mwu - university of hawaiʻi...derson president ami treasurer of the western dry goods company of...

8
VOL L1V NO Irt HILL UNER M till cup Seattle Excursion May Be the First of Many Calls of Minnesota MATTER DISCUSSED Seattle Merchant Brings News of Probable Trade Route After thei big Hill liner Minnesota viBlts Honolulu the latter part of this month or the firsst of next with a party Of Chicaigo trado excursionists en route to the Orient aboard tho Great North- ern ¬ company may operato regularly the Minnesota on a new route with Hono lulu ns a port of call Eugene G An ¬ derson president ami treasurer of the Western Dry Goods Company of Seat- tle ¬ who is a guest at the Young Hotel states that there is a strong possibility of the company making this important change in its schedule and he belioves it will bo done The excursion trip of tho Minnesota to the Orient from Seattle via Hono- lulu will do watched with interest by the railroad officials and If the scheme works out and tlie trip is made Tvith a reasonable amount of profit and the expenses resulting from increased con- - eumptipn of coal are not top high the linor will be placed on tho new route making calls each way While the Minnesota would not make many trips in a year from Seattle yet because of toe fact that jsho is such a bg vessol thelargesf evelr sent to Honolulu with excellent opportunities for developing travel from the North westinto the Pacific sho wmild jyob-a-bl- y become- - very -- popular wiW tho traveling public and no doubtwould bo generally patronized by thefpeoplo of the Northwest Mr Anderson states that bworo he left Seattle for Honolulu tho matter was being discussed while of course business interests woc glad of an to tee a nov oneninfr for trade development with the Hawaiian Islands The Northwest is a vast country with a vast income from its g cat pro- ducing ¬ lands said M Anderson yes- terday Five hundred dollars per acre is a moderate income from produc ¬ ing lands and 1500 is a maxlnum and perhaps not much above- - the average but this indicates what a great income we have up there Our people are be ¬ coming wealthy and they want to travel California Is not altogether tho idoal winter resort and Hawaii as far as I have seen of it possesses just the right kind of a climate to att aot travelers It is an cquablo climate ami must be ideal here in tho winter months It is tho wealthy toarist you want to attract They aro tho ones we like for a large percentage invest buy homes remain and then attract others I dont 66o why that rule should not obtain down here Tho establishing of a steamship line- - with the Minnesota to staTt it off with will develop travel down here Mr Andersons houso has done busi ¬ ness down hero but lias never had a direct representative Ho camo down here to look over tho field personally and was greatly surprised to seo what a progressive community ho had come to The stores ho found are up to date ad want the best fabrics and lie is here to deliver the goods IMPORTANT MEETING THIS AFIERiO Through an error in the original notice from tho chamber of commerce it was announced yesterday morning that the joint meeting of the chamber the merchants association and tho planters association members was to have been held yesterday The date of the meeting has been set for this afternoon at three oclock and tho full membership of the three associations is expected to attend The meeting is one to discuss tho question of the re versal of the present taxing system whereby revenue will be raised to meet estimated expenditures and not ex pnditures made on the basis of revenue Tho main point to come up at the meet ¬ ing this afternoon is tho proposed amendment to the bill to limit the tax on real and personal property to one per cont iim i fc 4 Records at the tax lenartmeat in New York show that Maria Snleker who was for 52 voar a domestic in n Fourth avenue houtehald saved 32000 MWU HONOLULU HAWAII TERUtTPRY MAMMOTH LINER MAY MAKE OF HONOLULU REGULAR PORT CALL CHIC1G0 PARTY OF Ti HUNDRED COMMERCIAL EX0UBSI0NIST8 TO BE OLAD IN SPECIAL UNIFORMS SPOKANE Washington March 1 More than one hundred membezs of the Chicago Association of Commerce their wives and a few of theirdaugk ters making a party of two hundred Mill arrivo in Spokano the morning of March 19 on tho way to Seattle whenco they sail on the steamship Min nesota ioriionoriiu me iouowing nuuu on a tour of the Pacific Ocean extend- ing ¬ nearly three months The party will travel from Chicago in a special compartment train over the Burlington lino to St Paul and over the Great Northern lino to Spokane and Seattle George W Sheldon is chairman of the committee In charge R S Hotz is vice chairman and other members are Edward W Hines A C Buttolph Oliver E Fuller D W Seipp and D F Bremner The hospitality programs to be ex tended by the authorities of Honolulu Manila and tho Japanese cities on tho schedule are expected to be elaborate Scretary of State Knox has instructed mo American liuiisuis ui cue yueiubs ports to prepare for the comfort and enjoyment of tho Chicago visitors Special Uniforms Tho men voyagers will wear a spe cirl yachting uniform onsisting ot a cap blue doublo brea ted fiat and white duck trousers In tho nine dajs jrunt through Japan they will wear all whito uniforms with helmetf No spo ci 1 garb is required of the women but thoy are now bnsjgatherlng wardrobes of summer gownsina appropriate mil- - Fofes ing Is th4imo table aft sailing fiom Seattle at noon on March 20 Arrivo Honolulu Maxell 28 Ino Hcnolulu March 30 arrno Ynkoharri April 11 leave Yokohama April 14 arrive Kobe April ISpeavo Kobo Apui 17 arrivONagasakt April 10 lav Nagasaki April 20 arrivo Manila April 25 leave Manila April 27 arrive Hongkong April 29 lcno Hongkong May 0 arrive Nagasaki May 30 Invo Nagasaki May 11 arrive Kobe May 13 leave Kobo May 10 airle Yoko hama May 17 leave Yokohama May 20 arrive Seattle June 3 arrive Spo lcnno Juno 4 arrive St Paul Juno 0 arrive Chicago June o A RIYAL FRANCHISE -F- OR 10 RAW Another franchise bill for a street railway in Hilo was injected in the legislature yesterday when houso bill number 128 was introduced by S P Correa It is the expected rival to the application made in the senate a similar railway with the differonso- - that thn senate hill snnnnnpes Hi 5 rKfito of the railway as tironoscd while thoJmnar years within a certain limit The houBo bill grants a to William H Beers his associates and assigns for the right to bplld this jroil wny over any roud now orejbUc ¬ or any road opened future within ftvft ml1p In ftnv lrMitlnn I bo built if passes WtbSsWh Hilo district in Its other clanses for terms ns In sonate bill work to be commenced within two It was referred to judiciary committee 4fr HfgTS THE S S MINNESOTA MARCH 7 1911 WEEKLY OF FUND IS IT INCREASED BUT- - MONEY MAY BE USED IN WIDER WAY BEIiEOATBjjffO STAY EAST Ernest Walker Mail to Tho Advertiser WASHINGTON February 23 The sundry civil appropriation which was- - to the house today did not carry an appropriation for the study of leprosy in Hawaii Theappropratlons committee did not that thoy could grant the audi iionaJU money which Secretary Mott- - Smith Doctor BrinckerliofT asked Hilo the bill The 1111 tho same vears the By bill feel and But thoy did odd provision to tho roport against the bill item for investigating thejing out men get money might be spent anywhere in ho Islands It is claimed that this will enable the investigators in effect to do more with the same amuont of money than they have been able to do The carries or to special to prepare plans for the Hilo public building SKMI Special increased otherwise giving architects Delegate Kalanianaole would Japa as cadet at the Naval Academy at An- napolis ¬ Marcus B Monsarrat with Ivan M Graham as alternate There is nothing new in tho judge- ship ¬ situation this end Delegate Kalanianaole intends starting soon for Hawaii as as the session of con ¬ gress However the prospects of an extra session of congress seem to be increasing in which event he would remain at Washingtoa in all prob- ability ¬ George McK McClellan has made no plans about going to Hawaii far ECAN DECLINED TO BECOME TAFTS PRIVATE SECRETARY Martin Egan editor and managing director of the Manila Times was through passenger on was tor roan where he was offered tho post of secretary to President Taft Mr Egan declined the offer bis principal reason being that lie could to it Wliilo being nattered included the expenditure of more money salary by tunny as Egan has not builded is making fame and come money in proprietorship of one of the foremost papers in the Far East it iff understood wished to have Egan ns his right hand because bill gives franchise fprUfiyfof in the Far East franchise high- way Itrtho TUfeSDAY reported gan ap to bo the in whom President felt he conld for In formation affairs in the Pbilipnines added which was splendid store to nfffiirs In Japan and China it the conrthouso at Th roflfl Is to the wiut his the SHOW S PIBB Rusl March Ninety were cremated and forty otheri Injured by a fire today nmovingplctiiro flirr In iiMWiwMWi - r ONE VOTE IINS ON 10 DOLLARS Bpa TO TO BE ACTED UPON IN THE HOUSE TODAY When Jho miscellaneous committco Submitted a majority report in of theipassage of H B No 10 calling for ho payment of 2 day to all laborers employed by the county of Ho- nolulu on road and other public works it raised a storm which will be tackled agnia today when the bill comes up for third reading Representative Morcallino submitted a a minority point- - leprosy that that more can work much heretofore of BTJENED houHfr favor under tho present arrangement than if tho wages are Increased The majority roport avas carried by oae vote In its roport tho committee recom ¬ mended tho amendment of the bill by striking out the words by contract same bill a provision for thus the right soon a the J5T a contractors to employ men on public work for less than rate paid has selectedtho county That mean from ends thus paid uncio yet Taft nenrs 4ho neso Loss Money for All Itepresentativo spoke against the bill explaining that if it there would be fewer men on tho roads and also those who did get work would havo to work fewer days and so would not make moro in the end than at the present rate of 150 a day as there was only just so much money in the treasury for the work to be ac- complished Itepresentativo Coney moved that both the majority and minority he laid on tho table but Alfonso jumped into tho ring calling the bill a raid on the treasury and moved that tho whole bill bo laid oh the table but got no action Kawewehl and Halo supported the hill on tho ground that they were hero 10 iook alter tue interests of their con stituonts thus indicating that their con- stituents ¬ were road workers only in ¬ stead of Tho captains get higher wages and the crew should too declared Kawe nehi All the Sheldon sounded a note of warnlnc yesterday on route to tho Philippines ftatlnir that if this eountv forced uaving recently neen in wusuingiuu io pay 2 a auy worJc the other important not allqrd accept tno aonor than ¬ in would he called upon to do the same ana moved to table tup bill also got no action After some more warm oratory Bon- - i rcsentative moved to make tho bill a special order of for March 10 but lost on rolcalI and a Kn W1 order T Z louay carrica by one vote the duties of a secretary to a President There was considerable the ana himself o the jtnan of knowledge blanket matters one of men rely concerning a knowledge relating NfNETY provides Manchuria IN HOUSE O people ESTABLISH WAGES by Watkins passed employed reports taxpayers Counties counties but Keliinoi business was unofficial dis cussion during recess and rfome of the representatives will have to go on rec ¬ ord today on the rollcnll third read- - these expenditures he had perforce to j ngaltist wighe President splendid a J to PETEItSBUnO on FID FfiAUO III ALASKA DEALS DETROIT March 7 Seven indict nicnts were returned yesterday by the federal grand jury investigating alleged frauds in connection with Alaskan coal mine claims nnd land matters Prop- erty valued at fifty million dollars is involved in the various cases in which evidence of fraud has been found JUDGE LOWELL DEAD IIOSTON March 0 -- Vnltea States Circuit Jiidire Francis Cabot Lowell died hero today I CHANGE FOR THE CURLY BOSS SUPREME DOUBT REFUSES TO attANT mrar any BEHBAUINQ SAX FRANCISCO March 7 Abo Ruof convicted grafter whoso sentenco of fourteen years in tho penitentiary was recontly confirmed by supreme court decision vacating a favorablo decision of January 23 yesterday ap- plied to tho Stato supremo court for tho soctmd tlmo for rehearing That court yesterday nfternoon returned an nnswor on tho points submitted denying tho Toqiiest Ruef is now In the county jail await ¬ ing transportation to San Quentin t FORGE AT DO TROOPSHIPS BRING BELIEF TO LOYALISTS OF BAJA CALIFORNIA MEXICALI Lowor California March 7 Federal troops who havo been dis embarked from tho Mexican gunboat Gucrroio at Ensonada aro approaching this city which is in the hands of tho socialists revolutionists and an nttaok upon tho town- - will probably bo mndo today Tho main rebel force under Genoral Loyva is at Tia Juana which it had proposed to attack yestorday In antici pation of tho coming of the federals No word from that city Iibb reached hero to intimate whether the threat ¬ ened storming took place or not In addition to the fivo hundred men landed from the Guerrero another flvo hundred aro said to bo en route from Maratlan on the steamer Manuel Her- - rorlas with orders to drive every revo- lutionist ¬ out of Baja California Pierce Fight at El Tapia EL PASO Toxas March C Fierce fighting Is reported today from El Ta- pia ¬ across the border Tho rebels cap ¬ tured tho town nnd later abandoned It HENRY OF TEXAS Of BIG COMMITTEE WASHINGTON MaTch 7 Robert jjee nenryj or uoxas was yesterday so lectcd bytlio ways and means commit toe of tho houso to convene April i as chairmanoithe 3iow house committeo on ruTes TWnamea of the other members of -- the committee as an nounced yesterday by Representative Underwood indicate that the now reg ulators of the proceedings will bo tho jriost powerful body in that orgnnlza tion Chairman Henry has been a member of the house since tho fifty fifth cou gross Ho was chairmau of the Demo- - cratic caucus in tho fifty ninth Before becoming a representative the now chairman of the rules committee was assistant attorney general ARYAN ARRIVES WITH A BLIND SKIPPER SAN DIEQO March 7 Tho Amort can ship Aryan two hundred and seven days out yesterday and given up as lost for which the U S Fish Commlp slon steamer Albatross had been mis taken on Sunday finally arrived last night after a voyago of horrors The captain is blind having been stricken while directing tho operations of his crew oattllng to save the ship from being destroyed by are The Aryans coal cargo caught ilro shortly after the vessel had rounded the Horn and for two weeks tho battle against the elonients went on storms making the fire fighting most difficult EXPEBT THIEVES MAKE HAUIi OF FOETUNE NEW YORK March 0 One of the most remarkable thefts in the annals of New York criminal history occurred today when an envelope containing 100000 in securities was stolen from the poeket of Aaron Bancroft a promi- nent ¬ banker ns ho stood in tho corri ¬ dor of a safe depoult vault building Another envelopo like the first but stuffed with papers nnd making a per ¬ fect dummy was substituted for the one stolen The thlevoa made good their escape They arc believe to bo experts wiioLB 6ta MjlfSBItlf MORE SOLDIER FOB GENERAL sen h iA Five RegimentsReceive Orders to Leave for Front FOR FIELD SERVICE Infantry Cavalry and Guns Ordered Situ- ation ¬ Is Serious SAN FEANClSCO March 7 So se- rious ¬ has become the revolution la northern Chihuahua nnd Sonora andso frequent aro the reports corning in from the City o Mexico of tbe break- ing ¬ of the neutrality laws along tho American lino that orders havo bcon issued at Washington to dispatch four regiments of infantry andono of cav ¬ alry to tho front together with two companies of infantry from Whipple Barracks with two machino guns to re- - MsWWMM sIBBSt t IssUB Hi ft u ilH iHP JPffftfffeT IHi HEiisB9B6ltmlBvsfij9 jfiHaBBwIsHBIiirMiMEvilM JBEIG GEN WAITEB 8 SOHUYLEB iuforco tho troops undor Brigadier General Schuyler The eight companies of tho Thirtieth Infantry stationed nt tho Presjdlo hero havo recoived marching orders and will start today for the Mexican border equipped for field service The Eighth infantry stationed at Monterey is to join this forco which will also be joined at tho front by tho Fifteenth Infantry now at Fort Doug las Utah The Seventeenth Infantry wltn heal quarters at Fort McPhorson near At- lanta ¬ Georgia has receivod orders to prepare for field service aud tho Elev- enth ¬ Cavalry now at lNrt Oglothorpo Georgia has aho been officially noti- fied ¬ to start Two companies of tha Enghtconth In- fantry ¬ stationed at Fot Whipple near Prescott Arizona also leave for thu border today with two machino guns Watching the Border DOUGLAS Arizona Fobruary 24 A large part of tho United States Army is getting scattered along tho border In what appears to bo a vaia attempt to secure comploto observance of the neutrality laws General Schuyler commanding the department of tho Colorado accompanied by bis chief quartermaster Maj A W Kimball has been making an inspection of all troops nnd localities nlong the Arizona and New Mexico bordor As a result the commands aro being split up into small- er ¬ detachments and a much more com plete fuirvcllluncois being maintained One detachment lias been sent to Ari vacnevcnty miles southwest of Tucson whore thirty five mounted Mexicans lately woro reported to have passed bound southward The men did not ap- pear to bo armed but there is no doubt but that they were associated with tho iusurrectos In some manner Anoticr pnrty of eight men lately crossed th boundary line nenr this point bound for Blsbee where they ntd they would recruit n largo number of Moxlcnns for service- against the federals Thoy told that they had been In n fight last week west of Fronteras about midway be tween Douglas and NacoznrL Tho bat ¬ tle was n hot one but It appears that no one was hurt Cattlemen nlonp the border stp re porting tho loss of range horses which seem to have drifted mvsterlouslv nrross the line so nil of tho water holes nre to be gunrded very much as was done bv the American army In the Geronlmo campaign Just now water is unnsuallv ilentlful on the plnlns per mittluc tho departure by warlike wav- - fnrers from the nsunllv traveled path or roipmrrc Ifi Ml 1 1

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Page 1: MWU - University of Hawaiʻi...derson president ami treasurer of the Western Dry Goods Company of Seat-tle ¬ who is a guest at the Young Hotel states that there is a strong possibility

VOL L1V NO Irt

HILL UNER Mtillcup

Seattle Excursion May

Be the First of Many

Calls of Minnesota

MATTER DISCUSSED

Seattle Merchant Brings

News of Probable

Trade Route

After thei big Hill liner MinnesotaviBlts Honolulu the latter part of thismonth or the firsst of next with a partyOf Chicaigo trado excursionists en routeto the Orient aboard tho Great North-

ern¬

company may operato regularly theMinnesota on a new route with Hono

lulu ns a port of call Eugene G An ¬

derson president ami treasurer of theWestern Dry Goods Company of Seat-

tle¬

who is a guest at the Young Hotelstates that there is a strong possibility

of the company making this importantchange in its schedule and he belioves

it will bo doneThe excursion trip of tho Minnesota

to the Orient from Seattle via Hono-

lulu will do watched with interest bythe railroad officials and If the schemeworks out and tlie trip is made Tvith

a reasonable amount of profit and theexpenses resulting from increased con- -

eumptipn of coal are not top high thelinor will be placed on tho new routemaking calls each way

While the Minnesota would not makemany trips in a year from Seattle yetbecause of toe fact that jsho is such

a bg vessol thelargesf evelr sent toHonolulu with excellent opportunitiesfor developing travel from the Northwestinto the Pacific sho wmild jyob-a-bl-

y

become- - very --popular wiW thotraveling public and no doubtwouldbo generally patronized by thefpeoploof the Northwest

Mr Anderson states that bworo heleft Seattle for Honolulu tho matterwas being discussed while of coursebusiness interests woc glad of an

to tee a nov oneninfr fortrade development with the HawaiianIslands

The Northwest is a vast countrywith a vast income from its g cat pro-ducing

¬

lands said M Anderson yes-

terday Five hundred dollars peracre is a moderate income from produc ¬

ing lands and 1500 is a maxlnum andperhaps not much above- - the averagebut this indicates what a great incomewe have up there Our people are be ¬

coming wealthy and they want totravel California Is not altogether thoidoal winter resort and Hawaii as faras I have seen of it possesses just theright kind of a climate to att aottravelers It is an cquablo climate amimust be ideal here in tho wintermonths

It is tho wealthy toarist you wantto attract They aro tho ones we likefor a large percentage invest buyhomes remain and then attract othersI dont 66o why that rule should notobtain down here Tho establishingof a steamship line-- with the Minnesotato staTt it off with will develop traveldown here

Mr Andersons houso has done busi ¬

ness down hero but lias never had adirect representative Ho camo downhere to look over tho field personallyand was greatly surprised to seo whata progressive community ho had cometo The stores ho found are up todate ad want the best fabrics andlie is here to deliver the goods

IMPORTANT MEETING

THIS AFIERiO

Through an error in the originalnotice from tho chamber of commerceit was announced yesterday morningthat the joint meeting of the chamberthe merchants association and thoplanters association members was tohave been held yesterday The dateof the meeting has been set for thisafternoon at three oclock and tho fullmembership of the three associations isexpected to attend The meeting isone to discuss tho question of the reversal of the present taxing systemwhereby revenue will be raised to meetestimated expenditures and not expnditures made on the basis of revenueTho main point to come up at the meet ¬

ing this afternoon is tho proposedamendment to the bill to limit the taxon real and personal property to oneper cont

iim i fc 4Records at the tax lenartmeat in New

York show that Maria Snleker who wasfor 52 voar a domestic in n Fourthavenue houtehald saved 32000

MWUHONOLULU HAWAII TERUtTPRY

MAMMOTH LINER MAY MAKE OF

HONOLULU REGULAR PORT CALL

CHIC1G0 PARTY

OF Ti HUNDRED

COMMERCIAL EX0UBSI0NIST8 TO

BE OLAD IN SPECIAL

UNIFORMS

SPOKANE Washington March 1

More than one hundred membezs of theChicago Association of Commercetheir wives and a few of theirdaugkters making a party of two hundredMill arrivo in Spokano the morning of

March 19 on tho way to Seattlewhenco they sail on the steamship Minnesota ioriionoriiu me iouowing nuuuon a tour of the Pacific Ocean extend-

ing¬

nearly three monthsThe party will travel from Chicago

in a special compartment train overthe Burlington lino to St Paul and overthe Great Northern lino to Spokaneand Seattle George W Sheldon is

chairman of the committee In chargeR S Hotz is vice chairman and othermembers are Edward W Hines A C

Buttolph Oliver E Fuller D W Seippand D F Bremner

The hospitality programs to be extended by the authorities of HonoluluManila and tho Japanese cities on thoschedule are expected to be elaborateScretary of State Knox has instructedmo American liuiisuis ui cue yueiubsports to prepare for the comfort andenjoyment of tho Chicago visitors

Special UniformsTho men voyagers will wear a spe

cirl yachting uniform onsisting ot acap blue doublo brea ted fiat andwhite duck trousers In tho nine dajsjrunt through Japan they will wear allwhito uniforms with helmetf No spoci 1 garb is required of the women butthoy are now bnsjgatherlng wardrobesof summer gownsina appropriate mil- -

Fofes ing Is th4imo table aftsailing fiom Seattle at noon onMarch 20

Arrivo Honolulu Maxell 28 InoHcnolulu March 30 arrno YnkoharriApril 11 leave Yokohama April 14arrive Kobe April ISpeavo Kobo Apui17 arrivONagasakt April 10 lavNagasaki April 20 arrivo Manila April25 leave Manila April 27 arriveHongkong April 29 lcno HongkongMay 0 arrive Nagasaki May 30 InvoNagasaki May 11 arrive Kobe May13 leave Kobo May 10 airle Yokohama May 17 leave Yokohama May20 arrive Seattle June 3 arrive Spolcnno Juno 4 arrive St Paul Juno 0

arrive Chicago June o

A RIYAL FRANCHISE -F-

OR 10 RAW

Another franchise bill for a streetrailway in Hilo was injected in thelegislature yesterday when houso billnumber 128 was introduced by S PCorrea It is the expected rival to theapplication made in the senate asimilar railway with the differonso- - thatthn senate hill snnnnnpes Hi 5 rKfito ofthe railway as tironoscd while thoJmnar

years within a certain limitThe houBo bill grants a to

William H Beers his associates andassigns for the right to bplld this jroilwny over any roud now orejbUc ¬

or any road opened futurewithin ftvft ml1p In ftnv lrMitlnn

I

bo built if passes WtbSsWhHilo district

in Its other clansesfor terms ns In sonatebill work to be commenced within two

It was referred to judiciarycommittee

4fr

HfgTS

THE S S MINNESOTA

MARCH 7 1911 WEEKLY

OF

FUND

IS IT INCREASED

BUT- - MONEY MAY BE USED INWIDER WAY BEIiEOATBjjffO

STAY EAST

Ernest WalkerMail to Tho Advertiser

WASHINGTON February 23 Thesundry civil appropriation whichwas- - to the house today didnot carry an appropriationfor the study of leprosy in HawaiiTheappropratlons committee did not

that thoy could grant the audiiionaJU money which Secretary Mott- -

Smith Doctor BrinckerliofT asked

Hilothe bill

The 1111

tho same

vears the

By

bill

feel

andBut thoy did odd provision to tho roport against the billitem for investigating thejing out men getmoney might be spent anywhere in hoIslands It is claimed that this willenable the investigators in effect to do

more with the same amuont ofmoney than they have been able to do

The carries or tospecial to prepare plans forthe Hilo public building

SKMI

Special

increased

otherwise givingarchitects

Delegate Kalanianaole would Japaas cadet at the Naval Academy at An-napolis

¬

Marcus B Monsarrat withIvan M Graham as alternate

There is nothing new in tho judge-ship

¬

situation this end DelegateKalanianaole intends starting soon forHawaii as as the session of con ¬

gress However the prospects ofan extra session of congress seem tobe increasing in which event he wouldremain at Washingtoa in all prob-ability

¬

George McK McClellan has made noplans about going to Hawaii far

ECAN DECLINED

TO BECOME TAFTS

PRIVATE SECRETARY

Martin Egan editor and managingdirector of the Manila Times wasthrough passenger on

wastor roan

where he was offered tho postof secretary to President Taft MrEgan declined the offer bis principalreason being that lie couldto it

Wliilo being nattered

included the expenditure of more moneysalary by tunny

as Egan has not builded

is making fame and come money inproprietorship of one of the foremostpapers in the Far East

it iff understoodwished to have Egan ns his right hand

becausebill gives franchise fprUfiyfof in the Far East

franchise

high-way Itrtho

TUfeSDAY

reported

gan apto bo the in whom

President felt he conld for Information affairs in thePbilipnines added which wassplendid store tonfffiirs In Japan and China

itthe conrthouso at Th roflfl Is to

the

wiut

his

the

SHOWS

PIBB

Rusl MarchNinety were cremated and

forty otheri Injured by a fire todaynmovingplctiiro

flirr In iiMWiwMWi -

r

ONE VOTE IINS

ON 10 DOLLARS

Bpa TO TO

BE ACTED UPON IN THEHOUSE TODAY

When Jho miscellaneous committcoSubmitted a majority report inof theipassage of H B No 10 callingfor ho payment of 2 day to alllaborers employed by the county of Ho-

nolulu on road and other public worksit raised a storm which will be tackledagnia today when the bill comes up forthird reading

Representative Morcallino submitteda a minority point- -

leprosy that that more can work

much

heretofore

of

BTJENED

houHfr

favor

under tho present arrangement than iftho wages are Increased The majorityroport avas carried by oae vote

In its roport tho committee recom ¬

mended tho amendment of the bill bystriking out the words by contract

same bill a provision for thus the right

soon

athe

J5T

a

contractors to employ men on publicwork for less than rate paid

has selectedtho county That mean

from

ends

thus

paid uncioyet

Taft

nenrs

4ho

nesoLoss Money for All

Itepresentativo spoke againstthe bill explaining that if itthere would be fewer men ontho roads and also those who did getwork would havo to work fewer daysand so would not make moro in the endthan at the present rate of 150 a dayas there was only just so much moneyin the treasury for the work to be ac-complished

Itepresentativo Coney moved thatboth the majority and minorityhe laid on tho table but Alfonsojumped into tho ring calling the billa raid on the treasury and movedthat tho whole bill bo laid oh the tablebut got no action

Kawewehl and Halo supported thehill on tho ground that they were hero10 iook alter tue interests of their constituonts thus indicating that their con-stituents

¬

were road workers only in ¬

stead ofTho captains get higher wages and

the crew should too declared Kawenehi

All theSheldon sounded a note of warnlnc

yesterday on route to tho Philippines ftatlnir that if this eountv forceduaving recently neen in wusuingiuu io pay 2 a auy worJc the other

important

not allqrdaccept

tno aonor

than

¬

in

would he called upon to do thesame ana moved to table tup billalso got no action

After some more warm oratory Bon- -

i rcsentative moved to make thobill a special order of forMarch 10 but lost on rolcalI and aKn W1 order

T Z louay carrica by one votethe duties of a secretary to a President There was considerable

the anahimself o

the

jtnan of knowledgeblanket matters

one of menrely

concerninga

knowledge relating

NfNETY

provides

Manchuria

INHOUSE

O

people

ESTABLISH WAGES

by

Watkinspassed

employed

reports

taxpayers

Counties

countiesbut

Keliinoibusiness

wasunofficial dis

cussion during recess and rfome of therepresentatives will have to go on rec ¬

ord today on the rollcnll third read- -

these expenditures he had perforce to j ngaltist wighe

President

splendida J

to

PETEItSBUnO

on

FID FfiAUO III

ALASKA DEALS

DETROIT March 7 Seven indictnicnts were returned yesterday by thefederal grand jury investigating allegedfrauds in connection with Alaskan coalmine claims nnd land matters Prop-erty valued at fifty million dollars isinvolved in the various cases in whichevidence of fraud has been found

JUDGE LOWELL DEADIIOSTON March 0 -- Vnltea States

Circuit Jiidire Francis Cabot Lowelldied hero today

I CHANGE FOR

THE CURLY BOSS

SUPREME DOUBT REFUSES TO

attANT mrar anyBEHBAUINQ

SAX FRANCISCO March 7 AboRuof convicted grafter whoso sentencoof fourteen years in tho penitentiarywas recontly confirmed by supremecourt decision vacating a favorablodecision of January 23 yesterday ap-

plied to tho Stato supremo court for thosoctmd tlmo for rehearing That courtyesterday nfternoon returned an nnsworon tho points submitted denying thoToqiiest

Ruef is now In the county jail await ¬

ing transportation to San Quentint

FORGE AT DOTROOPSHIPS BRING BELIEF TO

LOYALISTS OF BAJACALIFORNIA

MEXICALI Lowor California March7 Federal troops who havo been disembarked from tho Mexican gunboatGucrroio at Ensonada aro approachingthis city which is in the hands of thosocialists revolutionists and an nttaokupon tho town- - will probably bo mndotoday

Tho main rebel force under GenoralLoyva is at Tia Juana which it hadproposed to attack yestorday In anticipation of tho coming of the federalsNo word from that city Iibb reachedhero to intimate whether the threat ¬

ened storming took place or notIn addition to the fivo hundred men

landed from the Guerrero another flvohundred aro said to bo en route fromMaratlan on the steamer Manuel Her- -rorlas with orders to drive every revo-lutionist

¬

out of Baja CaliforniaPierce Fight at El Tapia

EL PASO Toxas March C Fiercefighting Is reported today from El Ta-pia

¬

across the border Tho rebels cap ¬

tured tho town nnd later abandoned It

HENRY OF TEXAS

Of BIG COMMITTEE

WASHINGTON MaTch 7 Robertjjee nenryj or uoxas was yesterday solectcd bytlio ways and means committoe of tho houso to convene April i aschairmanoithe 3iow house committeoon ruTes TWnamea of the othermembers of -- the committee as announced yesterday by RepresentativeUnderwood indicate that the now regulators of the proceedings will bo thojriost powerful body in that orgnnlzation

Chairman Henry has been a memberof the house since tho fifty fifth cougross Ho was chairmau of the Demo- -

cratic caucus in tho fifty ninth Beforebecoming a representative the nowchairman of the rules committee wasassistant attorney general

ARYAN ARRIVES WITH

A BLIND SKIPPER

SAN DIEQO March 7 Tho Amortcan ship Aryan two hundred and sevendays out yesterday and given up aslost for which the U S Fish Commlp

slon steamer Albatross had been mistaken on Sunday finally arrived lastnight after a voyago of horrors Thecaptain is blind having been strickenwhile directing tho operations of hiscrew oattllng to save the ship frombeing destroyed by are

The Aryans coal cargo caught ilroshortly after the vessel had roundedthe Horn and for two weeks tho battleagainst the elonients went on stormsmaking the fire fighting most difficult

EXPEBT THIEVES MAKEHAUIi OF FOETUNE

NEW YORK March 0 One of themost remarkable thefts in the annalsof New York criminal history occurredtoday when an envelope containing

100000 in securities was stolen fromthe poeket of Aaron Bancroft a promi-nent

¬

banker ns ho stood in tho corri ¬

dor of a safe depoult vault buildingAnother envelopo like the first butstuffed with papers nnd making a per¬

fect dummy was substituted for theone stolen The thlevoa made goodtheir escape They arc believe to boexperts

wiioLB 6taMjlfSBItlf

MORE SOLDIER

FOB GENERAL

senh iA

Five RegimentsReceiveOrders to Leave

for Front

FOR FIELD SERVICE

Infantry Cavalry andGuns Ordered Situ-

ation

¬

Is Serious

SAN FEANClSCO March 7 So se-

rious

¬

has become the revolution lanorthern Chihuahua nnd Sonora andsofrequent aro the reports corning infrom the City o Mexico of tbe break-

ing

¬

of the neutrality laws along thoAmerican lino that orders havo bconissued at Washington to dispatch fourregiments of infantry andono of cav ¬

alry to tho front together with twocompanies of infantry from WhippleBarracks with two machino guns to re- -

MsWWMM

sIBBSt t IssUBHi ft u ilH

iHP JPffftfffeT IHi

HEiisB9B6ltmlBvsfij9

jfiHaBBwIsHBIiirMiMEvilM

JBEIG GEN WAITEB 8 SOHUYLEB

iuforco tho troops undor BrigadierGeneral Schuyler

The eight companies of tho ThirtiethInfantry stationed nt tho Presjdlo herohavo recoived marching orders and willstart today for the Mexican borderequipped for field service

The Eighth infantry stationed atMonterey is to join this forco whichwill also be joined at tho front by thoFifteenth Infantry now at Fort Douglas Utah

The Seventeenth Infantry wltn healquarters at Fort McPhorson near At-

lanta¬

Georgia has receivod orders toprepare for field service aud tho Elev-enth

¬

Cavalry now at lNrt OglothorpoGeorgia has aho been officially noti-fied

¬

to startTwo companies of tha Enghtconth In-

fantry¬

stationed at Fot Whipple nearPrescott Arizona also leave for thuborder today with two machino guns

Watching the BorderDOUGLAS Arizona Fobruary 24

A large part of tho United States Armyis getting scattered along tho borderIn what appears to bo a vaia attemptto secure comploto observance of theneutrality laws General Schuylercommanding the department of thoColorado accompanied by bis chiefquartermaster Maj A W Kimball hasbeen making an inspection of all troopsnnd localities nlong the Arizona andNew Mexico bordor As a result thecommands aro being split up into small-er

¬

detachments and a much more complete fuirvcllluncois being maintainedOne detachment lias been sent to Arivacnevcnty miles southwest of Tucsonwhore thirty five mounted Mexicanslately woro reported to have passedbound southward The men did not ap-

pear to bo armed but there is no doubtbut that they were associated with thoiusurrectos In some manner Anoticrpnrty of eight men lately crossed thboundary line nenr this point boundfor Blsbee where they ntd they wouldrecruit n largo number of Moxlcnns forservice- against the federals Thoy toldthat they had been In n fight last weekwest of Fronteras about midway between Douglas and NacoznrL Tho bat ¬

tle was n hot one but It appears thatno one was hurt

Cattlemen nlonp the border stp reporting tho loss of range horses whichseem to have drifted mvsterlouslvnrross the line so nil of tho waterholes nre to be gunrded very much aswas done bv the American army In theGeronlmo campaign Just now wateris unnsuallv ilentlful on the plnlns permittluc tho departure by warlike wav- -

fnrers from the nsunllv traveled pathor roipmrrc

Ifi

Ml

11

Page 2: MWU - University of Hawaiʻi...derson president ami treasurer of the Western Dry Goods Company of Seat-tle ¬ who is a guest at the Young Hotel states that there is a strong possibility

r

n i uniiiHrwilf Hi Mlilli HI iinmliinilillihn lrnnlilrrjr rir

GOVERNOR SENDS

IN MESSAGE

AiJILLReviews territorial and

County Needs for

Pubtic Work

OUTLINES A PLAN

1924240 Plus Road

Money Called for

in Bill

From Saturdays AdvortisorThe permanent improvements net

carrying the appropriations for thourgent construction work needed by thoTerritory was presented in both housesof tho legisluturo yesterday GovernorFrcar submitting his estimate and alengthy racssago in which ho outlinedtho necessities of tho Territory

Ono of the largest items is for thoHonolulu water system for which beasks 500000 and a bond Issuo willprobably be authorized tho principalnnd interest to bo paid out of tho reccipts from tho department

Tho parks territorial buildings andother needed improvements como in fortheir fair share of attention Tho schoolsaro treated at length as being ono oftho most important needs of tho Islandsot tho present timo and tho relations ofcounty government in relation to ter-ritorial

¬

government as regards schoolsis discussed

Tho messago is as follow

A Message From the Governor

To tho Legislature I submit here- -

with in tho form of nn appropriationbill estimates tor public Improve-ments

In my first message I suggested thodesirability of separate bills for curTent expenses and permanent improve ¬

mentsTho amount available for public im ¬

provements from loan funds now in thotreasury after meeting outsanding ob-ligations will bo practically nothingbut there is a substantial surplus ingeneral funds though email ns com ¬

pared with the needsoi uunus mar i

bo nH iq maesiea 1500000Roviscd Laws pago 1302 is 17G0

000 If public improvements aro tobe provided for ont of loan funds inexcess of tbnt amount either tho exist-ing

¬

loan act mast be amended so as toextend tho limit to which bonds maybe Issued or else a new enabling actmnst enacted

The limit prescribed by the OrganioAct to which bonds may be issued isono per cent of tho assessed value ofproperty or say 1500000 in anyono year and seven per cent in theaggregate but it will probably bo advisable in any event to issue tho bondsnot all nt but in instalments soas to avoid keeping an unnecessarilylarge sum in idleness and so ns not toaffect labor conditions too seriouslyTho total amount of bonds now out-standing

¬

is 4020000 or 2G8 per centof the nssessed valuo of property Anadditional 25000 is about to bo paid

Facilitate SaleThe recent amendments of tho Or

ganic Act extended the term for whichbonds may bo issued from fifteen yearsto thirty years This should facilitatethe sale of bonds at a lower rato otinterest or a higher price than wouldotherwise bo possible On the otherband the bond market at tho presenttimo is such that n higher rato of in ¬

terest may have to bo paid or thobonds sold at a greater discount thanwas the caso with the last threo issuesIt may bo that bonds cannot be soldat par unless thoy bear interest nt arato as high as four per cent por an-num although the market may improvo before the bonds are issued soas to make it possible to sell them onbetter terms Tho last salo wob 3per cent fifteen year bonds nt 9825If the rate of interest is 4 per centthere will have to bo set asldo annuallyfor sinking fund in addition to inter-est

¬

499 per cent if the term of thobonds is 15 years 336 per cent if thoterm is 20 years 240 per cent if thoterm is 25 years nnd 178 per cent itthe term is 30

In order to justify tho issuance otbonds adequate provision should bomade nlso for tho expenditure of theproceeds to the best ndvantage andwithout waste and for tho upkeep ofthe improvements thereafter so thatthe improvements will not require tobo replaced beforo the bonds are paid

Host ot the improvements coveredby tho proposed bill have been explained sufficiently in my first messageto wblcb your attention is invitedThey are divided into two classesnamely thoso which aro territorial andthose Vhieb are county and city andcounty in nature

territorial improvementsclassified into water and sewer workswharf and harbor improvements andpnblie buildings

Special BondsAs to water nnd sewer works all the

bonds that may be issued for thesomay be met principal and interest outof the revenues of those works as provided by Act 105 Laws of 1009 andsection 6 of the bill submitted herevlth

As to wharf and harbor improve-ments tho bonds that may be issuedfor these may bo met in part at leastout of revenues ot tbe improvements to be mode with the proceedsof such bondl It is a question call- -

vJLSJilfri

RAWAttAK hit HFHiMY MARlH

nH wkr lnmM t b Mfcmlw WM k pltt lkt Utfc

tM K VM tat pwMrt bjr H lMf tfTmlUH t m ht IM Mllrmul At MMttMimMBhw Mr fmw ih Tfrttnrr In b at II Ho a lirbi bw jrtftDl In II Hit MnllrMdOmfcpanr 11 t whsrf net jrtil1 MUDtrrttet 1h lli saw KaHalo the jtMtlem nt tl bHanre efA IIBMr hM IHtt Ik MftJMt r l- -

evMhm blwMn I ho gerefftment anderrUIn railroad vmmhIm foul noHettiM bai yt ben lrl In Mhof lmt oaM Iho whsrve are proIxmhhI far ImbIIIIw Ih whleh there itnow Utile or no ImalnM and to nhlehthe railroads do not ejtend anil It iisuggested that If appropriations arcin silo for the construction of thesewharves they should bo made only onsome such conditions ai these set forthIn the bill In order to assure tho useot tho whanes At Kohulul the wharfhag already been constructed under nlicense from Territory and it la aquestion whether that should now bopurchased by tho Territory as may bodono under terms of the licenceat nn appraised value not to exceed thocost Again it is n question whetherMcGregors wharf should be extendedas it ought to bo if it Is to rcranln theprincipal landing on that side of Mauifor Vvailuku or whether tho principallanding should bo changed to Klhol

Buildings Needed

As to territorial buildings most ofthese arc pressing- - needed They nrchowever non revenue producing Im-provements

¬

and should be provided foras far as possible out of general revenues As pointed out in my first mossago they have first claim upon thoterritorial surplus Accordingly it isprovided in section 2 ot the bill thatthfcso may be paid for out of tho gen ¬

eral revenues in so far ns thcro maybe such revenues available for the pur-pose When tho Territory is so fortu ¬

nate ns to have a surplus it should boused tor neglected objects of this naturo In order to keep down the bondedIndebtedness or to pay off such indebt-edness for which sufficient provisionhas not yet been mndc It is impos-sible- to estimate accurately what thorevenues for a future biennial periodwill be becauso they depend so muchupon the varying price of sugar andother varying causes So far as ennbe estimated it is probnblo that alarge portion of these buildings andperhaps nil of them may bo providedfor out of tho general revenues pro ¬

vided bolt ronds arc provided for outof loan funds Tho potent reasons whybolt ronds should bo provided for outof loan funds and tho general reve ¬

nues used for such territorial buildingsas these aro set forth in my first mes ¬

sageorder to reduce the of these

buildings as much as possible it is proin 8 of the bill that

for institutions may bo con

iA

Nided section thosecertain

structcd as far as practicable by theinmates of those institutions In thecase of the prison it is a questionwhether the site of that should bechnnged if so a far larger amountthan that stated in the bill will berequired and in any event a largeramount should bo provided if possi-ble Accordingly in order to providetho necessary rovenucs for tneso pur

a no amount may yet i i i i i

the loan act wharf

bo

once

years

The are

tbo

hM

tho

tho

In cost

7section 4 of tho bill which mny easilybo modified to meet tbo views of tholegislature Thcro is need of a publicbuilding at Hilo for the use of the cir-

cuit court and other purposes but thoneed is not of sucb immediate urgencyns tho need of tho other buildings referred to nnd it is a question alsowhether thnt should bo provided for asa territorial building or as n countybuilding No cstimnto is included forsuch a building but your attention iscnllcd to it in order that it may notbe overlooked

Kaplolanl ParkAs a fourth class of desired terri-

torial¬

improvements tho Kapiolani Parkmay bo mentioned as ono requiring asmall appropriation of say 12000 forvarious improvements in caso it shouldbe regarded as suggested in my firstmessage as in tho nature partly of a ter-ritorial

¬

park and partly of a city andcounty park tho Territory providingfor tho permanent improvement and thocity and county lor tlio upKeep underthe of a torntorial boardThnt albO is a non revenue producingimprovement and for that reason andbecauso of the nature of the object theappropriation if nny should bo madeshould perhaps bo included in the appro-priation bill for current expendituresso as to have it payablo out of thogeneral exclusively

As to county and city and county im-

provements¬

it is a question whether thebonds should be issued by tho Torritoryfollowing the precedent sot by tho lastlegislature in thu caso of the Kula pipoline or by the several counties nnd citymid county The Territory could doubt-less

¬

issuo tho bonds nt lower rates ofinterest nnd if tho reimbursement ofthe Territory by the counties and cityand county for interest and sinkingfund should bo provided for in thomanner set forth in section 7 of thobill the counties nnd city and countywould havo the additional advantngo ofbeing able to pay tho bonds and dis ¬

charge their obligations at any timointtend of being obligod to wait a longperiod until the bonds should becomo re ¬

nnd would nlso avoid thonecessity of accumulntinc the sinkinirfund which is objectionable from thestandpoint of a sound fiscal policy be- -

cuuse the Territory can make use oramounts set aside for sinking fund pur-poses

¬

from timo to timo by applyingthem to tho payment ot its earlier issues of bonds while the counties havono such earlier issues of bonds whiletho counties have no such earlierto which they could npply their sinkingfund

The county nnd city and county im-provements

¬

arc divided into two classesnamely belt roads and school buildingsNo estimates are made for tho formeran some of the counties may not wishto havo bonds issued for that purnosonnd other counties will wish to determine tho amounts desired by themIllanks aro left for ho insertion of thedesired amounts if any of the countiesprefer to avail themselves of thismethod and the legislature approves

Schools a NecessityTbe construction of school buildings

however is a necessity and tho onlyquestion should bo whether thoy shouldbo ronttructed as territorial or a coun-ty buildings If the maintenance of

buildings is to remain in tho coun- -

minimum if ii mrtlry M totftMtriHK W MIMIHtf IM MM HI

thi Mfpft rf lb jiMI yhftfar wblib i not always rdWttT furlh rawHti t ttMlhtaln thtm pTfpWlr

llarlng lb tail ynt tot UtlNttethe rmtMly In vrlileb I here ii lh Itrjeitnumber of Mfcosl lnlMliirs MptlM

I bum I n8thlng far Iheir mslnlwinnIf the building ihod he enitntlat nty Inttldlnf to b renmnl bytho comltm and net by Ida Territorywhen they linear the eounllw iretildbavmn additional Inducement for propitrly maintaining them If the TerntorrIi tn construct them either it shouldbe provided with tho means of maintnlnlng them or elio thftlr maintenanceshould fn tome way bo mndo obllgalory on tho counties In caso any oftho counties ahould prefer to constructIts school buildings without tho iMunnceof bonds provision Is mndo for tbnt inme proviso or section o or tno bin

If the Territory is thus to lend Itscredit to tho counties for the construetion of belt roads nnd school buildingIt must see to the proper applicationof the proceed b of tho bonds for whichIt is primarily liable and on tho otherhnnd if the counties aro to be ultimately responsible for tho pnymont of thebonds tlfy nlso ahould have a voice intho application of tho fund Accord-ingly provision Is made for this in section S of tho bill

Economy a MotiveThe bill docs not Include estimates

for all need nor nre all the ostlmntesthat aro included ns largo aB might bedesired Tho aim has been to keendovrn the bonded indebtedness to insuroits payment nnd tho economical expenditure of loan funds and to meet thevarying needs and resources ofthe Ter-ritory and the sovoral counties and cityand county bo little has been dono lorsome years past in the matter of publicimprovements citner out or loan junasor out of general revenues that muchis required now in order to meet theurgent needs of a growing country

W i Jbif JSAKGovernor of Hawaii

The Items NamedThe bill specifies appropriations to tho

amount of 1024241 wthout namingadditional amounts for the belt roadsof the various islands The items speci ¬

fied aroTerritorial Improvements

Honolulu water nnd sowerworks 50000000

Honolulu wharves and harbor 35000000Hilo wharves and harbor on

condition that the HiloKallroad enters into a satisfactory agreement to ex-

tend¬

Its railroad to suchwharf and operate it ns acommon carrier for a termof not Icbs than ten years 20000000

Konwaloa wharf on condi-tion

¬

that the Konsi KauRailroad Company entersinto a satisfactory agree ¬

ment tn construct at leastfifteen miles of railroadwith its terminus at suchwharf and to operate-- thosame as a common carrlorfor the term of not lessMinn ton viwrs 8000000

j Nnpoopoo wharf 1500000issued under existing tiini j I Mahukonn

direction

revenues

deemable

issues

school

Kahuhii- - including purchaseof present wharf 3024000

McGregors wharf 900000Hannlei whnrf 1000000Collego of Hawaii 7500000Girls Industrial School 4000000Boj s Industrial School 3000000Lahainaluna School 2500000Insane Asylum 5000000Prison vouuuuuKalihi Hospital 2500000Amory Honolnlu on condi ¬

tion that a suitable site boobtained therefor 7500000

Armory Lahninn 10000oqSchool Buildings and Equipment

Knimuki COOOOQO

1ohuknina 3000000 boardKnuluwcla 3000000Miscellaneous Honolulu 1500003Lahnina 3UuuuuuMiscollan eous Maui 1 250000Hilo Union 6500000Napoopoo v 800000Miscellaneous Hawaii 1250000Hnnnpepe 4000000Miscellaneous liauni vuuuuji

Bonds and General RevenueThe bill provides for tho payment of

income producing Improvements fromloan fund and the payment for thonon producers from general revenue

as far as there mny be sucn revenueavailable for tho purpose Contractsfor tho work on tho public institutionsis not obligatory in order to utilizofor that purpose tho labor of tho in- -

mates of tho institutionsAn important clauso Is ono specify ¬

ing that for city or county work underthe bill the expenditure of the ap-

propriation¬

the letting of contractsana tno penormanco or tno worn

shall bo under tbo directionand subject to tho approval of a com-mission

¬

for each county and city andcounty consisting of too superintend-ent

¬

of public workB tho mayor orrlinirnmii nf tbo board of sunorvlsorsand threo other persons appointed hytho Governor as provided in section 80of tho Organic Act who aro residentsof tho county or city and county inwhich auqb work is to be performed

SPE1IER IS PUZZLED

BY GOiESPOiENGE

Speaker Holstclu of the house of representatives is puzzled over the identityof a correspondent in Hilo who writesin behalf of a bill introduced by Rep-resentative

¬

Baker prohibiting a super-visor

¬

or any other public officer beinginterested in n covernment contract

The unknown writes Hoping thatsuch a bill will meet with your approvaland that yon will do your utmost thatsaid bill become a law nt this sessionI remain yours truly

And thnt Is the cud of it What Isa puzzled speaker to dot

PILES CURED IN O TO 14 DAYSIAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed

o euro nny caso of Itching BlindBleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 t14 days or money refunded Made byPARIS MEDICINE CO Saint LouisU of A

mkAmmimd

MOST UMLSILL SUBMITTEO

COMMISSION aOVMHNMRNTSHOWN TO 88 B1MMS AND

BOONOMICAL

m

From Saturdays AdvertiserWilli the third nMr commtMlon gov

eminent bill Introduced In the house ofrepresentatives yesterday by F KArcher tho judiciary committee willhavo a lively time of it when hearingsaro commenced to thresh out tho ononnd only bill for tho honso to act uponeventually

The bill submitted by RepresentativeArcher yestorday and known as housobill number 120 is tho nearest approachto tho real commission form of government of all those now beforo the housoIt coos much farther than cither Itop- -

rceontntivo Costlo or RepresentativeLong went in their bills

jbor instance It limits tno ouicers tobo elected by the city and county ofHonolulu to a mayor a board of foursupervisors and an auditor tho board ofsupervisors to consist of tho mayor nndthe other four members These mustprovldo bonds in 10000 but tho nuditor must find 25000 bonds The salaryof tho mayor shall bo 3000 a yearwhile tho salaries of tho supervisors andauditor snau bo SZ4UU a year

The main points of the now bill concentrate tbo power of tho gopornlngbody to tne smallest limit section no78 says

Given Full Powers

The board of supervisors shall havoand possess und the board and its members shall exorcise all executive legisla-tive

¬

and judicial powers and duties nowhad possessed and exercised by thomayor board of supervisors tho treas-urer

¬

tho city and county nttornoy thocity and county clerk tho sheriff nnddeputy sheriffs nnd nil other officers nnder tho city and county whether theynre elected or appointed under tho provisions of act 118 nnd all amendmentsthereto

The executive and administrativepowers authority and duties in tho cityand county shall bo distributed into andamong five departments as follows

Department oi public nitnirsDepartment or accounts

financesDeDartmcnt of public safety

and

Department of streets nnd publicimprovements

Department of health parks andgarbage

Then follows a clnuso which compelsthe board of supervisors to determinetho powers and duties to bo performedby tho various officers and to nssignthem to tne nppropriate aepanmenisBut Bcction No 79 relieves tho boardof special responsibility in regard totno mayor and says

Special For MayorTho mayor shall be superintendent

of tbe department of public affairs andtho board shall at its first regular meet ¬

ing designate by a majority yote onosupervisor to bo superntendent of eachof tho other departments

Tho bill provides for tho selection ofnil the Other city nnd county officersby n majority vote of tho board in ¬

cluding a city clerk city attorneytreasurer civil engineer electriciansuperintendent of tho water and sewerworks chief of the fire department citynhvsician sheriff nnd shall appoint adistrict judge or judges in ench district

Another power the bill gives the supe visors is to create or discontinue anyoffico and employes mny be removed ntnny timo by n majority vote or me

Vhe bill is to take effect as soon nsappioved by tbo Governor

There was very little discussion overflu- - hill in the house yesterday andit i- - understood that all three bille arenow up to the judiciary committee orwill be when they aro received from thoprinting committee and pass secondrending It is possible that a publichearing on tho bills will bo called later

TROUBLE lOfIG

T

JAPANESE AND FHJPINOS HAVE

DIFFICULTY AT EWA

ONE DYING

From Baturdays AdvertiserOnly tho bad aim of a Filipino luna

averted n riot on Ewa plantation yesterday botween the Japanese nnd Filipinos according to the informationbrought back by Chiof McDuffie Instnight Two men are now under arrestand ono is dying in tho plantation hos¬

pital as a result of trouble between twogangs of laborers ono of littlo brownbrothers nnd tho other of Nipponese

The Japancso wero tho first in thefield and had selected their section be-

foro

¬

the Filipinos had arrived Tho

latter attempted to drive the Japaneseaway tbe luna marching in front swinging a big cane knife As the Japanesewhom lie was approaching backed upho drew a handkerchief from hispocket and as he did so there was asudden report anq two iapaneso sawflame and Btuoke issue from it Tbechief afterwards recovered the handkerchief but all the Filipinos deny anypossession of a gun

But instend of hitting one of theJapanese tho luna if Jit was ho whoilrod hit ona of his own party FermenCantalanaman who was shot throughtbe intestines ana who is expected todlo He is being treated at tbo pinntation hospital

Marcus Sobrimesana and AntonlpQoebrado one tbo luna and the otherbis roommate iiavo oeen nrronea amiare held under investigation until thochief can obtain further Informationfrom the plantation laborers who tawtbo disagreement

HllIlPllWllHllWHHIi ilgtHH

mum inON OREGON PLUN

NOT flDRAli BUT BBINO SUT INTOBHAPB TO BB VERY

EITaOTIWB

Leslie M Beott one of the oitncrsand tbo AMoelate editor of the Portland Oregonlan I In tho city and Itwatching tho progress of legislationwith a great deal of Interest HUStnlo is tbe homo ot tho Oregonplan extolled throughoat tho lengthand tho breadth of tho Union by whichsenator nre selected by tho direct voUiof tho people and which Includes thedirect primary tbe lnltlntlve referon- -

dum nnd tho recall and about everything else in advanced legislation a i

Mr Scott confesses that it has notnil worked out according to the Idealsof the reformers bnt states that withall its faults tho now system is an im-provement

¬

on the old ono of machineand boss rule

Wo are trying to amend tho faultsof the present system and leave thogood he said last night referring totbo Oregon situation

I understand that you aro after adirect primary law here ho continued ll jou get It you will findthat it tnkes time to net tho best results Our experience at the start wasthat tho officials chosen wero mightybad ones but things nre getting bet- -

ter jit us wuffr uiu uirvcb priuiurjgives us bettor men than under the oldsystem

The main lauit wo nave to undwith tbe direct primary is that oftenthe man with a minority of the votesIs elected Tho present Governor nndsenior senator oi our atato arc demo-crats for instance while the votingpower of tho Republicans is three toone We havo now straightened thismatter ont by having a first and second cnoice in tne popular vote forsenators

Initiative and BeferendumRegarding the initiative and refer-

endum¬

methods these aro very proneto give the minority power owing totho apathy of tho majority of the elec-

tors At our last elections wo hadthirty two bills brought up for ballotby these methods They me voted onaccording to tho names of the bills nndOur expeiienco has shown that theyare mostly tbe work of cranks andagitators These men get together insome back room and draft out a billIt is then put on tbo street and signatures are canvassed for Most peoplowho sian the proposed bill nevertrouble to rend the contents or if theydo want to know what Is in it then

nnd

in put billmeir uwu uu mo aencieucy

are aisoonly n few thousand votes and I an of

or votes may j ontotnl one fifth of tho votes on theA measure has recently been intro-duced

¬

however to make compulsorya majority of of tho

to signify their approval beforea measure holds good

Afraid of Machine PoliticsOne of the main reasons why wo

shall stick to the present system isthat tho peoplo are afraid to go backto the old machine days and wouldrather amend and regulate thomethod Tho politics of the State werevery bad tho plnn andtbopeople got so thoroughly thatthey are determined not to let it goback to that if they can help it

HUNTER HOPES FDR

FAR REflGHIHG RESULT

AUSTBALIAN REPRESENTATIVE

PAN PAOD7IO OFF FOEHOME

I am very hopeful of far reachingresults to bo achieved by Pan-Pacifi- c

Congress and am also hopeful thatwill in more frequent visits

of Australian steamships here saidPercy nuntor official representative oftho Australian Government at the Pan- -Pacific Congress If steamshipnervjeu 19 juipruvcu x cuuuuuui muiit will result In a largo in tbenumber of Australians coming hero toenjoy beauties of your capital cityand your Islands

Mr Hunter departed Australiayesterday on Zealandla and was

n sendon by several local peo-plo

¬

and all his Australian friends Hostated he was very grateful to overy- -ono hero who helped to uivcsuch a good time and especially to theHawaii Promotion Committee

I hopo we shall bavo a largo deleirotn Pan Pacific Congress

at Sydney in 1913 at which time Ihone I shall bo able to entertain nilthoso who were present at firstcongress Honolulu

I think tbnt tbo fact theWorlds Fair is to be held in BanFrancisco in 1010 going to bo one oftho biggest factors in malting Pacific tho great field travel and Ithink too much emphasis cannot bo

on tbe necessity of all the coun ¬

tries bordering on tho Pacificmaking a special effort to get in onthis immense fair

Mr Hunter wished to state that howas extremely pleased with tbo hoteland cafe service here and he felt hewas fortunate in being given goodservice at the Young Hotel He waspleased with the Young Cafe and be-

lieved¬

that in Rudolph Heydenreicheafe bad one of best restaurateurson tho Pacific

ml-

MINNESOTA RETURNS TOYOKOHAMA DISABLED

YOKOHAMA March Sv tfholiner Mnnesotn which sailed from

this to cross tbe Pacific to Seattleis returning with a broken thrust shaft

1 1 kikstaf jb itctifeJ Mi tu utifodbi iS aiitt JsTisi iii iii saiififTsi JtMiitig a yriFriiaatrtiivYi trrifje rfrjifftsl rftft vy

MMMmJgaUaJim UJMuiCMMmjrimiMmaiJ J1 Jc SJfubl

ilFf Tlir

EXTRA SESSION

BY MIDDLE OF

MONTH

Taft Is Disappointed atSenates Refus a

to Agree

PEARY IS THANKED

so Gets Rank and PayFrom Day He Fouud

North Pole

WASHINGTON March 4 Tho mombers of tho sixty first congress enteredupon their last day of work nt mid-

night¬

both houses grinding away ontho mass of routine before thorn Ad ¬

journment was taken early this niorn-in- g-

Tbe President has abandoned all hopoof tho senate taking action before mid- -

night today on the Canadian reciprocityagreement He is bitterly disappointed

makes no secret of thisThe extra session of siity second

congress virtually n certainty as thoPresident is determined that some disposition of reciprocity agreementmust be mndc in order that tho Cana ¬

dian parliament may up the mat¬

ter on its side It is probable thoextra session will bo called immedi-ately

¬

and the dato set not later thanMarch 16

Peary Gets His DueBoth house and sennto yesterday

passed tho amended naval bill whichplfces Commander Peary tho polar ex-plorer

¬

on the retired list of civil en-gineers

¬

with tho rank and pay of arear admiral both to date from April 01909 on which dnto tho explorerreached tho North Pole

Penry was also voted tho thanks ofcongress for his achievement and fortne glory bo bad brought Americaand tho American Navy

Postoffico Bill PassesThe postoffico appropriation bill car

rying two hundred fifty eight mil- -

tho men charge if the canvass fonii paRSed in tho senate thistuiunu covering appropriations

it goes on Some of them passedby the The bill calling for increasewnole number cast noi postngo rates advertising matter in

roll

Itfor tho wholevoters

new

under oldalarmed

AT

the

it result

thouiu

increase

tho

fortho

given

bad him

gation tho

thein

that

istbo

for

laidOcean

sucb

tbethe

JapanHill

port

Vu f

thois

tho

tnkothat

tho

to

nnd

the magazines was withdrawn and in ¬

stead a resolution was adoptod callingupon tho postal commission to investigate the plan and report back

Captain Veedor BestoredTbe senate bill restoring Captain

Veoder V S N retired to tho activelist was passed in the houso

Tho Sundry civil bill cumins threomillions for immediato uto Jn PanamaCanal fortification work passed thosenate

No Friar Land DealTho majority and minority rcportB

were presented in tho houso on thoFriar lands investigation Both roiports exonerate tho Philippine officialsjof any intention of wrongdoing butcriticize tho laws for inadequacy toprovent monopolistic holdings

s

1 T

LABEDO Texas March 4 Lieu ¬

tenant Foulois U S A and PhilipParmaleo flew from Eagle Pass to thisplace yesterday a distance of one hnndrd and six miles covering the distanco in two hours and ten minutesThis establishes two worlds recordsfor aeroplane flights with a passengera record for distance and for time

STARVING CHINESE

KILL EACH OTHER

IHANKOW China March 3 Twen-ty-on- e

men women and children weretrnmpled to death today and many oth-ers

¬

injured in an immense crowd thatgathered at Shayang where missiona ¬

ries were attempting to distribute foodfor tho starving people

MANILA DENIES

SENDING CHOLERA

TO HONOL

Speeial Cable to Tho AdvertiserMANILA March 3 Fox acting di

rector of tbe health bureau here inresponse to Honolulu reports that tbecholera there was brought by FilipinoJnunigrnnts states that such Is ImposIblo unless the disease appeared among

fl m111- - TuW0 o uolera Inthe Philippines

ftiJl dMi

Page 3: MWU - University of Hawaiʻi...derson president ami treasurer of the Western Dry Goods Company of Seat-tle ¬ who is a guest at the Young Hotel states that there is a strong possibility

rl

KIPPERS TELL

OPPOSITE

THUS

Captain Sam Worn Out

by Long Exposure

Back to Report

REPEATSHISCHARGE

Kukui Men Mistook

Lighthouse for a

Schooner

3in22SS22j

Prom Sundays AdvertiserO

oI was in my room asleep

when the Krtui struee theschooner Tbc recond officer

i Shaw was In cbavgo of tl a ves- -

Bel at the time I cazro on deckimmediately and had the Kukui

0 stand by while the searchlightswere operated We saw ur oneand hoard no one According tothe Krkuis leg the Kukui re- -mained in the vicinity for anhour and twenty minutesStatement cf Captain Kerlgerof thn United States LlohthousoTender Kukui

a The Kukui changed hercourse and headed directly formy schecaer and btrcck us amid- -

ffl shies end the bcnocner sank im--mediately The rtcamer contin- -ncd on her coujo ard when shegot to windward she used hersearchlights We soiled untilwe were hoarse and then shecontinued on her course Ifloated on two Blanks for nearlytwenty hours and on Tuesdayafternoon Z landed at KaonaPoint Lanal All my crew oremake Strtemest of C ptaiuSam of the schooner Moi Wa--

hineo oOThe above are the statcmonta of tho

commanders of tho two vessels whichwore tho principals in the tragedy ofthe sea in the channel between Molokaiand Maui on Monday night when thoKukui jammed and sank tho islandschooner Moi Wahina and caused sevenmen of the schooner to drown

Captain Sam arrived from Xahalnayesterday morning on tho Mauna KeaHe was in a collapsed state physicallyus a result from his twenty hours ex-posure

¬

in tho open sea on two plankswithout a diDp of water to drink oru morsel of food Ho is about coventy- -

eix years age and only becausa ofhis hardy constitution could he havesuiweii mat terrimo oraeai xio wasso worn out even when he ai rived yesterday that he was rot asked to makean ouicial statement of tbo causes leading to the sinking oi his lscI butTin Monday ho will make his statementto the collector of customs throughHind Kolph Co his agents CaptainSam was met at the wharf by membersof his family and was taken to hishome to bo nuised back to strengthagain But Captain Sam wert beck tohis homo stripped of bis al for hisvessel represented the livings of al-

most¬

a lifetime and ho is again left tofaco the woild and to commence oncemore at tho bottom of the ladder

His StoryCaptain Sam states that tho Moi

Wahino was off Palaau Mobkai onMlonday evening abou eight thirty andhe was at the wheel at the time Allhands weie tm deck At tho timo hewas on tho starboard tack and he sawtho lights of a staaaier coming downthe channel between his boat and theshore Tho vossel app6a ed to sudden ¬

ly change her course and headed direct-ly

¬

toward him Immediately afterwardtho Mo Wabiro ws struck amidshipsand she sank at once there boing notimo even to loner a boat The steam-er

¬

continued on her course and thenappeared to stop and the searchlightswore thrown around Captain Samstates he yelled foi help or an ho statedit we yelled for help although hosays littlo about his comrades andprobably know little of what happenedto them Ho Bays the steamer was farnwny when she began to throw hersearchlight and then tho Kukui stoodon her courso Ho believes if thosteamer had stopped immediately thocollision occurred cud lowered a boatho and his crew could have been pick ¬

ed up tbqaLuckily he caught bold of two planks

from the wreckage of his ship and onthese he floated to Lanal Island Hefelt it would be impossible to reachMolokai on account of the wind Aboutnoon on Tuesday he was to leeward ofLanai and drifted ashore Ho draggedHimself overland trout JiOena Iolnt toAwaluf whero ho found a desertedhouse Hero a mattress was ripped upto provido covering for he was en-

tirely¬

naked The noxt morning hestarted for Maunalel arriving thereWednesday afternoon and Thursdaymorning- - went to Charles Gays homeat Kahalepalaoa whero he was givena sun of clotties

Ho states positively that hi lightswore uurning at tno time or tue coillilon

Kerigers StatementCaptain Kerlger of the Knhul states

that he was on deck of the Kukui untilabout eight oclock the night of thecollision but was swleep in bit room

y

when the boats name together Heheard what twined to tie s rraib Iffmet the eud offiior who wag

Jffw

SSffi

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE TUESDAY MAW I 7 tiliillUIIIWWIWIMiHMHl4IJllilWlliritH

MILEf BBSTHEN DOESNT

SS8IOHS AND WITHDRAWS IOSKBSIOKATION VEBT

qUIOTCLY

WASHINGTON March C SenatorBailey of Texas throw a itirprlso Intotbo senato yesterday by presenting hisresignation to Vice President Shermanadding tho second surprlso by withdrawing his resignation as soon as thoPresidents proclamation calling anextra session of congress was madepublic

Tho Texas senators reason for pre ¬

senting his resignation was the plquoho felt at tho attitude toward him ofhis fellow Democrats and tho snubs hois alleged to have received in tho recent Democratic caucuses when hisclaim to leadership was not recognized

His request to bo allowed to with ¬

draw his letter of resignation camewithin an hour after tho Presidentsproclamation His letter of resignationsent at the same time to Governor Col

quitt of his Stato has also been withdrawn

GASPARRI FOUND THE

HONOLULU GUI1E GOOD

SAN FRANCISCO February 34Many trials and tribulations awaitedMadame Emma Calve yesterday whenshe arrived hero on the Chiyo Marufrom Honolulu Tho diva was sparednono of tho ordeals provided by UndoSam for distinguished travelers when astowaway is detected by a medico witha suspicious rash

The importunities of tho Immigrationinspector were peculiarly rasping totho songstress The purser had refusedto take tho responsibility of settingdown tho divas ago at 20 althoughBho made tho suggestion In writing Holeft the age epaco blank Tho immigration inspector with a careless glance atthe diva sct down 44 and Calvo wasabout to protest when he asked hername

Sho insisted that it was MadamoEmma Calve After listening to herstory ho insisted on making it MrsGasparri and with tragic mien andmany sighs tho diva submitted

This dla not end tho trials of thosongstress She had to be vaccinatedalong with ihe other passengers al-

though¬

sho pleaded that after havingcrossed tho ocean in regal comfort inthe most luxurious suito of tho steam-ship

¬

she should not be incommodedmerely because an immigration commis-sioner

¬

suspectd that a dangerous germwas loose aboard

In her rooms at tho Palace Calvobusied herself with knitting I am nota suffragette she said and have nosympathy with tho movement I amvery bourgooiso My tastes Tun todarning and cooking I am a very goodcook In fact I am too particular aboutmy husbands wishes to allow any oneto cook for him My whole desire is toplease him

Gasparri smiled at this complimentand when Mme Calvo aid that it wasimpossible to got anything good to eatin the Par Hast Gasparri corrected thattho cuislno of the Honolulu hotels wasverv pood Tho diva acquiesced

charge of the ship and was Informedthat a benooner nnd run inio tne len ¬

der Kerlger went into the pilothouseand rang a slow speed bell and put thohelm hard aport and then saw a greenlight ahead Ho stopped tho ship andwaited and meanwhile had the search ¬

light turned on but could see no wreck ¬

age or lights Lieutenant Snbtu U SK who was a passenger was at hisside durincr this time They saw thoKaunakakal light in the distance andconcluded that it must bo tho starboardlight of tho schooner so the ship washeaded for tho light Later tho otherliLht at Kaunakakal was made out andthey then found that the light theywero heading for was not the schoo-ners

¬

light but n fixed light ashoreThov retraced their courso as closelyas possiblo to the spot whero theythought the collision had taken place

CaDtaln Kericer stntos that the information given him by thoso on deckwas thaat tho impact was siignt otuerwise ho would have laid around therelonger He thought the schooner hadcontinued on her course and thereforotook up his own course for HonoluluHe states that the officer in charge didnot seo the schooner until her sails wereright alongside

Captain Kerlger however feels thatCaptain Sam shouldnt have put to seain such a vessej as tne moi vvumnuSome wreckace from the Moi Wahinofell upon the deck of the Kukui andhe has a piece of It It might havebeen oak at one time but he statesit Is like sawdust now It is a flimsypiece and he says Captain Samshouldnt have cono to sea lu a vesscl of such flimsy material He statesthat he is sorry tho thing happenedthat he lias never had an accident be-

fore¬

during his long career at sea andhe has been an officer since 1601 Hohas asked the department of commercoand labor to hold an investigation andin tue blame

Second Officer Shaw says tho firstthing ho saw of the schooner was whenher sails came Into view Ho star ¬

boarded the helm but the schooner wasstruck a glancing blow no immedi ¬

ately stopped the engine and calledtliu captain He ran aft and taw theschooner he says heading lu the windHe Is certain lie could make out tlioontliiiM of her tails and then ho observed a green Hjtbt He heard n

rlM for beln ami no flnre llnhU weroit turned

CASTRO PASSES

ON MS WftY

WAKDBMHO JEW OP JkODEBH

TIKES IJBAVSS BY MOHOOUA

rOB MAIKIiAKD CITY

Onco moro Oipriano do Castro expresident of Venezuela and tho Wan ¬

dering Jew of modern times has bwnforced to continue his nover crullngjourney For two days he successfullymanaged to btdo his identity lyingperdu at tho Hawaiian Hotol under thonamo of Baron J do Castro a Frenchnobleman and giving out that ho wasmaking a pleasure tour of tho globoFato was against him however and inquiries mado on Friday night as to hisreal idontity caused him to mako preparations for nnothor quick jump Thosteamer Mongolia was leaving for thoCoast and ho availed himself of thoopportunity still attempting to hldo hisidentity in tho rrench nobleman andputting up a big enough bluff to pullwool over tho oyes of tho inqulsltivoones

Owing to tho diplomatic work of hisvalot tho ox presldent managed to fendoff all inquiries made at tho hotel onFriday night by tbo announcement thatho was out for tho evening furtherinauiries made vesterdav show that farfrom being out ho was in tho buildingall tho timo Prom a word lot fall byone of tho attendants Dr Carl Ferinwas communicated with but far a longtime refused to give any informationas to whether he had been with DoCastro or not When tho known factswero laid before him hotvevcr ho ad ¬

mitted not only tho fact that he hadbeen with the ox presldent but alio puttho question as to his identity beyondall dobt

The firBt Intimation I hod that bowas in youi c ty said the doctor

was when I was dining in tho YoungHotel and he bowed to ne His uddoaappearance gao mo quite a start atfirst as I had not seen him for somotimo Ho has grown moto gray aboutthe head but that is prncticollj tnoonly difference from tha timo somethroo years ago when I leceivd a cableto go to Venezuela and advise him Iwas staying at the Auditorium Annexin Chicago at the tmo but left im-

mediately¬

This was iust before hisbig trouble occurred and it was oa aannnnt of tho advice I cave him thatbe loft when ho did When he bowedtn mn I know that thero most bo something tho matter and cons quently Iwas not surprised last night when hisyalet informed mo that ho wished tosee me

Delicate Political MattersIt was just ten oclock when ho

came to my rooms ana it vtas oueoclock when ho left again Daringtbc timo he was with mo we discussedcravo political matters which wiie ofsuch a delicate nature howstei thatI am not at liberty to divulge tlJiHo is the mott remarkable man I hateover come acioss and is a splendid dip-lomat Ho is ono of thoso people towhom fear is an unknown quantity ardthis ho proved when bo went out at thehead of his army Baing a poAOrJulrulor he has more orles of the biuteabout him but this has beea ths casewith all the great rulers tho wotld hasever seen Napoleon was a biute andso was Julius Caesai Hannibal and alltho othors He will n vor sndvo fiomthe nath which he thinks i tno liguione for him to take and he would runa country tho way he wanted it whstbeiit was only tho sizo of a thimblo orwhether it was the largest in the world

Ho is a great believer in tne ocuttand that is why ho came to mo fo ad-

vice¬

Last night howevei it was notfor that purpose that I was colled inbut rather as an adyiser in the mat-ter

¬

of fine diplomacy for duiicg mytravels round tho world I haver comoIn contact with so many of tl0 under-ground currents that aio at woLaffecting tho destinies of nations thatI am naturally ablo to give the righttlilnir In An

On being told that there wero somodoubting Tnomascs in tue town anathat perhaps they would not believeoven now that it waB really Castrotho doctor smiled and taking his penwrote on a pad for a few momentsWhen ho had finished he handed thofollowing lettor to the reporter

President 0 de Castro formerPresident of Venezuela whom I haveknown for years and who has consultedmo on various occasions spat word tome through his valet that he would liketo see me and I saw him from 10oclock to one oclock last night

As tho interview was of a verydelicate political naturo I am not atliberty to divulge nnythtng of whatpassed between us

DB CARL LOUIS PERESFurthermore continued tho doctor

I am willing to deposit my check for5000 against 500 that I am right as

to tbo identity of the man If any onequestions it then I will hand a certi-fied check to The Advertiser and If thoother man thinks ho knows moro thenlet him put up his money or keep quietIt is not likely that I would take tborisk of damaging my reputation bymaking a false statement on the question

EM SESSION

H APRIL h

WASHINGTON Marchfollowing tho final adjournment

of congress President Taft issued aproclamation calling tho sixty secondcongress Into extra session to meet on

April 4Tho question to bo taken up is that

of Canadian reciprocity which passedin tbo houso in tho last session butwhith was not taken up for consideration by the senate ilio Pretldent isdetermined to have oohutsh cither ae

pl ths ggrnient or shoulder the resjiwwlblllty for defeating It

Ml WMHIYlMpijMInWIWy

CHAUFFEUR HAS MILL PASS BILL

WQNDEBFUL HIDE

UNCONSCIOUS OK FRONT SEAT ASMACHINE OOABS OVEA POSTS

INTO FISH POND

From Sundays AdvertiserOno of tbo most remarkable auto ac

cidents which has oVor occurred In Ho-

nolulu took place on the Wniklki roadyesterday at Cassldy station whea

Dooney Hnrtman In machine 603lost control and was thrown into thofish pond Wnikikl of tho CnSstdy path

Hartman was going at n good rate ofspeod towards Waikiftl when the ncot- -

dent happenod Ho was just approaching Cassldys whon his steering gearbroko and tho machine made n suddensweno tq tho makai sido of tho roadAs tho front wheels hit tho curb of thowido sward sidewalk Hartman wasthrown against the wheel and knockedunconscious according to his own state-ments last night

Tho front wheels wont on the sidewalk but tho Tear wheels caught andskidded throwing the front axle backInto line and starting the machine overinto tho pond

Hartman who has a reputation of boing a careful driver and as skillful asho is careful was going at about twoa- -

ty fivo miles an hour or a trlflo moroat tho timo the accident occurred Howas lato and was making the best timoho could but was within tho speedlimits Ed Lowis in a now machinopassed Mm just as ho passed tho McCully crossing but neither machinowas racing

To show that ho Idid not intend torace Hartman shut off his gasoline andslowed down At that momont tho gearbroko and tho impetus of a twenty- -

five milo an hour paco sent tho bigPackard two hundred and fifty feet boforo it finally came to a halt

After climbing up on the sidowalktho shock of this smashing Hartmanagainst tho wheel and knocking hiswind out tho car whizzed past a tolophono post the hub and running boardof tho car cutting a big gash in thowood ns it went by with Hartman un-conscious

¬

in tho front seat After pass ¬

ing tho post tho car was hurled intotho nond Ewa of tho Oassldy path butthe impetus was so great that ho ma-chino

¬

shot up tho inclino to the paththo pond beincr shallow at the timeund soared completely over two postsone two feet and the other thrco feetin helghth and cleared tho Cassidy pathmteen root wide witnout a waeoltouching tho ground The rear wheelstruck fully eighteen feet from tho spotwnero tbc car left tho ground tne in-

cline¬

throwing it at least four foot intho air over that distance

Hartman s escape was the moro mira-culous

¬

becauso his machino not onlycleared tho broken posts but passed betweon the Cassidy sign post and akiawe trco not seven feet apart ondinfter again striking ground plunged forsixty feet through tho water of thopond and finally came to a halt in thocenter of it

Hartman was pulled from tho car un-conscious

¬

as it stood in the water andrushed to the Queens Hospital where itwas discovered that his injuries amount-ed

¬

to littlo moro than a sevoro cut ontho face and a couple of bruises Thodamage to the machino was not overtwenty dollars according to Motorcycleunicer umiton wno inspected it

Chilton was on tho spot shortly after ¬

wards and traced the course of the carby Its wheel marks Several bystandersgavo him tho numbers of cars whichthey claimed wero all racing Hartman samong thorn but investigation showedthat nearly all tho cars named were ontheir proper stands at the time andsome one seems to be passing tho shortand uglier somewhere

The police will investigate the chargeof racing and may prosecute Lewisamong others

SENATE HURRIES TO

PROVIDE EXTRA CASH

With hardly a word of debate thosonate yesterday passed third readingof houso bill number twenty oight pro ¬

viding for an appropriation of 20000for tho use of the board of health inits sanitary crusade in the city Thobill makes the amount available assoon as the Governor lias signed it andmado it effective

An amendment was inserted in theoriginal bill providing for an extra

5U00 making a total of 25000 forthe use of tho boaYd of health althoughit is understood that tbo extra sumwill bo devoted to the building of acrematory ut quarantine in placo oftho one now in use which is reportedto bo almost burned out Tho bill withtho amendment was returned to thobouse for approval

Two senate bills were reported ad ¬

versely upon by tho judiciary commit-tee

¬

One S B No 0 providing forthe filing of wills and testamentarypapers with tho circuit court insteadof tho supreme court as at presentwas laid on the table on the groundthat there was no place in the circuitcourt for keeping such valuable docu-ments

¬

As for senato bill number sixteenwhich prohibited county attorneys fromaccepting private eases It was alsotabled because it was stated it mightprevent acceptable lawyers from tak¬

ing tho county office

AHSWSB TO QUESTIONHow to curs a cold is question in

which many are Interested just nowChamberlains Cough Hemody has wonill erwit reputation and Immense saleby Its remarkable nr of colds It canalways lie dyntudfcd upon Tot wis byan oMisrs Hansen smith vo Ltdsjjwfs fur Haws 11

J

FOR HEALTH LAW

HOUSE WILL aUANT BOARD OF

HEALTH MORE FOWER A

ItOT DIOOUSMON

Krora SunWs AdvertiserOutside of routine business tho timo

of tho house of representatives wastaken up yesterday with a dlscuwlonof tho pol problem ns faced by thoHawailans in this city now that thoboard of health has closed tho Chinesepol factories and shops la Honolulu

Tho health committee of tho housomade a completo rport upon its inves-tigation Into tho situation as to tho al-leged

¬

suffering caused by a lack ofpronor food for thoso confined in quar ¬

antine In addition it rccommondodthat tho judiciary commlttoo framo alaw giving tho territorial board ofhealth moro power to enforco strictsanitary rules without waiting for anoutbreak of an epidemic

This renort tlifectori tn KnnnVnr TT

L Holstcln of tho house was signedby Chairman Coney and tho commlttooand is as follows

Commlttoo ReportYour health and police commit-

tee¬

has had under consideration H It03 introduced by RepresentativeCharles Kanokoa requesting that thiscommittee bo instructed to look Intoinvestigate and ascertain whether ornot families of suspocts together withfamilies of deceased persons who diedof tho present outbreak nro proporlycared for in tho lino of food and allnecessaries so that ovcry precaution ofa possible outbreak of certain sicknessthrough tho carelessness and improportreatment had by officials of tho boardof health bo checked

In pursuanco of the nbovo resolu-tion

¬

jour committee has hnd a confer- -

onco with tho president of tho boardof health inspected tho poi factory atKalihi whore for tho timo botng polfor tho city Is being manufactured andmado a thorough examination into thosubject mattor of this resolution

Tho president of tho board wontover in detail tho methods pursued byhis department tne njmbcr of casesroported and their location and a brlofreforonco to tho sources of possiblo infection to wit poi fish water rawrruus and vegetables and uueookedfoods

Ono fact of special importance

Id lmatter of foing sanitary rules unless somo epidemicor outbreak arises to give them thoauthority

The factory in Kalihi your com-mlttoo

¬

found ready to manufacture thetaro of tho independent planter atactual cost of handling It ha a a capa-city

¬

of turning ojt ton tons of pol intwenty four hours nnd is supervised byinspectors of tho board of health andtho food commissioners Arrangementshave all been completed for tho deliv ¬

ery of pol and will bo contained Insealed packages

Tho complaint that families of sua- -

I pects and deceased persons had beenHeft without moans of seeming foodyour commlttoo found was withoutfoundation but at tho Kalihi campwhero tho complaint emanated theboard has distributed gratis amplequantities of food Tho rumor thattho inspectors had thrown away poiand other food belonging to familiesresiding in inspected premises wastraced to its sourco and found groundless

As a result of this investigationyour committee recommends that yourjudiciary eommitteo be instructed toframe up a daw that will give thohealth authorities ample povr to onforce sanitary rules and regulations

Oppose Moro PowersA lone discussion followed tho road

Ing of the report by Clerk Woodwardlieprescnttuivo bheldon opposed onvamenument or tne ueaitu law as sug-gested by the committee stating thattho board of health had nil tho powerit needed to enforce sanitary regula-tions

¬

He indicated that ho though thoboard had too much power now esne- -

cially in closing poi factoriescnairman Jjoiiu of tho health com

mittee explained that tho city ordinances had taken the power from tboterritorial board of health and it waswithout tbo proper authority from theboard of supervisors to do what wasneeuou

Great InjusticoRepresentative Kanokoa was another

who opposed tbo part of tho roport ask ¬

ing for moro power for tho territorialboard of bcalth ilo stated that thoboard had done tho poonlo a crcat injustico in stopping their supply of polana tant taey reauy nad no ngnt to interfcrc Also ho believed the committee should have followed the instructlons in tho resolution introduced byhimself and should havo seen the sufferers themselves and not tho presidentof tne uoard or ueaitu

Representative Kamanonlu as amember of tho health committee statedthat the place where tbo alleged sufferers are confined is quarantined andtbo eommitteo could not get into thecamp nut wore inrormed on good anthority that plenty of food was supplied

Tn regard to tho manufacture of polKamanoulu reported that the committeenau found tno taunt ractory was in amost sanitary condition and tho government was prepared to furnish poi up tothe limit

Inadequate LawRepresentative Tavarcs referred to

the law in tbo present case of emergency ns Inadequate while Honrcsohtutlve Marealllno addod that in ordinarytimes any health inspector might belegally run off of private premisesand that only alter tno epidemic hadbroken out had they any authority Hobejlovcd they should be given moro pre-ventive power

Speaking of Ihe Investigation conducted by the health committee Henrwontative Hale stated that they badinvsiiLiiteii tho factory at Kaiiiii

Wc tarted tho poi to in If It wasgood or not nnd It was good b reouirksd

ltnrMjitUv IUwkwsIiI also f

aiOikM35jESt-sse- -

3

WILD SCENE IS

THE SESSi

ENJED

Cannon Declares His

Ability to Whip

Anyone

HOUSE CHEERS HIM

Clenched Fists andChallenges in

the Air

WASHINGTON March 5 Thosixty first congress camo to an end yes-terday

¬

nmld sceaos of extraordinaryconfusion and oxcltoment

In tho houso just as the session wasending Representative Johnson of Kentucky stung into anger ut a ruling fromtho spoakor engaged in n wordy warwith tho chair refusing to bo calledto order or to address tho chair andtho members who attempted to interforo In parliamentary language

If it wero not for your gray hairsI would challenge you to como outsidoand daro to repeat tho insults you havoofferod mo hero bo shouted at thospeaker advancing with clenched fiststoward tho rostrum

Speaker Cannon bristling with ragojumped to his feet and advnncod tomeet tho belligoront Kcntuckian whiloexcited members rushed between thotwo to provont an oxchango of blows

Struggling in tho hands of friondstho speaker roared a defianco of thoyounger man

You neednt let my gray hair boany bar to anything that you or anyother member of this houses wishes tooffor no yollcd

At this tho houso arose and cheered

taXtt strictly5 hCommissions and Omissions

Tho session just closed has accomplished somo important legislation andrailed to completo much othor workAll of tho appropriation measures weropassed Including throo millions forcanal formications Two battleshipswere provided for and tho codificationof tho federal laws was orderod

Among tho measures that failed werothe Canadian reciprocity agreement thoocean mall subsidy tho provision for apermanent tariff board tho genoral pen ¬

sion bill stntohood for Arizona andNow Mexico tho plan to incroase postago rates on magazine advertising andtho election of United Statos senatorsby direct voto No action was takenon tho Pinchot Balllngor reports

TAFT IS OFF

FOR A REST

WASHINGTON March 5 ProsidentTaft leaves today for Augusta wherobe will rest until congress is ready toconvene in extra session

SENATOR FLINT ONt MONETABT COMMISSION

WASHINGTON March 4 SenatorPrank P Flint of California has beenappointed n member of the monetarycommission

member of tho committee said he couldlirut no sufferers for Inck of poi Inanswer to n question ho stated that sofar as the committee could learn thoChinoso poi dealers wore not takingtholr tnro a the Kalihi mill to bo madointo poi The factory be added wascapable of turning out about 20000pounds of poi every twenty four hoursif the raw material was supplied it

Misery of Dual Governmentwo are now experiencing tbo mise

ries of a dual form of goverument de ¬

clared Representative Kellinoi In thoshapo of dlvidod authority between thoTerrltoryand county Fortunately thisexperience is coming to us at a goodtlm What wo want to do is to givetho henlth board power to do what Isneeded at onco It will take six days topass a bill and I think wp should sendthis resolution to tbo board of super ¬

visors and roquest them to glvo thonecessary power and then wo can passa proper law

Representative Castle said it was truethat tho board of supervisors had nright to pass an ordinance but a consti-tutional question was Involved and suchn law ns proposed would make thesupervisors merely deputies to the boardof health for all practical purposes

What good Is the board of super ¬

visors in such an emergency Why itcannot spend moro tbon 200 evonwithout advertising for five days Thelaw gives them no further power i

added CastleKellinoi remarked that he wished

that the legislature could end the wholething meaning the dunl form of govern-ment

Roport AdoptedI move we strike out In the roport

whnt is not responsive to the resolution said nenrcsontatlva Castle andlatr go nn ana give tho people relief

The vote an the motion was a doteone and a rollenll wot demanded whenBpfnkrr HoUtfin upheld the motionHut tho roll showed that tho motioncarried by a small majority Thus tinreport was uphold utept Insofar astit rsMKittissidstten to the judicialsewwlttw mm cMflwd

MutaLteiuiMiMkL itLmtM vwmifbjuy

4i

-

f1

iain

fl

Page 4: MWU - University of Hawaiʻi...derson president ami treasurer of the Western Dry Goods Company of Seat-tle ¬ who is a guest at the Young Hotel states that there is a strong possibility

HAWAIIAN GAZETTEtmMmxmyi

feOHSlOX 8 MArUBOH

iwyflniiymii

t2H2SS2S222E IMWHMMMm

giSSMSSS

KD1TOK

Entered at the Postoffice of Honolulu H T StcondCUs matterScmVcoky Issued Tuesdays and Fridays

Subscription Rates

rr Month 4 23 Per Month Foreign 33

Tet Year 300 Per Year Foreign H00Payable Invariably in Advance

CHARLES S CRANE Manager

SUESDAY MAEOU 7

OHOEERA

Official notice by the Board of Health

Oholcra is a dlseaso of the bowels It begins with vomiting purg-

ing and belly ache and cramp In tho aim andjeg muscles and a strong

thirst for water It kills very quickly in from six to flfteon hoursfrequently

Treatment or medicine is no good unless given early that Is in

tho beginning of the diseaseA patient that doen not see a doctor early in tho disease is almost

sure to die so bo surO to call your doctor as quickly as possibleYou got cholera by eating food or drinking water that contains

tho germs of tho disease and In no othor way Plies may carry thegerms of cholera to your food arid drinking water

Boil your water and milk oat nothing but cooked food keep outtho flics and wash your hands beforo eating and you wjll not get cholera

Keep your promises clean

FEDERAL ASSISTANCE

It is a common experiendo among those fighting any pestilence amongignorant pcoplo to find that not only has tho poBtilenco itself to be overcomebut tho ignoranco of the pcoplo has to be combated It 1b not peculiar therefore that already among tho Hawaiian and tho ignorant of other races heroa disposition to light tho authority of tho board of health has manifested itnolf Yesterday from several Bourccs came tho information that among theHawaiians it is being- reported that what is killing the cholera victims is notthe disease but the medicine administered Somo of tho reports go fartherA prominent citizen who Bhould know better than even suggest such a thingstated that in his opinion the board of health was actually spreading cholerain order to forco liberal appropriations from the legislature

Thero is no argument to meet ignoranco thus shown It is a serious com-

plication

¬

of tho situation however to have spread among the Hawaiians anysuch reports which would bo ludicrous if the matter were not one of life anddeath Tho fact that manyiHawailans now are openly aihising their neighborsto shun tho board of health remedies in tihe event of a seizure the fact thatthere aro members of the legislature ready to interfere in tho work of theboard tho fact that the legislature considers it necessary to talk about in-

vestigations

¬

the fact that tho city health authorities confess their inabilityto tako euro of tho wholo city asking one portion to be patient while anotherportion is being cleaned leads to the conclusion that the sooner tho federalhealth officers are put in charge of the situation the better

The board of health is doing everything possible as n board but it hasneither tho fund n6r tho authority to carry out the work on the thorough basisnecossary Tho question of our autonomy is not involved No ono questionedthe right of Now Orleans to manago its own affairs after the federal cleanershad swept t free of yellow fever and Set tho local authorities an cxamploin thoroughness that has never been forgotten San Francisco so far as hand-

ling

¬

tho plaguo was concerned was placed in tho hands of tho federal author-

ities without injuring her status as a eelf governing community Honolulucould be cleaned up and made free of cholera without imparing the prestigeof our own government Tho only department that might be injured wouldbo the sanitation and health committees and the worst that could happen to

them would bo injured feelings at having to receive a lessonIf anything is to he placed inthe way of tho local health authorities aris

ing cither from thfe ignpranee of the populace the indifference of tho peopleor the politicians in tho legislature the whole work of sanitation and purifi-

cation should bo handed over to tho chargo of those who will givo this citythe cleaning it needs irrespective of the dollars of the tenement house ownersor the votes of tho tenement house dwellers

If federal interference has to come which it will if the outbreak as-

sumes

¬

the extent of an epidemic it will be mueh better to havo gone on rec ¬

ord as inviting it than it would bo to havo had it forced upon us-THE LEQISLATUBK TO DATE

One quarter of the present sossibn has passed and it Is possible now todetermine in a fata way what may be expected from tho present legislatureIt is not too much to state that the expectation of a buslnessliko session ap-

pears

¬

likely to be fulfilled Each house is taking hold of important measuresin a comprehensive and businessliko way and questions of import are beingdiscussed on their merits V

There is as was to have been expected and as there is in every otherlegislative assembly a host of minor bijla introduced for tbe - political effectthey may have These clutter up the calendar and add to tho expenses oflegislation but ore not otherwise particularly bad Thero is more chaff thanwheat in most things and these chaffy bills will be winnowed away oventually

No serious breaks have been made and about the most regrottahlo de-

parture from the average of good sense on tho part of any of tho legislatorshas been in conneetlofl with the present cholera scare a small minority hav-

ing

¬

evinced a disposition to interfere in the vigorous campaign of tho boardof health Fortunately suqh attempts have been promptly squelched by thethinking majority

As yet there has been manifested no disposition on tho part of tho variousisland delegations to combine in a spoils campaign or a raid on the treasuryneither has thero evidenced itself any disposition on the part of the members to consider legislation on factional raee or district lines The impression given a casual visitor to tho legislate e chambers is that wo havo gathered together two bodies of calmly deliberate men ambitious to establish a repu-

tation¬

as rational lawmakers In only one or two instanccahaa thero appearedany sign of friction between tho legislature and tho administration While

the former has appeared willing at all times to consider outsido suggestionsregarding pending or proposed legislation

Everything being dono does not please everyone but a lot that is beingdone pleascB the majority of the business men of the community and is regarded by tho majority of the people wo bellove as boing for the best interestof the Territory ns a whole Of course little of importance has been actuallyenacted into law but much is beforo the lawmakers and is receiving an atten-

tion¬

that justifies the hopo that tho end of the session will see legislationto advance the Territory materially and place it and the various individualcounties on a much more satisfactory basis than at present

It is too early to judge completely but enough has been done to nllowthe public tovlook forward confidently to what should bo accomplished in thenext forty five dajs

-- -

CHOLERA OARHIERSThose who may be Inclined to doubt the theory of tho physicians of tho

marine hospital service regarding tho outbreak of cholera in this city whichtney uencvo is uuo to ciioicra carriers may ho interested in tho followingdespatch from Ottawa Canada

OTTAWA February 18 Although bolatiun in fluarantino is drivIng an immigrant violently insane the goernnient has decided thatnothing can be done to improve his condition Tho mun is a Ituniaunamed Uodleib Ho was detained utGroseo Isle quarantine stationas a cholera suspect He developed the disease and apparently recov ¬

ered but became what is known as a eholera carrier Tho factswere submitted to the government but it was decided that Qodlelbmust stop Isolated despite his mental condition

- --

Out ef a total number of seventy eight thousand in the Territory whoieduty it Is to pay poll tax over twenty nine thousand last jear failed to eomothrough This fs thirty eight per cent It would be InteiMting to know juit

W proportion f these delinquents have been on the puMle payrolls duringthe yr It is a Mfe pee that two third wf them have

yg t i

HAWAIIAN rtAVFTTF TUESDAY WAUCH 111 -SK- MI-WHtRKLY

gaaaaaaftippf Ofteifcl ttptnU ftp M MAulftH lst MgM b4lM lta ti Hfc

of the ctrtiMA ttHM DM htm koken Nt4 rtt tin Amnt frtrtft tftfMUMeaMde ef ih tjHArsnUaed Wsna li pntUHMf am tU a nek kmbbewiver that any ItMiettlns In ptteMtttOM be ikHomisd It de netmetn either that Uie work of clewing up the city m long tmA o urgentlyneeded should ho stopped In Mir degree Srewpt weric sided by fortasa M

elrcuurUnce has ensiled the authorities to stamp otft the foci of Infectionco far The duty of the governing bodle now U to provide taexw end menwhereby tho necessity for much that hae h4 to bo done thai tliuo will Heurerrecur

HEPEATO ITflELr

It would seem that the dreams of somo centuries ago nro being indulgedIn again and nro affording An illustration of tho maxim that history repentslUclf Franco Is the homo of the pew alchemy Not only is the elixir of I

life again announced but tho philosophers clone tho eoerct of transmuting baso tnotals into gold is heralded by tho sensational astronomer CainllloFlammarios Radium is tho nIracIo rorklng agent A minute portion of thoprecious mineral injected Into tho jugular vein of a broken down old horse iscroditcd with having rejuvenated that fortunate animal lie became as friskyas a d colt gained flesh and underwent a general transformationIf all that is told about tho experiment is true no one should bo surprisedto hear that tho radlo actlvo equlne paradox is entered for tho CI rand Prixand tho Dorby

Unfortunately thero aro certain malicious persons with long memories whowill persist in recalling tho othor serums of long life that havo originated inFranco Something more than twenty years ago it was Doctor Brown Scqunrdselixir of life Many doctors experimented with it in Europo and America andconsiderable harm was dono before tho Brown Bequard elixir was put underthe ban Since the discovery of radium various curativo properties hao beenattributed to it Experiments havo centered on tho euro of cancer by its useThore seems ground for bclioving that radio active treatment has proved ofBomo boneflt in certain cases of cancer

So far howover tho results havo n6t becnpositlvo enough to regard radiumas much mpre efficacious than the Roentgen rays in combating this dread diseaseAs for tho roiuvenatine effects of radio nctivitv in tho blobd n excmnlifiedin tho case of the old horse tho world will not take tho report too seriously I

Mthe possibility of transmuting tbo oaser and silver of July although coming early excellent one while

Flammarions assertion coincides a statement by Mn i prevlousncss alllNs plcntyJriMtime to proper adequate proand thero is a certain credulousnesg on the part of tho public with regard toscientific achievements which inclines them to beliovo anything that Jlr EdlsOnsays The dream of transmutation was dreamed very thoroughly in medievaldays and tho amount of surprising literature with regard to it is very re ¬

markable But no gold was actually made though every c6urt in Europe hadits alchemist as well as its court jester Theso surprising things crop upperiodically in the despatches It will bo remembered that Paris was also thohome of a process for manufacturing diamonds Fortunately M Flammarionthough a sensationalist more than a calm scientist is not a man of thosamotypo as tho diamond maker who is now serving a term of years in the galleysfor perpetrating an audacious swindle

--tTHE MABINE HOSPITAL SERVICE THEOEY

The Advertiser has accused of intentional misrepresentation f inpublishing the theory of tho officials of tho marina hospital service that thepresent cholera outbreak fortunately apparently nt an end duo to thocoming of a from the Orient probably a Filipino It isfrom no desire to defend ourselves that Tho Advertiser reverts now to thatsubject and theory but in older to emphasize the tremendous responsibilitythat rests upon those who assist in bringing in Filipinos who have not beenthoroughly examined as to their physical condition

An official publication written in November lest under directions of thosurgeon general of the public health department a copy of which has justreached Honolulu deals with cholora and cholera carriers being written byA J McLaughlin passed assistant surgeon of the marino nrvice whoworked during tho last choleTa outbreak in Manila Tho article has been vritten as a further aid in the surveillance over immigrants from choicrn infcctedcountries nt their points of destination in the United States

During times of epidemic bacillus carrieH aro numerous and tho writerfound six to seven per cent of carriers ninpng healthy individuals living in theinfected neighborhoods in Manila lSays this official publication tvhicli con-

tinues¬

Tho fact that tho bacillus carreer may liaibor the icholera nty iosiaslong as sixty nino days illustrates hor quarantines may bo passed and

inexplicable outbreak bo explainedTHE DANGER FKOM THE BACHjLTO CARRIER DEPENDS UPON

HIS HABITS AND THE SANITARY CONDITION OF THE COMMUNITYIN WHICH HE FINDS HIMSELF t

In addition to the facts contained it ihe government publication of sorecent a date Moses Clegg the bacteriologist at present working in this cityin conjunction with the local board of health states that while in Manila hediscovered cholera bacilli from cholera carriers after three months

Eternal vigilance is tho price of safety If this city is to becomo thegathering spot of thousands of Filipino immigrants admittedly from amongthe poorest classes of that oriental groun the city must prepare itself by athorough system of sanitation to prevent the of this and other diseasesand must insist on tho scrupulous examination of the newcomers prior theirdeparture Manila

One lesson which has cost eighteen lives ought to be sufficient

CHOLERA AND FILIPINO THEOEY

Exception is being taken to a published interviow in this paper witb DoctorCurrie of tho Marine Hospital Service in which that bacteriologist employedfor tho special purpose of locating the source of the present cholera outbreakadvanced the theory that tho disease bod been brought here by Filipinos Ina characteristic article avoiding any mention of the fact that the theory wasthat of a medical expert the Bulletin charges this paper with intentionalmisrepresentation giving tho statistics of the arrivals of orientals othorthan Filipinos to show that infeetion7mIght have arrived through Chinese orJapanese

The Advertiser can afford to ovlook the charges coming whence theydo but at the same time it would bo most unwise on tho part of tho peopleof Honolulu to overlook tho put fprward by ono in a position to knowwhereof he spenlcs Tho Advertiser has had frequent references to the dangerattending the importation Filipinos based on various reports official andothorwise from the local staff of the Marine Hospital Service Included amongthe diseases the introduction of which was feared weeks ago by Doctors Ramusand Currie long before it appeared was Asiatic cholera

This is not a theory of The Advertiser nor nny attempt to stampede thelegislature or the public against the Filipinos or the ones responsible for theirpresence here It is a theory of practical health officers and deserves the consideration of all thinking men i

This is not a time for new Bpaper bickering This community faces aserious problem If the present cholora outbreak is due to the presence of

cholera carriers among tho Filipinos tho disease may justns well make itsappearance on the other islands as hero Too much care can not be exercisedin watching for tho first manifestation of tho disease ia other districts

hCOMMISSION GOVERNMENT

Of the various measures before tho legislature for the correction of tholucal city goernmont it must be confessed that the ono introduced yesterdayby Beprefccntative Archer is tho best The various other bills are attemptsImproo the present sjstem tho Archer bill is n straight effort to provide acommission form of government with all references to the present municipalact cut out His is the only bill that goes direct to the point without takingcover somewhere- - in nn effort to appear something Other than it is Tho clauseproviding for tho appointment of district judges might well bo eliminatedOtherwise tho bill covers the wauts of tho lpcal situation

This and tho bill providing for a direct primary re two of tho most Ira- -

poriont measures uerore tno lawmakers affecting llonolulu Tho primary Diliia a sort of compromise proposition but a big improvement on the present lawIt is being held back now in order that the committee tnayatudy the Berkeleylaw admittedly tho best direct primary Jaw in America Unfortunately not forthe law but for the eueeaiw of a similar one for Honolulu the Berkeley laweliminates party polities from consideration The Oaliu direct primary billrecognitor party too much in the opinion of many

It I feared howover that any attempt Id Improve it in this respeet willkill it Party is wmetMng In local municipal affairs that Honolulu will lough

gme day along with other IneurobraneH but Itis hsrJIy ponlble that thattime has some Mather than have a dlreet plmaj-- bill killed besauw of itlnxselltsee we prefer to im a ex cell wit Ml j

rfffrftv nirc

xsatMfcMtntu ako rotiffPWMSrfMutl

The few nt tetwMatfttiw It Mktg ltKslf kh m riOieulMM In Itpert eewpalge the HHjMle tmtk U ref Ml imng sne mt he JUweilfctftaewberi tht lh befitdBf hUk Is tehlg fiendish MtUfMtlen in preveatuithe oo ea tf that ertlete oftdlet bwairte it happens le he he lple feed ftthe JUwiJIane Nothing eeuld be futlher frefeUe truth hh the first plaUthe board hae rMion to believe that much of tho jil ot ceniuwed tome fromfilthy fartorles and that there 1 a polblHty that one 6r more ef thMe faetorlcamfty bo conttttnjitated- - reeulllng In deaths among tho JlawaUftni It ie notcontended tbatpol as a food la dangerous but U bat jin decllctl that onlypol that is abo re suspleion may bo eaten hence ftiefreodistrlbutlon Thotiippresslon of tho open eale of pol Is not against tho Hawaiians but is Intended to save them from a possible disease

Hawaiians nro not tho only ones whoso regular food supply has beon in ¬

terfered with Thero is not a whlto family in tho city who has not given upgrocn vegetables and very few who have not stopped eating fish But shouldany white representative undertako to ask questions about this oa tho floorof tho house he would bo laughed nt and properly dubbed a meddling fool

It haa been discovered that cholera germs exist In at least one taro pondThat fact ought to bo enough to Jtecp intelligent quiet and loadthem to suppress tho unintelligent ones for tho credit of tho race Tho wholopol question ia simply embarrassing the board ofjhelth without leading to anypossible good result

fBecause thd board tf health is apphrcntjly gettingtho cholera situation --

well in hand is no reason why anyone should relax in thV Slightest n hispersonal vigilnnco or core of himself Neither is it any reason to supposethat it is not as necessary to always keep tho city cleaned up It is mostfortunato that the present outbreak has been held as closely as it has asbad it once secured a foothold in somo sections of this city in tho unsanitarycondition they are the cost to Honolulu would have been counted in huadredsof lives nnd millions in money Tho outbreak is a warning of what could boand the lesson it has taught should bo a sound one The danger has by nomeans passed ns yet and tho possibility of a recurrence is strong so long asdirt flourishes and sanitation is subordinated to politics

-- -The suggestion that Honolulu should return to a patriotic celebration of

As for metals into gold the Fourth is an itswith reported Edison of prepare a and

been

wasCholera carrier

hospital

spreadto

from

theory

of

to

Hawaiians

gram for tho dili if it is dccjdjjl to 4ake the matter up Criticism has beenmade that tho Floral Parade festival was more of a commercial than a patriotic laffair nncl4 therefore the military Could not participate Let us decidoto prepare a progJam for the Nations Birthday that will bo patriotic ia everyevent ana freo from any suggestion of moneymakiug The G A B veternnsshould take thqlcndjn a thing of this kind and start the hall rolling

i -

The number of deaths in this city from cholera for the fourteen daysending February 28 was seven the number of deaths ffrom tuberculosis wasten Yet the whole city is more or less alarmed concerning the former diseaseand more or less indifferent to tho latter although tuboiculosis has been re-

sponsible¬

for more deaths every month for tho past five years than ias thocholera during what we are pleased to call tho epidemic If thaauthoritiesC6uld insist on the cleaning up of the city as it should bo cleaned up and in ¬

sist on it being kept clean as it should be there would bo a marked falling offin tubercular deatliB ns well as in those from all other dirt bred sickncssei

r -

Wonderful results reports the Britisb consul general at Manila have beenobtained in the Philippines by means of compulsory vaccination in reducingthis disease from o real scourge to mere sporadic cases among the unvaccinatcdDuring tho year ended June 30 1909 3811872 persons wore vaccinated andexaminations made when this disease has reappeared in localities where a thorough system of vaccination has been carried into effect prove that tho diseasein such localities is practically confined to children born since the vaccinaMonin those localities was performed to persons who escaped the Vaccinators andto unvaccinatcd persons from other districts

The Bulletin is industriously attacking tho attempt of tho business men tosecure a one per cent limit on taxes on real nnd personal property for countypurposes and the attempt of tho business men to secure a revision of thecity charter that will narrow down the responsibility for government and forcothe community o elect only responsible men fco office The present systemof general irresponsibility coupled with an unlimited taxing powor is abouttho height of some peoples ambition What pickings thore could be

In Yokohama the municipal council has put a tax on bathtubs Eachfamily of five is to be taxed a yen a year for their tub whilo an oxtra yen1b placed on every other five in the family and for every extra tub This ieone way of securing a revenue that the Governor here has overlooked in hisgenera tax schemeJ -- -

A transpositipn of letters made the cabled report yesterday of the doingsof the Lower California Tebela state that tbey were heading against Guaymaaand Tia Juana the former happening to be the name of an important city inSonoma Tho objective point of the rebels was Guyamas an unimportant vil ¬

lage lying between Mexicali and Tia Juana--f

Ono of the-- afternoon papers on Saturday had the Vice President of thoUnited States nominating a United States senator for Texas This is a decided departure from constitutional usage and beatB tho direct vote legislationall to pieces

Carl it be possible that a sea tragedy by which seven lives were lostthrough someones carelessness is to bo allowed to go uninvestigated becauseof official red tape

--t - -

From reports iU would Appear that a revolution in Mexico brings out moreAmerican troops thadt doesrMexicans Tho idea of tho war department maybe to givo the boyh in khaki some practical lessons in guard duty and forcedmarches it tl

WesJ Point Discipline and Congress

President Tafta veto of the jointresolution of congress reinstating atWest Point the nine cadets who badbeen dismissed for hazing is a welcomeCheck to a very bad practise says TheNation Again and again have theauthorities of tho Military Academyseen their efforts to maintain disciplinethwarted by act of congress Ia theirdetermination to stamp out hazing andto make the future officers of tho armylearn the first lesson of obedienco they

DfJXdHs Browned

Acts Ilka n Charm In

the only Specific In

end

ought not to be interfered with by atoo nood natured congress too open topolitical influences The Presidentrightly states that the proposed restora-tion

¬

of the nine cadets would be veryinjurious and would tend seriouslyto demoralize the discipline at WestPoint His veto will have a tonieeffect It will bo easier after this toenforce the rules at tho Academy andinsubordinate cadets will understandthat they can not so readily appeal topoliticians to undo the work of theirmilitary superiors

Tho ORIGINAL and ONLY GENUINE

DIARRHOEA

CHOLERADYSENTERY

Checks and arrestsFEVER CROUP --AGUE

The Beit rtemedy known forCOUGHS COLDS

ASTHMA BROHCniTIS

The only Polllatlvo In HBUtWtOt OOWT BMRUHATieM

jj i niut n kMiM i Beta MftnnfartumiL

rrk ia LiMlili 1 2JS 415 1 J T PiVMrcut U4 teodon J

rxfiJKj

Page 5: MWU - University of Hawaiʻi...derson president ami treasurer of the Western Dry Goods Company of Seat-tle ¬ who is a guest at the Young Hotel states that there is a strong possibility

BUFORQ SAILS

WITH FAMINE

SUPPLIES

Ftfod Sufficient to Save

Thirty Thousand

Until June

THE NEED IS GREAT

Eye Witnesses Tell of the

Sufferings from Gold

and Hunger

SEATTLE Match C The UnitedStates Army Transport Buford sailedfrom this port for China yesterdaycarrying supphesTdr the sufferers inthe famine provinces of the south

The cargo consisting of rice andother foodstuffs and clothing is valnedat fifty thousand dollars and will besufficient to keep thirty thousand of thefamine stricken Chinese alive until thenew crop is matured in Juno

Tho Great NecessityTho latest newspapers from the

Orient dated February 17 give someparticulars of tho situation in thefamine provinces Tho following isfrom tho columns of tho Japan Ga-

zette of YokohamaRecent news from China more than

confirms tho former reports as to theextent and severity of the famine inKuangpei Extensive districts notOnly in Annul but also in Honan andKiangsu are affected and resident mis¬

sionaries estimate that more than twdmillion people are dependent upon out-side

¬

relief The affected districts hav ¬

ing been swept bare of ever thing thatby any possibility can be made to serveas food the unfortunate people aremicratine bv thousands Driven byhunger these ordinarily peace lovingpeople have turned to pillage and rob- -

Dery anu ine siine 01 auuira is yiuauiyfin the extreme

Many are dying from hunger andcold and from the dreaded typhus orhunger fever Belief will have to bocarried out until May Tho Tokio Chi-

nese¬

Young Mens Christian Associa-tion has opened a subscription list andwill be glad to forward subscriptionsto the central relief committee inShanghai

A Shanghai telegram of the eight ¬

eenth instant to the Hochi says thedamage paused y the Tecent floods inAnhui Province extend over nn area ofseveral hundred square miles and thopeople on the verge of starvation num ¬

ber 2500000 A popular outbreak isfeared

An Eyewitness ExperienceDr Samuel Cochran of tho Ameri-

can¬

Presbyterian Mission who Teeentlyarrived in Shanghai from Hwaiyuen inconnection with business with the fam ¬

ine relief committee says Conditionsinan

district have is chanceresult

wasacute

xoodstttffs in statustha district which enabled peopleeke out an existence this is now rapid ¬

ly being exhausted A large part ofthe population is in a condition ofstarvation or is approaching it Thogovernment has given out smallamounts of in the form of coppercoins but they form a mere trifle boside the need What is earnestly need ¬

ed are large importB of grain andwe hear the committee has taken stepsto secure To do anything adequatevery largo sums would beThe condition of people in thafiooaed regions is truly pitiable Menwomen and children are dying in num ¬

bers everywhere of starvation coldThe streets are crowdod with peoplewho have absolutely no resource except begging and there is very littleto be obtained that way even in thetowns I hear that one who cameto Hwaiyuen to pay New Year calls onthe first of the Chinese year passedthirteen bodies in thirteen miles ofroad very low ascertained estimate

those actually without food and whomust starve would be million people

probably tho numbers are muchlarger Ono must live in the district

realize tbo horrible feeling of hope-lessness

¬

which those people must haveas they face a lingering death by priva-tion

¬

unless help is sent to them

PNEUMONIA CAUSE

OF DBCTOBS DEATH

Pneumonia in most acute form wasthe cause of the death of Dr W RBrinekerhpff news of which shockedhis numerous friends hero several daysago cable received yesterday gvothe further information

Owing to tho wording of tho firstcable received which stutqrt that thecause of death unknown n querywas sent to New York yesterday resjlting in on answer reading

Pnenmonia Sick thirty six hoursnconscious from start

BEST LINIMENTSlight accidents and Injuries are a

frequent occurrence on the arm and inf work shop A cut or bruise which

is of en tbo cause of much annoyancei loss pf time may be cured in about

on third the time usually requiredapplying Chamberlains Pain Balm siwon as tb injury It received There lino danger blood poisoning resultingfrom an Injury wben this JlalwMi ftsrinlied before the narti tiMOifie In

HAWAIIAN CAflrmLTUKSnAY MARCH 7

iiaMBjfciaieeA3aJiwga

AU5 Willi

SOCIALIST

APPEAB BEFORE TIA JUANA AND

ANNOUNCE AN ATTACK -- -XL-

FOE TODAY

SAN D1KGO March 0 The revolttlonary army under General Leyvawho has proclaimed himself 1roviBlonal President of tbo Socialistic Coldmonwealth has appeared beforo TinJuana in force having arrived fromMexlcali accompanied by a company ofAmerican socialists marching underthe banner of tho Independent Workers of the World Thoy havo sent wordto the federal commundor of tho smallforcCMf loyal troops in tho city thatthey will nttack this morning

The revolutionists nro about fourhundred strong with two hundred un ¬

armed camp followers Captain Wil-liam Stanley an American is secondIn command to Leyva

Tho plans of tho revolutionists areif thoy capture Tia Juana to xnovoagainst Qunymas where further stopswill bo taken to complete the organiza-tion

¬

of the Lower California SocialisticCommonwealth

Noncombntants from Tia Juana nrocrossing the lino into California thoprocession of men women and childrenwith tlreir household goods havingbeen kept up all through fbe night

89

m

itnK11

in

Of

E

PALAMlbASE JpByES TO BENEGATIVE ONE TWENTY

IN ALL TO --DATE

From Mondays AdycrtiserTwo more cases of cholera were dis-

covered¬

yesterday only one of whichwaB outside the quarantine reservationand as the caso at Palama Junction re-

ported¬

yesterday morning as cholerawis proved yesterday to have beentuberculosis of the liver instead thooutside case was the first the boardof health has had to deal with in fourdays besides the Manoa infection nowwiped out

Tho first death yesterday was thatanother Perry girl sister of the two

little tots who first took the diseaseThis last victim of the Manoa infection was held ns a contact in thoKalihi hospital and her case was expected

The outside case was on Luso street j

out a snort aisianec xrom me sceno orthe former Luso street case Attemptsto trace the mans movements yesterdaywere unsatisfactory and the attemptwill be continued today It is believedat the board of health office that it wasconnected with the original Luso streetcase

Three contacts have originated withthe last case all of them members ofhis family and are held at quarantineThe victim was an ex member of theband

The bpaTd of health agents were onthe scene of the last caso within fifteenminutes after it was Teported Tester

the famine now reached day and there little that thiscenter in furtherstage Up to tho present there will cases

a certain amount of Tie present of the epidemic ifto

relief

this

necessarytho

and

man

Aof

a

to

a

A

was

by

of

il can oe cuiieu bucij is vwenvy cusubWith eighteen deaths The eight-year-ol- d

girl from Kakaako and the womanfrom Gandall lane are the two cases re- -

covering

MAUI OUTLINES

RAGING PflObl

WAILUKU Maui March 4 At amccUngheMpuitRacing Associa ¬

tion keldvFchruaryT2i3 the followingprogram was adopted ipj the Fourth ofJuly It will be noticed that tbo free--

for all --races both trotting and run¬

ning have very snbsantial purses toattract good horses

T mile Firstprize 25 second pree 10

SecondJapanese race running onolialf mile First 00 second 15

Third Hawaiian bred running onehalf mile First 200 second 50

Fourth Free-for-a- ll trotting andpacing one half milo heats best threein five 500 sweepstakes 100

Fifth Free-for-a- running onemile 750

Sixth Pony race free-for-a- ll onehalf mile 125

Seventh Hawaiian bred runningone mile First 300 second 50

Interval for LunchEighth Japanese race running

three quarter mile First 75 second15Ninth Pony maidens Maui bred

running one half mile First 75 second 25

Tenth Hawaiian bred runningthree quarter mile First 250 second

ou L

Eleventh Freerfor rJJ running onoshair mile 200 purse

TwelftbJanauese raee runningone mile First 130 second 20

Thirteenth Cowboy race three re-lays

¬

of one half mile each First 25seconu siu

Fourteenth Gentlemans race running one half mile Onsen to rideHace horses barred 25 cup

Fifteenth Mule race one half mile

racer

First 315 i feond 15Tho executive eouimUteo have been

instructed to proed with tt im-provement of the track

ii

Thonisi A JMIion tbo Inventor Isinformed fMt a suit brought by himmid JJLJIWn is against SayVMHUumwo Aniw sga j ambc ti- -

in4 and nrolln Star mlt fey grf f Umm ay It litku dUmbMed byJUJN tirtult Murt of ap- -

Knllll LEAVES

ON LUST JOURNEY

DAUOHTEB or CAPTAIN OP THAD- -

DEUfl PASSES AWAY ASAQE OF EIGHTY

K

Ono of tho figure most closely asso ¬

ciated with historical Hawaii passedaway esterday after soventy ninoyears of llfo in tho Islands when Mrsilarrloft Blanehard Townsciyl died ather homo in urirtstiy Lane mo aaugnter of tho first missionary captainslid has witnessed tho hundred and onotransient periods in Hawaiian historylias followed tho riso and decay btf thoHawaiian inonarony and was an Old

woman when tho island republio wasbprn

Sho witnessed tho expansion of thofaulted States westward from its nar- -

row area of 1831 when Spanish terri ¬

tory intervened and Hawaii was for indeed from the Stars and Stripos up tothe time when tno groat republic unaiiyreached her icry doors and her nativeislands beoame a more active unit in amore active agei Mrs Townsona wno woula novo oconeighty yonrs 6 ago on May 7 diedat sovea oclock yesterday morningconscious to tho last and with hor sonCopt Gcorgo Townscnd and her grandson John Wilson among the mournersat her bedside

Tho funeral will bo hold at tlircooclock this afternoon from Williamsundertaking parlors Fort street to Knwaiahao church

Mrs Townscnd was born in 1831 ina grass house which stood a little backof whore tho Palm Cafe is now situatedtin Hotel strcot Fort street was thennothing but tro patches Hor fatherCaptain Blanehard was master of thebark Tbaddeus which brought to Hono-lulu

¬

tho first missionariesf--

THEY AIL DEMAND II

Honolulu Lite Every Other Community Receives It

People with kidnoy ills want to becared When ono suffers the tortures ofan aching back relief is eagerly soughtfor There aro many remedies todaythat relievo but do not cure Here isevidence to provo that Doans Backache Kidney Pills euro and the cure islasting i

Mrs N TJ Miller 1509 Jackson BtBaltimore Md says For over a yearI suffered from kidney complaint Everyduuuuu wutuuivub buuii ouusy palliathrough my loins and it often seomedas if my back were being pulled apartI did not sleep well and had all thesymptoms of a bad case of kidneytrouble My feet and ankles swelledand I conld hardly wear my shoes TheKianey secretions wore unnatural ana ithus knew that X waB in noed of a kidney medicine X was dizzy when I firstgot up in tho morning and was oftenforced to grasp something to keep fromfalling Headaches were common andmy suffering nearly drove me franticThe contents of two boxes of DoansBackache Kidney Pills effected a completo cure and during tho past threemonths I have had no reenrrence ofkidney complaint I can not praiseDoans Backache Kidnoy Pills tooHighly

Doans Backache Kidney Pills aresold by all druggists and storekeepersat 50 cents per box six boxes 250or will be mailed on receipt of priceby the Hollister Drug Co Honoluluwnolcsajo ngentB for the Hawaiianlanos

Komomber tne nametake no eubstitute

and

FRENCH if MAN

A

Doans

OEOSSES LIGUEIAN SEA FROMFEANOE TO ITALY IN

FIVE HOURS

iNIOF France March a LieutenantBattue of the French army yesterdayestablished a worlds record for over ¬

sea aeroplano flight having crossed thoarm of tho Mediterranean from An--

tibes near here to the Island of Coreona opposite the city of LechornItaly The distance in a straight linois one nundrea ana twenty tour miles

Tho aviator bogan his flight acrosstho Ligurian Sea without havine arranged for tho assistance of any vessels no maae mo mgni in a uierioimonoplano and was five hours and ahalf in the air -

PASSIVE RESISIER

S COM WEST

NEW YOItK March 0 Rev CharlesAkcd pastor of the Fifth Avenue Baptist Church announced last night fromhis pulpit that ho had received a callfrom the First Congregational Churchof San Francisco and that ho may accept tho new pastorato Mr Akcd isan Englishman ono of tho founders ofthe Passive Resistance League formedamong the Nonconformist of GreatBritain to protest ncninsttlie paymentof taxes In support of establishedChurch InstUntion lie came to NowYork in 1607 Uv is tbo author of sev ¬

eral well known Nonconformist publications und political pamphlet bearingon British situations

I

John Leaby who wailo more than1000000 altliougb be eould neither

read nor write it ilwd at III heme JnLfNg Island New York Ill nativeibrswdHMf ad JuJgmsnt of ftfon tornpwwlwj fur his lailc of dsliM

Vm -SE- MI-WEEKLY

gsssnaaemKmmmmmmmmtm

Senate Proceedings

YOURTEBNTH DAY- UILL3

introducedBjl 40 Providing reimbursement

6iSonmM Qulnn for falling off thollfiokield wharf in 4200 automobile

ty D CO Iro Idlng for permanentimpro omenta Fnirchiiu

Passed First ReadingH B 30 Relating to construction of

roads to and upon public lands openedfor homesteadtbg

II P 30 Relating to earnings atcertain inthlstrlal schools

H D G2 Rclating to hotel etclicenses

II D 03 Relating to expenditure ofpublic money

H B 01 Relating to procedure Inenforcing collection of delinquenttaxes

Passed Second ReadingS B 28 Providing 9000 additional

for construction of Kaptolant GirlsHome1

H B 38 Addltionnl appropriationsfor hoard of health with amendmentof ffiUlK for morgue building

Boferred to CommitteesH B 39 Boferred to oducatlonal

committeeXT B 52 Tlofcrred to ways and

meansH B 63 Rofcrrod to judiciary com ¬

mitteeB B 04 To judiciary committee

COMMITTEE REPORTSCommittee on health recommends

nassaire of 11 B 38 making additionalappropriations for the board of healthwith amondmont of 5000 for morguebuilding

Committeo on health rocommendspassage oi S B 26 with minor amend ¬

ment relating to Sanitary commissionCommittee on health recommends

passage of S B 28 carrying additionalappropriation for Kupioluni GirlsHomo

Committee on public lands reportscommunication from supervisor re-

questing¬

additional funds for local improvements as not being direct petitiontp legislature

Committeo on public lands recommends consideration of 8 B 7 forwhnrf at Nnnoonoo with recular an- -

prOpriatlon bll amount carried beingsumcient

Committee on public lands recom-mends granting of petition 1 providing relicz of Hawaiian tioaru unuorwill of It Malta and widow of BMalta

Committee on public lands reportspetition of residents of Houghtaillngroirtl for water main as bolng providedfoci In recommendations of departmentof public works

Committeo On nrlntincr reports S B3D relating to liilo franchise printedana reaay tor aisinuuuun

vtii COMMUNICATIONSMessage from OoVernor with items

for permanent improvementsFrom clerk of house transmitting

H B 39From clerk of house transmitting H

13 04From clerk of house transmitting H

B 69From elerk of house reporting con

curring of Jiouse in senate amendmentsto A- - C B 4

Froni clerk of bouse returning S B25 after passing third reading in house

From clerk of house transmitting IIB 03

From clerk of house transmitting HB 52

From clerk of house transmitting IIB 30

FIFTEENTH DAYBILLS

Passed Third BandingH B 28 Making an additional ap ¬

propriation of 5000 for now buildingsand furnishings for Kaplolani Girlsiiome aent to nouse

S B 30 To amend section 1 act 31S L 1905 relating to licenses for dealera in second hand goods Bent tohouse

H B 38 Amended by making addi-tional

¬

appropriation of 5000 to sum of20000 for fumigation and sanitation

by board of health Sent to housePassed Second Beading

S B SO To authorize tho appoint-ment of tho sanitary commission of Ho-

nolulu¬

and appropriating 500 for expenses JCelcrrea to nenitn committee

H B 15 To repeal chapter 50 of theRevised Laws relating to road super-visors and load boards Referred tojudiciary committeo

H B 21 To repeal chapter 51 R Lrelating to cantonniers Referred tojudiciary committeo

Ji is 40 Accepting tno cik oi William G Irwin tp the Territory of cer¬

tain lands as an addition to KaplolaniPark Referred to judiciary committee

COMMITTEE REPORTSJudiciary committeo recommended

that S B 0 providing that testamentary papers bo kept on mo in courtswlinrf nrnhnttl hn lntA nn tableAdopted

Juaiciary committeo rceommenueapassage or H B 15 relating to roadsupervisors and road boards Adopted

Judiciary committee recommendedpassage of H B 21 relating to can-tonniers Adopted

Judiciary committee recommendedpassage of IL B 40 accepting gift ofland to bo added to Kapiolanl parkAdopted

COMMUNICATIONSFrom elerk of house transmitting II

B 78 relating to commission for uni ¬

formity of United States lawsFrom Honolulu board of supervisors

presojjtingresolution demanding moreinom yanHcnro of schoolkouses

5ESlxte8ntb Dayff BILLS

- IntroducedS B5 03 Declaring certain land

at Nspoppoc a public park8 11 No 51 Providing for super ¬

vision of public parksB B Np 05 Creating a department

of immjtfntiu labor and stutlstljMJudd

8 B No CO Amending Jawi relating to fences

8 II No 07 Defining duties of coun ¬

ty attorney Jloliliisqna is No 8Jeiatinir to rmoM or

fllto of elerk iudleUry deixirtmsnti i - -

rairfuunVtMtA Bfld KeAdtHff

R II Xo J7 KahllHtf to propria

llM fef ettftyter 83 H IPaase4 Third KedlH

It B No 47Referred to Committees

S ft 3talieUtlng to disposition offluM snd cost To judlelnry committee

S li No 40 Referring to merchan ¬

dise Ueonsci To ways and meant com-mittee

¬

8 II No 43 1rovldlng modleal in ¬

spection of publlo school pupils Toiicaiiii committee

S B No 45 Holatlng to gonoralpowers nnd limitations of eountics Tojudiciary committeo

b H JNo 40 llolatlng to expenses ofdistrict ninglsitatos To judiciary com- -

ntltfmvS 11 No 47 Relating to circuit court

oxponscs To judiciary committeeS B NO 48 Pxovidlnc nubile loans

for couhty of Hawaii To select committee of Hawaii members

S B No 49 Provldinnr nnvment ofclaims of James Qninn To ways nndmeans committee

COMMITTEE EEPOETaJudiciary commlttoo feeommends pas

sngo of H B No 42 providing financial reports of counties

Judiciary committeo rccommonds passage of S B No 12 providing fornotico of pendency of action wijhumcnunioms

Judiciary committeo recommends passage of H B No 23 relating to sidowalks after minor amendment

Judiciary committeo recommends passago of H B No 47 with amendments

Judiciary committeo reported S BNo 10 relating to duties of county at-torneys as tinwiso measure

Health committeo recommends reference of S B No 21 to n Bolect commltteo of Hnwail members

Health commlttoo recommends passage of It B No 12 with minor amendmont

Printing committeo reports S BsNob 37 38v 40 43 45 48 and 47printed -

Prlnttug committeo reports S BsNos 48 nnd40 printed

COMMUNICATIONSFrom H P O Sullivan reporting

signing of S B No 25 as Act 7 Relating to publication of United Statescourt decisions

From clorlc of house informing sen-

ate¬

that its amendments to H B No38 had been concurred in -

House Proceedings

FOURTEENTH DAYBILLS

IntroducedH B 118 To amond Act 39 S L

1900 entitled An Act creating coun-ties nnd providing for governmentthereof nddlng paragraph for ap-pointment of Bubordiuant officers anddistrict magistrates in counties-Bick- -ard

H B 119 To provide for public improvements nnd appropriating 310000and itemized Rice

U B 120 Amending sections of Act118 S L 1907 relating to countygovernment una providing ror a Doaraof four supervisors with mayor andauditor to bo elected at large Archor

H B 121 To amend Sections 1781nnd 1782 B L as amended rolatingto tho summoning of jurors Kawewohi

H B 122 To provide public lonnsfor county of Hawaii by issue of bondsnot to exceed 050000 Moanauli

II B 123 To provide a hospital Inthe district of North Kohalu Hawaiiat a cost of not mora than 5000 ofcpunty funds Makckau

H B 124 To provide for construc-tion of new wharf and shod at Napoopoo Hawaii and appropriating 18000therefore Makckau

H B 125 To provide a senaratogovernment physician to each of thodistricts of North and South Kona Hawaii at salaries of 150 per monthMakckau

H B 12C To appropriate 12000for reconstructing Btono embankmentof Wcimea river Kauai Sholdon

Passed Third BeadingH B 28 To amend Section 14180

KP L Act 90 S L 1907 providing forsliding scale of license to sell merchan ¬

dise from 25 to 100 Sent to senateH B 39 To amond Act 05 S h

1009 relating to earnings of industrialecnoois eent to senate

U B 52 To amend Section 1381B L relating to hotel boarding housoand restaurant licenses 50 in Honoluluand HIlo 25 elsewhere Sent to sonate

H B 04 To amend Section 1271 BL relating to procedure for enforc-ing puymont of delinquent taxes assessed against unknown or non resident

t persons Sent to senateit u ua To limit time in which

warrants upon territorial treasury mayDo paid adding a Bection KHUA to ItIt Sent to senate

H B 70 To provide for reconstruc-tion

¬

improvement and extension ofwhnrf and shed at Mnbukonn Hawaiietc and appropriating 14400 Sentto senate

DeferredH B 22 Accepting gift of late

Archibald S Cleghorn of Ainahau Op ¬

posed and made special order of busi ¬

ness April 1 1911II B 01 To provldo for construc-

tion of belt road around Island of Ha-

waii¬

and appropriating 000000 Spe-cial

¬

order of business March 8 1011II B 02 To provide for the reiu- -

bursement of Territory for cost of boltroad around island of Hawaii Madospecial order of business March 8 1011

COMMITTEE BEFOBTSCommitteo on rules gavo notice of

amendments to rules 10 and 24 govern-ing

¬

members and duties of committeesMade special order for today

Irluting committeo reported that thoGovernor first ami third tnestuges totho legislature bad boon translated andprinted and ready for dlitributlon

Judiciary committee recommendedpasiago of H I ii2 Carres to provldo I

passage of II Ii 7H to establish com ¬

mission for uniformity of legislation inUnited ritutoD Hhelduu

RESOLUTIONII O Ii II flint uuvtirnor bo ro

audited to uIIIIm ItWUU for lufferlegdue to iNHjiomry close of pot tMi

ibaJdoH11 Jt OS Uy KftHftkan bat sow

wllltw as btlllh sad pvllte nwwtalw

una

wheihewir not fumlllM of futpeet erdecease pfofl who died in presenttipidatnfe are lining properly ued forIleferrcd to health committed

COMMUKIOATIONSFrom Governor transmitting special

moMsgo an appropriations nnd re-

source Referred to finance committeeFrom clerk of sennto returning II U

It with nnnouooomont that it pastelthird reading

FIFTEENTH DAYBILLS

Introducedn B 12 To amond Section 1 of

Act 122 3 L 1900 relating to thasaiatics of the sovcral district magis ¬

trates and clotks MahooPassed Third Beading

H B 78 To establish a controlselon for tho promotion of uniformityof legislation in tho United States

Passed Second BeadingII B 102 To amond Chapter 102

B L relating to licenses to soil mer ¬

chandise To finance committeeII J3103 To appropriate monoy for

tho rollofof tho llilo Electric LightCo Ltd on claim To ftuanco com-mittee

¬

H B 104--T- o autkorlto tho recov ¬

ery of attorneys fee by a person recovering judgment in nn action broughtfor wages To judicinry committee

H B 110 To amond Sections 1C0Oand 1081 B L rolating tb appoint ¬

ment of disttiet magistrates To judi-ciary

¬

commlttooCommitteo Boports

Judiciary commlttoo recommendedtho amendment of U B 44 relating toregistration of intrumonts and will botaken up Monday

Judiciary commlttoo recommendedtho pnssago df H B 40 as nmondedrelating to tho recording of certain instruments Mado Bpccial order Mon ¬

dayEducation commlttoo reported that

discontinuance Of Ainnkca School Kohala Hawaii was not containplated

Printing committeo reported H Bs102 103 104 and 110 printod nndready for distribution

Commlttoo on rules submitted amend ¬

ment that standing committees consistof flvo members oxcont commlttoes offinanco nnd public lands Adopted

Alfred L Castlo chairman judiciarycommitteo reported that a public hear ¬

ing would bo held in hall of represen-tatives

¬

on H Bs 113 115 nnd 120 re-lating

¬

to proposod amondmonts to cityand county act

Miscellaneous commlttoo reported infavor of passage o H B 2 fixingsalaries of City and county ufflcors De ¬

ferred to Menday

BESOLUTIONSH B 04 By KawowehJ to Insert

in appropriation hill sum of 10000for constructing now road from Kawalhao to Puako county of Hawaii

H E 05 By Kawowehi to insertsum of 5000 in appropriation bill forconstruction of warohouso at Kawalhao district of South Kohala

II B 00 By Koliinoi to insert25000 in appropriation bill for con

struction of a wagon road rom Kihelto a point about two milos abovo Makena

COMMUNICATIONSFrom Chief Clork O Sullivan an ¬

nouncing that Governor had signed HB 14 providing for judgmont of 15000 against Territory

From clork of senate roturning HO R 0 with notico that it bad passed

SIXTEENTH DAYBILLS

Introduced v

H B 128 To authorizo William HBeers associate and assigns to con-struct

¬

and operate a street railway indistrict of Sohth Hiio for distance offlvo milos In cither direction fromcourthouse Correu

H B 120 To amend county act nndpiohibiting county attornoya appearingin any court for private clients -xaicsw

Passed Sceond BeadingH B 80 To provide for tho geo¬

graphical limits of the city of lliloliofcrrod to public lands committo

H B 87 Adding new sections toact 40 S L 1009 providing for piymont of officers and men of nationalguard of Hawaii when on active dutyReferred to military committee

II B 88 To piohiblt the taking offish with nets in tho waters of tho har-bor

¬

of Honolulu Roferrod to healthcommitteo

H B 80 To nmond section 2900 RL defining the crime of embezzlementand punishment tlStefore Referred tojudiciary committee

II B 00 Tp amend act 09 8 L1905 relative to funds for tho payirpntof tho expenses of the several coun-ties Rofcried to financo committee

II B 92 Relative to tho issuance ofburial permits or certificates Referredto health committeo

n B 93 To amend section 37 act39 of S L 1005 making eligible tohold any ofllco any person eligible tovote Referred to judlchry committee

H B 04 To provide for tepaynicntby Tenltory of 1945531 to mer ¬

chants which was collected us mer ¬

chandise license fees Boferred tofinance committee

H B 90 Relative to tho payment oftbo sovoral district courts Referredto financo committee

II B 105 Exempting fathers of sixormoio legitimate children from pay ¬

ment of poll road and school taxesReferred to financo committee

H B 100 To alter boundaries ofsenatorial districts by dividing Terri ¬

tory Into five districts and apportionsenators Refoncd to judiciary com-mittee

¬

v II B 107 Belatlng to the pay oflaborors employed on public worksReferred to miscellaneous committee

II B 112 Making appropriationsfor construction of armories for national guard of Hawaii at Honolulu andLa ha Inn To financo committee

H B 113 Amending laws of 1007and piovlding for board of soveu u

pcrvisora under eoiumlsslou form ogovornmont Referred to judiciarycomtimieo

H II 114 To autbnrUo appointor registration of otut Adopted merit of coinuilimlon to eoninlle statutoJudiciary euiiimUioo recommonded i aws f Territory mid appropriating

Adopted

15100J I U

To judiciary commlttoo110 To amend uuctiou iBill

chapter r u 11 u rolating tp osemiit lun of nentonul property from attachmetit To Judiciary committee

A JspaiiMe woman Minmllted eulddoat Ijolntiulu on Alurili I taking tartwlle Kelt to h4 bir life 9h was thewlf of one Kjidl

VJ

itut

n1

j

M

1

Page 6: MWU - University of Hawaiʻi...derson president ami treasurer of the Western Dry Goods Company of Seat-tle ¬ who is a guest at the Young Hotel states that there is a strong possibility

Mfcaa6 f

rmEBYsmNDEi

iliw9mtll Crossing tho Canadian Lino

MmlllaMmlmB Political Pests In and Out

II IlliSoS llllll - Where Blaxo the Boutbem Btars

Thcro is one thing overlooked by tho congressional committee of investigation which took op tho immigration problems eomothing which the legislaturethe promotion committee tho ponpacific congress and the other influentialbodies of Hawaii ought to pass a few Tesolntlons about Prior to a final ad ¬

journment of the Bbtty flrst congress I hesitated to mention tho matter being18 hopeful that something would bo dono as President Tnft was

Now that congress is pau I mako my suggestion in order that epecialmooting of tho local organizations may bo called to take action in timo fortho extra cession

What I wont to get at is this tho proper respect is not shown along thoAmerican side of the Canadian border to tho Hawaiian flag I will gl 9 justono Instance wholly sufficient to justify anything that may bo done

Not so very long ago T Cllvo Davics toured the mainland On accountof the eoastwiso law ho went from hero via Vancouver and spent a few daysin that real estate capital boforo proceeding on to Seattle At tbo borderlino he tipped tho immigration inspector and informed bim that ho was fromHonolulu and would be please stop bothering with his bally questions aboutnationality It is the law that foreigners crossing tho lino must pay two dollarsfor tho privilege and in accordance with ruling Canadians are not classedas foreigners but Englishmen are Mr Davics however being an Americanby annexation should have been exempt I am from Honolulu he explained

Two dollars pleaseBut my dear man I am from Honolulu Prom Honolulu do you hearlBritishers has to pay two dollars Thats tho law insisted tho in-

spector¬

But I nm not a British Bubjoct replied Mr Bavies I am a residentof Honolulu Hawaiian Islands United States of America said the Honoluluman very slowly and clearly

The inspector picked Mr Bavies bat off the overhead rack and lookedinside then pointed sadly to the namo of tho Strand haberdasher ho turnedback tho collar of Mr Bavies overcoat and drew his finger across the namoof tho Piccadilly tailor then held out his hand once more

41 Two dollarsMr Bavies paid itWhats the use being Annexed when tho name of Honolulu and the fact

ef tho coastwise laws only results in having to pay to get back into your owncountry

o o o

There appears to bo only one pest of the petty political stripe in the legis ¬

lature this session and unfortunately he is a Honolulu representative Thisis Khneltoa

Ono of the dictionary meanings of koa is to throw words carolosslytogether in plain United StatcB to shoot off tho mouth without puttingbrains into tho words The Bamo Hawaiian distionary tells me that krnta woll as meaning a male creaturo means a kind of bug Tho dictionary

doesnt specify the bug but I think I could namo itAt tho present time this ornament of the lower houso is stirring up the

Hawaiian populace against the hoard of health and adding to tbo worries thatorganization has on hand Ho is doing it purely for what he expects to makeout of it for his own political advantage two years from now Ho talks of

starving the Hawaiians in quarantine and risos to demand investiga-tions

¬

It is the same misfit in the Oabu rankB who has a bill in committee toraise tho minimum wage of road workers in Honolulu to two dollars n dayHe knows if ho knows anything that there aro moro men wanting work nowat a dollar and a half than the road committee of the city can biro and hoalso knows that a dollar and a half is good pay for tho class of work donoon the roads Ho doesnt care in the slightest however how much he wouldcripple the road department by bis bill should it pass As a matter of facthe doesnt care if tho bill passes or not provided ho can secure tho credit ofhaving tried to get moro money for tho poor Hawaiians

In this same connection I notice that a pest of tho last session fortunatelyteuton is using the columns of tho Bulletin through which to spit his vonoman easy channel This is weeping Willie Coelho In a quarter column commuaieation ho finds room to of my

the words had forgottento inauco some sort or tuo various types of resultingKanaka at tho board of health crematory to announco that tbo kanaka is

refused a chance to make an honcBt living not given a chanco to livebeing killed by starvation and a few other things typically Coelhoesque

Kanekon following in tho footsteps of the Maui statesman may hoontinue to follow him into political oblivion where bis only hope to stir up

trouble will bo tho accommodating columns of such publications asthe Evening Bulletin

If you send a child into a dnrk room however familiar ho may bo withit he is afraid if tho lights are switched un he goes fearlessly Tho roomis- tho same the old familiar articlcss of furniture nnd the wall decorationsare the same whether the room bo dark or lighted but the difference betweennot knowing exactly and being ablo to seo clearly and know definitelybrings difference between alarm and reassurance

The same thing hold true in the caso of grownup children and epidemicWhen tho facts aro suppressed when officials whisper behind closed doorswhen the newspapers enter into a conspiracy of silence publie is alarmedand fear bred by rumor When clearcut definite statements of factare given out by the officials when people know what is being dono for themand what they must do for thomselveB when truth prevents the circulationof wlldeyed guesses there publie calm and tho work of stamping adisease can be carried along without complications

This is shown at the presont timo Tho board of health is letting thepsblie know exactly what it is doing what it is trying to accomplish audwhat step It is taking to clean up tho city of cholera As a eonscquencothera is little ulurm and people know that there is nothing to bo alarmedabout

It is tv be hopd that the precedent of the board of health will be followedin all othor things of government Not so very long ago tho newspaper re ¬

porters of the sity had to uio Mrkscrews to extract information for theirfeeders that the public had a right to know all about The various governsent boards went Into executive sessions to do everything but read minutesand etro IUmi ware tajmrj alort at times vbeu reporters wcro about TherlM aio changing buwever hi Ipmoii after lento 11 In the valuo of publicityis Mug Uwglit leou the eartaiu will be up on everything

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE TUESDAY MARCH 7

Piwpiiiiwpiiiiiiipiipiiiiiiii

SIDELIGHTS

1911 SltMr WEEKLYRMHMM4 t IHIt4nMWAlMKJMMMIIIMflMM

JPHOGBAM TOR LENT

Let J bo thankfil that Lent is at hand It means many things a muchneeded rest particularly during which life may bo enjoyed by fasting nndprayor Wo havo trained gloriously for tho abstemious part of tho fortydays Along tho derotional lino wo can uso up each and every hour in catch ¬

ing up on derelictions and shortcomings in the past If we keep busy womay como out even

Plans woro perfected by us last Wednesday evening Hulas and geiibaiaro prohibited under pain of excommunication Thoy have been responsiblefor tho thunderstorm and tho cholera Moving pictures aro permitted onesa week provided a moral 18 taught and tho vnudoville stunts aro not lookedat Only thrco Ids may bo h jng on each departing friend Tho legislaturemay be attended when debates on conservation are going on or messages fromtho Governor being read but tho ground is no longer holy When a scrap iththo superintendent of public works is either a preliminary or a main eventMeat may bo oaten on fivo days of tho Week with one extra for St Patricksday nnd ono for tho day tho legislature aujourns Joy rides arc prohibitedunless you havo a machine of your own and it needs exercise A doctorsprescription must be at your clliow if you imblbo anything stronger than postumcereal Three cigarettes a day aro allowed Tracts must bo forwarded bymessenger service to tho tenement houses but under no circumstances mayyou go thcro yourself Expletives of a gentle nature may be indulged inwhen necessity arises but no ugly words must bo used Nothing but sack-cloth

¬

can bo worn decolleteStudy and meditation are on tho freo list hampered by no embarrassing

restrictions of any nature Provided you glvo half an hour a day to tho Bibleyou may take literary jaunts along any old kind if a trail Oivo ten uunutestimo to meditating on your pwn black marks and dovote all you want to thosedarker and longer and moro numcrpus ones of your neighbor

I am going d get a llttlo curious during the restful period and may per-haps

¬

bo able later to throw somo interesting sidelights on how the days arospent Will the meat bills bo smaller Will tho Japs and tho Chinese whohavo discarded thir pagan bcliofs and Been and followed the great light ofChristianity bo amongst thoso who keep up our pacof Will tbo teachings oftho great Master ho studiod appreciatively during the prescribed hours in thosoportions of tho city where short rations are as regular and certain ob the rentcollector and whero Bibles aro tho exception and squalor and filth and disensabreeding premises the rulct

Yes Lent should be observed properly and perhaps too if wo try wo

may learn something

HOW TO COOK

In theso days when erudition logic and rhotoric are jjrodoccd by the- tonand can be purchased at bargain figurite at any bookstall it is to euyleast unsafe to bo anything but original and oven at that you occasionallystriko a literary affinity you didnt know existed But I am going to run thorisk of having tho deadly parallel 6prung on me The only thefts not quotedaro from the writings of ono or two old fellows whose names even havo beenforgotten

Learning how to cook in Honolulu is my theme Any phaso of tho sub ¬

ject of cooking is of course interesting to us The brain of the boss maysecure money necessary to clotho us in fino raiment but unless bis stomach isproperly trained he keeps the dollars and wo Nvear our old drosses and hatsEver has the malo species been partial to cooks In ancient days when hecouldnt get a good one he took lessons himself Charlemagne couldnt learnand so made a cook out of his general or vico orsa I have forgotten whichUlysses knew how to cook roast beef to a turn The piece do resistance ofold Cinclnnatus was turnips and ho learned after much study and experiencetho exact psychological moment when tho pot in which they wcro boiling mustbo removed from tho fire And when tho oldtimers heard of a good cook ina neighboring dominion they discovered that some treaty stipulation had boonbroken declared war and tried to lasso him

Tho Japanese aro on observing lot of people and havo discovered thisweakness Thoy are industriously endeavoring to mako themselves invaluableby learning how to cook well I knlow this quito a long while ago but itwas not until tho other day that I discovered the lengths to which the move-ment had gone A board of health inspector having spent the previous houror two in careful and painstaking investigation of the sanitary and healthconditions surrounding half a dozen tenement houses and finding nothingwrong concluded to put in the balanco of the morning in looking up three orfour residences mine amongst them I went with him to the servants quar-ters

¬

to seo for myself the deplorable conditions as to rat holes and dayqultotj which existed After pledging myself to plug jp the holes and tokeep tho premises dark bo tho day pest would have to move out I glancedaround My eye caught half a dozen shoots of white paper I was just abloto road tho head lino on one of them It was in English and said Nuuanu YM A I was curious and naturally went further Then I saw a lot ofmenu cards of the Geo Lycurgusj stylo breakfast and luncheon and dinnerall figured out Ono of tho dinner blanks started out with Cocktails aBa Buhhead plenty of space being left underneath in which tp write downtho particular brand to bo served

Later I learned that tho affair was of a cooperative nature Y M Awas not a misprint Even tho cocktail showed that no C had beenomitted It meant Young Mens Association There wcro twenty fivemembers Each contributed a dollar a month for necessary expenses Theymet around at different houses twice each week They had no teachpr eachcontributing to tho general fund of knowledge If your Jap cook particularly successful in cooking a cold Btorago turkey he taught his colleagues howtho trick was done If yoj havo been surprised at a new kind of salad com-

ing¬

on you may now learn that tho dish was one which was served at thetable of ooo of your neighbors

Previous to this in fact several years ago I had discovered a cook bookand learned how to get my boy to uso it He cant read English and I cantread Japanese but tho book does away with this difficulty for it tells whattho dish is in our language and how to make it in the boys My first at-

tempt didnt hook up vejy woll but when I found out wherein I was wrongno further mistakes occurred Ono Tuesday night I pointed out to him what

insinuate that the board health is attempting I o would like to have for breakfast tho next morning by putting fingerdiseases to fiaish I on the Breakfast Wednesday I that tho first word

is

through

thean

theprealls

is out

tho

roos- -

was

is nlwoys last and got what tho book says was good for Thursday Sometimes too jou must do a little guessing for a good Japanese cook book ajthoris not necessarily strong in English orthography Witness a few Cocoanutspudding supcrioril bread pudding Mable cake almond macarooni

apple dumbling pap ovens scallped tomatos Steamed cabbegoclamb frcttors bold solt mckrel cod fish bolls

Thoro aro plenty moro of this typo in tho book There aro othor thingstoo which are not as amusing for when your cook gets proficiont the volumetells him how to ask for higher wages and more nights off

The Chinese have no books they simply instinctively know how to broila chicken fricassee a sharks fin and mako a birds nest tasto like somo rarodelicacy Neither have tho Koreans any Instinct helps them out too Every-thing

¬

is cooked in tho sanio dishAnd let tho man who is here to write books about us and to study the

Orientals as they aro here not overlook this phaso of the subject on whichho is seeking to enlighten tho civilized world It will pay him

OELEBTIAL OHAETTYOne of theso days when the pendulum has swung back far onojgh we

may hope for tho repeal or at least very material modification of the harshChinoso exclusion net Whon the proper time comes to do bo let us assisttho good work by minimizing or at least telling tbo truth about tho vices

ly n feat that is Impossible for any sort of an eyed person anywhero elsoou American soil Milkmen who rise In the night- - and the performers at tbovarious art establishments of tho Honolulu Amusement Company who patronizetho drill tell me that tho Information is correct

One does not he to bo crowyeJ to see either constellation by Itteelfhowever and those who havent nodded an aloha to the Southern Cross throughppera glasses and feel that their experiences require such a thing should eitherget up or stay up until tbreo In the morning find n clear space overlookingKakaako and look

The beauty of the Southern Or oh eoniists principally In tbo fact that itU it So far as briliUnsy got the various referents to the binning itariof the eenitellatleu way be taken with a plush of selt But there U onlyQua HuutlMH tL Glow It la u auk vaiiutr ladip uunlil 1 Mtuui taut mimtiT 1nn f wntfn- - rf nw -- t r--

At ILt fMMi time MVt4litK to lbs Mspt et lttmr lMjUb any btit lb XI if ef KNgltiu U jwt a niwi WfJ by the tbatuHWds willvy4 fume wr t k ietttiwe Oif t4 tht OrMt Iter MtsnlUnN- - twtk their kmIm trying in mi Mm in Jw

SSIof tho GlfHtlV atl show la tho brightest colors hit many vlrtW Admitthat lie gambles but snyjlmt other people have ben suspected of doing soDo riot deny that be attempts to got opium by lynx eyed customs inspectorbut naively call attention to tho fact that it is manufactured within tbrealm upon which tho sua never sets A little thing like en oath doesntbdtber Mm a great deal when he is trying to evade the law which singles himout from alt other nationalities as not a fit person to be trusted but we canaay that the provocation Is great and that the mark put dawn against himfor lying to try to get hero or come back hero or get eome friend or relativehere will not be a i ery heavy ono when tho final reckoning Is had

When wo como to his virtues there is one which we should not overlookalthough I am inclined to believe that neither tho extent to whioh it is prac ¬

tised nor tho manner in which it is exercised aro generally understood or ap-preciated

¬

If being charitable will help out wo may safely assort that theChinaman is entitled to high rank amongst the possessors of tho greatest oftho three graces Charity with him Is onoof tho few tenets of his religionwhich stand out clearly Ho has many vague ideas concerning life and thoduties and responsibilities to bo borne by tho human species When it comesto helping the poor and needy to caring for tho ponnilcss widow and orphansof one of his countrymen to halting along lifes highway to give assistanceto somo traveler less fortunate than himself In short to starting an accountin a bank which is guaranteed not to fail our almond eyed friend takesodds from no one And I bcliovo that Confiicius as to alms glvlbg stolofrom what tho Bible was to print lator for his disciples do not their nlmsboforo men to be seen of them and when they do give heed well tho admoni-tion

¬

not to announce the fact by the blare of trumpets and that tho giftsmay bo secret to keep the left hand In the dark as to tho transactions of thoright Confucius made the left hand do tho alms giving and the right onetho guessing but the idea was there

Their method of caring for tho poor isnt a method at all They holdno Kirmess festivals and have no associated charities or boards of directorsor printed appeals for help or newspaper subscription lists save whon thowhite people start one But somehow or other they get thore The poorman always has several cousins And a Chinese cousin is a mighty fine followHo does not confine the regard growing out of or the eervicea inspired if notrequired by the relationship to furnishing bail and securing lawyers Whenhis relation falls sick ho hunts bim up and hunts up the society 6f which hois a member and without votes or resolutions or auditors and treasurersreports the grim wolf of hunger is kept away from tho door of tho sick manand bis family and Chinoso medicines secured to stavo off tho dread reaperII ho dies arrangements aro made ta care for his family Sometimes theystay here oftener they roturn to their natlvo land Later tho bonos of thodead man are packed up and returned to repose with thoso of his worshipedancestors AU 06 this as a matter o course and without tho slightest hintirom the good people that they have done anything meriting praise

It may be that this docs not count far touch but should woman suffragecome as it surely will I am going to voto for tho man to whom it will appealstrongly A people who unostentatiously euro for their poor is a good peopleno matter what sand lottcrs congressmen and other politicians may say

V- -

Small Talks

E A MOTT SMITH Im beginning to appreciate that vacation I tookEBEN LOW A horso was1 all right before I became a supervisor but now

I want an automobileJUDGE D M WALKER of Winnipeg Hawaii has a climate that beats

southern California in every wayJACK SCULLY There might bo tho Bohemianism of the green room

but theres none in tho long green the bohemians I know boiler forSHEBHT JAEBETT Im protty husky myself but thoso pol shops I

had to visit pretty nearly did mo up I never knew what they wore beforeP A BOARD MAN from Yokohama I have been meeting Theodore

Richards hero almost every day Its just like doing sports in HonoluluJUDGE BUBOHABD They talk about women being leary about giving

their ages Man is just as squeamish particularly if he has married somoone younger than himself

A Q MAEOALLINO Of course congressmen aro all right but if Hawaiiis going to give anybody auy junkets why not import a few league teams andget some real advertising

LESLIE M SCOTT Eighty thousand Japanese and ten thousand Americans and every month tho former are sending nn enormous sum of moneyto Japan This makes Hanaii the most valuable colony Japan possesses

SUNNY JIM McOANDLESS I am surely going to attend the nextSbrlner conclave which meats In July Im just now studying out what sortof a Hawaiian souenir I can take over there to distribute among all whoattend

BILLY BESWIOK No I brought no oil or mining stocks down- - herebut if I had I can assure you that I would not try to unload anything oamy former friends but bona fide stocks and something they would be sureto realize on v

B W BBECKONS Do you nutice thero hasnt been any doublo columnheads in the newspaperss about opium lately Just wait I want to getahold of the fellow who started that mattress yarn and then Ill glvo youchaps a good story

JOHN T McOEOSSON As far as I know tho beet sugar experiment onLanai is turning out well and it looks as if it would be a great success Ev-

erything¬

is doing well on Lanai and that Island will surely become tho modelfarm of the Pacific

All summer sho has kept her sleevesBoiled up her arms are brown

But homo again with work to doShe promptly rolls them down

STILL AT

HIS OLD THS

Honolulu is amused over tho receiptof tho uews from Japan that Dr

OFTO

5 Aof fivo

and fivehas to go to

ka andme lor now or

and in to theone of tho four of tho Coai claims

dis- - Tho is to at tholifo a in

ou the that it did notthe of

ncse in at that 4 com- -who loft tho of his has tho

for in re- - of in--time he was re- - has to the

for has no hasto a for or

of his inthe j

He hai now inof the

neie diet to his case up piir nTTi iiri 4and It is that tho willbo the of this has pro- -

in the of the ofthe in

IN is no a

Inspector j a

j

Dorolt Free Press

COMMITTEE OONGBESSVISIT ALASKA

WASHINGTON March specialcommission consisting holdoversenators reelected representa-tives

¬

been appointed Alas ¬

investigate conditions regardingnecessity a system gov-

ernment¬

regard disputedNegoro leadersHigher Wage Association which committee roport

Slar session Decemberrupted Japanese plantation year

ll S1 ffi1 SHIP SUBSIDY

office ground LEGISLATION STBAIOHTsatisfactorily protect rights Japa- -

citizens Hawaii time WASHINGTON March TheNegoro scene mittce which been investigating

unionistlo activities Japan charges brought ship subsidymarkably short after flUMiCe reported effect thatleased fim jail conspiracy improper influence beon usedsince been busy trying interest either against ship subsidy legls- -number countrymen getting lationhimself notorious around Japanesecapital H0NDUBA3HA8

succeeded inducing PBOVISIONAL PBESIDBNTseveral members present Japa- -

imperial takeprobable matter COBTEZ Fran- -

introduced latter part tiK0 crtraad been appointedmonth nature impeach- - visional president Honduras pendingment mentioned elections Ootobcr

1

BLIND PIG BAID PEESB3TENT 00LD3MAQOON BLOOK There reason why cold should

License mdmi madehang on for weeks pr until some chromou08t or un trqub

Mfll raid atc fay IMeeUve t w ot jf you tne Cbam0bperBSnrMon 00 a blind pig In the lower Cough llwnedy By Its reaurkibleMaaoen bletk Ult n it eewlag nmy cures of eolds tbaf remedy has from awilli a primer evldene In the shape MIA gnlntr acquired a worldwMeof marked money and bottle ef equtre gale and n You may know that afN nsd ee mw4 demUetiM ef rewe4y that bei coMtantly grewti inUtoa The urlttssr U AUu ttlUtt fvr and popularity or tlwest fortef rbiar tie MkWr wbe tire4 year Ui ntre than nr4Uary meritwtr ibete preeewt ie a reeeat rtp or U bv iij dtalare 1Wwr ttlibrv4up v U1 tftu tot Hawaii

Page 7: MWU - University of Hawaiʻi...derson president ami treasurer of the Western Dry Goods Company of Seat-tle ¬ who is a guest at the Young Hotel states that there is a strong possibility

lpBWgfgffeft

HELP THE EARTHAND THE

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Pacific Guano and Fertilizer CoHonolulu H T

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OF LONDON FOR FIRE ANDLIFE Established 1836

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LIMITED

Territory of Hawaii

PAID UP CAPITAL 560000000SURPLUS 10000000UNDIVIDED PROFITS 15759202

OFFICERSC H Cooke PresidentE D Tenney Vice PresidentF B Damon CashierQ G Fuller Assistant CaBheirR McCorrlston Assistant Cashier

DIRECTORS O H Cooke B DA Lewis Jr E F Bishop

P W Maefarlnno J A McCnndlessC H Atherton Geo R Carter F BI

Caabauamon n v Aiuenuu asecretary

Strict attention given to all branchesof Banking

TODD BLDG FORT STCOMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS DE ¬

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Castle Cooke Co Ltd

Life and Firnsurarice

AgentsOtaoral Insurance Agents representing

New England Mutual Lire insuranceCompany of Boston

Attna Fire Insurance CoATTENTION

We lave just accepted tbs Agnetot the--

ndhB Tfitotortor UndtrwitUri of tfte

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iwif in m rrastueo

rf1

PpplBffPBWWWWlWiPPP

FREE P01 FOR

THE HAIIISCHOLERA SITUATION HAS

unrairr hide for tubNEEDY ONES

ITS

From Saturdays AdvortisorWhile there were two deaths yester ¬

day under investigation by tho boardof health and ono suspect enso of sick ¬

ness outBide tho quarantine station1hero wero no definite cases to add totho list of cholera victims Amongthe contacts hold in quarantine twodeaths from cholera occurred ono thohusband of the woman taken sick inGandall lane who is herself recoveringtho other a woman contact of tho fatalcase of Wednesday in Manoa

This brings tho number of deaths upto thirteen out of fifteen cases ofdiagnosed Asiatic cholera

Free Pol Today

This morning with tho two thou ¬

sand dollars appropriated by tho legis-

lature¬

as an emcrgoney appropriationtho board of health starts in to dis-

tribute poi among thoso in need forthat now restricted delicacy Jamc4A Rath of tho Falama Settlement is tobe in chargo of the work of distribu-tion

¬

having canceled his vacationplans for the present to stay hero andwork tho poi which is Doing maaoat tho Kail In factory under board ofhealth inspection will bo distributedfrom threo stations tho Falama Dis-pensary

¬

Kawaiahoa Church and theKalihiwaena Dispensary at tho schoolof that name It is expected that asupply will bo on hand at ten oclockthis morning for thoso who need it andno charge will bo made

Discussed In Legislatureunoiera occupied a gooa aeai ox at-

tention¬

in the legislature yesterdayRepresentath e Bice asked for informa-tion

¬

regarding the bill appropriatingau emergency fund of 20000 beinginformed that it was held up in thesenate

This started the discussion Kanokoa proposed to introduce a resolutioncalling for an investigation of the KnUhi quarantine Ho had heard thatsome of tho Hawaiians were sufferingunder the restrictions and wanted tofind out about it Sheldon announcedthat he had heard that the board ofhealth had shut tho people up butmade no arrangements to feed them

AffonBO wanted to know why theGovernor didnt draw on tho 38000left of the contingent fund Rico ex-plaining

¬

that this money was needed tokeep the courts going

Keliinoi declared that he didnt carewhat the courts needed the money waswanted now and ought to be spent tothe last cent if necessary

The resolution passed and tho in-vestigation

¬

will be madeThe boys of the Kamchameha SchoolB

have been forbidden to eat any poiowing to the presence of cholera intown

POI POSSIBILITIES

FREE DISTRIBUTIO

LEGISLATURE AUTHORIZES THEGOVERNOR TO HELP THE

SUFFERING

From Saturdays AdvertiserPoi and its possibilities or pos-

sibly lack of possibility was respon ¬

sible for a concurrent resolution in tholegislature yesterday during whichthere were all kinds of discussionsrelative to the cholera quarantine andtho effect this might have on tho poisupply or rather curtailment of itSome of the legislators expressed the

E fear that poi mjght be deletedxnc resolution detailed tho misery

B I for lack of poi and bow some may havoof

supply on uccojnt of closing of thei ChinecA factories nnrt then iuithnrififl

Incorporated Under the Laws of thn Governor to spend 2000 from tho

Tenney

contingent fund for relief of tho suffering only the suuering

If necessary the Governor author-ized

¬

to distribute free poiWhen the resolution reached the sen ¬

ate Senator Chillingworth was sur ¬

prisedI dont know what tho senate

knows about this be exclaimedThe only trouble is tbo Chinese poi

shops are closed and the Hawaiianshavo been the habit of getting theirpoi On credit They can get all tho poithey want now at cost where tho boardof health is seeinc that it is clean

However the Oahu senator withdrewhis objection when be saw that theresolution was only designed to relievosuffering and it passed and was sentto Governor

Now Half ParalyzedAboard the Mongolia is tho young

freight tbo Pacific Mail stoamship Asia who was incapacitated forwork while at Kobe A load of freightswinging out of tho hold struck himoa tho head and fractured tbo skullTho blow also paralyzed him on onosldp Thekull has mended very wellbut ha has not regained ofparalyzed parts It is thought how ¬

ever that ho will fully recover Thestewardess of the Asia became ill atKobe and is said to have had an at-tack of appendicitis

TO GUHE A COLD IN ONE DAY

Take Laxative Bromo QuinineTablets All druggists refundthe money if it fails toE W Groves signature if oneficl boxPARIS MKDICIMB CO ttLotOi II ft A- -

HAWATAN CAHRTR TVESlmY MARCH iW SfcfcttWERKtX 1

IS FORMER DICTATOR OFVENEZUELA NOW VISITOR

AT PACIFIC CROSSROADS

A retiring gentleman registered ht American trust Ho passed throughvolution after revolution had bistho Hawaiian UoUt as Baroa do Cas- -

blockaded by andtro Is believed by a number t n1 threatened by Bruh wawllipJ whi0who enmo with him on tho 8 8 Molina Uncle Snms vessels hovorod around tofrom Australia to bo Clpriano Castro pet into tho game to collect damagestho former president of Vefiesuela Americans or enforeo tbo Monroe

ii Doctrine whichovor was necessarytho without a country whoman Cn9tt0 took H tJlQ 1Cad of

has been refusod an asylum in France jaray in 1890 and started a war withall tho South American countries and Colombia to kocp his people busy whilomnininna America Iho laid away a surplus In Paris After

On tlio Canadlan Aistralian liner ho J P114was booked as Doctor Castro this bo- - country ho sailed for Franceincr nit tho official Information pos- - There he was denied a landing al- -

sessed by tho ships ofltcors which they though seriously ill and put into afelt at liberty to give out Among hisfellow passengers Doctor Castro orDaron do Castro or cx Prosident Cas-

tro¬

mingled little and his Frenchvalet wos discreetly sllont when questioned

Whoever ho may be tho HawallnnHotel guest leaves this morning fortho Coast on tho 8 S Mongolia

Former President Castro had morotroubles when President than tho Sultan of Turkey but ho weathered themall ho to regulate an his millions

SCHOOL FUND BILL

WAS -- UNDER FIRE

commission before senatecommittee to tell

ABOUT IT

From Saturdays AdvertiserTho committee of the whole is tho

senate yesterday took up tho whole discussion of tho school bill numbered inthe senate 18 which was prepared bytho school fund commission and withtho members of the commission itselfaa well as officials of the board of pub ¬

lic instruction to answer inquiriesThere proved to bo a number of the

latter and a continual running are ofqueries was directed at the heads ofthoso responsible the drafting of

act At times during the discus- -

fsion tho remarks became warm and ashade of criticism appeared in the attl-tudo

¬

of the senatorsTho chairman presiding was A S

Kalcipou giving President Knudsen achance to ride occasionally whichdid once to band out a roast tocommission Fairchild Cecil Brownand Judd wero all lined up for battleand directed the battery

Each had his pot objection to thebill whlch ho wanted explained awayBrown thought that the most seriousobjection to the bill was the fact tnatif the legislature passed it it wouldnot know how much monoy it was ap ¬

propriating for the schoolsThe salaries for teachers as provided

by the bill are to appropriated asa general item in the school budgetadjusting itself by a semimcchanicalaction The measuro provides for acontinuing fund which shall be a firstlien on the revenues out of whichfund salaries shall bo provided

This feature gave rise to tho objec-tion noted but W B Farrington amember of tho commission pointed outthat the number of teachers was limitedto one to evory tweny five pupils as amaximum This did not quell the suspicions of tho senators who still wanted to know why they should pass ameasure with uncertain appropria-tion

¬

Farrington rather heated then stat-ed

¬

that tho bill provided for the teach-ers which lTEd never been done beforein this Territory

Judds objection was that the clausemaking tho fund a first lien on thorevenue would impair the standing ofterritorial bonds which ore givon firstlien by clauses la the bonding lawsW A Bowen another member of thocommission didnt believe as a businessman that it would

transactedto suffer for failure their Usual foodl schools are tho first charco on the

the

the

is

in

the

clerk of

control tho

cure

ho

until

forthe

hotho

bo

an

revenues stated Farrington Thwfirst thing the American pioneer didafter ho cut down tho trees in his clearing was to build schoolhouses The firsttiling tho missionary did when ho cameto those Islands was to build schools

We dou spend as much on schoolsas tho city of New York does Thoyspend ono dollar out of every four onschools and we only spend ono dollarout of every six and New York isnt abouquet for good government either

Knudsen rose ns heurinc drewJ to a closo and stated that ho thoughtrue meaning or toe school rund commission was to deviso a source of rev ¬

enue Farrington arose on tho jumpand made a hot reply to the effect thatthis children were a source of revenue

Yes I know Knudsen butworo talking in terms of dollars andsense

Thn committee finally decided to Tefortho bill to tho committeo themembers of which could call upon thndepartment of public instruction whenever they wanted information

MILLION LOST IN

QUAKER CITY FIHE

PHILADELPHIA March C ThoMinneapolis Syndicate block was do- -

itlio bunding ana contents beingmated nt one million dollars Two perboos known to he in tb bulldln aremissing and it U feared that they havedun meir

HFREE SCHOOL FOUNDER

IS DEAD ON COAST

SAN mANOSOO March O JobnO 1olton who faundsd thi first itwrmblla school on the lflaiflo Coast diedat lit bewo hum ywurdsy

Spanish port As long as ho was sickho was allowed to stay ashore butconvalcaonto brought a polite littlonote Inviting him to pack up his gripand lenvo Spain Ho sailed back toVenezuela and had tho door slammedin tf face whilo all of Venezuelasneighbors hung out tho not athomo sign no wont to jnow xorKand wns met at Ellis Island by blanklooks whereupon he sailed for London

For tho past year or two ho has boonin moro or less obscurity circling aboutfor a place to runko his home and spend

undertook

education

OUT FOR FIRST TIME

SPRUNG BY RICE IN HOUSE INDEBATE OVER BILL FOR

WHARVES

Tho previous question broke looseyesterday In tho house of representa ¬

tives for the first time Tho Hon C ARico was tho guilty party

It was all becauso of a littlo Hem In

house- bill No 7G calling for a meretrlflo of 14400 for a wharf and shedat Mahukpna Island of Hawaii Maultried to butt in

Representative Kcllinoi of Maulmade an amendment by which a littleridor of 40000 was tacked on for anow wharf on tho seaward side of hisisland Then thero was another amendmeit for a small matter of a few thou-sands for a wharf somewhero else

Thcro was considerable eloquence before tho vote was taken and then byjan excecamgiy cioso margin carotuuynoted by Speaker Holstein the amend-ments

¬

wore lost one after the otherFollowing camo some more oratory in

connection with the original bill Itwas at this juncture that Bice saw hisopportunity He had kept his eve onenfor that chanco ever since ho becamea Binricuro as vice speaker

I call for tho previous questionand tho call was made in a tone ofvoico which stilled tho clamor

Debate was strangled on tho spotOn rollcall Kauai lined up solid with

Hawaii but thero was a little scatter-ing

¬

among the Solons from Oahu Maulwas liko a stono wall for that 40000or no bill but tho wall wasnt highenough and the ball passed third read ¬

ing by a vote of twenty one to eignt

LITTLE GUSH 01LICENSE MEASURE

From Saturdays AdvortisorFor tho first timo thero was somo

aggresslvo life injected into tho houseof representatives at its meeting yesterday The first clash came over the

ow aftornooaS Kawewehi providing for a slidingscale of license fees for merchants ac-

cording to tho amount of businessWe havo gone on basis that the

tho

said

lUUU U U1DCUOBJUU lUiUWCU VViJUU IHU

bill camo up xor third reading ijeprescntutive Towse stated emphaticallythat the bill would bo a perjury fac-tory Ho opposed tho measuro as go-

ing back to an old law which jvas triedand quickly given up

A number of others spoko and thenRepresentative Rice made a warm dofenso of tho bill He stated that thisbill was for the purpose of caualizinirthe license as at present was unfairxo small merchants and no namedHackfeld Co ns paying no moro fora license than tbo small dealer tryingto make both ends meet

Upon tho roll call however tho billpassed third reading by a substanti tlmajority

DR SUN YflT SEN AT

WORK FOR REBELLION

VICTORIA British Columbia Feb- -

ruary 22 Dr Sun Yat Sen who formany years lias led a niovemont for thooverthrow of tho present dynasty In

China is in Victoria preaching thocausa of revolution among tbo local Chi-

nese¬

Ho advocates armed rebellionfor tho purpose of upsetting the prcs

i r-Mroyed by nro yesterday tho loss of lent aynasty and establishing a govern

- r E T I

estl- -

lives

to reform ou westernFor many years he has been in oxllo

from his nativo land and has time1o time boon usweinted by report withrebellion in He was last heardof In Singapore where he resided untilabout two mouths ago Ho made aspeech at the Straits Settlements portadvocating the starting of an armed re- - j

GETTING AFTER

PERSONAL IKES

more oHBLAuanTS on revenueSOURCES SEEM TO BE

SCHEDULED

This is tho open season for tax lawsTho Governor has heard other sugges-

tions of a polite way to kill off ihooxlsting statutes on various pretextsand not satisfied with tho alreadynumerous proposed reforms sorao ono

has coino forward with tho suggestionthat tho personal taxes on schools androaus ua auousnod

This fact that Tho authorities at Manila con- -

commission bill 11 1ii1a1 iinnttnlinn t IftlAAbthois now bolug considered by tuq sanatofinds amplo opportunity to uso theschool tax at least

Tho Goornor has had figurcB pre ¬

pared on tho subject to present tothoso interested in tho schomo ono wayor tho other and is ready to moot allcomers pro or con an apparentlyneutral attltudo and hanging outonly for tho password of no reductionin rovonuo not oaring much kindof revenuo it Is

Tho rush for tho pork bnrrol in thohalls of tho legislators has boon soBteady and persistent since tho sessionbegan that tho question of enoughrovonuo to make ends moot has increased in soriousness since tho Gov ¬

ernor stated whilo drawing up tho or ¬

dinary estimates for tho next biennialperiod that they havo a hardtimo to perform this teat oven men

Tlio figures prepared at tho Governors order show that there nro 7ouh

in the whoParo but jj tpectcd thoir personal n 1 i ipayroaas unu scuuuis xuio uuuuvi is ucluslvo of anv in tho county ofKalawao or tho Island of Midway

Out of this number poll taxes werecollected last year from 48855 leav-ing

¬

29053 or 38 per cent who didnot pay Of this last number prob ¬

ably tho 053 wero exempt and tho29000 cheated tho Territory

Tho advocates of tho scheme toabolish tho personal taxes tako thostand that they aro oxpensivo to col-

lect¬

as well difficult

TO

Special Cable Tho AdvertiserMANILA March 3 Messrs Hode

mann and Swanzy who arrived hero onFebruary 20 to look into tho proposition of establishing a central Bugar mmin tho San Carlos district to bo financedfrom Honolulu sail for their homos to ¬

Thoy state that thejr havobeen greatly pleased with thoir inspec-tion

¬

of the sugar possibilities In thoSan district and will report fa-vorably

¬

on tho central proposition tocooperators

WIFE OF KAPAPALi

RICH HNA6ER DE1D

From thcro twentjmnrn whito 10000

to mademanager Kapapala P etc thoso

who witnessincs or carnival ana anrincrs weoitSho had been for somo timeof diabetes but nothing serious wasfeared tho disease wasby a attack of poison-ing

¬

for which sho was taken for treat-ment

¬

to tho Johnson sanatorium Thofnnnrnl arviPB lw lnlfl fflmnr

passago of H B 28 introduced by H at half two nt St

the

it

Mrs wob a daughter ofMrs L A of Honolulu Sheleaves surviving her husbandoulv son having been accidentally kill-ed

¬

In California a few years ago threes sters Mrs Renjcs Mrs Hubert Vos

Wow ITork and Mrs Monroe and abrother Hon J H 3onoy ofHer niece Miss Anna Graham is thoaflianced wife of Jay Gould ofYork

wedkofhoIluto california

FRANCISCO February 23Tho for Honolulu of Mr andMrs Nelson Lansing will follow a briefhonoymoon trip Southern California

wedding took onThursday evening at St Lukes Churchwas n brilliant affair The bridal partyincluded a group of tho most attractivdgirls in society The maid of honorwas Ethel McLean tho ofthe brido and tho weroMiss Edna Hayward Miss Margaret

Miss Marian Lolly and MissBcrnieo

Melville Bowman acted as best manand the ushers wore Cleighton 8nnr James O Bell Georgo Ounn andDcrwent Kennedy William Chlpmanescorted tho hrido to tho altar whoreshe was given into tho keeping of horhusband by hor aunt Mrs Timothy Ouyrucips

ment presumably a pledged wedding supper nt the Bcllovue atlines

from

China

their

until

past

which tlio bridal party and a fow intimate rncnili were prettom

Mr Lansiugs family is aone i Honolulu and It was whilo visiting In Islands and Miss MoLean first met although Mrs Phelpsend bin mother hud been friends formany years

A bMutuui uomp ror moir occupancybolllori In China which resulted a I It in coume of Honoluluwarning ltng given him by the local Mr end hi bride will boauthorltlw and afterward he left roynlly r elcomwl on their arrival

Ill AFFAIRS

QUIET AT CAPITAL

GOOD chanoe for coastwisesuspension bill in the

next session

By Ernest a Walker

MnilJ3pcclal to Tho AdvertiserWASHINGTON 10 Tho

departure of W O Smith for homeafter having the situation withroforonco to tho Immigration of Fili ¬

pinos is tho chief Hawaiian matter atI Washington slnco tho last mall loft

notwithstanding tho are toschool fund whoso

what

would

to

girl

era leaving for Hawaii This has beenarranged by communication with DeanWorccstor and is fuiiy approved by offl

cials hero in WashingtonThis arrangement eliminates atay ne-

cessity¬

for legislation at Washington orfor any effort to put a provision uponnn appropriation bill It is generallybolloved that tho arrangement willwork out satisfactorily

Goorgo McK McClcllan has been at¬

tending tho sosslons of thoconferonco that havo to do with

trado wottors to tho Bouth Prof HiramBingham of Yalo formerly of Honoluluwas to havo given an lecturolast tho delegates to thatconference but had to his en ¬

gagement because of an attack of gripThcro is absolute other ¬

wise in matters lf Hawaiian interestiat the capital Not n wheol is turningWilli rctoronco to Jlnwniian measures

persons Territory ox McClollnn ald today ho beto tnvpn on 11

ono

as

u

morrow

Carlos

Hawaiian

Hof

Kauai

wliero

beforecancel

ncvcd mora woum uo guuu jiruspuuiaat tho next sosslon of congress in get ¬

ting the national park bill nnd thecoastwlso bill onactod Intolaws

WHITE IN ARE

NDT AFFECTED B

CHINESE PLACDE

A 8 Perolstrous writing to TheI Advortisor from tho contor of theplague district of Manchuria statesithat out of oor fifteen thousanddeaths to tho date of writing February 3 only twonty had boon

of white persons Tho lettersays

Dalrcn Dalny Manchuria Febru- -

ary 3 1011

Having read from your nowspaportho Bomowhat incorrect account youhavo received concornlng tho plaguo inManchuria I thought perhaps youmight voluo somo first hand informa-tion

¬

on the subjectIn first place I might say that

we have not a single caso of bubonicplaguo in this country I havo per-sonally

¬

been over it from Harbin toDairen Whnt fao havo bore unfortu-nately is pneumonic plague somewhatdifferent to bubonic plaguo in that itaffects the lungs and not tho glandsns in bubonic It is also different inthat it is contracted from direct in-halation

¬

from an infected andalso that it is not a whito mans sickness

During tho existence of the pngueSaturdays Advertiser haVo died only eight

TUnHi nmn mulilnnlv vivtnWiiiv people as against Jhincseihg Mrs Julian Monsarrat wife of The number of tbo whitesthe of tho ranch Ho- - rni doctors nurses whowail was hero to the do havo been attonding dlroctly on tho in l

suffering

aggravatedsevere ptomaine

tvll

MonsarratConor

their

New

SANdeparture

inTheir which place

Miss sisterbridesmaids

WitterHarrell

Sliri

ropubllc

prominent

the that ho

in construction InLansing

soon

February

adjusted

illustratedovening

inactivity

suspension

upoight

thoso

ho

all

porson

are

It is Bald to havo been brought intothis country by the Chinese in tho im-portation of marmot skin from Mon-golia

¬

and strange to say it has re¬

mained only among tho Ghinoso Ofcourse their tnannor of living la ratherconduclvo to its sproad

The city of Harbin is I understandfairly clear of it It is only the Chi- -

neso city that is infected and that issome way from tho Itussian city InDairen thanks to tho Japanese thedeaths havo not raachod soven a dayIn tho Chinoso cities up tho countrythings are bad They of course asusual refuse to do as they are told inprder to provont its sproadlng

X must add that tho germ lives onlyIn confined and insufficiently vontilatedrooms instantly it comes into the sun-light

¬

and fresh air it dies This ofcourse prevents it spreading

ISEiERG MEXALTED RULER

D 1 R Iscnborg was chosen by theHonolulu Brotherhood of Elks as theirexalted ruler in an election last nightand tho choice has bcon hailed with a

great deal of satisfaction within thefraternity Other oflkors elected are

A E Murphy esteemed leadingknight J l Dpyle esteemed loyalknight E M Ehrhorn esteemed lec-turing

¬

knight M II Drummond treasurer James D Dougherty delegato totho grand lodge with E A Douthittalternate Raymond Irwin tiler andJ D Dougherty trusteo for threeyears

Following the election and the con-gratulations

¬

Mr Camm o 6an Francisco addressed tho lodge on tho bigwork done in re creating San Francisco Illustrating bis talk with a jimhpr of storooptlcon vlows Representative Fonmndoz ran tbo view machine

QUICK RESULTSAn ordinary attack of diarrhoea may

ho cured by u single dose of Chambe-rlains Colic Cholera and DiarrheaJtomoily Only In tho most savero antesis a second or third doo required TrrIt Fas sale by all dulori BensonBinlth i Co Ltd agents for Hawaii

t

jitrMf j JaiJSEiLiJiLj

j ftj 4

m

llHi

rfjtl3I

4

tlA

M

Page 8: MWU - University of Hawaiʻi...derson president ami treasurer of the Western Dry Goods Company of Seat-tle ¬ who is a guest at the Young Hotel states that there is a strong possibility

ffwwwrpllHWWprpv J

tajt

Thinrr JSPale WMLAll run down easily tiifcd nervous And do not know whatto take Then go direct toyour doctor Ask his opinionof AVers Sarsaparilla It con-

tains

¬

no alcohol no stimulationand is a blood purifier a nervetonic a strong alterative an aidto digestion Ask your doctorabout Ayeis non alcoholic Sar-

saparilla

¬

as a strong tonic forthe weak

Ayers Sarsaparilla

fnnni b Of 1 C Ajtr Ca lowll Hut I 8 A

EXPERIENCE

an BmJKiiIIi TrTBBTRAor

CopyniGKTQanyone ending kf cti nd dMcnptlonmaj

qtilcklr ttaroriitiii our opinion wbeUier uiCommnnlcaIriTonunn ii pnunDirrTlti

Rtncur cmiuaenu

80

Acfree

liom rmnucuun onlitentitent free Uldett treucr fortecunngpatenta

latents taken ibrouvh Mann A Co receTipteiai notice wunoni cninre iu mo

Scientific JJtiercatuATiandiomoIr ninitrited weealr TJimot dreolation a ny aclenuflo Journal Tmil3Teari fonrmonUuIL Bold byall newadealera

UNNCo36Bro New YorkBranch Oflee e V BU D C

BUBINDSa OAEDH

HONOLULU IRON WOEKB CO Mathlnery of every flescrlptlon mule toorder

SENATE IS AFTER II

FEW MORE DOLLARS

Evidently tho representatives in ho

lower house of the legislature thoughtthe senate was trying to beat thornto it when it came to dividing thofederal appropriation of 30000 fortheir expenses for the lower housomdnibers yesterday refused to concurin a concurrent resolution by which thosenators appropriated to themselves

12000 and allowed the bouse 18000Tho concurrent resolution was sent

to the senate from tho house in thoorst place setting the division at20000 for the house and 10000 for

tho senato basing the division on thoground that tberp are twice as manymembers in the house and consequentlyit should liuvo twice as much money

But the Benato did not sec it thatway and amended the resolution to suitthem better When tho houEo refusedto accept the amendment Speaker Hoisteln appointed a conference committeeof three Representatives Coney Wntiins and Waiaholo to try and straight ¬

en out tho money tangle with the senate

t

UNCLAIMED LETTER LIST

List of remaining uncalledfor in the general delivery for tho weekending March 1 1011

Adam Mrs Baul Jones Ira OAlbert Mrs King J B F

Esther IC Kitclicm AndrewAllan Mrs T W Krane KennethBaldwin Capt Lcong Toy Long

Thomas8 2 Lockwood WBenton Hart Lloyd MrsBirch H N 2 HameatBlakshaw Ernset Mars J C 2Bob Mrs Maggie Mason QJJriggs Alias ijadio autchei Airs ABargcss C Wiiacnn ueoBurnett JCampbell PeterCartwrlgbt A JChase LewisCridland Arthur

Hnrkleroad EarlHendersonHopper

WilliamJohnson

YEARS

MarksDesigns

Vfaablogton

letters

MIbs PatticHorse Sir

Mrs II OMunro Ed

EugenoHeldBoss Harry

Dorssin Dr M H Shriver Mts TodDurant John A C 5

II A V Smith Bobt K 2Peter Eddie Stone Mrs NiauFore Thomas J Stewurt Angus MFrid Mies HildaOBgg Mrs N P

B BWm

JohnsonE B

Morse

and

PugliGeo

EvansMrs

Turner Miss JeanS

1paohn FrankWilson Mrs IL AWiedermeycT Mrs

Etta 2

PackageWilliam Prank

Morris EarlBossian Letters

IWntlrti I rinbit r

f

Brukov A 2 Smolensk Mr3rarkof T Salsmukoff MrOoporemskoi A SemldeyOodoOj Mr Sergiovlcb MrOooshiu 8 Urasoff MrOombekomu C Voromovu MrICltslne F Vilkoff MrKusmlcbbft Mr Zlnovoaff Mr

Please ak for advertised letterjpSBIU G PRATT Postmaster

I DIEDMeLAllEN Atk Queens Hospital

March 4t JOU William llusiell McLri n nutfvo of Glasgow Scot ¬

land ogd sUlytflve years

A maul mwttneof yneouver Brit- -

Wi Columbia lftnm ibrlld in ajw minuiai 9zmoo io d th toleffund opnd for the fmJiin wffrrt inthlriK

MARINE REPORT

MerchaaU Kickwit

MARCH 7 1911mmmmm ww gigi

By JSaturday Marb 4

Ban lrnnclBco Arrival midnight 88 Asia from Honolulu

Monday March 0 1011lnjjot Sound Arrived Feb Z5r 8 8

Mcxlosii from Snn FranciscoSeattle SnIIMwMareh 5 U S A T

Bnford for HonoluluVTokohnmn Arrived March G 8 8

Siberia lieuco Feb 22Nitrate Tort Sailed March 4 bktno

Hawaii for HonoluluSato Francisco Arrived March 0 8

8 Enterprise from Kilo Fob 24llllo nncl Mnrcn a sonr unmuie

for San FranciscoHonolpu Arrived March 0 8chr Mu-

riel from San Francisco

PORT OF HOHOLULU

AEBXVXD

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE TUESDAY

jrwuuj uuibu uO 8 S Sierra Houdletto from San

1YanciRco h a mP M 8 8 Mongolia from Yoko-

hama 11 a mO A 8 S Zealandia from- - Victoria

qnd Vonconvcr 2 p mSaturday March 4 1011

Nor S 8 Promise from MukiltooIfaytian Islands

Str Mauna Ken from Ilito and wayports a m

Sunday March 5Btr Klnnu from Hawaii 430 a mStr Mlknhala from Molokai 5 a mStr Likelikc from Hawaii 030 a mStr Iwalani from Kailua a m

Monday March C

P M S S Mancliuria from SanFrancisco 830 a m

M N S B Hiloninn from Seattle0 n ra

A H S S Virginian from Seattle845 a m

V S A T Sherman from Manila0 p rn

Am scbr Ilclche from Port Ludlow

DEPARTEDC A S S Zealandia for Sydney

via Suva and Fanning 7 p mi

Str Mauna Loa for Kona and KanportB 12 noon

ur cruiser Jcnt ior Acapuico janoon

Str W G Hall for Kauai ports 5p m

Str Clandlnc fdr Mauiv and Hawaiiports C10 p m

Str Maui- - for Hawaii ports 020p m

P M S S Mongolia for San Fran ¬

cisco 10 a in- S 8 Santa Itita for Port San Luis12 tooon -

P M 8 8 Manchuria for Yoko ¬

hama 5 p mStr Nocau for Knuai ports 5 p mU 8 A T Sherman for San Fran-

cisco¬

0 p m

PASSENGERSArrived

Per O S S Sierra from San FranMarch chauffeur Mrs

Anderson ScharlinAirs licu adulteuq x J jaecnur juraBecker J H Belscr A Berdick MissB E Bcrcrin W LBeswick Mrs IIBoland J J Boyce Miss Borden HarryBrandon J II Burnett Mrs BurnettU li LnstendyK Airs uastcnayK unamaid Miss Bernico Castcndyk MistorHobert Castendyk Mrs S E Chaffln FD Chandler Mrs Chandler It B Chris-ty

¬

Victor T Clark Christian CochranCochrnn C H Coffin Mrs

Coffin F B Coffin Miss Bernlce BCook F A Copeland Mrs Copelind

Isabel Corbett Miss Jennie MCrabbc Fxank B Craig Mrs CurtisiMiss Grace Davis Miss Elizabeth Donncll W E Donovan Mrs DonovanMrB M M Daw John Dreier Miss EM Dunning J B Durand Mrs Durand

F G Eaton Sanford Evans MissBella Falk L J Falk B G Falk MrsD A Fnrgo Mrs M W Fish A 11

Fitzgerald Miss J Fitzgerald J WGilchrist Mrs Gilchrist Mrs E M Gil-

lespie¬

Miss J Gillespie D H GilmoreG W Goodridgo L B Harsha MrsHnrsha C D Hayward Mis HaywardD C Hazclrigg Mrs Hazelrigg MissC O Henderson Miss S J HendersonG C Hideckcr Mrs ErnestHlllior Mrs Hillier Miss Holen Hobron Mrs Perloy L liorne M P JacobsA i Jackson Mrs Jackson M JordanMrs Jordan J W Kennedy Mrs Ken ¬

nedy Mrs F C KingBbury W WKirklnnd Miss Frieda E Klein WnKnight MrB Miss Elsa Lackner Miss Irma Luekher A P LasherMrs Lasher- - Miss 8 E Lohring W BLinsley Miss E J LinBlcy Mrs F JLowrny Miss Boma Love Mrs W FLudington J Oswnld Lntted Dr C BLyman Mrs Lyman C A McLeanMrs McLean Mrs T A Marlowe MMarr Mrs Mnrr J N Martin S Hiiays Airs miijs a aiereen aiiss xio- -

ns Moreen Miss EUitn Alercen uMetcalf Mrs Metcnlf Miss Mac Moore11 1 iNngej Mrs JNagel Miss HageiF C Nnsh F G Nowton Mrs MichaelPat on Miss Paton C F Patterson MrsPatterson 11 It OBrien W L Os-borne

¬

Miss E Pierce Mrs C B Pikeut A A roenner Airs ioelinor MrsF Balney Carrol Beid Mrs W GRogers F F Rowland Mrs RowlandMrs Geo Russell nnd child Miss RReed Miss Edna R Ryan H H ScovelMrs Scovol Henry Sadler Mrs SadlorMiss i pnuicr Airs it u aawycr MissN Sawyer Miss J Shanghnessey JesseA Smith A Soeldner Miss J E SquicrMiss E L Miss L A StewartDr L 8 Thompson Daniel Tweedlev wniiace inos a word w KWnid Mrs M Ward G H WhitneyH S Wood

Per P M S 8 Moncolia from Orientports March 3 Fnr Honolulu MissMnttfe Kim Dr J Mrs JTleliida and maid Through for Sanrraneisco Jose Bcnevides Mrs L EBray Miss Emilie Bretthauer MD OT Ilrldgman Mrs Jennie Cameron WM Crawford Mrs W M Crawford and3 children nnrry Catlin E F Coe MrsE F Coe Miss M F Cross and mnldT M Dalley Mrs II C Du Rose CountEickstedt Dr Joseph Fischer Mrs GL Frusrr and two children Dr Channcev Goodrich Mrs Chauncey GoodrichLuther Goodrich Henri Gitson Miss IIL R Grove Mrs W JansenRe H Lyman Mrs II Lymnn MrsAmv Jt Long Dr W N Murray MrsW N Murray Iul McCall Gcorco DMnroan IF It Nicoll R H PereivalMrn M L Sawyer Mrs Win I flwalImi nnd 2 children MIm Gertrude Bwnl- -

Iwi Hcnrv Towir J M Vidal MIm M

I it n i a a AtHAi ti m ri v k tiwwiiini a a tvimirif imiiii wI Potrell Uv W II lIMleyI troll Mia rotltrll MisslruteH ir riAA T Uum

Km eat Lo Mirler CIsra Lt McImi- -

rlsr Tos Doekrlll Mrs F E HerringMlie F W Herring E O Anderson WBulley MtB Sulley F Wright MMWright Kathleen Wright Mrs Os CMcshor MiH F Mcsher MIm V UEl ford T J Trapp Mr Tropji KAllan J Katsehucr Mrs lCateuurrDelia Kntschilor Oertruilo KntsiihuerRnvmonil Kntschuer A W BerleauxJ V Whllcley Mrs T W WlilfclpyAnsa ji wnuciey nancy wintcioyAlbort Hose C Jensen MrA JcnwnMrs M Jcrucn J Jensen Meta Jen- -

DUll OUI1I1 11UU1U IT XUilJ Jt MBrown E A Ellsworth F AV DealingMrs ueliliilg Viola iJenling Jas Hun-ter

¬

Simon PopoffPer str Mauna Kca from Hilo and

way ports March 4 D C MayE FBasely P Smith L H Fischer andwife Mrs B F Cau Mrs Brass CE Hascom J H Hughes AV O WillIt L Glieon B C llarl C P BroyH B Hcnney Mrs E M Dabson DrO F Klauss wife and son- - Mrs CMcKinnoy Mrs O Kemp O D HallMrs Kink Mrs Lnymara Mrs B CDwight M W Lovy nnd wife W Dollen Mrs V A Andrews Mrs D Bnsselly Mrs Cummlngs 1 8 Scbovck ULyman D Purdy T A Carter E HCoub C W Hodglns Mrs E A Car ¬

bon J A Olson Mrs A Winla Missand Mrs Barvard M Bear Capt FD AValker Mrs O W Wallaco ChanLin Yick A S Prescott T W Skinner H T Hayseldcn E Uanobug OHorswcll Mrs D Honnings and childC F Hnyre Captain Sam

Per str Mikahala from MolokaiMarch G II J Shoemaker Mrs Slioo- -

maker 1 A Dubois J A Krohn JW Kershncr W Dickson Mrs AionnCarl F Ilaynes

Per str Kinnu from Hawaii MarchS Francis day and servant Miss Hookano II E Smith E Faxon BishopA Gartley Miss Jottmon W O Hensgen Chan Sak Heo Fat MrsY AhLin A Froitas Mrs J II Conoy Mal ¬

colm Coney Catherine Concv nnd servant Eov Y C Kim K Yamamoto

Per P M 8 H Mancburia from SanFrancisco Mnrch 0 Mrs L E Arnoldand infant Master Lewis Arnold F SBell Mrs F 8 Bell James G Berry- -

hill Mrs James Q Berryhill 3co IIBudd Mrs GeoH Budd Mrs SusnnII Burgess II H Burrcll Miss K Costello S St Cummins Bobt Dalziel JrMiss A J Dcnpler James D Dole1 DW Durnnt O W Fisher Mrs O WFisher G W Folsom Mrs G W Folsom Miss F A Folsom Mrs A BGrover W A Hall Mrs W A HallW n Hunt Miss L G Johnson BJKnight Mrs D Lnogier C LongwoodM Lemcke E B Martin Mrs E BMartin F S Mathewson Mrs JV SMathewson Chas McCarty Mrs ChnsMcCarty F II Morley Mrs F H Morloy J 8 Mqrrow Mrs J T NpvillsMiss Clara Novills Miss E H NixcnOswald Oliver James P Philip MrsJames P Philip E B Pike1 Mrs BB Pike S L Prentiss Mrs Bi tfreh- -

tiss J H Queal Mrs J H Queal andcisco 3 Mrs M Y Allison A C Belnecko A CMrs C E Master Anderson fleinecke ji Alex Sclator

Elizabeth

Mrs

Mrs

Hldecker

Knight

Stevens

Uchida

Elizabeth

V -- B many

wick G E cli tclnKThellan Mrs M E Tisdalo JWTomblin ilrs J w TomCUn K iiVon Winkle Mrs E B Van WinkleMrs J II Weor Miss N Wecr MrsO T Wellington L G Wcsiott MrsL G Wcstcott C Yntes Mrs C EYntes Mrs O Oliver Layover BjJnolulu Mr nnd Mrs John Bull Browning Mr and Mrs G R Howard MissAlma Howard Miss Ethel Howard Mrand Mrs W B Kcane Mrs F EStrykcr Miss Eva Wilkinson TJAllen Job Freeman Miss E ArinioHall

Departed

Per str Manna Loa for Kona andKau ports March 3 A L KayKay Mrs Jenkins Miss E A StoneMrs F L Loslie Miss May W FMartin Mrs Martin A Ahrens MrsAhrens J C Hoyt Mrs Hoyt MissAhrens Mrs M D Byron

Per 11 M 8 Zealandia for AustraliaMarch 3 H Brandon Mr andHillier N H Jacobs C S WallaceMr and Mrs Jr O Johnson Frank LBnrwick Mrs F Bainoy T A Burn- -

ingham Percy Hunter II S Woodsand Ernest Kaai and his band of tenmusicians

Per P M S 8 Mongolia for SanFrancisco Mnrch 3 Mrs E A MeBrydc Mrs Malonoy Miss M Wil ¬

liams J R Gait and wife C VWalker Susan L Cooper Sarah EHalo J W Ney and wife A GKeagle C C Crawford and wife F NMnrshall and wife D G Peck and wifeian a iieise Mrs Mcuiuiy iiiggins T C Lutz Miss Singer Miss Innes Mrs A Waldemneir Mrs C ACaywood Mrs M L MrsB Griggs Holt Jus A Carr nnd wifea v Mcuryuo miss Mciirydo w 11

Smith Miss M Arnold Miss A LaillnII A Crocor Mr McDoll Mrs BushFinnell F W Oakcs and wife J HBecker and wife Miss J A Gouldy HC Warren A Maddros Ashley OJones Frank L Hale and wife Mrs PT Walsh and daughter O II Macaulayand wife O N Ecklcson and wifeH P Danzig Tnfford Hudson andwife Mrs Henry E Highton MraHV Cook 0 8 Douglas and wife MissBqscombc Miss Bunco Miss GBunce Miss E Bunco E Bishop MrsRose Edwards Mrs E A BaldwinUco 11 Utilise wife nnd child F MGrncTv nnd wife Miss B B IlirrtlnttF II Cose N V F Randolph MissMarion Randolph Robt Winkelnianana wire unas I uuitiurt and wifeMiss C BJIarbert Miss A Bluet MrsV Z Nelson C A Fellows and wifeG M Gardner C N Cotton MissBarbara Cotton E L Thompson wifeand son N R Smith Mrs G P John-stone Mrs La Fountaine Miss Bradley Miss Li Tusiopp L li Adams GeoF Stone and wife R Rlahetti MrsR R Muscio II Bernard and wife JohnA Cooko and wife Roy J Cooke MrsDoctor Groff Miss A Vandcrbilt MrsE V Cash J MeUeebaii V S Tenney J G Held and wife J 11 MacMlllau Mts C W Davis II 0 Rothling and wife S V Mooney N N Redfield Mrs J J Dlstatte and daughterMr and Mrs J B Mills C A DavisR B Irwin Mr and Mrs E K MoyoriWalter MnCorniack Mrs J II MoCorrnnck 6 0 Van Auken nnd wife E JoiiiioK ii teener jiasKin lien Audio

M Vornlrk I Yamajruehl W T D and wife Ben Wllliami and wife MillYtTn Too Him Mob Wang Ting Ton K eno A o AjipleUy 1 A

f

UWSm3i L

mSmmimmmmmmm-S-KMl-WEEKLY

m CHOLERA SGIBE

COME TO

-- jZ

NO NEW OASES DOOTOIin THXNKiXllliX 11AVU IJIBWUVlUiUU

INTECTION CENTEE

the lack of id thocbolcra situation njcfcfnnew cases Are concerned the

idevelopment

yesterdaybt

health nnd physicinns gcnerallynrofcsdto see an end to tho threatened epidemic providing thnt tho community asa wholo still keeps np its sanitary vigilance and uocv not let a tod readilysupposed security lead it back to thoold basis

Tho most important discovery madesinco tho first case appeared on Hustacolane was made yesterday in tho discovery of the probably source of in ¬

fection This gives tho board a holdon the situation which it did not havebefore nnd which makes the end of thopresent sorles of cases the moro probable Tho source of Infection is nowbelieved to bo two largo ponds in Ke- -

walo very near the place whore thecholera first appoared Chinese tarohas been jrown tbgre and sold widelysinco the outbreak Moses T Cleggone of President Mott Smlths medi-cal

¬

detectives Discovered the micro-scopic crooks in these ponds both ofwhich were full of baccilli

Taro from these fields had been takenfrom tho ponds nnd sold in tho marketever since tho first case from which theponds were most likely infected Thoother cases appearing in such widelyseparated districts can probably all bo

traced to the consumption of the foodgrown here and thcro is still also thepossibility that there is some of thistaro in private homes at tho presenttime where it may bo eaten anU resultin another outbreak

Tho moment the discovery was madePresident Mott Smith personally wentto tho ponds and stationed guards andtlion returned to the markets as fastas his machine could take him and sawthat all tho taro there of the varietygrown in iewftio was destroyed irany more cases appear and duo tothe consumption of this yecgtable thetaro will have been purchased beforoDoctor Cleggs discovery

All the sulphjiric licid in the city waspoured into the ponds yesterday butoven the amount on hand Is not consid ¬

ered sufficient to completely destroy thebacilli and are still beingtaken

8tMiShrJl0ltao the coWtsMrs iT Wbur

wh are nolant tI0nll13ar

K

Mrs

Mrs

Cunningham

W

if

In

aro

precautions

antino station qr in outside districtsIri accordance with statements of thopresident last week it is possible thata number of the restrictions will betaken off if tho promise of the presentsituation is maintained

The discdvery of tho bacilli in thepona aoes not give n ciue as to tneorigination of the disease

TAKES POSSESSION

OF COUNTRY HOTEL

The lease giving E P Iiwin the con-

trol¬

of tho Wahiawa country resortformerly the Malukukui Hotel wassigned yesterday by tho trustees of theAtherton estate and tho new proprietortook possession at once

Numerous expensive additions andrepairs about the place have been al ¬

ready planned and will be immediatelyexecuted increasing the capacity ofthe hotel and making it cosier andnearer tho standards of the comfort incitv bostelries

An automobilo will meet tho trainsat AVahiawa from tho hotel and in itsoff moments act as a link between theHau tree Irwins Waikiki Hotel anduis new wtiuiuiYa- - enterprise

14MAN WHO LAID SEWEE

SYSTEM IS BAOBZ AGAIN

7

J II Belser of San Francisco fntherof J J Belser the local contractorwho laid the Honolulu sower systemabout ten years ago is a visitor herehaving tirnvd on the Sierra He willvisit with Mr and Mrs Belser for afew months

Mr Belser secured tho contiact forthe building of the sewer system in theface of much competition Ho com-pleted

¬

tho work amid difficulties andthe city has now a system which aidslargely In making for better sanitaryconditions although it needs many ex-tensions

¬

ton Cyrus Pierce E H Hulse andwife J Koclan Professor Perkins CN N Rowo H B Cooper J A Work-man

¬

Jos L Anderson and threedaughters W A Morris A Link MrsO P Shinbler Mrs Conger H MCoke E W Packard J Black audiwife G M Gibson Mrs H L Cum-mlngs

¬

Mrs C B Russell Miss RussellMiss Anna O Strayne B Ivors andwife Mr Hardy wifo and no chil ¬

dren Miss Stella Wilbur 8 E Fernan- -

dez and wife Dr i U Uraithwaite JDe Castro nnd valet F M Brown HKoehler

Per P M S 8 Manchuria for Yokohama March 0 Judge A A Wildernnd wife Miss Alice Macforlnne andJapanese maid Frank Fitzgerald u IIFerris MUs O Stephens Miss J Stephens Miss Mnry McDowell Chas Her- -

Krcn Mrs C W Boucher Mrs J HChapman F P Cobb Mrs F D CobbWright Curtis Mist Augusta KufTrrMis Alice X McDowell Miss CarolineH McDowell Min Mary Q McDowellMrs AitMontaouiery II I Shoemaker

bMri It 1 Hhoswakor Mrs II Stephensf t B af aUt BtaVMivtaf all

sess 18 in I rniiiitnliiiiJlMwb 7s

COULD SEE ONLY

THE Ml IT

MABItlAOE or 1IELENE IHWIN TO

U5 TBMPLETON OnOOKEE BUMS iiSSJAINMTLLIONa

SAN FRANCISCO February 23KlB clink of rriuch fine mid the fflltter

Hi it tho olamour of it the nil 1x5 r--

yCnllng dominance of it gold to thonxiuDb 01 many millions uuu manymoro millions to come will give a lus-

trous¬

background to the wedding ofMiss Helene Irwin daughter of mil-

lionaire¬

and Tcmplcton Crocker son ofn millionaire nephew of a millolnaironnd grand nophow of a millonaircwhich will tako place this afternoon

The marriage one of the most mo ¬

mentous events of tho- season in bothsociety and tho money mart of thoWest will be held at the residence ofthe brides father William G Irwinbanker and planter of Honolulu iuWashington street It will see the join ¬

ing of the vast Crocker possessions totho big Irwin holdings and the uniouof two of tho richest families in thocountry An exceedingly conservativeestimate of tho two fortunes is 23

000000 anj tho probabilities are thattho figure is ifill higher Money andth power thorcof with its diamondsand pearls and precious stones with itsautomobiles and orchids witb1 all thomany things that bask and htjye in itsgolden rays jwill mark tbeisweddingTho wealthiest ruenof the land willwitness the affair in corhpany withtho most exclusive women of thocojntry 4

The altar will be of orchids massedheap on heap tho expensive petals in-

terwoven¬

and intertwined with thodaintiest ferns into designs of wonderand creat beauty It will stand before a stained glass window at the footof the staircase The ceiemony willbe performed by Most Rev P W Biordan nrchbishop of the diocese

On the smo scale are the giftsLeading- - them all is that of Irwia tohis daughter or iuuuuuu in gut eageastocks and bonds The brides mothergives an automobile landaalct and thegrooms present to her is a rare neck-lace

¬

of emeralds and pearls Thpendant on the necklace is a largoemerald the favorite gem of MissIrwin and around it is set a perfectnetwork of pear shaped pearls em-

eralds¬

and carefully selected preciousstones

Miss Jennie Crocker sister of thegroom has given some of the choicestgems of her historic collection heir-looms

¬

and matchless Mrs WbitclawReid has given a jeweled purse of exquisjte design Apart from these thocouple have been showered with lesserpresents by the score with china andporcelain rare and exquisite with toysrif rmld and silver presents of everydescription and degree of overy kindand of every brilliant color amountingin all to thousands of dollars

Detectives guard them Too preciousis the outlay to go without a strictwatch

The residence is to be banked withflowers The entrance ball will bodecked from top to bottom with orchids

snow whlto and flawless every onoWhite will predominate but hero andthero will be shadings of pink andmauve

The brides gown is a rare creationof satin and silver The court traini oloth and silver heavily embroideredwith pearls The bodice and skirt areclulion crapea over wmiu amm mwholo finished in the conventional waywith a veil of laco and tulle A coronet of orange blossoms will fasten tholaco veil in tho dark hair of the bridoand she will carry a shower of orchids

Miss Jennie Crocker who is to bethe maid of honor will wear a gownof pink chiffon and a hat in pink tonesThn- - hridnsmaida will be MUs MaryKeenoy Miss Mrfrian Newball MissMarian zetie nnu juisa juw uuuk- -

4 home They are to be gowoetJ in orchid tones of mauve suauesana mucjirrv muffu of nink orchids

rf art - i 11- - Airiempteton urociter is wwim vt T000000 in his own right His brido tobe besides the trifling matter of 1

000000 given her by her father is thosolo heir to tho Irwin estate valuedat least at 12000000 The groom istwenty five aiid the bride twenty threoyears of age

WIFE OF JUDGE

ra IS OEAD

Mrs F M Hatch wifo of JudgeHatch who represents the HawaiianPlanters Association at Washington

died at the Johns Hopkins HospitalBaltimore on Sunday news reachingW O Smith yesterday by cable MrsHatch had been ill for some time andhones for her recovery were slenderMrs Hatch was the daughter of Colonel and Mrs A u Uawes and thesister of A O Hawes Jr formerly pri ¬

vate secretary to Governor Dole Sheleaves surviving her a husband a

Idaughter Miss Harriet Hatch whomade Iior denur in Yvasniugion societyabout a year ago and a son Gilchrist

uiatco wuo is auoit to eater tne navalacademy

- I 4

HHEUMATIO PAINSWhen you have rheumatism in your

foot or instep apply Chamberlains PainBalm and you will get quick relief Itcosts but a trifle Why sufferf For saleby all dealers Benson Smith CoLtd agouti for Hawaii

11Attorney General WiolcLmliam urged

the need for simplifying legal prosedure in a speeeb at tho dedication of thenew law department of GeorgetownIuWurtdty Washington

HONOLULU STOCK EXCHANGEHonolulu MtMidsy March 6 1911

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BEeili TO BOOM

COMMITTEE ON AGEIOOLTTJEE 131NTEEESTED IN PROGRESS

OP iNDtTSTRTES

These are busy days for tho menfbersof the committee on agriculture forestry promotion and immigration Thecommittee has been investigating thepossibilities of tho Bluefields banantrsas a great industry for tho Islands andis surprised at tho progress that hasbeen made sinco the United Fruit Com-

pany¬

started things going hereChairman Ed Towse announces that

the government experiment stations onOahu Hawaii Maui and Kauai eightof them are propagating suckers fromBluefields stock as rapidly as possiblebesides which the Hilo railroad is help ¬

ing along the samo line and a numberof private ranchmen aro also growingsuckers

There is a great demand for suckershere the banana variety and it is thebelief of the committee that before longthe banana industry will be a most im ¬

portant part of tbo island trade So

far reports Mr Towse the committeehas found little it can do to help alongtho preliminaries us tho government ex¬

periment BtatiQBS and others are doingall that is necessary

It is different however with the cot-

ton¬

industry This also promises to boof great importance to the Islands es ¬

pecially as the reports show that thecotton raised hero is of tho finest qual-ity

¬

grown anywhere and commands ahigh price

Over five hundred acres of new cot-

ton¬

land have recently been placed under cultivation and the committee findsmat wtitie tne dreaded bou weevij isabsent there is another pest which isa detriment This is a worm which attacks the boll and tbo committee Ispow preparing a plan to import a para ¬

site which will attack this worm Withthis post eliminated the members of thecommittee believe that the cotton in ¬

dustry will quickly rank as one of themost important industries here

ONLY INSTITUTIONS

OF HIST FAITH

The houso yestorday adopted the re ¬

port of the committee on the bill toprovide religious institutions with freewater The report recommended theinsertion Of the words in the bill tomake it readfof Christian faith andthis amendment was carried

There was somodlscussion at to theconstitutionality of tho bill as amendedbut this did not tttm to trouble thehouse much and it was made a specialorder of business on March 0 Withtbo passago of the bill all Institutionsof Christian faith will get waterfree after July 1 next