship with him searched his ud a new field for tho camera a Held rooms anyway which Bonino intends to take inBtant While Ah Loy generally proves to bo in tab nnvn and has a good burglur be turned out to be a Incr theso few films has shown him bad rambler Ha stated that ho bad mi m vmnmtfnuKK m ElilW3Hlll BiHKHItfS I IHBIdHHHHaHHI ATTORNEY GENERAL WICKER SHAM WHO DRAFTED THE RAILROAD BILL CORPORATIONS PAY A THIRD OF THE TAXES WASHINGTON Juno 0 Tho roport of tho commission of corporations is sued today shows that of tho total Stato tax receipts Now York dcrivos aDOut thirty two per cent from corpo rations For Stnto purposes corporato taxation is by special taxes Local taxation of corporations is by a gon oral property tax on both realty and personalty Thus the separation of Stato and local taxation is nearly com- plete ¬ Tho capital stock tax is quito complex and applios to a very largo number of corporations It is based on capital stock moasurcdi by assets employod in tho Stnto and tho rato varies according to dlvldonds solvency nnd tho market price of tho stock In legal theory it is a tax on franchiso or on tho prlvilego of doing buBiuesa within tho State and not a tax on nronortv ltailroads aro jtaxed ou both capital stock nnd on gross earnings Surfoca lines operated by motive power other than steam are taxed on gross earnings and on dividends in excess of four per cent Shares of stock aro not taxed in tho1 hands of holders Debts may bo de- ducted ¬ from tho entire amount of per ¬ sonal property instoad of from credits alone Special franchises for use of highways by public sorvico com panics aro valued by a Stato board but aro taxed locally for local uso Theso special franchises are declared by statuto to bo real estato thus pro vonting tho deduction of d4bts bond issuos etc from tho amount of tho assessment This statuto is also some what unusual in principle as it adds to tho valuation of tho physical property tho valuo of certain intangible fran ¬ chiso rights Foreign corporations aro practically subjoct to tho samo taxes as domestic companies Tho total amount of taxes for state purpoBoi from all sources for tho year ended September lliuu was opprpxl matoly 20000000 Of tills a littlo less than ono third was from corporations The next largest singlo item of rovonuo was from liquor licensos which in flvo months produced over 5000000 Tho major portion of tho remaining taxes is from inheritances about 7000000 and stock transfers about 5000000 The capital stock tax produced about 2000000 Is the Professors Abo director of the Wa scda University baseball team writes to Editor f Ouodera of the Japanese Daily Chronicle that bo has had a hard time deciding on the personnel of the team that he should bring to Honolulu ou the proposed Wascda basobull tour The wholo university has become so enthusiastic over tho prospects of n trip to Hawaii that everybody wants to come nnd every balLplayer in the cbool s out at work trying to make the team By as process of elimination Abe has finally picked what he considers to bo tho strongest team In Japan and to theso men bo i paying his Jndlviduul attention rounding them into sliajio Yamawalil known throughout Japan as tho best backstop in tho country is headed this war bound for Now York During tho series ho will do most of tho catching for Waseda alternating if need be witli Ynmaguchi who is where he con improve on bis methods 10 when he arrived here but that he being brought along as a sub catcher and ho U now laying plans to make had lost it all shooting crops in Aala Four pltehors are on tho list tun a much wore elaborate series Park with a let of boys Japanese realizing that th y vlli need ftjL AGREEMENT AT THE WHITE SE President Taft and the Railroad Presidents Come to Terms STAND BY THE NEW LAW Administration Agrees to Stop Injunctions Against Increas- ing ¬ Rates WASHINGTON Juno 7 After a four hours conference of President Taft Attorney General Wickorsham and sovoral leading Tatlrond presidents of tho country it was announced that an agreemout had been arrived at whoro by tho rnilroads would submit for tho present without contest to the opera ¬ tion of tho now law just passod Tho railroad presidents agreed to withdraw their proposed increases of rates pending tho rnllrond bill going into effect empowering the intorstato commerce commission to investigate all increases and docido as to their reasonableness Prosldont Tnft announced that in viow of this agreement on tho part of tho railroads tho government would withdraw its injunction Buit now pond ing in Chicago to prevent tho railroads from increasing rates M- - SUCCEEDS NORTON WASHINGTON Juno 7 A Piatt Andrew has been named to succood Charles I Norton as assistant socro- - tary of tho department of the treasury Ho io at presont director of tho mint FORTY KILLED IN AN UPRISING IN MEXICO VERA CRUZ Moxico Juno 7 sorlous uprising has occurred in Yuca- tan ¬ Several thousand Mayas havo sacked Valladolid killing forty pcoplo including all tho government officials in tho place Troops aro being rushod to tho sccno CARNEGIE LIBRARY ARCHITECT IS COMING A letter wns received yesterday by Abo Lowis Jr as a member of tho library commission from Henry D Wickfeld of San Trancisco the archi- tect ¬ that will proparo tho plans for tho new Carnogio library Mr Wickfpld will arnvo in Honolulu on the next Manchuria scheduled to arrive on June 24 to look over tho site and make his preliminary plans This marks the commencement of tho real work on tho now institution which will bo rushod to completion as rapidly as possible now that tho slto difficulty has been disposed of STRONGEST TEAM IN JAPAN TO REPRESENT WASEDA HERE The Japanese College Nine Composed of Specialists on Orient Baseball Diamond a few good speed artists in order to do battle on Saturdays and Sundays Iscda who plays third for tho col legians is tho big stick artist for tho team and his speciality is two and three baggers Noiiomura tho shortstop Is nick named Zoider No 2 his playing bo- - ini almost as stroncr and sensational us tflo work of Zcidcr with tho Chicago White Sox Following is a list of players on tho team as chosen to represent Wasoda and which will start in tho series with tho Onliu league teams on Sunday July third Ymnuwakl catcher Olil pitcher Oniuru pitcher Matsuda pitcher Nishlo first base Hani second base Iseda third base Nonomura short stop lilda captain left llold Mikami right field orpltehor Ogawa center field Fukabori sub infielder Hayakawa sub outfielder Yamuguclil sub catcher Professor Abe nianegr jii i M a HI

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IHIHBHHIHIHBHHHHBJHilHIHHiBI

3kt wih m as jh wm f m mk

L x

VOL LIII NO 45 HONOLULU TERRITORY TUESDitf JUNE 7 1910 -SEM- I-WEEKLY WHOLK NO 8172i iiiihjihuijui --- imiiiiiii mmm3mmmummmmBmmmmmmnmmmmmmmmimmmmmKmmaM

HAT TO DO

WITH THE

SALOONS

A Liquor Problem Independent

of the Prohibition

Campaign

UP TO THE LICENSE BOARD

Salooners or Antjsalooners May

Ask That Action Beit

Deferred

While tho plebiscite aa becn thomain topic of discussion adjlo tho localliqUUr H1LUHV1UU It 13 UlgLUUlU IU IlrttUa rival in the matter of considerationof applications for renewals of licensesfor tho coming liquor year which begins with July Tho Board of LicensoCommissioners has cloven applicationsup for consideration at a meeting tobo held on June 15 and fourteen to beconsidered on Juno 20

It is understood that tho Anti SaloonLeaguo Will have something to say bo

foro tho board as to tho policy thatshould bo pursued regarding theso re

ncwals It was thought by some thatas thero is to bo a special election inJuly tho matter did not call for specialconsideration now It has ibeen point-ed

¬

out however that no action concome as a result of tho July electionfor a year from July Hence the Boardof Licenso Commissioners has to act

Continued on page Foun

M BOARDS ARE

UMEDjr PREfiR

One on Maui and Two on Big

Island Will Hear Appeals of

Property Owners

Governor Frohr yesterday appointedthe tax appeal boards for tho threedistricts in which appeals have beenmado from the assessments of this yearTho total amount of the appeals is notvery heavy but nevertheless it necessi ¬

tates tho appointment of boards to passupon tho anneals

Tho tax appeal board appointed fortho second taxation district winch ison Maui consists of G D Lufkin chair-man

¬

W L Decoto and P CockettFor the third district on Hawaii tho

board is George P Tulloch chairmanE A McWain and L 8 Aungst

The members of tho board of thofourth taxation district on Hawaiiaro Judge E W Barnard chairmanWilliam McKay and R T Guard

B

Information has been received at tho

naval station that tho cruisers ¬

and Chattanooga left Guam onJune 5 for Honolulu and Ban Francis ¬

co Tho warships will arrive heroabout June 17 and will coal prepara-tory

¬

to leaving fpr tho Coast The twovessels and their complements of offi ¬

cers are as follows

The U S 8 Clevelaad a protectedcruiser of ten guns 3100 tons registertwin screws and 4700 horsepower

U 8 8 Cleveland Commander HughHodman commanding Lieut Austin8 Klbbee Lieut Benjamin Keon Ensign John B Rhodes EnsignWovman Beehler Easn RichardT Keiran Ensign George W KonyonEnsign John M Sehelling EnsignGeorgo H Laird Ensign Grattan C

BOTHA STARTING

AS BRITISH PREMIER

Appointment

General

S

of former Boer

With

Enthusiasm

4RffiraHraffipMIMi

hIBP tfe cfr felBfafSMBKi

GENERAL BOTHA

CAPETOWN June 0 GeneralBotha is proceeding with the organiza-tion

¬

of a government of tho SouthAfrican federated British states Hisappointment as premier has been re ¬

ceived with enthusiasm

WANTS TO BRINGMANY EDITORS TO HAWAII

In tho opinion of Secretary Wood oftho promotion committee the people ofHonolulu could not - invest 3000 or

4000 to better advantage than bybringing the national editorial associa-

tion

¬

to Honolulu and ho believes noefforts should be spared to bring tho1111 convention here

Ho believes that not only would thehotel interests and those who obtainrevenue from the sale of curios etcbonefit from the convention but alsothe larcer and vital Interests or tuoTerritory would bo advanced by suchan arrangement it seems to mm sucna visit would be cgually as importantas the visit of congressmen

Wo want a riglit understanding ofour conditions on the mainland howrites and no hotter way could bodevised for securing same-

FISHERIES ARBITRATION

THE HAGUE Juno C The BritishAmerican fisheries arbitration hasopened Professor Xaumasch of Aus-

tria¬

is presiding Thto English case ispresented by Sir Robert Finley

The regular monthly meeting of theMinisterial Union and tho last beforovacation took the form of a picnic tothe Peninsula yesterday certain ousiness was discussed but tho greater partof tho day was given to merrymakingand nn enjoynuio mncn

TWO CRUISERS ON WAY HERE

U OBTJISER OLEVELAND BISTEB SHD OP THE OHATTAKOOGA

Cleve-

land

Is

John

P

Dlchman Asst Burgeon Herbert LKelley Passed Asst Paymaster JohnII Gunnell Gunrcr Henry Eieck ChiefMachinist Charles A Howe MachinistMartin Huber

Tho U 8 S Chattanooga is also aprotected cruiser carrying ten guns is3100 tons register 4700 horsepower andis driven by twin screws

Following is tho complement of officers on each vessel

TJ 8 8 Chattanooga CommanderJohn I McDonald commandingLieut Chandler K Jones Ensign Nelson II Goss Ensign John J LondonEasign Hoy L Lowman Ensign GeorgoA Alexander Ensign Hoy Le C Stov-er

¬

Ensign Cortlandt C BaughmanAsst Surgeon Harry L Smith PassedAsst Paymaster Robert B LuptonBoatswain Charles II Foster Chief Ma ¬

chinist Francl P Mugan Machinistnarry Choropcno

pzm j r

HAWAII

Received

CONTRACT FOR A

NEW OHPNEMI

The Bonine to Take the

of the Burned

Theater

Place

THE OLD SITE IS ABANDONED

Cohen Signs Contracts for theRemodeling of Hotel Street

Place3j

Joo Cohen last nlcht lot cOTractsfor tho remodeling of tho Bonino Theater on Hotel street to bo known infuture ns Tho Orpheum and thoarchitects and contractors will startwork this morning to transform tholittlo playhouse into an oporahouse tobo ready June 27 when tho Casinomusical company arrives on tho Sierra

Enough spaco has been leased backof tho Bonino for tho jxtension of thestago to make it as large as tho oldOrphoum stage and about tho BfO ofthe oporahouse stage oxcept -- i towidth

Tho roof will bo raised ovor tho tagosection so that a gridiron can beinstalled for raising and loworing dropscones At tho sides of tho orchestranext to tho proscenium arch boxes wilbo put in a lower and an uppor oneach side tho Dame as those in thoonornhouso

Tho front of tho houso will bo re- -

modeled and tho entrance mado doubleits present width and transformed tolook like a Broadway playhouse

The seating capacity of thois to bo eight hundred and fifty

and there is enough additional spaceon iho Ewa sido to give two hundredand fifty moro seats of nocessary

Tho old Orpheum site has been gvonup as a theater site

BRITONS WILL

-- BE CARETAKERS

Enalish Government Decides It

Prefers to Tend to Cook

Monument

The British government has decidedthat it wants to toko care of tho Cookmanumont after all instead of havingUncle Sams lighthouse keeper ocrapooft tho moss and keep tho plot in goodshape

Governor Trcar yesterday received aletter from tho interior department in--

closing a letter from tho state departmont

rank

enteralter monuiucui

It has been years since thogovernment sent

Hawaiian caro for andtho latter

was bad state of until ¬

when ncTeomonttwo countries lighthouso was

to look it it costs

nosed governmentwould bo to leavein statu nowthis not case i

H

MOVING PIETIES

OF LUG FISH

advantage of His experience

RESPITE AGAIN

ilRD E E

Washington Gives Another1 Chance of Life to

Wynne

Murderer Wynne is to lmvoclianca his life Last niorht UnitedStates District Attornoy Breckons recoivtd csblo from Washington whichpractically reopens ease far asWynnos for a commutation Is

concerned nnd movement will bomade for carrying tho sontenco of hanging into effect until still nnother roport ias been mado to Washington

Tho cnbla was from tho pardon attoroy of tho department of justice It

Arlrllf trtnnl nnnnro Wvnnn4WVllflWV4 4UW UW

forwardod for roport andrecommendation

Wynne wns to havo boon broughtintoHho fcdoral court noxt Monday forformal proceedings Betting ahis execution As thoro will bo

no action until Breckons hastho documents now on tho waysent in report and until tho

has boon ngain taken up andnctod on by the bureau in Wash ¬

ingtonWynnes defenso was undertaken by

thdongincors association of which howas member Tho of which

was tonvicUd was committed ouboard the Bteamer Bosocrans in Hono ¬

Ho was drunk at thotime His1 now think thoy willget acommutation of for him

--HROOSEVELT AT LUNCH

WITH KING AND QUEEN

LONDON Juno C and MrsRoosovctt took luncheon as the

of King Georgo V and QueonMary

IITNEJJ INf

The Warship Kaimiloa Star of

Rotten Row Changes Hands

Again

The entire royal navy of thomonarchy of Hawaii passed into thoownership of ono man yesterday afternoon and ho is a junkman Admiral

Klondike C H Brown was the pur ¬

chaser and tho Associated Oil Compa ¬

ny tho seller tho navy being thowarship Kalmiloa onco tho

pride of the Kalakaua dynasty and nowin which it was stated tho a mero hulk stripped of nil hor

American chorgo daffaires at London glory In her timo tho Kniml- -

hnd boon advised by tho that loa was the only warship belonging torule tho British empiro that tho an independent nation between Occl- -

mont of Great Britain has decided that dent andiOrlent tho junkmanit prefers look nfter tho caro and has by his purchase raised bimsolfmaintenance of the monument from tho ranks of mero civilians to

This comes somewhat in the nature commanding and may soon hoistof surprise as was tacitly agreed his fl admiral oyor ftsome timo sinco between tho twogoy-- Vnimin flf hv irtrnmonts that the government of the nkaua flg a j and Bent t0 6aumm owes bUBu b-- moa in tho hopo that Bamoa wouldnouso jiuepor ucutoHi iuiioau ji intolOOK mo

severalBritish has a war vessol to waters todecorate the monument and

in a neglect re-

cently bv betweon thotho keeper

directed after as

that the Britishcontent the matter

quo appears thatis the

0

Still

nnotherfor

atho as

appealno

said IHUVIUtoday further

dato forit is

recoivodhas

a nowmatter

pardon

a murdorho

lulu Harborfriends

sentonco

Coloneltoday

guests

-

dofunct

former

that harborformer

powersgovern- -

Brownto

a it hukThn

Jbua union with Hawaii with

Kalakaua as tho supreme monarch ovorall ibut tho mission of tho commis-sioners

¬

on tho Kalmiloa failed and thowarship was soon sot asido as useless

Admiral Brown no doflnitoplans as yet for tho Kaimiloa but howill remove tho oil tanks from thohulk

--fc

about 12000 to send a cruiser from mmrM D All I nvVancouver to Ao tho work it was sup- - DUnUUHn HH UU I

but itIS LANDED ONCE MORE

Eeturning to get a coat which ho hadleft in his restaurant on King stroctthe Chinese proprietor last night dis-

covered

¬

a countryman going throughthe till and helping himself to tlio con-

tents¬

Ho made a rush for the manand after a short scuffle secured himHis culls for help wore answered byOfllcer Wells who was just retorting

Tbo moving pictures of tho fish at for ty an ft0 blKllr Bkon topolice station and charged

tho aquarium taken by R K Bonine 1Ie m Bent up to McDuffie for nwere put on tho screen for tho 41rst timo veatigation and turned out to bo Aulast night at his studio before Pro- - Loy an old jail bird who has alreadyfeasor Bryant and his friends Mr served four or five sentences for similar

inl0S- - ldBryant leaves Wednesday for the Coast J6him had beenagainst as he caughton a lecture tour and Trill take these in tjl0bact nnd t0 mako roatters worsepictures with him Ia Philippine coin which had been In

They upon development havo turn- - the till was found on his pernoned out to be among tho most remaTka- - An Ly JlttS been oa Hawaii for fourWb vr taken Thera i nothlnrr to teen months and returned a week agoIndicate in tho maioritv of them that Saturday Sinco that time he has boonthn ramm wa turned on tha fish in living in a tenement near the Palamaanv other nlace exeent their natural junction He swore solemnly beforoabode and there is wonderful action in the chief that this was his first joball tho films Borne of them THl be since he returned to tho city but thocolored to make them more attractive chief on tho strength of a past pc- -

This work of Bonino s has opened quaintanceship with him searched hisud a new field for tho camera a Held rooms anywaywhich Bonino intends to take inBtant While Ah Loy generally proves to bo

in tab

nnvn

and

has

a good burglur be turned out to be aIncr theso few films has shown him bad rambler Ha stated that ho bad

mi

m vmnmtfnuKK m

ElilW3HlllBiHKHItfS

I IHBIdHHHHaHHIATTORNEY GENERAL WICKER

SHAM WHO DRAFTED THERAILROAD BILL

CORPORATIONS PAY A

THIRD OF THE TAXES

WASHINGTON Juno 0 Tho roportof tho commission of corporations is

sued today shows that of tho totalStato tax receipts Now York dcrivosaDOut thirty two per cent from corporations For Stnto purposes corporatotaxation is by special taxes Localtaxation of corporations is by a gonoral property tax on both realty andpersonalty Thus the separation ofStato and local taxation is nearly com-

plete¬

Tho capital stock tax is quitocomplex and applios to a very largonumber of corporations It is basedon capital stock moasurcdi by assetsemployod in tho Stnto and tho ratovaries according to dlvldonds solvencynnd tho market price of tho stock Inlegal theory it is a tax on franchisoor on tho prlvilego of doing buBiuesawithin tho State and not a tax onnronortv

ltailroads aro jtaxed ou both capitalstock nnd on gross earnings Surfocalines operated by motive power otherthan steam are taxed on gross earningsand on dividends in excess of four percent

Shares of stock aro not taxed in tho1hands of holders Debts may bo de-

ducted¬

from tho entire amount of per ¬

sonal property instoad of from creditsalone Special franchises for useof highways by public sorvico companics aro valued by a Stato boardbut aro taxed locally for local usoTheso special franchises are declaredby statuto to bo real estato thus provonting tho deduction of d4bts bondissuos etc from tho amount of thoassessment This statuto is also somewhat unusual in principle as it adds totho valuation of tho physical propertytho valuo of certain intangible fran ¬

chiso rights Foreign corporations aropractically subjoct to tho samo taxes asdomestic companies

Tho total amount of taxes for statepurpoBoi from all sources for tho yearended September lliuu was opprpxlmatoly 20000000 Of tills a littlo lessthan ono third was from corporationsThe next largest singlo item of rovonuowas from liquor licensos which in flvomonths produced over 5000000 Thomajor portion of tho remaining taxesis from inheritances about 7000000and stock transfers about 5000000The capital stock tax produced about

2000000

Is

the

Professors Abo director of the Wascda University baseball team writesto Editor f Ouodera of the JapaneseDaily Chronicle that bo has had a hardtime deciding on the personnel of theteam that he should bring to Honoluluou the proposed Wascda basobull tourThe wholo university has become soenthusiastic over tho prospects of n

trip to Hawaii that everybody wantsto come nnd every balLplayer in thecbool s out at work trying to make

the teamBy as process of elimination Abe has

finally picked what he considers to botho strongest team In Japan and totheso men bo i paying his Jndlviduulattention rounding them into sliajio

Yamawalil known throughout Japanas tho best backstop in tho country isheaded this war bound for Now YorkDuring tho series ho will do most oftho catching for Waseda alternatingif need be witli Ynmaguchi who is

where he con improve on bis methods 10 when he arrived here but that he being brought along as a sub catcherand ho U now laying plans to make had lost it all shooting crops in Aala Four pltehors are on tho list tuna much wore elaborate series Park with a let of boys Japanese realizing that th y vlli need

ftjL

AGREEMENT AT

THE WHITE

SE

President Taft and the Railroad

Presidents Come to

Terms

STAND BY THE NEW LAW

Administration Agrees to Stop

Injunctions Against Increas-

ing¬

Rates

WASHINGTON Juno 7 After afour hours conference of PresidentTaft Attorney General Wickorsham andsovoral leading Tatlrond presidents oftho country it was announced that anagreemout had been arrived at whoroby tho rnilroads would submit for thopresent without contest to the opera ¬

tion of tho now law just passodTho railroad presidents agreed to

withdraw their proposed increases ofrates pending tho rnllrond bill goinginto effect empowering the intorstatocommerce commission to investigateall increases and docido as to theirreasonableness

Prosldont Tnft announced that inviow of this agreement on tho part oftho railroads tho government wouldwithdraw its injunction Buit now ponding in Chicago to prevent tho railroadsfrom increasing rates

M- -SUCCEEDS NORTON

WASHINGTON Juno 7 A PiattAndrew has been named to succoodCharles I Norton as assistant socro- -

tary of tho department of the treasuryHo io at presont director of tho mint

FORTY KILLED IN AN

UPRISING IN MEXICO

VERA CRUZ Moxico Juno 7sorlous uprising has occurred in Yuca-tan

¬

Several thousand Mayas havosacked Valladolid killing forty pcoploincluding all tho government officialsin tho place Troops aro being rushodto tho sccno

CARNEGIE LIBRARY

ARCHITECT IS COMING

A letter wns received yesterday byAbo Lowis Jr as a member of tholibrary commission from Henry DWickfeld of San Trancisco the archi-tect

¬

that will proparo tho plans for thonew Carnogio library Mr Wickfpldwill arnvo in Honolulu on the nextManchuria scheduled to arrive on June24 to look over tho site and make hispreliminary plans This marks thecommencement of tho real work on thonow institution which will bo rushodto completion as rapidly as possiblenow that tho slto difficulty has beendisposed of

STRONGEST TEAM IN JAPANTO REPRESENT WASEDA HERE

The Japanese College Nine Composed of

Specialists on Orient Baseball

Diamond

a few good speed artists in order to dobattle on Saturdays and Sundays

Iscda who plays third for tho collegians is tho big stick artist for thoteam and his speciality is two andthree baggers

Noiiomura tho shortstop Is nicknamed Zoider No 2 his playing bo- -

ini almost as stroncr and sensationalus tflo work of Zcidcr with tho ChicagoWhite Sox

Following is a list of players on thoteam as chosen to represent Wasodaand which will start in tho series withtho Onliu league teams on Sunday Julythird

Ymnuwakl catcherOlil pitcherOniuru pitcherMatsuda pitcherNishlo first baseHani second baseIseda third baseNonomura short stoplilda captain left lloldMikami right field orpltehorOgawa center fieldFukabori sub infielderHayakawa sub outfielderYamuguclil sub catcherProfessor Abe nianegr

jii

i

M

aHI

I

NCREASE IN

JAPANESE

HERE--

Births and Arrivals More Than

Number of Deaths and

Departures

ONLY A FEW CARE TO VOTE

Secretary Mott Smith Thinks

They Will Not Be a Factorin Politics

From Saturdays AdvertiserTho number of Japancso In Hawaii

is larger today than over before andis steadily increasing according to thoostimato of Secretary Mott Smitb whois probably tho man best posted in thomatter Notwithstanding tho fact thatdeaths and departures tako away ngood many theso two causes are sotsufficient to counterbalance tho arrivalsand births i

And of tho cstimnted 70000 to 72000Japanese now in Hawaii several hun ¬

dred are probably qualified to voto andseveral thousand moro will too able tovoto in a few years sinco they woreborn on American soil

But Secretary Mott Smith stated yesterday that he does not anticipate thattho Japaneso aro liablo over to ibocomoan important political factor in Ha ¬

waii for the reason that thoy ovincolittlo or no interest in politics and veryfew of them nt present czorciso thoright of franchise Only an import-ant

¬

commercial question would boliable I think to induce tho Japanosoto resort to the Iballot said Mr MottSmith

Mr Mott Smith states that tho birthrate among tho Japancso is high andgetting higher every year At nrstho says it was low on account of thofact that up to 1900 or 1002 fow oxcoptmen came in But sinco 1902 thowomen havo been coming in faster ev¬

ery year and thero havo consequentlybeen moro marriagos and moro birthsI estimate that the Jopancso birth rntois now about 2500 a year and it willbe higher It is considerably higherI think than tho death rate

Sinco Juno 1 1900 thero havo boon8967 Japanese iblrth records and thisrecord is very incomplete Tho num ¬

ber of deaths recorded in tho samoperiod is 8400 and tho death record ismuch moro comploto than tho birthrecord So it is evident that tho Japa ¬

nese population appears to Ibo increas ¬

ing very fastAbout one third of tho total num ¬

ber of Japanese children born horo nrosent back to Japan to bo educated butmost or mem win ruiuru buuiu uu uthoro appears little chanco of the totalJapaneso population diminishing It israther moro liablo to increase

Certificates of Hawaiian BirthA very largo numbor of tho Japa-

nese havo been taking out certificatesof Hawaiian birth for thoir ohildronwho wcro born here For sovoral yoaratho office of the territorial secretaryhas had charge of this work tout afterJune 30 it is to bo tnkon over toy thofederal authorities Henry O Sullivanof Secretary Mott Smith s office hnsfor tho past four weeks been on theother islands finishing up this worknnd it is estimated that in that tlmoho lias registered about 1500 and hois not through yet Secretary MottSmith stntcs that Mr O Sullivan hasbeen on Hawaii and is now on MauiHo is to visit Molokni and Lanai andsomeone elso will probably bo sent toKatini to finish up tuo worK on inniislnnd

Most of tho Japanese who camo totho Islands in tho early years of Japa ¬

noso immigration settled on Kauai andit is on that Island that most of thoHawaiian born Japanese old enough tovote nro located But Mr Mott Smithsays that nt tho last election only sixJapaneso voted in this Territory at thoelection beforo that none voted andat the previous election only two orthree cast their ballots

f--GRACE DID NOT GO

ON STEAMER TO FORMOSA

From a most reliable source in Japaneso circles information has been received here from Japan that AndersonOraco did not arrivo on iho BteamerNiigata Mnru at Takno Formosa thusdiscrediting tho rumor that ho stowodaway in that vessel at this port

A cablegram sent from hero to Tokiowas referred to tho governor generalof Formosa who states that thoro isno basis for any suspicion that Gracelanded nt Takao Tho vessel after leaving Takno wont to Yokohama nnd thopolico report from tho latter place indi-cates that no person of QraceB doscription was ever aboard tho vessel

Reports lmvo boon laid beforo SheriffJnrrott that Grace was seen in Knkonkoa fow nights ago and that he wasriding n bicycle with lights out

TEETHING OHILDBENTeething children have more or leu

dlarrhooa which can bo controlled bygiving Chamberlain Colic Choleraond Diarrhoea Roinedy All that Unocesiary is to give the prescribed doseafter each operation of the bowels morothan natural nud then eaitor oil tocleanse the system It Is safe nnd sureFor sale-- by all druggists BensonSmith Co Ltd atfeuta for Hawaii

ft DISAGREEABLE

I REGHIATQN

Hawaii Residents Are Classed

With Those Living In

Porto Rico

NEED ALIEN CERTIFICATE

Noncitizcn Residents Who Go to

Mainland Encounter

New Rule

Local steamship agents have had a

task imposed upon them by tho fedoratgovernment which is disagreeable notonly to themselves but to many appli-

cants for passago on steamers lenvinghere for tho Coast refcrenco beingmade to aliens who nro placed under rigid restrictions a violation of

which will cnuso their arrest nt tho

malnlannd ports of destination This is

tho department of commerco nnd labor bureau of immigration nnd naturalization regulation entitled Immi-

gration via Porto Hied and HawaiiAlthough tho rule was probably not do

signed to impose hardships upon rcsldenti of this Territory who havo notbecome naturalized yot many of Hono-

lulus moat prominent citizens havebeen compelled to take out identifica-

tion certificates which place them in aclass with coolies

Itobcrt Catton prominent in businessnnd manufacturing circles and ono oftho foremost membors of tho Britishcolony on applying for passago to SanFrancisco recently was compelled togo to tho immigration building whichis located down among tho coal pilesand dust of Knkaako and file applica-tion

¬

for a certificate to idontify him nsnn alien nnd to provent his nrrestin San Francisco Mr Cntton has longbeen a resident of Honolulu It is hishome all his largo business intorestsnro located here nnd yot to travel tothe Coast ho is compelled to seek iden-tification certificates much as n Chineseor a Japancso coolie Mr McLaln theScotch football player and accountnntwas told by tho steamship agents thatho would havo to set a certificate An

alien Englishman who has beenworkingon n sugar plantation for aboutsoven years applied at tho offlco of thoOceanic Steamship Company yesterdayfor passaeo to San Francisco on thoSierra Passenger Agent Whitney askcd if ho was an Americnn citizen andreceived n negative reply

Then Ill havo to ask you to readthe- - department of commerco and la ¬

bor regulation pointing to tho notcoposted near tho tlcht window Andtho man who has been a rosldent ofHawaii for nearly a docado who decid-ed

¬

he wanted to tako a run to theConst found he had to tako a backdown to tho immigration building getand pay for a certificate although pos-

sibly¬

ho wont havo to pay a head taxwhich also Mr Catton will escapeTho regulation which imposes a pecu-liar

¬

hardship upon old timo Tesidontshero is dated April 10 iiuu ana is aadrcsscd to all immigration officers nndothers concorncd ns follows

The following addition to tho ImmiLrntlon Beculntions is hereby promulgated to tako effect beginning May 151910

Hulo BO Inspection and entry ofaliens into the mainland of tho UnitedStntes from foreign countries throughPorto Rican or Hawaiian Territoryundor tho Immigration Act will bo ac ¬

complished in accordance with tho fol ¬

lowing provisionsa All aliens arriving in Porto

Rico or Hawaii destined to the main ¬

land of tho United States shall bo inspectcd at the time of arrival and higiven a certificate of the form set forthbelow Tho holders of such certificateduly signed by the United States Com-

missioner¬

of Immigration at San Juanor by tho inspector in churgo at Ho-

nolulu shall bo entitled to admissionto tho United Stntes at nny ono of tho

nrious ports of entry without furtherexamination by tho United States im-

migration¬

officers as to thoir right toenter upon their identification and sur-

render¬

of such certificate to such ofilciuls nnd upon payment of head tnx

l Aliens manucstou in good minito Porto RicQ or Hawaii who shall reside there for a time nnd who Bubsoducntly desire to proceed to tho UniteJStates shall i pon application to thocommissioner of immigration at SanJuan or to tho inspector in chnrgo ntHonolulu bo furnished with the certificate horoin referred to attestingtheir previous examination

e Failuro to present tho Baid cer ¬

tificate shall bo deemed presumptiveevidence that examination hai not oc-

curred in Porto Rico or Hawaii nnd thoalien shall bo arrested in the mannerprovided by sections 0 nnd 21 of theImmigration Act and deported unlessho shows that his presence in the coun-

try¬

is lawful or that his residence inPorto Rico or Hawaii or tho mainland orboth has exceeded tho period of threeyears

d Head tax is not to bo ollectcdin the cases of aliens who arrived inPorto Rico or Hawaii prior to July 1

1007 at which t me tho Act of February 20 1907 took efrect

o Tho certificate shall lie in thofollowing form

Alien Certificate Insular TerritoryForm G40 No

Department of Commorco and LaborImmigration SorvicePort of - 191

This i to certify that anative of who arrived ntthe port of per steamship

on tho 10has boon duly Inspected and registeredami will bo admitted into tho UnitedStates upon proper Sdimtifleatlon nndpuyment of had tax nnd surrender ofthis certlflouU to nny immigration cilice r nt a ilvsignattd port of entry

The doMriptton of the holder n it

ArirK TIT SOW 1VSK 1010 -Mt- MI-WKRKIY

CUT PHILIPPINE FORTSBUT INCREASE THOSE HERE

Congress Reaffirms This Policy and Votes

4200000 for the Pearl Harbor

Dredging and Dry Dock

By Ernest O WalkerMail Special to Tho Advertiser

WASHINGTON Mny 23 Somo con-

tributions¬

to tho problem of coast for-tifications havo been modo during thosession of congress although these aroby no means entirely solved It is disheartening to those who feel tho valueof a dollar to hear tho statesmen talkabout ships of war costing 10000000or 18000000 n pieco only to bo tlSrownupon tho junk heap nftcr a fow pearswhen it has cost tho government asmuch moro for their maintenance nndup keep But on top of this evidencoof waste of millions comes tho expensesof const fortifications They aro byno means ns largo ns for the navy butthe caulpmont wears out in tho coursoof a fow years and experience hasshown that tho guns and nrmament fortho defense of coasts and cities duringono generation nro obsoloto for the following gonoration

Tho debates or tho sonato during tnopast week havo brought out clearlythat expensive fortifications in thoPhilippine Islands aro no longer favor-ed

¬

by those in authority That idoawas hold tonaeiously for a great manyyoaTS said Senator lowlands orNevada one of thoso who participatedin tho dobato It has mot with muchopposition in tho senate and I am gladto know that tho sentiment of congressnnd the sentiment of tho country ispractically unanimous in favort of itsabandonment I recall that within ashort timo after the acquisition of thosoislands in n conversation with a distinguished oflicor of tho Gorman staffho stated that nny great Europeanmilitary power taking possession ofthose islands would not think of mak ¬

ing largo expenditures in tho way offortifications but would rely mainlyupon its fleet Tho policy which hasnow been determined upon will dimin ¬

ish the expense tho risk nnd tho ex ¬

posure of tho United States in that fardistant country

Senator Gallingcr of Now Hamp-shire first emphasized tho decision notto fortify in tho Philippines and Sen-ator

¬

Lodge Baid ho acquiesced in it asa wise abandonmentTho governmont has alrcailyf spent

in round numbers something liko8000000 for tho fortifications of tho

Philippines nnd if tho plans of armyofficers had been followed tho govern-ment would now bo committed to muchlarger expenditures thero for fortifica-tions Tho so called abandonmenthowever docs not mean that tho expenditure or money for rortiiying Manila is to censo altonothor Enormousdefon8ivo works and tho best of highpower modern guns have already beenput there uniy a tew uays ago anostimato of 050000 for tho furtherfortification ot tho Philippines was forwarded to tho liouso and a good por-tion

¬

of it if not nil of it will prob-ably

¬

bo voted nt this sessionTho abandonment npplios moro

strictly to tho construction of navaldofenscs nnd naval bases and it wasdecidod somo months ago that expendi ¬

tures for thoso purposes would coaso in

follows Ago height wightcolor of Tiair color of

eyesRemarks note destination etc

Name TitleSurrender at to Inspector

191- -

f Special material facts shouldbo noted on the back of tho certificatewith proper Reference thereto on thoface DANL J KEEFE

Commissioner GeneralH

TUG IROQUOIS TO

BE AN OIL BURNER

The United States navy tug Iroquoiswhich wont to San Francisco somo

months ago for general repairs is tobo converted into an oil burner beforebeing sont back to Honolulu In thomorchant marine such a step would bo

takon inorcly as nu evidenco of goodbusiness judgment so conclusively hastho ndvantago of liquid fuel over coalbeen demonstrated

In the navy however tho decisionto convert tho Iroquois is n radical de-

parture¬

from old methods nnd is par-ticularly

¬

interesting for tho ronson thatit is believed to be tho first practicalstep toward tho general adoption by thenavy or liquid iuoi lor tno smallerboats at any rate Tho Iroquois willbo tho second naval vessel on tho Coastto bo so equipped

Tho Iroquois is to bo equipped withtwo Babcock Wilcox boilers of approved Annanolis desien and will havea fuel capacity of 25650 gallons Thecosfof repairs win do moro man78000

mi

INTER ISLAND COMPANY

IS MAKING A FIGHT

By Ernest G WalkerMall Special to The Advertiser

WASHINGTON May 23 ProsldcntJamos A Kennedy of tho Intor Islandsteamship company is continuing hisefforts horo to defeat tho provision ontho rnilroad bill putting water com-

munication¬

botween the Islands nndortho jurisdiction of the interstate caminerco commission Attorney Watson ofHonolulu is also In Washington on legalbusiness

TO CUBE A GOLD IH ONE DAY

Take Laxative Bromo QuinineTablets AH druggists refundIhe money if it fails to curev W Groves signature is onweb box6W3 MEDIC1NB CO SU UxjH U 8 A

mmmimmm

tho Philippines and tho governmentwould make its great naval baso In thePacific nt Pearl Harbor Hawaii Thodobate in recent days has emphasizedthat purpose and sonato and liouso ntthis session havo already shown theiraMcnt to the expenditure of very largosums thoro to further tho erection of agroat naval Btatlon nt that point Sen-ator

¬

Lodge has just pointed out thatPcnr Harbor will bo the Gibraltar oftho United States government in thoPacific I do not pretend to bo nnaval export said ho but I am

certain that no hostile fleet would3ulto como to the Pacific Const and leavetho American flcot bohlnd it with a basoat Hawaii

With that end in view tho sonatofinnlly approved of a house provisionappropriating 1500000 for dredgingthe channel up to Pearl Harbor insteadof 1200000 nnd also approved of alimit of 2700000 for tho constructionthere of a drydock which will bo onoof the largest and ono of tho best drydocks in tho world when completed

Very closely Tclntcd with thoso matton of fortifications in the Philippinesnnd in tho Hawaiian Isnds is that offortifying the Panama Canal overwhich a contest is raging in congressA board of military men has recom-mended

¬

fortifying the canal at a costof scvoral milions of dolars Thesefortifications onco put in place willmean an expense of about 1000000to maintain Quito a contingent ofmembers in tho housOj headed by exSpeaker Kelfer of Ohio is opposed tovoting this money for canal fortifica-tions

¬

favoring instead the neutraliza¬

tion 6f tho canal in timo of warthrotjfeh tho framing of treaties withforcata nations Such a treaty now isin fco with Great Britain and it isclaimed that other treaties with thopowers of the earth could easily bonegotiated

Tho advocates of militarism are push-ing

¬

their caso aggressively but if thovotinc of the appropriation can boprevented at this session of congresstho prospects will bo good for keepingtho canal open to all ships of war andavoiding tho expense of fortificationsWore this country to gain any decidedadvantngo by fortifying tho canalthere is littlo question what congresswould do but tho experts say it will boexcoodingly difficult to defend tho canalin timo of war and that its neutraliza-tion

¬

would probably prove an advan ¬

tage to tho United StatesTho Tearl narbor appropriations

havo boon ncqniosced in by the Benatoin exactly tho form thoy were votedby the house That means tno AcariHarbor paragraph will not bo a sub ¬

ject of dispute in conference It iscertain now hat the naval ibill as itbecomos law will carry an item of

1500000 for dredging tho Pearl Har-bor

¬

channel nnd also an authorizationfor tho increase of tho cost of tho drydock to 2700000 Thore was consid ¬

erable referenco to Hawaii and PearlHarbor in connection with the debateon tho Naval Appropriation Bill Itwas practically all in favor of buildingup a great naval baso thero

THE COASTWISE

SUSPENSION BILL

IS LAID OVER

Cannon Promises That It Shall

Have Recognition in theNext Session

Special Cable to The AdvertiserWASHINGTON June 3 Action on

the Hawaii coastwise suspension billhas been deferred until tho next sessionof congress It was agreed by the housetoday that tho matter be not token upthis session

Speaker Cannon has been interestedin the matter and has given a promiseto the supporters of the bill that itshall have recognition in the next session

HMAN FROM HAWAII

A PHILIPPINE MYSTERY

A letter was received in Honolululast night from A F Thayer who hasbeen reported by cable from Manila asbuying lands in tho Philippines for thoDillingham company of Honolulu Asfar as is known the letter does not explain tho mystery of whom he is act-

ing¬

for which is a local puzzlo in viowof the fact that tho Dillinghams havedenied that he is their agent

Thayers letterhead is tho CalambaEstate Sugar Company A F ThayerManila representative but he saysnothing that will clear up the connec-tion

¬

with the Dillingham companywhich ho claims in Manila but which isdenied here

Mr Thnyers family is now in liagulo the summer capital of tho islands Ho is said to have purchasedanothor auto besides tho one he tookwith him doubtless on tho account ofhis company whatever it is and seemsto be prospering

COLD RECEPTION FOR

THE NEGRO PUGILIST

BAN FItANOISCO June 4 PugilistJolmon nut with a cold reception whenhe gave n boxing exhibition nt thoDreamland latt nigh I He boxed a sixround exhibition go Th crowd nbowtdno initliiuiitwM fur him but chwrrd forJwffriM

FIGHTING FOR

WORLD SF

San Franciscos Tussle in Wash-

ington

¬

With New

Orleans

THE PANAMA EXPOSITION

Contest in Which Honolulu HasAlready Declared for

Frisco

By Ernest a WalkerMail Special to Tho Advertiser

WASHINGTON May 23 Congressis having somo exceedingly fervid sidocontests in tho closing weeks of anunusual session Theso contests havobeen flaring up from timo to timo quiteunexpectedly and focusing attentionfor a little from tho big events whichhave steadily held tho boards for thowinter This week exposition Iboomorsaro again taking possession of tho cityand Iby all tho wiles of men of theircratt trying to commit congress to aplan for a Panama Cual Expositionin 1015 Tho committee on industrinlarts and expositions of tho houso ex ¬

pects to settlo the matter this weoknnd at least will give exhaustive hear¬

ings to tho boomers Tho rivalry ischiefly between San Francisco and NewOrleans neither of which is asking thogovernment for nny money oh no butsimply for a little bit of legislationdesignating tho city as tho officialPanama Canal Exposition City where ¬

upon the citys public spirited citizenswill do the rest

Tho oldsters in Washington knowvery well that that is only the prologueto the play Tho time has gone bywhen congress can easily be broughtto voto money directly for an exposi-tion

¬

That plea was worn out long agowhen the leaders in tho sonato andhouso began to cry out whonover ap-propriations

¬

in aid of expositions werebroached Never again

in these advanced legislative timestho boomers do it another way Thoypersuade congress to recognizo theircity for somo exposition by voting nnappropriation for a governmont exhibitand also by authorizing invitations toforeign governments to participateThat is the entering wedgo and beforocongress is through with a project ofthat kind it takes somo tens of thou-sands

¬

of dollars and sometimes hundreds of thousands of dollars Tho es ¬

sential thing is to got tho governmentcommitted to the exposition and to es-

tablish its official characterThe San Franciscans havo already

done somo very clever work in advanc ¬

ing thoir cause They havo coveredbillboards in tho city with their signsand havo whooped it up around tho sen-ate

¬

nnd tho house The New Orleansboomers did likewise some weeks ngobut thoy are coming again in forcothis weok and iproposo to blanket thofiro of the San Franciscans The rivalryhas been pretty friendly thus far al-

though San Francisco boomers havebeen dwelling much upon tho fact thatNew Orleans had an exposition in 1884and borrowed a million dollars from thofederal government which was neverpaid back

There has been somo talk about twoexpositions but that is frowned uponbecause it iB claimed it would be im ¬

possible to mako two official PanamaCannl expositions a success Every ¬

body knows it is difficult enough tomako any one exposition a success andcongress probably will designate butono city to celebrate tho opening oftho cannl Foreign nations will be ask ¬

ed to send exhibits there nnd tho fedoral government will havo a mammothexhubit of its own

H--Y LEFT

FA

Bulk pf the EstateTrust for the

Children

Is Put

Five

in

The Into torn May loft an estate ofover half a million dollars to bo dividodamong his heirs and devisees Tho willwas filed for probate yesterday andP C Jones wns appointed by JudgoRobinson special administrator undorbonds of 35000

Tho petition for administration statesthat tho real estate loft by tho testatoramounts to about 35000 while thopersonal estate including stocks bondsand notes aggregates over 500000

Tom May in hia will leaves to hissister Laura tho sum of 1200 each oftho four other sisters receives 5000Other bequests aro as follows BritishBenevolent Socioty of Honolulu 500American Protestant Episcopal Churchof the United States of America inHawaii 2500 which is to be investedpermanently for tho support of thochurch St Clements Church of Hono-lulu 2500 which is to bo used for thopayment of the church dobt providedhowever that if the dobt does notamount to this amount at tho timo oftho decease of the-- testator whateverremains goes to tho second beneficiarytha widow gets tho houso nnd lot onKinnu street Honolulu ond elevenother pieces of real cstato all the resi ¬

due of tho cstato goes to the three administrators Dole Jones nnd Henderson to bo invested for tho benefit oftho children the incoino of the invest-ment of the lifo insurance of 10000going wholly to the duugnter voraThe In com a from other property is tol o recalml by the trustees until eachof tho children Is of ago and then boraid directly to them Upon each ofihe ton and daughters attalnlnsr tho

go of thirty the total bequwt to hiturned ovttr by tuo truiUf for them touw ni they Me fit

tonford II Dolt P O Jones und JII JTiuUfw nro nam ni t rules

TAFT IS AGAIN

WINNER IN

CONGRESS

Railroad Bill Passes Senateby a Very Large

Majority

THE REPUBLICANS UNANIMOUS

Six Democrats Vote With ThemRailroads Threaten

Bankruptcy

WASHINGTON June 4 Aftertwelve weeks of debate and considera ¬

tion the railroad regulation bill reached a vote in the senate today and thaadministration won a sweeping victory

Party lines were to a considerableextent ignored in the voto on tho muchdiseussed mensuro for not only all thoinsurgent Republicans but six Demo ¬

crats voted for it Tho bill had thounanimous Republican voto and thocount showed fifty two votes for it anaonly twelve against

CHICAGO Juno 4 A statement haabeen issued by the publicity bureau ofthe railways to the effect that manyroads will bo forced into bankruptcy ifnot nllowod to increase their ratcBTho statement discusses pending injunction proceedings to stop an increasein rates and says that if such proceed ¬

ings are sustained many railroads willhave to go into bankruptcy

The statement further declares thatduring tho past two years tho railroadswent behind seven hundred and thirty-million dollars

CONFESSION LEO

TO THE CEMETERY

Sugar Trust Witnesses NowPoint to the Late H 0

Havemeyer

NEW YORK Juno 3 SecretaryHeiko of tho American Sugar BefiningCompany in his testimony in hia owntrial today indicated that the latoHonry O Havomeyer was responsiblefor tho long continued defrauding ofthe government by sugar trust em-ployes

¬

He denied any personal blamoin tho matter

Heikes testimony was similar in thisrespect to that of Oliver Spitzer whotestified a week ago making a full con ¬

fession nfter having been pardonedWhen asked under cross uxuminationwhy ho had not confessed before Spit-zer

¬

replied that he was reluctant to doso becnusa his confession would havocarried him to a cemetery moaninghe explained that his confession wouldhavo exposed Havcmoyer which hesaid the government prosecutor did notwant Alter leaving the witness standSpitzer further said

Another reason why I committodperjury was because I thought nothingcould barmen to the suirar trust Woall thought the trust was so strongmat tno government couia uo nothingwith it

I left my effects in Atlanta I camohere to unburdon myself of tho greatwrongs I had done all theso years Iwantod to confess all my sin3 beforethis court and tell all I knew

I wanted to stand among my fellowmen onco moro and tell all I shouldhavo told before I wonted to go backto my family I wanted to bo shrivenof nil that cankered mo these sleeplessnights in Atlanta prison where I suf-fered

¬

so muchI couldnt stand it any longer I

told Captain Flyim of the secret servico in Atlanta that I couldnt stand thotorture that I must toll tho truth andthat I wouldnt be behind tho bars ifI had taken tho advice of my lawyersMr Mackeller and Mr Cochran Theytold me to confess if I had anything toconfess nfter my conviction last Feb-ruary

¬

Thoy told mo to confess beforoit was too late

HBRIBED BECAUSE

HE WAS HELD UP

PEORIA Illinois June 4 nenryLomm a prominent fish dealer has con ¬

fessed to bribing members of the legis ¬

lature to prevent legislation advorso tohis intorests Lemni says that ho washeld up and had to pay the bribes andthat he paid the money to kill billswhich would have destroyed hia busi ¬

ness

MACHINISTS STRIKE

POBTIiAND Oregon June 4 Thomachinists In thirty eight shops horohave ttruek demanding an eight hourday and nn Increase in wages

PRESIDENT OF VENEZUELA

CAUACAS June 4Jun Vicenteloin or has been inaugurated presldont

tf-An army board of esglntori will da

eldo on mu PxaneiMot Urtob Iletebyclaim

NUUANU HAS

iii NEW

LAKE

II

The Great Dam at Last aPractically Completed

Job

A LARGE POND ALREADY

Several Times More Water ThanAll Other Nuuanu Reser-

voirs

¬

Combined

From Sundays AdvertiserAfter years of work and controversy

tho Nuuanu dam is now practically fin ¬

ished There was several times morowater backed up behind it yesterdaythan is in all tho other Nuuanu reser ¬

voirs put together At tho gato towerin tho center tho depth of water isthirty seven feet and according to thebest estimates there aro not less thana hundred and twenty million gallonsof water in tho mpldly growing newpond This makes all other reservoirsand ponds in tho Islands look smallbut it is only a beginning of tho lakothat is to be

Contractor L M Whitehouse whohas been working on tho dam for yearssaid yesterday that tho water in thoreservoir rose about nino feet duringtho past week This was an unusualrecord A week ago tho depth at thegate tower was twenty eight feet Yes ¬

terday the water was at tho thirty- -

seven foot mark Whitehouse estimatesthat tho area of water is now abouttwenty five acres though of course thedepth over most of this area is muchless than thirty seven foot Basing calculations upon tho known contour oftho land tho quantity of water in tholako is estimated at from a hundredand twenty to n hundred and thirtymillion gallons

The dam has cost tho Territory about300000 Two hundred and sixty thou ¬

sand cubic yards of material weredumped in to build it up to the presentlevel and five years have passed sincotho work began though tho five yearsropTCsent only about two years of ac ¬

tual work owing to delays caused bydry weather Tho dam is about 305foot wide at its base

At tho present rate of filling thenow reservoir would soon approach thelevel of tho dam but tho inflow hasbeen unusual of late Thero will boover sixty feet of water at tho base ofthe dam when it is full and tho lakowill cover moro than eighty ncresOpinions differ as to how quickly thofilling with wator will proceed

Contractor Whitehouse still has alargo force of men at work on tho dambut they are merely putting tho finish ¬

ing touches on it By tho end of thopresent month he will probably bo clos¬

ing up his labor camps and turning thojob over to tho Territory

In spito of the largo volumo of watorhold by the now dam on tho upper leveltho lower reservoirs also aro all fullItainfall of late haB found its way intothe reservoirs to an unusual extentTho supply at hand is tho biggest Ho-

nolulu¬

has ever had and Superintendentof Public Works Campbell is lookingforward to going through a summerwithout having to compel pToportyownors to oboy restrictions in tho irriga-tion

¬

of gardens and lawns4

PROHIBITION CLUBS

OF

HILO May 30 Nakookoo tho proliibitionist who has been here for seVoral weeks for tho purposo of organizingprohibition clubs among tho Hawailansreturned to day from a trip throughNorth una South Hilo districts Ho reported that he had organized clubs atLaupabochoe Fohakupuka HpnomulindKalauao With the following officers

Ilonomu Mens Club President WmKoliinui vice president Henry Ohumukini secretary W H Kallimai assist¬

ant secretary Kekahio treasurer Sam ¬

uel KaiiimaiIlonomu Womens Club President

jurs ivcuinui vico presiuent Airs Uliumukini secretary Mrs Laihanai assistant secretary Mrs Kalamau treasurerMrs Knwabinekapu

Laupahoehoe Mens Club Presidentlianlel Kahoolo vice president W KKabaleohu secretary E K Simmonsassistant secretary S J Maluo treas- -U1VI 1VIII lUVUU

Laupahoehoe Womans Club Prosdont Mrs Emma Locba vice presidentMrs Annie Simmons secretary MissEsther Kahnlcohu assistant secretaryMrs Annlo Kftololwl treasurer MrsWallo Maluo

Pobakupuka Mens Club PrcoidentDaniel N Iolkalanl vico prosldontvuas juimeeiiui secretary Wilson Hahnkuolun assistant secretary Kolnuwnlllunlcini treasurer Solomon Koula

Katouna Mens Club President DK Knilimtu vice president John Wnl- -

hoc screury John Kakoj assistantsecretary jf Haubl treasurer 13 Nnonue

Mrs Ksllimaii vice president Nan I

llama secretary wis Annie liamnassistant loeretary Mrs Annie Walhoojtreasurer Mrf Louisa L JCakee

A Vw Vork surgiwn li eurlug iuai f itnui wudlBgitli by ojKratioui etlfii limit

socuhmII H

WW

iCThe President in a Speech Calls It

the Great American

Problem

HE DISAPPROVES ITS TENETS

Duty of American Statesmen to

Meet Spreading Destructive

Doctrine

JACKSON Mississippi Juno 5

President Taft yesterday delivered anaddress at tho unvolling of a tablotcommemorating the establishment oftho Republican party In which ho de-

clared¬

that socialism was tho greatprohlom now confronting tho Americanpeople

Taft repeated his recent utlorancoscalling attention to tho riso of social ¬

ism and wont further declaring thattho nilvnnco of socialistic ideas must10 skillfully met by tho leaders inAmerican national affairs

Tho Prosidont expressed tho opinionthat tho doctrines of socialism aro dan-

gerous¬

to itlie development of Amoricancitizonshlp and called attention to thosocialistic tendency of much of the re ¬

cent criticism of social and businessconditions lie said that tho revelationswhich had been mado of business andpolitical corruption in America hadtonded to fostor socialism and that thospread of its doctrines now constituteda grave danger in the United States

PROHIBITION TALK

BY PROF THOMPSON

Tho following address was read lastnight by Prof U Thompson at thoKamohameha Alumni reunion

The most talked of quostion todayis tho question of prohibition As Ishall not bo hore to cast my ballot onJuly 20 1 wish to cast it hero and nowand also to tell you young peoplo whyI would vote for prohibition

Every man and boy here and evorywoman and girl hero knows that mostof tho poverty in those Islands can botraced directly to drink that most oftho men on the reef are thero Ibecausoof drink

You know these things aro truejust as well as I know it 6o I shallnot spend any timo trying to prove itall But do you know that most ofthe weak children most of the stupidchildren most of tho blind childrenmost of the diseased children aro weakor stupid or blind or diseased becausetho father or the mother or both livedbad lives at some timet And do youknow that in most cases they beganthis toad living because of drink Anddo you know that if you should tracoout each case of weakness or stupid-ity

¬

or blindness or disease you wouldcome in most coses to tho door of asaloont

Thousands of such cases have beentraced out and the magazines are fullof it

It is a great satisfaction to anyman to see his sons strong in bodyclear headed well trained to do someuseful work and with clean blood topass on to their sons

To bo a of such sons is agreat satisfaction but to be a grandfather of such is to knowthe highest a man maysnow

If I hnd wanted my sons to bo weakand diseased and worthless I wouldhave used liquor before thoy wore bornand given it to them early in life

On July 26 each man in Hawaiiwin say ioy nis oauoc J wane my sonsand grandsons to havo the ibest chancoin life that is possible I want them

1910

father

to be strong clear beaded edncatodur no wit say i aont care wnat nappens to my children andLet them look out for themselves

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE TUESDAY JUNF EMT-WTPKIY

grandchildrensatisfaction

grandchildren

But suppose tho majority dontcare Does that mako it right foreither tnelr descendents or for yoursYou might as well ask a lot of trampsto vote as to wnetuer tnoy would workfor a living or live without work Ofcourso they would vote against work

When a man has got tho drinkhabit ho is no longer in a stato ofmind to vote on tho drink question anymoro than a tramp is in a proper statooi mino to voto on tno work question

Supposo ninety per cont of the voters cast ballots in favor of the saloonsInstead of showing that the saloonright would show bow dead wrongme saioon realty is Btmpiy Having amajority does not necessarily proveanything The matter just as rightor just wrong alter tno voto as dofore tho vote

7

lait

isas

The majority nover has reallyruled And it should not rule till thatmajority Is sufficiently intelligent toiknow want is best tor tno coming gemorations and sufficiently free to standfor what is best

On July 20 not the Tight nor thowrong of prohibition but the conditionsunder which your children and thoiremiaren aro to bo toorn and live willbe decided

Iiuikin says The wealth andstrengtu or a nation are Its men andwomen

What are you going to do aboutU

KNOWN TUB WORLD OVBI1

Tliu worlds most susceitful medicine far IjowkI complaints ii Chamberlains Colic Cholera ami DiarrhoeaUmdy It has relieved matt ualn

and auffariiiir and aaved moro livofhuh any olfew inadlalH In dm invaluable for child raw Bud adult Vurm by all druggist IUnmb HmilU IcJj Ltf iwt for Hawaii

UP TO THE HAWAIIANS

M PLEBISCITE Hiiff I JULY261910 fW

STCHAMCJBILK HAWAHANSEVEE fY l

MADiTO DE C L ABJBIiXG AINSTTME- - -- -S A La O IMSe

J3F IT M AY BE THEIRLASTCHANCE

W SZZV

I faIIII Sfffeu- -

The July Plobiscito Is Unique In That It Is tho First Timo Congress Ever Honored tho Voters of a Torritory by1

Oolling for Their Views by a Special Election in Such a Matter and Also Becauso It Will Bo tho First Chanco forHawailans Whoso Kings Princes and Loaders Havo for Generations Opposed tho Liquor Traffic to Ecglster a plain

Vote on tho Question

LAST MOVE 81

JUDGEPIHSDK

Throws Out Pepeekeo Boundary

Case Without aDecision

Tho testimony is insufficient isthe basis of tho decision given by JudgoParsons as boundary commissioner inthe Pepeekeo case over wnlcn the judgohas been having a very lively con

troversy with tho attornpy gcnoralsdepartment Tho judgo dismisses thocase without prejudico which meanspractically no decision Tho nttornoy l

generals department took tho positionthat Parsons ought to decide whileParsons said he was waiting for a brieffrom the attorney general Tho replyto this was that the attornoy generaldidnt care to tile a brief and that thocase was a clear one anyhow needingno further evidence or argument Par ¬

sons final word is the- following deci ¬

sion j

Tho evidence in this case is insuf-

ficient¬

to warrant tho commissioner inadjudging tho boundaries of Sections2 and 3 of Kahua Second to bo as al- -

leged by tho petitioner by tho Terri¬

tory or by Emily P KinneyA preponderance or tno evidence

shows that the Ahupuaa of Kahuaawarded in 1852 to Kahonu extendedin n westerly direction to Huinawai asalleged by tho petitioner but the com-

missioner¬

will not adjudge tho boundaryto be as claimed in the application fortho reason that the petitioners inter-est

¬

therein is not disclosed by tho evi-

dence¬

no titlo having been proved bythe introduction of titlo deeds or other-wise

¬

to any portion of tho said konohiki land Tho omission 1b fatal forthe right to apply for certification ofboundaries is conferred by Section 353of the Revised Laws only upon ownersof the laud and proof of such ownershin is indispensable

Tho Territory has introduced kama- -

nina testimoriy a portion of which hasbeen discredited tending to show thatKahua Second extends in a westerlydirection only as far as Kananaka andthat the land lying botween that pointand Huinawai is known as KahuaThird The Territorys claim that tholino runs from Kananaka to tho north ¬

ern boundary by courso and distanco asalleged in tho answer is based chieflyupon the map attached to the Polbnmpatent and upon Kanakanuis testi-mony

¬

as to tno meaning of a dottedline Bhown thereon beyond the limitsof tho land convoyed by said patentThere is nothing to show who mado thomop or upon what authority the words

Kananaka end of Kahua Secondwere written thereon Tho dotted linois not straight Knnakanui has esti-mated

¬

tho angle which it makes withtho Polham boundary and has calculatedthe distanco represented by the extended lino to Malcea Stream Upon thisand similar testimony tho commissionerIs asked to fix dofinitcly tho westernuounuury or nnnua Boconu The testimony is Insufficient j

As to tno boundaries of Section 2of Kahua Second the answer of thoTerritory does not set forth Its claimsnor does tho answer pray that theboundaries of said second section boestablished otherwise than as asked bythe petitioner I

Tho extent to which Emily P KinneyIs Interested in tho boundaries of 8etlon S doc not appear In her nimwcr nrIn the evidence The transcript nago4KU suaws mat tier counsel alTereuwhat purported to li a dd to hiellffut from on Jardao to about one arof Uml toutlitd by Hit uliputft Uowmlnrlw but this bfltr wm withdrawnupon TmllliHr admission of raaordi Nat i w mm rwuy y iiwoy turnauiaa inlirast In tic land

VowUtto la the pJdiwu or yrwt

rCflsBNaVisBiiSfiil

i

HAWAIIAN ALUMNUS TOKAMEHAMEHA GRADUATES

Address dollvered lost night by Daniel S K Paliu to tho Kamohamehaclass of 1010

Mcmbors of tho CIobs of 1910 in behalf of tho KamohamehaAlumni Association I wish to wclcomo you into tho fellowship of ourassociation

You havo finished your courso at Knmohamoha You havo re-

ceived¬

what education Kamohameha has to offor to us Hnwalians andin return for that education you can do at least two things for yourschool You can make a good name for Kamohameha or you can dis ¬

grace Kamohameha Which of theso two things are you going to dotThcso aro serious questions to think about boyB

If you make a name for Kamchamoha your parents yourteachers your friends as well as we who havo gono beforo you willrejoice with you over your success But woe unto you who dares todisgraco the namo of Kamohameha for you will not only spoil your ownchance in life but to a cortaln degreo you will spoil my chanco as wellas tho chances of tho hundreds of graduntcs who havo gono beforeyou But worst of nil you will also spoil tho chancos of tho hundredsnay tho thousands of young men who aro to pass this way in thogenerations to come

So whatever you think of Kamchamoha Do your very bestwbatover walk in life you aro called upon never be afraid of work

for work nover kills a man It is worry that kills him Bo honest botrue to your fcllowmon nud above all boys and girls also To thinoownself bo true and it must follow as tho night tho day thou canstnot then be false to any man

DEMOCRATS

IN DINGMcCandless Fern Harvey and

Kaniho Spoke LastNight

From Sundays AdvertiserMayor Fern link McCandless Sena-

tor Frank Harvoy and Kaniho wero thespeakers last night at a political meet ¬

ing held at tho Halciwa Hotel It wasa Democratic rally with Billy Wondas chairman According to a report received Inst night there were not quitea dozen voters present tho audienceof forty six consisting of thirty five

women and childrenKaniho announced himself a Democrat

Ho declared that the Homo Itulo partywas dead and again renewed his sup-

port of McCandless for delegate to con-

gress¬

provious addresses supporting McUandlcss Jvnnllio lias always insisted thnt ho romaincd a Homo Ituler i

Frank Har7cys speech was largolydevoted to a dfrcusslon of tho leprosylaws McCandless also touched on them j

Mayor Fern dicussed the affairs of hisadministration stating mat no migmhavo done a lot for tho peoplo if hisinds had not been tied by tho liepublican board of supervisors

is there any statement of tho boundaries of her own land and tho court Inthis proceeding brought upon tho application of another will not fix for hertho boundaries of the entire tract described Section 2

The Territory and Emily P Kinneyhave filed no briefs in tlio caio andtheir specific claims baaed iijn theevidence have not been made knownto me eommiMioner except iy inanequato oral argument at the timo of theInjuring

For riasoni hereinabove svt forththe petition la dlimlMed without prujudiM at the pelltlouara Mt

Judgment in nmonlawte with thisdecision will 1m alynad whfl prllby mwmwIrtnA UIMULKa Y IAKHONMCowMiasloaar of BvundarUa Iouilti

Cinvll T H

r Ml X

I

-- INlltlTIONlllff I

mm-RST

do

in

In

LIQUOR 1FEELING HAPPY

Reports of Their Campaign Com-

mittee

¬

Help Brewery Stock

a Bit

Tho liquor dealers association bosestablished political headquarters in theWaverley block and its campaign committoo has already spent thousands ofdollars la preliminary work for tba coming special lcton Meetings havoboon hold at vory frequent intervalslatoly and tho situation is thoroughlygono over Ituunors employed by thocommittee ropdrt constantly tho rosultsof their work

It is said that tho roports thus turnedin aro tho causo of tho rise in broworystock which has recovered n trillo fromtho big slump it suffered in tho openmarket when tho campaign began Ithasnt got near to par yet but tholiquor campaign committee feels en ¬

couraged enough by tho reports its em ¬

ployes havo brought in up to dato tocauso natural strengthening of thoBtock

A let of money some of which Is re ¬

ported to bo from mainland ilistilloricsand breweries Is being used by tholiquor campaign comiiiiteo

ROOSEVELT JUNIOR

to mm soon

NEW YOJtK Juno 15 ThoodoroRoosevelt Jr son of the ex PreidiUutyoitanlay obtninoil his niurriugo llcaiisothe wwdillijtf to take pk on Junu 0Ilia IirliU will bo Mia liloauur JlutlarAloKMuilnr daughter of Judge

a Nuw York luwyor who la counaalor of lli morlwu HWlwMy in Purls

DialfpiiopTiiATioNsWApJIIINIITOK Tun I Tlia sundryiHilratlu bill iHMa rwgrNH y

tfiiy tarryiug MMjnirlliuaa wuouutlug to a huMiirwd aud tu uolllvtt dvllaia

TRY TO

FIGHT III

HUSCO

National Appeal to the Gov-

ernor

¬

of California

Planned

A POSTAL CARD CAMPAIGN

Stop That Fight This Is theTwentieth Century Is

the Cry

COLUMBUS Ohio Juno 5 lStopthat fight This is tho twentieth cen-

tury¬

are tho words emblazoned onmillions of postal cards to ibo mallod toUovornor Otllott of California if thoplans sot in motion horo today are carried out Tho govornor will bo delugedwith cards

Tho plan dovelopcd at a mooting oftho local Y M C A and rapidly de-veloped

¬

into what promises to bo a na-tional

¬

protest against California allow-ing

¬

a prizefight which other States rofuse to allow It is tho claim of thosowho are backing tho agitation thnt tindor tho laws of tho Stato of Californiatho govornor has power to provont prizofights

SAN FKANOISCO Juno B Thonows of anothor plan to stop tlio

coutcst has not causod anychango in tho managers plans nor latho pugilists training activities Therois howevor beginning to bo somo doubtexpressod as to whether tho contest canbo pullod off It is anticipated thatnatlon wldo prossuro may bo brought tobear upon Governor Olllott to causohim to attempt to intorforo

BIG RAILROAD MEN

ARE VERY HARD HIT

The First Effect of Passage of

Administration RailroadBill

CHICAGO Juno C Loading railroadcomponios of tho country yesterdaytook radical action in tho ourtailmontof now projects as a direct result oftlio action of congress in passing thoadministration railroad regulation billFlans fur millions of dollars worth ofnow equipments and oxtonsions of roadsworo cancoled at meetings of tho di-rectorates

¬

of various aompanlea and itwas freely announcod thnt this actionwas a result of tho passage of tho rail ¬

road bill and tho docislons of tho UnitedStates Supromo Court sustaining pro-visions

¬

of tho interstate commerce lawM

ANOTHER FALSE TIPABOUT ANDERSON GRACE

Another exciting choso after Gracewas indulged in last night which wasshort fraught with possibilities butunsuccessful Two polico officers whohavo been watching for tho man afterthoy woro relieved from duty in hopesof earning tho 500 Toward claimed tohavo soon him in tho houso of Marcallino a negro portor on the O It Lwho has been under suspicion as desir ¬

ing to aid GraceChief McDuffio and his boys surround-

ed¬

tho house Marcalllno was examinedand tho houso searched Ho put up anIndignant denial and said that tho 500looked as good to him as it did to any¬

body elseTho two officers who claimed to havo

seou Oraco were consistent in thoirstories and it looked bad for Marcallino on tho first telling

CRETE AGAIN DISCUSSED

HOME Juno 5 5Cing George ofGreece nrrivod horo incognito Ho ison a visit to confer with tho king ofItaly regarding the situation in Crete

1

AMERICAN CAUGHT

TO BE COURTMARTIALED

BLUBFIELDS Juno 4 Tho Madrlisgovernment forces have been defeatedand routed Genoral Chavarria is fly-ing

¬

to scapo capture by tho pursuinginsurgents

BLUEKIKLDS Juno 1 Tho Amor ¬

ican consul has ordered that all vesselspay customs duties to tho insurgentgovernment

BAN JUAN DEL SUH Juno 4 Ithas been learned that Wm Pittham thoAmerican engineer who laid andhandled tho insurgent mlno at Bluefields has bocn wounded and capturedby tho Madriz government forces andIms beon ordered courtmartialed

WASHINGTON Juno I Tho Statodepartment has cublcil tho Madrls gov-ernment in Nicaragua doinanding fairtreatment of Plttlmui who has beeniniido prisoner

HFISHERMAN OPENLY

VIOLATE THE LAW

IVn blu saiupaiiB linked together ann ewlmmruu aro lining omployod In thoharbor for fishing The boats liremanned by JaiiHe and tons of libar btlug usltod ttmii day to day Thowau llali ihy awl night Although themart rulati0Hs agalnit wall fishing tliulutiu Ub umuy Tlw Uuata are fnqueully lu lb way of vlii ami lUu

uta ar wwawhal iiajioui lu tbuuialUr vvsmIs ualMg propallvn

14

HAWAI1AMODKttlOK O MATHEBOK

2S23

GfZETTEEDITOR

Entered at the Postofficc of Honolulu TI TL Second class MatterSemi Weekly Issued Tucsaays rftttl Fridays

i Subscription Rates -Por Month iBSPer Month Foreign 35Par Year a309Por Year Foreign 4400

Payable Invariably --infAdpranceCHARLES i CRANE Manager

TUESDAY JUNE 7

BENATOE LANES VIEWS

Scnatpr Lane like many others haB his own opinion as to the liquor Issueand as no baa expressed himself in decent terms attempting to givo reasonsInstead of fnerely abusing tboso whoso views ho disapproves ho is entitled toAinAlf ill nnnJlHnriit Inn 1 f la fntin1 n rnnrllvii Vt lita mimnnf lliftf tha wrlmli

IP of his opposition to prohibition s based upon tho old argument that prohibition

niil UVb JIUU1UIU iiv iioauu ujiu IUU1 UU ICIUUUUIU UJUU Ult1 Kiuuauu bUUb

it did borne think however that it begins to prohibit and will if tried longenough couiplote tho job In the light of statistics showing in two yearB ofincreasing prohibition a decrease of a hundred and sixty six million dollarsin the liquor productlonin tho United States isnt this old argument nowrepeated by Mr Lane based upon a misapprehension of tho facts f AmericanStates which hao tried prohibition tho longest arc tho firmest In its supportThere is no other explanation of this fact than that tho system has workedwoll unless ono abandons belief In tho great American principlo of popularself government

Senator Lano has not been in thoso American States which have prohibi-

tion and as his illustrations of prohibition fnihyo he cites the conditions attho leper settlement whoro he says swipes making and drinking prevail andtho conditions of years ago in Hawaii when tho laws prohibited Balo of In

toxicants to Hanaiiaps For reasons which should hot need suggesting thoconditions in tho unfortui ate colony nt ICalaupapa are not nearly enough normalto bo cited either ns an Illustration of tho consequences of ordinary efforts toenforce a law or of tho motives which control tho habits of people in ordinaryhuman life Senator Lano docs not strengthen his case by chnrglng the un-

fortunate lepers with being makers of snipes As a rulo they boar theirterrible affliction with fortitude but to clto tho fact if it bo true that acommunity afflicted as is tho leper settlement is ono in which prohibition is

hard to enforce is not only unkind but is throwing logic and common senseoverboard altogether Tho samo is truo of tho rcfcrcnco to tho old Hawaiianlaw That law discriminated in plain terms between whites nnd Hawaiiansand was therefore specially resented by many Hawntlans

Lanos two other propositions also aro apparently not carefully con-

sidered¬

Ho says that Prohibition means moro misery from tho offects ofdrinking poisonous concoctions by tho llawaiians nnd that the problem oftho Balo of impure liquor can safely bo left In tho hands of tho llccnso com-

missioners¬

Tho first idea suggests that Senator Lano is not familiar with thomisory that exists now and has not studied tho Hawaiian death rolls and thosecond needs for its answer only tho fact that after moro than two yearsefforts by tbo commissioners to regulate four or fivo conscientious and In

fluential members of the Wholesale Liquor Dealers Association vtithdrow frommembership on tho ground as tho biggest ono of them openly stated of tho

associations fniluro to coopcrato in tho work of stopping sale of poisons overpublic bars

4KNOCKING HAWAII IN THE FAB BAST

A Manila paper publishes the following apparently as a translation froma native paper

A Filipino lady writCB from Hawaii to n resident of this capitalgiving him an account of certain sorious affrays which occurred botwoen the Tillplno and Japanese laborers who aro working in Hiloon that island

Tho Filipino laborers there arc divided into groups and hnvo aleader or fireman

Ono of theso groups for what reason is not known had a fierceclash with a group ofi Japanese workmen seven being killed nnd twentywounded Among the latter was tho foreman of tho Filipino groupwho received a wound almost a palm in length on tho right sido neartho lower part of thoarmpit Tho informant docs not say how manyFilipinos wcro killed

This event has caused a profound sensation among tho Filipinolaborers who rrro now working in those Islands and the woman whowroto tho letter to which wc refer has expressed her deslro to returnto tho Philippines

A gcntlemnu who passed through Hawaii on his way to Americahas stated to us that life there is very dangerous nnd is constantlythreatened by thioves and Highwaymen Thrco musicians of tho Con-

stabulary¬

Band when out for a walk in Hawaii with some Japancsowere attacked and dospoilod of nil they had

Onr informant adds furthermore that everything is dear nnd theeighteen dollars Which tho Filipino laborers rccoivo nro equivalent toeighteen pesos Conant here taking into account that tho monetaryunit in Hawaii is the dollarIs this stuff inspired There is practically nothing truo in this article

nothing noarly enough truo to seem liko an exaggeration of nctunl ovonts orconditions Tho Hilo fight never took place and it is imposslblo to boliovo thatany visitor to Hawaii reported lifo hero to bo dangerous because of thioves andhighwaymen Nor is thoro nny truth in tho financial statement with which thoarticle concludes It is possible that there nro influences at work in tho Philip-pines

¬

against Hawaiis immigration plans similar to tho influences which havobeen reported ns working in Manchuria and which if thoy nro responsible forour troubles with Russians havo for tho timo boing nt lcnst killed a promisingimmigration enterprise

At nny rate tho Manila artlclo is so entirely original so without n basis ofwhich it might havo been an exaggeration as to suggest dcliborato inventionfor a purpose

OIL BUBNINO WARSHIPSTho oil burning battleship threatens to do uwny with tho coaling operations

with which Honolulu has long been so familiar Sajs tho Christian ScienceMonitor A ramarkablo increase is taking plnco in tho substitution of oil forcoal as fuel on ships propelled by steam Tho Yule which has just made avery successful test of the advantages of fluid fuel is said to bo tho firstmerchant turbine in the country that has been equipped with oil burnersExperts who took the trial trip on her said thoy wcro satisfied that tho systemhad coino to stay In n round trip betweiu Boston and New York tho Yalowould consutno about 47600 gallons of oil Which could bo pumped aboard inan hour Her coal consumption has been 35 tons and it requiroj eight hoursfor her to take it aboard No nolso nnd no dist accompany tho taking on ofoil and there aro no cinders to fall upon the dock when it is burned Tho Yalohas needed forty eight Btokcrs with coal but oil calls for only eight men onduty who work under comparatively comfortablo conditions

Tho announcement has boon mado that tho British navy will substltutooil for coal as fuol In all its vessels It has been conducting experiments forseveral years to dovolop methods for using tho oil and many of its battleshipsand cruisers havo carried oil to supplement tlo coal supply A warship takingon oil can dispenso with 75 per cent of tho working force of stokori This liquidcan bo carried as ballas In tho double bottom of tho ship and ns tho oil Isconsumed water can be admitted Coaling on tho high sons has always been ndifficult and tedious operation but a war vessel can quickly fill her reservoirthrough pipes from a tank steamer

Tho United States Navy now has six battleships using oil In connectionwith coal ono monitor uting oil exclusively and fifteen torpedoboat destroyerssimilarly equipped All of tho now battleships nro to havo oil tanks Thooxcollont results obtained In tho speed trials of the Delaware nnd the NorthDakota when oil wui used In connection with coal was ono of tho matt con-

vincing arguments In favor of tho present plansIt Mould hardly b prudunt on the pari of tht naval nutboriliM to do away

entirely with eol owing to the esM with whjb a jupjily of oil Muld U

dtttroyad by tho tmny A mmUmtniury wpmV of might b tlia moansof saving a flMt or u campaign Tho ivlHg In llwo mwl tpni In handlingII KfMllM WVfHlfiM KJ MMBllNftM W fffUtl tty rJtWl Wt hJWfVOrwill immisuiy 1M4J io Kg gHWUY IBUOqWMWI l ail M IBM

WUols dWiit 4 to Mftlw villi to Oabii Jail tu tMh our pfUoWM how

HAWAIIAN GAZETTli TUESDAY JUNE 7 1910 SEMI WEEKLY

TATT VrlNB BY riBMNESSTho longth to which warfMo wthie the Republican party is going shows

a willingness on tho part of ninny important leaders to throw overboard thopartys cbauces In tho elections this full perhaps looking to 1012 for vindlcaHon Democratic hopes of carryingtho congressional election in tho off yearwore never nigucr man now ana surety tney novcr can navo been moro encouraged by Republican dissensions Some oxtensivo national straw votes havegiven evidence of groat Democratic gains nnd the small by elections so far heldhavo each shown Democratic landslides Before Republicans dipn1r ns to the1012 result it is worth while-- for them to remember that tho passage of a nowtariff bill should according to historic precedent bo followed by defeat of theparty rcsponsiblo for it thnt tho grentcr contest for national control is morethan two years ahead and that President Taft who is certainly both far seeingand well informed and unquestionably desirgus of being sustained stands firmas a rock with tho regular Republicans and is enforcing his polioies

As late as ton days ago tho best informed Washington correspondents werewondering how tho ndministrationwaB going to pull through with tho railroadbill ono of tho features of tho Tjft program most contested Tho party leaders

mi rwore in a qunnanry xjiey uiunr Know wriomcr io siaetracK wo bill ana tryto abandon the discussion But Taft would not listen to any compromisethat spelled surrendor When tho voto camo last week tho Republicans insurgents anS all solidly supported tho measure and six Democrats voted1 withthem President Taft won

This is only ono of a number of signs of a Taft strength which may nppcalto tho American voter when tho time comes Tho insurgents and tho Donibcratsaro making a lot of noise but as developments are mado known the administra-tion is piling up a record of achievements that will mako pretty good thunderlater on not tho least being tho shewing mado in some of the trust cases nowIn tho courts

WHICH SIDE IS DISINTERESTED 7

i Not only aro tho Prohibitionists impractical but thoy aTO absolute ¬

ly dishonest nnd apparently proud of it BulletinTalk about fanaticism nnd prejudice and narrowness did the most violent

of roform cranks ever equal tho abovo paragraph Dishonest and appearcntly prond of it This is tho argument of interested liquor men as appliedto leaders of a campaign to stop the liquor traffic It suggests an inquiry as tomotives With what motivo are thp Prohibitionists urging their chosen planfor changing local conditlonsT Is it possible in nny way to even imagine anypersonal gain to thoso really bofilnd tho movement f NTho organ fromwnichtho above is quoted declares ono day that if tho Prohibitionists succeed theywill destroy their own property next it says thoy nro fanatics and again thatthoy dont mean what they say

Tho ncodlossncss of arguing as to tho disinterestedness of the motives oftho prohibition lcadors Is npparent Is it worth whllo to turn uttentitra to thoother sidet To nsk how many campaigners there nro for tho liquor side whonro not cither interested in the liquor business or paid by the liquor dealersassociation Tho questions do not need nnswering Tho answer rro Knownto nil Comparing tho two campaign committees ono is working solely toprcsorvo tho financial interests of those who organized it and tho other for aprinciple

There aro two campaign committees in tho field Ono is composedofmembers of tho liquor dealers association fighting for their own privateinterests vyith financial backing according to crediblo reports from mainlandbroworics and distilleries also working to preservo their own private businessTho opposition committco is ono of volunteers Tho Bulletin varies botwecncalling them liars and saying they arc dishonest and trying to toll them ihoyaro fanatics working for a principlowhich will kill their own property

BIO FIGHT PROBABLY A FAKEThcro is world wldo interest in tho big prizofight whioh San Francisco is

to witness on tho Fourth of July As tho program is announced a negro nnda whito man who have so far outfought all comers aro to enter a ring anddecido which can whip thd othor In a fist fight tho contest to continuo untilono or tho other is mado unconscious or helpless It would bo useless to denyhuman interest in this sort of a contest for most men aro enough fightinganimal to feel a thrill of oxcitoment over it There aro fow oven amongmoso wuo most strongly aopioro encn brutal entertainments who nro nob con-

in result The good seo tho far Gregor are makers thoabovo tho best drama command which tho nreas have been in bad Allassociations find aro necessary to satisfy public demand for news tho eventprovo interest

It is easy howdver toshow logically that tho fight will almost necessarilya fake Tho immense sum of monoy to bo won by settling tho

issuo in advance and gambling on it considered together with tho charactor oftho men engaged in tho business makes tho proposition of a fair earnest fightsocm almost absurd Tho term manly art of self dofenso has almost gono

of uso ih descriptions of these matches they becamo great financialaffairs Thoso on tho insido know it ns tho public is coming to know it as thoart of swindle and graft This is helping it to its dbom ns a public sport

-RUSSIANS ARE DOING BETTER

In tho light of present reports regarding tho Russians it is not certnin thatthoy will not yot prove a very desirablo addition to tho population of thoIslands and thoroughly justify tho importation of In soveral notablecases employers of them who have now made a long trial roport to botho best laborers horo in both capacity and willingness The fino record ofsixty or moro of them employed at Pahoa is well known Foremen at tho Nuuanu dam glvo tho samo good report regarding them and from some of the plan-tations also havo como excellent accounts All this seems to indicate that thetroubles with Russians havo boon duo tho activities of certain agi-

tators now in jail and to imperfect arrangements look aftor them when theyarrived of which tho principal fcaturo was probably tho lack of enough com-

petent¬

interpreters It is only fair to the Russians to say that they have beena law abiding lot Even during a period of idleness and utter destitution theyhave not resorted to violenco or crime to any sorious extent Thoso who havoworked havo been found steady strong industrious homcloving and ambitiousto learn English The record on the whole is by no means as bad as it seemeda fow months ago that it would bo and tho board of immigration may yet havocauso to look satisfaction Upon the of its Mnnchurian enterprise

s

Tho visit of tho Portugucso cruiser San Qabricl long anticipated has beengreatly enjoyed Officers and crow alike pr6vcd to bo tho kind of people Hawaii loves to entertain and wants to soo moro of They showed that small asis the Portuguese that nation making no pretentions to a part in thegreat competition of battleship construction such nuvy as sho has is keepingpaco with tho world in tho development of the new modern personnel in cabinand focsle And tho visitors found Jioro so many of their own raco that theyworo specially nblo to enjoy themselves They lcavo horo wishing to comoagain and with Honolulu hoping to see them again

Tho liquor men must bd bard prcssod for material when they get SenatorLano to charge the unfortunatos at tho lepor settlement with swipes making asan argument against prohibition Itisjiot for any man to say how ho wouldbear the burdon of condemnation as a and tho argument is of no logicalvaluo whatovcr Tho settlement is ono vast hospital and of no uso as anillustration of anything oxcept ns such

H- -

It is but a short timo sinco tho liquor dealers wero declaring thoprosent liquor law outrageously unfair Thoy woro demanding its amendmentAt that timo tho lcadors on tho other stdo of tho controversy wero declaringit tho best law over enacted Now the liquor men aro running after prominentcitizens to get endorsements of tho present law At this rato porhaps the liquormen will como round to prohibition In a fow years moro Thoy havo traveledprotty fast In tho Inst two years

Vox tho luko of Oahu jiritoii dlialpljno It essential that tho escaped con-

victs be recaptured soon nnd savorely dealt with Tho second eicapo of Martini isespecially likely to destroy convict discipline The remaining priioncrs williuovltahiy come to foci that escape Is safe and easy

i tColonel ItooiovuJt la now ulmont at tho cud of his tour lie lias told inoit

of tho nit I loan how to run nlialri Tlio modern Alexander facing theutitiul of houi long for etUor wirU to sdvU

Xtm tbat ttn Ngr trust frauds nro being trufod to Henry 0 Hveiwyrwhs mn mm ym it It Mill proper io rfir le th liHrtlButlnui Mwruli far l hlgUrwjut

It m bit wribl Isnt U tbtt tU llqtMr m U tmm to BdwltlUt prakllrftlMt moU b t Hm4 tbig If it wmM preblbit i Ut tUt sik if

IN STABBED

IS Ml DEATH

Porto Ricans Dance jind Boozeand Have Bloody

Quarrel

Tho five thirty train from Knhuknyesterday afternoon carried to tho dtjCnndido Rivera perhaps fatally stabbedand Bonhaddin Madera and SclcsttnoCortes who may bavo to answer for hisdeath

The wounded man nnd his nisallantswore in charge of Daniel P McGregortho officer at Hauula and thoy werebrought respectively to tho pollco sta¬

tion and tho Queens Hospital at oncoAt the hospital the doctors declared thowounded mans lifo to bo In danger andtho police wcro notified to that effectOfficer Minvicllc the Spanish Interpro--tor of tho force went to tho hospitalimmediately and Deputy City AttorneyMilvcrton and Chief McDuffio wcro no-

tified¬

McDuffio took a hack to tho hospitalwhero he found his officer who hadtaken a statement from tho dying manRivera asked to bo permitted to identify his assailants nnd McDuffio returned for them

Tho larger of tho two Cortes wasrocognized nnd identiflod by tho wound ¬

ed man as a man who had drawn a knlfoon him Milvorton arrived Immediatelyafterwards and tho identification wasrepeated Rivera said that thcro wasanother man who had stabbed himMcGregor believes ho knows tho manmentioned and returned to tho plantation as soon as Minvicllo had given himtho particulars of Riveras statement

Rlvern was not nblo to mako thostatement from tho timo ho was hurtuntil ho had rested a fow hours at thohospital His wounds consist of severalstabs about tho face ono of which slicedon lus noso ana a deep wound in tnoback The latter has penetrated tholungs nnd may prove fatal

According to Riveras vaguo state-ment

¬

Cortes slapped him in tho faceand ho struck back and started to runCortes followed drawing a knifewhich was described as a long slimblade about twelve inches long andstruck at him

Tho fight according to McGregortook placo about one thirty Sundaymorning after a dance that had proceeded the entire ovoaing proviously

Both men were drunk or at leastpartly sov at tho timo of tho affrayuortes anu Maaora according to Mo

sclous of interest tho prico of tickets to show trouble at campwhat can and tho energies and Teputo thero

ofthis

bo

out since

themthem

toto

with results

navy

Iepor

tuuirmutt

Hti dm

nro Porto Ricans Tho stabbing tookplaco in tho camp immediately makai oftno aepot near tno mm

it

LL SOT STOP

THEJIG FIGHT

Governor Gillett Says It Is Not

Any of His Business

SAN FRANCISCO Juno 0 Prizo- -

fighter Johnson yesterday discharged hismanager Little nnd he has appointedBilly Nolan to manage his affairs

Governor Gillett stated in reply tothe appeals mado to him for interfer-ence

¬

that ho would not attempt to stoptho fight on July 4 Tho governors at-

tention¬

was called to tho plans for agigantic national postal card petitionasking that he interfere and ho saidthat such a petition would not causohim to tako nny action

Tho governor holds that tho matteris a matter to bo determined by the au-thorities

¬

of the city and county of SanFrancisco and that ho has no right tointerfere if thoy grant a permit fortho fight

HALMOST KILLED BY

KICK BY A MULE

Thrown and kicked by a niulo a Por-tuguese

¬

water luna of Late plantationis lying at tho point of death in thoplantation camp It is posslblo that hohas nlready svecumbed to his injuriesdefinito Information last night being impossible to obtain as thero is no nearertclopbono than Waialua on ono siuo andICahaua on the other

Bosides the fact that tho injured man sfirst name is Louis bis identity can notbo learned until tho ofllcors reportcomes in from tho plantation Ho is aprofessional rider and was giving anoxhibition nt tho timo ho ys injured

Tho rider picked out an unbrokenmule which had a reputation of beinga particularly Intractable creature amiwas riding it about the camp whon thoanimal bucked him off and turning onhim klckod hlhi Ho was horriblywounded by tho animals hoofs andwould uo doubt havo boon killed on thospot hail not bystanders driven thbbeatt off

KOHALA LAW

KolmJn Mlilgett A pollcemm thoother Hy compelled o resident of thisJJlrUt Jo lKwgi a lurk kit lie fcptin a Mug Hvery ono should knowthat it It a toNtrery Io law to kenIn iptlvlty Jnrkig Hunt l or MujHilrJjifiller ilwn twwiriix or then br4 InMiiivuy -

A OttUit war ymwJ Ik UmIhw OUIom twicrod Nw Vwrk lAtmt Majr Uuad Miliit4 witb in ituftmiti

CHINA HEADY

FOR NEW

InTraveling Prince in America Gets

Confirmation of Riot

Threats

ASSURANCES FROM PEKING

Government Will Be Able ThisTime to PreventSerious

Trouble

BROOKLYN Now York Juno 0Prince Tsai Tao undo of the ompororor iuna who is hero as a visitor hasreceived from Poking cable confirmationof tho press reports of the Imminentdanger of a violent antiforolguo1utbroakin nanicing r

His cable from tho ChlneS1 capitalsays howover that tho fears aro oxajr--gcratod and that tho government willbo able to handlo tho situation and con ¬

trol any outbreak that may occurThe princo is advised that tho im ¬

perial government is thoroughly warnodof the threatened outbreak which hasso stirred tho foreign legations inPeking and that tho Chinese forolgnuwtu uas uuuiiuu no governments tnatit OXpects tO bo able to tlrovent n rnnntition of tho Boxer outrages

i itcaunuun uuvo oeen taxen oy tnoChinese authorities and Princo TVnctsays he does not expect serious trouble

SENATE TALK ON

PEARL HftflBOOR

Moses B Clapp of Minnosota wastho member of tho United States Senate rcsponsiblo for tho recent temporaryicuucuou oi tno jrcari narDor appro-priations

¬

Details of tho discussionbrought by mall show that Clapp op-posing

¬

tho views of all tho strategistsdocs not think a naval station hero ofany value Senator Perkins of Califor-nia

¬

led the successful debato to havotho appropriation restored to the largerfigure When the matter camo up forunai determination no asked that thesenate disagree to Clapp s pondincamendment and produced cables fromtho San Francisco Chamber of Commerce and Merchants Associatloa urging tne appropriation Tiio followingis tho discussion in pnrt as published intho Congressional Record

tTHIEVES BIG HAUL

NEW YORK Juno 6 William AMiner trnveling from Chicago to NowYork yostenlay was robbed of fiftythousand dollars which he had on hisperson -

Bills against racing havo passed thoNow York senate

A FAIR EXCHANGELargo sums of monoy aro no

doubt realized from simple spec-ulation

¬

but tho great fortunesaro derived from legitimate andhonest business whero the goodBfurnished aro worth tho pri tthoy bring Certain famous busi ¬

ness mon havo accumulated thoirmillions wholly in this wayPrompt and faithful in ovorycontract or ongagoment they en¬

joy tho confidence of the publicand command a class of tradothat is rofused to nnstablo ortricky competitors In tho long t

run it does not pay to cweatordeceive others A Jiumbug waybo advertised with a noisolikothe blowing of a thousand trumSots but it is Boon detected andkposed The manufacturers of

WAMPOLES PREPARATIONhavo alwayB acted on very differ-ent

¬

principles Boforo offoringit to the public thoy first madosuro of its merits Then andthen only did its namo appearin print Peoplo woro assured ofwhat if would do and found thostatement truthful To day thoybolievo in It awo all belioyo intho word of a tried and trustedfriend It is palatablo as honoyand contains all tho curativoproperties of puro Cod LivorOil oxtrnotod by ub from freshcod livers oombinod with thoCompound Syrup of Hypophosphites nnd tho Extractsof Malt and Vlld Cherry Itaids digeition drives impuritlwtfrom tho blood and s oiTcotivo in Anorna Debility LungTrouble Influenza and allYYtutiiig Coinpluinu Dr LoumIV Highop wtys Uko plmiuron wiylng 1 have found it n moat

pfllolunt preparation ombodiiitfuU of tho tnudlaiiml iirupiirUe4 a pure soil liver oil m u moat

twliitoble hmn It U a wUiitifinrlHWta91 H f9ll With ifflfll

stow US mm flavour On Ut

aww iiii ii iiiiiiUiiiiI m mumnmimmmmmmmtn ltSjMiiiuiiiuwM1iiiiiiiniiiiiitl iiiiiiiiUliihi n iinur V Tttt i rzn J lL il

Business and FinanceIlMPOBTANT DISCUSSION ON

Tho matter off applying interstatocommerce regulations to mo inior- -

island stcumship business hero is likelyto bo tbo main business topic of thocoming week The merchants associa ¬

tion will hold a meeting on Thursdayafternoon nt which tho matter will bodismissed and in tho meantime there isa lob of privato discussion going onamong business men ns the result of apretty active campaign oa tho one handto secure a declaration in favor of tholaw iand on tho other hand to haveHonolulu protest against tho law

It is said that the Issuo even InvolvesItho possibility of establishment of an- -

other intorlsland steamer servico as aH rival of tho Inter Island service by tho

Dillingham interests B F Dillinghamhas madono secret of his campaign tohavo tho law1 apply here He has cabledto Washington stating his position anddeclaring that it is a discriminationagainst tho island railroads to leavetho steamship tompany free from thoregulations This campaign is understood to Do largely in tuo interests 01tho now extension of thd Hilo BailwayCompanys lines on Hawaii

Tho railroad companys representa¬

tives contend that tho intorlsland busi ¬

ness hero is practically that of n localrailroad company If tho company isnot placod under tho interstatQcommerco laws and made to publish a itsTates and submit to the conditions dfthose laws tho railroad company maybo found ontering the steamship busi ¬

ness Itself to insure rates to its over-land

¬

shippers beyond ihoir island ter-minal

¬

portsTliq railroad companys awiuue iu

tho matter is said to be duo to an opin ¬

ion that the nterislandTates are toohigh and that tho proposed federalregulations would causo roductions to

Itho benefit of settlers small farming ntn As tha railroad company isextending its lines into a big district j

Hon Hawaii wuere muuy aiuuu Duiyu

federal commission allowed to fix ratesdefinitely so that through prices forshipments may bo quoted

h rue torms or ino inwrHwuo tuuuuwmjlaw provide for tho placing of freightland passenger rates practically underItho control of the interstate commercecommission tho following being some

iof tho principal provisions of tho actlas to means of enforcement etc

Sec 0 That every common carrierubject to tho provisions of this Acthall filo with tho commission created

Jby this Act and print and keeti i ren topublic inspection schedules showing all

itho rates fares and charges forbetween different points oa

Pits own route and between points onits own route and points on tno routeof any other carrier by railroad Dy

pipe line or by water when a througuIrouto and joint rate havo been eatab- -

IHahnri

Such schedules shall lie plainlyprinted in largo type and copies forthe nso or the puunc snau oe iieiii yuai- -

IpA in twn nublicand conspicuous placesBin every depot station or ouice 01 buciicarrier where passengers or freight reinnRtivfllv nro received for transportation in such form that they shall baaccessible to the public and can beconveniently inspected

No change shall bo made in thorates fares and charges or joint ratesfares and charges which have beenaied and published by any common carrier in compliance wim me requirements of this section except after thir

ity days notice to tho commission andIto the public published as aforesaidiwhich shall plainly state the changesproposed to bo made in the schedulethen in lorco ana inn nine nucu mokhnnncd rates fares or charges will go

into effect and the proposed changesmail be shown by printing new schedales or bhall bo plainly indicated uponthe schedules in force at the time andkept open to public inspection

Every common carrier subject tothis Act shall also file with said commission copies of all contracts agreemnnls nr nrranecments with other common carriers in relation to any traffic

laff ected by tho provisions of this ActIto whichi at Jmay bo a party xne com- -

nission majf determine and preBcriDOhe form in which the schedules requir

ed hv this section to bo kept open topublic inspection shall bo prepared andirranged and1 may cnango me luriufrom timo to time as shall bo found expedient No carrier unless otherwiseprovided liy this Act shall engage orparticipate in the transportation of pas-

sengers¬

or property as defined in thisAct unless the rates fares and charges

ijpon which the same nre transportedby said carrier novo ocen uiea nnu puo

llishcd in accordance with the provisions of this Act nor shall any car

f Bill Rtmlfy known lor

JUNE 7

rior charge or demand or collect or re-

ceive a creator or less or different compensation from such ofpassengers or property or for any ser-

vice in connection therewith betweentho points named in such tariffs thanthe rates fares and charccs which arespecified in the tariff filed rind in effectat the nine nor shall any carrier re ¬

fund or remit n any mnnncr or by anydevice nny portion of tho rates faresand charges so specified nor extend toany shipper or persoh any privileges orfacilities in the of passengers or property except such as arespecified in such tariffs

See IS That tho commission isauthorized and empowered and it shallbb Its duty whenever after full bear ¬

ing upon a complaint mado as providodin section thirteen of this Act or uponcomplaint of any common carrier itshall bo of tho opinion that any of therates or charges whatsevcr demandedcharged or collected by any common carrier or carriers subject to tno provisions of this Act for thfc transportation or persons or property as definedin the first section of thiB Act or thatany regulations or practices whatsoeverof such carrier or carriers affectingsuch rates are unjust or unreasonableor unjustly or undulypreferential or prejudicial or otherwisein violation of any of the provisions ofthis Act to determine and prescribewhat will be the just and reasonableinto or rates charge or charges to botbereafter observed in such case as tnomaximum to be charged and whatregulation or praetico in respect to such

is just fail and reasonable to be thereafter followed and tomake an order that the carrier shallcease and desist from such violation totho extent to which tho commission findtho same to exist and shall not thereafter publish demand or collect anyrate or charge for suchin excess of the maximum rate or chargeso prescribed and shall conform to thoregulation or practice so prescnoeu

Tho commission may also aftorhearing on a complaint establishthrough routes and joint rates as themaximum to be charged and prescribetho division of such rates as hereinbe ¬

fore provided and the terms and con-

ditions¬

under which through routesshall when that may benecessary to give effect to any provisionof this Act and the carriers complain-ed

¬

Of havo refused or neglected tovoluntarily establish such throughroutes and joint rates provided noreasonable or satisfactory throughroute exists and this provision shall ap-

ply¬

when one of the connecting car-

riers¬

is a water lineSec 20 That tno commission is

hereby authorized to require annualreports from all common carriers sub-

ject¬

to the provisions of this Act andfrom the owners of all railroads ongaged in interstate commerce as definedin this Act to prescribe the manner inwhich such reports shall be mado andto requiro from such carriers specificanswers to all questions upon which thecommission may need informationSuch annunl reports shall show in detail tho amount of capital stocic issuedthe amounts paid therefor and themanner of pavment for the same thedividends paid the surphiB fund ifany anu the number of stockholdersthe funded and floatinz dobts and thointerest paid thereon tho cost andvalue of tho carriers property franchlses and equipments tho number ofemployees and the salaries paid eachclnssjthe accidents to passengers emplovees and other persons and thocauses thereoi tue amounts oxpenucufor cacn year now exponded and the character of such inrprovenicnts the earnings and receiptsfrom each branch of business and fromnil sources the operating and otherexpenses tho balances of profit and lossand a complete exhibit of the financialoperations of the carrier each year in ¬

cluding an annual balance sheet SuchTcports shall also contain sucu inrorination in relation to rates or regulationsconcerning fares or freights or agree ¬

ments arrangements or contracts affecting the same as tho commission may

districttoabling carrypurpose of this Act prescribe a periodof time witliin which all commonriers subject to the of thisAct shall have as near as may be auniform system of accounts andmanner in which such accounts shall bokep

The shall also havo au-

thority¬

to require said carriers to filemonthly reports of earnings and ex-penses

¬

or special rcportB within a speci-fied

¬

period and if any such carriershall fall to file such reports within thetimo fixed by tho commission it shall bosubject to forfeitures last aboveprovided Said forfeitures shall bo ro- -

fCollisBrcswiies

TheORiQIMAL and ONLY GENUINE

COUGHS COLDSTl Most Valuabl named

ovor divuivarsoEffewully cuts ihort nil attackof SPASMS Cpecks and armlilii I JF3 VIA ilmn too often fttal illieast- t-

rtviu Miuur ah kitTh enly rIIlaive lr

JLfill Ull IWMW IU NLUIlkLAIIIi UUUIa

k mmMK 0YSS8THY A CMOUIA TOOTHACHE

l1 I 6x MiO1WIK0 I M pnMiiMiiii

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE TUESDAY

transportation

trnnportatlon

discriminatory

transportation

transportation

bejjoperated

improvements

nnnfLfrttJfgtfakuinvuiw7BIIBUbAtISM

S14UUMlMlyHl

LIST OF HAWAIIAN PLANTATIONS

PLANTATIONOahu

Apokna Sugar CoEwa Plantation CoWalanao CoWalalua Agr CoKahtiku Plant CoWaimanalo Sugar CoOahu Sugar CoHonolulwPlant CoLaio PlantationKoolau Agr Co

MaulOlowalu CoPioneer Mill CdWalluku Sugar CoHawaiian C S CoMaui Agr CoKipahulu Sugar CoKaeleku Sugar Co

uawauFanuhau Plant CoHamakua Mill CoKukaiau Kukaiau

Co KukaiauSucar Co

Sugar CoJTlUUUlblUU

Honomu Sugar CoPcpookeo Sugar CoOnomea Sugar Co

Sugar CoHawaii CoWaiakea Mill CoHawaiian Atfr CoHutch son

Mill Co IvobnlaKohala Sugar CoPacific Sugar MillHonokaa Sugar Co

Sugar CoPuna Sugar Conalawa PlantationHawl Mill and PlantPuako Plant CoNiulii Mill and PlantPuakoa Plant CoKona Devcl Co

Kauai

Gay RobinsonSugar Co

CoCo

CoHawaiian CoKckalia CoWalmea Co

ii iiinmim

POSTOFFIOE HONOLTJMT ATJENTa MANAGER

WaianaoWalaluaKahukuWaimanalo l Brewer CoVaipahu U Hackfeld CoAieaLaioHauula

LahalnaLahainaWnllnkuFuuneno

KipahuluKaeleku

Sug PaauhauPaauilo

PlantationKukalau MillKalwlkl OokalaLnupahoohoo Papaaloa

HakalauX1UHU1HU

HiloMill

HonomuPepeekeoOnomea

PnhalaPlantCoNnnlohu

Union

Olaa

EwaEwa

Tala

HiloHiloHilo

Sug

KohalaA Co

V CoOlaaOlaa

KohalaStKohalaKohala

Kilauea Sugar Plant CoKilauca

MakeoGrove Farm PlantLlhuo PlantKoloa SugarMcBryde Sugar

SugarSugarSugar

Baldwin

Schacfor AhronsHonokaa

Kohala

Kohala

- E

II Trust BohinsonFairehild

Lihuo H Hackfeld EdLihue TI Hackfeld

HackfeldAlexander Baldwin W

Baldwin BaldwinWaimoa v

Kekaha Hackfeld

covered iu the manner provided for thorecovery of forfeitures under the pro-visions

¬

of this Act Tho oath requiredby this section may bo takenany person authorized administer anoath by tho laws of the State in whichthe same is taken Thomay in its discretion prescribe thoforms of any and all accountsand memoranda to be kept by carrierssubject to tho provisions of this Actincluding thp nccounts records andmemoranda or movement of traflieas well as tho receipts and expenditures01 moneys uue commission shall at alltimes hnvo access to all accounts records and memoranda kept by carrierssubject to this Act and it shall be un-lawful

¬

for any carriers to keep anyother accounts records or memorandathan those prescribed or approved bythe commission and it may employspecial or examiners who

authority under tho order of thoto inspect and examine any

and all accounts and memo-randa

¬

kept by such carriersH

NEW TELEPHONES BOON

At tho meeting of thoassociation during the coming weekbeen out during the week in tho resi-dence

¬

sections installing the now wiresa fow weeks the chango will

bo made and Honolulu will pass undertho automatic systemIMPBOVES INTERISLAND SEBVIOE

The Inter Island Steam NavigationCompany is preparing a now sailingschedule and there will bo a slightchange mado in tho time of aswell as departure at arious ports ofcall between Honolulu and Hilo ThoMauna Kca will sail at ten oclock onTuesday morning instead of the noonhonr as formerly This will permit thopopular liner to arrive at destination

on Wednesday Thoearly train on tho Hilo railway will be

require and the commission may in Kea ana mcans thJ KonaA1 the better rlT out SiKau of Hawaii will

carprovisions

tho

commission

the

FrkfiMEMUm

SUGAR

commission

M Dowsett

Baldwin

Baldwin

C BrewerH Hackfeld

BrewerAloxandor Baldwin

BaldwinE HckfeldCoThoo H Davios

Stodart

getquicker mail The Claudino will

at her usual time two oclockMonday afternoon but will not makoine long aeiays wuicu now taico Placeand will reach on Wednesdaymorning of Thursdayas is now tho case InspectorCarr states that hopes that arrange-ments he made before long thattho JIauuino will leavo Hilo laterhe afternoon than she docs now which

will give a still better service to Hono-lulu

Castlo CookoCastle CookeJCastlo Cooke

Eleelo

IMPOBTANT HOMESTEAD MOVES

In view of tho final of thoamendments of the Organic Act

publictno near luturo win see tue territorialadministration taking up many

k urowor a w

Dev Co

CoCo

C Co

Co

a

hocan so

in

ing to lands it 1b that

tant land matters Thi much discussedWaiohlnu sales over whichKtiliio made a row Inst year and thoICapas deal will be among tho first tocomo up

At the same timo two important com

Aloxandor

AloxandorHawaiian

Alexander

expected

Delegate

missions nro preparing to roport to thoGovernor on mutters vitallypun nctliomtnt uno it the coiiumlouheaded by W A Kinney hunevolved a plan whoroby It is bellovudthat Hie Territory can properly andlegully uid liomettenderf to the extentof liomnjor bona fide nettlonThe ntlw is a of wliMt 1

li u will rrt a tklun for ranking mU to hip

Mn uniform unit on nil thetohnrVM and hnilliij of lie Trritury

vmnhvvm poduot imhJ U Dulu ut th liwmmiU Iru4iMU

toluy dlwUiHM lb titlrlbttt4 tu Mm I but U tnwny Lw4

ui4n tt wu huMifd

fr sf iii ImiM uU Miii tbtt

G F RontonG P EontoaFred MoyorTV

Andrew AdamsG ChalmersE K BullJames QibbH EJ J Dowling

Geo Qibb

II P PonhallowY F BaldwinII AAh PingJohn Chalmers

C Brewer Cov Alexander SmithTheo H Davios Co A LidgatoH Co A HornerThoo H Davies Co E MaddenC Brower Co GeoTheo H Davies Ss Co C McLennanC Brower Co J M RossC Brewer Co Win PullnrC Brewor Co Jas WebsterC Brower Co 1 T MolrC Brewer Co J A ScottH Co W H C CampbellTheo H Davios Co C C KennedyC Brewer Co Wm G OggC Browor Co Carl WoltersThoo H Davies Co H H RontonCastlo Cooke Geo 0 Watt

Kukulhaele F AA Schaofor IC S Gjerdrum

Honolulu

Bishop Co J WattBishop Co J WattH Watorhouso Trust Co J Atkins WightHind Bolph Co John HindHind Bolph Co Jno 0 SearloThoo H Davies Co Kobt HallH Trust Co H B Bryant

Kealakckua Theo H Dales Co E Conant

C Co j RMakawoli Co GayKcalia G H

Co BroadbontCo F Weber

Koloa H Co C B

Makawcll Aloxandor B DCastlo Cooke JII Co H P Fayo

beforoto

records

the

agents shallhavecommission

records

merchants

Within

arrival

early morning

serviceleave

instead morningPostal

enactmentapply

impor

ufTectlug

which

erectingWiiiiIIoii

Aletrger olmlrnmn vlileU

nNHWiiahl

l4lmwt

tbnbMiid

Browor Myors

Wilcox

Fnssoth

glllllrigllgggl

WiGoodalo

Wooley

tiWclnzhelmor

nackfeld

McCubbln

Hackfeld

Waterhouso

Watorhouso

there was no limit to the market Hodeclares that he was not so enthusingtic Hdwcvcr he iav convinced thatthere nro big possibilities in tho pineapplo nuico and those who have lookedinto tho matter nnd aro familiar withtho success of the grnpo juico enter ¬

prise on tho mainland regard tho nowpincapplo plan as likely to bo a mostimportant fcaturo of Hawaiian agricul-tural

¬

enterprise

THE BANK OP HONOLUThe incorporation jiaprs for tho

Bank of Honolulu have been filed withtho Territorial Treasurer This is thonew name of Spreckels Cos bankBesides WG Irwin Jtho incorporatorsaro E I Spalding G C Potter W MGiffard R Ivors J M Dowsett PaulMuhlondorf Ht F Lewis and J T McInerny Tho capital Btock is to bo

000000 This incorporation meansthat Mr Irwin retains largo financialinterests in Honolulu

J

HOLT LANDS SOLD

at 120000 weroCastlo this week

BOOST BAN PBANOISOOAt tho meeting of tho Merchants

Assoeintion during tho coming weekaction will probably bo taken to seethat Hawaii uso her influence in nid oftheSan Francisco Panama oponing oxposition as against other proposed ex-

positions San Francisco is waging avery strong fight against Now Orleanswhich has a delegation in Washingtontrying to have congress declare forNow Orleans as tho placo to hold thofair

THE NEW OU COMPANYTho ntimaumq Oil Company organiz-

ed¬

durinc tho week and will soonclose itssubsiption lists Tho sum ofisiuuuu was paia over tor tho optionon California on which tho company is to operate The company is aHawaiian company and has a big listor won known citizens of tho Terri-tory on its list of Thoofficers will bo James A Kennedypresident Paul lluhlcndorf vice presi ¬

dent F Klamp secretary arrd treas-urer A Humburg assistant trcnsilror

NO TBANSPOBTATION BELIEFTho failure in congress thls session

of tbo coastwjso suspension bill ascablod to The Advertisor on Fridaywas a disappointment to most of thomercantile community There Ischanco for Bhip subsidy fringing anyrcliof in tho near future and trans-portation conditions will thoroforo romala ax they are for many monthsThosq who support the suspension plantake comfort from tho cabled nows thntSpeaker Cannon has ngreed that thematter shall havo recognition in thonext session Cannon is expected toromain Bpeakor during tbo life of thoiiroHent congress which will meet againin December

WANT NEW PAVEMENTTho Fort street liltulltlilc pavement

propoBiiion was urgea iieioro tno noaraof supervisors during tho week bypetition vlileli wnn remarkable for itsstrength na ruiirosentlntr tho builneMtommunlty By tlili petition tho hiuluei men noit cnucurup tiio biggesttflirpayer and tue inch tnotl liiteriwlfulIn fori itreet Join ml In asking Ilialimnl to go alioad the irork

SmPMINTB TO PATHTti Miimt Iestftf roirt jlilnmin

of twwr ffHiii DaMWliir to dale atittfilO lew Of th IU4KW IhwUi lw wnt u rnttttu awrkt byttif IribwM of rmUimuttn ml I48Wurn mt ip urn mui tu tw rM mui WNX um 1y UmtkiityM lit tw tutl khiMMiUi vmmi

5

inw

The Sugar MarketCALIFORNIA WANTS LABOR TOO of tho State Tho Information waa

rendily tho Jopanoso and thoA report just made toy tho California

BUmo quOBtfona answorcd carefullyState Board of Commissioner of Labor nntj fuiiyon tho Jspanoso in California is to- - With this data boforo thorn nnd withgarded as having an Important posslblo tj day Tcports of tho agents and

thousands of interviews withknninre on tho future polcy of tho intcro8loalinJth0nnil othorg flnanciaUvnation with regard to Jnpancso labor 1rooiom nt hand tho Investigators pro- -

California having ihoen tho Stato main- - pared tho following summary of farmly responsible for tho Japanoso bxelu- - labor conditions in tho Statosion policy now existing tho report of botweon tho

TBtfarm

tholnlbor J5tho commissioner that tho Stato ab- - n -

solutely noods somo such labor as tho ho orcBIra vinoynrd and flcW and thoJapanese for thq development of her lndllstrios homsolves hnvo icon doindustries is a atriking and important volojod iong un03 of nn evolutionarynow fcaturo of tho discussion Tho dmrnctor and are practically imposslblofollowing from an Assoc atod Press ab- - of moillflcat5on 5n nnv material doBWOstract of tho report which was filed 3 Thnt tho poDlom ot 80lving

Sacramento May 31 shows that tho Bltuntion by drawing from thoCahforn labor commissioner thinks jrogont available whito farm lobor nupthat California needs labor about aa ry an known or 8Ugs0stod mothodsmuch as business men hero think Hn- - of moaificatlon of tho conditions nowwail needs labor obtaining in this Stato will afford no

Some form of unsklllod labor such praetor or lnBtorinl reliefas 14 now ropresontod by tho Japanese 3 That tho croation of an idoaiis essential for tho continuance and intelligent class of whito farm labor todevelopment of Jho specialized agrlcul-- bj drawn ffom aourc0 wUhln thotlnLdSlst5icSo California confines of tho Unitod States is prao- -

This is the broad conclusion of tho Ucal an imp0MVbUity for tho reasonreport te tho Stato Labor Commissioner Umt gncl an ooit woud ontaU nnjust submitted to tho flovornor on tho ontIro nnd raaieni IOadjuBtmont ofJapanese in California and which was cconomi0 conditions and tho relation- -prcparod after over a year of caroful siip that now exists betweon tho grow- -field work by a corps of special ngonts or wA tho tom o transportotionamong tho farms omploylng Japanoso aisfJhuton and mnrkotlngTliq investigation was nuinorizca uy 4 TImt tho porpotuuy or connet of legislature just after the anti- - Unuod aovblopmont of xhe30 Broat nndJapanese agitation in California In h specialized forma of agriculturalJOUS IDOO and tho report conststs of activfty must largely dopond noyer 20000 words excliislvo of a mass of labor comn from wluhoutof tabulated statistics ho tjnltod States and of such a naturo

Tho so called oriental problem n and cnnractor ag to conform to thothis Stato is thoroughly discussed In collmIoiI rcsllitlng from tho anpllca- -the report aad aftor soarchlng Inquiry tlon of that Jabor t th 0Brleututaiinto all economic nnd social conditions dcmandsfinds that some form of unsklllod labor 5 TImt Ul0 tranBjton from lhocapable of indopondeut subsistence WIoSl Rrowln poriod to tho dovoiopquick mobilization and entailing no ro- -

mont of apefcianzcd ngricnlturo in- -

sponsibihty upon tho employer for con- - crCBged tho ratlo of toropSrary holp ro- -tnuous employment is absolutely noc- -

rod b Ul0 fnrmJng datrjcta b0yondessary to Californias Hold orchard tle normal available supply within thoand vineyard industries if those vast g duri tho patioalBlot iaTgoiy inenterprises aro to bo porpotuntod and cren9inc populationdeveloped Tho roport is or tho opinion io Tho necessity tor providingthat tho Japanese are socopd only to tho number of tomruTniTy em--11 run n mnntinr thnen rnnitlrnmciits

An In tlm nmnlalnts heard airalnstthe Japanese in tho districts in whichthey nro employed in groat numborsthe report states that thoy ariso largoly from the attempts of tho laborersto secure highor wages It is pointedout however that there aro fow com-

plaints this character oxcopt in suchdistricts as are dominated by tho Japa-nese laborers by virtue of thoir num-bers and tho almost absolute dependonco of tho growers upon them for thoharvesting of the crops in tho shorttime tho seasons allow for tho workTho average duration of employmenton farms is less than two months intho year In this connection tho reportpoints out thnt tho Japanoso hnvo

shares

nrlBUNl

ployos engaged in tho harvest with em-ployment

¬

tho various poriodsothor thantho harvest is a vitalelement in the solution of farmproblem

STJOAB FntM BUT TKACTIVETiio week ondodi ycatorday was

a featureless ono far local sugaraffnirs woro concornod solos ofthe week wore not important andchanges In prices did not amount toenough to attract nttontion A notunoxpocted roport camo from Honokaawhoso manager Mr Gjerdrum is intown to tho effect its wouldbo ten tons about a thousandtons less than tho original estimate

learned that thoy can mako much moro Weather conditions during tho rlponingmoney out of contrast laboring than of tho crop in this region lod somoworking for daily wages Tho rough time ngo to forecasts that thoaverage wage in the fields orchnrds would not como up to ostimatos andand vinoyards Is givon nt approximate- - many of tho plantations botwoen Hiloly 1B0 per day Under tho contrnct and Kukuilmclo may bo a little unders stem tho laborers nro to make curlier expectations though tho loss isfrom 400 to 700 per Front not considered sorious Onomoa It islit it i 1 a - 1M fl lt - - - i11

Holt Estate lands at Walalua valued V l7 VI ii Tr gTXtransferred to W It iu cui huwwuj ui uin v

¬

lands

¬

subscribers

¬

no

¬

a

with

I

I

titi

a

a

of¬

to crowinc crops on Ground estimate

during

aa asTiio

cropthousand

nbleday

ViV

held by them under cash rontal and Tho stock market has gono throughin comparatively isolated instances to tho week very quiotly Holders ofactual ownership of tho land stocks appear to bo satisfiod with them

Japanese ambition says tho ro- - and buyorg nro not dlsposod to payport to progress iboyond mero servility more tho present pricos Offorsto tho piano of tho focttor class of of stock nro tnkon if tho price dropsAmerican workmen to own a homo to below daily quotations but thoro nrooporato industries to bo master and not no buyers out who aro disposod to boostslave is of tho samo quality as that tho figuresof the Italian tho Swiss tho Port- -

tho Russians with whom houguese I Icompetes and is in lino with the nrabi- - UNULAIMfcULtl I fcK Lib I

tion of that typo of Amoricnn who wljlnot compote with him Tho moment of letters romaiulng uncalled forthat this ambition is exercised that n tho general dolivory for tho weekmomont the Japanese ceases to bo an ending Juno 4 1910

ideal laborer Bonjamln Boht MartinDanOf the character of tho Japanoso BlgolowIYl MorricoMiss

laborer and his desiro for an American Bradloy MrsM Mariaeducation the roport speaks jn high Brown Mrs Mai- - Montague Missterms Of tho responsibility and roli- - colm Annioability of tno Japanese contractors Camp Mrs O J Morris Misssmall contractors siib ibosscs or labor- - Collier T Nancyvlb mo juiiurt Bimea uiai mi j uu uui uunningham Mrs Margan JHsscompare unfavorably with whltd mon Annio Norton leorgoin the samo stations As to tho in- - DalailSing Pollitz Odividual Japanese laborer as compared Daniel MrB Jack PoulsorrjMrslMagto tho typical class of whito laborers 2 nusnow in tho field and available for the DeoMrsThos President Marino

uin u mini uiwiwwa m uu uiu- - Kdnorton J u XJopartmontcri3ir1 j tImt of tho jBPanose- - Engilish Mrs Burt PunoonMiBsM

land owner or leaser It is stated that Flora Missho is found to bo of a very high type p0x Mrs JuliaTho investigators found thnt tho land Hampton Charlesowning Japancso desired to mako his jjhomo in this country thnt ho at once Hindlcy OWadopted Amorican customs and habits Hill Prank Bof life nnd closely follqwcd his Amor- - jjjjj Francis Blean neighbors In many ways Tho jjoran Jagents invariably reported courteous Hogg Misstreatment and hospitality when visit- - Hulbin Miss EttaIng these men KerriMTsIsaaey

rP nAl 1nf l I I tlvlu v ui wm- - jionaau

sent

Uiat

that

than

List

IfocEiarco A

BicoIioso Mr Mrs J

F

Schultz FSiam JimBlglsmiinil A

Stalny AlfredXivolvn

Hlnnl till- mIn its provinco to offer Buggostlons as Ijonsborg Miss LIIto the solution of tiio Jabor problem j8n Vnlnntlno II Bproscnled but merely to present tho UyMn Wallace Coptfacts as thoy havo 4iccn found aftor a Tlnf John Mrs Chns Frigid scrutiny of overythlng bearing McDonald KT WallenKOupon Japancso life In California Great Magill Miss Holon William Johnstress is laid upon tho infinite labor Wright MrsWthat was exponded in gathering the Packagesdata from which It Is drawn It Is Marks Lionelpointed out that virtunjly every farm Bussian LettersIn the districts where Jflpanesa nro Paplroiileli Nk o1iiiployod was personally visited thattho opinions of omployew of Japanese Bliloppa Alex

of mixed races and of mltriii Htarlkoru Demltrlrowh to laborers only worn interviewed Ondoroga V TpsJiqviicIi Origorland thoir view on the Japonoie filed Kernlavleli TiitlknffNwith thu liuresiii tlmt aside from tho Volsky WuMomariwpyiiu wh i mm nn mi iih bBh UNyi riinniaminiftvwr WVW MDkUl iwrd wf flllud out iliy Juiwiiixe and to thu liureaullint fluur roprtwuiting 41 jmr wntat His ttl Jhiuhw jtujiuliitlnii of thrfHi Tlivw Mrdi in Uuululi

seasonlabor

crops

iuBuiihi

ltoynoldsFWMrs David

SeodmanBarhott

8mlthCFitz2

8wariTcd

Mrs

AndrowltchIwanfay

BnrannvMlkHllexeluslyely

NedautfllloMI- -

Jlesne gak for sdvottim d InllersJOHHIlf 0 VUAVV

IMlmultr

am is todayu4 Jumnmmi wr irtrd with Ulumhtthlot UmIIs OtwUm cm

vw Cu iltttrMluiui awMrfMr tb DwrrlMM ItwiUMiy U IU mt HnuwntUiuuif ut uli ludivuluil In ufdur ritttimjgf tut tlifrtuM It Mjfii la mlbt lb iuvlijUur mlvMt bnw ut4 wb l4t utfmim fjt Itllim but k wblb t find Ihvir mjh iu4ji Vtr l by ll immki nN

mium a to lb bkrHtr ud woiin u Miiilb A Iu 144 iMM tvf Ilnt lif ut lb liirl Jhiuii i4nl wall

aLLffi tJikMMfAdktJA

i

M

jtSiskuM

a4

ittl Tj

i

rr- -

Mlsquotor a False Witness

Evoryono Talking of Liquor

Mort Oats Dangerous Sign

Noar Sardines for Noar Nothln

A Newly Created Oobu Scene

Where Is Dam Patterson

JTho Bulletin yesterday gave as a discocry to be placed in black type a

statoment by The Advertiser that reasonable men did not claim that prohi ¬

bition prohibited Tlio Bulletin quotes this from The AdvertiserIt is found on reading of bis Lanes argument that the

wholo of bis opposition to prohibition is based upon tho old argu-ment

¬

that prohibition will not prohibit Wo assure him that noreasonable man ever claimed that it did

And tho Bulletin ignores this sentence which immediately followed thoone quoted

Somo think however thnt it begins to prohibit and will iftried long enough complete tho job In tho light of statisticsshowing in two years of increasing prohibition a decrease of ahundred and sixty six million dollars int tho liquor production intho United States isnt this old nrgument now repeated by MrLano based upon a misapprehension of tho facts f

Tho Bulletins misquotation of Tho Advertiser is almost as violent asthat of the man who used a well known Bible text to prove that the Blblosays There isnood by clipping off tho first part of tho Psalmistssonlcnce Tho fool hath said in his heart Thcro is no God

Whnt is to bo thought of that vondorful Bulletin mind which can drawfrom an ndmjjsion that prohibition docs not completely prohibit tho conelusion that prohibition promoters are hypocrites and glory init The processes of a mind liko that rcquiro the attention of either thoalienist tho school teacher or tho reform school Tho alienist would trivotreatment the teacher would try to educate wbilo tho reform Bchool man wouldcall attention to a list of ten commandments given somo thousands of yearsago each ono of them being still prohibition that doesnt prohibit and howould call special attention to the ono about bearing false witness

Did you ever before see n subject so tako hold of a community as prohi-bition

¬

as taken hold of this town It scorns to dominate everything I gotto discussing the toil of Baileys comet with a friend the other day and howondered whether there would bo prohibition hero when tho comet comesagain Next thing I knew a reference in talking with another acquaintance tomy poor understanding of tho fact that a Chicago professor had separatedand studied an ion of electricity brought forth a query as to what I thoughtwonld be tho Kakaako vote on July 20 I cm afraid it is too much to hopefor but I wish I could think tho election of July 20 would sottle tho questionnntil tbo comet comes again by which timo I expect to be independent lofeither prohibitory or licenso laws But on the morning of July 27 wo shallread in Tho Advertiser together with tho nows of the result of tho plebiscitethe new of preparations for fighting tho issuo some more no matter whichway it goes

Jim Oat is tho nuthor of a new sign It hangs in tbo store of Oat Mossman and reads We will pay 500 for 1809 Lincoln pennies Oat getsa lot of fun out of this cruel joke Tho other day a customer looked at thesign and then hurried home Ho returned soon with a Lincoln penny andoffered it for 500 Where are tho other 1008 pennies blandly nsked thoauthor of the Bign It took Oat somo timo to explain thnt ho considered 1009pennies worth 1909 and would bo glad to buy them for 500 Tho Bign isstill there I imagine it is a sort of mental balm a nerve soother and allround good humor excitative When it is too hot or things go wrong orbusiness is too rapid and Oat feels tirod mad peeved and disposed to wonderwith Hamlet whether ho ought to continue to bo or not ho looks up at thosign romembers tho man who offered tho 1909 penny and becomes liko oneof Dickens characters ono vast substantial smile and all seems rightagain

Tho other day I saw a Itussian hurrying home with thrco loaves of breadand a couplo of tins of sardincB This it appears is the favorite food of thoRussians Thoy buy tho sardines for fivo conts n tin Think of sardines caughtprepared tinned with patent key opener fqr each tin packed in cases shippdacross the continent and then across tho ocean and sold at retail for fiveocnts a can here And yet the Russians are said to complain of tho high costof living Tho label on tho tin says thnt tho sardines are packed somewherein Maine and that they are packed in cotton seed oil Isnt it a remarkablefact that by tho ounce fish caught preserved and tinned and shipped fivoor six thousand miles is cheaper bore than the fish that swarm in all thowaters of tho ocean horenbouts I dont know what theso near sardines arjout how can they bo worth less than five cents a tin

Whero is Nuunnu Dam Patterson Tho dam is finished now or practicallyso and tho water is rising rapidly in tho now lake But Patterson hisapparently faded away It is interesting to recall what ho accomplished Asa result of his howling prediction that tho dam would wash away the Territory spent several tbouFnml dollars in employing a new consulting engineer tolook ocr tho job and pronounce it on the whole a fine one

Tho Island of Onhu has a now lake a new bit of scenery nnd n nowBset material as woll as scenic It is Lou Whitchouse lake or Patterson laker Marston Campbell hike or Nuuifnu dam lake or whatever you choose to

call it and it it already big enough to float a ship Up Nuunnu Yalloy behindtho biggest dam over constructed in the Territory lies this new body of waterBetween the picturesque ranges which enclose tho valley It extends from thodam up tbo bed of tho Nuuanu ttruam towards tho Pali If Jupiter Pluviusdoes his share as well as Lou Whitchouso aud Ms cosmopolitan laborers havodone theirs the lake will soon be between sixty and ulghty ueros lu extent nndthe suggestion wot made yixtenluy thnt If tho yneht Hawaii does not wintho trsmpaolfle moo the thould be luiulod up Nuunnu Valley ami put on thisnew unnamed lake There ought tu be a Niiuami boat club to make use ofthis fin i uew body of writer

NO IlaUBKB QIVKN OUTA llttJs mi riding on llrookln trolloysur the other Jay lindsred Die

conductor Imlffaw lluw old am yew little glrlf U awrlwi BJKryktllli br for gfaa iurM4 Ur ll fur a wmuomI then xilwl nmt mfont ilroppod two Miort wnu1 Into the oMjusters uUtuUd nb Mutjtt barpurw awl dwtiuroly riUii You Lv jtwr 8r atrf uty iiiU r wyOWHI 11WMiyB IAI

lltjlM DrTr li uliuuslly wit Ut HMr lit MUM pifilutl WiUMtMfa gfttuUibtf i ii ult uCtJtm vt kU 4lw Aiu what AaU I UlV BWfm UbiU Ilrtw wWm Mttsii MIihi la few jw tUi t imUiwUmk uvl -- Wkstll yt it kuui Tbo Vtt Iking tk W tk fuwor

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE TUESDAY JUNE 7 1910 -SE- MI-WEEKLY

THE ADVENTURES OFJOSHER BLUFFEM

The Power Behind the Throne or How to Be

Happy Though Handsome

If you can imagine the elegance of n Brummcl the politeness of n Chesterfield tho grace of an Apollo the beauty of a Narcissus the cloqucneo of nWebster tho wit of a Swift and tho suavity of n Lorrin Andrews all combined

in ono man who to tho above mentioned qualities unites superb statesman-

ship

¬

infinlto patience vaulting ambition and a stern sense of duty if Isay you can imagine all this you may have a faint idea of what ho is like

though tho picture still falls for short of tho reality Ho needs all tho graces

virtues and accomplishments mentioned too

especially tho suavity and patience for he istbo guide monitor admonlshcr and nurse ofa mayor

Thcro now thats dono Having said

about him tho things ho insisted I Bhould

say Ill now proceed to toll tho truth insofarat least as my natural limitations will pormit

I saw at once whon I called to pay myrespects to tho Mayor that Hizzoncr was byno means tho most important porsdn in thoroom Ho lacked poiso and exhibited anxietyand whenever ho spoke ho glanced anxiouslyat bis Private Sccrotary as if for approvalIt was rarely accorded though tbo elegantboing who gavo tone to tho executivo officesdid not frown but ho assumed a sad andpcnBive air as if his burden was almost morethan he could bear I saw at onco that be wastho victim of a great secret sorrow or agnawing remorse I was not sure just which

An ntmosphero of emptiness pervadedtho executivo offices and tho two solemn oc ¬

cupants rattled around as if trying vainly tofill tho void that so plainly oxistcd I learnedafterward that it vas supposed to tako threeTooms to contain all tho dignity of Hizzoncrbut that somebody bad miscalculated and pro-

vided two and a half rooms too many for thepurpose Tho desperate efforts of tho PrivateSecretary to mako up tho deficiency con-

stituted¬

ono of tho causes of his weary ex-

pression¬

Tho Mayor was gazed admiringly at hisown lei wreathed photograph whon I enteredand he paid no attention to me But thoPrivate Secretary arose greeted mo courte-

ously¬

and inquired as to my business Handing him my card I statod that I had comoto pay my respects to tho Mayor and tomako a little quiet investigation

Ah yes I see he replied politelyI am the Mayors keeper beg pardon I

moan his Privato Secretary and you may pay your respects to me I transactall tho Mayors official business you know Ho draws tho salary

Ho carefully dusted off a chair with his handkerchief it was a lilachandkerchief heavily perfumod waved mo gracefully to a seat handed me acampaign cigar flicked an invisible spot of dust off bis beautiful trousers andsat down himself- -

airNow what do you wish to investigate he inquired with a diplomatic

Woll I replied if you will be so kind you might tell mo what thoMayor is for

Do you know ho said that is a question that I have often askedmyself and I must confess that I dont know the answer

Hizzoncr had been showing symptoms of nervousaess andbo interruptedtho conversation Tho Mayor runs tho city and county government ho saidwith an attempt at dignity

You forgot yourself Joe said tho Private Secretary severely Howoften must I tell you not to speak unless youre spoken to Littlo mayorsshould bo seen and not heard Besides you dont know what youre talkingabout You dont really think do you that you do run the city and countygovernment

Why or yes of courso I do replied Hizzoncr rather doubtfully Ido doat I

You dont run anything Joe except a rented automobile and you dontrun that any too well I wish I could mako you understand that your businessis to do politics pay official calls draw your salary and let mo run this officeto suit myself Youre always interfering with things that are nono of yourbusiness Get wise cant you or if you cant then get as wise as you can

Turning again to me the Private Secretary apologized for what ho termedtho unfortunnto conduct of his protege Ive been doing ray best ho said

to teach him how to act in company but I havent made much impressionas yet

I wish youd explain to mo tho idea of county government here I saidand why it exists what its for and of what it consists

Thats pretty hard replied tho Mayors nurse but Ill tell you hewI look nt it Tho idea of county government is to provido as many jobs aspossible for as many voters as possible Tho more jobs you know the moro

voters who will support tho party that can supply the pic It exists becausetho people are weak enough to stand for it Tho public you know is a sheepusually though I must admit that sometimes it is a goat And one must knowhow to wield tho shears propcrlj As to what its for I havent tho remotestidea It consists principally of Me tho supervisors and the Mayor

You ought to name mo first interrupted tho Mayor Im the head oftho government

I thought I told you not to speak unless youre spoken to Joe saidtho Private Secretary sharplv Dont you think youd better go out for nubile

I dont know whero to go replied Hizzoncr plaintivelyI dont care whero jou go so you go somewhere But you might go and

pay an official callI guess Ill go and call on tho Governor said the Mayor rising and

putting on his high silk hatWalt almost shrieked tho Privato Secretary in horror as he looked

at the Mayors feet Youve got on your yellow shoes Chango them atonce Aud havo you got n clean handkerchief Como hero and let mo fix

your tie Cant 1 over teach you how to tie a four-in-han- Better washyour fnco before you go out too Bo sure you get back by thrco ocloek anddont make any had breaks this time I dont want to havo to go andapologize for you

The Mayor went out hurriedly ainl tho Private Secretary turned to me witha weary air Buoli lot of trouble as 1 lmo with thnt man he mild

patiently- - You en nt Imagine Hut Im making omo linnrtvHlon I bollexeHes not as bud n he uted to bo but bo will Insist on trying to butt intoulfuirw of glut without my priulwlon

Hut illwoners nothing Ilk the trouble tho miHirvlir are to me Whytliey tiro pmlty utwly n m si tint county ntloruoys oflluiw ami wliuu oneUw wld that bo bus Mid about til tbr U to Mjr WbB I Irst took bargof tlii Uy mid winity goveniwMit 1 tried to make tomelbinti of th suwrviMrs 1 lri4 u bii tUw fruw uuklttK Wair iliuww of tbmlvtMi tbHMutate UIwmm but I Utwt Uug Mmo kIvkh tUw tip M Utlm Why ile

yim kiwwf ilMjr mm nwys iuurfvrlng with wy pImm llm Iva bom towork bimJ vUo4 lb imvlag Mil r tko Unyor Ui it mmuhnU to tbo m

tUloijouJ now Iboy sr trylon tu o it ovor tks vl I wight toll you

why Ivor wwt u 4o lUt but Its Mow mmoI Hut m uot rip yt- - You

wight Mfc Arllttir Browo r Vro4 Mlhtrtoa U loll If pm wim to oYou 4m I mww to Ub ywur joo I rrMik4 UototlvolyHmmm ll 1 bots n j uu kuum li4 Un IlltsU U

rotary as ho carefully touched np his classic nose with a scented powder puffYost I said interrogativelyYes he repeated affirmatively But dont tell anybody You know

wo are to have another election next NovemberAnd thenWell this city and county has got to have a Mayor to draw upon that

three thousand a year hasnt ittOh I sec I replied intelligently You figure thnt Mayor Fern will

bo reelected and that you will be fblo to bold your present jobTho Privato Secretary looked at mo almost scornfully as lie sniffed delicately

at a bottlo of smelling saltsNot oxactly ho replied Mayor Fern will not bo reelected Tho

Democrats need a good strong man to head their county ticketI suppoBO thats true I repliedOf course its true They need a strong man a man who is very popular

extraordinarily handsome a shrewd politician a clever orator who knows howto wear his clothes and what clothes to wear on nil public and private occasionsa man with an unusual amount of brains and with a thorough diplomatictraining

Thats a pretty hard bill to fill I remarkedYes ordinarily it would be said tho Privato Secrotary but it is not

impossible to find tho man In fact if it woro not for my natural modesty Ithink I could namo him myself And the Privato Secretary blushed bo- -

comlnglyAha I cried as a great light broko upon me Yon arc tho manBluffem he said feelingly I congratulate you upon your perspicacity

though I almost believe that you do mo too much honor Almost but not quiteAb as mattor of fact between you and me Bluffem I have already decided

upon tho pollcios I shall follow when I am elected Of course I havent beennominated yet but that is only a mattor of form and I havo my speech ofacceptance already written Would you liko to hear it

I told him that I did not bolievo I had the timeSomo other timo thon bo said Ill tell you Bluffem when Im mayor

theros going to bo a great change around bore Im going to havo pink ribbonsonthe back of the Mayors chair and Ill mako tie supervisors wear swallow-tail

¬

coats at evening meetings of tho board and Ill havo a privato secretaryof my own who wont have anything to do but to brush my clothes and shinemy shoes and well havo ladles nights in tho council hall onco a month andDan Logan will havo to cut off his whiskers and Jim Quinn if bos elected asI dont think ho will bo will havo to supply tho Mnyor with frco automobileridos and oh therell bo a lot of changes You so- - I used to bo in thodiplomatic corps and I know how things ought to bo dono Theros not enoughdignity nttached to this job at present but thoroll bo dignity to burn whenI am Mayor

Feeling that tho atmosphoro of tho placo was becoming too rarificl orme I rose to go The Private Secretary shook hands with me giving mo thehigh handshako so high that I nearly dislocated my shoulder trying to reachit dismissed mo with a bow learned while ho was at Washington and as Ileft tho room turnod to tbo mirror and began to curl his handsome mustacheAs I went down tho stairs I passed the Mayor sitting disconsolately on oneof the Bteps and wondering what would happen to him for having overstayedhis time

4

v

Small Talks

NIGEL JACKSON O yes I also ran

THE YOUNG- BOVINE Every dollars an argument

A1EXANDEE HUME FOED They call mo ukulele nowJOE COHEN An antisaloon fight might havo been a winner but not

prohibitionCHARLEY CLAEK I could have worked for tho prohibitionists But I

am engaged thank you

FEANK KBUGEB Charles Hustaco will bo next mayor of HonoluluWaki and liana and you will see

CONTRACTOR WHITEHOUSE Bussian laborers are harder workers thanalmost any others I have tried all and know

BLAOKSTONE JE Ashford might be circuit judge itoday but for thofact that Cooper may soon be on the supremo bench

JOHN SMITH Tho prohibitionists ought to apply Napoleons remark thattho Almighty is on the side of the strongest battalions In politics make itread best precinct hustlers

ANDERSON GRACE Of course I respect Nicola ns a man who has somocapacity in tho escaping line But just let him try to appear in three or fourplaces at once as I have done

SUPERVISOR AYLETT I want that expectoration ordinance postponeduntil I understand it and can vote intelligently on it Whats that a questionof longevity Ill look that word up

KANE A peculiar feature of this liquor discussion is that the entireargument is devoted to the question of which is the best way to suppress liquorDoes this mean that everybody agrees that it ought to be suppressed

10 BUILD IN

CIICENTEB

Plans for Improvements Between

Fort Street and Young

Hotel

Plans for tho bottorment of propertybetween Hotel nnd King street andFort and the Ewa lino of Bishop Parkacross from tho Alexander Young build-ing

¬

are being discussed by tho reprosqntathes of tho Brewer Estate whichif carried out will add materially to theappearance of tho big block and willbe a long step toward the improve ¬

ment of what is regarded as ono of thomost valuable collections of businessproperties in tho city

The building nt present occupied bythe Bulletin is to bo razed accordingto theso tentative plans and a fluebuildiug erected thereon as the BrowcrKstnto has acquired n fifty year leasoon tho property Negotiations havobeon under way between the cstuto andvarious corporations with reference toa lease of the now building or a leaseon n portion of the Mime but no nego-

tiations hao yet been closed Thonew building will bo modern in everyiwpect and will he tlenigiied to meettliu requlromcnt of whatever businessIt to mako its home there

In order tu take up a lot of valu-able wnste property back of tho Boston ijiock mo Ionian iiiook una tuutow uviiuploil by Demon Smith

Thrum JiooUtorti Honolulu Photo- -

Supply Coniiwiiy MiimifueturiTi HhoolUuiiiHiuy Whitney Urli plum oreolio iieinif uiMUMOti wwit i wmo anevYway will lis run fioui Kluir itroflt

Iiink the Km lliif of UUbop Iurk tolloioi sou u Miti or iu Anminwllill omy liuvn tu U uiijltl

Willi I lil rr uikUH0 tbtf Wtjiruimrty tMl of lU stufM ONtlBtiwill bf built up m4 rHodd from thoumlu bulhliutft Ikk to Ikt ftllsy TbotuiiiMit ttuiif aiuug rri suvm orerow4l for reow owl trM t44ilioIII ll r lMiNtN lnt U locniin

li4lb iiiiniiuu Mill tui Urs

sura but with increasing valuo to allthe properties and enlargements of alllines of business tho money expendedit is calculated will bring good returns

t

Everybody In Honolulu Is Eligiblev

Old people stooped with sufferingMiddlo age courageously fightingYouth protesting impatientlyChllQron unablo to explainAll in misery from their kldnoysOnly a little backache firstComes when you catch a coldOr when you strain tho backMany complications followUrinary disorders diabetes Bright

diseaseDoans Kidney Pills cure backacheCure ovcry form of kidney HisB T White Pearl City Oahu Hono-

lulu¬

Hawaii says I am ninety twoyears of age and I suffered from back ¬

ache and Judney disease for eight yeanI havo given Doans Backache KidnePills a fair trial and havo been sogreatly benefited that I cheerfully rec-

ommend¬

them to other kidney suf-ferers

¬

Doans Backache Kidney Pills aresold by all druggists and storekeepersat 0 conts per box six boxes 260or will be mailed on receipt of price bytho Holllster Drug Co Honolulu whole ¬

sale agonts for tho Hawaiian IslandsBcmembor the name Doans and

tako no substitute

0 HENRY DIED IN

NEW YORK YESTERDAY

NUW YOItK fJuno 0 Sydney Tortor widely known umlor tho name ofO Henry the nutlior dlod hero yester ¬

day at a rult of nn operation- - Howas ii very jtopulnr contributor to pftHr and wuuiulut mid was author Of

iniril wll known bimk

CUSTOMS COURT STARTING

WUIIlNOrOK Juno 0 The InlUlKttttvi ooil of tuttow H10U will

ttflu ti i i Tut4y- - it baa twoliuiili aut iwvntyfWo est on ifluhtt

JMilujfO I Kiilsobiofl l ftuilly I itiKrouttftsl

i lief r

HELP THE EARTHAND THE

EARTH WILL HELP YOU

Wo make fertilizer for every productland put on the market only what baaI been oroven oC real value Lot usI know the purpose for which ycu wantI sell helps ana we will supply you

Address us

iPacific Guano and Fertilizer CoHonolulu H T

Tlieo H Davies Co

Limited

iAgents for Fre Life andMarine Insurance

Horttiern Assurance Company

OF LONDON FOR FIRE ANDTTFFL Established I81

Aceumulatta Funds fil87B000

OF LIVERPOOL FOR MARINECapital fil00OOO0

Reduction of ratesImmediate Payment of Claims

Theo H Davies Co LtdAGENTS

Tie Famous Tourist Route of thoWorld

ifn Connection With the CanaJian-Aus-- -i rHitn Tin Tirtrffltrail an utcaiuauiF -- -

IssuedTO ALL POINTS IN THE UNITED

STATES AND CAWAUA viaVICTORIA and VANCOUVER

Mountlan ResortsBBANFF GLACIER MT STEPHENS

AND FRASfcK lawiuhEMPRESS LINE OF STEAMERS

T7ROM VANCOUVERTickets to All Points in Japan China

India and Around trie wormiFor Tickets and general mtormation

--Apply to

THEO H DAVIES CO LTD

Agents Canadian Australian S S LineCanadian Pacific Railway

iCastle Cooke Co LtdHonolulu T H

Commission Merchants

Sugar Factors

wa Plantation CoWnialua Agricultural Co LtdWaimoa Sugar Mill CoApokaa Sugar Co LtdFulton Iron Works of St LouisBlake Steam PumpsWestons CentrifugalsBabcock Wilcox BoilersGreens Fue EconomizerMarsh Steam PumpsMatson Navigation Co

Planters Line Shipping Co

Kohala Sugar Co

Dillf flf UfllflB8EMIIbI Ul liEAWWUIl

Ilncorporated Under tho Law or meTerritory of Hawaii

1FAZD UF OAPITAIi bbuuuouuuBmTTTlPTTTH i iuuvuuuulOHDIVIDED PROFITS 10201780

OFFICERSCharles M Cooke ResidentP C Jone Vice PresidentV V Sfararlane2na Vice PresidentC H Cooke uunierC Hustace Jr Assistant CasnierT B Damon Assistant Cashier

f B Damon SecretaryDIRECTORS Chas M Cooke P C

Hones F W Macrarlane E F BishopBE D Tenner J A McCandless C HDAtherton C H Cooke

Strict attention given to all branchesof Banking

lnnD irortDiNO ronr rniBJBTIOOHKBBCIAIi A2TD SAVINGS DE- -

vAsmmrsa

fcastle Sc Cooke Co Ltd

Life and FireosuranGegents

iOenera Znioranco AceutA representingI New Knjfland Mutual Lira JniuraneeUotasny or jMfton

Anna tire iniuraoca uoATTEHTIOrf

W hove just UMeplml the Agentiror mri MD1

ifUt Prt0ter VtdHmitm ot tlVhwm sr wntm

Thru v ir ill ummb iho IU1J CfBWWURf la V FttUKW- -

Edmond Alan Center a Honolulu

High School student has successfully

passed physical nnd mental examina-

tions for admission to tru United Statesnaval aendomy and will ontor Annapo-

lis in August as a cadet from HawaiiYoung Center is eighteen years of ageand gets the over his principnl Robert Purvis who failed to passtho physical examination Mrs Contcrtho young mans mother received thofollowing letter yesterday from Delegate Kalnnianaole

Committee on tho Territories Housowasn

ington May 1010My Dear Mrs Contcr take

advising you that your sonsuccessfully passed tho examination

for entrance tne naval academy onuRobert Purvis his principal has

failed in his physical examination yourson will therefore be admitted to theacademy about July

wish congratulato you yoursons excllont showing and am veryglad that his ambition that ho Bliouldenter tho navy Beoms In way to bepromptly realized Very truly yours

Delegate Congross

Young Center when boy dovelopedtalent modeling small yachts sail

ing vessels and warships and frequentlyho snileil floet of these nuninturocraft in tho harbor He attracted thoattention Commander now CaptainPond USN then command of thoTJnitod States station tug IroquoisCaptain Pond felt that tho boy had

IS

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE TUESDAY JUNE 7

HONOLULU HIGH SCHOOL BOY

PASSES FOR NAVAL

appointment

of Representatives u sD a 23

inns

tons

1

I to onI

a

toa

n or

a

ofin

MOTT SiTH

SOME PEEVED

19lOSEMIWEEKLY

ACADEMY

Considers Discharge of Myhre

Act of Discourtesy TowardBoard of Health

From Saturdays AdvertiserPresident Mott Smitb of tho board of

health is not at all pleased ovor thosudden action of the board of super-

visors¬

Thursday night in canning MilkInspector Myhre In fact he is con-

siderably¬

peeved over it Ho considersthat his department has been most cav ¬

alierly treated by tho sudden super ¬

visors and that past favors on his parthave been rewarded with ibut scantcourtesy on tho part of the city andcounty tatners

Mr Myhre has ibeen entirely satisfactory as milk inspector said MrMott Smith nnd tho news that ho hasbeen lot out came aa a distinct anddisagreeable surprise to mo It seemsto mo that something might have beensaid to me about it hoforo any suehaction was taken When tne questionof transferrins dispensary work to Doctor Sexton of the board of health aroseI consulted the supervisors about italthough they were mignty slow in taK-ins any action And now they go towork and fire Myhre pho though paidhis salary by the city and county isreally a member of tho sanitary department of the board of health workingunder Doctor Duncan the food inspec-tor

¬

The situation is rather complicatedDoctor Duncan is the employe of boththe federal government and tho Terri-tory

¬

Myhre was Doctor Duncans subordinate and the two were working inharmony As a matter of fact DoctorDuncan has the right to inspect nndexamine all milk if he wants to

Tho idea has foeen that tho Terri-tory

¬

and the city and county shouldwork in harmony in such matters butthis unexpected action on the part ofthe supervisors does not look to momuch as If they were trying to workin harmony with us Understand I amnot saying anything against Mr Rich ¬

ards the new man appointed Iby thoboard of supervisors Ho may bo allright for all I know for I dont knowhim nt all But I do think that if anychange were contemplated I shouldhavo been consulted about it first

The truth of tho matter appears tobe as nearly as can be gathered thatMyhre was nred largely becauso Doetor Mackall did not opprovo of himMnckall had been klckinc about Myhrefor some time although ho did not havoanything to say against him along thelines of efficiency except that ho couldnot cet alone with Myhre tnat tne jatter intcrfcrrcd with his plans andstirred up considerable discord amongtne dairymen

it is cald tnat pontics aiso naa agood deal to do with Myhre s loss ofhis job Somo of the politicians didnot look upon Myhre as a man liableto win many votes for them at thocomimr election Loean was tho onlymember of the board of supervisors whonn AnnyiAfl t n Ma hnlnrr Inf ntif findwhen the matter came up Thursdaynight Logan according to his own state-ment saw that he could do nothing andtherefore acquiesced as gracefully aspossible in what he saw to iho tho In-

evitable¬

Tho hasty though long calculated ac-

tion of tho supervisors In firing Myhrois liable to lmva the effect of creatinga breach in the already nomowbatdrained relations between tho super-visors and the board of health-

Cleo M IlobeiU of WHUMo 0oliim to be the only inniiliui heir offlwrge WfliblnitUn n1 wbiiU wmxvtnto give him tb g0Aft00 due the Waihfugton 4Blf wliitb ftUr loui ImiHsr uinK for

PILES CUIIBO IN 6 TO M PAYSiAOOINTMUrh U uarnfe1

to wu eny m of Helling HllwimtJlnB nt Protruding HI In 6 ta1 4 dyf r mMy rWwuUd Mm byHARM MRDICINE O feint ImkU 8 A

HH

BPJR JH me 1 Jr iH i

EDMOND ALAN CENTER

unusual ability in designing vesselsand suggested that his career bo thatof shipbuilder but lator having takena model of a warship with him to Wash ¬

ington ho said that tho placo for youngContor was tho navy

Young Center is tho son of tho lateDavid Center who was a loading sugarplantation manager up to tho timo ofhis death a fow years ago

Tho new naval middy is a momborof tho Myrtle Boat Club and of thoclubs freshman crew and an activemombor of tho Hawaii Yacht Club

LUST ESCAPE

IS CAUGHT

Porto Rican Who Got Away

Yesterday Jailed atMidnight

From Saturdays AdvertiserLouis Martini a Porto Rican prisoner

under sentence for a year who es-

caped from tho prison gang at ThomasSquaro yesterday morning was captur¬

ed at midnight by Officer Minvielloat Kukui and Vineyard streets Minviello was put on tho case as soon astho escape was reported and fromknowledge of the Porto Rican a habitswas ablo to trace and land him Mar-tini

¬

will not bo given any more suchgood chances to get away tho escapehaving been his second one

The escape occurred yeBtorday morning at Thomas Square when tho mandecided that picking up loaves thofavorite recreation of prisoners was toohnrd labor and skinned out He disap-peared quickly down a small lane thatloads off tho pack to Kakaako withQuard Jones tho same from whom hohad formorly escaped in full chaseafter

Martini evidently got ou a rig nndmado good time divesting himself ofjtis superlluous clotnes as Uu went inoguard first picked up a coat whin badfallen bv tho wayside and next encountered a woman gazing oiriiitly atn pair of number nines which had beencast from tho flyine feet

Tho coat and blioes now representMartini at tho jail He had promisedJailer Asch to bo good and as ho hadvoluntarily given himself up to a policeofficer ho was permitted a little morefreedom than ho should havo had

Special Officer Minviello soon succeeded in tracing tho mans movemontsup to ono oclock yesterday afternoon

At olovon in tho morning a fow hoursafter he had escaped tho man had mado

the city undetected Day beforo yes-terday

¬

accordinc to information re- -

colvod by Miuvielie E Lopez loft thojail Jiaving sorvod his time takingwith him from Martini a suit of clotheswhich was given into tho possession oftho woman that Martini had beon livingwith i

When Martini arrived in Iwiloi yes-terday ho hunted up another PortoRican named Aniceto Sunrez whom hosont to the womans house in Palamaafter tho clothes At ono oclock homot Suarcz in tho Ahana block neartho Vineyard camps

TGHERLEY MY

NOT PRACTISE

Must Not Treat Lepers atSan Franoisco Isolation

Hospital

the

SAX PRANCISO Muy 20 Tho hos-

pital¬

and health commit toe of tho boardnf supervisors yesterday sustained thoaction of tho board of health in rofuiinjfto allow Dr John Atchorloy to pructlio nt tho lopcr colony nt tho InolutlouIfoiitul and will so recommend to thoboard at tlio mooting nuict Tuesdayufternoon

The action wu Ukwt upou rtpreMUtatlons by Ilia oflleeM of tlio board ofliMilth Uiot Attflnrley without buviibeen urtmllUd to jmutsa In tiU listswa HdMinUtrliig to tlw lfri rAwly tho liiKrJInt et wlilrii lis -

t iIIhhwm m hIw mm tiw ralftt at lUr froM tU tAtmil of

IImu1h1i wriMwi Hi Okki ut PvUmUrti MyUH AItnrWy U4 mm lUnsHfltM4 in Mm Onkit hum AyluM MM 4UfUU intltutt tw m nt mt

CENSUS HUMSilriE WTHHELD

Dr Clark States That Part of

thp Enumeration WorkMust Be Reviewed

It will bo at least three months intho opinion of Dr Victor Clark beforetho census returns from Hawaii can bomado public Tho work has been con ¬

siderably delavod on account of inaccuracies which must bo corrected andDoctor Clark states that fully fifty porcent of tho returns must bo reviewedboforo they can bo sent on to Wash-ington

¬

Hawaii says Doctor Clark of- -

fen n hardor problem to tho censusman than any othor American Terri-tory

¬

unless possibly it is Alaska andthere tho difficulties aro principallyphysical Hero wq havo so many dlfferont nationalities to deal with andmust havo so many different ngonts totnlk with tho various races

Doctor Clark states that tho enumera ¬

tion has been finished with tho excep ¬

tion of some of Iho iptaplo living infnrming districts who havo not yetbeen Tcachod Tho work will bo concluded soon nnd tho returns sont toWashington probably boforo tho end ofthis month Doctor Clark expects togo to Washington himsolf oarly in July

ARE READY TO AID

Allan Herbert Enthusiastic

Plans for Big PanamaExposition

at

Chronicle May 20 Allan Horberta capitalist and oldtimo resident of llonolulu is in tho city and is takingmuch interest in tho exposition

If tho fair is hold hero he saidyesterday It should bo a great helpto us in Hawaii Many of tho visitorshero will run over thero aftorward toSCO tho sights of tho tropics On thisaccount I feel euro that Hawaii ifasked would do tho liandsome thingby way of a subscription to tho fifthmillion Hawaii you know is tho rich ¬

est country por capita in tho worldThere is money to givo away and whentho object is worthy our people re-spond

¬

quickly

HOW WALTER METHIS CHARMING BRIDE

SAN rRANOISCO May 28 Whethor tho Walter Dillinghams will arrivein timo to sail today on tho liner Sierrafor Honolulu is tho question that isagitating their friends here It hasbeen announced that their honeymoonwas cut Bliort becauso tho bridegroomsbusiness intorests in tho Islands com-pelled

¬him to hasten back and sail toy

this particular boat But tho Dilling-hams

¬

can not bo found in town Societyis longing to recoivo tho popular pair

with open arms and fete them appro-priately

¬

Aro tho Dillinghams dolayador aro they desirous of escaping thoeffusive welcome that awaits themf

A decided sensation was caused thisspring when tlio popular Honolulu manarrived here announced his engagomentto tho Chicago heiress Miss LouisoGaylord and loft for Italy whoro hlaweddinj took placo a few weoks since

To Miss Maudo OConnor must gotho credit of being tho diroct instru ¬

ment of providence which brought thoDillinghams within tho sphere of eachothers fascinations The Chicago girlknow Miss OConnor and was enter-tained

¬

by her whon hero en route totho Islands

Miss OConnor wroto to Dillinghamnsking him to call on Miss Gaylord ifho cared to but made tho request arather indifferent ono

A prophetic spirit moved Dillinghamto call and tho result justified his judg-ment

¬

Later on when ho ibeenmo ongaged he wroto Miss OConnor thatho hnd called and seemed to caro de-cidedly

¬

about doing soWhen witnesses for tho civil mar

riage of the Dillinghams in Italy worodemanded tho benefit of tho OConnorsbeing a numerous family was againdemonstrated Miss Cornolla Isabeland Ella OConnor nre spending somomonths in Italy and although Dilling-ham had novcr mot thorn thoy knewMiss Gaylord and with pleasuro ap¬

pended their signaturesTho earlier dsys of tho honeymoon

woro spont at tho beautiful villa of thobrides undo John Mitchell near Flor ¬

ence and it was planned to remainabroad for somo timo longor had notmatters compelled n hasty return

But aro tl Dillinghams in town un ¬

beknown to their friends or havo thoychanged their plnnsT

i

OIIAMBERLAINO COLIO CHOLERAAMD DIABRHOBA REMEDY

When you fail to provide your family with a bottle of ChamborlainsColic Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy atthis toaion of the year you aro neglecting them as bowel complaint is sureto bo prevalent and It is too dangerousa malady to bo trifled with This Isopeelally true if there nro children inthu family A dote or two of thin remedy will placo tho trouble within contra nd iierhiiM mv h lift or tiunt a doctor bill It ban never beenkuowu to full vn in ih iil uvrand dunuiirouj eatM nnd Hi cftt it notbtyiimi lie inenj of any ens Perby all drutfglili Utiflii 8wlti OuLtd HKfNli tat IfurjilLtfi

trmm mum unHynwmipmOut at Uw wwnlfti ut Itlux VrlMj

MMIjjtrf ill Urcu bM MtifrMM MMlHildlu4 114 pMpbj Id til unsfMrMy

VICE PRESIDENCY DOESNOT SHELVE SHERMAN

Branches forth as Leading Stumper of His

Party Friend of Taft andCannon

By Ernest O Walkor

Mail Special to Tho Advertiser

WASHINGTON May S3 VicePresident Tames Schoolcraft Shormau iswinning golden opinions in Washingtonand olsowhoro for tho vory loyal andpfirsistently loyal support ho is givingMsono official superior Prosldcnt TaftIn the history of Presidents nnd Vice- -

Presidents during tho Inst fifty yearsthere is no lnstiinco whero a Vlco-Prosl- - that there should bo no break in thodont hns maintained moro cordial reintions with tho Whito Houso or whoro hohas labored moro nggrosslvoly to promoto tho popularity of tho Whito Housooccupant

Although tho spring is yot young thoIVlco Prosidont hnB boon out ou sovornlspeaking trips whoro ho is discussingpolitics pure nnd siinplo nnd tolling thopeople tho kind cf man thoy havo forPresident Ho is consistently tho Prosidonts friend nnd bollovos that thocountry does not fully approciato thoworth of thu man who now holds thohelm of state Ho is also spoaklng upfor tho tariff law but in fnct has hardlymoro than begun his ofTorts on boththoso lines Tho Republican lendors aroplacing groat emphasis upon tho im-portance

¬

of the work that tho VIcoProsidcnt is doing nnd is planning todo between now and next Kovomber

First nlid foremost Vico PresidontSherman is a party man That is onoreason why ho is willing togo out iipontho hustings and do all ho can to wardoff tho overwhelming dofost which somany Rpublicans aro now prophesyingin their hours of discouragement Hispredecessor Vice President Fairbankstoo was a party man and ho did all hocould for tho ndvancomont of party Interests but President Roosovelt troatodblm so rudely and inconsiuoratoiy tnatMr Fairbanks omitted much montion ofMt Roosevolts nnmo on public occa-

sions¬

For tho prosont Vice President Shor- -

mnn tins dropped out or tuo WiiltoHouso legislative conforoncos somowhatThat is not on account of any lack ofapprobation on tho Prosiiionts part itis simply bocnuso tho timo has gono bywhon tho Vico Prosidcnt can bo of anysorvico as a poacomakor thero Somomonths ago ho was striving earnestlyto patch up n compromiso between thorogulnrs and insurgonts but ull suchefforts proved unavailing and consoquontly Vlco President Sherman liasboon proceeding along now linos Thoregulars decided that it was essontial tofight out thoir factional battles and MrSherman was promptly gotton out upontho hustings proclaiming tho tariff lawns an oxcellont stntulo and PresidentTaft as an excollont executive

e

toof

One of tho most important capturesthat Chief McDuftfo has yot madoamong tho gamblers of tho city wasmado Saturday night whon ho and hisstaff raided n house of tho Ca¬

tholic cemetery nnd mado flfteon ar¬

rests Among those woro Goorgo TineaMakaohe Kawahara and others

McDuflio recoived minuto informa ¬

tion concerning tho garrto and thenames of thoso who woro playing Theyworo moving from houso to houso so

ho was told and gonorally to that oftho ono who was tho biggest losor inthe last preceding gazno so that ho

might get tho bonofit of tho percentageGoorgo Kaea was said to bo in sirhundred dollars and another who wasnot caught was stated to ibo a loserto tho amount of eight hundred

McDuflio and his boys started for thogamo nt clovon oclock tho chief boingnot exactly certain of the place Com-

ing¬

down from Borotnnia by alloysthoy got as far as the mauka sido ofKing street opposite tho Catholic cometery and from there woro compelled towalk directly down a road to a housotho oxact location of which thoy didnot know They passed sovora groupsif Hawniians on tho road all willingto givo warning If thoy had a chancetlioro woro three women posted asguards ono ut tlio gate ono on thoporch and ouo in an adjoining roomwho gave tho signal but tho game wascaught Tho ofllcerH had to rushthrough the door with Apna a closesecond nnd thoy managed to get thodice and u portion of tho money Thogang was playing sovwi olovcn with acup nn ilia chlnf had been Informedas they did not trust each other enoughto lira their hands

All of them woro admitted to 430ball uight securing tho money nt tliohouse mill the rwt boing brought downto the station

Utwrge Kuva iibjadwl exwnpUou athn mid lie Inn lust coino Iu after anmuIu rid mid did not Iwvu u hmnIu lib Mikt Tlili however did nottlu mid Onuruii wild was onu of lhtMliirieui Villi uaf wn Ink n nloiitfwlib U iM Tlit ll Ukm h wsiin Mhtt u vim Asm M1Q hltkw li HtHut4 U lb liixi

DurlNf-- 111 MUffl IM WM KMUpwJI tllv4 lo It ifusrd l tu

Most of tho Vico Presldonts apeak- -

ling in rocent weeks hns boon attlia instnnco oC tho liopuulican con ¬

gressional committee Ua was chairmanof tho Republican congressional com-mittee

¬

when ho was nominated nt Chi-cago

¬

for Vice Presidont His intorestin tho work of tho congressional commlttoo novor lagged kecnuso of his pro ¬

motion to a higher ofllce That committoo hns conducted n series of success ¬

ful campaigns over bIuco 1891 nnd theVice President is vory anxious indocd

atn 111 411- - C inllUnl-- tlHi llltlllJk tU13 I U iruilllfHgrace 1910

It is altogether pronablo thnt thoVicc lresidont will bo put forward nsthe lending stumper in tho congres-sional campaigns this year unloss thoparty chioftnins nro able to porsundoex President Roosevelt to mako a fowspeoche9 While President Taft willundoubtedly nork nnd plan to holp hisparty in every posslblo way tho tradi-tions

¬

nf tho ofllco are against his goingupon tho stump and ho welcomes cor-dially

¬

such an influential champion nshis politicnl runningmato Tho VicePresident possesses his confidonco fullynnd thoroforo is ablo to cooperate withtho Presidont in political mattors

Whon nominated for thoMr Sherman was known as a

fairly capablo public spoakor Thoparty managers howovor did not ex¬

pect particularly brilliant sorvico fromhim upon tho stump In this thoy woromeasurably surpricod for ho provod nvory effective orntor all during thopresidential campaign ana ovor smcothen has boon ready and willing always to go out for a speech whoro thoRepublican party would bonofit from alittlo stirring up of sentimont Ho isdistinctly a conservative but clothesbis ideas in respectful language for allparties nnd factions concerned andmakos n good popular impression Thodemands for spocchos from him consoquontly nro constantly coming In andif ho would accept of thoso In-

vitations¬

tho Vico Presidont could dovoto himself ovory day from now tilltho Novombor cloction sounding notesof praiso for tho Aldrloh Payno tarifflaw and for Presidont Tnft

Ho is also staunch in his support ofSpeaker Cannon Tho two worofrionds for years and the

beiioves in tho Spoakor as thoSpeaker bcliovos in tho Vico ProsidntAccordingly ho will undoubtedly bo achampion of tho Speakers administra-tion of houso affairs to somo extent dur-ing

¬

tho campaign if tho Spoakors ad-ministration

¬

of houso affairs is madonn issue Tho Speakers frionds ontho other band beliovo that tho issuoof Cannonism is boing pushed Into thobackground and that tho country isshowing more intorest In PresidentTnft andtho tariff

GAMBLERS NEW SCHEME

PROVES UNSUCCESSFUL

Try Moving From House House Kaea After

Paying a Fine 25Q Is

Caught Again

back

half

jail and will bo tracedTho ono fortunato man who escaped

evidently did not know tho locationor surroundings of tho houso much bet-ter

¬

than tho detectives did for hewont around to tho back of tho housoand then walkod cautionsly toward thofront on tho othor sido whoro ho shouldhavo known an officer would bo postedno bumped into Officer John Kellottwho was watching a window Kellotttook a hasty glance at him and recog-nized

¬

him as a guard at tho jailTho man had tho presonco of mind

to ask what was upt and was toldthat a gambling gamo was on ThenKcllctt told him to watch tho windowand went insido loaving tho escapedman on duty When Kellott returnedho found tho man had disappeared Acomparison of notes showod Kellott hismiBtako Chiof McDuflio also recogniz-ed

¬

tho guard as bo wont out of thodoor

Tho mon arrested woro KawaharaMorimoto Ogata Kojuma Joo ApauD Kane Apo John Amaslu D KKnma Clement Makooho Knnuo KeoklPenn Goorgo Kaea Jacob Uiopa SamOncha and John Antono

SICK JAPANESE

COMMITS HARA KIRI

Sicknoss nnd dospondoncy cuuecd thosuicide of n Japanese by the nnmo ofPujimoto Friday afternoon nt Kakukuplantation camp News of tlio mansdeath did not rench town until yosterday Mhcn it was brought in by OfficerMiflrtgor of Iluuuln

The laponsso choso tho hara kiriroute and turvived hln ghastly act byeight or iiino hours Hn first attemptedto cut his throat und this not provingfutal cftt himsolf across tho stomachiici ordlng to Jupnmtso custom Inflictinga nix inch gush Hint ovuutimlly causedhis limit h

Ifo was ntlomUd nnd tho woundsntltoliml by Dr wood of Waiitlim butPIlorM to wvo him wnrit unavailing11b Ibbvu u wlfo who will rluru toJulian The in ii hud been sick for

until hi i und bail iq bIiuikm of rovrlNH his hyullb

Iu uiimUiiim of tlil wliulinaluiWiiuiiwi uf gnvM Iu iiIjIuIm humanIwir fur purl iiiitllily to fttrlt thVitni ut IMHtwu bss Imifi Ubiptuvimg tut imy of lU ghoullurwl Id Iblt wsrh MU1 w putath

r

I

rf

A crown cf glory fa a beautifulhead of hair An Australian lady

WyxKbM

Jeftf In

jf2 Ml a

linnstent free

now in Lqfidonwrites underdate Jan11 28

JI907 mi

AjtraHntrVicorhaa dono nvjr iutlr

world of coodThanks to It tar hair

b now thick glouyand soft ad whenplaited Is 65 incheslong Ayet Hair Vigoroofcht to bo mod by

every woman whotakes pride In herappearance

Yon also may havosuch a crown of

5 glory if yon wilt

follow tbo exsjnplo of fhia lady and ubo

tillersMat Viaor

It will remove all dandruff andmako your hair rich and abundant

tnwrt to Dr J C hu Co Inil Halt U SA

60 YEAR8EXPERIENCE

iSBETnADE Marks

DesignsCoPYniQHTS c

urtjxmm smiling a st ch And description marsmieklr nsrvrttm ur opinion free whether anInvention Hnrohablr patentable CommntitcA- -

trtcllrtaiilMenttiil HANDBOOK on PatentsOldest airencj rorsecunnff patents

Intents taken through MUnU k Co Tecelretprctal turtle without clmrco In tbo

Sciemif ic BticrcaiA nantWiraalr IliastTftied weeklr lnrort eJrcalaUoa of anrclcntmo Journal Terms 93 arear i four months fU Bold by sdl newsdealers

UNGo3BIDrod New YorkBranca Offlce CO Y 8U Washington I IX

BUBINESa OAUDB

HONOnULTTIRON WORKS CO Ma ¬

chinery of every description made toorder

OHM LOSING

FAMOUS BEAOHi

Dredging Depriving Waikiki of

World Famed Sandy

Slopes

The sand beach in frontj of tho Mqana and Seaside hotels continues todwindle away exposing tbo coral anddeep inroads arc being mndo into tbobanks which arc So far unprotected Ijybulkhead In front of the two thotolsplank walls were erected to hold thosand which is tliij fopndatlon under tholawns from being swept into tho seaGradually1 tho sand before thoso wallsis being carried away and on Saturdayand Sunday tho tanks on the MoanaHotel sido of tho Outrigger lagoon bo

gan to cave in and some of the palmsare threatened

Thoso who havo Leon following thopccnliar action of tho sand beach nowstale positively that the dredger isresponsible for tho Band carrying awayTor months tho beach has been wash ¬

ing away and it lias bocn during thotime tho dredger hns been at work intho water fronting Fort De Hussy Thodredger is pumpiug up and forcingthrough a pijio line coral and sandwhieh is deposited in the swamp landsbeing reclaimed by tho war departmentfor a barracks site

Tho dredger was brought through thoBrown channel and when it had towork toward Ho Hussy it began dredging its own channel and for soveralmonths has been working n largo nreuof sea front for filling material ThoBrawn channel and the nuwly dredgedchannel now form sluiceway throughivuicu trie satnl irom the uoteis is carried along to tho dredger where it ispumped Into tho pipe line

Thoro havo been many complaints bybathers of lato regarding tho sharpeornl wlierv dnce was smooth sandybcarlh Jti s the throry of many thattho holes which the dredger is makingin the oeeun nearby eonso driftingaway of tho Rnnd from the beach in thogeneral leveling of tho ocean Jiod Ac ¬

cording to this theory the beach willovontually regain its old sand level butnot for many years It is probable thatif conditions got vyurso there will boconsiderable Wasting nuJ removing ofcoral -

JOHNSON PADDLING

HIS OWN CANOE

BAN HUANOISCO June 0 JackJohnson he ueirp pugilist who U tofight Jeffrie on the fourth of Julyannounced today liat he would be hisown manager until after tli fight

Johnson has u reputation for gettingInto truublu with hit manuger and thusfar no one has lutii ulilu to baudluhim What effuct tln will havi nu hisprospects for succcm rumuiiis to becen

T1IU ANNOYING COUGH

Your cub vuuf uuhacking arid ltwiiMf the dslUaU liinuibrntyfl Mtir iltritsi If you Hut Jobe annond Bui If yuu wnni nlfWRNt to V r4i OaiiwbwUlir

fM HMA ftwllb k To

i

a

ft

a

Marine reportMerchant- - Exchange

JUNE SEMI

Friday Jubo 3bbiil Arrived Jnno 2 8 8

San FranciscoI lUlo Xnitrod May 27 Bchr 0 Wf WntBonj from Grays Harbor

Boa lancisco Arrived Juno a 8 8Xcvndan lienco May 20

Portland Arrived Juno 3 ItaL spNinfa hence May 14

from ililo

7

Saturday Juno 4 10103 8ch Bal- -

boaJuni

Lcith Sailed May 18 shin lIcKOgiuCccHlc for Honolulu

8 8 TENYO MJU1U AT 8BA 8p m I0B miles fTom Honolulu

S S LUJILIKK AT SEA 8 p mCM miles from Honolnlu modcratonortheast wind and sea will arriveearly Wednesday

R 6 NIPPON MARU AT 8BA 8p m 500 miles from Honolnlu cloudyweather smooth tea

U S TRANSPORT SHERMAN ATSEA 8 p m 720 miles from Hono ¬

lulu moderate northeast winds seasmooth all well

Monday June 0Ban Francisco Sailed Juno 4 S 8

Enterprise for HiloSan Frnnclsco Arrived Jurio G S

S Hilonlnn from HonoluluSan Francisco Sailed Tune 5 bk B

P Rithct for HonoluluSeattle Arrived Juro f 8 S Hy

ttdes from San FranciscoSan Francisco Arrlviid Juno 0 8

S Columbinn from Salm i CruzSan Francisco Sailed Juno C U 8

A T Logan for ironolulu8onttlc Sailed Juno 0 8 8 Mis

sourlan for HonoluluPort San Luis Arrivodr Juno 0 S

S Santa Bita henco May 25Aianuxona Ainveu uuuu o oum a

M Baxter from Willapa HarborHann Arrived Juno G- - schr Jas

Iiplph from San Francisco

PORT OF HONOLULU

ASBIV1IUt

Friday Juno 3O S S Sierra Houdlette from San

Francisco 7i30 a mU S A T Sherman from Manila

8 a mT K K 8 S Nippon Maru from

Yokohamn 7 p inAm sp Marion Oavi

Iota n m t

Juno 4 1010A H S S Mexican from SeattleStr Mnunh Koa from Hllo and way

ports a mSaturday Juno 4

Str Iwalnul from Honuapo p V- -- Sunday Juno 5

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE TUESDAY WEEKLY

j

Itcdondo--Arrivc- d

Chllcottfrom

Saturdityj

Str Niihau from Waimcn Kauai n mStr Mikahala Tujlett from Molokai

nnd Mnui ports alym

iOir iiiuuu ureUffjr Aiuin nuHia mi i Monday June 61T K K S S Tonyo Maru from San

Francisco 1130 a m

DBPABTED

Str Manna LoA Thompson for Konaand Kan ports 12 noon

Str Claiidinc for1 Maui and Hawaiiports 5 p m

Schr- - Expansion for Hilo and Coast0 a m

Port cruiser San Gabriel for Xkhatna and Lisbon 9 ovm

Schr Expansion for Sound D a mU S A T Sherman for San Fran

cisco 5 p m i

T K a S Nippon Mnru for SanFrancisco 12 noon

Br S S Vancouver for Milke 8

PA88ENQEEB

ArrivedPer O S S Sierra from San Fran

cisco Juno 3 ForJllonolulu Mrs h3i Arnaud Miss J M Baker Mrs EF Bercer E Bishop J B Blake MmM Bruns Mrs E Ghanes Mrs A MVnisictt Miss uurgucritw jiurHi iuiEaMargaret Creighton Mrs L S Cockroft Miss Thoda S Cockroft- - MissCharlotte M Cockroft J CohenMrs Cohen Mrs M Cxonan MissHazel Davis tMiss Jj--

iairweatuor --Mrs iairwcamor uociorGlazier Mrs Glazier ontPchlld MiBS

H Henry Mrs Clara E Hughes 8F Hunt Huntington Mrs Wr1 Huntington Miss M Hussoy MrsC J Irwin F W Kloln Miss AnnaKncist C D Lufkin Jas LysaghtMrs A McDowell J A McRae MissEthel Marion E H Marriott S BMarston Mrs Marston E C MeekerC D Miner Miss Violn Mutch HarryE Myers E Nelson Mrs Nelson AW Pattison Geo II Robertson MissM A Ryan V B Schrndcr Mrs Eh Smith and child J Spitzcr MrsSpitzcr P R Stott Mrs Martha Towa- -

senu A iv vierra Miss uraco wauniimn Mra O Wnnvor MlaiWolferiden A

N

E W Stuart Wm Welter Leter leacook M S Meston

Per T K K S S Nippon Maru fromYokohama Juno 3 For Honolulu IIBrooke Smith U P Bonvlllain MrsII II Darby Mrs II B L AWalker Miss M Qnincy Miss KnightThrough From Honckong ShanghaiNagasaki and J L Barrott Mrs

H Booth Mrs Fok Seo nnd thrcochildren J Kcarnej W II LucasMrs W II Lucas Miss Lucas MissMock Mrs Miss Smith PWeber from Yokohama V H Atkinson V L Austen K inu k k inggsU W Blumcuthnll 11 Boline II J

Dr Loster Curtis Mrs I esterCurtis W T M HninlnirgerMIkr E 1 Heuett Mrs B HodgsonA H Htimmoll Miss Ilummell Mlnonye Mm 8 II Kaffonburgh A IIKufTenburah Mrs C M Kcnnoberg YICuwikn Col It Uiuh Cant E Carre

liwery IT w II n MnoiniuniuMm W 11 MncnnDald HaroldIratli Mm Harold Macflrath J O

MnCluri Huns Muud Mrs Hans MundCol II H Nidnin Mrs 11 S Neloon

e ir Owi Tvlflie Capt 1 TownP Tk Waul II WML Hor War- -

lmrloii ll 1 H Wvwmur S 8 Mhubh K Juik i tt V

iVHlllnlsU W ltun MlH Hun C IS

Wright lllud M Dr A H

NUOwll Mra lUrg It V Tullt yia wir i a a vu im

MfC V K loa alitlii JriUila TJ Uiy M X JawlfiD

C H Waterman H p Marlnor DThaanum T H Kennedy Mrs M WJ1linmt Vonnir Kut Low Sing Chow TKatataka nnd wife C Bolte deVillcto 1 A Schaefcr Hi Jt Chongand wife Rev Oho Ping B II Mark- -

ham A w Todd A 8 Bilva arfd wildK 8 Gjcrdrum J A Gorman Mrs WHeel C K wife and child 8Yokomido A Dowsett Miss Bett

Gibb and twb daughters O Waldoyerand wife It Kearns w A IClnnisyBre Iaschcb Joe Kalua C S AmanaMoon Wh

Per str Mikahala from andMaul ports JtinoG Geo Gibb ARego L Keoohinui Mr and Mrs J IJBrown Mr Knnopu Mr and Mrs GeoCooke Miss Sexton Rev KakipL

Per str Kinnu from Knuai portsJuno 5 Miss O A Arnold O JanuBonMiss M Rhcdota WG Irwin B IvcrsE Konkc Francis Gar W A RamsayA Well R E Bond A Gartenburg 1

Sirs UCO iialtcr Mis Alargart uoanMiss Cooke Rev and Mrs 11 C Leo

Knthcrino

NoHey

Molokai

John 1ctor and J ago JjCO a utrcmoaStewart iicnry wmang uav in

Ford Miss Cabrnla Mrs A MeKcagueG Inouyo 1 Sloggett Mr ahd MrsEggcrklng A Nelson Miss Anna Nel-

son¬

O Burmcstor G R Davis KHamalshl Hco Fat W Matsublta MMiyagawn Miss E Toruyo BonnioLemon D Pokii H MaryKnuikclo

Per T K K S S Tenyo Maru fromSan Francisco Juno 0 Through forYokohama C E Ferguson Mrs O EFerguson II G Hann B Katsura SKoike Miss L McWilllam Miss IdaMerrill R F Moss Prof R Nnka- -

D

L

snima T unouera u w iunngtonMrs O V Purington Mrs F PPfingst Edward PUngst Capt Geo TSummerlin II Tsuda Mrs II Tsudaand infant Master K Tsuda Master TTsuda Mrs H K Walker For Shang-hal-- F

0 Atwatcr F C Jordan L OMcGowan Mrs ti O McGownn F WMcrritt Mrs P W Stryker Miss E BStrykor Mrs I Sullivan H I VineyFor Hongkong Miss E Bruncr L ABergolz Mrs MM Bergolz B ADemnrcst Mrs B A Dcmarcst FFinnell Mrs F Finnell 0 RMrs C It Jones Mnslcr 11 LMibi ragman it ragman i

Murphy Mrs E J Murphy L DMandoll Mrs L D Mandell MasterMandcll Mrs 1 JIcElroy Jlrs H LMarkor A C JJepcker Mrs A CNebeker II F Patterson Miss DelightBice S W Strong Mrs S W StrongJ B Villamar A Vi Walker Dr A ItWard

HWHAT TO DO WITH J

THE SALOONS

Continued frpm Pago Onc1just if thero wero no plebiscitoitnllnil

Tho licenses to be granted tliis monthrun for a year up to July 1 1011which is about the timo a prohibitionlaw yould 8 intp effect if jvisjninVlby tho voters next month anjl jiasflcdby tho legislature jii JJdbruary Cipndjtlons until then remain in the controlof the liconse commissioners

Ono of tho announced policjas whichtho bonrd is expected to carjy out isthat of restricting licences to tho flrolimits districts and to main- - streetsThis will result in tbo closing of anumber of places r n

It is Said that thoro will jbo a re-

quest¬

cither from tho antisalooncrstho liquor dealers that action on thelicenses be postponed unll thoplebiscite

Members of the license- bqard havonot been notified of any such requestTho reason advanced for the recommendations of postponement of actionis that tnq result of tbo plcpiscitomight cause a chdnge of policy on thopart of the board

It is also understood that there willbe a hard fight against the Issuance ofrcnownls of tho licenses of somq of thoChinese wholesale liquor dealers of thocity not only on the part of tbo antiliquor people but by others connectedWith tho government It is very probublo thnt tho liquor inspectors reportwill bo advorso to the granting of theselicenses among tho applicants for whichis KivotiL Chunir Lunir at the inaukaYalkiki corner of King and Maunnlcca

strcetBThe policies of the board havo al ¬

ready been given out it boing in favorof renewing tho licenses of somo ofthoso who havo been hit by the rulingto bring all saloons within the ilro limits This nud the promulgation of arule to compel all saloonistB to put openswinging doors on the places will prob ¬

ably tako up a great deal of the timoat tho coming meeting

Amone those who havo their applications boforo tho board at tho presenttimo are Mrs Bertha Klemmo Wing

Yo Tni Co Wing Chong Lung inCo Patrick F Ryan H 8 Cuuha

Lewis l ranK linrvoy u bSMrs A Young tbreo I Kojimn Oznki V C Peacock

children and maid Miss Irene Young j Co Conrad HolliiinnWillinm LiskmnnB Young J A Young 0 P White for the Seuslde Hotel Y Kimura

Ducan

1910

talny

Lclnnd

Hiinnum

KobeE

NG Jtovpll

orderOrimth A

B

11 Mac

V

C

Ashburn

Uhijrlcs McCarthy John T Scully andothers A portion of theso nrc for rotail licenses and others are for wholosalo licenses

It is fairly certain that thoro arosomo in tho list who will bo turneddown If present indications can bo de ¬

pended upon There are a iiumbor moroapplications from n saloonsfor renewals nud theso will nil prob ¬

ably receive favoralilo action

LEE LET CASE CONTINUED

Tho case of Lee Let against UnitedStates Attorney Hreckonsi Collector ofCuitoms Stackable AdaTlta anil Taylorwill not bo tried this term nqtwitkstanlug tho efforts of Lorrin Andrewsattorney for tho plaintiff to bting itto trial Judge Hole yesterday after-

noon

¬

on motion of Breckons continuedit to tho October term of court it being specified that it shall be tho firstcnte taken up at that term

ro

j v i VS Tho iottit Jury was excused for thoVT i JZuLVS UIm of the term subject to call

MIHVI Mil Tllr II Bnt nn lmt ie 3tt wituout relMVlllL feet mut rainaln In townII

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auyon lliu rliunco that tliu Lrand lurv tlioreport of wlilcli lini bcu lonir delayoJmay roHirt wjno lndltmnti fr trial

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1rwl KoUIcr wluim llotmVrlt itallwltltti uuntry Iwat iwlllw flllUf liai

1im rannil from ii Miulrwl ot tlwJNvnUml hiIIm Iiu of drttiikM

HM llHWHfallt UMMW4NX laMtMrdluitUwn

EASY DAY FOR

HIESSix of Them Get Small RnesandXUstatwiS

Many Forfeit Their

Bail

Luck was on tho side of the fifteengamblers caught by Chief McDufCeSaturday night when they came up fortrial yesterday morning in polico court

Out of the fifteen six only put in anappearance and these tho majority ofwhom wcro Japanese were fined but 47rhd costs apiece This small sentencenBtonislied tho officers who caughtthem as this Is not tho first timo thatbe men have beca met at tho gaming

tablo by the detectives Seven dollarsis tne usual sebtenco meted out to thoEclmolboy novice experimenting for thefirst time with tho bones

Of toe nine who failed to put in anuprearancc bench warrants wcreisucd but for two George Kaca and

Clement Makaohe The reputation ofthese two sn lar overshadows that otho balanco that they were evidentlychoEcn So represent tho entire aggregation of talent in court

Knea was sentenced to pay a finoof 4250 on August 18 of last year and

200 on September 27The escape of the Japanese with such

small fines was due in great measure tothe efforts of Japanese interprotorTjwnsend who interested himself great ¬

ly iu their behalf While the trial wasin progress he supplied tho startlinginformation that tho men were beforetBc judge for the first time This wasin contradiction to tho officers whotestified that they n cro oldtimersTownsonds testimony went

The police court records themselveshowever show otherwise David Kanewhile not appearing in tho records forgambling has served a thirty day sentence for vagrancy Kawahara forfpitod 10 bail on March 23 of Instvenr that amount having been put upfor him after bis arrest for gamblingnnd on Augu9t 0 was fined 8 for thesanie offense

Koiima was fined 0 for gambling onApril 2 Inst year and Ogata paid costsoi court on a previous nppearance toanswer the same charge

Kacd and Mnkaohc will appear thismorning to answer the charge It isexpected that they will put up a strongfight

-HONOLULU MILL

FOR PHILIPPINES

WASHINGTON May 13 TheMindoro Development Company isbuilding nt Honolulu a 500000 sugarplant which ib to be placed on theSan Jose estate in Mindora PhilippinoIslands This connects that estate andtho Mindoro company and connectsthe purchaso of the estate and the Min-doro company

This statement was mado by Repre-sentative Martin Democrat of Colorado who is waging the campaign forInside facts about tue Inilippine gov-ernments sale of the San Jose estato6n January 4 last to the Mindorocompany Mr Martin hns introduceda series of resolutions probing into thecorrespondence between tno war de-partment and tho Philippino government and all other papers that mightthrow licht On tho wnv that the NowJersey corporation which he believesto lie a subsidiary to tue AmericanSugar Refining Company was enabledto acquire theso friar lands

It is perfectly plain said MrMartin that Strong and Cadwnllader tho New York law firm of whichtho Presidents brother Henry WTaft was a member opened tho nego-tiations for tho purchase of the SanJose estate and that for nppearancesake they got tho De Gorstorff firmalso of Now York to conclude thonegotiations Strong Cadwalladerrepresented the Havemeyers nndotiiors

Mr Mnrtin proposes to continuo byspeeches and resolutions of inquiry hiscrusade ngninst what he characterizeda gross iniquity

-

TARN MGREWS MARRIAGE

A wedding of international note wasthat which took place in Paris a fewdavs aio when J Tarn McGrew ofHonolulu a graduate of Stanford TJni

ii ii i c timersuv unu wuu jtuunu iu duu x iuuCisco married --Mrs isaoeile bcouGrant former wifo of Douglas Grant

The Grant family is ono of the bestknown in tho East and in EuropeDouglas Grant is the son of BenchGrant of New York and a brother ofAdele Ornnt the proscnt Lady Essexwifo of George Devereux do Yero Capell seventh enrl of Essex whoso townhou6o at 0 Mansfield street Portlandplace London W is ono of the pillarsof Mayfair Lady Esses is a closefriend of tho Duchess of MarlboroughMrs Scott Grant secured a divorcefrom Douglas Grant several years agofollowing which she took up her resi- -

douoo in Paris her home thoro beingtho scene of tho most famed bridgeparties of tho French capital

Tliougu ms iiomo is in nonoiuiu mcGrew hns spent tho greater part of hisllfo in Paris He went thero originallyto study architecture after leavingStanford Unlvonity but since then haslived there almoct continuously S FCall

BIG LEAGUE SCORES

BAN FllAKClStV June 0 Bi

league eores for today nmnea uroiJvational llillailoljilila IS Chicago

S New Vnrk 0 St I ouii 1 Brooklyn0 Cincinnati 1 Other gninw poiliKHied

Amoriwiu fit I011U 1 New York 2 1

CIiimko 1 IIimIou ut Utftmlt 1 Vuiliingtun 1 Utlmr ijailiw iwutrxjnl

I LOCAL BREVITIES

Prom Saturdays AdvertiserBishop and Mrs Iicnry Bond Rcsta

rick announco tho engagement of theirdaughter Constance to Panl Withing--

ion son oi Air ana Airs i L With- -

tcrnal Revenue Collector Walter F Drake whoso resigna ¬

tion is still unaccented left on tno S 8Mauna Loa yesterday fora wooka dutyon Hawaii During bis absence tho offico will be in charge of Ralph Johnsfonc

Tho federal jury yesterday afternoonreturned a verdict of not guilty in theenso of Leong Ning charged with vio-lating

¬

the antloplum laws of the United States This was the second trialof Leong Ning the first resulting in adisagreement

Governor Frear is busy selecting thoelection inspectors who will hold officofor tho next four years and who mustbo appointed beforo tho election ofJuly 20 There are two hundred androrty tnree inspectors to bo named latho clchtv one election precincts of thoTerritory

A mandate was received yestordayfrom Washington in tho Sierra mail bytho local federal authorities to tho ef ¬

fect that tho case of Wynne who killedEngineer McKinnon of tho oil steam ¬

ship Rosecrans is continued until Juno13 when Judgo Dolo will set tho datefor Wynnes hanging

An autopsy wob yostorday performedon tho body of Olo the native whowas found dead in the lantana nearBattery Harlow Thursday Examina ¬

tion proved tho man to havo died ofvalvular diecaso of tho heart He wasstark naked when found nnd there woroevidences that ho died insane Ho waseighty years old

From Mondays AdvertiserGcorgo C Bcckley whoso health has

not been the best during tho last fewmonths may shortly leave for tho mainland to be oporated on by a specialist

Bishop Restarick and son aro bookedto leave for tho mainland on the SierraTho bishop goes to England to attend animportant missionary conference

vxmnt Canavarro tho Portugucso con-sul

¬

to Honolulu stated before ho leftthat Ililo had outdono tho larger cityin its reception to the officers and menof tho Portuguese cruiser HawaiiHerald

Professor Lord and Professor Cod- -

dington who jiamo hero from Ohio totako special observations of the passageor tno comets tan on May is arebooked to leave for tho mainland onthe Siorrn

Pineapple stock is looking up andreports from the Haiku section aro totho effect that the Haiku Fruit andPacking Company will harvest and sendto mnrkct a bigger crop than ever be¬

fore this season Matli NewsProhibition clubs are being organiz-

ed¬

jn several places in liana districtand tho leaders hope for a bright fu-ture

¬

and tho final victory of tho causeWomen of Hana aro listing names andforming a prohibition club qf thoirown Maui News

As a result of the investigation ofcommercial conditions in the Kona dis-

tricts¬

which was made by Manager Pat-ten

¬

of the Bank of Hilo on his recenttrip to the other side of the island thoBank of Hilo has definitely decided toopen a branch bank in Kona

Mr and Mrs J L Gordon of NewYork who have spont the springmonths here residing at the YoungHotel lenve on the Sierra on Wednesday for the mainland This is the sec ¬

ond visit of tho Gordons who werohere early last year They were socharmed with their visit that aftermaking a tour of tho South Seas thoydecided to come-- again

The case of Deputy Sheriff Kekaulaof Kau who was charged with havingombezzled license funds and which washeard at the Kailua Circuit Court camenear resulting in an acquittal As itwas tho jury disagrced standing ac- -

coruiug to ait reports viuub tu xuur iufnvor of on acquittal Tho case wasone of considerable interest as itmarks the Iastpbase of tho great Kau

graft investigation which stirredup tho people of this island particularly in Kau considerably at tho time Itwns first brought up through tho reportof Liceuso Inspector Affonso

Delegate Kuliio is expected to arrivehero on tho Siberia July C

A Henry Afong a capitalist of Ho-nolulu

¬

is at tho Stewart tvith bisfamily Call

Mr nnd Mrs J Parker Currier whoare in Melbourne expect to spend themonth of Juno in Honolulu S FWasp

Frank fipeaight tho Dickens readergoes to Kohala next week as tho guestof John Hind and to givo a readingthere

Mrs John Scott Noble and MissWonner of Seattle Washington willbe at the Moana for the remainder oftheir stay on the Islands

William isuges wiro and two elmdren leave for the Const by tho S SSierra tomorrow after an eighteenmonths residence in Honolulu

Bov Father Julian Thierpont aPaulist priest who is stationed atLihue on the Island of Kauai Hawaiiis at the Stewart on tho way to returnto his charge S F Bulletin

MissJean Center of Honolulu isvisltinir relatives in San Francisco Hormarriage to Harold Pierce- Danzig ofOswego New York will take plaeohere in July or August S F Wasp

The Ateherloys are coming dbcic toHonolulu Mrs Mary Atcherley haswritten that she will soon again bo Inthis city to eettlo cortain legal mat-ters

¬

It is understood that she willbring her husband

Capt and Mrs Joseph C Castnerare nt Fort McDowell Angel Islandlinvlnp arrived from Honolulu MrsCastner was formerly Miss Ada Whiteof this city Captain Castner expectsto be at Fort McDowell for at leasta year 8 F Wasp

YALE WILL GIVE NEW

RULES A TRY0UT

NBW HAVBX Conn May 14

Vale will try out tho nevr football rulesby onlllng back two weeks below eol- -

true open next fall a selected njunil ofveteran tilovnr to work out the forma- -

Itiuni Thwe players will be qaarterodii iij Aisniiar t lis naUlut f1ul Perrv uT wini otunr ptaee

UavKJer li hW urder4 by CtwutoUwy from Nsw Htvea wbere cliwintic

triiMe oJltiuiii are ralle

Jt BaOKEN DOWN SYSTEMTfo s it a cnmlitvta for d ti which doctore msarnarati out wwch lew o tana mil

tnd rt Und It if tirapWweaknets abreak downa- - It tint of thnMUl force that tntuta lis irstrro No rnaitr what aiaTb its castes for tierare clmoU numJetlrtf Its tj tnplom re ranch thettrae the tnute pront nrnt bHnx tlrrpltitnctiwv if p ottratlon or wrarinrat depression ottlTtts and want ot raenry for all tho ordiaaryffirlife Kw whatalonelsabialstelretBrn

1 al fr all urh raes It i wcrviflrfVi7r--lro- vr

VITJ8L STRENGTH ENERGYto tfipiw nff ihwc morbid feeling and exprrleuepmw that At n ghl tucrwdi the day tfali tnijoem trr rrrtam jr wcured by a court ofTHE NEW FRENOH REVEDY

r3RAPiONNo3hart hx arty tr knuwn combination 80 surelyt it a ken m accordance with the c rioted

It ctinn acrompanfioff ft will Uie shatteredIvNih l rrtrraTHE EXPIRING LAMP OP LIFE

LIGHTED UP AFRESHjnd a nrw exntenc imparted in place of whatha l o tat 1v tterard worn out used up andvalit lrt Thit wonderful medicament it pnrelyritalt v rf innocuoat it agreeable to tho tattsuitable fur all constitutions and conditions In

either tci and It Is difficult to imagine a case ofWase or deran em ait whoie main features iretboso tf debility that will not be speedily andtjermantntly benefited by this never fill inp recnperatire essence which it destined to cast intooblivion everything that had preceded It for thiswidospreadandnumerousclaisof human allmenta

THERAPIpNp rtInKngland

19 per packet Purchasers shouid tee that the wordThkkahov appears on HritUh Government

Stamp in white letters on a red eroundi afiUntto every package by order 0 Malestvs HonCora mi von ers and without which His a forgery

Xhoraplon may now be bad in tatte l1011 zorm

HONOLULU STOCK EXCHANGEHonolulu Monday June 0 1010

NAME Ot BT CK

MsscantilxO Brewer OoM

ScoutBwsHaw Agricultural

Haw Com A BcgarCo

llODOmunonokaiUalkuBntchlmon Bug PlanvouuKatmkuKekaba Bagar ConoioaMcBrrdo Bar ln It1uiilu sugar omOncmcaOUa Sugar Co LtdOlowalurimiiau Bug riauuoracincPalPcpeckeoLlAnAnsil

WalaluaAKriocIiw ana iuWilmanalo -Watmea Sugar Mill

MISCXLLAHIOUSIntor IaUnd B s Coflaw Klectilo Cuu it i a i tio rnEKTt LOOopjMutual lolOotNablkn BubbarCAiNiblkn ItubberCounaij toHllo riItCa PfdHllo KB Co ComUonnlulQ Brewing A

Malting- Co LtdUawPlneanplernUTanJong Ulok Rub

Co PaU upTanjong OlokRub

to rAsBMit Pdlrsliangitub Coifnld

V- P-fflahang Rub CoAts25pc Pd

BondsIlnwTerlPCIFlre

ClalmiUaw Ter 4 p n Het

tuudlnz 1005HawTorlDII aw Ter 4 pcHaw Tor 3 JJ pcCal Boot Sugar Ite- -

o6pellanHkua Dltib

upper ditch laHnwAlInu Irrigation

to 6 80 pcimldIlatntllau IrrigationC6tuHjpid

Hw on Si SugarCo p c

Hllo K R6s liiueo Kill

HIloB a Co KelKJLL1 LDDBl

Unnokaa ugCo 6 pcnon it rot LUOD p eKauai RycodaKohola bitch fo 6suc uryae Hug uo BsMutual Tel MO It A I CoB DClOahu Sugar OoB p cuiaa sugar ot p cPacific sugar lllliPioneer Mill Votipcvvaiatua Ag uo a p c

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23125 on 100 paid T64 per centpaid jiioaeemawe at lus t maturityPaid up D270 shares treas stock

115000 shares treas stockSession Sales

15 McBryde 0Between Boards

jrt rin1 a r 00 Rn ir nntSug Co 3305 45 lahang Rub Pdn 0 1ioneer 212 15 lion JJ JM

CO J 575 15 Ewn 33025

COURT NOTES

Josorthino J Perry who was rrrantcd I

a separation from her husband Frank j

J Perry has filed n motion that horhusband bo summoned to appear in Icourt and show cause if cause ho haswhy ho should not bo punished for contempt of court for neglecting to paytho alimony ordered by tnlj court

Julio Bodrimies has filed suit fordlvorco from Catalina Rodrlgucs pn thegruuiiu uj uercrtiuu

Waiwaiolo ICnnini wants a divorcefrom Kamaka Kaaiai on tho croundthat ho is a habitual drunkard aridtreats her cruelly

s

Blxby and EdwardsWASHINGTON Juno C Col Blxby

wns today named by tho President asChief of Engineers Tho President renominated General Edwards as chief I

of the bureau of insular affairs under j

the war department

30BNASCII In Honolulu Juno 4 1010 to

Air ana jure j ascn a eonGBUNE In Honolulu Juno 4 1010 to

Mr and Mrs Ernest Qrune AdelaideFernandez a daughter

COOKE In Honolulu June 5 1910 to jMr and Mrs Clarenco H Cooko aldaughter

BALDWIN In Honolulu Juno D 1010to Mr and Mrs Samuel A Baldwinn daughter

DIEDMAODONAIiD In Honolulu Jnno 3

11110 Jas J ilacdonuld aged sixtyono years He waa an old rosddent ofHonolulu and a member of HarmonyUfliigO no 3 1 u o

HKIIKItn In Honolulu Junp C 1010Inwruco J Kkberg a native off- t

A lliniilutf mule iuit arrived in SaulHernaJluo California was found to 1

have a 9W0 nugget lu It boor