rf.pftrtfn · l;di's developments, that the question lly' throngs the dowiown streets rm...

12
S3 if- : ..r ' ',. ' in ia a a s.. in . jf. . 8. tTEATCTE BUREAU, December 31.-- Last 24 Hour,' EaiMall, M SUOAS. i6 Jere Test Centrifugals, 3.67c Per Too. 573.40. '-"- I". 7i; Mia. 62. Weather, fair. . f 8 Aaiyis Beets, 10s. Per Ton, $82:20. ESTABLISHED JULY t, 183S. VOL. XLIX, NO. 8236. HONO HAWAII TEESITOET. FIDAY, JAJTTJAXY 1, 1S0. PRICE FIVE CENTS. v. IJPARI-KI.AND- S RF.PftRTFn ; FERN IS READY NEW YEAR VAS TO STAND BORN A1ID "T""'-- " "SUNK WITH 23,000' ' " SOULS FIRE RACKET 17' ! Estimate of Dead f(uns Up to 300,- - (Mayor Says He Is Only Otherwise Celebfition I I " ' 1 . ' A 'J "'XI ! L- - - i - . - -- 17 u i Was Very Quiet Observing the Event. Laws. 000 Bodies Obstruct the Coast Railway TracksAtlantic Fleet Going to Messina American Re- lief Speedily Given Bodies Are Being Burned. ,The announcement of the appoint- - IVe was as much jubilM& in the ivittsbv Mayor rern.givea to tne pud- - bou"8. me wiiuiuea,. y Advertiser yesterday, created sire booming of bombs si ringing Iiie'Jk.the to e expected and yesterday of at midnight last p"t as on Dxactieally open war -- was declared be-- anjformer birth of a n year m 'tween the Republican Supervisors and Hoiiulu, but otherwise, Jowntown, . 1 f . ti Tl. . - U 'T h f vena i I r.. , .f m'SOf DUOllSl V I x' iuv iiuci aic vuv--&- "- .,- V hostile to the assumption of author- - It may be that !aS year was v on the part of the Mayor to go into . sis good one for IIol4 that its , (Associated Press Cablegram.) ROME, January i. It is reported that the Lipari Islands, off the Sicilian coast, have been swallowed up with their entire popula was not eonsideml n occa- - tie appointment: of stablemen and iii'g 'Hicksmiths as County officers, . while sfor celebration, or ity be that tii latteT declares that he acted accord- - trospects for this efc? that this hr; "4. if S ' . r4- 1 to law and if the Supervisors doubt neyear holds out are bright that h rights the courts are open to them, thoccasion was too mna for ntter-la- s probaible, i the face of yester- - i; at any rate, the noif crowd that tion of 28,000 souls. A torpedo boat has gone to investigate. GRISCOM TO HELP AMERICANS. Ambassador Griscom and his aides will proceed to Messina to- day to assist American sufferers and collect the dead. "BODIES BLOCK TRAFFIC. The bodies thrown up on the coasts of the stricken sections irr L;di's developments, that the question lly' throngs the dowiown streets I to - rm appointmeats will be takea to y, conspicuous by its asenee, HlfrWnji-r,-.- MESSINA CATHDBAJU theupreme Court. here was, i k ysterday the Mayor declared the filtory attein r nti named by him appointed without rackers, tb f ui et ' f ormajitiea. Yesterday, also, fal cane f i tKKfublioan Supervisors notified the fwing of Y some places obstruct the railroad tracks. i 3 V?t office-holder- s not to rehnquisn . behind j PORTUGUESE Fl ffnffices but to stay with them, pro- - 'ebrators K V... - i .:. '. tyta tneir wor& ana gencraiij jg-- ; ire were te aT0r'8 appointments. On imefaced in ''u ; d V therefore, wilr come a clasU4tel street an DT2AD MAY REACH THREE HUNDRED THOUSAND. The dead are estimated at from 115,000 to 300,000. THOUSANDS FIGHT FOR FOOD. v At Messina thousands of people are searching the ruins for food and fighting each other for it when found. TWO THOUSAND BURIED. PALMI, January 1 Two thousand bodies were buried here ik jng pic- - J ""e the new and the old omcials, re shows, early MQTT-SMIT- H'S NEW YHRS GIFTS Exercises Executive Clemency in Two Cases Wade Is Sick. mere . , ff. w'th fV;!ts to be determined. ''.. rrwd. but W of th FROM Tl COAST ' : The Board of Immigration Will Bring No More of Them Back. on that L " i.utown was tVMly p yesterday. The Board of Immigration held a . iowed anv signs .nina- - the oune of the morn.ng, the Mayor even' the fcesiflebrated m fit to change h.s mirl concerning Th ha,hr trees be- - the elevation of George Wright to the - ?ore the doors, thr erosrf American post of Assistant .Fire Chief, naminl,i , Japanese flat and Ufa lanterns, the present holder of the office to sui-?- ! L -- ut this apteareto bee extent of ceed himself. Public sentiment - do- - ft,e decorations 4 the'aced almost warded Assistant Chief Deering and empty streets. I fi the Mayor bowed to the sentiment . he Peoa'e, flthe 't part, eele- - wh.!eMr. Wright will be otherwise pr raed f- urbs At no time . during the A,eg w;iit possible to t moted. Pub!.c sentiment, also demand ol)tain an aXUelnd the hacks ed the retention 'in office of Collecto old a big bu!. ' late ears of JT. P. Jaeobson, in the garbage deparl tne Kapid Trip Ciany found lit- - meaf, and the list was amended to ii n 'o do on fcf ou&und trips, but teway afternoon. . There were present Acting Governor Mott-t'mith- , Richard Ivers, John Garden and J, H. Craig. A. L. C. Atkinson, the other member, was absent. BURNING BODIES AT REGGIO. At Reggio, which is completely devastated, bodies of thousand are being burned to avoid a pestilence. The' troops are making bread in the streets. . AMERICAN RELIEF WASHINGTON, January i.The Atlantic battleship fleet ia due at Mtssina on the 15th, It is believed the crews will be ofifcrsil to the Italian government to a'.d the sufferers. ' ( SCORPION FOR MESSINA. The U. S. S. Scorpion has been ordered from Constantinople ta The letters and reports of the Board's agent in New York, Mr. Tre-r.o- r, were all gone over. These have t eame into toMtirU-fwel- l loaded. elude him. It was a iW holnning of what tbeen madefpublie in substance as they have been received. Mr. Trenor re A number of other appoint m-n- ts w . also made, not included in any of ? promises to If lie nH eventfut year in Honolulu 'IfktQTyj Jan Dance. ' The Moaoliijji was the scene of one of the moyllliant of the New Year Eve festM'es, the friends of that house gating to dance the New Year inland tllfid Year out, to the number of sevl f hundred. The dance itself was one 1 the best given for aiMV ''"liohilu, and the full nceoiiitnodatio,J Lv5ces of of the late ea,?re requirea to bring those into toh , tha Acting Governor Mott Smith made two New Years presents in' the way of Executive clemency, Stephen Malta-alu- , who served a term in prison on convietion in connection with grafting in the land office a few years ago, was restored to hit civil rights. Kimura Tobei, who is serving a- - life sentence for murder, received a f to thirty years to jl&td from 1902. With good time? he will finwh his sentence about 1920. 7.'oibei was convicted of murder in the first degree and was sentenced to be hanged. The Supreme Court, on appeal, while refus-in- g to interfere with the verdict inti- mated that the man had not been very well defended and that the sentence of death was too severe.. Governor Carter in 1904 commuted the sentence to life imprisonment. Acting Governor MottT Smith has reduced the sentence to a term which is rathr a long one for mur- der in the second degTee, that is, where malice aforethought is absent. Tobei and a Japanese woman agreed to leave this world together. The arrangement was that he was to kill her aad then kill himself. He did kill her and then tried to kill himself, cutting his throat in a horriMe manner. Medical assist- ance was summoned however before he had quite expired and his life was saved. It is thought probable that George WTade will receive a pardon within a few days. Efforts. are being made to raise, funds to send him to his wife and family in the East. He is in very ill health from diabetes and it is thought he cannot survive long. Some philanthropist could do what the Prison published lists so far. These are ift for the Koolaupoko road district l eantociers for the Pali road, the lair offices being nffw ones and very ne sary ones. ."V I The appointments are: Road Inna. Koolanpoki, M. P. Ka-cpu- blacksmith. David Alauia; sti man. Abraham Opunui; engineer, S-r- Wallace: engineer's helper, .las Collins; Pali cantoniers. John Ko5i and Kaleimamahu; road luna, Noah i- - huka. i Lists Officially Piled. ;? last dances, a Lsi(lerabl: rinrtmn nt I HIT IHCTHJt I f. The Mayor-e'ec- t fi'ed his list ofp- - nur nni l -- - pointees vesterday with the County u- - SH- - Sll I I Ull I! L Tl! ditor and the County Clerk, as reqoed UllL UULI UUUlL I U tw law. the pnr'iwrf of the I;sts bt!2 TOE INSPECTOR License Ilor Fennell and'Detec- - 1 Stated in the following introductory 'Know all mn hy the-- e presents tat T. Joseph J. Pert, the person whist .the election held un-le- r the ( harteof the City and Courtv of Honoluh ia the month of NovemSer next preeeing the date hereof. wa d ily elected Myor of the City and ,Ciiut of Honoelu, under and of the authritv Vested in me by thrr certain ae of tive Minnef. ft arrest and f made an 5 unexpected yesterday afternoon, "a the trail of John Thev were r i E. M"end f I e Kaiulani tract, sus- - pected of Messina. PRESIDENTIAL MESSAGE COMING. The President will send a message to Congress Monday urging a relief appropriation. He has given $500 personally to the Red Cross fund. '';.;: NEW YORK'S RICH BOUNTY, NEW YORK, January 1. The Sited Trust has contributed $25,000 to the Italian relief work; Stock Exchange, $21,000; J. D. Rockefeller, $10,000. WHITE STAR RELIEF BOAT. The steamer Celtic carries provisions for Messina sufficient to keep 50,000 people a month. A BREWER'S BENEFACTION. ST. LOUIS, January 1. Busch, the brewer, has given $25,000 for the relief of the earthquake sufferers, APPEAL TO CALIFORNIA. SACRAMENTO, January 1. The Governor has issued a procla- mation asking aid for the victims of the earthquake. NAVAL SUPPLIES GOING ON. NEW YORK, December 31. Half a million dollars worth supplies that were assembled here for the battleship fleet will be sent immediately to the sufferers at Messina. AFTERNOON REPORT. ROME, December 31. The record of deaths from the great Sicily disaster is still incomplete, but added information only in- creases the horror of it. The dead number 12,000 at Bagnara and 10,000 at Pal mi. It is believed that a full regiment of soldiers was drowned at Palmi. The bodies of 300 soldiers have already been recovered. Fully 25,000 soldiers will be required to police the devastated districts and extricate the dead and wounded from the ruins. Starvation and pestilence are feared by the King and Queen. At Reggio the survivors state that the heavens were illuminated before the shocks of earthquake were experienced. This indicates volcanic action and lavaj flows. - . BURTON TO BE SENATOR. COLUMBUS, Ohio. December 31. The election of Congress- man Burton as United States Senator from Ohio is assured. This was brought about today by the withdrawal of Senator Foraker, Charles P. Taft, Harris, and Congressman : an unlicensed booze ropped in oa the wav dispensa rjp, the Legislature of tie Territory oflla-wai- i creating said City and Count of ' Honolulu, entitled 4 An Act TneorpraS- - ing the City and Couutv of Hnnollu, at the hiD I I ports progress. He js exercising tho very greatest car in his selection of the first fifty families of Southern Italians to be brought here. It is prob- able that after these have been selected and sent here, Mr. Trenor will be en- gaged to secure and send here a num- ber f Portuguese from the Eastern States, as well aa further detachments of Southern Italians. The Board has decided to make no further efforts to bring back to the Territory Po"tuguese who have gone from here to the Pacific Coast. A party of seventeen of these were brought on the last Alameda, and the Board ap- proved the b:Hs incurred in bringing them back. Of this party sixteen were men and one was a w.iman. They ranged in age from 19 te 54. The bringing back of this party and others that have preceded it are the result of the efforts of Mr. Silva. who was sent as the representative of the Board to California to work among the Portu- guese who had gone there from here. The decision to discontinue this effort w due to the fact that the polier of the Board is to introduce families, wh'le those returning, and according to the reports of Mr. Silva, which may be expected to return in the future, are nearly all unmarried men. HU11III CHRISTMAS TRELOVER ftGMN There will be another Malihini Christ- mas Tree this afternoon, or at least the one of a week ago will be done all over again on the moving picture screen at the Opera House at the exbibttioii to be given by R. K. Bnine. Mr. Bonine i the only man in Am Tiea who can take moving pictures, develop the film, print positives and exhib't them, and is one of the very few independent moving picture operator in the world. This is' the reason whv Honoln'ans may s5e themselves a others ee them and cot have to wait for the'r own views until the exposed negativf-- s are sent to the Eastern States or Esirope to be pre- pared fr.r shnw rrpoef. Ta addition t the new Christmas pie-turf- there will fw ihown this after- noon the manv local tiewswhich hare pleased thp thoanls who have een Them, including the unique Volcano scenes, the parade of the Shrinr and a lot of new on to be ran reialy far the many children who wiii be in the audience. oachin Silv. intend- - H I f 1 I ing to g y to do the informer e of the forhi.Idpn it act and iuice f to be used as evi-tw- o officers of the Ji denee. law a they wanted Joa- - chin t evidenti 'ng to drink she pueir mksion. for she a Board would tninK wouia oe a great kindness by aiding in furnishing the means to send him to his family to spend his last days. JOHN G. WOOLLEY MWJOME BACK It is reported in local prohibition circles that John G. Woolley is to be brought back to Hawaii to fight for the passage of a local option bill in the coming Legislature. Mr. Woolley, from his knowledge of the local situation and his acquaintance with the working out of prohibition and local option measures throughout the mainland, is considered the one man who is capable of framing a workable local option law for this Territory. there was no ne- - fo anv other Dlaee had plenty of it r sale. Then she - tne same ufiK ' ' i .ci i or i. the Session Laws of. I'. 07. appnved April 30. 1907. have aj : inted, aal bv this writing do" hereby : ; ;oint, snv ral--'Iy- ; the following nameo. r.rsons t the offices, positions, servi or enploy-mea- f. under and in the tr nd Coun- ty of Honolulu, set oppos t their james respectively." Pern Ready to Sta d piri . Mayor-elec- t Fern had y day yes- terday. He was tryin? be Mayor de facto and stand off ue.f ry Itepub-liean- s and disappointed ana at the same time round th year s an employe of the Intc SlatSB eom-pan- v and pay off a eang t stedores, ach anxious to be first at th : pay win- dow. Last night the First Citizen of the Cltv took off his working clothes and prepared himself for the rcbes of office, which he will don on Monday. "It Is immaterial to me whether the Stinrrvisnrs conclude to approve of the T made or not.,'" he stat- - er stock, consisting gm, a five-gallo- n gallon demijohn of cessit j for ref f on 1.4i! prou.lb I of tb demiji j wine;i I fine ii showis J therear a rou-- 5? ed w- - the v moBt to tlV w. 1 uozen beer and a 'es. It was a good fied the beast, but t shock when, after nrchased with mark- - 'ers promptly seized ok back the marked the hospitable lady interruption, the of- - r1 pL "I have made the appoint ents a ncerr, . . . , 1 .V.. T Jin. nthfcj Mendes, secured an- - Senator C. H. 'Dickey, president of the Acti-loo- League, would not verify the definite statement last night that Mr. WooIJey was to be induced to return here. "Nothing definite has been ppttleil about it as yet." he said. "We are trying to raise the fund, but mir prog- ress does not justify aa asnnutee- - required dv iaw au m- - pervisom have in the offices, ao far as t .irsfand the law. is to vote the bagged the outfit. 1$ Keifer. This leaves a clear field to Burton. rvs humble compared .t;, for their pay. The la plav made bv the r 'f ctilv a course of f es me tne ngnt aim LE MANS, France, December 31. Wilbur Wright made a fligl to appoint thnen to tsry cwerys bei', and a with his airship today of two hours and nine minutes. ontmued orai ase jry- - Ior rye, at that.

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Page 1: RF.PftRTFn · L;di's developments, that the question lly' throngs the dowiown streets rm appointmeats will be takea to y, conspicuous by its asenee, I to - HlfrWnji-r,-.-MESSINA CATHDBAJU

S3

if- : ..r ' ',. '

in ia a a s.. in. jf. . 8. tTEATCTE BUREAU, December 31.-- Last 24 Hour,' EaiMall, M SUOAS. i6 Jere Test Centrifugals, 3.67c Per Too. 573.40.

'-"- I". 7i; Mia. 62. Weather, fair. . f 8 Aaiyis Beets, 10s. Per Ton, $82:20.ESTABLISHED JULY t, 183S.

VOL. XLIX, NO. 8236. HONO HAWAII TEESITOET. FIDAY, JAJTTJAXY 1, 1S0. PRICE FIVE CENTS.v.

IJPARI-KI.AND- S RF.PftRTFn;FERN IS READY NEW YEAR VAS

TO STAND BORN A1ID "T""'--" "SUNK WITH 23,000'

'"

SOULSFIRE RACKET 17' !

Estimate of Dead f(uns Up to 300,--

(Mayor Says He Is Only Otherwise CelebfitionI I " ' 1

.' A 'J "'XI !

L- - - i - . - -- 17 u i

Was Very QuietObserving theEvent.Laws.

000 Bodies Obstruct the CoastRailway TracksAtlantic FleetGoing to Messina American Re-

lief Speedily Given Bodies AreBeing Burned.

,The announcement of the appoint- - IVe was as much jubilM& in the

ivittsbv Mayor rern.givea to tne pud-- bou"8. me wiiuiuea,. y

Advertiser yesterday, created sire booming of bombs si ringingIiie'Jk.the

to e expected and yesterday of at midnight last p"t as onDxactieally open war --was declared be-- anjformer birth of a n year m

'tween the Republican Supervisors and Hoiiulu, but otherwise, Jowntown,. 1 f . ti Tl. . - U 'T h f vena i I r.. , .f m'SOf DUOllSl V

I x' iuv iiuci aic vuv--&- "- .,-

V hostile to the assumption of author- - It may be that !aS year wasv on the part of the Mayor to go into . sis good one for IIol4 that its

, (Associated Press Cablegram.)

ROME, January i. It is reported that the Lipari Islands, offthe Sicilian coast, have been swallowed up with their entire populawas not eonsideml n occa- -tie appointment: of stablemen and iii'g

'Hicksmiths as County officers, . while sfor celebration, or ity be thattii latteT declares that he acted accord- - trospects for this efc? that this

hr; "4.

if S'

. r4-

1 to law and if the Supervisors doubt neyear holds out are bright thath rights the courts are open to them, thoccasion was too mna for ntter-la- s

probaible, i the face of yester- - i; at any rate, the noif crowd that

tion of 28,000 souls. A torpedo boat has gone to investigate.

GRISCOM TO HELP AMERICANS.Ambassador Griscom and his aides will proceed to Messina to-

day to assist American sufferers and collect the dead."BODIES BLOCK TRAFFIC.

The bodies thrown up on the coasts of the stricken sections irr

L;di's developments, that the question lly' throngs the dowiown streetsI to -rm appointmeats will be takea to y, conspicuous by its asenee,

HlfrWnji-r,-.-

MESSINA CATHDBAJU

theupreme Court. here was, ik ysterday the Mayor declared the filtory atteinr nti named by him appointed without rackers, tb

fui et ' formajitiea. Yesterday, also, fal cane fi tKKfublioan Supervisors notified the fwing of Y

some places obstruct the railroad tracks. i

3V?t office-holder- s not to rehnquisn . behind jPORTUGUESE Flffnffices but to stay with them, pro-- 'ebrators K

V... - i .:. '.tyta tneir wor& ana gencraiij jg-- ; ire were

te aT0r'8 appointments. On imefaced in''u; d V therefore, wilr come a clasU4tel street an

DT2AD MAY REACH THREE HUNDRED THOUSAND.The dead are estimated at from 115,000 to 300,000.

THOUSANDS FIGHT FOR FOOD.v At Messina thousands of people are searching the ruins for food

and fighting each other for it when found.TWO THOUSAND BURIED.

PALMI, January 1 Two thousand bodies were buried here

ik jng pic- -

J ""e the new and the old omcials, re shows, early

MQTT-SMIT- H'S

NEW YHRS GIFTS

Exercises Executive Clemencyin Two Cases Wade

Is Sick.

mere. ,

ff. w'th fV;!ts to be determined. ''.. rrwd. but W of th

FROM Tl COAST':

The Board of Immigration Will

Bring No More of Them

Back.

on thatL " i.utown was tVMly p

yesterday.

The Board of Immigration held a

. iowed anv signs .nina- -

the oune of the morn.ng, the Mayor even' the fcesiflebratedm fit to change h.s mirl concerning Th ha,hr trees be--the elevation of George Wright to the- ?ore the doors, thr erosrf Americanpost of Assistant .Fire Chief, naminl,i, Japanese flat and Ufa lanterns,the present holder of the office to sui-?-

! L-- ut this apteareto bee extent of

ceed himself. Public sentiment - do- - ft,e decorations 4 the'aced almostwarded Assistant Chief Deering and empty streets. I fithe Mayor bowed to the sentiment . he Peoa'e, flthe 't part, eele- -

wh.!eMr. Wright will be otherwise pr raed f- urbs At no time. during the A,eg w;iit possible to

tmoted. Pub!.c sentiment, also demand ol)tain an aXUelnd the hacksed the retention 'in office of Collecto old a big bu!. ' late ears ofJT. P. Jaeobson, in the garbage deparl tne Kapid Trip Ciany found lit- -

meaf, and the list was amended to ii n 'o do on fcf ou&und trips, but

teway afternoon. . There were presentActing Governor Mott-t'mith- , RichardIvers, John Garden and J, H. Craig. A.L. C. Atkinson, the other member, wasabsent.

BURNING BODIES AT REGGIO.

At Reggio, which is completely devastated, bodies of thousandare being burned to avoid a pestilence. The' troops are makingbread in the streets. .

AMERICAN RELIEFWASHINGTON, January i.The Atlantic battleship fleet ia

due at Mtssina on the 15th, It is believed the crews will be ofifcrsilto the Italian government to a'.d the sufferers. '

( SCORPION FOR MESSINA.The U. S. S. Scorpion has been ordered from Constantinople ta

The letters and reports of theBoard's agent in New York, Mr. Tre-r.o- r,

were all gone over. These havet eame into toMtirU-fwel- l loaded.elude him. It was a iW holnning of what tbeen madefpublie in substance as theyhave been received. Mr. Trenor reA number of other appoint m-n- ts w

. also made, not included in any of ?

promises to If lie nH eventfut yearin Honolulu 'IfktQTyj

Jan Dance. '

The Moaoliijji was the scene ofone of the moyllliant of the NewYear Eve festM'es, the friends ofthat house gating to dance the NewYear inland tllfid Year out, to thenumber of sevl f hundred. The danceitself was one 1 the best given foraiMV ''"liohilu, and the fullnceoiiitnodatio,J Lv5ces ofof the late ea,?re requirea to bringthose into toh , tha

Acting Governor Mott Smith madetwo New Years presents in' the wayof Executive clemency, Stephen Malta-alu- ,

who served a term in prison onconvietion in connection with graftingin the land office a few years ago, wasrestored to hit civil rights.

Kimura Tobei, who is serving a- - lifesentence for murder, received a f

to thirty years to jl&td from1902. With good time? he will finwhhis sentence about 1920. 7.'oibei wasconvicted of murder in the first degreeand was sentenced to be hanged. TheSupreme Court, on appeal, while refus-in- g

to interfere with the verdict inti-mated that the man had not been verywell defended and that the sentence ofdeath was too severe.. Governor Carterin 1904 commuted the sentence to lifeimprisonment. Acting Governor MottTSmith has reduced the sentence to aterm which is rathr a long one for mur-der in the second degTee, that is, wheremalice aforethought is absent. Tobeiand a Japanese woman agreed to leavethis world together. The arrangementwas that he was to kill her aad thenkill himself. He did kill her and thentried to kill himself, cutting his throatin a horriMe manner. Medical assist-ance was summoned however before hehad quite expired and his life wassaved.

It is thought probable that GeorgeWTade will receive a pardon within afew days. Efforts. are being made toraise, funds to send him to his wifeand family in the East. He is in veryill health from diabetes and it isthought he cannot survive long. Somephilanthropist could do what the Prison

published lists so far. These are iftfor the Koolaupoko road district l

eantociers for the Pali road, the lairoffices being nffw ones and very nesary ones. ."V I

The appointments are:Road Inna. Koolanpoki, M. P. Ka-cpu-

blacksmith. David Alauia; stiman. Abraham Opunui; engineer, S-r-

Wallace: engineer's helper, .lasCollins; Pali cantoniers. John Ko5iand Kaleimamahu; road luna, Noah i- -

huka. iLists Officially Piled. ;?

last dances, a Lsi(lerabl: rinrtmn ntI HIT IHCTHJt I f.

The Mayor-e'ec- t fi'ed his list ofp- - nur nni l -- -pointees vesterday with the County u- - SH- - Sll I I Ull I! L Tl!ditor and the County Clerk, as reqoed UllL UULI UUUlL I Utw law. the pnr'iwrf of the I;sts bt!2

TOE INSPECTOR

License Ilor Fennell and'Detec- -1

Stated in the following introductory'Know all mn hy the-- e presents tat

T. Joseph J. Pert, the person whist.the election held un-le- r the ( harteofthe City and Courtv of Honoluh iathe month of NovemSer next preeeingthe date hereof. wa d ily elected Myorof the City and ,Ciiut of Honoelu,under and of the authritvVested in me by thrr certain ae of

tive Minnef.ftarrest and f

made an 5 unexpectedyesterday afternoon,

"a the trail of JohnThev werer i

E. M"end f I e Kaiulani tract, sus- -

pected of

Messina.PRESIDENTIAL MESSAGE COMING.

The President will send a message to Congress Monday urginga relief appropriation. He has given $500 personally to the RedCross fund. '';.;:

NEW YORK'S RICH BOUNTY,NEW YORK, January 1. The Sited Trust has contributed

$25,000 to the Italian relief work; Stock Exchange, $21,000; J. D.Rockefeller, $10,000.

WHITE STAR RELIEF BOAT.The steamer Celtic carries provisions for Messina sufficient to

keep 50,000 people a month.A BREWER'S BENEFACTION.

ST. LOUIS, January 1. Busch, the brewer, has given $25,000for the relief of the earthquake sufferers,

APPEAL TO CALIFORNIA.SACRAMENTO, January 1. The Governor has issued a procla-

mation asking aid for the victims of the earthquake.NAVAL SUPPLIES GOING ON.

NEW YORK, December 31. Half a million dollars worthsupplies that were assembled here for the battleship fleet will besent immediately to the sufferers at Messina.

AFTERNOON REPORT.ROME, December 31. The record of deaths from the great

Sicily disaster is still incomplete, but added information only in-

creases the horror of it.The dead number 12,000 at Bagnara and 10,000 at Pal mi.It is believed that a full regiment of soldiers was drowned at

Palmi. The bodies of 300 soldiers have already been recovered.Fully 25,000 soldiers will be required to police the devastated

districts and extricate the dead and wounded from the ruins.Starvation and pestilence are feared by the King and Queen.At Reggio the survivors state that the heavens were illuminated

before the shocks of earthquake were experienced. This indicatesvolcanic action and lavaj flows. -

.

BURTON TO BE SENATOR.COLUMBUS, Ohio. December 31. The election of Congress-

man Burton as United States Senator from Ohio is assured.This was brought about today by the withdrawal of Senator

Foraker, Charles P. Taft, Harris, and Congressman

: an unlicensed boozeropped in oa the wavdispensa rjp,

the Legislature of tie Territory oflla-wai- i

creating said City and Count of' Honolulu, entitled 4 An Act TneorpraS- -

ing the City and Couutv of Hnnollu, at the hiD I I

ports progress. He js exercising thovery greatest car in his selection ofthe first fifty families of SouthernItalians to be brought here. It is prob-able that after these have been selectedand sent here, Mr. Trenor will be en-

gaged to secure and send here a num-ber f Portuguese from the EasternStates, as well aa further detachmentsof Southern Italians.

The Board has decided to make nofurther efforts to bring back to theTerritory Po"tuguese who have gonefrom here to the Pacific Coast. A partyof seventeen of these were brought onthe last Alameda, and the Board ap-

proved the b:Hs incurred in bringingthem back. Of this party sixteen weremen and one was a w.iman. Theyranged in age from 19 te 54. Thebringing back of this party and othersthat have preceded it are the result ofthe efforts of Mr. Silva. who was sentas the representative of the Board toCalifornia to work among the Portu-guese who had gone there from here.The decision to discontinue this effortw due to the fact that the polier ofthe Board is to introduce families,wh'le those returning, and accordingto the reports of Mr. Silva, which maybe expected to return in the future,are nearly all unmarried men.

HU11III CHRISTMAS

TRELOVER ftGMN

There will be another Malihini Christ-

mas Tree this afternoon, or at least theone of a week ago will be done allover again on the moving picture screenat the Opera House at the exbibttioii tobe given by R. K. Bnine. Mr. Boninei the only man in Am Tiea who cantake moving pictures, develop the film,print positives and exhib't them, andis one of the very few independentmoving picture operator in the world.This is' the reason whv Honoln'ans mays5e themselves a others ee them andcot have to wait for the'r own viewsuntil the exposed negativf-- s are sent tothe Eastern States or Esirope to be pre-

pared fr.r shnw rrpoef.Ta addition t the new Christmas pie-turf-

there will fw ihown this after-noon the manv local tiewswhich harepleased thp thoanls who have eenThem, including the unique Volcanoscenes, the parade of the Shrinr anda lot of new on to be ran reialyfar the many children who wiii be inthe audience.

oachin Silv. intend- -H If 1 Iing to g y to do the informer

e of the forhi.Idpnitact andiuice f to be used as evi-tw- o

officers of theJidenee.law a they wanted Joa- -

chin tevidenti 'ng to drink she

pueir mksion. forshe a

Board would tninK wouia oe a greatkindness by aiding in furnishing themeans to send him to his family tospend his last days.

JOHN G. WOOLLEY

MWJOME BACK

It is reported in local prohibitioncircles that John G. Woolley is to bebrought back to Hawaii to fight for thepassage of a local option bill in thecoming Legislature. Mr. Woolley, fromhis knowledge of the local situationand his acquaintance with the workingout of prohibition and local optionmeasures throughout the mainland, isconsidered the one man who is capableof framing a workable local option lawfor this Territory.

there was no ne- -

fo anv other Dlaeehad plenty of it

r sale. Then she

- tne same ufiK ' ' i .ci i ori. the Session Laws of. I'. 07. appnved

April 30. 1907. have aj : inted, aal bvthis writing do" hereby : ; ;oint, snv ral--'Iy- ;

the following nameo. r.rsons t theoffices, positions, servi or enploy-mea- f.

under and in the tr nd Coun-

ty of Honolulu, set oppos t their jamesrespectively."

Pern Ready to Sta d piri. Mayor-elec- t Fern had y day yes-

terday. He was tryin? be Mayorde facto and stand off ue.f ry Itepub-liean- s

and disappointed anaat the same time round th years an employe of the Intc SlatSB eom-pan- v

and pay off a eang t stedores,ach anxious to be first at th : pay win-

dow. Last night the First Citizen ofthe Cltv took off his working clothesand prepared himself for the rcbes ofoffice, which he will don on Monday.

"It Is immaterial to me whether theStinrrvisnrs conclude to approve of the

T made or not.,'" he stat- -

er stock, consistinggm, a five-gallo- n

gallon demijohn of

cessit jfor ref fon 1.4i!prou.lb Iof tbdemiji jwine;i Ifine iishowis J

thereara rou--

5?

ed w--

the vmoBtto tlV

w. 1

uozen beer and a'es. It was a goodfied the beast, butt shock when, afternrchased with mark- -

'ers promptly seizedok back the markedthe hospitable lady

interruption, the of- -

r1pL "I have made the appoint ents a ncerr,. . . , 1 .V.. T Jin. nthfcj Mendes, secured an- -

Senator C. H. 'Dickey, president ofthe Acti-loo- League, would notverify the definite statement last nightthat Mr. WooIJey was to be induced toreturn here.

"Nothing definite has been ppttleilabout it as yet." he said. "We aretrying to raise the fund, but mir prog-ress does not justify aa asnnutee- -

required dv iaw au m- -

pervisom have in the offices, ao far ast .irsfand the law. is to vote the

bagged the outfit.1$ Keifer. This leaves a clear field to Burton.rvs humble compared.t;, for their pay. The la plav made bv ther 'f ctilv a course of fes me tne ngnt aimLE MANS, France, December 31. Wilbur Wright made a fliglto appoint thnen to tsry cwerys bei', and a

with his airship today of two hours and nine minutes.ontmued orai ase jry- - Ior rye, at that.

Page 2: RF.PftRTFn · L;di's developments, that the question lly' throngs the dowiown streets rm appointmeats will be takea to y, conspicuous by its asenee, I to - HlfrWnji-r,-.-MESSINA CATHDBAJU

THE PACITIO COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, FRIDA JANUARY. 1909

gapo as a regular hospital! There isno hospital there. The TiAcf is now -held to be unSea worthy, an has prob-- !ably made its last cruise. A surrey i

will be made and repairs Authorized j

FDI IS READY

TD STAtJD FIREI When the Breath o! winter ana xoe amou3 hospital shiii will ceaseto be a fieet auxilian- -

It is reported that'on thetreeent atltempt of the Belief to makf the tot- - j 1 1

CORSETS P0R 4iL?

age from Manila to Guam, 4 the wayto ban Francisco, there oeeirred pre-cisely the instance of conflicting au-thority predicted bv Rearl AdmiralBrownson. formerly Chief oi the Bu-reau of Navigation, as likel to hap-pen. The commanding offieeii Surgeon

sv The kind that improves V

ft j. nv. iuuuci cxdvuv sunea toStokes, and the civilian sailirfe master! $2.25 per pair.0u..-s.-: as to the bourse onwhich to sail the ship. The-surgeo-

commander was for keeping on in theI LADIES' and CHILDSEK Sr? BOY'S REGATTA WASHmen tin town. Colors guaraio i. tsupward a suit. c

leiun ox me xypnoon. The sailingmaster was for making back to Las"1an4 safety. Under the contratt madewith the latter he had the ight toinsist on this ehange of courselin viewof the danger t0 ship and humii lives.The anomalous thing took placl bf thesubordinate refusing to obev Ihe su

(Continued From Fage One.)

the work of the county and the lawmakes it the duty of the Supervisors toappropriate funds for the work.

"I am preparing the list3 of the com-

mittees of the board and will announcethem on Monday, with the chairmen.This also is a part of my duty. I havedone now what the law requires. Ifthere is to be any blocking of the pub-ti- e

business it will be through the workof the Supervisors Politically I havemade fair appointments, nominatingmany of the heads of departments putthere originally by Republicans. Thedistribution of offices has been an equit-able one, I believe."

No Criticism of Ones Named.There is "very little, if any, criticism

of the men named for the various jobs,the criticism beig practically altogeth-er over the manner of the appointments.According to the offices filled by theMayor-cleet- , claim many, there is noreason Thy he should not go ahead andnaire every employe of the county notin 'ne of the departments controlledby an elected chief. If he ean nyme

BOY'S WOOLEN PANTS, 6cBOY'S OVERALLS withl!CHILDREN ROMPERS s. 1perior and commanding officer, jnd do

Strikes, It's Time to Think of WarmerClothing.

We, believe we have themost elegant line of Sweat-

ers for men to be seen inthe Islands. Fine FrenchFlannel Outing Shirts, too.

Goods to Throw on When Out for aWalk or a Drive.

This is the weather for them.Discomfort arising from highwinds lifting your hat from

your head in a trolley canbe obviated by wearing acap or a soft hat. Wehave them in green felt.

ing as ms juugment dictated. J Sur-geon Stokes is now on his way! home,

: : in

n

' V...

O. PEACE. ' ' t

The Czar "I will build two big bat-tleships." '

1 ,

DOJohn Bull "I will build four."The Czar "I will built eight."John Bull "I will build sixteen."The Czar "Let us have peace,"

Hamilton, (Canada) Spectator. -

blacksmiths, for instance, it is thrWhtthat, he could as well name sho.

,1 "Vteamsters and street sweepers.Secretary Rhodes on the Appointm

"Mayor Fern had to take thenicipal Act as he found it,"Charles L. Rhodes the secretarythe .

Mayor, when asked regarding.announcement of bellicose purpos 1the part of the EepubTican Supe 5 Cups $1,5ors. "The act is not clear in itsguage, and there is perhaps roomdiflerences of opinion as to some o'provisions. But the act has toV 1

BURGLARS

GROW BOLDERAlmost every day there is a

burglary, whetker reported orDOt.

The danger from burglarsgrows with the We of thecity. Valuable property, jewels,money, deeds, may be lostthrough theft or damage.

Insure in the Pacific CoastCasualty Co., and be protectedin every way.

taken as it is. By section 146 HEUHclnerny, Ltd.Fort and Merchant Sts.

PjCESS'Ofmade mandatory that during the monthof December the Mayor-elec- t shallmake certain appointments. Just what 7 Cups U

tiW6 kinA ivm

appointments are intended are to bedetermined by a study of the wholeact. Mayor Fern believes he has donethis. Objection seems to have beenmade because he has made 'a long listof appointments' and 'because theyare mostly Democrats.' As to eachone of these, he either had the powerto make the appointment, or he did lifeVAlVEtV

l

not. If he had the power to makeit, tae appointment is good. If he didnot have the power to make it, it isnot good, but the 'question of thepower to make it or not fef make it

Hawaiian

TrustCo., Ltd.

923 FORT STREET

is a legal oie in which there is nopolities unless the Republican Supervisors inject polities into it by threatsof 'coercing the Mayor,' such as arereported to have been madp.J

"Mayor Fern r made , the appoint-ments that he tid, beeau:,e upon- - astudy of the who&fi. Municipal Act, andthe orders, ordinances:' and resolutions Haifa Son, itiftFor RentBy reason of its great popularity with fastidious young

men and women, the Regal Shoe has become known asthe "Thoroughbred" Shoe. In our immense new stock of1909 Spring Regals are the best features of the smartest andnewest New York custom styles. They are "snappy" shoesthat cannot be found except in Regal Shoe Stores and thehighest process custom shops. REGALS ARE

$3.50 AND $4.00.

REGAL SHOE STOREMcCandless Building, King and Bethel Streets.

of the several Boards of Supervisorsof the County of Oahu, which by sec-tion 142 of the Municipal Act are ex-pressly continued iiv foree, these seem-ed to be the appointments he- - wa re-quired by the act "to make. He Aitdnot pick out these appointments fromthe whole roster of the public serviceof the eounty because they were theparticular positions he was desirous offilling, but because under the law andthe acts of past Boards of Supervisorsthese seemed to be the ones it was hisduty to make, Yr it must not be for-gotten thai the Municipal Act saysthat during December he shall notmay but shall make the appoint-ments required, and the appoijtmenshe Las made are th se thnt frc m astudy of the whole act he believes heis required to make.

"It must not be forgotten al- - thatsection 146 of the Municipal Act, ex-pressly provides that all boards, com

5

Building oncorner ofNuuanu andQueen Streets,known as the"Red FrontStore."

'EAUTIFUL PTEKKS

a yard:,! A fBishop Trust Co.,

HAWAIIAN SOUVENIRS

JEWELRY and WATCHESh

missions and officers of the County ofOahu 'by appointment' under exist-ing laws shall hold office no longerthan 'the 'of noon on the firstMonday after the first day of Jannary, 1909.' This ruthlessly cuts offall those servin the county under ap-pointment, which furnishes the reasonwhy the law in the same section re-quires the Mayor to make appointmentsbefore the first day of January. '

"But assuming for the sake ofthat these appointments have to

be confirmed by the Board of Super

ktsSEf BAZAR,

vl.NO' 924 BETHEL. STEEET

IF A BOY IS

WANTEDKING 361 .

Territorial Messenger Service

Urt; NEAR Trfe CONVENT.

7 ivisors, wnich under the law it seemspretty clear thev do not have to be, theonly question then for the Supervisorsto pass on would it -' "tness of thepersons appointed for the positions to

1064 Fort St.-H. Oilman See Our Prints

WAH Y1NG CH0NG. NEXT THE FIS1IMAKKET

TO ORDERAND FIT ASSURED

GENTLEMEN ' S CLOTHING

J. E. IROGHA.HARRISON BLK. - PORT ST.

which they are appointed. The factthat they may be Democrats wouldhardly be considered by the public asa sufficient reason to refuse to confirmthem provided they are fit persons forappointment. Mayor Fern is not seek-ing to exercise anv power the'law doesnot give him. Threats of 'coercion'and of compelling him to share his ap-pointing power with the ' Supervisorsis law-defyin-

"It is stated that the RepublicanSupervisors are notifying those dis-placed by Mayor Fern s appointmentsto stick to their This is an at-tempt by these Supervisors to appointnot only a list as long as the Mayor's,but one a great deal longer. And ifthere is one thing clear in the Munici-pal Act it is that the Board of Super-visors has no direct appointing power.It can not even appoint clerks or otherassistants for its own body juntil it isauthorized to do so by ordinance. Sothat on whatever ground it may denythe right of the M3yor to make all theappointments he has, the Republican

Health for the ChildrenEvery parent notes with anxious eye the first symptoms of the children's

failing health: the pale cheek, listless manner and capricious appetite speak moreplainly than any words, for the well child is a veritable storage battery of animalspirits.

Renewing the appetite is the first step back to health and

Steams' Wine of Cod Liver Extractgiven faithfully for a short time will do it. The children need not even knowit is a medicine for the taste is very pleasant and does not suggest cod liver oil

in the least. But the effect is certain. "

For persons of every age Steams' Wine of Cod Liver Extract is an unfailingtonic, appetizer and strength renewer. Get it at your chemist 's, and be sure youget STEARNS the genuine.

I , jM t ' ;SERVED PROPERLY A longglass and a good one.

Orpheum SaloomCHAS. LAMBERT, Proprietor

. M. LEVY & CO.Supervisors can not claim any r'ght ofdirect appointment themselves, thoughthat is exactly what they are doinwhen they tel' employe or others inthe county service to hold on to theirjobs after the eountv has ,eeased to ex-ist and the eitv is in existence."

KING STREET, NEAR BETHEL

Phone 76 .

THE FAMILY GROCERS

I bted 1 , S

I Dttlea '1 ,I Vaaorl

I of empl j ymx

m'mm. a grei V- - i

I

!

NEW SHIPMENTFINE WOOL BLANKETS.

White and Colored.

I BED SPREADSSHEETING, PILLOW CASES.

DISOBEYED SURGEON CAPTAIN,

It ha been decided at the Navy De-

partment that the hospital ship ReI ,1 been I C"

? the of rr :iiFire Insurancenei, alter ieiiig repaired in CQnse- -

I quence of her exwrience in the re-cent typhoon, shall be kept at Olon- -YEE CHAM & CO.

Bethel and King.

i littld I

jt atterl I

prroer, 1 11

FORjce.n I

THE B. F. DILLINGHAM CO.LTD.

General Agents for Hawaii:L.

'1. 1 1&1

PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS.PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed

to cure any case of Itching, Blind.Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to1 4 days or money refunded. Made byPARIS MEDICINE CO., Saint Louis.U.S. of A.

tls Ayjnranue Company of London.York Underwriters' Agency.

Providence Washington InsuranceTVare ri?ht n0 --fve-4

I . ..ut . .it. - Isad the "Advertiser," World's News Daily

Page 3: RF.PftRTFn · L;di's developments, that the question lly' throngs the dowiown streets rm appointmeats will be takea to y, conspicuous by its asenee, I to - HlfrWnji-r,-.-MESSINA CATHDBAJU

THE PACIFIC COMMFJEtCIAL ADVERTISES, HONOLTJLI?, FEIDAY, JANTJAHY 1, 1909.

aDOC393eQOeC30C50BONINE'SMoving

PicturesLadies' Tan

Welt Oxfordi '.-,- - ... " - -

Resume of SportingOne of the new styles for Spring,

1909. PRICE $3.50.

HUNTERS KEEP

BUSY THESE DAYS

China Pheasants, as Well asDucks, Are Found on

Preserves.

Events, New and Old, Opera House

Friday, Jan. 1st2:30 P. M.

MALIHINI CHRISTMAS TREE

UXLAUEA IN ACTION

SHRINERS ON PARADEAND MANY OTHERS

Manufacturers' Shoe fffioQNew Year's Day will be suitably!

celebrated, from a sporting standpoint,! 1051 FORT STREET

oaooczDocOC DO

Tickets 25 and 50ctsReserved Seats now on sale at Berg-stro- m

Music Store.

future of this sport in Honolulu is ex-cellent. With a clever youngster likeDick' Sullivan at present holding the"championship of Hawaii," and twofast fighters like Kyle Whitney andGeorge Peterson, scheduled to arrivehere shortly, little more need be saidwith regard to the 1909 prospects.Good crowds have attended everyscrap held during 1908, guaranteeinggate receipts that warrant the bring-ing of the best fighters here from theCoast.

So has it been during 1908 in allbranches of sport. Honolulu is with-out a doubt beine recognized on the

OPERA HOUSE- ; January 7th and 8th,

W. D. Adams Presents the Famous Comedy Drama .

"MRS. WIGGS OF! THE CABBAGE PATCH"Arrangement with 'Liebler and Co., New York.

Seats on Sale at Bergstrom Musiq Co., Monday, January 4th,at 9 a. m. "

. .,

map of Sportdom, as much becauseof the high standard she has set inher. performances as because of thecosmopolitanism of the sports here.

; in these Islands, and if the first day ofthe year may be taken as a criterionHunters are busy these days with theon the rest of 1909, the wrrld of sport-al- lshotgun, this being the open season fordom will be full of events of interest,kinds offeathered game. Chinese

and Japanese pheasants are to be found and significance. Baseball enthusiasmhaa been none of the best during theon some of the game preserves, thoughlatter of the 1908 but thispart season,they are greatly thinned out compared

to .what they were here some years was d?.mof. t0 apfy "n the. part of players than on

ago,-- ; It was no uncommon thing for part of the loyal fang The eom.the Bportsman to bag a, dozen or more jng 0f the Reach teamof these regal game birds in a" day's will undoubtedly have the good effectshoot a number of years ago, but, with of ; dispelling the lack of interest that

; has been the' order of late, to a greatthe long open season, and the increase degree; ag trjp ()f'the peiflcin .huntsmen of late, 'both the Chinese Coast gtars to these Islands in 1907.anS Japanese pheasants are disappear- - For a time shortly afterwards Hono- -

ing. i lulu was surfeited with baseball, withAlmost every Sunday the Knights of the refult that, after a few months,

and thethe players grew stalethe Shotgun may be seen out on the standlird of the nafl0ma

'game . here

preserve at Leilehua or elsewhere bang-- , fen perceptibly.ing away. A number of varieties of Other sports have taken a decidedducks are encountered here also, these impetus during the year just past, andproviding an additional incentive to new sports have been introduced. To--t

he followers of th? sport. Pigeon, jjay wn mark. the opening of a thril-spri- g,

spoonbill and f native ducks,? ing and novel sport motorcycle rac-th- e

latter a variety f the littia teal ing0ne that will undoubtedly hae athat is commonly found on the Coast iarge following among the speed. fiends,marshes, are met with kere. " 'it may be that the races which are

Geese are found oyer on Hawaii, and he)(i this morning will prove theit is a strange fact that the honkers , mpnIia nf ponrinff banked, raised

ART THEATERMOVING-PICTUR- E SUBJECTS

Swedish DancesTransformation of a HorseSleeping BeautyA Stowaway 'After MidnightThe Cossacks of the Don,' of Moscow'The Rival BarbersThe Squaw Man's Daughter

Orchestrelle"Washington Post MarchThree Twin SelectionGrand Opera Bits

Today there will be golf at theCountry Club, beginning at 10 o'clockin the morning; soccer, starting at1:30." in the afternoon; motorcycleracefy and almost every outdoor sportplayed will be represented. It willstart the new year off right. Let us iIhope- - it will be continued.

-'

SOCCER ELEVENSGem TheatreHotel Street, between Port and Bethel

: EOR TODAY GAMES.Change Monday,

1

1

1

Wednesday, Friday The soccer lineups today will be:First Game.

Y. M. C. A.T Position. Punahou,

For EveryOccasion

KODAKSFrom $5 up

CAMERASFrom $1 up

Start the NewYear with aFKDDAK '

LATEST and BEST FILMS J. Macaulay ...... G . . ........ Fraser

there keep to the heights of Manna Loa. ; edge aroana the historic KapiolaniMarshy lowlands, preferably tide-flat- s track.. '

are the haunts of the wild goose alongy ijorse-racin- g has taken a great leapthe Coast. The probabilities are that ! within the last six mtmths in the la-the reason the Hawanan geese seek and8. To be Bure the Sport of Kingsthe heights rather .than the lowlands hag not reached the place that it heldalong the seashore hes in, the different a few baek but then it wasKinds of food they find Up in the hills km,d (hrough . the crookedness ofthere kmds of berriesare numerous gome of Running , thewhich are probatoly palatable to .the hergameieg if is conducted nearhonkers It is said of these Hawauan make a strongfnn srs- as? stunt ? to s sL?zr any coramunit

Harrv Whitney, E. R. Spalding, J. Both soccer, and Rugby. footballHarvey and others are among the bestknown hunters here. Nothing wiU.be ,hve. been ?enTIuP "lthmu. n thusiasm. Soccer Foot- -

Dickinson L.B. ... ... AkinaSwi ft,-- . . . w ...... R.B . . . . R, R. CattonC. Dixon. . . .' L.HTI . . . MackinnonJ. MacConel ..... C.H LotaRickard ...RH, ....... .. DodgeG. McKinley .. . . .O.R. . ... . C. LymanJ."C. Anderson. . .'.I.E. .. .. . W. DeshaMcLaughlin . ... .C.F, . . . . . . Mon YinR. Brown ..... ." . I.L . . . . . WalkerJ. Macauley . .O.L. , . . J. II. Catton

J" Second Game.Mailes. - Position. D. Heads.

I

I

I

ADMISSION 10c. and 20c.

Children 5c.

EMPIRE THEATRFHOTEL AND BETHEL STEEETH.

PROGRAM CHANGED

MONDAYS, WEDNESDAYS AND

FRIDAYS.

New Moving PicturesAdmission . , 10c ,

Children 5c

ra II a CQAfli a t ia m r na coo crn nrhi t n J. J.Belser . . .G. ; . . . v . . . .

J. C. McGill. . ... .L.B. . . ... J. ClarkWm. Greig .H.B. . ,4 J. HickmanH. Andrews .... .L'.H . . ....... Lemon

Honolulu Photo Supply Co."Everything Photographic" FORT ST., near HOTEL

club until February when the claypigeon shoots, will commence.

' ,

HILO TRIBUNE VERSE.A spreading Fern has blocked the Land

To Honolulu folks' abodes; '

But citizens do not complain, ;

Because he 's made some other Rhodes.

will be completed V.oday unless theMailes and the Y. M. C. A. team aretied for first place, and thus necess-itating a. final contest, has furnishedsome cracking good --ftfiort as well asexcellent ' amusement for the public.

The pugilistic game has come to thefront amazingly, notwithstanding the

H. ChilHngworth . C.H Hughes. . . . . ....E. Davis ...... ,.R.H... SherwoodMarcallino .......O.L . . E. KeaCraik I.L. . . E. FernandezE. Andrews . .C.F. . . . . Sing ChongH. Bailey I.R.: ... Abe N&rtonG.Dwight .. .O.E.- . ...... C. Oss

r. . . . efforts that . were made to keen itRemember, while you praise the Court,; smothered. During the stay of the

The longest Lane has got a turn; j two fleets rn this port, a large numberAnd as our Lane is rather short, of mills were pulled off, and they2eJon "Sivf to Fern.f were all classy. The outlook for the

1 SBC0 WyWOKLD'B MSWI DAILY

oc DOCZDOCZDOC DOC OC DOO

" toWOMAN'S EXCHANGE,Hotel St., Opp. Union St.

and showing ?

n

1 oUK r'AJ

Elgin, Waltham andHamilton Watches

in endless variety.

A.M.DIETZ JEWELRY CO.

START PRACTISENEXTMONDAY

: At noon yesterday the trustees of theleague officially decided, as was pre-

dicted in these columns, to play"Mique" Fisher's aggregation of All-Star-

and a committee, consisting ofChas. Falk, F. Steere, E. Fernandezand John Wise, was appointed to selecta team of

The men from whom this nine willbe selected was announced in the Ad-

vertiser of yesterday. Practise willstart Monday afternoon and it is ex-

pected irat there will 'be a large turn-out for the first day. Merit will countin selecting the team, and diligence ingetting out to practise will also be tak-en into consideration.

A meeting of the committee will beheld Saturday afternoon when the captain--

manager of the local team will beselected. E. Fernandez may be putin charge, though nothing definite willbe known until after the meeting ofthe committee. '

OWon First Place among American Cars, andSecond Place in i International Light Car Road Race 12

uo

.- J. ABADIE - - - Proprietor.

Ladies' and Gents' Washing Done First-clas- s.

Gloves and Ostrich Feathers. .

Wool and Silk Made Cleaner by a New French Process.Charges reasonable. Give us a trial.

258 BERET ANIA STREET : : : : 'PHONE 1491

oEASY PICKING

' FORMARlNESThe Marines walked away with theO

Fort Shafter aggregation on their home

LEADING THE ENTIRE FIRST HALF of what proved to be the mostAFTER and most stubbornly fought speed battle in automobile racing history, the

Model io's gasoline lank came loose and because of stops totaling overminutes from this frouWe, the Buick lost the 196-mi- le Savannah race by

: six minutes. .. ;! "Hilliard in his $3300 Lancia won ar'd all credit is due him. ' Burman in his $1000

Buick gave him the fight of his life and brought his car in with such a lead over the re-maining contestants that there was no question concerning the standard which the Buickhas set in low-price- d automobile construction. -

E. A. Hearne of Chicago, driving his own car, a Buikc Model ip, won fourth place andwas at all times a contender for the highert honors.The great duel between the leaders Vas a sight which the spectators will never forget.The Buick used was a regular stock thassis except that for the sake of securing fess

clearance, the frame and machinery were kinder hung. Our regular motor, transmissionand axle parts were used. ' jDuring the entire race, the hood ovt the engine was not raised.Michelin tires wre used and absolutely no tire trouble was had.70 miles per hour was made on the smoath straight-awa- y stretches.The three fastest laps made in the rie were made by the Buick. 'The Buick made each of 17 laps in less; than ix minutes. The length of each lap was

9.8 miles. i j

The fastest lap of the race was made by the Buick in 10 minutes and 8 seconds.

GEESE, GANDERS AND

THEODORE RICHARDSgrounds by the scora of 7 to 2 rester- -

PortraitsFinest Studio and Equipment

R. W. PerkinsHOTEL STREET, NEAR FORT

day afternoon. Both teams workedhard, but it was an uphill fight for, theShafter lads. The Marines started outlike winners, putting four men over thefrying-pa- n in the first canto, while the

uoD soldiers made one of their duo in the

initial inning. The new pitcher of the'

land-sailor- s proved to be a whirlwina,for the soldiers were unable to touch

oDR. D. P. OSDWAY'S

Improved PlasterCURES BRONCHIAL ANl LUNG

DISEASES

HONOLULU DRUG CO.. LTD.

l him. The following was the line-up- :i Marines Mike, If.; Winters, lb.;

Showe, ss; Masak, 2b; Anderson, c;m Syedman, p; Misner, 3b; iiumphyrs,

ef.; Booth, rf.Fort Shafter Loiette. c; MeCall

2b.; Glenn, ef.; Budrlhu, p.; Kistler,If.; Lemn, lb.; Duwent, ss.; jUe-at- D,

3b.; Oaklev, rf.

WOMAN COACH AND EEFEEEESeattle Times. As far is known

Miss Lillian Merrell, a schoolteacherof Kalama, Wash., is the only womanwho has the distinction of having ref- -

ereed a football same or a banket- -

Lj Buickj

j

- Michigan. j fj

Editor Advertiser: It is a parableof law enforcement. A zealous official

discovers a fractured statute. It isan ordinance of signs and sidewalks.Right here let us locate the geese inthe parable: they are the businessmen. It is to be said in favor of thegeese that they lay eggs, and in. thecase of the parable the eggs are ofthe golden variety. It is to be' saidof the law made for the geese we

seem to have forgotten just what wasto be said for that "three feet -- fromthe sidewalk, law-,.- " but there is atleast a suspicion of "goose" origin.Anyway, it is law, and a number of

the offending geese are hauling intheir signs, .eggs or no eggs. We be-

long to that breed of goose..

We pass to the gander. He is notyet in the parable. To get sauce to

him and so fulfill a useful proverb is

the function of the official, and theparable hereby passes it up to him.

The gander, owing to the terror in-

spired by his hiss, hoik and wing-piavw- e

will pull into the parablein the guise of a "fan." He iswider in girth than the goose, is the

father of autos for noise and laysnothing but wagers. It should be saidin frtvor of the prototype that he hasmore fight in him than his understudy,who chiefly pjiys for his blood andfeathers at a afe distance. The !swagainst prizefighting was framed with

in mind, though it chieflyconcerned with breeding a better class

ball game played by men.Saturday high school teams repre-

senting Kalama nd Castle Rock playedin the former town and Miss Merrellwas the referee. Her work was en-

tirely satisfactory to both teams. Morethan this. Miss Merrell coaehes basket

of birds. Now, no gander would darerisk bis reputation (over his ownquill tracks) with any sibilant twad-dle about. "boxing contests." Thomorning "Fan-feed- " (mark you, wesaid not '"fanfare") will stir up th?militant crops of the red-eye- wad-dler- s

like a. bit of on astick. "Joel Cohen, the genial im-

presario, prizefight promoter,signed up two s to enraodown." "When these twbruisers stpp into the padded ring inHonolulu the greatest it,

this little burg ever aw is promised."Nothing of the hypocritical there! P.y

the wav, what did the ganders electBrother V'ohen for? "And where doethe official come into the parable?"You can "search us." He hasn'tcome in anywhere yet; that is. wedidn't see him. Wo surmise he fearsthe gandorsv, we are quie willing tconfess thht in our kid days he' nearlyfriphtened us out of our knirkerboi-k-ers- .

And now well, we are somethingof a fan ourselves. Higher criticismshows that the chief difference philo-logieall- y

(we blush to announce it)between a "fan" and a "fanatic"is the possession of an upper story.

Yours for law. just law,THEODORE RICHARD?.

ball and football in the Kalamaschools. She is well versed in therules of both games and when in college was a star basketball plaver her- -

l self.

The von ttamnj-Youn- g Co., Ltd. n

Agents r

While refereeing a game she wearsshort skirts and is fast enough to be onband to pass on any close play. Everyone knows that the play shifts rapidlyfrom one goal to another and it seemsalmost impossible that a woman "wouldbe equal to the task of aeting as ref-eree. But Miss Merrell declares shehas little difficulty seeing all the playsand that she has studied the rules un-

til she knows them bv rote.

Page 4: RF.PftRTFn · L;di's developments, that the question lly' throngs the dowiown streets rm appointmeats will be takea to y, conspicuous by its asenee, I to - HlfrWnji-r,-.-MESSINA CATHDBAJU

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, FRIDAY, JANUARY 1, 19094m m ii iii '' THE I THE DAY OF HIGH RESOLVE. I , " - M , " "

Pacific Commercial AdvertiserA MORNING PAPER. IT WILL PAY YOlTl J I

LDIT02.WALTER Q. SMITHTo look into the merits of

FRIDAY JANUARY 1

The majority of men make New Year lesolutions and more try to keep themthan is commonly thought. For weeks after January 1, the depressing effect ofNew Year resolutions is felt in the saloon and cigar business; and to make theless as light as possible, barkeepers keep open house on New Year's day so asto drown out the resolution fever, while cigar men see that their customers havegifts that will keep them smoking until the new year is under way.

A small percentage of the men who reform stick to their' self-impose- d

pledges, and these are pleased to find that a good habit is just about as easyto acquire as a bad one. It is not the evil habit only that sticks. The boywho disdained to brush his teeth but finally got used to it, would no more omitthat hygienic service now than the other boy, who never learned how, wouldtake it up. Men who stop drinking and stick to it long enough to get the habitcf abstinence find it about as hard to break that habit as drinking men do tobreak theirs. The fetters cf habit are for the good and bad alike. "

It is a mighty good thing to make New Year resolutions of some kind as atest of manhood. You ought to take stock and find out where you stand; and ifyour standing isn't good, try and improve it. If you can do so, you are thereal thing; if not, you are degenerating; and a degenerating man is a moremelancholy sight than a fine tree with the scale eating up its leaves and bark.

Resolutions should suit the individual case, but here is a good one of generalapplication: "There are three companions with whom I shall keep on goodterms my wife, my stomach and my conscience."

;- h -

One of the sure signs that the earth is young is the frequency of its quakesand volcanie eruptions. The dead moon has immunity from such things, andit is probable that declining Mars also has it. But the earth is full of labor andis all the time altering its surface either by slow and calm or by swift andviolent processes. V

. They are current savers, yet give the nearest approach

to daylight of any artificial illuminant.

The Hawaiian Electric Co., Ltd.

rNEW YEAR SERVICE

AT OAHU PRISON

; WOLD YEAR AND NEW.

The year 1908 will be written with capitals in the calendar of Hawaii as

the one that has brought the greatest returns to the staple industry of thegroup, the most promise to diversified agriculture and the one which hasushered in a new era of development.

The returns from the merchandise this Territory has shipped away in theone year, ehufly sugar . derived from the cultivation . of a little mere than200,000 acres of land, amounts to $40,568,796 or about $225 per capita on theestimated present population. The per capita ownings in money of the UnitedStates proper as a whole, as estimated for one year by the last census, are

$31.40; of the Uinited Kingdom, $17.58; of France, $37.13; of Germany, $22.40;

tot The Netherlands, $26.76; of Cuba, $15.62; yet, counting out all other ac-

cumulations of money saved from former years or derived from Hawaiian in-

vestments, our own per capita is $74.11 more than all the rest of them puttogether. The figures suffer from having been taken in different years, but notenough so to perceptibly narrow the margin of Hawaii's tremendous lead.

: Aside from the development of the sugar industry Hawaii has experienced'.;' notable gaju in the production of pineapples. Over 400,000 cases went out in

1908, and there is the promise of a million cases this year. Tobacco farms arecoming into bearing; more sisal has been planted; cotton has been introducedvrith good prospects;' rubber groves have added to their area, and interest inall forms of agricultural production has increased; population is steadily andseenrely growing. In these respects alone the record of 1908 has been notable.The one year justifies all that was hoped of or promised for the policy of an-

nexation which ends its first decade of trial with the present year.I ; The fact of equal if not greater importance to the expansion of industry, isj' the decision of the government to establish, on the Island of Oahu, the greatest; military and naval post in the world.. Beginnings have been made in a pro-

jected outlay for the physieal plant alone, including dredging for naval apfproachesy forts,: drydock, asenuls and camps, of $10,000,000, a sum to be vastlyt t. "... . . , , . .4; exceeded in the end and which will assure ihe annual expenditure for operationt and maintenance" of between $1,000,000 and $2,000,000, As the year, in which

Hawaii began busness as a war. base, 1908 promises to be put down in local: Listory sas one from which great commercial, political and sociological changes'

iterued. .'. .

The outlook for the new year Is sufficiently encouraging. We are promised

c ftj great circulation of money, an increase in the number of useful inhabitants,a better tourist trade, an expanded agriculture, more of all that goes to secure

vthe greatest good to the greatest number and our fair share of comfort andi happiness. y ' ..."

' "i " ' 'AW'"

Seasickness

Prevented

One of . the most recent dis-coveries of medical science is achemical combination of Men-thol and Valerianic Acid, theMenthol exercising a calminginfluence on the stomach and'the Valerianic Acid quieting'thebrain. This preparation iscalled

HalFs Safes and Vaults, ABSOLUTELY FIRE AND BURGLAR-PROO- F.

The walls of this safe are filled with a special fire-pro- of

composition that prevents all heat from passing through to

the inside.

The perfect construction of every detail makes it im-

pervious to the drill and chisel of the cracksman. If you see

the Safe itself, you'll see why it is so superior to others,

H. Hackfeld & Co., Ltd.HARDWARE DEPARTMENT.

New Year's services will be held atthe Oahu Penitentiary today, underthe leadership of W. A. Bowen. Theexercises will commence at 10 o 'clockthis morning and the following pro-

gram will be rendered:Song .... . By CongregationScripture ..... . . Wm. EsterSong (in Hawaiian). . .O. P. Glee ClubShort Address (in Hawaiian) . .

By a KamaainaRecitation, . . . . .Master Roy GrahamSong (in Japanese) ... . , . . , tGlee ClubShort Address (in Japanese) . .

..... ... . . ; , . . Re v. Frank ScudderSolo. ......... .Mrs. F. J. HareShort Address .. Rev. Amos A. EbersoleSole ..... . .Mrs. Grace Wing CrockettClosing Remarks. ... .John M. MartinSong "America". . ..By Congregation

VALIDOL

If taken in time, will preventseasickness in over 75 per centof cases, and will always relieveit. , ,

It is used by the recommenda-tion of the ships' surgeons onthe Pacific Mail and North Ger-man Lloyd lines. Sold byA. B. ARLEIBH & CO." vH ..'

INGORPORATEDARE IB 19 1.Articles of association of A. B. Ar- -

Limitedleigh & Company, Ltd., were filed withD

the Territorial Treasurer, yesterday.The incorporators are A. B. Arleigh,William N. Patten, William J. Robin- -

" CIVIL SERVICE TESTS FOR POLICE.

'; There is a way to' get a better police force than we have or ever have hadby means of an ordinance, passed by the Supervisors, putting appointment to

l that body on a civil service basis.i v The Advertiser : is pssured that the Supervisors have the legal right to, enact this reform.'f. By means of it, candidates for the1 police force would have to pass an' ex-- r

lynination as to their mental and physical fitness and, in the case of formerjace officers, as to their records of efficiency in police service. Both politics

1 jajid color would be ruled out of the test and the selection left wholly to merit.i :.This jivstem extends to most responsible positions in the civil service 'of! the'United States and would be in line with better; government for Honolulu.

vv"0' rM'-Cy".,,- ";.,' :" ," . V?:i:;..y; .:

"Mr. 'Charles L, Rhodes, who leaves the Advertiser to become the Mayor's

f:

Is

I

i

IT HOLDS GOOD

A Bottle of Perfume from

' BENSON, SMITH & CO., LTD.

n. R. II. Trent anl James V. L.even- -

son. The corporation is formed to "pur- -

chaso the business of A. B. Arleigh

BOOKSALL KINDS

Wall, Nichols Co.

& Co., which it has done , for $8260

The capital stock, is $12,0p0 with theright to increase ; it to $50,000. .. The Is as acceptable for New Years as Christmas. " '

secretary, is a well-rea- d lawyer and a newspaper man of marked ability. About'twelve years ago he was chosen with two others, from the staff of a Chicago

jiiewspaper. to infusef new1 blo63 into the writiig force of the San Francisco

shares are $20 eacn. $lu,26y are paidin. A. B, ' Arleigh owns 395 shares;William N. Patten, 100 snares; Louise

ALL ODORS ALL MAKES.

E. Arleigh ten shares; Phoebe J. "Ar' Chronicle. He. did brilliant work there,,but; attracted, by, the fame of Hawaii,leigh, five shares; and the otaer incorhe came to Honolulu to 30m the staff of the Star. He wa editor of mat

share each. 'porators, one'(x paper for some years and, on the retirement from this journal of Miss Krout,

joined its staff, becoming its commercial and court writer. Readers of the Ad

WE WISH YOU A VERY'

, icrtiser need no assurance that his work is good. Mr. Rhodes has alwaysteen a Democrat and is counted as one of the most sagacious advisers cf that

. party in this Territory. He will be, in a very comprehensive sense, the right-- - -

hand of Mayor Fern.HAPPY NEW

The sudden brilliancy of the sky just before the Sicilian earthquake wasprobably due to a show of fire in the craters of Stromboli and Aetna. In ancient

'times such a phenomenon might cave given birth to some supernatural bugaboothat would have come down to us. in the classics with a record of the multitudesit had seared to death. Dreadful; as great earthquakes are, science has at, least

i mitigated the force of their assault upon the nerves by explaining their signs

YEAR

Neglect in

TreatingImpaired Sight

occasionally leads to blindness.The services of an experiencedand capable optician will 'Oftenrepair a weakness of vision. In

our Optical Department is themeans to an end an opticianwho knows the what, where andhow of the sight.

H. F. Wiciioion X CO. 03.

OPTICIANS

4 and wonders, eliminating the wrath of heaven and evicting the gods and devils,genii,, beasts of revelation, imps aDd other carnivora which used to add such

THAT WILL MAKE A LADY HAPPY OR THE

HOME BEAUTIFUL.i DRAWN WORK,

CREPES, KIMONOS, SCREENS,

needless terrors to earth-convulsio-

AlexanderYoung Cafe

' We are not aware that the Democratic committee summoned cither Mr.ETC., ETC.Fern or Mr. Jarrett beforeit' and told him to stand and deliver so as, to."per

feet" their control of his office. If it had, the Advertiser might have made thecomment which the esteemed Star vainly looked for. in its columns, though, asthis paper said before, it is not trying to keep the Democratic strategists from usablundering.. There is a difference between the coercion of a public official byits campaign managers and a voluntary consultation between them, which the ARBStar remembers 'to forget. ; r i)

ABOVE HOTEL.NtJUANU,Up to and including President Harrison's time it was the custom to ap-- Of- -

joint the secretary of the Executive, at the. close of the administration, a paymaster in the army with the rank of major. In his second term, President

LADIES' - I. ' J" " '

V- -i- iii

.1

Cleveland made his former secretary, Dan Lamont, a cabinet officer, and thislule has been continued. Mr. Cortelyou. who aspired for the nomination whiehMr. Taft received, is a signal beneficiary of the new method of rewacd. Wm,

j SAN FRANCISCO HOTEL.Ioeb, Mr. Roosevelt 's secretary, is now on the slate for a cabinet portfolio.SWEATERS

The fleet supplies that are being rushed to Messina are a gift which thesufferers' will appreciate. A half million dollars' worth of naval stores, pur ABchased as they have been at the lowest cash price, amount to a very large usinessMONDAY, JAN. 4

AT 8 O'CLOCK

Our entire line of Blouse Sweaterswill be offered at greatly-reduce- d

prices. See window display.

tonnage indeed,-an- will sustain the life of a host of people. Food and shelterare needed in the stricken isone quite as much as money, so the charity of ourgovernment has been wisely exercised. . x

... - -The same people who so bitterly opposed a "centralized" Territorial gov-

ernment are the ones who drew up and passed the municipal bill which putseverything in the hands of the Mayor. They are repentant now because aDemocratic Mayor was elected. But for that, the workings of the appointmentmill would be greeted with frantic applause. "

1 Lot Navy and Fed, to close. at

that carries a stock of the bestthere is in the various lines dis-

played, for twelve months in

every year, is the one to pat-

ronize when quality is wanted.

With us the value is represent-

ed by the price charged there'sharmony here.

3 Lots White, Red and Navy,price $3 and $3.50, to close at

$2.252 Lots White, Eed and Oray, regu

FMBt$Pf30E$T MOTELSAN FRANCISCO

The most supef bly situated hotel in the WorldOVERLOOKINO ! TEE ENTIRE BAY

1 OF SAN FRANCISCO,

THE GOLDEN OATS, AND THE RAPIDLY REBUILDING CITY.

CONVENIENT TO SHOPPING, THEATER,

BUSINEW. AND RAILROAD CENTERS.

THE EPITOPE OF HOTEL EXCELLENCEj Combining al tne conveniences and luxurUs a good

f total shonld nave, with many uniine, original and

exclusive- - features. Entirely refurnished and refitted

at a cost of pver three million dollars. Social center

of the dty-headqua- rters of the Army and Navy

Sceni of mort of the social festivities.

ACCOMMODATIONS FOR 1000 GUESTS.EUROPEAN PLAN.

Single rooms witKbath, $2.50, $3.50, $4.00, $4.50, $5.00 upwards.

Suites, with bath,' $10.00, $12.50, $15X0, $20.00, $25.00 upwards. ,

, MANAGEMENT

PALACE HOTEL COMPANY

lar price $3.30 and $4, to close atA facetious paper says that Taft will be inaugurated President of the

United States on March 4, 1909; that precisely four months thereafter all ofthe banks in the United States, most of the factories, and practically all ofthe great business house will close. Compute four months from March 4. .; $2.50

2 Lots White and Fed, regular price$4.50 and $, to close at

$3.00Mr. Burton was beaten for mayor of Cleveland by Tom Johnson. If he

hadn't been, he would haye: stood small chance, for the ITnited States SenatorshipH.L WOMAN X C0..LTD.

Leading JewelersFORT STREET

lie now receives. His was a lucky political catastrophe.

may predicate a large emigration this coming year from Sicily andCalabria.

There is a good opening in Honolulu now . for at least twenty-fiv- e white ASAD XSE AD7E&TX3EXWOALD'a 1TSWI DAXLIcarpenters from the Coast- - -

" - " ,1 '

n -

ACI II

Page 5: RF.PftRTFn · L;di's developments, that the question lly' throngs the dowiown streets rm appointmeats will be takea to y, conspicuous by its asenee, I to - HlfrWnji-r,-.-MESSINA CATHDBAJU

THE PACITIO COMMERCIAL ADVERTISES, HONOLULU, FEXDAT, JANUARY 1, 1909.

f ii fii m rr --nCOURT CLERKS IRE60S! WHIG OP

MARINES. iM. DAMON A. W. T. BOTTOMLEY. j I .H TPS fil fl I SS T

BALANCE SHEET AS AT DECEMBER 31st, 1908 Bst FlourThere was a fin de annee air about

the Judiciary building yesterday. Inevery office there was an ar

dullness so far as the actual busi-

ness of the day was concerned, and abusying in. the work of getting up sta

'FEARS FOfi SAFETY

; OF THE FORT GEORGE

' N. Y. Sun, Dec. 6. The four-maste- d

Liabilities.Assets.

Cash $ 694,635.20 ' Capital and surplus 937.470.SStistics and reports of. the year. JudgeDe Bolt has pretty nearly finished his j bBks d ,01" bMkm,oSl?

UaunciS j..t 1 vpa o.o!J-VSO.-

Bonds, stocks and invest-ments 504,746.55

Loans, discounts and over-

drafts 3,128,361.S7Keal estate and bank fur-

niture 96,806.74Other assets . ... 212,433.68

The Cook's Best friend

A large fresh shipment just in at$4,762,744.28 $4,762,744.28

iron bark Fort George, called also a"shipentine," which sailed from thisport on July 26 with a cargo of coal

the naval station at Honolulu, is(more than a month overdue there, andreinsurance is sought on her. Nothing.has been heard of her since she wasppoken in the south Atlantic on August27. She is commanded by Capt. JamesFullerton and has a crew of nineteenmen, ' including two Japanese and adozen Scandinavians. She is Britishbuilt, but owned by the Matson Navi-gation Company of San Franeisco. Ifshe is lost she will be the third sailingvessel chartered to carry coal for thegovernment that has gone to Davy

report to the Chief Justice. It willcontain some very interesting statisticsof divorce and other litigation, and anumber of recommendations as toneeded legislation. .badge De Bolt hasdiscussed a number of problems at con-siderable length, more particularlymeans for saving costs and avoidingdifficulties in the probate of small es-

tates,Tn the Tax Ofilce, Charles T. Wilder,

the Assessor and. Collector for theFirst Division, has collected duringthe year 1908 $1.024,863.3.3. Therewill be a few dollars added to this,as some collections made yesterdaywill not be. reported until Saturday.

The collections last year were $957,-074.7- 8.

The increase is due to someincreases in taxation and largely tothe fact that the amount of delin-quent taxes collected this year exceeds

Co., Ltd.

Phone 22

enry lay &Leading Grocers

Honolulu, December 31, 1908.

I, Allan W. T. Bottomley, Jo solemnly swear that the foregoing balancesheet represents a true and correct statement of the affairs of the BankingHouse of Bishop and Company, as at December 31st, 190S, to the best of myknowledge and belief.

ALLAN W. T. BOTTOMLEY.

Subscribed and sworn to before me this 31st day of December, 1908.

J. HARRIS MACKENZIE, -

- I' Notary Public, First Judicial Circuit.

The Fort George is not carrying coalfor the naval station, but has a fullcargo Of structural steel for the Hono-

lulu Iron Works. She is now out 153

that of last year. The decision in thepineapple exemption cases also in-

creased the tax collections this vear. JIi. ESTiffilIIII.lll THE SMALL FARMER

The taxes collected in 1906 were$922,012.77, but the comparison be-

tween that, and other years is not amisleading one because of a change inthe collection of the income tax.

In the Circuit and Supreme courtsthere were filed during the year ap-proximately 5500 papers of all kinds.These include complaints, petitions,bills in equity, petitions for probate ofwill, for appointment of administra-tor, for appointment of guardian, li-

bels for divorce. . plejs in abatement,demurrers, briefs, decisions, decreesand a II the other varied and manifoldlucubration f,f the lawyers.

In the orbe of the Eegistrar of Con-veyances there were entered on thefee book th filing of 3819 documentsrelating to land and land transactions.

STATEMENT OF CONDITION, DECEMBER 31st, 1908.

$ 60,000.00

Liabilities.

Capital:Subscribed ...$100,000.00Paid in .....Stockholders'

liability : 40,000.00Undivided profitsTrust and agency

balances

Assets.

Cash on hHuj and in bank..$ 51,043.58Bonds ...... 17,093.00Stocks 5,074.88Loans secured by mortgages

on real estate 6,207.07Loans demand and time... 18,285.00Furnitur and fixtures . - - - 9,439.16Real" es;ate office building

and site 26,086.63Accrue! interest receivable 593.00Assets' other than those spe-

cified above 7,990.67

13,445.00

63,372.99

f

I

l

IPAID HIS BILLS WITH

days.British Collier Arrives.

The British steamer Glendevon, twen-

ty days out from Newcastle, reachedport yesterday afternoon. She brings acargo of coal for the Inter-Tslan- d com--pan-

which she will discharge at the-Bisho-

wharf. Today being a holiday,the work of discharging will not com-mence until tomorrow. The GlendevonLad an uneventful voyage.

Inter-Islan- d Sailings Today.

The Inter-Islan- steamer Claudinewill sail for Maui and Hawaii portsthis afternoon at five o'clock, as usual.No freight will be received at the Inter-

-Island wharves, today, however.The Mauna Kea will arrive this morn-

ing from Hilo, one day ahead of herusual schedule.

China Due Tomorrow.

There is some possibility of the Pa-

cific Mailer China reaching port thisevening from the Orient, but she is notdue until tomorrow morning. She willprobably leave for the Coast shortlyaft'-- r noon and will take the mail?.

The Texan is due from the Coast to-

morrow and will bring two days' late?mail.

Sheridan from Manila.i

The army transport Sheridan clearedfrom Nagasaki on the 21st for thisport. . .

AY. M. Bush of the Inter-Islan- d , ma-

chine shops dislocated his shoulder yes-

terday morning in a bicycle accidentat Kapiolani Park.

LOCAL OFFICE OF THE UNITEDSTATES WEATHER BUREAU.

Can secure our assistance in endeavoring to find a market forhis products. We are engaged in the business of sellingGroceries, Provisions and numerous articles required by thefarmer for the daily use of his family. We believe we may beable at the same time to sell his products; some of them any-way if not all.

If the farmer will let us know what he has to sell, whenit will be ready for market, how packed and how tobe shipped, with probable quantities in each shipment; giveus in advance all the information he can; we will at once startinvestigating the market conditions and advise him of same.

We sell to family consumers throughout the Islands forCASH, money with order, and many acknowledge that theyare saving money eyery month. We want the farmers'family trade and will sell their products for CASH also, so asto furnish the necessary "GOLD LUBRICANT" to keep thefarm running smoothly. No order too small or too large forus to undertake.

Get the CASH HABIT in buying and selling.

THEO. F. LANSINGCommission Merchant,

Importer, Jobber-an- Retailer.

93 and 95 King Street,P. O. BOX 351. Honolulu.

$141,817.99$141,817.99

II WORTHLESS CHECK

M. Morimote digged a deep hole forhimself when he undertook to buy sup-plies with checks on the 'YokohamaSpecie Bank before depositing cashthere to meet his paper He passedone check on the Union Feed Companyfor $45 and is now lying in the cellawaiting a preliminary hearing on, acharge of gross cheat.

Dan Paea who fell by thewayside yesterday and will pass hisNew Year day in the toils. The chargeagainst him is stealing a pair of dttcktrousers fromW.'J. Robinson. .

Territory of Hawaii, '

Island of 0:uu. .

I, Jas. L. Cockbufu, Treasurer of the Bishop Trust Company, Limited, do

solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledgeand belief.

. , ; JAS. L. COCKBURX, Treasurer.

Subscribed and sworn to before me. this 31st day of December, 190S."

: : J. HARRIS MACKENZIE,,, Rotary Public, First Judicial Circuit.

DOINGS IN THE COURTS. 1Ifi! Ill III flLHonolulu, Thursday, Dec. 31, 1908,

Best BsfSTATEMENT OF CONDITION, DECEMBER 31, 1908.

Assets. Liabilities.

Cash on hand and in bank..$ 67,965.03 j Capital:Subscribed ...$200,000.00

2 f THERMO. e5 WDa ts sb 5 5 5- eg

5 : a : - :- - gI ; j I g : j: : ;,

MOO ?29 96 72 60 '6 Oo 66 10 SB .'.

'30.IJ1901 71 63 67 01 54 5 51

1802 29 99 T7 63 73 00 70 2 S

1908 31 04; 76 70 "3 .35 78 6 KE

1804 30 17 7J 65 71 .0) 89 4

10U6 30.09: 76 67 72 .08 7d 3 E 11

1806 29 75 76 67 72 .30 76 5 81 30

1907 29.96 77 7u 74 .09 65 3 7

1806 33.00 74 62 63 .Co 63 9 rs S

WB33 01 7 66 70 .00 63 5 si

Bonds ..... 10,250.00Stocks and other invest-

ments 22,760.47SOy paid in.. $100,000.00Shareholders' ' ,

' liability ... 100,000.00

in the Territory

C. Q. Yee Hop & Co.

Next the Fishmarket

iuuiiyagca sctuicu uv lea . 1n

The Peterson Bankruptcy.Judge Dole yesterday morning ad-

judged Wm. L. Peterson a bankrupt onhis voluntary petition. The schedulesfiled by Mr. Peterson shew that manyof the persons indebted to him haveeither gone into bankruptcy or haveleft the country, making it impossiblefor iim to meet his own obligations.MY. Peterson was in the loaning busi-ness, but gave it np several years ago,and has since followed that" line onlyto the extent of trying to recover whatwas already due him. Mr. Peterson 'sassets aie "about $7000 and liabilitiesabout $17,000.

Land Title Registered.Judge Weaver has filed a decision

and Tendered a decree giving a regis-tered title to J. B. Castle to a consid-erable area of land in Koolau. Someof the land is subject to rather pecu-liar easements and other incumbrances.One of these is the right of the own-ers of certain knleanas to fish andotherwise r.se the waters of a lakeenclosed wholly in ground belonging toCastle. Another piece of land is sub-ject to a lease wh'ch does not expirefor about fifty years.

Executor Reports.

15,284.67estate 30,146.50 . Undivided profitsLoans demand and time.. 196,479.80 Trust and agency

236,202.44801.41

accounts .

Other liabilitiesFurniture and fixtures .... 6,567.72Accrued interest receivable 2,655.48Other assets 15,463.52

$352,288.52$352,2.88.52

WM. B. STOCKMAN,Boctlorj Tirector.

METEOROLOGICAL EE COED.Cuued Every Sunday Morning by th

toca1 Office, U. S. Weather Bureau.

RELIEVES it unwise to ad-

minister Drags for the purposeof increasing Cell Resistance, ,

lest they act harmfully upon,,the Bodv Tissues, Knowing

Territory of Hawaii, ,

County of Oahu.I, A. X. Campbell, Treasurer of the Henry Waterhouse Trust Co., Ltd., do

solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge

and belief. )

A. X. CAMPBELL, Treasurer.

Subscribed and sworn to before me this 31st day of December, 1908.

JXO. GUILD,

Xotary Public, First Judicial Circuit.

WINDTHERM.AV. O. Smith, the executor of the

That the Lvmph contains all the remedial agents necessary to effeetwill of Maria L. Hoffman, deceased,has filed his, report in the Circuit a cure or to destroy bacteria, he directs nis euuns iu .ut-.v-

,

quality and quantity of the blood and to promote a free circulationof the same.

DR. F. SCHURMANN.HOURS 8 to 9 a. m.

otttce 224 Emffia oauare. 4 to 6 p. m.

Court. He has collected all the prop-ert- v

belonging to the estate except adeficiency judgment, and he wants hisbond reduced to a hundred dollars.

Guardian Appointed.Third' Infantry to sail August 5: TwenI'll8 2o3o.li --i U 1 17 79 7: e in

M 2':!to.l4 7H j . lu 2 7 NE 13T 22 30.12 7t 68 16' 7 I le i 12

W 2v:v.li- 77 i .03 '6 5 j m I 12'T 24 30. 75 : 4 .240 7 SE 7

F 25 .xOi 70 61 .2 4 N E 15'8 2fl;S0..04 70 i 61 .T "u 5 K 14'

ty-fir- Infantry to sail September 5,and Companies!! and H, engineers, to

FULL TRANSPORTSIN THE SPRING sail June o.

Judge Pe Bolt yesterday appointedM. P. Robinson guardian of the es-

tate of Arthur Allen. The estate is Troops in the Philippines will returnhome according to the following seiieuule:

valued at 61500.Decree of Sale.

Judge Pe Bolt yesterdav entered aTenth Cavalry to sail May 1 and to

be stationed at Kort Ethan Allen. Vermont: Ninth Cavalry to sail May 15

and to be stationed at Fort D. A. Ku

lN'ote. Barometer readings are cor-rected for temperature, instrumentalerrors, and local gravity, and reducedto sea level. Average cloudiness statedIn scale from 0 to 10. Direction olwind is prevailing direction during tihours ending at 8 p. m. Velocity olwind Is average velocity in miles perfcour. T Indicates trace of rain.

WM. B. STOCKMAN,Section Direo'- -

TTDES. SUN AND MOON.

About 8000 troops in the Philippinesare to be sent home in 1909 and themovement will begin about March. Atthe same time the transports leavingSan Francisco for Manila via Honoluluwill be filled with troops sent out toreplace those now in the islands. Thefollowing dispatch from Washington,dated December 15, gives the completesystem of exchanges:

Orders involving the movement ofabout 20,000 soldiers of the regulararmy during the next twelve monthswere issued by General Bell, chief ofstaff, today. These orders include the

and! MPPLES

sell; Sixth Cavalry to sail December16, headquarters band and one squ.ol-ron- ,

to Fort Walla Walla; six troopsto the Presidio, San Francisco, and twotroops to Boise barracks, Idaho; Firs--

Cavalry to sail January 15, 1910, andto be stationed at Fort Des Moines,Iowa; Twenty-sixt- h Infantry to sailJune 15, headquarters band and twobattalions to take station at FortWayne, Michigan, and one battalion atFort Bradv. Michigan; Thirtieth Infau- -

3

decree of sale in the suit of AugustPreier, Ltd.. vs. W. W. Ahana andChoi eem. his wife: R. II. Trent, trus-tee, and Henry Holmes. The deerefprovides for the sale of the propertymortgaged snd for the division of itsproceeds among The creditors. T. II.Beadle was appointed commissioner tosell the property and divide theproceeds.

i-- .

FIRECRACKER BLAZE LASTNIGHT.

A firecracker on the roof of one ofthe ccttages in Theodore Richards'Vineyard street camp last night re-

sulted in the calling out of the de-

partment. The fire vras put out beforethe machines arrived, but the China- -

man who turned in the alarm justifiedhimself to Chief Thurston by remark-ing that ''niebhe liilii fire now, mebbehimeby to? much big."

o S I "i - .B O C e i

trv to sail July i- - ami to taKe stationHomecoming 01 ahout ,ouu troops inBEAUTIFUL FRUIT.

SPLENDID CONDITION,!.m .j Ft i in. p.m. m.

28- 7. SO; 1 6: 9 1 5 :.52 C 25I

5 29 :l.l. 'nba as well as the liomeconunir of at the Presidio, Monterey, 'ai.; 1 wenabout Hi MX) troops in the Philippines.29 B.2"i 1 4 1 : 35 1 50 6 S" R ;M ...

I ip m. tt.tii37 1 .2 1.3 V 25 4.2

U

V

w

r

3.4. 6 3H5 39 D.13I i

10 30 hX-- 5 30 6 y S HI 1 H

h Infantry to sail August io anato take station" at Forts .lay, Porter,and Niagara, New York; Twenty lift h

infantry to sail September 13 ami totake station at Fort Logan, Colorado,and Whipple barracks, Arizona; Highteenth Intantrv to sail October 13 and

and the despatch of an equal numberfr-u- the United States to take theirplaces. Details regarding the move-ment and disposition of the troops toreturn from Cuba have been made pub

SI

1v

22 15P. 4f. VS7 7 (7 65.31 jiblic lieretotoro.

V m2 1 07 1 8 12.46 6 22 8 17 6 3 5.S2 3 07

S l.Sl 2 r 1.42 7 02 8 17 H 1- 5 x 4 The following named organizations to take station at lorts Lawton aimare ordered to the Philippines: Thir-- ' Coore Wright. Washington ; Companiesteenth Cavalry,' to sail March- - .";!' ami 1), engineers, to sail .lino 13 andTwelfth Cavalry, headquarters band To take station at Washington barracks,and ten. troops to sail April .1 and t wo j i of Columbia; headquarters,troops Jlv 3; Fourteenth Cavalrv, j field start" and band. Fifth Field Artii- -

Robert Innes Liiiie,NIW YEAR SIJENTO.

The largest special Xw Year paperissued in the Territory today is Mr.Mieha's lliwaii Shinpo. it has thirty-nin- e

pages well illustrated and full ofta- -headmiarters band and ten troops Xo- - lerv, to aii April 13 and to lase

First quarter of the moon Doc. 29.Tn tides at Kahulul and Hilo occui

bout one hour earlier than at Hono-ml- n.

Hawaiian standard time is 10 bsuriminutes slower than Greenwichm, being that of the meridian of 157

Wre thirty minutes. The timewhistle blows at 1:30 p. m., which it

ame as Greenwich 0 hours 0 mln-te- s.

Sun and moon are for loeal time

ead- -vember 3. and two- troops February 3, it ion at Fort Sheridan, lliirsui-- : Telephone 564.Queen Street.Robinson Building.good tbicjs about Hawaii. One page ; lilo Second Cavairv. headquarters quarters, held safi, i.at- -

and sume nserted columns are m Eng-lish, the contents btirur. in the main

band and ten troops to sail IVceml.e t.at.m. lourtii Fie'.d Artiherv. l.aivies3. and two troops March 3. 1010; Sev- -

' and IJ. to sail April 13 and take sta-ent- h

Infantry 'headauarters band and I t:on at Fort 13. A. Ku-se- ll. Wyonuiisr- -contribution? from American friends ofthe paper, including some of the high-- 1 Firt and Third battalions) to sail .Tune The dates mentioned are ti li"J

ctpt when othtwise stated.it otlicials. '3: Twelfth Infantry to sail Tniv 5.r ta whole group.

Page 6: RF.PftRTFn · L;di's developments, that the question lly' throngs the dowiown streets rm appointmeats will be takea to y, conspicuous by its asenee, I to - HlfrWnji-r,-.-MESSINA CATHDBAJU

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISES, HONOLULU, FRIDAY, JANUARY 1, 1909.6

Fraternal Meetings Castle 4 Cooke, Ltd.

RACING MAY BE THE SPORT

OF KINGS, BUT

THE ONLYSTORE OFF

Fort Streetwhere the

fa

IS THE DELIGHT

OP HOUSEWIVES

Honolulu Gas Go.,

LIMITED

Bishop Street. 11E VwA

, STOCKTAKING

Book

BargainsWILL BEGIN IN A FEW DAYS

E. Herrick Brown & Go.707-70- 9 ALAKEA STREET

SHIPPING AND COlQCIiaiOM

Sugar Factort and General IutraMAgent.REPRESENTING

N'ew England Mutual Life Lar.Company of BostonAetna Fire Insurance CoRational Fire Insurance Co

tl"n89;a1nc8:rcnoC)e C- -

Fall MillineryBEAUTIFUL STYLES

NOW ON EXHIBITIONMISS POWER

BOSTON BUILDING, FORT STREET

Rubber GoodsGOODYEAR RUBBER CO.

. H. PEASE . . . pre,,,9 Market Street,San Francisco, Cal., TJ. 8. A.

Cation, Neil! & Company, Lid.ENGINEERS AND MACHINIST I.

QUEEN AND RICHARDS STREET.Boilers with charcoal-iro- a

or steel tubes. General ship work.

PAU !(A NANAIS PURE SOAP UNDER ANOTHER

NAME

PREFERRED BY ALL

Keystone-Elgi- n

And

Ingersoll WatchesJOS. SCHWARTZ, Agent

The most compltand attractive nrwla

STEINER'SIsland Curio StoreElite Building, Hotltreet. Visitor al-

ways welcom.

Forcegrowth. MAKES PLANTS GROW

Hawaiian Fertilizer Co.. Lti. J

E. O. HALL & EON, LTD,

Selling Agent!

Holiday GoodsEverything in the Haberdashery Line

The Kash Company, Ltd.

John Neill135 Merchant Street.

Dealer in new and second hand ma-chinery. Automobiles and fine machin-ery repaired.

Ship and general blacksmithing.Agent for Foos Gasoline Engines ani

Hamilton Machine Tools,

COME TO MEwith yonr old shoes and I winmake them as good as new.

Joaquin F. Freitas(Successor to Ton Berg)

UNION STREET, ABOVE HOTKC

HonoluluScrap Iron Co.

C. H. BROWN - - Manager

HALEKAUWILA STREET

Highest price paid for Old Bras,Scrap Iron and all metals.

Dealer in Second Hand Machinery.Telephone 642 P. O. Box 641

HONOLULU IRON WORKSCOMPANY.

Machinery, Black Pipe, GalvanisedPipe, Boiler Tubes, Iron and Steel, En-

gineers' Supplies.OFFICE Nuuanu StreetWORKS Kakaako.

For KimonosSEE

K. FukurodaALL COLORS AND PRICES.

PRECIOUS STONESet in rings and brooches. Gold ani

tilver jewelry made lo order at reaenable prices. Your trade solicited.

SUN WOCHAN CHEW, Manager.

ln Maunakea St. P. O. Box 941

ristCHICAGO I

MET raiELLCouldn't Down Him Three Times

in Hour Roller Will Try

Thirty.

rORTLAXD, Ore., Dec. 17. M. J.Dwyer, wrestling instructor of the Chi-

cago athletic club, failed in his effortthrow Eddie O'Connell, wrestling in-

structor of the Multnomah amateur ath-letic club, three times in sixty minutes

the exposition rink tonight. Butone fall was secured by Dwyer, and thison a "head scissors," after thirty min-

utes and forty-thre- e seconds wrestling.O'Connell repeatedly brought the crowd

its feet by his fast work in wrig-

gling out of good holds.

O'Connell is the man whom DoctorRoller offered to' throw thirty times inan hour. There is a story behind thechallenge of Roller which the papers upNorth haven't, and proba'bly will not,handle. That is the intense rivalry between the Seattle Athletic Club inwhich Roller was physical instructor,and the Multnomah Athletic Club ofPortland, where Eddie O 'Connellteaches the strong-ar- act.

Roller was convince! that O'Connellwas afraid of him, and consequentlyhad a hunch that the latter thoughtthe best thing he could do would be tohedge on various excuses. As a matterof fact, O'Connell did not appear over-anxious to meet the Seattle giant, andhe wis mildly roasted by the sportingeditors in his home town. Ihis seemedto bring him around, for he came out'with a statement that he wuld meetRoller, take up his challenge, after hismeeting with Dwyer, of Chicfgo, whowent on to throw the Portland manthree times in an hour.

That Roller is supremely confident inhis own prowess is evidenced beyonda doubt by his offer to undertake, on a$ot)0 side bet, the herculean tas'-- ofswamping O'Connell thirty times insixty minutes. The challenge is alsoproof that Roller does not intend toforsake the wrestling game, now thathe has entstd the field of heavy-weigh- t

prize-fighter-

"KEEP IT DARK,"SELDOM HEARD

If any one thing counts more thananother in the world of professionalathletic sports that one thing is pub-

licity. The ability of a fighter, ballplayer, coach or trainer to keep hisname and his features under the. glareof the spotlights and on the lips of thefans is one of theaiest potent factorsin his struggle for livelihood. It isoften more important than excellencein his particular line, as is witnessedby the incomprehensible successes ofprofessional athletes who either havenever exhibited what the ' sportingworld calls "class," or who have longago passed their period of usefulness.

There are times, however, when theobject of talk in fandom would gladly"pass the buck" to one of his fellowprofessionals and hide himself in obscurity until the story about him passesout of the publie mind. Merkle of theNew i ork Giants, for jnstance, wouldwelcome any sort of a psychologicalphenomena which would forever hushthe description of how he lost the championship of the world for 'his team.When the second baseman failed totouch the bag in the decidirg game ofthe New York-Chicag- o series, he gaineda notoriety whieh will require years otgood playing to overcome. The member of the Harvard boat crew whobroke down in the Yale-Harvar- d matchlast year has never entirely recoveredhis standing, while Jack Monroe lapsedinto oblivion alter one neaitny waiiopfrom Blacksmith Jeffries. San Fran-cisco Bulletin.

OLD TIME IDCLWON FOR ENEMY

George Selby (Kid McCoy) had anexperience upon one occasion tnat nenever told to the newspapermen. Mc-

Coy was on a train between New Yorkand Boston. Getting into an altercation with the conductor, a slight butpowerful Irish-America- the "Kid"rose up to wipe the oitender rrom tnemap of the worid. Instead, he received a short-ar- jolt flush on the jawand went down and out for consider-ably more than the usual minutes.Finally recovering, he said faintly tothe conductor:

"I never thought 'Kid' McCoy wouldget a jolt like that from a bobby!"

"Great Lord!" shouted the ticketpuncher, "you aren't McCoy, areyou I"

"That's me," ruefully replied themiddleweight.

The little man shivered."Why didn't you tell me-s- of Why,

man, I've got two months' salary beton you for tomorrow night!"

In spite of his sore jaw McCoy wentinto the ring the following evening anddisposed of his opponent in the thirdround. But it broke his heart to thinkthat by doing so he was winning a cozybet for the man who knocked him out.

THE TACTFUL HUSBAND.

"How did vou eure vonr wife otchattering so much!"

"I told her that when her lips woreclosed they formed a perfeet Cupid'sbow." Cleveland Leader.

STILL BLEEDING.

"I had supposed until yesterday, doc-tor, that the days of the bleeding ofpatients were past."

"And so they arc. But what chang-ed your mind?"

""The bill vou sent me." Harper'sWeekly.

POLYNESIA ENCAMPMENT NO. 1.I. O. O. P.

itfSSfK. Meets every first and third FridayK6lc OI lne monin, at csu p. m., inWrJ9ieaf Odd Fellows' Hull Vnrt. Ktraet

Yisitine brothers cordial! v iavitedto atteDd.

R. MENAUGH, C. P.L. L. LA PIERRE. Scribe.

EXCELSIOR LODGE NO 1, I. O. O. F..js!?if? Meets every Tuesday evening, atWpSfSi 7:30 in odd bellows Hall, FortSSJiSP Street. Visiting brothers cordi

ally invited to attend.H. B. BROWN. N. G.L, L. LA PIERRE. Secy.

HAEAONT LODGE NO. S, I. O. O. P.JpSISaSfe. Meets every Monday evening, at74 mIS 1 'u' " vuu f nail, xui

ally invited to attend.J. LIGHTFOOT, N. G.E. R. HENDRY. Secy.

PACEFIC KEBEKAH LODGE NO. 1.I. O. O. P.

i Meets every second and fourthjgk Thursday, at 7:30 p. m.. Odd

are cordially invited to attend,FLORENCE LEE, N. G. toALICE NICHOLSON. Secy.

OLIVE BRANCH REBEKAHLODGE NO. 2,i. o. u. e.

Meet every first and third atigoS Sfe Thursday, at 7:30 p. in., in Odd

KgjP" Fellows' Hall. Visiting Rebekahsare cordially invited to attend.

FRANCIS i'lNDT, N. G.8ALLIE L. WILLIAMS, Secy.

OCEANIC LODGE NO. 371, F. & A. M.Meets, on the last Monday of each tomonth, at Maeoniu Temple, at 7:30 p.m. Visiting brethren are cordially in-vited to attend.

R. II. BEMROSE, TV. M.W. H. GOETY, Secy.

LEAHI CHAPTER NO. 2, O. E. S.Meets every third Monday of eachmonth, at 7:30 p. m., in the MasonicTemple. Visiting sisters and brothersare cordially invited to attend.

CLARA M. SCHMIDT, W. M.ADELAIDE M. WEBSTER, Secy.

LEI ALOHA CHAPTER NO. 3, O. E. S. .

Meets at the Masonic Temple every

7& second Saturday of each month, at7:30 p. m. Visitine sisters and brothers are cordially invited to attend.

MINNIE FRAZEE. W. M.A. E. WEI.BOURNK, Secy.

LADIES' AUXILIARY, A. O. H.. DIVISIONNO. 1.

Meets every first and third

4 M,CLB. U. Hall. Fort Street..1 Visiting sisters are cordi-t- 0

ally invited to attend.T MRS. K. CO WES. Pres

JOSEPHINE DILLON, See.

HONOLULU TEMPLE NO. 1, PYTHIANSISTERS.

Meets every firbt and third Monday,at 7:30 p. m., at Knights of PythiasHall, Fort and Beretania streets. Allvisitors cordially invited to attend.

MARTHA AHRENS. M. E. C.SALLIE L. WILLIAMS, K. R. S.

OAHU LODGE NO. 1. K. of P.Meets every first and third Fuday at7:30 o'clock, Pythian Hall, cornerBeretania and Fort streets. Visitingbrothers cordially invited to attend.

A. DEERING. C. O.J. W. WHITE, K. R. S.

william Mckinley lodge no. 8,X. of p.

ASK Meets every second and fonrth SaturiQay evening at 7:30 o clock, inI Pythian Hall, corner Beretania andFort streets. Visiting brothers cordi

S2? ally invited to attend.W. L. FKAZEK. O. O.E. A. JACOBSON, K. R. 8.

COURT CAMOES NO. 8110. A. 0. .l IMeets every 'second and fourth Tues-

Jjr fOdST oi each month, at 7:80 p. m., injtf'San Antonio HalL Vinavard street,RSr Visiting brothers cordially invited to

JL attend.Sa H. PEREIRA. C. R.M. C. PACHEOO. P. 8.

CAMOES CIRCXS NO. 240. O. O. F.Meets every second and fourth Thurs4a; of each month, at 7:30 p. m., inHan Antonio iUll. Vineyard street.Visiting companions are cordially invited to attend, ts MRS. HELEN M. PERRY, 0. 0.

MR. L. A. PERRY. F. S.

COURT XiUNALILO NO. 6600. A O. F.Meets every first and third Wednes-day evenings of each month, at 7:30KJ p. id., in Pythian Hall, corner Portand Beretania streets. Visiting broth-ers cordially invited.

T. O. BLiACKWE-- -, o. k.JTAS. K. KAULIA, P. C P. 8,

HONOLULU AESD3 140, T. O. E.Meets on second anas

vlM.3v fourth Wednesday even- -

'ings of each montii, at7:30 o'clock, in Pythian

Hall, eorner Beertania and Fort streets. Visit-ing Eagles are invited to ttend.

, W. L. FRAZEE. W. P.H. T. MOORE, Secyw

HONOLULU HARBOR NO. 64, A. A. Of M.M. ft V.Meets on the first ssunoay

evening of each month, at 7Ml .Jin o'clock, at Udd ueiiows

Hall. All sojourning nrem-re- n

are cordially invited toattend.By order Worthy President,

J. B. SEARLE;FRANK C. POOR, Secy.

THEODORE ROOSEVELTCAMP NO. 1, U.S.W.V.- Meets every first and

third Wednesday of eachmonth in Waverley Hall,comer Bethel and Hotelstreets, at 7:30 p. m.

By order of the CampCommander.

J. K. BROWN, Adjt.

SONS OF ST. GEOROE LODGE NO. S53.

MeeU' every second and fourth Thursdayat K. of P. Hall. Visiting Dtomers coruuuiyinvited to attend. ,

ISAAC uwtuvny w. jr.JOHN RIOHABT)SOW- H-

MARINE ENGINEERS BENEFICIAL ASSO- -

Vot aanond and fourth Mondays of eachmonth at the new K. of P. Hall, corner Fortand Beretania streets.

IS. jtHJUtlfiS, Jrres.H. G. WOOTTEN, Secy.

HAWAIIAN TRIBE NO. 1. O. R. M.Meets every first and tmrdThnrcdav of each month, in K.of P. Hall, corner Fort andBeretania streets. visitingbrothers cordially invited toattend.

A. B. ARLEIGH, Sachem.A. E. MURPHY. C. of R.

HONOLULU LODGE 616, B. P. O. E.kHonolulu Lodge No. 616, BP. O. E., will meet in theiihall. King street near Fort,every Friday evening. By

"order of the E. R.W. H. MclKERNY, E. RH. C. EASTON, Secy.

HONOLULU SCOTTISH THISTLE CLUB.igj. Meets on the first and thirddays, at 8 olock, in roo in

Kfl5"i!v the Oregon Block, entrance on$3kffl Unioa Street.fe J. At. MacKINXON, Chief.

'Mt JOHX MACAULAY, Secy

HAWAII CHAPTER NO. 1, OEDEE OFKAMEHAMEHA.

lt?ts every first and third Thursday even- -

ire i! aoh month at 7:30 o'clock in Fraternity Hall. Odd Fellows' Building, on FortStreet.

N, FERNANDEZ,Kuauhao,

Shoe Stylesof Fort Street are to be found

I. AYAU SHOE CO.Nuuanu near King

The Yokohama Specie

Bank, Limited

ESTABLISHED 1880.

Capital (Paid up) ...".Yen 24,000,000Reserve Fund Yen 15,100,000

HEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.

Branches and Agencies:

Tokio, Kobe, Osaka, Nagasaki, Lonion, Lyons, New York, San Francisco,Bombay, Hongkong, Shanghai, Hankow, Chefoo, Tientsin, Peking, New-ehang- ,

Dalny, Port Arthur, AntungHsien, Liaoyang, Mukden, TienlingChangchun.

The bank buys and receives forcollection ouis or exchange, issuesDrafts and Letters of Credit, andtransacts a general banking business.Honolulu Branch. 67 S. King Street.

START THE

New YearWITH THE RESOLUTION OF

BEING ON TIME WITHEVERYTHING

You can best keep up to thatresolution by having the rightkind of

I

!A CLOCK IWe have an assortment of

them, one of which will surely Iplease you in style and price.- I

:nmm.113 HOTEL STREET J

1908 STYLES--AND

SPRING PATTERNS

KOW TO BE SEEN AT

W. W. ARANA & GO., LTD.

FASHIONABLE TAILORS.

n KING STREET. PHONE 21

FORD; Touring Car, $1185.

SCHUMAN CARRIAGE CO.. LTD.

PUREST AND FRESHEST

CandiesAnd- -

Cakes

THE PALM CAFE

HOTEL, NEAR UNION

Union Electric Co.C9 BERETANIA STREET,

Telephone 315--

aons Wiring - Beilv - Cry CallSpecial attention to installing private

telephones and general repair work.

Send Your SuitTo tk

EAGLE DYEING ANDCLEANING WORKS

Zdcpkose 575. FORT BTSiT.

8

WW

El

YEA n

T ml

A PERENNIAL

IF UCONSOLIDATED SODA

WATER

OFFICE DIARIES;PERFECTION.HANDY andDAILY CALENDAR '

DESK PADS;HAWAIIAN ANNUALS,

FOR 1909At- -

THOS. G. THRUM'SSTATIONERY AND BOOK STORE

1063 FORT STREET

Start in the .NewYear by having allthe untamed pic-tur- es

and photosabout the houseproperly framed at

GURREY'STHE ART AND PHOTO SHOP

932-93- 3 FORT STREET

Miles HotelNE. Comer Jones and O'Farrel Sts.

SAN FRANCISCOHELEN K. NEEDHAM, Prop.

SAM. LACKLAND, Mgr.Entirely new. Eighty-fiv- e rooms,

well-furnishe- d and modern. Suiteand single.

Caters to Hawaiian Island cus-

tom. Poi served daily. Porters atall steamers from Hawaii.

Rates Reasonable

PHONE 583

iiniiiGeneral Contractor

BAGGAGE AND HEAVY HAULING

PLOWING AND GRADINGSUBSOILING A SPECIALTY

180 MERCHANT STREET

Bulbs, Bulbs, Bulbs

Various kinds of Flowering Bulbs.

MRS. E. M. TAYLOR, Florist.

BEAD THE ADVXTKTISER

WOXXX)'? STEW! DAXLT

Page 7: RF.PftRTFn · L;di's developments, that the question lly' throngs the dowiown streets rm appointmeats will be takea to y, conspicuous by its asenee, I to - HlfrWnji-r,-.-MESSINA CATHDBAJU

THE FACuIO COM3EEECIAI ADVEETISEE, HONOLULU, FRIDAY, JANUARY 1, 1909.

i t .

LOCAL BREVITIES.We are grateful to our patrons and the public for their

liberal patronage during1 the Holiday season. Althoughthings literally walked out we can supply all the neces Whitney & Marsh, Ltd. j Jsities that go to make the New Year's table appointments

FOR SALEOur Annual

elegant.

WISH TO START HOUSEKEEPING?Come in and look over our large and complete stock. We

can start you off right.CHINA, GLASSWARE, CUTLERY, KITCHEN

UTENSILS.

The Best and Cheapest in the CityJEWEL STOVES and GURNEY REFRIGERATORS

aie veleLrated for the superiority over all other makes.

W. W. DlfflOND & CO., Ltd.53-5- 7 King Street. of

will begin

atufday

IT'S A MATTER OF TASTEof course, what kind of a suit you'll wear; and a style that

pleases one man may not please another.

Hart SchaffnerJ Marxhave made for us so many different styles, so many good

models, and in so many beautiful fabrics, that really it's the

easiest thing in the world for us to satisfy every requirement.

You ought to see our tflue and black suits; our full dress

and Tuxedo. . :

I This store is the home ofHart, Schaffner & Marx clothes

JANUARY 2nd

he RainSILVA'S TOGGERY

Elks' Building. King Does not interfere with the comfort of the guests at Haleiwa.

There's a warmth in the hospitality of the place which counter-

acts the effect usually produced in wet weather.

'; ST. CLAIR BIDGOOD, Manager.

Ladies' White Canvas3-H- oIe Garden Tic

A very handsome tie with Elucherstays," turn sole, and neat cut.

This i an ideal shoe for eitherstreet wear or dancings

Manufacturing Harness and Saddle MakerREPAIRS to all LEATHER GOODS. Prompt Service. Reason-abl- e

Prices.Collins Building, King." near Fort St. Phone 427

Any person, before givingmoney to alleged Syrian orArmenian'prlests for the bene- -

fit of some unidentified churchin Asia Mhu.r or thereabouts,should inquire of either theRoman Catholic or Episcopa- -

lian Bishop tre as to the an- -

thenticity of the appeal.

Oahu Lodge No. 2, K. of P.. will holda regular meeting in K. of P. Hall at7:30 this evening.

Polynesia Encampment No. 1, I. O.O. P., will meet in Odd Fellows' Hailat 7:30 this evening.

Honolulu Scottish Thistle Club willmeet this evening in its rooms in theOregon block, Union and Hotel streets.

Loyd Childs is planning to reproducethe kamehameha statue in sugar foran exhibition at the Alaska-Yuko- n Ex-

position.New Year's will be oibsei.ed at Ath-erto- n

Hall, of the Midpacifie Institutein Manoa Valley by an old fashionedhookupu.

There will be no rehearsal for theCentral Union choir tonight, this hav-

ing been postponed until the same hourtomorrow night.

The lumber brought by the Alaskanfor the cavalry cantonment at Leilehua,is being discharged and sent out thereas rapidly as possible.

There will be an automobile servicetoday between the end of the street cartrack and the Country Club, commenc-ing at nine o'clock this morning.

Honolulu Lodge 616, B. P. O. E., willhave open house for Elks and theirfriends all day, and in the evening thelodge wi'd hold a regular meeting.

The Civic Circle of the Men'sLeague will hold no meeting beforeJanuary . at which date the study ofthe Municipal Act will be resumed.

W. C. Avhi has retained A. L. C.Atkinson to deft n i him, it is reported,should the Attorney General's depart-ment bring disbarment proceedingsagainst h;m. Deputy LarnaeU is nowlooking up the evidence.

The American-Hawaiia- Paper andSupply Co. is distributing a calendarblotter for January which contains alist of steamers arriving and depart-ing during the mohth. It is a con-venient thing for the desk.

The firemen at the Makiki station,through the columns of the Advertiser,wih to thank the residents of Makikifor cigars and other Christmas remem-brance and D. P. R. Isenberg for apig for a New Year7 luau.

Acting Governor Mott-Smk- h receiveda cablegram from Governor Frear yes-

terday stating that he would leave forthe coast yesterday. He is expected toarrive at Oakland Monday night andwill probably arrive here by theSiberia. Attorney General Hemenway J

is expected to arrive with the Governor.There was much iselody around the

police station 'last night, and as amark of favor to celebrate the eomingof 1909 asd the Cotipietionof anotheryear of time served, ths trusties wereallowed to remain out of their cellsand to sing out the old year. The fourtrusties form an admirable quartet andthe officers on watch and some outsid-ers spent a part f the evening downbelow listening t the music.

James Adley, a first-clas- s private ofthe U. S. Engineers, left the Leilthuacavalry camp Monday morning earlywith his gun to go hunting ia the Wai-ana- e

mountains. Not returning at nightsearch, was instituted for him. H; wasfound about half a mile from the. eamphelpless from injuries received by fall-ing down a precipiee three hundredfeet, due to the trail along the precipicecrumbling under his feet. His in jurieswere so spvere that he was unable tocrawl and suffered intensely fromthirst, becoming deliTions, and finallyunconscious.

EPISCOPAL HEAL ESTATE.The Frotestant Episcopal Church in

Hawaii yesterday made an exchangeof property at Lahaina with the trus-tees of the Bishop Estate. The placeknown as the St. Cross premises",wher? the English sisters started aschool in ltTi, and which had beenused beiore as an American marinehospi'al, was exchanged for the prop-erty tn the leach where Mrs. Bishoplived when a girl and which once be-

longed to the Chief Paki. On thisbeach property the Bishop expects toerect ft house for the Rev. Mr. Kroll.

GEEMAN LTJTHEBAN" CHURCH.January 1, L !, Xew Year's service,

11 o VUck a. m;January 3, 19$, service at 11 o'clock.

Jucer llund at 3 p. m.

Here AreSIX SPECIALS

j For Saturday-

Tht acme cf Economy. ,

Twilled and Huckaback Cot-ton loweling

i Saturday, 5c yd.Borieaux Linen, white and

navy. 20e. quality,Saturday, I-- 2c yd.

LadSs' lisle Thread Hose inBlack, '; White, and Tan, 50e.quality!

ISaturday, 35cCravenette Guaranteed water

proof, 12 and 54-in- ., tan andOxford, 2.50 quality,

Satirday,f$1.90yd.Corset torer Embroidery, 60c

qualltj 40c. yd.Mending Ccttcn, in white, tan,

black and brown. Regularprice, pe. a spool,

Siurd.y, 2 l-- 2c

SACHS'The Place to Shop

OOOC30 PC

NMUNC

Bur a home in theMakiki district.$2300 will buy a newtwo-bedroo- eottage,containing all modernimprovements.

TRENT TRUST CO., Ltd.

I HOLIDAY j

i CHEER j

i You'll find it I

at thei

iPALACE CAFE

Richards and Merchant Sts.i

BUSINESS LOCALS.

Underwear sale at WhitnevMarsh's begins tomorrow. j

Royal Annex for oysters, crabs,frigs' legs and lobsters. See sign. !

The Alexander Young Cafe wishes j

its patrons a very happy Xew Year, j

Try Sun Wo when you want a pieceof jewehy made. Maunakea street, '

above Hotel. j

The Chas. R. Frazier Co., your ad-

vertisers, wish ymi a happy and pros- -

perous New Year., The new steamer time-tabl- e postcardfor the month? of Jan., Feb. and March.19i)9, is out today.

Just imported, fine, fresh, familymilch cows. Also fine bred bulls. ClubStables, Fort street. Telephone 109.

. . j, : 1. . . 1 . . . 1pari Tiertii i 'ikis i.?-t--u tv

include W. R. Castle, D. L. Withing-- j

ton, W. A. Greenwell and A. L. Castle.Wall, Nichols Co., Ltd., have books

of record, books of fiction and books. of history all sorts of books for allsorts of people.

If you think it is rheumatism, or ifa cold has settled in the muscles, sendfor Mr. and Mrs. Hashimoto, the cele-

brated masseurs.Thos. F. MeTighe & Co.. has just re-

ceived a choice selection of wines.liquors and fine old whiskies for New j

Year's trade. Phone 140; P. U. .Box735.

Henry May & Co., Ltd., have alarge, fresh shipment of Centennial'sBest flour in stock. If you have nottried this fine flour before, try it now.Phone 22. .

Sun Lee Tai Co.. King street, be-

tween Xunanu avenue and Smith, arevery reasonable in their charges forarticles in wood. They make them toorder from special designs.

On Monday, January 11, E. W. Jor-dan it 'o. will begin a monster rem-nant sale to clear up the short lengthsand odd lots before stocktaking. Rem-nants of dress goods, silks, chiffons,etc. Many odd lots.

We are reliable and responsiblepiano and furniture movers. We abso-lutely guarantee all our work, and ren-der first-clas- s service in everv wav.Tnion-Pacifi- c Transfer Co., 122-12- 6

King street. Phone 5S.

'Osteopathy is the opposite of alltreatments where drugs are adminis-tered. Dr. Schurmann, whose office isat 224 Emma Square, is very success-ful in treating diseases by this modernmethod, many of his cases being oflong standing.

The A. M. Dietz Jewelry Co. hasrt,-- ..

. . TV.,. o.,,., . tUa AV1 ( ( ' JiUUI I'l b 1 H I 1 I, J UC it V

man's Exchange, on Hotel street, op-

posite Union. A. fine assortment of.Elgin. Walrham and Hamilton watcheswere received too late for Christmasand are now shown.

The L. Ayau Shoe Co., on Nuuannavenue, next to King, has a completeassortment of shoes for men. womenand children. The styles are the sameas those found in the stores on Fortptreet and the prices are said to be ma-terially less. The young men in theestablishment have the knack of dress-ing the windows of the store and dis-playing the stock to good advantage.

A. Blom, Fort street, opposite theCatholic church, advertises today largelines of goods which appeal to womenwho wish to keep their figures trim.Corsets that appear to be moulded tothe form are what Blom is offering to-day. Overall, and romrers for boysare good to have in the house; smallboys thrive when enveloped in gar-ments that do not compel them to sitBp and be good.

A BELIEF FUND CONCEET.Mr. R. Rmlland Bode desires to an-

nounce that, with the approval of theItalian Consul. F. A. Schaefer, Esq.,a concert will be given on Thursdav

Jamsarv 2S, 19t!, in aid ofthe funds for the relief of sufferersin the terrible earthquake in Sicilyand Southern Italy. Names of patrows and particulars of program,which will include Sir FrederickBridge's The Cradle of Chfis,"will be published at an earlv date.

ft

. .

Est. 1891

JO

EMENTr

& CO., ltd.

Street. Phone 651.

Shoe StoreJ

VerandaRooms

With Every ModernConvenience

mawalian HotelFor MEALS

or CAFEELKS WILL GIVE BIG MINSTEEL

SHOW.Once more the Elks are to appear in

the limelight, .and will delight theirhost of friends at the Hawaiian OperaHouse on the nights of February 4thand 6th.

The Elks have secured forty of thebest voices from the KamehamehaSchools for their chorus, and they havebeen rehearsing faithfully for the pastsix weeks on the best ' choruses everarranged for a Honolulu audience.

The end men will have new jokes,and their songs are sure to make a hit.Tom Sharp is busily engaged in paint-ing new local scenery for the big firstpart. Xo expense will be spared instaging the performances instyle.

Coming? Well rather. I am keep-ing those two dates open for a fewhours of fun.

Seats will go on safe, at the Berg-stro-

Music Co., Monday, February1, at 9 a. m.

WILL AID STJTTEEEES.The management of the Art Theater

announces that it will give a matineeon Monday, when the entire receiptswiil le donated througn Consul Schae-fer to the sufferers by the earthquakein Sieilv.

A - bag containing medical instru-ments has been lost. See classifiedads.

AVe are determined to make the year 1909 the biggestA

year in the history of our business, and will offer specialinducements for buyers to come to our store in order tomake the first month of the New Year a Bonanza month.We will give special Reductions in all White Goods in anydepartment; our stock of White Goods is more completethan ever. This is a great chance to save money.

JANUARY ECONOMIC SALE

OF WHITE GOODS

Special Reductions on Everythins White

Muslin Underwear as shown in our windows for thepast week, all White Drtss Goods, Victoria Lawns and

India Linons, Special Values. India Head and LinenWalking Skirts, Towels, Sheetings, White Cottons, Lin-

ens, Table Napkins, Bedspreads, White Blankets, Lacesand Embroideries, Handkerchiefs, White Ribbons, WhiteGloves, White Hosier', Mens' White Shirts, Mens' andWomens' White Shoes. In fact everything

So Long as It's WhiteSPECIAL, Fine White Cambric, 36 inches wide,

worth 12J2C January White Sale Price, 12 yards $1.00.

Mclnerny

TODftY'S HOOKUPU

I MANGA VALLEY

A Xew Year's celebration of a kindpossible only in Hawaii is what isplanned for this afternoon in Hono-

lulu's most beautiful suburb. Manoavalley, in the handsome new buildingof Kawaiahao Seminary, the girls' de-partment of the Mid-Paeifi- c Institute.F'Tom two until six this afternoon thiscity's best will be wending their waytoward Atherton Hall, each laden withsome donation, ranging all the wayfrom a book to a piano, a chicken toa horse (in which case the gift maycarry the giver), a bit of bric-a-bra- e

to a farm wagon, for Kawaiahao is tohave its farm department. It will beone of the experiences of the year toview the collection that will make upthe whole of this unusual hookupu. Ifyou wish to meet your friends todayand have a happy social time, you willgo to this "at home." If you are astranger in town, you will be equallywelcome and will find the music of theBoyal Kawaiahao glee club a rare treat.

The faculty of the seminary and theladies of the trustees will receive. Theentire building will be thrown open toinspection.

. .FINAL EESTJLT

of the votes east in Kerr's sewing-machin- e

contest, Miss Aea being thelucky winnerrMiss Mabel K. Aea... 5S41Mrs. Creedon 4071Miss K. Hargreaves 3172J. Silva 2909Mrs. T. Kieharda 2031Miss A. Hall 1926Mrs. Wright 1634Lena Colburn 1370Mrs. T. P; Harris 1102Annie Akina 873May Rawlins 620S. W. Keleikini 478Thomas Naki 432Gladys Auerbach 417Miss Sheldon 362Mrs. H. Anderso-- n 264T. Xahwihi 157M. J. Curroca . 149

-CAED OF THANKS.

Captain X. C. Xielsen of the DiamondHead Signal Station, wishes to extendhis thanks to all for their kind Christ-mas remembrance.

Stock-takin- g is under full swing atBrown's Book Store. Merchant andAlakea streets. Watch for their bar-gain sale next week.

VE ARE GOING TO MAKE IT WORTH YOURWHILE TO SHOP ON ALAKEA STREET.

Start the New Year Right. SaveMoney. Come to Our

Store

Sale Begins Monday, January 4th

L. B. KERR

DOCTDOCZDOOODOC

Page 8: RF.PftRTFn · L;di's developments, that the question lly' throngs the dowiown streets rm appointmeats will be takea to y, conspicuous by its asenee, I to - HlfrWnji-r,-.-MESSINA CATHDBAJU

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISES, HONOLULU, FRIDAY, JANUARY 1, 1909.8

HONOLULU STOCK EXCHANGECanadian-Australia- n Royal Mail Line8teamert rousing in eonneetioa with the Canadian Paeifle Railway Co.

sH at Houolalu on or about the fol lowing dates:

Honolulu, Thursday, Dec. 31, 190.8.

HlUlltlTO APPEAR FOR ISO! NAME OF STUCK. Paid Cp. '!.! Bii. AskFOR FIJI AND AUSTRALIA. I FOB TANCOUVER.

Halstead & Co., Ltd.

STOCK AND BOND

BROKERSMKRCA VTM V

AORANGIMOAVA ,,MAKURA

...JANUARYFEBBTIARY.... MARCH

C. Brevsvr & c.lfAKURA JANUARY 8XORANOI FEBRUARYMOAN A , MARCH 5

' 'Will U at Fanning island.$2 000,010 1100 2j0

MXFor went 3j 6

20; 35iuo' '

EwaHaw. AgriculturalHaw Com Si i.gnr hHa Sugur oHononiu ,..Honokaa

THEO. H. DAVIES & CO., LTD.,GENERAL AGENTS.

1 iX.f 02 312.765

2m '.ooij500, oo

i .... LOANS NEGOTIATES

In the Isoi investigation, which hasalready led up to the fact that thewomen of Iwilei paid twelve dollarsapiece for the promise of immunityfrom someone during fleet week, fourmore warrants were issued yesterdayfor arrests in connection with the mat-ter. It is expected that within a fewdays, evidence concerning the, wholematter will be discovered. If it is,there will be an investigation byeither the Federal or Territorial grand

Memberso

IlliIKUHtitctiiDt-o- (sag t"uT

Kah uku.."."l".".!!"Kefc-h- a S .gar ii'.'. TKoioa

HonolTiln StockExchatugt23.$50.00

vo!100100

Oceanic Steamship Co. Time Table! Ob' and latter June 24, 1908, the SALOON BATES will be: Single Fare,

'JC$; Sound Trip, $110. Family rooms extra.i FBdM !

SAN FRANCISCO. FOR SAN FRANCISCO.

MoBrv.le t.mr rV.V20

161 '

2TK

Nuuanu Avenue . .

Nuuanu Avenue . .

Sehool Street

2.000.0X)iMm.uooi8X3.CKX)i

500.000S.AOO.r.0:V 00.000l.ooo.ooo!

500 OiK).54)00 OuOi

5,0 O Oi1

20 2720

Oahu Sugar Co.........Oirnmea. " ""--Ookala ;Olaa Sugar Co Ud'"' 20 IS

. 35.00

. 40.00

. 22.50

, JANUARY 20FEBRUARY 10

20'ALAMEDAALAMEDA.

JANUARY 15FEBRUARY 5 uiowalu

ALAMEDAALAMEDAALAMEDA -

lOV'soQuarry StreetFEBRUARY 26

i'Hauhau sug Plan . tiPacific .. . ..Pala loc 100

FOR SALE.Fine large lot (100 feet frontage)

with cottage, on Young street $150o!A good home, Ewa side of Kameha-meh- a

Boys' Sehool. $1500. Easy terms.A fine two-stor- y building and gooa-size- d

lot on car-lin- e at Palama. $1000down; balance in rental of $30 permonth.,.Nnew ottage and lot at Palama.$1550.

For Rent: Nice fi i--

.1001100!fepeekeo25.00Kinau Street . ....

5"J0.0.!750 0QC1

750.0D02,750.00i!4.500.0O:l,5ti0.000

Pioneer 135100100 7HWaialua Agri Co

Wailuku .Lunalilo Street (furnished) .... . 40.00 100Waiir.aualoWaimea Suear Mill'""

l'JO!loo.

252.000)125.000;10.00 MlSCELI.tNlInl aAlapai Street

t connection with the sailings of the shore steamers, the agents areCfivsucd'to issue, to intending passengers, Coupon Through Tickets by any

railroad, from, San . Franeisco to all points in the United States, and fromNew York by any steamship line to all European porta. '

Fr farther particulars apply toWM. G. IRWIN & CO., LTD.,

v . .... ,. AGENTS.

Inter-Islan- d 8 S ;o ... 1.50',0000

100!l00Hw hiectric Co ..

?ni,n-li!!-B-

Eental $17 per mo.i, T l co Pfd.flKTl Co Com.

jury. The present investigation is be-

ing directed in particular against aconspiracy to! import women for im-

moral purposes. The discovery of thetwelve-dolla- r club was a find of an-other class of offenses.

Isoi and his wife, Chise, are hav-ing difficulty in securing both lawyersand bail. The other day their case inthe Federal Court was continued togive them an opportunity to securecounsel, but so far they have not beenable to do so. Whether it is becausethey are not able to pay counsel ornot, is not known. Charles F. th

was their counsel, but he

l.l5f,0CO xi. BUiijNACK, 137 Merchant Streetloo10

100150 0001

60.0001

Mutual Tel CoNahiku Rubber V'o..".Nithlku Rubber Vo ,O R A I. Co

A ssess 130 FOR SALE,Galvanized sheet sti .v- - .

Uo100!1002u

4.000.0001.000,000HUO K Rio...IFoif Honolulu Brewing 4

PACIFIC MAIL S. S. CO., OCCIDENTAL & ORIENTALS. S. CO-- AND TOYO KISEN KAISHA.

Steamers of the above companies will call at Honolulu and leave thi

15"

2024

lights, gutter, ridging, leader and Jmalting Co LtdHaw Pineapple Co."...

400.000400,000

201

2C AU v Bnape, any size. tnT ..vBondsfMOt ow or about the dates mentioned; below: standing In stock or to order. Bibbed or f ra.proof wire skylight glass. Estimates a--FOB SAN FBANC1SCO. Two fine bargains in Makiki DisHaw Ter 4 p c (Fire

Ciaims)..Haw Ter 4 p c (Ke--

has withdrawn.FOB THE ORIENT.NIPPON M ABU. JANUARY 9 315,000' aujriuiug in our line.CHINA ............... JANUARY 2

MANCHURIA ........ JANUARY 9CHIYU MARU ........ JANUARY 16

800,100:trict at ......$2650 and $1800 Job work in sheet metals solicited, '

EMMELTJTH & CO-- LTD. JANUARY 15

JANUARY 23SIBERIACHINA , .

vanaip? 1905 .Haw Ter4Ji pc...Haw Ter t p cHaw Ter 8'4 p cCal Beet Sug & KeJ

1.000,0001.000,0001 044,000

TEACHERS' APPOINTMENTS.Superintendent of Public InstructionH. HACKFELD & CO., LTD., Agents.

following t;o e p cHaiku 8 D C

Babbitt has announced theteaching appointments:

1,000,000225.0001

200,000Hamakua D'tch :o

Upper Hitch 6 n c.... Albert F. Afong832 FORT SEEET '

"WATERHOUSE TRUST"Miss Gertrude Topham and Miss

AMERICAN-HAWAIIA- N STEAMSHIP COMPANY.T2.Q1S NEW TORE TO HONOLULU. WEEKLY SAILINGS VIA

M V.. , TEHOANTEFEO. J.V ;'

Freight received at all times at the Company's wharf, 41st Street, South

Maw uom & sugarCo 5 p c

Haw sugar 6 pl.ftfl.CO',Myrtle Hodge go to Waimea, Kauai,

to replace Miss Rose Aea and Rowena FORT AND MERCHANT STREETS ano itticJisnc ... 95l.o.oooSno.ooo J J jsHonokaa Sug tic 6 p c

&2

101

100

Elston, who retire on account of illhealth. . , en.oiTotton el r M Li (jo o p c.

Kahuku 6 p c...Mcitryde Sue Co 6 d'c

15,0tW2,000,000 P4Miss Dorothy Whittington takes the

plaee of Miss Kapuniai at Kekaha 101 HOR4I. w 6 p c .......Oabu Sugar Co 5 p c... 90 000

STOCK AND BOND BROKER

Member. Honolcla 8tockad Bond Xzchaasjs

school. uiaa ugar uo B p c...1009?

01

1,250 0001

450.0001Miss Elizabeth Dow is transferred

from Kapaau, Hawaii, to Hanalei,

FROM PUG.ET SOUND TO HONO- -

LULU DIRECT.

PLEIADES to sail ......... .JAN. 1

For further information apply toH. HACKFELD & CO., LTD.,

J ? Agents, Honolulu.t

- C. P. MORSE,- General Freight Agent.;

FROM SAN FRANCISCO TO HONO- -

.',-- ' LULU.TEXAN to sail . . .DEC. 24VIRGINIAN to soul ..... JAN. 3

FROM HONOLULU TO SAN FRAN-CISCO.

PLEIADES to sail . . . . . , . .JAN. 13

Freight received at Company's wharf,Greenwich 8treet.

rauinc sugar MmCo 6 8

Paia 6 p c ,Pioneer Mill r.6 d cWaialua Ag; Co 5 p c..

lCv--

Kauai. 8i.5)1.250,0001.&X.000 si" loo

' Miss Catherine Porter is appointedto Kapaau.

Miss Anna Sorenson takes her oldposition at the Royal School.

Miss Adkinson, who has been substituting at the Royal,-- goes to the Pohukaina. '

J SEND A j

WIRELESS

1 Whether it is a businessV message, or one that is per- - Jt sonalf the Wireless will fill I) the bill.

! RATES ARE LOW i

23.125 paid. t39 per cent. paid.Session Sales.

None. .'

Between Boards.None.

Divideuds-Decembe- r 31.

MATSON NAVIGATION CO.Schedule 8. S. HILONIAN, in the direct service between San Francisco

"

and Honolulu; v Miss Clara Simpson takes the placeot an uncertificated teacher at Paia. C. Brewer. & Co., 2 per cent.: Ewa,Mrs. A. V. Crockett takes the place 1 per cent.; Waimanalo, 2 1-- 2 per

cent.; liaw. Juectric, 3-- 4 per cenor jvir. lee Kui, who leaves on account of at Spreckelsville. Olowaiu, 1 per cent.; Hon. B. & , M.

Leave Honolulu.

JANUARY 26FEBRUARY 23MARCH 23APRIL 20MAY 18JUNE 15

Arrive Honolulu.

JANUARY 20FEBRUARY 17MARCH 17APRIL 14MAY 12JUNE 9

Real EstateFOR RENT.

Pineapple, banana or vegetable land taPalolo foothills carriage road jutcompleted to this tract.

Office desk and floor space.FOR SALE iy2 acres residence slta.

W. L. HOWABDBoom 3, Mclntyre Eolldlmg

HAWAIIAN DEVELOPMENT C0.

LIMITED

F. B. McSTOCKEB - - ManagerSTAN.pENWALD BUILDING

Cable Address: DevelopP. O. Box 263

Co., 1-- 2 per cent.; I.-- I. S. N. Co., 3-- 4

per cent.; Kahuku, 1 per cent.; Haw.

Miss Ellen Copp resumes her placeat Kealahou.

Manuel Carvalho takes the placeofRoss Hall , at Keokea. . ,

Ag. Co., 1 per cent.; Haw. Pineappleuo., 1 per cent.; Hon. K. T. & i,. CoPfd. (semiannual), 3 per cent: Hon.

AFFINITIES OFFICIALLY RECOG- - R. T. & L. Co. Com. (quarterly),per centit

I fL 8. LURLINE of this line sails 'from San Francisco January 5 forHonolulu direct. .

PaMeneer Rates to San Francisco First Cabin, $60. Round Trip, FirstOast, $110? v CASTLE k COOrTE. LTD., Agents.

December Sales... .NIZEP. -- :.r

The indictment under the EdmundsAct against Joe Kalan and EmmelinePorter was nol prossed yesterday in

708 Ewa, 26.125 to 26.75; 47 Haw.Com. & Sug. Co., 99; 15 Haw. Sug,Co., 35.50; 200 Honokaa, 13.75; 127

.McBryde, 3.50; 2586 Oahu, 27 toOnion-Pacif- ic the United States District Court, "di-vorce- s

having been obtained now andthe couple being thus enabled to wed.

28.25; 5 Ookala, 13; 325 Olaa, 4.50 toBAGGAGE, SHPINO,STORAGE, WOOD, ;

PACKING, GOAL.4.875; 440,Paauhau, 19.50 to 20; 60

Phone

58Transfer Co.! Ltd. Pioneer, 13.9 to 140; 205 Waialua, 73to 76.25: 35" Waimej, 50; 5 Hilo R. R.

In the course of the hearing yesterdayJudge Dole, said: Some people marry

Co., 14; 120 Hon. B. & M. Co., 20; 225under a oiistaKe ana hnd their alnni- -

FURNITURE AND PIANO MOVING. Haw, Pineapple Co.- - 23; $65,000 Hilois5 KING ST. ties afterwards. They are carried awayR. R. Con. 6s. 85 to 92.50; $3000 H.by their feelings. This is not a real

defeet of character it is a mere de B.-.T- & L. Co. 6s, 106.50 to 107; $11,- -

000 O. L. & L. Co. 6s. 101.25 to 102;fect of will power..'; . ..".Pbooc 295. : - v 63 Queen Street.

The Burroughs Adder

will do everything any other ma-

chine will do, and more.

SENT ON THIRTY DAYS TRIAL

The Waterhouse Co.JTJDD BUILDING

$4000 Olaa 6s, 97 to 97."0; $500 Paia6s, 101; $10,500 Waiahm 5s, 100.

2: MARINE REPORT, f 1ft RENT TRUST CO., Ltd. Professional Cards; : ;hustace-pec- k company, ltd.,

''a-- ' ,:s ."!'' fi''.' t General Contractors.: :.'r-- :'-.

Dealers in Crushed Rock, White arid Black Sand, FireWood, Stove and Steam Coal, Blacksmith Coal, Hay, Grain,Garden Soil and Manure.

(5 5 5 5 i5 tS 8

CHINA PAINTING.MRS. J. L1SHMAN MORE Classes in

(From San Francisco Merchants Exchange.)

Thursday, December 31.Draying and Heavy Teaming a Specialty. china painting. Orders solicitedStudio, Harrison block. Telephone1346. i 7968Iquiqne Sailed, December 30, Am TO LETbkt. T. P. Emigh, for Honolulu.

' r

ft

I

iNagasaki Sailed, December 21, UClassified AdvertisementsS. A. T. Sheridan, for Honolulu.

PORT OF HONOLULU. in iiTHE k ABBrVED.Thursday, December 31.

WAIALAE HEIGHTS(On the ridge, Kaimuki.)

LOTS 75x15012,250 SQUAREFEET

Streets curbed and macadamized.Lots free of rock, clean, deep

soil, ready for building.Electric lights and telephones.

Magnificent Marine View

W. M. MINTON,(Owner)

No Agents. - 122 S. KING ST.

Wilder Ave. ...... 4 B.R. $18.00Kaili Ave. ....... 2 " 18.00Young St 2 " 20.00

Alder St. ........ 2 " 20.00Pacific H'ts Rd. .. 2 " 22.00

Middle St. ...... 1 3 " 22.00

Kapiolani Park ... 4 " 25.00

Hackfeld St. . 2 " 27.50

Beretania St. 3 " '35.00Beretania St. .... 3 ' 40.00

Br. S. S. Glendevon, Ellis, fromioo carpenters wanted at Leile- -Newcastle, 4 p. m.

DUE TODAY.Str. Mauna Loa from Kona and Kau

nua. Must bring tools and bed-din- g.

: ;

WANTED.IIM W

poffts, a. m.Str. Mauna Kea, Freeman, from Hilo

and way ports, a. m CAPABLE dry goods salesman; oneWe arc getting the business is because We Do Things Right andgive all orders our personal attention. A.-T- I. S. S. Texan, from San Fran with experience of Island traveling

preferred. Apply X. L.. Adverfiser.8235

FURNISHEDCisco, may arrive.SAIL TODAY.

Str. Kinau for Kauai ports, 5DUE TOMOEBOW.

Classified Advertisementsp. mCITY TRANSFER CO. ONE 500-vo- lt D. C. motor; one 110- -PHONE 152 Kaimuki 2 B.R. $45.00 $gr-- Cash must accompany ttevolt H C. motor. P. O. Box (23.

8034 'P. M. S. S. China, Friele, from Yoko copy, no deviation rrom tnw rnie.JAS. H. LOVE hama, a. m.

MOVING-PICTUR- E machine in goodSAIL TOMOEBOW. EMPLOYMENT AGENCY.RENT TRUST CO., Ltd. MALE and female supplied promptly.P. M. S. S. China, Friele, for San condition. Sta'-- j price and make.

M. Palau, Advertise? office. 8234 Any work; llzi Union bt., phone579. 8219

A LADY typewriter and stenographer

Francisco, about o p. m.

vessels rsr poet.(Army and Navy.)

Iroquois, TJ. S. station tug, Moses.

Why Not Ring Up 298(Somes Express Ob.

with knowledge of general officework. Address, stating experienceand salary required, "C. B.'', Ad-

vertiser oftice. 8233

OFFICES FOR RENT.'THE STANUENWALD" Only fire-

proof office building in city.Dix, IT. S. Army transport, Ankers.

(Merchant Vessels.)Alaskan, am. s.s., San Francisco, Dec,Office 716 Fort Street.

FURNISHED or unfurnished tottageor housekeeping rooms. II. Mirtinez.care of Advertiser. 313

SERVANTS.ALL kinds furnished on short notice.

Employment Office, King and Wai-ki- ki

Road; phone 442. S. Yanagawa.8228Mmw

30.Glendevon, Br. s.s.,

Dec. 31.Helene, Am. schr.,

Harbor, Dec. 7.Irmgard, Am. bktn.,

Ellis, Newcastle,

Johnson, Grays

Christiansen, SanSEWING WANTED.

WILL go out by the day. MrsjSeiheTaylor, 2566 Lertin road, aiKisi.

IWulu Construction and Draying Co., Ltd.

GENERAL CONTRACTORS.Phsae Office 281.. P. O. Box 154.

'..- - Fort SWOpp. W. G. Irwin & Co., Ltd.

re 3d all kinds of Teaming; also deal in Crushed Rock, Whiteand Black Sand, Broken Coral, Garden Soil, Etc

SAFE MOVING A SPECIALTY.

Francisco, Dee. 2a.Mathilda, Nor. s.s.,

castle, Dec. 22.Kjerland, New--

FREE SEATS FOR KALIHI HOMEROOMS AND BOARD.

THE COURTLAND is a high-clas- s pri-

vate hotel at reasonable rates, lo-

cated at the corner of Punahou andBeretania streets.

Nuuanu, Am. bk., Josselyn, New York, CHILDREN. EXPERIENCED embroiderer snd sew-m- ri

TTinta work at home. 1398211R. K. Bonine has set apart a section "ts

Beretania avenue.of the' seats in the Opera House for

Dec. 14.St. Katherine, Am. bk., Saunders, San

Francisco, Dec. 9.Wm. P. Frye, Am. sp., Murphy, San

Francisco, Dec. 25.TBANSPOBT SEBVICE.

ROOMS TO RENT.cnoT. and commodious; well furnish- -his moving picture exhibition this af FOR RENT. ;

rnTTiiTPS with board. Mrs J. CasHANDLED WITHOUT DAMAGE " Helen's Court,ternoon for the use of the children ofthe Kalihi home. These little wards onntt Kalia. Road. Waikki. 8133 ed; mosqulto-pro- ot

1124 Adams Lane.D1UJ A.vvru j. -

Buford, sailed from Hon. for Manila, of the Territory have very few opporam SIX-ROO- house, Lunalilo, iear Pen-.i- .

iojtric lights moderntunities for pleasure and the movingpictures will doubtless be a great treatto them.

1

Dec. lo.Crook, at San Francisco.Dbc, in port.Sherman at San .Francisco.

MCUiaj fs; 'f c -

vacant JaiuaryLOST.

ONE bag containing medical instru-

ments. Reward for its recovery at70 Beretania str?et; telephone 481.

8236

8226

FUENITTJRE CAEEFULLT MOVED

',. - -- And

SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

Apply 1337 Pensacola.Sheridan, sailed from Manila for Hon,

Phone 316KIEPER via Nagasaki, Dec. 14. NICE, airy m.-.s-V- of rwrns. Ho-

tel nelmonico. ReDt reasab.e. X8080Thomas, at San Francisco.

THE MAILS. H. . O'Neil. prop. A SMALL, white, fiat bottom skiff.Finder notify or return to H. M. vonHolt. Waikiki. 8223$25 Reward Mails ate due from the following ALEXANDER YOUG BlJLDING

Honolulu's only iip- - dati fire-pro- f

LONGBOAT TO JOIN CHURCH.

TORONTO, Ontario, December 20

Tom Longboat, the Canadian long-distanc- e

runner, who defeated Dorando inNew York, will oe received into thechurch here tomorrow. He is now whatis known as a pagan Indian. His mar-

riage to Miss Maracle of the MohawkIndian reserve-i- s to take place on theplatform of Massey hall Monday, De-

cember 28, at the close of a benefit per

points as follows:San Francisco Per Texan, tomorrow.Yokohama Per China, tomorrow. ,

building; rent includes eicmc ujjm..i, ta o.A water, and lanitor ser

Annlv th; vou Himm-Youn- f

THE PACTFIO

Commercial AdvertiserCctarad at the Postoffiee at Honolulu,

T. IL as aeeond-elas- s matter.SUBSCRIPTION BATES.

On jr i W2.00jivTting Bates on Application.

f(kifeed every morning exceptfhutdar 7' the. ':

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE CX)., LTD.3Tn Holt Block, No. 5 South King St.

C. m. CRANE 1 1 Manages

STEIN WAY & SONSAND OTHER PIANOS.

THAYER PIANO CO.Co., Ltd.

FOR SALE.

WV0. be paid by the HAWAIIAN GA

JETTE CO., LTD., for the arrest andwnrietion ot any person found stealingtopics ot the Advertiser from ad(rents of subscribers.

C. S. CBANE,Manager.

IKS Hotel Street. Phone tit

Vancouver Per Makura, Jan. $.Colonies Per Aorangi, Jan. 6.

Maiis will depart tor the followingonfTITa as follows:San Francisco Per China, tomorrow.Yokohama Per Nippon Maru, Jan. 9.Vancouver Per Aorangi, Jan.. 6. . ,Colonies Per Makura, Jan. 8.,.'.(,. ;, .'V.r

formance. Longboat's Inruan name is InGARDEN soil and en poral.TUNING CUARANTEBD. '

quire Fred Harrison, Beietama andr. meaning " everything.' 7 anaithat of his intended bride is Ka-hon- -

do-so- meaning "the leader." Fort.

--1

i ?

Page 9: RF.PftRTFn · L;di's developments, that the question lly' throngs the dowiown streets rm appointmeats will be takea to y, conspicuous by its asenee, I to - HlfrWnji-r,-.-MESSINA CATHDBAJU

rir r r r r r r-- nj; SECOND SECTION 2 inweirii 'LI S'

t SECOND SECTION

?t. PAGES 9 12.

1J ! PAGES TO 11

J ..1 ,l i j Jif jj i

ESTABLISHED JULY 2, 135C

HONOLULU, HAWAII TEBRITORY, FRIDAY, JANUARY 1, 1909.

0CZ30Cto get Mr. Fairbanks into the cabinet.Indiana n with Republican f ac-- 1

tional fights, and the Democrats will!

have him, if that one will consent toserve. He has had the name of Senator '

Philander Chase Knox, of Pennsylva- - j

ma. under sorious consideration and!GETTING UP

JjSBIETHow the Claims of Localities

Affect the President'sChoice.

utomobilis

Afo MoreS4P

Standard Tire Protectors

ContinentalOld Style straight Ken-

tucky Bourbon Continentalwas the favorite of theSouthern gentry of "Be-foa- h

the war" period. "Agood, honest, friendly old

' 'whiskey.

W.C. Peacock & Co.,

LIMITED.

Merchant StSole Agents.

They take all the hard knocks, stone or glass cuts andbruises that a tire tread is constantlv subieet to.the tire in its original strength, thus eliminating the dangerof the blow-ou-t, the "bug-bear- " to the automobilist.

When once in place it positively cannot crtep or come off.It adds to the resiliency of the tire. It actually saves morethan half the tire expense.

A number of sets of these protectors are in constant usehere, and are giving entire satisfaction.

)OC 30C

fintinnVII1IWII

Tire Trouble n

o

o

0

0and prices, see

C DOC

TO HAVE YOUR ORDER

OR DELICATESSEN OR

HEAT CO., LTD.

Phone 45.

For further information

HUSTACE, PECK CO., LTD.

soon be m complete control of the!State. They will have the Governor,most of the State officers and onebranch of the Legislature. It is rec-ognized that there must be a big read-justment in Indiana before-th- e Repub-lican- s

can hope to win there again.The Governor is elected for four years,but two years from now members ofCongress and a Legislature will beeleeted, and the Legislature will havethe eboice of a United States Senatorto succeed Mr. Beveridge. Unless apeace can be arranged between the '

Fairbanks and Beveridge factions it is !

thought the State will go Democratic)ci.n r i i. i

identified with the Taft administrationas Secretary of State, it might helpspeed Indiana back into line.

But the new President has his cab-- 1

met problem with reference to Ohio.There are two factions in his homeState, although only Senator Forakerof the defeated faction is pressing forany offiee and he is pressing simplyfor a reelection to the Senate. Twoor three cabinet aspirants in Ohio com- -

say nothing of the rush for election tothe Senate. Mr. Taft has said, how-ever, that he will take no part in thesenatorial fray, although making nosecret of the fact that he would liketo see his brother,Charles P. Taft, win the toga. If ftisbrother should be elected Senator itwould be all the more difficult for himto name more than one member of thecabinet from Ohio. He has beenthinking strongly about giving Repre-senta- ti

ve Theodore E. Burton a place athis council table, but if he should de-cide finally to do that, he would beconfronted with the problem whetherto retain Secretary of the InteriorGarfield. For Secretary Garfield, likeMr. Burton, not only comes from Ohio,but from the city of Cleveland.

West Wants Interior Portfolio.Then, again, the West, particularly

the Far West, has a traditional claimto the Interior portfolio, because thatdepartment has to do chiefly with mat-ters that interest Far Western people,and if he should decide to keep Secre-tary Garfield in the cabinet it mightbecome a question whether to retainhim as Secretary of the Interior ormove him over to the Department ofCommerce and Labor, where Mr. Gar-field has served as Commissioner ofCorporations, so that the . West couldhave one of its men at the head of theInterior. Mr. Taft has already toldthe Pacific Coast Republicans that herecognizes their claim to a place in hiscabinet. In , recent times Californiahas had the Pacific Coast member, butMr. Taft has indicated that it may be

(Continued on Page Twelve.) ..

some think Mr. Knox may finally bthe man. Mr. Taft has high respectfor Mr. Knox's ability. The latter, itis true, has had high cabinet honorsbecause of his distinguished incum-- ;bency as Attorney General during por-tions of the McKinley and Eooseveltadministrations. As a rule senators donot eare to resign their places to enterthe cabinet. They reason that a sen-ator is quite as high in the official scaleas a cabinet officer. Then the Senatehas to confirm the nominations for cabi-net offices and senators argue that j&sthey have a hand in creating cabinetofficers they eertainly must be quiteas important as the officials they make.

But Senator Knox had always beena busy man. , All his mature life hehas had a prominent part in affairs.In the Senate there is comparativelylittle to . do that interests him. TheSenate, as many a busy man has found,becomes irksome and at times SenatorKnox wishes he were put of it for goodand engaged in practising law or atSome, other active occupation. Andtherefore some of Senator Knox's clos-est friends would not be surprised ifhe accept the premiership, should it beoffered him. There are numerous lead-ers in the Senate, who are senio tohim in service, which means he mustwait quite a while before he becomesone of the foremost men of action inthat body.

It has long been a custom for a newPresident to take one of his rivals forthe nomination into the cabinet andmake him Secretary of State, just asit has been the eustom for the Suc-cessful candidate for Speaker of thaHouse to give his leading rival theroost important chairmanship of aHouse Committee. That is a consideration to which Mr. Taft is giving weightand is one of the reasons for his con- -

sidering Mr. Knox, for Secretary ofState. Mr. Knox was not his leadingrival for the nomination but was veryclose to it with the solid state of Pennsylvania behind him.

Seasons for Naming Fairbanks.Vice President Fairbanks had more

votes from more States for the nomi-nation, in which connection it shouldbe noted that Mr. Taft has thoughtof him for Secretary of State and hassaid that it might come about thatMr. Fairbanks would be offered theplace. The Vice President is givinglittle, if any, thought to such ancome, but is making his plans to re-

turn to private life and take up thepractise of law at Indianapolis. How-ever, he likes Washington official lifeand would be attracted by a profferof the highest cabinet place under thenew President.- y

From the political standpoint itmight be a good move for Mr, Taft

By Ernest G. Walker.(Mail Special to the Advertiser.)

WASHINGTON, D. C, Dec 14. Fouror five of the larger states are figuring

prominently in President-elec- t Taft 's

calculations regarding his cabinet. Hewants to distribute the prizes aroundas much as possible. He ia not dis-

regarding location as much as Pres-ident Eoosevelt has. The latter did nothesitate for a moment about takingthree of his cabinet of nine from NewYork State, provided they were menhe wanted. So it is that now Secre-

taries Root, Cortelyou and Straus areall New York men and all from thesouthern end of the state. He did nothesitate to have two men at one timein his cabinet from Iowa SecretariesShaw and Wilson nor two from Ohio

Secretaries Taft and Garfield.In the same way Mr. Eoosevelt was

entirely willing to nominate two jus-

tices of the Supreme Court of the Uni-

ted States from Massachusetts, 'al-

though he hesitated for a while aboutthat.

The President-elec- t not only wantsto distribute his cabinet appointmentsso that all sections of the country willbe represented but he has decided toproceed slowly about making his seleetions. "I am open to suggestions" hehas said time and again in recent weeksto those who were talking with himabout his prospective advisers. And ashe has invited, suggestions, the namesof persons suggested to him have oftenappeared in the newspapers as prospec-tive appointees when their cases hadnever gotten that far in his estimation.

Knox as Secretary of State.He wants first of all to find a cap-

able Secretary of State and . is stillcanvassing the field for one. He wantsthe best man obtainable and means to

OCZDOC 30

WE WILL BE PLEASED

FOR MEATS, POULTRY

FRUITS.

METROPOLITAN

1909

r DIARIES

Handsomely bound in eloth

and leather, for pocket or desk.

MEMO CALENDAR FADSIn all sizes.

OAT & MOSSMAN

78 MEBCHANT STEEETNear Postoface

JFresh Milch Cows

AND IMPORTED BULLS

Club StablesTelephone 109

31EAD THE ADVERTISES" WOXLD'H STEWS DATLT

cfflocrrro rococroc.v::oczzDocroc7rro or... )opoc3oc...joc,3ocz3oc3o

1If IB Lyworth the making is a resolution to make more money the coming year than any other year before. We can help you out. Next NewYear you'll find you have delivered the goods if you hook up righ t now with a bunch of "Mayflower" at 25 Cents. That's the lowest

price the stock will ever see. It's dollar stock selling today at a quarter per, to get acquainted. It will advance to a dollar soon, andmore too, because it's worth the money. We state our deliberate conviction that it will be worth well over the dollar mark before thedawn of next New Year, and on its merits as a dividend payer. BUY "MAYFLOWER" STOCK. BUY IT NOW!

If you don't buy now, you'll be keeping company, pretty soon, with keen regrets. Butt in at the low price, for the stock will soon

take a walk forward. Money is crystalized labor. Every spare dollar a man has ought to be at work for him hard. If you have'ntmany spare dollars it's all the more reason why you should place them where they will work as hard and as fast for you as ever possible.

And there is no speedier way to get a start on the road to competency, if not affluence, than buying into jeal, genuine mining stock atthe first price. You will make in the advance on the stock, and you will get returns from "Mayflower" before another New Year.

BUY "MAYFLOWER" STOCK. BUY IT NOW.You may think I talk pretty proudly, and you are not in error. But there is nothing in the world I am so confident about as the

success, and the spectacular success, of the "Mayflower" Mine. If you knew as much about it as I do you would be convinced tothe last degree that I am justified in my confidence. Where even the remotest chance of failure exists, I cannot see, in a proven gold

property, with a splendid plant on the ground, every facility for economical mining, and all under the masterly management of one of

the ablest "Captains of Mining" in the United States. Call for' our prospectus. Every statement therein is guaranteed straight truth,with no exaggeration or amplification. We're handing you out no Fancy Stories. We only desire to shoot the facts into you. I'mmaking a noise this New Year which wUl echo in dividends next New Year. The quicker you get in, the cheaper you'll get in on the

best and safest mining stock that ever came up the pike. Get busy and buy! BUY "MAYFLOWER" STOCK. BUY IT NOW!

CALL OR WRITE FOR A PROSPECTUS. YOURS FOR THE ASKING.

o

ISop

o

U

80 n

Per o

Cent 5

Per 1

Annum n

o

o

I3

80

PerCent

Per

Annum

M VAN DOW, Fiscal Agent "Mayflower" Mine

Office, Suite 51 & 52 Alexander Young BIdgGEO. M. SHAW,Agent

HILO, HAWAII

2p iniil"j o LI, nu j CJD O CZZD

Page 10: RF.PftRTFn · L;di's developments, that the question lly' throngs the dowiown streets rm appointmeats will be takea to y, conspicuous by its asenee, I to - HlfrWnji-r,-.-MESSINA CATHDBAJU

a a

TO 1KB PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVESTISEB, HONOLULU, FEIDAy, JANUARY 1, 1909.

i t'ffi-- t ' " """" - w11 ..u .tLM.-.ua,- . . , --- tLIZZZ. H r-- ,i mna

i

!'' pl. .

- '

r;l t

I ff(Wlu m ei) (si) i!9 y ii o iyj fill li

1 If rightly done, it will bring many new del--I

, Jars into', you? 'business this new year.I ;: Let us help you. We understand adver--I- ii tising from. A to Z. : a

if'

:

' ' '

I life Sell Newspaper Space.life Sell Bill-Boa- rd Space.

life llfrite and Plan Advertising.

".'V

vi

7

We are thoroughly equipped with all the modernadvertising facilities; such as cuts, borders and designs tomake ads attractive and readable. We study to bringout in the most forcible way the points that will interestthe public; and boiled-dow- n, reason-wh- y copy is the onlykind that will convince.

Advertisers upon our list are sure of a weekly orsemi-week- ly change. We call upon them, get the pointsof the ad, and "write it up." We knOW type, andselect just the kind we want used in the ads.

Let us make you a proposition.

f

fc4

ii

UUuuVlLl Quo

DOC DOCoc 30oc

FrhYOUR ADVERTISERS -

Iin.r

J

Page 11: RF.PftRTFn · L;di's developments, that the question lly' throngs the dowiown streets rm appointmeats will be takea to y, conspicuous by its asenee, I to - HlfrWnji-r,-.-MESSINA CATHDBAJU

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISES, HONOLULU, FRIDAY, JANUARY 1, 1909.11

PKODTJCTa or

Love's BakeryWilliam O. Smith

Trust Department

Cxtatea Managed. Eevennei Collect,Loam mi Investments Made.

" Fire Insurance1XNT FOB ENGL1SH-- A MEBICAlv

Sergeant, B. X. Kahalepuna; ReceivingStation Clerk, A. K. Xawahi; BievcleOfficers. Samuel II. Kaahu, D. II.

Patrolmen, James Paikai.John S. Kauhaihao. Hose Peter, S. L.Leialoha. Geo. 11. Kilia, Wm. Spencer;Turnkey, Sara Kaloa.

" t'THE GEM THEATER.

Whatever you do today include inyour program a visit to the Gem The-

ater on Hotel street, near the NewEngland Bakery, and see some of thewonderful pictures to be shown there.There is no place where so much enter-tainment, is given for the money as at a

Oahu RailwayTIMS TABLE

OUTWARDyr Waiuae, Waialua, Kahuku andWay Stations 9:15 a. m., 120 p. m.

For Pearl City. Ewa Mill and WayStations 17:30 a. m., i : 1 5 a. m.,

11:15 a. ni., 2:15 p. m., 3:15 p. m.,$9:30 i. m., til p. m.

Tor Wahiawa 9:15 a. m. and S:1I9. txx.

INWARD.Arrive Honolulu from Kahuku, W-alu- a

and Waianae 8:M a. m., i:Sl

Arrive Honolulu from Ewa Mill andPear! City T7: a. m., S:t9 a. m.,10:18 a. m.. 1:40 p. m., 4:51 p. m.,

I:tl p. m., -- 7:30 p. m.Arrive Honolulu from Wanlawa

t:M a. m. and S:S1 p. m.The Halelwa Limited, a two-bo- ux

train (only flrat-cla- ss tickets honored),leaves Honolulu every Sunday at 8:11

a. m.; returning, arrives in Honoluluat 10:10 p. m. The Limited stops onlyat pearl City and Walanae.

Dally. tEx. Sunday, t Sunday Only.. P. DENISON. P. C. SMITH.Superintendent. O. P. A T. A

Around the

Police Station

Yesterday in the police court, so faras convictions were concerned, was

youngsters day. Eight children, rang-

ing in age from seven to eleven years,

stood up lefore the bar of justice.Seven of them were present to answer

to the charge of burglary, ard one lit-

tle damsel of eleven years had a chargeof assault and battery down againsther. There were quite a bunch of

others in the dock, but these had theircases go over until later for trial.

The seven alleged juvenile burglars,all little Portuguese boys, were charged

with having broken into the warehouseof Henry May & Co. and feloniously

stolen, taken and carried away what-

ever they happened to fancy from thestock of good things in sight. Five of

the loys proved their innocence, fhe

other two were sent to the reformschool for a year. These were JohnBotelho, aged eleven, and Manuel An-

gela, aged eight.Dolly Doas was the assault and bat-

tery prisoner. Dolly is eleven and thevictim of her assault, Beatrice Garner,is not quite three. Dolly pleadedguilty to punishing Beatrice in a waynot sanctioned by the law. After being properly admonished by --Judge An- -

drade and weeping copiously, she wasdischarged.

Would-B- e Policeman Arrested.Ching Alai, who a short time ago of

fered his services to the Sheriff-elee- t asa first-clas- s guardian of the law andwho expected to be put on the payroll,appeared in court as the defendant in ablind pig ease. He was the victim ofone of License Commissioner Fennell'araids. The case went o;r .until to-

morrow.Short on Licenses.

Eighteen Chinee, the proprietors ofstores and laundries, who had failed totake out the necessary licenses, werebrought into court. The licenses weredue last July, but the various defend-

ants were given until Tuesday next tomake good. i

Ito, a Japanese, who rode a bicycleafter dark without a light, paid in $3for the same.

Signed His Last License.Sheriff Ia3s&3signed his last theat-

rical license yesterday afternoon, giv- -

ng nis otneiai- - permission lor tne Japanese tneater on Aala lane to be openfor dramatic performances tonight andtomorrow night.

Burglars Taking It Easy.How are the burglars getting

along!' was asked of Chief of Detec-tives Kalakiela. who was reflecting ona tilted-b'ac- k chair during the after-noon. "

A beam of inspiration crept up fromunder the number eighteen collar ofthe Chief and spread turgidly alonghis massive features.

"The burglars?'' Oh, yes; the burglars. Oh, they're taking it easy."

Just what else they are taking now,however, the Chief failed to state. Hehas a variety of reasons why most ofthe recently reported burglaries andhold-up- s are figments of active imagi-nations and is content to let it go atthat.

Iaukea Has No Plans.I have no definite plans for an oc

cupation after Monday," says SheriffIaukea. "I have one or two mattersunder consideration, but just at present

am getting ready to move out andturn over the keys of office to my successor.

"Have you noticed that I am prettywell out of the Democratic partynow!"

The Sheriff, although he carefullyavoids criticizing the personnel of thenew force as chosen by Sheriff-elec- t

Jarrett and his deputy, expresses regret that Captain Parker is to be re-

tired. -

Captain Parker stood up for therights of the people at a time when astrong man was needed. He took aleading part in a crisis in our affairs.and it seems too bad that a man likehe is, who has given a score of years offaithful service to the public, should beturned out tor purely partisan reasons.'? ..

Badges Will Be Called In.Sheriff Iaukea, since he went into of

fice two years ago, has issued policecommissions and badges to no fewerthan one hundred and eighty-fiv- e

SDecial officers, who serve without nav.' L

Among these wearers of the badge ofauthority are four women, assistant humane omcers. snerm Jarrett will issuean order on Monday calling in all thesebadges and commissions and patrol boxkeys that may be out. A number ofthe commissions will be reissued, butnot all of them.

Evidence of Prosperity.In going over his book of automobile

licenses. Chief Clerk Rose commentedon the great increase in the number ofautomobiles and during thepast two years, hen the present po-

lice administration took office, therewere just 103 automobiles in the city.Today there are 291 machines in actualuse ant about a score of benzine bikes.Last, month licenses for eleven newautomobiles and four motorcycles wereissued.

Make-U- p of Watches.Sheriff Jarrett has divided his regu-

lar police force as follows:First Watch Captain, Wm. Punohu;

Sergeant, P. K. Ohulenui; ReceivingStation Clerk, James K. Olds; BicycleOfficers, L. Parish and Abraham Ka-waiho-

Patrolmen, D. B. Haumea, M.L. Malina. M. J. Moniz, J. F. Humeku,Chas. A. Wills, D. Keawe; Turnkey, J.L. Fern.

Second Watch Captain, D. L. Kaha-leaah-

Sergeant. X. T. Xeilsen; Re-ceiving Station Clerk, D. Kamahu; Bi-cycle Officers. Alexander H. Anld, A.Kahaawinui; Patrolmen. Geo. Kealoha-panol- e,

John Thomas. M. Pnahi. E. K.Rathburn, Geo. Xamokueha, P. Kaae;Turnkey. Albert Kauwe.

Third Watch Captain, C. H. Baker;

aeain mannf aetnred Good;Daily

Saloon PilotPilot andSoda Crackers

r for t&la by tee foUotring tmtt

HENRY MAY & CO, ,

J. M. LEVY ft CO.. jT. H. DAVIES A CO,H. HACKFELD & CO, ?

C J. DAY St CO,GONSALVES & CO.

Fresh Fruitsand Vegetables

Satisfaction Guaranteed or MoneyBefnnded ,

Brauen NahcrneComer Beretania and Alakea Streets

Telephone 563Importer of Fruits i r.d YttUt!es

FromCalifornia, Vancouver and Seattle

Autos Repaired

Your machine will be ready foryou when we say it will be. Wedon't experiment on autos, we re-pair them.

Vcn Hamm-Youn- g Co., LM.

Alexander Young Building.

KWONG HIN6 GHOliB CO.CHINESE GRASS LINENS,

LADIES SHIRTWAISTS, PONGFJS,CHRISTMAS GIFTS.

1024 NUTJANTJ STBEET

ShirtsIn All Sires Made to Order by

B. YAMATOYAPanahi Street, off Nnnaan 8trk.

Owl 5c CigarM. A. Cunst fit Co.

Fort and King Streets.

Antique Calabashes,Malihini Christmas

Tree Postearda,Roumanian Shirtwaists

and Shopping Bag,Old Ipnkais and Food

Bowls of Reign Kamehameha.

HAWAII & SOUTHSEAS CURIO CO,

Alexander Young Bldg.

PURE-BRE- D POULTRY

FOR SALE.OQ8 from chalc stock In ships.

Adras: W.aWKEDON,Box m. Honorala.

"YAMATOYA-,-

ALL KINDS OF

SHIRTS, PAJAMAS and KIMONOS

MADE TO OBDEB.

1246 Fort SW jnst abov Orphetua.

AGENTS FOB

Republic

TS18IESStepney

WHEELSAssociated Garage

LTD.MEBCHANT AND BISHOP STS,

FOB THE BEST QUALITY OF

Typewriting. Paper ,GO TO THE

OFFICE SUPPLY CO., LID

931 FOBT STBEET

'GENERAL

REPAIRS

CARRIAGES OR AUTOMOBILES. ,

1

W. W. WRIGHT ft CO.

KINO, NXAR SOUTH STRICT

BEFORE WE MOVE, AND

GET THE BENEFIT OF

LOW PRICES

A. M. Dietz Jewelry Co.

Fort Street, Next to Arleigh'i

ELECTRICAL

NOVELTIESCHRISTMAS TREE

-- And

TABLE DECORATIVE LAMPS

FLASH LIGHTS ALARM CLOCKSCIGAR LIGHTERS. Etc.

CHRISTMAS GIFTS THAT AREUSEFUL AND WORTH WHILE

0. W. Macfariane & Co.,27 HOTEL STREET

Waverley Block - Telephone 145

Andrew Usher's

Scotch Whiskey

0. V. G. SpecialReserve

w. a FXACCCX CO, LTD.AGFNT8.

DrinkRainier

AND KEEP HEALTHY.

IRON BREWHave You

Tried. It? -

HAWAIIAN SODA WORKS.

Phone 516.

IMPORTERS

AND DESIGNERS

of

Fashionable

Millinery

t

DUNN'S HAT

SHOPJ

KOA DESKS andFOUR POSTERS

WING CHONC CO,:King and Bethsl

A VictorOn our Easy Payment Plan.

Bergstrom Music Co., Ltd.

Sun Lee Tal Co,Contractors, Builders, Painters

KOA FURNITURE TO ORDER.

King Street, near Nuuann.

Oahu Ice & Electric Co

ICE delivered at any part of ths eitysJani orders promptly filled.

Telephoue 528: P,0. Box 600. OffleSewaio.

UJTDEBWBrTEBS

Real EstateFOB BENT

Cottage, Palama, near car-lin- $15.

FOB SALS

Lot with two eottages,' corner Millajind Beretania streets.

Fine Lot in Palolo Tract.House and Lot, Kewalo.Lots in Puunui Tract.Houses and Lots in Palama.Lota in Juuanu Valley and Kaimuki

. Honse and Lot, King street, nearThomas Square. Bargain.

WE PUT

HEW RUBBER TIRES

ON OLD WHEELS

BABY CABBIAGES,

INVALID CHAXB3,

IBISH MAILS,

TBICYCLES.

0 Jt 0

COYNEFURNITURE CO., LTD

JAPANESE GOODS.

The Best Only.

IWAKAMI,

Hotel and Bethel.

Real FramesMADE TO LAST All Shapes ,Pacific Picture Framing Co.

3STJUANU, BELOW HOTEL

K. UYEDA

HATSJTJST BECETVED

1023 NUTJANU STREET

SMOKE

n in10c. Mild Havana Cigar

LABQE

Chrysantnemums.1

Len ChoySMITH AND BERETANIA

VIOLETST. KUNIKIYO

FOBT STBEETTelephone 635

Y. WO SING & CO.11S6-118- 8 NTJHANH STBEET

FreshCALIFORNIA FRUITS

P.O. Box 952 - - Telephone 238

Sam Wo Meat Co.

SuperiorBEEF and MUTTON

King Street Fishmarket.

Barnhartwill deliver a superior grade of ICE at

OC Per Hundred

Jt Pounds

ASSESSMENT NO. 9.Has been called in theHarrison Mutual Burial Association,due December 15, 1908; delinquentJanuary 15, 1909. Payable at the of-fice of the Townsend UndertakingParlors, King and Alakea streets.

Rycroft's SodasPUREST FLAVOR

HIGHEST QUALITY

Gnaranteed Absolntelj PurePhone 270

motion picture show, and the Gem is noexception to the rule. Admission,adults, 10 and 20 cents; children, 5cents.

GAZETTE SAVINGS

CLUB SPLITS MThirteen .hundred dollars, represent-

ing money collected during the yearin a savings' club, was distributedamong a number of the employes ofthe printing department of the Hawai-ian Gazette Ccmipany yesterday. Thissavings' club has been in existenceamong the Gazette employes for thepast five years, under charge of IsaacTesta, assistant foreman, and the NewYear division of the dollars and dimeslaid by during the twelve months isthe crowning event of the year to thecluib members. This money is collected week by week in small amounts andbanked, the interest on the deposit andthe earnings of the money throughsmall loans to club members makingusually a neat little addition to theamounts put in.

Yesterday, as a mark of appreciationto Mr. Testa, for safeguarding theirmony during the year, which he doeswithout any recompense whatever, he

p"sente with a beautiful crystalpunchbowl set, the presentation beingmade during the noon hour.

At the Capitol, Henry Hapai, of theTreasurer's office, is acting in a similarmanner at the head of a savings hui,and through his efforts the members ofthat clu'b have in many instances started bank accounts of their own and navesome substantial sums put away for arainy day.

'-

LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY

CELEBRATION PROPOSED

The Civic Federation's committee oneducation will in ' a few days call a"Lincoln" meeting. The general pub-

lic will be invited for the purpose ofconsidering plans for a proper observance 01 the hundreatu anniversary 01

the birth of Abraham Lincoln, February12. The executive committee of theFederation voted some months ago tomove in tnis matter provided it "wasnot taken up by. some other organization. It is taken as a matter of courseby the Federation that Oahu College,Kamehameha and the public schoolsthroughout the Territory will have pro-grams for this occasion, which will bemade memorable not only in the UnitedStates, tout all over the world.

Lincoln literature, by the way, is becoming a vast institution. juawau nasmade its contribution, the same beinga small "Life of Lincoln" in the na-tive language. There are a number ofgentlemen in Honolulu who will be ableto give' personal reminiscences of thegreat president.

A FOOLISH OLD IDEA.It was once thought that a

medicine was all the more bene-ficial for having a nasty taste andsmell. "Ve now know that suchan idea is perfect nonsense.There is no more recson whymedicine should offend the sen-ses than why food should do so.Therefore, one of the greatestchemical victories of the pastfew years is what wre may callthe redemption of cod liver oil.Everybody knows what a viletaste and smell this drug hasin its natural state'. Xo wondermost people declare they wouldrather suffer from disease thantake plain cod liver oil, and theemulsions are as bad, no matterwhat may be alleged to the con-trary. Xow it is one of nature'slaws that a medicine which dis-gusts the nose and the palate,and also sickens the stomach, canhave no good effect as a mcui-cin- e,

because the system criesout to be delivered from it. InWAMPOLE'S PREPARATIONthe desired miracle is wrought,and we have the valuable part ofthe oil, without the other. Thiseffective modern remedy is pala-table as honey and contains allthe curative properties of pureCod Liver Oil, extracted byus from fresh cod livers, com-bined with the Compound Syrupof Ilypophosphites and the Ex-tracts of Malt and Wild Cherry.The palate accepts it ai it doessugar, confectionary cr crean.Taken before meals it goes tthevery secret stronghold of diges-tive disorders, and strengthensthe system against Scrofnb,Throat and Lung Troubles endall diseases due to impurity cfthe blood. Dr. G. C. Shannon, ofCanada, says: "I shall continueits use witn, I am sure, great ad-

vantage to my pitlenli tud cilifaction to myself." V, hx3 lJhe virtues cf col Tver of; nioi its fau"is. Sold br chezaiscs.

Koolau RailwayTIME SCHEDULE

DAILY, EXCEPT SATURDAY.SUNDAY AND HOLIDAYS

Leave Kahana for Punaluu,Ilauula, Laie, Kahuku andWay Stations at 12:00 M.

Arrive Kahuku at 1:00 P.M.Returning:

Leave Kahuku for Laie, Ilau-ula, Punaluu, Kahana andWar Stations at 1:45P.M.

Arrive Kahana at 2:45 P.M.SATURDAY, SUNDAY

AND HOLIDAYSLeave Kahana for Punaluu,

Hauula, Laie, Kahuku andWay Stations at 11:00 A.M.

1:30 P.MArrive Kahuku at... 11:58 A.M.

2:15 P.M.Leave Kahuku for Laie, Hau-

ula. Punaluu, Kahana andWay Stations at 12:33 P.M.

3:00 P.MConnections are made at Kahuku

with the O. R. & L. Co.'s 9:15 a. m.

train from Honolulu, and the 2:20 p. m.

train, which arrives in the city at 5:30to m.

JANUARY 1, 1909.

J. J. Dowling,Superintendent.

E. S. Pollister.Gen. Passenger & Freight Agt.

WM. G. IRWIN & COL, LTD.SUGAR FACTORS AND

COMMISSION AGENTSWm. G. Irwin PresidentJohn D. Spreckel9...First Vice PresidentW M Giffard. ..Second Vice PresidentH. M. Whitney TreasurerRichard Ivers SecretaryD. G. May Auditor

AGENTS FOROceanic bteamship Co., San Fran-

cisco, Cal.Baldwin Locomotive Works, Philadel-

phia, Pa.Hakalau Plantation Co.Hilo Sugar Company.Honolulu Plantation Co.Hutchinson Sugar Plantation Co.Kilauea Sugar Plantation Co.Olowalu Company.Faanhau Plantation Co.Waimanalo Sugar Co.

Win G. Irwin& Go., Ltd.

AGENTS FOR THERoyal Insurance Co., of Liverpool, Eng

land.Scottish Union & National Insuranci

Co., of Edinburgh, Seotlaad.The Upper Rhine Insurance Co., LtdCommercial Assurance Co., Ltd., of

London.

C. BREWER & CO., LTD.SUGAR FACTORS AND

COMMISSION MERCHANT!List of Officers

C M. Cooke, President; George M.Robertson, Manager; E. F. Jtsishop,Treasurer and Secretary; F. W Mhc-farlan-

Auditor; P. C. Jones, C M.Cooke, J. R. Gait, Directors.

1

Motor BoatsFitted with Engines, 5125 Up

CHARLES 0. WALKER'S

Beat and Machine Works,KING ST., NEAR SOUTH ST.

"THE BESTJADE JEWELRY, in latest European

styles.Best workmanship at the lowest prices.

BO WOHotel Street, between Mannakea and

Smith Streets P. O. Box 1007

P. M. POND

General ContractorPLOWING, GRADING,

HAULING, ROCK, 8AND, ETC.

Let Us Submit an Estimate

P. M. POND - Telephone 890

tlome-Mad- e BreadFresh Daily.

Pies, Cakes, Doughnuts,Baked Beans Saturday

PERFECTION HOME BAKERY,BERETANIA NEXT TO EMMA. .

Page 12: RF.PftRTFn · L;di's developments, that the question lly' throngs the dowiown streets rm appointmeats will be takea to y, conspicuous by its asenee, I to - HlfrWnji-r,-.-MESSINA CATHDBAJU

12 THE PACTFIO COMMESCIAL ADVEETISER, HONOLULU', FRIDAY, JANUARY 1, 1909.

PARTNERSHIP NOTICE.COMMISSIONER'S( GETTING UP

A CABINET

FUND GBOWING FOR,-EARTHQU- AKE

VICTIMS

lip to 4:30 p. m. yesterday, the sum

tAL(Continued from Page Nine.)some other Pacific Coast State this

Notice is hereby given that W. R.Castle, D. L. Withington. W. A. Green-we- ll

and A. L. Castle, all residing inHonolulu, Territory of Hawaii, haveentered into a law partnership underthe name 0f Castle & Withington, andwill maintain an office at 37 Merchantstreet, in Honolulu,

Dated, Honolulu, December 31 190SrW. R. CASTLE,D. L. WITHINGTON.

OF--of $4350 had been subscribed to the time.

VALUABLE LANDW. A. GREENWELL,A. L. CASTLE. -8236SITUATE AT

Italian consular fund for the relief ofthe sufferers from the earthquake andtidal wave. At 11 a. m. $2800 werecabled to Eome via San Francisco, bythe Italian Consul, Hon. F. A Sehaefer.Late last evening word came that thefund had been increased to about $4500.

HEALTY TRANSACTIONS

On Monday, January nth, we shall begin a monster rem-nant sale to clear up the short lengths and odd lots before ourannual stock-takin- g.

COTTON DRESS GOODS AT HALF PRICE

Many Dress Lengths in Organdies, Lawns, Muslins,Batistes, Madras, etc., which will be sold at about half prices.

Remnants of Silks, Embroidered Chiffons, Silk Mulls at- Lowest Prices.

HOSIERY Many Broken Lines of 50c, 65c, and 75c goods,which will go very cheap.Ladies' Kid Cloves, Corsets and Under Vests, Laces and

Embroideries.

Kuwili, Honolulu,

COUNTY OF OAHU, TERRITORY OFHAWAIL

Of course. New York State Republi-cans would have a fit, if a Presidentshould organize his cabinet withoutone of their number being in it. Sec-retary Elihu Root could have remain-ed at the head of the State Depart-ment, if he had not consented to be-

come the new Senator from New York.No New Yorker, of special promise,has been brought forward for a cab-inet place yet, unless one makes an ex-ception- for William Nelson Cromwell,of Panama Canal fame, who has beenmentioned for Attorney General. Ofhis ability as a lawyer there is littlequestion, but bis legal career has beenassociated with the big trusts and com-binations, and it is doubtful whetherhis appointment as Attorney Generalwould be at all popular. He was iden-tified with Mr. Taft's campaign andhas had much to do with the War De-

partment in Panama Canal matters. Hewas also one of the large contributorsto the Republican campaign fund. Ofcourse, there is plenty of cabinet ma

Entered of Record December 31. 1908.

Gertrude V Cadinha and hsb toManoel Braneo .' ,. M

J II Sehnaek and wf to William SMorrisey . . 7 . . D

H Wharton to Waialua Agretl Co,Ltd L

Waialua Agretl Co, Ltd, to JohnJORDAN'Pursuant to a decree of foreclosure

and sale made by the Honorable J. T.De Boltr First Judge of the CircuitCourt of the First Judicial Circuit, saidTerritory, on December 31, 1903, in asuit Equity No. 1623, entitled AugustDreier, Limited, an Hawaiian corpora-tion, complainant, vs. W. W. Ahanaand Choi Seem, his wife, Richard H.terial in New iork, but Mr. Taft is

ha ving no easy task determining upon ' Trent, Trustee, and Henry Holmes,place, i spondents, the undersigned, appointedthe New York'man for a cabinetThe SOCIAL SIDE as Commissioners by said Deeree, willProblem as to New England.

I sell at public auction to the highestThen, there is the problem of a bi(1(ler for eash subject to confirmation

Southern men?ber of the cabinet and 0f Court on '

MORTGAGEE'S NOTICE OF INTEN-TION TO FORECLOSE AND OPSALE.Notice is herety given that whereas

J. H. Fisher of Honolulu, Island ofOahu, Territory of Hawaii, did exe-cute the followirg mortgage, namelv-mortgag- e

to Emily C. Judd of thesaid Territory of Hawaii, dated June9, 1900 A. D., recorded in the RegistryOffice, said Honolulu, in Liber 207pages 273. 274 and 275, upon the prop'erty hereinafter described, to securethe payment of the promissory noteof said mortgagor for Eighteen Hun-dred (.$1800.00) Dollars, in one (1)year from said date;

And whereas default has been madeby said mortgagor in the payment ofthe principal sum secured according tothe terms 0f the said mortgage, andsuch default still continues; ,

Therefore, the said Emily C. Judd,act-n- herein under the power of salein said mortgage provided and re-ferred to, now intends to foreclose saidmortgage, for breach 0f the conditions-i-

said mortgage.Notice is also hereby given that the

land by said mortgage conveyed andthe improvements thereon will be soldat public auction at the auction roomsof James F. Morgan, at No. 857 Kaa-huma-

street, in said Honolulu, onSaturday, the 16th day of January,1909, at 12 o'clock noon of said day,in foreclosure.

The property in said mortgage de-scribed and intended to be sold is de-scribed as follows:

Beginning at a point on the south-east side of Makiki street at thenortherly corner of land conveyed byP. M. Pond to one Weaver, said pointbeing distant 147 feet north 43' 35"east, true from the present east cornerof Kinau and Makiki streets as shownon the Government Survevs' Register

OF THE- -

of a.JNew England member ot the cab-- jinet. National Chairman Frank H.Y.

H Nihoa et al . . ... p DWaialua Agretl Co, Ltd, to Wahi- -

awa Consol Pineapple Co, Ltd . . LJ K Kauanoe to Y K Aiona. .'. .... LTuck Wo Wai Co to See Sung Wai...B SJohn Ii Estate Ltd to See Sung Wai LHenr;' Smith and wf et al to Ke- -

mou Land Co, Ltd.. DJohn Viviehaves by Kegr. .... .NoticeFrank E Colby and wf to Nellie

E Smith . ... . V . . . . . MCharlotte L Turner to Jacintho

Costa . . .................... KelJacintho Costa and wf to Tr of

Sara A Makee. MJames B Castle by Regr. ..... ..NoticeKaiama Paona (w) to Kahema Pa- -

ona (k) j , . . DLahaina Bismark Stables, Ltd, to

Iao Stables Co, Ltd B SKeawe Kaiko (w) to Joaquin Gar- -

eia MCastle & Cooke, Ltd, to J A "Gil-ma- n

EelMrs Jim K Loo Nee to Hutchinson "

Sug Pltn Co. ................... LWong Leong to Richard II Trent,

Tr ...A M

MAKES IT AN ATTEACTIVE

Hitchcock is to be Postmaster Gener-al. Nominally, at least, he resides inMassachusetts, although he is anOhioan by birth and has lived nearlyall of the time for the last fifteenyears in the District of Columbia. NewEngland has had a man in the cabinetin every administration for the lastfifty years and wants a real New Eng-lande- r,

identified with the politics andinterests of one of the six New Eng-land States, in Mr. Taft 's cabinet. Itis glad to have Mr. Hitchcock comeinto Mr. Taft's cabinet as a New Eng

at 12 o'clock noon of sail day, at thefront in auk a entrance of the JudiciaryBuilding, said Honolulu, the mortgagedproperty following, to-wi- t:

FIRST:All of the land situate at Kuwili,

Palama, Honolulu aforesaid, mention-ed and described in Land CommissionAward No. 1089 to Kapehe and inLand Commission Award No. 671 toPaakua and in said foreclosed mort

Young fullen's ClubMeet other Toons Men in the Gymnasium, SocialBooms, Class Booms, on the Athletic Field, or in

the Supper-tim- e Bible Class

Newcomers Invited to Inspect the Building.

Membership in Men's Department Open to those 18 yearsor over.

HOTEL AND ALAKEA STS.

land man, but hopes that some other,,gage of W. W. Ahana to August.who has passed his time there, will be

chosen, too. Massachusetts has gener-ally had the cabinet member from that

Protestant Episcopal Church to Dreier, dated November 10, 1899, ofrecord in Lwer 196, page 467, HawaiianRegistry of Conveyances, (except only

Est of B P Bishop..... ..Ex Dsection and is now pressing for thecontinuation of George von L. Meyer, that portion of the land described inRecorded Dec 21, 1908.at present Postmaster General, in "the Land No 1089 expressed to be

v,,r,Qf ; ,;f. conveyed by said W. W. Ahana to theMaria A Freitas and hsb et al to John ed Map 1100, and running by trueHawaiian Dredging Company, Limited, J bearingsJ Caldeira, D; por lot 4 of pors kuls But this is complicated by the ef (1) S. 47" 7' E., 134 0 feet alongby deed dated Aug. 1, 1902, and of recordforts to put Chief Forester Gifford104 and 59-F-- Alewa, Honolulu, Oa

hu. $530. B 311, p 238. Dated Aug15, 1908.

in Liber 238, page 313, said Registry) Pinchot in as Secretary of Agrieuland deseribed in partial release of mort-M- r.

hire. Mr. Taft thinks most highly ofPinchot. who. however, is native I ZftM said A"8 Dr?Ler Lsaid.John H de Fries to Peter N Motas.

oi Connecticut and has remained aDissltn Co-P- ; partnership in mdse andgrocery, etc, bus dissolved, Nov 17, Connecticut man, although he has lived

outside of the State for many yearsiaus, Haiawa-kai- , Ewa, Oahu. B 321.p 15. Dated Nov 17, 1908. and is now more a resident of the

W. W. Ahana dated Aug. 15, 1902, ofrecord in Liber 237, page 438, said Reg-istry), the remaining portion of saidlands covered by said mortgage, and tobe sold as aforesaid, being described bymetes and bounds as follows, to-wi- t:

Commencing at the North corner ofthis piece of pToperty at junction offences on the South side of Dowsett

H0N0P0LE-R- ED TOP-CHAM- PAGNE

MOST DELICIOUS CHAMPAGNE OF THE AGEOLD GOVERNMENT PLANTATION CIGABS Only the very best of

Porto Blc&n tobacco used la the manufacture of the cigars. All sizes andcolon. ,

LEWIS & CO., LTD.169 KING STREET SOLE AGENTS FOE HAWAII TELEPHONE 240

Peter N Motas to John H de Fries. District of Columbia than of anyDissltn Co-- partnership in mdse and State. Of course, if Mr. Pinchot and

Mr. Hitchcock are both to go into thecabinet. New England could not hope

grocery, etc, bus dissolved, Nov 17,1908, Halawa-kai- , Ewa, Oaha. B 321,p 15. Dated Nov 171908,

John H de Fries to Peter N Motas.

the mauka boundary of said landof Weaver, being a portion ofR. P. Grant 3106;

(2) N. 43 35' E., 53 feet or a littlemore along R. P. Grant, or aportion thereof, and L. C. A. 95,to the makai boundary line ofland now or formerly belongingto Makanoe Kaepa; thence alongsame

(3) N. 47 7' W., 134 0 feet tothe said, southeast side of saidMakiki street; thence alongsame ,

(4) S. 43 35' W., 53 feet or a littlemore to the said northerly coi-ner of land conveyed to saidWeaver, the initial point, andbeing the same premises convey-- -ed to the said mortgagor bydeed of Percy M. Pond, datedJune 5, 1900, and duly recorded.

Together with the improvementsthereon and appurtenances belonging.

Terms: Cash in U. S. gold coin;ten per cent, of purchase price pay-able on fall of hammer, and balanceon delivery of deeds. Deeds at ex- -

B S; int in mdse, hardware, cash, "furniture, fixtures, accts, etc, Halawa-kai- ,

Ewa, Oahu. $700. B 321, p 15. DatedNov 17, 1908.

Lane and running:1. S. 57 00' W. true 112.8 feet along

fence along Dowsett Lane;2. S. 30 35' E. true 88.9 feet along

fence along L. C. Award 2440Bto Kauaua, Apana 1;

3. N. 86 00' W. true 36.3 feet alongfence along same;

4. a' 13 45' E. true 71. feet along

for any other cabinet appointments.Wright Will Remain.

It seems to be settled for the pres-ent that Secretary of War Wright willcontinue into the Taft administration.As he comes from Tennessee, he willbe the Southern member, but Mr.Wright is a Democrat and may remainin the cabinet only for a while. Mr.Taft wants to recognize the Southern

John H de Fries to Peter N Motas.L; pc land, bldgs, etc, Halawa-kai- , Ewa,uanu. 3 yrs at $1200 per y. B 321,p 17. Dated Nov 17, 1908.

Wong Lai to Hee Man, P A; generalpowers. B 321, p 22. Dated Oct 26,

fence along same;5. S. 72 40' W, true 23. feet along

same;6. S. 16 55' E. true 30. feet along

L. C. Award 826 to Keakahiwa,Apana 2;

1906.C Bosse by atty to M A Goes, Eel;

gr 3S11, bldgs, etc, Pauoa, Honolulu, S. 41 25' E. true 37. feet alongOahu. $2000. B 312, p 90. Dated Dec same and L. C. Award 2440B, pense of purchaser.

We have Glass for Windows.Glass for Picture" Frames,Glass for Greenhouses, etc.,Plate Glass, Ordinary Glass,Colored Glass cut to order.

21, 1908. " "

H., DecemberApana 2 to Kauaua; Dated, Honolulu, T,William R Castle Tr to Aenes C 8. S. 73 35' E. true 27. feet along , 10,

EMILY C. JUDD.L. C. Award 2440B. Apana 2;Weaver," Par Rel; leaseholds, Manoa,Honolulu, Oahu. $1000. B 312, p 91.

Republicans, as he is trying to encour-age them to build up a virile party inthat section.

It is not improbable that two oreven three members of PresidentRoosevelt's cabinet will be taken overfor brief terms and be expected togive way within the next year or twofor men of Mr. Taft's own selection.He does not feel as free, of course,to makr a clean sweep of the Roose-velt cabinet members as he might, hadhe come into office without feelingsome obligation to his predecessor, al-though as a man of long cabinet expe-rience and of special familiarity withadministration affairs, he has less needof old hands at the head of depart-ments than a President new to Wash-ington life would have.

Dated Dec 18, 1903.By Her Attorney in Fact.

F. MI SWANZY.8225 Dec. 18, 25; Jan. 1, 8, 15.

NOTICE TO BONDHOLDERS OF

9. S. 17 20' E. true 50. feet alongL. C. Award 2440B, Apana 2;

10. S 8 5' E. true 1 16. feet alongL. C. Award 2440B, Apana 2;

11. - N. 87 10' W. true 45. feet along

Wong Kwai and wf et al to TinLook, D; int in pors ap 2, R P 1635;t stock in the Territory.II Largef ap 1, R P 2675; and R P 1634-an- d 2

i

i

ir

f

'4--

pes land, Fort st, etc, Honolulu, Oahu.$1. B 311, p 240. Dated Dec 14, ltf08.

HONOLULU PLANTATION COM-PANY.Notice is herebv given that, puri in Look to First Am Savs & T Co

of Hawaii Ltd, M: pors ap 2, R P 1635;ap 1, R P 2675 and R P 1634 and 2pes land, Fort st, etc, Honolulu, Oahu,

suant to the provisions of that certainmortgage, dated the first day of Feo-ruar- y,

A. D. 1902, which was executedby the Honolulu Plantation Companyto Mercantile Trust Company of San

I LEIVERS &( 177 South King Street.

$3000. B 312, p 92. Dated Dec 18,COOKE, LTD.Phone 775.

L. C. Award 2440B, Apana 2;12. S. 11 25' E. true 47. feet along!

Government; Thenee13. S. 87 10' E. true 98. feet along

Grant 3475 to Oahu Railroad andLand Company, Apana 2;

14. S. 83 10' E. true 187.4 feet alongportion of L. C. Award 1089 soldbv W. W. Ahana to HawaiianDredging Company, to point thatbears N. 28" 29' W. true 29 feetfrom a redwood post;

la. N. 28 29' W. true 78. feet alongGrant 4804 to H. M. von Holt;

THE EMPIRE.iyos.Adeline Waiau and hsb to C W A splendid assortment of views will

be shown at the Empire this afternoonBooth, D; R P 1791, kul 996, ap 3, Paurranciseo, as trustee, those certainfifty-si- x (56) of the bonds secured by-sai-

mortgage, and hereinafter desigoa, Honolulu. Oahu. $200 and mt? as a welcome to tne New Year. Andthe quality today will be a forerunnerof the good things to be shown at this

$200. B 311, p '242. Dated Dec 21,1908.

nated by their numbers, were, on thefifth day of December, 1908, selected.

little theater durmsr ly09. bpena aEmma A Kahinu et al by mtgee to drawn and designated for payment andHeadaches Are Unnecessary Why Endure Them ? part of the night there.Mary E Low, D; int in lands and prem redemption in the manner provided insaid mortgage. Said bonds so selectises, Puunui Iraet. Honolulu. Oahu.No one endures a headache willingly, but merely through a dislike to take $500. B 311, p 244. Dated Dec 21,

1908.Btedieine, for fear it may be harmful.ed, drawn and nesignated for paymentwill be paid at the office of MercantileTrust Company of San Francisco atNumber 464 California street, in the

190&EXCELSIOR DIARIES

And it is wise to be eareful about the medicine one takes; for health it John Emmeluth Tr to Lahapa Naihe,D; lot 26, blk,!?, Kapiolani Tract, Ho- -

nolulu, Oahu. $1, etc. B 311, p 246.

16. S. 85 40' W. true 110.9 feet alongL. C. Award 826 to Keakahiwa,

. Apana 3;17. N. 12 15' W. true 78.5 feet along

same; -18. N. 85 25' E. true 93.7 feet along

. same to a point 3 feet mauka ofcorner of fence;

19. N. 10 50' W. true 106 feet alongGrant '4804 parallel to fence;

20. N. 30" 25' W. true 42. feet alongL. C. Award 2440B, Apana 3 toKauaua to corner' of fence atcoral ;

tfi

very precious., For nearly twenty years millions of people have been relying on

Stearns Headache WafersDated Dec 21, 1908.

Victoria S Buffandeau and hsb (E)HAWAIIAN NEWS CO., Ltd.to Richard H Trent. Tr, Add Chge; pe

td give them relief from aching heads; they have never disappointed them; land, cor Beretania and Alexander sts,Honolulu, Oahu. $400. B 312, p 95.

they are made today from the same pure, simple ingredients as at first; and j)ate(j j)ec 21, 3908.they havo more friends than ever before. I Eliza Dunbar by afft of mtgeeto

Therefore, vou are exercising proper care when von take Stearns' Headache Erie K J Gay, Fore Affdt; por kul 21. S. 76 35' W. true 72. feet alongL. C. Award 2072 to Kapaalua

City and County of San Francisco,State of California, at the rate of onethousand (1000) dollars per bond andaccrued interest, on the first day ofFebruary, 1909. Such bonds shall besurrendered to the company for pay-ment, redemption and cancellation, asprovided in said mortgage; and inter-est thereon shall cease from said firstday of February, 1909. Any bond-holder who may , desire to surrendethis bonds for cancellation before Feb-ruary 1, 1909, may do so and receivepayment at the rate of one thousand(1000) dollars per bond and interestto the date of such surrender.

The following are the numbers ofthe fifty-si- x (56) bonds so selected,

Sharp SignSnr. . it : ,v4 e K, ,;;! j I Juauo, rvunui lane, nonoiuiu, uanu is"-- " J e " . - 319 r P.7 TWort TW 91 1QO

i

.i

I'V

a;

1

Ap. 1 along fence to corner ofJjon'l enaure ta neaaacne; De mnii w yourseu use oiearna- - xieauacne i Antone Freitas and wf to Julia Rieh- - same. Thence

"MAKE GOOD" 22. N. 19 50' W. true 219.6 feet alongWafters. And see that you get STEAKNS the genuine. ard, D; por kul 6549, ap 1, Paeohi, La- -

tj8 same and L. C. Award 1285 toKaluau Ap. 1 along fenee to

' 1111 ATI (I Ul 'i I , V I V . ' tit . , J tj'--l .

Dated Mar 3, 1908. 1

CaTrie. :Antone Freitas and wf toRickard, D; por kul 6549, ap 1, Paeohi,

initial point. .

Area 1.7 Acres.

SECOND:Lahaina, Maui. $1, etc. B 311, p 234. Tom SharpTHE SIGN MAN

ELITE BUILDING Phone 397

drawn and designatedDated Mar 3, 1908.

If your stationer cannot supply you with

Whiting's Papeteries Numbers 9Antone Freitas and wf to Antone 10. 11, 31. 32, 33, 34,All those pieces or parcels of land35. 36. 37, 38, 39, 40, 42, 43, 45, 47,Freitas Jr, D; por kul 32, ap 2, Laha- - situate at Honuakaha, makai oi yneen

Street in said Honolulu, described in 499. 533, 542, 560, 570, 571, 572, 573,maluna rd, Lahaina. Maui. $1, etc. BBoval Patent (grant) 3495 to Neina311, p 235. Dated Mar 3, 1908.try the No'u Tentetoa. area 590 square feet,Antone Freitas and wf to Helen Frei

tas et al, D; pors kul 6549, ap 1 andJ H,, I Will IIIkul 32, ap 2, Paeohi, Lahaina, Maui, i

American-Hawaii- an Paper and Supply Co.

574, 575, 576, 900, 902, 903, 932, 933,949, 950, 951, 952, 960, 961, 962, 964,994. 996. 997, 998, 999, 1000, 1001,1002, 1003, 1205, 1206, 1210, 1211,1212, 1213.

Dated, San Francisco, December 7,1908.

. J. A. BUCK,President, Honolulu Plantation Com- -

$1, etc. B 311, p 237. Dated Alar 3,1908.

eonveved by her to W. W. Ahana by-dee-

dated May 24th, 1899, recordedin register office, Oahu in Liber 195pages 135-13- Also all the land de-

scribed in Royal Patent (grant) 3568to Annie Tene'tetoa, conveyed to W. W.Ahana bv deed of J. Alfred Magoon,

Haleakala Ranch Co to J B Castle,Fort and Queen.

Mr. and Mrs.

Hashimoto

MASSEURSRHEUMATISM,

BRUISES,SPRAINS,TIRED FEELXNQ, and otherailments qnicklj

Agrmt; in re occupation and ownershipof feneed 23 acre lot. Kalialinui, Maui.B 321, p 20. Dated Dec 6, 1908.

Jan. 1-- 4-- 9

pany.8227 Dec. 21-2- 28-31- ;

11-1-J B Castle to Haleakala Kaneh Co,

Agrmt; in re occupation and ownership of fenced 23 acre lot, Kalialinui,

et al., dated June 8, 1899 recorded insaid office in Liber 194 pages 251-25- 2

containing an area of 8640 square feet.TERMS OF SALE Cash, U. S. Gold

Coin, 10 per cent, at time of sale, bal-

ance on confirmation by Court and de-

livery Qt deed.Deeds at the Expense of Purchaser.For further particulars apply to

Thompson & Ck-mon- attorneys for

Mam. B 321, p 20. Dated JJec 2fi. lyus.Kauweloa and wf to Abel Catheart,

D; 4 int in pc land. Waialua. Molo-ka- i.

$10. B 311, p 243. Dated Dec2J, 1903. .

RELIEVED.444 KINO ST.

PALAMATelephone 63r

BEAUTIFUL NEW GOODS.

SWELL PATTERN?LOW PRICES.

PURE DISTILLED WATER

High and LowALL JAPANESE BEAD

THE HAWAII SHINPOAn authoritv among Japanese ewa-oaper- s.

published in the Territory oflawaii.

The only Hlustrated 10-pag- e Japan-ese Daily in Existence.

12-pa- Sunday Issue is the BeatMedium.

Job Work in Japanese and Chinetspecialty.

LA HOYcomplainant, Campbell Block, Honolu-lu, or to James F. Morgan, auctioneer,857 Kaahumanu street, said Honolulu,or to the undersigned at 916 Fort St.,said Honolulu.

IRWIN II. BEADLE,Commissioner.

Honolulu, December 31, 19f.

TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY

Take Laxative Bromo QuinineTablets. All druggists refundthe money if it fails to cure.E. W. Grove's signature is oneach boxPARIS MEDICINE CO.. St. Louis, U S. A.

i'iuuanu, below Hotel.Is Manufactured and Delivered By

Consolidated Soda Water Works

Phone 71 1 s 158236 Jan.

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