3 BEYOND DOUBT - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu

12
L WW ? TJ. S. "WEATHER BUREAU, July 6. Iast 21 Hours' Rainfall, trace. SUGAR. 96 Degre Test Centrifugals, 4.39c Per Ton, $37.80. Temperature, Max. 80; Mia. 72. Weather; cloudy. 88 Analysis Beets, lis. 6L Per Ton, $88.60. ESTABLISHED JULY 2. 185S. VOL. XLVIII., NO. 8084. HONOLULU, HAWAII TERRITORY, TUESDAY, JULY 7. 1908. PRICE FIVE CENTS. OMINATION OF EDERAL GRAND 3 BRYAN IS NOW BEYOND DOUBT JURY TAKES UP THE PRIZEFIGHT Summoned Before It Three of Those Who Wanted the Contest Stopped, and One Who Was PresentOthers to Be Called. 3 S 1 (Democratic Convention Opens at Noon Today 4 . Vice-President- ial Boom for Kinney Ruef a Valuable Man. C THE ILLUMINATED CAPITOL. Williams Photo. The Federal Grand Jury is making an inquiry into the prize fight which took place at the Orpheum three or four weeks ago, which brought about the arrest of United States Attorney Breckons on a warrant sworn out by Theo- dore Richards. About noon yesterday United States Marshal Hendry was given a list of names and asked to notify them by telephone to appear before the Grand Jury at 2 o'elot-k- . Later, a little before 2 o'clock, regular subpoenas were issued for Dr. F. II. Huniphris, Theodore Richards, Rev. E. W. Thwing, and John ALartin The time was so short that, of course, it was impossible to find all of tloe lefore 2 o'clock, but all of them except Eiehards were found and served during BATTLESHIPS LEAVE FOR HONOLULU THIS AFTERNOON AT TWO the afternoon, and all of them appeared at the Judiciary building except Rich ards. who is not on this island. Humphris and Thwing were both before the Grand Jury and were examined tn w ihexr knew about the contest or saw at it. John Martin was at the Judiciary building, but was not examined. He will be examined this morning. Just what the purpose of the Grand Jury is in this investigation is not known. But the fact that the Grand Jury was to take it up was known down town during the noon hour, and was a matter of much jocose discussion. There were suggestions that the Grand Jury would have some fun with some of the (Associated Press Cablegrams.) DENVER, Colorado, July 7. The nomination of William Jen- nings Bryan as the Democratic candidate for the Presidency is now assured. The Vice Presidency nomination is still unsettled. CONVENTION OPENS TODAY AT NOON. The opening session of the convention will be held at noon to- day. Judge Parker, who was the Democratic candidate for the Presidency in the last election, is prepared to deliver the eulogy to the memory of Grover Cleveland, eliminating references to politics from his speech and doing away with what had been expected to be a clash between the Bryanites and the Gold Democrats over the , matter. KINNEY FOR VICE PRESIDENT. A William Kinney boom as a candidate for the Vice Presidency has been begun among the assembled delegates. CONTESTS ARE SETTLED. The National Committee in session yesterday has settled the claims of the contesting delegations, involving the rights of seventy-si- x delegates to their seats. . . BELL CONFERS WITH BRYAN. LINCOLN, Nebraska, July 7. Theodore A. Bell, of California, who has been selected as temporary chairman of the convention, ar- rived here from Denver yesterday morning and called upon Bryan. GRAY AND JOHNSON STILL CANDIDATES. DENVER, July 6. Judge Gray and Governor Johnson have not been withdrawn as candidates for the Democratic nomination. Guffey, anti-Brya- n, has been chosen National Committeeman witnesses. . The announcement and the carrying out of this contest was reported to the (Associated Press Cablegram.) SAN FRANCISCO, July 7. The Atlantic fleet of six- teen battleships will sail for Honolulu this afternoon. There will be no demonstration at the departure of the battleships. Department of Justice by the United States District Attorney and by those who sought to prevent it on the ground that it was a prize fight. According to the official schedule the battleships will weigh anchor at two o'clock, San Francisco time, this afternoon, and will arrive here off port at one o'clock in the afternoon of Thursday of next week the sixteenth. THE LOG OF YACHT HAIM iil P. ROBINSON AT HIS IE! JOB of The Transpacific Cup Racer Is WHO COMMANDS ON COMING BATTLESHIPS Attending to the Duties President of the Health Board. Pi Credited With Splendid Showing. The log of the transpacific yacht The near arrival of the fleet makes It imperative that the names of the from Pennsylvania. officers of the different vessels be known, as considerable business is to be con-- J Hawaii was received by the S. S. Mon golia yesterday and reads as follows: June 2 yacht left Honolulu at 2:30 p. m. with a strong NE. trade wind and RUEF RELEASED ON BOND OF STAGGERING AMOUNT President Mark P. Robinson of the Board of Health was on duty at the Board of Health office during a good part of the day yesterday, attending to the duties of the new position ha occupies. Dr. Cofer was there for a while, going over with the new presi- dent matters which had been under consideration, but were unfinished bus- iness. Among others besides Dr. Cofer who a lumpy sea. 4:30 p. m. Took in balloon jib and two gaff topsails. Schooner Moi Wa-hin- e leaving Honolulu shortly after ward was soon left astern and to lee ward. June 3, 9 a. m. Arrived off Lahaina, ducted between the ships and shore. The flag officers and captains in the order of their rank is as follows, ac- cording to the latest official list: Flag Officers Rear-Admir- al C. S. Sperry, Commander-in-Chie- f, Commander First Division; Rear-Admir- al W. H. Emory, Commander Third Division; Rear-Admir- al Seaton Schroeder, Commander Fourth Division; Rear-Admir- Richard Wlainwright, Commander Second Division. Captains Captain W. P. Potter, commanding Vermont; Captain Kossuth Niles, commanding Louisiana; Captain John Hubbard, commanding Minnesota; Captain J. B. Murdock, commanding Rhode Island; Captain Hugo Osterhaus, commanding Connecticut; Captain C. E. Vreeland, commanding Kansas; Cap- tain E. F. Qualtrough, commanding Georgia; Captain W. H. H. Southerland, commanding New Jersey; Captain T. B. Howard, commanding Ohio; Captain W. C. Cowles, commanding Kentucky; Captain R. F. Nicholson, commanding Nebraska; Captain Henry Morrell, commanding "Wisconsin; Captain Hamilton Hutchins, commanding Kearsarge; Captain J. M. Bowyer, commanding Illinois; Captain Alexander Sharp, commanding Virginia; Captain R. M. Doyle, com- manding Missouri. Commanders Commander W. S. Hogg, commanding Glacier; Commander hold a" Federal and a Territorial office Maui, and hove to so as to trim ship. SAN FRANCISCO, July 7. Abe Ruef has been released from custody on a bond of one million five hundred and sixty thousand dollars. His next trial begins on the fifteenth of this month. : GARFIELD REACHES MAINLAND. Took anchor chains from forehead and Dr. who ! are Sinclair, is in the Marine Hospital Service and assistant to the stowed them amidship. All supplies stowed away and yacht put; in ship president of the Board of Health; Mr. Duncan, who is Pure Food Commission- er for the Territory, and food and drug chemist for the Department of shape. 1:30 p. m. Filled away and beat out channel. 4 p. m. Halawa Point, Molokai Vomeree and Labor; and Dr. Norgaard, who is Territorial Veterinarian and ! abeam Wltn strong trade wind and big SAN FRANCISCO, July 7. Secretary Garfield arrived here yesterday on the cruiser St. Louis from Honolulu. also an agent of the Bureau of Animal nead sea- - aent plunging neaviiy ana lying down to the masts at times, Industry in the Department of Com- merce and Labor. The question in these cases is not so much whether a person holding a Federal office is eligible to ann.iint- - A. W. Grant, Chief of Staff, Atlantic fleet; Commander V. S. Nelson, command- - 5:45 p. m. Reefed mainsail. Cook and cabin boy very sick so it is a case of crew catch as catch can. 5:25 p. m. Halawa Pt. in lat. 21-1- 0 in? Panther. PRESTON NAMED AT THE SOCIALIST CONVENTION Lieutenant-Commander- s Surgeon Charles F. Stokes, commanding Relief; ment to a Territorial office, as whether ! lonS- - 156-4- 1 W. Bore SW. by W 41. . A .... and ship heading N. E. from which Lieutenant-Commande- r J. B. Patton, commanding Culgoa; Lieutenant-Commande- r C. B. McVay, Jr., commanding Yankton. 5 i f. ! " i, ; j til i ur i wu oincfs are incompaxiDie, in which case the acceptance of the sec- ond office would be the equivalent of a resignation of the first. In some of these cases the second office may be the better of the two. But in other RAPID TRANSIT GET or METGALF DISCUSSED PLAN OF VOYAGE cases the hrst may be the better more desirable of the two. READ! FOR BUSINESS SAN FRANCISCO, July .6. The Socialist party have named Martin R. Preston of Nevada for President, and Donald Monroe of Virginia for Vice President. PEARY OFF ON ANOTHER DASH. NEW YORK, July 6. Explorer Peary's ship Roosevelt has sailed for the Arctic Ocean, carrying Peary, equipped for another dash to the Pole. FRENCH CRUISER "Vi"', 7 u'ua""rao jference between Secretary of the Navy DUE III OCTOBER F'iicti uuuug iiTvi. net'ii auu every- thing in their barns with wheels is be- - Metcalf, Rear Admiral C. S. Sperry, commander in chief of the Atlantic fleet, and Admirals Emory and AVain-wrig- ht of the third and fourth di- visions, concerning matters nortainin? departure is taken. 6 p. m. Shook reef out of mainsail. 11 p. m. Took reef in mainsail on account of heavy squalls. Tune 4. Strong NE. trades blowing with big sea. 8 a. m. Saw cook a few minutes but he disappeared again so it is still a case of grab and trust to luck in the grub line for a while yet. Have traveled 173 knots up to pres- ent time. June 5. 4:30 a. m. Sighted unknown bark to windward bound north. 5 a. m. Set jib topsail. 6:30 a. m. Set fore and main gaff topsails and very soon left the bark astern. 8 a. m. Moderate XE. trade wind with smooth sea. Crew engaged at various duties and relieving stations. 1 p. m. Light NE wind. Cook has come to life and we are getting three regular luaus a day. 2 p. m. Wind afreshing and able seaman Rietow busy with paint and brush. Run for day, 165 knots. June 6, 12 a. m. Uneventful. Light E. winds with smooth sea. 1 p. m. Light NE. winds with clean sky. Rietow fined for spilling paint on deck. Run fnr day 183 knots. June 7. Lisrht NE. winds and smrtntl, PROTESTANT COUNTRIES CUT OUT. ROME. Tuly 6. Great Britain, Holland, Canada, and the M. Menant, the Consul for France, expects the French cruiser Catinat to arrive in Honolulu in the latter part of October. She will go from here to San Francisco, and thence along the coast of South America to the Atlantic and thence home. She will rtrjbablv be to fleet adm inistration and plans for the United States have been removed from the jurisdiction of the Roman cruise around the world, was held yes- - Catholic propaganda, terday on board the flagship Connect- - " ieut. j ARSENAL EXPLODES IN HAYTI. Full naval honors were accorded Sec- - pnPT ATT PR1MPR TTavti. Tulv 6. There was a fire and CX- - succeeded by a larger vessel in the ing refurbished to be turned out and put into service. Altogether the ser- vice will be just doubled, the twenty-thre- e cars now being run to be in- creased to forty-five- . This will take every car the company owns with the exception of the one in which the convicts are transported to and from their daily work at Ka-piola- ni Park, and even" this car is to be pressed into service for special trips, such as to the baseball park and to the polo games. There will be a good service on the waterfront. Extra cars are to be put on the Punahou run, and these will be run around as far as the Iron Works, alternating with the Alakea street cars every five minutes. retary Metcalf, with the exception of piosion in the arsenal of Third City today. It is still burning the secretary's salute, which was All offi omitted at his special request Samoa. Gise has just been detached sity without the right of appeal to the frnn, the hin and ordered to Samoa ! board of trustees. The measure Is raid 1 acme. The Catinat was here about a vear ago, coming from Tahiti. She "will probably come here direct from the New Hebrides this voyage. NAVAL PARADE TAKES as commander of the station ship The Glacier will also leave Honolulu in advance of the fleft for fleet will be wireless with Fiji, and through it the able to communicate by the Fiji cable station. to be so drastic that the question of the competency of the faculty mem- bers is to be the only thing left to the decision of the president. This action on the part of the trus- tees is the direct result of the recent dismissal of Dr. Julius Goebel as the head of the department of Germanic languages. Dr. Goebel has the repu PLAGE FRIDAY WEEK sea. The cook is doing good work and is i giving the crew a regular Hawaiian Ininu at evorv meal. Distance 155 knots. Juno S lO o m T - - - . The big naval parade will take place cers appeared in special full dress uni- form, and Rear Admiral Sperry sig- naled for Rear Admirals Emory and Wainwright to board the flagship. They responded and joined the secretary and Sperry and his staff at luncheon. The secretary left the flagship at o'clock, going in the admiral's barge to the Oakland mole. The secretary ex- pressed his pleasure at the condition of the ships of the fleet and at the man- ner in which plans for the world trip are bing carried out. The repair ship Panther will not re- main at Honolulu during the entire stay of the fleet, but will leave ahead of he other vessels and carry Lieutenant Commander William Gise to Tutuila, tation of being one of the most bril The bulk of the service is expected to be done on King street, however, and on that track twenty cars will be in operation. It is impossible be- cause of the lack of convenient switches to run the ears oftener than every ten minutes, but during fleet week the cars will be operated in pairs. The company is breaking in extra motormen and conductors for the week's work and are straining every point to have the system in perfect order to do away with any chance of a breakdown at the time when the system will be taxed as it has never been taxed before. on Friday, the 17th inst., and not on aild smooth se " " " Sunday, as has been stated. 6 a. m. Occasional rain squalls but The cable eonveying the news of the Prv 1'ttle rain, parade reads as follows: 1 P m- - WinJ has hauled to E. Cook ! broke a couple 0f dishes this morning To Carter. Honolulu: Sand is in line for a fine. Captain Tlar" Thanks for courteous letter: will ris is looking for-- n r, Ae i DR. JOEDAN CURBED. SAN FRANCISCO, June 2 By an enactment in the annual report of the board of trustees of Stanford Univer- sity, which will be published shortly, the long reign of President David Starr Jordan as the absolute dictator of the tenure of the members of the faculty will be brought to an abrupt end. Hereafter no professor can be dismissed by the head of the univer- - liant German scholars in America, and his summary dismissal from the Stan-flT- nl faculty caused much comment at-- , the time. No charges were preferred against the distinguished scholar, and, hi3 demands for a public trial were ig- - ! nored by Dr. Jordan, who xersistentljr refused to discuss tbtr case. , parade twenty-fou- r hundred men July j the NW. and we want it quick so we seventeenth. scan stand across to S. P. SPEEEY. J (Continued on Page Three.) it

Transcript of 3 BEYOND DOUBT - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu

L

WW?

TJ. S. "WEATHER BUREAU, July 6. Iast 21 Hours' Rainfall, trace. SUGAR. 96 Degre Test Centrifugals, 4.39c Per Ton, $37.80.Temperature, Max. 80; Mia. 72. Weather; cloudy. 88 Analysis Beets, lis. 6L Per Ton, $88.60.

ESTABLISHED JULY 2. 185S.

VOL. XLVIII., NO. 8084. HONOLULU, HAWAII TERRITORY, TUESDAY, JULY 7. 1908. PRICE FIVE CENTS.

OMINATION OFEDERAL GRAND3 BRYAN IS NOW

BEYOND DOUBTJURY TAKES UP

THE PRIZEFIGHT

Summoned Before It Three of Those Who

Wanted the Contest Stopped, and One

Who Was PresentOthers to Be Called.

3 S

1 (Democratic Convention Opens at Noon Today4 .

Vice-President-ial Boom for Kinney

Ruef a Valuable Man.C

THE ILLUMINATED CAPITOL. Williams Photo.

The Federal Grand Jury is making an inquiry into the prize fight which

took place at the Orpheum three or four weeks ago, which brought about thearrest of United States Attorney Breckons on a warrant sworn out by Theo-

dore Richards.About noon yesterday United States Marshal Hendry was given a list of

names and asked to notify them by telephone to appear before the Grand Juryat 2 o'elot-k-. Later, a little before 2 o'clock, regular subpoenas were issued forDr. F. II. Huniphris, Theodore Richards, Rev. E. W. Thwing, and John ALartin

The time was so short that, of course, it was impossible to find all of tloelefore 2 o'clock, but all of them except Eiehards were found and served during

BATTLESHIPS LEAVE

FOR HONOLULU THIS

AFTERNOON AT TWO

the afternoon, and all of them appeared at the Judiciary building except Rich

ards. who is not on this island.Humphris and Thwing were both before the Grand Jury and were examined

tn w ihexr knew about the contest or saw at it. John Martin was at the

Judiciary building, but was not examined. He will be examined this morning.

Just what the purpose of the Grand Jury is in this investigation is not

known. But the fact that the Grand Jury was to take it up was known down

town during the noon hour, and was a matter of much jocose discussion. Therewere suggestions that the Grand Jury would have some fun with some of the

(Associated Press Cablegrams.)

DENVER, Colorado, July 7. The nomination of William Jen-

nings Bryan as the Democratic candidate for the Presidency is nowassured. The Vice Presidency nomination is still unsettled.

CONVENTION OPENS TODAY AT NOON.

The opening session of the convention will be held at noon to-

day. Judge Parker, who was the Democratic candidate for thePresidency in the last election, is prepared to deliver the eulogy tothe memory of Grover Cleveland, eliminating references to politicsfrom his speech and doing away with what had been expected to bea clash between the Bryanites and the Gold Democrats over the ,

matter.KINNEY FOR VICE PRESIDENT.

A William Kinney boom as a candidate for the Vice Presidencyhas been begun among the assembled delegates.

CONTESTS ARE SETTLED.The National Committee in session yesterday has settled the

claims of the contesting delegations, involving the rights of seventy-si- x

delegates to their seats. . .

BELL CONFERS WITH BRYAN.

LINCOLN, Nebraska, July 7. Theodore A. Bell, of California,who has been selected as temporary chairman of the convention, ar-

rived here from Denver yesterday morning and called upon Bryan.

GRAY AND JOHNSON STILL CANDIDATES.

DENVER, July 6. Judge Gray and Governor Johnson havenot been withdrawn as candidates for the Democratic nomination.

Guffey, anti-Brya- n, has been chosen National Committeeman

witnesses. .

The announcement and the carrying out of this contest was reported to the

(Associated Press Cablegram.)

SAN FRANCISCO, July 7. The Atlantic fleet of six-

teen battleships will sail for Honolulu this afternoon. Therewill be no demonstration at the departure of the battleships.

Department of Justice by the United States District Attorney and by thosewho sought to prevent it on the ground that it was a prize fight.

According to the official schedule the battleships will weigh anchorat two o'clock, San Francisco time, this afternoon, and will arrive hereoff port at one o'clock in the afternoon of Thursday of next weekthe sixteenth.

THE LOG OF

YACHT HAIM

iil P. ROBINSON

AT HIS IE! JOB

of The Transpacific Cup Racer Is WHO COMMANDS ONCOMING BATTLESHIPS

Attending to the DutiesPresident of the Health

Board.Pi Credited With SplendidShowing.

The log of the transpacific yacht The near arrival of the fleet makes It imperative that the names of the from Pennsylvania.officers of the different vessels be known, as considerable business is to be con-- JHawaii was received by the S. S. Mon

golia yesterday and reads as follows:June 2 yacht left Honolulu at 2:30

p. m. with a strong NE. trade wind and

RUEF RELEASED ON BONDOF STAGGERING AMOUNT

President Mark P. Robinson of theBoard of Health was on duty at theBoard of Health office during a goodpart of the day yesterday, attendingto the duties of the new position haoccupies. Dr. Cofer was there for awhile, going over with the new presi-

dent matters which had been underconsideration, but were unfinished bus-iness.

Among others besides Dr. Cofer who

a lumpy sea.4:30 p. m. Took in balloon jib and

two gaff topsails. Schooner Moi Wa-hin- e

leaving Honolulu shortly afterward was soon left astern and to leeward.

June 3, 9 a. m. Arrived off Lahaina,

ducted between the ships and shore.The flag officers and captains in the order of their rank is as follows, ac-

cording to the latest official list:Flag Officers Rear-Admir-

al C. S. Sperry, Commander-in-Chie- f, CommanderFirst Division; Rear-Admir- al W. H. Emory, Commander Third Division; Rear-Admir- al

Seaton Schroeder, Commander Fourth Division; Rear-Admir- RichardWlainwright, Commander Second Division.

Captains Captain W. P. Potter, commanding Vermont; Captain KossuthNiles, commanding Louisiana; Captain John Hubbard, commanding Minnesota;Captain J. B. Murdock, commanding Rhode Island; Captain Hugo Osterhaus,commanding Connecticut; Captain C. E. Vreeland, commanding Kansas; Cap-

tain E. F. Qualtrough, commanding Georgia; Captain W. H. H. Southerland,commanding New Jersey; Captain T. B. Howard, commanding Ohio; CaptainW. C. Cowles, commanding Kentucky; Captain R. F. Nicholson, commandingNebraska; Captain Henry Morrell, commanding "Wisconsin; Captain HamiltonHutchins, commanding Kearsarge; Captain J. M. Bowyer, commanding Illinois;Captain Alexander Sharp, commanding Virginia; Captain R. M. Doyle, com-

manding Missouri.Commanders Commander W. S. Hogg, commanding Glacier; Commander

hold a" Federal and a Territorial office Maui, and hove to so as to trim ship.

SAN FRANCISCO, July 7. Abe Ruef has been released fromcustody on a bond of one million five hundred and sixty thousanddollars. His next trial begins on the fifteenth of this month. :

GARFIELD REACHES MAINLAND.

Took anchor chains from forehead andDr. who !are Sinclair, is in the MarineHospital Service and assistant to the stowed them amidship. All supplies

stowed away and yacht put; in shippresident of the Board of Health; Mr.Duncan, who is Pure Food Commission-er for the Territory, and food anddrug chemist for the Department of

shape.1:30 p. m. Filled away and beat out

channel.4 p. m. Halawa Point, MolokaiVomeree and Labor; and Dr. Norgaard,

who is Territorial Veterinarian and ! abeam Wltn strong trade wind and big SAN FRANCISCO, July 7. Secretary Garfield arrived hereyesterday on the cruiser St. Louis from Honolulu.also an agent of the Bureau of Animal nead sea- - aent plunging neaviiy ana

lying down to the masts at times,Industry in the Department of Com-merce and Labor.

The question in these cases is notso much whether a person holding aFederal office is eligible to ann.iint- -

A. W. Grant, Chief of Staff, Atlantic fleet; Commander V. S. Nelson, command- -5:45 p. m. Reefed mainsail. Cook

and cabin boy very sick so it is acase of crew catch as catch can.

5:25 p. m. Halawa Pt. in lat. 21-1- 0in? Panther. PRESTON NAMED AT THE

SOCIALIST CONVENTIONLieutenant-Commander- s Surgeon Charles F. Stokes, commanding Relief;ment to a Territorial office, as whether ! lonS- - 156-4- 1 W. Bore SW. by W

41. . A .... and ship heading N. E. from which Lieutenant-Commande- r J. B. Patton, commanding Culgoa; Lieutenant-Commande- r

C. B. McVay, Jr., commanding Yankton.

5

i

f. !

"i,

; j

til

i ur i wu oincfs are incompaxiDie, inwhich case the acceptance of the sec-ond office would be the equivalent of aresignation of the first. In some ofthese cases the second office may bethe better of the two. But in other RAPID TRANSIT GET

orMETGALF DISCUSSED

PLAN OF VOYAGE

cases the hrst may be the bettermore desirable of the two.

READ! FOR BUSINESS

SAN FRANCISCO, July .6. The Socialist party have namedMartin R. Preston of Nevada for President, and Donald Monroe ofVirginia for Vice President.

PEARY OFF ON ANOTHER DASH.NEW YORK, July 6. Explorer Peary's ship Roosevelt has

sailed for the Arctic Ocean, carrying Peary, equipped for anotherdash to the Pole.

FRENCH CRUISER

"Vi"', 7 u'ua""rao jference between Secretary of the NavyDUE III OCTOBER F'iicti uuuug iiTvi. net'ii auu every-

thing in their barns with wheels is be- -Metcalf, Rear Admiral C. S. Sperry,commander in chief of the Atlanticfleet, and Admirals Emory and AVain-wrig- ht

of the third and fourth di-

visions, concerning matters nortainin?

departure is taken.6 p. m. Shook reef out of mainsail.11 p. m. Took reef in mainsail on

account of heavy squalls.Tune 4. Strong NE. trades blowing

with big sea.8 a. m. Saw cook a few minutes but

he disappeared again so it is still acase of grab and trust to luck in thegrub line for a while yet.

Have traveled 173 knots up to pres-ent time.

June 5. 4:30 a. m. Sighted unknownbark to windward bound north.

5 a. m. Set jib topsail.6:30 a. m. Set fore and main gaff

topsails and very soon left the barkastern.

8 a. m. Moderate XE. trade windwith smooth sea. Crew engaged atvarious duties and relieving stations.

1 p. m. Light NE wind.Cook has come to life and we are

getting three regular luaus a day.2 p. m. Wind afreshing and able

seaman Rietow busy with paint andbrush.

Run for day, 165 knots.June 6, 12 a. m. Uneventful. LightE. winds with smooth sea.1 p. m. Light NE. winds with clean

sky. Rietow fined for spilling paint ondeck.

Run fnr day 183 knots.June 7. Lisrht NE. winds and smrtntl,

PROTESTANT COUNTRIES CUT OUT.ROME. Tuly 6. Great Britain, Holland, Canada, and the

M. Menant, the Consul for France,expects the French cruiser Catinat toarrive in Honolulu in the latter part ofOctober. She will go from here to SanFrancisco, and thence along the coastof South America to the Atlantic andthence home. She will rtrjbablv be

to fleet adm inistration and plans for the United States have been removed from the jurisdiction of the Romancruise around the world, was held yes- - Catholic propaganda,terday on board the flagship Connect- - "

ieut. j ARSENAL EXPLODES IN HAYTI.Full naval honors were accorded Sec- - pnPT ATT PR1MPR TTavti. Tulv 6. There was a fire and CX- -succeeded by a larger vessel in the

ing refurbished to be turned out andput into service. Altogether the ser-

vice will be just doubled, the twenty-thre- e

cars now being run to be in-

creased to forty-five- .

This will take every car the companyowns with the exception of the onein which the convicts are transportedto and from their daily work at Ka-piola- ni

Park, and even" this car is tobe pressed into service for specialtrips, such as to the baseball park andto the polo games.

There will be a good service on thewaterfront. Extra cars are to be puton the Punahou run, and these will berun around as far as the Iron Works,alternating with the Alakea street carsevery five minutes.

retary Metcalf, with the exception of piosion in the arsenal of Third City today. It is still burningthe secretary's salute, which was

All offiomitted at his special request Samoa. Gise has just been detached sity without the right of appeal to thefrnn, the hin and ordered to Samoa ! board of trustees. The measure Is raid

1 acme.The Catinat was here about a vear

ago, coming from Tahiti. She "willprobably come here direct from theNew Hebrides this voyage.

NAVAL PARADE TAKES

as commander of the station shipThe Glacier will also leave

Honolulu in advance of the fleft forfleet will be

wireless withFiji, and through it theable to communicate bythe Fiji cable station.

to be so drastic that the question ofthe competency of the faculty mem-

bers is to be the only thing left tothe decision of the president.

This action on the part of the trus-

tees is the direct result of the recentdismissal of Dr. Julius Goebel as thehead of the department of Germaniclanguages. Dr. Goebel has the repu

PLAGE FRIDAY WEEKsea.

The cook is doing good work and isi giving the crew a regular HawaiianIninu at evorv meal.

Distance 155 knots.Juno S lO o m T - - - .The big naval parade will take place

cers appeared in special full dress uni-

form, and Rear Admiral Sperry sig-

naled for Rear Admirals Emory andWainwright to board the flagship. Theyresponded and joined the secretary andSperry and his staff at luncheon.

The secretary left the flagship ato'clock, going in the admiral's barge tothe Oakland mole. The secretary ex-

pressed his pleasure at the condition ofthe ships of the fleet and at the man-ner in which plans for the world tripare bing carried out.

The repair ship Panther will not re-

main at Honolulu during the entire stayof the fleet, but will leave ahead ofhe other vessels and carry LieutenantCommander William Gise to Tutuila,

tation of being one of the most bril

The bulk of the service is expectedto be done on King street, however,and on that track twenty cars willbe in operation. It is impossible be-cause of the lack of convenientswitches to run the ears oftener thanevery ten minutes, but during fleetweek the cars will be operated inpairs.

The company is breaking in extramotormen and conductors for theweek's work and are straining everypoint to have the system in perfectorder to do away with any chance ofa breakdown at the time when thesystem will be taxed as it has neverbeen taxed before.

on Friday, the 17th inst., and not on aild smooth se" " "

Sunday, as has been stated. 6 a. m. Occasional rain squalls butThe cable eonveying the news of the Prv 1'ttle rain,

parade reads as follows: 1 P m- - WinJ has hauled to E. Cook! broke a couple 0f dishes this morningTo Carter. Honolulu: Sand is in line for a fine. Captain Tlar"

Thanks for courteous letter: will ris is looking for-- n r, Ae i

DR. JOEDAN CURBED.

SAN FRANCISCO, June 2 By anenactment in the annual report of theboard of trustees of Stanford Univer-

sity, which will be published shortly,the long reign of President DavidStarr Jordan as the absolute dictatorof the tenure of the members of thefaculty will be brought to an abruptend. Hereafter no professor can bedismissed by the head of the univer- -

liant German scholars in America, andhis summary dismissal from the Stan-flT- nl

faculty caused much comment at-- ,

the time. No charges were preferredagainst the distinguished scholar, and,hi3 demands for a public trial were ig- - !

nored by Dr. Jordan, who xersistentljrrefused to discuss tbtr case. ,

parade twenty-fou-r hundred men July j the NW. and we want it quick so weseventeenth. scan stand across to S. P.SPEEEY. J (Continued on Page Three.)

it

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1908.2

THE GOVERNOFI

IN CONFERENCE

K BLANCHE ARRAL

IN FA R EWELL CONCEIT

Tonight Mme. Arral gives her fare-well concert in Honolulu at the OperaHouse. A program of such artisticand also popular value should draw ahuge house to faxewell this great sing-

er, who is giving the treasures of anexceptionally great repertoire.

The program, the principal numbersof which appear on another page, is

LOOK COOL, FEEL COOL

Our white flannel suits ap-

peal to those who dresswith the taste characteristic

ofAt

Newest designs in all-ov- er laces at 25c a yard and up .

New Galons, Insertions and Edgings, Cluny,

and Baby Irish Laces.

Work on the Form

Special Agreement forHomesteads.

Governor Frear is almost ready toannounce the new form of specialagreement sale of public lands for

All new Goods. Large Assortment. Special Prices for

this week only See window display.homesteads under which the pineapplelands in Koolau will be disposed of,and perhaps the Kapaa lands on Kauai.

The Governor was at work on thismatter nearly all day, in consultation

the richest that has ever been offeredhere, and those who love music shouldnot miss tonight's concert.

The entire mad scene from Hamletwill be given, depicting the frenzy ofOphelie over the supposed faithlessnessof Hamlet. This is as much of a mas-terpiece in music as the great tragedyin blank verse probably more so, asit has the advantages of music andmis en scene to appeal to the passionsof the audience, and enacted by Mme.Arral brings the poignant sorrow ofOphelie right to every heart.

The selections from Mignon havealready been mentioned and those whoattend are assured of a veritable feast

and conference most of the time withLand Commissioner Pratt, AttorneyGeneral Hemenwav and SecretaryMott-Smith- .

The form of the special agreement Opp. Catholic Church, Fort St.

of men of fashion at theEastern sea coast resorts.They are cut from materialof fine texture, finished withsuperior facings, buttons andall-si-

lk thread. The ma-

terial is pre shrunk andcoats fitted to models andmade to hold their shape.We have never seen bettervalue.

has not yet been fully decided on. Itwill be very much like the form whichwas proposed by the Governor beforehe went to "Washington. There will besome changes in it based on sugges

WEEKLY WEATHER BULLETINFor the Week Ended July 4, 1908.tions made by Secretary Garfield, and

some ehanges based on suggestions by

of melody and the selections from thegreat masters sung by the greatestexponent of the old operas extant.Such an opportunity should not bemissed by anyone in this town whohas the least claim to musicalknowledge.

BACHELOR'S R01NCE

IS 11 CLEVER PLAY

others.Suggestions have been received from

a great number of sources, and all ofthese have been considered.

BUILDING FOR MilM. AT YUKON EXPOSITION

Honolulu, July 6, 1908.The mean temperatures reported were higher than those of the

previous week 0.4 deg. to 1.2 deg. on Hawaii, excepting in the south-ern portion of the Kau district; 0.2 deg. to 1.7 deg. higher on Oahu ;0.2 deg. to 3.3 deg. higher on Maui, and 1.3 deg. higher on Molokai,and 0.1 deg. lower on Kauai.

The rainfall for the week was below the average of ten or morevears at all stations having such records in the section from whichreports were received. The deficiencies, in inches, on Hawaii rangedfrom 0.21 to 0.81, 0.12 to 0.36 on Oahu, and 0.11 on Kauci.

All stations report less rainfall than during the previous week,excepting no change at Pahala, Hawaii, and Kihei, Maui. Thegreatest deficiencies occurred in the Hilo and Puna districts of Ha-waii, and varied from 1.13 to 1.37 inches, and 1.32 inches in the Hanadistrict of Maui. The deficiencies in the remaining districts were:Hawaii Kau and Hamakua 0.00 to 0.28 inch, excepting 0.80 inch inthe southwestern part of the Hilo district; Maui Kula and Lahaina0.00 to 0.12 inch; Oahu 0.06 to 0.53 inch; Kauai 0.02 to 0.63, andMolokai 0.27.

The greatest amounts of rainfall reported were from the Hilodistrict of Hawaii, and ranged from 1.17 to 1.70 inches. The great-est amount reported from the remainder of the stations was 0.53

SEATTLE, June 27 Xow that 'theFORT AND MERCHANT STREETSUnited States Government has made a$600,000 appropriation for participation in the Alaska-Yukon-Pacifi- c Expo-

sition, the work creating the 1909 fairhas been given an impetus. Whilethere has never been any doubt in theminds of the management as to thesuccess of the exposition and as to itsbeing reaay on time, the government'saction has stimulated more interest inthe fair throughout the country.

During the past week applications

A very pretty comedy-dram- a is "ABachelor's Romance," which was pre-sented by the Lumley Company at theOrpheum last night before an audiencewhich was small, but appreciative. Inthis play, as seen at the first per-formance, the ladies of the cast ap-pear to better advantage than themen, Miss Keane being particularlygood in the part of Sylvia, the youth-ful and pretty, ward of the bachelorto whom came the romance.

Sharing the honors with Miss Keanelast night was Miss Harriet Jocelyn,who demonstrated again her talent incharacter work.

Another excellent character was thatof Mr. Mulburg, played by E. E. Bal-lard. The part was a small one, butit was perhaps the only male part lastnight that was done full justice to. Theother members of the company ap-peared to be tired.

"A Bachelor's Romance " is good,however, and worth seeing, deservingcertainly a better house than greeted

While critically inclined, it might bementioned that the soubrette, whodances prettily between the acts at theOrpheum, would make a hit and bemuch more successful if she would tonedown her acting in her songs and mod-ify the excessive playing to individ-uals in the audience. This dancer isclever, but supposes that variety show

FOR LADIESI5t

for concessions and exhibit space havebeen pouring into the offices in the Ad-ministration building. The construc-tion work has gone ahead without anycessation, and there are finished orunder construction nine buildings.

The government architects are work-ing on the plans for the Uncle Sam'sbuildings and just as soon as the de-signs are finished construction will bestarted. Of the total appropriation,$250,000 will be spent in the buildings.Besides the main government building,there will be structures for Hawaii,Alaska, the Philippines and the fish-eries industry. The remaining $350,000will be expended for exhibits as fol

inch.j No rainfall occurred at two stations in the Kau district of Ha-waii; at two on the leeward side of Maui; at two in the Koolaupoko-distric- t

of Oahu and a trace in the Ewa district, and at twp in theKona district of Kauai.

Due to an alteration in mail schedule reports from. 36 stationsare missing.

The weekly average of temperature and rainfall for Oahu was:Temperature. Rainfall.

Oahu 77.1 deg. 0.02 inch.At the local office of the U. S. Weather Bureau in Honolulu

partly cloudy weather generally obtained, with .01 inch of rainfall 011

the 4th, .22 below the weekly'normal, and .25 less than during thepreceding week. The maximum temperature was 82 deg., mini-

mum 72 deg., and mean 76.3 deg., 1.6 deg. lower than the normalainl1.0 deg. higher than last week's. The mean daily relative humidityvaried from 61 per cent to 72 per cent, and was 65.3 per cent for theweek. Northeast winds obtained, with an average hourly velocityof 7.7 miles. The mean daily barometer ranged from .06 to .09 inchabove the normal, and the mean for the week, 30.0S inches, was .07inch above the normal.

REMARKS BY CORRESPONDENTS.(Note: The figures following the name of station indicate the

date with which the week's report closed.)ISLAND OF HAWAII.

lows:. Government, . $200,000: Alaska.

We have a large new stock of Regals for ladies, in High

and Low Shoes. They are all of the latest new shapes in

Toe, Heel, Vamp, and Welt.

They are just in the cases are now being opened and

there are none like them anywhere else in Honolulu.

These shoes are all made in the Regal Custom Style, of

First-Grad- e material throughout and handsome finish.

They're built right, and the quarter sizes insure you a perfect

fit from toe to heel.j Price, $3.50 and $4.00.

1ill $100,000; Hawaii, $25,000; Philippines,

Hi

Mil

methods will add to her attractiveness.They do not.

HAWAIIAN AT COLORADOSPRINGS EXCITES INTEREST

YOUR OLD SHOES REPAIRED WHILE YOU WAIT. cleg. ShowersPaahau (1) The mean temperature was 75.6.28 below the. Backer.

occurred on two dates and amounted to .42 inch,svpnw and less than the preceding- - week's. R. W

REGAL- - SHOE STOREMcCandless Building, Corner of King and Bethel Sts.

. Colorado Springs Gazette. J. Gar-

cia, of Wailuku, Hawaii, delegate tothe Republican .National Convention atChicago, which opens June 17, was inthe city yesterday on his way to theWindy City. He is accompanied byMrs. Garcia, and the two spent theday in sightseeing in the vicinity ofColorado Springs.

In view of the relations of the UnitedStates and the Orient within the lastfew months, the remarks of Mr. .Galciaon his hor.e country are of interest.After expressing his delight at what hehad seen in the Pikes Peak region, hetalked of Colorado in a way that ap-

peals strongly to the boys in khaki whcwent to the Philippines in 1S98, whenthe Spanish-America- n war was on.

"I have 4 always been interested inyour State," said Mr. Garcia, whospeaks excellent English, "as I re-

member that it was the volunteer regiment from Colorado who were the firstvisitors at Honolulu after the annexa-tion of Hawaii. That was just tenyears ago, almost to a day, as the troopship came into port the day followingthe mail ship that brought the newsthat we had become citizens of theUnited Stares. The city was en fete inWmor of the occasion, and we hadhastily prepared a little spread for thesoldiers."

COLORADO BAND MADE HIT.Mr. Garcia was told that Director

Irvine of the Midland band was at thattime director of the Colorado Volun-

teers band."Had 1 knovTii that," he said, "I

should have been jilad to meet Mr. Ir-

vine. The people of Honolulu remem-

ber the First Colorado band as being

stories published some months ago tothe effect that the Japanese were mo-

bilizing in Hawaii in anticipation of awar with the United States, but thesewere largely if not entirely iu the im-

agination of the writers. Of course,there are a large number of Japanesein the Islands, and following the littletrouble at San Francisco a great manyJaps who had planned to go therestopped at Honolulu in fear that theywould not be welcomed on your west-

ern coast. This condition probably gaverise to these stories. It is true thatthere are a great many Japanese in theIslands, but there was no indication ofany trouble at any time.

WILL WELCOME FLEET."The big fleet will be welcomed by

the people of Hawaii is the best man-

ner they know. It seems that everyport is trying to outdo every otherstopping place in the matter of enter-

tainment, and I am sure that the Ha-waiia-

will not fall far behind thepace that has been set. In fact, we

have always welcomed the big fightingships and have tried to make it pleas-

ant for the officers and men who havevisited our ports. It will be the firstsight of a big fleet for my people, andI am sure that it will be appreciated.We are all sorry not to be able to wel-

come Admiral Evans again, as he isknown there from his trip around theworld to join the Atlantic fleet duringthe Spanish-America- n war.

"Your soldiers who visited Honoluluten years ago would hardly recognizethe city now. It has followed in thefootsteps of most American cities indevelopment lines and the Americanspirit predominates. A great many peo-

ple from the United States have conmthere since the annexation, and the na-

tives have been stirred from their

DEAR!!Any Paint that peels, flakes, and scuffs off in a short

time is dear at any price.

Pure Prepared Paintcosts a .little more than the ordinary cheap paint, but it givesservice and lasts twice as long.

It is ready-mixe- d. That precludes all possibility ofadulteration in the mixing.

It is worth your while to insist upon having the painteruse only Pure Prepared Paint.

LEWERS 8c COOKE, LTD.177 South King Street. Phone 775.

Papaaloa (2) Rain fell on five dates and amounted to 1.45inches, 1.39 less than during the preceding week.-7-C. McLennan.

Hilo (2) The mean temperature was 72.2 deg. Showers oc-

curred on six dates and amounted to 1. 17 inches, 1.13 less than dur-

ing last week, and .63 inch below the average. L. C. Lyman.Ponahawai (2) Rains occurred on six date, amounting to 1.70

inches, .80 inch less than during the preceding week. The meantemperature was 71.0 deg. J. E. Gamalielson.

Kapoho (1) Strong NE. winds and cloudy weather obtained,with showers on four dates totaling ,35 inch, .Si below ihe average,and 1.32 inches less than last week's. The mean temperature was73.8 deg. H. J. Lyman.

Pahala (1) Rainless weather continued, a deficiency in rainfallof .21 inch as compared with the weekly average. The inerm tem-

perature was 72.1 deg. Haw. Agric. Co.Naalehu (30) Dry and windy weather prevailed, with no rain-

fall, .03 less than the previous week's, and .34 below the jverage.C. H. White.

Kau (30) Northeast winds and showery weather prevailed,with .52 inch of rainfall, .28 less than during the preceding week.The mean temperature was 64.9 deg. W U. Hayselden.

ISLAND OF MAUI.Hana (30) The mean temperature was 76.9 deg. Showers oc-

curred on five dates and amounted to .27 inch, 1.32 inches less than;he preceding week's. G. O. Cooper.

Kihei (30) Rainless weather continued. The mean ttmper-altir- e

was 76.7 deg. M. J. Moura.Kaanapali 2) Moderate NE. winds prevailed, with close,

sultry weather during nights. No rainfall occurred, .12 inch lessthan during last week. The mean temperature was 75.9 deg.W. Robb.

ISLAND OF OAHU.Kahuku (3) WTarm, dry weather and moderat; "n !?' pre-

vailed, with a mean temperature of 75.4 deg., and .07 inch of ram-fal- l,

.27 below the average and less than last week's. R. T. Chns-topherse- n.

Hauula (3) Fresh "trades" prevailed. The mean temperaturewas 79.5 deg., and the rainfall a trace, .53 inch less than the preced-

ing week's. Mrs. E. W. Hay.Waimanalo (3) The mean temperature was 78.4 deg., and

there was no rainfall, .48 inch less than the preceding week's, and .36

below the average. A. Irvine.Ewa (4) Clear to partly cloudy weather obtained, with but a

trace of rainfall, .12 below the" average, and .06 less than the previousweek's. The mean temperature was 75.8 deg. R. Muller.

ISLAND OF KAUAI.Eleele (2) Np rainfall occurred during the week, a deficiency

of .63 inch as compared with last week. McBryde Sugar Co.Makaweli (2) The mean temperature was 77.0 deg. There

was no rainfall, a deficiency of .11 inch as compared with the aver-

age, and .02 less than the previous week's. Haw. Sugar Co.

ISLAND OF MOLOKAI.Molokai Ranch' (3) The mean temperature was 74.1 deg.

Showers occurred on twfi dates and amounted to .03 inch, .27 lessthan the previous week'srrG. P. Cooke.

WM. B. STOCKMAN, Section Director.

the onlv foreign organization that fst op for the played- - the national air of the Ha-

waiian. Although the ship China came

This is vacation time and you should take it easy

before the fleet arrives. If you will go down to i

Haleiwa for a few days you will be fit to encounter

many triak durin that week.

into port at an early hour, there tropical lethargv into competition withwere a great many people there to their white allies. The change hasgreet the troops, and the astonishment been remarkable and for the best in-w- ss

widespread when they heard the terests of the ritizens. '

familiar strains of their national air Mr. Garcia did not care to talk onplayed by an American band, political subjects, laughingly declaringIt was afterwards published in the that from what he had seen of thepapers that the band leader had learn- - newspaper since hia leisurely triped the melody from the purser of the through the United States there waship, who whistled it for him, and had enough political talk being printed. He

arranged it for his band." left last night with Mrs. Garcia. ex- -

Mr. Garcia was asked regarding th peeting to reach Chicago Monday morn-visi- t

of the big fleet and the Japanese ing and take his seat in the conventionsituation. j as the representative of the most iao- -

"Tker wre a number of newspaper lated territory of the United States.

1

i M

ST. CLAIR BIDGOOD, Manager.

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1908.

AMUSEMENTS. L,1yUY YOUR SHOES

HEREAND SHIRTSf

ORPHEUM THEATRE

Now Playing

MR. RICHARD BUHLER

and the Incomparable

Lumley Companyincluding

FRANK E. MONTGOMERY, MISS

-- 'iiv-1! k' .t -:4 I

- C I v I vW.vWe've just received a fine assortment of the famous

Goodyear Welt Shoe for gentelmen, $2.50 and $3.50. Forladies, $2.00 and $3.50 a pair.

Patent Leather, Gun Metal, Vici Kid and Brown Leather.Reliance Shirts from $1.00 and $1.25.We have a splendid assortment of this renovmed shirt in

tasty and attractive designs. Negligee and full dress.SEE OUR WTINDOW DISPLAY.

OHAM & CO. ; -

INDIGO

Winner of several valuable purses at the Hilo races.

REACH NINE WILL PLAY

SERIES HERE IN FEBRUARY

Jesse Woods, the local sporting man, and advance agent of the Reach,

baseball team, which will shortly tour the Orient, passed through on the S. S.

Mongolia yesterday.While here he had a consultation with the trustees of the Honolu Baseball

League relative to playing a series of games here on the return trip.The trustees agreed to guarantee $800 toward defraying the passage money

of the team from Yokohama.The Reach combination will be here in February, and will stay over a

steamer playing five or six games with an All-Hawa- ii nine.The net proceeds of the series of games will be divided equally between

the visitors and the league.The trustees of the league intend to establish a fund with the proceeds

of the games which will be used to bring other baseball attractions to Honoluluin the future.

SUMMARY OF

lilLU RACES

Honolulu Horses Sweep theBoard of Most of the

Purses.

The people of Hilo showed their pa-

triotism fittingly by the way they cele-- ,

b rated the national holiday in their lit-

tle town.At Mooheau Park, there were literary

exercises and children's races in tnemorning, and at the Hoolulu park werehorse racing and cowboy stunts.

At the latter place, Bruner and Indi-go, two Honolulu, horses, belonging toLouis Warren, seemed to have muchtheir own way. Bruner won everythingbut the last race and in that race itis claimed he was given a bucket ofwater just prior to the start.

The football game between the Hiloand Honolulu boys was a fast one, beingwon by the Hilo team by a score oftwo to one. The Honolulu boys wereonly off the boat an hour when thegame started and allowances have to bemade as quite a few of them were con-

fined to their bunks on the trip over.The cowbov carnival was not as

elaborate a one as the recent Honoluluaffair, but nevertheless brought outmany good riders and ropers.

The following is a condensed reportof the outcome of the races: '

JULY 3.First Race. Free for all, 7-- 8 mile.

Purse, $200. Won by Bruner; owned byL. Warren. Time, 1:40.

2nd. Cowboy relay race; 1 mile.Purse, $25. Won by Brick Lyman.Time, 3:53.

3rd. Hawaiian bred, MerchantsStakes; 1 mile. Purse, $500. Won byIndigo; owned by L. Warren, lime,1:52.

4th. Japanese stake race; mile.Purse, $75. Won by Jemmie; ownedbv Ikada. Time 1:26.

5th. Hawaiian bred; 3 8 mile. Purse,$150. Won by Indigo; owned by L.Warren. Time, 0:39.

JULY 4.1st. Free-for-a- ll race; 5-- 8 mile. Purse,

$200. Won by Yolo Girl; owned by C.David. Time, 1:09.

2nd. Roping contest. Won by Akauof Woods' ranch, Kohala. Time, 1:12.

3rd. Hawaiian bred race; mile.Purse, $200. Won by Indigo; ownedbv L. W'arren. Time, 1:23.

4th. Free-for-al- l, Merchants Stake 11-- 8 miles. Purse, $500. Won by Bruner;owned bv L. Warren. Time, 2:07.

5th. Bucking contest. Prize, $50.Won by Kaumu of Monsarrat's ranch.

6th. Japanese race. One mile. Purse,$50. Won by Jemmie; owned by Ikada.Time, 2:03.

7th. Maiden race. Hawaiian bred;mile. Purse, $100. Won by Break-

water; owned by Monsarrat. Time,0:54 1--

8th. Wild steer riding. Prize, $25.Five entries. Prize divided.

9th. Named horses. Any Hawaiianbred with catchweights, 3-- 8 mile. Purse,$150. Won by Indigo; owned by L.Warren. Time, :40.

10th. Free-for-al- l, mile. Purse,$225. Won by Frolic; owned by J.O'Rourke. Time, 1:20.

11th. Lunas race. Purse, $50 and10 of the entrance fees. Won bySweet Nell. Time, 2:08 1--

12th. Bucking race. Prize, $25. Wonbv Kaumu of Monsarrat's .ranch.

r rvr r r rk Coming Events Jr r 4xr p r ?p ?r"rJuly 9-- 11 St. Louis Minstrels' show.July 11 Triangular league baseball

starts.July 17-- 18 Wild West show.July 19 Fleet baseball.July 19 Golf, Mclnerny Cup play.July 20, 21, 22, 23 Kennel Club show.July 21, 22 Polo tournament.August 1 White Sox dance, K. of

P. Hall.Aug. 17 Puunene tennis cup play.

MEETING TONIGHT.The Kalanianaole Baseball League

will meet tonight at 7:30 o'clock atthe home of President A. K. Vierra.Business of importance is to be con-sidered and acted upon, and every representative is hereby notified to be ;

present.

MAE KEANE and VIRGINIATHORNTON.

Change of play, Monday and Thursday.

Monday Evening, July 6th:

A Bachelor's RomanceTHURSDAY; JULY 9

The Silver KingMATINEE "WEDNESDAY

AND SATURDAY

POPULAR ORPHEUM PRICES

Seats now on sale at Orpheum BoxOffice.

11 .oera nouseTuesday, July 7,

BLANCHE

Prima donna four continents in thegreatest program ever offered an audi-

ence anywhere.l.Nightingale Song Masse

(Les Noces de Jearmette)2. Mad Seene Thomas

Hamlet.

3. Excerpts from Mignon Thomas.(a) Romance "Knowest Thou the

Land."(b) "Swallow Song."

. (c) "Cantabile."(d) "Polacca."

ART THEATREHotel Street

BETWEEN BETHEL AND FORT

Extraordinary attractions. ChangesWednesday and Saturday. Matinee2:30 to 4. Evening, 7 to 8:30; 8:40 to10:15. Two Big Shows. Fine musicMrs. King, the celebrated concertsinger, in illustrated songs.

MOVING PICTURES

CALIFORNIA THEATRE

HOTEL and Union

NEW MOVING PICTURES

Today from 10 a. m. to 5 p. m., and

7 p. m. to 11 p. m.

Admission Ten Cents

Children Five Cents

EMPIRE THEATREHOTEL AND BETHEL STREETS.

New Moving PicturesTONIGHT! TONIuHT!

NEW FILMSFRANK VIERRA, Pianist.

Admission id cent!Children 5 cent

ASH BALLLeague Grounds

SATURDAY. JULY II

1:30 P. M.

ADMISSION 25c.

Reserved Seats, Grandstand, 25c Extra

I Furniture1 '

J. Hopp & Co. jJ 185 KING STREET. f

ISLAND HORSESFOR SALE CHEAP

Club StablesTelephone 109

JOCK FER R EIRA'S

Si EXPERIENCE

Got the Money in Hilo, but Was

Done Up for His

Pains.

Jockey Ferreira returned from Hiloraces yesterday morning. He showed

greatly improved form and had a verysuccessful meeting, bringing six horsesunder the wire firsts during the twodays of racing.

Ferreira stated last night that hedidn't get a square deal across thewater and that the other jockeys triedto give him the worst of it whenevera chance offered.

He brought back a couple of badly-discolore- d

optics, which he explains asfollows:

"The boys over there were jealousbecause I won so many races, and triedto do me dirt. They did me up, butI got the money all right.

' ' Early on Saturday morning, JockeyEverson, who was riding for Richard-son and O'Rourke, came up to me andwanted to scrap. We mixed it and Iknocked him down. Then Willis, thejockey; Clarence, the coon; Eversonand three native boys set on me andbeat me up, their idea being to fixme so that I couldn't ride that day.

"Bruner was in great shape andwould never have been beaten if thelast raee of the meeting, won by JohnO'Rourke 's Frolic, had been run onthe square.

' ' We were at the post in the lastrace waiting for the starter when aman on a horse came along and saidthat Willis hadn't got his right weight.Willis was told to go back and weighout properly, but refused to do so, andthe race was started. Willis was onFrolic, I was on Bruner, Everson wason Itolo Girl and a Japanese rider wason Banonica. The race finished withFrolic first, Yolo Girl second, andBruner third.

"After Willis had dismounted, Clar-ence, the coon, threw a blanket overFrolic and at the same time slinnedaoout ntteen pounds of lead where theyj

o

If .

i

: 1

4

Bethel Sts.

By the way, I came near to break-ing my second finger the second nightout; have not been nble to use it free-ly yet. The chest came in good use.Captain is on the bum and I have beeadoctoring him up on Garfield tea.

June 13, 1908.After three days of calms we got

a wind from the south last night. Waset the square sail and raffe, and thismorning the fisherman's staysail, whichis sending us along about ten milean hour. I wish I could get a pictnreof her. We have ten sails set andthose that say the Hawaii can nottravel do not know what they are talk-ing about.

Thursday morning we had a deadcalm, so we put the small boat over-board and I took some pictures. Ihave used up one film of six expo-sures and six more on a ten roll. Asoon as we get to L. A. I am going toget them developed and prints madeto send back as soon as possible. Weare 1240 miles from our destination atnoon today, so that the best time wecan make is about eighteen days.

June 23, 1908.Well, let me get back a few days.

Three days before reaching the main-land we "hit" some very roughweather, with big seas. Had to reefin mainsail and were making ten milesan hour; made 225 miles one day,

Saturday morning at daylight wosighted land, St. Michael's Island. Wwere becalmed off San Pedro aboutthirty miles all Saturday night andSunday morning. About 12:30 p. m.we got some wind and managedto get into San Pedro about 6:30 thatevening. We were met at the en-trance by Colonel Spalding (from Ka-uai), who is now commodore of theSouth Coast Yacht Club, in his yacht,folowed by many other yachts andlaunches. As soon as the doctor gaveus our pass, all hands came aboard. Assoon as the rush was over, me for LosAngeles. In company with Mr. Stewartand & Mr. Wood, I went to L. A. Ar-riving there, they took me to the HotelAlexandria (the big new hotel, cornerFifth and Spring), for a good feaftt. Iwent out to Yapps as soon as possible,arriving there about 11. o'clock. Alllook well and about the same. I havebeen treated royally by everyone.

The following letter was receivedyesterday by Chas. T. Wilder:

Irwindale, California,June 26, 1908.

Chas. T. Wilder, Esq., Honolulu, T. II.Dear Sir: The beautiful yacht Ha-

waii arrived in good time Sundayevening, the 21st, and we are prondof her. All who have seen her sayhe is the finest craft of her kind that

has come to this coast, and there seemsto be a general desire that she winthe race, as it would stimulate the de-

sire for a better class of yachts onthis coast, and a continuance of rac-ing in these waters. I am pleased withthe prospect of our winning the"Cup." Captain Harris wished me toinclose a few lines from liim. He saysthere will be no liquor on board whenthe Hawaii leaves port, and he willwin the race or sail the sticks out ofher, if tlwit were possible "Give methe wind and we will win." Every-thing is being done as well as possibleto have her in trim for the Fourth,when she will start on her triumphaltrip across the Pacific to show theother yachts the way to sail to thei'ands.

The fact of the Hawaii being builtand equipped and entered in this raceby popular subscription has made thpeople here appreciate what kind ofpeople we have at the islands, and willadvertise the inlands more than can beestimated. I am very sorry that oneof you could not have come up to rep-resent the club; possibly someone willcome on a later steamer so as to behere by the Fourth. I hope so.

With very kind regards and threecheers for the winning yacht it willbe the Hawaii vours verv truly.

W. WAT KIM IO USE.

i Short and Sweet 3

The fast and commodious yachtSpray will be sold at auction today atnoon.

Soldier Marsh of Fort Shaffer chal-

lenges Cabral, and would like to boxwinner take all.

Wahiawas' 19, Waipahus 8.Diamond Heads 7, Wailukus 5.

Wichmans 13, Hawaiis and Oahus 3.

Hawaii United 2, All Oahu 1. Suchwas the result of the socker gameplaved in Hilo for the Kennedy Cup

n the Glorious Fourth.

Cor. King and

praying for rain.4 p. m. Light wind from north. Set

squaresail and raffe. This last sailcertainly does the work in light weatherand is our only salvation.

Distance 105 knots.June 17, 6 a. m. Took in squaresail

and raffe as wind is hauling ahead.9 a. m. Took in flying staysail as

wind is freshening. Old Father Gabrielhas opened the tap to his north tankand is letting us have it good andplenty. Yacht making about 10 knotsan hour.

Distance 150 knots.June 18, midnight. Strong wind from

north and very cold. Hard work get-ting sights as weather is very cloudyand big sea.

12:30 a. m. Took in big jib topsail.6 p. m. Took in fore and main top-

sails.8 p. m. Strong wind from NW. with

big sea. Yacht still making 10 knotsan hour.

Distance 225 knots.June 19, 6 a. m. Double reefed the

mainsail as there is a strong wind fromNW. with a big sea. Our stove is outof commission and cook is sick, butsuch is life on a transpacific yacht.Very wet on deck and cold.

Distance 180 knots.June 20, 4:15 a. m. Land ho! Sight-

ed Saint Miguel Island dead aheadabout fifteen miles off.

9 a. m. Island abeam.4:35 p. m. Off Anacapia Islands and

fifty-seve- n miles from San Pedro.8 p. m. Dead calm with big swells;

about forty miles from San Pedro.June 21, 6 a. m. Sighted Santa Bar-

bara Island to leeward, also four-maste- d

schooner bound for San Pedro. Havethirty-thre- e miles to go to reach ourdestination with no wind. Very cloudy.

12 m. Set squaresail and raffe aslight wind has sprung up from the NW.Passed schooner which proved to be theDauntless, lumber laden.

2:30 p. m. Sighted Point Fernin andhope to get into port tonight.

6 p. m. Off San Pedro breakwater.Met by yacht with Commodore Spaul-din- g

and members of the S. C. Y. Clubaboard and followed by many otheryachts and launches.

6:30 p. m. Dropped anchor in SanPedro and were boarded by the doctorand given pratique.

Distance traveled, 2159 miles.Average run per day, 127 miles.Lowest run per day, 27 miles.Highest run per day, 225 miles.The parents of Ray Rietow, purser

of the transpacific yacht Hawaii, re-

ceived the following letter by yester-day's mail:

Yacht Hawaii, Lat. 34:31,June 9, 1908.

Today is Tuesday and at 2:30 o'clockwe will be out seven days. We arestill heading north, but are ready tostart for San Pedro as sooq as we canget a favorable wind. Yesterday thewind hauled around to the south, sowe are heading NE.

The trip so far has been simplydandy, with the exception of the firsttwo days out, when it was quite roughand wet.

The cook is doing good work dish-- j

ing up a regular luau every day. 1

am getting a great appetite, and if1 keep on I will not be able to getinto my clothes.

T have to stand watch with the restof the crew four hours on and fourhours off. It was pretty hard at first,having to get up at midnight or 4 a.m. to stand watch. I have been foxy,though, and after standing at thewheel for an hour or so I take a blan-ket and roll up on deck, and have anap.

The weather has simply been dandy,with a very smooth sea. The days aremute warm, but the nights are whatmake you want to get into your bunk.My warm clothing has come into gooduse in fact. I am the best fitted outof the whole bunch. Mr. Stroud iswearing one of my woolen shirts atthe present time.

The earlv part of the evenings, tneCaptain, Mr. Stroud, cabin boy and Iplay pedro. So far the Captain andMr. Stroud have been aomg us up infine style; my luck seems to have departed.

Captain Harris has uist ngurea outt t 1 T

Aiir location. !." mnes irora x e- -

dro, which, at 200 miles a day, shouldget us there in eight days.

Well, I am going to read awoneand then take a snooze; so so muchfor now.

June IT'O.Things are rertainlv n the bum.

The wind is around to the east anawe are heading NE. Captain Harriss getting crazy for a shift of wind.

It rained this afternoon ana ougnt tobring a change. Having to watcnwater supply prettv close, as we donot know how long we will be out. Ices pau and only one more pineapple

left.

should have been during the race, sothat when Willis weighed in his weightwas found to be O. K. It was a dirtysteal, all right. Some people made aholler about it, but nothing came ofit, and Frolic got the money."

Ferreira will return to the Coast toride in the near future.

THEY WELL DANCE.The Aliiolani Royal Dancing Club

opened last night and three dances aweek will be given in Wilcox Hall.The music is good and a fine time isassured all attending:

The Log ofYacht Hawaii

(Continued from Page One.)Distance 165 knots.June 9, 4 a. nf. Wind hauled from

E. by N. to E. SE. but not steady.10 a. m. Settled back to E. Watches

busy with the paint brush.Distance 157 knots.June 10. Light NE. wind and smooth

sea all day.8:50 p. m. Tacked ship.9:30 p. m. Tacked ship again. Wind

light and variable.Ice supply is pau so no more cold

drinks for a while.Distance 98 knots.June 11, 1 a. m. Dead calm.4:30 a. m. Lowered mainsail and

made minor alterations and repairs. Unbent old jib and staysail and bent onracing gear in their place. Loosed outsquaresail to dry.

8:30 a. m. Put out boat and Rietowtook photograph of yacht.

10 a. m. Our old friend the NE. windsprung up again much to the disgust ofthe captain who was in hopes of gettingthe wind from the westward as we arenow two degrees north of San Pedro.

10:30 a. m. Lowered baby jib andset big jib topsail.

2 p. m. Wind hauled around to thesouth and we were in hopes that we hadour fair wind at last. At 4 o'clockwind hauled back to NE. again.

Distance 27 knots.June 12, midnight. Dead calm,

i 2 a, m. Liight wind trom tne soutn.'Yacht heading E. by N., makingthroughout the day about 3 knots anhour.

3:30 p. m. Wind hauled aft, so setsquaresail and raffe.

4. p. m. ; Took in squaresail andraffe as wind hauled ahead.

10 p. m. Wind hauling to south andfreshening. Set squaresail and raffe.

5:30 a. m. Set flying staysail. Thismakes ten sails we have set and theHawaii must certainly look fine withall sails set and only wish we couldget a picture. At noon today were1240 miles from San Pedro. Had ourlast, pineapple for supper, finishing thelast of our fresh fruit.

Distance 56 knots.June 13, midnight. Wind very light

from the south. Hope to get out ofthese calms soon as we all want to getto San Pedro.

4 p. m. Sighted unknown barkbound north.

Distance 145 knots.June 14, midnight. Light wind from

b. S. with smooth soa; uneventful.Distance 165 knots.June 15, 2:30 a. m. Wind hauled

dead aft, so took in flying staysail.5 a. m. Wind hauled back to S. by

W.: set flying staysail again.12:15 p. m. Wind hauled to eastward

so jibed sails. Sighted unknown four-maste- d

schooner bound south.12:30 p. m. Wind hauled north; took

in squaresail and raffe.4:30 p. m. Wind bark to north

again with light showers and thickweather.

Distance 135 knots.June 16, midnight. Dead calm. If

this keeps on we will never get to S. P.in time for the race. AH hands are

w .

t'x - f '"" ov

1 v. w . , 4 A " . ' , - - , ,. 1

At : Cc sv - -- - 1 -- ll - -- ..

BRUNESLonis Warren's raeer, which helped to sweep the board at the Hilo J

1 meeting. C

; ; 7. L i I

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1908.

THE3

CITY TO RECEIVE A

THOROUGH CLEANING UP

Pacific Commercial AdvertiserA MORNING PAPER. ! Cooling Zephyrs

BWALTER Q. SMITH . EDITOE

TUESDAY : : : : : : : JULY 7"

How many people know it onlyiTi;meet

' as a name people who should beWhen you need themWhere you want themBy using a portable

Aeorni .strong, healthy, virile!THL1308,: Vigor is the result of the right

amount of Vitality.--1lodgf tectric

As far as the streets of the city areconcerned, this will be Spotless Townwhen the fleet is in port, but there area number of places about the city, prin-

cipally in the outer sections among theresidences, where vacant lots displaytheir weeds and rubbish piles andwhere the yards, of untenanted housesshout for the man with the hoe.

The various improvement clubs haveworked hard in enlisting a popularsupport for a clean city, and in thecase of the great majority of theproperty-owner- s this work has beenvery successful, the exceptions onlyemphasizing the rule. The county and

For Appetite, Health, and Vig

or, there's nothing that can take

. J"" A ministerial resolution asking the press to hide the name of areputable citizen who is said to own property used for immoral purposes might"well have been followed by one advising that citizen to get into another lineof business.

.

THE MONEY QUESTION.Honolulu, July 4, 1908.

Editor Advertiser. Answering Mr. Ingham's question in thismorning's paper you say "the purchasing power of that currencyfluctuates." The intimation is that the purchasing power of currencybased on a gold basis does not fluctuate.

' Is it not a fact that the purchasing power of all currency con

the place of Attachable to any elec-

tric light socketBetter than a vacationCosts very little.

4 lalt lutrineV2

i the Natural Tonic.Territory, too, intend to do theirshare.

Road Supervisor Cummins stated last It is universally prescribed by The Hawaiian Electric Co., Ltd.King St. near Alakea. P. O. Box 144.

E3X the medical profession.

stantly fluctuates? Is it not a fact that the purchasing power of agold dollar is different today from what it was before the panic of19071 And is it not a fact that the basis of our currency has beengold for more than a decade! Then, if gold is unable to prevent

'fluctuation, assuming fluctuation to be detrimental, to "hamper busi-

ness," is it not possible to substitute some currency that is of itselfmore stable and le:js susceptible of manipulation than gold!

RespeetfuJy yours, II. CULM AN. Hi 11 1,The price of products may fluctuate, according as they are scarce or dear.

Limitedand sometimes for artificial reasons. But we do not, as used to be the case

night that his department would keepa big gang of street cleaners at workboth before the arrival of the fleet andduring the time that the sailors are tobe in the city. The regular road work,except in the outer districts, will bediscontinued for the week and abouthalf the road workers will be laid off.The other half will go into cleaninggangs and on the street sprinklers. Thework of sweeping will be started everynight at midnight and the main streetswill be gone over so as to be spickand span every morning. t

There are s.ix street sprinklers avail-able, and these will be kept going allthe time during the week.

Along the waterfront the Territoryis in charge of the cleaning up.Through the courtesy of the HighSheriff a gang of prisoners has beenturned over to the Department of Pub

ia Japan, when that country was on a silver basis, have to look in the paperThe Best is always the Cheapest.

HAWAIIAN SOUVENIRS STAMPEDrv ilstv tn a nchnt. mnnpv itsplf ia worth. The ETOld dollar IS Worth a

dollar all the time. Unite a fluctuating troduct with a fluctuating currency

and you have financial chaos and hard times. A currency that will not change

H.C.

any more than a yardstick will, is the only safe currency."

. Maunawaia, T. II., July 4, 3903.

Editor Advertiser. In your editorial today, replying to EdwardIngham's query, you say that so long as gold is the standard of valuethe world over, etc., etc., etc. ' Now, I wish to ask if gold is, ever was,or ever can be a standard of value! If so, how? Is it not simply thebasis of issue! Yours very truly, E. C. BHODES.

lic Works, and this gang has beencleaning up the government lots alongthe front and the sidewalks and roadsadjoining. Glean sand is being spread Are the best and are truly souvenirs because they are made

It is the standard of value because it is the only commodity in universalon the sidewalks, along the front, from 6 in Honolulu.bs which does not fluctuate in value. The monetary worth of all other com

xnodities, in final analysis, is measured by gold. That is why gold, in all counFort street to Punchbowl, and sandwill also be put on the walks about thefishmarket. The prison gang will betries of stable currency, is the basis of issue.

. Gulman 1064 Fort Streetkept on the front cleaning during fleetweek.THE LONDON TIMES. It onlv remains for those property- -

GuaranteeYour Watchto keep perfect time if repaired byus. Many years' experience in the

owners who have neglected their dutyso far to get in line and the city will

In the files arriving by the Mongolia yesterday the statement that theXiondon Times has been sold is again made. The purchaser this time is given

be in a creditable condition from theas Lord Northcliffe, the principal proprietor of the London Mail, and better front to the crest of Punchbowl.known in America as Sir Alfred .Harmsworth. It is stated that the organizalion of a limited liability company, including all the interests represented in

NEWS NOTESthe ownership of the paper, which was undertaken some time ago to preventits falling into the hands of C. Arthur Pearson, did not have "the harmonizing FROM FILES

The treasury faces a deficit of $60,- -

000,000.

ffeet that it was thought it would have, and it was finally decided to sell theproperty. Lord Northcliffe seemg to have been the Johnny on the spot, and got it.

The interest with which the fortunes and the fate of j the London Times isfollowed is, in itself, the highest possible evidence of the unique positionthe paper holds in the newspaper world. The Times is, and for many yearslas been, regarded as something more than a mere newspaper enterprise. Itlias been looked on as an institution. It has had influence as an institution.Other newspapers express opinions. It thundered inerrant and immutable truth.

Bryan is assessed in Nebraska for

watch business places us In a po-

sition to offer to you expert ser-

vices at minimum cost.Appoint us the guardian of your

watch. We will guarantee to make

it keep correct time.

Jl J J

H. F. Vichman & Co.LIMITED

Leading Jewelers

$84,500.Lord Northcliffe has purchased the

London Times.

Cotton Crepe, NewPatterns, ReautifuJDesigns, 20c a Yard.

Japanese BazarFort Street, near the Convent.

San Diego is shipping lemons eastia Tehuantepec.J. P. Morgan thinks the business out

v its influence for many years has been out of all proportion to its circulation.i J It has been a good deal like Shakespeare. As a great many more people accept

look is improving. . r

There is a marked decline in American travel abroad.

4J

v

f v

J

A new diamond field has been foundin Southern Africa.

Hearst only gained 800 votes in therecount for mayor.

The Harriman stables at Tuxedo Park

Shakespeare as all that is great in literature, than read him, so a great manymore people believe the London Times the greatest newspaper on earth thanread it. As an institution the British public revered it. But to find the thingsthey wanted to read, served in the way they wanted to read them, they tookcome other paper.

No doubt its achievements in the past have justified something of theveneration that is . felt for it. On the other hand, the fact that the London

(

Times has escaped the commercialization which the British press has so almost. tiniversally suffered, has no doubt had its influence in retaining for the Times

its unique position. If Lord Northcliffe has indeed bought it, he will achievethe greatest journalistic triumph of his wonderful journalistic career, if heeaves it from commercialization, and preserves it to something of the beststandards that made it great.

have been burned. ..

Theodore Koosevelt, Jr., has gradu salsated from Harvard. WRAPPING PAPER,Jaime Alexander Jean is the name ofthe new Spanish prince.

On June 24, the Shah declared PAPER BAGS, TWINESTeheran in a state of siege. 'Germany protests agains the landing

of French troops at Tetuan.During a recent riot in Teheran, a

bomb was thrown at the Shah.Pugilist Corbett will leave the stage

for the hotel and cafe business.

ServedAt All Hours

The Best of Everything.

In the Best of Style.

V

t aB tt

A. Y. CAFE

The Queen of Portugal, mother of American-Hawaiia- n Paper & Supply Co., Ltd.King Manuel, is going to Brazil.

Inky black water off Catahna is supCORNER FORT AND QUEEN STS.posed to indicate submarine disturbance.

The steel trust will spend $11,000,000TelepbtM 411.GEO. G. GUILD. Genera! Manager.n building a model town for employes.

The steamer Jefferson brought $1,- -

000,000 from Alaska on her recent trip.Chas. Templeton Crocker is to drives auto from New York to San Fran

cisco.French Catholics report a fall of hail

stones bearing images of the VirginMary.

Diplomatic relations with enezuelahas been severed. Castro is bellig- -

BO WOHotel Near Smith Street.MANUFACTURER OF

Jade Jewelryereut.

THE SODA WATER HABIT.Strangers coming here from almost any part of the mainland are surprised,

when they learn about it, at the amount of bottled soda drinks consumed inHonolulu and the Territory at large. In the East, West and South, while foun-tain soda ia universal, the use of cheap bottled goods is generally confined tobars and rarely extends to private homes or to the grocery and "notion"trade. Here it is common to homes, fruit stands, bars, small grocery storesand push-wagon- s, and to all classes, though most popular, perhaps, among for-

eign laborers. The consumption in Honolulu is really enormous, gome esti-

mating it at one bottle per capita per day. At the soda fountains a large sumof money is also spent, and there is constant rivalry among them, as there isamong the bottlers, to invent new flavors or improve old ones. .

Were this custom common on the mainland it would go far to abate thedrink evil, as it assuredly has done in Hawaii. But for the soda manufacturersand sellers, this Territory might be deluged with cheap beer, to the very great

, detriment of public health. Whatever may be said in favor of the moderateindulgence of beer in northern countries, especially beer which is made fromhops and has not been fortified, its use in the tropics is clearly dangerous.When a man returns to England from India and sajs that he has drunk beeras regularly for five years there as he ever did at home, he is credited withLaving an iron-boun- d constitution. In the tropics the liver, for lack of theowner's exercise, is always in peril; and the use of beer makes that perilgreater. Beer and the liver never get on together, and the latter is the onethat succumbs. Furthermore, as an agent, in the fatty degeneration of all theorgans susceptible to that form of disease, ;beer has no rival in the drink mar-

ket. It is a standard life-shortene- r.

But carbonated waters, harmlessly flavored, hurt no one. They quenchthirst, which is the chief business of a drink; are pleasant to the taste, andtheir consumption does not set a bad example. There are no arrests, no fines,no offenses against the law, no impoverished homes in a soda fountain or apod a case. Tlxey promote temperance in its best form, and their wide acceptancehere is a thing which makes Honolulu fortunate among cities.

King Edward has forbidden the officers of a crack regiment to give skirtdances.

awanan

We have just received from the dairies a large invoiceof the best butter we have had in many months and we

are offering it as follows:CRYSTAL SPRINGS .35 Cents

WHITE CLOVER 30 Cents

PARKER RANCH, zlbs 70 Cents

Metropolitan Meat Company, Ltd.Telephone 45.

Ho'i

10

1

R

mti

uvenir

UTS es

50 cents

Hi If

The Sultan of Turkey is trying toborrow $600,000 in France on mortgagesecurity.

The U. S. S. Salem, new turbine scoutcruiser, made 2(3.88 knots on a meas-ured run.

A Republican mas meeting in Lisbondemanded an accounting of royal ex-penditures.

The Shah has wrecked the homes ofPersian politicians who opposed him inParliament.

Heart trouble, aggravated by intenseheat, was the cause of Grover Cleve-land's death.

An office-structur- e and hotel may boerected on the old Occidental site inSan Francisco.

Mrs. ('. P. Huntington has purchaseda former residence of the Empress Eu-genie in Paris.

Democrats think they have betterprospects of electing the House thanelecting Bryan.

Secretary Loeb has declined thechairmanship of the Republican Na-tional Committee.

Four of the Atlantic fleet fired asalute to former President Cleveland inSan Francisco harbor.

Helen Gould, who does not like thePrince de Sagan, strongly opposed themarriage of her sister.

An auto ran off the Coronado ferry-boat into San Diego bay with fourpeople. All were saved.

Lightning struck the automobile ofGov. Hughes, of New York, while hewas riding in it and shattered theisinglass screen in front.

President Roosevelt, before the fun-eral of Grover Cleveland, summoned themembers of the dead President's two

I 1 H WWHi I 3 JLI 2L JLJL-- L. XL tsL JX alkali 2

The growth of prohibition sentiment in the United States is remarkable.There are now eight prohibition States, with a total population of 13,000.000.There are 2.10 prohibition cities in thirty-fiv- e States, with from 5000 to 160.000each,, having a total population of 3,500,000, and an average population ofnearly 15.000. Practically 40,000,000 people, of whom at least 10.000,000 havebeen added within the past four years, are living in prohibition territory, whichruw comprises nearly two-third- s of the nation's area. "The liquor traffic,"says the Associated Prohibition Press, "is now largely centered and protectedin one hundred large cities of twenty-eigh- t license States, from which vantagethe nation's prohibition two-third- s are being bombarded and devastated withoutredress by the brewers under the protection of the Federal government's inter-state regulations."

(UNSWEETENED)

The BestPURE.

We have just received the first ship-

ment of what we think will be the best50c. seller of all the many moderate-price- d

Hawaiian Souvenirs. This is atwo-poek- et Shield Purse, with handstrap for women and plain for men.The front shows the Hawaiian icoat-of-ari- ns

with motto, the under flap anAmerican Hag, the outer flap the word'Aloha," and the roar the Kameha-meh- a

statue, all in relief. The leatheris strong, durable calf, natural color.

Besides being a handsome souvenir,this purse will be much used locally,its shape, utility and artistic finish allcombining to make it an ideal pursefor daily use.

and Safest to use, because it's ABSOLUTELY

RICHEST IN BUTTER FAT.KEEPS INDEFINITELY.ASK YOUR GROCER.

While it is to 1 e regretted that Captain Carter should have involved him-

self in a personal difficulty with a reporter, lie was not without a substantialgrievance. For months he has misrepresented in print. Twice he hasbeen accused of running his boat aground, when nothing of the kind occurred;once he was pictured as making a false move which left his boat to be draggedby the stern by a big liner; his seamanship on other occasions, particularly atPearl Harbor, has been unjustly criticized; he was reported as having sailthat, he found an uncharted rock upon which the Sheridan had struck, whenhe had simply refused to be interviewed on the subject. Finally, his patiencegave out aid he struck a blow. .Some men would have done worse under aslighter sense of injury; some not so much. It is a question of temperament.

. HAGKFEL CO,, LTD.0 ciiCabinets into the chamber of death anddelivered to them, with his character-istic energy and force, an xquisiteeulogy on the life and death of Cleve-land. It was probably the only eulogypreached at the funeral, and even thiswas delivered behind closed doors tomen who were much in the public eye.

DISTRIBUTORS.illThe Star's simultaneous edition was a rrp.lit t' - - V - 'Uir-,lU- 3 aiivj Willprepare the sailors, on their way down, for the sights in store for them.

Si

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1908. 5

a cutd 0ca cd cz:.:d c DOC

AUTOMOBILE SERVICE Opposite Hawaiian Hotel

9ELEGANTLY EQUIPPED IN EVERY PARTICULAR. NOTHING BETTER IN THE TERRITORY. MODERN, POWERFUL MACHINES AT PUBLIC SERVICE AT REA-

SONABLE RATES IN CHARGE OF CAREFUL, RESPONSIBLE CHAUFFEURS ACQUAINTED WITH THE CITY AND CAPABLE OF DIRECTING TO ALL POINTS OF IN-TERES- T.

v f . 3

nUciL XI Z? ...... Ur-c- e

TELEPHONE 191.

This Island contains much of interest to the tourist.

These machines carry you quickly giving you long time

at objective points.

We know the where and how of automobiling. ''Our

services are at your disposal at all hours, day or night.

Seven Seated Studebaker.

Seven Seated Stoddard-Dayto- n.

fijr battery ofn--Thoroughbreds

One Seven Seated Stoddard-Dayto- n.

One Five Seated Buick.

One Seven Seated Studebaker.

One Five Seated Pope Hartford.

Record bearers for Pacemakers and Hill climbers.

Nothing better has ever been run over these roads.Five Seated Pope Hartford.Five Seated Buick.

f

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Our Chauffeurs have grown with Honolulu and know every ndok and crannie of the place from the viewpoint of the tourist. Special rates for long distance runs or to Haleiwa. Visits to

Kapiolani Park, Diamond Head Light, Aquarium and the beach hotels at nominal cost. .

1

Fort Shnfter Bishop Museum, Kamehameha Schools and Moanalua are objects of special interest to visitors and should not be overlooked. r

LIOne of the finest bits of scenery on this Island. The spot where Kamehameha conquered his enemies and drove them to their death. A magnificent panoramic view of both sides of the

Island may be obtained from this point No one should miss this grand scene. ' The cost of the trip is small, compared with the satisfaction ; the time is shortr ?

FULLEST INFORMATION AS TO ITINERARY ON APPLICATION.

REPAIR DEPARTMENT - .This is in charge of expert mechanics thoroughly familiar with automobile construction. Repairs made quickly. 'Greatest attention paid at this Garage to the care of private machines.

Compensation for this service on application. .

GEORGE S. WELLS, Manager.

EDO'.

ELKS FOREGATHEREDReisManuel III!' ONE 1 i a:RROWto the delight of the well-nig- h frozenexcursionists.

Shortly after midnight a party ofabout thirty people descended into thecrater and traveled to the brink ofHalemaumau. The edge of the firepitwas reached about half-pas- t one, whenthe excursionists were rewarded by see- -

HALEMAUMAUATffHE LATEST MODEL POPE-HARTFOR-

1908. Honolulu People Give Credit WhereCredit is Due.

. ing the crater in probably its greatest People of Honolulu w,ho suffer with'8 Isick kidneys and bad backs want a

I: If I

iMiffiiiit

The best automobile In the city, ttcarry four passengers, can be had '

ny hour, day ir night, by calling uManuel Reis, te tphone 290; voHamm-Youn- g arte, telephone 200, e?

my residence, telephone 1097.

TWO IMPORTED

Thoroughbred JerseyBULLS AT SERVICE AT

THE POND DAIRYTelephone 890

kidney remedy that can be dependedupon. The best is Doan's BackacheKidney Pills, a medicine for the kid-neys only, made from pure roots andherbs, and the only one that is backedby cures in Honolulu. Here's Honolulutestimony:

H. S. Swinton, Honolulu, say: "Iwas a long sufterer from bacsache,having been afflicted with it for twelveyears. Taking this as a symptom ofkidney trouble, and seeing Doan'sBackache Kidney Pills advertised asbeing good for complaints such asmine, I procured some of them at theHollister Drug Co.'s store. I found

CLUPECO SHRUNK QUARTER SIZES

An Arrow Collar rightly chosen setsright on your shirt, is becoming toyour face and fits your neck, isc- -s for 25c.

CLUETT. PEA BODY & COMPANY. Troy, N. Y.Makers of Ciuett Shirts

upon taking them that they were doingme good, and was thereby encouragedto keep on until now I am cured of tha

Tired, but satisfied, . is the general.feeiing of the passengers who returnedby the S. !S. Mauna Kea yesterdaymorning from the Elks' excursion tollilo and the Volcano.

The party numbering over two hun-

dred, left Hoaolulu on Friday eveninglast. The trip to Hilo was very smoothin comparison to what it is at times,and there were only a possible ten whocondescended to amuse the others bylooking as if they had lost their lastfriend. Early Saturday morning asmall gathering, presided over by Col.C. J. McCarthy, assembled on the portdeck, and Jack Lucas and Geo. O'Xeilwere dragged from their bunks andwere made to do little stunts, much tothe amusement of the crowd.

The boat arrived at Hilo on Satur-day morning at 10 o'clock, seventy-si- x

of the party leaving immediately bytrain for the Volcano. The balance ofthe crowd visited the IIoolulu Park,where the horse racing was going on.After the races the balance of theparty boarded the Volcano train, leav-

ing Hilo before 7 o'clock in the even-

ing.Glenwood, the terminal of the line,

was reached shortly after 9 o'clock, andfrom there the party were transportedto the Volcano House by stages, andwere greeted by the party which pre-

ceded them in the morning. Demos-thones- e

Lycurgus then seated them toan exceptionally fine supper, the roombeing heated by a large fireplace, much

backache. The merits of Doan's Bach-ach- e

Kidney Pills have been strikingly Theshown in my case, and I recommendthem to other sufferers."

Doan's Backache Kidney Pills aresold by all druggists and storekeepers

activity.Four hundred feet below the molten

lava spouted and bubbled. In the cen-

ter of this molten flow, which probablyfilled an area of from eight to tenacres, seemed to stand an island; onone side of this was a fantastic lavaformation, houselike in appearance,against which waves of lava rolled, andbeing repulsed, flew high into the air.On the opposite side of the pit therewere two similar spouts, which con-

tinued throughout the morning to emitgreat quantities of lava. The entirelake was in continuous movement, as ifby special appointment. Among thesightseers were many old kamaainas, whohad heretofore never seen the sight,and who agreed with the balance thatit was one of the greatest displays theyhad ever witnessed. At daybreak theparty returned to the Volcano House,some returning to Hilo and others stay-

ing over for the day. rThe trip down to Glenwood proved to

be a very interesting one. Along theroad grew large tree ferns, amongwhich the wild roses twined. Berrieswere in plenty, the rain, however, stop-ping the passengers from gatheringmany. The balance of the party camedown on the evening train to Hilo, em-

barking immediately for Honolulu.A large gathering was on the wharf

to bid aloha to the passengers, thequintet club aboard singing appropriatesongs. The trip back to Honolulu wasa very smooth one, the majority of the;passengers retiring to their bunks early,after their tiresome journey.

Great credit is due to the committeewho managed the affair, which will be;

PURE-BRE- D POULTRY

FOR SALE.EGGS from choice stock In se&aom.Address: W. C. WEEDON,

Box 658, Honolulm.

REDUCTION SALELADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S

HATSK. UYEDA1023 7UUANTJ AVENUE

at 50 cents per box (six boxes for $2.50),or will be mailed on receipt of priceby the Hollister Drug Co., Honolulu,wholesale agents for the HawaiianIslands.

AT THE COUNTY BATHS.There was a crowd of over 1000 peo-

ple at the public baths at Waikiki onthe Fourth, and there was another big

Offer to the Trade Their Mill Products, including the fol-

lowing Celebrated Brands:

"GOLDEN GATE," "SPERRY," "DRIFTED SNOW,""MAPLE LEAF," "SOUND RING," "RED SHIELD,"

and. other Family and Baker Flour. AlsoBRAN, SHORTS, MIDDLINGS, ROLLED BARLEY, and

the famous CAPITOL MILLS CEREALS.

The Sperry Products have been for over fifty years thestandard of quality for the Pacific Coast

rowd on Sunday afternoon. On theFourth the women's bathing quarters

The most completeand attractive curioIs

STEINER'SIsland Curio StoreElite Building, Hotelstreet. Visitors al-ways welcome.

Hi were entirely inadequate for the crowdand late-comer- s of ladies and childrencould not be accommodated. The Sal

. PRECIOUS STONESset in rings and brooches. Gold andsilver jewelry made to order at rea-sonable prices. Your trade solicited.

vation Army with their band and thechildren from the home attended onthis day and gave the little ones anouting that they will remember. Downin the mauka (Diamond Head) cornerof the premises a place has been ma-

cadamized for the accommodation ofthe vehicles, which has been much need-ed, as horses had to be hitched pre-- !

viously to the trees along the road. Itis understood that in view of the great

Ask your Grocer for them.

Robert Innes Lillie,RESIDENT MANAGER.

long remembered bv those who took!SUN WOCHAN CHEW, Manager

1S08 Maunakea St. P. O. Box 943

Choice

the trip. Henry C. PZaston had the af-

fair directly under his charge, doingmuch to make the passengers as com-

fortable a? possible. The others on thecommittee were J as. Dougherty, Geo.Martin, and J. Walter Dovle.

Hilo Office:Spreckels Bldg., King St.

Honolulu Office:Robinson Bldg., Queen St.

Red Checker MenFloat the red checkers fromyour checker-boar- d in a bowlof water and you will knowwhy blood is red. Blood hasmillions and millions of littlered wheels floating in a clearfluid. The professor calls themred corpuscles. Well,

Scott's Emulsionmakes red corpuscles. Theselittle red wheels grow in thebone marrow. SCOTT'SEMULSION contains a powerwhich feeds and puts new lifeinto the bone marrow of palepeople.

AUDruffKiats; 50c and $1.00.

Kaneohe Beefdesire on the part of the frequentersof the beach that the band play atthe publie baths instead of MakeeIsland; that the Sunday concerts atWaikiki in the near future will begiven under the big banyan .just oppo-

site the public baths or a band standbe erected in the premises.

A certain Sunday school class inPhiladelphia consists for the most partof youngsters who livp in the poorer dis-

tricts of the city. One Sunday theteacher told the class about Cain andAbel, and the following week she turnedto Jimmie, a diminutive lad, who, how-ever, had not been present the previoussession. "Jimmie," she said. "I wantyou to tell me who killed Abel.""Aint no use askin' me, teacher," re-plied Jimmie; "I didn't even know hewas dead."

Always on HandYOUNG PIGSPOULTRYEGGSFRESH BUTTER AND CHEESE

SAM WO MEAT GO.King Street Market, next C. Q. Yee

Hop & Co.Tel. 288

YOUNG TIM, Manager.

FEMCM LMUB3DRYJ. ABADIE - - - Proprietor

Ladies and Gents' Washing Done First-dai- s. r I

Gloves and Ostrich Feathers. f

Wool and Silk Made Cleaner by a New Frenci Proccts.Charges reasonable. Give us a trial. 1

358 BERETANIA STREET : : : ': ': THONE 1431

WELL. NAMED.Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and

Diarrhoea Remedy is just what itsname implies. For pains in thestomach, cramp colic or diarrhoea, Ithas no equal. For sale by Benson,Smith Sc Co., Ltd., agents for H. I.

6 THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1908.

S. 543, s. c. 46 Law Ed. 321; Equitable Thuite Assurance Society v. Brown ere isNO CONFLICT OF admr., 187 U. S. 308, s. c. 47 Law. Ed.190), but in view of the historical

noinof

facts, with the knowledge of whicill

aeffectsgallonCongress must, undoubtedlv, have beenLI SAYS COURT charged, that the previously existin

Republic, Provisional Government andTARE A SHOT 1

AT THE FLEET !

Kingdom of Hawaii, had for over halfa century, provided and maintained forthe beueht, betterment and upliftinof the people of these islands an ine KoDinson uverruies ueJudgdependent government, comprising andcomprehending every detail and cireumstanee of the government of a mod

murrer in the MartinCase. ern civilized nation, in its later stages

patterned atter the form of government obtaining in the United Statesitself. (Hawaii v. Mankichi, 190 U,

We'll Supply You With Guns and Ammunition because197, s. c. 47 Law. Ed. 1016.)Judge Robinson yesterday overruledCounsel for defendant challenges the the

ofthe demurrer interposed to the indict

propriety or employing the popular expression used in referring to our orment against Blanche Martin. The quantity

alcoholprincipal ground of demurrer urged by ganic act as "Our Constitution," inissisting that it is absurd for a people

to recognize as a constitution a congressional enactment which, of itself, 11.smais subservient and subordinate to theConstitution of the United States. Butthe constitutions of the several statesare subservient and subordinate to the Rainier Bottling Works

A. S. Humhpreys, the woman's attor-ney, was that section 3151 of the Re-

vised Laws of the Territory of Ha-

waii, the one under which the defend-ant was indicted, is inconsistent withthe Constitution and. laws of the Unit-ed States and was not continued inforce by section 6 of the Organic Actof Hawaii.

After stating the case fully, JudgeRobinson directs himself to this con

Constitution of the United States, aswell as the organic acts of the several

Phone 1331territories, and I am inclined to thinkthat the popular expression is not sowide of the mark, if one compares therelations established between the peopie of the United States and the Congress of the United States, by meansof the Constitution of the United

tention, and says: )

It is a well-know- n rule of construc

PlumbingWe do the best work at

the lowest prices. Satisfac-tory to the expert inspector.

Sing Chan Co.Opposite Aala Park.

States, and the relations establishedtion, expressed in the maxim,pressio unius, exelusio alterius between the Congress of the United

States and the legislatures of the sev--that the express mention of one act. meanscondition, stipulation, class or number! ' er.al . states and territories, bynerson or r,lar.e. imnlips th l;r- - ot the constitutions and organic acts,

of such states and terri- -of another, or others, not monti respectively,

The Coming of the Fleet offers a rare chance tor you to

get fine pictures pictures that you will be glad to have, andproud of having taken. Such a grand spectacle has never be-

fore been seen here, and may never be seen again.

Everything favors the man with the Kodak; the clear

Honolulu air, the grouping of the vessels, and the easy access

to points of vantage insure some very remarkable Fleet Pictures.

Get yourself a Kodak NOW, when it will do the mostgood.

Or bring out the old one, and we will overhaul it and cleanit up FREE OF CHARGE.

Don't wait! Don't miss your chance!

Get your supplies now. , The Fleet will soon be here.

This rule restricts what is implied by liels."s well settled that the people of

what is particular and specific. If the United States grant to the Con-gress of the United States only suchcounsel 's contention that it was the

purpose and intent of Congress in the powers of government as are expresslyconferred by the terms thereof or nec

LAUHALA MATS

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Lauhala Mats, Bas-kets, Tapas, Fans,Postals. HAWAII sSOUTH SEAS CU-RIO CO., AlexanderYoung Building.

passage of the Organic Act that allacts of Congress applicable generally essarily implied therefrom, reservingto the territories of the United States to themselves all powers of govern-

ment not expressly granted or necessarily implied, and, on the other hand,that the Congress of the United States,

and those places over which the Unit-ed States has exclusive jurisdiction,should apply to as well to the Terri-tory of Hawaii, is correct, the expressmention in said section 10, of certainstatutes of general application, towhich attention has been called, asbeing applicable to the Territory ofHawaii, would have been idle and amere wasts of words.

It is also a well-know- n rule of con-struction that a particular statute mustprevail over a general one where their

OFFICE SPECIALTIES

CASH REGISTER.

TYPEWRITER,

ADDING MACHINE,

MIMEOGRAPH andGL0BE-WERN1CK- E

suppLIE

j provisions are inconsistent or irrecon

through and by means of the constitu-tions of the several states, confers uponthe legislatures of the several statesplenary governmental powers, reserv-ing unto itself only such powers ofgovernment the exercise of which, Nby

the State legislatures, is expressly in-

hibited by such constitutions. How-ever different may be the manner oftheir adoption or the methods of theurpromulgation, I am unable to observeany essential difference in effect ' be-tween the constitution of a state andthe organic act of a territory, as theauthority conferred by Congress uponthe Several territorial legislatures, bymeans of the several organic acts, is alimitation of power similar to the au-

thority conferred by Congress upon theState legislatures of the several statesby means of their several constitutions,and not a grant of power, such as tnatderived by Congress under the Con-

stitution of the United States.Under this construction, no parallel

can well be drawn between the limita

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onolulu Photo-Suppl- y Company Hawaiian Office Specialty

cilable, and in the case at bar theOrganic Act of this Territory, being aspecial statute, having particular ref-erence to the Territory of Hawaii, itmust be assumed that Congress, at thetime of the passage of the OrganicAct, had especially and particularly inmind the purposes and objects soughtto be accomplished by the legislationthen proposed, rather than the pur-poses and objects sought to be accom-plished by a general statute passedthirteen years prior to that time.

In my judgment, the provisions ofsection 10 of the Organic Act, beingthe last expression of the legislativeintent, tend strongly to show that itwas the intent and purpose of Congressthat acts of Congress, of a punitivecharacter, at least, of general applica-tion to the previously-organize- d ter-ritories of the United States, and also

Company, Ltd.

931 Fort StreetFort Street near HotelEverything Photographictions of power impressed by Congress

Send Your Suiton the Legislature of this territoryunder the Organic Act, and the grantof power conferred by the people ft'any State or territory through its legNOTICE TO CREDITORS.islature, to any municipal corporation,or Douv pontic or corporate, p.xf reining governmental functions, within its

mbromere

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CLEANING WORKSTelephone 575. FOET STBEST.

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InSILKS and CREPES, NOVELTIES,

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For Ladles and GentlemenIWAKAMI, Hotel Street

those places over which the UnitedStates had exclusive jurisdiction,should not have such an unqualifiedand unlimited operation in ( the Terri-tory of Hawaii. If this were not thepurpose and intent of Congress, whatoccasion was there for providing fur-

ther in said section 10 that certainstatutes of general application to theterritories of tne United States andthose places over which the United

and Silk Crepe Waist Patternsand Hand Bags.

Silk Crepe Scarfs, Cotton Crepes of all Shades

The undersigned, the duly appointedExecutrix under the will of LawreneeMcCully, deceased, of Honolulu, Oahu,Territory of Hawaii, hereby gives no-tice to all creditors of said deceasedto present their claims, duly authenti-cated, and with proper vouchers, ifany exist, even if the claim be securedby a mortgage upon real estate, at theoffice of Castle & Withington, in Hono-lulu, within six (6) months from thedate hereof, or they shall be foreverbarred.

Dated, Honolulu, T. H., July 6, A. D.1903.

ELLEN M 'CULLY,Executrix Under the Will of Law-

rence McCully, Deceased.By Castle & Withington, her Attorneys.

S084 July Aug. 4SAVEDIVIDEND NOTICE.

boundaries, and in the light or thisconstruction there can be no questionbut that the Legislature of this Terri-tory possessed full power to penalizeany act or acts, although such act .tacts were already- - penalized by act ofthe Congress of the United States, un-

less the power to legislate in regardto such act or acts and the subjectmatter thereof was expressly reservedto itself by Congress, in the OrganicAct, or unless the act of Congress inregard to the subject matter of suchlegislation was, in express terms, totake effect in this Territory, and nopart or portion of either the OrganicAct or the Edmunds-Tucke- r Act hasbeen called to my attention which canhave such effect. Let the demurrer be,and the same is hereby, overruled.

Judge Humphreys claims that by thisdecision Judge Robinson has held ineffect that the Edmunds Act is not inforce in this Territory, and that, for

that reason, prosecutions of this classof cases may be had under the Terri-

torial statutes. Judge Dole has heldthat the Edmunds Act is in force inthis Territory.

Judge Humphreys will take the Mar-

tin case to the Supreme Court of theTerritory.

HA SHEEP SHEARER'S TRIALS.

"I have followed the shearing seasonthrough New Zealand and all overAustralia," says Mr. R. L. McBean ofDuntroon, N. Z., "and the changes ofwater and tucker always bring an at-tack of diarrhoea. The only relief I

WATALUA AGRICULTURAL COM- -

WALKERBOAT AND)

MACHINE WORKS

PANY, LTD.

The directors of this corporation hav-ing declared a dividend of of 1,Dividend Xo. 3 is due and payable onWednesday, July 15th, 1908, to stock-holders of record at the close of thestock transfer books Tuesday, July 7th,19 ns, at 12 m.

Stock transfer books will be reopenedon Thursdav, July 16th, 19(18.

CHAS. H. ATHERTON,Treasurer, Waialua Agricultural Co.,

Ltd.Honolulu, Hawaii, Julv 6th, 1908.

8084

G STREET

States has exclusive jurisdiction,should also extend to, and be made ap-

plicable to, the Territory of Hawaii!There is nothing anomalous or in-

congruous in the view that courts ofentirely separate and distinct jurisdic-tion may possess concurrently the rightto hear and determine criminal or othercauses arising under different statutes,but of similar import, purpose and ef-

fect, enacted by distinct and separatelegislative bodies, even where suchstatutes severally penalize the sameact, and there need be no apprehensionof any conflict in jurisdiction or ofauthority between the several courts,as it is" a woll-recognize- d rule of ju-

dicial r ocedure that as betweencourts of concurrent jurisdiction, thecourt first acquiring jurisdiction of theperson or persons to, or the subjectmatter of, any action or proceeding,shall be permitted to retain such ju-

risdiction, without, let or hindrancefrom the other, until the final deter-mination of such action or proceeding.And this rule of judicial procedure isfully recognized both by the UnitedStates eourts and the State or Terri-torial courts in their relations witheach other.

Nor need there be any apprehensionthat any constitutional question wouldnecessarily be involved, on the groundthat a man might be put twice injeopardy for the same otfense, contraryto the provisions of the Fifth Amend-ment to the Constitution of the Unit-ed States. As was well said by theSupreme Court of this Territory, speak-ing through Mr. Chief Justice Hart-wel- l,

in the case of Territory vs.IS Hawaiian, at page 622, in

commenting on the decision of the Su-

preme Court of the State of Californiain the case of In re Sio, 73 Cal., 142:

Your Grocer

I u is. J

THAT IS THE BUTTER FOR YOUR TABLE. (J MAY WE SUPPLY YOU WITH IT? f) SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY

C. Q. Yee Hop & Co. I

' telephOne 5- - )

-- :will sell you:

IPPRODUCTS OFcan obtain is irom cnamDeriains

Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy.Every shed now has some shearerswho use this wonderful medicine andalways carry a bottle with them." For Love's Bakerysale by Benson, Smith & Co.. Ltd.,agents for H. I.

Goods; BakedMachine-manufactur- ed

Daily

QUARTERLY MEETING.C. BREWER AND COMPANY,

LIMITED.The regular quarterly meeting of tho

shareholders of C. Brewer & Co., Ltd.,will be held at the office of the company

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OP THEFIRST CIRCUIT, TERRITORY OPHAWAII. AT CHAMBERS. INPROBATE.

In the Matter of the Estate of ManuelMachado. Late of Honolulu, De-ceased, Intestate.

Order of Notice of Hearing Petitionfor Administration.

On reading and filing the petition ofIrmina Machado, widow of said de-ceased, of Honolulu, Oahu, allegingthat said Manuel Machado of Hono-lulu, Oahu, died intestate at Honolulu,Oahu, on the 3rd day of May. A. D.1908, leaving property in the Territoryof Hawaii necessary to be adminis-tered upon, and praying that lettersof administration issue to her, saidIrmina Machado;

It is Ordered, That Monday, thethird day of August, A. D. 1908, atnine o'clock a. m., be and hereby Isappointed for hearing said petition inthe courtroom of this Court at theJudiciary building, Honolulu, Oahu, atwhich time and place all persons con-cerned may appear and show cause,if any they have, why said petitionshould not be granted, and that noticeof this order shall be published oncea week for three successive weeks inthe Pacific Commercial Advertiser, anewspaper published in Honolulu,Oahu.

Dated at Honolulu, Oahu, June 29,1908.

ALEXANDER LINDSAY. JR..Second Judge of the Circuit Court of

the First Circuit.Attest:

J. A. THOMPSON,Clerk.

SOTS June 30; July 7, 14, 21.

m Honolulu on Saturday, July 11, 1903,at 9:30 o'clock a. m.

W. W. NOKTH,Acting Secretarv.

Honolulu, July 3, 1908. S0S2

Made here at home are bound to be fresh, because wemake them daily from pure cane sugar, pure flavoringextracts, and with a care that guarantees cleanliness.That's why ours are in greater demand than the others.

Phone 311. Hotel St. near Fort.

NOTICE.

"Tliis decision seems right. But thecourt drifts into a constitutional dis-

cussion which seems wholly unneces-sary. It assumes that if it held theordinance valid a man could be pun-ished twice for the same offense. Thisdoes not necessarily follow, because,while this was held by Cooley, a largenumber of courts held that where anordinance was valid, and because it isvalid, a conviction xmder it may bepleaded as a bar to the prosecutionunder the State laws."

In my opinion, the Congress of theUnited States in the passage of theOrganic Act of the Territory of Ha-

waii," intended to and did in fact con-

fer upon the Legislature of the Ter-

ritory greater powers than were grant-ed to the legislatures of the territo-ries of the United States previouslyorganized, as a comparison of the re-

spective organic acts of the severalterritories will show. And this evidentpartiality on the part of Congress wasentirely justifiable, not alone becauseof the geographical situation of thisTerritory and its distance from thecontinent (Wilder 's S. S. Co., 1S3 U.

Saloon Pilot

Pilot and

Soda Crackers

are for sale by the following flrmi;

HENRY MAY & CO.,

J. M. LEVY & CO.,

T. H. DAVIES & CO., i

H. HACKFELD & COC. J. DAY & CO.,

GONSALVES & CO.

READ THE ADVERTISERWORLD'S NEWS DAILY

During my absence from Honolulu,Dr. A. R. Rowat will take charge ofmy practise.

8079 DR. W. T. MONSARRAT.

If ID-AI- R PERIL.' rr .Bird "Run along1 and play, now ; but be careful you

over by any of those flying-machine- s." Metropolitan

Union Electric Co.19 BERETANIA STREET

Telephone 315Souse Wiring - Bells - Dry Celli

Special attention to Installing privatelephones and general repair work.Dated Honolulu, February Z8L 190S,

)

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1908.

j that in the compromise plank the Ee- -

CANNON'S PART IN THE UNPRECEDENTED SUCCESS

C I BATTLE

He

One of --theEssential

of the happy homes of to-da-y I3 a vastfund of information as to the best methodsof promoting health and happiness andright living and knowledge of the world'sbest products.

Products of actual excellence andreasonable claims truthfully presentedand which have attained to world-wid- e

acceptance through the approval of the"Well-Informe- d, of the World; not of indi-viduals only, but of the many who havethe happy faculty of selecting and obtain-ing the best the world affords.

One of the products of that class, ofknown component parts, an Ethicalremedy, approved by physicians and com-mended by the "Well-Inform- ed of the"World as a valuable and wholesome familylaxative is the well-know- n Syrup of Figsand Elixir of Senna. To get it3 beneficialeffects always buy the genuine, manu-factured by the California Fig Syrup Co.,only, and for sale by all leading druggists.

Leads all others in quantity and quality of goods sold duringthis sale. We have some more of the stock and it's yours for

Lost the Presidency, but He Upset the Rest

of the White House Program Authorof Platform,

.little money.

CLOTHING, SHIRTS, HATS,

BOOTS AND

4$h

By Ei nest G. Walker.

(Mail special to the Advertiser.)WASHINGTON, June 24. The ticket

is afieM. It reads Taft and ShermanThe great tribunal of the people, as-

sembled at Chicago, has named thenames. The Republican legions arewheeling into line. The campaign isstarting. And Washington, always thehotbed of polities, thrills thereat andbegins to take fresh notice.

Delegates and onlookers, politiciansand mere voters have been pouringinto Washington of recent days, tellingthe stories and incidents of the greatconvention, telling how it was done inthe open and how it was done in thesecret conferences. Some have return-ed to gather literature for the oncom-

ing campaign and to gird up their po-

litical loins for the fray. Others stop-

ped en route home, simply because itwas convenient to do so.

The Congressional eontigent have re-

turned most triumphant. Speaker Can-

non 's friends say that he and thosewho worked witth him from the UnionLeague Club headquarters by the Lake-

side named the running-mat- e and madethe platform. That makes them feel

.ii t. - i a i :n . i 1.1 l

Eyerything for

KerrA LAKEA

many weeks ao that the Secretarywouid have 700 votes in the conven-tion, and was in a fair way to havethe platform just as he wanted it andto name as Vice President just the manhe wanted. This would have been somone from the middle west, of the radi-cal stripe, so as to combat the cam-paign that Bryan will make and alsoto advance the radical ideas which bothhe (the President) and Bryan champion.

SPEAKER AND PRESIDENT.As he went away to Oyster Bay the

President had feelings toward SpeakerCannon none too kindly. These wereaccentuated by the protests from theWestern states about the ticket. It ispretty certain that the President andthe Speaker, while likely to continue onterms, outwardly friendly, will havelittle use for one another during thenext eight months which cover theremainder of the second Roosevelt ad-

ministration and also another session ofCongress. The Speaker has been smart-ing under the interference of the Presi-dent at the Capitol, has long been re-

sisting the President's plans for radicallegislation and has conceded only whathe has felt that he must concede. Nowhe has had written into the party plat-form, which is regarded as law for theguidance of Republicans, about whathe wanted in spite of the Presidentand he is not likely to yield much tothe President from now on. They maymaintain better relations than the lateSjenker Reed and the late PresidentMeKinley were able to maintain butat heart their regard for one another

i

will be quite as cold and formal. !

The part that the Speaker and his,i I 1 e icongressiona, cronies puieu at. i n.cngo,

on the whole, pronuses to be of far- -

reacnnig importance, i ne results winhave very great influence upon futurelegislation, at least, for the next three;... imu. .... 11

. "" "

u. n means L,;ry xi, uihe um gpcaker Cannon and his coworkersin the with earnestnesscampaign more c,aimeJ they hail a majoritv of theand enthusiasm. The Congressional committee4orae of30 or 31 memberscontingent think very highly of "Jim" a committee of 53 Attornev-Genera- l

Sherman, the running-mate- . They WatIe gUis, of Ohio, and Senatorwould fire and water fgo through or Ch(?ster j Lon of Kangas who werehim. They regard him as one of their r,the twQ leaJing champions of the

and would like to put him in ministration in the eommittee, claimedthe chair of the presiding officer of the butth&t their opi,onents haJ twentvl. mtea states urmermore, neis undoubteuly one of the best, if notrue rest, 01 presiding omcers among ;

men in public life.. ,.-- . ..!To oe sure, ne coma uoi uo very iiuu--

in the Senate where he would haveneither voice nor vote except in case j

the Senate was tied but he would keep ,

the Senate straight at its work and j

would be a master hand in untying theparliamentary knots into which the!Senate has a habit of getting itself.

The incoming political travelers dwellwitn mucn entnusiasm on me waySpeaker Cannon jumped into the fightover the platform and then into thefight over the Vice Presidential nomi-

nee and "did" the administration

puolscan convention only pledged theparty to maintain the present law, forhe points out that the existing lawauthorizes injunctions vrithout notice,onjy where "there appars to be dan-ger of irreparable injury from delay."So Mr. Bryan asserts that the Chicagoplank is a "transparent fraud" and is j

going for the Republicans hammer andtongs for handing the laboring menwhat is not as good as a gold plated ,

brick.There will be much more about this

plank before the campaign is over.Secretary Taft will undoubtedly havesomething of interest to say about itwhen he writes his letter of acceptance.The Democrats at their national con-vention at Denver, will also have some-thing of interest about anti-injunctio- n

in their platform. This raises the in-quiry whether Mr. Bryan is going tobe able to write the platform on whichhe runs or whether some more conser-vative Democrats than he will be aidto write it for him. The business menof the country generally do not want astrong anti-injunctio- n plank and preferto ha'e. nothing about it at all in theirplatform. But the radical Republicansand the radical Democrats are deter-mined that the issue shall be kept tothe front and probably they will findsomething more to their satisfaction inthe Denver plank when it is written.

THE VICE PRESIDENCY.The administration's defeat in the

platform was hardly as signal as it wasin the matter of the Vice Presidency.The arriving politicians recite vividlythe conditions that prevailed at Chi-cago in the selection of the runningmate. "Your Uncle Joseph" Cannon,at the Union League Club by the Lake-side, flushed with victory in the fightover the jdatform, was ready to jumpright in and make the fight for thDomination of the man he wanted forrunning mate. The moment SecretaryTaft's nomination for the Presidencyras announced, the Speaker was at it

for "Jim" Sherman. He had first senta man to the telegraph office to wireat the earliest moment his congratula-tions to Secretary Taft. The man hadgone in advance to the operating officeof the Western Union Company to waitthe "flash" of Taft's nomination andto have a wire cleared to "Washingtonso that the Speaker's message could gothrough without delay or hindrance.

It was the Speaker's generalship thatmade Sherman's nomination possible.Senator Curtis, of Kansas, a strong Taftstate; Representative Tawney of Minne-sota, another strong Taft state, and soon down with Representatives or for-mer representatives through a long lineof Taft states, had joined the Speaker'scampaign for the nomination of Sher-man. They had been active in com-

mitting their delegations to Sherman,before President Roosevelt and Secre-tary Taft had time to center upon anycandidate and before word could bepassed to the loyal.

Therefore the afternoon and the nightof Thursday were devoted to this or-ganizing under the Speaker's direction.The Taft managers were in consultationin a little room in th Auditorium An-

nex. They wanted a man from the Mis-sissippi valley, for the radical or pro-gressive sentiment is strong in that sec-

tion and in that section probably theRepublican campaign will be lost orwon. First the President indicated adesire for Dolliver of Iowa but Iowawould not permit Dolliver to be nomi-nated, because it would make a vacancyin the Senate and open up a tremen-dously bitter fight in Iowa between theconservative and the radicals as trv

endanger the legislature and makeprobable the election within a year ortwo of two Democratic United StatesSenators from that state. That micrhtseem to some people, so the politiciansay, like an exaggeration but it wamade with such force and, authority atChicago as to convince th party lead-ers of both factions that it was true.

The President, telephoned the littleconference of Taftites in the Audito-rium Annex that they must find a man"of the flannel shirt variety in theMississippi valley to run with Taft j

and thev kept searching for such a j

man. Thev took up Senator Warner ofMissouri, for a time, but abandonedhim. TIk-- did not believe he woulddo at all. They talked of GovernorCummins of Iowa, a progressive, and byFriday morning the administration hadsettled upon Governor Cummins or Sen-

ator Beveridge of Indiana. This wasafter they had considered GovernorSheldon of Nebraska, and decided thathe would not do and after they hadturned once more to Vice PresidentFairbanks only to be told that the VicePresident would not accept a renomina-tion- .

that the Indiana delegates wouldnot present his name to the convention,although they would vote for hFni ifOhio, his native state, presented hisname.

But. all this time "Uncle Joe" Can-

non had been "plugging away" withthe Sherman boom, had planned to goupon the convention floor and to second Sherman 's nomination, if he couldsecure unanimous consent so to do,which consent eventually was granted.

So when tlx last day of the conven-tion began Friday morning the oldfighter from Illinois had, his forces allin position. The Republican Congres-sional Committee officials, shrewd andadept at politics, were nearly all on theground aiding him. They had a coupleof brass bands, heading a Shermanparade admitted to the convention hall.New York had unanimously agreed uponSherman as a candidate, the Southerndelegate, who had held out againstSherman, because of resentment at the

Ptv VnrV Ir--1 actm t ii n far vntin-- r tn tp- -

due the Southern "representation" in ,

national conventions which effort ailbut carried in the convention, bv the j

yvay had been won over. And therefore the Speaker had things all his ownwav. Tt had gone so far that neitherthe' President nor Secretary Taft could

Utop the Sherman boom and he wasnominated with a whoop.

As the first legislative power in Con- -

gress. in distinction from the Presidenta the first executive authority in the- , . . " - .

ianl. the ispeaker won two big victories, i

He has alwavs been against mterfer- -i

;

. . .- i i ,i r. : im pontics ana iuw cruicizen tne i resi- -

dent much. bnh f-.- intc-rferin- W":.!1Congress and for interfering with theselection of a nominee for President.

. .t- - i it. .: t.. ,1 T i r., P .o tr nm,i!:u t nc.e .joe took ,

a hand in niak.ng over the platform.tne President had been having his ownwav with the Chicago convention. Hehad carried things through according to

li.; . v j :,jii;.--. i ' f i j . u ti ni'ni i u.t iru o.crr iniy ;

iT.ft v.t-- too -- f. drino ..;.

ma. n in power. J- or .f the republicans , ,1((mination and thev are expected fremain in power in the House, and j (.ntribute much sUengfh toward hi.Speaker Cannon is spared, he w.ll Miction. His successor as Secretaryreelected and will continue to exercise. ()f w (;OIU.rai Luke . Wright ofa dominant influence on legislation. It T,n)Ilf.ssee. has been announced. Taft,is improbable that Taft, as President, M m r(.mainH in eabinct, but willcan sway popular opinion as Roosevelt vi),(1 ,,is portfolio next Tuesdayhas swayed it, which means that the wjti t,H, rl,,se of the fiscal year. Afterlegislative branch of government will '

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but he is coining back here late tliaweek. Washington is now more inter-ested than ever in his coming nnlhis going. He has been most cordially received on every hand, spf-n- t LisSundav with old friends in Cincinnati

, )ep.irtP1 Unday afternoon forY1,(, Univrrsity. his old alma mater.where bo is spending a portion of tbwilc in p.nnini(n. pmpnt fist i v i 1 is nn ff

observances. There is great enthu-- J

asm amone the Vale men over hit

Washington to show (ieneral W righlhoyv to take hold of the War Depart-ment helm. Nominee Taft will reachsome decision about yho is to managhis campaign.

TIT I. CAM PAH! N MANACEIL

There has been a bitter quarrelamong his managers over that Import-ant matter. PostmasterGeneral Frank 11. Ilitchcock wanted t

lie national chairman. So did Arthurj -- orvs w , first managed the Tuft

f,,r !,, nomination, but w)iwas graonaliv oispiacea bv .nr. in.-rn- -

cock. The Secretary has said littlnabout the matter, although it is known,that he has had other and more

men in mind for that vertimportant post. But. the Rppuhlican.of large political experience have beenunwilling to accept the place.

Myron T. Merrick of OIi'kcouhi have been national chainuari. buthe exy.ressed reluctance about assum-ing the task. Senator V. MurrayCrane of Massachusetts, to whom Pres-ident Koosevelt olfereil the place f..uryears ago, could have had it, but hf,too. did n"t want it.

These de nat iori have made it verydifficult for the to find t'rman he yvoiib like to have. hJ- - t

been conultirig with the best pohtic.iltalent inside the jiarty for advice onthe question and expects when he re-

turns to Washington to be able latathis week or early next week to an-

nounce his selection. Mr. 1 if chroc fc

lias withdrawn from tie -- t of a --

pirants, on the pl--- a of ill health. b:.tit is doubtful whether the Secretary,in any event, would pick Mr. Mitch-coc- k

if he could find anyone el-- e. !

is a capable young man. but h:is . atoo much accustomed to p'aving poll-tic- s

under the protection and guid-

ance of President Roosevelt to rnaka good campaign manager in th'Sstressful times which yc;n to bahead. Men who are nominated forthe presidency are averse to tak:njany chances with their campaign rnan-a(rer- s.

There is too nu. ch at ftakc,even though an election may seen angood as certain. Seasoned jwdificalveterans, not young men who havha-il- ly more than won their spurs is

are pret'errel for such task".The President's secretary, William

T.oeb. Jr.. is verv anxious to mannges!iirril.fi. Tiift fu mi c. i 'n. TTil

- I sf , .j with tnanv newsr.ai.er eor- -

res; "IN'iriio,--. 1... in feel kindlv to warJj. j has enn tted him to put out rca--morons inspire! articles at.ont: Eatavailability for the work. The S;re-tar- y

may eventually pick Mr. Leb, ofwhose jolitifnI sagacity he thinks veryhighly, but there is nothing ret to in-

dicate it.

friends not to vote for it, and I mustkeep my promise. ' '

"Could nothing induce you to changeyour mind about it?" Mr. Ilitchcockpersisted.

"Nothing but a direct request fromPresident Theodore Roosevelt," repliedMr. Shay with some heat, thinking thathis reply was a clincher.

"Think it over a while," Mr. Hitch-cock finally said, "and see if you can'tstand with us." A half hour later amessenger boy stood at the entrance tothe committee on resolutions, asking ifGeorge Shay was there. lie found hisman and to him delivered a telegram.Imagine Mr. Shay's surprise as he torethe yellow envelope open to find thathe had a telegram from TheodoreRoosevelt. It urged him in most posi-

tive terms to stand by the anti-injunctio- n

plank as originally written. ThenMr. Shay, like the historic possum, camedown out of the tree. He announced,very quietly, that he was ready to votewith the administration men in thecommittee. While Mr. Shay made lit-

tle noise about it, the word quicklyspread.

Whether the plank would have beeneliminated had the matter ever came toa direct vote will never be known.

votes. The bier- - fight was 41i th

a(loption of tbe foliowing language,which President Eoosevelt and Seere-tar- v

Taft had written or approved inWashington:

Ve declare for such amendments ofth? statute3 of prot.e,lure ,n tbe Federal

...nn.a tn thft nSft nf thewrit of injunction as will, on the one

prevcnt the 9ummary issue ofwithout proper considera- -

Qn thJ otl)er? wiU preserveimaim.n.sheJ tfae powef of tLe courtjJ

to enforce their processes to the endthat justice may be done at all timesto all parties."

But the vote was never taken on

this in committee because Speaker

zation or tne uoycott. xais ciausamade an exception, declaring thatamendments bv Congress should bemade jn that law S() ag not to inter

to eniorci tueir processes ana to pro-tect life, liberty and property shall bepreserved inviolate. We believe, however, that the rules of procedure in the

jsuance of the writ of injunction shouldlnorp accurately defined by statute

and that no in junction or temporarvrestraining order, should be issued with- -

V"" : "--- -'r-""

ijury yrould result from delay, in whichease a -- r,u,ii. l, i. ,.".,-- . ..,.,-- i i

granted."So much for what was the great fightthe invention, even thoughma3' b difficult for the average citi- -

President were anxious to do ever v.tning tney coma ,i0 , the platform toassure laboring men that, as the-Repnb- -

hcan standard bearer, he could be trust- -

ed to do the laboring men full justice,Both sides to the fight the Cannon

menand the Taft men expressed satis- -

faction with the outcome. SenatorT nn.T t- - V. , 4 1, - -- . i. a. i

11 "U". vas on in .arn.M,cal flec.ared that the Secretary wouldnot go le to re the convention as a candidafe. if the anti-injucctio- n plank waseliminated. The convention-goer- s werebardv willing to eredit that but thestatement was probably made seriouslvand was intended at least to indicatehow determined the administration was.

The hilarity of the struggle over thepjanh. nas oeen quickeneI by the dis-- ,CO verv from V i ism .Inmnffa K-t-- qti- . - J -- , i

ine prosDective .Democratic nnmiivcn

politicians to a finish. He had intended, iate atf,annon after conferring night,Presidential candidate himself, toas a qt more C0TrectIv ia the earIy morDing

remain down at Danville, Illinois, a few of Thursdav with Senator Cranehours away. But he just could not keep ; of MasaachusettSf an(1 Representativesout of the fighis. His friends were ap-.pav-

of New york and DsJzeU ofpealing to him to come on and help j ,e;nsvlvanisij assented to a compromise,them, and he did. Of course, the plat-- ;

T(. conJitioned upon the eliminationform fight was finished first. The great from a recommendation for the amend-strugcl- e

was over an anti-injunctio- n ment of the Sherman law, the legali- -.- 1 i i rr 1 1

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plank. Tht. tpop.lnnifi over thatfeature went up early. All the East;,in fact, most of the East that is thisside of the Mississippi river; joined fere with the operations of such asso-wit- h

the Speaker to keep the anti-in-- ! ciations among business men, farmersal-n- d wage earners as result in a positivejunction plank out of the platform

benefit thei! ti public."together. The Speaker had fought

j The compromise wa9 finanv accepted,many a battle on the anti-injunctio- n uie objectionable words in the Sher-issu- e

in Congress. President Samuel man anti-trus- t law plank were elimina-Gomper- s,

who" is his arch foeman, was ted and the Resolutions Committee ac- -

" Icepted this anti-iniunctio- n plank:the leading advocate of an anti-mjun- c- J ,The RepuMican partvlwill upholdtion plank. The Speaker would have at a1 times the authoritv an,j tne jn.fought the planh if for no other reason tegrity of the courts, state and federal,than that President Gompers wanted it. 'and will ever insist that their powers

AXTI-IXJrXCTIO-N PLANK

:V very mild plank had been" drawn,but the peaker objected to that Hesai.l it would please nobody ana woulddo nobody any good. A shrewd dele-- j

gate in the convention declared that"you can't play on either side of the j

fence when vou are straddling it.lieiuai was nuai iuc j(r. &c luuugui.

argued through the long night of Wed-- j benesdav and Thursdav that if you put in!the plank, however "mild it mav bo, you'?

i t . , i11

be more independent and will do moreas it likes about enacting reform laws.

With all this knowledge of the situa-tion, the Speaker and his lieutenantsare getting ready to take right holdand elect Taft. That is one good fe- -

ture from the Republican standpoint,Thev feel that thev have won a tre- -

mendous victory and they yvant to follow it up by reelecting a Kepuohean-i louse ol Kepresentatives and iy put- -

ting the partv nominee in the White j

House. There is no question about ;

these congressional leaders being atower of strength to the ticket. Theycan help get campaign funds, they canlift up many influential voices on thestump, and contribute to the sem-blance of harmony within the party.

The radical and conservative yvingsof Republicanism are therefore unitedabout as effectively as could be hojedfor. "Uncle Joe" was one of theleading Allies. He and the other al-

lied aspirants for the presidency areaccordingly in better fettle than theywould have been had the President hadhis own way entirely at Chicago. Tobe sure. Vice President Fairbanks, or,"one of the leading Allies, and the onlyone of them who was able to hold hisState solidly behind him at Chicago, isin anything but a kindly frame ofmind. He is very bitter against the1 'resident, and during the conventioncame out in outspoken languageagainst the dictation of nominationsfrom the White House. It became anopen secret that the Vice Presidentthought the defeat of the Republican!ticket at the polls would be preferable j

to the success ot President Koo'-evel- t s

idea of nominating his own successor.So bitter was the Vice President thathe stated his entire unwillingness tobe on the ticket with anv White Housenominated candidate for the pre-i- -

dency. although if Roosevelt had beennominated, the ice President mightnave accepter a renominauou. however, he did not believe in the wi-l- m

of naming anv rrrtn to be 1 'residentof the United States for more thaneight years, the traditional limit oftenure.

The politicians say that the VicePresident yvill feel more amiably r.

the campaign progresses and that h

is likely to come around to the atti-

tude of Senator Fo raker, who hadi . .

in the convention ana no je:i, ...... ..... ,.!-- .a warm m-.- .? m "

, . T V . - . . Cnofnio iue rj-v.- i

T- - i" - . 1., .1... - f.- hato ti? on u- - nont .

ror.-'te- r. . - . , : . l ,. ,1 .ticket before tne campaign i ru'i-.- j,

anil ic- - x ' -- . t

an mnph Pot he is rec- -

as an elective campaigner,,r ,,.r,,,T,v CT

The presidential nominee was awayfrom Washington soon after the first

Tho.i v 1 :iMLCHii.

" jzen, not learned in the law. to compre-pu- tin a mild piank it wall not satisfy jhend why there should have been such

the labor people, whom it is intended; a tremendous fuss about it. But theto pacify- - and whose votes it is hoped !I'itu of the matter is that there is fear

. (the unions of organized labor will notto eaten. (support Secretary Taft as the Republi- -Presi.ient Roosevelt and secretary j oan nominee, because they regard him

Taft did not interpret it that way. They as "the father of injunction." Hiswere actively at work all that time over ! decisions against labor unions when

f.? wa " h' a United Statesthe telesrraph and telephone wires, trv- -," Judge are likel- - to prove ato line members of the Resolu- -mg v.p tremendous weakness. He and the

tions Committee for the plan as it hadbeen written at the White House. Thosetwo distinguished Republicans did mostheroic work in behalf of their anti-injunctio- n

compromise. Manager FrankHitchcock, their agent in Chicago, wasvisiting member of the resolutions or'platform, committee and urging themto stand by the administration. An in-

stance of the determination with whichMr. Hitchcock worked is shown in thecase of the member of the resolutionscommittee from Alaska, George Shay,from Xome.

"I can not vote to keep that plankin the plstform." said Mr. Shay to Mr.Hitchcock. '.'I have promised my

? -- . f a . , j t n. ua , in : JA--- -

8 THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, ; TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1908.

OahuTIME

RailwayTABLE

NTERESTS OF r iifi."j:'jwwiwn mm ifW DC

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(Advertiser Correspondence, Copyright

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von Hamm-You- ng Go.,LIMITED

LAWRENCE BARRETT10-Ce- nt Havana Cigar

THE QUALITY SMOKE

WELCOMEThe Fleet with an Artistic SIGN ORBANNER done by

TOM SHARPPhone 426 137 King Street

Y. WO SING & CO.1126-11- 28 Nuuanu Avenue

RESH ISLAND BUTTERP. O. Box 952 Tel. 238

HENRY'SSarsaparilla

POWERFUL PURIFIER OF THEBLOOD.

Acts through the Natural Secretoryand Excretory Organs. v

100 Full Doses, $1.00.

Honolulu Drug Co., Ltd.Fort Street, Odd Fellows Bldg.

PICNIC GOODS

DAINTIES - DELICACIES

HENRY MAY & C0MPANG, LTD.

Phone 22

SUMMER READING

Choice Books; Low Prices.

E. HERRICK BROWN & CO.907-9- 09 Alakea Street.

American CMX European Flan

HOTELA "Homc" Hotel for Permanent and

Transient Guests, in the Heart of theCity, with many Sunny Suites and Singlerooms all Connected with Baths.Special Summer Rates. Cuiink Unexcelled

NORMANDIECorner Sutter and Gouoh Street

SAN rKANCISCO

for the advancement of the nationalong helpful lines, and ready to pledgetheir support to every movement thatwill militate toward that end. Theseare the delegates from the federateddubs of forty-si- x states and territories,representing 5000 clubs with a mem-

bership of over 800,000 women. Forsix days the twelve different depart-ments of the General Federation of Wo-

men's Clubs will hold sessions in Sym-

phony Hall, while overflow meetingswill be accommodated in nearby build-ings.

As a measure of the progressive spirit of American women, all manner ofconveniences will hedge this meetingabout with modern aids to comfort. Abranch bank, branch telephone, telegraph and post offices and a hospitalwith physicians and nurses will be established at headquarters. A historicalsignificance may be attached to theselection of Boston as a meeting place,for there the first women 's club meetings in this country were held. Tliatwas in the days when Anne Hutchinson called together her townswomen inher home, where the Old Corner BookStore now stands, and discussed withthem the sermon of the preceding Sun-

day until, in 1637, the outraged elderssent her into exile for the sin of toofreely expressing her feminine mind.

This is the ninth biennial of the or-

ganization, and reports in thehands ofexpert heads of hard --working depart-ments will show that in the eighteenyears of the Federation's existence, aswell as in the decade back of that, thewomen of the nation have not ceasedin a concerted effort to ameliorate unsatisfactory social conditions and topromote the growth of altruism. One

of the most vital interests of the wto-me- n

of the Federation is that of abol-

ishing child labor in the factories,mines, mills, workshops and stores.Whether their influence was direct orindirect, the fact that eighteen statesduring the past year have enacted newlaws or improved old ones regardingchild labor has been largely due to theunflagging zeal of the women 's clubs.Reports will show that within the pastyear Florida and Mississippi have pass- -

ed child labor laws for the first time,and Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia,North Carolina, South Carolina andAlabama have amended those alreadyon their statute books, while Oklahomapromises the best of all under her newconstitution.

A Children 's Bureau will shortly beestablished in .Washington, and this isthe result of the work of the womenwho constitute the membership of ninety-

-six clubs in and around New YorkCity. They organized themselves intoa child labor association that is na-

tional in its aims and scope. Thealarming fact was known to them thatof every 1000 babies born in the tJni-te- d

States, 300 die, and through thisbureau they mean to investigate thecauses of mortality, illegitimacy, or-

phanage, dependence and child laboramong the children of the nation. Theymean to plan a campaign against thegeneral ignorance prevalent among acertain class of mothers and by in-

telligent legislation and training protect the helpless little ones. It hasbeen pointed out with ironical plain-ness that the national governmentthrough its Department of Agriculturespends millions annually in the protec-tion of its game, the improvement ofits domestic animals and the fosteringof its animal and plant industries, whilenot a penny is expended in the preserv-ation of child life and in the ameliora-tion of its conditions.

The health of the nation is beinglargely taken over into the hands ofits women. Through the influence ofthe General Federation of Women'sClubs a bill was introduced into thelast Congress providing for an educa- -

tional campaign against tuberculosis.Already women's clubs have been fore-most in the work of establishing homesand camps for tuberculosis patients, acampaign that is telling in its excellentresults. This is quite a far cry fromthe conditions of which an Englishtraveler wrote in 1S30: . "What theycall 'consumption' kills the Americansas if they were perpetually in battle;but they speak of it as if it wore inno way their concern, rather as if Godsent it for some reason of His own."The women of tod.iy have no sueh ideason the subject. They rather accept thedictum of the Texas physician who laysthe disease, not to Divine Providence,but to dirt and ignorance. The Louisi-ana State Health Conference recentlypaid public tribute to the work of wo-

men in the sanitary uplifting of thestate.

There are 20,000,000 public school

DC

children in the United States, and clubwomen of the country know that whenthe fall term opens there will be 5,000,-00- 0

or more children who will not en-

ter the schools. To the women hascome the momentous question of findingout why they will not enter and a curefor the reason. Of these children

will be at work earning theirown living and that of others, and fromthem wrill come the plea that theschools of the land are not giving thema training that will fit them for earn-ing a living with their hands, and thatthey must go into factories to learnhow. Less than COO cities in the Uni-

ted States have manual training intheir schools, and in only a small per-centag- e

of the schools of the land iseducation of any kind compulsory. Howto place education of the needed kindin reach of these 5,000,000 children andmake them take advantage of it is oneof the biggest problems with which thewomen of the nation are now wrestling.

The Federation and its clubs havenot been idle in doing the work thatlies nearest in educational lines. TheFederation itself maintains a scholar-ship for American girls at an Englishuniversity. The Michigan State Fed-

eration has a $.1000 fund for the useof worthy girls. Texas has twentyscholarships, Utah two, Colorado nine-teen, and Kansas eighteen, while dur-ing the past year the New HampshireState Federation educated four girlsand that of Mississippi sent eight toschool.

The old theory that women needhave no training for home life has beenswept to the wall by the club womanof today. In Illinois, where there wasestablished at the State university iu1870 the first domestic science schoolin the world, the club women have beenactive in sueh education. The Schoolof Domestic Arts and Sciences in Chi-cago had last year an attendance of11 00 students and added kindergartenwork and the care of children to itscurriculum. The Women's Educationaland Industrial Union of Boston hasfor three years conducted classes forsaleswomen with remarkable success.The State Federation of Vermont clubs J

conducted last year a successful arts j

and crafts exhibit, and through The I

work of club women one iiassachusetts '

and three North Carolina towns have!revived old hand industries and have;materially prospered. j

Loving house-cleanin- g because 4 theyare intensely domestic, the club womenof today, through the Civics Commis- - j

sion of the General Federation, haveasked for a big municipal house-clean-- :

iug day that shall become national, andhave already inaugurated it in manyjcities and towns. Through this de- -

partment of civics they ask for an!intelligent and economical disposition!of garbage and refuse that would sup-- j

ply each town with its electrical power!and incidentally bring in revenue in-- 1

stead of becoming a dead expense. Theyhave offered endorsement and coopera- - i

tion to the Department of Agriculture

"2) C

i"To be patient, sympathetic, tender;to jook ior tne budding flower and theopening heart; to hope always."

INFANTILE CHOLERA. 'Any unusual looseness of a child's

bowels during the hot weather shouldbe a warning to mothers. Infantilecholera may develop In a few hours,

nd prompt action should be taken toavoid it. Chamberlain's Colic, Choleraand Diarrhoea Remedy, followed by adose of castor oil. will check the dis-ease In its insipieney, and all dangermay be avoided. For sale by Benson,Smith & Co.. Ltd.. agents for H. I.

ForcegrowthMAKES PLANTS GROW

Hawaiian Fertilizer Co., Ltd.E. O. HALL & SON, LTD.,

Selling Agents

Assessment No. 8DELINQUENT JULY 15

HARRISON MUTUAL ASSOCIATION

Kapiolani Building

BottledQOOM COLM

From

HAWAIIAN SODA WORKS

Phone 516

William O. SmithTrust Department

Stt Managed, Revenues Collected,Loara and Investments Made.

InsuranceVGINT FOR ENGLISH-AMERICA- N

UNDERWRITERS

Real EstateFOR RENT.

T. W. Hobron premises on NuuanuiTenue, now occupied by Mr. Richard'. Ienberg. Partially furnished. Beau-lf- ul

grounds: large, spacious house.TOR RENT Large house, Beretania

treet, next to Queen's Hospital.OR SALE Lot with two cottages,

orner Miller and Beretania streets.Pir.e Lot in Palolo Tract.House and Lot. Kewalo.lols In Puunui Tract.Houses and Lots in Palama.Lots In Nuuanu Valley and Kalmukl.Huse and Lot, King street, near

.notzioM Square.

in the pure food movement, and when800,000 women back up a governmentalproposition like this it means some-thing.

Believing thoroughly in the need ofopen air for children, club women haveurged cities to build parks and play-grounds and in many instances havedone it at their own expense. In To-ledo, Ohio, one of the club women maybe found every day iu the school gar-dens, taking turns with her coworkers.The women's clubs of Columbus, Ohio,keep, eight playgrounds, and in Du-buque, Iowa, they have purchased abluff for a park. Keenly interested inthe weak and oppressed, they havegone after reform in almshouse nurs-ing, the State Federation of Michiganand the Association of Nurses in thatState leading, with twenty-thre- e Statesfollowing closely on their heels.

The immigrant has come in for agoodly share of attention among thewomen's clubs. The Woman's Munici-pal League and Welfare ComtMttee ofthe National Civic Federation had twolaws enacted in New York last Sej-temb- er

protecting immigrant girls fromunscrupulous ticket-sellers- . The Edu-cational and Industrial Union of Bos-ton, the Research and Protective Asso-ciation in Philadelphia, the Women'sTrade Union League in Chicago, andthe Council of Jewish Women are of-

fering advice and protection and helpto the newcomers who receive no gov-ernment aid after leaving Ellis Island.Education in good citizenship is offeredto thousands of newly-arrive- d foreign-ers through various patriotic and civicclubs composed of women.

In the conservation of the nation'snatural resources the woman 's clubs arelending a helping hand. They hadtheir representatives at the meeting ofthe governors, they have their depart-ment of forestry, ani in some Stateshave established regular classes in for-estry. There is no Carnegie among thewomen, but the traveling libraries, ascore of good books in their smallboxes, have penetrated mountain fast-nesses, and gone to remote prairietowns that never would otherwise knowof bookland. Colorado alone has 6000volumes always on the road, and thisis not much of an overestimate foreach of the other forty-fiv- e State Fed-erations.

Througn the work of club womenCalifornia's missions will be preserved,the Indian Mounds of Wisconsin arebeing protected, the Cliff Dwellings ofColorado and Arizona have been placedunder national protection, the desecra-tion of the Palisades of the Hudsonand the threatened destruction of Ni-agara Falls have been brought beforethe public, the homes of Washingtonand Andrew Jackson have been pie--erve- d.

and the Alamo purchased as aperpetual monument to Texan viiir.Through the Oregon women a statuehas been erected to Soca.iawea. the In-dian mail of Lewis and Clark's expe-dition: the women of Colorado havekept Judge Lindsey in office for thegood of the delinquent children of elseState, and the South Carolina Federa-tion is trying to secure a State indis-trio- l

school for I. v They are work-ing along many lines, so ire for suf-frage, some for revision of State lawson various subjects, but all with thesame end to the nation. Theyseem to have taken Amiel's advice":

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1908.

every plan was appropriately and pret

ONTMARINEStocks !

Yokohama, June 8.CORONADO, Am. bkt.. Potter, ar.

Hon. from S. F., June 3.COLUMBIAN. A.-- H. S. S., Colcord,

from Hilo for Salina Cruz, June 20.TARAVELLAS, Fr. S. S., ar. S. F.

from Hon., June 23.

CULGOA, U. S. S. supply ship, fromS. F. for Hon., July 1.

DEFENDER, Am. sehr., from Honoipufor San Francisco Julv 2.

EDINBURGH, Br. bk., from Leith forHon., July 1.

E. F. WHITNEY. Am. bk., ar. S. F.,from Kahului, June 19.

ENTERPRISE, M. Nav. Co.'s S. S..from Hilo for S. F., July 3.

EDWARD SEWALL, Am. sp., Quick,from Hon. for Delaware Breakwater,April 6.

FALLS OF CLYDE. Am. sp., Larsen,ar. Hon. from S. F., July 5.

FOOHNG SUET, Am. bk., Banfield,from Eleele for Delaware Break-water, May 22.

FLAURENCE WARD, Am. sehr. aux.,Piltz, from Hon. for Midwav, July 1.

GLACIER, U. S. S., from S. F. forHon., June 29.

GEO. E. BILLINGS, Am. sehr., Birk-hol- m,

ar. off port June 9 from New-castle, sailed same Eleele ar. June13.

GERARD C. TOBEY, Am. bk., ar. S.F. from Hilo, June 9.

GEORGE CURTIS. Am. bk., Her

SAN FRANCISCO

The most superbly situated hotel in the Worldoverlooking the entire Bay of San Francisco,the Golden Gate, and the rapidly rebuilding city

Convenient to shopping, theatre, business and railroad centers.

THE EPITOME OF HOTEL EXCELLENCE.combining all the conveniences and luxuriesa good hotel should have, with many unique,original and exclusive features. J$ jgf J$Entirely re-furnis- and refitted at a cost ofover three million dollars.!? d9 d$ J$Social center of the city headquarters of theArmy and Navy Scene of most of the socialfestivities. j9j&dStjfdStd&-J&jS-

ACCOMMODATIONS FOR 1,000 GUESTSEuropean Plan, f S:0$05upwUaPr7Jd-- -

MANAGEMENT PALACE HOTEL COMPANYi

iieA 0

FYre Eljztinguisher

and

We respectfully solicit ordersfrom clients who appreciate intel-ligent brokerage service.

Every order you give will beexecuted to the letter and a re-port sent to you at once.

We are members of and chargethe regular commission of theHonolulu Stock and Bond Ex-

change.

HQWQllQn IICOMPftKT. LIU

Bishop Trust Co. ,Ltd.

tray and sells Hawaiian Stocks and

Bends. Makes Loans on approved se

curity. .

Invites correspondence In . reference

to Investments In the Islands, or the

condition of any Hawaiian Plantation

Act as Trustee, Executor, or Guard- -

Collects interest and dividends and

manages estates generally.

Fire Insurance.

Safe Deposit Boxes.

Bishop Trust Co. Building924 Bethel Street,

HONOLULU.

1908 STYLESAnd

SPRING PATTERNS. NOW TO BE SEEN AT

W. W. AH ANA & CO., LTD.

; FASHIONABLE TAILORSIT tvr ST. - - Phone MI

LOCAL OITICE OF THE UNITEDSTATES WEATHER BUREAU".Honolulu, Monday, July 6, 1908.

tily prepared.An enormous crowd witnessed the

docking oi the Mongolia yesterday atthe Hackfeld wharf, the great numberof passengers aboard nearly all havingfriends or relatives down to meet them.The vessel brought all told 152 pasengers for Honolulu, a small parcelfreight, ami 337 sacks of mail.

Leaving at half-pas- t five in the afternoon. she was assisted in gettingstraightened out for the channel bythe tug Intrepid, and left the harborat half-pas- t six on her way to theOrient. She took ten cabin passengersfrom here, among them being Prof. A.F. Griffiths and Mrs. Griffiths, C. F.Fitts, and Miss Elizabeth A. Foster, allof Punahou, who will tour Japan.

NOTICES SENT.The Secretary of Commerce and

Labor has sent out copies of late actsof Congress calling attention of Col-

lectors of Customs and others concernedto the laws regulating the count to bekept by masters of steamers of thenumber of passengers carried; the lawrelating to the reciprocal privileges tobe accorded foreign yachts in cruisingin the waters of the United States, andthe laws governing and regulating theconduct of regattas and marine pa-

rades.'SCOTTY" SKTOOOED.

"Seotty" Meston came near losinghis happy home yesterday. He wentaboard the Mongolia to see some friendswho were passing through on the vesseland tarried too long. When he and hishosts realized it was time for "Seotty"to go ashore, the vessel was alreadyrising to the swell of the broad Pacific.A rush was made for the deck, and,luckily, Pilot Sanders had not yet leftthe ship. On promising to be good andnever let it happen again, "Seotty"was brought back to Mrs. "Seotty"and a large and admiring circle of ac-

quaintances.

JOHNGON EXPORTS.The wireless station at Kahuku re-

ceived the following message from Cap-

tain Johnson of the Hilonian:"To Press, Honolulu:

"Eight p. m.? 'July 5. Hilonianeight hundred and thirty miles off.Honolulu. Aloha. Johnson."

The Hilonian will be in here tomor-

row, possibly in the afternoon. She hasa big cargo and a large list of pas-

sengers.BEST STATIONS.

Rest stations atthe new boat land-

ings will be supplied by Superintendentof Public Works Campbell. They willbe made from the election booths. Itis about time to give these portablehouses an overhauling, so they will belooked over at this time and put to agood use as shelter stations.

GLACIER TODAY.

On Sunday evening the Glacier spoketo Kahuku station, announcing that shewas four hundred and sixty-fiv- e milesfrom Honolulu, and would arrive heretoday about 2 p. m.

SHIPPTNG NOTES.The Xoeau for Ilamakua ports sails

at noon today.The Despatch should arrive from

Makaweli today.The Kinau from Kauai ports will be

due tomorrow early.The Manna Loa is due today from

Kona and Kau ports.The Cummins for Windward Oahu

ports sailed yesterday.Ke Au Hou was the only island

steamer leaving last night. She wentto Kauai.

The American barkentine Olympicsailed for San Francisco on Friday witha full load of sugar.

The big freighter Arizonan fromSeattle arrived yesterday afternoon.She is at the railroad wharf discharg-ing.

"

MOVEMENTS OF SHIPPING.ARETHUSA, U. S. S., from S. F. for

Hon., June 30.AJAX, U. S. S., from S. F. for Hon.

June 29.

ARIZONAN. A.-- H. S- - S., from Seattle,for Hon., June 27.

ALABAMA, U. S. S., Veeder, ar. Guamirom lion., July 5.

ALAMEDA, O. S. S., Dowdell, from S.F. for Hon., July 4.

ALASKAN, A.-H.- "r. S., from Kahuluifor S. F., June 29.

ALEXANDER ISENBERG, Ger. sp.,from Bremen for Hon.. Mar. 27.

ALTCE COOKE, Amsehr., from Hon.for Tort Ludlow, July 2.

AMY TURNER, Am. bk., Warland,ar. S. F. from Hon., July 4.

AORANGI, Br. S. S., Phillips, ar. Syd-ney from Hon., June 19.

ASTRAL, Am. sp., Dunham, from Hilofor Delaware Breakwater, April 6- -

ATLAS, Am. sp., from Kahului forDelaware Breakwater, Apr. 9.

ALBERT, Am. bk., from Port Town-sen- d

for Hon., June 15.ASIA, P. M. S. S., from Hon. for Yoko-

hama. June 29.AMERICA MARU. T. K. K. S. S.,

Filmer, ar. Yokohama June 5, hence.--way zo.

ANNIE E. SMALE, Am. sehr., ar. Ma--1 ' f T- - - -ivaeu irom lion., Juiv 2.an; IE JOHNSON, Am', bk., from S.F. for Hilo, Julv 4

ANDREW WELCH. Am. bk., fromHon. for S. F.. June 25.

AURORA, Am. bkt., Samuelson, ar.. from Hilo. June 20.

ALICE McDONALD, Am. sehr., ar.Port Townsend from Hon., July 5.

BOREALIS, Am. sehr., ar. Mahukonafrom S. F.. June 20. ,

BUCRANIA, Br. S. S., from Newport?ws ar. Hon.. June i J.

CRESCENT, Am. scr., from New-castle, for Hon.. Miv ?.V

CARRADALE, Br. sp., from Newcastle

OTEL

dger 99

- Agent

Popular NovelsReprints of $1.50 Books, 73c.

Hawaiian News Co., Ltd.

The Owl5c. Cigar 5c.

ftf. A. Cunst & Co.

Best CigarsBest Tobacco

Best StoreMYRTLE CICR STGKE

BIG STOCKENAMELED

AU Sizes

Coyne Furniture Co., JLtdTOUNO RUILDINO

WHITEHOUSE ISSUPREMEJCQURT CASE

An employer is not responsible forinjury to a laborer resulting from tbe

i negligence of a fellow employe,j The Supremo Court yesterday reaf-firmed this old common law doctrine ia

i the suit of Catalino Mcjea against L.M. Whitehouse.

Mcjea was working on the Nuuanaiam. In excavating a perjendicularbank of earth it caved in and fell oabim rendering him unconscious for m

time, breaking his thigh and inflictingother injuries.

He sued for damages alleging thatthe cause of the accident ,was tbeneglect of the plaintifr to take precau-tions against such a happening. Jt wasshown that the neglect, if any, waithat of the foreman temporarily incharge of this particular work. Thecourt holds that such a foreman is afellow employe and that the employeris not responsible for what he does.

ONQMEA DIVIDEND BUTE

RAISED TOFO RTYTGENTS

SAN FIJANCISCO, June 2.". Localstocks and bonds had very little move-ment on tie Exchange at the regularsession this morning, but the generaltone of prices was steady. The haleswere as follows: 2000 Southern Pa-cific lief ii nding 4s at U2.r,); 20 Maka-weli at $31.25, and 40 Spring ValleyWater at .22. The last named tockshowed notable strength in the face ofthe company's troubles.

Continued prosperity among the Ha-waiian sugar companies was indicatedtoday when the announcement vraimade that the Onomea Sugar Companyhas increased the rate of its monthlydividend to 40 cents per share begin-ning July C. The previous rate was30 cents."

Buffalo Bill, who says that with hardwork a man should live to be a cen-

tenarian, talked, at a reunion of Kansas cavalrymen, about straight shoot-ing. "It is hard work to learn to ba good shot," he said. "We Ameri-cans are tetter shots titan most," hcontinued. "A French prince visitedme on my ranch once, and we went. rutafter birds. I carne back with a fultbag, but when I asked the prince whathe had killed, he said proudly: 'Of zbairds, none; zey are too difficile; butof ze vild cows and calves, I 'ave nineovair ze 'ill.' "

bert, from Hon. ar. S. F., June 1.

II. C. WRIGHT, Am. sehr., ar. S. F.from Mahukona, Julv 3.

HILONIAN. M. N. Co. S. S., John-son, from S. F. for Hon., July 1.

HONOIPU, Am. sehr., from Honoipufor S. F., June 25.

HELENE, Am. sehr., Thompson, ar,S. F. from Hon., June 10.

HOLYWOOD, Br. bk., ar. Hon. fromJunin, May 7.

IRMGARD, Am. bkt., ar. S. F. fromHon., July 3.

IROQUOIS, U. S. S., Carter, ar. Hon.from Pearl Harbor, July 2.

INCA, Am. sehr., from Newcastle forHon., May 16.

JOHN ENA, Am. sp., Madsen, fromHon. 'for Delaware Breakwater,May 9.

KOREA, P. M. S. S., from S. F. forHon., June 29.

KAIULANI, Am. bk.. Colly, ar. S. F.,from Kaanapali, June 19.

LURLINE, M. N. Co. S. S., ar. S. F.from Hon., July 1.

MICHAEL JEBSRN, Ger. S. S., Ben-dixe- n,

from Hon. for Hongkong,July 2.

MARY WINKLEMAN, Am. bkt., Ja-cobs-

ar. Hon. from Ei'reka, June26.

MAINE, U-- . S. S., Harber, ar. Guamfrom Hon., July 5,

MARAM A, C.-- A. S. S., Gibb, ar. Vancouver from Hon., June 30.

MANUKA, C.-- A. S. S., from Hon. forSydney, June 27.

MEXICAN, A.-- H. S. S.. Nichols, fromKahului for Hilo. Julv 1.

MONGOLIA, P. M. S. S., ar. Hon. fromS. F., July 6 and sailed for Yoko-hama.

MARION CHILCOTT, Am sp., fromHon. for Gaviota, July 2--.

MANCHURIA. P. M. S. S., Saunders,ar. Yokohama from Hon. June 26.

MOHICAN, Am. bk., from S. F. forMahukona, June 2G.

MONTEREY, Am. oil sehr., Keliey,in tow S. S. Rosecrans, from Mon-terey for Hon., July 6.

MURIEL, Am. sehr., ar. S. F. fromHana, June 11.

MARY E. FOSTER, from TaUal forHon., June 8.

NTJUANU, Am. bk., Josselyn, ar. N.Y. from Hon., June 17. ,

NIPPON MARU, T. K. K. S. S., ar.lokohama Irom Hon., July 6.

OKANOGAN, Am. sehr., Mathew,from Port Gamble for Hon. June18.

ORLAND, Nor. S. S., from Hon, forOcean Island, May 9.

OLYMPIC, Am. bkt.., Evans, from H-.m- .

for S. F., July 3.PANTHER, U.S. S., from S. F. for

Hon., June 30.

RELIEF, IT. S. hospital ship, from S.F. for Hon., July 3.

ROCHAMBEAU, Fr. bk., from Leith,. for Hon., June 19.

R. P. RITHET, Am. bk., McDonald,from S. F. for Hon., Juno 24.

ROSECRANS, Am. s. s., Holmes, sailedROSECRANS, Am. S. S., Holmes, fromR. C. SL DE, Am. sehr., for Aber-

deen from Makaweli, June 4.

ROBERT LEWERS, Am. sehr.. Un-derwood, from Hon. for Port Gambia,June 24.

SANTA RITA, Am. S. S., from PortHarford for Hon., July 2.

SPOKANE, Am. sehr., ar. Hilo fromPort Gamble, June 12. .

S. C. ALLEN, Am. bk., Wilier, ar.Grays Harbor from Hon., June 28.

S. G. WILDER. Am. bk., Jackson,from S. F. for Hon., June 25.

SHERIDAN, U. S. A. T., ar. Hon. fromManila and sailed for S. F., July .o.

SIBERIA, P. M. S. S., ar. Yokohamafrom Hon., June 12.

ST. LOUIS, U. S. S Gleaves, fromHon. for S. F., June 29. --f

TENYO MARU, T. K. K. S. S., ar.S. F. from Hon., June 29.

TEXAN, A.-- H. S. S., Hall, from S F.for Hon., July 1.

VIRGINIAN, A.-- H. S. S.. Colcord,ar. S. F. from Hilo, via Salina Cruz,

St

V.

The recent trip of the Mongolia fromSan Francisco to Honolulu was inter-

esting and Dotable notable in that it

carried not only the record list of cabinpassengers (over 250;, tut the largestnumber ever taken to Honolulu, so said

the San Francisco ofSee. About 150

stopped at Honolulu. Many were re-

turning residents, including a consider-able number of students; but a largetourist list accounted for the unusualinflux. Among the Honolulu passengersare several pew-comer- s (who are alwayswelcome), who have come to remain.Mr. F. T. Dillingham comes with hisyoung wife. He is a son of Charles T.

Dillingham, many years ago cashierwith Castle & Cooke. He joins theforce of scientists employed by thePlanters' Association, ad a fine reputation earned in his line in Massachusetts gives promise of a useful careerin Honolulu. Dr. V. E. Collins, afteryears of good work in South Africa,conies to settle in Honolulu, bringingwith him knowledge and skill in surgery as well as in medicine. He expectsto join Dr. Humphris. Mr. and Mrs.John M. Dowsett return from the Republican National Convention in Chicago, bringing their son from schoolMr. Klebahn, Hackf eld 's genial representative of their steamship agencies,with his wife, will be welcome afteran extended absence. Mr. and MrsBissell, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Kimball,the E. A. Mcltiernys, the C. F. Petersons and others return from short trips

Among the through passengers, perhaps the most notable is the Hon. Wm

M. Sinister, a recent addition to thePhilippine Commission, who is returning to his post, taking his wife aiTd

family. Dr. Galbraith, who is wellknown here, is en a trip around theworld, accompanied by the multi-mi- l

lionaire copper king, Col. W. C. Greene,and his daughter. A number of veryinteresting Philippine young people arereturning from various schools in theUnited States, where they have beenlearning, perhaps, something of whatAmericanism means, and whether thereis really any future for their littlecountry. Xot so very little, either, fortheir two thousand islands, containingover 113,000 square miles, support apopulation of more than 7,000,000, withabundant capacity for 30,000,000, soMr. Sinister says. Perhaps not theleast interesting of those passingthrough is Prof. Jesse Woods, who ison the way to Japan, Shanghai, Hong-kong and Manila to pave the way foran "All-American- " baseball team,which is to follow in the fall, and showthe Orient how the game is played.THE FOURTH ON THE MONGOLIA.

As the Mongolia left San Franciscoon June 30, the Fourth came while atsea. That the day should pass unob-

served was not possible with a crowdof enthusiastic Americans on board.Messrs. Jesse Woods, Clifford Kimball,Senator Dowsett and others organizedthemselves into a committee of arrange-ments anil got up a very creditablecelebration. At 10 in the morning theflag was raised to the music of the StarSpangled Banner, sung by a volunteerchoir of good voices, three rousingcheers, and a salute of twenty-on- e guns,fired from the ship s little brass gun.Senator John Lane of Hawaii, in animpressive voice, read the Declarationof Independence, and CommissionerShuster, a speaker of standing, deliv-

ered an oration of high character,worthy of transcription in full insteadof a mere notice like this. After sing-

ing the Battle nymn of the Republicthe large audience dispersed, to reas-

semble at 2:30 for the athletic sports.These were both strenuous and im-

mensely amusing, and consisted of apotato race, cock fight, cracker battle,pillow fight betweeu combatants astridea smooth pole high above the deck, relay race, putting the shot and sparringmatches. The list was concluded by aboxing bout between two Chinese ath-

letes. Woods kept the two men, whohad never worn the gloves before, attheir work, with a result so irresistiblyfunny that people lay down to laugh.

A Fourth of July dinner was follow-ed by the award of prizes for thesports, the means for which was pro-

vided by a generous subscription amongthe passengers. The prizes, which con-

sisted of very pretty pins, sleeve but-tons and the like, were presented byMrs. Sontherland. wife of a UnitedStates naval officer, who will be inHonolulu with the battleships in a fewdays. Honolulu made a most creditableshowing, getting six oit of fourteenawards. Master Peterson got first andW od second prize in the juvenile race,Sherwood Lowery got first in the pil-

low fight and second for putting theshot. Wallace Copper got first in thepotato race and for loxng.

The day's amusements came to anend wth dancing on the upj er deck, forwhich Clifford Kimball furnished themusic, assisted by a chorus of Hawaiiansongs. Eleven o'clock came all tooearly, with "lights out," but not ma un-

people went to bed til! the wee smallhours began to lengthen.

The success of the day was madepossible by the cordial assistance of theofficers of the ship, by whose efforts

2 5 THSRMO 5" WIND5 5 2 if il: S a P g w s 3 15: 0 s-

- -- : S ": : , : : : :

1900 29 98 65 70 78 CB 7i 4 V ....1901 30 03 81 F8 76 .01 81 6 ...10O3 3) 02 M 63 . 6 07, 81 3 Nl1903 29 6 84 73 78 .00 62 2 n

1904 80-0- 2 82 72 77 05 72 4 NE

1909 28 9 77 70 7 .(4 72 7 K 13

1906 30 01 2 75 T8 . 63 4 N 7

1907 30 04 62 71 78 . 01 60 2 S 9

1908 30:10 80 72 78 T 68 8 8

ATte 30.01 S2 71 76 .C4 9 l

J. A. OILMAN,

July 4.W. H. MARSTON, Am. sehr., from

Hilo for S. F., June 17.YANKTON, U. S. S., from S. F. for

Hon., June 30.

PROPERTY OWNERSIVILL

NOW BEPROSEGUTED

At the meeting of the MinisterialUnion yesterday forenoon at CentralUnion church, Sheriff Iaukea presentedbis plan for prosecuting the owners ofproperty used for immoral purposes, asthe best way to suppress the evil esit exists at Iwilei, and asked for thesupport of the union. This was givinby the adoption of a resolution pledg-ing it to him, offered by Dr. DoremtisScudder, pastor of Central Unionchurch.

In presenting the matter, SheriffIaukea said:

"I find that arresting the womenwho live at Iwilei does no good, asthey are advised after getting out thatthey should go back, and I have cometo the conclusion that it is time thatsome action is taken against the own-ers and agents of the property at Iwi-lei and other parts of the city wherethese women live, but before doing thisI want you all to think very seriouslyabout it, as it will involve the mostprominent men in this community, whoare either directly or indirectly own-ers of property which is being used lorthis unlawful business.

"I am ready with the evidence toproceed against every owner of suchproperty, and I will have no respectfor persons, it it is your uesire. Vouhave started this crusade against theevil, and it is for you to say if I shallgo ahead, because possibly you maynot want some member of this uniondrawn into court as an owner of suchproperty, but if I start I will not thinkof people.

"I will notify the owners first hyletter that they are allowing theirhouses to be used as places for prosti-tution, and then, if they still refuse todrive the tenants out, it is for you tosay if I shall bring suit directlyagainst them."

WHITE SOXTHE LATEST

The Honolulu White Sox AthleticClub will give a benefit dance at K.of P. Hall on Saturday night, August 1.

The Honolulu White Sox is a neworganization, with the following off-

icers: President, Sam Akai; vice pres-ident, Dr. K. F. Li; secretary, C. S.Wakita; manager, Sam Hop; captain,J. K. Notley.

The club will furnish the public withthe best kind of baseball for nothingin the coming season of the Kalania-naol- e

League.Tickets can be obtained from mem-

bers of the team or at the door. Theadmission for a lady and gentleman isfifty cents.

The famous Royal Kawaihau GleeClub will furnish the needed melody.

present time lies idle. It will growanywhere that tule wilT, and its com-

mercial value, 'based on a five-foo- t

stalk, runs from $1'0 to $- - a ton.The yield per acre in Hawaii, accord-

ing to the experiments made, is from4'jiH pounds of dried rush to iU00pounds, according to the length of thestalk, while one beauty about its cul-

tivation is that care pays in two ways,the longer the stnlk the greater thetonnage and the higher the price perton.

The weaving of matting from the Chi-

nese rush, the scientific name for whichis Cyperus tcgotiformis. is a simple art,an! something that requires no veryelaborate machinery, while the marketfor the matting is a large one. Even j

in supplying the home demand in Ha-

waii for this rush matting there is a'good field for a small industry.

WM. B. STOCKMAN,Section Director.

TIDES, SUN AND MOON.I los S 12 .i--

i H. --i H

13 -- 51 b o o s S50 a- - ram.ift :p.in. a m p m i ets.

6 . 0 40, 1 1 8.55 3.28 3 So 5 24 6 48' t

7 11.37. 1 3 JO CO 4 05i 5.50 5 24 8.46 0 28P..! ! i I i i -

8 12-8- 1 5 11.10 4.45' 7 20 5 25 8.45 1 03i ! i I I i

9. 1.10; 1.8 ... 5.35 8 24 5 26 8 45 1 41am I I i i

10 1 52 2 0 0.10 8 20( 9 17(5 28 6.4i 2 23

8 ll' 2.34! 2.1 1.20" 7 05.10.00,5 28 6. J 3.US 12 3 15? 2 2 2.14' 7.4610 0!5 26 6 45 4.C5

First quarter of the moon July 6.The tides at Kahului and Hilo occur

about one hour earlier than at Hono-lulu.

Hawaiian standard time is 10 hourstO minutes slower than Greenwichtime, being that of tro meridian of 157degrees thirty minutes. The timewhistle blows at 1:30 p. m., which isthe same as Greenwich 0 hours 0 min-utes. Sun and moon are for local timefor the whole group.

METEOROLOGICAL EECOED.Issued Every Sunday Morning by the

Local Office, U. S. Weather Bureau.

GROWING CHINESE MATRUSH OFFERS INDUCEMENTS

Director Wilcox of the Federal Ex-

periment Station, although he has beenhere but a short while, has already madeup his mind that there ia one industryawaiting development which Las so farbeen overlooked by the public. This isthe growing of Chinese mat rush andthe weaving up of the product in theIslands for export.

A sample of this growth, which wasgrown experimentally at the station, isnow on exhibition in the rooms of thePromotion Committee. It is split andcured ready for weaving. The rushshown is over four feet Jong, and ispliable and of good color.

There is a big demand for the mat-

tings made from this fiber in the Unite. 1

States, and according to Director Wil-

cox it can be grown most successfullyin Hawaii, and in marsh land that is

aia so ol . .

SABCK. r .tx a a5 3 x r . r cQ K t

i

8 28? W 10 P2 72 : .fO f2 N! 87 ! tU ir 10

T ay si n '2 ' .00 SI 7l 7i 0 NX 7

T 9 3 t Pi 71 ( rt( 7f 3 S0.0 81 7 V . 7l "K 7

4 id cs 72 01 2 8

Note. Barometer readings are cor-rected for temperature, instiumentalerrors, and local gravity, and reducedto sea level. Averasre cloudiness statedIn scale from 0 to 10. Direction ofwind Is prevailing direction during 24hours ending at 8 p. m. Velocity ofwind is average velocity in miles perhour, T indicates trace of rain.

WM. B. STOCKMAN,i Section Director.

ror Hon., June 4.

CHINA, p. M. S. S., from Hon. for too saline for rice and which at thej.1

i J1 J L1

10 THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, TUESDAY, JULY 7, igc8.

8 Fraternal Meetings Fraternal Meetings CARLOS LONG 15

DISPENSER OF JUSTICE

MARKS GETS TWO

YEARS FOB THEFT

Sentence is to Begin When

the Other One Has

Ended.

Castle & Cooke, Ltd.SHIPPING AND COMMIXIIOS

MERCHANTS.Sugar Factors and Ceneral Ianna

Agents.

REPRESENTING .

New England Mutual Life IwriacjCompany of Boston.

Aetna Fire Insurance Co.National Fire Insurance Co.Citizens' Insuranc Co. (Hartford KitInsurance Co.)Protector Underwriters of tht Pa

of Hartford.

Ynb - l r i si

oTor '

Way fFortatloi

i. m.,'

Tori9.

Arrt

Pun 1

BaleKah

xair

f

9

i

XalLkXalHat;Kal"HalFui

Con

b ;

ID.tra

J

F

AtNTr

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1331

yOLYNSSIA ENCAMPMENT NO 1,I O. O. F.

.10 VhIi erery flrit and third Friday

Odd Fellowa' Hall, Fori Street.Visiting brothera cordially inritdto attend.

O. A. SIMPSON, C. P.L.L.U PIERRE, Scriba.

3ZCZL8I0B LODGE NO. 1, I. O. O. F.MEPtt-ss- . Meet every Tuesday evening, at

4 i 7:o, in oaa reuowa nan, ronStreet. Visiting brothers cordiallyinTiled to attend.

J. DUTOT, N. G.L. L. LA PIERRE, Sec.

XLA2UCONT LODGE NO. 3, L O. O. Frf:'i Meets every Monday evening, at

7-i- n in T.llni. Woll fnrlV.W Street. Visiting brothers sordially

uitiwu attciiu.BEN VICKERS, K. QE. R. HENDRY, Sec.

PACIFIC REBHKAH LODGE NO. 1,I O. O. F.

Meets every second and fourth. Thursday, at 7:30 d. m.. Odd Tel

lows' Hall. Visiting Rehokahs areordiallv invited to attend.

ALICE PRATT, N. O.JhjSNY JAUOCSON, Secy.

OLXVE BRANCH REBEKAH LODGENO 2, L O. O. F.

rfft2!,. Meets every first and third Thurs-Igjda-

at 7:30 p. m, in Odd Fel-Af-- "

'0W8' Hall. Visiting Rebekahs arecordially inrited to attend.JENNIE H. MACAULAY, JT. G.HAZEL CRANE. Secy.

OCEANIC LODGE NO. 371, F. & A. M.A Meets on the last Monday of each

month, at Masonic Temple, at 7:30 p.. Visiting brethren are cordially in-- '

xTited to attendM. M. JOHNSON. W. M.W. H. GOETZ. Secretary.

LEAH! CHAPTER NO. 2, O. E. S.Meets every third Monday of each

7& month, at 7:30 p. m., in the MasonicTemple. Visiting sisters and brothelsare cordially invited to attend.

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

LXI ALOHA CHAPTER NO. 3, O. E. S.Meets at the Masonic Temple everysecond Saturday of each month, at 7:30p. to. Visiting sisters and brothers arecordially invited to attend. .

MINNIE FRAZEE, W. M.LOUISE A. TRUE, Secy.

LADIES' AUXILIARY, A. O. H,DIVISION NO. 1.

--jr Meets every first and thirdTuesday, at 8 p. m., in O.

Hall, tort Street,Wrf Visiting sisters are cordially

trjLJttvdZ PJ invited t attend.MRS. K. COWES. Pres.JOSEPHINE DILLON. Sec.

MYSTIO LODGE NO. 2. K. of P.Meets oa the second and fourth Tuesdays of

eacn monin at T.sto'clock in K. of P. Hall, corner Fortand Beretania. Visiting brothers cordi-ally invited to attend.

W. L. LYLE, C. 0.F. WALDRON, K. R. 8.

HONOLULU TEMPLE NO. 1. PYTHIAN SISTERS.

Meets every first and third Monday, at1 :30 p. m., at unignu of Pythias Hall,Fort and Beretania streets. All visi-tors cordially invited to attend.

RENEE WHITEHFAD, M. E. O.GRACE O'BRIEN, M. of R. & S.

OAHU LODGE NO. 1, K. of P.Meets every 1st and Ird Friday at7:30o'Clock. Pythian Ball, corner Her- -

atania and Fort streets. Visiting brothers cordially invited to attend.

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

william Mckinley lodge no. 8,K.0fP.

Meets every second and fourth Saturday even.Vmt Gt . ing at 7 :30o'clock, in Pythian Hall, corner Bere-tania and Fort streets. Visiting broth-ers cordially invited to attend.

W. L. FRAZEE, C. O.E. A. JACOB SON, K. R. 8.

COURT CAMOES NO. 8110, A. O. F.Meets every second and fourth Tues-day of each month, at 7:30 p. m., inSan Antonio Hall, Vineyard street.Visiting brothers cordially invited toattend.

DR- - JOHN F. COWES, O. R.M. C. PACHECO. F. S.

OAMOES CIRCLE NO. 240. C. O. F.Meets every second and fourth Thurs-day of each month, at 7:30 p. m., inSan Antonio Hall, Vineyard street.Visiting companions are cordially in-vited to attend.

MRS. J. P. REGO, O. C.R. J. BORGES, F. S.

COURT LUNALLLO NO. 6600, A. O. F.Meets every first and third Wednesdayevenings of each month, at 7:30 p. m.,in Pythian Hall, corner Fort andBeretania streets. Visiting brotherscordially invited.

H. H. HANAKAHI, C. B.JAS. K. KAULIA, P. O, F. 8.

HONOLULU AERIE 140, F. O. E.Meets on second and

fourth Wednesday even--ings of each month, at7:30 o'clock, in Pvthian

Hall, corner Beretania and Fort streets. Visiting Xaglea are invited to attend.

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

HONOLULU HARBOn NO. 54, A. A.Of M. & P.Meets on first and third Sun-day evenings of each month,at 7 o'clock, at Odd FellowsHalL All sojourning brethren

I are cordially invited to attend.I By order Worthy President.

A. TULLETT.FRANK C. POOR, Secy.

THEODORE ROOSEVELT CAMPNO. 1. U. S. W. V.Department of Hawaii.

Meets Saturday nnon nntirA in momTw&ra inWaverley Block, corner Bethel and Hotel, at7:bo p. m. visiting comrades cordially in-vited to attend.

L. E. TWOMET, Commander.

MARINE ENGINEERS BENEFICIALASSOCIATION.

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

E. HUGHES. Pres.H. G. WOOTTEN, Secy.

HAWAIIAN TRIBE NO 1. I. O. R. M.Meets every first and thirdThursday of each month, in K.of P. Hall, corner of Fort andBeretania streets. Visitingbrothers cordiaiiy invited to at-tend.

J. W. ASH. Sachem.A. E. MURPHY, C. ef R.

HONOLULU LODGE 616. B. P. O. E.v Honolulu Lodce No. 616, B.

,C? P. O. E., will moot i tlisi.fU hall. Kinir street near Fort,'4r every Fridav evening. By

order of the E. R.V. H. McINERNY, E. R.

H. C. E ASTON, Secy.

HONOLULU SCOTTISH THISTLECLTjfi.

Meets on the first and third Fri-day, a 7:30 o'clock p. m inrooms in Orepon Block, entranceiSVf'y on Union street.

J. M. MacKINNON, Chief.JOHN MACAULAY. Secy.

HAWAII CHAPTER NO. L OZDE3OF KAMEHAMEHA.

Meets every first and third Thursday svsn- -

ng of each month at 7:80 o'clock in Fraternityuna reuowr uoudicir. on Fort street.

M. rXKXANPVZ,

soxs or st. ascxoz, lodsbIX. SJ.

. ''7 mmi4 4 ftvtt Ikmntay ati r. nan.

Tititias brtkrt cordiallj iirited to

. . COLLTKi, W. P.. 8. KXNWAT. S7.EXUJTCr WAS LODQB XO. 4, K. of P.

Xtta artry mob ui tail Tmasiar al ltato, V lnyar itraat, at 7:0 p. ax. YlalttM

MM&an ara eoriaily IstHm to ttn.wono cim cHoira. ...

Better stopencouraging

perspiration

GET A

G

STOVE

and a gas lamp for yourhouse.

Honolulu. Gas Co., Ltd.

Bishop Street

AstersAT t SHADES

Lcn ChoyBretnLa and Smith Street

Andrew Usher'sScotch WhisRey

0. V. G. SpecialReserve

W. O. PEACOCK & CO., LTD,AGENTS.

PORT, BELOW KINO

O. OKAZAKI

GCC2S IN

Worsteds and Shirtings

Suits and Shirtsto order.

Hotel Street, near Eiver Street.

f.Ir. and Mrs. HashimotoMASSEURS

RHEUMATISM.BRUISES,SPRAINS,TIRED

i FEELING,

and other ail-

mentsQUICKLY

RELIEVED.

444 KING STREET. Telephone 637

1GE CREAM AND CAKESServed Dally

EXCEPTIONAL QUALITY VMANY FLAVORS

Perfection Home BakeryBeretanla and Emma Streets

REMOVAL NOTICE.

Tee New Oahu Carriage Manufac-turing Co. has removed to Queenstreet, at the easterly side of Nuuanustream. 8034

YOUR WATCHneeds attention. We will cleanand oil it, patting it in conditionto keep correct time.

L H. DIETZ JEWELRY CO.

1066 Fort Street

W. H. THOENECONTRACTOR

House Painting General JobbingCarpentering

Repairing Furniture a Specialty212AJCTNION ST. Telephone 422.

Id Kona CoffeeWANTED 1 BAG OR 10 BAG!

State Quality and Price to

fMhesney Coffee Co.

16 MERCHANT STEHET.

HONOLULU

Coffee Roasters to the Trad

KWONG HING CHONG GO.

1024 Nuuanu Avnue

GEASS CLOTH GRASS LINESTABLE COVERS DOYLIES

Oahu Ice & Electric Co.

ICE delivered at any part of t&aIsland orders promptly

Tel. B28; P. O. Box 600. Offlo.walo.

KOA DESKS andFOUR ROSTERSWING CHONG CO,

King and Bethel

Sun Leo Tal Co.Contractors, Builders, Painters

KOA FURNITURE TO ORDER.

Kin Street, near Nuvana"

NEW

ranklin AutosSILENT CAMERON.

Noise on any Speed.Come and M It.

Associated GarageH. F. MURRAT, Manager.

DISTILLED WATERPURE SODA WATER

Fountain Soda WorksT. KUNIKIYO

FLORISTFort Street, next Kash Stor.

Fresh flowers daily. Vloleta. nanaAsters. Roses and an asortm

decorative plants. Orders for tableflowers promptly filled. Telephone fSS

NEW SHIPMENT.Famous "B" Brand

For Kimonos, BIB

K. FukurodaALL COLORS AND PJUCSW

Bikes PaintedTO LOOK EQUAL TO NX VI

Y. YOSHIKAWA163 KING STREET

A. A. WILSON.

General ContractorOffice, 58 Young Bldg. TeL HI.

Gattcc, Neill & Company, Ltd.

Engineers and Machinist

QUEEN AND RICHARDS STREETBoilers re-tub- ed with charcoal-lr- o

steel tubes. General ship work.

YAMATOYA,ALL KINDS OF

SHIRTS, PAJAMAS and KIMONOS

MADE TO ORDER.

1148 Fort St., Just above Orphewa.

onsy

Carlos Long occupied the seat ofjustice in the police court yesterday inthe absence of Judge Andrade on Maui.He had nineteen cases on the calendarto deal with, and disposed of ten ofthe minor offenders.. Six drunks werefined, and Ah Sam, an offender againstthe swill ordinance, was likewise com-pelled to dig up. The biggest fine im-posed was that on Hugo Hanaukama,who paid .$6 for an assault.

The most important cases on the cal-endar, from the standpoint of publicinterest, were those against LieutenantCarter, for assault and battery, andagainst Dr. (Mrs.) Burnhara, for reck-less driving of an automobile. Theformer ease was continued until today,while the charge against Dr. Burnhamwas dismissed.

SNEAK THIEVES STEAL

BECOME FLAGS

Sneak thieves, with more than ordi-

nary lack of that which goes to makea man a man, stole a number of fineflags some time between Saturdayevening and Monday morning from thedecorations placed in iront of A.Blom's store on Fort street. The flagswere a part of the decorations put upfor the Fourth, and were being left inposition in anticipation of the fleetcoming.

The affair has been reported to thepolice, who will endeavor to run downthe thieves in this particular case andto keep a sharp eye out for any otherswho may decide to go into the businessof tearing down the decorations aboutthe streets.

WAIALEES LOST

BASEBALL GAME

On the Fourth of July, a lively gameof baseball was played between theWaialuas and the Waialee School team,on the latter 's ground. The winnersof the day were the Waialuas, whodefeated the Waialees by the closescore of 5 to 4.

The game was an interesting one andwas witnessed by a large crowd ofpeople, who cheered heartily for theirfavorites.

There was a crowd of boys from theIndustrial School, cheering, yelling andthrowing their hats in the air whentheir side scored three runs in theeighth inning, but they subsided whenthey were given a goose-eg- g in thelast inning and the game ended infavor of the Waialuas.

This was the first time that theWaialee School team had been beaten,and their defeat was due to steadypitching by Frank Deponte, the twirl-e- r

of the Waialuas, who had twelvestrike-out- s to his credit. PitcherEddie Bush of the Waialees struck outseven.

After the contest the visitors wereinvited to a luau, to which they didample justice, and this was followedby a brass band entertainment by theschool boys.

The following was the lineup:Waialees Kuhea, rf.; Gomes, ss.;

Johnson, lb.; Kane, cf.; Kuoha, 3b.;liush, p.; i'aulo, ".b.; Ivauhi, c.Akana, If.

Waialuas A. Fegerio, cf.; Keonaona, c; A. Achiu, ss.; Jac. Souza, 3b.;F, Deponte, p.; M. Teves, If.; A. Alameida, rf.; A. Waikoloa, lb.; J.Teves, 2b.

Score by innings:12345678 9

Waialees 10000003 04Waialuas 00301100 5

Summary:Bases on balls Off E. Bush, 3. Two-bas- e

hits Gomes, Johnson, M. Teves.Struck out By Bush, 7; Deponte, 12.Passed balls Kauhi, 3; Keonaona, 1.Wild pitch Bush.

Umpire Chi Bui.Scorer Peter Corney.Time of game 1 hour 2."i minut?s.

MACHINERY FOR SALE

One Blake vacuum pump, 14"x24"xIS", brass lined.

One tandem, compound, ball, high-speed engine; cylinders 15" and 2o"x16" stroke.

Our workshop has been equippedwith 1he latest improved tools and weare prepared to take in a wider rangeof work.

Automobile repairs and fine machinework a specialty.

All kinds of blaeksmithing and re-

pairs promptly attended to.One Mirlees and Watson crab winch.One large platform scale, capacity

1500 lbs.One ch centrifugal (Krogh) pumpAn assortment of Steel and Iron

Pulleys.A lot of Railroad Spikes.Tools and Implements.One piece double leather belt-

ing, 41 feet; one piece 10-in- ch doubleleather belting, 46 feet; one piece 12-in- ch

double leather belting, 4S feet. Infirst-cla- ss condition, at a bargain.ttjST RECEIVED BY STEAMSHIP

COLUMBIAN.A consignment of the celebrated

FOOS GASOLINE ENGINES, 2. 4, 6

and 9 II. P. Any size or style up to90 H. P.

The best gasoline engine that hasever been imported into this Territory

Call and look them over at

Neill's Workshop135 Merchant Street.

Vickers'Repair Shop

Now in Basement of Regal Shoe Store.

John Marks was yesterday sentencedby Judge Robinson to two years' im-

prisonment at hard labor, though thetime when his sentence is to com-

mence is a little indefinite. It de-

pends somewhat on how Marks comesout in a prior case in whieh he waseonvicted, but from whieh appeals bythe habeas corpus route and othermeans have been taken to the UnitedStates Court. In that case he wassentenced to five years and if he servesit his sentence in the present casewill begin at the finish of that. Butif he gets out of that sentence, thenthis sentence is to begin right away.

In this case Marks was convicted ofcattle stealing and the jury made astrong recommendation for mercy. Thesentence pronounced by Judge Eobin- -

son was as follows: r

"It is the judgment and sentence ofthis court that upon the verdict ofguilty returned by the jury in this casethat you be punished by imprisonmentat hard labor, in Oahu prison, for theterm of two years, such imprisonmentto take effect and such sentence to beserved upon the expiration of any existing term of imprisonment or uponhis discharge from, or other termination of, any existing term of impris-onment."

A motion for a new trial has beenmade on the ground, amon others,that Marks was in the jurisdiction ofthe United States Court by reason ofthe habeas corpus and other proceed-ings in Judge Dole's court in the othercase, and therefore, it is insisted, theCircuit Court has no jurisdiction to tryhim. Another ground is that the verdict is a qualified one and thereforenot such as will support a judgment.

THE AFONG CASE.The hearing on the present branch

of the Afong case is nearing a finish.Yesterday forenoon was occupied large-ly with rebuttal evidence on behalf ofMrs. Afong. The afternoon was occupied principally with argument,Judge Perry taking up most of thetime. lie went carefully through theevidence of the several witnesses, ana-lyzing their testimony, and seeking toshow that it failed utterly to show anyof the fraud or misrepresentation orwant of consideration which was alleged as a reason for Airs. Burns withdrawing from the agreement of com-promise which was entered into onJuly 22.

Argument will be continued today.WANT TO BE CITIZENS.

Petitions for naturalization werefiled yesterday in the United StatesCourt by John Sylvanus van Yolsem, anative of Belgium, 35 years old; andby Nicholas Barbe, also a native ofBelgium, 32 years of age. These pe-titions will come up in court Novem-ber 23.

AntoneGomes, a Spaniard, who ar-rived by the Heliopolis, has declaredhis intention of becoming a citizen ofthe United States. So, too, has De-met-

Martin, another Spanish arrivalby the Heliopolis.

ACCOUNTS APPROVED,The accounts of James L. McLean

as executor of the will of the lateMary Ann Gray were yesterday ap-proved and he was given his discharge.Receipts for the distribution of theestate were filed for twenty-fou- r sharesof the stock of the Inter-Islan- d SteamNavigation Company and the respec-tive share of cash by each of thoseentitled to distribution Caroline E.Godfrey, "William II. McLean, JamesL. McLean, George Thomas McLeanand Robert C. McLean.

WANTS ALIMONY.Xorah McGuire, against whom her

husband, James L. McGuire, has begunproceedings for divorce, has filed ananswer, by her attorneys, Clem K.Quinn and J. A. Magoon, denying allgrounds for divorce, and has asked foralimony pendente lite and for reason-able attorneys' fees.

The motion for alimony will be heardnext Monday.

TAX APPEALS.Attorney General Hemenway has re-

ceived word that the Tax AppealCourt of Maui has decided that underthe exemption law all the property ofpineapple plantations ' is exempt. TheTax Appeal Court of Hawaii has de-

cided that only a part of such prop-erty is exempt.

TEMPORARY MAGISTRATE.Charles F. demons has been ap-

pointed temporary District Magistratefor Honolulu during the temporary ab-

sence of Magistrate Frank Andrade.The oath was taken before Judge DeBolt July 30.

DIVORCE GRANTED.Judge Lindsay has granted a divorce

to Lilly Peter Pa from Peter Pa, onthe grounds of desertion and non-sup-por- t.

TO EXAMINE TITLE.J. Lightfoot has been appointed to

examine the title on the application of :

C. Y. Booth for a registered title tolands.

LAND CONVEYED.By deed filed with the Registrar yes-

terday, the "Waihiku Sugar Companyhas conveyed to C. Brewer & Co. for$750 a lot containing 0.(5(3 acre of land,adjoining J. L. Coke's and W. T. Rob-inson's lots in the Hi of Koloa.

The list of fatalities by contagiousdisease in this community for the fif-teen days ending June 30, comprisessewn cases of tuberculosis and one oftyphoid fever.

R. J. Taylor is senior boarding officerof the Customs during the absence ofE. A. Jacobsen.

THIS DAY

Auction SaleTUESDAY, JULY 7. 1908,

12 o'clock noon.

Between Hackfeld wharf and Railwaywharf.

Cruising Yacht "Spray"On account of departure of the own-

er, I am instructed to sell the sloopyacht Spray, without reserve.

In April last she made the circuit ofOahu in the shortest time on record,viz. 22 hours. She has a roomy andcomfortable cabin, ideal for Pearl Har-bor sailing1. She was formerly a $2000boat. She has been examined by Mr.C. Johnson, the boat builder, who re-ports that for $290 he will give her anew suit of sails, rigging, steeringgear and rudder; calk and- - otherwiserepair and give her two coats of paint, city.and that with these, In his opinion,she will not need any substantial re-pairs for say three years. His, offergoes with the boat. A .chance for abargain.

JAS. F. MORGAN.AUCTIONEER.

Imnant SaleSaturday, July II, 1908,

12 O'CLOCK NOON

Property King St,, Kalihi

LOT 10 59.3xl38.7.x20.4xl30.LOT 7 31.3xl35.7.x70.4xl30.

JAS. F. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER.

No

Under instructions from MR, C. M.V. FORSTEK of Honolulu, Island andCounty of Oahu, Territory of Hawaii,trustee, The undersigned will sell atpublic auetion, on TUESDAY, the 7thday of July, 190S, at 10 o'clock a. m.,at his salesrooms, Kaahumanu street,Honolulu aforesaid, atl that certainpiece or parcel of land, containing anarea of 20 acres or thereabouts, situ-ate at Kahauloa-iki- , District of SouthKona, Island and Territory of Hawaii,and being that certain portion of theland described in Royal Patent (grant)1613, conveyed to A." J. Lopes by Anto-nio Gonsalv.es, by deed dated August10, 1899, and of record in the saidRegistry in Liber 198 at pages 225-22- 7.

Dated July 4, 1908.

JAS. F. MORGAN. tions,AUCTIONEER. of

For further particulars, apply to thesaid JAMES F. MORGAN, or toMESSRS. HOLMES & STANLEY, at-

torneys for C. M. V. Forster, trustee,at their offices on Kaahumanu street,Honolulu.

Bargains in Machinery

One four-dru- m Engine,Wire Cableway, complete.Wire Rope (1 3-- 8) one reel 750 feet,

one real 300 feet.Sheers of all sizes.Brass Valves,Galvanized Iron Guy.All in good order and for sale at

very low prices.Apply at my office, 847 Kaahumanu

street.

JAS. F MORGAN.

PROPOSITION FOR A

WOMAN

I have a proposition in the heart oftown for a smart, hustling womanwhose husband is employed in city. )r

New, bright, Does notrequire money. You can make itfrom the start if you are suitable.

JAS. F. MORGAN.

FOR RENT.Money-irake- r cn Emma Street.Cottages on Enuna Square.Five-roame- d House, Young street.

All in good shape and cheap rents.

JAS. F. MORGAN."VYe

andTO LET.

HOUSE, nine rooms. Will furnish forresponsible party on lease. Goodbusiness.

JAS. F. MORGAN.

Wallprettyworn 1

Go trives kper Bifor you

Thenfew teflavor ii

M. A. (

JeweNo moftiel-s- a

Co., LtThe

teleplioI'pCHl foin Hie

ThelatestItegal i

thern.ftegal (

Shoesyou washoes w

prts w

VickersA feu

to brin;tired onClair I!look afl

The c

ISachs 1

mense;on,. arc

We 1

trade,hats, piIslandbnildinj;

For a jnothingNutrine.ed s aHolJiste:

The 1

selling fi

by wellThey arral with

If thfing of u'and sencheap, s

Taint j'iWe h

ment ofweek ofonr DorUerrr '8hoe H:

Wev

r rage soi harge' Honoluli

HawaiiaAn uri

on thisCatholic

i yard ani in Gatoiny, Vab

; All new

buy your Diamonds, Watches,old jewelry for Spot Cash.

Can1018 Nuuanu Ave., and FortStreet near Hotel

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1908. XI

LOCAL BREVITIES. JEWEL STOVES

WHTJEY lifiARSHIFC. F. Peterson and family returned

from the Coast on the Mongolia,Smith, the escape from Fort Shaf-ter- ,

was not captured yesterday.W. A. Baldwin of Wailuku is to un-

dergo an operation for appendicitis.The Hawaiian band will play at Ka-kaak- o

mission this evening at 7:30; aspecial program.

Excelsior Lodge No. 1, I. O. O. F.,will meet in Odd Fellows' Hall thisevening at 7:30.

Ladies' Auxiliary A. O. II., DivisionNo. 3, will meet in C. B. U. Hall this

'2

5--- . f iff

"3SgstH: I I JEWEL

l DETROIT STOVE WORKS figjp

o(ft

Uncle SamOur Uncle Sam has boughtland at I 'earl Harbor, andis just beginning to build ahopie for his family. It istime to do as Uncle does.Leasing and renting is goodenough for cheap foreigners,weary Willies, landlords andthe man with the movingvan. BUT now is the timeto fall in line with Uncle'sgood judgment. Buy a lotand build a home in COL-LEGE HILLS. You buy thelot and we'll loan the moneyto build the home.

College Hills

SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY

0evening at 8 o'clock.

Judge W. J. Robinson leaves todav Mrccn nfor Kauai to try some cases in whichJudge Hardy is disqualified.

Rice Investigations A Report ofFirst Year's Experiments has been is

Isued as a bulletin by the Hawaii AgriON EASY TERMS

VJ. W. DI&IOND & COfWPANY. LTD. jin

cultural Experiment Station.The Home Rule convention to nomi

shades, white, mode, light blue,Copen-Hage- n, brown and navy

$1.25 a Yard.Trent Trust Company nate a delegate to Congress ha3 been

called for Monday, August 31, in Ka- -

hiliaulam hall, Honolulu. THERE'S no doubt

that our Hart Schaff--LIMITED The case of Maximiana Brilliante,

eharged with assault and battery, wascalled in Judge Robinson s court yesterday but went over till next Monday.

. Speaking of the Mohonk Conference, eeh Finish Sills$25 Reward ner & Marx clothes

are doing a lot of goodllie Laving Church 6ays: "Anothe

--TUmnMlMilllHl H M'millll !! HI I If I IIHHIl ll

fLiiLl v f--' A

speaker of weight and of delightful interest was Hon. W. F. Frear, the Gov

ernor ot Hawaii."The lloonlu and Hoola Lahui Society

will hold their regular monthly meet

f Also, Ri

(l( in shades,

if 3

in this community; rais-

ing the general standards

WfU be paid by the HAWAIIAN GA- -

mri'ti CO., LTD., for the arrest andonvlctlon of any person found stealingopies of the Advertiser from ad- -

flrie of subscribers.C. S. CRANE,

Manager.

ing on Wednesday morning at teno'clock at the Kapiolani MaternityHome. All members are requested to

light blue, 'Copen-Hage- n

and brown

1.00 a Yard.attend. of style in men's dressMr. and Mrs. George P. Castle have

ii i imore wen aressea mensent a check for $350 to purchase ateam for the sprinkling cart for Kapio-lani park. The Board of Supervisorsfelt unable to make appropriation forLP .i iithis need. man usual nere now.

Miss Grace Hortense Tower who wasDRAUGHT BEERWe'll put you right if

you let us.

This store is the home of HartSchaffner & Marx clothes

That's DifferentOur Draught Beer is full of

Life and Snap because we go

to the trouble and expense of

keeping it in the right way.

CRITERION ANDPALACE BARS.

Four-Strok- e

Washing Machine

, A child can operateit. Washing done in

one half the time.

Come and see it.

here two years ago with the SouthernCalifornia Editorial Association was tosail for Honolulu again July 4, accom-panied by Miss Bonnie Bunnelle. andMiss Jessie Earley.

Announcements have been receivedhere of the marriage in San FranciscoJune 10, of Firman Thompson and thedaughter of Captain and Mrs. E. R.Underwood. Captain Underwood ismaster of the schooner Robert Lewers.The voung couple reside in Newark,X.J."

L. G. Blossom, who was purser of theManchuria at the time she went' on theWaimanalo reef, suffered a stroke ofparalysis a year ago last May while onthe S. S. San Juan, and has been in theMarine hospital at San Francisco eversince. He lost the use of his entireright side, but is now on the road torecovery. -

S. M. Damon has heard from DonaldMaelntyre who went to Manila to securechoice varieties of mangoes. Maelntyre

Sil 1va s oggervCopyright 1908 byHart Schaffner & Marx HONOLULU, T. H.

C. J. McCarthy - Prop.m tlt .gftmm

BUSINESS LOCALS.

EACHWill cairfor formal dress on many occasions.

The Dora Del Sarte, a white satin tie ; and the Merry- -

LtdO. Hall & Son,Widow Sailor tie in pink, blue and lavender, are the daintest,Mrswellest ties for dance occasions.

Annual clearance sale at Sachs nowon.

New Kajah silks. "Whitney &

Marsh;A good second-han- d piano is want-

ed. See classified ads.An island horse, sound and gentle,

is for sale. See classified ads.A room or cottage is wanted for the

month of August. See classified ads.A dividend has been declared on the

shares of Waialua Agricultural Co. Seenotice elsewhere.

Wall, Nichols Co., Ltd., are selling aprettv fleet souvenir that should be

Take Elevator.Household Dept.

says his plans are proceeding satistac-toril- y.

He speaks of varieties of man-goes there thaj. ripen in January andfetch $5 gold per dozen; and of othersthat in the usual season bring fromthirty to fifty cents a dozen.

J. M. Dowsettand John C. Lane, del-egates to the Republican National con-

vention at Chicago, returned by theMongolia yesterday. Only two dele-gates from Hawaii were given seats inthe convention, Robertson and Dowsctt.Robertson was placed on the Committeeon Rules and Dowsett on the Committeeon Resolutions. One meeting of thiscommittee lasted from 5 p. m. to 4 p.m. Hereafter Territories will be givensix delegates in the convention.

PRICES REDUCED!,

Imported especially for "Fleet Wreek."

Price $5.00 per pair.

McINERNY SHOE STOREFort St. near King.

iailfornia Table Fruitsworn by everyone. They are cheap.

Go to Ilaleiwa before the fleet arrives and regain vour strength. Manager Bidgood will make things pleasant BOY CAUGHT

All prices lower than ever on all California Tinned Fruits.

LEWIS & COMPANY, LTD.169 King Street. FAMILY GROCERS. Telephone 240.

for you. h

MANY ULUAThere is no other five cent cigar, andfew ten centers, that have the fine DAUGHTER OF ANINflavor and quality of the Owl 5c. cigar.M. A. Gunst & Co.

Jewel stoves are the best bv test. IDS Ifj FRISCONo more satisfactory baker and larger

A big school of young ulua put inappearance off Naval Wharf No. 2 yes-

terday afternoon and afforded goodsport to several fishermen.

A Chinese boy named Chong caughtforty-eigh- t fish between 10 a. m. and2 p. m.

Shifting to Naval Wharf No. 3, hehooked a big lobster, which dropped

DUFFY'S APPLE JUICEootsnsoff his line as he was hauling it on to

the wharf. A delightfully refreshing drink, un--Chong, by the by, didn't enjoy the With Every ModernConveniencefruit of his fishing, for, returning to

S

; I

n11

where he had left his fish, nicely fermented but with a bouquet and sparkleawansnthreaded on a line and dangling mthe water, he found that someone had m a. equal to champagne. Non-alcoholi- c, butmade off with his catch. L SmFor

SAN FRANCISCO, June 30. Thewedding of Rockwell S. Chapman andMiss Amoy Anin of Honolulu, which,was quietly celebrated yesterday after-noon at 2 o'clock at the parochial resi-dence of St. Mary's cathedral, was theculmination of romance which alait.,da daughter of the Far East and a sonof the Golden West.

The bride is the only daughter ofYong Anin, one of the wealthiest r.ndmost respected of the Chinese Mer-chants in the island metropoiis, andthrough him she traces her nncestryback to distinguished Oriental progen-itors. Iler'mother was a Hawaiian,and while she has the petite, winsomedaintiness of a Chinese maiden, a pro-nounced strain of Kanaka blood is dis-cernible. She is related to the Afonggirls, who are all the wives of Amer-icans. She has been most carefullyeducated, being a graduate of NotroDame convent in Honolulu and an ac-complished linguist and musician.

Since coming to this city, two years,

thy flLEXANDER MM pTEtcrisp and snappy. Get a sample bottle.

25 cts a pint, by te dozen $2.50

Benson, Smith & Company, Ltd.or CAFE

EOYAL HAWAIIAN GARAGE.The battery of automobiles in the

Royal Hawaiian garage, on Hotel streetopposite the Hawaiian Hotel, containsche best to be found in publie servicein this Territory. For big machines,ihose carrying seven persons, none is

fuel-save- r known. W. W. Dimond ,&Co., Ltd., distributers.

The Territorial Messenger Service,telephone 3G1, is the one you may relyrpon for prompt attention to your needsin the delivery of letters or packages.

The new style ladies' shoes in thelatest toe shapes are just in at theRegal Shoe Store. Stop in and seethem. The same prices and the samaBegal quality.

Shoes repaired in a few minutes whileyou wait for them. Leave your oldshoes when yon get knew, and our ex-perts will repair them in short order.Vickers Repair Shop.

A few days spent at Ilaleiwa is boundto bring pleasant results. If you aretired out and want a rest go there. St,Clair Bidgood is manager and he wiltlook after your comfort.

The crowd that attended the first dayf the annual clearance sale, of the

Sachs Pry Goods Company, wasthose that could not be waited

on, are kindly requested to call again."We have the goods to supply the

trade. Low-marke- d tapas, mats, leis,hats, postals, island trinkets, etc. TheIsland Curio Store Steiner's Elitebuilding. Hotel street.

For appetite, health and vigor, there'snothing that can take the place of MaltNutrine. It is universally recommend-ed as a tonic bv the best phvsiciansHollister Drug Co., Ltd.

The Hawaiian News Co., Ltd.. areselling a number of popular $1.50 booksby well-know- n authors at 75c. apiece.They are reprints, in every way identi-cal with the original books.

If the "cheap" paint you are think-ing of using on your house peels, cracks,and scuffs up in a few months, is itcheap, after allf Try Pure PreparedPaint just once. Lewers & Cooke, Ltd.

We have on hnni? a special assort-ment of dress and dnnc ties, for theweek of entertainment. Call and seeonr Dora del sartf dress ties and ontMerry Widow sailor ties. MelnemyBhoe Store.

We respectfully solicit orders fromclients who appreciate intelligent brok-erage serrice. We are members of andcharge the regular commission of theHonolulu Stock and Bond Exchange.

better than the Stoddart-Dayto- n or theStudebaker. Like the five-passeng- SEASONABLE SHOESPope-Hartfor- d and the Buick, these

4a

1

y

i

1

ago, she has made her home with Dr.V.'ong Him at lifiS O'Farrell street,where she has lived surrounded withthe luxury of Oriental splendor. Theengagement between herself and Mr.Chapman has existed for about a year.

The marriage ceremonv yesterday

machines are powerful and great hillOur Ladies' White Canvas Shoes, in turn and welt soles.climbers. As pacemakers they have no

equal. The chauffeurs at the garage with the latest toes, give you all the latitude you could wish ,.re obliging and capable. They knowwas performed by Rev. Father Pren- -for in your choice, and are the right footwear for summerai about Honolulu and the suburbs, andmonths.

dergast and was witnessed only byMr. and Mrs. Howard Ilerron and Dr.and Mrs. Wong Him.

The bride wore a lavender messa- -

We have them in Tumps and Oxfords atNOW IN PEOGEESS are competent to guide visitors any-

where. In the garage there is a department for the repair of machinesline gown, made in the loose, flowingA CLEAEING EVENT ABSOLUTELY Hawaiian fashion, with a large white

TJNPEECEDENTED hat trimmed with lavender plumes. Anand automobiles are looked after bythe month. Rates will be furnished onapplication.

$2.00, $2.50, $3.50, $4.00, and $4.50.Stop in and see these SWELL SHOES.

MANUFACTURERS' SHOE CO., LTD.

1051 Fort Street. Telephone 282.

special sale of certaininformal wedding breakfast followedthe ceremony, after which Mr. Chap-man and his bride left for a honey-moon trip to Tahoe.

Not merely aarticles but a

The bridegroom is a well-know- n busSWEEPING EEDUCTION

IN EVERY DEPARTMENT.iness man ot this city, being 1'acineCoast agent for the American LaFrance Fire Engine Company of El-mir- a.

N. Y., and was formerly surveyorOP ot the Hoard of Underwriters, a memA GENERAL BREAKING

PRICES ber of the Pacific Coast Association

BALL IxCKETS.Tickets for the Atlantic fleet ball can

be procured at the following places:W. W. Dimond Co.. Ltd.Chambers Drug Co., Ltd.Bergstrom Music Co., Ltd.Hollister Drug Co., Ltd.Benson, Smith & Co., Ltd.M. Mclnerny, Ltd.M. A. Gunst & Co., Ltd.Wall, Nichols Co., Ltd.Hawaiian News Co., Ltd.

GO TO LMSMDO'Sof Fire Chiefs and of the InternationalAssociation of Fire Engineers. STOREplain figuresAll goods marked in

and sold for eash onlv. 4,J. A. McLeod. with five-seate- d BuickHawaiian trust (n., Ltd. j

auto. Tel. 1111 or 191. First-clas- s

152 HOTEL STREET, OPPOSITE YOUNG HOTEL

FOR YOUR TRUNKS, VALISES AND SUIT CASES "

His stock of Shirts, Collars, Cuffs, Ties and Underwear is complete. Alsotrade solicited.

An unusually interesting lace sale ison this week at A. Blom's, oppositeCatholie church. All-ove- r laces 25c. ayard and up. Hundred more bargainsin Gatons, insertions and edgings, Clu-n- y,

Valenciennes and baby Irish laees.AH new goods.

If you are out for an outing per Hats and Caps of a large variety. Panamas and Straw a specialty. PricesH.S. Sacfis Dry Goods Go., Ltd.Corner Bertania and Fort Streets.

Bo Wo is the manufacturer of Chi-nese jewelry, on Hotel street, betweenSmith and Maunakea.

auto, ring up 200, 338 or 1458. Twobrand-ne- machines at your service.C. H. Behn.

are right and no trouble to show goods. Don't forget he has moved frontFort street to the Oregon block, 152 Hotel street, opposite Toune HoteL

HONOLULU. TUESDAY, JULYTHE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER;13"" i.ii -- 11. . I HONOLULU STOCK EXCHANGE Haistead & Co., Ltd.Canadian-Australia- n Royal Mail Lineoi Honolulu, Monday, July 6, 1903.

Steamer running In connection with the Canadian Pacific Hallway Co.all at Honolulu on or about the follewing datea:

FOR VANCOUVER.FOR FIJI AND AUSTRALIA.1IARAMA JULY 24AORANGI AUGUST 22MANUKA SEPTEMBER 19

Will call at Fanning Island.THEO.

apitaiaid Cr Val, Bid. Alk

M.noo.fXM $100

5,000.000 20 Zi1.200.COO ICO!2,312.7tS! 100! . S542,000.000 2C - S6

7.003 loo' -.

Z.OOO.Ouu 20 .... 12600,000 100

5,00",C00 50 ... 18s600.000 rM) ... 2

2,500,000 eo600,000 100 ICO

2,500,000 20 Sy 48,800,000 20 28. 291,000,000 20 35 k

500,000 20 85,000,000 20 3i iVA

iso.eoo loo .) 5,000,000 &C 18X

500,000 100750,000 10C ...750,000 100

. 2,750.000 10C 12 V 1454,500,000 100 SI 831,500,000 100 175

252,000 100 175125.000 100 1X 55

1.50C.00O 100600,060 10C

1.150.080 loo ;;;; 65-

i 150.000 10 ..co.ooo loo

ABse96. 100 tS"4,600,000 100 100 1(H1.000,000 2C

100,000 20 19 Vi 214C0.00O 20 I

Oceanic Steamship Co. Time TableOn and after June 24. 1908, the SALOON RATES will be: Single Fare.

IB; Round Trip, $110. Family roomi extra.

FROM SAN FRANCISCO. FOR SAN FRANCISCO.ALAMEDA JULY 10 ALAMEDA JULY 15

ALAMEDA ... JULY 31

ALAMEDA AUGUST 21ALAMEDA ....SEPT. 11AT.AMTVDA OCTORER 2

SAMS O? STOCK.

MISCAST!!.0. Brewer & Co.

WHaw. Azricni oral.Hw Com A Snjar V

Hoiiomu.. ..Honokaa....Haika . ...

CoKftriuknKifcei PUnCoLtd.....Koloa

Oahu 8ugr CO-.- ...

Onomea........OokalaOlaa Sugar Co Ltd.,Olowalu

Pacific.Pftia .PepeeJteoPioneer .. .......Waialua Agri Co. ..Wailuku..... . .Waimacalo -WaimeaSngrar Mill

MisCBLLANsouaIoter-lslan- d 8 8 Co..Haw Electric Co. .H R T & h Co Pf d ....H E T A ifllo. Com.Mutual Tel CoNahiku Rubber ku

Rubber Co.ORiLCo......Hilo Ft R f!rHonolu'u Brewing A

malting uo 1.1a.. ..Haw Pineapple Co ...

Ant. OnlBonds etandlnifHawTeMpc (Fire

Claims) 815.00CHawTer4 po(Re- -

. funding 1905 600.00CHaw Ter 4J p c l,0O0,i)O0aaw Ter 4 p c l,000.rooSaw Ter 3 pc .... 1,044 ,0JC-81,-

Haw Gor't 5 D 0 .. XOal Beet Sug A Rel

CO 6 p C 1,000,000aaika 6 p c...... soc.octSamakua Ditch Co

Upper Ditch 6 p c... 200,000Haw Cora A Sugar

Co 6 p c ............ 1.871,000Rl flnirar Ann 475,006

AORANGI .. JULY 22

MANUKA ... .... AUGUST 19

MARAMA SEPTTMBER 15

AORANGI OCTOBER 14

H. DAVIES CO., LTD.GENERAL AGENTS.

ALAMEDA .AUGUST 5

ALAMEDA AUGUST 26

ALAMEDA SEPTEMBER 16ALAMEDA UOi.Ui5.CK,

KOREA V1 uZ

AMERICA MARU .....juux 11

SIBERIA JULY 27

CHINA AUG. 1

In connection with the sailing of the above steamers, the agents areprepared to issue, to Intending passengers, Coupon Through Tickets by anyrailroad, from San Francisco to all points in the United States, and fromNew York by any steamship line to all European ports.

For further particulars apply toWM. G. IRWIN & CO., LTD.,

AGENTS.

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

Steamers of the above companies will call at Honolulu and leave thisjport on or about the dates mentioned below:

FOR THE ORIENT. FOR SAN FRANCISCO.MONGOLIA JULY 6

HONGKONG MARU JULY 18

KOREA JULY 29AMERICA MARU AUGUST 81

H. HACKFELD & CO., LTD., Agents.

MATSON NAVIGATION CO.

ion .... - 99

oo " ::::

05 11

98"101

.

101101--

100

Vessels of the above company willCisco on or about the dates mentioned

HILONIAN -

LURLINEHILONIANLURLINEHILONIAN

Passenger Rates to San FranciscoClass, $110.

AMERICAN-HAWAIIA- N STEAMSHIP COMPANY.FROM NEW YORK TO HONOLULU.

Weekly Sailings via Tehuantepee.

Freight receive at all times at the Company's Wharf. 41st Street, SouthBrooklyn.

ply between; Honolulu and San Fran- -belowArrive Leave

(Honolulu. Honolulu.Jlv 8 July 14July 15 July 28

Aug. 5 Aug. 11Aug. 19 Sept. 1Sept. 2 ; Sept. 8 '

First Cabin, $60. Round Trip, FirstCASTLE & COOKE, LTD., Agents.

FROM SEATTLE AND TACOMA TQHONOLULU.

ALASKAN JULY 19

ARIZONAN AUGUST 9

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

Agents, Honolulu.CP. MORSE,

General Freight Agent.

3 Queen Street.

Teaming a Specialty.

FROM HONOLULU TO SAN FRAN-CISCO.

ARIZONAN JULY 18

ALASKAN AUGUST 8

FROM SAN FRANCISCO TO HONO-LULU.

VIRGINIAN JULY 15

COLUMBIAN JULY 29Freight received at Company's wharf,

Greenwich Street.

Phone 295. .1

MARINE REPORT.

(From San Francisco Merchants Jtx-chang-

Monday, July 6, 1908.San Fra-ncisc- Sailed, July 3, U. S.

II. S. Relief, for Honolulu.San Francisco Arrived, Juiy a, okt;

Irmgafd, hence June 14.San Franciseo Arrived, July 3, schr.

H. C. Wright, from Mahukona, June 10.

San Francisco Sailed, July 4, bk.Annie Johnson, for Hilo.

San Francisco Arrived, July 4, bk.Amy Turner, hence June 11.

San Francisco Sailed, July 4, S. S.Alameda, for Honolulu.

Port Tovvnsend Arrived, July 5, sen.Alice McDonald, hence June 14.

San Pedro Sailed. Julv 4. vaehtsHawaii, Lurline, Lady Maud and Gwen-dolyn, all f r Honolulu.

Guam Arrived, Julv 5, U. S. S.Maine and Alabama, hence June 22.

Kahuku From S. S. Hilonian. .Tulv5, 8 p. ni.: 830 miles from Honolulu;will arrive Wednesday.

San Francisco Sailed, July 6, U. S.A. T. Thomas, for Honolulu.

San Francisco Arrived, A.-H- . S. S.Virginian, from Hilo via Salina Cruz,July 4.

Monterey Sailed, Am. S. S. Rose-cran- s,

towing oil schr. Monterey, forHonolulu, Julv 6.

PORT OF HONOLULU.

ARRIVED.Monday, July 6, 1908.

P. M. S. S. Mongolia, Morton, fromSan Francisco.

Str. Mauna Kea, Freeman, from Hilo.A.-H- . S. S. Arizonan, Taplev, from

Seattle.Str. J. A. Cummins, Searle, from Ko-ola- u

ports.DEPARTED.

Str. J. A. Cummins, Searle, for Koo-la- u.

Str. James Makee, Thompson, forPearl Harbor.

P. M. S. S. Mongolia, Morton, for theOrient.

Str. Ke Au Hou, Pedersen, for Kauai.SAIL TODAY.

Str. Mauna Kea, Freeman, for Hiloand way ports, at noon.

Str. Noeau, Mitchell, for Honokaaand Kukuihaele, at noon.

Str. W. G. Hall, Thompson, for Kau-ai, at 5 p. m.

Str. Mikahala, Tullett, for Maui andMolokai, at 5 p. m.

PASSENGERSPer P. M. S. S. Mongolia,

from San Francisco, July 6. For Ho-

nolulu: Miss V. Atherton, E. F. Bar-tholomew, Paul Bartholomew, (Jr. K.Bates, Webb E. Beggs, Miss Carrie BergM. J. Bissell, Mrs. M. J. Bissell, MissEleanor A. Bissell, H. W. Boweri, A. C.Bowles, E- - J-- Burns, John B. Burner,Mrs. John B. Burner, W. R. Castle, A.L. Castle, Miss Eloise Child, Miss' AnnieChubb, Miss S. Chubb, Dr. V. E. Collins,W. M. Cooper, W. M. Cressey, Mrs. W.M." Cressey, Miss T. Culligan, C. P. Cun-

ningham, J. P. Curts, Mrs. J. .P.. Curts,Miss E. Davis, F. T. Dillingham, Mrs.F. T. Dillingham, II. A. Doty, Mrs.(ll.A. Doty,' J. M. Dowsett, Mrs. ', J. uU.Dowsett, II. M. Dowsett, D. A. Dowsett,Miss G. A. Dunlop, Miss E. E. piston,Arthur F. Gay, Miss C. Goodale, J. A.Gorman, Mrs. J. A. Gorman, Miss MaryGorman, Mrs. M. II. Hart, Miss' ClaireHart, Frank J. Hart, Jas.Miss J. A. Henck, Max Henningston,Miss May B. Heusner, Mrs. Geo. F.Heusner, 11. S. Hosmer, Mrs. S. H. Hos-me- r,

Col. W. E. Hughes, Mrs.1 J. C.Hutchinson, J. B. Hyde-Smit- Mrs. H.F. Jones, Miss Rosalie H. Kelsey, Clif-ford Kimball, Mrs. Clifford Kimball andinfant, F. W. Klebahn, Mrs. F. W. Kle-bah- n,

Daniel H. Kramer, W. J. Kyle,Mrs. W. J. Kyle, Mrs. A. D. La Motteand infant, John C. Lane, John R. LaRue, S. M. Lowrey, Guy E. Macfarlane,Mrs. J. G. Maher, E. A. Mclnerny, Mrs.E. A. Mclnerny, Miss Mary Mclnerny,Miss Gertrude Mclnerny, Miss SybilMclnerny, Miss H. N. Mellersh, MissJessie Ogden, Miss Carolyn Ogden, Mrs.L. L. Ormsby, C. F. Peterson, Mrs. O. F.Peterson, Fred. J. Peterson, Miss MurielK. Peterson, Edwin W. Peterson, Dr.David Powell, Mrs. David Powell, MissMargaret Powell, George F. Renton. JMiss Ivy Richardson, Miss Rwth Ri;h-ardso- n,

Miss Alma M. Ross, Miss AliceRoth, J. Ryan, Miss E. Schaefer, MissLinda Schaefer, Miss Cassie K. Seay,Mrs. F. II. Shafer, Miss Eugenia Shafer,Miss Dorothy Shafer, Miss G. Shafer,Wm. H. Smith, Mrs. Wm. II. Smith,Miss Mildred Smith, Miss Annie C.Springer, Miss N. Swanzy, Mrs. G W.Talson, Miss Alice II. Thompson, CarlA. Widemann, Mrs. C. B. Wood, MissDorothy Wood, Master Sanford Wood,H. S. Yeamans, Mrs. H. S. Yeamans,Miss Edith Yeamans, J. M. Young, A.Potts, and wife, Mrs. W. W. Kimball andmaid, Dr. S. Nachimoff, Miss AliceVoigt, Miss Jennie F. C. Lam, Mrs. W.H. II. Southerland, Miss Southerland,Miss Mary Southerland, Bryan H. Tay-lor, Mrs. Bryan II. Taylor, Mrs. Wm.Webster, Miss Elizabeth Webster.

Per P. M. S. S. Mongolia, for theOrient, July 6. Miss A. Janet Gault,Miss A. J. Foster, A. F. Griffiths andwife, C. F. Fitts, Elizabeth A. Foster,Leong Yew, Rev. David Russell, L. A.Allaine, W. E. Burke, 39 Japanese, 2

Chinese and 1 deport.--VESSELS TS PORT.

(Army and Navy).Iroquois. U. S. S., Carter, Pearl Har-

bor, July 2.(Merchant Vessels).

Holywood, Br. bK., Smith, Junin,May 7.

Coronado, Am., bkt., Potter, San Fran-cisco, June 3.

Bucrania, Br. s. s., Tilsley, NewportNews. June 19.

Mary Winkleman, Am. bkt., Jacobsen,Eureka, June 26.

Falls of Clyde. Am. sp., Larsen, SanFrancisco. July 5.

Arizonan, A.-H- . s. s., Tapley, Seattle,July 5.

TRANSPORT SERVICE.Warren, In Fhtl!pr!ne.Thomas, left San Francisco for Hono-

lulu, July 6.Logan, at San Francisco. rerairine.Sheridan, left Honolulu for San Fran-

cisco, Julv 5."-

- --4BORN.

BUFFANDEAU In this city, July 6,190, to Mr. and Mrs. E. Buffandeau,a s. n.

)HUBTACE-PEU- K LOMrAWii LIU.,GENERAL CONTRACTORS.

Dealers in

STOCK AND BOND

BROKERSLOANS NEGOTIATED

Memberi Honolulu Stock &md Bs3Exchange

FOR SALE.Lots at Kali hi, close to car-li- a, mi

half prices. Terms: $50 down, a4$10 per month, without Interest.

Lots (about one-ha- lf acre) onHeights, unequaled in view and soil.

Lots at from $250 and up in NcaaavValley, on your own terms.

Lots at Kapahulu at $100 eack.time payments without interest.

Lots at Palama, within walking Urntance from town. Easy terms.

FOR RENT An eight-room- ed fur-nished house, with stable, etc., on Ka-li-hi

road, one block from car line;large grounds with bearing fruit tree.Rental $30 per month.J.-H-

. SCHNACK, 137 Merchant Street

FOR SALE.Galvanised sheet steel tanks, sky-

lights, gutter, ridging, leader and airpipe. Any shape, any size, any welgat.In stock or to order. Ribbed or fire-proof wire skylight glass. Estimateson anything in our line.

Job work in sheet metals solicited.EMMELUTH & CO., LTD.,

Phone 211. 145 King StFOR RENT.

Fine residence, Wahiawa; pineappleland at Palolo.

FOR SALE.Pineapple land at Wahiawa and Pa--'

lolo.WT. L. HOWARD

Room 3, Mclntyre BuildingTel. 181

HAWAIIAN DEVELOPMENT CO.LIMITED.

r. B. McSTOCKER - - - lCaaaetSTANGENWALD BUILDING

Cable Address: DevelopP. O. Box 263

Albert F. Afong832 FORT STREET

J J J

STOCK AND BOND BROKER

MEMBER HONOLULU STOCXAND BOND EXCILUCOa

Real EstateCHAS. BREWER & CO.'i

NEW YORK LINERegular line of vessels plylBf

between New York and Honolalm.BARK NUUANU will sail froNew York on or about July SI,1908. Subject to change without no-tlc- e.

FREIGHT TAKEN AT LOWS STRATES

For freight rates apply toCHAS. BREWER & CO.,

27 Kilby St., Boston; erTHEO. H. DAVIES & CO.,

Honolula.

Parcel DeliveryThe Only Reliable

Territorial Messenger ServiceTelephone 361

CO. HOTTEL

Bonded Collector and

Genera! Business Agent

79 MERCHANT STREETTelephone 310

PicturesHOLLYWOOD PHOTOGRAVURESCOPLEY PRINTS

Pacific Picture Framing Go.lOrJO NUUANU STREET

AUTOS AND

CARRIAGES REPAIRED

Schuman Carriage Co., Ltd.

When YourEyes Suggest

a visit to us, we can assure you

the best aid within the reach of

human knowledge, at small cost.

A. N. SanfordOPTICIAN Boston Bldg.

STEINWAY & SONSAND OTHER PIANOS.

THAYER PIANO CO.156 HOTEL STREET

Phone 218STUNTNO GUARANTEED

-f- -

VT COMPART, I

" Honolulu. Ka&

FOR RENTKing Street - $22.50

Keeaumoku Street $40.00

Emma Street ..$50.00

Kalakaua Avenue $25.00

Beretania Avenue $40.00

Beretania Avenue $35.00

Kinau Street $30.00

Makiki Street $27.50

Pensacola Street ..$15.00

Aloha Lane $18.00

Matlock Avenue $22.50

Lunalilo Street $16.00

Nuuanu Avenue $25.00

Pawaa Lane $25.00

Piikoi Street $27.50

Pensacola Street $35.00

FOR SALEMakiki Street, Two-bedroo- m Cottage

and Lot 53x134 $2500.00

"Waterhouse Trust"Corner of Fort and - Merchant Sts.

All the islandsconnected bywireless.

Get thewirelesshabit.

RENT TRUST CO., Ltd.

TO LET$40.00 and Over.

$75.00.... "Waikikl; 4 B. R.... Furnished60.00.. Waikiki B'ch; 2 B. R..Furnished50.00.. College Hills; 4 B. R.. Furnished50.00.. Pacific Hts.; 4 B. R.. Furnished46.00.. Anapuni St.; 2 B. R.. Furnished

$25.00 to $35.00.$35.00.. Pacific Hts.; 2 B. R. .Furnished

2.1.00. . . .Palolo; 2 B. R. . . .Furnished

$10.00 to $35.00.$10.00 Morris Lane 2 B. R.

10.00 Rose St 2 B. R.10.00 ?..Kaimuki 2 B. R.13.00 Fort St 2 B. R.13.00 School St ....2 B. R.15.00 Gandall Lane 2 B. R.15.00 Young St 3 B..R.

8.00 Pensacola St 3 B. R,lS.ftO Gandall Lane 3 B. R.22.00 Middle St 3 B. R.22.50 Young St 3 B. R.25.00 Matlock Ave 2 B. R.30.00 Alexander St.... 3 B. R.30.00 Alakea St 2 B. R.30.00 Alexander St 3 B. tu32.00 Wilder Ave 3 B. R.

SOME OTHERS NOT ADVERTISED

I RENT TRUST CO., Ltd.

REALTY TRANSACTIONS.

Entered of Record July 6, 1908.James L Coke and wf to A N Hay-selde- n

DXaiwi (k) et al by affdt AiTdtWailuku Sugar Co to C Brewer &

Co Ltd DKuhaupio Telemia and wf to

Charley K Kuhaupio et al DKuhaupio Ielemia and wf to Helen

Moa et al 1)Mary L Porter to Charles Wil-

liams DCharles Williams to Mary L Por-

terMaikaaloa Cook to Louisa Hapai..Nellie A Oana to Lahaina Agrctl

Co LtdMary E Foster by atty to John

Emmelnth RelMary E Foster by atty to John

Enimeluth . RelMary E Foster by atty to John

Enimeluth RelJohn Kaelemakule, Jr, and wf to

John Enimeluth, tr DC O Hottel to von Hamm-Youn- g

Co Ltd CMRufus A Lvms.n to Hilo Railroad

Co LP Silva to Namauu Paoa PelNaniaun Paoa and wf to Ernest K

Kaai M

An Ohio lawyer tolls of a client ofhis a German farmer, a hard-workin-

plain, blunt man who lost bis wife notlonq; ago. The lawyer had sought himout to express his sympathy; but to hisconsternation the Teuton laconieallyobserved: "But I am again married.""You don't tell me!" exclaimed thelegal light. "Why, it has been but aweek or two since vou buried yourwife!" "Dot's so, my frent; but sheis as dead as eiler she vill be."

Crushed Rock, White and Black Sand, Fire Wood, Stove andSteam Coal, Blacksmith Coal, Hay, Grain, Garden Soil andManure. . .

Draying and Heavy

Trmt.Bale!XaluiBamKalr

Kali;HaniKalxlHalel

XhCcV

Bono.

tral.hukJ'!

ETH

JltTf

Pre

M

B03

Boo

CM;4.:

(SU

cHoTrfarCo

Wsu

i

TT.

Ide

fa

Phone

58BAGGAGS SHIPPINGSTORAGE WOODPACKING COAL

Union --PacificTransfer Co., Ltd.

FURNITURE AND PIANO MOVING.Btf KING ST.

Hllp R R Co 6p o 1,000,000Hon R T A h Co B p e 647,000Kahuku 6 p e... 208,000

a,ooo,oocUKAliVOSp c .. 2.000.00Cuann sugar Co A p c... 900.001Olaa Bngar Co 8 pc... 1.250.00CFac-Xi-

c Sugar MillCo 8 b 350,000

Pftia R i 450,001.Pior e r Mill Oo 8 p c l,250,r0CWataltia As C J S p c... 1,500,000Honokaa Sug Co 6 p c k)3,w.'o

23.125 paid. t31 per cent. paid.SESSION SALES.

200 Ewa. 27.50; 25 Onomea, 36; 60Waialua, 82.50; 35 Oahu Sug. Co., 29:5 Hon. B. & M. Co., 20.

BETWEEN BOARDS.100 Oahu Sug. Co., 29; 50 Ewa, 27.50;

5 Haw. Com. & Sug. Co., 95.NOTICE.

July 3, 190S.The Honokaa Sagar Co. 's bond issue

of $600,000 is listed by the Exchangethis day, to be called for the first timeJuly 6, 1908. -

Professional Cardsjjjj1" Cask must accompany the

copy. No deviation from this rule.

JAMES T. TAYLOR, M. Am. Soc. C.E. Consulting Hydraulic Engineer.Residence telephone No. 1603. P. O.Box 799, , Honolulu. 8070

CHINA PAINTING.MRS. J. LISHMAN MORE Classea in

china painting. Orders solicited.Studio, 1445 Keeaumoku street. Tel-ephone 134S. 7968

Classified AdvertisementsSJBS Cash must accompany the

copy. No deviation from tbis rule.

WANTED.TO RENT for the month of August

small cottage or room, furnished orunfurnished; at or near Waikikl.Address St. Andrew's Priorv. 80S4

GOOD second hand piano. Will rentor buy. XX, this office. 8084

SITUATION WANTED.IF you need house servants or vard

boys, please call up the Korean com-pound on Punchbowl street. PhoneNo. 1203. 80S2

FOR RENT.NICE, airy mosquito-proo-f rooms, Ho

tel Delmonlco. Rent reasonable. J.H. O'Neil, prop. 8030

SIX-ROO- M modern house. Electriclights; gas, mosquito-proo- f. Inquireat 1337 Pensacola street. 8045

THE Popular apartments are the bestlocated, neatest and cheapest rooms.1249 Fort. 8029

FOR SALE.ISLAND horse, sound and gentle. Sad

dle or harness. XX, this office. 8084

REMINGTON typewriter; good condi-tion; $20. At this office. 8081

ONE gas engine, 13 h. p.; Union. Onegas hoisting engine, 12 h. p.; Fair-banks, Morse. One No. 3 Austinstone-crushe- r, complete. Address "E.V.," this office. 8066

ROOM AND BOARD.VIDA VILLA, King street. Room and

board; also table board. 8045

OFFICES FOR RENT."THE STANGENWALD" Only fire-

proof office buildin? in citv.

ALEXANDER YOUNG BUILDINGHonolulu's only up-to-da- te fire-pr- o!

building; rent includes flectric liht,hot and cold water and janitor ser-vice. Apply the Von Hamm-Toun- g

Co., Ltd.

ROOMS TO RENT.COOL and commodious: well furnish-

ed; mosquito-proo- f. Helen's Court.1124 Adams Lane. 805"

BOOK BINDING.SHEET MUPIC bounl 5o it may be

kent in form indefinitely. Any stylebinding, from $1.25 per volume up-

wards. Hawaiian Gazette Co.. Ltd.8044

Gity Transfer GJas. H.

BAGGAGE AND FURNITURE MOVING. .

Office Opposite Union Grill. 'Phone 152.

GOMES' EXPRESS CO.Fort Street, opposite Hackfeld A Co.

BAGGAGE CHECKEDOffice Phone - 298

Honolulu Construction and Graying Go., Ltd,

GENERAL CONTRACTORS.'Phone Office 281. P. O. Box 154.

Fort St., Opp. W. G. Irwin & Co., Ltd.

fffe do all kinds of Teaming; also deal in Crushed Rock, Whiteand Black Sand, Broken Coral, Garden Soil, Etc.

SAFE MOVING A SPECIALTY.

Love.

FREIGHT HANDLED, FURNITUREAND PIANO MOVING. STORAGE,PACKING, SHTPPTNG.

THE MA TT ,

Mails are due from the followingpoints as follows:

San Francisco Per Hilonlan, July 8.Yokohama Per Korea, July 9.

San Franciseo Per Texan. July 9.San Francisco Per Alameda, July 10.San Francisco Per Lurline, July 15.Yokohama Per America Maru, July 17.San Francisco Per Tenyo Maru, July

IS.Sydney Per Aorangl, July 22.San Francisco Fer Virgrinian. July 23.Victoria Per Mara ma. July 24.Yokohama Per Siberia, July 27.

Mails will depart for the followingpoints as follows:

San Francisco Per Korea, July 9.San Francisco Per Hilonian, July 14.San Francisco Per Alameda, July 15.San Francisco Per America Maru,

July 17.San Francisco Per Arizonan, July IS.Yokohama Per Tenyo Maru. July 18.Victoria Per Aorangi, July 22.Sydney Per Marama, July 24.Yokohama Per Siberia, July 27.San Francsco Per Lurline, July 28.Yokohama Per Korea, July 29.

THS PACIFIC

Commercial AdvertiserISatered at the Foatoffice at Honolulu,

T. H--, a second-cla- ss matter.

UBSCRIPTION RATES:

E3ae Year ....$12.00Afiyertlslng Rates on Application.

PukUahed every morning except Sun-day by the

SLkWATIAN GAZETTE CO., LTD.

2Tm Holt Bleck, No. South King St.C I. CXANB : : Manager.

M siis"WELCOME"

Wall, Nichols Co., Ltd.SHAD THE ADVERTISES

YTcrLLD'a inrsrg daily

HONOLULU IRON WORKSCOMPANY.

Machinery, Black Pipe, GalvanizedPipe. Boiler Tubes. Iron and steel. En-gineers' Supplies.

OFFICE Nuuanu Street.WORKS Kakaako.

Q