evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu...4 ; V! j II ' The Stai Is An Intelligent Progressive Newspaper...

8
4 ; V! j II ' The Stai Is An Intelligent Progressive Newspaper TELEPHONE 365 5EC0ND STAR STA EDITION Business Office VOL. XVI. HONOLULU, HAWAU, SATURDAY, JANUARY 9, 1909. No. 5234 FROM FUISCO AND POUT OF CANADA AND THE FAR EAST COME MONSTER BOATS ALU WITHIN BRIEF SPACE BAD "WEATHER THROUGHOUT MILLIONAIRE'S SON AND HIS ORIENTAL AFFIN- ITY MAKURA HAS SIXTY-SI- X PASSENGERS FOR HONOLULU. When three trans-Pacil- lc liners hit of Honolulu within a day there Is a hus tling In this harbor of tho hub or the Pacific that staggers the ordinary rou- tine of events. Last evening the Toyo Klsen Katsha a S. S. Nippon Maru arrived from San Francisco with eight days' mall and she sailed for the Orient at 11 o'clock this morning. Bright and early the P. M. S. S. Manchuria arrived from the Orient, to sail for the Coast at 5 o'clock this afternoon; at about 1:30 o'clock tho Canadian-Australia- n Co.'s palatial new S. S. Makura hit port from Vic- toria and Vancouver, en route to the Southern Cross colonies, whither she departs at 2 o'clock this afternoon. Customs officers, automobiles, hacks, hotels and other things and people, on this triple account, were stirred of to an activity that seldom occurs. A goodly bunch of local passengers struck Honolulu per Manchuria and going through, to tho Coast, aboard the same monster tank, are several prominent folks, not of local fame, but whose fame illuminated this locality about as much as it has decorated out- side sections of the earth. Judge Wilfley, for example, Is bound to San Francisco from Shanghai. Judge L. R. Wilfley Is ho around whom there was such an' atmosphere of argument for the reason that he Is' alleged to have high-hand- it in the Orient In regard to American law- yers. He was complained against by attorneys who went to Shanghai rrom 'Honolulu; there were damage suits and other excitement; complaints were filed; It was sought to have him re- moved; and President Roosevelt stood up for him, in fact practlcaUy exon- erated him; then Wilfley resigned, and now he is going hack to the States, with, as far as is known, no truth of any charges clinging to him, but removed from the bench by himself of his own will. Ho Is sick of.Shanghal. Then aboard the same boat, B. S. Manchuria, is the son ot James Pier-po- nt Morgan, millionaire and Juggler ,;r ENRY WIDOW OF THE LATE JUDGE BR THOUSAND DOLLARS AGAINST VERDICT IN THE FEDERAL 0 ATTORNEY. Henry Withoff, the mate of the bar- - kentlno Fullerton who has been award- - ed a verdict of $17,500 as damages for Injuries incurred In the perform- - 1 Here! Stop just long enough to con- sider this: If you wero to dlo today, would your property bo dispos- ed of in just tho way you now Intend? Is your will drawn up proper- ly In legal form? If not, let us do It for you free of charge. Trust Co., Ltd., 923 Fort Street steamships and railroads and Wall Street and politics and a few other things. This son occupied whole dou ble-pag- es of colored supplements or mainland Sunday papers when he weu beauteous and sweet-soule- d llttlo Japaneso girl, and his father was an- gry, and New York female society was mad because the rich young man didn't plaster his million .on some Go- tham dame; nevertheless it was a love match with George, George D. Mor- gan, and he married the dear llttlo Japaneso and he has her with him, and a very devoted wife she Is; and ho is en route to New York, once again to pique the alleged exclusive Manhattan social swirl with the spi rltuelle perfection of his Oriental affin ity. J. K. Roosevelt Is another passen ger aboard tho Manchuria, a cousin President Roosevelt he is, though he's not boasting about it. Seventeen hundred tons of precious freight is aboard the Manchuria for Honolulu and the Hawaiian stevedores are hustling to get it ashore so that the monster ship can leave at. 5 p. m. today. Nasty weather was experienced; there was only one good day. Every- body was seasick, or almost everybody. Earthquakev conditions seem to have made the old earth feel disagreeable and sea and shore are getting tho re- sult of tho world's indisposition. The fine S. S. Makura was held out side this morning for the reason that the sixty-si- x passengers for Honolulu, as well as tfte through passengers, were horribly slow In lining up for inspection. Next time, it is hoped, this delay will be overcome. J. G. Schllef, formerly a Honolulu newspaper, cashier, who has been In the Canadian district for a couple of years, returns in the Makura to Ho- nolulu, looking well and glad to bo back. The Makura, too, had bad weather, encountering a southwest gale. She brings 200 drums of codfish, 100 cases of whiskey and some miscellaneous freight for this port. VS. WIT INGS A SUIT FOR OVER THREE THE SAILOR WHO GOT A $17,500 OURT HERE SAYS GEAR WAS HIS ance of his duty, seems hound to have delay after delay before he gets his money. Tho latest development Is a suit which has been filed against him SHOES For Men ALL THE NEW SHAPES MAINLAND PRICE3. V LB.Kerr&Co.5Ltd ALAICEA STREET. notn FROM FIBS CITY OF HILO SHOULD HAVE LARGER WATER MAINS TO EN- SURE SAFETY FROM FLAMES. A better water system for Hllo Is 0110 of the matters which' Superin- tendent of Public Works Marston Campbell has been taking up with William Vannatta, tho superintendent ot tho water system In the Hawaii town, for the past ten days. Tho mains in Hllo, with tho exception ot those on Walanuentto street and in ono or two other localities, are too small to give! proper fire protection,, as was shown recently at a fire in which a little baby was burned to death and which, with a decent water I supply at tho point of tho conflagra- tion, would have been quickly ex- tinguished. In addition to this many of the mains In Hllo nrc old and filled with holes which cause a great deal ot leakage and los3. Tho reservoir sys- tern is in good shape and no addl- - I tions are needed In this line, while the supply is first class and largo ' enough for a city of ten tlmes'HIlo's size. DYING ACT OF PH LAW THROPY ACCOUNTANT MARTINOFF LEAVES ALL HIS ESTATE TO THE CHIL- DREN'S HOSPITAL. Mr. Martinoff, a German about C2 years old, died In the Queen's Hospi- tal last night after an operation. He was an accountant and ten or fifteen years ago was employed In Bishop's Bank. Before his death Mr. Martinoff made a will, leaving his entire estate to the projected Children's Hospital. It was his dying request that no ceie-mon- y should be held at his funeral. The body has been cremated. TEN DOLLAR CLUB AGA N OBJECTION MADE TO TRYING JAPANESE UNDER INDICTMENT THAT IS FIVE YEARS OLD. An IntnrnMnr mnfnr. mm.. Un . (' T...1 iuiu juubo jjuie jesteruay wnon tia-yas- was placed on trial. H0 was to bo tried under an old Indictment as a member of tho Ten Dollar Club which existed somo five years ago. His attorney strenuously objected, claiming that tho indictment was worthless for present uso, for Haya-sh- l had not been given tho speedy trial, which, under tho Constitution every defendant Is entitled to. Tho matter was tho occasion of a rather hot argument and was continued till Monday, morning. in the California courts for tho sum of $35G1 by Mrs. George u. Gear, the widow of the late Judge Gear of this city. According to the complaint which has reached this city Withoff agreed to pay to Attorneys E. A. Douthltt nnd George D. Gear forty per cent of any amount which he might bo given In Judgment for his services. Judge Gear died shortly after tho suit for damages was brought and did little work on' tho case. Mrs. 'Gear how-ove- r, Is suing or ono hnlf of the forty per cent mentioned. LOOK AFTER YOUR HEALTH. If you havo a cough, euro It. a cough Is a symptom of more serious trouble. Chnmberlaln's Cough Re- medy Is tho best obtainable and you need have no hesitancy In using it as It contains nothing Injurious. For sale by all dealers, Benson, Smith & Co., agents for Hawaii. PSYCHOLOGY AND ART CLASSES. Miss Locke's Class in tho Psychology ot William James will begin January 20, at 10:30 a. m., at tho residence of Mr. J. M. Dowsett, Punahou strcot, between Wilder and Beretanla ave- nues, and tho Art Class will begin Jan- uary 15, at 3:30 p. m., at tho resi- dence of Mrs. C. B. Wood, Thurston avenue. GEOLOGISTS PREDICT MORE UPH EAVALS THE STORIES OF SURVI- VORS TELL OF THE TERRIBLE SCENES IN THE DESTRUCTION OF THE LARGER CITIES IN THE ZONE OF THE QUAKE HOW THE SHOCK FELT. The following' dispatches give details of the great Italian earthquake: One of the refugees from Reg-gl- o who was the first to bring tho news of tho city's destruction, tried to make his way to Sicily In a sailboat, but was compelled to return, and final- ly found safety at a peninsula port. In his experiences he said: 'Tho sea was mysteriously agitated and the heavens were ablaze. Nearing Sicily the clearing smoke revealed the mystery; Messina was in flames. In the frenzy of despair I turned my boat back to Ca'abrla.'' Starving, bleeding from Injuries and almost Insane from their terrifying ex- - WASHINGTON, January 9. Yester- day the Houso adopted a resolution purging the Secret Service paragraph of the President's Message of tho por tions declared disrespectful to Con- gress. The President has responded by disclosing a report made by Secret Service officers connecting . Senator Tillman of South Carolina with tho attempted lanO grab in Oregon. The report includes copies of tho corres- pondence of the Senator with an agent in Oregon who was instructed to re- serve eight sections in the namc3 of Tillman's family. Meanwhile Tillman had Introduced a resolution to com- pel the railroad owners to sell lanh cheaply, as provided in the grant. Washington is probably In a per- - tP nan ten TRYING BY The arrest of John T. Stayton, charg- ed with official letters from tho States mall, took placo last night shortly after tho mall pouches from the Nippon Mnru were brought to tho postofllce. Stayton has held tho position of assistant In this city for somo time and has had the trust and confidence ot evcry-on- o in tho postal service. Ho is an popular young man and as far as can be learned has no bad habits. Ho was soon to havo been married. The of letters from the mall appears to havo been dono by Stayton In order to ascertain whether ho was being watched for a more se- rious offense. It that when the money order accounts woro ins- pected last there was a $200. This could not bo traced, but was mado good by Stay-to- n. At tho time no ono had tho slightest Idea that ho could havo had anything to do with tho shortage great was tho confidence ot tho other officials In his Integrity. From that time on Pratt and Inspector Haro kept missing mall from Sovoral times they were rather severely for to answer letters which had been mailed them In official en HOME MADE CANDY. FIno Turkish Nougat, Cocoanut Loaf, Almond and Hazel Nuts Pure, delicious candy made dally. I saster perlences, Messina's survivors are flee- ing In all directions. Tho snectaclo presented by tho ruined seaport is de- scribed as terrifying. Tumbling build- ings both killed and mutrated many, while hundreds of the Injured, Im- prisoned in the wreckage, were aban-- 1 doned to their fate by tho fleeing populace. One of those who escaped said. "The earth suddenly to drop and then turn violently on Its axis The whole who practically were from the rent In twa'u. were spun around like tops (Continued on Page Five.) feet sizzle of excitement over tho President's sensational exposure of Senator Tillman ot South Carolina, who Is proba'bly about the last man in American public Hfo who would have been suspected of any connection with graft. He Is tho fieriest member ot either House and may bo expected to make all sorts of a row before the Incident closes. Tho mall last night brought copies of tho President's special message to Congress of January 4, which was cabled briefly to The Star, in an- swer to the resolutions (Continued on Taea Three). . Best cup of coffee in the city at New England Bakery. velopes. Tho result was a general In vestlgatlon which was mndo by Ins- pector Hare and which resulted last night In the taking of threo letters one of which had been opened, from Stay ton, shortly after tho arrival of tho Nippon's mall. When placed under urrest on a war rant sworn to by U. S. District Attor ney Breckons, Stayton maintained that his accounts would be found o. k. and that If they wero not, ho had the money with which to inako good any shortage. Ho said that ho had been worried by his work, tho Inspection of accounts and other matters, that. ho had opened tho official malls. Ho was taken to tho Oahu jail at about 11 o'clock last night and waived examina tion before United States Commission er Kingsbury this morning being hold In $1,000 bonds. The accounts of Stayton's office havo not yet been examined by Inspector Hare, but this will bo done very soon Tho work could not bo attended to to day on account of tho fact that there aro threo malls to bo handled and the postofflco Is rushed with this busi ness. Tho penalty for let' tors from a postal pouch under tho law Is imprisonment for not moro than a year or a fine ot not over $500 or both. SALE OF WAISTS. Sachs' annual January clearance sale of ladles' waists begins Monday morning at almost half prices. S3 1? s3HiGsa ra e nss n nssa are cm ASSISTANT POSTMASTER STAYTON RELEASED ON $1,000 BONDS-SO- ME TALK OF A SHORTAGE WHICH HE MAY HAVE BEEN TO KEEP QUIET STOPPING INVESTIGATION AC- COUNTS BEING INVESTIGATED. abstracting United postmaster oxtremoly practically abstracting appears September, discrepancy of so Postmaster Washington. reprimanded failure to Fudge. seemed population, precipitated houses Congressional so abstracting QUAKE IN MEXICO WHICH SCIENTIST f HAD (Associated Press MEXICO CITY, January i). An earthquake occurred on the western coast of Mexico yesterday, it was severely felt at Acapulco and Oaxaca, but fortunately tho damage was slight. This shock on the Mexican coast, It will ho seen elsewhere in this Is- sue, was predicted as well as tho Sicily disaster by Dr. Willis Eugeno Ever- ett, a scientist who arrived at Tacoma from Alaska the first of tho year. According to his calculations "a severe seismic upheaval and submergence' of land on the Atlantic seaboard may be expected." SAN FRANCISCO, January !). Among the passengers sailed for Ho- nolulu in tho Siberia today aro Mr. Calvin of tho Southern Pacific and Mr. Bancroft of the Union Pacific Railroad, H. A. N. Lewis, Governor W. F. Frear, Justice S. M. Ballou and Alexander Young. house mm WASHINGTON, D. C, January 9. The House of Representatives has adopted a resolution to Investigate and has passed an appropriation to un- cover frauds ? -.- 1 punish crlihinals involved In matters concerning which the Secret Sei.i.s has been inve3tigat SENTENCE FOR UNION CITY, January 9. The local of the nightrlders, condemning them to BATTLESHIPS ordered to leave this port for Marsell Greece. 1L SAN FRANCISCO, Tho will of tho late Claus Spreckols has been admitted to probate. E. C. Peters, as tho representative of tho Sisters of St. Andrew's Priori', is suing Georgo E. Smithies Tor $3000, duo on promissory notes. IT HAS COME. Wo received that largo ship ment ot Tengu Japan rlco and wo aro selling it as tho demand Is very great. It supersedes all In and quality. K. Yamamoto, sole Hotel near Nuuanu. IIP IB)' PiWHER Absolutely Pure Ths only baking powdor mado with Royal Orapo Cream of Tartar No Alum, No Lime Phosphate PRE DEATH REECE DICTED Cable to The Star.) FRAUD lug. NIGHTRIDERS court has passed sentence on Blx be hanged on February 19. GO TO AND FRANCE les. The Ohio has ordered to HAWAII'S COUNTY CLERK STAFF. County Clerk John KnI has mado tho following recommendations to the Board of Supervisors for appoint- ment ns members ot his offico staff: W. II. Beers, deputy county clerk; D, K. Ewallko, first assistant; A. A. Ha-pa-l, stenographer and typewriter; W. M. Kalalwaa, second assistant. Tho nominees represent all three political parties. Republican, Democratic and Homo Rule Hawaii Herald. Tho deposition of Col. Spalding of iKauni In the case of the Territory vs. Hco Fat, was taken in Robin- son's court today. A SHOE FOR THE TIMES ! NO RUBBERS NEEDED Tha new boot, the addition to our stock, Is ono that will meet tho needs of the man who does lots of walking and is troubled with parti- cularly sonsltlvo feet. Tho "Cambridge" Is made ot soft black vlcl kid has a double sole, broad toe, and low heol. It has a distinctive and Is al together a good-lookin- g, sensible shoe. No. C23. Price $5.00. Limited 1051 Fort Street., Telephone 282 PORT SAID, January 9. The-Rhod- Island and Nebraska havo been January 9. havo fast, others fla- vor agent, been Judge latet' style, ' -- W. -- m-. ltrtrr.....7l,int v. x Xi

Transcript of evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu...4 ; V! j II ' The Stai Is An Intelligent Progressive Newspaper...

Page 1: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu...4 ; V! j II ' The Stai Is An Intelligent Progressive Newspaper TELEPHONE 365 5EC0ND STAR STA EDITION Business Office VOL. XVI. HONOLULU, HAWAU, SATURDAY,

4 ;

V!

j

II' The Stai Is An Intelligent Progressive Newspaper

TELEPHONE 365 5EC0NDSTAR STA EDITIONBusiness Office

VOL. XVI. HONOLULU, HAWAU, SATURDAY, JANUARY 9, 1909. No. 5234

FROM FUISCO AND POUT OF CANADA AND THE FAR EAST COME

MONSTER BOATS ALU WITHIN BRIEF SPACE BAD "WEATHER

THROUGHOUT MILLIONAIRE'S SON AND HIS ORIENTAL AFFIN-

ITY MAKURA HAS SIXTY-SI- X PASSENGERS FOR HONOLULU.

When three trans-Pacil- lc liners hit ofHonolulu within a day there Is a hustling In this harbor of tho hub or thePacific that staggers the ordinary rou-

tine of events.Last evening the Toyo Klsen Katsha a

S. S. Nippon Maru arrived from SanFrancisco with eight days' mall andshe sailed for the Orient at 11 o'clockthis morning.

Bright and early the P. M. S. S.

Manchuria arrived from the Orient,to sail for the Coast at 5 o'clock thisafternoon; at about 1:30 o'clock thoCanadian-Australia- n Co.'s palatialnew S. S. Makura hit port from Vic-

toria and Vancouver, en route to theSouthern Cross colonies, whither shedeparts at 2 o'clock this afternoon.

Customs officers, automobiles, hacks,hotels and other things and people,on this triple account, were stirred ofto an activity that seldom occurs.

A goodly bunch of local passengersstruck Honolulu per Manchuria andgoing through, to tho Coast, aboardthe same monster tank, are severalprominent folks, not of local fame, butwhose fame illuminated this localityabout as much as it has decorated out-

side sections of the earth.Judge Wilfley, for example, Is bound

to San Francisco from Shanghai.Judge L. R. Wilfley Is ho around

whom there was such an' atmosphereof argument for the reason that heIs' alleged to have high-hand- it inthe Orient In regard to American law-

yers. He was complained against byattorneys who went to Shanghai rrom'Honolulu; there were damage suitsand other excitement; complaints werefiled; It was sought to have him re-

moved; and President Roosevelt stoodup for him, in fact practlcaUy exon-

erated him; then Wilfley resigned, andnow he is going hack to the States,with, as far as is known, no truthof any charges clinging to him, butremoved from the bench by himself ofhis own will. Ho Is sick of.Shanghal.

Then aboard the same boat, B. S.

Manchuria, is the son ot James Pier-po- nt

Morgan, millionaire and Juggler,;r

ENRYWIDOW OF THE LATE JUDGE BR

THOUSAND DOLLARS AGAINST

VERDICT IN THE FEDERAL 0ATTORNEY.

Henry Withoff, the mate of the bar- -

kentlno Fullerton who has been award- -ed a verdict of $17,500 as damagesfor Injuries incurred In the perform- -

1

Here!Stop just long enough to con-

sider this:If you wero to dlo today,

would your property bo dispos-

ed of in just tho way you nowIntend?

Is your will drawn up proper-ly In legal form? If not, let usdo It for you free of charge.

Trust Co., Ltd.,

923 Fort Street

steamships and railroads and WallStreet and politics and a few otherthings. This son occupied whole double-pag- es of colored supplements ormainland Sunday papers when he weu

beauteous and sweet-soule- d llttloJapaneso girl, and his father was an-

gry, and New York female society wasmad because the rich young mandidn't plaster his million .on some Go-

tham dame; nevertheless it was a lovematch with George, George D. Mor-gan, and he married the dear llttloJapaneso and he has her with him,and a very devoted wife she Is; andho is en route to New York, onceagain to pique the alleged exclusiveManhattan social swirl with the spirltuelle perfection of his Oriental affinity.

J. K. Roosevelt Is another passenger aboard tho Manchuria, a cousin

President Roosevelt he is, thoughhe's not boasting about it.

Seventeen hundred tons of preciousfreight is aboard the Manchuria forHonolulu and the Hawaiian stevedoresare hustling to get it ashore so thatthe monster ship can leave at. 5 p. m.today.

Nasty weather was experienced;there was only one good day. Every-body was seasick, or almost everybody.Earthquakev conditions seem to havemade the old earth feel disagreeableand sea and shore are getting tho re-

sult of tho world's indisposition.The fine S. S. Makura was held out

side this morning for the reason thatthe sixty-si- x passengers for Honolulu,as well as tfte through passengers,were horribly slow In lining up forinspection. Next time, it is hoped,this delay will be overcome.

J. G. Schllef, formerly a Honolulunewspaper, cashier, who has been Inthe Canadian district for a couple ofyears, returns in the Makura to Ho-

nolulu, looking well and glad to bo

back.The Makura, too, had bad weather,

encountering a southwest gale. Shebrings 200 drums of codfish, 100 casesof whiskey and some miscellaneousfreight for this port.

VS.

WITINGS A SUIT FOR OVER THREETHE SAILOR WHO GOT A $17,500

OURT HERE SAYS GEAR WAS HIS

ance of his duty, seems hound to havedelay after delay before he gets hismoney. Tho latest development Is asuit which has been filed against him

SHOESFor Men

ALL THE NEW SHAPES

MAINLAND PRICE3.V

LB.Kerr&Co.5LtdALAICEA STREET.

notnFROM FIBS

CITY OF HILO SHOULD HAVE

LARGER WATER MAINS TO EN-

SURE SAFETY FROM FLAMES.

A better water system for Hllo Is0110 of the matters which' Superin-tendent of Public Works MarstonCampbell has been taking up withWilliam Vannatta, tho superintendentot tho water system In the Hawaiitown, for the past ten days. Thomains in Hllo, with tho exception otthose on Walanuentto street and inono or two other localities, are toosmall to give! proper fire protection,,as was shown recently at a fire inwhich a little baby was burned todeath and which, with a decent water I

supply at tho point of tho conflagra-tion, would have been quickly ex-tinguished.

In addition to this many of themains In Hllo nrc old and filled withholes which cause a great deal otleakage and los3. Tho reservoir sys-tern is in good shape and no addl- -

I

tions are needed In this line, whilethe supply is first class and largo '

enough for a city of ten tlmes'HIlo'ssize.

DYING ACT OF

PH LAW THROPY

ACCOUNTANT MARTINOFF LEAVES

ALL HIS ESTATE TO THE CHIL-

DREN'S HOSPITAL.

Mr. Martinoff, a German about C2

years old, died In the Queen's Hospi-tal last night after an operation. Hewas an accountant and ten or fifteenyears ago was employed In Bishop'sBank.

Before his death Mr. Martinoff madea will, leaving his entire estate tothe projected Children's Hospital. Itwas his dying request that no ceie-mon- y

should be held at his funeral.The body has been cremated.

TEN DOLLAR

CLUB AGA N

OBJECTION MADE TO TRYING

JAPANESE UNDER INDICTMENTTHAT IS FIVE YEARS OLD.

An IntnrnMnr mnfnr. mm.. Un.(' T...1iuiu juubo jjuie jesteruay wnon tia-yas-

was placed on trial. H0 wasto bo tried under an old Indictmentas a member of tho Ten Dollar Clubwhich existed somo five years ago.His attorney strenuously objected,claiming that tho indictment wasworthless for present uso, for Haya-sh- l

had not been given tho speedytrial, which, under tho Constitutionevery defendant Is entitled to. Thomatter was tho occasion of a ratherhot argument and was continued tillMonday, morning.

in the California courts for tho sumof $35G1 by Mrs. George u. Gear, thewidow of the late Judge Gear of thiscity.

According to the complaint whichhas reached this city Withoff agreed topay to Attorneys E. A. Douthltt nndGeorge D. Gear forty per cent of anyamount which he might bo given InJudgment for his services. JudgeGear died shortly after tho suit fordamages was brought and did littlework on' tho case. Mrs. 'Gear how-ove- r,

Is suing or ono hnlf of the fortyper cent mentioned.

LOOK AFTER YOUR HEALTH.If you havo a cough, euro It. a

cough Is a symptom of more serioustrouble. Chnmberlaln's Cough Re-medy Is tho best obtainable and youneed have no hesitancy In using it asIt contains nothing Injurious. Forsale by all dealers, Benson, Smith &Co., agents for Hawaii.

PSYCHOLOGY AND ART CLASSES.

Miss Locke's Class in tho Psychologyot William James will begin January20, at 10:30 a. m., at tho residenceof Mr. J. M. Dowsett, Punahou strcot,between Wilder and Beretanla ave-nues, and tho Art Class will begin Jan-uary 15, at 3:30 p. m., at tho resi-

dence of Mrs. C. B. Wood, Thurstonavenue.

GEOLOGISTS PREDICT MORE UPH EAVALS THE STORIES OF SURVI-

VORS TELL OF THE TERRIBLE SCENES IN THE DESTRUCTION OF

THE LARGER CITIES IN THE ZONE OF THE QUAKE HOW THE

SHOCK FELT.

The following' dispatches give detailsof the great Italian earthquake:

One of the refugees from Reg-gl- o

who was the first to bring thonews of tho city's destruction, tried tomake his way to Sicily In a sailboat,but was compelled to return, and final-ly found safety at a peninsula port. Inhis experiences he said:

'Tho sea was mysteriously agitatedand the heavens were ablaze. NearingSicily the clearing smoke revealed themystery; Messina was in flames. Inthe frenzy of despair I turned my boatback to Ca'abrla.''

Starving, bleeding from Injuries andalmost Insane from their terrifying ex- -

WASHINGTON, January 9. Yester-day the Houso adopted a resolutionpurging the Secret Service paragraphof the President's Message of tho portions declared disrespectful to Con-gress. The President has respondedby disclosing a report made by SecretService officers connecting . SenatorTillman of South Carolina with thoattempted lanO grab in Oregon. Thereport includes copies of tho corres-pondence of the Senator with an agentin Oregon who was instructed to re-

serve eight sections in the namc3 ofTillman's family. Meanwhile Tillmanhad Introduced a resolution to com-pel the railroad owners to sell lanhcheaply, as provided in the grant.

Washington is probably In a per- -

tP nan ten

TRYING BY

The arrest of John T. Stayton, charg-ed with official letters fromtho States mall, took placo lastnight shortly after tho mall pouchesfrom the Nippon Mnru were broughtto tho postofllce. Stayton has heldtho position of assistantIn this city for somo time and hashad the trust and confidence ot evcry-on- o

in tho postal service. Ho is anpopular young man and as

far as can be learned hasno bad habits. Ho was soon to havobeen married.

The of letters from themall appears to havo been dono byStayton In order to ascertain whetherho was being watched for a more se-

rious offense. It that whenthe money order accounts woro ins-

pected last there was a$200. This could not

bo traced, but was mado good by Stay-to- n.

At tho time no ono had thoslightest Idea that ho could havo hadanything to do with tho shortagegreat was tho confidence ot tho otherofficials In his Integrity.

From that time on Prattand Inspector Haro kept missing mallfrom Sovoral times theywere rather severely for

to answer letters which hadbeen mailed them In official en

HOME MADE CANDY.FIno Turkish Nougat, Cocoanut Loaf,

Almond and Hazel Nuts Pure,delicious candy made dally.

I

saster

perlences, Messina's survivors are flee-

ing In all directions. Tho snectaclopresented by tho ruined seaport is de-

scribed as terrifying. Tumbling build-ings both killed and mutrated many,while hundreds of the Injured, Im-

prisoned in the wreckage, were aban-- 1

doned to their fate by tho fleeingpopulace. One of those who escapedsaid.

"The earth suddenly to dropand then turn violently on Its axisThe whole who practicallywere from the rentIn twa'u. were spun around like tops

(Continued on Page Five.)

feet sizzle of excitement over thoPresident's sensational exposure ofSenator Tillman ot South Carolina,who Is proba'bly about the last man inAmerican public Hfo who would havebeen suspected of any connectionwith graft. He Is tho fieriest memberot either House and may bo expectedto make all sorts of a row before theIncident closes.

Tho mall last night brought copiesof tho President's special message toCongress of January 4, which wascabled briefly to The Star, in an-

swer to the resolutions

(Continued on Taea Three).

. Best cup of coffee in the city at NewEngland Bakery.

velopes. Tho result was a general Investlgatlon which was mndo by Ins-pector Hare and which resulted lastnight In the taking of threo letters oneof which had been opened, from Stayton, shortly after tho arrival of thoNippon's mall.

When placed under urrest on a warrant sworn to by U. S. District Attorney Breckons, Stayton maintained thathis accounts would be found o. k. andthat If they wero not, ho had themoney with which to inako good anyshortage. Ho said that ho had been

worried by his work, tho Inspectionof accounts and other matters, that. hohad opened tho official malls. Howas taken to tho Oahu jail at about 11

o'clock last night and waived examination before United States Commissioner Kingsbury this morning being holdIn $1,000 bonds.

The accounts of Stayton's office havonot yet been examined by InspectorHare, but this will bo done very soonTho work could not bo attended to today on account of tho fact that therearo threo malls to bo handled andthe postofflco Is rushed with this business. Tho penalty for let'tors from a postal pouch under tho lawIs imprisonment for not moro than ayear or a fine ot not over $500 orboth.

SALE OF WAISTS.Sachs' annual January clearance

sale of ladles' waists begins Mondaymorning at almost half prices.

S3 1? s3HiGsa ra e nss n nssa are cm

ASSISTANT POSTMASTER STAYTON RELEASED ON $1,000 BONDS-SO- ME

TALK OF A SHORTAGE WHICH HE MAY HAVE BEEN

TO KEEP QUIET STOPPING INVESTIGATION AC-

COUNTS BEING INVESTIGATED.

abstractingUnited

postmaster

oxtremolypractically

abstracting

appears

September,discrepancy of

so

Postmaster

Washington.reprimanded

failureto

Fudge.

seemed

population,precipitated houses

Congressional

so

abstracting

QUAKE IN MEXICO

WHICH SCIENTIST

f HAD(Associated Press

MEXICO CITY, January i). An earthquake occurred on the westerncoast of Mexico yesterday, it was severely felt at Acapulco and Oaxaca,but fortunately tho damage was slight.

This shock on the Mexican coast, It will ho seen elsewhere in this Is-

sue, was predicted as well as tho Sicily disaster by Dr. Willis Eugeno Ever-ett, a scientist who arrived at Tacoma from Alaska the first of tho year.According to his calculations "a severe seismic upheaval and submergence'of land on the Atlantic seaboard may be expected."

SAN FRANCISCO, January !). Among the passengers sailed for Ho-

nolulu in tho Siberia today aro Mr. Calvin of tho Southern Pacific and Mr.Bancroft of the Union Pacific Railroad, H. A. N. Lewis, Governor W. F.Frear, Justice S. M. Ballou and Alexander Young.

house mmWASHINGTON, D. C, January 9. The House of Representatives has

adopted a resolution to Investigate and has passed an appropriation to un-

cover frauds ? -.-1 punish crlihinals involved In matters concerning whichthe Secret Sei.i.s has been inve3tigat

SENTENCE

FORUNION CITY, January 9. The local

of the nightrlders, condemning them to

BATTLESHIPS

ordered to leave this port for MarsellGreece.

1LSAN FRANCISCO,

Tho will of tho late Claus Spreckolshas been admitted to probate.

E. C. Peters, as tho representativeof tho Sisters of St. Andrew's Priori',is suing Georgo E. Smithies Tor $3000,

duo on promissory notes.

IT HAS COME.

Wo received that largo shipment ot Tengu Japan rlco and wo aroselling it as tho demand Is verygreat. It supersedes all In

and quality. K. Yamamoto, soleHotel near Nuuanu.

IIPIB)'

PiWHERAbsolutely Pure

Ths only baking powdormado with Royal Orapo

Cream of TartarNo Alum, No Lime Phosphate

PRE

DEATH

REECE

DICTEDCable to The Star.)

FRAUD

lug.

NIGHTRIDERScourt has passed sentence on Blx

be hanged on February 19.

GO TO

AND FRANCEles. The Ohio has ordered to

HAWAII'S COUNTY CLERK STAFF.County Clerk John KnI has mado

tho following recommendations tothe Board of Supervisors for appoint-ment ns members ot his offico staff:W. II. Beers, deputy county clerk; D,K. Ewallko, first assistant; A. A. Ha-pa-l,

stenographer and typewriter; W.M. Kalalwaa, second assistant. Thonominees represent all three politicalparties. Republican, Democratic andHomo Rule Hawaii Herald.

Tho deposition of Col. Spalding ofiKauni In the case of the Territory vs.Hco Fat, was taken in Robin-son's court today.

A SHOE FORTHE TIMES !

NO RUBBERSNEEDED

Tha new boot, the additionto our stock, Is ono that will meet thoneeds of the man who does lots ofwalking and is troubled with parti-cularly sonsltlvo feet. Tho

"Cambridge"Is made ot soft black vlcl kid has adouble sole, broad toe, and low heol.

It has a distinctive and Is altogether a good-lookin- g, sensible shoe.

No. C23. Price $5.00.

Limited1051 Fort Street., Telephone 282

PORT SAID, January 9. The-Rhod- Island and Nebraska havo been

January 9.

havo

fast,others fla-

voragent,

been

Judge

latet'

style,

' -- W. --m-.ltrtrr.....7l,int

v. x

Xi

Page 2: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu...4 ; V! j II ' The Stai Is An Intelligent Progressive Newspaper TELEPHONE 365 5EC0ND STAR STA EDITION Business Office VOL. XVI. HONOLULU, HAWAU, SATURDAY,

1 2L1

. i.

f

- TWO

Oceanic Steamship Company

Alameda ScheduleLeave San Fran. . .Arrive Honolulu. Leave Honolulu. Arrive San Fran.

JAN. 9 JAN. 15. JAN. 30 FEB. 6

FEB. 20 FEB. 20

MAR. 13 MAR. 19

JAN.FED.

' On and Juno 24th, 1908, the SALOON RATES between Honolulu

and San Francisco will bo as follows:

ROUND TRIP, $110.00. SINGLE FARE, $65.00.

In connection --with tho Balling the nbovo steamers tho Agents aro

prepared to issuo to intending passengers coupon through tickets by any

railroad from San Francisco to all points the United States and fromYork by steamship lino to all European Ports.

FOR PARTICULARS, APPLY TO

W. G. Irwin & Co., LtdAGENTS FOR OCEANIC STEAMSHIP CO.

Canadian-Austrai- in Royal Mail Steamship Co

Steamers tho above lino running In connection with tho CANADIAN-PACIFI- C

RAILWAY COMPANY between Vancouver, B. C, and Sydney,N. S. VV., and calling at Victoria, B. C, Honolulu and Brisbane, Q.

FOR FIJI AND AUSTRALIA. FOR VANCOUVER.

AORANQI JANUARY C MAKURA JANUARY 8

MO ANA FEBRUARY 3 AORANGI FEBRUARY C

MAKURA MARCH 2 MOANA MARCH 5

AORANGI.. MARCH 31

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

Theo. Davies Ltd., Agents

American Hawaiian Steamship CompanyHonoluiu- - Weekly Sailings Tehuantepec

Freight

SAN TOMEXICAN TO

niOU HONOLULU TO SAN

PLEIADES TO

Freight Company's wharf,Greenwich

the

CHINA

CHIYO

MAR. 3 ...MAR. 9

MAR.

SEATTLE TO

MEXICAN TO SAIL

&Agents,

C. P.General Freight Agen

will call and

CHIYO MARU

JANUARYTENYO MARU 9KOREA

H & 1

i as?-

New York to via

received at all times at the wharf, 41st Street,Brooklyn.

FROM FRAN.SAIL JAN. 14

SAIL JAN. 20

received atStreet.

Pacific Mail Steamship Co.Occidental & Oriental S. S. Co.

Toyo Kisen Kaisha S. S. Co.of above companies

JAN.

MAR

FROM

CO., LTD.,

leave

ASIA

South

this port about tho dates mentioned below:FOR THE ORIENT. FOR SAN

NIPPON MARU JANUARY JANUARYSIBERIA JANUARY 15

JANUARY 23

JANUARY 29MARU FEBRUARY

ASIA FEBRUARY 13

20 20

10 16

of

In

of

24 30

11

H. HACKFELDHonolulu.

Morse,

at HONOLULU

JANUARY 16JANUARY 23

MONGOLIA 30FEBRUARY

FEBRUARY 20

Co., Gen

From

Company's

HONOLULU.

FRAN-CISCO.

Steamerson cr

FRANCISCO.9

MANCHURIAC

HONOLULU

MANCHURIA

FOR FURTHEB INFORMATION APPLY TO

H. HACKFELD CO. LTD

riATSON NAVIGATION COMPANYSchedule S. S. HILONIAN in the direct service between San Francisco

and Honolulu.Arrive Honolulu. Leave Honolulu.

S. S. HILONIAN 20TH JAN. 26THS. S. HILONIAN FEB. 17TH FEB. 23RDS. S. HILONIAN MAR. 17TH MAR. 23RDS. S. HILONIAN APR. 14TH APR. 20THS. S. HILONIAN MAY MAY 18THS. S. HILONIAN JUNE 9TH JUNE 15TH

The S. S. Lurllne of this line sails from San Francisco January 5th forHonolulu direct, receiving freight for Honolulu and Kahulul.

Si S. Hyades of this line sails from Seattle about January 22nd, for Hono-

lulu direct receiving freight for Island ports.

Castle & Cooke Limited, Agents

UN

TRANSFER CO., LTD

126 KING ST.

FEB.

after

New

THE

AND

JAN.

JAN.

12TH

BAGGAGE, SHIPPING,

STORAGE, WOOD,

PACKING, COAL.

FURNITURE AND PIANO MOVING.

Transfer Co.W. H.. SILVA, MANAGER. ,

BAGGAGE, PACKAGES AND FREIGHT PROMPTLY DELIVERED ATALL STEAMERS.

Furniture Moved with Care to Any Part of the City.TELEPHONE 571. Stand: Hotel & Union Sts., Honolulu.

ToiletOF EVERY DESCRIPTION RATHER

CHEAPER THAN USUAL IN THIS

STORE. WE HAVE MANICURE

SETS IN GREAT VARIETY. . . .

....

siIndependent

Goods

BENSON, SMITH & CO.HOTEL AND FORT STREETS.

.Wm iik....

TUB HAWAIIAN BTAR, SATURDAY, JANUARY 0. 1909.

(Latest Shipping

TIDES, SUN AND MOON.Full moon January Gth at 3:41 a.m.

i,s I s . S - $s& Ps h h p tijg

H 3 3 1 ll g Ua sJ a 5 3 g " "

A. M. It. I. M. 1'. M. A. M

4 2:30 2.2 2:3U 7:14 10:00 0:40 5:33 .VIII

6 .1:17 2.2 3.14 8 22 10:48 0:40 5:34 6:M

0 3:S3 2.2 3 67 8:57 11:28 0:40 5:35 Rises

7 4:27 2.1 4:12 0:34 12:03 0:40 5:. :I9

8 4:58 2.0 6 2S 1010 12:32 0:40 5:3tl 7:10

0 5.35 1.0 0:20 12:55 10:48 6:40 5:37 8:31

10 0:02 1 7 7:18 1:27 1:27 0:40:5:371 6:23

Times of tho tide are lalien from theU. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey tables. Tho tides at Kahulul and HIlooccur about one hour earlier than atHonolulu. Honolulu standard time is10 hours 30 minutes slower than Greenwich time, being that of tho meridianof 157 degrees 30 minutes. The timewhistle blows at 1:30 p. m. which istho same as Greenwich, 0 hours, 0 min-utes. The Sun and Moon are for localtime for the whole group.

1 Shipping in Port I

(Army and Navy).U. S. S. Iroquois ,Moses, station tug.

(Steamships.)Br. S. S. Glendevon, newcastle, Dec.

21.A.-- &. S. Alaskan, S. F., Dec. 30.

P. M. S. S. Manchuria, Orient, Jan. U.

C.-- S. B. Makura, Victoria, Jan. a.

(Sailing Vessels.)Am. sc. Helene, Gray's Harbor, Dec.

7."

Am. bkt. Irmgard, Schmidt, S. F.,Dec. 25.

Am. sp. W. P. Frye, Murphy, S. F.,Dec. 25.

Fr. Sp. Thiers, Hobart, Jan. 7.

1 The Mails

(INCOMING.)From S. F., Siberia, Jan. 15.

From S. F., Alameda, Jan. 15.

From Orient, Chiyu Maru, Jan. 1C.

(OUTGOING.)

For Colonies, Makura, Jan. y.

For S. F., Manchuria, Jan. 9.

For Orient, Siberia, Jan. 15.

For S. F., Chlyu Maru, Jan. 1C.

For S. F., Alameda, Jan. 20.

U. S. A. TRANSPORTS.Thomas S. F., for Hon. Jan. 6.

Bufbrd from Hon. for Manila, Dec. 15Dlx from Hon. for S. F. Jan. 7.Sherman at S. F.Crook at S. F.Sheridan left Hon. for S. F., Jan. 5.

ARRIVING.Saturday, Jan. 'J.

P. M. S. S. Manchuria, from Orient,7 a. m.

C.-- S. S. Makura, from Victoria,10:30 a. m.

S. S. Mauna Kea, from HIlo and wayports, 0:45 a. m.

PASSENGERS.Arrived.

Per S. S. Mauna iKea, January 9,

from Hiio and way ports: B. S. Osgood,Mrs. Osgood, Miss M.Dowuing, Miss R.Davison, Miss A. Forster, Mrs. a. B.Forster, Miss Cromwell, J. Otben, Mrs.Othen, Miss Thayer, M. Hill, Mrs. Hill.Misses Alexander (2), Mrs. C. II.Dickey, E. Mana, D. Damon, Mrs. Bet- -

tis, Mrs. R. Harker, F. E. MAllory,Mrs. Mallory, Miss Mallory, W. K.Schultz, Mrs. Schultz, Mrs. I. Renwick,H. Shlpmau, Mr. Jaklns, J. Gaurd, MissN. Shlpman, Miss Jenkins, Miss E.Curtis, F. M. Swanzy, Mrs. Swanzy,Miss Swanzy and maid, J. Lemon, H.M. Ayres, O. B. McKay, Mr. Freltas,W. Scribner, H. Green, D. E. Metzger,Geo, Carty, A. Lindsay, J. G. Pratt,Jr., L. Warren. C. W. Zelgler, F. Harrison, J. C. Green, Mrs. Green, MissL. Gibbon, T. M. Church, J. K. Meyers,Misses Moir (2), Master Molr, Miss M.

Forrest, R. Lucas, C. Wlllfong, C. E.King, K. KoJIma, Mrs. M. Williams,Mrs. iKoJima, T. Tschunal, Mrs. Ka-wa- i,

Misses Lidgato (2), W. Lllgate,R. E. Askew, D. F. Nicholson, W. El-lia- tt,

W. G. Walker, Mrs. Walker, W.A. Irwin, J. Walohlnu, Mrs. Walohlnu,Miss E. Cowan, Miss Tullock, Miss A.Bond, Miss M. Hind, H. Hind, O. Hind,H. Bond, F. Dickender, Thomas Nott,R. Hind, Rev. J. W. Wadman, S. Pel-se- r,

George C. Beckloy, Miss J. Beck-le- y,

Miss M. Campbell, R. W. Shingle,C. Stlllman Jr., Misses Austin (2), A.Austin, H. Howard, George Hlggerby,P. Coyne, Sam Parker, George Davis,A. H. Afong, Miss V. Rickard, A. W.

Curtin, Mrs. Curtln, 3 children andservant, Miss Marshall, W. S. Chllling- -worth, Adj. A. V. Winter, Miss J. Kamakal, E. Amln, W. Wadsworth, R. A.

News on Pago .

Wadsworth, G. H. Moyer, F. P. Rose-cran- s,

Mrs. Rosecrans, A. Taylor, MissRosecrans, W. Hansen, E. B. Corley,Miss S. E. Taylor, Miss Kingler, MissA. McLain, Miss R. Aklm, Miss M. Tay-

lor, J. Mlchloka, Miss Okamura.Booked.

Per R. M. S. S. Makura, for Syduey,Jan. 9. J. H. Whltehouso and wile,E. J. "Whltetiouse, Mrs. Frances Day,W. E. Desplace, S. J. Whowell and wiroThos. Carson, F. C. Johnson, F. 10.

King, W. Porter Allen, F. S. Townsend,John Buchanan, L. Peterson and wife.

Per P. M. S. S. Manchuria, for SanFrancisco, Jan. 9. Q. J. Warren, MissGrace Power, Miss Ada Dwyer, MissHelen Lowell, Mrs. Armstrong, Mrs.Alter, Miss Lottie' Alter, Miss HolaneRaymond, Miss Florence Busby, MissPearl Eagell, Messrs. Fred Meek, Jos.Smiley, J. F. Webber, Argyll Campbell, Eugene Shakespeare, Mr. Malllu,Miss D. P. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. C. L.Lowney, child and nurse, Col. SpaldingMorgan Adams, Miss E. Bohr, Mrs. J.Sonnl and maid, E. Kroger, W. J. Lentand wife, J. S. McCandless, Mr. andMrs. Henry Holmes, Mrs. Duck, Wm.Frese, Miss Frese, Leon Honlgs-berge- r,

Mrs. Ida G. W. Harrison, MissMabel Thayer, W. S. Shaw, Mrs. Spear,Mrs. Aug. Dreler, Mrs. E. T. Dreier andchild, Mrs. A. Clark, Geo. B. Gale andwife, W. D. Wohlforth, Miss AnnaWohlforth, A. K. Tiernan and wife,Mrs. L.. Tiernan, Miss O. E. Steele, F.J. Lescher and wife. C. B. Ellis andwife, H. A. Pratt, wife and two chil-

dren, E. L. Houter and wife, J. C.

Montgomery, E. M. Landley and wife,Mrs. F. C. Johnson, J. Hodglns andwife, Miss P. Q. Arlelgh, Floyd H. Em-

mons, Tong Phong, Miss M. F. Floyd,Miss M. D. Dunning, Miss Davison, T.H. Johnson and wife, J. F. Kerriganand wife, A. W. T. Bottomley, H. A.Reed, L. Van Laak, F. P. Livingstonand wife.

LATEST CABLE NEWS

MORE EARTHQUAKES.REGGIO, January 9. There has

been a renewal of earthquakes here.One thousand bodies have been dug

from the ruins of the city.Tho safe of the Bank of Italia has

been found containing three milliondollars.

Three children who were burled forseven days hare been rescued alive.

ROME, January 9. There will be nocelebration of the Queen's birthday.

MATSON COMPANY TO

BUILD BIG STEAMERSAN FRANCISCO,' January 9. The

Matson Company has contracted withthe Newport News shipbuilders for amillion-dolla- r steamer to go on theHonolulu run.

GREAT HAUL BY ROBBERS.

PARIS, January 9. A mail sackcontaining '$200,000 was stolen In thestreets yesterday in broad daylight.

BLIZZARD IN MONTANA.

HELENA, Mont., January 9. Ablizzard has been raging for fourdays.

Fine Job Printing. Star Office.

Fraternal Meetings

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

Meets every Monday evening at 7:30in Odd Fellows- - Hall, Fort Street. Vis-iting brothers cordially Invited to at-tend.

J. LIGHTFOOT, N. G.

E. R. HENDRY, Sec.

HONOLULU LODGE 616, P. B. O. E.

will meet in their hall. King streetnear Fort, every Friday evening. Byorder of the E. R.

WM. H. McINERNY, E. R.H. C. EASTON, Secy.

DIVISION No. 1, A. O. H.

DIVISION No. 1, A. O. II.Meets overy first and third Wednes-

day, at 8 p. in., in C. B. U. Hall, FortStreet. Visiting brothors are cordiallyInvited to attend.

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

The Latest Parisian .

GOWNSI

MADAME LAMBERTS

Harrison Block. Beretania & Fort Bta

For a square meal tnat Is tasty andgenerous.

BOSTON RESTAURANTHptol& Fort.

Ring; XlnThe City jilessenger Service tor

prompt delivery, personal attentionand carefulness to parcels and messages.

CITY MESSENGER SERVICE.Union Street Phone 1ZZ

4 SUITS FOR 51 50.

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

JOIN NOW.

TELEPHONE 496.

fho Ohio Clothes Clenning Co.Harrison Block, Beretanla nr Fort.

BEAUTIFUL ROGKERSChairs, Bureaus and Furniture of all

kinds made from select Koa.

Wing; Chong CoMCorner King and Bethel.

I'll XexetixiiGLFor Furnished Rooms and Board.

Best place for meals in tho city. Corner Union and Beretanla streetsPhono 1299.

The Two. JacksThe Most Popular Saloon in the City.

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

Hotel Street near Fort. Phone 482

Your Picture taken with greatestcare.

o

HONOLULU ART 1'lIOTO GALLERY.Hotel near Nuuanu.

I &. Mffl & Co.

AGE! ITS FOP. THERoyal Insurance Co. of Liverpool, Eng.Scottish Union & National Ins. Co., of

Edlnburg, Scotland.Commercial Union Assurance Co. of

London,rhe Upper Rhine ihs. Co., Ltd.

E I HIKE ID.Honolulu, T. H.

SHIPPING AND COMMISSION MER-CHANTS.

SUGAR FACTORS and GENERAL IN-SURANCE AGENTS.

representingEwa Plantation Co.Walalua Agricutural Co., Ltd.Kohala Sugar Co.Walmea Sugar .Mill Co.Apokaa Sugar Co., Ltd.Fulton Iron Works of St. Louis.Blake Steam Pumps.Westons Centrifugals.Babcock & Wilcox Boilers.Green's Fuel Economizer.Marsh Steam Pumps.Matson Navigation Co.Planters Line Shipplnng Co.New England Mutual Life Insur-

ance Company of Boston.Aetna Insurance Co.National Fire Insurance Co.Citizen's Insurance Co. (Hartford

Fire Insurance Co.)Protector Underwriters of the Phoenix

of Hartford.

Fire InsuranceAtlas Assurance Company of

LondonNew York Underwriters

AgencyProvidence Washington In-

surance Company

The .B, F, Dillingham Co., Ltd,

General Agents for Hawaii.Fourth Floor, Stange'wald Building.

PAOJECp'S

No MatterHow Severe

Your dandruff, or how long standing,or what remedies havo failed,PAChECOS DANDRUFF KILLER.Is guaranteed to cure. This preparation prevents baldness and loss of thehair's natural color. It stops itchingand all scalp Irritations.

Sold by all druggists and at Pache- -co's Barber Shop. Phone 232.

At all Bars

A W I IAN

Mini liiiiiiimiBeretania Street near Aala Street

MANUFACTURERS OF

MACARONI HI ODOH)

BUCKWHEAT (Ml S0BA

The largest and only incorporated concern of iti kindin Honolulu.

A new enterprise launched by enterprising merchants.

K. YamamotoSALES AGENT.

Tel. 399. Hotel St. nearPSBSIISHSHSHSHSHSHSHSHSHSHSBEHSHSHSIISHSaiSHSilSHSHSHSBSO

To ATTRACT THE JAPANESE TRADE edvortlsa In THB DAILYNIPPU JIJI, tho most popular and widely circulated evtnlna papar unoigtha Japanese colony.

JOB PRINTING A SPECIALTY with either lansuaga of Japanaia, Ghlaaao, Korean or English.

The NippuY. SOGA,

Phona Main 4t

gOCCC0CCKC0CtfCC

Tungsten LampsARE SUPERIOR X

Brilliancy, Quality and Efficiency

They are Specially Adapted to Stores and Show Windows whereit is Desirable to Give the True Color Values.

The First Cost is Soon O set by the Saving in Current

aiWII

H A

-- AND-

Nuuann. P. O. Box 816

it

Jiji Co., Ltd.,Manager.

Hotal Btreat near Nauaaa.

Con-

sumption.

II

4444'44

M.CONTRACTOR.

The Hawaiian Electric Co.,LIMITED.

King Street near Alakea. Phone 390.

0CCCCC0K3CCCCCCC

Pond,

Telephone 588

indt's Transfer Co.GENERAL CONTRACTOR.

180 Merchant St., Magoon Building.Baggage, Shipping, Storage, Packing, Wood and Coal. Furniture Moving

and Draylng. Heavy Teaming a Specialty.

Plowing, Sub-Soilin- g and Grading

A.

SWEET VIOLET Table I

iini'liiin tMI iil.lnii, lil ni i-j-':

Butter is the best of thegood butters.

El

Your Premises INeed FILLING and GRADING before the WinterRains set in. We are ready to supply the Earth andGrade for you at Reasonable Prices.

fitfiaii iifci'iM

P.PHONE 890.

M900OO0000O004K000OOO0OO0eO0O

Page 3: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu...4 ; V! j II ' The Stai Is An Intelligent Progressive Newspaper TELEPHONE 365 5EC0ND STAR STA EDITION Business Office VOL. XVI. HONOLULU, HAWAU, SATURDAY,

5

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a'i

:at

Ml

aw

t

.jitKrii id

X?:---V --

MAXflAWAP

The

:..HAWAIIAN 9.

.ARE WELL MIXED In this world and It's tho ability which a man attains In distinguishing the one from the other that counts In or out on the game of success. In a word, shrewdness, Any man Is boundto become rich who can pick the winner every time and shake the loser at a profit. Puunene and Klhel. And what is shrewdness? Merely a capacity for examination and prompt action. Being sure you ro rightthen going ahead. Investigating a proposition, weighing Its merits, calculating its chances of success, looking at It every which way, and grasping it if It wears the winning front. The way to roll It up is to get in on a goodthing, early In the game, when the price Is low. The biggest money Is always made on Judgment and foresight, and not on demonstrated facts. By the time the arc demonstrated, there's a big premium on the stockto pay. "Rapid Transit," if you'ro wise. a good one. but ho good and sure, It's good, then Invest quickly. The "Mayflower" Is what you're looking for. BUY "MAYFLOWER" STOCK. BUY IT NOW. It will putyou In the prosperity ranks in record time it you buy it today at 25 cents. The "Mayflower'' is clean wheat, No. 1, and hand picked. It will stand examination under tho microscope. It cannot be beat In the realm of safe andpermanent Investriient. It's a basket where you can put all your eggs and never get one chipped. Call or write for our prospectus. The "Mayflower'1 Is more of an Industrial enterprise a mining proposition. The Millis In .place, and the ore proven in the ground. It's simply a case of going ahead and earning so much money per ton milled. In short, it's Just a continuous gold.grlndlng proposition. And the ore polarizes pretty high. Aroyou on for some stock? Better move up to a bunch while it's going at 25 Cents. The wise ones are getting in. Join tho chorus. BUY "MAYFLOWER" STOCK. BUY IT NOW!

GEO. M. SHAW,

Hilo, Hawaii..--

a

!.

S 25 Cents. ;. r. ";.r.!i :?.

:'.v: Xtf: i&z

ALEXANDER S BRLDWIN LTD

OFFICERS and DIRECTORS.

H. P. BALDWIN President

J. B. CASTLE 1st Vice-Preside- nt

W. M. Alexander... 2nd Vice-Preside- nt

J. P. Cooke.... 3rd Vice-Pro- s. & Mgr.

J. Waterhouse ....TreasurerE. E. Paxton Secretary

W. O. Smith Director

J. R. Gait DirectorW. R. Castle Director

SUGAR FACTORSAND

(OMISSION MERCHANTS

AGENTS FORHawaiian Commercial & Sugar Com-

pany.Haiku Sugar Company.Paia Plantation.Maul Agricultural Company.Hawaiian Sugar Company.Kahuku Plantation Company.Kahulul Railroad Company.Haleakala Ranch Company.Honolua Ranch.

NEW HAWAIIANSOUVENIRS

Enameled hand-painte- d

Hawaiian Views, brilliant-ly colored, on Mirrors.

Perpetual Calendars,Time Indicators, etc.

HAWAII & SOUTHSEAS CURIO CO.

Alexander Young Bldg.

Blank Books and Typewriting PaperGIvo our Agawan Typewriter Paper

a trial and you will use no other.

THE PLACE

Wall, Hiodols Co., Ltd.,Telephone 10.

Year'sNew Prn

Why not fix up that den foryour husband.

Original designs and coloring by

Tom SharpTho Decorator.

Elite Building Phono 397

Sharp Signs make trade.

.w.; :;:;;:.! . .:..i

PRETTtf

careful

f'i''; J:

SPORTSSPORT ITEM

ALMOSTO'Connell and Golden, who are, on

tho Vorbeck & Farrell circuit, reportthey are meeting with splendid suc;cess everywhere.

Pierce, Cunningham and Shields re-

port pronounced success in their act,"Tho, Puzzled Servant," in Canada,doing tho Bennett time.

Unthan, tho Armless Wonder, Isgo!ng West again, where he will re-

main until next summer, when ho ap-

pears on Hammersto.ln's Roof.Tho team of Swain and Powers has

dissolved partnership. Miss Powershaving signed with a burlesque showtor tho rest of tho season.

Rose La Harte, for three seasonsprima donna at the Hippodrome, NewYork city, try vaudeville withthree new songs by Silvio Hein.

Charles Le Witt, Hazel Ashraoroand Company, in their newest succesa,"A Pa,lr of While Ducks,!' aro on theMozart circuit topping the bills'.

William Tompkins recently playeuthe Orpheum, Los Angeles, Cal.,- - fortho third In flvo months, nndscored as heavily as ho did on hisllr&t visit.

Clarice Mayne has arranged to stayin America for twenty weeks longerat an increased salary, and has accordingly postponed her engagementsIn Eu2iand.

Newell and Niblo. after six monthson the Continent, will return to Eng-land and produce a now vision of

comedy act that they tried outwith fcoou success last Spring.

Jack Odell and Grace Gilmoro aroon the Hodklns circuit, and reportmeeting with success. Their nowact, by Jack Burnett, entitled ''S.fsetCharity, nas proven a winner.

Do Faje Slsteis, who recently 10- -

iiirneu tiom a successful Europ-j.i-

tour of flvo months aro now playingtho Orpheum circuit, booked by PatCasoy. They will return to Paris thisyear.

Adelo Pruvis OnrI and Mile. AlorSaro scoring a. big success on tho Intor-Stat- e cucult. Tho Japanese costumes of beautiful handwork aro ov- -

erywhero favorably commented upon.Al C. Jundt, formorly of Brazil and

Brazil (Les Jundts) has given upstago work. Mr. Jundt will havocharge of the J. C. Mathews' agencywhile tho latter travels with' tho Lau-

der road show.Babo Rio and Etholyno D'Ardono

stato that they havo taken Honey BoyHelnlojn Into their act to managesame and direct their tour South.Hereafter they will bo known as theLyon Trio.

May Boloy will return to tho stagoafter tho holidays for n tour of thoOrphoum circuit. Sho will glvo uptho eccentric characters with whichsho has been associated in tho past,and will offer a novel specialty.

Santoro and Marlow, and LlttloBaby Victory, owing to the closing of

THE 8TAR,

!i?: r: .

him

M

SATURDAY, JANUARY

i

will

Call, Write

:". t--- ..

'o'a

FROM

EVERYWHERE

the Dram-o-Ton-e Company aro inChicago booking dates. They holdcontracts for twelve weeks with thoabove named company for tho Sum-

mer season.Milly Morris and Sherwood Sisters

aro on the Inter-Stat- o time as an ex-

tra added attraction. Their act"Those Southern Folks," Is the hit ofevery bill. They are bookedthrough the Western Vaudeville As-

sociation.Harry Burns, has resigned his posi-

tion at tho Crystal Theater, Chelson-vi)!- e,

O., and has accepted from thoIr.ter-Stat- o Vaudeville Managers' As-

sociation tho position of field mana-ger- He reports doing finely In hisnew position.- -

Tho International Quartette, H, A.Ackerman, E. Concannon, H. Kaiessand N. Meyers, all Baltimore, Mdboys, are at present making a hit withAl W. Martin's "Undo Tom's Cabin"Company. Next season they expect togo into burlesque.

Tho team of Viola and Engel haodissolved partnership. Viola willhavo a new act, known as Otto Violaand Brother, presenting "Pierrot andHis Master," Otto Viola doing sonvnow feats in somersaulting out ofbarrels, while tho comedian Is doinga new line of "bumps."

Leon Finch, impersonator, reportssuccess in his now original Idea of'Tho Broadway Belle." Mr. Finch Isalso doing tho Brlnkoy Girl and thoGibson Bathing Girl much suc-cess. He is assisted by Roscoo Slater,and is ono of the features with' thoTrousdale Brothers' Minstrels.

SPORT HiSPARKLES

Joe Cohen, statesman, Imprcssarlonnd sports1 promoter is arranging tobring from tho Mainland a couplo ofgood boxers, Peterson nnd Whitney,the latter of whom has been matchedpreviously against Dick Sullivan, whowas beaten hero by Ayres In tho halfmllo walking match.

Sullivan and Whitney havo alreadymet twice. Tho first occasion was ina six round draw. Tho second timoSullivan was beaten In tho twentysecond round becauso SullivOuSbrother, who was his second in thobout, then threw up tho spongo. Slncoliving in theso islands Sullivan hasbeen following tho "health treatmentadvocated by Dr. Roller, living in thoopen air and in tho salt water whiledoing his training. Sullivan's condl- -

few

I17A IV T F.II 71 V UJ vv

51or a

:::f.?? ya' '' :

tlon Is better than It ever was be-

fore, his flesh is in perfect shape andhe has a hunch that he may be abloto beat his old antagonist Whitney.

oAt the annual meeting of tho Chi-

nese Athletic Club held at the ChineseY. M. C. A. hall last night the fol-

lowing were duly eected officers toserve for the ensuing year: Jos. GooKim, president; W. Tin Yan, vice pre-

sident; E. S. Kong, recording secre-tary; JK Y. P. Zane,secretary; John Lo, treasurer; K. C.Yay, assistant treasurer; Phiip Wong,auditor; Lau Tang, manager; Mon Yin;assistant manager.

(Continued from Page One.)

regarding his original message on Se-

cret Service. This messago did notsatisfy Congress, which proceeded yes-

terday to expungo those passages inthe original message which it thoughtInsulting, causing tho President to"come back' with the Tillman expos-ure. Tho special messago of tho 4thvas Jn part as follows:

I am wholly at a loss to understandtho concluding portion of tho resolu-tion. I made no charges of cor-ruption against Congress nor againstany Member of tho present House. IfI had proof of such corruption affect-ing any Member of tho House In anymatter as to which tho Federal Gov-ernment has Jurisdiction, action wouldat once bo brought, as was dono intho cases of Senators Mitchell andBurton, and William-son, Herrmann, and Drjggs, at differ-ent times slnco I havo been President.This would simply bo doing my duty

' In tho execution and enforcement oftho laws without respect to persons.But I do not regard It as within theprovince or tho duties of tho Presi-dent to report to tho Houso "alleged

of Members, or thosupposed "corrupt action" of a Mem-ber "In his official capacity." Thomembership of tho Houso is by thoConstitution placed within tho powerof tho Houso alone. In tho prosecu-tion of criminals nnd tho onforcomont

! of tho laws tho President must resortto tho courts of tho United States.

In tho third nnd fourth clauses oftho preamblo :lt ,is stated that thomeaning of my words is that "thomajority of tbo Congressmen aro Infear of being Investigated by secrotservice men" and that "Congress aB awhole was actuated by that mollvo inenacting tho provision in question,"and that tills Is an impeachment oftho honor and .Integrity of tho Con-gress. Theso statements aro not Ithink in nccordanco ' with thofacts.

A caroful reading of this messagowill show that I said nothing to war-

rant tho statoment that "tho mnjorltyof tho Congressmen wero in fear ofbeing investigated by tho secret' ser-vlc- o

mon," or "that Congress as awhole was actuated by tlmt motive."I did not make any such statement inthis message Moreover I havo never

1009.

Find

than

time

with

Agent "Mayflower" Mine

Office, Suite and 52 Alexander Young BldgPhone for Prospsctus

corresponding

IT ROOSEVELT

TO CONGRESS

Representatives

delinquencies"

!'.B' ;?:

3, FlSCall

J';?;! ...jr. .;.f:b''a .; 'M's:

made any such statement aboutCongress as a whole, nor, with a fewInevitable exceptions, about tho mem-bers of Congress, in any message orarticle or speech. On tho contrary Ihavo always not only deprecated butvigorously resented the practice ofindiscriminate attack upon Congress,and indiscriminate condemnation ofall Congressmen, wlso and unwise, fitand unfit, good and bad alike. Noono realizes moro than I tho Impor-tance of cooperation between the Ex-ecutive and Congress, and no onoholds tho authority and dignity of thoCongress of tho United States In high-er respect than I do. I havo not thoslightest sympathy with the practicoof Judging men, for good or for ill,not on their several merits, but in amass, as members of one particularbody or ono caste. To put togetherall men holding or who havo held aparticular office, whether .It bo thoofllco of President, or Judge, or Sena-tor, or Member of tho Houso of Rep-resentatives, and to class them all,without regard to their individual dif-ferences, as good or bad, seems to moutterly Indefensible; andjt is equallyIndefensible whether the good areconfounded with tho baa In a heatedand unwarranted championship of all,or in a heated and unwarranted as-

sault upon all. 1 would neither attacknor defend all executive officers In amass, whether Presidents, Governors,Cabinet officers, or officials of lowerrank; nor would 1 attack or defendall legislative officers In a mass. Thosafety of free government rests verylargely in the ability of tho plain, ev-eryday citizen to discriminate betweenthoso public servants who servo himwell and those public servants whosorve him ill. Ho can not thus dis-criminate If ho Is persuaded to passJudgment upon a man, nor with rer-en-co

to whether ho Is a fit or unfitpublic servant, but with referenco towhether ho is an executive or legis-lative officer, whether ho belongs .toono branch or tho other of the Gov-ernment.

This allegation in tho resolution,therefore, must certainly bo duo toan entire failure to understand mymessago.

If you will turn to tho CongressionalRecord for May 1 last, pages C553 toGCGO,, inclusive, you will find tho do-ba-

on this subject. Mr. Tawucy ofMinnesota, Mr. Smith of Iowa, Mr.Sherley of Kentucky, and --Mr. Fitz-gerald of Now York, nppoar in thisdebato as tho special champions oftho provision reforred to. Messrs.Parsons, Bonnet, and Drlscoll werotho lenders of thoso who opposed thoadoption of tho amendment and up-

hold tho right of tho Government touso tho most efficient means possible-i-

order to detect criminals and toprevent and punish crimo. Thonmendment was carried in tho Com-mitte- o

of tho Wholo, whero no votesof tho individual members aro record-ed, so I am unablo to discriminate bymentioning tho members who votedfor and tho members who votedagainst the provision, but its passage,tho Journal records, was greoted withapplause I nm well awaro, however,that in nny case of this kind manyMembers who havo no particularknowledge of tho point nt issuo, arocontent simply to follow tho load oftho commltteo which lmd considered

(Continued on Pago Six.)

:""il9. :?& .:&

facts

thtir

solid

havo

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WORKCrayon Work and Oil Painting by our expert Artist. The most nr

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Page 4: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu...4 ; V! j II ' The Stai Is An Intelligent Progressive Newspaper TELEPHONE 365 5EC0ND STAR STA EDITION Business Office VOL. XVI. HONOLULU, HAWAU, SATURDAY,

I

Tlie HLoLro.iio.n StarDAILY AND SEMI-WEEKL- Y.

Cublished every afternoon (except Sunday) by the Hawaiian StakNewspaper Association.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES.Local, per annum $ 8.00Foreign, per annum 12. qq

Payable in Advance.Entered at Pott' Office at Honolulu, Hawaii, as second class mall matter.

Subscribers who do not uet thelr papers regularly will confer a favorby notifying the Star Office; Telephone 365.

The Supreme Court of The Territory of Hawaii has declared both THEHAWAIIAN 8TAR (dally) and THE SEMI-WEEKL- STAR newspapers

if general circulation throughout the Territory of Hawaii, "suitable for ad-

vertising proceedings, orders, Judgments and decrees entered or renderedtn the Courts of the Territory of Hawaii."

Letters to THE HAWAIIAN 8TAR should not be addressed to any Indivi-

dual' connected with the office, but simply to THE HAWAIIAN STAR, or tothe Editorial or Business Departments, according to tenor or purpose.

GEORGE F. HENSHALL MANAGER

SATURDAY , JANUARY" 9 1909

A GREAT ROW IN WASHINGTON.

The master' politician in the White House has scored again. It is

all very well for Congress to resent language in the President's regu-

lar message which seemed to reflect on Congress, and it was quite a

national sensation for a time.. But it is overshadowed now by the at-

tack on Senator Tillman, and the president, with apparent reluctance,has justified his original request, and, to some extent, his manner ofmaking it. There is something peculiar about the way in which thisexposure was brought to light. It will be remembered that when Con-

gress took offense at the President's language there were rumors, asstated yesterday, that he was "primed and loaded" and would respondwith exposures if Congress pressed him too far. Then on January4 he replied to Congressional resolutions with a message, in which headopted a remarkably conciliatory tone, apparently inviting Congressto drop the matter of the alleged insulting language and consider the

.Secret Service matter on its merits. Congress refused to be satisfied,indulged in a general roasting of the 'President and actually adopted aresolution expunging from the President's message that portion towhich objections were being made. The President's reply, apparent-ly an effort to justify his charge that objection' was made to the SecretService because it investigated members of Congress, is a SecretService report connecting the Senator from South Carolina with landgrabbing.

It is a very unusual thing for Congress to even consider strikingportions of a President's message fromvthc Record. But the sensationof an attack on Tillman will probably overshadow even this. ThatTillman, tlic pitchfork orator, the rugged, plain spoken, always patrio-tic champion of the people, should be connected with a graft schemeof any sort, will be enough to set Washington by the ears. Perhapsthat is why the President chose him for yesterday's message. If thisis so it may mean that the President is really "primed and loaded"and that there is a lot more coming,

The first compromise offer in the municipal mix-u-p did not comefrom .Mayor Fern, nor from any Democrat, but- from the Republicanside.

The Department of Justice takes a long time over the Breckons mat-ter. But it has been pretty long-wind- ed over the Kepoikai matter andall departments in Washington are very busy just now. These thingshave to go to the President, who is putting in his time on special mes-sages which make fine reading both in and out of Congress. And itis just possible that the department is waiting for a report from thatPinkerton-Secr- ct Service man.

itWLIMM

m IN

says mmANNUAL, REPORT OF THE SKUKKTARY OP THE INTERIOR DISUUSS- -.

ES HAWAIIAN "AFFAIRS AT CONSIDERABLE LENGTH SAYSGENERAL, CONDITIONS OK THE TERRITORY ARE ADMIRABLETHE LAND AND LABOR 1'ROULEMS BEING WORKED OUT.

WASHINGTON, D. C, January 4. In his annual report, recently madepublic, James R. Garfield, Secretary of the Interior, has this to say aboutconditions and affairs In Hawaii:

Careful attention should be given the report of the governor of Hawaiibecause of the constantly Increasing importance of the Territory of Hawaiito the United States. Both politically and commercially the Territory oc-cupies a unique position.

Future legislation affecting Hawaiian interests must be so framed as toclosely unite Its interests with those of the mainland. The people of the"Territory thoroughly appreciate that the benefits which annexation gavethem brought corresponding obligations to the United States. On the otherhand, the people on the mainland should realize that the Territory is anintegral part of the United States and must be treated as such.

This, of course, does not mean that all the laws of the United Statesshould be made applicable to the Territory. Legislation must be in con-formity with any special or unusual conditions. For example, the landlaws in force upon the public domain In the mainland would be wholly inaptin Hawaii. There Is need of change in the land laws of the Territory, butsuch changes must be made in conformity with the conditions there.

Formerly It was supposed that sugar was the only agricultural crop,but more recently it is found that many other products can be profitablyraised, such as coffee, tobacco, rubber, pineapples, and sisal. The sugarplantations have been large In area, and until recently the small landholdlngswere not encouraged a,nd wore not profitable, but with the diversity in agri-cultural products a modification of the system of landholding will necessarilyfollow. a5.fr,

In order to deal wisely with the land questidn, the governor of Hawaiiappointed a commission to study and report upon land conditions and makerecommendation for needed changes. It is earnestly hoped that a systemwill be adopted under which farms may be acquired of small acreage, sim-ilar to the homestead on the mainland, so that ultimately the land will becultivated by many owners Instead of by tenants alone. Such a change'does not Involve the destruction of tile sugar plantations, as. was feared byeome, but will increase the area of arable land and permit the use of landsfor the crops which will be most profitable.

In this connection I have had Mr. Newell, the director of the Reclama-tion Service, malce a thorough personal examination of the land and waterconditions in the islands for the purpose of considering a plan for the re-clamation of lands which can not be cultivated because of the lack of wa-ter.

The water conditions in Hawaii are phenomenal. It is generally sup- -

Vttd!,,

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, JANUARY 9. 190D.

posed that the rainfall throughout the Islands Is excessive. This Is truoIn localities, but there are thousands of ncrcs where Irrigation Is as neces-sary as in the arid districts of tho West.

The Federal Government should treat Hawaii ns It does the mainland,giving Its people the advantage of all tho work which Is being carried on bythe Departments of Agriculture and tho Interior In the study and develop-ment of its agricultural possibilities.

Directly connected with tho land and agricultural problemsls the ques-

tion of labor. Since cutting off the supply of Asiatic labor means must botaken to provide for the substitution of that labor, as It is required, withlabor from the mainland or Europe. There is the 'heartiestbetween the sugar planters, now the largo employers of labor, nnd the Fed-

eral government In working out this difficult problem.The transportation interests of the Territory deserve our most careful

consideration. The success of Increasing and diversifying the agriculturalproducts of the Islands depends upon proper transportation facilities by wa-ter. One harbor, nt least, upon each Island should be provided so thnt theproducts of that Island may be shipper directly to tho markets of thoworld. Congress lias directed the beginning of this work, but further ap-

propriations should be made immediately available. Tho ultimate commer-cial development of our trade with the Orient Is directly connected withproper provisions for ocean transportation with the islands.

Tho general conditions of the Territory are admirable. Educationalwork Is given thorough attention. School conditions In the islands arcmost unusual. In the same school there are often represented more thana dozen different races. The school courses are thoroughly practical, es-

pecial attention being given to industrial courses.Owing to the existence of leprosy, the problems affecting tho public

health have received careful attention. There has been the closestbetween the local authorities and the federal service, but both author- - '

ities feel the need of certain changes In the law, which have been presentedto Congress, tho purpose of which Is to give greater authority to the healthauthorities to take necessary protective measures to prevent the introduc-tion and spread of contagious diseases. The importance of this legislationcan not be over estimated, because of the enormous number of travelers toand from the Orient who enter or pass through tho port of Honolulu.

00000C000HOW COUGHS AND COLDS ARECURED IN BURMA.

The following letter from 'the Super-intendent of the Municipal office atMandalay, Mr. R. J. Stevens, showsthat the method of curing colds inBurma is not unlike that used In al-

most every part o.f the civilized world.He rays: "I have used Chamberlain'sCough Remedy for several years and

352B5HH

have found it most efficacious. I aV

ways keep a bottle of this remedy Intiifi house." This medicine is as goodfor the child as for tho adult and nofamily can afford to be without it. ItIs for salo by all dealers, Benson,Smith & Co., agents for Hawaii.

No matter how severe your dan-druff, Pacheco's Dandruff Killer neverfalls to cure.

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1909 DIARIES(EXCELSIOR)

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Misses and Children's Shoes$2.50 SHOES, $2.00; $2.00 SHOES, $1.50.

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Men's House SlippersSOME 60 PAIRS, LEFT OVER FROM CHRISTMAS, SELLING AT

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Page 5: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu...4 ; V! j II ' The Stai Is An Intelligent Progressive Newspaper TELEPHONE 365 5EC0ND STAR STA EDITION Business Office VOL. XVI. HONOLULU, HAWAU, SATURDAY,

RESOLVE TO ASK

FOBjfll TEST

After a meeting that lasted nearlytwo hours, the civic section of thoMen's League of Central Union church

with outsiders present (allowed tovote, adopted, a resolution calling ontho City and County Attorney to atonco bring quo warranto or other pro-per proceedings to test tho legalityof Glty and County appointments madoby the Board of Supervisors. This wasmnvAfl liv linn. W. T?. HnsHp RpnntnpW. O. Smith had moved an amendment, I

calling for a "harmony committee tointervene, but on a tie vote withdrewit.

A. L. Castle presided. Senator W.O. Smith was tho first speaker. Atfirst in the legislature he was opposedto the municipal bill. It was the in-

tention of the legislature, accordingto his recollection, to create a munici-pal government In which the executivepowers should be vested in a Mayor,with the power of veto, and (ho legis-latlv- o

powers in a Board of Supervisorswith tho power to over-rid- e a veto.Ho mentioned the provisions for ap-

pointments of deputies and clerks bychiefs and contended that the Mayorsappointments in December were au-

thorized but that the Mayor made amistake In not submitting them forthe Board's approval. The Boardprobably took its course, to some ex-

tent extreme in his opinion, In e.

,

Supervisor Logan thought It unne-cessary to speak on" the general pow-

ers of the supervisors which had beendiscussed at the previous meeting. Hopainted out the deficiencies of thecharter, from which the existing dis-putes arose. It did not even give'the Mayor and Supervisors in termsthe power to make and maintain roads,although it gave them control of thouses of the roads., Its authority In thatmost important service of the muni-cipality was indirectly conferred bymaking ihe City and County of Honolulu the successor of the County ot'S1". wnose ring prowess seems

Oahu. It gave the Mayor the .ap-t- o have Slven Stanley KetcUell, Billypolntment of officers, but created ve the fist,c connoisseurs of thesolutoly no offices but the elective middleweight bunch an excuse forones., This glaring deficiency was drawing the color line, the other daycompared with the deflnlteness of the.S the flst,c connolsessurs of theOrganic Act of Congress In designat-ing tho officers of the Territory andwho should elect or appoint them.Hence tho Mayor could' not possiblyappoint Incumbents to offices that dld,man' nnd many believed that they saw

' thenot exist if tho charter was the fundamental law. And hence the board,being charged with carrying on thevarious services handed over to it fromthe county, was compelled to devisesome method of carrying on those ser-

vices. The speaker' referred to thejudicial distinction ibotween officersand employes, admitting that the Ma-

yor had the appointing power when-ever an officer in the legal sense wasto bo appointed. Referring to Sec- -

thatby the

rubgone

thetheir qualification was the ofbonds approved by the

L. Mayor's privatesecretary, was the third regular

of the evening. He presentedsummary of the legal grounds onwhich Mnvnr Fprn wns to

hitman

the His

tho has

December and appoint-ments were harm was done.

W. R. Kingsbury, W.Hall, Scudder, W.Farrlngton, John Martin, Dr.

Rodgers and others,three set speakers the evening con-

tinued the discussion, theend gravitated

end tho presentby Mr. about the

and Supervisors "dickering ioverdivision spoils'," together with

lecturing tone assumed by somespeakers dis-

pute Supervisortho history movementeffect an amicable understanding, alsoto theand Board that this not by anymeans first, nor up presentthe worst conflict authority local

the Territory, tho Re-

public and Monarchy moreand scandalous deadlocks oc-

curred. With the attemptcompromise, had originated with

He mado propositiontho lay his advisers,he

which contemplated thothe appointments with tho

Board's approval and an agreementbetween the and Supervisors

dark for the one positionthere was disagreement,

the subordinate Jobs regardingtho doubted hisand with tho stipulation that

the man selected befrom dabbling on painsummary dismissal.

Fine Job Star

LS. IT FO

DEPUTY flTTORNEY

At,ycsterdny's meeting" of thoof Supervisors, big surprise waa

when letter was read fromCounty Attorney Williams asking thoBoard's permission appoint CarlVS.

as Deputy County Attorney atof $150 The

was referred tho Finance Commit-tee.

tho event of Mr. receivingappointment ho will to the

criminal portion County's lawbusiness and bo distinct

aln 1,10 force tho holCounty have Mr. Smith's servicesat the disposal tho public.Herald.

TWO APPOINTMENTSBY SHERIFF PUA

Upon charge tho Sheriff'soffice on Monday, Pua foundthat thero wero two vacancies to bofilled on tho force. One aroso '

through tho death last SaturdayLieutenant J. Kaajlau who had beenon the force about twenty-flv- o

far back as time otSeverance. Kaallau, who has

been for months, diedat end last week and was

on Sunday, a very numbermourners following him

grave. successor M.who travelled round tho

of Hawaii, tho last election cam-palg-

with Senator Makekau andPua.'

Tho appointment was thatof John who had formerly beenan and bow fills vacancy jthatarose through resignation Off-icer Heihl who has to Hama-ku- a.

Herald.

WORD SHOWS

HIMSELF A BIT

dam Langford, the colored

Coast size him upTho display lie' made sent

curious away with wholesomerespect the abilities of black

reason why many of the lilywhite champions his class were giv--I 7 1 1 O 1 i 1. ,l"."" ivWllUK.

uuy u. mutt, miiiur mm, unuis liable to land that .kick perhansmore liable to land, It than Ketchelis to land one his swings.Langford can damage an opponent.

I those who saw him are convinced,of that. .His enthusiastic local ad- -

are still sea about oneI however. he game?" was the

about man whom they haveseen service. The wal-

loping of has made them cautious about accepting on pastperformances town. Pugi- -Hstic stars from afar have como and

hnfr manv titam i.n..n

show this yet.Billy Roche is one or enthusias-

tic admirers black man.a Danny Cree-don- ,"

declared ihe "Hea knockout handhe can land It. He ofold He has tho hit andaway style of the pugilists.Ho looks all to mo."- -

CHICAGO, December 10.who bear on. the thiscountry will

J. Pierpont Morgan, at Commer-cial banquet, pointed this sentence

him years by his father,tho secret his unfailing optimismspite of and

The elder Morgan's waswhen and son were on theirway America.

"He told me," Mr. Morganas saying, "to my bent Inbusiness, but that business,

work hard. One he said 1

shall always remember, not discountAmerica. He said:

" may bo times whenare dark and cloudy America, whenuncertainty will cause somo dis-

trust and to think thero ismuch production, too much building

railroads and much develop-ment other enterprises. In suchtimes and at all tlmc3 remember thatthe great growth of that vast countrywill take care all.' "

complete line of denatured alcoholarticles at W. W. Dlmond &

Co., Ltd. Lamp3, heaters,chafing dishes, coffee machines, etc.,

'etc. v ' -

tlon 14G, providing for appointments I ",V saff, or is the all negroMayor he took his seat, fighters have streak yellow truehe contended it was nugatory Jn h,B case?

on of impossible condition leMt ohQ Qft imposed on to qualify prior ,

The ,ocal c orto a meeting of part ofiM,nm nr hnrv. , . . .,-

filingboard.

C. Rhodes, thespeak

er a

ntlvlRed- - - 0u.au, ... .1 J Wt vt.Wl liUTO UCC11

ceed with appointments taking mere and the hard,office and refuse to them forjLangford is a nlco little blackthe approval of defense dress parade, but a inof the appointments of subor-jtim- e, battle-lovin- g veteran; but wo

to chiefs departments(are from Missouri. The negro the

was in effect that he had the earmark of a lighter, and not tho cau-t- o

appoint them was necessary earmarks but he hasdo so if the

illegal noCastle, S B.

W. Dr. Ed. Towse,R. M.

together with theof

which inInto tho of how

to deadlock. re-

mark Martin Mayora

of thea

toward the actors In theinduced Logan to give

inside of tho to

remind critics of the Mayorwas

tho to theof in

affairs. Underthe serious

moreregard to

athimself. a to

Mayor to before asdo before the Board ma-

jority givingMayor

Mayoron "a horse"on out-

side ofmayor himself

power,bo should inhibited

in politics of

Hinting, Office.

Boarda

sprung a

toSmitha salary a month. letter

to

In Smiththo attend

of thoit would a

I)olIco a,nd,to

of Hawaii

MADEtaking of

Samuel

pollcoot

foryears, as thoSheriff

ailing severalthe of bur-

ied largoof to tho

His JamesKepoo Coun-ty In

Sheriffsecond

Kelli,officer a

themoved

Hawaii

middle

Pacific a chance toIn action.the a

for the

soIniu

in ne

of vicious

All

mlrers at thing,"Is

siastic anot in actlvo

Papkea man

in another

nP

to bunchthe

of the "Hepocket oditlon of

rereree. hasin either lrIs a lighter the

school. getoldtlmo

tho goods

"Any manis a future of

go broke."the

togiven to agoas ofin panics reverses.

advice givenfather

toIs quoted

follow ownwhatever

to thingto

the of'There things

Into

others too

of tooin

of

buringirons, stoves,

maximbefore a ofutterly Therosaccount theofficers

board, as

wuvbefore comets ground

submitboard. on demon war

Mayor's adlnates of

It powerIt to iiflower either,

In

matterA

It

should

which

which

Is

is

punch

future

A

.THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, JANUARY,0. 1009.

NEW NATIONAL BANK

WASHINGTON, D. C, December 20.

Tho Comptroller of the Treasury hasapproved tho application to organizetho Kohala National Bank with In-

corporators as follows: Jno, Hind, J.F. Woods, G. C. Watt, H. II. Renton,and J. Atkins Wight. Tho Bank ofHawaii, Ltd., Honolulu will be thecorrespondent.

BAND CONCERT

Tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock atMakeo Island, Kaplolanl theprogram for the regular band concertwill be:

PART I.Tho Old Hundred.

Grand uarch The New Year..KappeyOverture Paragraph Three SuppeIntermezzo The Clockbells. . .DouglasSelection Faust Gounod

PART II.Voca! Hawaiian Songs.. Ar. by BergerSelection Ernani VerdiGavotte Rhino Sounds LatanFinale On the Beach Vakuan

'Star Spangled Banner

DEPARTING.Saturday, January 9.

P. M. S. S. Manchuria, for S. F. 5p. m. j

C.-- S. S. Makura, for Colonies, 2

p. m.

DETAILS OF THE

GREAT DISASTER

(Continued from Pago One.)

as they ran through the streets. Manyfell crushed to death and others be-

wildered took refuge for breath be-

side the tottering walls, where theysoon met the fate of their compan-ions."

MESSINA, January 1. I am (in-

formed that In three days, when allhope of having the wounded will havedisappeared, warships will bombardMessina to bury the bodies under theruins and prevent the developmentof an epidemic.

This decision', I.am told, was reach-ed today aboard the battleship ReginaHelena by General Mazza.

By this terrible act that scene ofbeauty and human activity, which boreIhu name of Messina, will have for-

ever ceased to exist.I arrived here last night at S o'clock

frrfm Naples by the Ionia, whichbrought troops and police. The spec-

tacle in the stricken city was terrible.Messina has been completely de-

stroyed. The number of killed andwounded amounts to thirty or fortythousand

STREETS ARE PILES OF RUINS.The quays and streets aro reduced to

piles of ruins. The terror stricken po-

pulation, many of them women withchildren in their arms fill the city withtheir lamentations.

In addition to General Cotta andNicolo 'Fulci, whose deaths have al-

ready been reported, Slgnor Orlloles, amember of the chamber of deputies,also perished.

The starving population yesterdayattacked the Bank of Italy, but was(repulsed by soldiers guarding (thebuilding. They made use of their arms

(

and killed two people.As the depredations In the city con-

tinue the prefect has proclaimed mar-tial law.

SAILORS SAVE WOUNDED.Russian sailors did wonders In the

way of. saving the wounded.There is no shelter to bo had. Food

Is scarce. Part ot the population hasleft for Naples,- Catania and otherplaces..

Reports which reached me from othercenters are equally terrible.

William II. Bishop, United Statesconsul at Palermo, Is thought to havecome here before tho earthquake. Notrace of him has been found.

A French squadron has arrived toassist In the relief work. Five thou-sand troops have arrived and are beingplaced through the city to assist thowounded and keep order.

Survivors, estimated to number 20,- -000, almost all have fled from the city.Nearly every house collapsed. Theline of palaces which surrounded Mes-

sina on the seaside aro nothing butruins. The few walls still standing in-

close an immense cemetery. This lineot palaces seems as if it had beencrushed by gigantic teeth.

ROBBERS PLUNDER BODIES.

Crews of tho Russian warships Bo-gat-

and Slava havo shown marvelouscourage and devotion In tho streets otMessina, which aro a mass ot ruins.One only sees thieves and robbersplundering the dead, and from tlnio totime they are shot by the soldiers inthe darkness.

Rain, hunger and thirst Increasetho sufferings of those who remain.

As I was disembarking this eveningan unfortunate man threw himself Intotho sea, crying "As 110 one will helpme I will kll myself." Ho was res-

cued. 'More appalling than tho destruction

ot the towns and villages themselves Istho terror of tho survivors, The spectacle-I- s horrible. The wounded.bleed- -

ing, ragged refugees are human vic-

tims who stagger hero and there .drag-ging their bruised feet with effortand Btarlng vacantly In all directions.

Those less afflicted tell contradictorystories. Each remembers only thotragedy of which ho personally was

tho victim.It would be useless to revert to the

story of tho destruction of tho towns;they aro exceeded by the horror of thepresent.

FOOD AND SHELTER NEEDED.Dr. Castelllno, who is charged with

the direction of relief from 'Regglo, de-

clares that the question of the sur-

vivors is more harassing than thequestion ot tho dead. Tho governmentarmy and marine mighty as far as theirefforts aro concerned, remain Impotentbefore tho immensity of this misery.

Money is without value. The indis-

pensable need Is food, clothiilg andtents for shelter. These must comequickly. Each day's delay Increasesthe list of dead.

CATANIA, Jan. 1. Refugees fromRegglo and Messina contlnuo to pourInto Catania and the city Is one vasthospital.

Thousands of half nude Individualsof both sexes havo gathered on eitherside of the ruins of Messina, seekingfood or trying to get away by sea.Many children have died from expo-

sure and tho casos of madness are in-

creasing.A train from this city succeeded in

reaching the outskirts of Messina thismorning. It has been learned thatDeputy Fulel, who survived tho disas-ter, has died of his Injuries.

Last night the warships In .Messina

harbor threw their searchlights on theruins to enable the rescuers on shoreto continue their work. The work ofsuccor Is going on feverishly, but tlisforces are still Inadequate. The stenchfrom decomposing bodies Is becomingoverpowering.

RAIN INCREASES SUFFERING.A heavy rain continues to fall at

Messina, increasing the suffering of thoInjured and making more difficult thework of rescue but it is quenching thefires and having a slightly purifying ef-

fect on the air.The distribution of food has been or-

ganized. Bakeries have been openedand slaughtering houses establishedand It Is hoped that by nightfall or atthe latest tomorrow morning no onowill be without food.

The city has been divided into zonesand the work of rescue in each dis-

trict is in charge of army officers. Thesoldiers continue to' distribute breadand water to the survivors.

TOURISTS SUCCOR INJURED.American and British tourists who

were at Taormina at the time of theearthquake have formed an organiza-tion for the succor of Theheadquarters of the organization areat Glardina, 30 miles south ot Messinaon the road to Catania. The committee includes about GO men and womenunder the leadership of Miss Ball.

Very few children have been foundalive at Messina, while at Regglo large,numbers of children have been takenalive from the ruins.

Eight hundred dead soldiers aro un-

der the wreckage ot the Messina barracks. The corpses being recoveredthroughout the city are mutilated beyond recognition.

REFUGEES LINE ROADWAY.The roads between Catania and Mes-

sina aro filled with refugees. Therearo crowds of them at every stationof the railroad, aud they are hoveringIn tho main doorways, in hamlets andhuts. Some of them stagger alongoverloaded with their possessions, theroare othors driving before them a don-

key or cow weighted down with house-

hold goods, while still others aro ac-

companied by a sheep or a few goats,or perhaps a faithful dog.

A vast majority of tho survivorshave saved nothing. All their posses-

sions aro on their backs in the shapoof tattered clothing, scantily coveringtheir nakedness.

VICTIMS'LIVING IN RUINS.The survivors, one and all, tell awful

tales of death aud destruction. Theysay that there are undoubtedly stillliving peoplo trapped in the ruins orthe smaller villages that havo not beencarefully searched, that others arostraying along the beach, and that stillothers are high up In the mountains,where they lied to escapo the waters.

REGGIO, Dec. 31 (via Catania, Dec.31.) A stat of most frightful anarchyprevails. Mpbs of rufflclans roam amongthe ruins giving full vent to their vilestInstincts. They are pillaging thewrecked jewelry stores and banks and

(Continued on Faro 7.)

GOOD ROADS.Manager Bldgood intimates that tho

road to Halelwa is not in a "deplor-able" condition which means that itis In proper shapo, In splto of therains, for an enjoyable ride to thatmost delightful spot In the islands,Halelwa, where tho epicure may en- -

New AdvertisementsSTOCK DOOKS CLOSED.

STOCK BOOKS CLOSED.The Stock Book of tho Oahu Sugar

Co., Ltd., will bo closed to transfersfrom January 11th to 15th, 1909, bothdates inclusive.

(Sgd.) GEO. RODIEK,Act. Treas. Oahu Sugar Co., Ltd.

GAM

Asa CatarrhRemedy.

5

ThoResponsible People

PEOPLE occupying positions of highaud trust aro always

very busy peoplo.Thoy havo little or no timo to dovoto

to sldo Issues.His therefore very raro that such peo-

plo nro willing to write testimonials foranything.

Xhen again there U a natural diffi-dence in giving public endorsement toany commercial enterprise) on tho partof peoplo who aro much beforo thopublic.

Hare Endorsements,it is thus that It Is very raro thakpub-H- o

officials, liko govoruors, congress-men, consuls, senators, etc., give publicendorsement to a proprietary medi-cine.it Is therefore a great triumph that

Peruna- - has tho unqualified endorse-ment of so many men In official posi-tion.

Scores ot pnbllo officials of nationalreputation havo enthusiastically de-

clared In favor of Peruna in publicprint over and over again.

A Startling FactThere Is no way to account for such 'a

startling fact as this except that Pcrnnahas extraordinary unusual merit.

Alter all, peoplo high and low, aroconstituted very much alike.

THE WILL THESMITH & CO.,

Joy himself to his heart's content Bid-go-

Is host par excellenco and hischef is the real thing in cooking whatpeople want. The service and roomsat Halelwa aro excellent and tho golflinks in splendid shape.

NOTICE OF SALE OF LEASE OFPACIFIC OCEAN GUANO

ISLANDS.

At twelve o'clock noon, Monday,February 8, 1909, at the front cutrancoto tho Judiciary Bullulng, Honolulu,thero will bo sold at Public Auction,under the Provisions ot Part 5, LandAct 1895, (Sections 278-28- 5, Inclusive,Revised Laws of Hawaii), a GeneralLease of Laysan and Llsianskl Isl-

ands.Upset Rental, Twenty-flv- o ($25) Dol-

lars per annum, payabloin advance, together with Fifty

(COc) Cents per ton for overy ton orfraction thereof of Guano removedfrom said Islands, said royalty of Kitty (50c) Cents per ton to bo paidsemi-annual- ly on rent dates.

Terms ot Lease, Fifteen (15) yearsfrom February 8, 1909.

Tho Lessee to plant on the premisesflvo hundred (EOO) cocoanut trees perannum, and maintain same in goodgrowing condition.

Reservations regarding tho prlmisesor any portion thereof, which may borequired by tho Federal or TerritorialGovernment, for public or other pur-poses, will bo embodied in tho abovelease.

Covenants prohibiting killing otbirds or capturing birds for removal,or uso of explosives for tho purposeof killing or capturing fish, will beembodied In said lease.

For maps and furtherapply at tho office ot tho undersigned,Judiciary Building, Honolulu.

JAS. W. PRATT,Commissioner ot Public Lands.

Dated, Honolulu, T. H., Jan. 7, 1909.5ts Jan. 9, 10, 23, 30, Feb. 0.

NOTICE OF SALE OF KULA LANDAND FISH POND AT

OAHU.

At twelvo o'clock noon, Monday,February S, 1909, at the front entranceto tho Judiciary Building, Honolulu,thero will bo sold at Public Auction,under the Provisions of Part 4, Sec-tion 17, Land Act 1895, (Section 270Revised Laws of Hawaii), tho follow-ing described public land and fishpond.

3.2 Acres, more or less, Kula, to-

gether with 3.05 Acres, more or less,

of WyomingPeru

r have such confi7dence in prominent personat friends who have

used and endorsed Perunathat I feel justified in assum

ing that it is a valuable remedy for catarrh and an ex- -

jceiient general tonic. "John W.

Victoria Plats.Washington, D. C

Magnificent State Capitol Building of Wyoming.

FOLLOWING WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS RETAILBENSON, HONOLULU. HAWAII- -

semi-annual- ly

particulars,

KANE-OHE,

As

Hoyt.

SUPPLY TRADE:

Natural Enthusiasm.'When a person has boon really helped

In gotting rid of somo chronic malady,after other things havo fallod, it la quitenatural for enthusiasm to load peopleto make a statement of the fact.

For great services, gratltudo is nat-ural. .

This Is tbc only y that it can possi-bly bo explained wViy It Is that so manypersons prominent In public, diplomaticand social life glvo testimony forPeruna.

Actual BenefitPeruna promptly relieves.This is tho explanation.Catarrh Is a disease difficult to relieve.A great many of tho doctors fall to

rellovo It.Gratitude Results.

A few bottles of Peruna euro a chronicmalady of many years standing and It isalmost impossible to repress the naturalfeelings of gratitude which spring up.

Catarrh of Head and Throat.Mr. Joseph Roiss, 3121 N. 11th street,

St. Louis, Mo., writes:"I had catarrh of the hoad and throat,

but through tho use of flvo bottles ofPeruna and two bottles ot Manalin Iwas cured.

"1 think that Peruna Is the best tonicthat I have ever used and 1 would ad-vise all catarrhal sufferers to use

1 Peruna,"

Fish Pond, In the land ot Kanohoulu-iw- i;

Kaneohe, Oahu.Upset Price, Ono Thousand (J1.000)

Dollars.Terms, cash.For map and further particulars,

apply at tho offlco of the undersigned,Judiciary Building, Honolulu.

JAS. W. PRATT,Commissioner of Public Lauds.

Dated. Honolulu T. H Jan. 7. 1909.

5ts Jan. 9, 1G, 23, 30, Feb. C.

ELECTION OF OFFICERS.

At tho annual meeting of tho Stock-holders of tho McCandless BuildingCo., Ltd., held January 7, 1909, thofollowing officers wero elected for thoyear 1909:

J. A. McCandless ..PresidentL. L. McCandless VIce-Prc- s.

J. S. McCandless ...AuditorJonathan Shaw TreasurerP. C. Jones SecretaryTho above officers constitute tho

Board of Directors.P. C. JONES,

Secretary.

PROPOSALS FOR PRINTING.Office ot Depot and ConstructingQuartermaster, Honolulu. H. T.. Jan.4th, 1909. Sealed proposals, In tripli-cate, will bo received until 10 a. m.January 11, 1909, and then opened, formiscellaneous printing, ruling, andfurnishing tho paper and cardboardfor same, necessary at Honolulu, H.T during tho period beginning Jan-uary 15. 1909, and ending Juno 30,1909. For further information applyto tho offlco of tho undersigned. M. N.FALLS, Capt. & Quartermaster, U. S.A., Depot and Constructing Quarter-master.

Classified AdvertisiDgWANTED.

Position as cook by Portuguese man.Good worker. Will work around house.X Star office.

Man to manufacture soda water Infactory on Island of Oahu. Stato

nnd give reference. AihlrnsnBox 3CC this office.

FOR BALK

One Ford 1908 Runabout, used onlv3 months nnd in nnrfivtApply nt Royal Hawaiian Garage fordemonstration.

FOR RENT.First class furnished rooms central

ly located. Hot and cold baths, Ar-lington Hotel, 215 Hotel St

An ExcellentTonic.

FIVE

r MW5

Catarrhal Fever.Mrs. W. K. Good, Broadway, Ya.,

writes:"When 1 was fifteen years old I had

catarrhal lover and for nlno years IhaVo had catarrh of tho head.

"Through neglect it wont to my throatand noso. After consulting you I usedPeruna for four months as directed, andI am entirely well and havo my naturalhealth.

'I cannot pr.ilse Perunn too highly.It will do all that it is recommendedto do."

a Relieves Catarrh.Mr. L. Cliflord Figg, Jr., "US E,

Marshall St., Richmond Va., writes;"As soon as I get a cold I send for a

bottle of Peruna, and It soon drives 11

ont of my system-Despaire- d

of Being Cured."For several years I was not entirely

well, and despaired of ever being cured,as I had used numerous remedies thatmy friends advised. 1 doctored for twyears without any improvement.

A Last Resort"As a last resort I tried Peruna, and

am pleased to say that in a short timeI was completely cured.

"I havo not been troubled for over ayear. 1 am pleased to undorso Pcrunscs It saved me a world ot tsufTurjzut."

Nsir ,r,,uqjiviiuiuiu, ruwqy

RENT

Nuuanu Valley, $25.00Quarry Street 22.50Kinnu Street 25.00-Nuuanu Street 50.00School Street 40.00Kaimukl , 25.00Lunalllo Street 25.00

40E SIjE!Nuuanu Vnlyley Ono and ono-quart- er

acres $2,500Mnnoa Valley Building Lots

$1,000 and upwards. Also lotsat Puunul and Kaimukl Beachproperty at Kalawal..

"(irons WCorner of Fort and Merchant Sts.

DO YOU

REALIZES that you may communlcato with8 a stcamor four days from port

by Wireless Telegraph? Ratesaro low.

PIANO-TUNINOAN- D REPAIRING.James Sheridan, tuhir"anTTipaIr

Ing of pianos and organs. No. 162;Hotel street, orders left at HawaiianNews Co., Young building. Good;pianos to rent or sell at cheapest rates.

1

Page 6: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu...4 ; V! j II ' The Stai Is An Intelligent Progressive Newspaper TELEPHONE 365 5EC0ND STAR STA EDITION Business Office VOL. XVI. HONOLULU, HAWAU, SATURDAY,

if

J

A

Ft

SIX

If a man is asold as ho fools,then thoso fel-

lows must boabout ton yearsold. Thoy don'tintend to growold. They knowthat Ayer's Sar-saparil- la

givesnow life, strength,

KjV vigor. iMaiies mumfeellikobovsaeain.

Improves tho appetite, aidsdigestion, keeps tho norvosstrong and steady, and thobrain clear and active.

AVER'SSarsaoarilla

D

is a great preventive ofBright's disease and otherkidney affections. It purifiestho blood, restores good appe-

tite, sound digestion, androbust health.

An now made, Ayer's Snrsa-2nrll- lu

contains no alcohol.. There are manv imitation' Sarsaparillas.

Be sure you get "Ayer's."FrepirH by Dr. I i ; f. I I .p'i, f ;., U.S.A.

ATSa'S VIZj o bo it family IaxtW8.

For Tinting andInterior Decorating

It comes ready-prepare- d .inpowder form, and, when mixedwith cold water, is ready to ap-

ply.It gives a deep, rich color

that is lasting and durable.

STo OtlierIS QUITE

0 GcOOClIt is a Paris White prepara-

tion that does not "set," as dothe Plaster Paris preparations,and so can be used for severaldays after mixing.

IB I MlLIMITED.

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68HOURS

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OVERLAND

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brary and Drawing Room com-partment, observation car, withdiner. Telegraphic news post-

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on twhen your typewriter falls to turn outflret class work.

Send to our store and let us give Ita general overhauling.

Our Repairing Department Is fullyequipped to do the work.

The work so done by us will pro-long the life ot your machine and en-

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THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, 9,

SOCIAL EVENTS OF THE WEEKThe members of tho Wahlue Knpu Davis, Buchanan, Leech ami tne miss- - cent wedding, which iook jimcu m wu

Club gave u very delightful card party cs Stoncy. homo of the brido's parents, Dr. nud

hut Monday evening at their hom0 on 6 ft Mrs. Taylor Hudson. Captain and

Young street Tho first part of tho Tho following paragraphs, clipped Mrs. Davidson have been enjoying afrom a San Francisco exchange, ap- - leisurely honeymoon trip sincenear to be rather pertinent in this city, ember 23. when the wedding was cclc- -

.. ...1.1. l.n.wl whero of late recourse to tho nrtlllcial brated, but after a visit hero thoyuo mine- - u5 "'"". lllcnnB of producing a complexion have Bailed Tuesday on the Korea for Ho- -

o Secret Serv,icouon en wun shli lhc vory volIllgcr BOt: a visit in Honolulu before going to ; other investigating force In tho doMerle Johnson, one or u o )"ul,,uo T, e SUOuld a society lor the china and Japan, where they will re-- 1 imrtmonts should bo unsparingly punof the Club gave an of to Debutantes' main for a stay, and then proceed to iBhed. and Congress should hold it- -

tricu wnicn no nus iuubhi. ...We nU manner ot iulninnltarlan Manila. Captain Davidson is stationed solf ready any and all times to in-

that was presented to him wniie onorganzatlons fm. the prevention ot near Manila. S. F. Call.

tno maininnu " crueltv. so why not add this to uio ft egreat merriment. ,sl7 The necessity for It is plainly r. v. Shlnglo and his bride to be,

those present were A m of debutantcs, Migfl MurJel rcturncu from occurred l

E. Missoa Dcas Carey Grace. havo Ul0 wlUed look that ft tQ Hnwa, b tho MaunaNellie McLaln, View this is no only the right o

Cantln. McLaln, fi0rt of car.mM ft rag thu emphatically its duty,Coleman (2). smiui uj. pet oE one--

s sie0p. Tho debuntanto ft ft ftMacauW (2), Messrs. Crockett, Wal- -

g()eg tQ 1)ed at tw0 or evcn later in Miss Justine McCIanalian, the youngker, McCorriston, Conness, Carey, tho ,nornins, and just a patch daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. B. McClan-Simpso- n,

Ferris, Wright, Perkins. ()f sCQp Qn the nlghti wllcn jt i8 timo anan wni entertaln shortly at aHurd, Devereaux. Delicious tQ ge(. up fly arounu to tho dressmaker ner to be given at her home in Broad-refreshme-

were served during the Qr tho 4,,, como home to dress for way jn compliment to her friend, Mlssevening and it was after midnight be- -

a llmcheon, drop in at a tea, motor Anna Weller. The families of thesefnro ihn cathcrlnsr broke up. i,m mm in nf In nnothor patch of twn nttr.mHvn Hrls have had a lone

a nap before dinner, and then a dance acquaintance that bids fair to be per- - decent administration, Jn tho name, ofnno tlm ulcasantest affairs in the n,,.comt, tii tho i,.in, i, .immhtpra mir honesty and for tho purpose of bring- -

VJi DUttlU ..... . w.. tJcity for some time was the dance giv-- n,Rht an(1 Ule morning meet. attended school here whenen on Wednesday night by the mem- - Its a so very nard on the complex- - sno wag a nttlo girl, but has passedhers of the Kalnloha Boat Club at the ,on Ssh, Wnn0 1 tell you something, the later years In Honolulu. She hasHealanl Club's quarters. The Tne otUer nlght. I noticed that at least iany friends in the younger set andfurnished by Nainoa's quintet club, haU tlle debutantes had dipped into las taken an active part the de-w- as

exceptionally good and the cool "t,g sister's" or mother's make-u- p uutante affairs since her return to Sanweather made the dancing event plea- - nox The little rosy trail ot the rab- - Francisco about a year ago. Miss er

than usual. The evening was i,ifs f00t was written plainly on their cianahan is petite and vivacious, withone ot beautmu mooniignt wmeu faccs Thoso who nau not tneu uie much of the native grace which de

the sceno a most charming one. titled blushes looked so white and 0ngs to those who havo had the so- -

Among thoso present were: weary that it made one sigh lor tno cjai training ot different cities. SheMisses Lelnaalo Smith, Mary Crew- - fresll rosy cheeks of the country girl. ilag intellectual interests and is alto- -

es, Birdie and Lily Reist, Maud Levey, It lg useiess to analyze and sort and gether a charming to localEthel Carter, Hilda Robertson, Mil- - ci,ooso the reason for all this febrile society. S. F. Call.dred Grace, Sarah Williams, Edith pushing of the debutante, it exists,Treadway, Lela Dlnkiage, Margaret and at bottom the excuse cannot oe

Timmons, Agnes Dunn, Emma itose, that tho moro seasoned llowers areBernlce ana Slllen Dwlght, Caroline anxious to reduce the buds as soon

Callle Lucas, Lucy Lloyd, Ed- - as possible to their own slightly dam- -.

na Lloyd, Gertrude and Eva McCor- - aged state. Yet tho malevolent fairiesriston, Emma and Ethel French, Helen must smile and insist that tho reasonWitt, Mrs. Diuklage, Mr. and Mrs. the girls entertain the buds soHenry C. Hapal, Mr. and Mrs. C. fast and furiously is not utterly de- -

Mayne, Beatrice Taylor, Sophie de La void ot malice. It Is preposterous,Nux, Helen Witt, Messrs Samuel and yet if that were their design, theyRobert Chillingworth, Samuel Mane- - could not set about in a neater andlona, Jack Young, E. Moses, John moro subtle way to accomplish, 'theClarke, Benj. Clarke, Lester Petrie, wcar and tear ot the first season isLani Lemon, Geo. McCorriston, J. D. simply appalling. Afterwards a girlTucker. Chas. Cowan, H. Chadwick, niay put the brakes on If her fancyCarlos Long, Vernon Gedge, Fred Bal- - dictates, but during the ilrst season,ley, Alex. May. Chas. Melvin, Geo. not to go evcrywher is to write one'sAshley, Frank Batchclor, Bradford sef down as a social failure.Sumner, James Crewes, Otto Berndt, ft ftDavid Sherwood, Wm Cameron, Geo. Dougherty is out. oftheClark, Henry Rose, Chas. Simpson. H. .

B. Christian, John M. Drum-mon- d,

J. M. Macconel, Ed. Dunn, V.

K. Jordan and others.The newly elected officers of the

club are: Margaret Timmons, Presi-dent; Mildred Grace,

fl'KlltH- -

vu'u""e mnStrUCtlniTCaptain; Alice Vice-Captai- n.

F. SwanzySwanzy have been

Volcano House littletime, returned Mau-n- a

arriving morning.

ilUOUUM M" ' o "be about extent. His mo-

ther, J. Spear, ot San Fran-cisco, arrived to be duringhis convalescence.

ft ftr. .T. rnstller. tllO mnnttr.nn.1

AnnAC rilinn fjnirnfnrv'. TVTnilrl -" ; ;,' " who has tor A carefi the Congress- -

run, v" " fow tem- - Ir.no! nnnl will nlcn hnf nrnn.

ftMr. and Mrs. M. and Miss

Rosamond who attho for some

to this city by thethis

to someMrs. S.

with him

to

In

to

Urs tho Wife Of

been

,liJ (UUW . . 'UilUI AV.V,JtU IT UHUIIporary barracks for the Cavalry, tically tho only arguments advanced

expected arrive on the transport in favor of the limitation proposed byThomas, due hero on next. Tawney's beyond

ft ft may ue supposed to bo contained by

Many local people will glad to in sentences to... . . I abuses" which specified,welcome uaptain unaries s. xiaigiu,

ot the Fifth Cavalry. He is well. A J l.nnitm lmxi no li h no lionn niinrtr- -

Mr. Mrs. W. G. Walker, Oo- - wa'ley that had been "prokala arrived city way ng out ofby Manna Kea for short stay.

other than thosecaptain, was here with the Tenth

The members of the Kunalu Boat infnntry for some little time.Club give one of their Informal dances g

clubhouse on waterfront Dunning has been the rankingtonight. military officer for some time in this

4 4 4 city, but with tho coming of theThere will be something doing on cavalrv. will lose this distinction.

Chinese New Year's night, tho 21st Col Walter S. Schuyler will assumeinst., lor tne u. a. u. wm nave grana thp position. Major Dunning, throughmasquerade ball at the K. or Hall. hIs unfaiiing courtesy, has alwaysIt is said that J. Kim, tho newly heen a favorite m this city and it iselected president will attire in his best comriian(ito bo hoped Umt he and n,gmandarin costume which arrived w, nere for some ttle

Manchuria today and will lead the ft 4 4grand If anyone is Intending Lieut, and Mrs. Randolph, of Fortto go, better buy the ticket early and shatter, left for a Tour months visitprepare now, 50c admitting lady mainland by the transport Sher-an-d

gentlemen rrom all members. Uan,ft ft ft g g

Mrs. William 0. Irwin and Miss He- - Ueneral and Mrs. Davis, of this citylene have brought number ot were among the passengers to sail torbeautiful gowns from abroad and it is tho Coast on Sheridan. Many ofsaid that somo ot the newest models their friends were tho dock to seewill bo a surprise to those dovoted to them leave on Tuesday evening,the dlrectoire modes. The latest edictfrom scores radical change in Tjr. and MrsT McCallum. of Fortthe clinging styles that have almost Shatter, aro expected back in this cityhad their day of pouianty. miss lrwm vy the transport Thomas. Dr McCal-ha- s

received cordial welcome from lum has remained in San Franciscosociety and has been the center of while away, Mrs. McCallum

an admiring group since her re- - made trip East to see her relatives,turn. Mr. and Mrs. Irwin were tho Wh0 live in Kansas City,

or honor at a dinner given last ft ft ftby Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Schwerin Miss Mabel G. Thayer, of San Ra-- at

their homo in Pacillc avenue, faol, Is on visit HiloAmong those invited to meet tho com- - as tho guest of Mrs. T. Lewis,plimonted guests wore: Mr. and Mrs. ft ft ftHenry T. Scott, Mr. and Mrs. Mount-- Miss Juantta Beckley is on short

Rudolph which gokels, Miss Laura Edward to the ranch.W. Hopkins, Capt. It. S. Halstead, IV ft ft ftS. N. S. F. Call. captain .Wilson Thompson

ft ft U. S. A., and his bride, who was for- -

WASHINGTON, D. C, December 22. morly Miss Mary Hudson ofMiss Harriet Hatch, daughter ot Tex., wero guests in town for a few

Judge and Mrs. Hatch, of Hawaii, and days last week and received a cordialone of tho greatly feted debutantes greeting irom captain Davidson'sthis season, was hostess today friends In army circles. Captain Da-- at

a large luncheon, when her guests vldson is ono of the most popular ro

Misses Caroline Murray, Nccrs in tho medical corps, and whileSadie Murray, Aleshlre, Langtltt, ho was stationed at the PresidioYvonno Howry, Henrietta at Monterey ho made friends by thoFitch, Downing, PIchon, score. There was universal regretTalbot, Maltland, Marshall, Garllng- - when ho was sent to tho Philippines.ton, Duncan Baxter, MIchle, His return was occasioned by his

1909.

brief

WHAT

Tnelr present plans Include fitance auu&0 by the

puts

music,

older

ROOSEVELT

TO CONGRESS

(Continued From Page Three.)

the matter, and have no doubt thatmany Members of the House simplyfollowed tho lead of Messrs. Tawneyand Smith, without having had thoopportunity know very much as ,tothe rights and wrongs of tho question.

would riot attemptthis way to discriminate betweenmembers ot the House, but as objec-

tion has been taken my language,In which simply spoke of tho actionof tho Houso as whole, and as apparently there is desire that shouldthus discriminate, will state, thatthink the responsibility rested on theCommittee on Appropriations, underthe lead of the members whom have

army officer nere reading ofwPplfR olinw

Kea,

FifthIs to

Wednesday Mr. committee, what

be Implication certain asnot

Goo

wero contained in the repeatetlstatements Mr. Sherley. Mr.

and of , . , stated' nounced abuses theplantation, in this to

the a iTlZiZVsZn

in their the Major

Firth

aP.

In remaIn tlme,tlio

march.

a the

athe

at

a

a

many a

guestsweek

California, a toJarrett

a

McKInstry, Parker

Davidson,

Belton,

herself

Townsend,Humphrey,

Lillian

JANUARY

McCIanalian

I

I ordinarily

Ia

a II I

I

,'

111 Wi'

I

werethose

of Sher- -

... there

intended," puttinghis statement in the form dt a quctlon, and in the same form furtherstated that the "private conduct" ot"Members of Congress, Senators,"and others ought not to be investi-gated by tho Secret Service, and thatthey should not investigate, a "Mem- -

ber of Congress" who had been accused of "conduct unbecoming a gentle-man and a Member of Congress." Inaddition to theso assertions couchedas questions, ho made one positivedeclaration, that "This Secret Ser-vice at one time' was used for thopurpose of looking into the personalconduct of a Member of Congress."This argument of Mr. Sherley, tho on-

ly real argument as to tho merits ofthe question made on behalf of thoCommitteo on Appropriations, will bofound in columns 1 and 2 of pagoC55G, and column 1 of pago 5557 oftho Congressional Record. In column1 of pago 555G Mr. Sherley refers tothe impropriety of permitting thecret servjeo men to investigate menin tho departments, officers of tho army and navy, and Senators and Con.gressmen; In column 2 ho refers toofficers of tho navy and Members ofCongress :lu column 1, pago 5557, horefers only to Members of Congress.Ills speech puts most weight on thoInvestigation of Members of

But all of this is of Insignificant Importance compared with tho main, tho

Congress deslro that tho Government piiegciiinii nnvn nf (tea . unnon inn mnsr 0111- -

ford, S. Wilson, Mrs. Spree- - visit to Hilo, she will cirat instrument for tho detection of

and

crlmlnals and tho prevention and punlshment ot crime, or does it not? Thonotion of tho Houso last May was em-

phatically an action against the inter-est of Justico and against tho interestot g people, and in its effectof benefit only to lawbreakers.Such a body as the Secret Service,such a body of trained investigatingagents, occupying a permanent position Jn tho Government service, andsoparato from local investigating for-ces in different departments, Is an ahsolute necosslty if the best work is toho done against ,prlmlnals. It is byfar tho most offlclont Instrument pos-

sible to U80 against crime. Of courso

tho moro elllo,lent an Instrument is,tho more dangerous it is it misused.To tho argumont that a force llko thiscan be misused is only necessary ttanswer that the condition of its use-

fulness i handled properly is that itshall bo so efficient as to be danger- -

mm if handled lnmronorlv. Any in

orbe

oxniuuiuii upreVontlon Cruelty

hayo at

Crewes,

E.

.,,

noblnson,

Greene,

Weeks,

se

vestlgato tho executive departmentswhenever there Is reason to believethat any such Instance of abuse has

Among MrsMurphy.

thatSadlo

addition

Congress, butTo use tho Secret Service In tho in'vestigation ot purely private or poli-

tical matters would bo a gross abuse.But there has been no single instancoof such abuse during my term as Pres-ident.

In conclusion, I most earnestly ask,In tho name of good government anu

of T,ntn,i

In

ft

'o

n-- of

to

Irwin

Paris

while

re- -

It

ing to the federal Material and sup- -laws they may bo found, plieswhether in public or private life,that tho action taken by tho Housolast year bo When this ac-

tion was taken, the Senate committee,under the lead of the lato Senator Alii- -'

son, having strongly-worde- d Materlai anu Sup.protest (Appendix D) from Secretary,corieiyou nice mat no nau seni Mr.Tawney, accepted tho Secretary'sviews; and the Senate passed the billin the shape presented by Senator Al-

lison. In the conference,tho Houso conferees insisted on tho

of the provision they hadinserted, and the Senate yielded

The ot the Is,utterly inadequate to

the importance of his functions and totho admirable way In ho hasperformed earnestly urge thatit bo increased to per

also urge that the Servicebo it properly belongs,and in tho Departmentof Justice, as the of the

has repeatedly requested; butwhether this is aone or notbo explicitly provided that the

Force:

before

Chief Secret Leant Home..paid salary

whichthem.

$G000 annum.Secret

placed wheremade bureau

Chief SecretService

shouldSecret

Service can bo used to detect and Dollarspunish crime wherever is

THEODORE ROOSEVELT.The White House, 4, 1909.

METHODIST CHURCH."Great Earthquakes Their Causes

An Attempt to Explain," will bo Rev.John W. Wadman's subjectmorning at 11 o'clock In the First M.E. Church and in tho evening at 7:30he will speak on "Man His Crowning

and Crumbling Weakness."The public is cordially invited.

Fine Job Printing, star Office.

BY AUTHORITYRESOLUTION.

Making Appropriations for the VariousServices of the City and County of

BE IT RESOLVED by the Boardof Supervisors of the City and Countyof Honolulu:

H:at tho following sums, amountingto Two Hundred and Fifty-on- e

Two Hundred and Twenty ($251,-220.0- 0)

Dollarsj are hereby appropri-ated to be paid out of moneys in thegeneral fund of the Treasury of theCity and County of Honolulu, for sal-

aries fixed by law and otherwages of labor, and generalexpenses of the said City and Countyfor the period beginning with theFourth day of January, 1909, at 12

o'clock noon, and ending with theThirtieth day of June, 1909, said pay-

ment to bo made in pro ratasubdivisions of said amount as statedin the, schedule thereof herein con-

tained:Per Month. Six Months.

Salaries fixed bylaw 2,095.00Mayor:

Material and suppliesClerk:

Office employes.Material and sup-

pliesAuditor:

Office employes..Material and sup-

pliesAttorney:

Deputies and office employes.

real Issue. This jissuo is simply, Does Material and sup- -

after

and sup

150.00 900.00

340.00

100.00 GOO. 00

125.00 750.00

50.00 3Q0.00

8S0.00

100.00 COO. 00

Treasurer:Office employes. 125.09Materlai

plies 25.00Municipal Of-

fices;Rent 250.00

Maintenance ofPounds:

PayrollFor Engineer-

ing and Sur-veying Work:

Payroll 425.00Material and sup-

plies 100.00Maintenance of

12,570.00

Parks:Payroll

Donation:Kaplolanl Park.

1,200.00

Malntcn o

and Construc-tion of Roads,BridgesParks:

Honolulu 11,500.00Ewa 1,800.00WalanaeWnlalua 1,575.00Koolauloa 1,525.00Koolaupoko 1,825,00

Maintenance of

PayrollMaterial and sup-

pliesMaintenance of

Fire Stntlonsand Fire Ap-

paratus:PayrollMaterial nnd sup-

pliesCollection andDisposition ofGarbage:

PayrollMalnten c c.and Construc-tion of Elec-

tricSystem:

Payrolljustice violators o ,

wherever

loverscd.

Maintenance otPolico a'n

AlarmSystem:

it anlleg'

to

however,

retention

a

I

I

a

it

it

?

, ,

$

,

$

a n b

a n d

....

a n

dF 1 r o

Maintenance ofHawaiianBand:

PayrollMaterial and sup-

pliesDonation:

ServiceWitness Fees.

In-

questsProm lum on

Bonds Notpro ...

200.00

700.00

100.00

Poltco

GO.000.0010,800.00'

11,250.00

10,950.00

C.G25.00 39,750.00

1,000.00

22,050.00

COO. 00 3.C00.00

1,400.00 8,400.00

G75.00 '4,050.00

1,000.00 6.000.00

125.00

125.00

8,100.00

75.00

125'. 00

150.00

75.00

760.00

750.00

750.00

450.00

Total $251,220.00

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED thatthe following sums, amounting to Ten

and Fifty ($10,050)found.

January

tomorrow

Greatness

Honolulu.

Thou-sand

salaries,donations

monthly

2,010.00

30.00

Light

Coroner's

rated.

4,200.00

2,400.00

0,150.00

C.000.00

3.G75.00

1,350.00

1,550.00

Thousand

5,280.00

are hereby appropriated to be paid outof moneys' ih the r.oad tax general fundof the City and County of Honolulufor the building and maintenance ofroads and bridges in the respectivedistricts named herein, said paymentto be in pro rata monthly subdivisionsof said amount as stated in the sched'ule thereof herein contained.

Per SixMonth. Months,

Honolulu $500.00 $3,000.00Ewa and Waianne. 700.00 4,200.00AVaialua 125.00 750.00Koolauloa 1,050.00Koolaupoko 175.00 1,050.00

AND BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED

that the Auditor is hereby authorizedand directed to draw warrants on theTreasurer for any of the sum3 namedherein, or parts thereof, upon havingfiled with him schedules of salariesfixed by law and other salaries, of donations named herein, of payrolls andof accounts for material and supplies,accompanied by original vouchers andcertified by the Clerk as having beenduly passed by the Board of Supervisors at any regular meeting, or anyspecial meeting called for the purpose

i

of considering expenditures.AND BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED

that to make expenditures under thisresolution, it shall be necessary thai:all salary lists, items of donations,payrolls, items of materials and sup-

plies and accounts of general expensesshall being presented to theBoard of Supervisors, be passed uponby a Committee or Committees and bysuch bo reported to the Board ot Su-

pervisors with tho recommendation ofsuch Committee or Committees andsums found to be lawfully due andpayable may then be voted upon singlyor collectively as convenient on a callof the ayes and noes. In tho eventof any such Committeo failing or ne-

glecting to so pass upon any such mat-ters, or to make any recommendationin regard thereto, the Board may there-upon act.

AND BE IT FURTHER RESOLVEDthat no payments under this resolu-tion shall bo made, nor indebtednessot tho City and County of HonoluluIncurred, in any month in excess otthe monthly pro rata sums herein au-

thorized.The foregoing resolution making Ap

propriations for the various services ottho City and County of Honolulu was,

750.00 at a Regular Meeting of tho Board ofSupervisors of tho City and County ot

150.00 Honolulu hold on Tuesday, January 6,A. D. 1909, passed to print on tho to!lowing aye and no vote of tho said

1,500.00 Board of Supervisors:

G.

1.

450.00

900.00

175.00

before

Ayes Ahla, Aylett, Cox, Kane,Logan, Quinn. Total,

180.00 Noes McClollan. Total,BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF THE

CITY AND COUNTY OF HONOLULU.

2,550.00 By D. KALAUOKALANI, JR.,City and County Clerk, City and

600.00 County of Honolulu.6ts Jan. G, 7, 8, 9, 11.

Amusements

1 The Artbringing to v;ow scones from

many lands and cmbraclns

COMEDY"AND

PATHOSTwo Changes each Week, Mon-

day and Thursday.

FILMS.

Tho Fatal Card; Tho CircusBoy; The Tale of a Pig; NoMoro Service Wanted; Galvanic

Fluid; Pickman tho 2nd fg

a Statue; The Sacrifice;The Fresh Air Fiend.

Orchestral Selections Over-

ture William Tell; Wonderland

Selections; Songs Without

words. 9

eoeoecooO9oeoeottC0oeceo

G F M mmHotel Streot, between Fort and Bethel

LATEST AID BEST FILMS

CHANGE OF PROGRAM:

Monday, Wednesday and Friday.ADMISSION 5c, 10c, and 20c

You get the finest glass of beer Intown at the

Orpheum SaloonFort St. above the Orpheum Theatre.

Finest wines and liquors in stock!

m ARRIVALS IN SILK GOOD

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

Iwakami & Co., - - Hotel St.

IMPORTERSand

DESIGNERS

of

Fashionable

Millinery

Dunn's HatShop

J. 1 1 lira & Co.

JEWELERS115 St.

For Repairlngs and Hawaiian Jewelry.Call on Us.

PACIFIC PHOTO GALLERYWaverley Block.

(17 St. makal side.)

Photography in all Its branches, pictures enlarged.

Hotel

Hotel

Kodak developing and printing aspecialty.

KNOXSoft and Felt Hats.

8 I L V A ' a TOGGERY.Elks' Bldg., King St,

IF Yflll WISH Tfl ADVERTISE 5IN NEWSPAPERS!

i ANYWHERE AT ANYTIMHCell on or Write

!J CDAKE'S ADMTISIHG AGEHCIS

. 124 Snnsomo StreetI SAN FRANCISCO, CAUP. J

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

Page 7: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu...4 ; V! j II ' The Stai Is An Intelligent Progressive Newspaper TELEPHONE 365 5EC0ND STAR STA EDITION Business Office VOL. XVI. HONOLULU, HAWAU, SATURDAY,

THE

Bank of HawaiiLIMITED.

Incorporated Under tho Laws of thoTerritory of Hawaii.

CAPITAL, SURPLUS AND PROFITS,

$1,028,982.39

OFFICERS:Chas. M. Cooke PresidentP. C. Jones nt

F. W. Macfarlane..2nd nt

C. H. Cooke CashierC. Hustaco Jr Asst. CashierF. D. Damon.... Asst. Cashier & SectyZ. K Meyers. Auditor

Board of Directors: Chas. M. Cooke,

P. C. Jones, F. W. Macfarlane, E. F.Bishop, E. D. Tenney, J. A. McCand-les- s,

Geo. It. Carter, C. H. Atherton, F.C. Atherton, C. H. Cooke, F. B. Damon.

COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS DE-

PARTMENTS.

Strict Attention given to all branchesof Ranking

JUDD BUILDING, FORT STREET

Claus Sprcckels. Wm. G. Irwin

ClaisSpreems&Go

HONOLULU, - - - - H. T.

San Francisco Agents The NevadaNational Bank of San Francisco.

DRAW EXCHANGE ONBAN FRANCISCO The Nevada Na-

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

Bank, Ltd.NEW YORK American Exchange Na-

tional Bank.CHICAGO Corn Exchange National

Bank.PARIS Credit Lyonnals.BERLIN Dresdner Bank.HONGKONG AND YOKOHAMA The' Hongkong and Shanghai Banking

Corporation.NEW ZEALAND AND AUSTRALIA

Bank of New Zealand, and Bank ofAustralasia.

VICTORIA AND VANCOUVER Bankof British North America.

TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKINGAND EXCHANGE BUSINESS.

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

COLLECTING PROMPTLY AC-

COUNTED FOR.

ESTABLISHED IN 1830.

BISHOP SCO.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 allowed on term andSavings Bank Deposits.

HE

LIMITED.

Capital (Paid Up).. Yen 24,000,000.00

Reserved Fund 15,050,000.00Special Reserved Fund 2,000,000.00

HEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.

Branches and Agencies:Toklo, :Cobe, Osaka, Nagasaki, Lon

don, Lyons, New York, San Francisco,Bombay, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Han-kow, Chefoo, Tientsin, Peking, New-chang- ,

Dalny. Port Arthur, Antung-Hsien, Llaoyang, Mukden, Tlenllng,Chunschun.

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STAR, 1909.

NOT

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will all IGNITIONThe ENGINE and are In one unit, on the famous three-poin- t plan,

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ders, four pistons, and eight valves.This Is truly a splendid car, and all autoists who know the good points of a machine will be

with it. We want you to come and' see It, and try it out.The new car is now here and on exhibition In our show rooms. Autoists have been at It, and

every one of them was surprised that a car of such high quality should be put on sale at such a tow price.

Ig8

OF THE

GREAIContlnued frim page flvej

do not hesitate to shed the blood ofthose opposing them.

A few soldiers who escaped unhurthave been Impelled by an admirablespirit of discipline to organize patrolson their own initiative. They are endeavoring to protect property left intact, but the criminals fight them. Thenumber ot these criminals has increased to such an extent that thesoldiers have on several occasions beenforced to fire on them.

It was only after a pitched battle, In I

which several were 'killed, that a sem-

blance of order was restored. All entrances to the city or what Is left of itare guarded by soldiers. Many of thosurvivors are lying exposed. Tho relief parties, of which several are heronow, aro unable to cope with tho distress.

MESSINA, Dec. 31. A frightfulscene occurred here today amm tnoruins ot the custom house. Bands offamished Individuals were gropingalong the debris in tho hope of discovering food. The first of the search- -

ers who were successful were attackedby others with revolvers and knives

. . . . ..-- 1.11 1 t .1 I I .1 1. I An.,anu wero uuugeu iu uiviuu men min-ings. The struggle was fierce.

The famished men throw themselvesupon each other like wolves and sev-

eral fell Ina handful of dry bones or a few ouncesot flour.

One of tho unortunates was pinnedto a plank by a knife, while clingingto his hand was his llttlo child, forwhom he had sought food.

By Prof. T. L. SEE.The great and sea wave

In the straits of Messina was ono ofthe most remarkable on record, but

typical of tho worst of

these disturbances, all of which arocaused by tho leakage ot the oceans.This gradually forms steam beneaththe earth's crust, where the moltenrock slowly swells till moro space isrequired, and a yielding and readjustment takes place. It Is in this way

that mountains are formed, usually bytho expulsion ot lava from beneath thosea and tho transference ot it undertho land. This is why tho

aro formed parallel to the seashore.

LAVA FROM SEA.The seismic sea wave in Italy shows

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that so much lava was expelled frombeneath the sea that the bottom wasundermined and caved down, duringthe earthquake. Then the sea retiredto fill up the depression in tho level,where the bottom subsided and thisleft bare the shore. When the currentsmet at the center of tho depressionthis latter was raised up into a ridgeabove normal height, and when theswell or mound of water subsided Itsent a great wave ashore to add to thehorrors of the earthquake. The wavewas apparently caused by the sinkingof the sea bottom In the region eastof Sicily, which Is the deepest partof the Mediterranean.PROCESS BENEATH THE EARTH'S

CRUST.In memoirs recently published In the

proceedings of tho American Philosophical society at Philadelphia, I haveproved that this is the true processgoing on beneath the earth's crust Inthe greatest earthquakes. This newtheory wus the outcome ot two yearsot exacting research following thogreat local earthquake, and is generally accepted by tho leading Investigators throughout the world

It is well known to geologists thatthe foundations of Mount Etna were

(

lam m tne sea. iseariy an volcanoesbegin as submarine eruptions, but thosurrounding crust is often upraised tillthe region becomes land. Mount Etna,Sicily and southern Italy aro now beinguplifted step by step. This work Is allduo to the sea, which has also raisedup all tho continents in tho same wayIn the course of immense ages.

Unfortunately for affected Italy,there is no relief from these terribledisturbances, except to build safelyagainst shocks and Inundntlon by tnosea. In such localities cities ought tobe protected by powerful walls, orbuilt above the reach of the sea wave.In my opinion, thero is no danger otfurther disturbance at present. Thecountry will now bo qulto safo for aconsiderable time."MORE UPHEAVALS PREDICTED.

TACOMA, Jan. 1. In an Interviewgiven nn afternoon paper of tills cityOctober 22 Dr. Willis Eugeno Evorette,from Alaska, predicted tho earthquakoof last Monday. Ho also predicted thoMont Peleo disaster and tho San Frandsco earthquake, and now declaresthat sudden and severe seismic upheaval and submergence of lnnd ontho Atlantic seaboard may be expected.

Dr. Everetto says the world apparently Is trying to turn itself insido outand gives scientific reasons therefor,He is an expert mining geologist,chemist, astronomer, Inventor and au

; thor of scientific works. Concerning

and wear than any other.this steel but It will take them two

FORT AND ALAKEA STREETS.

the cause of the horror In Italy he;said:

"The earth turns once upon Us axisevery 24 hours. It Is 25,000 miles Incircumference. To make that movementthe earth requires a velocity of morothan IS miles per second.

"For comparison, the wheels of arailroad train running CO miles an hourrevolve at the rate of 88 feet per secondwhich gives an idea of the speed of theearth.

'The Italian disaster was caused byearth stress, due to orbital eccentric-ity. He explained that mountainsare created and mineral veins areformed therein by "stress" upon theearth by volcanic activity caused during any orbital eccentricity. He added:

"The maximum effect of the presentorbital eccentricity that tho earth isnow undergoing should occur between188S and 19JC and tho critical years Inthat Interval should be 1901, 1908, 1909.

' Tho Atlantic coast of America is Ina geo-stre- ss condition now where Itwould not surprise mo at any time tohear of sudden and severe upheavalsand submergence of tho country adjacent to that particular section directlynorth of the gulf of Mexico, extendingtoward the gulf or St. Lawrence, ThoPacific coast will not bo likely to suf-

fer so much."Mother Eartli Is trying to turn her

self Insido out and the process willtend to give her beautiful rings, likeSaturn. Tho moon, as yet undisturbeddoubtless is yearning to come backhome, ns It Inevitably must some day.And when It starts upon that Journey,!which is not so far, considering theprobable rate ot syeed, tho earth willbo in for tho final trouble, so far aspresent life upon it is concerned, forthe intense heat that will bo generatedwill destroy all lifo wherever It strikestho earth. People needn't ho alarm-ed, however, as tho astronomers willknow of tho great event before thomoon starts upon that fateful Journeyand people may havo tlmo, porhaps,to say their prayers."

EARTH WAS MOLTEN MASS.NEW YORK, Jan. 1. Opinions given

hero by two scientific men on tho ter-rlbl- o

convulsion In Calabria and Sicilyaro highly Interesting.

Dr. James F. JCemp, professor of geology at Columbia university, said:

"I can not get away from tho oldtheory that tho earth was at ono timea molten mass, tho surface havingcooled off sufficiently to form a crustThe earth is continually contracting,which causes tho weaker portions onthe surface to cave In and it seems tomo that this Is what occurred in thecase of tho Italian earthquake.''

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6

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THEUnited States, for tho Territory ofHawaii.

The United States of America, plain-tiff, vs. Joseph O. Carter, ot nls., de-

fendants.Action brought In said District Court,

and tho Complaint filed In the offlco oftho Clerk of said District Court inHonolulu. ,

THE PRESIDENT UF THE UNITEDSTATES OF AMERICA, GREET-ING: In

To JOSEPH O. CARTER, SAMUELM. DAMON, WILLIAM O. SMITH, E.FAXON BISHOP and ALBERT F.JUDD, Trustees under the Will andof the Estate of BERNICE P. BISHOP,deceased; YAMAMURA, whoso truoand full naino is unknown; S. O. FU-GIT-

whose truo and full nnmo Isunknown; T. NAKAFUGI, whoo trueand full name Is unknown; M. TABA-R- A,

whose true and Mil name is un-

known; YAMADA, whoso truo and fullname is unknown; IIARAMOTO, whosetruo and full name Is unknown; A,

whoso true and full name Isunknown; YASIDA, whoso truo andfull name is unknown; GOO PING;WONG HUNG WAH; CHUNG CIIONGand LAI SEE; YUKUTA, whoso truo j

and full name Is unknown; NAKA-MUR-

whose true and full name Isunknown; JOHN ALFRED MAGOON;EMMELINE M. MAGOOil, wife or!JOHN ALFRED MAGOON; ARTHUR j

M. BROWN; KALAEONE; JUDASKALAEONE, MARY KALAEONE,JOHN KALAEONE and JAMES KA-LAEONE, unknown heirs at law ofKALAEONE; KAIMOLA NAKOOKOO,otherwise called KAIMOLA NAKOO-KOO GRAY; SARAH NAKOOKOO;ANNA HELEN NAKOOKOO, other-wise called ANNA HELEN THOMP-SON; JANE NAKOOKOO, JAMES NA-

KOOKOO, MARY NAKOOKOO andSAMUEL NAKOOKOO unknown heirsat law of KAHUNE NAKOOKOO, de-

ceased;. JOHN DOE, RICHARD DOE,MARY STILES and MARTHA STILES,unknown heirs at law of HAIRAMA,

otherwise called HAILAMA, otherwise ofcalled IIIRAMA, deceased; KEKOA-NU- I;

HENRY GILES; ANNA GILES;SAMUEL GILES, JANE GILES andPETER GILES, unknown heirs at law

(

or uiSNitY uiLiiss; ueceaseu; misl,e; i

PAOA; JULIA PAOA; HENRY PAOA;DAVID PIIKOI OKUU; MARY K,

HARBOTTLE; MARIA K. PIIKOI,JOHN SMITH and JAMES THOMP--SON, unknown heirs at law of MELE,deceased; ELIZABETH K. PRATT;GORDRICH PRATT; KATE KEN-NEDY; MARIA BREWER; EMMAPRATT; LEVI GORDRIDGE PRATT;EMILY G. PRATT; ELIZABETH S.NO YES; SARAH F. WALSH; WIL-LIAM PRATT. ROBERT PRATT,EVELYN PRATT and FRANCESPRATT, unknown heirs at law ofFRANKLIN S. PRATT, deceased;JAMES M. MONSARRAT, Trustee forSUSIE F. CARTWRIGHT; SUSIE F.CARTWRIGHT; KATE L. VIPA;SARAH SAVIDGE; CHARLES J. LUD-WIGSE-

SUSIE E. LUDWIGSEN;MARY PORTER, MARY ALICE POR-

TER, a minor; J. H. MACPHERSON,whose truo and full name is unknown;ABRAM S. HUMPHREYS; CHARLESF. PETERSON; EMMA DREIER;EMILE THOMAS DREIER; ADELEDREIER; AUGyST DREIER Jr.; ED-WARD DREIER, DOROTHEAREINCKE, ANNA MARKHAM; W. A.KINNEY, Guardian ad litem of EMILEDREIER; F. A. SCHAEFER nnd CE-

CIL BROWN, Executors and Trusteesoftho last Will and Testament otAUGUST DREIER, deceased; EMMADREIER, Guardian of the persons ottho minor children of AUGUST DREI-ER, born ot her body; F. A. SCHAE-FER, Guardian ot the property of thominor children ot AUGUST DREIER,born of the body of EMMA DREIER;PHILIP OPFERGELT; JOHN OPFER-GEL- T

and MARY OPFERGELT un-

known heirs nt law of PHILIP OPFER-GELT; LILIANET L. COOKE; A. F.COOKE; EAULY F. DAY; SEELY I.SHAW; ANNA L. SHAW, wife otSEELY I. SHAW; GEORGE F.

THE FIRST .NATIONALBANK OF HAWAII, a corporation or-

ganized and existing under and by vir-

tue ot tho laws of tho Congress ottho United States of America; FRANKE. THOMPSON; WILLIAM HENRY;THE BANK OF HAWAII, LIMITED, acorporation organized and existing un-

der and by vlrtuo of the laws of thoTerritory of Hawaii; THE TERRI-TORY OF HAWAII; THE HAWAIIANELECTRIC COMPANY, LIMITED, acorporation organized and existing un-

der and by vlrtuo of tho laws of thoTerritory of Hawaii; MUTUAL TEL1S-- jPHONE COMPANY, LIMITED, a cor-poration organized and existing undernnd liy vlrtuo of tho laws ot tho Territory of Hawaii; COMMERCIAL PACI-

FIC CABLE COMPANY, a corporationorganized and existing under and byvlrtuo of tho lawB of tho Stato of NowYork; EDWARD M. WALSH; HAR-

RIET BROWN WALSH; JOHANNAADELE DREIER; JOHN BROWN;JAMES BLACK, MARY PURPLE andJANE BLUE, unknown owners andclaimants. DAVID NOHOLOA; ENOCHJOHNSON; HENRY SMITH, S. M.KANAKANUI; WILLIAM R. CAS-

TLE; J. J. SULLIVAN; and COITHOBRON; claimants, Defendants;

You nre Hereby Directed to Appear,nnd answer tho Complaint in an actionentittled as abovo, brought against youIn tho District Court ot tho United

States, In nnd for the Territory ot Ha-

waii within 20 days from nnd aftorsorvlco upon you of n certified copy otPlaintiff's Petition horoln, together

with a certified copy of this Summons.And you are hereby notified that un-

less you appear nnd answer ns abovorequired, the said plaintiff will takoJudgment for any money or damagesdemanded in the complaint, as arisingupon contrnct, or it will apply to thoCourt for any other relief demanded

the Complaint.WITNESS the Honorable

SANFORD 11. DOLE,Judge ot said DistrictCourt, this Fifth day otDecember, In the year of

(SEAL) our Lord ono thousandnine hundred and eightand of tho independenceof the United Stales thoone hundred and thirty-thir- d.

A. E. MURPHY,Clork.

ByDeputy Clerk.

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, se.Torritory of Hawaii, City of Honolulu.

I, A. E. MURPHY, Clerk of the DIs- -trlct Court of the United States otAmerica, In and for the Territory andDistrict of Hawaii, do hereby certifytho foreKoInc to be a full, true and cor- -rect copy of the original Petition andSummons In case of UNITED STATESOF AMERICA vs. J. O. CARTER, otnls., as the same remains of recordand on file in the office of the Clerk ofsaid Court.

IN WITNESS WHERE-OF, I have hereunto setmy hand and affixed tho

(SEAL) seal ot said District Courtthis 5th day of December,A. D. 190S. .

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

Territory of Hawaii.By

Deputy Clerk.Endorsement. No. 57. District Courtthe U. S. for tho Territory of Ha-

waii. United 'Slates of America vs.Joseph O. Carter, et nl. Summons.Robert W. Breckons, Plaintiff's At- -torney.

For RentSIX BEDROOM HOUSE ON PACIFIC

HEIGHTS.

Servants' quarters. Stable. Entlropremises are In flrst-cln- ss order. Im-

mediate possession.

$30 PER MONTH.

81 IP1.1924 Mel street

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CHINESE NEWSPAPER

PUBLISHING AND

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No. 19 Cor. of Smith and Hotel Sts.

C, BREWIR & CO,, LTD,

QUEEN STREET.Honolulu, T. H.

AGENTS FORHawaiian Agricultural Company, "Ono-m- ea

Sugar Company, Honomu SugarCompany, Walluku Sugar Company,Ookala Sugar Plantation Company,Pcpeekeo Sugar Co., Kapapala Ranch.

Charles M. Cooko PresidentGeo. H. Robertson. & Mgr.E. Faxon Bishop.... Treas. & Secy.F. W. Macfarlane AuditorP. C. Jones DirectorC. H. Cooko DirectorJ. R. Gait DirectorAll of tho above named constitute

the Board of Directors.

HHH5B5HHffl5BH2HSHSHHHHHaED R. D. P. O R D W AY'SIMPROVED PLASTERCures bronchial and lung diseases

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Page 8: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu...4 ; V! j II ' The Stai Is An Intelligent Progressive Newspaper TELEPHONE 365 5EC0ND STAR STA EDITION Business Office VOL. XVI. HONOLULU, HAWAU, SATURDAY,

EIGHT

Step 111 '

And Inspect our large line or curios.

Novelties o nil kinds.

Woman's ExchangeHotel & Union SU.

W.(j.Lrviui&0o.,Lt(lSI) UAH e&GTOao, COaMSSION AQEHTi

Win. Q. Irwin.. President and ManagerJohn D. Sprechela. First nt

W, M. Glffard... Second nt

tfM. Whitney TreasurerRichard Ivers SecretaryD. U. May Auditor

AGENTS FOROceanic Steamship Co., San Francisco,

Cal.

Baldwin Locomotive Works, Phila-delphia, Pa.

Hakalau Plantation Co., Hllo SugarCompany, Honolulu Plantation Co.,Hutchinson Sugar Plantation Co.,

Kilauea Sugar Plantation Co., Olo-wa- lu

Company, Paauhau SugarUtlon Co., Walmanalo Sugar Co.

RING 71

If you want the best SODAWATER in the Territory.

CONSOLIDATED SODA WATERWORKS.

Notic

Employees ofthe Honolulu GasCo,, Ltd., havebadges which de-

signate their con-

nection with thecompany. Thepublic is cautionedagainst allowingpersons to enterpremises for thepurpose of inspect-ing meters withouttheir first produc-ing credentials.

C. L. Wight,Manager

OAHU TAILORING CO.Merchant Tailors.

Cigar Stand on th Corntr.

Beretanla and Emma Streets.

Cattou, Neill & Co.UMITBD

Engineers, Machinists, Blacksmithsnd Boilermakers.First cl8 work at reasonable rates.

Honoluu Works

CTCAM ENGINES, SUGAR MILLt,TOILERS, COOLERS. IRON, BRASS

AND LEAD CASTINGS.

Machinery of Every DescriptionWade to Order. Particular Attentionild to ship's Blacksmlthlng. Job

Work Executed on Short Notice.

OLD KONACOFFEE

HENRV MAY & CO., LTD.Phono 22.

Come and pick out your goods.Wo have a complete line otdressy, fashionable and businessgoods. As for a suit that willsuit

Our Expert Cutterrecently from Now York willguarantee you satisfaction in'workmanship,, quality and (ash-Io- n.

W, , AffAHA CO., LTD.X Waity Building, King street.

i

1

Fine Job Printing Star Office.

THK WEATHER.

Local Office, U. S. Weather Durea I,

Young llullding.

Honolulu, T. H., Jan. 9, 1909.Temperatures, c u. in.; S a. in.; 10

a. m.; and morning minimum.70; "3; 75; 75; 7U.

Barometer rending: absolute humidity (grains per cubic loot); ro'ntlvehumidity and dew point at S a. m.:

29.87; G.935; 79; 00.

Wind: Vo'ioclty and direction at C a,

m.; S a. m.; 10 u. m.; and noon:22 S; IS 'SIC; 20 SE; 9 S.

Rainfall during 21 hours ending 8 n.

m.: .01.

Total wind movement during 24 hoursended at noon: 330 miles.

WM. 11. STOCKMAN,Section Director

NEWS IN A NUTSHELL.

Parnnraphs That Give CondensedNews of the Day?

Oindt's Transfer Co., Phone 588.Two land sale notices appear In tills

Issue.The Orpheum Saloon for a cool re

freshing glass of beer.The Silent Barber Shop tor hot batlis

In the cold season. Hotel near Fort.Thurlow's Royal Annex for meals.

iFrog legs, lobsters and oysters.The stock book of the Oahu Sugar

Co., Ltd., will be closed to transfersfrom .Ian. 11th to 15, 1909.

Don't fall to have a drink with JackScully, Honolulu's best ' dispenser ofsociability.

If your dresser lacks any of thetoilet essentials go to Benson, Smith& Co., Ltd., and mako up the deficiency. The prices are low.

There was no' business at the meet-

ing of the Hoard of 'Supervisors thismorning and It adjourned to Mondayafternoon at 3 o'clock.

A. B. Arlelgh & Co. have openedtheir new stand on Hotel street, op-

posite Palm Cafe, and are now readyfor business.

The monster annual January clear-ance sale of Ladies' Shirt Waists willbegin at the Sachs Dry Goods Co. Mon-day morning, January 11th. Every-thing will go at almost half price.

Get your soda water from the peoplewith a reputation for making the best,a reputation that Is blown Into everybottle of the product of the Conso-lidated Soda Water Works Co., Ltd.Telephone 71.

SocietyOwing to the meeting of the Mov-

ing Music Club on next Wednesdaymomlnf, the first meeting of Mrs. Wea-ver's class in the study of the mttndrama has been postponed one week.The class will meet on January 20 atMrs. Walter Frear's at 10:30.

This night week, January 1G, thepeople of Honolulu will have an opportunity of aiding the earthquake suf-ferers by attending the dramatic per-

formance to be given for that pur-pose by Mrs. McLennan and her pupils of the dramatic circle of the Kllohana Art League. Posters announcIng the event are being painted byMiss Alice Spalding. Mr. W. DAdams has kindly consented to act nsmanager. Tickets will be on sale atBergstrom Music Co.. ?1, 75c and 50c.

These ladles, have kindly consentedto be patronesses: Mrs. Walter V.Frear, Miss E. A. Mott-Smlt- h, Mrs. ii.F. Dillingham, Mrs. F. A. Schaefer,Mrs. R. O. E. Forster, Mrs. H. M.von Holt, Mrs. C. Montague Cooke,Mrs. E. I. Spalding, Mrs. John A.

Mrs. S. B. Dole,. Mrs. U U.McCandless, Mrs. Jas. B. Castle, Mrs.E. D. Tenney, Mrs. Kate Deering, Mrs.A. G. Hawes Jr., Mrs. W. L. Hopper,Mrs. G. P. Wilder, Mrs. C. B. Cooper,Mrs. J. S. McGrew, Mrs. H. E. Coop-er, Mrs. .1. T. Augus, Mrs. LouisAbramsj Mrs. L. C. Abies, Mrs. A. N.Campbell, Mrs. W. Montrose Graham,Mrs. J. J. Greene, Mrs. Jennie Bell.

Following are the contents of theprogram:

A dramatic sketch, "Ono Touch orNature," hy Mr. C. H. Dickey, MissAlice .Spalding and Mr. Heinecko.

Balcony scene from Romeo and Juliet:"Juliet Miss Alice SpaldingRomeo Miss A. Bell

Comedy "Mrs. Oakley's TelephoneMiss Oakley ; Mrs. WhltfordMiss Constance. .. .Miss Marion GreenMary Miss SprlnksEmma Mrs. W. M. Graham

Those plays are by pupils of Mrs.McLennan.

Mrs. McLennan contributes her ser-

vices In the olio, Royal KawaihauGlee Club under the direction of Mr.S. K. Nalnoa will render an intermezzo, "Mngdalena," composed by Elea-nor McLennan Rlvenburgh.

Impersonation Miss Sprlnks.Violin Solo Mrs. Ingalls, accompan-

ied by Prof. Ingalls.Vocal Solo "Alia Stella Consl-danto- ,''

by Eleanor McLennan Riven-burg- h,

accompanied by Prof. Ingallswith violin obllgato by Mrs. Ingalls.

Recitation "The Charge of the.Irish Brigade," by Mrs. McLennan.

Vocal Solos, by Mrs. Bruce V. Mac- -lall-"- The Slave Song," Heart'sSpringtime."

Male Quartet "The Rosary, by Dr.

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, JANUARY 9.' 1909.

DUTY 01 COFFEE

STRONGLY URGED

(Washington Post, December 23.)With the lov'.Blon ot the tariff, an

effort will bo made by coffee plantersof Porto Rico to have incorporatedmi llotn iirnvwllnir fni Ihn Ininosltloilnf a duty of at least C'cents a poundon all foreign colTeo Imported Intothe United Slates. The matter willbe presented to the ways and niennscommittee, and arguments showinghow such a duty will materially ben- -

eflt tho United States will be made byprominent Poito Ricans.

Walter McK. Jones a won thy j

.vuiiiik tuueo piiliuur oi mw,who is In Washington for the purposeof laying the matter before Congress,and who represents practically everycoffeo planter on the Island, In ex-

plaining the situation last night, said:"Congress will bo asked to grant a

petition of tho planters that coffee betaken from the 1.1st of free articles. '

With tho extension of the protecticosystem to this Industry, we seek onlyjustice, in oiuer to promote me su..- -

oral welfare of our fellow-citizen-

"Neither the abandonment of thecultivation of coffee in Porto Riconor tho substitution of any other cropcan be considered. Not only do thopeculiar conditions of our soil pre- -

vent such a change, but it should notbo forgotten that this is tho mostwidely distributed of our Industries,including 21,000 landholders who arcentirely dependent thereon, and whoare almost entirely Porto Ricans.

"It is not unreasonable to predictthat under a regime of protection asefllclent as that which favors so manyother industiies, the Philippines, Ha- -

waii, and I orto Rico will producewithin a short time tho coffee noces- -

sary for the needs of the whole na-- ,tion. j

"The American flag has placed ourlaboring classes in contact with thogreat labor organizations of the Unit- -

ed States. Half a million Porto Ri- -

cans have cause for discontent. TheDltlgley tariff oppresses them Withoutoffering any advantage. They live"7'?, l,eJ .

goods that American manufacturersnrnfliicR. Ami flmso nvUninc ,,ct iabrought at the high price which thetariff makes possible, and which hasbeen calculated beforehand as neces-- '

C.an

C.

sary of ofcodfish and textile for Day of

nlty." Miss Forbes.must be 7:30 Sermonwith a day's wage,

till. Wl,li, D,..,n '

' "ni.n ,i,,n JDa ,,..v.u..uuoistence. becauso wh.lln tho ,intio0the national rorts prove abulwark for fruits, sugar andno such exists for coffeo.Any witha may offer Its cof--

ice me American underns as our ship -

pers, without having asour people have contributed, to thesunnort of a reirinio timf noonroo ti,n

been

in thoot

with

DIVIDENDS Jan. 10, 1909: Paau- -hau. 20c 1 2 nor

Hutchinson, 20c share.Sesslon 25 251

itsBoards:

Ewa, $27.25: GO -neer, Sugar $28.50;150 Oahu Sugar O. & L.

PASSENGERSPer S. S. Jan. 9, from Vic-

toria and forG. Frascr, C. F. M.K. Smith, W. R. O.C. Gallagher,. C. R. Croft,

J. II. E. Ewald, M.G. H. Jones, H. P. Mrs.M. Mrs. Mrs.

Mrs. Mrs. Cooperchild: Mrs. Roberts. Mrs. Kmltli nml

sons, Mrs. Mrs.Mrs. Farrell. Mrs. Luther. Uaiia- -gher. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs.Jones. Mrs. Ramsev. Hodiros.Miss Miss Fraser. Miss Jam -leson, Miss Miss W.

II. F. Fraser, G.W. Pratt, J. Wylle, J. R.

B. J.Wellbourne, Mrs.

bins, Mrs. Read andPer Manchuria, Jan.

for Mrs. A. J.Warren B. Craw, Mrs. War-

ren B. Craw, J. F. Mrs. F.Master David Y. lida.

Mrs. A. Mss E.W. Lister, Dr. A. Nord, D. H.Mrs. D. H. J. 3. Mr.H. E.

Cowes, W. Henry Clark and Er-nest Kaal.

by Symphonoy

Mrs. Rlvenburgh will twelvein "A

Double of

'Co., 15 Haw. &' S. Co., mont pray- -

j 100 50 Oahu Hug for order permitting them toSugar $2S.50; Walalua $S0.00. enter into n certnln agreement with ffi TTTI TTT A TVTOiTTl HAT T71 ffl

Stock. Hid. Asked. the United States of for the fit --"J-IA A.f,J Nl & J KJJ.Jk.JUl,!, A $Brewer & Co S200.00 S alo of certain real estate $

for the continued prosperity People's Society Christian Endeavor,the rice, industries, j Subject: "Living the Eter--.

Laborer's Wages Small. Leader, Harriet'coffee laborer content At evening worship.

because .,. ,, T T

Imlnctrvnlovmnnt

ntveritabletoBacco.

bulwarkcountry, although competing

national pioduct,10 consumerfavorable conditions

contributed

share; Walluku

HEREBY

Pio$140.00;

7

ARRIVED.Makura,

Honolulu:Jamleson,

Holdane,Brack-bur- n,

Jamleson,

Labarco, Haldane.

Orchard,

Dods, Markham,

Lougher, Anderson,Robblns,

steerage.

Car-withe- n,

Kendall, Kendall,

Osborn,

Kerr,

Orches-tra.

presentoriginal

'Sextet

$115.00; Drclor, deceased,9100.00; Ononiea,

Oj"TTAmerica jHJ

belonging

penurious

Ewa P ant. Co 27.25Hawaiian Agrl 160.00Haw. C. & S. Co 99.75Hawaiian SugarHonokna Sugar Co. .. . 11.25 '

iKahuku Sugar Co.... 27.50Kekaha Sugar Co 150.00McBryde 4.00uanu sugar Co zs.zo

Sugar Co 40.00 10.50Ooknla Sugar Co 12.75oina Sugar Co 4.50 1.75Paauhau 20.00 21.00poneer jm ( 111.00Waialua Agrl'" 80.75 S2.00Wa,hlUu mMI. I. S. N. Co 135.00 150.00Hon. Co com.... C7.00

Rub. CoO. R. & L. Co 120.00Hllo R. R. Co 15.00Hon. B. & M. Co 20.50Haw. PineappleHaiku Cs 100.50HnmaUlla Dltch Ggi. 10o.00H)0 R R C(J 03.00 95.00Honokaa 101.00"huku Gs 100.00

McBryde Gs 94.00Oahu Sugar Co. 5s.... 100.00Pacific Mill Gs 101.00Pala 100.50Pioneer 105.50Walalua Agrl Gs 99.50

CENTRAL UNION CHURCH,

Dorenius Scudder, minister. AmosA. Ebersole, minister. Ser- -

vices Sunday, January 10.

At 9:50 Bible School. C'.ifton II.Tracy, superintendent. Study of In- -ternational lesson. Classes for allgra(jes.

At 10 o'clock the parlor. Men sBlule c!ass ""der the direction of theassistant Subject: "Mark'sGospel By whom and to whom writ--ten Its to the Other Gos- -pels."

At 11 nvlnnl.- - Mnrnlnfr Wnrafcln'Horm ,.,,, ,,,, .. . rni,i--d its Outcome." Offertory solo:'uere's a uleeu ,llu lar avfay.

iiounoa. Mrs. v. a. weiglit. Antnemby the choil' "Magnificat" Blumenschein.

At G:30 In the Parish House, Young

"', uur irwiHB.Offertory solo: "Blest are the Pure iniit,, ,, ,

m-tllem b' choir: "Sing Allelulah Forth"

A cordial invitation isall to attend the esneclallythose whp are strangers or visitorsthe city,

Y V A TT rTTflKTT' Y' V VXtJL JL I

jiuiciiuu 01 itvaiajaua Avenue Sa-- 'ratoga Road, the existing linothe Honolulu Rapid Transit & Land

j Company; and further been advis-ed that such right way for the oper- -!'tiou ot a railroad is necessary to thel:,,tetl States for Military purposes;

NOW .THEREFORE BE IT RE- -SLVED, that the City and County of

,a rlS,u or war s requested in saidletter, to-w-

A RIGHT OF WAY for the operationof a railroad over the Saratoga Road,the same being a highwaytwo highways, to-w- one knownas Kalla Road, and ono known as Ka-laka-

Avenue. ALSO A RIGHT OFWAY over the said Kalakaua Avenuefrom Its junction with the SaratogaRoad to the existing lino the Hono-lulu Rapid Transit & Land Co.

J. C. QUINN.Dated Honolulu, Jan. 8, 1909.

Tho f01'eGing resolution was, at aMeeting of the Board Su- -

' l,evIsors of tho City and County ofHonolulu, held on Friday, January 8,1909- - Passed to print on the followingvotn of tuo sald Board Supervisors

Ayes: Ahla, Kane,McClellan, Quinn. Total G.

Noes: None.Absent and not Cox. Total

1.

HOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF THECITY COUNTY OF HONOLULU.

By D. KALAUOKALANI, JR.,Clerk, City and ot Honolulu.

5ts 8, 9, 11, 12, 13

IN THE CIRCUIT OF THEFirst Territory ot Hawaii.At Chambers. In Probate.

In tho matter of tho Estate otdeceased. Order to Show

Cause on Executors' ApplicationSell Estate.On reading and filing tho

of Cecil Brown and F. A. Schaefer asExecutors tho last will and testa

existence of the larger part of the'" "

national industries." I WHEREAS, this Board has ad- -

Mr. Jones contends that the impost- - vised hy letter from Major E. E. Win-tlo- n

of a duty on foreign coffee not s,ow- - Corns t Engineers, U. S. A., thatonly will result millions of dollars United States of America desirespouring Into the nation's coffers, but

'

to secure from tho City and Countyin no way will interfere the coin- - Hono'ulu a right of way Over a hlgh-mercl- al

relations enjoyed between way known as Saratoga Road, thef SfltGS1and "th,e,r countries;'

same being a highway connecting two

iTL'ssa.a K'Sn-ve'-S x ,,i8,rys' r raand will exert every effort to have ' T1the subject favorably Avenue; also a right ot wny from the

DAILY STOCK REPORT'

cent;Sales: Walalua ?S1.00;

QSHSHSn5H5HSaSDSHSnsaSKSHSnS35B5gHBSUSHSBSEHSgSSg5a

Walalua $S1.00; 20 Walalua $81.00. Honolulu through Board ot Super-Betwe-

70 Walalua $80.50; vIsors. DOES GRANT UNTO25 $80.00; 120 Ewa $27.25; 20 THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

$27.25; GO Ewa50 Oahu

$T!8.50; R.

Vancouver,Cooper,

Luther,U. O.

Brown, Dodd,Hodjes, A.

Fraser, Russel, Mcl'her-Eo-n,

and 2

2

Mrs.Croft. Blackburn.

Mrs.

Labarce, Coombs.A.

G. Schlier,Harris, R.

G. Rob- -

13S. S. 9, trom

Orient, Honolulu:

Elliott, J.Elliott, Elliott,A.

Osborn,Scully,

Walker.

Performance

children her sketch,Pickaninnies."

ot August$10.50;

25 A

35.00

2S.50Ononiea

R. T.Nahlku 30.00

00

Cs

Gs

Gs

Gs

assistant

In

minister.

Relation

iuuckuh.

ncnneciter.extended, to

services,In

withto ot

hasof

connectingother

of

Special ot

ofAylett, Logan,

voting:

AND

CountyJan.

COURTCircuit

AugustDreler,

toReal

Petition

of

dealt with.

Waialua

to said estate, namely:(1) Lots 4 and 5 of the Pratt pro

perty, at Kalla, Walklkl, Honolulu insaid Circuit, area 13,900 square feet,being portions of lands described inRoyal Patent (Grant) 2880 to I. J. H.Holdsworth, and Apana 2 of RoyalPatent 2S40 on L. C. Award 1515 toKaihoiilua, and in deeds recorded inLiber 225, page 17G and Liber 252 page3G8, Hawaiian Registry of Conveyan-ces; (2) to-w- lt a one-quart- er (Vi) in-

terest In Lot G of said Pratt property,area 0,900 square feet and Bath lotsJ," "K," and "L" having an aggre

gate length of 45 feet and a depth of1G.5 feet at the mauka side and 21

feet at the mnkni side, all situate atsaid Kalla, being portions of landsdescribed in Royal Patent 2810, Apana2, L. C. Award 1515, and in deed recorded in Liber 310, page 18 and settingforth certain legal reasons why suchreal estate should be sold, to-w- it:

that condemnation (eminent domain)proceedings have been instituted inthe United States Circuit Court for theTerritory of Hawaii by tho UnitedStates, covering said lands, and it isdesirable and ot advantage to said eS'tato to enter into said agreement atonce; that tho sum offered by thoUnited Stntos for the entire propertyaforesaid including all Interests in saidLots 4, 5 and G and both lots is $14,- -250.00, which Is a fair and reasonablevaluation for tho same; that ot saidsum, to-w- $11,013.75 represents thoInterest of the estate of August Dreler,deceased.

It Is Hereby Ordered, That tho heirsand next of kin of said decedent andall persons interested in tho said es-

tate, appear before this Court onThursday, tho 28th day of January,A. D. 1909, at nine (9) o'clock a. m.,at the Court Room ot this Court, inHonolulu, then and there to showcause why an order should not bogranted for the sale of such estate,as above prayed.

And it Is further Ordered, That anotice of this order be published atleast onco a week for three successiveweeks before tho said day of hearing,In the Hawaiian Star newspaper pub-

lished in Honolulu, the .last publica-tion to bo not less than ten days pre-

vious to the. time therein appointedfor said hearing.

Dated at Honolulu, Dec. 23, 190S.(Sgd.) X T. DE BOLT,

First Judge of the Circuit Court of theFirst Circuit.

Attest:JOB BATCHELOR,

Clerk ot the Circuit Court of theFirst Circuit.4ts Dec. 2G, Jan. 2, 9, 1G. '

NOTICE OF SALE OF GENERALLEASES OF LANDS SITUATED

AT HAMAKUA, ISLANDOF HAWAII.

At twelve o'clock noon, Monday,January 11, 1909, at the front en-

trance to the Judiciary Building, Hono-

lulu, there will be sold at public auc-tion- fi,

under the Provisions of part 5,

Land Act 1895, (Sections 278-28- 5 in-

clusive, Revised Laws of Hawaii), Gen-

eral Leases of the following describedlands.

(1) The land of Hanapai, Hamakua,Hawaii, containing an area of 78 acres,more of less, and classed as agriculturalland. Upset rental, $312.00 per annum,payable semi-annual- ly In advance.Term of Lease, ten years from January13, 1909.

(2) The makal portion of the landof Humuula, Hamakua, Hawaii, con-

taining an area of 910 acres, more orless, G71 acres more or less, beingclassed as agricultural land. Upsetrental, $1,500.00 per annum, payablesemi annually in advance. Term oflease, eighteen months rrum January 1,1909.

Reservations regarding land requiredby the Government for settlement orpublic purposes will be embodied ineach of the above leases.

For maps and further particularsapply at the office of the undersigned,Judiciary Building, Honolulu.

JAS. W. PRATT,Commissioner of Public Lands.

Honolulu, Oahu,December 10, 1908'.

5ts Dec. 12, 19, 2C, Jan. 2, 9.

HawaiianToBaccQPiantaiion Go.9

LimitedCapital Stock $100,000.005000 Shares .. ..Par Value $20.00

Subscription list now open at theoffice of

HARRY ARM1TAGEStoolc fl tl cl 13 G cllirolcur .....

Campbell Block, Merchant Street,Prospectus may tie had on appllca

tion.

James F. Morgan'sAUCTIONEER ANDSTOCK BROKER

Member of Honolulu Stock and Bondfixchanga.

Stock and Bond Orden rcelvprompt attention.

Information furnlshei relative to allSTOCKS AND BONDS.

LOANS NEGOTIATED.

Phont 71 P. O, Box 294.

I 'OF I

Ladies Shirt WaistsBeginning Monday Morning, January llth,at 8 A. M., OUR ENTIRE STOCK of

LINGERIE WAISTS,NET LACE

Xrices out of allPrices that defy

Wc have bat one object inUlearancc of our

See Window Display

i Fort and Bcretania Sts.0SESH2IEn:5nSBSH2B2n2iaSJ-SH2KQSHS- B

HUSTAOE-PEC- K CO., LTD.O m A IPtJ

Phone 295. 63 Queen Street. P. O. Box 21a.

ESTIMATES GIVEN ON ALL KINDS OF TEAMING.' Dealers In

FIRE WOOD, STOVE, STEAM AND BLACKSMITH COAL.

CRUSHED ROCK, BLACK AND WHITE

SAND, GARDEN SOIL.

KAY, GRAIN, CEMENT, ETC., ETC.

GENERAL

'Phone, Office 281.

Fort Street, Opp. W.

We dp all kinds of

CRUSHED ROCK, WHITECORAL. GARDEN SOIL. ETC;

SAFE MOVING A SPECIALTY.

TENDER

J. HOPP & CO.,

the

TAILORED WAISTS ANDWAISTS

proportion to Valuescomparison

view the quickest possible,stock of Wmsts.

Opposite Fire Station, m

Bfi., ML,

CONTRACTORS.

P. O. Box" 154.

G. IRWIN & CO., LTD

Teaming; also deal in

AND BLACK SAND, BROKEN

MUTTON

Gi.

The kind which have taken tho townby storm. Nothing finer. The bestthing In the baby carriage line evsrinvented. variety.

Lewers & Cooke BuildingStreet

"Detroit Stove Works" cast on It.

FROM NEW ZEALAND WAS RECEIVED EXAORANGI TOGETHER VITH LAMB AND RAB-BIT- S

AS TENDER AS A BIRD.

Hii Metiiliti MlTELEPHONE 45.

Pllwin Go-Ca- ns

It is Not Accidentalthat cnulne Jewel Stoves ltep the fuel bills low and last so long.It is just because they are built that way. They are made In theLargest Stove Plant in the World, where they know how. Everygenuine Jewel has name

Big

W. W. Dimond & Co., Ltd,53, 55, 57 King Street, Honolulu