If II I THE HAWAIIAN SECOND EDITION I Way Is The Way Win ...I If You want io SECOND dnj's IScitb...

8
I If You want io SECOND dnj's IScitb lodar THE HAWAIIAN STAR you TUB II ml STAK It In EDITION I I The Advertising Way Is The Way To Win Suoooss Iu Business VOL. XIV. HONOLULU, HAWAII, TfFSDAY. TWVARY 15. !;. No. 6J Kauai AND CARRIED FORTY FEET BY THE WIND-T- WO HOUSES COLLAPSED HORSE, DRIVER AND PIG BLOWN INTO REVER HANALEI STREAM JUMPS ITS BANKS SAND BAR DI6- - ; m "ABP.BAnS 95 INCHES OF RAIN IN 14 DAYS. A monstrous blow hit the Island of fiercest wind experienced on Kauai In Kauai on Saturday and a downpour the last ten years. went with the wind, the rain vying .The Ke Au Hou got to Hnnalel last with the ciant air current for thor- - Friday night and she was lying at Ha oughness and energy. At Ha'ona two nalel when the Invisible giant reached houses were crushed by the force of out from the southeast and snatched the wild south-east- er and a third real- - houses off their bases to the "terror of dence structure, a substantial frame house, was lifted from Its foundations and carried forty feet, its people In it the while, and landed safe on Its bot- tom, with no one harmed beyond the severe nervous shock which might be expected. The Inter-slan- d steamship Ke Au Hou, Captain Sachs, which arrived from the Garden Island at 3.10 o'clock this morning, brings the story of the SAYS CDR. tip.- Suffers From Fury Of ;jHUillLlFTED chagrin den, water from It Kauai heaviest T0N6A WILL SOON BE BRITISH TERRITOR Mclennan who is in close touch with conditions TONGA SAYS THAT THAT WILL SOON BELONG 2 GOVERNMENT HE BRINGS. WORD OF THE LA WILLIS T HAT FIELD. Dr. D. Li McLennan for the along If It took his fancy he could years been the medical tell the man to get out by giving a advisor for tho King of Tonga arrived piece of ground tho same size no mat-- In this city, accompanied by his wife, ter how barren It was. the British on the S. S. Ventura. Dr. .McLennan will locate In this city and will prac- tice He Is well known to a num- ber of Honolulu people, he having prac- ticed medicine here for a number of years before going to Tonga. Dr. 'M- cLennan started for San Francisco he learned upon his arrival at place that his home In San Francisco had been leased for a considerable per- iod, and that led him to locate In this city. Doctor thoroughly understands the different questions In Tonga, both .political and ecclesiastical, as his close relation the head of the kept him in constant touch the affair of state, "It Is a question of a short there. the is when the step In "When Islands In their ground, law, chief could fifty saved much as habit as for Fort therein of "Gee. but she was a sud tool" Captain his handsomo black moustaches. "She up of and went strontr. on are It was wind (Continued on Pace Five). in KINGDOM BRITISH BISHOP IN past and chief him here. this with Govern- ment with only each well. Over they Government promising to survey the and do away trouble, natives led to for all might have had It not the ish Government them was of giving thorn reform ho and built a concrete for there was absolutely no as So far there been no survey- ing of Abls, as holdings are called, done. therefore aro "The natives this group of Islands I believe, of the Islanders In they are easily misled by the white men. Here, If one treats time," the Doctor morning, a native kindly he gives you his "Until Kingdom of Tonga be a na ana jt an he portion of the British Empire. At jt ja different keep ent British occupy Island only y0u at a distance If one wants to as a protectorate, Indications jeai witn them he to be square, fast approaching British Government claim the group. the passed under the protectorate the natives were about evenly divided approval and old come not Life best the and tho said this the came out that TO OF who ten but The was tho land with this the were gune well been that the Brit sent most that need yet. the land Tho most the the By that mean that not said this the will wjtn that owns, 'alo But pres- - The the the and from time will and first the and took "My reasons for that will only short while until the under fact that Hamilton Hunter, C.M.G., and Deputy of very man that of the move. o.jcou,d wIn tnelr esteem ,mme portion of tnem me aiately stopped and ijhould supreme; but the the,r w,Bnea Ho ,8 flunked by both sion or the cniets tne otner nan Eurapeans and natives. Now that desire of Under gettlng old an(i that his term of office the If a man had a piece ot which man entitled to under TheAverageMan at has as he expected to. Insurance establish cs a strong of saving, pro-teo'- ts the family The Prudential furnishes tho and earns more the policy holder. Street, Honolulu outh-East- er folks the landlords. ripper, and Sachs morning, dripping southeast saying the has By ask the jNow man Impolitic. Instead Immediately 10,000 pounds wharf which has the natives discontent of are brightest, of any Pacific. natives but has It be a islands are British control Is the Consul Commissioner Tonga, i a tactless and seeing he disapproval Naturally not he tnougnt kiok i trying- - opposed remain oppres. iea iu ( he a change government. - lg system a protection protec- torate. bellevfng is getting short he is doing all In his (Continued on Page? Five). orosis SHOES & FOR WOMEN. $3.50 $4.00 $5.00 Oxfords 'Puups and .Bojts, Newest Swing, Jasts, Rbbpn, Tigs. fFor dross or street, wear.- - ,' . , , New custom 'made Boqts and Ties, Choloest "Pot, 'CoR or Finest Kid Fanoy. .colored. LJnen; Puups and Ties, L. B. Kerr & Co., Ltd ALAKEA STREET. ANOTHE MT.PELEE (Associated Press Cable t I he Star.) ST. THOMAS, January lk Tin S, Dwi city rMfU Mmt Kingston, Ja maica watt destroyed by eartttgUftk 9 Monday aftsfwwn. Mttmr lire were lost. , I Fires started immediately after the quake and a4M ttf the dletre. The shocks are still continutttgr. The people are camping out In dlftress. The cable ofllce at Holland Bay wat damaged. , The land wires were Interrupted at :80 o'clock on M(HOfT,ad re now ,jetored within five miles of Kingston. j The Jamaica cables are interrupted. Kingston the seat of the prevent tr ouble Js about UXK) mile weet and SW miles north of Martinique the scene of Mt. Pelee disaster. The disturbance on the island pf Jamatlca comet at the time of the volcanic activity on Hawaii. The Hawaiian Island and Jamaica are on tho same general line, Hawaii being on tile line of latitude 20 and Jamaica ie about IS. The Mt. Pelee disaster occurred May R, 1902. There were over 26,000 live lost at that time. SENATORS ELECTED WASHINGTON. D. C, January 13-- Th- following iuivt elected Unit ed States Senators In tho various jday: t'oioi ad. Simon Guggen heim; Delaware, H. A. Richardson; Montana, J. M. Dixon. Nebraska, Morris Brown; New Mampshlre, H. E. Bum ham, Massachusetts, W. M Crane and Maine, William P. Frye. All of tium aro Republicans. INSURANCE INVESTIGATION NEW YORK, January 13. The In vestlgatlon Into the affairs of the Met- ropolitan Life Insurance Company was begun here today. VERNMENT UN LANAI R BUSY APPEAL SECURED INTERLOCUTORY DECR EE BEFORE NOON YESTERDAY AND RUSHED MATTERS TO A FARE-YOU-WE- LAST NIGHT-CA- SE WILL SOON BE CALLED FOR THE BIG BATTLE BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT.' Some fast work was done yesterday papers on Judge Gear the attorney for and last night by tho attorney general's L. L. McCandless after 1 o'clock last department In perfecting the appeal In night. Notice was also seaured by the Lanal land case, Attorney General mall this morning that tho appeal had Peters, Deputy F. W. Mllverton and been placed on tho court calendar yes- -' even Chester Doyle the criminologist, terday afternoon. And now tho big took a hand in rushing things so that fight Is on. the appeal could be put through be- - The brief prepared by the attorney fore tho Supremo Court. general's department Is of much lengtlw Shortly boforo noon yesterday, At- - It does not recede from any of tho four torney General Peters secured the in- - legal points raised In the demurrer terlocutory decree from Judge De Bolt which was filed originally to McCand-t- n the matter and by 4 p. m. the notice loss's bill In equity. These points aro of appeal and appeal to theSupremo first, that his bill was insufficiently Court had been filed by Peters In behalf verified to ontltlo him to rolief by In-- of Land Commissioner J. W. Pratt. Tho Juntlons; second, that an injunction accrued costs of $17 were paid and a cannot bo granted upon a bill stating bond of $50 in insure the payment ot tho conclusions of law; third that ve costs was produced. Then plalnant, L. L. McCandless, had not tho work of preparing tho brief was shown any sufficient lntorost in tho sub-begu- n. It was not until 10 o'clock that Jeot matter to ontltlo him to an Injunc-Peto- rs and Mllverton completed this tlon and fourth, that there was no Important feature of the work and had equity in the bill. It filed with Henry Smith the clerk ot tho Supremo .Court. Doyle served the DO NOT EXPERIMENT WITH CROUP. When a child shows symptoms of croup thero Is no time to experiment with new remedies, no matter how highly they may be recommended. There is one preparation that can al- ways be depended upon. It has been In use for many years, and has never been known to fall viz: Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. Give it, and a. quick cure Is sure to follow. Fo sale by a'l dealers. Benson, Smith f: Co., agents for Hawaii, SURPRISE TO ALL, Everyone who lunches for the first tlmo at tliA Criterion Is surprised at the excellence of the lunch for Como today and be surprised. Star want ads pay at once. 25c Classified Advertising Wonted White boy with blcyole to carry pa pers. been (Continued on Five.) C. K. Qulnn hag recovered from an attack of the measles and was on duty again yesterday in Judge Robinson's court. Delicious pies una cakes. Candy fresh every day. New England Bakery, The best cup of Hawaiian Coffee In the olty. New England Bakery and Cafe. Page CLOSE TOUCH with the mosi prominent exporting mercantile house of Yokohama, togeth or with the large trade he carrlos on with tho plantation stores all over the Islands, qnable K. Yamamoto to deal in all kinds of Japanese goods at smaller price thnn any other Japanese merchant in Honolulu. Hotel street, near Nuuanu. SACHS' SPECIALS. Prant spying prices af Sachs' tjis week, Laoe ourtnlns, wash dress goods nlpaoa waists and Turkish bath towel" all on sale at startling reductions, in some oases the prices are cut cam Pletoly in half. EXCURSIONS THE LAVA ''TJI THK HILO PEOPLE AND THK KOHALA PEOPLE HAVE KI) FOR STEAMSHIPS TO TAKE THEM TO THE KONA OF KAU (OAST WHERE THE ORAND SPECTACLE CAN BEST BE 1'KOBABLdE SXCURSTOK 9ROK HERB ON IATURUAT. Three Bteamntp excursions to tbe that the? excursion irtll be rerjr 1 outbreak of Mftluta UM are la sight. It la probable that the U. M. President Kennedy of the Inter-Is- l- now on the Hamakua coast will and Steamship Company received ap- - detailed for this service, plications by wireless from Hllo peo- - Apparently the telephone strrtoe pie asking for a steamship to take an the Island of Hawaii has bean ftrr excursion partr of good stae from Hllo much demoralised by the lava flow w around the Island to the Kona or Kau the storm or both. The Inter-IaUU- side, whichever point should be found Company has been unable to get r- - to give the best view of the great spec- - ponaes to Its wireless messages ad-tac- le. dieased to Aungst or other agenta on A similar request was received from the Kona or Kau coast. It la supposed the ICohala people who are anxious to from this that owing to the telephone view the great sight: wire being down, the messages ean- - If the outbreak and lava flow keeps not get from the wireless station to tbe up, the Klnau and the 8. S. Ma una Loa men addressed. both will If there is a demand for It, AU tbe information attainable may be sent out on Saturday afternoon dlcates that the outbreak l on to tli Kona coast with excursionist. Kona or Kau aide of the mountain, and Ily leaving here Saturday afternoon the not from Mokuaweoweo. Moktuurw- - excurslon party would have all day weo Is 13,200 feet above sea level, while Sunday and part of Sunday night In tbe mountain on the Kona side of the which to view the splendor, and return- - crater towers nearly 600 feet higher. Ing would arrive here Monday forenoon. Lava from Makuoweowi-- would of The arrangement for the excursions necessity either How out on the Kau from Hllo and Kohala have been left Bide, or toward Humuula, That the in the hands of the company' agent McKay, at Hllo. It seems certain (Continued on Pace Five). L QUESTION UHSETTLfD ATTORNEY GENERAL NOT YET BEEN ASKED TO" TAKE UP THE MATTER JAPANESE ARE BUSY. C. Shlozawa representing the Japa nese educational Interests called upon certaIn the extent of the damage. Attorney General Peters this morning to Inquire the status of the school ques- tion. The Japanese editor had also called upon Superintendent of Public Instruction Babblttt but had been re- ferred by the latter to the attorney general. Shlozawa desired to ascertain what nctlon would be taken by the government relative to closing or to exerting a closer supervision ovor tho Japanese private schools in the city. He was Informed uy the attorney general that the matter had not been referred to him ns yet, by the superin- tendent of education so no opinion had been ronderod by tho logal departrrtont ot the government. Attorney General Peters stated that this quostlon cntno up originally as to whethor the board could enforce tho ii'KMmiiujis miiuuiii vuuuiuuuuji, uli the Punahou schools. Yesterday tho question of the author ity possessed by tho board ot educa tion ovor the various private schools was brought up at a meeting o.f the board and tho sentiment of some of tho members scorned to bo that the board ought to oxert a greater supervision, as tho statutes would seem to give them such authority. It was stated that the Japanese schools would also como In under this policy. Superintendent Babbitt was disposed not to onforce any possible perogatlves of tho board, as he considered that moro trouble would needlessly be created. It was finally decided to refer the matter to tho at torney gonoral's dpartmont. J Continued on Page Eight). A MATTER OFHEALTH Pill POWDER Absolutely Pupo HAS HO SUBSTITUTE A Oroam of Tartar Powder, froo from alum or phos-phat- lo acid ROYAL DaKINQ POWDER 0.i HEW YORK. FLOW Heavy Rains ' Do Jjamage MAKIKI STORM FLUMES BROKE THIS MORNING TROUBLE ON HACKFELD STREET. The heavy rain this morning caused the big Malcllcl storm Hume to break mauka qf the fire station Read Super- visor Johnson had to rush off to as- - considerable portion of that section ot the city was flooded by the waters from, the drain. It was also reported that a retaining; wall on Hackfeld street had caved down causing the water to flood some of the neighboring premises. Considerable minor damage In the way of washing; out culverts and portions of the roads has been done but the extent ot the damage throughout the city and vleln-lt- y will not be ascertained for a day or more. Work on the new Kaliht sewer near tho Kamehameha schools, had to be suspended yesterday, owing to the heavy rains. It Is not thought that the work can bo resumed for some days. '" The Imperative necessity of repairing" tho Judiciary building was made evi- dent this morning when t!w heavy storm broke shortly after 9 o'clock. Tho roof was leaking throughout. Tito water fairly poured Into Judge Lind say's court room and other portions ot tho upper story fared little better. Assistant Superintendent of Publle Works Howland went to make a per- sonal Investigation of the conditions. The building Is covered with a clatft roof and the work of repairing will do both difficult and oxpenslve. Answer This Question Do you want Individuality, style, wear, comfort, good fitting qualities in your,foot wear. Tlten try our AU American J8.50 and $4.00 shot. You get all of these excellent qualities when you come here V 14, LiniTED lQtl Fort Street. Phone Main Si A' J i j J '1 .33 i -

Transcript of If II I THE HAWAIIAN SECOND EDITION I Way Is The Way Win ...I If You want io SECOND dnj's IScitb...

Page 1: If II I THE HAWAIIAN SECOND EDITION I Way Is The Way Win ...I If You want io SECOND dnj's IScitb lodar THE HAWAIIAN STAR you TUB II ml STAK It In EDITION I I The Advertising Way Is

I

If You want io SECONDdnj's IScitb lodar THE HAWAIIAN STARyou

TUBII ml

STAKIt In EDITION

I I The Advertising Way Is The Way To Win Suoooss Iu Business

VOL. XIV. HONOLULU, HAWAII, TfFSDAY. TWVARY 15. !;. No. 6J

Kauai

AND CARRIED FORTY FEET BY THE WIND-T- WO

HOUSES COLLAPSED HORSE, DRIVER AND PIG BLOWN INTO

REVER HANALEI STREAM JUMPS ITS BANKS SAND BAR DI6- -

; m "ABP.BAnS 95 INCHES OF RAIN IN 14 DAYS.

A monstrous blow hit the Island of fiercest wind experienced on Kauai In

Kauai on Saturday and a downpour the last ten years.went with the wind, the rain vying .The Ke Au Hou got to Hnnalel lastwith the ciant air current for thor- - Friday night and she was lying at Haoughness and energy. At Ha'ona two nalel when the Invisible giant reachedhouses were crushed by the force of out from the southeast and snatchedthe wild south-east- er and a third real- - houses off their bases to the "terror ofdence structure, a substantial framehouse, was lifted from Its foundationsand carried forty feet, its people In itthe while, and landed safe on Its bot-

tom, with no one harmed beyond thesevere nervous shock which might beexpected.

The Inter-slan- d steamship Ke AuHou, Captain Sachs, which arrivedfrom the Garden Island at 3.10 o'clockthis morning, brings the story of the

SAYS

CDR.

tip.-

Suffers

From Fury Of

;jHUillLlFTED

chagrin

den,water from

It Kauaiheaviest

T0N6A WILL SOON

BE BRITISH TERRITOR

Mclennan who is in close touch with conditionsTONGA SAYS THAT THAT WILL SOON BELONG

2 GOVERNMENT HE BRINGS. WORD OF THE LA

WILLIS T HAT FIELD.

Dr. D. Li McLennan for the along If It took his fancy he couldyears been the medical tell the man to get out by giving a

advisor for tho King of Tonga arrived piece of ground tho same size no mat--

In this city, accompanied by his wife, ter how barren It was. the Britishon the S. S. Ventura. Dr. .McLennanwill locate In this city and will prac-tice He Is well known to a num-

ber of Honolulu people, he having prac-

ticed medicine here for a number ofyears before going to Tonga. Dr. 'M-cLennan started for San Franciscohe learned upon his arrival atplace that his home In San Franciscohad been leased for a considerable per-

iod, and that led him to locate In thiscity.

Doctor thoroughly understandsthe different questions In Tonga, both.political and ecclesiastical, as his closerelation the head of the

kept him in constant touchthe affair of state,

"It Is a question of a short

there.

the is when thestep In

"When Islands

In their

ground,law, chief could

fifty saved much as

habitas

for

Fort

therein of

"Gee. but she was a sudtool" Captain

hishandsomo black moustaches. "She

up of and wentstrontr. on are

It was wind

(Continued on Pace Five).

inKINGDOM

BRITISH

BISHOP IN

past andchief him

here.

this

with Govern-ment with

only

each

well.

Over they

Government promising to survey theand do away trouble,

natives led to forall might have

had It not theish Government them was

of giving thornreform ho

and built a concrete forthere was absolutely no as

So far there been no survey-ing of Abls, as holdingsare called, done. thereforearo

"The natives this group of IslandsI believe, of

the Islanders Inthey are easily misled

by the white men. Here, If one treatstime," the Doctor morning, a native kindly he gives you his"Until Kingdom of Tonga be a na ana jt an heportion of the British Empire. At jt ja different keepent British occupy Island only y0u at a distance If one wants toas a protectorate, Indications jeai witn them he to be square,

fast approachingBritish Governmentclaim the group.

the passed underthe protectorate the natives were aboutevenly divided approval and

old

come

not

Life

best

the and tho

said thisthe

came out

that

TO

OF

whoten

but

The

was

tho

land with this thewere

gune wellbeen that the Brit

sent mostthat

needyet.

the landTho

most

thethe By that

mean that not

said thisthe will wjtn that owns,

'aloBut

pres- - Thethe the and

fromtime

will and

first

the

and

took

"My reasons for that willonly short while until the

under factthat Hamilton Hunter, C.M.G.,and Deputy of

very man thatof the move. o.jcou,d wIn tnelr esteem ,mme

portion of tnem me aiately stopped andijhould supreme; but the the,r w,Bnea Ho ,8 flunked by bothsion or the cniets tne otner nan Eurapeans and natives. Now thatdesire of Under gettlng old an(i that his term of officethe If a man had a piece ot

which man entitledto under

TheAverageManat has as he

expected to. Insurance establish

cs a strong of saving, pro-teo'- ts

the family

The Prudentialfurnishes tho and earns

more the policy holder.

Street,Honolulu

outh-East- er

folks thelandlords.

ripper, andSachs

morning, dripping

southeast

saying the

has

By

ask thejNow

man

Impolitic. InsteadImmediately 10,000

pounds wharfwhich

hasthenatives

discontentof

are brightest, of anyPacific.

natives

but hasIt

be a islandsare British control Is the

ConsulCommissioner Tonga, i

a tactless and seeing hedisapproval Naturally not he

tnougnt kiok i trying- - opposedremain oppres.

iea iu( he

a change government. -lg

system

a

protection

protec-torate.

bellevfng

is getting short he is doing all In his

(Continued on Page? Five).

orosisSHOES

&

FOR WOMEN.

$3.50 $4.00 $5.00

Oxfords 'Puups and .Bojts, NewestSwing, Jasts, Rbbpn, Tigs. fFor drossor street, wear.-- ,' . , ,

New custom 'made Boqts and Ties,

Choloest "Pot, 'CoR or Finest KidFanoy. .colored. LJnen; Puups and Ties,

L. B. Kerr & Co., LtdALAKEA STREET.

ANOTHEMT.PELEE

(Associated Press Cable t I he Star.)

ST. THOMAS, January lk Tin S, Dwi city rMfU Mmt Kingston, Jamaica watt destroyed by eartttgUftk 9 Monday aftsfwwn. Mttmr lire werelost. ,I Fires started immediately after the quake and a4M ttf the dletre.

The shocks are still continutttgr.The people are camping out In dlftress.The cable ofllce at Holland Bay wat damaged. ,The land wires were Interrupted at :80 o'clock on M(HOfT,ad re now

,jetored within five miles of Kingston. j

The Jamaica cables are interrupted.

Kingston the seat of the prevent tr ouble Js about UXK) mile weet and SW

miles north of Martinique the scene of Mt. Pelee disaster.The disturbance on the island pf Jamatlca comet at the time of the

volcanic activity on Hawaii. The Hawaiian Island and Jamaica are on thosame general line, Hawaii being on tile line of latitude 20 and Jamaica ieabout IS.

The Mt. Pelee disaster occurred May R, 1902. There were over 26,000 livelost at that time.

SENATORS ELECTED

WASHINGTON. D. C, January 13-- Th- following iuivt elected United States Senators In tho various jday: t'oioi ad. Simon Guggenheim; Delaware, H. A. Richardson; Montana, J. M. Dixon. Nebraska, MorrisBrown; New Mampshlre, H. E. Bum ham, Massachusetts, W. M Crane andMaine, William P. Frye. All of tium aro Republicans.

INSURANCE INVESTIGATION

NEW YORK, January 13. The In vestlgatlon Into the affairs of the Met-

ropolitan Life Insurance Company was begun here today.

VERNMENT

UN LANAI

R

BUSY

APPEAL

SECURED INTERLOCUTORY DECR EE BEFORE NOON YESTERDAYAND RUSHED MATTERS TO A FARE-YOU-WE- LAST NIGHT-CA- SE

WILL SOON BE CALLED FOR THE BIG BATTLE BEFORETHE SUPREME COURT.'

Some fast work was done yesterday papers on Judge Gear the attorney forand last night by tho attorney general's L. L. McCandless after 1 o'clock lastdepartment In perfecting the appeal In night. Notice was also seaured bythe Lanal land case, Attorney General mall this morning that tho appeal hadPeters, Deputy F. W. Mllverton and been placed on tho court calendar yes- -'

even Chester Doyle the criminologist, terday afternoon. And now tho bigtook a hand in rushing things so that fight Is on.the appeal could be put through be- - The brief prepared by the attorneyfore tho Supremo Court. general's department Is of much lengtlw

Shortly boforo noon yesterday, At- - It does not recede from any of tho fourtorney General Peters secured the in- - legal points raised In the demurrerterlocutory decree from Judge De Bolt which was filed originally to McCand-t- n

the matter and by 4 p. m. the notice loss's bill In equity. These points aroof appeal and appeal to theSupremo first, that his bill was insufficientlyCourt had been filed by Peters In behalf verified to ontltlo him to rolief by In-- of

Land Commissioner J. W. Pratt. Tho Juntlons; second, that an injunctionaccrued costs of $17 were paid and a cannot bo granted upon a bill statingbond of $50 in insure the payment ot tho conclusions of law; third that ve

costs was produced. Then plalnant, L. L. McCandless, had nottho work of preparing tho brief was shown any sufficient lntorost in tho sub-begu- n.

It was not until 10 o'clock that Jeot matter to ontltlo him to an Injunc-Peto- rs

and Mllverton completed this tlon and fourth, that there was noImportant feature of the work and had equity in the bill.It filed with Henry Smith the clerk ottho Supremo .Court. Doyle served the

DO NOT EXPERIMENT WITHCROUP.

When a child shows symptoms ofcroup thero Is no time to experimentwith new remedies, no matter howhighly they may be recommended.There is one preparation that can al-

ways be depended upon. It has beenIn use for many years, and has neverbeen known to fall viz: Chamberlain'sCough Remedy. Give it, and a. quickcure Is sure to follow. Fo sale by a'ldealers. Benson, Smith f: Co., agentsfor Hawaii,

SURPRISE TO ALL,

Everyone who lunches for the firsttlmo at tliA Criterion Is surprised atthe excellence of the lunch forComo today and be surprised.

Star want ads pay at once.

25c

Classified AdvertisingWonted

White boy with blcyole to carry papers.

been

(Continued on Five.)

C. K. Qulnn hag recovered from anattack of the measles and was on dutyagain yesterday in Judge Robinson'scourt.

Delicious pies una cakes. Candyfresh every day. New England Bakery,

The best cup of Hawaiian Coffee In

the olty. New England Bakery andCafe.

Page

CLOSE TOUCHwith the mosi prominent exporting

mercantile house of Yokohama, togethor with the large trade he carrlos onwith tho plantation stores all over theIslands, qnable K. Yamamoto to dealin all kinds of Japanese goods atsmaller price thnn any other Japanesemerchant in Honolulu. Hotel street,near Nuuanu.

SACHS' SPECIALS.Prant spying prices af Sachs' tjis

week, Laoe ourtnlns, wash dress goodsnlpaoa waists and Turkish bath towel"all on sale at startling reductions, insome oases the prices are cut camPletoly in half.

EXCURSIONS

THE LAVA

''TJI THK HILO PEOPLE AND THK KOHALA PEOPLE HAVE KI)

FOR STEAMSHIPS TO TAKE THEM TO THE KONA OF KAU(OAST WHERE THE ORAND SPECTACLE CAN BEST BE

1'KOBABLdE SXCURSTOK 9ROK HERB ON IATURUAT.

Three Bteamntp excursions to tbe that the? excursion irtll be rerjr 1

outbreak of Mftluta UM are la sight. It la probable that the U. M.

President Kennedy of the Inter-Is- l- now on the Hamakua coast willand Steamship Company received ap-- detailed for this service,plications by wireless from Hllo peo- - Apparently the telephone strrtoepie asking for a steamship to take an the Island of Hawaii has bean ftrrexcursion partr of good stae from Hllo much demoralised by the lava flow waround the Island to the Kona or Kau the storm or both. The Inter-IaUU-

side, whichever point should be found Company has been unable to get r- -to give the best view of the great spec- - ponaes to Its wireless messages ad-tac- le.

dieased to Aungst or other agenta onA similar request was received from the Kona or Kau coast. It la supposed

the ICohala people who are anxious to from this that owing to the telephoneview the great sight: wire being down, the messages ean- -

If the outbreak and lava flow keeps not get from the wireless station to tbeup, the Klnau and the 8. S. Ma una Loa men addressed.both will If there is a demand for It, AU tbe information attainablemay be sent out on Saturday afternoon dlcates that the outbreak l onto tli Kona coast with excursionist. Kona or Kau aide of the mountain, andIly leaving here Saturday afternoon the not from Mokuaweoweo. Moktuurw- -excurslon party would have all day weo Is 13,200 feet above sea level, whileSunday and part of Sunday night In tbe mountain on the Kona side of thewhich to view the splendor, and return- - crater towers nearly 600 feet higher.Ing would arrive here Monday forenoon. Lava from Makuoweowi-- would of

The arrangement for the excursions necessity either How out on the Kaufrom Hllo and Kohala have been left Bide, or toward Humuula, That thein the hands of the company' agentMcKay, at Hllo. It seems certain (Continued on Pace Five).

L

QUESTION

UHSETTLfD

ATTORNEY GENERAL NOT YETBEEN ASKED TO" TAKE UP THEMATTER JAPANESE ARE BUSY.

C. Shlozawa representing the Japanese educational Interests called upon certaIn the extent of the damage.Attorney General Peters this morningto Inquire the status of the school ques-tion. The Japanese editor had alsocalled upon Superintendent of PublicInstruction Babblttt but had been re-

ferred by the latter to the attorneygeneral. Shlozawa desired to ascertainwhat nctlon would be taken by thegovernment relative to closing or toexerting a closer supervision ovor thoJapanese private schools in the city.

He was Informed uy the attorneygeneral that the matter had not beenreferred to him ns yet, by the superin-tendent of education so no opinion hadbeen ronderod by tho logal departrrtontot the government.

Attorney General Peters stated thatthis quostlon cntno up originally as towhethor the board could enforce thoii'KMmiiujis miiuuiii vuuuiuuuuji, ulithe Punahou schools.

Yesterday tho question of the authority possessed by tho board ot education ovor the various private schoolswas brought up at a meeting o.f theboard and tho sentiment of some of thomembers scorned to bo that the boardought to oxert a greater supervision, astho statutes would seem to give themsuch authority. It was stated thatthe Japanese schools would also comoIn under this policy. SuperintendentBabbitt was disposed not to onforce anypossible perogatlves of tho board, ashe considered that moro trouble wouldneedlessly be created. It was finallydecided to refer the matter to tho attorney gonoral's dpartmont.

J

Continued on Page Eight).

A MATTER OFHEALTH

Pill

POWDERAbsolutely Pupo

HAS HO SUBSTITUTEA Oroam of Tartar Powder,

froo from alum or phos-phat- lo

acidROYAL DaKINQ POWDER 0.i HEW YORK.

FLOW

Heavy Rains '

DoJjamageMAKIKI STORM FLUMES BROKE

THIS MORNING TROUBLE ON

HACKFELD STREET.

The heavy rain this morning causedthe big Malcllcl storm Hume to breakmauka qf the fire station Read Super-visor Johnson had to rush off to as- -

considerable portion of that section otthe city was flooded by the waters from,the drain.

It was also reported that a retaining;wall on Hackfeld street had caved downcausing the water to flood some of theneighboring premises. Considerableminor damage In the way of washing;out culverts and portions of the roadshas been done but the extent ot thedamage throughout the city and vleln-lt- y

will not be ascertained for a dayor more.

Work on the new Kaliht sewer neartho Kamehameha schools, had to besuspended yesterday, owing to theheavy rains. It Is not thought that thework can bo resumed for some days.

'" The Imperative necessity of repairing"tho Judiciary building was made evi-dent this morning when t!w heavystorm broke shortly after 9 o'clock. Thoroof was leaking throughout. Titowater fairly poured Into Judge Lindsay's court room and other portions ottho upper story fared little better.

Assistant Superintendent of PublleWorks Howland went to make a per-

sonal Investigation of the conditions.The building Is covered with a clatftroof and the work of repairing will doboth difficult and oxpenslve.

Answer This

Question

Do you want Individuality,

style, wear, comfort, good

fitting qualities in your,footwear.

Tlten try our AU AmericanJ8.50 and $4.00 shot. You

get all of these excellentqualities when you come here

V

14,

LiniTED

lQtl Fort Street.

Phone Main Si

A'

Jij

J

'1.33

i -

Page 2: If II I THE HAWAIIAN SECOND EDITION I Way Is The Way Win ...I If You want io SECOND dnj's IScitb lodar THE HAWAIIAN STAR you TUB II ml STAK It In EDITION I I The Advertising Way Is

Oceanic Steamship Company,

MM Ml hMW

TIIOM CAN9M0MA

OuU

IKDAITU HA . .

IMKDAIRA

E&AJIEPAB0KOMA

OL Lax En atfmrrvRA(AleAMEDAaewoMA'ALAMEDAiVMNTL'RA'A LA Mi; I) A

iT MMMMii ( thli una will arrlv at mhI IW ft

rRAVrtproJA.V tJAW. U

.PSB. Hham. iMAR. U

....mar na en. i

..APR. IT

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WAV 8

MAY 17

to

VCNTL'RAALAMKDAtlMRMA ..ALAMEDA

ONOMA .

ALAMKDAVMMTURAALAMEDASIERRA .

A LAMBDA(IIKRRA ..A LAMBDAhi unit a ...ALAMEDA

HAN FRANC IBCDJAM. 1

JAM. 11JAN. M

iii

raa. it....MAR. K

Mail mMAM. IIAPR, IIAPR. ii

....A ......MAY 1

MAY 7

MAY It

I eonneotion with the sUlng of the above steamers, the AeU ore pre-

saged to lue t intending pengers coupon through tickets by any rall-B- g

fren San 1" ncl so to all nolnts In the United State, and from New6Kfl by steamship line o all Europe n Port,

rot further particulars apply to

W. G. Irwin & Co.CLL. 1TED)

General JLgenta Oceanic S. S. Company,

Canadian -- Australian Real Mail

T STEAMSHIP COMPANYtaamora of the above line running In connection with the CANADIAN-KlCrri- C

RAILWAY COMPANY between Vancouverd, B. C and Bydney, N.

B, 3? and calling at .Victoria, B. C, Honolulu and Brisbane, Q.

KJJJ 'AX HONOLULT ON OR ABOUT THE DATES BELOW. STATED, VIZ.

TOR AUSTRALIA. FOR VANCOUVER.AORANGI JAN. 12 MO ANA JAN. 9

MOANA FED- - 9MIOWERA i FEB. G

MIOWERA MAR. 9AORANGI MARCH G

AORANGI APRIL G MOANA APRIL 3

MOANA MAY 4MIOWERA MAY 1

.. IHXING 'AT SHVS, FIJI, ON BOTH UE AND. DOWN

r KOYAGES.

THEO. H DAVIES & CO.. Ltd., Gen'l Agts.

AMERICAN HAWAIIAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY.

GHRECX MONTHLY SERVICE BETWEEN NHTOXORK AND HONOLULU, VIA PACIFIC COAST.

r -r-- from NEW YORK TO HONOLULU.B. S. "HAWAIIAN" Via Tchuantepec To sail January 15th

FROM HONOLULU TO SAN FRANCISCO, VIA KAHULUI

S. S. "NEVADAN" To sail December 3thFROM. SAN FRANCISCO TO HONOLULU

S. S. "NEVADAN" To sail January 24th

FROM SEATTLE AND TACOMA TO HONOLULU.S. S. "CALIFORNIAN": To sail January 8th

UtiLOlrfelci &s

f B. SL MORSE, General Freight Agent. Agents.

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

Toyo Risen Kaisha S. S. Co.

Steamers of the Companies will call at Honolulu and leave thispert on or about the dates below mentioned

FOR CHINA AND JAPAN. FOR SAN FRANCISCO.BORIC JAN.' 15 HONGKONG MARU JAN. 8COPTIC JAN. 22 KOREA JAN. 18HONGKONG MARU JAN. 31 AMERICA MARU JAN. 29KOREA FEB. 12 SIBERIA FEB. 5AMERICA MARU FEB. 20 CHINA FEB. 12

1rf

For general Information apply

rcana

JBL. Co,,

above

m flavin 1 IIU &JPb

For thy stomach's sake

PRIMO BEERIIs'S PURE

lEor xxxxclety DinnerYou cannot find anything better than a shoulder of lamb.

That ours is better than you will get elsewhere is shown bythe demand. Uur stock ot meats, replenished daily, is abovethe average in quality.

Paragon. MarketTHE GORE.Be'retania, Emma and Alakea Streets.

nD

(For iddllion.i inmt t, 1 t t) i I. let skipping

TIDKH, tTN AND MOON.Fli.l ;u 11 'f ill.' M "in Jim

WtWv ?Jan a.m. p.m. v m. a.m.

FiiiU 4.0J S.2 4.00 .t 11.M 1.40 t M

p.m.II 4.44 1.1 4.S0 10.10 U.4J 1.41 1.40 7 3211 Ml 1.0 l.-'- l 10.M U N 1.40 1.41 13-a.-

17 1.01 1.1 1.43 1.08 11.41 1.41 Ml 0 34

It 1.17 l. 7.60 .1.44 I.44) 1.41 10.3:a.m.

It 7.11 1.4 8.05 2 0.41 1.40 6.11 11. Si20 7.61 1.2 10.18 2 59 2.01 1.40 6.41....

Times ot the tia hih taken from theU. S. Coast and Qeodetit Surrey ta-

bles. The tides at Kahuliil and HI10ooour about one hour earlier than atHonolulu, Hawaiian sta dard time Is10 hours 30 minute slower than reen-wlo- h

time, bring that of the meridianof 157 degrees M minutes. The timewhistle blows at 1:30 p. m., whloh Isthe same as Greenwich, 0 nours, 0 min-utes. The Sun and Moon are for localtime fot the whole Broup.

U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICUL-TURAL WEATHER BU.REAU.

The following data, covering a periodof 32 years, liuve beiti compiled fromthe 'Weather Bureau and MoKlbblnrecords at Honolulu, T. H. They areIssued to show the conditions that haveprevailed, during the month in question,for the above period o years, but mustnot be construed as a forecast of theweather conditions for the comingmonth.

Month, January for 32 yfars.TEMPERATURE. (1SD0.-1S0G-.)

Mean or normal temperature, 71"The warmest month was that of 1S9S

with nn average of 72.The coldest month was that of 1S05,

with an average of 67.Tho highest temperature vtfa Sl on

January 10, 1S91.

The lowest temperature was 51 onJanuary 2", 1S03.

PRECIPITATION (rain 1S78-1S- and1905-0- .)

Average for the month, 3.00 Inches.Average number of days with .01 o

an inch or more, 12.

The greatest monthly precipitation"was 10.03 inches In 1879.

The least monthly precipitation was0.17 inches in 1S7S.

The greatest amount of precipitationrecorded In any 21 consecutive hourswas 5.30 inches on January 25, 1S78.

RELATIVE HUMIDITY.Average 9 a. m. 727c ; average 0.p..m.

7S7o (lS90-lfl01)- average 8 a. m. 08;average 8 p. m. 08, (1905-0- .)

CLOUDS AN DWEATHER (1S90-190G- .)

Average number of clear days 12;partly cloudy days, 14; cloudy days, 5.

WIND.The prevailing winds are from the

northeast (1875-1S9- 4 and 1903-- ,The average hourly velocity of the

wind Is S.9 miles (1905-6.- )'

The highest velocity of the wind in1905-- G was 42 miles from the SW, onanuary IS, 1906.

Station: Honolulu, T. H.Date of issue: December 29, 1906.

9 o'clock averages from records ofTerritorial Meteorologist; 8 o'clock av-erages from Weather Bureau records.

WM ,B. STOCKMAN,Section Director, Weather Bureau.

ARRIVING.S. S. Doric, Gaukroger, from San

Francisco, 6:10 p. m.DEPARTING. r

Tuesday, January 15.;

S. S. KInau, Freeman, for HIlo andway ports, 12 m.

S. S. Iwalani, Piltz, for Hawaii andMaul ports, 5 p. m, 1

S. S. W. G. Hall, S. Thompson, forKauai ports, 5 p. m. '

V. S. A. T. Sherman, Johnson, fJrGuam and Manila, 11 a. m.

S. S. Doric, Gaukroger, for the Ori-

ent, 5 p. m.S. S. Likelike, Naopala, for Hamakua

ports, 5 p. m. j

S. S. Ke Au Hou, Tullett, for Kau!ports, 5 p. m. !

Wednesday, January 10

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

French S. S. Amlral Exelmans, Gens,for San Francisco, a. m.

Thursday, January 17.

S. S. MIkahala, Gregory, for Kauaiports, 5 p. m.

Friday, January IS.S. S. Claudlne, Parker, for Hawaii

and Maul ports, 5 p. m.

PASSENGERS DEPARTED.Per J.-- S. S. Aorangl, January 12,

for the Colonies: Humphrey Beckley,Miss E. O'Sulllvan, T. A. Stevens, MissE. M. Goddard, Miss Power, Mrs. J. S.Keneor.

Per S. S. KInau, January 15, for HIloand way ports: E. P. Low, H. Jones,C. Macfarlane, Dr. H. Pattle, C. A.Brown, A. C. Dowsett, Miss C. Walters,Mrs. Thomas Murray, Loo Joe, C.Schwartz, Gus 'Kuhn, R. C. Brown andwife, George iMayfleld and wife, MissHoward Bryant, M. R. Jamieson, A.W. T. Bottomley, C. F. Herrlek, W. H.Smith and wife, H. W. M. Mist, A.Mason, W. E. Foster, R. A. Lyman,R. P. Robinson, A. Enos, D. H. Rahe,G. C. ZImmer, L, H. Burton, Mr. Jones,Mrs. W. H. Bailey, H. Focke, D. Lam-bert, W, W. Emery and wife, W. Wag-goner, S. Holt, Miss Whlttin, Mrs.Bourlne, Rev. E. W. Thwlng, E. O,Mall, J. T. Stacker, H. Saxe, N. C.Wall.

PASSENGERS BOOKED.Per O. S, S. Alnrnedn, January 16, for

San Franolsoo: Miss A. de 1'Artlgue,C. DuRol, W. Mutch, S. Han, KateWalsh and infant, G, E.' Hart, T, J.Keaney, A. N. Walton, J. II. Snohn,Miss A.4L. Smith, Miss Hanson, Mrs.A. Crozler, Mrs. Welokar-Walke- r, S,H. Moses, Father Wyman, Father

!C RESUMES

YOYAGE TODAY

Tin V n Dull. n l port yester'ln pm nlna from H.in fiunclsco, dotkIni al the 1'hnnml wharf at o'clock,(he Mils for the Uil.iu at 4 o'olockthin afternoon. Ah? left Baa FranciscoJanuary I. brlnalna three days latermall. The voyage was a rough experi-ence. Mr. and 14 re, Arthur Maertenstopped over at Honolulu. Among the

through passengers ii H. ahlrashl.managing director of th Toyo KlsenKaisha, returning to Yokohama froma business trip to the United States.D.. Lucy Brown Is going to Japan, see-

ing the world. Miss Nellie Rankin Is amissionary bound for China. T. K. Mc-

Kay Is the well known passenger ex-

pert. J. It. Corse is a Pacific Mallfreight expert. His wife Is with him.They go to Hongkong. The Doric car-il- ei

1S00 tons of freight for the Orient,much of It raw cotton. She takesaboard 606 tons of coal here.

TROUBLE OVER

PRIVATE SCHOOL

BOARD OF EDUCATION DISCUSSADVISABILITY OF GREATER SU-

PERVISION OVER SUCH.

There wa, quite a discussion yester-day at the meeting of the Board ofEducation relative to the Board exert-ing a closer supervision over variousprivate schools, than nad been the cus-tom In former years. It was contend-ed by some members of the Board thatthe private schools should be watchedwith greater care and a greater super-vision kept In conformity with the va-

rious provisions of the law. It wasfinally decided to submit the matter tothe attorney general for nn opinion.

It was voted to close the schools forthe summer vacation on June 21.

Teacher's examinations were sot forJune 26 and 27. The examinations forOahu will be held at Honolulu, for Ha-waii at HIlo, and either Konawnena orAhunlon, Kohala, for Maul at Wallukuand for Kauai at Lihue.

The resignation of J. M. Kuhns atWaimea and Mrs. Vickery at Pauoawere accepted. Mr. Teixelra was appointed to Ahualoa. Letters decliningpositions were received from Mrs.

and Mrs. Olney.The request made by Principal Mack-

intosh for the use of the Royal Schoolbuilding for the Royal School Alumniwas granted.

The report of the committee on geo-

graphy was not ready.

LIGHTHOUSE ON MOLOKAI. .

The following is a bill for the establishment cf a light house at Kalaupapaon .the island of Molokai, Territory ofHawaii introduced in the House, De-

cember 11, by Delegate Kuhlo.Be it enacted by the Senate and

House of Representatives of the UnitedStates of America in Congress assem-bled, that there shall be established bythe Secretary of Commerce and Labora lighthouse of the first order, underplans prepared by the LighthouseBoard, to be located at Kalaupapa, onthe north coast of the Island of Molo-kai, Territory of Hawaii, together witha keeper's house and all necessaryequipment, at a cost not to exceed sixtythousand dollars; and this sum, or somuch thereof as may be necessary forthis purpose is hereby appropriated outof any money in the Treasury nototherwise appropriated.

The following is a bill for the establishment of a lighthouse at Mana Pointon the island of Kauai, Territory ofHawaii, introduced in Congress De-

cember 11, by Delegate Kuhlo.Be it enacted by tho Senate and

House of Representatives of the UnitedStates of America In Congress assem-bled, that there shall bo established bythe Secretary of Commerce and Labora lighthouse of the first order, underplans prepared by tho LighthouseBoard, to be locaeed on or near ManaPoint, on. :he west end of the island ofiKaual, Terrltoryp of Hawaii, togetherwith a keeper's house and all necessaryequipment nt a cost not to exceed sixtythousands dollars; and this sum, or somuch thereof as may be necessary forthis purpose, Is hereby appropriated outof any money in the Treasury nototherwise appropriated.

Stark, Mrs. L. T. Flnson, Miss TIddy,Al. Moore, wife and child, W. T. Smithand wife, Mr. and Mrs. French andfamily, Mr. and Mrs. Livermore, Mr,and Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Sinclair, AylmerRobinson.

PASSENGERS ARRIVED.S. S. Doric, January 14, from San

Francisco: For Honolulu: Mr. andMrs. Arthur iMaertens. For Yokoha- -rritr: M. Shlrashl, F. P. Solomon, W.F. Pierce, H. Nauaml, Walter Dohle,Jacques Marchand, Dr. Lucy HallBrown, Mrs. F. P. Solomon, Mrs. W.F. Pierce, T. Shlbata, James Dlcan-vlll- e.

For Kobe: Miss Nelllo B. Ran-kin; For Shanghai: J. H, McMurtrle,m B. Gregory, E.H. Wilson, Rev, C.

. F. Hancock, H. N. KInnear, J. a.iDlsuIdoff, H. E. Morton, Walter R.Zappey, Rev. J. W. Vinson. Mrs. C, V,Hancock, Mrs. H. N. KInnear, twochildren and servant; T, D. McKay.For Hongkong: G. H. Corse, FlorenceE. Barton, W. B. Webb, Rev. G. Frnn- -zen. A. Strauss, F. H. Gqetschlus, Dr.Z. M. Laughlln, P. A. Meyr, A. L,Shields, Miss Louis eG. O'Toole, Mrs.'C. H. Corse, Walter N. Echols, T. A.Rlordan, Mrs. G, Frnnzen,' Robert ENorfleet, Mrs. F. H. Goetschlus, CypVabre. Maurenus Peterson, W, W,Lewis.

CHIUSA MARU CASE ON.The hearing af the llbej against the

Japanese S. S, Chlusa Maru was in

OCO

" KI KKO'TfiN " , MBent Soy I

mSBBBBBBBBSBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBIBw I I I

t, .k LV"

The attention of Plantation Managers is called to this brand ofSoy. Years of experience have brought it to the front and it now:ranks as the best Soy in the market.

Ii. YiVXlVtOXOSOLE AGENT. '

25 Hotel Street near Nuuanu. Telephone Main 399.

January TermNew line of special goods as follows:'Heavy Woolen Blankets and 'Men's Woolen

Sweaters and Shoes.

OO.

MB

Comforters,

Yl IvOY

wim in the Poolcixxcl.. .

leeping JlpartmentsJETor tjll.l50 at

HI

The Poundman.has his eye on your dog if .he hasa

'iCOjIar jufd .a tag, no harm .done.

fiV'o .carry collajrs from 25c aup.

E. O. HALL & SON, LTDCorner Fort and King

progress before U. S. Judge Dole yes-terday. Captain Haglund of the Inter-

-Island Company, the llbellant, wasa witness.

BAKER

MAKES

E

11 REPLY

ISSUES A FORMAL DENIAL OF

THE STATEMENT IN A RECENTPUBLICATION.

CONCORD (N, H.), January 4 Mrs.Mary Baker Eddy, leader of tho Chris-tian Scientists, today issued over hersignature a reply to the first Install-ment of the history of her life in

Magazine, Mrs, Eddy deniesthe characterization of her father as aman "Ignorant, dominating, passion-ate," Her father, she says, was a"well Informed, intellectual man, culti-vated In mind and manners." He didnot use 'bad language, as the magazinealleges,

Tho priestess of Christian Sciencesays McClure's story of tho death ofher first husband and her subsequentipoverty is erroneous, Mrs, Eddy do-nl- es

'that after' she returned to herfathor's homo she was given to com-muning with spirits. She says;

"I was never given to 'long and lone-ly wanderings, ospoolally at night, asstated by McClure's, I was always ac-

companied by some responsible Indl-- i

S

Kins St. Ewa of Bethel

Open All NiairrHotel Street Next to

Young Hotel

Streets.

consistently declared that I was not amedium for spirits. I never was espe-cially interested in the Shakers, never'dabbled In mesmerism,' never was 'anamateur clairvoyant,' nor did 'the su-

perstitious country folk frequently seekmy advice.' I never went Into a tranceto describe scenes far away."

ARE AFTER MANUEL.His alleged creditors are after Man-

uel Qunl formerly of Hilo. It is claim-ed that Manuel Is trying to do, AV. S,Wlso out of a note for $1675 and H.Hackfeld & Company, Ltd., for $192.95

for goods received. It is claimed thatQunl transferred most ot his propertyto one Kim Moon Sun and the latterIs converting the property into moneyand the creditors will be defrauded,High Sheriff Henry served tho papersin the assumpsit BUits with attachmentIn aid this morning. Qunl Is chargedwith having Jumped out of HIlo,

THE RULERS CHOSEN,The iMardl Gras committees met last

evening and talked over the comingcarnival, The queen of the Mardl Graswill be Miss Lorna Iaukea and theking Dr. George Herbert, Tho nextmeeting of tho Mardl Gras committeeswill be held on Monday evening at 7:p, m., at Kllohana Art League rooms,Nos. 10 and 11 Young Building, atwhich time tho tickets will be distrib-uted to those who are to assist In theirdisposal.

Through the persuasion of Chlof ofDoteotlves A, P, Taylor two disreputable characters, a negro and a Porto

vldual when I took An ovenmg walk.Rlcan, have been "Induced" to loave thobut seldom took one. I have always country. j- - iig

Page 3: If II I THE HAWAIIAN SECOND EDITION I Way Is The Way Win ...I If You want io SECOND dnj's IScitb lodar THE HAWAIIAN STAR you TUB II ml STAK It In EDITION I I The Advertising Way Is

Tim tfirst of tho Ymv

muliutt m4 nil ataara will wutJlUAKK "OKS, CAUBDAA PAD.nmrrAXM. wcnb. mbwcilb. to at

yw Mc. W hara Juat raealvad

A w ar closing out our STOCK

CABINKT Mm will too sold t coot.

Wall, Nichols Co,, Ltd,

W. G. Irwin & Go.

AGENTS TOR THKCo.. of Liverpool. KnK

Alllanc Ansurance Co. of London, Bag.Bwttlah Union A National Ins. Co., ot

Bdlnburg, Scotland.Tire Association of Phlldlphla.'Alliance Inauranco Corporation Ltd.

of Madgefcyrg Gonoral Ins.Company.

Bamboo FurnitureCARPENTER WORK.

1S8 Beretanla Street. 1 onolulu.

M. PHILLIPS & CO.,Wholesale Impo-'er-

And Jobber of

AMERICA!! AND EUHOPEAH DRY GOODS

Corner of ""ort nd Quet 8t.

PACIFIC PICTURE FRAMING CO.

Artistic Work Guaranteed.

Nuuanu Street near Hotel.

TKE HAWAIIAN REALTYAND UATUH1TX CO. Ltd.Real Estate. Mortgages, Loans and

Investment Securities. Homes built ontho Installment plan.Home Olllce: Mclntyro Building, T. H,li. K. KENTWELL, General Manager,

For Rent, Lease or Sale,

fTon tn ae.venteen acres land Withhouse, barn and water, directly on carline; splendid 1 cation ror aairy iarm'Apply P. O. Box 184.

COMPANY, LTD.

Sole manufacturers and agents ofGenuine Kola Mint. (Don't buy poorimitations.) Phone Main, 71.

CLOTHES CLEANED ANDPRESSED BY THE

Honolulu Renovating Co.T. FUJI, MANAGER.

All Telephone Messages PromptlyAttended To. We Call For ana ueuverTelephone Main 378.

Richard Street near Queen

Y. WO SINGr CO.GROCERIES, FRUITS,

VTGETABLES, ETC.

U8J-118- 8 Nuuanu Street.

W1TAnn Haiti 238. T BOX 8

Honolulu Iron Works.

STEAM ENGINES, SUGAR MILLS,BOILERS, COOLERS, IRON, BKABH

AND CASTINGS.

MnnViinorv of Every Description Madeto Order. Particular attention paid toShip's Blacksmlthlng. Job Work Ex

o nShort

c,

LEAD

ecuted Notice.

& CO, LTD,

QUEEN STREET.HONOLULU, H. t

AGENTS FOR.

Hawaiian Agricultural Company, Onomea Sugar Company, Honomu SugarCompany, Walluku Sugar company,Ookala Sugar Plantation Company,Haleakala Ranch Company, KapapalaRanch.

Planters Line Shipping Company,Charles Brewer & Co'a Line of Bos

ton Packets,LIST OF OFFICERS,

' Charles M. ,, .PresidentGeo, H, Robertson,, &'Mgr.

B. Faxon Bishop.,.. Treas, St Secy.

F. W. Macfarlane AuditorP. C. Jones Director

' C. H, Cooke,.,, ..DirectorJ, R, Gait, , Director'All ot the above named constltuto

the Boa-- d of Directors,

annual wwrrmo.

TM rotator annual mating of tholooMwMoro of Tho Bank of Hawaii.

LM iHH bo hot! t tho ew of ihocotojmtKHl, IUI. Honolulu,w ttrantar. iMwrr if. w. at t

o'etocfc A. n. r aftA0f(toot ot try.

Honololo. January 1MT.

Oatton, Noill & Co.,

anKtaoorf Mnehlntota, WoltamlUtand Bottormakars.Flrot alas work at roaonnawa raMs.

W.G. Irwin & Co., UCWin. G. lrwtn..Proaldont and MaiWarJohn D. IpreckeU. First nt

W. M. Oltfard....flooend Bt

If. M. Whitney TreasurerRichard ivora SoorotaryW. P. Wilson Auditor

SUGAR FACTORS, COMMISSION AGENTS

AOEMTB FOROceanic flteunablp Co., tan FraMtooo,

j Cal.I Western Sugar RoAning Co,, San Frn- -

olaoo, Cal.Baldwin Locomotive Work, Philadel-

phia, Pa.Nwall Universal Mill Co., Manufao-turor- a

of National Can Skroddor,Now York, N. Y.

Pacific Oil Transportation Co., SanFrancisco, Cal.

19(17 J15We have a full line o 1D07 sample

suitings open for your Inspection now.These cloths are the very best valuefor the money and will appeal to thethrifty man for that reason.

The stylish man can get the cut hewants and a perfect tit. Also he canbe sure he Is exclusive If he buys herefor not more than three suits of thesame cloth will be made.Yours for the 1907 trade.

W.W.Aliana Co.LtdMerohant Tailors.

Phone Blue 2741.No. 62 King Street.

LITEST TfiPIK INSUMNCE

ivinus oc annuities to protect youagainst the vicissitudes of old age

JUST OUT.

It will pay you as It has paid other.to Investigate these pu'lcles befor increasing your insurance. Call or wrlUfor particulars.

astle tteGENERA AGENTS.

A. B. ELNER, Special Agent.

Fire Insurance!Atlas Assurance Company

of London. '

New York UnderwritersAgency.

irrovidence Washington Insurance Company.

fHE B. F. DILLINGHAM GO,, LIMITED

General Agents for Hawaii,fourth Floor, Stangenwald Building.

flLEXANDERSBALDWIK,LTD

J. P. COOKE, Manager.

OFFICERS:

H. P. Baldwin PresidentJ. B. Castle First Vice-Preside- nt

W. M. Alexander.Second Vice-Preside-

L. T. Peck Third Vice-Preside- nt

J. Waterhouse TreasurerE, E, Paxton SecretaryW, O, Smith r Director

Sugar Factors andCommissionfterchants

AGENTS FOR

Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Company.

Haiku Sugar Company.Pala Plantation.Maul Agricultural Company,Klhel Plantation Company.Hawaiian Sugar Company.Kahuku Plantation Company.Kahulul Railroad Company.Haleakala Ranch Company,

Fine Job Printing, tftar Office.

AfMtfttf. KJtVARf tl. IMf. TfMftAf, IftJWftftt ft Ml.

Gannon JoinsWith

WAMtNOTOM, nrr -- it m

ortod that poakor CannoM iutame with tk lroald'ni .i- - f

Mofod cabal against lno. m,

Bonato. one object of whi i

ELMER D

pel Cortelyou to lesign the h.i i nnui- -

shlp of the Republican National " m- -

mtttee before he Is confirmed af Secretary of the Treasury, and that the alliance of Uncle Joe and the Proaldentwas ratified ht at a dinner givenat the White House.

Prominent Sena'ois liavp thatany cabal among them exists, but In

the rough and tumble of th- - fight iv

1.

ll w

'

r

B.

the rate bill and. other measures whichthe friends have forcedthrough Congress many sore conferredhave been caused and the wounds stillrankle. Not only Foraker, but suchwar horses as Scott of West

of

has

Foreign News

ON15

ofJr. In

that noto the an act

the andno sign It even If

tain theof such a

be, hp a not.

OIL.15. Nine

andbeen

Oil Athe

Oil to

JVER

GEORGE CORTELYOU.

President's

Virginia.

I . t f to

- I 10 h e ain d

n f 'i' pM,i h.i n t lh'it ton .. re ms" frlrn.l n- -

eat,' tui r ,unl h.ive It by anew in who. would not be

to him. Cannon has hepn in to help the President keep in theship and defeat his

more than any one canurg or defeit and visri ally It Is believed that if

T,f not b" ti:.idi sue- -

cessor. the asfar as the can order It,

spots win tie upon cannonis felt over tho be

ing and some even say It Is

the InAldrlch of Rhode Island, Piatt since the days of James G. andYork, and others, are arrayed against Roscoe Conkllng. Fairbanks hasthe Administration. They are playing a deep and skillful game anda fight on andjjave declared much strength. --He now has a newfor Elmer to head the commit- - foe td light.

By CableJORDAN JAPANESE.

SAN FRANCISCO, January Pros-Ide- nt

Davll Starr Johdan, LelandStanford University, a speechyesterday declared oongresewould consent .passage ofof exclusion against Japanese

President wouldthe latest news concerning out-th- e

signing measure wouldsaid, hoodlum

THE STANDARDFINDLAY, Ohio, January

hundred thirty-nin- e Indictmentshave returned against thetand-ar- d

Company, finding ofjurulUy

on these counts would leave Stand,ard liable possible flne,s aggre-

gating fifty-eig- ht million dollars,.

Roosevelt''

nvililhn

takenperhaps,

accept.il Accordinglyealled

Cartelyou chairmanopponents.

Cannnn.legislation,

powerfulRoosevelt's

Presidential succession,White House

Interest gameplayed,greatest known National affairs.

New Blainebeen

makln?CortelyouDover

that

man,

EARTHQUAKE IN SWITZERLAND.BASLE, Switzerland, January 15. An

earthquake has Interfered with theelectrical system here and the city isplunged In darkness.

Basle Is one of the principal cities of I

Switzerland, the population being given at 111,000.

BRYAN THROWN FROM SLEIGH.SPOKANE, Wash., January 15.

William Jennings Bryan figured In arunaway aocldedt here yesterday, hissleigh being upset. He was thrownInto a snowbank and thereby escapedInjury.

JAPAN TALKS DISARMAMENT.TOKIO, January 15 The Japanese

Government has expressed Itself as Infavor of submitting, the question of In-

ternational disarmament to The HaguePeace Conference.

Fine Job Printing,. ,gtar Office.

Good BreadAhead

When You Uk

Golden GateFlour

AH Groceri.

f , i mas j

H.Hackfel d c-Co- . lT0WHOLE

ElectricityIs the CHEAPEST LIGHT

There is no flame, no smudge, no heat, no odor. Nomatches needed. Electric light does not consume oxygen,therefore does not rob your air of vitality 'and freshness.

If you desire, our representatives will call and give youany 'further information.

Write or 'phone, MAIN 390.

Hawaiian Electric Co., LtdOffice, King near Alakea St.

Daily Needs

'Phone, Main 390

We arc in an excellent position to supply you with meats

of a superior quality. The cuts and chops will compare witht

the "Roast "Beef of old England" and the Downs. You can

not get better meats anywhere.

v t fr

Metropolitan Meat Co.,' Ltd

Office StationeryOf Every Kind

Lodgers, Journals, cash books, t.supplies, carbon papers and

business stationery of ovory description

can be bought td tho host advantage at "

Hawaiian News Company, Ltd.,Merchant Street Store.

They say "Men were deceivers ever,"Not much; thoy belle the name,Quite frankly they "keep out the wea-

ther,"Hero's to them! We'll do the same

Drink RainierYou Won't beBilious

Phone Whlto 1331. fjjC. A. Nelson, Agent. 'J,'

JUST RBCBIVBDA fine View of San Francisco Earthquake and Fire. 'A Beautiful

Picture in Colors, size 26x36 inches; very cheap; only $1.00.GENERAL ADVERTISING & COLLECTING AGENCY,

74 lung Street, Room 4.

Page 4: If II I THE HAWAIIAN SECOND EDITION I Way Is The Way Win ...I If You want io SECOND dnj's IScitb lodar THE HAWAIIAN STAR you TUB II ml STAK It In EDITION I I The Advertising Way Is

DAILY AttP SEMI-WEEKL-

; OMblUhcd every Utftuwn (except Sunday) by the Hawaiian Starfe Kwaypf Association, Limited.

Wm SUBSCRIPTION RATES:I Cbcal, per annum $ 8 00

foreign, per annum ia.00MP IHable in advance.

XeUrwt at Pott OMm ai JOmolulu, Hawaii, m Moand olaaa mall matter.

FRANK L. HOOGS ....MANAGER

TUESDAY JANUARY 15, 1907

.,t..t. .4.4. 4.4.4. 4. The inefficiency of an increaie in9 f Hu inlnnn liretue Je tn reduce thejlie EconOIlUCS amount of liquor sold, or to mate- -

Of License I euce tne number aaloonsin cities and larffe towns wat anuk- -

laja. day and tome iuitancei and examples of it were given.

(While it seems at first view almost incredible that the increae of

alopn license from $106 a year lo $500, some years ago in Chicago or

from $200 to $1000 a year in Joliet should not have had the effect of

jnaterially reducing the number of saloons in these cities, the reasonis not far to seek. It is an economic reason, and not one due cither tointemperate habits or something peculiar to the liquor traffic.

That the increase of the license should not reduce or greatly affectthe amount of liquor sold, ought to be expected. The demand remainspractically the same, unaffected by the number of places at which liquorcan be procured, unless of course the number should be so very great3y reduced that the physical possibility of securing liquor would be

sreatlv impaired. But even that would shortly readjust itself. Thosemho wanted it would take means to secure it, and the fact of the trouble thev went to to tret it, would in all probability lead to an increasein the use of liquor by some in the community, about off-setti- thedecrease in its use by others who do not care enough for it to go tojthe additional trouble. ,

i 'But the relation of the license fee to the number of places, restson altogether different grounds grounds not personal but economic.The license fee is only one element in the expense of running a saloon.Other elements are rent, light, heat, insurance, wages, superintendenceand all other elements that enter into any business. Of these the sizeof the license fee docs not affect any except rent, wages and superinjendencc. A man who 'is in the saloon business has his license sudtlenly raised from S500 a vcar to $1,000, for example. The effect isno different than an equal increase in rent or any other element of.expense would be. In order to do as well as he was doing before, heamist make an additional profit of $500. If his profits were large be-

fore so that they can stand that cut and still show a return on capital,though a reduction of return for superintendence, the saloon-keep- er isliable simply to accept the reduction for his own services and keepright on. But profits are not always large enough to permit of this.In that case unless the loss can be divided among other elements thesaloon must go. In that case, the landlord is without a tenant. IfLartenders are employed, they will be out of a job. The landlord on

the average is willing to reduce his rent some rather than have hisbuilding vacated. The wages of employes, unless kept up by tradesunion influences or some other influences bear a part of the loss..Thus the increased cost of the license k divided up between rent,(wages and superintendence, or between rent and superintendence,. andthe saloon keeps right on in business. In cities and large towns whererent is one of the important items of the expense of operation, anyprobable increase in the cost of license bears so small a proportion tothis and the other items of expense, economically affected by it, thatan adjustment is comparatively easy. Rent yields all the more readilyinasmuch as, owing to moral considerations affecting many individualsin the community, property is not as freely offered for saloon as for.ether purposes, and generally speaking rents for saloon purposes arejust a little higher than the normal for similar property, and this makesaccommodation and adjustment to an increase in saloon licenses, allthe easier.

In small towns and country places, yhere rent is a smaller item ofexpense, where wages and superintendence, .generally speaking arelower, it is not so easy to distribute an increase of several hundred dol-

lars in the license fee among these items that can bear it. In.fact, inmany cases it is impossible, and in the country and in smaller places aconsiderable increase m the license fee results 111 a decrease in the number of saloons. In many places this decrease is almost proportionedto the increase of the license. In some places it is more... The entireannual profits of many country saloons do not equal or exceed $500,An increase of that amount or of a considerable part of that amountmust necessarily wipe out the saloon, in some cases, of course, to giveplace to an unlicensed groggery.

Britain's NewAmbassador

The perturbation of the Britishover the loss of prestige sufferedby their embassy at Washingtonhas been noted in British papersfor several weeks. The Germanand French ambassadors had wonthe President's affection by their

congeniality of tastes and temperament. It was felt that somethingout of the common must be done, says The Literary Digest. The oldtalk that has been heard for years, about the famous men we send toEngland and the unknown men they have sent to Washington, was re-

vived in earnest, and now the rooted regard of the British for prece-dent has been torn up and thrown to the winds, and a man known toiame, but not to diplomacy, is named to represent one great branch of,

the Anglo-Saxo- n people at the capital of the other James Bryce.Hitherto, also, in British diplomacy, as the New York Evening Mailpoints out, "the first-rat- e men were reserved for Paris, Berlin, St. Pe-

tersburg, Vienna, and Constantinople," while 'Washington meant pro-motion only to diplomats stationed at the capitals of little countries."But this appointment of Mr. Bryce, taking him from his position inthe Cabinet, where he is Chief Secretary for Ireland, is, in the opinionof thi paper, "the greatest compliment ever paid to this nation byGreat Britain." And to the New York Evening Sun it "marks theofficial recognition by a British Prime Minister, and incidentally aBritish sovereign, of the fact that the place is the most important onein the diplomatic service of the empire." '

It is remarked by some papers, as by the Ncw York Times, that"Mr. Bryce will be the same 'kind of Ambassador to Washington thatue have been in the habit of sending to London." That is, he will notbe a professional diplomatist who takes this appointment merely as astepping-ston- e to something more attractive, but "he will be a manfrom the outside who may be expected to prove an acceptable person,not only to our Government, but to our people." That his welcome inthjs country will be enthusiastic has been apparent from the unani-mous indorsement extended him by the press since the first mentionof his name for the office.

"He is eminent as an author, distinguished as orator, formidableas a debater, admirable as an executive," says the Brooklyn Eagle,"and head and shoulders above any of his English' contemporaries as3 itucjcnt of 'American political and social conditions." AH of which

ae ljetter equipped

roe haiv-uu- tfti tviat jamais in im.

MaltNutrine . .

The very bcrt Maltin the mnrki't.

Hecomnn iiib 1 by theProfrfflon.

169

moreia to

Is

If

-- 1 W.H AM'THAYER

' II

' III! i: I I

PIANOpi "tiu H

vim; hi m i

El Palencia CigarsUI HI IU 'TORS

Tobacco Co.

EXQUIB1TB JEWELRY

J. VIBRRA CO.

Stmt.

HATC. SHIRTS.

UNDERWEAR,

Street.

.NEW 0A1LU CAIlKIAGIiMANUFACTURING

Any kind of repair work on carriage!.hoed.

1170 River street, Honolulu.

Whitney & MarshOur Semiannual

Sale of R

STKINWAY

emnantsWILL BEGIN ON

gJBXOMOTO.

Monday Next, the Hi.REMNANTS OF

Wash and yoolen .Goods,

Laces and Embroideries

In fafct all kinds of Remnants. j

Annual Stock-Takin- g 'ReductionSALE

BEGINNING JANUARY 1, 1807.

Useful odds and ends In our Household Department: German Wood SaltBoxes and Mixing Spoens; Candlesticks; Table Cutlery; Tea and Coffee Cad-

dies; Vegetable, Noodle, Sandwich and Cookie Cutters; TJmbal and JellyMoulds; Apple Corers and Parers; Wooden Butter Moulds and Paddles.

IO'Wi & Coa Jlta.KING STREET.

The Houseke.n er's Emporium.TELEPHONE MAIN 240.

than he to discharge the duties of the embassy at (Washington." Inthis unqualified indorsement the press of all shades of thought appar-ently agree. The New York World asserts that "no other man inEngland, with the possible exception of John Morley, highly reipected in this country for his talents and achievements at the bar, inliterature and in politics, and no man better understands Americanpolitics and affairs than Mr. Bryce." "In fact," adds the New YorkTribune, organ of the American Ambassador to Great Britain, "we areinclined to think that he knows America better than Americansthemselves know it, better even than many of our own legislators andadministrators." The public life Of Mr. Bryce is summarized inthis paper:

"Mr. Bryce has never before held a place in the diplomatic service,his nearest approach thereto having been a few years of duty as UnderSecretary of Foreign Affairs. He has been known as a barrister, aprofessor of law at Oxford for many years, ml as the author ofseveral highly important books, among them a history of 'The HolyRoman Empire' and a monumental treatise, historical, descriptive, andcritical, on 'The American Commonwealth.' For more than a quarterof a century, however he has been in Parliament, and he has been con-nected more or less prominently with the Government during most ofthe time when the Liberal party has been in office. In this latter ser-vice he has addressed himself efficiently to a considerable range anddiversity of legislative and administrative affairs, so that he is to beesteemed as an expert in politic and civics as as in law andletters."

Those 30d excursionists from Los An-geles will than bring back 'that$600 took send Secretary Wood tothe mainland.

Really the suspense in waiting forBooker T. Washington to break hlg si-

lence In regard to the discharge Pfthose colored soldiers becomingpainful.

Even the Volcano stops Its aotlv-It- y

before huge excursionists reapjh 1)8

they can fttJlMflt m WhBt It. can 40,.,

N"CO.

vNTn

ST

Jlaysolden

A. R.

Itotal

M0I1ERT

U.

Hotel

CO.

HorsesNo.

is so

most

thus

ascivil

well

for the first time In many moons ItIs pormlssable to write funny thingsabout Hawaii's weather man. This Isone style of jokes that the local papersordinarily have to fight shy of.

POINTED PARAGRAPHS.

It's all III tongue that tells no good,

Nevert Judge yourself by the faultsof yoj'nelghbors.

First It aflj bapebjiJI, then football8&jnj$ty It's sqngrass,.

j; J. a$

Corner

moment

E.W.J ordan & Co.

The First Lessonthat every housekeeper should tearla to use In the tac-

tion of foods for the table. Thepfcraon will Invariably M

S & Canned GoodsWe guarantee these goods money

back if they are not MUiafactory youwill And Just as we representthe vary choicest in the market. Everycan we sell makes ua friends. If youhaven't used goods put up under theS. A W. label, better start now.

Henry May & Co., LtdTelephones 22 and 92

GROCER

Telephone Main 101

P. O. Box 088.

HA11RY ARMITAGEStools f cl BondIlirolcer....

Member of Honolulu Stock and BondExchange.

Few ehares of following stocks forsale: Pioneer Mill Co., SugarCo., Ewa Plantation Co., HawaiianSugar Co., Walalua Agricultural Co.,Etc.

Office, Campbell Block Merchant St.Honolulu, T. H.

RON BEDSBIO SHIPMENTJUST. RECEIVED.

FOI'ULAH

J. HOPP & CO,1053-10- BISHOP ETREET.

CAHARA & COLIQUOR DEALERS.

Queen and AlakeaPHONE MAIN 492.P. O. BOX 64.

DAILY STOCK REPORT

Between oards; 17 Pepeekeo, J133,Session ales: 100 Ookala, $8; $1000

O. R. & L. Co. Cs, $102.75; 104 Sugar Co., $32.50.

Dividends: Haw.' Sugar Co., 11-- 2 percent; Oahu sugar Co., 1 per cent; O. R.& L. Co., 2 per cent.

Stock. Bid. Asked.C. Brewer & Co $385.00 $

Ewa Plan. Co 24.75 25.00Haw. Agr. Co 142,50Haw. Com. Co 82,00

Haw. Sugar Co 32.26Honokaa Sugar Co 11,00Haiku Sugar 175,00

Kahuku Plan. Co 26.00Klhel Plan. Co 7,75

Koloa Sugar CoMaBryde Sugar Co. 6.00Onomea 'Sugar Co 23.75OnomeaOlaa Sugar Cov 2. SO

Olowalu Co. ..; 100.00Paauhau Sugar Co 16.60Pacific Sugar Co 100.00Pioneer Mill Co 136.00

Walalua Agr. Co 72.26Waimanalo Sugar Co. .. 155.00Wnlluku Sugar Co 210.00

I. I. S. N. Co 1M.60Haw. Electric Co 135.00Hon. R. T. Co. pfd 101.00Hon. R. T., Com 66.00Mutual Telephone 8.75Nahlku Rubber Co 100.00

Nahlku Ruber Co, as,,.. 10.00

Oahu Railway 93.00

Hon. Brew. CoHaw, Ter. 4s 100.00Haw. Ter. 4s 100.00Haw. Ter, 4tf 100.00Haw. Ter. 3s 100,00Haw. Ter. 4s 100,00Haw. 5s, 100.00Cal.' Beet Cs ,,,,,,, 102,50Haiku Sugar 6s 102.00Hawaiian Sugar Cs 101.00Hon, R. T. L. Co. Cs 107,50Kahuku 100.05Oahu Sugar 6s 100.50Oahu Railway Cs ,. 102.76Pioneer Cs 105.00Pala Plan Cs 102.00Walalua Agr!. 6s

TUB

Oahu

Streets,

Haw.

Govt.

32.7611,50

27,00.136r.loG.50

24.0039.00

2.75

72.50

130.00

26.0094.0028.00

103.60

102.5099.60

MaBryde sugar Co. 6s 99,00

NYw Pattern far ft

may mak &greateit Stir but lift-Ca- ll

Patterns ftlwftjrf

make the beat gaTOMfti

discrimination

Wthem

Boston Block, Fort Street

Loose Lea

1

We have complete outfits. Original

record and transfer oasos All rullagi

and material the best.Expert aceountants testify to the ad

'vantages of this form of recording of

all transactions. Now Is the time to

select for the New "ear.

Hawaiian Office Specialty

COMPANY

"ST. KSIIXI,Corner Beretanla and Nuuanu Sts.

JAPANESE DRUGGISTSGENERAL MERCHANDISE

All kinds American patent medlcineait low prices.

JAPANESE REFUSE TO

SUBMITTO ARREST

BROWN RAILROAD LABORERS AT.

PORTERVILLE CAUSE A RIOT'ATTACK ON A WHITE 3IAN,

PORTERVILLE, January 4 A crowdof Japanese laborers working upon thetracks of the Southern Pacific Com-pany, near this city aswaultod Roy V.Clark today, striking him over the headwith a shovel and attacking him withjstlcks and clubs. Clark escaped byrunning and came to this city to no-

tify the locul ofllcers and swear outwarrants for the arrest of the Japaneseforty In number.

An attempt to arrest the JapanesewaB met with resistance. A messagewas sent asking for assistance and alarge number of spoclal ofllcers wasrushed to the scene. After consider-able difficulty fifteen Japanese werearrested, taken to Vlsalla and placedIn the County Jail. It was not consid-ered safe to keop them In the Porter-vlll- e

Jail on account of local feeling.During the fracas the Japanese are

reported to have raised the Japaneseflag. Great excitement prevailed Inthis city for a time. Because of thebad feeling existing further trouble Isfeared. There is a large number ofJapanese working on the railroad Inthis vicinity.

Clark who was attacked by the Jap-anese, Is not seriously hurt. He wassomewhat bruised and received a badcut on his hand. Tho trouble had itsorigin In the strong foellng growingout of the San Francisco school troubleand tho anti-Japane- se sentiment In thecommunity.

IRWINS ARE ENTERTAINING,Cards to a reception at the Irwin

home In San Francisco have been re-ceived here, The reception was givenby Mr. and Mrs. W. G, Irwin and MIsIrwin and was from 4 p. m. to 7 p.m.on January 12. The reception occurredat the Irwin residence corner of Lagunaand Washington streets.

1.

4

Page 5: If II I THE HAWAIIAN SECOND EDITION I Way Is The Way Win ...I If You want io SECOND dnj's IScitb lodar THE HAWAIIAN STAR you TUB II ml STAK It In EDITION I I The Advertising Way Is

4

I'

ik

3o3taaiaLl03nL !

WB NAVR RKRM AMHJISTt i. A

CMO eWtJNs OCMWAKT, Tl KKTJAPO, ft CRATER AMD rVMl or w imtRir watrhh-- t m

LI Ml TBtPORT AJCD KTHF.KTr'

A. I SanforctiHATM A LI. DPI H I

Bogtun J . j : . j . ; I in i S'

.1 OaLxi eULYOtiK HEAL ESTATE OR

X0 MATTER WHERE LOCATED

Properties and Buslnees of all klrvdimfa quickly for cash In all parts ofthe United States. Don't wait. Writetoday describing what you hava to sailand' give cash price on same.

IF YOU WANT TO BUTany kind of Business or Real Estateanywhere at any price, write me yourrequirements. I can save you time andmosey.

BVXD J?. 'rAJSCTHE LAND MAN.

415 Kansas Avenue.TOPRJCA, KANSAS.

REALTY TRANSFERS j

EnUred for Record Jan. 14, 1M7.i- - ivm " iff v a i, fi

John Todd tn Mallama IJohn Todd to Nlslbono , ,.LhlSarah C Watera by atty, to Samuel

Killmal and wf ItelKauabi JC ICaltolokula to Victoria

A Kahalokula .'. DLa ha pa Quinn to ilr. Mary K Ka- -

pahu DJohn Fitzgerald to T 0 Mitchell., ItelEmma R Ornated and hb to Arthur

E Carter .. , DKauka Kaimu to Jamas IC Kauka....DX O me ted and wf to R A Wadsworth

, MFlrat'xForelgn Church & Soc of HHo

by Trs to C C Kennedy DC C Kahnedy and wf to Ronald Ken- -

ndy DRonald C Kennedy and wf to First

Dank of Hllo Ltd MlPuafdle (w) to Mrs. Mary F Joseph.. .DGear, Lanalng & Co. by Trs to Rob-be- rt

'W Martlnoff DMary OVulllvan et al to Maxlmln

Alff , ,PAW G Walker to Ookala Sugar Planta-

tion Co--. , L

Joe Roberta to Ah Ting ; LHenry E Cooper and wf to Bruce

Cartwrlght Jr DG 'S Wilcox to Kuboyama Kotaro,...L

Recorded Jan. 8, 1307,

Fr,ed Johnson and wf to Frank EClark, D; Int in lota 8 and 10 blk 2,

Kaplolsnl Tract, Honolulu, Oaliu. 12.

B 2S6,.p 434. Dated Jan 3, I'M.American Shipping Co Ltd by Atty

& mtgee to Jamea T Taylor D; lots26 and 27 and mauka 1- -2 lot 2fi, blk A,bldgs, etc, Knplolanl Park Addn, Ho-nolulu, Oahu; por R Pa 6C2 and 1C32.

bldgs, etc, Lnlialna, Maul. 1C50, B2SC, p 42C. Dated Dec 21, 1906.

A O Rosa and wf and as Tr ot al toFranoiaco Denlz, Dj lots 1 and 9, blkH. Kaplolsnl Tract, Honolulu. Oahu.JS00. B 2S6, p 428. Dated Jan 7, 107.

Francisco Denlz and wf to A O RosaM; lots 1 and 0, blk H, Kaplolanl Tract,Honolulu, Oahu. $400. B 280, p 262.Dated Jan 7, 1907.

J. II. Cummin, et al by mtgee toClarissa Cummins, D; 1- -9 lnt In R Ps720 and 3679, por kul 4084 and por api, R P 4G84, Kamollllll, etc, Honolulu.Oahu; 8 Int In R P 4184, kul 0001,

Wqlaka, Honolulu, Oahu; 1- -9 lnt InGr'i40, Hlklaupea, Kaupo, Maul. $108.

B 240, p 420. Dated Dec 2, 1904.

John P Kahahawal and wf to Sam-uel Parker, D; lnt in por ap 1, R P76S4, kul 682C, Xuuanu rd, Honolulu,Oahu. 18876. B 286, p 482. Dated Jan

8, 19,07.

.Fanny Strauoh and hsb (P E R) toSamuel Parker, D; lnt In por ap 1, ItP 7021, kul 68, Kuuanu rd, Honolulu,Oahu. $113. B 286, p 488. Dated Jan3, 1007.

Kallllopua (wjdow) to L L McCaud-lea- s,

Radl Dow; R Ps 713, 388, 218 and1279, Mannnalkl, etc, Ewq, Oohu. 1200,B 286, p 434. Dated Jan 8, 1907.

Charles II Belllna to George II Fair-chil- d,

B S; furniture, fixture, etc, of"Beayer Lunch Rooms," Fort St, Ho-nolulu, Qahu, $2000. B 284, p 450. Dat-ed Jan S, 1907.

SnORT ALLOWANCE).Secretary Bonaparte says that tlio

annual cost of the navy represents only$1.33 por capita. Dy that method of cal-

culation a 28-00- 0 word presidential roes- -sngo divided among 88,000,000 men, women and children, looks like too shortan allowance. New York World.

Fine Job Printing, Star OflJce,

ORNTd FOR TNB KlUtUBA Vol.VIA HILO AjtD MmJfc. OK HO- -

MERCHANT

BUSINESS

U4WT IHPOMIAffOII MAT RS.

trust co. wt

iTAKEUCHI SAYS

HEJSJNNOCENT

TKLL8 BOARD OF INQUIRY HOW

ANARCHY CRBPT INTO Ml PA

PER 4KIORT ON ENGLISH

SAN FRANCISCO, January 4 T. Ta.kuucbl, editor ot the Japanese Paper,involution, was bera-- a a board of spe-

cial Inquiry in Um Immigration Consmlasionar's oaBc yaeterday Takeuchlwaa accompanied by his attorney, Aus-

tin Lewis. Socialist candidate for Gov-ernor at the recant election.

To Interpreter Gardiner, Takeuchlvehemently denied, yesterday, that hwaa an anarchist. He also renouncedJack London, whose doctrines, he saida few days ago, had Inspired him andthe little band of Japanese Socialisthe had gathered around him. Ha didnot heettate to say, yesterday, that heconaldera London crasy, so far as hitviews on Socialism are concerned.

Takeuchl Insists that his troublecomes through his Imperfect knowledgeof English, lie confuses "revolution"and "arolution," he says, and It Ishis Idea that the world .should he re-

formed through evolution, rather thanby bullet, torch and bomb. He ed

that when he JaW that theMikado, the President and all Kingshould be got rid of by whatevermeans offer, he meant moral and edu-

cational means. He wrote the editorialwith a paint brush, and afterwardtranslated It into English through themedium of a typewriter. It waa In thetranslation, he aaid, that the word go

tangled, and the Revolution (whichshould have been the Evolution) wasmade to utter .anarchistic, instead ftSocialistic sentiment. The paper will

be out again on January 20th, butwill be printed entirely In Japanese.

Takeuchl Is homeless now. The own-

er of the premises he occupied inBerkeley found him objectionable when

alleged anarchistic tendencies weremade public, and put him out. Thenhe went to a Methodist missionaryhome In Oakland. There, too, he waaunwelcome, and waa Infonned that hecould Jiot stay,

The Immigration Ofllce wjll send theevidence in the case to Washington,and will await instructions.

1

BURGLAR

PUTON TRIAL

M. COLON, THE STABBING PORTO

RICAN CRIMINAL, IN JUDGE

ROBINSON'8 COURT.

The trial of probably the moat murderous criminal that has ever Infestedthese Islands began this morning before Judge Robinson and a jury, M.

Colon, the Porjo Blcan kno wlelder,was charged with assault with a wenp.on obviously and angerously Imminentto life. Had It not been for the good

health of hl victim, the Porto Rlcanwould probably be charged with murder Instead of a lesser offence.

He Is accused of having on the nightof October 15, 1006, stabbed a Japanesewoman named Koyo Akahoahl. Ho

stabbed her In the back with a dirkknife. Tho woman was employed as ft

nurse at the Japanese Hospital jiap- -

noninir to look up at a window In one

0f the cottages, she saw the face ofrninn at the window. Not suspecungtv, man of helncr a desperate burglaruh walked out on the porch and In

riulred of him his business, almost thefirst thing he did was to make a rushtoward her with a knife In his nanaand as she turned to run Into the cottage, he stabbed her in the back. pThe

woman nearly died from the wound.Colon had before stabbed a Porto

Rlcan man who had detected him In

the act of robbing a Japanese hotelOfficer Frank Kanae arrested the Porto Rlcan. Both of the victims Identlfled the Porto Rlcan. W. F. FlemingIs prosecuting the case and E. W. gutton is defending It.

The Jury Is composed of the followIng; Antone L. Perry, T. H. Kalawalav.lwln II. Fernandez. H. II. Crabbe,

Richard Cheatham, C. A. Bon, EugenVeaale Todd. John L. "Whltmore..11. Belllna, C. A. Yarrlck, A. K. Hoapill, F. iM. Blndt

EVERY LITTLE BIT HELPS.If you have allowed hard work to get

the best of you every little bit of restyou get helps you to get back Into anormal condition. There la no place so

assessable to the average Honoluluanas Halelwa, and no place In the ooun

trv better suited to the man or womanwho enjoys flue athletlo sports, bathingor a complete resr. tub npiMjniwiiiuat Hnislwa are first class In every respect and the cuisine unexcelled. Com

munjeate with St. t:ir umpouu. mu..ager,

LILIUOICALANI TO LAHAINA

niiun T.tliuokalanl le't In tllS S. 8.

Klnati this afWrnoon for LahRni Maul

TOP. HAWAIIAN HMfl UKaHAV. JANt'aRT M, SB rim

MENAGE

JAPANESE

BOSTON TltAi:u:i: that Till, i.vtKSTtnx' If I'l l: To A RFI.IKK IN

MBSE IMM1UKA1 1' 'N IK A WstSTBKNTMJS IS A FALLACY.

Hw rreeident'e iiwwqi mmanon tteubl la lag, VMUKteMthat While the authorities aM UIKlMMto enforre th law, the Calif rmiene donot like tbc Japanese now on UCoast and art determined to keepJapanese from coailna to this country" BOMibie- -

me languia inierei in tne qawonoe Japanese immigration aaamifweathe Atlantic Coeet ta based on the atlstaken belief that this is a whollyWestern question, a fallacy wo thinkIt will he easy u dem aastrati- -

Thirty year ago the Immigrationto the United States from Italy, Aus-tria and Russia, which Is bow over-whelmingly in the lead, was In aboutthe same proportion to the Immigra-tion from Cngland, Ireland, Germany'and Sweden aa the Japanese Immigration is to the European movement to.day In the neat thirty years will theJapanese Immigration, if allowed tooontinue In turn. vr inn th. ru.paan?

Janan la ahoiit nn.arh ,k.nWapca aad about, the sis of Califor--ala. Including Formosa, it has a. no- -pulation of 4,7t2,IS2, equal to the po- - thn school question. If the Japa-pulatl-

of all the New England De Oovernment can have Its way.Slates, New York, Pennsylvania, Illl- -aols, Ohio, Missouri. Texas, Indiana,Atlchjgan, Iowa. OeorgU, Kentucky. VTvlasonsln and Kerth Csraltaa.

Twenty-eig- ht million Japanese liveby farming and earn their living byultlyatlng U.000,000 acres, which

means that the average farm to aup- - inport a family Is a plot about 0 feetfront by 20 feet deep, which would beconsidered a small lot for a house anu

OVERNMEKET BUST

ON LANAI APPEAL

(Continut-'- l from Pag' On--.- )

All of these points raised by the at 4atorney general's department arc amplified In the brief Med last night. Nu-

merous authorities are quoted in thematter, to sustain the contentions raised. It is contended that the legal effect of the verification in this case Isthat, the bill Is wholly upon Informa-tion) and belief ami this form of verification has been condemned by thecourts quoting from an Illinois decisionthe brief states that mausrs that areIn a bill that are stated upon Information and belief can only be known byprobing the mind of the pleader.

In arguing for the second ground thebrief points out that as because of theharshness of the remedy of Injunction,strict adherence to such rule of pleading is required In such a suit, - It'-l- s

iot jBtifflclent that the complainant(hould claim that the defendant, Pratt,Is proceeding without "authority oflaw" or that the acts complained Ofare 'unlawful" an act Is wrongful orllletral Is usually a conclusion of law.The facts showing logically that theacts are unlawful should be stated.

Upon the third ground It Is held thatthe aid of the courts can be Invokedonly by a person who would suffer,some special Injury or damage different from what the general communityat large might suffer. In the presentcase there Is no allegation made by

. .. i. . i.i.compiainnnt. iiMl u jiuh or wujiiu wsuffer by reason of the acts or tne lanucommissioner In making the proposedexchange. The aid of the courts can bo

evoked only on the theory that complalnant as a taxpayer and a citizenhas the right to come Into equity andrestrain the acts complained of. Insome Instances taxpayers have beenpermitted to enter Into Injunction proceedings where It was evident that thnpublic revenues might be squanderedand thereby cause a loss to every taxpayer but there Is no such allegationin the present Instance. The brief thentakes up the consideration of a numberof cases that sustain such contentionTne uriei noius mat wie compiainanihas failed utterly to show damage tothe community aa a whole or to himselfas special or otherwise.

The brief takes up the considerationof the Hawaiian case of Castle et alvs. Kapena, which is relied upon bythe complainant. It Is contended Inthe brief that, this case falls withinthe latter class, as It was shown Inthe Kapenta case that the Hawaiiangovcrnmen would have suffered an actual loss, as It waa proposed by theminister of finance to accept in payment of the Issue of 1180,000 of bondssliver coins whioh were worth only 82

cents of Jht value of an American goldcoin, when the laws expressly prohi-

bited the issuance of bonds at any pricebelow par.

The brief enters Into a careul andexhaustive discussion of the contentionsarising from the statutes regulatingauctions sales, leasees etc. ot public i

lamia Tt iM Vialrl Hint tha nrnvl&lon f

that restricts the sale of lands to 1,000

acres applied to sales of land for cashand not for exchanges as It Is proposedtq be made In the present case. Undersection 262 of revised statutes It Is con-

tended that there Is no limit whateverplaced upon the slae of land to be ex-

changed where the land to be securedthrough such exchange Is to be usedfor public purposes .

This feature of the case which Is re-

garded as about the strongest set forthIn McCandless' brief, Is argued at muchlength, a numbr of authnrtls andHawaiian cases whlelt art tbsujjtit t

li niriiistr111"'"

OF

IMMIGRATION l

il I'- - l l.ltl.m" IN Tl.t".Tin i.;t THAT dATA-I'll- 1

l:i.iM SAY THAT

itt aran anywhere toMMt of tha$" rlt la RIW. laaagtn

1 tanner obliged to MR aTOpe eaoughU anpport fatally at tares whichffteuld not hold OtataT or JordanMarsh etoret

Japan bar lto.eoa aaaAM mile, butnine-tent- h or it la aaowntalnoui or

capable of cultivation, and although every Inch at Mil la made to

CBor uMasValae,j3gS5eda lug niilial Md H4ttWi

'onnot.ftM Jtaelf. ftMaa.om buafcNS-- 4 rky leas sad

bush-- : Mriiy. wheat aadnrefip than H (oaaajBtes. so It is aoaseImport Its japa. trader tbasW

the JuasjasSi ariast emlariteto Wre Forni.iRa, Oorea andcfctfr are the natural outlet torJapmeao Immigration, but they will got? "f ,he? ttntrle- - whr"

" n prei- -. finming to Me uniiea maiea.hki in una a raaay-maa- e civ--

tliaation and cundltleeui in their HItlnsr.

IVae fact are worthy of thoughtr' Mttation in caltferau u dee per

l " reason why we will notn the Lulled Stale within twm- -

Tr unwards of MN.M9 Japa- -Bueh an Influx will have a mark- -

eti euect tor evil on our civilisation, asn additional and weighty objection

we cannot allow the Japanese to comefrosty without modifying greatly, if

not repealing wholly, the regulationspropihltlng the entrance of Chinese.Boston Traveler.

C1S0S TO

THE LAVA PLOW

(Continued from Page One).

va Is :i tu.illy flowing toward Konaand Is ut-g- t of the 1887 Haw Indicates;almost conclusively that the outbreakla below Mokuaweoweo and on theKiim sid-- . In fact all of the lava.flows within historic times have beenoutbreaks below the level of Mokua--wooweo.

"The point to wTileh.all the excursions'proposed are directed Is the point wherethe (aval. How Is now falling Into thesea. This Is supposed to be near theboundary line between Kona and Kau.The fact that the Kohala people wanta steamer to take them to where theycan see the sight Is significant. Forfrom Kohala clear through to Kauthere Is a good government road. Itis evident that they think more can beSeAi and with leas hardship than bydriving over the government road.

Any attempt to rea'ch the source ofthe jlow or the top of the mountainw'H.'be exceedingly and unusually dif-ficult, because of the Immense amountof snow on the mountains, extendingmuch lower than usual even In the mid-dle of winter.

The Inter-Islan- d company Is nwaltlngwith Impatience fuller Information re-garding the outbreak, by wireless, Ifthe flow keeps up so ns to make itworth while for people to go, the com-pany will provide nil necessary accommodations. A considerable number ofjnJ!.,ln ....... I... 11... I.. .I11 n,Low goes to Humuula from where howill start for the outbreak keeping tothe westward of the 1869 flow, betweenthe summit of Mnuna Loa and Hua-lala- l.

Henry W. Rletow was anotherlavo flow-bou- passenger. So alsowas W. II. Smith, tho lawyer, E. O.Hall and others. Many of those go-ing by the Klnau are not certain wherethey will land to make the start. Theywill be guided more or less by the In-

formation they receive at Kawaihaeand Hahukona.

Neither the Henry Waterhouse TrustCompany, J. F. Morgan, the Inter-Islan- d

or Lycurgus received any wire-less messages today regarding the out-break.

The two following despatches con-tain the latest news concerning the out-break of Mauna Loa, They were re-ceived yesterday afternoon:

HILO, January 14. Kona reportsnew outbreak from the summit of Ma-

una Loa with the lava flowing towardKona. No definite Information hasbeen wcelved.

HILO, January 14. Kllauea doinggood work. Mokuaweoweo a fine sight.whenever clear. According to reportsthe lava Is flowing faster.

DIED. ,

WRIOIIT--an Honolulu, Hawaii, January 15, 1007, Elizabeth HoskinsWright, wife of John Wright of 1413

Kaplolanl street, aged 67. Funeralnotice heraafter. Mrs. Wright halong been a resident of Hawaii, andIs widely and favorably known.

,y.$ClClC$eieX$eJC$etf

have bearing upon this feature of thocase, are discussed In detail.

Relative to the claim that there Isno equity In McCandless' bill the brieffurther argues the nature of the propospd exchange, contending againstthe claim set forth by McCandless thatthe exchange Is against public policy.

It Is asked that the decree of the clrcult court be reversed and that Ins- -

Htritlnng be Issued that the demurrerIn behalf of Pratt pe sustained.

Fjne Job prlByntr, Star Office.

Milln from I'agr n

kt n in ten ywora. Ten m ,k" told, the hud a pretty ha i.

"i Kaum Wtmi surprises me n'imn aniOiln .!'' wax the lomfm'tlve euMMiiliix kk ni the hanfl1 tom'nahp. In tplti or the Mi, t pct'.fl M.to find ' i iiah aflir the eajerLn."reported on Knuot. but. atlhough Itrained li.aiiy nan of th ttm. the aeawaa not unusudl. Whet) It didn't rain

wa et on deok Just the same, forthe wind nipped the frlafr from htwaves and awopt It over ti In as penerous quantities aa would have Wtflsupplltd by any ng rain-storm."

Raona, as far aa the people of theR Au Hou learned, waa the only see.(ton reporting damagea to houses. That Mtwo houaea blown down wore beaten Inby the wlnd.collepelng. That bousewnica axperiencM an aerial pasaage of wforty feet waa no more than slightlyJarred by the moderate bump receivedon landing.

The Hanalel river was swollen be-yond Ita banks and sections of thecountry round about werP InundatedAt the month of the river the sand-b- ar

was flushed out Md there la no morebar. The little river cut a swath forItself Into the aea for a good mile andthen gave up the attempt to make allthe ocean muddy, though It started thjob well.

A Chinese driving a horse attachedto a buggy in which aaid Chinese waasitting, was on Saturday swept Intothe Hanalel river, the cover of thevehicle offering a good opportunity tothe wind. The struggle that enaued Inthe boiling, muddy torrent waa deeper te. Horse and driver thought onlyof himself, the Chinese, of course, wearing no harness, having a decided advantage. He was swept Into a pile ofdrift after kicking free of ,the buggy-to- p

and managed to scramble ashore.The poor horse went wriggling on tnthe sea, he and the buggy being car-ried by the current several mile out.The horse waa drowned.

A workman for the Kauai ElectricCompany was making post-has- te witha kit of tools to make some repairs onthe line, many poles of which had beenprostrasted by the big wind. He wason horse-bac- k and both he and his ani-mal somehow managed to get into theHanalel river, whether through a slid-ing bank or the force of the wind lanot at present known. The man savedhimself, abandoning his kit of tools,which waa too heavy to swim with.The horse was lost.

For from ten to fifteen miles out atsea, the Ke Au Ilou reports, wreckageand rubbish washed down by the Hanalel stream, was noticeable. Uprootedtrees, fence rails, timber and miscellany afloat at sea glye the appearanceof Kauai undergoing a sort of garden- -cleaning operation.

Twenty-fiv- e inches of rain have fallen on the Island of Kauai since, thefirst day of January.

On Sunday the S. S. Nllhau was forced to put Into Hanalel for shelter, leav.lng again Monday for Makawell.

Captain Sachs will take the Ke AuHou out to Kauai .ports again ato'clock this evening.

TONGA WILL SOON

BELONG TO BR1T1AN

(Continued from Page One.)

power to have the British Governmenttake the Islands, and I should not beaurprlsed If he should succeed.

"The Government Ja run on a basis ortaxation per head, and not on a property value as eacljof the native donot own the abls they live upon. Thetax Is about $9 a head and thin allowseach man to have an abls In the cityand In the country. In the cfty he livesduring tho dry season wjien there Isnot much doing and on the countrynbl when he Is harvesting cocoanuts

"This year the natives are eolng vorywell. There havo been no heavy stormsand rain enough to Insure a large cropof copra for which 23 pounds 10 shitlings are offered a ton In London. Thismeans prosperity to the country for thenext two years.

"The harbor of Vavau la se of thefinest in the world and it will probablybe used considerably when the PanamaCanal Is opened. It is on a direct linefrom Sydney, to Colon and there is butlittle doubt but that it will b used ex-

tensively."Bishop Willis is plodding away

down there and making progress continuously in his work. He Is much thesame as he was when he was here onlyhe has not a fight on his hands In thatsection of the country.

"The Wesleyan church Is tbe strongest In the islands, but a large numberof those have gone over to the Churchof England. As a result of the aplltin the church an organization knownas "The Church of Tonga" came Intoexistence. This church Is Wesleyan In

doctrine only they do not send themonies collected by them to Sydney aB

did the old church. The sending awayof collections and Telylng upon appropriations to support the church did notappeal to a number of the people, sothey formed a church of their own.There are a few Roman Catholics In

the Islands, and although the Mormonstried to get a foothold there they failedto convert a single soul.

"My duties In the Islands were to

look after the health of-t- he people andI found a great deal to do. My dutieswere far more arduous than they were

while I waa physician to tb king litreunder the monarchy."

Pr. MeLunnan and, wife areOf swing in wia

T

i ,

MM!IH-- i . t m ,

Aioli.iKing stn . t

Kuuanu Kirett...Corner tnnni,i Ui.iNuuanu ffn..iMaOooh Aveau . .pjCJftssMI stteT'ss

Haass Avenue

FOR SALE.X two heareoui houae, stab!,

a lot IMssm. eight mtautertea, ear Uae.For one week from January 1, gjv.

wiu accept aptw ror abovecor. Fort and Merchants sta.

Horny WaMowe M Co,, tldReal Katate PoparlmmL

Cor. Port ft Merchant Sta.. Hgtaettfis.

ClassiM AdvertisinWaiJlfld

Second-han- d Roll-to- p Desk and Safe;good condition. Address P. O. Boa ttt.

Lost

Pearl Scarf Pin somewhere ootwsejRAfl Barium and Thomas !, Sundaynight. Probably on car. Ratnra totills ofllce and receive reward.

For SnloJly F. J. PUzpatriok o' the Myrtle

Cigar Store, a new lot of .HawaiianCigars received by the last Alameda.These cigars are the best now on themarket In Honolulu at any price, beingmade of a superb mixture of the bestHawaiian and Havana weeds.

Splendid seven-roo- m house aheapYoung street, Pawaa. R. Star 8fflc- -

wallan Hotel In the cottage lately oc-

cupied by H H. Willi.i ms.

TRIAL MARRIAGE

JR0VE SUCCESS

MRS. COMMANDER AND HUSBAND

UNITED BY A UNIQUE PLEDGE-FAVO- RS

LARGE FAMILIES. ;

NEW YORK, January 4 LydlnKlngsmlll Commander, whose bodk

about American race suicide is attracting attention, Is the wife of Rev. Her-

bert N, Casson, editor, reformer, so-

cialist and free thinker. Thelrg le atrial marriage. Both were members ofthe Ruskln colony In Ten-

nessee when they were married bywritten agreement. A civil ceremonyafterward was performed.

Caseon's pledge was: "I declare before these witnesses that I, HerbertNewton Caseon, take Lydla KlngsmlllCommander as my wife so long as lavennd wisdom unite us."

Tho woman's pledge was: "I pledgemyself as the wife of Herbert NewtonCasson so long, nnd only so long, aslove sholl bind our hearts."

Both declared thnt marrlaKf shouldInst only so long ns love existed. Thewlfo did not take her husband's name,but uses the prefix Mrs. to her maidenname. Both have carried on literary-an-

lecture work as before the wed-

ding, and say their married life hasbeen very happy. She Is a pronouncedsuffragist. Mrs. Commander has nPchildren, but advocates large familiesexcept among the poor, whose chil-

dren should be limited.

A STARTLING SITUATION.The brand of repartee handed out by

the sweet young thins was plenjlm: tothe heart of the Imnhful admirer. Alterher latest qtilp he said: "Well, MikeRlrnqtie, I like your Up!"

Promptly seizing the opportunity shesaid demurely ; "Well, you may havejust one, but this is awfully sudden."

Fine Job PrlnMng. Star Office,

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS

Imvniinn Preserves to the Coast

If you want to send a case awayYou get good value for the price you

pay.Leave your order and to whom ad

dressed,Mrs. Kearns will see to all the) rest.

ESTATE OF GEORGE TU.RXSR '

DEACON.

NOTICE TC CRHDITORS- -

Notlce Is hereby given by the undersigned administrator, of the abovenamed estate, to the creditors and allpersons having, claims against the saidEstate, to present thelrClalmt authenticated and witn rroper voucners anyexist, (even If' the claim Is covered bymortgage upon real estate) to him.either at hi, residence or place of business at the office of Castle & Cook.Ltd., In Honolulu, Oahu, Territory Of

Hawaii, within six (6) month of thedate of this notice, or they shall be for-

ever barred-Date-

Honolulu, December 18, S

II. PRTR1B,

Page 6: If II I THE HAWAIIAN SECOND EDITION I Way Is The Way Win ...I If You want io SECOND dnj's IScitb lodar THE HAWAIIAN STAR you TUB II ml STAK It In EDITION I I The Advertising Way Is

Kilt 'fjf, - y

nffiB

t awaiia MA rtrttOAr iawa? n. wt I

Union Paclflic

itailroadC roottMnNi

im tMiM daily thrwMg , SfM,4 od Uaa to all psiats.

S. 1. 'Booth

68HOURSTo Chicago

From ton Francisco. The

nrt transcontinental train.

OverlandLi mi ted

HUctrlc lighted, Buffet, Li-

brary and Drawing room com-

partment, observation oar, withdtoar. Telegraphic news poet-e- d

on train.

Sontta Pacific

Oahu Railway and Land Co.'s

XIIVXI3 TABLE

OUTWARD.

For Walanae, Walalua, Kahuku andWay Sta-tlon- a 1D:1G a. m 3:20 p. m.

ITor Pearl City, Ewu Mill and Wayttatlons-7:- 30 a. m., 0:15 a. m 11:03

a. m., 2:16 p. m., S:S0 p. m., 5;16 p.'., B:J0 p. m.. tlliOO p. m.

For Wahlawa 3:15 a. m. and 5:15p. m.

IXWARD.Arrive Honolulu from Kahuku, Wal-.alu- a

and "alanae 8:3 a, m 5:31p. m.

Arrive Honolulu from Ewa Mill andPearl City t7.1G a. m., S:3C a. m.,10:3 a. m., 1:40 p. m., p. m.,S:31 p, m., 730 p. m.Arrive- - Honolulu from Wahlawa

8:36 a. m. and 5:3l p. m.Dally. tEx. Sunday. JSunday Only.

The Halelwa Limited, a two-ho-

train (only first-clas- s tickets honored),leaves Honolulu every Sunday at S:22su m.; returning:, arrives in Honoluluat 10:10 p. m. The Limited stops onlyat Pearl City and Waianae.U. P. denison, f. c Smith,

Supt. G. P, & T. A.

cum I 1Commissi o i Merchants8ugar FftcDrs.

AGENTS FOR

(The Ewa Plantation Company,Th Walalua Agricultural Co., Ltd.The Kohala Sugar Company.(The Walmea Sugar Mill Company.

The Fulton Iron Works, St. Louis, Mo.

lAmerlcan Steam Pump Co.

IThe George F. Blake Steam Pumps.Weston's Centrifugals.Bho New England Mutual Life Insur-

ance Company of BosUn.Erne Aetna Fire Insurance Company of

Hartford, Conn.(The Alllanoe Assurance Company of

London.

ASummerProposition( Wel' now, there's the

ICE QUESTION!' Tou know you'll need Ice, you knowIt is a necessity in hot weather, "Wo

believe you are anxious to get that icoWhich Will give you aaiisiacuon, ana.we'd Jlko to supply you. Order from

(Telephone 3151 Blue, Postofflce Box 604,

fur c iipla ltd cold." A friend In hid it a friend In-

deed." A)cr' C'iicriy l'vUoral i justsuch a fricud. Niver be without It.It will prove n go.l friend wLsu roubare a Fu'mi cM, brinftng itamedl-at- e

relief. Ye t will tlud It euUftUytrue In old clK bronchitis, whoop-laf-coug- h,

astlina.II jroa will '.is- -

Skerry 9ut&rallot an irritalilo tlmst r weak lung.

Mud il "Iju btist friend iuEwill " It act a a strong tonic,

up the throat, giving tonedo the relaxed tisstms, and greatlysbungthenlng the lungs.

There are tuiuy substitutes gadlactation, Hcwcrc of them and o4

" Genuine Cherry Pectoral."Be sure you pet AYER'8 CherryPectoral.

Put up In huge and amalt bottle.hrfc.JC.fU..lJM.M.,U..A

FrHtornitl Wonting;

HARMONY LODQE NO 3, I. O. O. F.

Meet every Monday even toff, at 7iM,in Odd Fellows' Hall, Fort atreat. Vis.(tin? brother cordially Invited to at-tend.

C. A. SIMPSON, N. O.E. R. HBHDRY. Secretary.

HONOLULU A Kit IE UU,P. 0. E.

Meets on 2nd. and 4th. Wednesdayvenlnge of each month at 7s0 o'clock

.n K. of P. Hall, King street. VisitingCagles are Invited to attend.

SAM'L McKEAGUK,, W. P.,H. T. MOORE, Sect)'.

HONOLULU LODGE 010,Jt. l 0. E.

Honolulu Lodge No. 616, B. P. O. Ewill meet in their hall, on King streetnear Fort every Friday evening. Byorder of the IS. R.

HARRY E. MURRAY, E. R.HARRY H. SIMPSON. Secy.

noeum

earc

It is one or the most attractive

and serviceable floor coverings

you can possibly get for ofllce

wear or for kitchen bed-roo-

and bath at home.

Splendid qualities In print. In-

laid and plain linoleums at

LEWER8 J enLIMITED

177 SOUTI ICING STREET.

Hawaiian CarriageManufacturingCompany

427 QUEEN ST. TEL. MAIN 47.P. O. BOX 193.

Manufacturers of all kinds of Car-riages and Vehicles, Wagons, WagonMaterials of all descriptions supplied;Rubber Tires put on at reasonabloprices; Repairing, Painting and Trimming; satisfaction guaranteed; estimates given.

AUTOMOBILE REPAIRINGA SPECIALTY.

C. W. ZEIGLER, Manager.

Jade JewelryHand worked Jade Jewelry In gold

and silver. Back combs, bracelets andrings.

SANG ON KEE,130 King Street

Oregon RestaurantHOY WO, Proprietor,

Reopened under nevr managementBost 25 cents Meal In TVwn.

Open Tuesday December 18,

yVUi HEAR EXCEPTIONS,Tho hearing of exceptions In the

case of Fred IX, Hayselden v. W, HPain and Ellse S. V. Neumann, hasbeen set for trial on February 11 byJudge Lindsay,

HISTORICAL

SOCIETY HOLD

ANNUA L MEETING

MOST INTEHESTINtl MMTfNOLAST KVKKINQ AT THE HOKO-LUL-

LIBRARY

The annual meetiuf f HawaiianHistorical Society wa IsM teat evin-tu- g

tot the board reesa g 0kt library.A mm Interesting iwtus was apentand considerable ejsjtsaas truaaacU-d-.

Too (oliowing officers war steeled (or

the ooaaiag year:rratsesor W. D. Alstaudsr, relected

praatdeHt; Governor Carter, Aral vlRev. Aieaaudf JKlntoh.

seooud tt; i. S. Smerson,third vice preeldent; W. A. Bryan,

eeeiftary; Justice W. F.Hall, treasure i and Miss Oartrude Ba-

ker, librarian.Among the matters which came up

before the Society was a report a mlsnap made by Commander AlexanderMoKonochle of thc British Wav i

the Secretary of State tor War and theColonies m 1616 In which the c.n-mand- er

treated of the strategic peti-tion of these Islands. The map u.ohoned the rotation Of the island u

the Panama Canal which was eventhen being thought of by the Ameri-cans. A number of other Interestingpapers were read, among them wa apaper on the story of Kahahana thenext to the last king of Oahu writtenby the late Judge Fornander, and apaper on the funeral rites of PrinceKealiiahonul by Dr. Alexander whoalso gave a sketch of Judge Fornanderand of his distinguished father.

RECEPTION AT COLLEGE.The farewell recaption to Father?

Wyman and Stark ylll tails place thlaevening at St. Louis College Kail a6 o'clock. Father Wyman will spe.tkon his Impesslons of the Islands andalso on the subject of "Fom PlymouthRock to Peter's Rook." Father Starkwill also speak. A musical program,under the direction of Brother Fran-cis, will flit out the entertainment, ageneral invitation is extended to thepublic to be present.

SAY'S ITS COUNTY BUSINESS.In reply to a letter from Cecil Brow n

to the Board of Supervisors In whichhe protestsd as to the expenditure of thepark money by the 1'iu'k Cominlaslor.upon the luwn neghn ling the road inKapiolunl park, C. H. Holloway the act-ing secretary of the Park CommissionsayH thut that eonimlHxIon has notllUlgto do with tin i'ocIh an they are underthe County Road Department.

ENJOYABLE EVENING

AT THE Y.M.C.A

THE MEMBERS ROUNDUP LAST

EVENING WAS A GREAT SUC

CESS.

The members roundup at the Y. M.C, A. last evening was a most enjay- -

able affair, about eighty of ths members being present. The program wasa most entet tabling one and wae greatly appreciated by those present.

One of the most dramatic scenes everseen at an entertainment by umateurein Honolulu was shown last eveningat the round up. The sketch was entitled "A Busy Day at the Hospital,and it provoked much mirth among theaudience.

The scene was an operating table Ina hospital and the first doctor appearing decided that his patient must havehis leg amputated. And so he sawedIt off. A beef'B shin bone which wascut In two gave quite a realistic appearance to the operation.

But tho worst was yet to come, mesecond patient was supposed to be suffering from appendicitis. An operationfollowed, a football bladder was ex-

tracted. As the doctor say he hadmade a mistake he quickly replaced Itand sewed up the wound with a sailneedle.

BAND CONCERT

There will be a public band oonoertatThomas Square this evening at 7:30

PART I.March "Comrades" TelkeOverture "Juanlta" JSuppeIntermezzo "Regrets" BergereSelection "Toreador" Monakton

PART II,Vocal American Songs" arr. by Berg.rSelection "Old Folks at Homo"

DalbeyFanfare "Hussars" RohmFinale "Farewell" Williams

"Star Spangled Banner."

ANOTHER HAUL.Chief of Detectives Taylor last night

accomplished another successful raidof gamblers, eight Chinese beingcaught In a Pauahl street resort, between Smith and Maunakea streets.

BURGLAR A CONTORTIONIST.

The Alnkea street Hertnor Jewolrystore robbory 'Sunday ilovolops somepeculiar facts, The supposed burglarjoft a bare foot-pri- nt and apparentlyperformed contortions to wrigglethrough a transom. He might liavomade his exit by a door, but Insteadchose to move a hpayy bird cage andfprce a window.

Fine Job PrlntltJf, Star Office, ,

MPQRTANT 10

STOCKHOLDERS

tt!Kl"N HKM'l-.l.- l l K(TKMI)AY

r SVPHIsML i mI KT IN MATTKH

OT MrCNCT UKh'K COMPANY.

Aa Mtereetiag opinion was bandeddawn gaaterday by the supreme Courtrelative to th enseal (n the HonoiMluOlag rejMfl UU. The epinin waswritten by Chief iaettct Freer

The ease wae origin ally a bill Itequity iiissghi by Chartea R. Hcmen-wag- ,

as trustee of the Honolulu CiaCo., Ltd.. a bankrupt, va. the Mono-lul- u

Clay Company, Ltd., F. J. Lowrey, Fraak Mustace, r. t. Amweg. o.L. Sureaaon. J. B. Bohrer. J. R. BumsC. H. Quits, F. C. Atherton, W. Oehting. T, B. Damon, St. L. Smith, H. L.

Kerr. C. T. Ellison. F. L. Llthorland,T. licOUU Stewart, W. R Castle, Jr.,and A. K. Campbell.

The opinion recites at considerablelength the failure of the brick makingentergrlM. The company was incor-porata- d

for lUMOO. of 1O00 shares oftlOO eaob. Of this Issue 7M sh tres wereIssued as fully paid up in exc- h- ge forthe property of the business of Kernand Smith, promoters, and Ellison anaLltherland, experts The remaininghares, frith the exception of one for

the attorney, were issu as aseesaa-bl- e

and within time were fully paid up.

It was agreed that when the laat as-

sessment of tt par oent was paid In thepromoters should turn over a certainpart of the paid up stock to those hold-

ing aasaaaable stock, as some of the ex-

pense of the loss under which the com-

pany had operated, should be borne by

all.The concern was Anally forced Into

bankruptcy. The petitioner claimedthat the property that wnt originallyturned over was worth only 10,000, andthat the holders of the stock originallyIssued as paid up were liable for thebalance of I4M00 to the extent neces-

sary to pay the debts of the corporation.

The syllabus disposes of thl; conten-

tion as follows: "Although an a rulestockholders of an Insolvent rorp i

tlon are liable to Its creditor tr thamounts paid upon their rv,r veu

though the stock has been uedfully paid, whether In money r prop-

erty which was honestly and reason-ably believed at the time to be worththe par value ot the stock, It must beregarded as fully paid sven though theproperty turns out to ne or a lew

.i value.

The Judgment of the Circuit Court Is

affirmed.

MURDERER

SEEN

Chief of Detectives A. P. Taylor yesterday afternoon went to Halawaswitch, near Alea, on the line of the O.

R. & L. Co., to look Info an allegationto the effect that the Japanese, whokilled a fellow countrymen at Honoluluplantation recently, had been in hidingthere. The Jap was reported seen hang-ing about the place, carrying a bundleof mosquito netting. Taylor found Indications of recent occupation of anold warehouse. He Is working on thecase.

THE TRAINING OF THE CHILD.EDITOR STAR. Thanking you most

sincerely for all your valuable spacegiven to us the past few days. In yesterday morning's paper are two veryexcellent articles, one In the Spoils'page and one In the Editorial columns.Both articles pertains to "training,"mental and physical. It seemB to us,however, that the writer has left .un-

touched one very Important (Indeed theprime) point: the tralnlngof the child,(and from even early Infancy) physi-cally, as did the ancient Greeks even to

excess perhaps, and spiritually andmentally, as did the early Christians."Train up a child in the way he shouldgo and when he Is old he will not depart from that training." We quotethe words of the Inspired by God, whichfalleth not.

Honolulu, January 12.

ANNE M. PRESCOTT.

MURDEROUS MAN ON TRIAL.The trial of M. Colon one of the most

desperate burglars that has over beenIn the courts, Is on the dooKetbefore Judge Robinson. Colon stab-bed a couple of Japanese some monthsago, because they Interfered with hisattempts to rob their places of resi-dence.

FINAL DISCHARGE ORDERED.The final accounts of H, M, von Holt,

administrator of the estate of Mrs.Alice Mackintosh were approved yesterday by Judge Lindsay.

Letters of administration were granted by Judge Lindsay to Eliza-beth Pahe to the estate of Isaiah ICPahe, The estate Is valued at 1260.

NATIVE FOUND NOT GUILTY,Kalkana, charged with having un

lawful soxual Intercourse with a girlunder the age of 14 years, was foundnot guilty by a Jury in Judge Robinson's court yesterday,

. Si.SUIT FOR DAMAGES,

A suit of 15,000 damages for the deathof a child through the alleged care-

lessness of the employees of the OahuRailway & Land Company's train atEwa was commenced before Judge DeBolt and a Jury yesterday by one Odo,Plaintiff Is a Japanese, Qeorge A, Da-

vis and S, F, Chllllngwortli appear forPlaintiff, and A. G, M. Robertson andn, B, Anderson of Ballpu & Marx for

defendant Th purr 'memt "ftkenn1 . Fred I rumor, W. M Or.hm, John Duncan, ttugH Oowlne, DavMHurst, Htnrr Andrews, N. It. Brtn,L K. Shellvn. A. V IWre. M F

and Miram Keiomolism ie i mi mm

LADIES DAT OHAtMMDO

acfount of the many girts wMMnft iatronlae the Hotel Baths the man-ugpme- nt

has derided to give thr Ladleson afternoon In th wpek so thatmothers ran bring their daughter whoare attending schnol

Hereafter Ladle Day l Hip bath

I--

GasIS

111 W on Tuesday and Fri- -day afterwonn

COLD CtOSRS htnltttVICTORIA. British Columbia,

BT schema in tW oity havto bsnuse of me

noon tmir.Id hoy has bMu osuvertedhoy In Kew Tortt by a ausjettl

operallon. why not try It oa ofihr oM Imys in I be CletrolaSdleader

LightTHE

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Honolulu Gas Company, LtdALEXANDER YOUXG BUILDING

rl RANCH WUSTACE PECK CO., LTD.

OS Queen JSti'cetet

baggage contraots with the following Steamship Co.'s Lines:Oceanic Steamship Co.Occidental & Oriental Steamship Co.P(.-if- lc Mali Steamship Co.Toyo Kisen Kalgha Steamship Co. "t

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CHIir retriesTHAN 3and over The Only Double-Trac- k Rail

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The most luxurious train In the world. New Pullman drawing room andstatoroom cars built expressly for this famous train. Gentleman's buffet andLady's parlor observation car. Book-love- rs Library. Dining car meals ala carte. Electric lighted throughout. ,

EASTERN EXPRESS VESTIBULED. Leaves San Francisco at 6:00 p.m. dally. Through Pullman Palace and Tourist Sleeping Cars to ChicagO(Dining Cars. Free Redlining Chair Cars.

ATLANTIC EXPRESS. VESTIBU LED, Leaves San Francisco at 1:09a. m. Dally. Standard and Tourist Sleepers.

PERSONALLY CONDUCTED EXCURSIONSWednesday, Thursdays and Frl days, Tho best of everything.

Tickets to and from all points In Europe.

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Page 7: If II I THE HAWAIIAN SECOND EDITION I Way Is The Way Win ...I If You want io SECOND dnj's IScitb lodar THE HAWAIIAN STAR you TUB II ml STAK It In EDITION I I The Advertising Way Is

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Reserve Fund 13,700.000

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Branches and Agencies:Honolulu, New York, San Francisco,

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ThyBanks buys and receives for Collection Bills of Exchange, issue Draftsand Letters of Credit, and transacts a

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i IF Yn WISH Tfl AFWFhTISF iin newspapers!

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THU ANOXIC AN ontRl An n , hunh .ounrll .t la abQ. sfcuaw ama to r.o.anlte ihc An- - I Snliit ly n. niy today a wll

fttatvn erafi-s- , because on March . 1U4

Pas Jallas III Mnt a brie to CardinalPol desiring to absolve and reconcilebishops and prtsats made In EdwardVia time, tilling him not to reoraainMum, but to ronflrm the Anglican

Ana. The qaestlon at Issue It notwhether we are dealing with a new sector not, became the aileftance to it isaa Quickly given up at It haa beantaken. The qaeatlon that arises harela thla. Are the ordera conferred underKing ttdward VI valid or Invalid T Andhow Inter on 7

That sacred Orders be validly confcrred, are required:

1. A validly consecrated bishop toconfer ordera.

2. A baptised oflrwtlan man to recelve orders.

S. A valid form significative of theordera to be conferred.

IIV

4. The intention on the wart of theBishops to confer ordera.

6. The Intention on the part of theperson to be ordained to receive ordera.

So, allow me to tell you, that It la anew fallacy on your mind to supposethat we hold Anglican orders Invalidbecauae they have not been given withthe approbation of the Pope. Thlsle- -

fect would not make the ordera Invalid. Aa to the first of the enumerated points all the bishops of theCatholic irlod were, of course, validlyordained and therefore able to ordainvalidly others. But what about Barlow the consecrator of Parker, iso record can be found of the fact of his consecratlon so I conclude that It Is atleast very doubtful. Besides he andCramer are on record as asserting thatepiscopal consecration or ordinationare not necessary to make one a bishopor a prlost, but that olectlon or ap-

pointment are sufficient. Barlow goesas far as to say that In early times ofthe church bishops consecrated throughneattesKji because Christian princeswere lacking to appoint. How easy Itwas for this man to give reasons for hisprivate opinion? What other conclu-

sion can we draw from this, but thathe lived up to his opinion and has, con-

sequently, never received ordinationIf he was not consecrated validly abishop, he was forever unable to consecrate or ordain others.

Have the successors of Parker beencertainly baptized?

We do not doubt that baptism if conferred according to the rite of tho Bookof Common Prayer is valid. But hasIt always boen followed?

During the latter yonrs of Elizabethand the first of James I, Puritanismwag powerful In England. During thoParliamentary supremacy It was do-

minant. Diving tho first period thoprayer book was not used by a lnrgopart of the parochial clergy, who hadobtained livings without receiving epis-

copal ordination. For somo years dur-ing the second It was forbidden. Inthe former period a largo part of thenation grew up unbaptized according tothe prayer' book rite. In the latter almost a generation. Nor do we findthat any provision was made for a general rebaptlzlng of those. Now many ofthese persons, we must expect havebeen taken to the ministry and theepiscopate. Hence wo conclude that adark cloud hangs over the Anglicanorders. But the most serious reasonfor their Invalidity Is drawn from theInsufficient form that bus been used Inthe rite of ordination.

Cranmer Is known to have mutilatedthe form used by the ancient churchfrom the apostles' time. This mutl'lated form has been in use all over Eng.land up to tho year 1662. At that timethey revised it and gave it Its wordingof today. Now this is tho reason whythe Anglican orders aro pronounced Invalid. If we pass over the doubt as tothe valid consecration of the firstbishops of tho Anglican church, the Insufflclnecy of the ordination rite onv

ployed for a hundred yoars Is morothan enough to extinguish what wasleft in the beginning of validly ordained priests and bishops.

Now we can understand also forwhat reason Pope Julius III prohibitedthe reordlnatlon. He had tho recordof the valid consecration of the bishopswho ordained up to that period and hoknow that they had been ordained afterthe unmutllated rite of the old churchBut today wo must say, I am sorry foryou, that for the reasons explainedand not for the disconnection fromRome, the Anglican Orders are Invalid

MORE QUESTIONS ANSWEREDAND CONCLUDING REMARKS.

fl. Could Itlio BVahops "send" thePope?

Ans. With authority, no; by a respectful request so that ho could accoptor refuse It, yes. If the church or thebishops or the council Is reported to"send" the pope, the meaning Is thatthey conferred together and agree thatPeter (Act. VIII, 14) or the pope shouldgo.

Q. If the Pope took action on a cer-

tain matter, could people call him toaccount and contend with him?

Ans. The poople had no right to doso. As to (Act. XI, 12) where It Is

stated that after Peter had baptizedan unclroumclsed man, people In Jeru-salem disputed against him. St,

remarks that Cerlnthus whowas the next hereslarch after SimonMagUB, excited the people to this con-

tention. Now If they did, It will beIllogical to conclude that they had aright to do, or that Peter thereforewas not the supreme of tho church. IfIt happens that one of the Anglicanclergymen has a dispute with his bishopand If a reporter states the fast, Is Itlogical to conclude, therefore, thU Res-tarl- ek

Is not their bishop, or has noauthority over the clergymen of hisdenomination?

Q. If a council were called today,who would convoke It, preside ovor itand subscribe to Its decrees?

nra Hawaiian Mm

ANGLICAN ORDERS

AND CHURCH COUNCILS

In

inIf

In

In

Ijippiy.li f iJWWy ''n,",MTffTBrt

AngHeufl ta baaedMtrr

aVripiui I Christian Ila witness

die dwde of The biblicalinent It, andundeniable aa lllbt Itself dndjua author of the

facta, If faithfullyehw indeed, what peopletimet and pin anddid. But rnnva the

ItIV.vet IN the pant, that the IMpe Miner vv mm ,, ,u haby him.. If ..r by hla duly appalmed , Pgh, , An KoWi twdelegate convoke ll over It and Mnd rtfc, ,..n,.h , tht ttllaapprove of Ita decreet, by eJUIng hla e,, te ttBw llnntod. A facto adsignature :o them. If any of these Ju VBlet ,,,.,,,,..inrea conamona oe want'g tnere is no Kn( McDry V tmnnt9tr wHh themore question nf n Ugltlmate church ,,,Mp pin.,imonl tn, ltlpreireC0B0"- - headship of the hurrh from a foreign

In Act hre the apostle hold the blhap t8 itl, k,B .. Th, w th, Bto.Ilrst the "no small dtssenelone to - R, fact Bnt from th f d(Wa 80taccount for the necenalty of the coun- - foow he hB(j B r, fc to do Midl. St. Peter s outhorltr was very Tor ,nd prMlcgMl aa wall aswell known the apostle., thereamong ,,,,,,.5 or labilities are neverwas no question about it, s It needed ,uppotwi, they must .trlctly provednot to be mentioned. Conclude from admltud.w thc.,r .jrtstence cannot bathis to Its can only a Qia, thi pilnclpla ws arrivehysterical person, an ubalanced. preju- - at the mUlmil of dtahonMt ppls suchdiced mind, just as If somebody would a ,mtvht r,Bht... or .. .uMSfui,deny the governorship of Mr. Carter. thenew m)nd tne n)oan, you ofocuae ne aoee niu nna u vu ... e)(,-

-iuBtUai tne mcnnB ..

. .. .. Therarorc. tne hlgtorlral fet underWs must not forget that the report discussion must be as would

of first council was not written be transaction and tho convavance offor the purpose of convincing certain an object which was by the will, ofpeople of today of the supremacy of St. Christ utterly untransferable.Peter. Nobody dental it and St. Peter sums lauacy In savingsdelivering the first discourse V. 7 his may be found In enrller oailturies of nient of this company as follows- - Onsupremacy Is suitlclently Intimated by church laws made by the kings' parthis fact. If, the "apostles" are men- - liaments.tlonetl, St. Peter was one of and niatory bears witness tha( Vlgiltusto conclude now against this supre- - used criminal to arrive themacy is fallacy Just as much aa In papacy. He deserves tharafora thespeaking of the Anglican clergy soie- - ,Bme 0f a bad pope. But It Is a fal- -body would use this expression as a ,iacy if Bishop liestarlck oonoludesproof that the Anglican bishop is not (ronl this fact to the ofabove his clergy. the papal supremacy. It In a fallacy

Q. How is It that when Paul to conclude from this fact against the(Kph. IV 11) mentions the officers of papal Infallibility; because no evidencethe he does not mention that la offered that he ever taught a false-ther- e

was a president a headman? hood In his quality ns teacher of theAns, In the above quoted passage universal church, nor that In his qunl-S- t.

Paul of the charismata (the Ity of the supreme ruler of the moralgratuitous gifts) of the Holy Ghost but law he permitted any point that would

of the essentials of the church, be sinful to be committed.my opponent, I am sorry to pal goeg not beyond this

say, Is ngaln In the by drawing two points. We might apply here whatconclusion tnat is not warranted In Jesus teaohes to do in regard to the

tho premises. wicked Pharisees. XXIII 3) theyQ. Who called the Council of Trent, have on the chair of Moses, they

A. D. 325? have authority to teach, they have myAns. Emperor Constantln with the protection for this end so that they

approval of Pope Sylvester. I cannot lead you astray. Do thereforeIf wa remember that at that period , wliat tlley tach although you may

there was no railroad and no postal 110t be allowed to imitate their works,service as today and that the I Xow- - ln concluding let me say, thattlon of a general council had to be made ntter giving due consideration to all theby messengers, It Is easy to understand difficulties raised by my opponent. I am

thankful to him for the opportunity hethat the emperor could lend a great as- -to the Pope for this purpose. ave me to examine before the public

But to again from this clr- - , mutual claims.

cumBtance to something derogatory to I thank the editor of the Hawaiiantho papal supremacy adds another to Star for the kindness of promptly pUb-th- e

many fallacies of Bishop Restarlck's "ehlng my articles and I to offerargument. As to the presidency at theassembly, the bishops you mention, presided, llllt in thn llflmo nf til o Pnnp wlincould not be present In person. As to oJthe fifth General Council of Constantl- -nonlc D. 553 It Illegitimate un totho end and became legitimate only at I

the very end when Pope Viglllus sane- -

iioneti, npproveu or, anu suoscrioeu totho decrees It had formulated.

It Is not essenffal for a council to boheld In Rome as the Pope's Jurisdic

hns no limits; the essential thingIs that the Pope as stated convokes It,presides over and ratifies It; the twofirst conditions he can accomplish byproxies, the last condition not.

If even m the days before HenryVIII's reformation, "the Pope could notdo ln England as he pleased, for Actsof Parliament interfered" I am sorrythat I must remind you again of the

yours, that might Kona Several thecreate no rlcht.

As to the ancient British church existing in England previous to St. Augus- -tln's mission work It Is Impossible toconceive them Independent from Romeas they were solitary mission pointsestablished by the of Brittanythat province of Frwnce which thechannel separates from British Islands.How could bishops communionRome establish separated fromRome? Onod gratis nsserltur, gratisnegatur. To a gratuitous assertion weoppose an emphatic negation.

Q. Is Christ himself the "Dynamo?"When last week In one of my open

letters to Bishop Restarlck I comparedthe church of Christ to an electric plantproducing grace tho supernatural helpand life of our soul In the shape of lightand power Bishop Restarlck In hisreply trios to correct my comparisonby calling "Christ the dynamo," whichwould Imply direct communication ofovery Individual soul with Christ with-out any recourse to the church and horpastors.

I wonder many sheep of hisflock will subscribe to this assertion.This is a common fallacy, Inpast centuries by people who rejectedthe nuthorlty of church, reasoning Itout of the way or making a short cutaside of it. But what does this mean?Was this Indeed Christ's plan? Christhas redeemed us, but he has established the church for the purpose to applyto all men at all ttmes and places thefruits of his Redemption. Christ isthe engineer but not the dynamo. Hegives to the church the treasure of hismerits, he ties them by the ofthe keys, and all those who wishto partake of them to go to their pas-tors, submit to their authority andcomply wlh the conditions establishedby Christ order to receive the spirit-ual electricity for their souls. Christwas the dynamo we would need neitherchurch nor pastors we would work outour salvation with Christ alone. Butthis assertion Is not warranted In theHoly Scripture, nor the teachings oftho fathersor of history. Therefore"the correction offered to my abovementioned expression cannot be eccept-o- d.

CONCLUDING REMARKS.

To show defective logicRestarlck's argument. Some fallaciesnro put In evidence.

The catholic claim, as has beenof the ohurch and of history,

based on plain and cogent words ofHoly Scripture, on the teaching of theFather of the church and of history.

hi T

Thr rialm raff a

Hniy fot He

VMt.t of tied, hiftory in irfmn. argu

aa alld and true(hp It

Chrtat the bible.Historical related.

ua, in far offrircumataMta

now ln'i-- greatrllaV at nnnnnonta Mlllllt.

.preMde ,aw,

XV

rtgm$

be

do

.

pronouncedthis

with

ne vitiates wnaiever the ths depart

them,methods at

St.

church,

treats

not TheInfallibility

wrong

(Math.sltten

convoca- -

,

slstanceconclude our

'

beg

A. was

tion

power

my services to anybody or tins communlty who should wish to obtain morolight on doubtful points ln the domain

religion.,

JAMES C. BEISSEL.

iirnri , mrn mrn mia ft l n n n n du 1For the AVeek Ended January 12, 1907.

Honolulu, T. II., January 14, 1907.

GENERAL SUMMARY.The amounts of rainfall dur-

ing the week occurred on Kauai ani1Oahu, and the western portions of Mo-lok- al

and Maui. On Kauai tho amountsranged from 4.40 to 1.4.23 Inches; onOahu from 1.83 to 7.30 Inches. On Ha-waii the only stations reporting 1..0Inch, or more, of rainfall woro In theICau. nnd tho northern nortions of the

old fallacy of does districts. stntlons -

bishops

missions

whether

asserted

obliges

Bishop

ttoreft-- .

council,

greatest

Kohala and Hamakua districts reportno rainfall.

At stations having ten years, or moreof record tho total rainfall for theweek was above the average at all onOahu nnd Kauai, and ln the Kau district of Hawaii. On Kauai the excesses ranged from 3.43 to 13.16Inches; on Oahu from 1.15 to 6.38Inches, and .30 inch or less in the Kaudistrict of Hawaii. The deficiencies forthe week ranged from 1.47 to 2.31

Inches In the Hamakua and Hluo, and.35 Inch to P. 16 Inchos In the Konn,

Puna nnd Kohala districts of Hawaii.On ifawall, Maui and Molokal, and

ln the Koolaupoko and Honolulu dis-

tricts of Oahu, the amounts wore muchless than during the preceding weok,nnd ranged froni 2.85 to 8.76 Inches.In tho Ewa and Wnlnnne districts ofOahu the amounts wore 1.04 nnd 4.49lnchos.respectlvely, greater than duringlast week.

Exceseively heavy rains occurred ntKllauea, Kauai, on the 5th; Kilnuea,Koloa, Eleele and Makawell, Kauai, onthe 6th; Walanae, Oahu, on the 7th;Walluku, Mnul, on the 8th; Maunawlll,Oahu, on the 9th, and at Ewa andWalanae, Oahu, and Kllauea, Kauai,on the 10th.

Hail fell at Kllauea, Kauai, on the8th.

Thunderstorms occurred at a numberof stations on the several Islands, ex-

cepting Molokal. -

Slight earthquake shocks were feltat several of the stations In the northern part of Hawaii from the 8th to 10thinclusive.

The reflection from the erupt'on ofManna Loa, Hawaii, was observed

during the night of the 9th-10- th at anumber of stations on Hawaii.

The following table shows the week-ly averages of temperature and rain-fall for the principal Islands nnd forthe group:

Temperature. Rainfall.HawaiiMaul ...Oahu ...Kami!Molokal

71.3 deg.72.3 deg.72.8 deg.70.0 deg.71.9 deg.

0,49 Inin.In.In.In.

Entire group.... 71.6 deg. In.At the locol ofllos of the U. S. Weather

Bureau In Honolulu, tho barometerwas below the normal, .07 to .14 Inch,throughout the week. The maximumtemperature was 88 deg., minimum 67

deg., and mean 72.4 deg., 1.1 above thenormal and .3 deg. higher .than lastweek's. The rainfall was 1.83 Inches,

above tho normal, and 3,71 less

than furtag the imtitHal waufc. Theaartga rtaudlnaaa wm Moths t reta-

il humidity, M lMt cant., and !.prevailing ind, afc, with anhourly velocity of l.f mile

l,m. ...

Naiwlrbaitading aulpislati af tooaw proaperltr, there an tadtvMttalewkoa It haa not frssjljr llsuMsd vet.

.... ... ..., in ,.

tar wsnt pay at aaae.

1,445.03C.98

l.SS

2.06

1.15

ads

MVIDBMD NOTCH.

THR GERMAN SAVING AND LOANftOCIBTT.

IM California Itreet, San rrancisea.For the half year ending December

II, ism, a divldand has been dselaradat ths rsts of three and M

(I -- 10) per cent per annum on all asposits, free of taxes, payable on andafter Wednesday, January t, 1807. Divi-dend, not called for are added to andbear the sams rats of interest as thsprincipal from January 1, INT.

GEORGB TOURNY,Secretary.

DIV1DBND NOTICE.

CALIFORNIA 8AFB DEPOSIT ANDTRU8T CO.

Corner California and Montgomery Its.Ban Francisco.

For the six months ending DecemberSI. 1906. dividends have been declared

j n deposits

a

..

term deposits at the rata of S f-- percent per annum, and on ordinary depoalts at the rate of 3 1- -2 ier cent perannum, rree of taxes, and payable onand after Wednesday, January 2, 1907.Tho same rate of Interest will be paidby our branch offices, located at 1531Devtsadero Street, 927 Valencia streetand 1740 Fillmore street, San Francisco.

J. DALZELL, BP.OWN,Manager.

NOTICE OF LOST CERTIFICATES.

Notice Is hereby given that Certifi-cate No. 1017 for 15 shares, and No.309 for 10 shares, of th0 capital stockof the Wolalua Agricultural Co., Ltd.,standing on the books of said Companyln the name of George Goodacre, alsoCertificate No. 4075 for 100 shares of thecapital stock of the Ewa PlantationCompany, standing on tne books of flcesald Company In the name of Jennie

pleats

oeen lose, anu at the shortest notlco.ier uooks of said Families with cooks, hou

nas stopped, per- - boyssong are negotiating, Contracts Taken.

or dealing with the said House cleaning andcertificates. Said shares are assignable only by endorsement of said certificates and by the surrender of thesame and the Issue of new certificates.No title will pass to the of saidcertificates. Said certificates, found,should be delivered to the undersigned.

W. A. BOWEN,Walalua Agricultural Co.

Ltd.Treasurer Ewa Plantation Company.

Honolulu, 20, 1900.

JAPANESE AND AMERICAN' DRY GOODS.

Straw Hats Manufactured.

K. FUKURODA,Hotel Street near Bethel.

A Little

Chestof simple remedies will bo found

of groat service ln cases of Illness where

tho servlcos of a physlolon not

mediately necessary. Wo can

you with such as you require.

II. 11 1 fit

W. R. PATTERSON & CO.

General Contracting and Jobbing.Housepalntlng, Faperhanging, Grain- -

mit. Kalsomlnlng, Brick, Cement andStone Work. Shop with Whittle, thesign painter, 1168 Union street. PhoneMain 324.

! HB--iBegin the new year right by

smoking tobaoco InAdellno. PattI, made In the most

factories, Acknowl-edged as the best of s okes allover tho Unltod States.

Rough Riders, a ten-ce- nt cigarfor five cents. Hawallun cigars,better than ever ofHawaiian and Havana Ijlend.

Sold by

Fitzpatrick Bros.,CIGAR STORE.

Corner Hote and Fort Sts,

IroningNEGLIGEE

Shirts8MAL BTOHY NO. 2.

i J

aJ

Ths drossy negligee shirts won srman la thla atlttftCo ara vary 4Hmmto

Ws have a machine for tin Irispfof pleated bosom and nagflgaa iMAsthat turns out work that I hactar pisihand Ironing could possibly bs.

The lie smooth, t3m0ktfront Is just stiff enough to mm itfrom mussing easily, and ths fttsfk Uperfect.

Ihtih Xieim itfPH"Ni; MAIN tM.

ggCV W m fel ilBMSBMgSBBi SJ1 J M J tSBJ

Japanese young man In store or o- -

Plantation laborers furnished ln any;earner, nave trans- - numUerot me same on tne supplied

company, ueen ah and yard-boy- s.

warneu againstpurcnasmg, work, window

finderIf

Treasurer

December

home

are im

supply

before, made

laundar.

down

ilSSJSii

w.

gardonlng by hour, day or week.Prices reasonable.Phono White 2678.

P.Iver Street near Hotel.

i

. SA.KI,Bamboo Furniture

ANDPICTURE FRAMES. '

KeAt end HandsomeDesigns made to order.

Beretanla Street, near PuncabowfcTELEPHONE SLUE 181.

QMfcfeH STHEET

Firewood, Stove,Steam and Riaclcsmlth

WHOLESALE RETAIL. I

Special Attention Given to

OKAYINGALSO WHITE BLACK SAND".

Yienna Bakery600D Bread, the only HOME-MAD-

BREAD ln town. All of cakesour specialty. Wagon delivery throughcity.

AND

AND

kinds

Phone Ma'n 179. No. 1129 Fort St

0 1 o tx si 1ST el--CLEANED AND PRESSED

Honolulu Clothes Clenniiig Co

Makea St.. near King. Phone Main' 147

Koa FurnitureMade to Order.

Upholstering and Repairing.WING CHONG CO.

Cor. King and Bethol. P. O. Box 10M.

JAPANESE CONTRACTORAND CARPENTER.

House No. 762 Sheridan' St.Telephone White C01.

Horse Clipping.Luke Rogers Is back again from

Maul, clipping hor.es at the old stand,orner Punthbowl and King streets.

High Class DressmakingMRS. J. A. RODANET.

JOHNSON HOUSEPrivate Cottage,

',iuncnoowi near iv street.

Page 8: If II I THE HAWAIIAN SECOND EDITION I Way Is The Way Win ...I If You want io SECOND dnj's IScitb lodar THE HAWAIIAN STAR you TUB II ml STAK It In EDITION I I The Advertising Way Is

Jjt

ewnwIai'Mi on ,! hi CaMeee ttii about them n'

Ut MOTEL tTRBET

WITH A COMB

OR HAIR BRUSH.

IHcheco's Dandruff Killer I the onlyXtwlJj thai w ill effectually destroy thejtmiiwlt verm, and promote a luxu-rto- at

growth of hair.aM y all Druggists and at Paene-Barb- er

Shop, Fort street.PHONE MAIN SM.

GOOD DENTISTRYA bad dentist can do

more harm In an hourthan a good one can re-

pair in a life time. Gooddentistry l matter of

kill-- not high price. Ifyou wlah to save moneyand get the best. in den-tistry, come here. Exam-ination free.

THE EXPERT DENTISTS

F. L. FERGUSON, Manager.Hot! Street Arlington Hlock

--A YOUNGr HintCENTRALABSOLUTELY HOHBIULU

FIRE-PROO- F

MOftNH HOTELWAIKIKI BIACH

H. HERTSCIIE, GENERAL MANAGER

ICE CRBAMIN ANY QUANTITY

, M CENTS PER QUART.

Main 206DELIVERY FREE

, HARRY STRANGE.' Corner Alakea and Hotel Streets.

SHORTHAND !

NEW CLASSES COMMENCE JAN-UARY 2.

Typing and Book keeping. Monday,Kvednosday and Friday evenings 7:15 toa" p. m.. Magoon Building, Merchantand Alakea Streets. Address. M. F.tttawllns, Magoon Building.

Telephone Main 193. P. O. Box 192.

Successor toLORL & BELSER,

f GENERAL CONTRACTOR:

airew, Dredging, Grading, Paving,Teaming, Crushed Rock.

- Black and White Sand and SailI For Sal

Dfflce and Yard, South and ICawaiahaoStreets.

CALABASHES' Koa and Kou Calabashes made toOrder. Mats, Fans, Brasses, Pottery.Hawaii and South Seas Curio Co. Alex-ander Young Building.

P. E. E. Strauch,' HEAL ESTATE EXPERT.J Ileal Estate bought and sol..

Money Invested to beet advantage,BVaity Building. 74 S. King St,

Telephones Residence, White 861; Of-

fice, Main 293.

GOMES' EXPRESS COFurniture Moved With Care to All

'

Parts of the CityOFFICE 716 FORT STREET.

Near Queen, opp, Hackfeld Building.

' IFOR RENT, I,EA8B OR SALE.-- Uj '3uiCa puu osnoq !pui unjj put

Twenty-eigh- t and one-ha- lf acresland In Kallhl valley; good bananaration of crops unnecessary. Apply"Jf," Star office.

In r M i'H'it" t) II l' I'"'Mm ki'iiti , !'

nitii"t ft-- i'rt'1hiT I'limo t'i !'"Wiih Ylng Chung Co ..r.a.

ftXra Kg i j JNr

The first tiling to do attar dia jcovering that you ' Iyour watch, puree, dot. or f-- tthing, in tact, is to arranga tar 1

running CUeelaea rtvaftiao.ment In The Iter. ClassMia! J

I Ada tare tfcawa tor M eaata. iI

..- -, '' tTHE WEATHER

Local Oftce, V. U. WeatherToon Building.

Honolulu. I. H., January IS. INT

Temperatures: a.m , ft; t ,., 74;

10 a.m., 70; noon, 70; morningmum, "!.

Barometer, h a. m . 2."; abeolatehumidity, h a.m.. 6. 158 grains par ottMefoot; relative humidity, 8 a.m., as pmp

cent; dew point a.m.. 7 i

Wind: Velocity and direction : a.m., 20, south; S a.m., 17, eouttt, M ajsi,24. southwest; noon, 17, sraat.

Rainfall during 14 hours ended a.m.. .99 Inches.

Total wind movement during 14 aourended at noen. 117 miles

Wlf. E. STOCKKAN.Section Director.

tiviv)K BEETS: Jaaoarr 11. 8

.shillings, 10H pence; laat reviusquotauon, January a, gatHUMga.

pence. I

SCO A It: Haw York, January lo.or the stores3.M cents a pound, or 170 a ton; lastprevious ouetatlon January 3, a.aucents a pound.

A white boy is wanted to carry theStar.

Read the Rainier Toasts. They aretriglnal.

Good afternoon! Have you triedrtweet Violet Creamery Butter.

Mrs. C, L. Dlckeraon, Alakea streetIiuk it celVed goods on the last Alameda.

If your sewing machine needs re-

pairing, phone Benuey k. Co., Main 4S8.

MIks Edith 'Miller will leave on theP. 8. Korea for the coast for an extend,ed visit.

The W. C. T. U. will meet this after-noon at 2:W at the Central UnionChurch..

.str-- et cars were blocked about thedim-ren- t sections of the city this morn-ing by the flood waters.

The merchandise and furniture of thePeople's Bargain store will be sold atauction on Friday morning.

Miss Julia Bush entered upon hernew duties a stenographer to SheriffIaukea this morning.

Read the list of new arrivals At WaltYlng Chung store, Ewa of Fish Mar-ket, King street In this Issue.

Water rates, and sewer charge mustbe paid before 4 o'clock tomorrow other-wise they become dellnqucf.t.

.Stelnway, Starr and other pianos areeasy payments at Thayer Piano Co., ISO

Hotel street, opposite Young Hotel.W. T. Pope of the Normal School Is

preparing a set of rMef maps of theIslands for exhibition at Los Angeles.

Hawaiian preserver are In greater de-

mand than ever. Mrs. Kearns Is sending away forty cases of her preserveson the next Alameda.

Mrs. Sam Manuka Spencer, wife ofthe bookkeeper of the Parker Ranch, 1m

reported as recovering from a seriousnines:!.

A Chinaman who keeps a saloon andgrocery store at thu corner of Kekau-lik- e

and Hotel streets was arrested lastevening for selling liquor to a minor,

George Desha who has been for somecollector the

Company loft anyMauna Loa to take a position In the ,

post ofllco there under his father.The regular meeting of

the Honolulu Chamber of Commercewill be held at the room of the Cham-ber (Stangenwald Building, on Wed-nesday, January 1C, 1907, at 3 p. m.

There will be a meeting of the. Ha-waiian Football Association today at5 p. m., at the rooms of the ScottishThistle Club, for the purpose of choos-ing a team to play the Hallos noxtSaturday.

A meeting of the members of theHonolulu Automobile, Club will be call-ed this week to consider what plansare to be adapted the share thatthe motorists will ta ke In the comingFloral Parade. I

T. HIng today received a cable fromhis son Philip Ayau in London to theeffect that ho, Philip, had been admltted as a barrister. Philip graduat-ed from Iolanl College here, wentto Shanghai, to St. John's school there,going thence Cambridge University,England.

A cordial Invitation Is oxtended toall who are Interested In Central Unionchurch to attend tho annual businessmeeting which Is be held Wednesdayevening January 1C, Supper will beserved at 0:30 after which reports ofthe years work will be reatL If you areInterested In the work of tho churchyou are Invited whether you have .re-ceived a personal Invitation or not. Letthere be a large and representativegathering.

HEALER IS CUSTODY.J. Lor Wallaoh, convicted last Sep-

tember of practicing medicine withouta license, now commltteed to serve outhis fine, Is the young gentlemanwho proposed to euro leprosy and allother diseases by certain wonderfulmedicines tho secret of whloh none buthimself knew. One sure-cur- e wasclaimed to be made from certain stonesfound In the sea and endowed with mi-raculous powers. These stonos werefemalo In tholr virtues.

Fine Job Printing, star-- Office.

Makiki

StreamWas High

THK MAKIKI BTftKAM BR KB AM.RECORD IIUl ttOBKINO fOR

IBB.

The Maklkl aftraaea tale morning ttlhigher than H kaa ever keen kaeva thave beea kara. sWtaeen Bsraqalaand King aUta It aas been aatlretrwithout Its kawade and thecross Kin aWsst at the bridge wat

ao deep that tt raached the hubs afaacka in sasg.

The water oisM through the MilMiaton the mawka aide of King sttset atthat place, Mca heioogs to Kla Wei.AH af the atafaa la th building wereflooded, the Mar feeing covered by aatream n foot la depth. These storaare rented by Jasaaeee ami Chinamentt was feared at ane time that thefoundation of tfu building would bewaabed away. The water crossed Kingstreet, backed up atralnst another Chinaae store and then Hawed nway acrossthe banana Isolds in the sea

In the rear ot the building owned byKin Wai were a large number of shacksoccupied by Jaaaese. Th- - Japaaeseean to mova eat when the water con-

tinued to rise and many of their be-

longings were daiaod. chickens aswell as chicked coops were wasfcrdaway with other belonging wlilcli hap.nened to be scattered bout the yard,

Considerable damage wan done In allIn th building of Kin

wai One was a feed store and theKrain was piled upon the floor. Thestocks of goods In the other stores werealso damaged as they were for the mostpart on. the floor.

Lightning

Damaged

levatorTHE ELEVATOR MACHINE IN THE

tfUDD BUILDING PUT OUT Off"

COMMISSION.

Lightning struck about the JuddBuilding yesterday In acme place con-nected with the electric hoisting, ma-chine which runs the elevator In''thutbuilding and burnt out the coll of themachine rendering It useless, Theelevator lias not run since yesterdaynoon when the machine burned out andrepairs have not yet been completed.

It was shortly before noon, duringthe height of the election storm whenthe elevator boys started for the fourthfloor in answer to u call. He parsedthe third floor and the power grew gra-dually less and lean until the cage re-

fused to move at all.Upon going to the power room It was

found to be full of smoke and the stenchfrom the scorched insulation was almost enough to keep the elevator boyfrom the room.

Upon examination it was found thata huge coll In the machine, was entirelyburned out. Repairs of that naturebeing hard to make the machine wasnot In running order today.

It is not known where the lightningstruck the wire which conducted It tothe coll, but it was evidently outside

burned out In the process.

JOE LEAL IS --

SECOND CHIEF

Joe Leal, special police officer, a manwho has proved his worth as a cleverdetective and a fearless officer, was to-

day chosen by Chief of Detootlvos A.P. Taylor as Assistant Chief of Detec-tives.

All persons so far apprehended forgambling by the new deteotive forcehave been convicted. Eight Chinesearrested last night were this morningfined 15 each and costs.

W BOBBED BIS.

POOR OLD FATHER

The sad spectacle of a son robbinga loving father has been brought to thenotice of the authorities. The fatherof TaklchI tpaUe such a charge againsthis boy. TakUhl is alleged by thefather to have forged the name of thepaternal to a check for $190 on a localbank and to have cashed the check.

It Is believed that Takichl has madehis way to one of the other islands orelse has gone to the mainland, A searchfor him will probably be made by theauthorities.

OFF TO SEE VOLCANO.The S. S. Klnau today took the fol- -

Of course you intend sometime toown a hom' Now Is tlje time to buy.Some bargains at $t,IQ0, J2,0 and(1,500.

Irent & CO.933 FORT ST,

time paBt the for the Mutual somewhere for building. Is notfor Hllo on the Jured In way. Two fuses were

for

then

to

to

IN

$200

JMNNhNP At NR.

Jmoi Morgan

HI4M Ik JW. Mala WeiIS v IMt

AT AUCTIONTHURSDAY. JAN 17, 1907.

A.T If O'CLOCK A. M.,

at the store, Progress Block, Fortstreet, I will sell at public auction,by order of MR. lOMK KILLS, assignee of THE PEOPLE'S 10c. gad 25c.

TOftK, allMERCHANDISE AHD FURKITURE

MS. F. MORGAN.AUOTIOKBER.

lowing booked for the volcano: JudgeEdlngx, S. H. Saxl, E. O. Hall, MissWhltten, Mrs. Bouse, S. Holt, W. W.Emery and wife, D. Lambert, H.Fo'cke, L. II. Burton, iMr. Jones, G. C.Zlmmer, A. Maertins, Mrs. A. Maertlns,Gus Kuhn.

I HELD BY

The I. -- I. g. S. Klnau was delayedgetting away for Hllo and way portstoday owing to the steady and heavyrain of the forenoon Interfering withher taking freight. Her sailing timewas changed from noon to 1 p. m.

HARRISON TO THE COAST.Fred S. Harrison, ( who has been

connected with the clerk's ofllco U. S.

District Court, leaves tomorrow antho S. S. Alameda for the coast. Mr.Harrison expects to follow architectureafter reuchlng the alnland. He hashad some success In this line already,

There is a sense of securityabout the house after a man hasdeposited his papers oln a safedeposit vault. Wo rent boxes atprlcus, from four dollars a yearupward. Large boxes for cor-porations or trustees havingbooks to keep safely. Personsmay have access, at any timewhen accompanied by tho vaultsuperintendent and a privateroom will be furnished whereinhe may examine papers at lets-us- e.

Ilenry Waterhouse TrustCo., Ltd.

he having designed the house of FredL. Waldron in Manoa which burnedsome time ago and was said by manyto be the most beautiful In that val-ley. Mr, Harrison leaves manyfriends in Honolulu who wish him suc-cess 1 nhls new undertaking,

scooL QUESTION

(Continued from Page One).

From a casual reading of the lawthis morning by the attorney general,it would seem that the board did nothave the authority to regulate the pri-vate schools, as some of the memberseseemed to think was given It,

i a i ej

ARRIVING,At KohuIuhrAm. bkt. Jane L. Stan-fp- d,

Mollestsd, 46 days from Newcas-tle with 'coal. V"

W. 4elr to farcMrtr lmnre upon rvn raa of at Adveniaam i,t. th feci, thai treat saving ptMttuMi" are afrad KVMlt?WA:k. nnd that M will par many limes ovei m avail on welf of them.

oat WfjaaUH tttM WEEK Should he most Ittivroettaf ta all Mouse-Reope- n

and eeeaaVMoat 4ararai thr are mone) sovara ah the tmeat

Our Specials

1-- 2 Off on singlepairs of LACECurtains.

jUpaca Waists atSpecial Prices.

a a a

ee tehV

V.'4..

e... e

;

. . .

Wee

N. S. Sachs Dry Goods Go

at

at

. .;.VOL

:.?.e. o

"a,

a.ltamo'".a.v;.?..e:aVe

.'.a.

0

..;

Whether you .in- - a n.itin- or Connoisseur of meatquality, you will find it proflt.ibl.- - to buy your meats atour market. We curry in stock the vry best island meatsand give satisfaction in quality, quantity and price.

WE INVITE YOU TO TRY OUR

n

It Is especially fine for table use.

a.l-- .

tit--

'e.'e.- -C. Q.

ms i

TURKISH BATHTOWELS BigHed tuitions.

Wash MaterialsHalf Price.

Special Invitation

"SWEET VIOLET CREAMERY TABLE BUTTER

YEE HOP & CO. Wa at w

"""""""""amBeajmss-misssssajsssmamma- W. o ,

Butter Nut BreadMade of the purest flour.Baked in the best ovens.Eaten by the best people.Sold by the

2B

)

NEW ARRIVALS!See our window display n Ladles Ready-to-We- ar Muslin ShirtwaistsComplete assortment of BACK and SIDE COMBS.Ladles and Gents' Umbrellas at prl ces to suit all purses

For prices on all these lines, see j

Wah Ying Chong Co.KINO STREET EWA FISH JfARKBT

LAMPOmamenta1

o have Just received a New andComplete Assortment ofPIANO, AR!LOR, ' 4)DINING ROOM,LIBRARY, STUDENT,BRACKET HALI-AN-

NIGHTwhloh Includes a Choice Seleotlon in

OLD BRASS ANnBLACK HAND FINISHEDWROUGHT IRON,NICKEI AND GLASS,

Globes and Shados can tosuit. Our new llne of Electric porta--uicu are simpiy stunning, elegant de-signs and shapes, In that bautlfulRomanesque and Pompelan finish.

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