Business Office JAPS IbUi Jl - University of Hawaiʻi · i- 5 1 f. it. telephone 365 star business...

8
I - 5 1 f. IT . TELEPHONE 365 STAR Business Office VOL. XVII. JAPS LET ENOUG TO HINT jS Ib Ui Jl BLUUU UAHU rLAn iUN rUHLIU DIPSOMANIAC'S DEMISE WILL BE SUBJECT OF INQUIRY THOUGH HE PROBABLY HIT HIS HEAD ON CURBSTONE WHILE DRUNK EXAMINATION FAILED- - TO ShOW INJURY IN SPITE OF BLEED- ING LIQUOR FUMES FIRST EVIDENCE TAKEN. In the not altogether explained death ot M. J. McGannon a chronic inebriate has departed this life ,for a protracted period of sobriety, but that does not settle the question as to why science, in the character of the Queen's Hospi- tal emergency medical examination corps, failed to find that the man was injured. McGannon was picked up from the gutter In front of the entrance to the Criterion saloon, corner of Bethel and Hotel Streets, shortly after 11:30 o'clock Monday night, sent to the hos- pital, declared drunk and nothing else, taken to a cell, later, discovered to be sleeping too soundly, and taken to the hospital again where he died un- der a second examination. The sec- ond examination developed, beyond poradventure of a doubt, that the phenomenon ot death had manifested. Police and hospital people say there was no mark of injury. Nevertheless, the at otherwise the ot to of at to to there was from the he in of Criterion blood Hut not have indicated, to ai observer, Honolulu to give either an or an brace he nal the blood to him, htm on the pavement could not have been to hold on and for anything McGannon young may' McGannon' co.mrailQ3.Bympathl7.cd inquest, the of endeavor-'.wit- h hlni and'made the' to light on the that it bad that so of be held chap as their shipmate evening. to McGannon, there has been The or his death an to the not the son. not been drinking in the saloon. not in there at( all on Monday evening. This fact is evidenced by tne laie waicu ui me Criterion. acquired his' farewell jag, there seems no doubt that he been heavily,! elsewhere. he generally anything to drink in the better and the Criterion made it to chase him When closing came, .Monday night, a Japanese employe of the Cri- terion out to close the iron gates a quantity of blood pavement. He removed the ugly stain as "well as he could see at that time to do. In the morning a Portuguese was set to work to remove blood- that not been the So it may be seen that McGannon must have some to have so much blood. From the in which the in man was lying ,and from othr indications it is probable that non fell, while crossing from the man-k- a side of striking blow the hard curb, Inflicting a mortal the eyebrow possibly serving to hide external indications of the Whether the blood came from his or forehead Is not Possibly the of liquor made Your property may bo; Dissi- pated by expensive lawsuits; Scattered ignorant adminis- trators; to un- productive. Your may be; Helpless In the hands of "friends," cre- ditors, or enemies. Remember you your Executor. The your Administrator, It you without a wilL We how to your interests, perfectly. Would you Hawaiian Trusk Company, Limited, Fort Street. i j 9RI f . - - - - - H I I examination the hospital less thorough than have been the case; possibly the circumstan- tial evidence was more than it deserved; possibly poor reputation was against hlni, ' The second examination revealed a of skull, death. McGannon was a well-know- n and peculiar .street character. in- dulgence had prejudiced him against toil any kind. He went about, shuffling, night and day, with a stare, and where he could for dollar or dime quench his ever thirst. When the fleet here, McGannon, drunk and tottering, perch- ed on the end a wharf to met his son who was a tar aboard one of the big battleships, but the boy was Hist ashamed come ashore meet his old man, fearing that his comrades would guy his when they saw mopped sidewalk was a common soak, front the enough the lad was going away from jto without trying his external wound Inter- - father a and llnally came hemorrhage. Certainly ashore and talked urging take a himself get nlEfaken straight. Far from guying him, have been drinking. An "by remark around ing throw some method town was too line McGannon's death, will this a should have a father, going the bad. though news father's will created impression contrary, probably surprise had Criterion: He had been He for had drinking Incidentally was refused class saloons force always a point out. time went and noticed qrifhe em- ploye stains had removed night before. had injury spilled attitude jured McGaii' Hotel street, his against wound, injury. mouth his certain. fumes by Allowed remain family choose Law chooses die have learned pro- tect knowhow? 923 might given welgnt fracture and Liquor horrid touched a a raging Atlantic was father way 11 AT E PAPER xposmoN W. J. Cooper, the Hawaii Promo- tion Committee's editor of Hawaiian news articles for the mainland press, is going to Seattle In the transport Dix to conduct a newspaper in con- nection with the Territory's exhibit at 'the Alaska-Yukon-Paci- RELIEF FROM RHEUMATIC PAINS. The great- - pain relieving power of Chamberlain's Pain Balm is clearly shown in cases of sciatica and Inflam- matory rheumatism, both of which are extremely painful, but one application ot this liniment gives relief and enables the sufferer to sleep, which in many instances he has not been able to do for several days. For sale by all deal- ers, Benson, Smith & Co., agents for Hawaii. Jack Bergsti'cm, piano tuner with Bergstrom MusIc Co. Tele- phone G81. P. O. Box 40. 3000 Pairs SHOES For Men NOW SHOWING ALL STYLES mm ALAKJ3A STREET am I The Star Is An Intelligent, Progressive Newspaper HONOLULU, HAWAII, WEDNESDAY MAY 5, 1909. Sl Ir A ,S WITH LITTLE MORE THAN HAL F THE CROP GROUND AN EXCESS OF 2400 TONS OVER THE ESTIMATES IS' SHOWN GOOD JUICE TELLS TALE OF PROSPERITY WAIALUA IS "EXPECTED TO EX CEED ESTIMATES BY OVER TWO THOUSAND TONS OF SUGAR. With a little over half the crop the estimate made at the beginning ground, Oahu Plantation has produc ed over twenty-fou- r hundred tons more sugar than was estimated and Manager Bull Is in the receipt ot con- gratulations upon the Hue showing from all who have heard the good news. Up to the present time the Oahu mill has turned out JU.55I tons of sugar and the cane fields which have already been cut were estimat- ed to yield but 17,153 tons, thus mak- ing a clear excess of 2101 tons over the estimated product. Ah is the case almost all over the Ii; the figure mentioned than diminish- ed. now and while hardly expected Increased stock, one divi- dends cut before the close the REPORTS. the last meeting Pioneer the line juice the Mill Company a resolution was passed cause the present sea- - providing for quarterly visits by a son with plenty sun, which hns directors' investigating committee, and meant lots juice and comparative- - such a committee Is how at the a small amount fibre, has been tatlon and expected return Sat- an' unUHiially good one for The resolution providing for ands. such visits was following the policy Is stated and good authority, Oahu Sugar Co., has a commit-thoug- h not coming direct from the tee visit Pioneer is plantation agents, that Waialua have quarterly reports from such pected run at least over committee hereafter. Mayor FERN 'S substan- tially TO THE PEOPLE OF nOQLUl,U:-- Lt fanned by a number of religious ami other organizations, and by many of our citizens, to observe Sunday, May 9, as "Mothers' Day." is an observance which lias found much favor in many communities of the mainland. Its purpose is to recall, What this age and country of families, is too apt to be forgotten, the universal and abiding obligations of love and duty .to the mother who bore us and whose unselfish care watched, over childhood and youth. Surely no pur- pose could be more in the line of promoting good citizenship and making a better city and country. It is with pleasure and gratification, therefore, that I ac- cede to the request of those avIio tire promoting lliis-obervanc- to call attention, as far I can, of public, and par- ticularly young men of this City and (Vunty to it, and to urge general a participation in observance as may be found practicable. It is desired that the observance of day shall be made distinctive four things: That every young man will wear in the lapel his coat a white flower," preferably a white car- nation; that he will attend at least, service on hat day in the church of his choice; that he will write to his mother (if living and absent); and that lie Avill seek to dh ni least one specific act of kindness. There be no doubt but a Avidespread observance of "Mothers' Bay" Avill Avork civic betterment. (Signed) .TOSTCPTT .T. FBIIN, Mayor, Oil a, and founrv of Honolulu. TTonolulu, May IflflO. WW rill! LIEU PROMOTERS HAVE HARD TIME TO GET LOCATION LOON LEAGUE WILL FIGHT. the lease of conveniently located property can be obtained, which at present seems doubtful, an application for a saloon at Lellehua soon, bo mado to tho local Liquor Board. is understood that Charles G. Bartlett, of the Honolulu Brewery, make application and that has agreed with the officers of the Fifth Cavalry that ho will sell noth- ing stronger than beer to any ot the soldiers Camp Schofield. Thero aro two difficulties In the war ot the location ot a saloon at the Cav- alry post. Tho first ot these that tho land on which Is desired locato tho resort must leased olth-e- r from Dowsett Estate or tho Oahu Railroad. Tho second tho fact that tho (Anti-Salo- Leaguo will light tho pronosltloji In every way beforo tho LlquRr Commissioners. regard to the that tho easing of laud It is stated lease at ot land for pur-trad- e. t. . of the season. fact it said that is small and It is much more likely be increased to be Waialua is In good shape, it that there will be an dividend on the it is likely that or two meloiiB in the" shape of extra jnay be year. QUARTERLY At ot the islands quality of Is of excess. The of of plan-l- y of is to these isl- - urday. or It on which every month. to Is ex- - to 2,000 tons is next This in all our ours the as the of the as the the by of one can that to B, ANTI-S- A If license will It will the ho from is it to be th0 Is In Its Is to Is of PROGHl separated poses at the point mentioned, it is understood that the railroad company Is liable to take the samo stand. In speaking of1 the stand which would bo taken by the Anti-Saloo- n League In the matter Superintendent Woolley mado the following statement this morning: "Wo will fight the establishment ot a saloon at Lellehua just as hard as wo can, regardless ot the statement that only beer will bo soid to the sol- diers. While I realize that the ofllcers, of the Fifth Cavalry are In a difficult position, I do not think that It Is right to evade the expressed wish ot Congress that liquors shall not be sola on military reservations. It seems to me certainly an attempt ut evasion to encourago the placing of a saloon just across the line. "You know just as well as 1 do that the proposition of selling beer alone will simply encourage the 'sell ing of hard liquor Illicitly. A man who gets drunk on beer will want whiskey and the blind pigs'- - will flourish. The tlmo has como to deter- mine whether the number of saloons here shall bo increased or kept as now, it not diminished. As I say we are not Influenced by the plan to sell beer only to TENGU JAPAN RICE. Tho Tengn Japan Rico, a Im- port from the fields of Japan which IC Yamanioto of Hotel Btrcet ha3 received, Is considered the best rlco In Japan. Mr. K, Yamamoto is start- - Dowsett estate will refuse to Ing a rice mill here and expects a largo saloon direct DEPUTY KLUEGEL WILL CARRY OUT PLANS IN THE ABSENCE OK THE CHIEF. Some Important public Improve- ments will go right ahead notwith- standing the absence of Superinten- dent Marston Campbell. C. H. Klue-ge- l, Deputy Superintendent of Public Works, is In charge of the department while the chief Is absent. One of the most needed works is the repairing of Hackfeld wharf and it only awaits the lumber for It com- ing in the steamer Pleiades, which has 190,000 feet ot lumber Tor the de- partment. On May 15 the bids will be opened for the Palama sewer extension through Pua lane and Vicinity. F6r this work the lato Legislature voted ?1500. The same day bids will be opened for erectlmr a school linns,, at PpnitnL'on TTnwoH All proprietors affected by the pro- posed widening of Hotel street have como to terms excepting C. Bolte, who Is absent from the Territory He owns the lot occupied by the offices of sun- - a ; dry doctors between Alakca and Rich ards streets, the strip wanted from him containing 1348 square feet. SHOCK OF TRAGEDY PHOST T S1M N Three children playing In a house In which was a loaded shotgun, yes- terday afternoon at Watertown, Pearl Harbor, resulted in the death of the ld daughter ot Stove Berri-ga- n, head engineer for tho Hawaiian Dredging Company, the baby receiving the discharge in the abdomen and lingering an hour and a half. The shock apparently dulled pain, and death, though slow, was seemingly without agony. At 2 o'clock tho child went to Cap- tain Parker's house, adjoining and played with her ld sister and the little Parker boj. The children got hold of the gun and It was discharged, the load passing through a screen door on the other side of which baby Berrlgan was. Dr. AVayson responded in his autu to the telephone call and brought parents-an- body to town. Mrs. Parker was so overcome on ac- count of the schock of tho tragedy that shn had to bo given opiates to control her. THEIR IDEAS. First Bull (being chased by several policemen) Which way shall we go? Second Bull' It's hard to decide. Fust Bull Let's tos3 a copper. DICE AT 1 LOGAN TONIGHT Providing the Transport Logan ar rlvea on tlmo today, there "Will be a dance given at the Moana Hotel In honor of tho officers and ladles aboard her. Tho Royal Hawaiian, Quintet Club will furnish special music dur ing dinner and for tho dance that will follow. All hotel guests, visitors in Honolulu, and Honolulu peoplo are Invited to attend. Watch and Jewelry repairing re- quires the highest skill. II. Culman, Fort and Hotel, is skillful and de voted to his trade. AVASII MATERIALS SALE. To mako room for now goods, tho N. S. Sachs Dry Goods Co. Is offering sweeping reductions In wash materials, COMBINATION MEALS The combinantion breakfast, recent ly introduced at the Young Cafe, has proved as popular as their combination lunch and dinner. TEAME S LAUNCHED No. 0333 1 0KI0 SHIPYARD (Associated Press Cable to The Star.)' i TOKIO, May 5. The steamship Stewart, built for trans-Pacli- lc service in connection with the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railway interests, was launched here today. ENTERTAIN! THE JAPANESE OAKLAND, May 5. The oHlcers and men of the' Japanese cruiser Aso and Sayo are being entertained in ths city and Berkeley today. NEW OFFICIALS FOR THE TURKS CONSTANTINOPLE, May 5. Hilmi Pasha has been made Grand Vizier of the new government and Mollah Sahib the Sheik-Ul-Isla- CONVICr PLANS TO KIDNAP S0N0F GOVERNOR SAN QUENTIN, Cal., Mai' 5. A plot, to kidnap the son of Governor Gillett ot this State has been discovered here. It was planned by a con- vict in the state prison whoso object was to secure a pardon as the price for which the child would be released. SHAH OF PERSIA HI PEOPLE A CONSTITUTION TEHERAN, May 5. The Shah lias proclaimed a constitution, his promise to grant his people suffrage. HAJIN, May 5. This city Is facing a terrible famine. HUGE HSH ATTACKS READING, Pa., April 20. While on his way home from work John Haas, of Millmont, was attached In a most pecular manner, and then (followed nn experience which he Is not likely to forgot. He was walking along, when ho felt a peculiar sensation on his left leg. Glancing down, no saw an object which he first thought was a cat. He 0 POWEIf IN Absolutely Pure Tho only baking powtlos mado with Royal Grapo Cream of Tartar No Alum, No Lime Phosphif SECOND EDITION NG knocked tho animal down, but It Jumped at him again, and ho called for help. Several men responded, and after a fight tho animal was killed. It prov- ed to bo a monster muskrat. Mr. Haas trousers wero torn and he was botten in sovcral places on tho leg. nil' See the Duck? The duck Is wearing shoes. Why does she wonr them? Because sho is proud of them, my child. They are cool and pretty and easy to wear. Pino custom made t WHITE BUCKSKIN OXFORDS ?5.00. , ) LIMITED 1051 Fort, Street, Phone 232. - ? 4? n i ,1

Transcript of Business Office JAPS IbUi Jl - University of Hawaiʻi · i- 5 1 f. it. telephone 365 star business...

I -

5

1

f.

IT .

TELEPHONE 365STAR

Business Office

VOL. XVII.

JAPSLET ENOUG

TO HINT

jS Ib Ui JlBLUUU UAHU rLAn iUN rUHLIU

DIPSOMANIAC'S DEMISE WILL BE SUBJECT OF INQUIRY THOUGH HE

PROBABLY HIT HIS HEAD ON CURBSTONE WHILE DRUNK

EXAMINATION FAILED--

TO ShOW INJURY IN SPITE OF BLEED-

ING LIQUOR FUMES FIRST EVIDENCE TAKEN.

In the not altogether explained deathot M. J. McGannon a chronic inebriatehas departed this life ,for a protractedperiod of sobriety, but that does notsettle the question as to why science,in the character of the Queen's Hospi-

tal emergency medical examinationcorps, failed to find that the man wasinjured.

McGannon was picked up from thegutter In front of the entrance to theCriterion saloon, corner of Bethel andHotel Streets, shortly after 11:30o'clock Monday night, sent to the hos-

pital, declared drunk and nothing else,taken to a cell, later, discovered to besleeping too soundly, and taken tothe hospital again where he died un-

der a second examination. The sec-

ond examination developed, beyondporadventure of a doubt, that thephenomenon ot death had manifested.

Police and hospital people say therewas no mark of injury. Nevertheless,

the atotherwise

the

ot

to

of

atto to

there was from the hein of Criterion blood Hut not

have indicated, to ai observer, Honolulu to giveeither an or an brace henal the blood to him, htmon the pavement could not have been to hold on and

for anything McGannon youngmay' McGannon' co.mrailQ3.Bympathl7.cd

inquest, the of endeavor-'.wit- h hlni and'made the'to light on the that it bad that so

of be held chap as their shipmateevening. to

McGannon, there has been The or his deathan to the not the son.

not been drinking in thesaloon. not in there at(all on Monday evening. This fact is

evidenced by tne laie waicu ui meCriterion. acquired his' farewelljag, there seems no doubt that he

been heavily,! elsewhere.he generally

anything to drink in the betterand the Criterion

made it to chase himWhen closing came, .Monday

night, a Japanese employe of the Cri-

terion out to close the iron gatesa quantity of blood

pavement. He removed the ugly stainas "well as he could see at that time todo. In the morning a Portuguese

was set to work to remove blood-

that not been theSo it may be seen that

McGannon must have someto have so much blood.

From the in which the inman was lying ,and from othr

indications it is probable thatnon fell, while crossing from the man-k- a

side of strikingblow the hard curb, Inflictinga mortal the eyebrow possiblyserving to hide external indications ofthe Whether the blood camefrom his or forehead Is not

Possibly the of liquor made

Your property may bo; Dissi-

pated by expensive lawsuits;Scattered ignorant adminis-trators; to un-

productive.Your may be; Helpless

In the hands of "friends," cre-

ditors, or enemies.Remember you your

Executor. Theyour Administrator, It youwithout a wilL

We how toyour interests, perfectly.

Would you

HawaiianTruskCompany,Limited,Fort Street.

i

j

9RI

f .- - - - -

H I I

examination the hospital lessthorough than havebeen the case; possibly the circumstan-tial evidence was morethan it deserved; possibly poor

reputation was against hlni,' The second examination revealed a

of skull, death.McGannon was a well-know- n and

peculiar .street character. in-

dulgence had prejudiced him againsttoil any kind. He went about,shuffling, night and day, with astare, and where he could for

dollar or dime quench his everthirst.

When the fleet here,McGannon, drunk and tottering, perch-

ed on the end a wharf to met hisson who was a tar aboard one of thebig battleships, but the boy was Histashamed come ashore meet hisold man, fearing that his comradeswould guy his when they saw

mopped sidewalk was a common soak,front the enough the lad was going away from

jto without trying hisexternal wound Inter- - father a and llnally came

hemorrhage. Certainly ashore and talked urgingtake a himself get

nlEfaken straight. Far from guying him,have been drinking.

An "by remark arounding throw some method town was too line

McGannon's death, will this a should havea father, going the bad.

though news father's willcreated impression contrary, probably surprisehad Criterion:

He had been

Hefor

had drinkingIncidentally was refused

classsaloons force always

a point out.time

wentand noticed qrifhe

em-

ployestains had removednight before.

had injuryspilled

attitudejured

McGaii'

Hotel street, hisagainst

wound,

injury.mouth his

certain.fumes

byAllowed remain

family

chooseLaw chooses

die

have learned pro-

tectknowhow?

923

might

given welgnt

fracture and

Liquor

horridtouched

a araging

Atlantic was

father

way

11AT E

PAPER

xposmoN

W. J. Cooper, the Hawaii Promo-tion Committee's editor of Hawaiiannews articles for the mainland press,is going to Seattle In the transportDix to conduct a newspaper in con-

nection with the Territory's exhibitat 'the Alaska-Yukon-Paci-

RELIEF FROM RHEUMATIC PAINS.

The great- - pain relieving power ofChamberlain's Pain Balm is clearlyshown in cases of sciatica and Inflam-matory rheumatism, both of which areextremely painful, but one applicationot this liniment gives relief and enablesthe sufferer to sleep, which in manyinstances he has not been able to dofor several days. For sale by all deal-ers, Benson, Smith & Co., agents forHawaii.

Jack Bergsti'cm, piano tunerwith Bergstrom MusIc Co. Tele-

phone G81. P. O. Box 40.

3000 Pairs

SHOESFor Men

NOW SHOWING

ALL STYLES

mmALAKJ3A STREET

am

I

The Star Is An Intelligent, Progressive Newspaper

HONOLULU, HAWAII, WEDNESDAY MAY 5, 1909.

Sl Ir

A ,S

WITH LITTLE MORE THAN HAL F THE CROP GROUND AN EXCESS

OF 2400 TONS OVER THE ESTIMATES IS' SHOWN GOOD JUICE

TELLS TALE OF PROSPERITY WAIALUA IS "EXPECTED TO EX

CEED ESTIMATES BY OVER TWO THOUSAND TONS OF SUGAR.

With a little over half the crop the estimate made at the beginningground, Oahu Plantation has produced over twenty-fou- r hundred tonsmore sugar than was estimated andManager Bull Is in the receipt ot con-gratulations upon the Hue showingfrom all who have heard the goodnews. Up to the present time theOahu mill has turned out JU.55I tonsof sugar and the cane fields whichhave already been cut were estimat-ed to yield but 17,153 tons, thus mak-ing a clear excess of 2101 tons overthe estimated product.

Ah is the case almost all over the

Ii;the figure mentioned

than diminish-ed. nowand while hardly expected

Increasedstock, one

divi-dends cut before the closethe

REPORTS.

the last meeting Pioneerthe line juice the Mill Company a resolution was passed

cause the present sea- - providing for quarterly visits by ason with plenty sun, which hns directors' investigating committee, andmeant lots juice and comparative- - such a committee Is how at the

a small amount fibre, has been tatlon and expected return Sat-an' unUHiially good one for The resolution providing forands. such visits was following the policy

Is stated and good authority, Oahu Sugar Co., has a commit-thoug- h

not coming direct from the tee visit Pioneer isplantation agents, that Waialua have quarterly reports from suchpected run at least over committee hereafter.

Mayor FERN 'S

substan-tially

TO THE PEOPLE OF nOQLUl,U:-- Lt fanned by anumber of religious ami other organizations, and by many ofour citizens, to observe Sunday, May 9, as "Mothers'Day." is an observance which lias found much favor inmany communities of the mainland. Its purpose is to recall,What this age and country of families, is tooapt to be forgotten, the universal and abiding obligations oflove and duty .to the mother who bore us and whose unselfishcare watched, over childhood and youth. Surely no pur-pose could be more in the line of promoting good citizenshipand making a better city and country.

It is with pleasure and gratification, therefore, that I ac-

cede to the request of those avIio tire promoting lliis-obervanc-

to call attention, as far I can, of public, and par-ticularly young men of this City and (Vunty to it, andto urge general a participation in observance as maybe found practicable.

It is desired that the observance of day shall be madedistinctive four things: That every young man will wearin the lapel his coat a white flower," preferably a white car-nation; that he will attend at least, service on hat day inthe church of his choice; that he will write to his mother (ifliving and absent); and that lie Avill seek to dh ni least onespecific act of kindness.

There be no doubt but a Avidespread observance of"Mothers' Bay" Avill Avork civic betterment.

(Signed) .TOSTCPTT .T. FBIIN,Mayor, Oil a, and founrv of Honolulu.

TTonolulu, May IflflO.

WW rill!

LIEUPROMOTERS HAVE HARD TIME

TO GET LOCATION

LOON LEAGUE WILL FIGHT.

the lease of conveniently locatedproperty can be obtained, which atpresent seems doubtful, an applicationfor a saloon at Lellehuasoon, bo mado to tho local LiquorBoard. is understood that CharlesG. Bartlett, of the Honolulu Brewery,

make application and thathas agreed with the officers of the

Fifth Cavalry that ho will sell noth-ing stronger than beer to any ot thesoldiers Camp Schofield.

Thero aro two difficulties In the warot the location ot a saloon at the Cav-alry post. Tho first ot these thattho land on which Is desiredlocato tho resort must leased olth-e- r

from Dowsett Estate or thoOahu Railroad. Tho second tho factthat tho (Anti-Salo- Leaguo will lighttho pronosltloji In every way beforotho LlquRr Commissioners. regardto thethat tho

easing of laud It is stated

lease at ot land for pur-trad- e.

t. .

of the season. fact it said thatis small and It

is much more likely beincreased to be

Waialua is In good shape,it that

there will be an dividendon the it is likely that ortwo meloiiB in the" shape of extra

jnay beyear.

QUARTERLYAt ot the

islands quality of Isof excess. The

ofof plan-l-y

of is tothese isl- - urday.

orIt on which

every month. toIs ex- -

to 2,000 tons

is

nextThis

in all

our

ours

the as theof the

as the

thebyof

one

can thatto

B,

ANTI-S- A

If

license will

It

will theho

from

isit to

beth0

Is

In

Its

Is

to

Is

of

PROGHl

separated

poses at the point mentioned, it isunderstood that the railroad companyIs liable to take the samo stand.

In speaking of1 the stand whichwould bo taken by the Anti-Saloo- n

League In the matter SuperintendentWoolley mado the following statementthis morning:

"Wo will fight the establishment ota saloon at Lellehua just as hard aswo can, regardless ot the statementthat only beer will bo soid to the sol-

diers. While I realize that the ofllcers,of the Fifth Cavalry are In a difficultposition, I do not think that It Isright to evade the expressed wish otCongress that liquors shall not be solaon military reservations. It seems tome certainly an attempt ut evasion toencourago the placing of a saloon justacross the line.

"You know just as well as 1 dothat the proposition of selling beeralone will simply encourage the 'selling of hard liquor Illicitly.A man who gets drunk on beer willwant whiskey and the blind pigs'- - willflourish. The tlmo has como to deter-mine whether the number of saloonshere shall bo increased or kept asnow, it not diminished. As I say weare not Influenced by the plan to sellbeer only to

TENGU JAPAN RICE.Tho Tengn Japan Rico, a Im-

port from the fields of Japan which ICYamanioto of Hotel Btrcet ha3received, Is considered the best rlcoIn Japan. Mr. K, Yamamoto is start- -

Dowsett estate will refuse to Ing a rice mill here and expects a largosaloon

direct

DEPUTY KLUEGEL WILL CARRY

OUT PLANS IN THE ABSENCE OK

THE CHIEF.

Some Important public Improve-

ments will go right ahead notwith-standing the absence of Superinten-dent Marston Campbell. C. H. Klue-ge- l,

Deputy Superintendent of PublicWorks, is In charge of the departmentwhile the chief Is absent.

One of the most needed works isthe repairing of Hackfeld wharf andit only awaits the lumber for It com-ing in the steamer Pleiades, whichhas 190,000 feet ot lumber Tor the de-

partment.On May 15 the bids will be opened

for the Palama sewer extensionthrough Pua lane and Vicinity. F6rthis work the lato Legislature voted?1500.

The same day bids will be openedfor erectlmr a school linns,, atPpnitnL'on TTnwoH

All proprietors affected by the pro-posed widening of Hotel street havecomo to terms excepting C. Bolte, whoIs absent from the Territory He ownsthe lot occupied by the offices of sun- -

a ; dry doctors between Alakca and Richards streets, the strip wanted fromhim containing 1348 square feet.

SHOCK OF TRAGEDY

PHOST T S1M N

Three children playing In a houseIn which was a loaded shotgun, yes-terday afternoon at Watertown, PearlHarbor, resulted in the death of the

ld daughter ot Stove Berri-ga- n,

head engineer for tho HawaiianDredging Company, the baby receivingthe discharge in the abdomen andlingering an hour and a half. Theshock apparently dulled pain, anddeath, though slow, was seeminglywithout agony.

At 2 o'clock tho child went to Cap-

tain Parker's house, adjoiningand played with her ld

sister and the little Parker boj.The children got hold of the gun and Itwas discharged, the load passingthrough a screen door on the otherside of which baby Berrlgan was.

Dr. AVayson responded in his aututo the telephone call and broughtparents-an- body to town.

Mrs. Parker was so overcome on ac-

count of the schock of tho tragedy thatshn had to bo given opiates to controlher.

THEIR IDEAS.

First Bull (being chased by severalpolicemen) Which way shall we go?

Second Bull' It's hard to decide.Fust Bull Let's tos3 a copper.

DICE AT 1

LOGAN TONIGHT

Providing the Transport Logan arrlvea on tlmo today, there "Will be adance given at the Moana Hotel Inhonor of tho officers and ladles aboardher. Tho Royal Hawaiian, QuintetClub will furnish special music during dinner and for tho dance thatwill follow. All hotel guests, visitorsin Honolulu, and Honolulu peoplo areInvited to attend.

Watch and Jewelry repairing re-

quires the highest skill. II. Culman,Fort and Hotel, is skillful and devoted to his trade.

AVASII MATERIALS SALE.To mako room for now goods, tho

N. S. Sachs Dry Goods Co. Is offeringsweeping reductions In wash materials,

COMBINATION MEALS

The combinantion breakfast, recently introduced at the Young Cafe, hasproved as popular as their combinationlunch and dinner.

TEAME SLAUNCHED

No. 0333

1 0KI0 SHIPYARD(Associated Press Cable to The Star.)'

i

TOKIO, May 5. The steamship Stewart, built for trans-Pacli- lc servicein connection with the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railway interests,was launched here today.

ENTERTAIN!

THEJAPANESEOAKLAND, May 5. The oHlcers and men of the' Japanese cruiser Aso

and Sayo are being entertained in ths city and Berkeley today.

NEW OFFICIALS

FOR THE TURKSCONSTANTINOPLE, May 5. Hilmi Pasha has been made Grand Vizier

of the new government and Mollah Sahib the Sheik-Ul-Isla-

CONVICr PLANS TO

KIDNAP S0N0F GOVERNORSAN QUENTIN, Cal., Mai' 5. A plot, to kidnap the son of Governor

Gillett ot this State has been discovered here. It was planned by a con-vict in the state prison whoso object was to secure a pardon as the pricefor which the child would be released.

SHAH OF PERSIA

HI PEOPLE A CONSTITUTIONTEHERAN, May 5. The Shah lias proclaimed a constitution,his promise to grant his people suffrage.

HAJIN, May 5. This city Is facing a terrible famine.

HUGE HSHATTACKS

READING, Pa., April 20. While onhis way home from work John Haas,of Millmont, was attached In a mostpecular manner, and then (followednn experience which he Is not likelyto forgot. He was walking along,when ho felt a peculiar sensation onhis left leg.

Glancing down, no saw an objectwhich he first thought was a cat. He

0POWEIf

IN

Absolutely PureTho only baking powtlosmado with Royal Grapo

Cream of TartarNo Alum, No Lime Phosphif

SECONDEDITION

NG

knocked tho animal down, but ItJumped at him again, and ho called forhelp.

Several men responded, and after afight tho animal was killed. It prov-ed to bo a monster muskrat. Mr.Haas trousers wero torn and he wasbotten in sovcral places on tho leg.

nil'

See the Duck?

The duck Is wearing shoes.Why does she wonr them?

Because sho is proud of them, my

child. They are cool and pretty andeasy to wear.

Pino custom made t

WHITE BUCKSKIN OXFORDS

?5.00. ,

)

LIMITED

1051 Fort, Street, Phone 232.

- ?

4?

n

i

,1

two

Heeamc Me ams nip

LEAVE S. P.

Company

ARRIVE HON. LEAVE HON. ARRIVE S. F.

APR. "4 APR. 30 MAP 5 MAY 11

MAY 15 MAY 21 MAY 2C JUNE 1

JUNE 5 JUNE 11 JUNE 16 JUNE 22

JUNE 26....- JULY 2 JULY 7 LY 13

JULY 17 JULY 23 JULY 25 . AUG. 3

AUG. 13 AUO. 18 AUG. 24I. Is.:::.;: sept. 3 sept. 8 sept iBEPT. 18 SEPT. 21 SEPT. 29 0CT- - 5

Rates from Honolulu to San Fran ctsco. First Class, fC5; Round Trip,

1110; Family Rooms, extra.

FOR PARTICULARS, APPLY TO

W. G. Irwin & Co., LtdAQENT8 FOR THE OCEANIC 8TEAMSHIP CO.

Canadian-Australi- an Royal Mail Steamship Co

Btemern of the above line running In connection with the CANADIAN.

PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY between Vancouver, B. C, and Sydney,

N. 8. W, and calling at Victoria, B. C, Honolulu and Brisbane, Q.

r, mil INn AUSTRALIA. FOR VANCOUVER.

MARAMA MAY 28 MAKURA MAY 25

MAKURA JUNE 25 AORANGI MAR. 31

CALLING AT SUVA. FIJI, ON BOTH UP AND DOWN VOYAGES.

Theo. H Davies & Co., Ltd., Gen 1 Agents

American - Hawaiian Steamship Company

From Hew York to Honolulu Weekly Sailings via Tehuantepec

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

PROM 8AN FRAN. TO HONOLULU.PLEIADES TO SAIL JUNE 4

Freight received at Company's wharf,Greenwich. Street

TOOK HONOLULU TO SAN FRAN-CISCO.

PLEIADES TO SAIL MAY 13

r

FROM SEATTLE AND TACOMA TOHONOLULU DIRECT.

TEXAN TO SAIL MAY 13

VIRGINIAN TO SAIL MAY 27

H. HACK ELD & CO., LTD.,Honolulu

C. P. Morse,General Agen

Pacific Mail Steamship Co.

Tovo Kisen Kaisha S. S. Co.Steamers of the above companies will call at HONOLULU and leave

thli port on or about the dates mentioned below:

HONOLULU FROM S. F. LEAVE HONOLULU FOR S. F.MONGOLIA MAY 11 NIPPON MARU MAY 15

TENYO MARU MAY 20 MAY 25

KOREA MAY 27 CHINA JUNEND?PON MARU JUNE 8 MANCHURIA JUNESIBERIA JUNE 16 CHIYO MARU JUNE 12

CHINA JUNE 24 ASIA JUNE 25

MANCHURIA JUNE 30 MONGOLIA JULYCHIYO MARU JULY C TENYO MARU JULY 10

ASIA JULY 17 KOREA JULY 20

MONGOLIA JULY 28 NIPPON MARU JULY 31

TENYO MARU AUG. 3 AUG.KOREA AUG. 11 CHINA AUG. 17

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION APPLY TO

HACKFELD & CO. LTD

HATSON NAVIGATION COMPANYSchedule S. S. HILONIAN In th direct service between San

and Honolulu.Arrive Leave

8. S. HILONIAN MAY 12TH MAY 18TH8. S. HILONIAN JUNE 9TH JUNE 15TH

Castle & Cooke Limited, Agents

i ON-P- AC

TRANSFER

126 KING ST.

FIC

GO.. LTD

Agents,

Freight

ARRIVE

SIBERIA

SIBERIA

H.

Francisco

Honolulu. Honolulu,

BAGGAGE, SHIPPING,

STORAGE, WOOD,

PACKING, COAL.

Pfloue

FURNITURE AND PIANO MOVING.

STARI

Far yaara the Star's printing office hat been a busy place. We havegained a reputation for doing good work at fair prices and dellv ringthe Job when promlaed. Few printing offlcea can make a similaralalm. With addition to our plant we are 'n a better conditionthan ever to handle commercial printing. f Jr three Linotypes areat your servlcs for book and brief work if you are not a Staraiistsmar, stna us a trial orar; you wnl bo pleased with therasalL

Star Printing OfficeMtCandlssa Building. Telephone 36S

STAlt, MAY 6.

(Later Shipping News on Pago Flvel

TlDIiS, SUN AND MOON.Full Moon 15th at 1:26 a. m.

ot4 V

u nBwoH

3 C

fe3sr a"

THE 1909.

May

r. M. ft. A. M. A. .M. 1'. M.l

Sets3 3:05 1.6 2:18 8:21 9:35 6:26 6:27 4:41

4 3:36 1.7 2:50 8: 10:16 5:26 6:27 8:15

6 4:05 1.8 3:22 9:06 11:00 5:2(6:28 Rises

5t8joig86 4S45 1.9 3:51 9.31 11:51 7:42

7 6:35 1.9 4:30 10:00 .... 5:24 0:fl) 8:10

A.M.8 6:10 1.9 5:10 10:28 0:48 5:a3 0:2tl BU8

9 7:00 1.9 6:00 11:04 1:54 5:'J3 0:30 :10:6

Times of the tide are tSRen from tbeU. 8. Coast and Geodetic Survey tables. The tides at Kahulul and Hllooccur about one hour earlier than atHonolulu. Honolulu standard time Is10 hours 30 minutes slower than Green-

wich time, being that of the meridianof 157 degrees 30 minutes. The timewhistle blows at 1:30 p. m. which Is

the same as Greenwich, 0 hours, 0 min-

utes. The Sun and Moon are for loca:time for the whole group.

Shipping in Port I

(Army and Navy).U. S. S. Iroquois ,Moses, station tug.U. S. S. Kukul, Houston, light house

tender.

Am. bk. Mohican, Page, S. F.German ship Frelda, Logeman, Ham

burg.Schr. W. M. Marston, Hersey, S. if.Bk. Alden Besse, Hllo.Schr. Helene, Thompson, Port Lud

low.

15.

The Mails

HAWAIIAN WEDNESDAY,

(Merchantmen)

(INCOMING.)From Yokohama, Nippon Maru,

MayFrom San Francisco, Columbian,

May 7.

(Outgoing.)For Sau Francisco, U. S. A. T.

May 6.

For Yokohama, Mongolia, May 11.For Colonics, Aorangl, May 1.

U. S. A. TRANSPORTS.Sherman at S. F.Crook at S. F.Sheridan at San Francisco.Dlx sailed from Nagasaki, April 2G.

Buford, at S. F.Logan due today.Burnslde, ac Puget Sound.Thomas sailed for Manila Apr. 11.

DEPARTED.Tuesday, May 4, 1909.

Str. Noeau, Piltz, for Kauai, 5:20p. ui.

Str. Mauna Kea, Freeman, for Ha-

waii, noon.Str. Kinau, Gregory, for Kauai, 5

p. in.Str. Mikahala, Pedersen for Ahu-ki- ul

and Kauai ports, 5 p. in.P. M. S. S. Korea, Sandberg, for San

Francisco, 5:20 p. m.Wednesday, May 5.'

S. S. Alameda, Dowdell, for SanFrancisco, 10 a. m.

Sh. Fullerton, McKetchnie, for Ga-vlo-

11 a, m. . i

PASSENGERS DEPARTED.For San Francisco, per S. S. Ala-

meda, May 5. W. F. Erving, C. E.Fergusen, Mrs. Fergusen, W. S.Frayne, Mrs. A. L. Fredrlckson, MissE. A. Freney Mrs. P. Gleason, if. It.Greenwell, J. J. Griff an, It. Guesse-feld- t,

F. E. Holey, Miss K. Harrison,John Hind, Mrs. Hind, Miss Hind, E.II. Hitchcock, Mrs. Hitchcock, B. Ho-ni- g,

Mrs. Honlg and Infant, S. B.Hord, Mrs., Hord, Mrs. O. Hord, L. H.Hughes, It. L. Hughes, Miss 'J. John-son, Mrs. H. Johnston and 3 children,N. Jacob, Mrs. Jacob, J. L. Kelley,Chas. King,' O. D. Larnach, Mrs. M.Loulsson, Mrs. A. L. Lutted, 11. U.Middleditch, Mrs. Dr. McGowan, S. M.Ballou, Mrs. Ballou, W. W. Brunner,A. Gartley, Mr. McKendra, T. Wall,Dr. C. B. Wood, Miss McGowan, Mrs.McKendra, Mrs. W. Newhad, Mrs. L.Noonan, G. M. Peacock, Mrs. J. W.Robson, Miss IL Robson, I. Rubin-stein, Mrs. Rubinstein, Chong JokShan, Miss Schelnhauser, Wm. Schio-be- r,

S. C. Schultz, J. Scott, J. L, Se-

nior, W. G. Sheill, Mrs. J. C. Smith,Miss Smith, Mrs. A. L. Stable, PaulSuper, B. O.. Williams, A. E. Wllshire,Mrs. Wllshire.

THE LOG-HO- OK

On Friday morning the American-Hawaiia- n

steamer Columbian is ex-

pected to appear around DiamondHead bringing nearly a week's mallfor this city from San Francisco. Thenext mall after that will be broughtto this city by the Mongolia duo here

next Tuesday. The Alameda tookmall to the Coast this morning andthe Logan, which will probably getaway from here tomorrow, will takeanother shipment of letters and papersto the Coasti

The little schooner C. A. Thayer,which came In a few days ago fromPort Ludlow, has nearly finished dlscharging. The German ship Freldahas discharged and taken In ballastbut not yet received her sailing orders.

Times are good here Just now in theshipping business and each vessel thatleaves port is taking a full cargo andalso n. full list of passengers. Atthe present time there has been noparticular delay among those wishingto go to the. Coast, as there has beenplenty of accommodation. The Koreatook away a good list and the remainder of those desiring to go got awaythis morning on the Alameda. Forseveral weeks from now on there willbe small chance to get to San Fran-cisco, however. The next steamer forthe Coast carrying passengers doesnot leave till April 18, almost twoweeks, when th Hllonlan, which onlycarries thirty passengers, will geaway, after that the Siberia w,lll sailon May 24, followed by the Alamedatwo days later.

The three steamers to be nut on thejoint service to Canada during thecoming season by the Hamburc-Ame- -rican, Holland-Americ- a and NorthHerman Lloyd companies, will be thePrlnz Oscar and Prinz Adalbert, or theHamburs-Amerlca- n Lino, and theWlllehad, of the North German-Lloy- d.

lhey are comparatively new vessels.Having been built during 1903 and1904. Each steamer will have a carcocapacity of 7,000 tons, and will carry1,200 steerage, 100 first, and 100 second-cla- ss passengers. The first vessel, the Prinze Oscar, will sail fromEurope ,on March 18 for St. John's andHalifax and will be succeeded at fortnightly intervals by the Prinz Ada!bert and the Wlllehad. Thi first steamer to reach Quebec and Montreal willbe tho Prinz Adalbert, which will ar-rive up the river about May 1, andsail Irom Montreal on the 8th. Mr.James Thorn, of the Dominion Line,has been appoUted Canadian manager.

PHILADELPHIA. Anril 20. Talesabout Captain Kidd's treasure beingburied somewhere m tho neighborhoodof Bach Havei). N. J., were reviveduy me nnumtr in the sani . on Ktin

I day latt, of 2G old Spanish coins, datins from 1702 to 1721. They are ofsilver, about the size of an Americanquarter, and bear tho coat-of-ar- ofrhilip V. one one side and the Snanisb. coat-of-ar- and the date on theother., The coins are in a splendidstate of preservation and seem to benone the worse for their centuries ofrest on tho ccean, bed. Many of thesecoins are in the possession of thenatives, who find them in great numbers in the glodes near the iife-sa- v

Ins station when wind and tide areright. It is thought that the coinsfound last Sunday were nrobablvwashed ashore from the wreck ofsome Spanish ship which foundered ithe vicinity a couple of centuries ago

Union Pacific

Railroad

SUGGESTS

IJeoca. studComfort

Three trains dally, through cars.

first and second class to all points,

Reduced rates take effect soon. Writs

now. ,

S. h Booth

GENERAL AGENT.

No. 1 Montgomery Street,

SAN FRANCISCO.

Kniti'nml .11 cot) huh

HONOLULU LODGE No. 616,

B. P. O. ELKS.

Meets In their hall on King Street,near Fort, every Friday evening. Vlsltlng Brothers are' cordially Invited toattend.

E. A. DOUTHITT, E. R.

H. C. EASTON, Secretary.

HARMONY LODGE No. 3, I. O. O. F.

Meets every Monday evening at 7:30in Odd Fellows' Hall, Fort StreeL Vis-Itl- nr

brothers cordially Invited to

F. D. WICKE. N. G.

E. R. HENDRY, Sec

DIVISION No. 1, A. O. H.

DIVISION No. 1, A. O. H.Meets every first and third Wednes

day,- - at 8 p. m., In C. B. U. Hall, FortStreet. Visiting brothors are cordiallyinvited to attend.

FRANK D. CREEDON, Pres.JAMES T. CAREY, Sec.

BEAUTIFUL ROCKERSChaire, Bureaus and Furniture of all

kinds m-J- e from select Koa.

Wing Chong Co.,Corner King and Bethel.

Fine Rolls and Cakes, Buns, Pies and

all ttie delicacies of the table at

ASAHI BAKERY.Beretanla near Alakea.

OF Sweet VioletOL BUTTER

C. Q, YEE HOP TEL. 251

We Guaranteet to give you the very finest class. . ....y or nana worK at the same pricesy ju m.u t.u (V J.U i UiUUilJUU '.

laundering. yFRENCH LAUNDRY. X

9 A)

RAINIER BEE

At all BarsC. BREWER & CO., LTD.

QUEEN STREET.Honolulu, T. H.

AGENTS FORHawaiian AErlcurai rnmimnv Hnn.mea Sugar Company, Honomu SugarCompany, Wailuku Sugar Company,Ookala Sugar Plantation Company,i"ep6eueo sugar Co., Kapapala Ranch.

Charles M. Cookb presidentGeo. H. Robertson.V-Pre- s. & Mgr.E. Faxon Bishop.... Treas. & Secy.F. W. Macfarlane Auditor"P. C. Jones DirectorC. H. Cooke DirectorJ. R. Gait DirectorAll of the above named constitute

the Board of Directors.

Fire InsuranceAtlas Assurance Company of

LondonNew York Underwriters

AgencyProvidence Washington In

surance Company

The 5, F. Dillingham Co,, Ltd.

General Agents for Hawaii,"ourth Floor, Stange wald Building

ALfXAil) 8 BALDWIN LTD

OFFICERS and DIRECTORS.H. P. BALDWIN PresidentJ. B. CASTLE 1st nt

W. M. Alexander... 2nd nt

J P. Cooke.... 3rd Vice-Pre- a. & Mgr.J. Waterhouse TreasurerE. E. Paxton SecretaryW. O. Smith...., DirectorJ. R. Gait DirectorW. R. Castle Director

SUGAR FACTORSAND

( OMISSION MERCHANTS

AGENTS FORHawaiian Commercial & Sugar Com'

pany.Halkit Sugar Company, ,

Fala Plantation.Maul Agricultural Company.Hawaiian Sugar Company,Kahuku Plantation Company.Kahulul Railroad Company.Haleakala Ranch Company.Honolua Ranch. :

.'

ji

1

Ws6h, ji . a. " .....;-- ! ' '. .'JkG&k 'Aj.JaiJ2 'Uma., . S. . . - itfcv :wAJi IMvih .l,.

gaaGmnsfl5ngBa

fai

HAWAIIAN

linui MiiariiStreet near Aala Street,

MANUFACTURERS OP

MACARONI (HOI--AN

BUCKWHEAT (HOSHI )

The largest and only incorporated concern of itn ki&6in Honolulu.

Beretnnia

A new enterpriee launched by enterprising merchants.K

K. YamamotoBALES AGENT.

I Tel. 899. Hotel St. near Nuuanu.gasVKBUg5aSg5fflBKgaH5B

0 3ji rSp

P. O.

af -

To ATTRACT THE JAPANESE TRADE odvartlio In TSDB DAIL1KIPPU JIJL the moat popular and widely elrcalatad evening ojaeuthe Japanese colony.

JOB PRINTING A SPECIALTY with language ol Japaaaaa, Ofci.'

itu, Korean or English.

The Nippu Jiji Co., Ltd.,

Pione Mri 41.

Y. BOGA, Manager.

--IN-

819

paper

near Raaaaa.

PAPETERIES

FANCY and STANDARD LINES

When you get them here, you know that they areof the finest quality, and in the of taste.

Hawaiian News Company, Ltd.Alexander Voting Building.

Iff H J9 S JL . . ! 4 St - SX 5 f" 111

size .85

size ?1.40

No Rubbing'Clothes OutWhenraYou Use

Grvstal WhitTRY IT

Hotel

B Soup

H. HACKFELD & GO, iLTD,Distributors

IF WE GAVE AWAY theEVEN electric lamps, itwould be cheaper to buy

TUNGSTEN LAMP

O ECAUSE of the great Savingcurrent aim mc sucuui

quality of the light obtained.

25-w-

Box

either

Btroot

best

40-w- size ?1.0U100-wa- tt size 1.S5

The Hawaiian Electric Go.,

' A

For RentMakeo Road, opposite Makce

Island i line house of 6 roounsj

with two bedrooms, and a mod-

em stable adjoining. Splendidlocation, convenient to the cars.

RENT, 130. 'PACIFIC HEIGHTS. A mod-

ern, 12 room house, with C" bed-

rooms; Just the thing for a sum-

mer residence.RENT, ?30.

BiSHOP TRUST GO

Bethel, bet. King and Merchant.

IS COMING

TELL YOU OF IT

Makes Good Signs

Ellto Building.

M

HI

THE BOOn

SIGNS

SharpPhone 397

vFor a line glass ot beer go to the

Orpheum SaloonFort Street above the Orpheum Theatre

W. G. IRWIN & Co.

AGENTS FOR THE

Royal Insurance Co. of Liverpool. Eng.Scottish Union & National Ins. Co,

Edinburg, Scotland.Commercial Union Assurance Co.

London.The Upper Rhine Ins. Co., Ltd,

Y. WO SING CO.GROCERIES, FRUITS.

VEGETABLES, ETC.

California Butter, 40c lb.; CookingButter, 35c lb.; Fresh. Dried Fruits.

1186-11S- 8 Nuuanu Street.Telephone Main 238. Box 352

NEW ENGLAND

MUTUAL LIFEINSURANCE CO.

of Boston, Massachusetts.

New PolicyThe contract embodies, in an

absolutely COMPLETE andPERFECT form, the principleof strictly MUTUAL life

CASTLE & COOKE, LTD,

AGENTS.

Also representingAetna Insurance Co.National Fire Insurance Co.Citizens Insurance Co.The London Assurance

oroocoecooo0O9oecoeooaBBBBBBBBBBBRBBEBflBBBBflBBB

g John riattossta pr,iiMnrcn Aicn sheet iron

WORKER.117K Alnlon Of Phnnn (557--

MBBBBBHHBflflBBBBBBflflBBflflflBB

Carriage manufacturers and repairingin all its branches.

NEW OAHU CARRIAGE CO.

Queen Street near River.

h n i - tmrm v-- w i w - n m

ot

of

HflflflBBBBBflWlBBflBBflBflBl

QUEEN'S HOSPITAL

GIVEN A HEARING

MATTER OF MUNICIPAL AID TO INSTITUTION PRESENTED TO THE

BOARD OF SUPERVISORS FIN ANCIAiL AFFAIRS OF THE CITY

COUNTY OF. HONOLULU LARUE AMOUNT OF BUSINESS TRANS-

ACTED AT LONG SESSION LAST NIGHT.

Under suspension of the rules theBoard of Supervisors last night madeits first order of business a hearingto former Governor George R. Carter,W. W. North and Wlllnrd E. Brownon the Queen's Hospital. Mr. report on garbage which or Deed of Trust, thoCarter gave a historical sketch of theInstitution, leading up to the crisisnow confronting It from GovernorFrear's vetoing of tho ?1000 a monthsubsidy to it in the Territorial appro-priation bill. If the munlcpallty couldnot aid it, at least one-ha- lf tho as-

sistance the hospital now gives to theIndigent stop. Should the completed within a days. On re- -municipality take the course of paying for patients It sent thither by thoday, the lowest charge that could bemade was $1.50 per diem. Somemonths last year tile county had pa-

tients .there aggregating 1000 hospitaldays, and at the rate stated thiswould cost $1500. Mr. North suppliedthe statistics to illuminate the subjectand Mr. Brown supplemented Mr. Car-

ter's appeal for aid. Senator Chilling-wort- h

volunteered strong advocacy ofa municipal grant relating how thoSenate had, stood 'by the Territorialsubsidy even to overriding the Gov-ernor's veto, but to no effect on ac-

count of the sustaining of the veto bythe "House. From remarks by mem- -

it was S.having

permitted.committee five

submitted as alegislation has

and Aju waseighteen fzed newincreased on mu- -

a possibility of asthe Item maintenance of Jailand care of prisoners could not asyet be exactly estimated. Andestimates for re

and schools,,the building

and fornew In the the

hospital was to theways committee.

A was granted to Byron Clark backing a letter

himself, M. J. F. 13.

a committee of Imthat an

ordinance be to

in

was the

Treasurerof $84,967.95 includ- -

ng $51004.95 1. Expenditures $1G,G94.45,

GHANG E PLAY

thoaudience It

tho situations of thocal tho bill is

Woman's or Itwas the liands of thowell llvo

andtho that

asemotional her

she doIt is

tho strength tho company.popular

specialty is entirety newmore

will popular suc- -

of 738,373.50 cash on30. is ot ?33,

067.24 in road tax funds for all Per Menu, me denotrlcts.

Supervisor J. H. recelved vote of on his

gageshowed deficit ot $2 Instead of$300 as formerly.from him and committeebridges and laid out work onthe city for this to callfor about Reconstruction otthe Koolaupoko,destroyed by the late storm, bo

sick would fewport recommendation of Engineer

$2000 to coverthe restoration of Walkanoand building of atin the

To Attorney Milvorton wastask of reporting on all

the laws relating to the municipalitypassed by the Legislature at the

session, the waysmeans committee was Instructed to

estimates to fit new con-ditions.

J. J. Miehlstein was appointed bythe Mayor and unanimouslyed the building and 144. 1G7.

Ho 204,by of the

bers of the Board evident that Quartermaster's department, U. A.,assistance would be forthcoming If in Honolulu, been superlnten-th- e

revenue The chairman dent of construction for Army workof the and means "here the past Before that

that the in- - he worked plumber in town.creased revenue under new here eleven years,would probably be $105,000 odd expenditure of $19G author-fo- r

the months from June 30, to desks and chairsand the demands the the Supervisors, present outfitnlcipal treasury at $84,000 with being neither nor comfor- -

their being greaterlargest

theseallowed but $30,000

pairs Janitors of instead$51,000 asked department eral been erected.

under that head $81,000 build-ing schoolhouscs. end

matter referredand means

hearing nextup sign-

ed Blssell andSteere, the Manoaprovement Club, which asked

passed compel ownerskeep ventory orderedand good hands

roads there Chief auth- -

horseletter referred that commit- -

Trent's report Aprilshowed

on hand Aprilwere leaving

OF AT

Reports

recommenuea

convenient

appointed com-mittee

Governorpostofllco building

nicipality

Presldent Mott-Sml- th

commit-tee Thurs-day afternoon.

acceptedHonolulu

petrolithlccultivator.

perintendentfrontages

Territorial propertygenerally. Chairman municipality.

committee thought Engineer Thurstonordinance decrepit

receiptsattendance

THE ORPHEUM TO-NIG- HT

SECRET."

Cafe."class play with illustrations. Saturday

Orpheum. Last attracting attentionnighttho until cried with

farcl-- jThis eveningSecret," "Doris."

great successknown Efflo Ellsler

years worthy"Haxel Kirk," play made

Efllc Ellsler famous. Miss DuoDoris Vane, wonderfully

strong part that givesgreat chanco show what

the parts.with full otTho Osborn children will have

that andnovel and will than pleaso. Ray

the song

IHD HAWAIIAN WEDNESDAY, MAY 1009.

balance handApril There balance

dls- -' iionas,

Road Wilsoncongratulation

onlymonth

theparks

streets month$12,000.

bridgewill

Gero Board votedbridge

the culvert Apasame district.

Deputyallotted the

re-

cent while and

prepare

confirm

omccrs

ways years.ilgures

lived

theleast

table.Mayor Fern was

of one to keep In touch withthe on the matter of turning

the to the mufor city hall when Fed- -

of by has

O.

of Boardof Health invited health

to meet with that body on

The Board bids of thoIron "Works for an

a road roller, disc harrow

At written request of the Suof Public Works in- -

of street to their side- - was to be made of allwalks clear of weeds or- - in the of

Quinn of thethewas such a county the orized to return a of

to flrntee.

for

a

A

is otat

may

"Aa in

ago Is ato

aa

to canwith

a

G.

aoi

a

aa

on

a

by

Ho

for

by

a

a a

thethe

the

aand a

thean

der

and

Many minor wereof at the session, which lasted nearlythree and a half hours. There was afull ot members and alarge audience of officers and citizens.

SCENE FROM "W OMAN'S

Tho Elleford will cuess "Tho Flowers Outside thoau entirely different ot to-- ! The Ma- -

'tinee lotsnightlaughed

funnyoddity.

actress,

heavier cast

Collins sing

BTAIt,

roads,

and

engine,

matters

company present

successor

ap-

pears

wlth the little folks as In "Cinderella"there is a lot ot things to please thechildren and tho parents as well. ThoOsborns will have a new specialty andseveral members of the company willcontribute new songs, Tho sale ofscats is now on for all tho weeks

SLEEPLESSNESSYou will havo uo difficulty In procur-

ing rest and sloop if you will lot Dr.Miles' Norvlno soothe and strengthentho tired, agitated, weakoned brainnorves. So long as thoy remain Inthis condition, you will be rcstloss,Irritable, melancholy. You aro wel-com- e

to your money back If first bottl"docs not holp.

NOTICE OF REDEMPTION OF TWOHUNDRED (200) SIX PER CENT,FIFTEEN YEAR, GOLD BONDS,DATED JUNE 1ST, 1898, OF CALI-

FORNIA BEET SUGAR AND RE-

FINING COMPANY, A CORPORA-TION, WHOSE CORPORATE NAMEIS NOW CALIFORNIA AND HA-

WAIIAN SUGAR REFINING COM-

PANY.,r

In occordancc with the provisionsof a certain Bond Mortgage or Deedof Trust, dated June 1st, 1S98, madeand executoa uy ualiuvuuinia. ueuai:SUGAR AND REFINING COMPANY,a corporation (whoso corporate name,since the date of said bonds, has beenlegally changed to, and Is now, CALI-

FORNIA AND HAWAIIAN SUGARREFINING COMPANY), two hun

dred f200) ot the Fifteen Year. Sixj '

uoiamination of Tnousana (i,wo)Dollars each, also dated June1898, secured by said Bond Mort- -

behalf of the service,' were, on

Walahole In

thethe

tho

showing

disposed

one1st,

and

8th day ot April, 1909, duly drawnby their numbors by lot, for redemp-tion on the 1st day of June, 1909; andnotice is hereby given that said twohundred (200) bonds will be redeemed 6ts April May 5, 12, 26 June 2.

In full at the office of said corpora-tion, No. 254 California Street, SanFrancisco, California, on the 1st dayot June, 1909, at which time and placesaid corporation will pay on each otsaid two hundred (200) bonds, sodrawn, Its principal, or face value, towit: tho sum of One Thousand (1,000)Dollars, together with the couponsthat, on said 1st day ot June, 1909may bo due thereon.

Interest on said two hundred (200)bonds so drawn will cease from andafter the 1st day of June, 1909.

Said two hundred (200) bonds tobo redeemed as aforesaid are number-ed as follows:

3, 9, 11, 20, 50, 51, 54, GS, 87, 92, 1)5,

105, 107, 109, 110, 116, 118, 126, 143,Board as 1E2. 157.

plumbing inspector. was highly 203, 206, 207,the

obtain

over

was

28, 19,

213, 221,251, 255,297, 309,

1617,

,784,

,90G,

222, 247,

314. 523,341, 350, 351,370, 374, 377,394, 395,405, 411,430, 482,509, 510,531, 533,586, 596,

618,G42, 650,C89, 698,753, 754,

787,837, 841,874, 876,

940,

257, 278, 292,311, 331,

39G,

414,484,

544,600,619,655.716,755,793,

352,378,398,424,487,516,545,601,020,665,

75G,

794,

168, 181, 192, 201,208, 209, 210, 211,

225, 228, 236, 240,256, 290, 296,

317, 340,

512,

717,

353, 354, 3G1, 309,380, 387, 390, 393,400, 401, 402, 403,420, 427,495, 490,520, 522,546, CIS,G02,

C35,666,726,757,tsoo,

431,504,529,549,

C03, G10,

63 G, 637,671, C72,

433,508,530,5G8, '

612,1041,1

075,;742, 751, 752,'770, 774, 779,801, S15,

850, 859, SCO, 8G1, 863,879, 884, 898, 899, 902,

911, 912, 914, 920, 921, 922,941, 942, 947, 950. 951, 958,

818,872,905,935,9S0,

982, 987, 991, 999, 1000.

Dated: San Francisco, California,April 15, 1909.

BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OPDIRECTORS.

R. P. RITHET,President of CALI-FORNIA & HAWAI-IAN SUGAR RE-

FINING COMPANY.(Formerly Califor-nia Beet Sugar andRefining Company).

(Corporate. Seal)W. H. HUNTINGTON,

Secretary of CALI-FORNIA & HAWAII-AN1 SUGAR RE-FINING COMPANY.(Formerly Califor-nia Beet Sugar andRefining Company).

19ts Apr. 22, 21, 20, 28, 30 May 1, 3,

5, 8, 10, 12,' 15, 17, 19, 22, 24, 26, 29, 31.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFirst Judicial Circuit, Territory otHawaii. At Chambers. In Probate.

In tho Matter of the Estate ot JosephOliver Carter, the elder, deceased. x

NOTICE TO CREDITORS.

Notice Is hereby given that the lastWill and Testament of Joseph OliverCarter, tho elder, late of Honolulu, Island ot Oahu, Territory ot Hawaii, deceased, has been admitted to probate bytho abovo Court and Letters Testa-mentary granted to tho undersigned,Joseph Oliver Carter and Henry Cush-ma- n

Carter, tho Executors named Insaid Will. All creditors ot tho de-

ceased or of his estate aro hereby no-

tified to present their claims duly au-

thenticated and with proper vouch-ers, It any exist, even though saidclaims may bo secured by a mortgageupon, real estate, to tho said HenryCushman Carter at his office In thoCampbell Block, Merchant Street,Honolulu aforesaid, within six (6)months from tho date hereof (whichis tho date of tho first publication ofthis notice); otherwise such claims,If any, shall bo forovor barred.

I And all persons Indebted to thosaid estate aro hereby notified to make

' payment to tho said Henry CushmanCarter at tho above address.

Dated at Honolulu, T. H., April 21,1909.

JOSEPH OLIVER CARTER,HENRY CUSHMAN CARTER,

ExecutoryHOLMES STANLEY & OLSON,

Attorneys for Executors.5ts April 21, 28, May 5, 12, 19.

Rev. Henry Loomls, head of thoAmerican Blblo Society In Japan going homo In tho Korea, gavo an Inforesting address before tho Woman'sBoard of Missions yesterday afternoon.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFirst Circuit Territory of Hawaii.At Chambers,

Aho Ah Sul Llbcllnnt, v. Ah Sul,

DIVORCE SUMMONS.Stamps $2.00.

The Territory of Hawaii:To the High Sheriff of the Territory

of Hawaii, or his Deputy; tho Sheriffof the County ot Oahu or his Deputy:

You are commanded to summon AhSul to appear twenty days after ser-vice hereof, before such Judge ot theCircuit Court ot the First Circuit asshall be sitting at Chambers in theCourt Room nt Honolulu to answer theannexed Libel for Divorce of Aho AhSul.

And have you then there this writwith full return of your proceedingsthereon.

Witness the Honorable AlexanderLindsay Jr., Second Judge of the Cir-cuit Court of the First Circuit, nt Ho-nolulu this 23rd day of October 190S.

(SEAL)L. P. SCOTT,

Clerk.

FAIRBANKS TO SPEAK.Tho last meeting of the Men's

League for the season will bo held attho Hawaiian Hotel on Monday even-ing next at G o'clock. It will bo la-

dies' night. The address ot the even-ing will be delivered by former VicePresident Charles W. Fairbanks, whowith Mrs. Fairbanks, Mrs. J. W. Tim-mon- s,

Governor and Mrs. Walter F.Frear will be tho guests of honor. ThoKainehameha Boys' glee club will fur-nish music.

bh a m mm km ni b

i

URINARYDISCHARGES

RELIEVED

24 HOURSEach Cap.

sule I cirs (MIDYiS

the namcJC-- 3

AM. I)r.l :nt..s 3

5B5B2M5BSB2B5B2B2B2B5B3 B

Why have yourTypewriter '

tinkered with by in-

experienced men ?Let us do it! Weare fully equippedfor this particularwork and we em-

ploy only exper-ienced repairers,

Office SupplyCo., Ltd.

Ml Fort Street. Phone 143.

B 5B5B5B5H5B5BBB2BHB5B3

nveiopesby the Million,wholesale price.

111

Call and get our

J CO., ICorner Fort and Merchant.

Oahu Railway'CIMB TABLE

OUTWARD.

For Walanao, Walalua, Kahuku andWay Stations 9: 15 a. m., 3:20 p. m.

For Pearl City, Ewa Mill and WayStations f7:30 a. m.,

11:15 a. m., 2:15 p. m.($9:30 p. m., fll p. m.

For Wahlawa 9:15 a.P. m.

INWARD.

IN

'9:15 a.5:15 p.

m.,m

m. and 5:15

Arrive Honolulu from Kahuku, Wal-

alua and Walanae 8:3C a. m., 5:31p. m.

Arrive Honolulu from Ewa Mill andPearl City f7: 46 a. m., 8:36 a. in.,

10:38 a. m., 1:40 p. m., 4:31 p. m.5:31 p. m., 7:30 p. m.

Arrive Honolulu from Wahlawa-8:3:C- a.

m., and 5:31 p. m.

The Halelwa Limited, a two-ho-

train (only flrst-clas- 3 tickets honored),leaves Honolul uevery Sunday at 8:22a. m.; returning, arrives In Honoluluat 10:10 p. m. Tho Limited stops onlyat Pearl City and Walanao.

Dally. fEr. Sunday, JSunday Only,G. P. DENISON, F. C. SMITH,

Superintendent. G. P. & T. A.

I Watch, andi;i;

JewelryRepairing

H. GulmanFori and Hotel Sis,

You Want the

News First ?

You wantYour AdsRead ?

Here is some advice- -

THREE

Honolulu more than any othw city in the World, isa place where the EVENING PAPEK gets the newsfirst. The dock here is over two hours behind theclock at San Francisco, four hours behiiid New York

and ten to eleven hours behind the clocks in the Euro-pean capitals.

This means that when THE STAll is going to pressThe Day Is Closed In Washington, Chicago, New Yorkand Europe and almost over in San Francisco. The

.news of the day is here for THE ST AH.Under modern conditions it takes practically no time

to prepare and transmit news and

The Star gets everyEvening the CableDispatches giving

The News of all the WorldSflBBBBflflflBflflBflBBBBBBflflBBflflflBflflflflflflflBBfl

For tlie day just ended

Uere are some of the features that go to make theevening paper the predominating factor in fan advertis-ing campaign:

It is delivered at. the home each night, when thewhole family has plenty of time to read it.

It is carried home by the business man when hisday's work is done and it stays there. A morning pa-

per is usually carried down town by the head of thefamily and hurriedly read.

The evening paper is not read hurriedly, but thor-oughly, so that all the advertisements receive theirshare of attention.

v It presents the store news a little ahead, giving theprospective purchaser time to plan a shopping tourfor the next morning.

The evening paper presents the news the day it hap-pens. The morning paper the day after.

The evening paper presents the news first. The morning paper merely elaborates it.

The Evening PaperPrints Daylight Hews

The morning paper takes what is left.

9

?

&5

DAILY AND SEMI-WEEKL- Y.

fcublUhed evtry afternoon (except Sunday) by the Hawaiian StakNewspaper Association.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES.

Cocal, jer annum $ 8.00Foreijjn, per annum 12.00

Payable in Advance.EnUred at Poit Offlcs at Honolulu, Hawaii, aa tecond class mall matter.

Subscribers who do not get their papers regularly will confer a favor

ly notifying the 8tar Office; Telephone 366.

The Supreme Court of The Territory of Hawaii has declared both THE

HAWAIIAN STAR (dally) and THE 8EMI-WEEKL- Y STAR newspapers

t general circulation throughout the Territory of Hawaii, "suitable forproceedings, orders, Judgments and decrees entered or rendered

In the Courts of Mia Territory of Hawaii."Lettere to THE HAWAIIAN STAR should not be addressed to any Indlvl-tfM- al

connected with the office, hut simply to THE HAWAIIAN STAR, or to

GEORGE F. HENSHALL MANAGER

.WEDNESDAY MAY 5, 1900

That Mothers' Day proclamation and programme appearsnitpil the nrimarv However, as considerable rum- - ernment not them

ber of grown-up- s seem to belong in that class anyhow, perhaps the scheme will do some good.

IS HONOLULU ASLEEP?

It is stated that an important local hotel building enter-prise has been abandoned ,or suspended on account of thesteamer travel situation. The community shows singularapathy in the face of such blows at its prosperity. It is strangethat there is scarcely any agitation of subject so vital. Itis the habit of hustling American communities, when theyfind themselves being hit in this way by undesirable laws, tomake Rome howl. Never losing sight of the real policy offighting for subsidy that will increase American shippingand when there is such subsidy, coastwise laws even moresevere if necessarv than those now existing, Honolulu snouitimake herself heard in the strongest manner, and constantlykeep the noise going, in favor of one form of relief or another,now. The whole matter of subsidy was discussed at muciileneth in Congress last session, with practically no mentionof Hawaii made at all. Yef the plight of Hawaii and the Am-

erican nation's duty to relieve that jrijght, constitute an argu-ment of considerable force. We want the coastwise laws, as

part of the American protective jiolicy, and if they are tobe suspended, we want them nut into effect again as soon asis proper. But we have a riuht demand that Congress Ijyone means or the other, cease to so isolate these islands thatneople are afraid to come here lest they should not be qble toleave when thev'want.

FORCING ONE ANOTHER TO WAR.

It may be doubted Avhether the mere fact of the expensive-nes- s

war, or its supposed increased destructiveness, willever stop it. The militant peoples the earth will enter warwhen touched to the quick with only more enthusiasm. It isthe spirit countless thousands to be ready to lay down lifeitself in Avar against national foe. As long as this'disposition 'animates mankinl, it is not likely that mere

will prevent Avar. There are, on the other hand,,some reasons to claim that the very expensiveness of modern'armaments points inevitably to Avar instead of its proven-- ,

tion. Citing the cases of Great Britain and Germany for ex-

ample, does not the rivalry in fleet building point inevitablyto condition that Avill make Avar necessary? May not peace1actually become as a simple economic proposition, more ex-

pensive to the human race than war would be? In botli coun-tries there is disposition to increase expenditures on naviesto the last limit of what the taxpayers can bear.' S.eeing thatlimit being strained, will it not suggest itself statesmen ineither country that the only way out is to fight it out, put theIssue to the test, Avin or lose it all? Assuming, for example,that-- the British retain their intense devotion to the idea ofdominating the sens, Avill they Avait calmly Avhile Germany, ifable to do so. outdoes them in taxation and peacefully as-sumes control? TCoes not the very expensiveness of the pro-grammes being laid out threaten a crisis?

Local merchants ought to back up the postoffice, with fundsIf necessary, in inaugurating a system Avhereby the mails fromarriving steamers, from the coast at least, can be broughtashore more rapidly than they have been since Uncle Samknocked out the old system whereby pilot boats brought mailin. The expense of launches to meet the steamers outsidewould be small and often they would save one or two hours.

BACK UP THE SUB-SID- FIGHT.

Why doesn't Hawaii join forces Avith the vast American in-

terests, backed by President Taft himself and already havingabout half of Congress behind them as Avell, which are fighting for an American ship subsidy? A recent incident in thecampaign,- - Avhich may foreshadow an end of some of the Demo-cratic opposition Avhich has helped to kill all the subsidy bills,is an announcement by the Hearst papers of a campaignHearst proposes to make for the subsidy.

.MISSOURI POPULATING THE EARTn.

nt Roosevelt ought to settle in Missouri, Avhenlie gets back from Africa. There doesn't appear to be anyrace suicide there. The proportion local people Avho arefrom that State, as would appear from discussions of the Advertiser's last special cablegram, indicates that Missouri has

fair prospect of populating the universe.

If Walter Wellman Avauts to uet to the North Pole bv balloon, he had better run over and borroAV one of Zeppelin'smachines.

Taft is reported by some of the Washington correspondentsto be entering his first real scrap with Congress. He wants anational income tax law, and Senator Aldrich, boss of theupper nouse and leader m charge of the pending tariff bill,

' is unalterably opposed to an income tax law. It is not at allimpossible that before the extra session is over cartoonistsWill be picturing Taft without that smile.

kl)i HAWAIIAN MAlt, WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 1900.

CONSTANT IMSLABOR HAWAII

"The Jnpaneso residents of our conntry arc sore because the sugar plant-ers are trying to get a lot of Imm-igrants .from Porto Itlco and the Phi-lippines," said Mr. H. It Constant, ofHonolulu, at the Belevdere.

"Our planters hayo, long since beenweary of the Japanese, who do, notgive snUstnctlon as laborers, and wouldlike to Biipplant them with other work-ers of any nationality. We have triedpretty nearly all races to get efficientlabor. By far the best help is theChinese, but owing to the exclusionlaws of the United States, 'which oughtto be modified In favor of Hawaii,there Is no way to get these hard-working, well-behnv- Orientals whogive no trouble and keep faith withtheir employers. The Japanese wehave found to bo tricky and unre-- !liable, and even if they were desirable

jit is the present policy of their gov--:to class. a to allow to enn- -

a

aa

a

a

to

ofof

ofa

to

a

a

to

of

a

grate."Those now with us are Indignant

because the landowners are trying tosolve the labor question by bringing Inthe Porto Ricana and Filipinos. Myown belief is that these fresh recruits,if we get them, will be no great Im-

provement on the Japs. I believe they,are too' indolent to be effective on theplantations." Chronicle.

LATEST SHIPPING

.Victoria Arrived, May 4, S. S. Ma-ram- a,

hence April 28..Manila Arrived May 2, U. S. A. T.

Thomas, hence 'April 14.Yokohama Sailed, May 5, S. S. Nip-

pon Jtlaru, for Honolulu.San Francisco Sailed May 5, S. S.

Hilpnian, for Honolulu.San Francisco Sailed May 5 2 p. ni.

S. S. Mongolia, for Honolulu.

PHONE NO. 4.

LANGFURD

88 nt

TO

INSBOX

LONDON, April 20. Tho projectedfight between Jack Johnson, coloredheavyweight champion, and Sam .Liang-for- d

may possibly never be pulled oil,as Langford today articles for acontest before the National SportingClub on Derby pay with Ianwho last night wrested tho champion-ship of Great Britain from GunnerJim Molr. Hague, who knocked Molrout In the first round In the easiestfashion, Is a Yorkshire P.lt man. Hisprevious opponents have been localsmall fry, and the ease with whichhe finished Molr was a great surprise.'i;he National Sporting Club has ed

a purse of $7000 togetlier with aside bet of flOOp for the Langford-Hagu- c

fight.

THE KIND.

Her Easter gown It was a peach,Her hat It was another;The first it cost three thousand, andOne thousand cost t'other.

Her wrap It came from town,Her gloves from fair Parce;Her stockings of the falsest silkThat e'ver you did see.

Mercha Street.

signed

Hague,

USUAL,

London

Her shoes .they cost 'her twentyplunks, ' f

Her belt some forty more;Her Bidecombsthey did cost enoughTo start a peanut store.A golden bag upon her hip,A bracelet oneach wrist;Good lands! but she would sit in

churchAnd make 'alb others twist.She rose the Easter morn to greetShe saw a fall of mow:She heard theihail beat-o- the panesShe heard thdFrom morn II

ft Wild winds blow.noon frorn noon to

night,A steady pour It. fell;Snow, slush'' and rain without

break,And what folks said was ("Gee!").

xHsssm, wyxr?

I Rainier Beer II There is as much"! IH diffirence between 2y H

RAINIER and all AH other beers as be-- j; HH tweenood coffee mw HH this recognized ; Idifference that has H

made RAINIER theleadhg beer in H

HAGUE

W.C. Peacock &G(L Lid.WINE AND LIQUOR MERCHANTS. r

USHERS O. V. G. PABST WHITER ROCK.

.1

t

IIMIi fcW'll HWllillllll I I Ml JIMM W

to paint your house, be sure that the paint you...Ml l su l t . . .y uau win uu mc juu iui iiie iu.151 money, ana ai x

the same time give greatest satisfaction and longest wear

fj The Sherwik-Wilua- ms g

gives these results every time. Itfs a pure lead,zinc, and linseed oil paint. It's mixed thor

oughly and ground very fine by powerfulmachinery. It covers most surface togallon and wears for the longest time.

It's a paint you can depend onUse it and you'll be satisfied. '

COLOR CARDS FOR ALL KINDS OF GOOD PAINTING AT

55 A

&

THE KNOXFOR

js' the very highest class Millinery known.We are the Sole Agents of this World Renowned

Hat and have now on exhibit:moaeasBEaansamam

KnoxIf you would be

FORT

MoreCream !

King

Paint

DRESS

TAILOREDPANAMASAILOR

exclusive- - --Buy Knox.

HATSOLE AGENTS.

mm

1mi

E. O. Hall Son, Ltd.

LADIES

1 SEMI-DRE- SS

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DUNN'S SHOP

Hat

HARRISON- - BLOCK, STREET.

. ifcjrw m ill li it hi lruv. Iffy y.5 Vj T iTflKHWIWfyT

There's more cream on our milk

than you'll find on any other. It's the

richest and purest milk delivered in

Honolulu. us at 890.

The Pond Dairy

Imported Havana CigarsARRIVED.

Romeo & Julieta; Upmanns, La Esccpciona; Partagas; Castanpdas;Belindas; Punch; P Garcia; El Rey del Mundo.

Lewis & Co., Ltd.1C9 St.

Cigar Em porium.

The

Phone

9

JUST.

240.

Hinal Clearance!

OF ALL ODD LINES

REMNANTSEVERYTHING MUST GO

Telephone

1

i JORDAN'S U

1 FORT STREET

f J

WARDECLARED

against the mosquito.

We are supplying the ammuni-

tion in the form of

Insect PowderAT 35c A POUND.

LIMITED.

Established 1879.

sOoo t JsoGlasses

Unless you neethem and when yondo need them to sure they at youWo wijl give youa thorough examina-tion, and it yox doat ?need glasseswill toll you; if you do will bU youthe best

H.F. W1GHMAN CO,, LTD.

Optical Department.

i

DR. P. SCHURMANN- ' .Opticiai v

STEINWAYSTARR AND OTHBR:pIAN03.THAYER PIAN'o CO.

166 Hoterst., Opp. Younsr HoteLPhnnn 51 1 li

! TUNING GUARATttJBn

The only correct, complete and con-venient Shipping Paoer for the 'Hawaiian Islands.

GUIDE PUBLISHING CO'Alexander Young Building

Telephone 374.

All kinds WRAPPING PAPERS andTWINES, POINTING and WRITINGPAPERS.AMERICAN-HAWAIIA- PAPER A

8UPPLY CO., LTD.GEO. Q. GUILD. General Manager.

Fort and Queen Streets.Honolulu. PHONE 410

I IJstun

New shipment of patterns andstyles for 1909 Just received.

J. Hopp & Co. I185 King StreetT

Latest Paquin Models

FOR

The Swellest Gowns

avisonYOUNG BUILDING ROOM 72

! PRIMO I

JDJLfJiiXl) !

FOR OALC.

Solar Water Heaters. 30 to 120 cal- -lons. Galv. Iron Tanks anv size andweight, Shee Metal Work of all kindsmade to order on short notice, WaterPlpo and Fittings 1--4 to 2 in. in Blze.Plumbing and Pipe Fitting.

Job work given prompt attention.EMMELUTH & CO.. LTD.

Phono 211. 145 King St

Fine Job Printing, star Offlc.

4

1

ooooooocooooooocoooocoooooooooooooooooooooooboooooiaHAWAIIAN SOUVENIRS,

JEWELRY AND WATCHES

Special attention given to re-

pairing of all kinds.

UOOOOOOCOC$OOOCOOOOOOCOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOH

AMU3EMF:NT8.

THE

ARTThree changes

a week

WEDNESDAYand FBIDAY

MagjwAlbuiPn

DbiL't IoolYburWife'

Bkautiful Colored Film

Park TheaterFort Street and 3haplaln,'Lane f '

Open Air MovingPicture "ExhibitionSuperior machines.' ,

"Comfortable xhalrs, ;

Not an closed auditorium

ADMISSION 10 AND 15 CENTS." Chlldren( ,5,- - Cents.

ill fliHIThe New Open-A- ir Theater

Latest MovingPictures

CHANGES MONDAYSAND THURSDAYS

Two entrances Pauahi street, nearNuuanu; and Hotel street. .On site or

the merry-go-roun- d.

Orpheum TheatreTHE POPULAR FAVORITES !

To-nig- ht

Woman's SecretFriday and Saturday,

Special Bargain Matinee Saturday,

Children, under ten years, 10c; Aults25c; to all parts of the house.

Evening prices, 25c 50c, 75c.

Sent now on sale for all perform- -

ante?.

Your Plctur taken with greatest

care.

HONOLULU ART PHOTO GALLERY.Hotel near Nuuanu.

M. OHTACONTRACTOR & BUILDER

Estimates given on all kinds olwork.

636 South Hotel St , between Punch-bowl & Alapal.

Mrs. Llllnoo Kea, widow of John M.

Kea, the lato chief clerk of the Attorney General's department has peti-

tioned for the appointment of W O.

Smith as administrator of her hus

band's estate, valued at about $2500.

It. K. Bonino will take moving pic-

tures of scenes at the Hawaii YachtClub's season opening on Sunday.

H. CulmanFort and Hotel

REAL ESTATE.

OPEN LETTER,

TO the Public:Aro you an owner of real

estate do you want toKENT or BUY? We RENT

SELL, real estate o ev-

ery kind. You Bee we ac-

commodate you help youIn either case. We coverthe field thoroughly. Manykeep constantly In touch,with us. BARGAINS inoelllng aro not many, hutwe manage to find them.We can find them for YOU.

It's such a saving of your'

time to know that you cantrust us to find a house,office building buy or sell

and we havo been thepeoplei to do the hunting

' and worrying. We canSAVE you money , and

. BRING YOU MONEY.Our' business Is nothing

v.r i else hut buying and selling-- '! and renting FOR YOU

'' We have a service that;wlll .convince you if you .

will Just write us. But bestof all como and see us.We can SATISFY yourNEEDS. ' Simply tell uswhat they are.

Very truly yours,

REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE LTD.

82 King Street

FREEDuring the month of May,

1909, we will give away

Absolutely Free,

fl Two Burner

HOT PLATE

to all new consumers.Call at our office and get your

name on the list before the sup-

ply is .exhausted.First come; first served.Our salesmen will bo pleased

to demonstrate our stoves andappliances to any one interest-ed

;In same.

Honolulu Gas Co.,Limited

Younf Building, Honolulu.I 1

Fl ALARM BOXES

2. Corner King and Fort.13. Alakea and Beretania,14. Bethel and Merchant,15. Nuuanu and Queen.16. Nuuanu and King.17. Nuuanu and Hotel.18. Nuuanu and Beretania.21. Fort and Hotel.23. Alakea and Hotel.24. Alakea and Merchant.25. Punchbowl and Kins.2G. Punchbowl and Queen.

"27. South and Queen.28. Kawaiahao and Cooke.29. Queen and Kamanl.31. Fort and Queen.32. Fort and Allen.34. Allen nnd Alakea.35. Richards ana Queen.3C. King nnd Mililanl.37. Ala Moana and Punchbowl.41. King and River.42. Kckaullke and Hotel.43. Smith and rauahi.45. Beretania and .ltiver.46. King and Maunakea.

THfl HAWAIIAN STA.it, WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 1909.

WEEKLY WEATHER BULLETIN

FOll THE WEEK ENDED MAY 1, 1901).

Honolulu, Muy !5, 1909.G BNEll ALS.UMM All Y.

Kninless weather conditiohs obtained in the llaniakna and)ortions of the North Kohala

light rains in the Hilo district.Hawaii, and very

several islands are those provided by the late legislative Act.)The greatest amounts of rainfall were reported from the

voolaupoko district of OahiL and ranged from 2.75 to 3.39 inches. The amounts of rainfall, inches, the other districtswere: Koolauloa 1.01, Honolulu 0.32 to 1.18, and Ewa 0.11;Hawaii North Kohala 0.00 to 0.11, Hamakua 0.00, N. Hilo

14 to 0.57, B. Hilo 0.21 ,to 0.83,0.75, and S. Kona 2.02; Maui Hana 0.21 to 0.75, Malcawao

0.27 0.32, Wailuku 0.31 0.G7, and Lahnina 0.15; KauaiHanalei 1.2G, Kawaihau 0.82, Lihue 0.G0, Koloa 0.G3, and Wai- -

mea 0.5U; and Molokai MolokaiThe total amount rainfall

of ten or more years on windward Hawaii and leeward Oahu,and scattered sections of Maui. The departures from theaverage, in inches, in the several districts were: Hawaii N.Kohala 1.08 1.32, Hamakua 1.47, N. Hilo 2,52 to 2.53-- ,

S. Hilo 1.81 3.07, Tuna 0.78, Kau 0.1G to 0.15;Maui Makawao 1.23, Lahnina 0.08 and Wniluku 0.18;Oahu Koolauloa 0.52, Koolajipoko 1.91 to 2.28, Ilono- -

ulu 0.24 to 0.77, and Ewa0.07, find Wnimea 0.40.More rainfall than during the

at nil stations on Kauait Molokai and Maui; at all on Oahu,bxcepting the Ewa district, and at all in the Kau, Kona,and Puna districts Hawaii. The excesses did not exceed1.00 inch, excepting the Kona and portions of the Puna dis-

tricts Hawaii and the Koolaupoko district of Oahu, wherethey ranged from 1.3G to 2.94 inches.

The mean temperatures wereceding week on 'the leeward sidHamakua and S. Hilo districts of Hawaii, generally on Maui;elsewhere they were loewr; the greatest excess over Instweek's was 3.0 deg. and deficiency 2.1' dg.

The following table shows theture and rninfnll for the principal islands nnd for the group:

Hawaii '.

MauiOahu ',

KauaiMolokai .

Entire GroupAt the local office of the U. S.

partly cloudy to cloudy, muggy weather obtained, with themean relative humidity ranging high' 74 to 85 per cent daily,and 77.6 per cent for the week. Mensurnble rain fell on fourdates totaling .32 inch; .24 less than the normal, and .14 morethan during the preceding Aveek. "'The maximum temperaturewas 82 deg., minimum G7 iletr.,below normal and 0.5 deg. higher tinn last week's. Southerlywinds prevailed on the first three days, nnd northeasterly onthe remainmcr, with an average hourly velocity of 0.7 miles.The mean daily barometer ran ceil from 30.0,0 to 30,i4. inches,and the mean for the week, 30700, was 0.04 inch' nbnvif normal.

47. Railroad Wharf.48. Iwllel Road opp. Fertz. Works.49. Cannery off Iwllel Road.51. Iwilei Rorfd Opp. Oahu Jail. .

52. King and Beretania.53. King and Liliha.54. King and Ddwsetf Lane.5G. Insano Asylum Road nr. School.57. King und Waipllopllo Road.58. King and Kallhi Road.59. Gullck Ave. and Beckley St.CI. Vineyard and River.62. Vineyard and Nuuanu.63. Vineyard and Fort.64. Vineyard and Punchbowl.65. Beretania and Punchbowl.67. Alapal and Beretania.71. Liliha and Vineyard.72. Liliha and School.73. Liliha and Judd.74. Liliha and Wyllle.-Nuuan- u

75. and Judd.76. Nuuanu and PauojrRpad.78. Nuuanu and School.81. Alapal and King.82. Victoria and King.83. Kaplolanl and Beretania.84. Kaplolanl and Green.85. Pensacola and Lunalilo.80. Pensacola and Beretania.87. Plikol and Kins.91. Thurston Ave. opp Magazine St92. Pensacola and Wilder Ave.93. Lunalilo Opp. Kewalo St94. Keeaumoku and Wilder Ave.95. Kewalo and Heulu.96. Makikl and Domlnls.97. College and Domlnls.

123. Makikl and Lunalilo.124. Keeaumoku and Klnau.125. Keeaumoku and King.126. Punahou Opp. Bingham.127. Alexander and Beretania..128. King and McCully.129. King and Punahou.132. Kalakaua Ave. Opp. Sunny South134. Kalakaua Ave. and Kalla Road.135. Kalla Road and Lowers Road.136. Kalakaua Ave; Moana Hotel.142. Wilder Ave. and Alexander 'St152. Luso and Llshman St.153. Emma and School.154. Fort and School.156. Luso t. near Pauoa Road.162. King and Kamehameha IV Bd.163. Middle and Rose.

WHAT'S THE USE?Some peoplo mull around the house

all day Sunday without thinking ofthe grandeur outside. They are theonos who do not know of the pleasurescontained in a trip to Haleiwa. Thoyknow nothing of tho beauties of a ridoover tho Oahu Railway along the surf-beat- en

shores In tho shadows of thohills that skirt the coast. Tho costof tho trip Is so much less than thevalue of tho satisfaction that it is notworth considering.

Fine Job Printing, Star once.

districts of

in in

toto to

of

hi

toto

inofin

of

(The districts given for the

Puna 0.05 to 1.72, Kau 0.G8

0.20 to 0.3G.was below the weekly average

0.10; and Kauai Tlanalei

preceding Aveek was reportedof

higher than those of the preof Oahu, in the N. Kohala,

weekly averages of tempera to

(Temperature. Rainfall.77.7 deg. 0.52 inch.72.8 deg. 0.40 inch.,73.0 deg. 1.4G inches.

'. 71.2 deg. 0.77 inch.74.2 deg. 0.2S inch.

72.2 deg. 0. GO inch.Weather Bureau in Honolulu

and mean 73.G deg.. .01 deg.

EXCURSION

U RA

CANADIAN - AUSTRALIAN STEAM-

ER WILL TAKE PASSENGERS

FROM VICTORIA TO SEATTLE.

On her present voyage from theColonies to Victoria the steamshipMakura will play for a record notmerely for the sake of a record, however, but to reach the northern portearlier than scheduled, to accommo-date the promoters of a huge excur-sion scheme. Upon arriving at Victo-ria and Vancouver tho Makura willpick up big crowds of travellers Tor

tho Yukon exposition and take themto Seattle, returning to tho northerncities with full loads of returning tra-vellers. She will, be engaged fourdays In the work. On account of thospecial detail she will bo expected toarrive hero Sunday night of. May 23

in place of the dale originally set.

S'MOTHElt THING.here, Brown," ho said as they

stood on the corner waiting for a car,

"do you remember one aay aoout uiofirst of last November when we werewonderlnir what "the winter wouldteT'

"Perfectly, Mr. Green perfectly."You made some predictions." v

"Perhaps I did.""You predicted more snow, moro

blizzards and colder weather than wohad had for the la3t twenty years."

"I did, eh?""You did. You even went so far as

to say that thousands of people wouldbo frozen to death and that even therich would suffer from tho cold."

"Wcll7""Well, It has been one of tho mild-

est winters for years. We have hadvery little snow and only two or threeblizzards.''

"Well?""Well, what have you got to say for

yourself?"'Simply this; Mr. Croon. My name

Is Brown, It' was Smith who wasaround predicting about tho winternnd you've got us mixed up."

"Can It bo possible?""It Is, sir, I never predict about a

Winter. My great specialty is predict-ing about the summer, and I want totell you here and now, sir, that thocoming summer will bo the driestever known. Also tho hottest. Thou-sands of people will roast to death,and there will bo thousands of firesfrom spontaneous combustion. The

FLED BUB!

10 THE HQGS

AWFUL CRIME COMMITTED BY

LITTLE NEGRO BOY AS RESULT

OF WHIPPING.

NEW ORLEANS. April 20, Because

his stepmother had left him at homeat Opelonusas, In .charge of his youngstep-brothe- rs and sisters, for the day,

Tom Godfrey, a negro boy,

fed the youngest of In fa cnarges to thehogs and later with an ax Indictedwhat probably will , prove fatalwdurids on ithe'licndsiOf. the other chil-li feu.

Three children were (Injured. Tomwas placed in jail at Opelonusas. Thobaby's hands and feet had been eatenoff by the hogs when found, but It wasstill alive. Tho stepmother straight-way whipped Tom, and when she wentfor a doctor to attend the baby Tomseized an ax and attacked his

stepbrother, inflicting several deepwounds. His young stepsister Inter-fered nnd ho crushed her skull withtho ax. Tho girl Ms dying and theother two children have little chance

ltcovery.

LONDON, April 20. "If the conn-Cr- y

tknew the (truth begarding thopresent condition of the navy therewould be a panic," is tho striking sen-tence in a letter from Admiral LordCharles Beresford read at a meeting ofthe Navy League held at Bournemouthlast night.

To this Lord Charles added:"I wish you every luck in tryingrouse tho people to the grave danger

arising from our unpreparcdness forwar."

crops will wither, tho lakes dry up,and tomatoes and cucumbers will boselling for a dollar apiece. Take itfrom me, sir take it from me, andgood morning, sir."

PROMOTION WORK

MAY BE STOPPED

With the notified stoppage of sub-

sidy from the merchants of Honolulu,and the Legislature's failure to re-

deem campaign promises of support,the Hawaii Promotion Committee isconfronted with' tho mtenrice of beingstranded. There has been a littlesounding of Supervisors on tho outsldounon tho proposition of making theinstitution a child of the municipality

Present Indications aro however,that the load of transferred and newsalaries, raises of salaries and trans-ferred services placed upon the Cityand County of Honolulu by tho Legislature will fully meet if not overlaptho Increase of revenues provided. Alegal question Is also involved as towhether promotion work can be conIsidcred a municipal serfvice, !partfrom its recognized benefit to tho Ter-

ritory as a whole making it a Terri-torial matter.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFirst Circuit Territory of Hawaii,in Probate At Chambers.

In the Matter of the Estate of Charles1L Blsnop, deceased.Before JUdgo W. J. Robinson.Order of Notice of Petition for Al

lowance of final accounts and Dis-

charge in tills Kstate.On reading and Filing the Petition

and accounts of E. Faxon Bishop, Ad-

ministrator with the Will annexed ofCharles H. Bishop, deceased whereinhe asks to be allowed $357.70, and hocharges himself with $7,728.27, andasks that the same may be examinedand approved, and that a final ordermay be mado of Distribution of thoproperty remaining in his hands tothe persons thereto entitled, and dis-

charging him and his sureties from allfurther responsibility as such Administrator:

It is Ordered, that Tuesday, the 1stday of June, A. D. 1909, at 10 o'clocka. m before tho Judge of said Courtat the Court Room of tho said Courtat Honolulu, Island of Oahu, bo andthe samo hereby Is appointed as thetime and place for hearing said Petition and Accounts, and that all per-

sons Interested may then and thereappear and show cause, If any thoyhave, why the same should not bogranted, and may present evidence asto who aro ontltled to the said property. And that notice of this Order,in tho English language, bo publishedIn tho Hawaiian Star, a newspaperprinted and published In Honolulu,once a week for threo succosslvo weekstho last publication to bo not loss thnutwo weeks previous to tho time therein appointed for said hearing.

Dated at Honolulu, ths 23rd day ofApril, 1909.

(Sgd) W. J. ROHINSON.Third Judge of the Circuit Court of

tho First Circuit.Attest:

(SEAL)(Sgd.) M. T. SIMONTON,

Clerk of the Circuit Court of the FirstCircuit.

4ts April 24, May 1, 8, and 15,

tl'IIE VALUE OF PROPRIETARYMEDICINES

Is proven by tho very large percentageof physicians' prescrlirtlons for theMime remedies found in every drugstore In America, but as they arewritten I" Lathi, few patients realizetlis fact.

Tho old standard proprietary medi-cines llko Lydla E. Pinkham s Vege-table Compound, that have stood thetest of time, deserve a placo In everyfamily medicine chest, and it Is mostcertain they would uot bo prescribedby physicians if they were able to de-vise a formula equally as efficacious.

fine Job Printing, Star Offlca.

New AdvertisementsANNUAL MEETING OF STOCK-

HOLDERS.

The annual meeting of Stockholdersof E. O. Hall & Son, Limited, will boheld at. the office of the corporation.corporation, Fort and King streets,ton and King streets. Honolulu, onThursday, ,May 13th, 1909 at 9 o'clock.

Election of officers to servo for theensuing year will be held at that time

E. II. PARIS,Secretary, E. O. Hall & Son, Ltd.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFirst Judicial Circuit of the Ter-

ritory of Hawaii At Chambers.Arthur P. Warden v. Nina P. War- -

dell.Notice in action for Divorce.

Tho Territory of Hawaii; to Nina P.Wardell, defendant in the above entitled action, whose address Is unknown:

You are hereby notified that theabove entitled action, wherein thoplaintiff is suing you for an absolutedivorce, on the ground of adultery, Ispending In the above entitled court,and that the same may be heard, onmotion of tho plaintiff, not less thanthirty days after the last publicationof this notice. This notice Is firstpublished on the 5th day of May, A.D. 1909, and tho last publication there-of will 'be made on the 22ud day ofMay, A. D. 1909.

Witness tho Honorable W. J. Robinson, Third Judge of the Circuit Courtof tho First Circuit, at Honolulu,, this4th day of May, A. D. 1909.

Attest, with tho seal of said court,(SEAL)

,M. T. SIMONTON,Clerk.

A. S. Humphreys attorney for plaintiff.

Sts May 5, S, 12, 15, 19, 22.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFirst Circuit Territory of Hawaii.In Probate At Chambers.

In tho Matter of the Estate of Gull-her-

Botolbo, deceased.Before Judge W. J. Robinson,Order of Notice of Petition for Al-

lowance of Final Accounts aud Dis-

charge In this estate.On Reading and Filing the Petition

and accounts of Joao Lulz d'Agular,Administrator of the estate of Gull-hor-

Botelho, deceased, wherein beasks to bo allowed $90.30 and hecharges himself with $199.06, and asksthat tho same may bo examined andapproved, and that a final order maybo inado of Distribution of the property remaining In his hands to thepersons thereto entitled, and discharg-ing him and his sureties from, nil fur-

ther responsibility as such administrator.

It is Ordered, that Friday, the 21stday of May A. D. 1909, at 10 o'clock a.m before tlio Judge of said Court atthe Court room of the said Court atHonolulu, Island of Oahu, bo aud thesame hereby Is appointed as tho timeand placo for hearing said Petition andAccounts, and that all persons Interested may then and there nrpear andshow cnuso. If any they havo, why thesamo should not bo granted, and maypresent evidence as to who are entitledto tho said property. fnd that no- -

tlco of this Order In the English lan--jgunge, be published In tho HawaiianStar a newspaper printed and publishedIn Honolulu, once a week for threesuccessive weeks, tho last publicationto bo not less than two weeks previousto tho time therein appointed for saidhearing.

Dated at Honolulu, this 14th day ofApril 1909.

W. J. ROBINSON.Third Judge of tho Circuit Court of the

First Circuit.Attest:

M. T. SIMONTON,Clerk of the Circuit Court of tho First

Circuit.4ts April 14. 21, 28. May 5. .

BY AUTHORITYTho Board of License Commissioners

for tho County of Oahu will hold ameeting at tho Executive Building onWednesday, Juno 2, 1909, at 1 p. m., toconsider the application of T. SUMIOA for a transfer of his Wholesalelconso to sel llntoxicatlng liquors from

his present placo on Maunakea street,to tho cornor of Pauahi and Mnunakonstreets, Honolulu, under the provisionsof Act 119, Session Laws of 1907.

All protests or objections against theissuanco of a liconso undor Kaldappltcation should bo filed with theTSecretary of tho Board not later than thetlnio set for said hearing.

CARLOS A. LONG,Temporary Secretary, Board of LIcenbo

Commissioners.4ts May 4, 11 18, 25, 1909,

0S!

iKtuuMzAiem

Honolulu, Hawy

FOR SALE!

NEW BUNGALOW

Manon Valley

Two Bedrooms. Prlco $3,700New Five Room Cottage with

cne acre of land, bordering onKtilihi stream. Price. $1500.

FOR RENT

Furnished Cottage WaiklkiBeach.

furnished Cottage Peninsula.

,'fAnn Trust"

Corner of Fort and Merchant Sts.

lOOOMiles of Sea-bridg- by ona

WirelessClassified AdvertisingPIANO-TUNIN-G AND REPAIRING.

Jame3SnerJdanr tuner anafYepalr-In- g

of pianos and organs. No. 16s.Hotel street, orders left at HawaiianNews Co., Young building. Goodpianos to rent or sell at cheapest rates.

WASTED 10 BUY

Old books, magazines, Hawaiianstamps and curios. Books exchanged.Weedon Curio Bazaar, Masonic Tem-ple, Alakea street.

FOR RENT.First class lurnished roomn onntrml.

ly located. Hot and cold bathe, Allngton Hotel, 215 Hotel St

Notice to ShipperS. S. ALAMEDA.

Shippers receiving or ordering over-land shipments aro hereby informedthat the S, S. Alameda will receiveand deliver cargo at the CHINA BA-SIN, San Francisco, (Overland RailwayTerminal) without expense of cart-age.

W.M. O. IRWIN & CO.. LTD.,General Agents, Oceanic S. S. Co.

The Board of License Commissionersfor tho County of Oahu will hold 4meeting ut Hie Executive Building onWednesday, June 2, A. D. 1909, at 4 p.in. to consider the application of JamesE. Thompson for a transfer of hisSecond Class Saloon license to sell in-toxicating liquors from Alakea' St.'Kentucky Saloon,'' to tho premisesknown ns tho Emplro Building Co.,Ltd., near the corner of Hotel andBethel streets, Honolulu, under thoprovisions of Act 119, Session Laws of1907.

All protests or objections against thoissuance of n license under said appli-cation should be filed with tho Secrd- -tary of the Board, not later than thotime set for said hearing.

CARLOS A. LONG, -

Secretary Pro Tern Board of LlconseCommissioners.

4ts May 4, 11. 18, 25, 1909;

Honolulu, T. H., April 16, 1909.

RESOLUTION.BE IT RESOLVED BY the Board of

Supervisors of the City and County ofHonolulu, Territory of Hawaii, thatwo herewith appropriate from GonoralFund the sum of $150.00 for tho payment of Material nnd Supply DemandsNo. 610, ombraclng 1 claim for thomonth of April, 1909, for. accountknown as Treasurer's Adding Machine,which, having been examined andfound correct, is herewith nllowed andordered paid and tho Auditor Is here-by authorized and directed to issunwarrants on tho Treasurer pnyablo topersons or linns as per Hat heroic at-

tached.Introduced by William Ahlo.Approved May 1, 1909.

JOSEPH J. FERN,Mayor.

lOts-M- ay 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12.

BIX THE HAWAIIAN STAR, WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 1909.

"For over CO years I havo always keptAyer's Cherry Pectoral In tho house. My son that it will tako tho bases and

father of ton told mo that it Barod my llfo running lines away from the holesthat havo formed thero .from longwhen I was very young." usage. This new arrangement will be :h1

In thousands al) ready for tho big games on Sun-day.of homes Ayor's

Cherry Tectoral13 a household

word. JIt has rboonu s o d

firstby thogrand

parents, then by the parents, andnow by tho children. For coldsand coughs, croup, bronchitis, lagrippe, inflammation in tho throator in the bronchial tubes,

lifer's"Ghemi Sectoralis tho standard remedy tho worldover. It contains no narcotic orpoison. Accept no substitute.

Put up in large and small bottlesPrepared by Dr. ). C. Aytr It Co.. lottell. Mm., U.S..

need not bo elaborately or ex-

pensively furnished. It doesn'tcost any more to havo handsomeand artistic things, if only youknow how to get them.

In our splendid new stock ofCHINESE AND JAPANESE

Mattingsyou will find just what you wantto give tho best effect in roomor hall. See them today.

LEWERS I COOKE

JCvlrarxitocl177 S. King St. Phono 775.

OHHOUKS

To ChicagoFrom San Francisco, Tho

Fastest transcontinental train.

OVERLAND.

LIMITEDw -- a

Electric Lighted, Buffet," Li-brary and Drawing Room com-partment, 'observation car, withdiner. Telegraphic news post-ed on train.

Southern Pacific

Mil ARRIVALS III SILK GOOD

For years our line of Silk goods hasbeen tho best in town and our lastshipment proved no exception.

Iwakami & Co., - - Hotel St,

AUTOMOBILES FOR HIRE

Wilson & Morphy

Garago opp. San Francisco Theatre,

Phono Temporary 408.

Bet. Bethel and Nuuanu off Hotel St.

HEADACHEFrequent, or periodical headaches,

weaken tho brain, and very often ex-tinguish tho light of reason. Dr. Miles'Anti-Pai- n Pills will cure headachoquickly, by soothing tho irritated norv-o- s

of the brain. Thoy also preventpain if taken when first symptoms ofheadacho appear. 25 dosos, 25c. Ney.or sold In bulk.

In the Dunning series two goodgames of baseball were played at FortShafVr yesterday afternoon. Tho Eteam appeared tn both of them, takinga fall out of both Company O and F.Company F was beaten by a score ot11 to 5 but when it came to the con-test with G the thing was different,that team winning by a score of 9 to7.

Tho games in the Dunning series areof particular Interest at this time, forfrom tho teams taking part must comethe nine men to achieve honors forFort Shatter in the military league.There are unquestionably very strongPlayers in all four ot the Dunningteams, and if a powerful nine cannotbe picked out of the bunch there mustbe something radically wrong in themanner of selecting tho players.

The Fort Shatters will meet the Na-tional Guard team at Aala Park nextSunday afternoon, and It is hoped thatthe former will be in better shape thanon previous occasions....

urn TO

HELPJfllLITARY

Unusual as it may at first appear,the Military Leabue baseball game atAala park next Sunday afternoon willbe played under the wing of the iKala-nianao- le

League. In fact, the Na-

tional Guard and Fort Shatter teams'will practically be the guests of theKalanianaoles on that occasion, forthe latter will furnish the grounds, tleballs, the umpire and the scorer forthe game of the day. The reason forthis is that the military league hasno fund while the Kalanianaole havean income fro rathe rent of chairs atAula park.

Eddie Fernandez will umpire bothgames on Sunday and W. Tin Chongwill be the official scorer. ,

PflOCHESuOF THE

TENNIS

Three matches In the tennis contestfor the Wall cup were finished yes-terday and one left with a set to payoff later on. The games began on theBeretania tennis courts at 1 o'clockand resulted as follows::

A. J. Lowrey beat C. It. FYazier. 1,

1; A. R. Cunha beat I. Hurd, 5, 3;

W. L. Warren beat J. J. Page. 6-- 1, 1,

and Gray and Macconel quit on ac-

count of darkness, after Macconel hadwon tho first set, 7, and Gray thesecond, 2.

The names tnrinv will hn- - At 4r:!(1

C. G. Backus vw. Captain Low; at 5

m., it. B. Booth vs. L. J Warren,and the last set of tho Gray-Alaccon- el

match.

WARE'S

I FUTUR

MATCHES

E ROWNG

There is no greater authority onrowing than Dr. Warre, the late head-master of Eton, who was himself anOxford Blue in his day. Accordingto the Isis lie recently delivered a lec-

ture at the University boat house onsliding seat trowing, at which thisear's crew and a great number of past

and present Oxford rowing men werpresent. Dr. Warre, of course, learn-ed his rowing in the days of fixed seats

he out fre-'- lt

inthe the necessity of learn

ing to row on fixed seats. Nowadaysthere is too great a tendency to putmen on to sliding seats before theyhavo learned even tho rudiments ofthe art, and consequently much harmIs done to them. Rowing on slidingseats Is the continuation of rowing onfixed seats; one leads on theother; and a man has nothing to un-

learn when ho changes from tosliding seats. The function of theslide is to help the to carryout all the fundamental principleswhich he has learned In fixed seatrowing. Tho one is only an extensionof tho other, and every man shouldlearn to row thoroughly on fixed seats,so that when ho moves to aseat he be able to understand why

Is that ho gets aa increased reachand improved legwork. The averageoarsman is far more likely to managehis slide properly if ho has learned touse all his powers in a fixed seat, anaX)r. Warre did good service to "Oxfordrowing by emphasizing the

A party of yachtsmen sailed to PearlHarbor today to make certain arrangements for tho coming yacht cruise.

WHAT SPORT COST

ENGLAND YEARLY

SIX DOLLARS FOR EVERY'

.WOMAN AND CHILD SPENT

EACH TWELVE MONTHS.

England, according to an Americanwriter in Scribncr's Magazine, is n nation of sportsmen. "Sport here,' hosays, "is not a dissipation for idlers;it Is a philosophy of life," and he goeson to state that "though England maybe fighting somewhere in her vast dominions, she is also playing somewhereall the same."

Writing of the relative importanceof snort, the writer states: "The firstthing to attract my attention on thismy latest visit to England, was theannouncement on all the newspaperbulletins: 'England's Big Task.happened to know that the Prime Mlnister was seriously ill, that there wasfierce debating in the House of Com

nions upon the new estimates .tor theNavy, and upon the new LicensingBill Just brought in by Mr. Asquithand that there was fighting upon thefrontier of India with a certain tribeof natives.

"But England's big task had nothingto do with these trivial matters. AnEnglish cricket eleven was playing inAustralia. The Australian eleven intheir second inning had made an unexpectedly big score, and England'sbig task was to beat that score!"

The following table estimating thecost of sport is interesting:

SpentInvested.

Fox-hunti- . . 15,607,000

Shooting 4,067,000

FishingRacing 8,320,000

Yachting 5,600,000

Coursing 520,000

Coaching 290,250

Polo 87,000

Golf 525,000

RowingFootball and

589,000

317,410237,705110,100725,b50574,300

Cricket 10,708,000 11,712,000

There are some 750 golf links inGreat Britain.

"We may Include,'' says the writer,"that some 46,616,250 ispermanently and 44,775,545 Is spentannually on sport,

"There is, in short, an Investmentin sport of about 25s. for each man,woman, and child in tho United King,dom, and a smaller sum spenteach year for sport."

KEWALO

550,000

284,000

annually8,638,0008,128,000

10,503,0003,032,00

invested

slightly

TO

REGEIILTHE CUP

The presentation of tfie Fern prizecup to the champion Kewalo baseballteam will be quite an event at Aalapark next Sunday afternoon. MayorFern will do the honors. All themembers of the Kewalo team will bepresent to receive the cup. The pre-

sentation will take place at 1:30o'clock, rfiernoon.

HAwAIAN

TAKESJHEIt begins to look as though there

4 way be a booksellers baseball leagueere long. The appearance of the WallNichols in tho field has had ttieeffect of bringing out other stationerswho think thoy can play tho gamo.This morning the Hawaiian NewsCompany's employes filed a challengefor a best two in threo go with the

t Willi Mlnllrilo PnmtinMt, nltnmnlnun nr,ftand pointed what wo have '

,B necdlesa to that the ,quenuy uis.sieu upon tnese columns be accepted llistanter. Tho Hawaiiansays Globe,

from

fixed

oarsman

on slidingwill

it

point.

MAN,

team

News Company has a lot of likelyPlayers in its bunch, including one bigleaguer, and will likely bo heard fromafter the proposed start is made.

CHANGES

PARK

TEAM

NEWS

FIELD

AALA

DIAMOND

Several Important changes havo beenmade In the arrangements at Aalapark, ail in tho way of improvements.

months ago, has been taken In to thewall of Nuuanu stream, skirting thenark. Thero it trill rnnsnl

M, De Ponte, one of tho best pitchersof the Atkinson League, who has justfinished pitching the winning seriesfor tho Kewalos, was signed on lastnight by the Aala Athletic Club andwill toss the ball the remainder of tUeseason for that team. So succcssfuhas De Ponte been in tho past fewmonths that the Aalas regard theircapture as highly important to theirInterests. The new pitcher will entertho box on Sunday next In the gamewith the C. A. C.'s.

At the meeting of the Diamond HeadAthletic Club, held in the Odd Fellow'sbuilding last evening, it was decidedto have a big Invitational ball at theYoung Hotel in June, the entertainment being in the way ot a fourth an'niversary ' celebration. Edwin Fernandez, Ed. Towse and J. K. Clarkwere appointed a committee to makearrangements.

At the meeting last night it was

announced that L. Petrles, presidentof the club, would leave the last ofthis month for a tour of four monthsIn the east. Club matters in hishands will be referred to appropriatecommittees.

TORIFT

There will be a meeting of the Ka- -

piolani League at 7:30 tonight at theresidence of John F. Sylva.

The committee finds itself prettywell Ibooked up .for the yacht cruise toPearl Harbor on May 9, but as It willbe possible to ring in other accommodations, the crowd will be taken careof in good shape.

-- -

Paul Super, secretary of the Y. M.C. A. announces that tennis courts willbo laid on the roof of the new Y. M.C. A. building. This Is a. commonthing in the .east, but something quitenew here.

At 3:30 this afternoon the HighSchool and Punahou teams will crossbats on the diamond at Alexander field.Tho latter has been considerablystrengthened since the last game anasome good playing may be looked for,

This afternoon at 3 o'clock the FifthCavalry and Marines will cross bats atAala park. The horsemen came infrom Lcilchua this morning and havehigh hopes of walking away with thosea soldiers. On the other hand, theMarines are in fine practice and maybe expected to make the fur fiy.

A. K. Vierra has replied to a letterof Alexander Campbell, Camp Very, inegard to a sports program on July

Fourth. Inasmuch as the ball parkwill be used for a game by two teamsof the big league on that day, thoscheme proposed by tho marines isregarded as impracticable. SenatorCharles F. Chilinsworth, whose advicein tho matter had been sought, agreedwith this view.

NOT A SUCCESS.

The pther day I met a farmer whomI had encountered, two years before,and who ,to!d me that he was pre pre-

paring to take in, summer boardersand would have an attraction- - overother farmers for miles around. I triedto find out what it was, but ho wasmum. Recalling tho incident at thismeeting, I asked how his attractionhad worked.

"Say, I was a blamed- - tool!" heblurted out in reply.

"Tho thing didn't take, then?""Take! Why, man it emptied my

house as fast as I could fill it! Therewasn't a guest remained more thantwo nights."

'But what was the trouble?""Why, I dammed up a creek and

made a frogpond ot it, and I went totho trouble of catching a hundredfrogs and putting thorn in.

"But what for?""So that the frogs would slug my

First, the score board, which was put boarders to sleep nights. I thought Itup on the Winston building some four vas 1,10 cinest aurneu tncic in tho

lin

business.""And tho frogs didn't sing?""Sing? They sung to beat the band.

to eveiybody, while in its former posl-?'ov- orheard 8Uh Bl"Blng in all my

tlon on tho Winston vlock it could dayis Yo" could hear 11 a lnll-see-

llow thoso fross did tune 'erby no one. 1. us 'now position I

the board will also mark tho line be-- ! P,;, . ,tween tho foul and in fields. '

askedAnothor change is that the whole , m'hn unni.Aare ,i- - xt , , ,

left, changing altogether the batting',,,, nnr fm. ,,,,.and fielding directions. This will be! t' , tan enormous improvement for the rea- - FInB Jnh ..,,,

, . .mil w m miiiw

I

c

The Farmer All that goes up must come down especially tho airship.

fu KL jti tj. ii t.

W7i

mm m

1

THfcLWORST OF--

A Friend to knead,That's a friend indeed,

CentennialsEST Flour

is superior to all others

HENRY MAY & CO.. LTD.Phone 22

GET

Distributors

jVEN the air is filtered that coolsPRIMO BEER. The boilingextract of the malt and hops ispumped through coils containing

filtered air, and cooled without anypossible chance of its being touched bybacteria, n .. .. .. . ..

This cooling apparatus is the sameas that used in the big breweries on themainland, and is the most approvedmethods.

PRIMO is brewed espepially to suitthe climate and contains no preserva-tives what-so-eve- r.

If you want GOOD beer, PURE.beer, WHOLESOME beer, drink

The Beer that's Brewed to Suit the Climate.

p

when acquired suddenly, aromore often a curse than a bless-ing.

The man who really gets thomost out of them is tho ono whobuilds up a fortune ironi a smallbeginning, by industry, saving,and investing judiciously.

We pay 4 2 per cent interestoi saving deposits.

If III V HAWAII. LTD

Fort and Merchant Streets

Capital and Surplus, Jl.000,000.

Claus Spreckels. Win. O. Irwin

U IB 1 CO.,

BANKERSHONOLULU ::::::- - T. H.

San Francisco Agents The NevadaNational Bank of San Francisco.

DRAW EXCHANGE ONSAN FRANCISCO The Nevada Na-

tional Bank of San Francisco.LONDON Union of London & Smith's

Bank, Ltd.NEW YORK American Exchange Na-

tional Bank.CHICAGO Corn Exchange National

Bank. v

PARIS Credit Lyonnals.BERLIN Dresdner Bank.HONGKONG AND YOKOHAMA The

Hongkong and Shanghai BankingCorporation.

NEW ZEALAND AND AUSTRALIABank of New Zealand, and Bank ofAustralasia.

VICTORIA AND VANCOUVER Bankof British North America.

TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKINGAND EXCHANGE BUSINESS.

Deposlte Received, Loans Made onApproved Security, Commercial andTravellers' Credits Issued. Bills of Ex-change Bought and Sold.

COLLECTING PROMPTLY AC-

COUNTED FOR.

tbe YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK

LIMITED.Capital (Paid up) Yen 24,000.000Reserve Fund Yen 15,940,000

HEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.Tho bank buys and receives Tor

collection bills of exchange, issuesDrafts and Letters of Credit, andtransacts a general banking business.

The Bank receives Local depositsand Head Office Deposits for fixed pe-

riods.. Local Deposits $25 and upwards forone year at rate of 4 per annum.

Hea dOfflce Deposits Yen 25. and up-

wards for one-ha- lf year, one year, twoyears or three years at rate ot 5 1-- 2

per annum.Particulars to be obtained on appli-

cation.Honolulu Office 67 S. King SstreetP. O. Box 168.

M. TOKIEDA, Manager.

ESTABLISHED IN 1830.

BISHOP & CO,

BANKERS

Commercial and Travellers'Letters of Credit issued on theBank of California and Tho Lon-

don Joint Stock Bank, Limited,London.

Correspondents for the Amer-ican Express Company, andThos. Cook & Son.

Interest alowed on term andSavings Bank Deposits.

1 fill KifiK BO LID

CHINESE NEWSPAPER

PUBLISHING AND

JOB PRINTING.

No. 49 Cor. of Smith and Hotel Sts,

4 SUITS FOR $1 50.

We will clean and press 4 suite amonth for $1.50 It you Join our clothescleaning club. Good work guaranteed.

JOIN NOW.TELEPHONE 490.

, Tho Ohio Clothes Gleaning Co.Harrison Block, Beretanla nr Fort

Smallpox Breaks Out and FeverThreatened In Ravaged Dis-

tricts of Turkey.

STItlKB OF PRODIGIOUS SIZIS.

Wellman ta Make Attempt to ReachThe North Pole

in July.

WASHINGTON, May B. MinisterLeishman cables that smallpox hasbroken out in the ravaged districtsof Turkey and that an eptdemlcNnfever, due to the masses of unburueddead, is feared. The Minister appealsfor the assistance of the Red Cross.

PRODIGIOUS STRIKE.BUENOS AYRES, May 5. Two hun-

dred thousand men are out on a stvike.Six hundred arrests have been made.

PARIS, May G. Postal and othergovernment employes threaten to re-

new their great strike. The gvefu-me- nt

Is taking drastic measure? toprevent.

WELLMAN TO TRY IN JULY.WASHINGTON May 5 Walter Well- -

man announces ttint he will renew hisefforts to reach tho Pole by balloon inJuly.

HAINS' MOTHER COLLAPSES.FLUSHING. May 5. Captain Halns'

mother testified in the murder case

yesterday and collapsed on the stand.

BAND CONCERT

There will be a public moonlightband concert this evening (it 7:30 atAala Park.

PART I.

March El Capitan SousaOverture Light Cavalry buppoWaltz May I Have the Pleasure...

LiUlKO

Selection Harry Landers- - bong..tiume

PART II.Vocal Hawaiian Songs.. ar. by BergcrSelection Jolly Jingles Neatintermezzo Lontalne UllletMarch Hllo U3rgr

Star Spangled Banner.

JOHNNY ON THE GROUND-HO-

"Mv dear and loving teacher hasasked me to write a composition outhe ground-ho- g, and I will, therefore,say that he is something fierce. Ho

has a burrow In tho earth, and mostof .the time ho sits in it and plansand conspires against human life.

When he does go out it Is to roamaround with his eyes blazing tire andhis teeth gnashing, and If he comesacross a farmer's hired man in thebarnyard then woe to that man. Thereis a terrible growl, a scream of terror, ana a aeau oay is uuruu uuun.

to the burrow to be devoured at leis-

ure."As to how long a ground-ho- g lives

no on0 knows, but they have beenfound dead with 21 rings around thetall each ring representing at leasta year. From his birth to his deathhe Is man's implacable enemy andthirsts for human blood.

"When winter fairly sets in theground-ho- g ceases to roam over thecountry, chanklng his teeth and pulling down victims, mid enters his bur-

row for a long sleep. He has awfuldreams as he sleeps, and some folksthink this is the cause of earthquakes.If once you hear him growl in hissleep you will have goose-IIes- h for-

ever after."On the second daj' of April the

ground-ho- g turns over on his backand wakes up and gives a yel. Thenhe slowly crawls out to see now moPanama Canal Is coming ou. If It isa bright day, he sees his shadow, andit is so mean looking that ho tum-

bles backwards into his burrow anddon't come out again for six weeks.If it is cloudy no shadow appears, andho sets off over the country to inform fanners, schoolma'ams and oth-er interested parties that onions aroup, the roses blooming, and that it Istlmo for them to come" forward andhave their bones picked."

'i

A WOMEN'S MOVEMENT.

A special call is issued to everywoman convicted in any way with Central Union church or its. work to bepresent In the Parish House tomorrow(Thursday) morning at 10 o'clock. Dr.Scudder has some matters ot import-ance to lay before them and tho La-

dies Society of tho church is anxiousto havo a largo enthusiastic attend-ance. For some tlmo an advancomovement among the women has beenin contemplation and It is In this con-

nection that inn meeting Is called.

A BARGAIN.

When you can savo from 25 to 50per cent on any article, you' havo abargain. When you buy a bottle ofChamberlain's Colic, Cholera andDIarrlioea Remedy at tho regular price,you will probably savo several timesits cost in doctor's bills beforo thesummer is over with, besides the feel-

ing of security you will havo In know-ing that your family Is prepared torsudden attacks of dysentery or diarr-hoea. For salo by all dealers, Ben- -

There Is a rumor tbnt tho NipponYusen Kalsha suffered a heavy loss Intho last half year, ending March 31st,but tho Board of Directors or tho Com-pany, through the columns of theJIJI,deny the rumor.

The JIJi publishes a rumor that inconsequence of tho heavy loss sustain-ed by tho Toyo Klscn Kalsha the Gov-

ernment authorities havo suggested acombine of tlie N. Y. K. and T. K. Kand that in case tho former consentsto' do bo the proposed amalgamationof the two Hteanishli) companies willbe effected in the near future. JapanGazette.

AND HE, TOO.

'Well, H begins to look like spring "observed Mr. Mllllngton to Mr. Jones,as tney round themselves side by sidein the street car.

"Yes, it certainly does.'"It must be about time to go llsh- -

In?""Yes.""And you will indulge In tlie sport?""I will.""And you will tell of th big bites

ou had?"'Certainly.""And ot the big fish that got away?""I surely will.""And you won't hesitate to buy a

big fish of someone else and pass hltnoff as yours?"

'Not for a second.""In fact, Mr. Jones, you. a resnec--

tablo member ot the community anaa husband and father, and a man whoshould set a moral example to others, wm not hesitate to He about thefish you do or you don't catch?"

"I will not. Mr. Mllllmrton. I willlie like blue blazes to come out aheadof the other fellows."

Mr. Mllllngton turned away with alongdrawn sigh, and for the next liveminutes not another word was spoken, nen Mr. Jones turned to himand queried:

'And what about you?"'Why why, I believe I'll go fish

ing and lie, too " was the reply.

TAKE: rr NOW.It's not too late to prevent serious

heart troubles if you will take Dr.Miles' Heart Curo at once, when youhavo dizzy spells, shortness of breath,fluttering of the heart, Irregular pulse,weak or hunrry spells. These areearly, but urgent, symptoms of heartweakness, and must bo given Immediate attention. Money back if firstbattle falls to benefit.

An Ideal Touring

Franklin Model 0PRACTICALLY NO TIRE TROUBLE

With Us light-weig- ht and easy-ridi- strong construction ModelD is aptly termed the ideal of all automobiles for family use. WeighIng as it does a third less than the average water-coole- d automobllrof smaller capacity, It gives minimum tire and operating expense. Itmost nearly fulfills universal requirements. Its compactness, ability,handsome body, largo wheels, and the ease with which It handles

jj place it In a class by Itself an Idealcuy anu uusiness use. iigut-weign- t,

I!

pj

THE ASSOCIATEDE..O. Hall & Son,

MERCHANT AND

'.X

Cnr

touring-ca- r, not too largo forrenned and casy-rldln- g.

Franklin Model D, $2800. Fourcylinder, 28 horse-powe- r, ' flv-e-

passenger touring-ca- r.

wheels, samo size ns used on thebest water-coore- d automobilesweighing 1000 pounds more. Alu-minum body on steel angleframe the strongest and lightestautomobllo body made. Thrcolarge powerful brakes acting ontransmission and rear wheels,selective typo transmission, posi-

tive gear-drive- n oiler, Boschnign tension magneto.

GARAGE LTD.Lid., Proprietors.

BISHOP STREETS

IfYou Have a Dinnerto serve you should havethe finest meats. The kindwe sell. OURS are cutfrom selected cattle andthe meat is SUPERIOR.

Metropolitan Market

W. F. Heilbron, Proprietor. Phone 45.

I mm

GOOD TASTE AND JUDGMENTarc more essential to having a beautifully appointed table,than large expenditure. o

Let us show you unusual patterns in

Community SilverIt Has. a distinct richness of appearance and charm of

design which rival sterling.It's more than triple plate it costs hut a trifle more

than ordinary plated ware it lasts a life time.

W. W. DIMOND & CO., LTD.53- - 7 XING STREET. II

. y 7"-- " '. , , ' .. " -

"ilk;:,.. son. Smith & Co., agents for Hawaii..

v .v2LiailEBUtf.k .'.

Keepsakesaro often ruined by Incompetentworkmen. Many ears of expeii- -enco has made me an expertJewelry repairer.

The best Candyis be had at

TJIK

PALI CAFE

Hotel and Union IFresh every day !

The Latest ParisianGOWNS!

ADAME LAMBERTS

Haniion Block. Beretanla & Fort Bti

Are you losingyour hair? Have you Itching scalp?

PACHECO'S DANDRUFF KILLER

positively stops falling hair and onoapplication ot this marvellous prepara-tion will allay that awful itching.

Sold by all druggists ana at Pache-co- 'a

Barber Shop. Phono 232.

FurnitureIron BedsMatressas

Coyne FurnitureCo, Ltd.

Ml I WE. ilfiHonolulu, T. H.

SHIPPING AND COMMISSION MER.CHANTS.

SUGAR FACTORS and GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS.

representingEwa Plantation CuWalalua Agncutural Co., Ltd.Kohala Sugar Co.Walmea Sugar Mill Co.Apokaa Sugar Co.. Ltd.Fulton Iron Works ot St. Louis.Blake Steam Pumps.Westons Centrifugals.Babcock & Wilcox Boilers.Green's Fuel Economizer.Marsh Steam Pumps.Matson Navigation Co.Planters Line Shlpplnng Co. ,New England Mutual Lite Insur

ance Company of Boston.Aetna Insurance Co.

National Flro Insurance Co.Citizen's Insuranco Co. (Hartford

Fire Insuranco Co.)

Tho London Assurance Corporation.

THE SHOE

THAT PROVES

IF YOU WISH TO ADVERTISE 1IN NEWSPAPERS

J ANYWIIliRB AT ANYTIMU J

CM on or Write' g CDAKE'S ADYERTISfflG AGEHC!C 134 Sansome Street !

9 BAN TRANC18CO, CALIF.

H. CulmFort and Hotel

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THEUnited States, For The Territoryof Hawaii.

The United States of America, plaintiffvs. John A. McCandless, et al., de-

fendant.Action brought In said District Court,

and the Complaint filed in tho office ofthe Clerk of said District Court, inHonolulu.THE PRESIDENT CF THE UNITED

STATES OF AMERICA, GREET-ING:

To JOHN A. McCANDLESS; ELLAMcCANDLESS; wife of JOHN A. Mc-

CANDLESS; ELIZABETH K. PRATT;GORDRICH PRATT; KATE KEN-NEDY; MARIA BREWER; EMMAPRATT: LEVI GORDRIDGE PRATT:EMILY G. .PRATT: ELIZABETH S.NOYES; SARAH E. PRATT; WIL-LIAM PRATT; ROBERT PRATT;EVELYN PRATT nnd FRANCESPRATT, unknown heirs at law ofFRANKLIN 3. PRATT, deceased;JAMES H. MONSARRAT, Trustee forSUSIE F. CARTWniGHT; SUSIE F.CARTWRIGHT. HATTIE M. DAMON;SAMUEL M. DAMON; JAMES BLACK,MARY PURPLE; JOHN BROWN andJANE BLUE, unknown owners andClaimants, and tho TERRITORY OFHAWAII, Defendants.

Tou Aro Hereby Directed to Appearand answer tho Complaint in an actionentitled as above, brought against youIn the District Court ot the UnitedStates, In and for tho Territory ot Ha-waii, within 20 days from and afterservice upon jou of a certified copy otPlaintiff's Petition herein, togetherwith a certified copy of this Demurrer.

And you are hereby notified that un-less you appear and answer as aboverequired, the said plaintiff will takejudgment for any money or damages"demanded in the complaint, as arisingupon contract, or it will apply to thoCourt for any other relief demandedin the Complaint.

WITNESS the HonorableSANFORD B. DOLE,Judge of said DistrictCourt, this 10th day ofDecember, In the year of

(SEAL) our Lord one thousandnine hundred and oigntand of the Independenceof the United States theono hundred and thirty-thir- d.

A. E. MURPHY,Clerk

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ss.Territory of Hawaii, City of Honolulu.

I, A. E. MURPHY, Clerk of the Dis-trict Court of tho United States otAmerica, In nnd tor the Territory andDistrict of Hawaii, do hereby certifytho foregoing to be a full, true andcorrect copy ot tho original Summonsin the Case of UNITED STATES OFAMERICA vs. J.OHN A. McCANDLESSet al., as tho same remains of recordand on fllo In the office of the Clerkot said Court.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF,.I, have hereunto set my-han-

and affixed the scat(SEAL) of said District Court this.

10th day of December. A.D. 190S.

A. E. MURPHY.Clerk of United States District Court

Territory of Hawaii.Endorsement. No. bs. District Court

of tho U. S. for tho Territory ot Ha-waii. Tho United States of Americavs. John A. McCandless, et al. Sum-mons Robert W. Brcckons. Plaintiff'sAttorney. Filed December 12. 1908.

A. E. MURPHY,Clerk.

PACIFIC PHOTO OALLERYWaverlcy Block.

(17 Hotel St. makal side.)Photography in all Its branches, pic

tures enlarged.Kodak developing hnc printing a

paclalty.

The Two JacksThe Most Popular Saloon in the City,

THE FASHION.Jack Scully, Prop. Jack Roberts, Mgr.

Hotel Street near Fort. Phono 482

We Invito Inspection ot our goods.

o

K. FUKURODA.

Hotel near Nuuanu.

I VESTSFor Dress and Business Wenr.t

J Silva's Toggery J

STATIONERY.All of tho Quest quality.

OAT & MOS8MAN70 'Merchant Street, near P. O.

IK.

HIGH.T

Hawaiian Relics89

CUIIIOS AND NOVELTIESt

1WOMAN'S EXCHANGE

Hotel & Union Sta. 5

W.G. Irwin & Co., Ltd?U8AK FACTORS, COMMISSION AGENTS

W . 9. Irwlu.. President and Managerfokn D. Spreckol .First Vice-Preside- nt

M. G tttard... Second Vice-Preside-nt

, M. Whitney TreasurerRichard Ivers SecretaryD. O. May " Auditor

AGENTS FORCceinlo Steamship Co.. San francUco,

C.ldwln Locomotive Works, Phila-

delphia, Pa.lau PlantaUon Co., Hllo Sugar

Company, Honolulu Plantation Co.,Hntchlnion Sugar Plantation Co.,Kllauea Sugar Plantation Co., Olo- -walu Company, Paauhau Sugar Plan.UUon Co., Walmanalo Sugar Co.

The Standard ofQuality

CONSOLIDATEDSoda WaterOAHU TAILORING CO.

Merchant Tailor.

Cigar Stand on the Corner.

Beretanla and Emma Street.

Catton, Neill & Co.CIMITICO

Engineers, Machinists, Blacksmithsand BoilemiaKers.

First clas work at reasonable rates.

BUTTONS

Made to Order

We have just installed amachine for making cloth-cover-

buttons in sizes from IS to36 from any material. -

Prices reasonable.

Honolulu Iron Works.

TEAM ENGINES, SUGAR MILLS,TOILERS, COOLERS, IRON, BRASS

AND LEAD CA3TING8.

Hach Inory of Every Descriptiontfad to Order. Particular Attentionpaid to bhlp's Blacksmlthlng. JobWork Executed on Short Notice.

CENTENNIAL"S

BEST FLOUR m"

Henry lay & Co. Ltd.

Linens andCotton Duck

for Summer Suits. We havea splendid lot of cloth. Letus make you a suit.

W. f . AHAHA CO., LTD. f02 King Street Phone 521.

4

PRY'S VITRIFIABLEColors for China Painting

PACIFIC PICTUREFRAMING CO.

1051 Nuuanu below Hotel.

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.

Hawaiian Electric Co Page t11 O. Hall & Son's Meeting. .. .Page G

TVivnfnn fflimmnna PllCfi fi

Waterhouse Trust Co Page &

Bank of Hawaii Page 7

John Mnttos Page 3

Henry May & Co Page li

THE

Local Office, U. S. Weather Bureau,Young Building.

' Honolulu. T. H., May 5 190X

Temperatures, n. m.j ts a. m.; 10

a. m.; and morning minimum.73; 75; 77; 7S; 71. .

Baronieiei ivawng: absolute humid-ity (grains per cubic foot); relativehumidity and dew point at 8 a. m.:

30.03; 5.801; G2; CI.

Wind: Veiocr ana direction at 6,a.ui.; 8 a. m.; 10 a. m.; and noon:

B NE.; 8 E.; 12 E.; 12 NE.Rainfall miring at nours ending 8 a.

in.: trace.Total wiuo. enoTment during 24 hours

ended at noon 271 miles."Wat, . STOCKMAN,

Section Director.

NEWS IN A NUTSHELL

Paragraphs That Give CondensedNews of the Day.

Buy Tungsten lamps and watch yourlight bill diminish.

Dr. C. B. Wood was an Alamedapassenger this morning.

City and County Auditor Bicknellsbusy paying public labor today.

Try Thurlows' for a week andyou'll come again. Good meals andonly the best brands of liquors serv-ed.

Mrs. F. M. SwaUzy was among thepassengers to leave for the Coast bythe Alameda.

A notice in action for divorce inthe Wardell matter is published inthis issue.

A two bedroom cottage with Electriclights etc., .close to town is for rent t$20 a month.

Stephen Andrew, a native of Span a,Greece, has applied for naturalizationin tne Federal court.

There were 31 new and 7'J recurrentcases of relief handled bf the Asso-

ciated Charities last month.A. F. Knudsen is at Seattle looking

after Hawaii exhibit matters until thearrival of Commissioner Childs.

C. E. Fergusson, a writer for theOverland Monthly, and his wife re-

turn to the Coast in !' Alameda.Judge Robinson grav d a divorce

to Ellen K. Aona againat AlexanderK. Aona for failure to provide.

Secretary. E, A. Mott-Snii- th occupiedthe president's chair at the Board o(Health office this morning.

Thurlows Royal Annex Cafe servesthe best all round meals In the city.

Business lunch Thurlows' RoyalAnnex Cafe.

AU that was doing in the CircuitCourt this morning was the trial of aFiuall civil case before Judge Rob'n-so- n.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Boas, a brid-

al couple from San Francisco, return-ed to their home by the Alameda to-

day.Fred. L. Waldron and wife will sail

by the Hiloniau on the 18th lust, forEngland for a visit of four-- monthsto their respective homes.

Y. Ishii, the local Japanese drug--,gist, has been presented with a medalby the Japanese Red Cross Society forhis valuable services here in its work.

Even the air that cools Prinio Beeris filtered; It is stored in air-tig- ht

glass tanks till ready for bottling;and the public Is given the purest andinost healthful beer brewca.

By the absence from the Territoryof Messrs. Cooper, Campbell and Gart-le- y,

the Board of Regents of J.he Col-lege of Hawaii will be deprived ofa quorum.

Superintendent J. D. McVeigh willle:ive In the Claudlne on Friday even-ing to return to the Settlement. Hewill take a few more moving picturefilms with him,

The Chinese paper Man Sang YatBo, against which a libel suit broughtby Consul Tseng Hal is .pending, Isstill attacking the consul on everypage of every Issue.

Two bedroom cottage. Electriclights, etc., close to town and car-lin-e.

$20.00. Address "Cottage" Star office.The annual meeting of . O. Hall

& Son will be held on May 13.Begin saving a small part of your

spending money, begin today. Start,a savings account with thi? bank, and'you will be well started on the roadto success. The Bank of Hawal, Ltd.Those who have used it find Cennten-nial- 's

Beest Flour requires more knead-ing, takes more water, and goes far-ther than any other flour. It's thehost, of all. Henry May & Co., Ltd.Phono 22.

The regular monthly meeting of themembers of tho Walalae, Kalmukl andPalolo Improvement Club will be heldFriday, at 8 o'clock p. in. at the resi-dence of Mr. A. F. Cooke. Interestingcommittee reports.

John Mattos, tho plumber and sheetiron worker, lays Iron roofing, gutters,leaders etc. and repairs them. Ventilators, skylights all sorts of sheotiron and metal work. Phone C57, 1175Alakca Street.

A. B. Blakstad, Wahiawa trainbrakeman, injured through his headcoming in contact with a waterplpewhich crosses the track, on April 23,ytsterday morning , recovered con-

sciousness and expressed surprise at

l'HB HAWAIIAN STAR, WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 190S.

KOREAN

FOR INJUNChief of Detectives Joo Lr:al, nssist-c- d

by his capable staff, has jailed anumber of Koreans taken from a Mo-ilil- ll

camp for Investigation In regardto attempted burglaries In the Makikldistrict last night. The Crockett,Henderson and Marston Campbell re-

sidences were visited.Crockett saw a man looking In at

his window, lighting a match, andthought he would recognize his handsIf he saw him again, but could notpositively identify the man among thearrested hunch this morning. Hechased a chap In white pants severalblolcks and fired five shot3 withouthitting htm. Henderson's wife saw aman trying to get in the window andscreamed. The Jlenderson and Croc- -

kett residences adjoin. Mrs, Camp -bell also heard somebody prowlingabout her yard. .

There are eight Koreans under ar--rest. They arc most of them noted.......1 U i.vaiuiuB uuu iiuve a iiuu-u- ul jii iuu- -111111. Leal believes they can throwlight on last night's doings. The footof one fits ai imprint found In oneof the houses visited. Leal and hismen worked all night on the case.

CELEBRATE

MOTHERSEVERY MOTHER'S SON ASKED TO

REMEBER HIS FIRST LOVE.s lights have been very detrimental to

The Y. M. C. A. lias moved the Ma- - the safety of handling vessels enter-yo- r,

His Honor Joseph J. Fern, to is- - lug port and docking at night, andsue Ills first proclamation, a proclam- - since the chamre has made such aation ' which calls folks, particularly marked improvement, we take thisyoung men, to remember their mo-- means of expressing our appreciationthcrs on Sunday next, May 9, in cele- - 'of the many improvements .duringbration of the fact that they are their Mr. Campbell's incumbency,mothers and for all that "mother" Thanking you for affording us anmeans. opportunity of doing so,

This sweet superfluity is observed We remain,on the mainland and the Y. M. C. A.thinks it ought to observed here, ifthere is anybody who has forgottenhis mother, perhaps the novel customof reminder by proclamation may helphim to remember that if it hadn'toeen lor nis niotner lie would neverhave heard of the Y. M. C. A., norwould lie ever have seen Ma-yo- Fern.

Sunday next is Mother's Day; fa-

thers not In It for a minute and "no-body works like father," according tothe song.

T to .., .

, . - ' buys rreslQenVlreiit ol me i. m. u. a., tnat on Mo-ther's Day every young man wear a!while carnation in his buttonhole. '

This will keep the flower girls busy,if the proclamation is obeyed. Alsoeach chap is asked to-d- o at least oneieed of kindness, visit a sick. friendfor. example; and, if his mother Isabsent, he is requested to write her.Also is lie asked to attend the "churchof his choice."

Inasmuch as there are some whodon't go to church, tfiere are manymothers who will have to be celebrat-ed without benefit of clergy.

the lapse of time. Dr. Cooper at-tending him believes he will puilthrough.

able

for a by newpurposes. that

to be a play actor.and Mrs. B. Hord, and their

Miss G. Hord, who haveslaying at the Moana for' thepast few weeks, returned to the

Alameda and were coveredwith lois by their many friends.

For sale: New in ManoaValley; two ?3700. j

New 5 room cottage with one acre ofstream, $1500. For

rent, furnished cottage Waiklki andat the Peninsula. "Waterhouse Trust."

The Carmen's Benefit Association-tives- -

a grand dance on evennext, May 8, In K. P.... 1 I . 1 . ' C It.

Johnson

stamps,

clrculnr

tvnwr.tnrbeing reelected

ns follows:

S.Dr. Hand was secre-tary absence of Paul

States mattersfor

M--.

THANKS TO

CAMEL(HAWAIIAN STAR, City:

Dear sir; Kindly permitthe columns your

mm8G TEST

Date. Per LL Per Ton.utiax.Mar. 3.9925 cnts.Mar. 4.02April vl 3.99 cents...April 2

April 3April 8...... 3.955 cents..April 3.92April 1G

April20. .SS cents.

J April 21 ;April 22 3.86 cents.."T'.

April 23April 3.95 cents....Anrll 24 .

April 3.97 cents.April 27

iApril 29.'.'.'

April 28 3.905AnH, nn o q rents .,

1 w...April 31 3.S9 centsMay 1May 4 3.86 cents....,

paper, to publicly our sincerethanks to Mr. Su

of I'umic woriis, ior.niB,kind interest and most careful atten- -

tlon to the needs of tne watertront ;

of this nort. The completion of hislatest piece of being thatof screening government' electriclights bordering ori the Isreceiving most favorable

from the seafaring fraternity andwhich they are truly thankful.

Hie glare from these

"Very truly yours.' HARBOR NO. 45.

Frank C. Poor,Secretary.

ill GO AFTER

TOAD E

REPORT THAT AMERICAN-HAWA- 1

IAN MAY TAKE A HAND IN

SUGAR FROM MANILA.

It Is understood that the American-Hawaiia- n

Company is pre-

paring to take of the sugarbetween the and the Unit-

ed Slates as soon as the allow-

ing the entrance of tonsthe payment of duty is by

Congress and by PresidentTaft. Three new vessels have been

by the company, only oiie ofwhich is for the local trade. Theothers it is understood are to be usedin with the trafficAtlantic Coast. these vessels

pose.C. P. Morse, the local- - superinten-

dent of the American-Hawaiia- n, Isstill at sea regard to whether thenew boat to built for the localtrade will be a passengernot. He taken to ascertainthis

0 SE RUBBER

STUMPS ON CHECKS

States officers inchecks, said is hereby revolj-e- a.

Tho use the rubber stamp andfor said purpose there-

fore, nereby caretaken to Insure perfect

in filling the dates, andnames of the payees on checks, andthut only Ink used onpads and ribbons.

A DIFFERENCE.WIggs Ho used help her up and

down stall's before they were mar-ried.

Mrs. 'Now she has to lookout 'less ho trips her.

ij. n. commissioner ueorge A. uavis the American-Hawaiia- n willtoday committed Tsuchiya to the Fed- - to handle the sugar from' the Phlllp-e- nl

grand jury, under $2,500 bond, which, it is understood may beand brought to Salina Cruz a lino

man for immoral Tsuchiya which is being organized for purprolesses

Mr. S.daughter been

HotelCoast

by the

bungalowbedrooms. Price

land on Kalihiat

Saturdaying Hall, the

April

23

hold

on

to

uixusiun ueiug iiiu hjlu ui unuuui i

Free cars will run to all Uncle Sam believes in saving tlnieparts of the city midnight j where It can done without affecting

Miss Mary having return- - the morit of labor and lias revoked thefrom a visit to the mainland has regulation in ithe Treasury Depart-resume- d

full charge of her Sanatorium ment which the use of rub-o- n

Kewalo street; Miss' E. Freney ber stamps etc., because of their imper-wh- o

took her place during her ab-- ) ,fection. Says aj fl'reasury ncLice:senco left in the Alameda this morn-- 1 There having been a marked Improve-in- g

for California where she intends ment the usedto reside. an(j on tj,e quality of the ink used on

The directors of the M. C. and ri0bons sincehave elected for the year, 7 ot January 20, 1999, wasginning with the present month. W. ,,sued the use of rubberG. Hall was elected vice the A,nmns th hv unit,!other officers for an-

other year, President, R.Trent; treasurer, C. Atherton;

recording secretary, G. Waterhouse.appointed acting

during the Su-

per in the looking upconcerning a new building the Y.

C. A.

L

EDITORus,

.Vhrough of valuable

H H

212730 cents..

13 cents..

20

2G

.'.'.3.92 cents...cents

expressMarston Campbell,

perintendent

ingenuity,all

waterfront,commenda-

tionfor

Heretofore,

HONOLULU

0

CAR-

RYING

Steamshiptrade

Philippinesbill

300,000 with-out passed

signed

ordered

connection theWith

inbe

steamer orhas steps

information.

disbursing filling upcircular

oftyjiewrlter is,

authorized, providedis Impressions

in amounts,

permanent be

WIggs

be

pines,harboring maintaining wo- -

celebration.at be

edprohibited

A.

in heretofore

Y. Apads Departmentofficers be- -

p,.ohioItingpresident,

H. F,

UOTATION

LONDON BEETS

Price.10 shilling, 4 Z pence.

10 shillings 4 2 pence.10 shillings 5 4 pence10 shillings 4 2 pence.

10 shillings C 4 pence.10 Shillings 4 1-- 2 pence.

10 shillings 5 1-- 4 pence.10 shillings, 4"l-- 2 pence.10 shillings 5 1- -4 pence.

10 shillings G pence.10 shillings 1G 3-- 4 pence.10 shillings, 5 1-- 4 pence10 shillings, pence.

11 shillings, 3-- 4 pence,10 shillings ; pence.

Umited- . . . , ,

Capital Stock f 100,000. 005000, Shares Par Value $2C 00

Subscription list now open at theoffice of

HARRY ARMITAGEstoolt rk fx d tollrolccr .....

Campbell Block, Merchant Street,Prospectus may oe had on applica-

tion.

JAMES F, MORGAN

STOCK andBOND Broker

Member of Honolulu Stock and BondExchange.

Stock and Bond Orders receiveprompt attention.

Information furnished relative to allSTOCKS AND rBONDS.

LOANS NEGOTIATED.Phone 72. I . hqx 5m.

DfllLY STOCK REPDR T

Dividends May 5, 1909: Hawaiianu tc b. uo., 20c share; Onomea 2 2

per cent; Honomu 1 1-- 2 per centSession Sales: 25 McBryde $4,125;

82,000 Hilo R. It, Co., 6s, $93.00; .$1000u. H. & L. Co. $102.00; 10 HawaiianC. & S. Co., $30.00.

Between Boards: 250 Ewa, $28.50;5 Ewa $28.50; 130 Ewa $2S.50; 105Ewa, ?2S,50; '10 Ewa $28.50; 120 EwaJ28.50; 50 Waialua $95.00; 55 Kahuk.i.$30.00.

Stoclc Bid. Asked.C. Brewer & Co $210.00 $

Ewa Plant. Co.: 28.25 2S.75Hawaiian Com 29.875 30.&UHawaiian Sugar 39.50Honomu 145.00Ilonokaa Sugar Co.... 17.50Haiku Sugar Co 205.00Hutchinson ." 20.50iKabuku 29.50Koioa Sugar Co...... 145.00McBryde 4.00Oahu Sugar Co 32.7!Onomea Sugar Co 43.50 45.00Ookala Sugar Co 20.50 21.01;Olaa Sugar Co 5.00Paauhau 25 50I'aia Plant Co 210.00 220.00Pioneer .Mill 170.00Waialua Agri r 95.50Waimea Sugar Co.... GO. 00'I. I. S. N. Co i. 146.00 147.50Hawaiian Electric 140.00Hon. R. T. Co. com... 75 .'00Mutual Telephone.... 9.50 10.00Nahlkn Rub. Co 30.00O. R. & L. Co 121.00Hllo R. R. Co 14.7SHon. B. & M. Co.... 22.50 24.00Haw. Pineapple 22.25 22.50Haw. Ter. 4s (F.CL... 100.00Haw. Ter. 4s. (Ret:).. 100.00Haw. Ter. 4 l-- 100.00Haw. Ter. 4 s. 100.00haw. Ter. 3 l-- 100.00Cal. Ref. Co. Gs 101.00Hallu t. 100.00Hiimakua Ditch 6s 10 .00Haw. Irrigation Gs 98.00Hilo R. R. Co. 6s 94.00Honokna Gs 102.00Hon. R. T. Co. Gs.... 108.50O. R. & L. Co. 6s 101.75'Jahu Sugar Co. 5s 101.00Olaa Sugar Co. 6s 98.00Pacific Mill 6s 103.00Pala 6s 100.00Waialua Agrl 6s 100.00

Fine Job Prlntm, wvar Office.

Beef, 1 0 '9

Henry Vaterho'jse Trust Co.

Members Honolulu Stock and BondExchange.

FORT AND MERCHANT STS.

Sweeping Beduotlons wash materialsBeginning Monday, May 3rd.

A-- JL VJA. ULCJ. UU JXLOlYt? X UUJJL1pATfl M1M vi rtttr avtviivtm m a jv 3

we have decided to clear I

out certain lines of WashGoods, regardless of Costor Values. The one objectin view is the quickestpossible clearance.

The bargains cannot be mentioned in this announce-ment, because of the limited space but they are here.Come, and you will be repaid tho biggest and bestbargains ever offered in Wash Goods.

SEE WINDOW DISPLAY

M w fi OFort and Beretania, Onnosite Fire Station.

mm Gil 01 All II1S OF IBDealers In

Firewood, Stove, Steam and BlacksmithCoal$ Crushed Kock, Black and

White Sand, Garden Soil,HAY, GRAIN, CEMENT, ETC., ETC.

Hustace-Pec-k Go. LID.

:v3:n:'Phone 295. 63 Queen Street. P. O. Box aiavevov0vsvevvevvev9vev9V9V9vyvidvsv9V9viev9vievvtt

FF0RT

the health inspectors in the mosquito campaignu but SKEETGO kills

g 'em evlery time odorless and inexpensive. '

in'

with

' '

Benson, Smith & Co., Ltd.SOOOO(y2GOGOOGOOOOOC5000000000000000000000COQQOOOGo6!m

GOALW e deliver fine stove coal tos

any address in the city at rightprices. Phone us your order

Honolulu GonstruGtion & Diaylng Go., nt.Office Fort Street,' Opp. Irwin & Co. Phone 281.

Srioirt slosing Out at

cs

Our big window Is fairly teeming with useful and practical bargains in'China. It Is a pleasure to go by, and see the dainty dishes, fancy cups andlovely plates. Twenty-fiv- e cents (25c) will go a long- way and will provo thebest investment you ever made.

Few

argain Prices

Suggestions5 CENTS. Large assortment pin trays; tooth pick holders; individual

butters; child mugs, etc., etc., eta10 CENTS. A. D. cupf. and saucers; coffee cups and saucers; B. & B.

plates; salad plates; match boxes; eggcups; ash stands, etc.25 CENTS, Cake plates; salad bowls; berry "dishes, B. & B. plates;

salad plates; chocolate cups nd saucers; match stands, mugs, etc. ,

Gome early and get first choice

W. W.Dimond & Co., Ltd.Leaders in Ho usefurnlshlngs.

( 73fl .... ( . TmFine .star Office. , h, :

53-5- 7 King Street . ,, L j

1fc

t

TELEPHONEJointing i33Tfc.r.'v" : - .. . M..t .' ! m is,". ;'.,,,. a.. iUSl '4 . .. if ... is ... h.ii? Mum !.. ... L. a ... .. 1 . kJJrjBMm .;.,. .i .ifeti. - ... , . . . . -- ., , ... vmi:Tir-- - . .ihm min riii mn it -