III HE f IK I illII - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · ir yon want to--The lltnrnllan Star...

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ir yon want to- - The lltnrnllan Star day's News, lotlay Is the nnpnr that yon can llnil It In goes into the best THE STi.lt homes or Honolulu VOL. VIII. HONOLULU, H. I., WKDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1901. No. 2936 III HE 11 IBU NEW OFFICERS EEECI f IK ARRIVE MAY I ill II LABOR E11UJP WIVES CAPTAIN MOSHER BRINGS IM- PORTANT ANNUAL MEETING CHAMBER OF CAME ON THE GAELIC THIS NOTHIIIG KNOWN ON GAELIC OF PLANTERS TO HOLD ONE HERE INTRICACIES OF A CHINESB: INFORMATION. COMMERCE. MORNING. iV THE GLORT. ON MONDAY DIVORCE SUIT.' JTter Bald to have Reached Mahukona A Day After it Reached Kallua Felt At Kukulhaole. Later reports from Hawaii of the itldal wave were brought by the steamer 3Co Au Hou this morning. The Ke Au Hou did not touch the western coast "but according to the Information which 'Captain Mosher received while at the tidal wave appears to have reached Mahukona and was evi- dently general along the Kohala coast. The rush of water at Mahukona did not occur until last Saturday, a day later than It was observed along the Kona coast. This circumstance seems quite odd. The explanation which Cap- tain Mosher offers for the difference, Is that the original wave coming In a westerly course across the Pacific was divided when It dashed agalnBt Mono Point and one part went to the south-whi- ii another went to the north. Evi dence of some exceptional disturbance of the waters was felt even at Walplo 3ulch on Sunday where the Ko Au Hou was lying. On Sunday Captain Mosher was lying In his cabin. Suddenly, a strong current setting from around the northern end of the island swept down ana complete ly swung the vessel around. It was not the force of a sudden gust of wind which did this but the water, for Cap- - lain Mosher sprang out on the deck to observe the cause. He soon discovered that It hod been the strong current. "Within a short time the vessel had swung back to Its former position and 110 further evidence of the high tide or strong current was felt. Captain Mosher thought the affair quite peculiar but he paid no further attention to it until he met an old native who had come from Mahukona. This native said that on Saturday, the day proceeding the strong current which turned the Ke Au Hou about, the water had "come up big" at Mahukona and had swept into his house and Inun- dated his dwelling. Captain Mosher could not learn very much of the details of the sudden rush of waters but from what the native did say It was' evi- dent that there had been an exceptlon-l- y high tide or else a tidal wave had rushed Into the shores of Kohala. No reports from any other place were re- - celved however by the Ke Au Hou and not until after they had reached here was the real cause of the sudden rise Jn the waters known to those on the vessel. This report from the Kohala coast puts an entirely different aspect on the situation. When the mauna Loa brought the news yesterday that only the Kona coast had been touched by the tidal wave, the natural presump- tion was that the rush of water had been due to some volcanic action In the proximity of that particular section of the western coast. In fact, with even this explanation of the matter, It was regarded as very peculiar that only twenty miles of coast should be reach- ed by the wave while other sections of the coast line should not be visited by it. Now that the Kohala coast seems To have been reached at a later time than the Kona coast, it is very likely that the original wave was divided by Mano Point and two different currents sent along to the respective northern and southern coasts. Even the Mauna Loa which was lying around at Punaluu on the other side of the Kau coast felt the swell of the tide on Friday. The steamers from Kauai this morn- ing report however that no evidence ot the tidal wave has been seen on that island. CHINESE PLAGUE DECREASING. Marked Falling Off on Record at Amoy. According to reports by the Gaelic there has been a marked decrease in the plague at Hongkong and Amoy. At the latter place the decrease has been the most marked. For the two weeks end- ing July 23, the date that the Gaelic left Hong Kong, there had been 39 cases and 37 deaths at that port. This is a very decided decrease. At Amoy, which Is several hundred miles from Hong Kong, the decrease Is reported to be still more marked. Up to a short time ago there were fully 100 cases and nearly as many deaths every day at Amoy. The reports by the Gae lie are to the effect that this average has fallen and while there are still nu merous cases about Amoy the death rate it not nearly so great as formerly. HOUSES GOING UP. Purchasers In College H.lls are begin nlng to build; three resldenc are in course of construction, another begins next week. Plans for others are in tho hands of local architects. UR WILL Is a matter of great import- ance. Do not neglect it. You do not know how long you will live, and if you die sud- denly without a will, your property will not be distri- buted as you wish. If we are opoolnted Execu- tor or Trustee we will assist you in drawing up a will, and keep It safe in our Vaults free of charce. Tho Trust Co., is never sick, never dies, never away; but always on hand to give your business strict . Men- tion. U1II19 Is! I r,iirxTE&r D23 Fort Street. Tel, Honolulu, n. T, Main 134. - W. G. Irwin Is the New President Re ports Read Talk of a New 'Hall. Other Routine Matters. The Chamber of Commerce held its annual meeting at 10 o'clock this morn- ing, in the hall over Castle & Cooke's. The following members were present: President W. F. Allen, Secretary Jumes G. Spencer, F. M. Swunzy, F. A. Schaef-e- r W. W. Hall, J. B. Atherton, J. J. Eagan, G. J. Waller, E. C. Maefarlane, 11. A. Parmalee, U. L. Wlfht and F. B. Auerbach. F. L. Waidron was elected to mem- bership. President Allen, for the committee on new quarters, said he had selected a i hail on tne second Hour of the Mclntyre building, but had this morning received an offer from Hackfeld & Company of a room in their new building tree of charge. As H. A. Isenberg, who made the olfer, was absent It was decided to postpone the matter to the next meet- ing. For the committee appointed to test the income tax law, Mr. Atherton stat- ed that the Planters' Association had already taken up the matter and, through Smith & Lewis and A. Sr Hart-we- ll had already begun test cases. The retaining fee agreed upon was $1,500, and a fee of $1,600 was to be paid for each case. The committee recommend ed that the Planters' Association be left to go ahead but that the Chamber spare the expense. A motion embody- ing this recommendation passed unani- mously. Annual reports of the treasurer and secretary were read and ordered filed. W. G. Irwin was elected president by unanimous vote. C. M. Cooke was elec- ted J. G. Spencer, secre- tary and treasurer. The following new board Of arbitration was elected: C. M Cooke, J. B. Atherton, F. M. Swanzy, W. F. Allen and F. A. Schaefer. President Allen called attention to the death of V. C. Wilder, a prominent member of the Chamber. A motion by J. B. Atherton that the secretary write a letter of condolence to the bereaved family carried. Mr. Swanzy called the attention of the Chtamber to the great misfortune re cently befalling E. O. Hall & Son and n resolution In oral form expressing the sympathy of the Chamber for the firm, passed. In leaving the office of president Col- - onel Allen thanked the members for the honor conferred upon him "and, the as- sistance they had given him in. tho. past year. The matter of a cable was not broached at all, although some of the members had spoken of bringing It up. DUELLISTS FINED. Shlgato and Ishi, Japanese were fined $G and costs each today by Judge Wil- cox for affray. They wanted to fight a duel with knives yesterday afternoon in Kakaako but were arrested. RAIDED A DICE GAME. Deputy High Sheriff Chllllngworth and Officer Lon Agnew raided a dice game at an early hour this morning in the billiard parlor, corner of Hott' and Hcthestree'ts. Ten nlayers were caught. They gave tho names or e, Harrison, F. Fernandez. J. Manulrc, L Wlllard, J. Tavash, Lutgut, C. Dean, C. Johnson, Benson and Barney d. Nearly all of them forfeited ball In Judge Wilcox's court this morning and those who did appear were fined $10 and costs. HABEAS CORPUS APPEALS. The Supreme Court this morning heard the arguments of Attorneys Robertson and Davis in the Pahla ha- beas corpus matter. This case presents the question of whether a defendant may appeal from a habeas corpus deci- sion of a circuit court. Argument was continued this afternoon. A JAP HELD UP. - Last night about 9:30 o'clock, a Jap- anese was held up on Beretania street by two men, supposed to be haoles. The cries of the Japanese nttracted pede- strians to the scene of the robbery: near C. M. Cooke's residence. The two men escaped in the darkness through Thomas Square. WORK FOR IROQUOIS. The government tug Iroquois, Captain Pond, will not, in all probability, make her regular cruise to tho various shoals and Islands north west of here, this season. She will drag for the lost an chor of the battleship Oregon however as soon as the weather is ood.' A lame shoulder is usually caused by rheumatism of the muscles, and may be cured by a few applications of Chamberlain's Pain Balm. For sale by all dealers. Benson, Smith & Co., gen- eral agents, Hawaiian .Islands, Just opened 100 cases of the famous "Walk-on- " mens' shoes at $4.00 at Mc-Iner- Shoe Store. Do You Keep a Dog? Wo have Just received a fresh shipment of Dog Bis- cuit, also Mange Cure and Su- - .dry. & POTTER CO,, LTD, 020 Fort Stroot, Tol- - Main 317. Eighty-Eig- ht are in the Crowd All .A pear to Be "Well Supplied With Money. Plantation labor ranks gained quite a number of recruits this morning on the Gaelic. All that depends upon the, newcomers rejoining the other Japan ese on ine various plantations is to ue. passed into the country by the emigra- tion gent. This detachment of Japa- nese laborers on the Gaelic was not un- expected. It was announced some time ago that a large number would arrive here by that vessel. There present de- tachment numbers 72 men, 12 women and 3 children. They are said to be the first detachment of several thousand whom the Japanese government will permit to come to this country to work. xne crowd all got aboard the vessel at Yokohama. Each had his own ticket and, so far as the steamship people were able to see, they appeared to be acting independently and not to be in charge of any agent or manager which woum most liKeiy nave been the case had there been any attempt on the part of some emigration agency to have snippeu tnem here. The men are a good strong looking lot and appear1 to be as hardy and healthy a crowd as has visited these islands In a lone time. Up to noon today Inspector Brown had examined about twenty five percent of the crowd. He found that they are ail practically laborers. All had morinv Some of tnem possessed several hun dred dollars while others had as low as $45. This seemed to be the lowest amount possessed. Mr. Brown was un- able to say how many were likely to be anowea to enter the country. Every effort will be made to see that the Con tract Labor Law is not violated. There were no cases examined however which seemed to be violations of any particu- lar law so none of the candidates were positively rejected. The first exam nn tions will be finished this afternoon. The crowd will be sent to the quarantine station and during their residence on tne island, will be further questioned d examined by the emigration olll- - cers. The event of these laborers Is re- garded as very gratifying. Tho need for laborers Is felt on every plantation In the Island and every recruit is hailed with delight. If the present crowd are treated well and like the place (hey will, in no small degree. Influence others of their countrymen to Join them. It Is said however that more laborers from Japan are expected on the Hong Kong Maru which will reach here on August 19. Only one Korean came on the Gae- lic. For the last three steamers there have been no Chinese bound for this port. IN THE DRAGON'S HEART. YOKOHAMA, August 2. On the medal which the Kaiser will present to tho German troops on their return from China, the German eagle is shown with his claws In the Chinese dragon. JAPANESE EMIGRANTS. YOKOHAMA, July 29. Seventy Jap- anese emigrants for Hawaii (not bound by contract) will leave Yokohama by the Gaelic on August 3. The departure of contract laborers for the Islands ha? been prohibited since Juno last year. Japan Gazette. MOLOKAI STEAMER SERVICE. The Board of Health will hold a meet. Ing this afternoon. Bids will be recelv-e- for the steamer service to Molokal as advertised for according to the board's decision at the last meeting. The report of Dr. Shorey, food inspector win oe received. ALLEGED GAMBLERS CAUGHT, Detective David Kaapa and posse raided p crowd in a building on Kukul street Just back of St. Louis college this afternoon. Twenty-on- e men were caught and charged with gambling Most of them are natives. SICK PORTO RICAN. Joe Alvez a Porto Rlcan boy applied to High Sheriff Brown today for assist- ance. The. boy has been ill and could not work so he left the plantation on Hawaii where he had bn employed and came here last Saturday. He had not eaten for two or three days and was nearly famished when he went to the police station. He was given food and will be given medical attendance. PERFUMED DERVISHES. The Sudanese natives eagerly buy clothes, cotton goods, sugar, perfumes tea, nails, chains, wire, leather, false Jewelry and iron trinkets. Great Brit- ain furnishes the cotton goods, but Germany, Austria and Italy have al- most the monopoly of the other arti cles. Germany does a huge trade in perfumes. A single caravan started off recently with 20,000 francs worth of German scents for the natives. Geneva La Suisse. A DEAD THEME. The Younger boys. Just released from the Minnesota penitentiary, have been employed as salesmen by a tombstouo and monument estob'ishment, nut tney are not to be put forwu.'d 'n tho way of sensational advertisement. The Youngers are still, therefore, in a very solemn connection, and the frivolois newspaper paragraphers should let them alone, we stop right nere. t.in clnnatti Enquirer. SEMI-WEEKL- Y STAR. . Honolulu people who aro going abroad can havo tho Semi-Week- ly Star mailed to any address for tho small sum of twenty-fiv- e cents a month. The Semi-Week- ly Star contains an me local news of importance, besides the dally stock quotations are pubiisned. NEW SHIRTS. L. B. Kerr & Company have Just un packed 25 cases of the most up to date goods in Men's wnuo ana negligee KiilrtH. This lot comprise the very new- est ideas in New York. They are being sold with tho other goods at Fair Prices. Fine Job Printing, Star Office. None of Onicers of Passenger Vessel Had Heard of the Reported Loss of British Flagship. Under date of July 31, the Coast pa- pers published a dispatch from Hong Kong to the effect that the new Brit- ish battleship Glory, the flagship of the iiicw uiiuiu Biuuuruu, wua uijruuna some where between Hong Kong and Shane halThe warships Eclipse, Daphne and jgnry were reported to nave twaaeniy WMHong Kong and the impression was tnat they had gone to the aid of the Glory. Captain Finch of the Gaelic, which arrived this morning from the Orient, says that lie had heard nothing of the reported grounding of the Glory up to the time of the departure of the Gaelic from Yokohama. From this news there is a very strong probability that me report, ot tne uiory going ngrouna may prove Incorrect. The Gaelic was at Kobe July 31 and she did not leave Yo- kohama until August 3. This would have been ample time in which to have learned whether the report of the grounding of the Glory was correct. In- asmuch as Captain Finch says he heard of no such mishap to the big battleship, there is excellent reason for believing that the alleged affair did not occur nt all. None of the Japanese Newspapers mention anything of the reported grounding of the Glory and ns they have dispatches, later than July 31, tlie date when the dispatch was sent from Hong Kong to the San Francisco papores It does not seem likely that sUch an important occurrence as the grounding of a new British battleship would have been overlooked. R IfPp A TARDY JUROR IS MADE TO PUT UP. Kaplolani Estate Wins the Albcrtlnu Suit Gear Instructed the Jury to De- cide for Defendant. Judge Gear this morning took the case of Sister Albertlna vs the Kanlo- - lani Estate company out of the Jury's nanns, Jn instructing7 tho jurors, on moYJon of Attorney Kinney, to bring in a verdict for the defendants. The mo. tlon was opposed in a long argument by Attorney I'eterson. it was made on the ground that the estate company had shown adverse possession and tho plam- - tuis nau not disproved tho claim. The long argument cost Juror W. Is. Rowell $10. Tho Jury was excused for alf nn hour while the lawyer talked and the members waited around the court houge till Rowell got tired, and ho iook mteen minutes orr, as he told the court later. During tho fifteen minutes the argument ended, and tho Jury was called into court with .Rowell absent. 1 took the chance." said Rowell. af- - er he had apologized to the court and vessel he knew States court morning. "The chance will cost you ten dollars" said Judgo Gear. The court on to explain that Jurors had been dealt with ery leniently but that it time something was done to compel attend- ance. "The court and counsel and ele ven Jurors have been kept wnltlng fifteen minutes," said the Judge. Without leaving thdr vieats the Jurors appointed A. W. Pearson man rendered a verdict as Instruct- ed by the court. noted ex- ceptions. The next cose on Gear's calendar Ip another suit of Sister Albertlna ngalnst the Kaplolani estate. It Is also an ejectment suit. THE WEATHER. Weather Bureau, Punahou, 1 p. m. Wind light northeast; weather clear. Morning minimum temperature: 75: maximum temperature, ba rometer, u a. m., steady (corrected gravity); rainfall, 24 hours ending 9 a. m., 0; dew point, 9 a. m., humi- dity, 9 a. m., 62 per cent. CURTIS J. ijONS, Ooserver. BORN. DYER At Honolulu, August 12, 1901, to tne wiie ot w. J. uyer, a FIELD MARSHAL WALDERSEE. SAIGON. July 31. Field Marshal von Waldersee called ot Algiers on his way from China. Ho paid a visit to the au- thorities, proceeded through the town received a sympathetic welcome. COURT TAKES A TRIP. Gear and a Jury, with tho court bailiff Ellis and Col. Jones stenogra- pher, this afternoon went to visit th' Manoa valley lando Involved In the sec ond suit of Sister Albertlna against Kaplolani Estate, Attorneys Kinney and Peterson made their onenln state ments to the lury on spot. Among the Jurors nre P. C. Jones, B. F. Dilling- ham and G. II. Robertson. WHY BRING UP FUNDAMENTALS? An upright Judge, learned In the Is respected, whether he Is in or shirt sleeves, whether ho grows '.vh's kera or n mustache or has a smooth shaven face; l.o wears h wig or goes bald-heade- d. St. Louis ro.'t Dispatch. ICE HOUSE DELICACIES. Camarlnos California Fruit Market is tho place for ice house delicacies, Everything tho California market af fords at this season of year be found at Camarlnos". SEAMLESS SHOES. L. B, Kerr Is making a specialty of Nettletons' seamless shoe for men. See display in window corner Fort and Hotel streets. Fine Book and Commercial Printing at the Star Office. Opinions Will be Gathered From All Over and a Labor Program Will be Determined Upon. An extraordinary meeting of the trustees and directors ot the Sugar Planters' Association with tho man- agers of Islands has been called for nex.t Monday morning at 10 o'clock It is expected that managers from all over will arrive hero Saturday and Sunday. The intention was to have meeting in the hall In new Mclntyre building, but It has been found impos- sible to get that place in shape in time. The purpose of the meeting is to dis- cuss to the fullest extent the labor pro blem und to come to some general and definite conclusion as to what may be done. Each manager will be asked to give in detail the situation on re- spective estate, and will be asked for Ins opinion as to what kind of new labor should be procured and how it may be gotten. Heads ot the Planters' Association state that there Is a general scarcity of labor throughout the group. Here- tofore recruiting movements been largely independent, or not controlled by any organized elfort or arrangement. Negroes, for instance, were brought solely by Alexander & Baldwin. It Is given out that Maul planta tions will tell special convention that the negro Is a egg and a good thing to let alone. As far as can be learned there is a preference on Maul, Hawaii and Kauai for Porto Rlcans. The matter of Jupanese will also bo dis cussed, but that labor cannot be assist ed, it having to come iiv- -i a foreign country. "The question of Filipino labor will not be discussed at all," said F. A. Schaefer, president of the Sugar Plan- ters' Association, this morning. Mr. Schaefer intimated that the question of whether the status ot Filipinos was such that they could be assisted into Territory would to be settled at Washington before any serious con- sideration could be here given to immi- gration proposals. The meeting will last o'je day only and will be behind closed doors. It Is expected that tho whole problem may be- - resolved Into a general program before the day Is over. I Mil III THEIR CASES UP BEFORE JUDGE ESTEE. Four Seamen Who Left the Vessel When She Was Afire, Refusing to Help to Save Her. The cases ot the four sailors of the bark C. D. Bryant, charged with re- fusing to obey the captain's orders nut. and a large number of witnesses. including Captain Colley of tho C. D Br vali t. Attorney Frank Thompson entered a demurrer on the ground that the In- formation was faulty In that it charged two separate distinct offenses. It was claimed that the presentment charged desertion as well as wllfull dis obedience of orders, accusing tne sail- ors of offenses under sections 4002 4590. Tho Jurors we're excused until 2 o'clock, while the point was argued. United States District Attorney Balrd claimed that the alleged second accusa- tion was not enough to constitute an accusation, and Assistant District At- torney Dunne, who drew the Indictment explained the clauses that were object- ed to. He declared that section 4002 was so Indefinite in Its statements that n further history of tho alleged crime was necessary under rules of the Unit- ed States Supreme Court to make the Indictment state definitely wnat tne crime chcarged was. Judee Estee decided to adjourn court nnd take the matter under advisement for a few hours. Ho announced that he would "ivc a decision at 2 o'clock this afternoon. This nfternoon Judge Esteo overruled the demurrer and the selection ot Jur- ors began at 2 o'clock, CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. You can get the best wall paper. Lin- - crusta-Walto- n wall burlaps at Real's; also window shades and picture mouldings. Alakea street, near Mer chant. Nnti Honda. Bill Heads. Statements and Fine Commercial Printing at the Star Office. RoVal Baking Powder Made from pure cream of tartar. Safeguards the food against alum Alum baking powders are the greatest mcaaccrs to health of the present day. KOYAl BUMS rowCtR CO., NtW YORK. the court had nsked him why lie left when tho was burning, were call-whe- n that tho Jury might ue ed in United Judge Kstee's called any minute. this The trial Jury was pres- - went was for fore nnd Peterson midday 85; 29.97 for 68; son. and Judge the the law. gjwn whether the can the the the his have al- most the the bad the have and and and Defendant Married Two Women Isv China and Lived With Both Here One Wants Divorce. Tom Chan, defendant In a divorce sntt that came up before Gear at noon hour today, has quite a family. It the r'aln-tl- ff is to be believed. .He has two wlvco (Oneof them being the mother ot sir Children and the other the mother of three. The six were in court, with the plaintiff,' Ah Sam, who alleges that her husband has failed to provide for her. Tom Chan's Mormon establishment is in Honolulu, and both wives havo lived together with him in happ'neni until recently, when Ah Sam ilew tr p coop and began suit for divorce. Jt is claim- ed that Tom Chan had one vlfc when he first came to Honolulu, ITu went back to China, and in August, 18S9, In Canton, China, he married the woman who asked Judge Gear to give her a divorce. F. M. Brooks represented the plaintiff. Before the case was called Tom Chan, by his attorney Judge Davidson filed an answer. In which he brings a coun- ter claim for divorce. He alleges adul- tery and desertion, and askj that the separation be grunted to him instead of to Mrs. Tom Chan number two. There was another case ahead of the Tom Chan case today, and the matter went over until noon tomorrow. While the matter was being discussed, Mrs. Tom Chan, or 7l Sam, as she appears in the legal documents, sat surrounded by children in brilliant clothes, and looked daggers nt the alleged poly-gan- lst whom she Is suing. The complaint says that ther are five children and it was correct when the suit was brought, but there arc bIx now, another having arrived since the suit was begun. The youngest was In court. The Infant began to make it- self heard nt one stage of the proceed- ings, whereupon one of thewell trained youngsters seized a bottle of milk and ran ncross the court room with it. The bottle was duly applied to the aperture from which the disturbing sounds were coming nnd on let was restored so that Judge Gear could continue business.- The case may present some legal In- tricacies, owing to the alleged double marriages ot the defendant. Both ot his weddings took place in- China, and are declared to be valid Chinese mar- riages. But the woman who Is suing' for divorce was made one with Tom by the second ceremony, It Is claimed. The suit is therefore an action to a man from what Is "imposed to be a bigamous marriage and no mor-ring- e at nil, under American law. WANT RAPID TRANSIT. The residents in the Kallhl district are anxious to have the Ranld Transit line extended to their locality. The Company has signified Its willingness to lay tho rails providing tho Kallhl people take cnouch bonds to cover the expense. An effort Is now beln made to tnlf" up about $10 000 worth of the securities. BACK FROM MANILA. YOKOHAMA, August 3. The U. S. transport Sheridan arrived at Nagasaki from Manila on July 25. She hns on bonrcl 130 soldiers, who are going home, nnd will call at Yokohama, where the Governor-Gener- al of the Philippines embarks. THE PACIFIC CABLE. SHANGHAI, August 3. The House ot Commons lias voted a loan ot two million sterling ns Great Britain's share of the cost of the Pacific cable. A VALUABLE ASSET. The ownership of a life policy In- jures no man's credit, nnd Infracts no rule of economy; and when once a en-tu- re is mnde and "tho hand puc to the plough" there should be no aiming back. Tire policy should be kept n.!e ond the Insured should pray dally for the privilege, of paying many ornual premiums. Insure In tho Provident Savlngr Life, represented In Honolulu by A. Xewhouse; office. 15-1- 6 Progress Block. The Customs Tariff Act of 1897 with alphabetical schedule, revised up to July W, 1900 an Indispensable book for nil Importers. Just received and for sale by the Golden Rule Bazaar. $5.00 Isn't too much to pay for a pair rhoes when you know that you aro yet-tui- g jour ti'onoys m ft worth. .. That is what we cl hn for ihisfc'hoe Mndoof Pi Vv K il and fifed with RuhixT heels ns to niako walk- ing eupy. Call for i vsy The " Hey wood" i HUtlUPlrAN V 4

Transcript of III HE f IK I illII - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · ir yon want to--The lltnrnllan Star...

Page 1: III HE f IK I illII - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · ir yon want to--The lltnrnllan Star day's News, lotlay Is the nnpnr that yon can llnil It In goes into the best THE STi.lt

ir yon want to- - The lltnrnllan Starday's News, lotlay Is the nnpnr thatyon can llnil It In goes into the best

THE STi.lt homes or Honolulu

VOL. VIII. HONOLULU, H. I., WKDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1901. No. 2936

III HE 11 IBU NEW OFFICERS EEECI f IK ARRIVE MAY I illII LABOR E11UJP WIVES

CAPTAIN MOSHER BRINGS IM-

PORTANTANNUAL MEETING CHAMBER OF CAME ON THE GAELIC THIS NOTHIIIG KNOWN ON GAELIC OF PLANTERS TO HOLD ONE HERE INTRICACIES OF A CHINESB:

INFORMATION. COMMERCE. MORNING. iV THE GLORT. ON MONDAY DIVORCE SUIT.'

JTter Bald to have Reached MahukonaA Day After it Reached Kallua Felt

At Kukulhaole.

Later reports from Hawaii of theitldal wave were brought by the steamer3Co Au Hou this morning. The Ke AuHou did not touch the western coast"but according to the Information which'Captain Mosher received while at

the tidal wave appears tohave reached Mahukona and was evi-

dently general along the Kohala coast.The rush of water at Mahukona did

not occur until last Saturday, a daylater than It was observed along theKona coast. This circumstance seemsquite odd. The explanation which Cap-tain Mosher offers for the difference, Isthat the original wave coming In awesterly course across the Pacific wasdivided when It dashed agalnBt MonoPoint and one part went to the south-whi- ii

another went to the north. Evidence of some exceptional disturbanceof the waters was felt even at Walplo3ulch on Sunday where the Ko Au Hou

was lying.On Sunday Captain Mosher was lying

In his cabin. Suddenly, a strong currentsetting from around the northern endof the island swept down ana completely swung the vessel around. It wasnot the force of a sudden gust of windwhich did this but the water, for Cap- -lain Mosher sprang out on the deck toobserve the cause. He soon discoveredthat It hod been the strong current."Within a short time the vessel hadswung back to Its former position and110 further evidence of the high tide orstrong current was felt.

Captain Mosher thought the affairquite peculiar but he paid no furtherattention to it until he met an oldnative who had come from Mahukona.This native said that on Saturday, theday proceeding the strong currentwhich turned the Ke Au Hou about, thewater had "come up big" at Mahukonaand had swept into his house and Inun-dated his dwelling. Captain Moshercould not learn very much of the detailsof the sudden rush of waters but fromwhat the native did say It was' evi-dent that there had been an exceptlon-l- y

high tide or else a tidal wave hadrushed Into the shores of Kohala. Noreports from any other place were re- -celved however by the Ke Au Hou andnot until after they had reached herewas the real cause of the sudden riseJn the waters known to those on thevessel.

This report from the Kohala coastputs an entirely different aspect on thesituation. When the mauna Loabrought the news yesterday that onlythe Kona coast had been touched bythe tidal wave, the natural presump-tion was that the rush of water hadbeen due to some volcanic action In theproximity of that particular sectionof the western coast. In fact, witheven this explanation of the matter, Itwas regarded as very peculiar that onlytwenty miles of coast should be reach-ed by the wave while other sections ofthe coast line should not be visited byit. Now that the Kohala coast seems Tohave been reached at a later time thanthe Kona coast, it is very likely that theoriginal wave was divided by ManoPoint and two different currents sentalong to the respective northern andsouthern coasts. Even the Mauna Loawhich was lying around at Punaluu onthe other side of the Kau coast felt theswell of the tide on Friday.

The steamers from Kauai this morn-ing report however that no evidence otthe tidal wave has been seen on thatisland.

CHINESE PLAGUE DECREASING.

Marked Falling Off on Record atAmoy.

According to reports by the Gaelicthere has been a marked decrease in theplague at Hongkong and Amoy. At thelatter place the decrease has been themost marked. For the two weeks end-ing July 23, the date that the Gaelicleft Hong Kong, there had been 39cases and 37 deaths at that port. Thisis a very decided decrease.

At Amoy, which Is several hundredmiles from Hong Kong, the decrease Isreported to be still more marked. Upto a short time ago there were fully 100cases and nearly as many deaths everyday at Amoy. The reports by the Gaelie are to the effect that this averagehas fallen and while there are still numerous cases about Amoy the deathrate it not nearly so great as formerly.

HOUSES GOING UP.Purchasers In College H.lls are begin

nlng to build; three resldenc are incourse of construction, another beginsnext week. Plans for others are in thohands of local architects.

UR WILLIs a matter of great import-ance. Do not neglect it. Youdo not know how long youwill live, and if you die sud-denly without a will, yourproperty will not be distri-buted as you wish.

If we are opoolnted Execu-tor or Trustee we will assistyou in drawing up a will,and keep It safe in ourVaults free of charce.

Tho Trust Co., is neversick, never dies, never away;but always on hand to giveyour business strict . Men-

tion.

U1II19 Is! Ir,iirxTE&r

D23 Fort Street.Tel,

Honolulu, n. T,

Main 134. -

W. G. Irwin Is the New President Reports Read Talk of a New 'Hall.Other Routine Matters.

The Chamber of Commerce held itsannual meeting at 10 o'clock this morn-ing, in the hall over Castle & Cooke's.The following members were present:President W. F. Allen, Secretary JumesG. Spencer, F. M. Swunzy, F. A. Schaef-e- r

W. W. Hall, J. B. Atherton, J. J.Eagan, G. J. Waller, E. C. Maefarlane,11. A. Parmalee, U. L. Wlfht and F.B. Auerbach.

F. L. Waidron was elected to mem-bership.

President Allen, for the committee onnew quarters, said he had selected a i

hail on tne second Hour of the Mclntyrebuilding, but had this morning receivedan offer from Hackfeld & Company ofa room in their new building tree ofcharge. As H. A. Isenberg, who madethe olfer, was absent It was decided topostpone the matter to the next meet-ing.

For the committee appointed to testthe income tax law, Mr. Atherton stat-ed that the Planters' Association hadalready taken up the matter and,through Smith & Lewis and A. Sr Hart-we- ll

had already begun test cases. Theretaining fee agreed upon was $1,500,and a fee of $1,600 was to be paid foreach case. The committee recommended that the Planters' Association beleft to go ahead but that the Chamberspare the expense. A motion embody-ing this recommendation passed unani-mously.

Annual reports of the treasurer andsecretary were read and ordered filed.

W. G. Irwin was elected president byunanimous vote. C. M. Cooke was elec-ted J. G. Spencer, secre-tary and treasurer. The following newboard Of arbitration was elected: C. MCooke, J. B. Atherton, F. M. Swanzy,W. F. Allen and F. A. Schaefer.

President Allen called attention tothe death of V. C. Wilder, a prominentmember of the Chamber. A motion byJ. B. Atherton that the secretary writea letter of condolence to the bereavedfamily carried.

Mr. Swanzy called the attention of theChtamber to the great misfortune recently befalling E. O. Hall & Son and nresolution In oral form expressing thesympathy of the Chamber for the firm,passed.

In leaving the office of president Col- -onel Allen thanked the members for thehonor conferred upon him "and, the as-

sistance they had given him in. tho. pastyear.

The matter of a cable was notbroached at all, although some of themembers had spoken of bringing It up.

DUELLISTS FINED.Shlgato and Ishi, Japanese were fined

$G and costs each today by Judge Wil-cox for affray. They wanted to fighta duel with knives yesterday afternoonin Kakaako but were arrested.

RAIDED A DICE GAME.Deputy High Sheriff Chllllngworth

and Officer Lon Agnew raided a dicegame at an early hour this morningin the billiard parlor, corner of Hott'and Hcthestree'ts. Ten nlayers werecaught. They gave tho names or e,Harrison, F. Fernandez. J. Manulrc, LWlllard, J. Tavash, Lutgut, C. Dean,C. Johnson, Benson and Barney d.

Nearly all of them forfeited ballIn Judge Wilcox's court this morningand those who did appear were fined$10 and costs.

HABEAS CORPUS APPEALS.The Supreme Court this morning

heard the arguments of AttorneysRobertson and Davis in the Pahla ha-beas corpus matter. This case presentsthe question of whether a defendantmay appeal from a habeas corpus deci-sion of a circuit court. Argument wascontinued this afternoon.

A JAP HELD UP.- Last night about 9:30 o'clock, a Jap-anese was held up on Beretania streetby two men, supposed to be haoles. Thecries of the Japanese nttracted pede-strians to the scene of the robbery:near C. M. Cooke's residence. The twomen escaped in the darkness throughThomas Square.

WORK FOR IROQUOIS.The government tug Iroquois, Captain

Pond, will not, in all probability, makeher regular cruise to tho various shoalsand Islands north west of here, thisseason. She will drag for the lost anchor of the battleship Oregon howeveras soon as the weather is ood.'

A lame shoulder is usually caused byrheumatism of the muscles, and maybe cured by a few applications ofChamberlain's Pain Balm. For sale byall dealers. Benson, Smith & Co., gen-eral agents, Hawaiian .Islands,

Just opened 100 cases of the famous"Walk-on- " mens' shoes at $4.00 at Mc-Iner-

Shoe Store.

Do You Keep a Dog?

Wo have Just received afresh shipment of Dog Bis-

cuit, also Mange Cure andSu- - .dry.

& POTTER CO,, LTD,

020 Fort Stroot,Tol- - Main 317.

Eighty-Eig- ht are in the Crowd All .A

pear to Be "Well Supplied WithMoney.

Plantation labor ranks gained quitea number of recruits this morning onthe Gaelic. All that depends upon the,newcomers rejoining the other Japanese on ine various plantations is to ue.passed into the country by the emigra-tion gent. This detachment of Japa-nese laborers on the Gaelic was not un-expected. It was announced some timeago that a large number would arrivehere by that vessel. There present de-tachment numbers 72 men, 12 womenand 3 children. They are said to be thefirst detachment of several thousandwhom the Japanese government willpermit to come to this country to work.

xne crowd all got aboard the vessel atYokohama. Each had his own ticketand, so far as the steamship peoplewere able to see, they appeared to beacting independently and not to be incharge of any agent or manager whichwoum most liKeiy nave been the casehad there been any attempt on thepart of some emigration agency to havesnippeu tnem here. The men are agood strong looking lot and appear1 tobe as hardy and healthy a crowd as hasvisited these islands In a lone time.

Up to noon today Inspector Brownhad examined about twenty five percentof the crowd. He found that they areail practically laborers. All had morinvSome of tnem possessed several hundred dollars while others had as lowas $45. This seemed to be the lowestamount possessed. Mr. Brown was un-able to say how many were likely to beanowea to enter the country. Everyeffort will be made to see that the Contract Labor Law is not violated. Therewere no cases examined however whichseemed to be violations of any particu-lar law so none of the candidates werepositively rejected. The first exam nntions will be finished this afternoon. Thecrowd will be sent to the quarantinestation and during their residence ontne island, will be further questioned

d examined by the emigration olll- -cers.

The event of these laborers Is re-garded as very gratifying. Tho needfor laborers Is felt on every plantationIn the Island and every recruit is hailedwith delight. If the present crowd aretreated well and like the place (heywill, in no small degree. Influence othersof their countrymen to Join them. It Issaid however that more laborers fromJapan are expected on the Hong KongMaru which will reach here on August19. Only one Korean came on the Gae-lic. For the last three steamers therehave been no Chinese bound for thisport.

IN THE DRAGON'S HEART.YOKOHAMA, August 2. On the

medal which the Kaiser will present totho German troops on their return fromChina, the German eagle is shown withhis claws In the Chinese dragon.

JAPANESE EMIGRANTS.YOKOHAMA, July 29. Seventy Jap-

anese emigrants for Hawaii (not boundby contract) will leave Yokohama bythe Gaelic on August 3. The departureof contract laborers for the Islands ha?been prohibited since Juno last year.Japan Gazette.

MOLOKAI STEAMER SERVICE.The Board of Health will hold a meet.

Ing this afternoon. Bids will be recelv-e-for the steamer service to Molokal

as advertised for according to theboard's decision at the last meeting.The report of Dr. Shorey, food inspectorwin oe received.

ALLEGED GAMBLERS CAUGHT,Detective David Kaapa and posse

raided p crowd in a building on Kukulstreet Just back of St. Louis collegethis afternoon. Twenty-on- e men werecaught and charged with gamblingMost of them are natives.

SICK PORTO RICAN.Joe Alvez a Porto Rlcan boy applied

to High Sheriff Brown today for assist-ance. The. boy has been ill and couldnot work so he left the plantation onHawaii where he had bn employedand came here last Saturday. He hadnot eaten for two or three days and wasnearly famished when he went to thepolice station. He was given food andwill be given medical attendance.

PERFUMED DERVISHES.The Sudanese natives eagerly buy

clothes, cotton goods, sugar, perfumestea, nails, chains, wire, leather, falseJewelry and iron trinkets. Great Brit-ain furnishes the cotton goods, butGermany, Austria and Italy have al-

most the monopoly of the other articles. Germany does a huge trade inperfumes. A single caravan startedoff recently with 20,000 francs worthof German scents for the natives.Geneva La Suisse.

A DEAD THEME.The Younger boys. Just released from

the Minnesota penitentiary, have beenemployed as salesmen by a tombstouoand monument estob'ishment, nut tneyare not to be put forwu.'d 'n tho wayof sensational advertisement. TheYoungers are still, therefore, in a verysolemn connection, and the frivoloisnewspaper paragraphers should letthem alone, we stop right nere. t.inclnnatti Enquirer.

SEMI-WEEKL- Y STAR. .Honolulu people who aro going

abroad can havo tho Semi-Week- ly Starmailed to any address for tho smallsum of twenty-fiv- e cents a month. TheSemi-Week- ly Star contains an me localnews of importance, besides the dallystock quotations are pubiisned.

NEW SHIRTS.L. B. Kerr & Company have Just un

packed 25 cases of the most up to dategoods in Men's wnuo ana negligeeKiilrtH. This lot comprise the very new-est ideas in New York. They are beingsold with tho other goods at FairPrices.

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

None of Onicers of Passenger VesselHad Heard of the Reported Loss ofBritish Flagship.

Under date of July 31, the Coast pa-pers published a dispatch from HongKong to the effect that the new Brit-ish battleship Glory, the flagship of the

iiicw uiiuiu Biuuuruu, wua uijruuna somewhere between Hong Kong and ShanehalThe warships Eclipse, Daphne and

jgnry were reported to nave twaaeniyWMHong Kong and the impression wastnat they had gone to the aid of theGlory.

Captain Finch of the Gaelic, whicharrived this morning from the Orient,says that lie had heard nothing of thereported grounding of the Glory up tothe time of the departure of the Gaelicfrom Yokohama. From this newsthere is a very strong probability thatme report, ot tne uiory going ngrounamay prove Incorrect. The Gaelic was atKobe July 31 and she did not leave Yo-kohama until August 3. This wouldhave been ample time in which to havelearned whether the report of thegrounding of the Glory was correct. In-asmuch as Captain Finch says he heardof no such mishap to the big battleship,there is excellent reason for believingthat the alleged affair did not occur ntall.

None of the Japanese Newspapersmention anything of the reportedgrounding of the Glory and ns theyhave dispatches, later than July 31,tlie date when the dispatch was sentfrom Hong Kong to the San Franciscopapores It does not seem likely thatsUch an important occurrence as thegrounding of a new British battleshipwould have been overlooked.

R IfPpA TARDY JUROR IS MADE TO PUT

UP.

Kaplolani Estate Wins the AlbcrtlnuSuit Gear Instructed the Jury to De-

cide for Defendant.

Judge Gear this morning took thecase of Sister Albertlna vs the Kanlo- -lani Estate company out of the Jury'snanns, Jn instructing7 tho jurors, onmoYJon of Attorney Kinney, to bring ina verdict for the defendants. The mo.tlon was opposed in a long argument byAttorney I'eterson. it was made on theground that the estate company hadshown adverse possession and tho plam- -tuis nau not disproved tho claim.

The long argument cost Juror W. Is.Rowell $10. Tho Jury was excused for

alf nn hour while the lawyer talkedand the members waited around thecourt houge till Rowell got tired, and hoiook mteen minutes orr, as he told thecourt later. During tho fifteen minutesthe argument ended, and tho Jury wascalled into court with .Rowell absent.

1 took the chance." said Rowell. af- -er he had apologized to the court and

vesselhe knew States court

morning."The chance will cost you ten dollars"

said Judgo Gear. The court on toexplain that Jurors had been dealt with

ery leniently but that it timesomething was done to compel attend-ance. "The court and counsel and eleven Jurors have been kept wnltlngfifteen minutes," said the Judge.

Without leaving thdr vieats theJurors appointed A. W. Pearsonman rendered a verdict as Instruct-ed by the court. noted ex-ceptions.

The next cose on Gear's calendar Ipanother suit of Sister Albertlna ngalnstthe Kaplolani estate. It Is also anejectment suit.

THE WEATHER.Weather Bureau, Punahou, 1 p. m.Wind light northeast; weather clear.Morning minimum temperature: 75:

maximum temperature, barometer, u a. m., steady (corrected

gravity); rainfall, 24 hours ending9 a. m., 0; dew point, 9 a. m., humi-dity, 9 a. m., 62 per cent.

CURTIS J. ijONS, Ooserver.

BORN.DYER At Honolulu, August 12, 1901, to

tne wiie ot w. J. uyer, a

FIELD MARSHAL WALDERSEE.SAIGON. July 31. Field Marshal von

Waldersee called ot Algiers on his wayfrom China. Ho paid a visit to the au-thorities, proceeded through the town

received a sympathetic welcome.

COURT TAKES A TRIP.Gear and a Jury, with tho court

bailiff Ellis and Col. Jones stenogra-pher, this afternoon went to visit th'Manoa valley lando Involved In the second suit of Sister Albertlna againstKaplolani Estate, Attorneys Kinneyand Peterson made their onenln statements to the lury on spot. Amongthe Jurors nre P. C. Jones, B. F. Dilling-ham and G. II. Robertson.

WHY BRING UP FUNDAMENTALS?An upright Judge, learned In the

Is respected, whether he Is in orshirt sleeves, whether ho grows '.vh'skera or n mustache or has a smoothshaven face; l.o wears h wigor goes bald-heade- d. St. Louis ro.'tDispatch.

ICE HOUSE DELICACIES.Camarlnos California Fruit Market is

tho place for ice house delicacies,Everything tho California market affords at this season of year befound at Camarlnos".

SEAMLESS SHOES.L. B, Kerr Is making a specialty of

Nettletons' seamless shoe for men. Seedisplay in window corner Fort andHotel streets.

Fine Book and Commercial Printingat the Star Office.

Opinions Will be Gathered From AllOver and a Labor Program Will beDetermined Upon.

An extraordinary meeting of thetrustees and directors ot the SugarPlanters' Association with tho man-agers of Islands has been calledfor nex.t Monday morning at 10 o'clockIt is expected that managers from allover will arrive hero Saturday andSunday. The intention was to havemeeting in the hall In new Mclntyrebuilding, but It has been found impos-

sible to get that place in shape in time.The purpose of the meeting is to dis-

cuss to the fullest extent the labor problem und to come to some general anddefinite conclusion as to what may bedone. Each manager will be asked togive in detail the situation on re-spective estate, and will be asked forIns opinion as to what kind of newlabor should be procured and how itmay be gotten.

Heads ot the Planters' Associationstate that there Is a general scarcityof labor throughout the group. Here-tofore recruiting movements beenlargely independent, or not controlledby any organized elfort or arrangement.Negroes, for instance, were brought

solely by Alexander & Baldwin.It Is given out that Maul plantations will tell special conventionthat the negro Is a egg and a goodthing to let alone. As far as can belearned there is a preference on Maul,Hawaii and Kauai for Porto Rlcans.The matter of Jupanese will also bo discussed, but that labor cannot be assisted, it having to come iiv- -i a foreigncountry.

"The question of Filipino labor willnot be discussed at all," said F. A.Schaefer, president of the Sugar Plan-ters' Association, this morning. Mr.Schaefer intimated that the questionof whether the status ot Filipinos wassuch that they could be assisted into

Territory would to be settledat Washington before any serious con-sideration could be here given to immi-gration proposals.

The meeting will last o'je day onlyand will be behind closed doors. It Isexpected that tho whole problem maybe- - resolved Into a general programbefore the day Is over.

IMilIIITHEIR CASES UP BEFORE JUDGE

ESTEE.

Four Seamen Who Left the Vessel

When She Was Afire, Refusing to

Help to Save Her.

The cases ot the four sailors of thebark C. D. Bryant, charged with re-

fusing to obey the captain's orders

nut. and a large number of witnesses.including Captain Colley of tho C. DBrvali t.

Attorney Frank Thompson entered ademurrer on the ground that the In-

formation was faulty In that it chargedtwo separate distinct offenses. Itwas claimed that the presentmentcharged desertion as well as wllfull disobedience of orders, accusing tne sail-ors of offenses under sections 4002

4590.Tho Jurors we're excused until 2

o'clock, while the point was argued.United States District Attorney Balrdclaimed that the alleged second accusa-tion was not enough to constitute anaccusation, and Assistant District At-

torney Dunne, who drew the Indictmentexplained the clauses that were object-ed to. He declared that section 4002

was so Indefinite in Its statements thatn further history of tho alleged crimewas necessary under rules of the Unit-ed States Supreme Court to make theIndictment state definitely wnat tnecrime chcarged was.

Judee Estee decided to adjourn courtnnd take the matter under advisementfor a few hours. Ho announced thathe would "ivc a decision at 2 o'clockthis afternoon.

This nfternoon Judge Esteo overruledthe demurrer and the selection ot Jur-ors began at 2 o'clock,

CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS.You can get the best wall paper. Lin- -

crusta-Walto- n wall burlaps atReal's; also window shades and picturemouldings. Alakea street, near Merchant.

Nnti Honda. Bill Heads. Statementsand Fine Commercial Printing at theStar Office.

RoValBaking Powder

Made from purecream of tartar.

Safeguards the foodagainst alum

Alum baking powders are the greatestmcaaccrs to health of the present day.

KOYAl BUMS rowCtR CO., NtW YORK.

the court had nsked him why lie left when tho was burning, were call-whe- n

that tho Jury might ue ed in United Judge Kstee'scalled any minute. this The trial Jury was pres- -

went

was

for

forennd

Peterson

midday 85;29.97

for68;

son.

and

Judge

the

the

law.gjwn

whether

the can

the

thethe

his

have

al-

mostthe

thebad

the have

and

and

and

Defendant Married Two Women Isv

China and Lived With Both HereOne Wants Divorce.

Tom Chan, defendant In a divorce snttthat came up before Gear at noon hourtoday, has quite a family. It the r'aln-tl- ff

is to be believed. .He has two wlvco(Oneof them being the mother ot sirChildren and the other the mother ofthree. The six were in court, with theplaintiff,' Ah Sam, who alleges that herhusband has failed to provide for her.

Tom Chan's Mormon establishment isin Honolulu, and both wives havo livedtogether with him in happ'neni untilrecently, when Ah Sam ilew tr p coopand began suit for divorce. Jt is claim-ed that Tom Chan had one vlfc whenhe first came to Honolulu, ITu wentback to China, and in August, 18S9, InCanton, China, he married the womanwho asked Judge Gear to give her adivorce. F. M. Brooks represented theplaintiff.

Before the case was called Tom Chan,by his attorney Judge Davidson filedan answer. In which he brings a coun-ter claim for divorce. He alleges adul-tery and desertion, and askj that theseparation be grunted to him insteadof to Mrs. Tom Chan number two.

There was another case ahead of theTom Chan case today, and the matterwent over until noon tomorrow. Whilethe matter was being discussed, Mrs.Tom Chan, or 7l Sam, as she appearsin the legal documents, sat surroundedby children in brilliant clothes, andlooked daggers nt the alleged poly-gan- lst

whom she Is suing.The complaint says that ther are five

children and it was correct when thesuit was brought, but there arc bIxnow, another having arrived since thesuit was begun. The youngest was Incourt. The Infant began to make it-

self heard nt one stage of the proceed-ings, whereupon one of thewell trainedyoungsters seized a bottle of milk andran ncross the court room with it. Thebottle was duly applied to the aperturefrom which the disturbing sounds werecoming nnd on let was restored so thatJudge Gear could continue business.-

The case may present some legal In-

tricacies, owing to the alleged doublemarriages ot the defendant. Both othis weddings took place in- China, andare declared to be valid Chinese mar-riages. But the woman who Is suing'for divorce was made one with Tomby the second ceremony, It Is claimed.The suit is therefore an action to

a man from what Is "imposed tobe a bigamous marriage and no mor-ring- e

at nil, under American law.

WANT RAPID TRANSIT.The residents in the Kallhl district

are anxious to have the Ranld Transitline extended to their locality. TheCompany has signified Its willingnessto lay tho rails providing tho Kallhlpeople take cnouch bonds to cover theexpense. An effort Is now beln madeto tnlf" up about $10 000 worth of thesecurities.

BACK FROM MANILA.YOKOHAMA, August 3. The U. S.

transport Sheridan arrived at Nagasakifrom Manila on July 25. She hns onbonrcl 130 soldiers, who are going home,nnd will call at Yokohama, where theGovernor-Gener- al of the Philippinesembarks.

THE PACIFIC CABLE.SHANGHAI, August 3. The House ot

Commons lias voted a loan ot twomillion sterling ns Great Britain's shareof the cost of the Pacific cable.

A VALUABLE ASSET.The ownership of a life policy In-

jures no man's credit, nnd Infracts norule of economy; and when once a en-tu- re

is mnde and "tho hand puc to theplough" there should be no aimingback. Tire policy should be kept n.!eond the Insured should pray dally forthe privilege, of paying many ornualpremiums. Insure In tho ProvidentSavlngr Life, represented In Honoluluby A. Xewhouse; office. 15-1- 6 ProgressBlock.

The Customs Tariff Act of 1897 withalphabetical schedule, revised up toJuly W, 1900 an Indispensable book fornil Importers. Just received and for saleby the Golden Rule Bazaar.

$5.00Isn't too much to pay

for a pair rhoeswhen you knowthat you aro yet-tui- g

jour ti'onoys

m ft worth. .. That iswhat we cl hn forihisfc'hoe MndoofPi Vv K il and fifedwith RuhixT heels

ns to niako walk-

ing eupy. Call fori vsy

The " Heywood"

iHUtlUPlrAN V

4

Page 2: III HE f IK I illII - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · ir yon want to--The lltnrnllan Star day's News, lotlay Is the nnpnr that yon can llnil It In goes into the best THE STi.lt

irwo

Wo offer for sale iropertlcs on Thurston Avenue, Spencer,Prospect, Kecaumoku, Annpunl, King. Ktnau, Lunalllo Btreets,Matlock Avenue, Etc., Etc. Several houses for rent.

Enquiries Invited.Dfclephono No. CD. Stangenwald

madian -- Australian Royal Mail

STEAMSHIP COMPANY

Blaavera the above line, running connection with the CANADIANRAILWAY COMPANY betw VVancouver, ar.d Sydney,

W.. and calling Victoria, C, Honolulu and Brisbane, Q.,

Due at Honolulu on about the dates stated, viz:

and Victoria, C,Eta Brisbane and Sydney:

MOANA AUG. 31

UIOWERA SEPT. 23

AORANGI OCT. 26MOANA NOV. 23MIOWERA DEC. 21

E03 Building.

of InBftCITIC een B. C, N.

BL at B. are

or foolow

Vancouver B. and forB. C:

NC

VN.

Munificent new th Limited" U now running

BETWEEN VANCOUVER AND MONTREAL

rwtfrm tht run IN houra without change. The Aneat Railway aervlce InMs BaeML

Saasmtb UcketM laaued from Honolulu to Canada, Uml ted Statu and Europe.

8Ha Bral 'a and ptftage and aU general lnf nation, apply to

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

Pacific Mail Steamship Co.

Occidental & Oriental S. S Co.

and Toyo Kisen Kaisha.

Steamers of the above Companies will call at Honolulu and leave this portB about the dates below mention ed:

FOR CHIi AND JAPAN:AMERICA MARU AUG. 17

PEKING AUG. 24

GAELIC SEPT. 3HONGKONG MARU SEPT. 11

CHINA 19

DORIC Slur'T.NIPPON MARU OCT,PERU

ervice dally

SEPT.27

4.OCT. 12

COPTIC OCT. 22

AMERICA MARU OCT. 30

PEKING NOV. 7

GAELIC NOV. 14HONGKONG MARU NOV. 23

CHINA NOV. 30DORIC DEO. 10

NIPPON MARU DEC. 18

PERU DEC. 20

,Pr general Information apply to

HACKFELD CO.,: Ltd. Agts.

Oceanic Steamship Company.

TIME TABlvBtCtt fine of line will at this port

aa ter der:SAN FRANCISCO.

MARIPOSA Alt? 17SONOMA Aug. ?ALAMEDA Sept. 7

VENTURA Sept 18ALAMEDA Sept. 28

SIERRA Oct. 9ALAMEDA Oct. 19

SONOMA Oct. 30

ALAMEDA Nov. 9

VENTURA Nov. 20ALAMEDA Nov. 29

Local Boat.

1 SteelS.S.

Room

From Sydney Brisbane, Vic-toria and Vancouver,

MIOWERA AUG. 28

AORANGI SEPT. 25

MOANA OCT. 23

MIOWERA T. 20AORANGI DEC. 18

MOANA 15

"Imperial

er

FOR SAN FRANCISCO:GAELIC AUG. 13

HONGKONG AUG. 20

CHINA AUG 27

DORIC SEPT,NIPPON SEPT.PERU SEPT.COPTIC OCT.AMERICA - MARU OCT.PEKING OCT.GAELIC OCT.HONGKONG MARU NOV.CHINA NOV.

01321

18

1522

19

DORIC NOV. 19

NIPPON MARU NOV. 20

PERU DEC. 3

COPTIC DEC. 10

AMERICA DEC. 20

&

'

Passengers Steamers this arrive and leave

FROM

MARU

MARU

MAHU

FOR SAN FRANCISCO.

MARIPOSA Aug. 21VENTURA Aug. 27ALAMEDA Sept. 11

SIERRA Sept 17ALAMEDA 2

SONOMA Oct. 8ALAMEDA Oct. 23

VENTURA Oct. 29ALAMEDA Nov. 13

SIERRA Nov. 19ALAMEDA Dec. 4

SONOMA Dec. 10

In connection with the sailing of the above steamers, the Agents are pre'yared to laaut, to intending passengers coupon through tickets by any railroadtrom San Francisco to all points In the United States, and from New York byteamsmp line to an European ports.JPor further particular! ppaly to

W. G. Irwin St Co.(LIMITED)

General Agents Oceanicl S. S. Company.

AMERICAN-HAWAIIA- N STEAMSHIP CO.Direct Service Between

New York, Hawaiian Islands- - via Pacific Coast..

Thr splen New Steamers:

Oct.

AMERICAN 6000 tons to sail about July 15.HAWAIIAN C000 tons to sail

Freight received at Company's wharf, 42nd Street, South Broo' 'vn, at alltimes.

Steamship CALIFORNIA, 6000 ton sailed from New York, June 16; willload on Puget Sound about August 20 th; for Hawaiian ports.

For further particulars apply to... HACKFELD & CO., LTD,

U. P. MORSE, General Freight Agent AGENTS. HONOLULU

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1901.

SHIPPING IHIftARRIVING.

Wednesday, August 14.S. S. Gaelic, Finch, from the Orient at

8:30 a. in.Stmr. Ke Au Hou, Mosher, from le

at 4:35 a. m. with 35S4 bagssugar, 14 pks.

Stmr. Iwalanl, Greene, from Nawlll-wll- l,

Elcele, Makawell, Wnlmea nt G

a. in. with 2250 bags sugar, 30 pkgs.sundries.

Stmr. Kauai, Bruhn, from Walmeaat 9:40 a. m. with 6310 bags sugar, 31pkgs. sundries, 45 pkgs. hides, 13 bbls.pol.

Am. ship Emily F. Whitney, Whit-man, 19 days from San Francisco at8:45 a. m.

DEPARTING.Wednesday, August 14.

Stmr. Klnau, Clarke, for Hllo andway ports at noon.

S. S. Gaelic, Finch, for San Franciscoat 6 p. m.

Stmr. Lehux Napala, for Molokal andMaul ports at 5 p. m.

Stmr. Knlulanl, Dower, for Hllo at 5p. ni.

PASSENGERS.Arriving.

Per stmr. Iwalanl, August 14, fromKauai ports. Mr. and M-- s. H. Isen-ber- g,

Mr. and Mrs. Ashe, Mrs. S. Wat-son and 3 children, Miss Grau Mrs. V.Radt, W. F. Johnstone, H. Damon, MissFassoth, A. Anderson, N. Anderson, S.Shlmamoto, Edward Kahale and 10deck.

Per stmr. Ke Au Hou, August 14,

from Kukulhaele. Mr. and Mrs. J.Watt, J. Mulr and 13 deck.

Departed.Per stmr. W. G. Hall, for Kauai

ports, August 13. E. L. Goldsborough,Miss Hardwlck, Miss Potts, C. H. Bish-op, A. Arendt, F. G. Prescott, L. H.Dee, Mrs. Miller, Dr. Cofer, H. A.Jaeger, M. Linda, Mrs. C. H. Bishop,Mary May, E. P. Molle, II. Walters,Arthur Dee, E. Hutchinson, W. W.Chamberlain, Daniel Pahu, ChonT Sing,Miss B. Welbke. Mrs. Kaanu and child,Carl Nllper, AV. H. Wright and wife,Miss Center, Mrs. H. Morrison, Mr. Kel-ler H. B. Cameron, Y. Y. HIrose andwife, Alfred A. Kana, Mrs. L. McLearyand J. Campbell.

Per stmr. Claudlne, for Maul ports,August 13. Mrs. Raymond, Dr. J. H.Raymond, William Green, M. B. Slm-mond- s,

Mrs. W. E. Beckwlth, J. C. Ma-wl- a,

Maurice Beckwlth, F. J. Raven,H. Howell, T. B. Lyons, A. C. Searle,S. M. Cooke, V. J. Alencastre and sis-

ter. D. Maclntyre, J. P. Dias, T. E.Lamar and wife, E. A. Brown, J. A.Tuthlll, Chang Cam Po, Mrs. H. Sharp.L. Nawahlne, M. Makalua, RowlandBrotherhood, Rev. J. H. Hone, JamesMatthews, A. S. Dowdell.

DELAYED BY BAD WEATHER.

Gaelic Arrived This Morning From TheOrient.

The Gaelic arrived off port at anearly hour this morning, twenty fourhours late' from the Orient. The vesselencountered strong easterly gales andheavy head seas since she left Yoko-hama and the rough weather was thecause of her being late. It was at flrstsupposed that she had been quaran-tined in some Japanese port but thisdid not prove to be the case.

The vessel has four cabin and 89steerage passengers for this port. Shebrought 668 tons of freight for Honolulu.Of the passengers for th's port, Inthe cabin were Mrs. C. Carroll and Mrs.B. Williams who have been making atour of the Orent. Mrs. A. S. Devln ofthe staff of the Chicago Record-Heral- d

will also stop over hereThe Gaelic- left Hong Kong, July 23.

She stopped at Amoy to get a quantityof tea and narclssis bulbs. While thehomeward trip was uneventful the out-ward trip from here was quite exciting.One of the Japanese steerage passen-gers from this port was lost overboardseveral nights after leaving Hono-

lulu. No one, so far as known, sawhim fall from the vessel and as far asany evidence to the contrary was con-cerned ho might have been murdereu.The Gaelic will leave for San Fran-cisco at 6 p. m. today.

SALE OF ROSE RANCH.

Dr. Raymond Buys toKahlkinul.

Add It to

The Dowesttt Estate Limited, hassold to Henry Waterhouse & Co., forDr. J. H. Raymond, Rose Ranch, onMaui. The consideration named In thedeed Is $52,500. Payment, It Is under-stood Is made In the securities of theDowsett Estate Company of which Mrs.Raymond Is a stockholder.

Rose Ranch consists of 16,000 acres.There arc about 2,500 cattle on It. Itcontains two line springs of water, andabout 750 acres of corn land which canbe greatly added to.

Rose Ranch was formerly the prop-erty of Captain James Makpe, andmany years ago was one of the flrstsugar plantations In the Islands. ButIt was long ago abandoned as a sugarplantation and turned over to ranchpurposes. It was bought a number ofyears ago by James I. Dowsett for $84,-50- 0.

Dr. Raymond intends to unite the newproperty with Kahlktuni run and man-age the two properties as one. Thetwo contain about 55,000 acres. The wa-ter on the property will be developedand utilized to Its fullest extent. Thequantity of corn lands will be Increas-ed. A systematic fight is being madeon lantana, and generally it is the In-

tention to develop the property to thehighest possibilities.

DISCARDING CANDLES.It Is more than likely that the mas-

ters of vessels will discard candles en-tirely as lights for use In the holds ofships. The fate of the bark Empireoff Mahukona recently has Impressedupon them the danger of taking a light-ed candle down Into the hold wherecargo of a more or less lnflamable char-acter Is kept.

Captain McLean of the bark, RufusE. AVood, has decided not to permit acandle to be taken Into the hold of hisvessel. Just before his departure forthe Sound he purchased several of. thepatent electric candles for use In light-ing the hold of his vessel whenever Itwas necessary to send any one below.He said that they are just the thing forsuch purpose and he wonders that theywere not invented long ago

LETTER BOXES PAU.The letter boxes at Moana hotel in

AValklkl and near Kamehameha schoolhave been removed and the service atthese two places discontinued. The rea-son for this move was that the boxeswere outside of the free delivery. JohnSllva will bo the regular man to collectmall from the boxes. The carriers willalso make collections, but Sllva will berequired to make the boxes on regularhours, prior to the sailing of malls.

Flno Job Printing, Star Office.

1 118

Fifteen Dollar SuitsAnd the price docs not hint at their

value. Other warm-weath- er wearablesare crying for room; our w. . of asklneyou to supply It: this Is on account ofthe large stock recently purchased inthe eastern markets.

Suits that SuitWe have Just received a fine line of

AVhlto Flannel and Serges, "'ennls andOuting Suits. Look In at either of ourstores, they will make your mouth

In " 1, 1

TWO STORES, TWO STOCKS.P. O. Box 658.

TWO TELEPHONES.Main 96 andMain 367.

9 and 11 Hotel Street andCorner of Fort and Hotel Streets.

Order blankscheerfullysent uponrequest

LEWIS Ss CO.,WHOLESALE ANDRETAIL GROCERS

Food DelicaciesThe Largest Assortment West of

San Francisco.

1060 FCr.T STREET.

240, 2402 TELEPHONES 240, 240.

Metropolitan Meat Go

1 KING STREET.

AND NAVY CONTRACTORS..

G. J. WALLER. : : : Manager.

Lin Sing Kee,TINSMITH.

3oes Sanitary PlumbingNuuanu Street, Oj poslte Emma

OHTA,Contractor and Builder,

House Painter

Kewalo, Sheridan Street, near Kln,Honolulu. H T

T. MURATA,No. 1044 Nuuanu Street

Straw HatManufacturer and

Native Hats

Any Styles Made to Order

TELEPHONE BLUE 3311.

P. O. BOX, 881.

HONOLULU, T. H.

The Encore SaloonCorner Nuuanu and Hotel Streets,

We Keep on Hand theBoat Brands ofLiquors rui (I Cigars

The Depot Saloon,Opposite the Oahu Railway & Land Co,

Wo will keep the Honolulu Beer al-ways on tap and In bottles. Also softdrinks and cigars.

RYAN & DEMENT, Proprietor

THE "MONITOR"

Plumbing, Tin, Copper and Sheet Iron WorkDIMOND BLOCK. STREET.

COMPAKY

Large Stock Assorted

Which will sold Lowest Cash Prices.

New Refrigerators and Ice Boxes, all Sizes.

P. O. 635. BEBETANIA STREET, NEXT TO FIRE S' TION,

10.000 Barrels

Tel. Blue Gil.

A of

be at

BOX

ROCHEHARBORLIME

DifitoAinyeEiSlliiiflariTheo. H. Davies & Co., Ltd.

IIardwareDe jp txr txxxGxxt

CRIBS AND BABIES' BEDS

840

A new Invoice Just opened,Call early or you will miss a choice.

Mew Furniture S,BtK.u,,p"otod' ,and :put

CITY FURNITURE STORE

Telephone

II. II. WILLIAMS, Manager

Oahu Carriage Manuf'g Co., Ltd1179 RIVER BERETANIA AND PATJAHI.

Dealers in Carriage Materials and rubber tires. Carriages andWagons built to Order. Repairing and Blacksmithing aSpecialty.

CIruxi HoyMaunakea Near King Street.

Watchmaker, Jeweler, Gold and Sil-ver Plater. Chinese Curios In Gold andIvory. Spectacles and Eye Glasses.Complete stock of Watches, JewelryOptical Goods, Clocks, Etc. Watch-makers' and Jewelers' Supplies.

Tel. Blue 841. P. O. Box 991.

HING LEE CHAN,Fort Street, opposite the Popular House

Dealer In Groceries, California andIsland Fruits, Poultry, Island Butter,Kona Coffee, Cigars and Tobacco. . Newgoods by every steamer.

Fine Job Printing, Star Ofllce

75-- 79 KING

on.

Lore Ilulldlnsr, 684 and 58G Fort Street

F. O. Box 7&

STREET, BETWEEN

HING TAIFort Street near Beretanla, .Opposite Central Fire Station.

Dress 3MCafeearLadles' dres cs, shirts and underwear

made to order at reasonable prices. Allwork receives prompt attention and laguaranteed.

Telephone Blue 933.

WING SING CO.4G Hotel Street, next door to Iwakaml.

IMPORTERS INGROCERIES .CALIFORNIA FRUITS,

BUTTER.

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

Page 3: III HE f IK I illII - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · ir yon want to--The lltnrnllan Star day's News, lotlay Is the nnpnr that yon can llnil It In goes into the best THE STi.lt

ATTORNEY AT LAW.NOTARY PUBLIC.

308 Stangenwald BuildingTELEPHONE MAIN 21.

DR. J. M. WHITNEY,DENTIST.

Boston Building, Fort Street Over H.May & Co.

Hours: 9-- 5. Tel. Main 277.

DR. A. E. NICHOLS,DENTIST.

Office Hours: 9 to 4.

1123 Alakea Street, next Masonlotemple, Honolulu.

DR. 0. B. HIGH,DENTIST

Philadelphia Dental College, 1892.

Office: Masonlo Temple.Telephone, Main 818.

OR, A, G. WALL. DR. 0. E. WALL.

LOVE BUILDING, FORT STREET,Telephone 411.

OFFICE HOURS. 8 a. m. to 4 p. m.

DR. A. J. DERBY,DENTIST.

Mott-Sml- th Building,Cor. Fort and Hotel Sts. Honolulu. H. I

Ofllce Hours: 9 a. m. to 4 p. m.

Dr. Archibald N. Sinclair,Offlces: Rooms 208-20- 9, Boston Building,Wort B'.reet.

Telephones: Ofllce, Main, 385, Resi-

dence. White, 2861.

Hours 11 a. m. to 1 p. m.; 3 to 5 pm.; 7 to 8 p. m. Sundays 12-- 2 p. m.

P. O. Box 801.

A. G. LOVEKIN,Stock andBond Broker,

lEIESlEIlllMIO402 JUDD BUILDING.

J II. FISHER 1 CO.,

Members of Honolulu Stock Exchange

Stock andBond Brokers

STANGENWALD BUILDING.

Advance Mado on Approved Security

SAM YEE HOP & CO.

HAS OPENED A

Second Hand StoreAnd are ready toSell and Buy allKinds of Goods.

Pauahl Street betweenMaunakea and River Streets.

AHINuuanu Street. - - - .Near Pauahl

Chairs from J .5 upTables from 1.25 upBed Room Sets from... 35.00 upMeat Safes from 4.E0 up

Mattresses and pillows at very rea.eonable prices.

P. O. BOX 912.

AT IT again:Will be pleased to have my customer-call- .

1 i rvr k b e ,MERCHANT TAILOR.

(OS King Street with Y. A. BoosNpxt to W W tftmond & Co

W. H. BARTH,STAR BLOCK 1290 FORT ST,

TinninK cxxnclGalvanized.Iron Work

Estimates furnished on all kinds of8heet Metal Work.

The patronage of Owners, Architectsand uunaers soncneu.

K. FUKURODA,1274 STAR BLOCK,

FORT STREET.

JflPRHESERHD HMERI8RN DRY GOODS

flerchant Tailor

Cleaning and Dyeing ofClothes

All Orders Promtply Attended To

Note Heads, Bill Heads, Letter Headsana all Kinds or Job and commercialprinting neatly and promptly executedat tne star umce.

Overworked Nervesand wasting vitality make their pres-ence known througlf lieadachcs,dizziness, inability to 6lccn, less ofappctlto and ti general run-dow- n con-dition of tlio system. Theso signsnro sometimes accompanied by neu-ralgia, hysteria, rheumatism or nerv-ous prostration in somo other form.To remove tlicso troubles, euro thonerves, j uey neca iccuint,', strength-ening and building up, and nothingwill do this so quickly and so surelyas Dr. Miles' "Nervine This trulyremarkable mod cino Is cainlmr hundreds of new friends every day. Herois a surveyor irom Decatur, ind.,Mr. G. B. McKeau, who writes:

"A chronio stomach trouble, whichmy physician wao unable to over--

comc.so wore on my nervous systemmat i DroKo down wun nervous pros-tration. I could nut sleep day ornight except in fltful naps; couldscarcely cat any kind of food andwasted away to a mero shadow.After snendiiiK over $300.00 in a vain6enrch for relief, I was prevailedunon to trv Dr. Miles' Nervine. Relief came immediately. I took sixbottles and today am a well man."

Dr. Miles' Nervine Is sold nt alldniRRists on a positive guarantee.Write for free advice and booklet toDr. Miles Medliul Co., Elkliai t, lud.

COUPOKATION NOTICES.

STOCKHOLDERS' ilEETISU.

A sDeclal meeting of the stockholder!of the Honokaa Sugar Co. will be heldat the ofllee of F. A. Schaefer & Coon Friday, the 16th day of August.1901, at 10 a. m. for the purpose of con-

sidering amendments to the Company'sBy-La- and the transaction cl general business.

Per orderW. LANZ,

Secretary.

ELECTION OP OFFICERS.

At the annual meeting of the stockholders of the Maul Sugar Company,T.td.. which was held on the 8th .orAugust, 1901, In tho hall of the UnitedCnlnese Society at King street, the fol- -lowing gentlemen were elected as officers and directors or tne saia com-pany for tho ensuing year.

LEE CHIT President.Y. AHIN, .Vice-Preside-

C. MING HYM Secretary.WONG KWAI Treasurer.YEE CHIN AuditorWUN YAM NAM Auditor.

Directors: Chu' Gem, Chang Yee. HeeKwok, C. Hock Chaw. T. Kat Poo.

Secretary Maul Sugar Co., Ltd.

NOTICE

Special Meeting of Stockholders ofE. O. Hall & Son, Ltd.

There will be a Special meeting ofStockholders of E. O. Hall & Son. Ltd.,at the ofllce of the Company In the SafeDeposit Building on Thursday, August15th 1901, at 2 p. m. for the purpose ofdiscussing matters relative to tne obs-truction of their business block andstock of merchandise and to take actionon such matters as may be of Importance as occasioned by thei.late disaster.It. Is earnestly requiested that all stockholders may be present.

E. O. HALL & SON LTD.,E. H. PARIS,

Secretary.Honolulu, August S. 1901.

Olaa Assessments.

The fourteenth ' assessment of 2V4

per cent or 50 cents per share was call-ed to be due due and payable June 20th1901. Said assessment is now bearingInterest at the rate of one per cent amonth.

The fifteenth assessment of 2V4 percent, or 50 cents per share has beencalled to be due and payable July 20th.1901. Said assessment Is now bearinginterest ai tne rate oi one per cent amonth

The sixteenth assessment of ZYi percent or 50 cents per share has beencalled to be due and payable August20th, 1301.

Interest will be charged on assess-ments unpaid ten (10) days after thesame are due, at the rate of one percent per month from the date on whichsuch assessments are due.

The above assessments will be pay-able at the office of the B. F. Dilling-ham Company Limited, StangenwaldBuilding.

ELMER E. PAXTON,Treasurer Olaa Sugar Company, Lim-ited.

Honolulu, T. H. July 20, 1901.

Kihei Assessment Notices.

TliJfl 1ZTU ASSESSMENT Of 5 percent or ti.bv per snare Decame due andpayanie January 2nd, 1901 and bearspenalty from February 2nd, 1901.

The thirteenth and final assessmentof 5 per cent or $2.50 per share on thestock of the Klhel Plantation Co., Ltd.,has' been levied and will become duennd pnvable on the 15th day of June,1901. Interest bearing after the 15thday of July, 1901.

The above assessments are payableat the offices of Alexander & Baldwin,Ltd., Judd Building.

J. P. COOKE,Treasurer Klhel Plantation Co.

Honolulu. May 18. 1901.

WANTE II.

First class Cigar makers.Apply to H. J. Nolte, Fort Street.

NOTICE.

Notice to subscribers to the fund' forendowment and establishment of aHospital for Incurables at Honolulu.The Initial meeting for tho purpose oforganization will be held at roomsover otiices of Messrs. castle andCooke on Monday, August 19th, 1901,at 2 o'clock p. m. A full attendanceIs earnestly requested.

ALEX. YOUNG.Honolulu. August 12, 1901.

WANTED.

An experienced young lady clerk forfurnishing store. Address In own hand-writing. Iwakaml & Co.

P. O, BOX 868.

TUB HAWAIIAN STAR. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 14, 1901. THUSM.

IGil I II 1ftPROFESSOR KOEBELE MAKES

INVESTIGATIONS.

Gangs Out In the Cane Fields Looking

For the Pest The Conditions Aio

Improving.

Professor Koebele has been lnves'.g.i-tln- g

the cane-bor- er on the Island iKauai, which is the Island most nlllltt-e- d

with the pest. There are gangs ofworkers out on most of the plantationslooking for cane-borer- s, which aredoing a good deal of damage, but Pro-fessor Koebele says that tne situationIs Improving.

Professor Koebele landei at Wnlm-'-

and spent ten days In golnqr to waypart of Kauai. He says tliut he foundthe sugar cane pest was being, foughtby the simple method of looKlngthrough the cane and killing the cane-bore- rs

found. "That Is the only knownway," said the entomologist. "The caneborer has no enemy that we can suc-cessfully Introduce. It would be Im-possible In any event to Introduce suchenemies or to scatter a poison, If therewere any, over the .many acres or aplantation. The work of looking forthe destroyer Is light work, which wo-men and children can do, nnd there aremany gangs out looking for the pest Insomo places.

When stripping Is done the borer?are found If there are any. They areeasy to find and kill. From my tour othe whole Island, I should say that thepest Is being stamped out. In someparts of Kauat there are no cane-bore- rs

nt nil."The cane borer Is a small Insect,

which gets Inside tile stalks of cane.Two of them are enough to kill a stalk.They bore up and down the stalk andsoon the stalk of cane Is killed by thework of the Insects. The stalk dies androts away.

The cane borer Is a "cyramblcydbeetle," which bores Into other plantsthan sugar cane. It Is quite a pest Inthe Southern American states. Thebeetle that causes trouble In Hawaii,however. Is different from that found Inthe South. Professor Ashmead, or theEntomological Museum nt Washington,who expected to find the well knownAmerican beetle, was quite surprised tofind a different sort of borer at workhere,

1 DPillCHICAGO RECORD-HERAL- D ON

OUR LEGISLATURE.

Thinks That the Point of Bander LogSatire Does not Demand-An- y LaboredExplanation.

That the Hawaiian legislature shouldhave got to the end of Its regular session without passing any appropriationbills at all and then devoted an extrasession to approving bills far In excessof the governments estimated IncomeIs not surprising In view of the character of that remarkable uody of statesmen. The Kanakas, who are In the maJorlty, are now fellow citizens of ourown, but they nave their little peculiarIties, is an inability toconform theVmental apparatus to theexigencies of our boasted Anglo-Saxo- n

laws and government and lncldently,we might add, to the exigencies of ourlanguage.

Evidences of this troublesome butvenial fault were abundant In the timebefore the revolution, and they havebeen present In pleasing variation re-cently. One solon proved his eruditionin matters constitutional by proposingthat the legislature should repeal the or-ganic act byvhlch the territory was es-tablished, as If this were a Kanaka af-fair pure and simple. But this daring"secesh" was hardly as funny as acolleague who, when he wanted to fore-stall the practice of cremation, twistedhimself In a knot by suggesting penal-ties for the cremated.

Tho meetings of the legislature wereoverwhelmed with ridiculous bills and j

riuiuuiuus emmer, which were turiiuu 10eirective use oy a cartoonist on tne ;

Dole side of the local fight when hedrew, a picture of Kipling's bander-lo- g

or monkey folk in council and printedbelow several of the Kipling verses onthat people, of which the following Isa stanza:

All the talk we even have heardUttered by bat or beast or birdHide or fin or scale or featherJabber It quickly and all together!Excellent! Wonderful! Once again!'Now we are talking just like men,Let's pretend we nre never mind,Brother, thy tall hangs down behind;This is the way of Monkey Kind.Though we should be loath to classify

our Kanaka fellow citizens as monkeysthe point of this satire does not demanda labored explanation Chicago Record-Heral- d.

GOVERNMENT BY WOMEN.T.lnrnln. M. .T. s a striking example

0f the failure of government by women,it was founded four years ago and Itsmanagement was placed In the handsof the fair sex. Women were givenequal rights with men In tho town'saffairs. They had a full vote and, beingIn the majority, elected the town off-icers. The first election day broughttrouble. Some of the women delayedtoo long with their shopping In aneighboring town and the polls wereclosed before they returned to vote.The factional spirit which this createdresulted In the success of tho opposi-tion at the next election. The townmight have survived", nevertheless, butfor unwise legislation. Tho Town Coun-cil, composed of women passed an or-dinance requiring the owners of a terracotta factory to paint the structure amore fashionable color than brick red.The factory owners moved the estab-lishment elsewhere rather than submit.Then a box factory was suppressed be-cause of the noise it created. Thenthere was a general quarrel becauseeverybody could not bo provided witha public park and the best pavementIn front of every individual front door,and none would consent to givingfranchises to trolley railroads on anystreets except those occupied by theirneignoors. women wno

fnr 'ffl""Wp'r Hfp;,ithey moved away. Now the Court ofChancery has ordered the wreck of thetown to be sold at public auction on tho10th of July. San Francisco Chronicle.

CAUSE FOR ALARM.Mrs. Crabahaw I suppose you'd be

awfully frightened if I Bhould send youa telegram while I'm away In the coun-try?

Crnbshaw Indeed I would, my dear!I don't know where to raise any moremoney to send you. Puck.

Fine Job Printing, Star Ofllce.

THE

gANKOFgAWAIILIMITED.

Incorporated under the Laws of theTerritory of Hawaii.

PAID-U- P CAPITAL - - $600,000.00RESERVE - - - - - 5o,ooo.ooUNDIVIDED PROFITS - Ha,728.74

OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS.Charles M. Cooke PresidentP. C. Jones Vice-Preside- nt

C. II. Cooke CashierF. C. Atherton Assistant Cashier

Henry Waterhouse, Tom May, F. W.Macfarlane, E. D. Tenncy, J. A.

Solicits the Accounts of Firms, Cor-porations, Trusts, Individuals, and willpromptly and carefully attend to allbusiness connected with banking entrusted to It. Sell and Purchase Foreign Exchange, Issue Letters of Credit.

SAVINGS DEPARTMENT.Ordinary and Term Deposits received

and Interest allowed In accordance withrules and conditions printed In pass-books, copies of which may be had onapplication.

Judd Building, Fort Street.

BISHOP k CO.

SavingsBank

Until further notice, Savings DeposIts will be received and lntc est allow-ed by this Bank nt four and one-ha- lf

per cent per annum.Printed copies of the Rules and Reg-

ulations may be obtained on applica-tion.

Office at Bank building on Merchantstreet.

BISHOP & CO.

CLAUS SPRECKELS. WM. G. IRWIN,

Glaus Spreckels & Go.

BANKERS,HONOLULU. H. L

San Francisco Agents The NevadaNational Bank of San Francisco.

DRAW EXCHANGE ONSAN FRANCISCO The Navada N

tlonal Bank of San Francisco.LONDON The Union Bank of London,

Ltd.NEW YORK American Exchange Na

tional Bank.CHICAGO Merchants' National Bunk.PARIS Credit Lyonnals.BERLIN Dresdner Bank.HONGKONG AND YOKOHAMA The

Hongkong and Shanghai BanklngCornoratlon.

NEW ZEALAND AND AUSTRALIABank of New Zealand.

VICTORIA AND VANCOUVER Bankof British North America.

TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKINGAND EXCHANGE BUSINESS.

Deposits Received. Loans Made onAonroved Security. Commercial andTravelers' Credits Issued. Bills of Exchange Bought and Sold.

COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY AC-COUNTED FOR.

ESTABLISHED. 1868.

BISHOP & Co.,Bankers

TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKINGAND EXCHANGE BUSINESS.

COMMERCIAL, AND TRAVELERS'LETTERS OF CREDIT ISSUED,

AVAILABLE IN ALL THEPRINCIPAL CITIES OF

THE WORLD.

Interest allowed after July 1st, 1900on fixed deposits: 7 day notice 2 percent, (this form will not bear Interestunless It remains undisturbed for onemonth) 3 month 3 per cent; 6 months 312 months, 4 per cent.

THE YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK

LIMITED.

Subscribed Capital Yen 24,000,000

Paid Up Capital Yen 18,000,000

Reserved Fund Ten 8,310,000

HEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.

The Bank buys and receives for col-

lection Bills of Exchange, Issues Draftsand Letters of Credit, an transacts ageneral ba -g business.

INTEREST ALLOWED:

On fixed deposits for 12 months, 4 percent per annum.

On fixed deposits for 6 months,' 3 percent per annum.

On fixed deposits for 3 months, 3 percent per annum.

Branch of the Yokohama Specie Bank.

New Repntilic Building, Honolulu 0 1

Territory Grocery StoreV. O. TEIXEIRA, Manager.

Corner Emma andVineyard Streets.

DEALER IN

Groceries, Delicacies, BeatBrands of Tea andKoha Coffee

FOR KENT.A large building with twenty rooms

suitable for a lodging house also sixstores on tho corner of Fort and Vine-yard streets.

Apply toCHUNG KM,

At City Mill Co.

The Remington Typewriter

Liahtesf TouchThat Saves Labor ; and does tho QuickestWork, that Saves time. Time and LaborSaved by the REMINGTON. Sold by

H. Hackfeld

LatestIN

Offlco Phono 390

AT

HOTEL

& Co., Ltd

Styles

Underwear andPajamas

IWAKAMI & GO.,

vvvAvl'Avwlvw.vvvvvvsl

" Electricity is Life "SO SAY MANY EMINENT

MEDICAL AUTHORITIES.

Many Simple Disorders Can be Successfully Treated by theUse of a

Home jediooX Battery"Uuder advice of a Physician tho battery may kaUsed to treat chronic and serious diseases.

Price, $10.00 EachN

Including-- a complete guide for tho treatment ofover 100 diBeauei

THE HAWAIIAN ELECTRIC CO., LTD.,

Fifteen CarloadsFamous

Budweiser Beer..by ANHEUSER-BUSC- H

ASSOCIATIONand duo

BY

Hackfeld Co., Ltd.,Agents

Territory

CASTLE COOKE, LIMITED.

Commission flerchants.

FACTORS.

AGENTS

PlantationWalalua AgriculturalKohala SugarWalmea SugarFulton Works, St. Louis,Standard OilGeorge F. Bl.ke Steam Pums.

Weston's Centrifugals.England

Company ofAetna Insurance of

Hartford, Conn.Alliance of

London.

STREET

Phone 389

of

WON LOUI CO.Corner Maunakea Pauahl 8 treats.

Sanitary Plumbers, Tlnsmltha.Sheet Workers.

Water Pipe Gutter Work la JBUs brunches.

Orders filled dispatch.

P. O. 788.

LUEN CHONGr CO.,King Street B. OxaJtl

HAS OPENED A

Bakery martGrocery Store1b prepared to make all klnda 4

Bread, CrackersHard Tack,

Cigars, Tobacco Frilli

Goods delivered to all parts of th cttr

Tlie.

. Brewed the RenownedBREWING of St Louis inBarrels cases Quarts and Pints ore toarrive in a few days. FOR SA.LE

H. &Sole for the

of Hawaii

&

SUGAR

FOR

The Ewa Company,The Co., Ltd.Tho Company.The Mill Company.The Iron Mo.The Company.The

The New Mutual Life Insur-ance Boston.

The Fire Company

The Assurance Company

Works

&and

andIron

andwith

Box

opposlted

AndSoda and

and California

of

3

St

'i

'4

4

Page 4: III HE f IK I illII - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · ir yon want to--The lltnrnllan Star day's News, lotlay Is the nnpnr that yon can llnil It In goes into the best THE STi.lt

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;.'' ,,'f"CTK

ar un THr HAWAIIAN STAR, "WEDNESDAY, AUGUST' 14, 1901.

THE HAWAIIAN STARDAILY AN'D SEMI-WEEKL-

.Published every nftcrnoon (exceptBundny) by The Hawaiian Star

Newspaper Association. Ltd.

JTItANK L. HOOQS ..Manager

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1901.

WELCOME SOMETIMES.

While the Chlneso Is thoroughly un-

welcome In the United States, ho Is wel-

comed In the little state of Sarawak.A wealthy Chinaman has started aChristian colony ot Chinese at Slba, ofwhom flvo hundred have arrived andcone to work, according to late Consu-

lar reports:There is a grant ot a fertile tract of

territory sulllclent to accommodatemany thousands of persons. By agree-ment with the governments, they havevery liberal control of their own peoplein the settlement of civil cases. Thegrowth of the poppy and the Introduc-tion of opium are to be prohibited; In-

toxicating liquors, lotteries, and gam-

bling also being excluded. The govern-

ment requires them to cultivate the ricefields according to the customs of theChinese in southern China, the designbeing to introduce rice culture on alarge scale as a commercial enterprise.Thousands of acres of what is believedto be suitable land for rice culture areavailable, and the government Is mak-

ing strenuous effort to Induce ChineseImmigration in large numbers.

It is curious that the very nationalitywhich is so dreaded upon the westcoast of America, should bo soughtafter with the view or opening up coun-

try in another quarter of the world.As far as Hawaii is concerned, herChinese peculation has served her Ingood stead. Large areas of land whichthirty and forty years ago wereswamps, with rushes growing overthem, hava been turned Into hand-somely paying estates by the Industryand agricultural knowledge of theChinaman.

In another wny the Chinaman hascommended himself here. Ho has al-

ways been remarkably law abiding.There has never been the trouble withthe Chinese here, that there has beenelsewhere. A San Francisco Chinamanand an Hawaiian Chinaman are twodifferent beings. The one Is aggressive,tricky, dangerous and heart and soulopposed towards the Caucasian. Theother is peaceable, orderly, honest inhis dealings, and liberal In his subscrlptions to charitable objects pro-

posed for the bentlt of his Westernbrother. There are probably good rea-

sons for this difference If a study of thesubject were made. But without goingin to that, which would be a somewhatlengthy argument, the fact must bepatent to all that the Chinaman of thewest coast and the Chinaman of Hawaii are essentially different In theirattitude towards the Caucasian race.

The arguments over the habeas cor-jj-

cases are now in full blast. Tothe looker on .the light seems one Inwhich each party sees only one side ofthe question, and denounces each theother, without allowing for honestdifference of opinion. There are twosides and two very stron- - sides. TheUnited States Supreme Court foundthat there were two sides and onlytook the view It did upon the narrowand almost casual majority of one. ItIs absurd to denounce men for holdingopinions ably argued by Chief JusticePuller and three other Justices. Wheregreat men disagree, lesser men maycertainly be allowed to differ and nothave their-- motives Impugned.

NEW BREAD.

There has always been an objectionto new bread. The learned doctorswho live upon our many ills warn usagainst its use. Dry toast, very stalebread, but new bread no! AnathemaMaranatha! It Is almost death to takeit. But a new school Is coming forwardwhich tells a very different talp. Youcan revel In hot rolls ad infinitum, Ifyou will only masticate them and notbolt them. The whole theory is thusdescribed by a writer in the LondonLancet. He says:

"A slice of stale bread on being brok-en with the teeth resolves into moreor less hard gritty particles which, un-less tiiey weie softened by the saliva,would be almost impossible to swallow.The particles wouiu irritate the throatand the gullet. The fact is, thereforethat man is compelled thoroughly tomasticate and to impregnate stalebread with sailva before he swallows it. '

Tills act, of course, partially digests thebread and thus makes It in a (It statefor digestion and absorption farther onin the alimentary tract. This is why ,

stale bread appears to be more dlgestl- -uie man new oreau. new ureau, onthe contrary, is soft, doughy, or plas-tic, and therfe appears' to be no necessity to soften It with saliva, hence itescapes the preliminary dlgestlvp actionof the ptyalln of; the saliva. New bread,In other words, is In reality 'bolted,' i

and 'boltlnc' accounts' for many of theills arising front dyspepsia. According- -ly, hot. rolls, should .be' enjoyed forbreakfast without any, fear of dyspenslaso long as the bread 'is good and so longas pains are taken to masticate it

..thoroughly.''

There Is, accordlrie to this reasoning,no special virtue in 'stale Bread as such,but simply' because' of Its hard dryand gritty character!' It forces the human been to use his teeth and proper-- (ly prepare his food for His allmenvarycanal. Instead of inveighing ngainsthot bread, or ntiw bread and recom-

mending the use" of stale, what thephysician ought to have done in thepast and ought td- do now Is to tell hispatient to masticate-- his rolls' and notbolt them. But this Is. such, an ordln- -

ary common sense rule that probably

neither doctor nor patient would feeldisposed the one to give It, the otherto follow It.

People are for ever saying that thedoctors are humbugs, and so In n. larecmeasure a very great number are, butthe reason that they are humbugs Isbecnltso the world likes to be humbug-ged. There is little chance for a physi-

cian to succeed unless he does hum-bug. The more suave and gentle he Isthe more ho Is run after. Humbug isking and always will be when the Illsof humanity are dealt with.

TUBERCULOSIS.

The complete and hopeful change inthe view taken of tuberculosis couldScarcely be more succinctly put than ithas been by the Chicago Record-Heral- d

In the following:"Dr. Allen T. Halght's dispatch on the

tuberculosis congress indicates thefinal and complete triumph of the bacillus theory of the cause of consumption. The insistence on the idea that'the most vigorous precautions shouldbe taken everywhere to prevent spittingon the sidewalks and streets of citiesand town,' the admonition that 'healthauthorities should be advised of everycase of tuberculosis and should rigor-ously disinfect all tainted places,' thewhole plea for cleanliness as it is nowput speaks for the infectious charac-ter of the disease and Its spread bydisease germs.

"All the other supposed causes arereduced to the minor state of contri-butory inlluences. Hereditary weakness, constitutional defects, climate,occupation, predisposing local inflam-mation, may each and every one ofthem prepare the field for the fatalharvest, but the decree of fate is notissued through them, and there Is sucha talk of prevention and cure fromphysicians of the very highest stand-ing as to give rise to the hope that theravages of th. greatest enemy to man-

kind may be largely checked in thenot distant future.

"The revolution In thought on thesubject during the last fifteen years orso since the discovery was announcedhas been most remarkable, and it Isof the utmost Importance that whatthe doctors preach today bhould reachthe people, because the control of themalady rests largely with the latter.Actual sufferers from the disease shouldbe made to realize their responsibility,and the watchword of cleanlinessshould be sent around the globe. Underproper regulations every communitymay establish effective defenses whichshall assist materially to dlmli lsh thepossibilities of infection and to cutdown that world's frightful mortalitylist ot three millions annually. Thepromise is an Inspiration to all human-ity, and especially to those personswho have been brought up to look uponconsumption as their probable inheri-tance.

"Cleanliness Is not only next to god-

liness; It Is synonymous with health."

The Gaelic seems to have brouerht theadvnnco guard of an Invading army ofplantation labor.

Labor day was observed with con-

siderable ceremonial and success lastyear, and there Is every prospect of itsbeing excelled by the celebration thisyear.

Who says the oriental pl" of moralsand sentiment Is low? Listen to thisfrom the Japan Gazette;

"No wonder Yokohama Is loyal to heramateurs' after the Flyincr Jordans kindof show. Even If the vaudeville visitorswere handlcaicd, the styl. of thingwas hopelessly vulgar."

The banks which have come to therescue of the treasury by the loan ofJ150.000 have done not only a public ser-vice but a public spirited service. ItIs coming to be recognized that Institu-tions as well as men have civic dutiesand obligations and can render serviceto the state. The transaction whichwill prove such a relief to many holdersof treasury warrants, may fairly be ac-

cepted as a recognition and fulfilmentof this responsibility and duty.

It would seem as If the question" ofthe validity of the income tax were aquestion ot whether or not, and If soto what extent the taxing power of thelegislature Is limited. In the severalstates this nower la as a rule strictlyguarded and limited by constitutionalprovision. As our theories legislativepower come down from British sourcesand through British precedent It wouldseem that the taxing power of an Am-

erican legislature was like that of theBritish parliament, unlimited unlesslimited by constitutional provision, orIn our own case by congressional enact-ment. If the taxing power of our legis-

lature has not been limited by the or-

ganic act, it would seem as thoughquestions of inequality or even of double taxation could not affect Its vali-

dity. As for Inequality of taxation Itwould seem as If our poll tax or per-

sonal tax law were liable to thatcharge since certain persons and classesof persons are exempt. Could not theincome tax be sustained as a personaltax, not based like the poll tax on ageand sex with some exemptions but onthe amount of income?

But the whole question Is before theSupremo Court with able counsel oneach side, so that the layman may feelthat whatever the decision he can ac-

cept it as a decision arrived at afterfull, candid, honest and able

Are you troubledwith Cock-roach- es

in your house?

If you are try

MistersRoach

Food

A non-poisono- us

powder, butgreedily eaten byRoaches and

causing theirdeath anddisappearance

Price 25 cenfs per Can

18 DlFort Street,Honolulu

Gentlemen,

VARIETYt IS THE SPICE OF LIFE!

Have you seen the variety ofarticles now displayed in ourfront windows?

Following is a partial list:11(190 llroedlng CagesSprinklers Parrot CagesDust l'ang and W. V. Ilruslics

o Ilruslii'B Whisk llniomsDusters Hand Ho'Iowru 1'nint Hrushes Hunting Knives

i I Floor lirooms llutclicr KnivesCash 1)0X03 Kitchen Kniveso Axes Monkey Wrenchesllntcliots l.otnou SqueezersSlovo l'ollih Carpenter's SawsMove llnislics FaniH) Heat Saws

o Picture Hooks llilleherPicture Wire-Curr- Spring Balanceso Combs Family Scales

o Machine Oil lllrd ( ago springsShoo DluekliifJ Carpenter's Ruleso Silver l'Mlish Harness SoapMi polio Hnrnos BlackingPllexo chamois SkinsHutchor Steels Meat Choppers

.Ice Chliipers Butcher's CleaversIce Shaves Family Cleaverso Hat Traps (larden Trowels

o Wood Saws Harden ForksIce Saws Tea Strainerso Hutclier Saws Chandelier Hooks

o Cane Knives Sqnegee BrushesIco Tongs Tobacco CuttersCork Scrows Axle (IreaseCan Openers Tnpo MeasuresHarness OH Shelf BusketsHi onges Scrubbing BrushesCoffeu .Mills Upholstering NailsHarness "U ashing AmmoniaCall Bells llorso BrushesScissors Wiro Door MaisScrew Drivers Bird Cage HooksTucks Hooks and Eyesice Picks Fruit Presserst MrnssHlicars Pruning ShearsBird Cages Shoo Brushes

Family Orind Stones

I ill 11'IIIt II ISIII1U1IIS VI VUIILIMITED

IMPORTERS OF

CrooJcery,II OUHOX? w. xx-v- i sailing;

SOLE AGENTS FOR THE CE-

LEBRATED JEWEL STOVESAND CURKEY REFRIGERA-TORS.

OUEENKBRR

mmxmOF

in

s.

PHONE 157

CONSISTING

Fans, Fichus, ChiffonCapes, Latest SilkHosiery and Silk Petti-coat

M. BRASCH & CO.

BLOCK

IB

HOUSEHOLD DEPARTMENT,PACIFIC HARDWARE COMPANY, LTD.

Bethel Street, next to Castle & Cooke

Goods Constantly Arriving

Dinner Sets at $13.50 and upwardsToilet " 3.00 " "Filters at 2.50 " "

FINE OTJHT O-IyiS- S

Sole Aguits for Wilcox & Gibbs New Automatic SewingMachines in 12 different styles. New Idea and Pan- -American Sowing Machines.

A full assortment of Royal Steel Ware atprices that cannot be beaten.

II so, call and examine our fine of Suitingsand Trouserings at our Queen Street Store. Whypay big prices for suits when we can sell you thematerial that will save' you at least one-thir- d thecost of buying elsewhere.

BliAVEit LUNCH BOOM,Fort Street. Opposite Wilder & Co.

H. J. NOLTE, Prop'r.

First-clas- a Lunches served with ten,coffee, soda water, ginger ale cr milk.

Smokers Requisites a Specialty.

ant new

& CO.,STREET

-- .

-- .

-

-

-- .

-

'

(COMPANY, LTD.)Esplanade, cor. Allen and Fort Sts.

Manufacturersof Soda Water, Gin-ger Ale, Sarsaparllla, Root Beer, CreamSoda, Strawberry, etc., etc.

clothes?

LTD.

We have over patterns to select from

The very newest goods in Scotch Homespuns,ALL PURE WOOL loosely material. The best,most stylish and positively coolest .Woolen Materialfor Summer Wear. The very latest Goods in NobbyStripes. Beautiful designs in Fancy Worsteds. 200pieces of West of England Worsted Trouserings.No two patterns alike.

A fine Range of Cotton and Linen Ducks.GENTLEMEN Save Money and be up to date,

?You cannot do as well elsewhere.Pleased to show you the goods.

Iv B.

New

stock

500

made

- 4

Page 5: III HE f IK I illII - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · ir yon want to--The lltnrnllan Star day's News, lotlay Is the nnpnr that yon can llnil It In goes into the best THE STi.lt

3--

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1001 riva.

sBAN FRANCISCO 215 Front St GOOD NEWS FOR HU8UAND8.

NEWHONOLULU,

TOltK,Queen43 Leonard

St.St. GtORGE FREEMAN'S DEfllH MEIHODS I EMI Judge HiiyH

TroUMor'HWives MuhI

Pockets.Not "Touah"

M. S.

Importers andCommissionflerchants

(Sole AgencyFOR

Blanche Bates Gigar

AGENTS FORBritish America Assurance Comp'y,

of Toronto, Ontario.

lie euIci b I lie Imiitci Ccrcptny

of New York.

Special attention given to con-signments of coffee and rico

COLUMBUS representswagon-i-aker- 's

handsomest

The Charles Herrick Carriage Go., Ltd.'.tangenwald

Gingham! Gingham!! Gingham!!!

Just opened ten eases containing about300 pieces of GINGHAMS, in checks and'Stripes of the latest patterns which willsold 10 cents, yard.

Nottingham Lace Curtains 50 centspair and upwards.

Children's Sun Bonnets and Hats, 50cents each.

Lades' Brown Linen Dress Skirts, 50cents each.

Don't miss this Opportunity.

The Bargain StoreBERETANIA STREET

ALAKEA

No trouble GoodsSa uple3 free on application

Alnkou Street, Merchant Queen

Telephone

JUDD & CO.,FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE

STOCK AND BOND BROKERS.REAL ESTATE AGENTS.RENTS AND BILLS COLLECTED.AGENTS HAZELWOOD CO.,

of Portland, Ore.OCCIDENTAL OIL CO., of

West Virginia.

Office No. Stangenwald building,Honolul ". P. 667.

JAPANESE TEA GARDEN.

Japanese Garden at PacificHeights Is now opened to the public.In modern style.

This cut represents a SURREY. This vehicle thhighest type of the ablll ty. There Is not a surrey In town tosurpass It.

We have the finest stock of surrlcs In this city and prices lowest.A cordial Invitation Is extended to visit the largest and car-

riage repository in Honolulu.

F.Merchant Street, next to Building.

beat a

a

NEAR

WallPaper

VARIETY

AT BEAL'Sto show

Bet. mid

Main S38 O. Box 838

AGENTS.

CREAM

AGENTS

S07

H. O. Box

The Tea

our are

IN

P,

Queen HotelRestaurant

There you will find more good thingsthan In any other restaurant. Theplace Is under new management andwe positively give the best meals Intown from 25 cents up. A trial willconvince.

G. TUBOI, PROPRIETOR.

GERMANIA SALOONC. WESSELS AND A. BECKER

Proprietors.004 Queen Street cor South.Headquarters for Honolulu Prlmo

Beer, in bottles and on draught. Al-ways Ice Cold. We can give you iebest glass of beer In town.

TEN CENTS A SCHOONER.

Plumbing and Sewering

Small Jobs and LargeSolicited by

Bailey's Plumbing Shop

' 165 KING STREET

lit). LTjgf J

.AGENTSFOR

'SALE OF REAL ESTATEF. J. LC .LEY. President.A. B. WOOD,J. A. GILM Secretary --ad Treas

urer.F. J. AMWEG. Auditor.CHAS. H. G1LMAN. Manager.

SANITARY

Steam LaundryCO,, LTD

Great ReductionIn Prices

Having made large additions to ourmachinery, we are now able to laun-der SPREADS, SHEETS, PILLOW-SLIPS, TABLE CLOTH" TABLENAPKINS, and TOWELS at the rateof 25 cents per DOZEN, CASH. Satls-tucto- ry

work and prompt deliveryguaranteed. No "ear of clothing beinglost from strikes, we Invite Inspectionof our laundry and methods at anytime during business hours.

Iiing up Main 78, andOur Wiigons will CallFor Tour W ork

Hawaiian CuriosKapa, Calabashes. Leis, NativeHats, Hula Skirts, 1 llhau Mats,Fans, Shells, Seeds, Etc.. Etc. Ha-waiian Stamps and Homo made PolConstantly on Hand at

WOMEN'S EXCHANGE314 FORT ST. HONOLULU H. T

IAND

Prim LagerHome...Production

IT HAVE 10 FORTIFY

Draughtand Bottled BeerDelivered on and afterMonday, July 1, 1901

,. TELEPHONE MAIN 341 ..

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

THE IMMEDIATE CAUSE IS UN- - DISCUSSION OF THE PRESENTDETERMINAHLE. METHODS. J

Who Contributing Coubcs Were Cardiac'Mitral Insulllelenoy Associated withChronic Nephritis No Foul Piny.

The cause of death of George Freeman has now been ofliclally formulatedand made a matter of recoid In theBoard of Health oillce. Yesterday af-ternoon Dr. J. T. McDonald completedthe transcription and copying of hisnotes of the autopsy and Hied it withthe Board of Health. Up t.j the i'ii.othis was done there was no oillclal re-cord of the cause of deith.

After a very careful statement ofwhat the autopsy Jlsjloid as to liecondition of the body and 'is various organs the final conclusion of tin nutuutfyis given. Of the heart Dr. McDonuldsays:

"No pericardial effusion; organ rather'small for size of subject; pulmonaryartery and valves healthy, the formerempty; right ventricle and auricle con-tain small amounts of white and blackclot; tricuspid normal, hypertrophy ofleft ventricle; mitral valve thickened Inpatches; chordae tendlneae unusuallyshort and mitral believed to havo beenincompetent; no clots in left i.eart;aortic arch healthy; aortic semilunarsslightly thickened, endocardium healthymyocardium normal color."

In conclusion Dr. McDonald says: I

. "Dr. Shorey reports that tne urlnocontains a considerable percentage ofalbumen and also a trace of morphine.The contents of the stomach measuredthree and a half fluid ounces made upof partially digested food with gastricjuice containing a considerable per-centage of alcohol undetermined as toform In which It was ingested. i

"While the Immediate cause of deathIs undeterminable, the contrlbutiugcauses were In my opinion, cardiacmitral insufficiency associated withchronic nephritis; there being no evi-dence of foul play or violence, and theamount of morphine not being In suill- -.

clent quantity to cause death."Just before The Star went to press

yesterday Inquiry was made at thfeBoard of Health at to the cause ofFreeman's death. The r.?nly to the In-

quiry was that It was not '.fnown as theautopsy physician had not vet niadohis report. On this reply it was statedIn The Star yesterday that the causeof death was not known. Dr. Prattstated at the office of The star as laioas 2 o'clock that this autopsy reporthad not been filed and until it was hecould not state the cause of death.

But today In a letter to Deputy HighSheriff Chlllingworth Dr. Pratt seeks tomake It appear that The Star mlstatedIn this respect yesterday. At the timeThe Star made the statement yesterdaythat no cause of death had been assign-ed such was the fact according to Dr.Pratt's own statement. The autopsyreport was filed soon afterwards sothat it Is now true as Dr. Pratt says inhis letter to Chlllingworth that lie hasreceived the autopsy report,

f It Is in the light of these facts tnatthe following letter should be read: j

EDITOR STAR: In your Issue ofyesterday, the coroner Is vigorouslyattacked for not holding an Inquest onthe body of George Freeman, who diedat Walklki last Saturday afternoon. ,

In defense I desire to say that accord- -'

lng to Session Laws 1898. Act 9 It iediscretionary with the coroner In allcases of sudden death, unattended byany susnicfoua circumstances, whetherto hold an Inquest or not.

In the case of George Freeman, hewas seen by three reliable witnesses towalk Into the water and fall, the waterwhere he fell being about six Inchesdeep! He was Immediately taken outof the water and every means possible '

i used to revive him. After being givenup by the doctors and pronounced dead,the body was taken to the morgue,posted and heart disease announced asthe cause of death. With these factsbefore him, the coroner very properlyexercised the discretion allowed him bylaw and decided that an inquest wasnot necessary.

The law does not require, as onewould infer from your article vester-da- y,

that an Inquest be held In everycase of unattended death. Many deathsoccur where an Investigation by thecoroner and a post mortem ty theBoard of Health Is had without an In-

quest being held.It was stated by you yesterday that

no cause of death was on record at theBoard of Health office, this I nm In-

formed by Dr. Pratt Is absolutely falseand at my request he has written the'following: I

Deputy High Sheriff rhtllincworth.City. Sir: In regard to the death ofone, George Freeman, who died sud- -denly at Walklki last Saturday, I wouldstate that I have received from Dr. J.T. McDonald, bacteiiologlst of the Boardof Health the following report us theresult of his post mortem Investigationsand ulso the report of Dr. Shorey:"While the immediate cause of death ifundeterminable the contributing causeswere in my opinion cardiac mitral In-

sufficiency associated with chronic ne-

phritis there being no suspicion of foulplay or violence and the amount ofmorphine not being In sufficient quan-tity to cause death."

Respectfully yours,(Signed) J. D. B. PRATT.

Executive Officer.It' is the duty of the coroner to en-

force the laW as laid down In the sta-tute books, and for him to hold un In-

quest In a case not contemplated by thelaw and Incur the expense Incidentthereto, would be. as grave a wromr asIf he failed to hold un Inquest In casecontemplated by the law.

A. M. BROWN.Honolulu, August 14.

Foreman McGllvary, at the Youngbuilding admitted yesterday that Free-man was under the lnlluence of liquorwhen he went Into the water. "Murryand I were at the beach and met Free-man at the Annex. He borrowed a dol-

lar from me, saying he wanted to go Inswimming. I noticed at the time thathe was under the Inlluenco of liquor,but as I had often seen him that waybefore I thought very little of It. I donot know what ho had been drinking.I do know, however, thut ho was In thehabit of drinking both hard liquors andbeer,"

The remains of Freeman were burledby, his fellow workmen on the Youngbuilding. A fund was raised by sub-scription among them. Thomas Murray,one of the foremen, had charge of thearrangements and settled with the un-dertaker. All of the stone masons inFreeman's gang, except McOllvery, at-tended the funeral.

BOSTON HAS A FLING.An Egyptian bout recently dug out

of the bed of 'the Nile and said to be4000 years old has Just been brought toNew York, This Is somewhat olderthat the ferryboats now In use In thatcity. Boston Herald.

A Surprising Volume by a Naval omcet Points Out the Evils and Howto llotnedy Them,

It Is not from out naval commandersthat we oiuuiuiiiy luoic lor uisousslons1 mating to tue governmental byslem ofthe countt y; anu nonce a pumpuict cs-s-

by Uuptuin l E. Cnudwiok, com-munui-

tue cruiser New York in tnebpunisn-Amerlca- n war, on tne evil ol'cuiigiessiuuul legislation by numeious

committees, at once arrestsattention. Captain Chaidwlck was forsome years our nuVul uttacfie ut Lon-don, and he has also been on duty atWashington, and tne opportunity of ob-serving tne computative merits of theEnglish and American legislative pro-cedu- ie

has been unproved uy him. ,

The result Is not favorable to thoexisting home methods. The great evilof present congiessional procedure isthe almost entile luck of legislative res.ponsibillty which has developed. Allbills brought Into either brunch ofCongress are given over to numerouscommittees, acting at cross purposes,and made up of members of all parties.The committees deliberate In secret,and the Congress possesses little com-mand over them, while the speaker oftho House exercises practically an ab-solute command, and becomes thowhole government In Its legislative as-pect, without being known or recogniz-ed as such and hence, as CaptainChadwick says, we have autocraticgovernment without any correspondingresponsibility.

This evil has been recognized by pub-licists and statesmen, but It has no-where In the opinion of Chief JusticeNott of the United States court ofclaims, been better comprehended andstated than in Miss M. P. Follett's book"The Speaker of tho House of Repre-sentatives," wherein it Is said:

Thus legislation rests with the committee; they may Initiate what theyplease; they may stllle any measureswhich have not their approval; the rulethat no bill shall be discussed withoutbeing reported by a committee mlgntalmost as w8ll read, "Without being ap-proved by a commltte." Thre arc threepractices, moreover, which greatly In-crease the power of the committeesthe privacy of their proceedings, the ab-sence of any definite responsibility, andtho lack of united responsible opposi-tion. These bodies discuss with closeddoors; ordinarily, tho country knowslittle or nothing of their dellbratlon; Instrict parliamentary practice, no mem-ber Is permitted to allude In the Houseto anything that has taken place incommittee. The House finds that Itmust follow tho committees or do noth-ing. Logrolling, lobbying and a generallaxity aro thus mada possible by thecommittees.

Moreover, related matters are hand-led by dilferent committee. The com-mittee on ways and means attends torevenue bills, and other committee toexpenditures bills; while In England theministry, practically a committee nam-ed by the House of Commons, dealswith both revenue and expenditure intho annuul budget, und accordinglydeals with the finances Intelligently andas a closely related whole.

Cuptuin Chadwlck's remedy Is a sim-ple one, and lying wholly within thopower of the House or the speaker toadopt. It is not without support amongwriters on American constitution andgovernment:

Firstly, to form all committees whichmay be regarded us political commit-tees from the majority only. By tneterm political committees Is meantthose which Bhape administration, asthe committees on appropriations, waysand means; the mlutuiy, naval und in-terstate and foreign commerce commit-tees; those on reform In the civil ser-vice, rivers and harbors, rules and ter-ritories. The effect of this would cer-tainly bo to give a real party responsi-bility to the pai'ty In power, cause unopposition to organize, and thus pro-duce a return to open debate und publicdiscussion. This can be done withoutuny constitutional amendment or evenchange of rules; It rests with the speak-er alone.

And the speaker's office might thereby be reduced more nearly Its pro-per "functions those of an Impartialpresiding officer or moderator. CaptainChadwick further says:

If the committees on appropriations,and on ways and means were unitedand made up wholly of the prevailingpaity, it would with its power to raisemoney una with the general controlwhich it should have of bills for ex-penditure drafted by other committeesns those of rivers and harbors, publicbuilding und grounds, etc., be uble tocontrol tint national expenditures. Thepaity In power would thus becomewholly responsible for the means ofraising money and Tor the money itspenus; for the things it does and thethings It falls to do. And If to thiscommittee were added the committeeon rules the new committee would be-come u great steering committee, tak-ing also the pluce of tne party caucus,und we should have In this a body ofmen unable at least to shift responsi-bility either In Congress or before thecountry; and this responsibility wouldfinally attach to the party to which Itbelonged with a weight-no- almost al-together wanting.

An alternative plan Is suggested, re-quiring a constitutional amen-lment- . bywhich the president would bo enabledand required to appoint t'.u se.iretaiienand UBslstant secretaries of the execu-tive departments from members ofCongress, who would retain thslr seatsIn Congress and thus bring C.mgressdirectly Into touch with tho who! busi-ness of the government inl Its needs.This Is equivalent to theplan of giving cabltnt minister's seatsand a voice In Coag?iis.

The Idea of a grand goneial com-mittee, composed wholly of nvmb-t- s ofthe majority party, and having nil mat-ters of revenue and expenditure under1Its charge, whose budget repir'a wouMfall under tho review of an oppositionmoro compact and effijtUe from notbeing mixed up In the preliminary de-liberations or format.vo work of com-mittee, Is attractive and worthy of pub-lic attention. It contains the possibili-ties of effecting a decided ImprovementIn the way of coherency and responsi-bility In federal legislation. SpringfieldRepublican.

AMERICA'S PREMIER ARMY.One thousand American school-teache- rs

are wanted In the Philippines. The?will constitute the finest army yet sentto our new possessions. St. Louis Re-public.

CHANCE FOR E. P., MAYBE.Attorney generalships, are coming to

bo considered as stepping stones togubernatorial honors. Attornoy Gener-al Montnguo of Virginia will probablysucceed Governor Tyler nnd AttorneyGenerul Elkln of Pennsylvania expectsto succeed Governor Stone. Washing-ton star. luitunr

"No womnn has a right to go througtthor husband's pockets any mora thaa husband has uny right to go throughhis wife's pockotR," said Miu'IstrnUCrane In the Yorkvlllo court today indeciding a case In which Kolma ltelchartof 20SEnst Eighty-fourt- h Btreet haftbeen arrested on complaint of her hufl- -,band, Ernest, ltclehcrt Is n Bhoemaknat 762 Third avenue. Ho claimed hitwife had stolen J 57 ar.J some privatepapers from his coal. She admittedtaking the papers, but denied gettingthe money.

"Your honor," said Lawyer Levy, "Xnever heard of such a thin' ns a womanbeing arrested for going through hrhusband's pockets. A woman haaevery right to do such a thing."

"I don't agree with you," said Ma-gistrate Crane. "No woman has thlaright.

Magistrate Crane discharged Mrs.Relchert nnd directed Rclchert to payhis wife $7 for tho past week, whichhe did.

Magistrate Crano said later: "Mywife never --oes through my pocketsand 1 never go through hers." drre--spondence Chicago Record-Heral- d.

RUSSIAN DIPLOMACY.Russian diplomacy would be moro

fitly symbolized by the Image of a foi?than of a bear. Washington Star,

j HONOLULU STOCK EXCHANGE".Quotations. Bid. Askedi.

C. Brewer & Co $ J425.0ON. S. Sachs' 100. 00L. B. Kerr & Co 41.00Ewa 24.60 21.875Hawaiian Agricultural 305. QOi

Hawaiian Commercial 52.30Hawaiian Sugar 31.23 33.0OHonomu 137.60Honokaa 16.50Haiku 225.00Kahuku 20.00 2.1.0ftKihei 11.0ftKoloa 170.00McBryde, asscssablo 8.00McBryde, paid up 11. 00Oahu 132. GO

Ookala 12. CO 13. BO

Olaa, assessable , 3.00Olaa, paid up la.OOOlowalu 145.Q0)Pepeekco 175. 0C1

Pioneer Mill 100. 0OPioneer, assessable 25.00Walalua 70.00 77.00Walluku '. 3C0.0OWilder Steamship 100. 00Inter-Islan- d 100. 0OHawaiian Electric 105.00Oahu Railway Stock 100. 00People's Ice 85. OfFirst National Bank 110.001st Am. Savings Bank 102.0O.Hllo R. R. 6's Puna Dlv 100.00Rapid Transit 6's 100.00Ewa 6's 101.50Onhu Railway Bonds ... 105.00Oahu 6's ." 100. 50 102.50Walalua 6's 101.00

Wlllard E. Brown Frank Ualstcad

HALSTEAD& CO

Stock andBond Brokers

Money Rdwpnce onSugar Securities

921 Fort StreetTolophono Main 133

NEV ADVERTISED Els Tts

LOST.

A package of papers containing iab-scrlpu- on

list and receipts of the Salva-tion Army Rescue Home. Finder winbe rewurded by leaving tho same atthis office.

Ilnwaiian Lodgo No. 21,F. Si A. M.

There will bo a special meet-- .

I F. & A. M.. at Its hall. Mason.In Templf. corner of Hotel and Alaketxstreets THIS (WEDNESDAY) EVEN-ING, August l. at 7:30 o'clock.

WORK IN THIRD DEGREE.Members of Pacific Lodge, Lodge L

Progres, and all sojourning brethrenaro fraternally Invited to bo present.By order of tho W. M.

K. R. G. WALLACE,Secretary.

BY AUTHORITYSEALED TENDERS.

Will bo received nt the office of thoSuperintendent of Public Works till 12o'clock noon of August 20th, 1901, fortho placing a concrete floor In DiamondHead Reservoir, the construction andpainting of roof, constructing a spill-way and such grading na may be spe-cified.

Plans and specifications on file inoffice of Superintendent of PublloWorks. All bids to bo accompanied;with a certified check for $500.00 madapuyablo to the Superintendent of Pub-lic Works. Conditioned that If the pro-posal bo accepted and contract award-ed, and If bidder shall fall or neglectto execute the contract, and give bondrequired within six days, after awardshall havo been made, such check shallbo deemed liquidated damages for sucUfailure or neglect, and shall bo deposit-ed to the credit of Government Realiza-tion Fund.

The Superintendent of Public Workareserves the right to reject any or allbids.

(Signed) JAH. II. BOYD,Superintendent of Publlo WorUs.

August 13th, 1901.

Page 6: III HE f IK I illII - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · ir yon want to--The lltnrnllan Star day's News, lotlay Is the nnpnr that yon can llnil It In goes into the best THE STi.lt

'BIX.

A Summer Proposition.Well, now there's the

fCE QUESTION!Tou know you'll need Ice; you know

ts a necefwlty In hot weather. WoIxfUere you are anxious to got that Icewhlch will Rive you satisfaction, nndwe'd like to supply you. Ordor from

IDE 01 ICE 8 EMC CO.,

HOFFMANN AND MAHKIIAM.

Telephone 3151 DIuo, Postofllco Box 606

in .

OF AXsXs

KINDS

Clothes, Work,

liimch and

Fancy Baskets

AT

o4 12UI

10 FORT STREET

AB SOP,SSInc Street, Territorial Stables Block.

Dealer Infamily Groceries, Tobacco, Cigars,

Island Butter, California andIsland Fruits.

'Orders delivered to any part of the City

&, IRIIH & CO., LTD.,

'Tm. G. Irwin. .President and Manager'Claus Spreckels... First Vice-Preside- nt

"W. M. Glffard.... Second Vice-Preside- nt

'31. M. Whitney, Jr..Sec'y and Treasurer'Geo. J. Itoss Auditor

Sugar Factors,Commission Agents

AGENTS OF THE

.hcemic mmm complyOF SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.

Telephone Main 82. P. O. Box SC6.

Y.SUGASHOTEN,IMPORTER OF

AND

fQUEEN AND ALAKEA STREETS.

mm mm up to date

HART & CO.,

HONOLULU

HIE ICE HI PARLORS

Oriental GoodsXIJBW IMPORTATION OF Silkoiki. In the piece; Silk Handkerchiefs;

'tSUr. Shawls; Decorated riower Pots;trw Porcelain Cups and Saucers; Tea

Dinner SetB; Carved Ivory; Rattan"Stall; Carved Sandalwood Boxes.

Goods are tho HandsomestIn all Honolulu

WING WO CHAN & CO.'210-21- 2 Nuuanu Street.

Q. W. McChosnoy & Sons.

Ttariesnle Grncorn nnd Dealers 1b

leather and Shoo Findings.

sicata Honolulu Soap Works Companyand Honolulu Tannery.

OMPORTER ANDDEALER IN

IilQTJORS,Japanese Provisions.

General Merchandise.UXS) PLANTATION SUPPLIES.

WO. HOTEL STREET, HONOLULU.Telephone White S4H.P. O. Box 90S.

If you dioji ruling youwill Mirely K1'1 llilnnrnnri tliuiiii't'. until nt iMtji "Manft'iiletUli. Gnu

wen I answer, althoughIt l.i piod for tlio home.1"dU must luivo n fondsuitnblo to your needs.

Ayer's

Hair Vigor

Is n hair food. Itwon't tako thoplaco of grass orbread. It Is goodfor tho hair, andthat is nil. Itfeeds tho hair

with hair food. Thomm hair can't keep fromgrowing. It stops

falllnc out because, it ishoarty and strong. AndIt always restores tho early

rich, dark color to gray hair."Wo say that "gray hair Is starved

hair"; and tho only way to treat It Isto supply tho best kind of hair food.This is whoro Ayer's Hair Vigordiffcrsso greatly from other hair preparations;it feeds tho hair. Just keep that inmiud all tho time you aro using it.

Prepare! by Dr. J. C. Acr Co.. Lowell. Mass., U. S. A.

I I

S ile Agents for Chartspublished by the U. S.

Coast and GeodeticSurv. y and the U. S.Hydrographic Office,

Washington, D. C.

We HaveDAINTY GRASS CLOTH,SILK GOODS, SILK KIMONOSEMBROIDERED CENTERPIECES, SILVER VASES,LACQUER and CHINA WARE,"Toys, silk flags pFEVERY NATIONALITY FANSWITH HAWAIIAN VIEWS,BEAUTIFUL SCREENS,DRESSING GOWNS FOR LA-

DIES OR GENTLEMENETC., ETC.

Remember It Is no trouble'for us to show Goods

ASADA Ss CO..ROBINSON BLOCK.NUMBER 141,

HOTEL STREET.

S. SHIMAMOTO,Merchant Street - - Honolulu, T. H

General flerchandise,Dry Goods, Groceries,Japanese Provisions,Etc., etc., etc.

. O. Box 88. Telephone tit

Wm. G. Irwin &Go., Ltd,FIRE AND MARINEINSURANCE AGENTS

AGENTS FOR THEScottish Union National Insuranc.

Company of Edinburgh,Wllhelma of Magdeburg General Insur

ance Company,Associated Assurance Co., Ltd., of Mu

nlch and Berlin.Alliance Marine and General ABBurani

Co., Ltd., of London,Royal Insumnce Company of LlveryoolAlliance Assurance Company of .on- -

don.

L. KONG FEE,IVIor-olarxn-t Tailor,

1262 Nuuanu StreetFashionable Suits at Reasonable

Rates a Specialty. A full line of Casslmeres and Tailoring Goods always InStock. Dyeing, Cleaning and Repair-ing at Short Notice. Satisfactionguaranteed.

10

fllll HAWAIIAN STAR, UHittfiMDAY, AtfOUBT 14, 1901.

111 PR

PLANS Kim IllCPfULIi AN OHOANI-HATIO-

Lack of Such Organization Held to

lli.ve Onused the Defeat Lust Time.Home Hult) Amalgamation,

Tlie proposition of calling n meetingof the Republican Territorial Centralcommittee to prepare for organizationof the party throughout tho Territory,to be ready for the next campaign, hasbeen Informally discussed of late amongmembers of the committee. Some ofthem want to begin work, nnd It Isquite likely that n meeting will be helduorore long. Secretary E. R. Hendrythis morning stated thnt no meetinghad been called, but that ho had heardtho subject talked of.

"If we had had an organization onKauai we should have won last time,"said Hendry, "or If we had i.nd a pro-per organization on Hawaii. It Is re-cognized all ovec America that victorygoes to the best organization, in manylights, and Hawaii Is sadly lacking inorganization now."

It Is proposed to form Republicanclubs In all the precincts of the Islands.The clubs would be to some extent under the central committee, nil formingone organization. They would report tothe central committee, aiiu In this way,the latter committee would have nccu-- 1rate Information to work upon. Oneclub for each political district precinct,is talked of.

The central committee has other mat- -'ters to consider besides the desired or--1gnnizatlon. It Is understood that themembers expect to consider the matterof the proposed amalgamation with"Home Rule Republicans," as well asother matters of Interest within the1party. The only matter, however,which is pressed for immediate con-sideration, is that of organization. It j

Is thought by some of the committeethat If the movement is begun now,much can be done .o secure large mem-- ,bershlp and add to Renubllcan chancesof success, between now and the nextelection.

TROUBLE AT WAIPAHU.At Walnnhu Inst nlrrhf Sn lro ,,,! i

Japanese went Into a Chinese restau-rant and was served with soup. Order-ing a second plate, for aomi re.ison therestaurateur refused to serve It. Analtercation ensued culminating In a!light In which the friends of the Chl'iu-ma- n

came to Ids aid and Sakfir.Mn '

drew a knife with which he indictedsome cuts on the Chinmnn s arms. De-puty Sheriff John Fernand-J- s arrestedSakaroda and put him In ihe Ewa jail.

ILLUSTRATED LECTURE.J. W. Erwin Assistant General Sup-

erintendent of Free Delivery will givea lantern slide entertainment at theHawaiian Hotel grounds this evening.He will speak of "The Lands of theJap, the Chino and the Filipino," allof which he has visited. He has about150 excellent slides giving selected viewsof these countries all taken by hims- .

Mr. Erwln Is president of the Califor-nia Camera Club of San Francisco anda most pleasant and entertalnlm?speaker. Just before coming here hegave an Illustrated lecture at Metropoli-tan Temple San Francisco to a housethat crowded that large building. Thehotel management extends a cordial In-

vitation to hear Mr. Erwin and see hissplendid views.

CERTAINLY IS A AVONDER.

A Coon With Two Sets of Legs andArms.

Physicians in Alabama are takingmuch Interest in the case of the four- -legged child to whom Mary Maddox anegress, gave birth at Onellka on May24. The baby is a well developed malechild.

One pair of legs are In the ordinaryposition, and, like the arms, are wellformed. The extra pair of legs are nearthe arms, and while quite well formed,are small. The feet on the extra legsare regularly formed, vi ith toes and toe-nails, but have the apnearance of be-longing to a sickly child. Tho child isrobust and healthy, with all the facul-ties of an ordinary child.

The child has been examined by lead-ing physicians of the state and pro-nounced healthy In everything exceptthe extra pair of limbs. He has gooduse of his regular limbs, but seems un-able to control the others. The physi-cians, after a careful exai lnation, saidthat if the child lives, which seems al-together probable at this time, he willeventually get control ur them, as thereare about the same muscles and liga-ments In them that are found In a cubbear of the same age.

Thousands of people have gone toOpellka to view the freak of whom theparents seem to be very fond.

Several theories are advanced to ac-count for this monstrosity. One of themIs that the mother was frightened by agreat black bear durln" the street fairin Opellka last fall. Dr. Williamson, astrong believer in the Darwinian theorydeclares that the case is simply a re-trogression of mankind a step back- -

that the human race came from thomonkey family.

Tlie features of the child are regular.They are those of the typical Africanwith the large mouth, Tat nose andkinky hair.

Alreadv the father of the child, JohnMaddox, is arranging to place him onexhibition, believimr that .he has thegreatest human curiosity ever producedHe is awaiting the highest bidder, andas soon as the child nnd mother nrastrong enough they will take to thoroad. New York Sun.

A NATURAL THOUGHT.It would have been a great thing for

Mr. McKlnley If he had postponed thepresent summer until the next admin-istration.

A MINISTER'S GOOD WORK."I had a severe attack of bilious colic,

got a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic,Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, tooktwo doses and was entirely cured,"says Rev. A. A. Power, of Emporia,Kan. "My neighbor across the streetwas sick for over a week, had two .orthree bottles of medicine from tho doc-tor. He used them for three or fourdays without relief, then called In an-other doctor who treated him for somidays and gave him no relief, -- - dis-charged him. I went over to see himthe next morning. He said his bowelswere In a terrible ix, that they hadbeen running off so long that it wasalmost bloody flux. I asked him If hehad tried Chamberlain's Colic, Choleraand Diarrhoea Remedy and he said,'No.' I went home and brought himmy bottle and gave him one dose; toldhim to take another dose In fifteen ortwenty minutes If he did not find re-lief, but he took no more'and was en-tirely cured. I think It the best medi-cine I have ever tried." For sale byall dealers. Benson, Smith & Co., gen-eral agents, Hawaiian Islands.

MUTUOItOLOOIOAI. SUMMARY.

Wenthrr L'omtlllmiH for the Month ofJuly.

Temperature menu for (he month.77. I'liliienlielt; normal, 77.3, averagedally maximum, SO; average dallyminimum, 71.7; average dally range,11.2: greatest dully range 18 degrees;least dally range, 7 degrees; highesttemperature, 80 degrees; lowest, 6?.

nitrometer avuingc, 29.96'J; normalao.'JM; (corrected for gravity by .06);highest, SO.UU on the luth; lowest, ll'J.88on the 21th; greatest change.b'X On account of the evenness ofpressure "lows" nnd "highs" werehardly distinguishable; low pressuremay be noted on the 4th nnd 24th, nndhigh on tho 11th and lUth. The baro-meter has now been below tho normalfor four mouths in succession.

Relative humidity, CS; normal, 66.8;mean dew-poin- t, 66.2; normal, 65.1;mean absolute moisture, 7.07 grains tothe cubic foot; normal, 6.81.

Rainfall, 1.53 Inches; normal, 1.80;rain record dnys, 25; normal, 19; great-est rainfall In one day, 0.42 on the 6th,total at Luakaha, 8,75; at KaplolunlPark, 1.10; at Kallhi-uk- a, 2.60 Inchesfell on the 6th. Total rainfall sinceJanuai 1st 22.94 Inches; normal, 20.62.

The artesian well water stood nt 33.40feet above standard mean sea level thismonth at the Punahou well.

The average mean sea-lev- el for themonth stood at 10.42 feet above an as-sumed base, 9.00 being hydrographiczero (low water), and 10.00 stahdardmean sea-leve- l.

Trade-win- d days, 30, (1 of NNE); nor-m- nl

for July, 29; average force, Beaufort seule, 2.7, (16 statute miles perhour). Cloudiness, tenths of sky, 4.4;normal, 4.0. Upper currents of airmostly from S. W.

Percentages of district rainfall nscompared with normal, Hllo, 40 percent; Hamukua, 17; Kohala, 20; Wal-me- a,

14; Kona 125; Knu, 50; Puna, ;

Maul, probably 100; Oahu, 100; Kauai,250 to 320. The lack of water in NorthHawaii Is quite serious.

Mean temperature, Pepeekeo. Hllodistrict, 100 feet elevation, average max-imum, 78.6; average minimum, 69.3;Wnlmea, Hawaii, 2730 elevation, 77.8nnd 65.9; Kohala 521 elevation, 80.9 and71.5; Ewa Mill, Oahu, 60 elevation ;

Kulnokahua, W. R. Castle's; 60 feet ele-vation, highest 87; lowest 68, average,77.9. The prevailing heat of the north-ern hemisphere has not affected theseIslands.

No earthquake reported. It is un-officially reported that Kllauea showsfire through Its floor. Thunder andlightning on Hawaii, 18; on Oahu 19th.Snow fell on Mauna Kea, 18th. Heavyswell on the 3rd; 9th to 14th, and onthe 29th.

The high average level of the sea for !

the months of June and July has at-- '

tracted some attention; It Is doubtlessdue to meteorological conditions, per-haps in the South Pacific.

CURTIS J. LYONS,Territorial Meteorologist.

THOSE VIRGINIA RATTLERS.Some of the spectators said the West

Virginia rattlesnake which boarded amountain train was 13 feet long and 25

inches around. As the snake was foundon the Dry Fork the story must betaken. But wait until the Whlskv Runsnakes start to hold up trains. Pitts-burg Times.

ChicagoIn Less Than

3 DaysSanFrancisco at 10 a. Ill

CHICAGO, UNION PACIFIC

& NORTHWESTLRN LINE

Double Drawlng-Roo- m SleepingCars, Buffet, Smoking and LibraryCars, with barber. Dining Cars-m- eals

a la carte. Dally TouristCar Service and Personally Con-ducted Excursions every week fromSan Francisco at 6 p. m. The bestof everything.

R. R. Ritchie,Gen. Agent Pacific Coast

San Francisco.617 Market Street.

Palace Hotel.

Ihe Villa Nova SaloonQUEEN STREETOPPOSITE SOUTH

Keeps the

Honolulu Primo BeerAlways on Tap andin bottles.

10 CENTS A SCHOONER

.. Also Soft Drinks and Cigars..

W.V.V.'.V.V.V.V.SV.'.W.Vi

The Globe

Do not forget to call on TheGlobe If you want to save moneyIn buying clothing, furnishinggoods, hats, shoes and trunks.

Our departments are mpletowith tho latest of patterns andprices to suit the times.

The Globe, 64 Hotel street, ng

New England Bakery.

The GlobeHOTEL STREET ADJOINING THE

NEW ENGLAND BAKERY.

VWAVAV.W.V.VAWWAiFine Job Printing, Star Office.

;

:::

.

.::.

a

..:..

?!

.o

.o.i."?

i?VTi? 'a. .. r'.7if

JUST DECEIVED

1901 Cleveland andJuvenile Bicycles

Per S. S. Sierra

We aro handling our Wholesaleand Plantation business at ourWarehouse on Allen Streat.

E. 0. HALL & SON, LTDTemporary Offices andBicycle Department overHawaiian Trust Co., Fort Stroet

Warehouse Tot. JVtctltx ITOffice Tel. Main' ""?;".'.

PURE GROCERIESThe starting point on the road to health ls-- t your grocers. It'sImportant to know that what y ou get Is pure, clean and

Here's a list of some of our recently

FRfcSH CANNED GOODSBartlett PearsClingstone and Freestone PeachesRoyal Anne, AVhite and Black CherriesGrated Hawaiian Pineapples, In cansSliced Hawaiian Pineapples, In cans

Our goods are the kind that make your meals attractive. You take nochances in buying here, for everything we sell Is right. Our roods will pleasethe palate, and build and maintain the strength.

MAY WE SERVE

mnBoston Block, Fort Street,

IP. O. Box, 388

RECEIVED EX

A large line of ready made cloth-

ing; also an assortment of golfshirts, the latest patterns and aline of black silk vest belts.

14 Hotel Street

New Store

P. O. Box 903. Tel. Main 3351.

Ko ODO,35 Hotel Street.

IMPORTER OF

Japanese ProvisionsAND

General Merchandise

PLANTATION SUPPLIES.

I BREWER & CO,, LIMITED,

QUEEN STREET,HONOLULU, H. T.

AGENTS FOR

Hawaiian Agricultural Company, Ono-m- ea

Sugar Company, Honomu SugarCompany, Wnlluku Sugar Company,Walhee Sugar Company, Makee SugarCompany, Haleakala Ranch Company,Kapapala Ranch.

Planters' Lino and Shipping Co.Charles Brewer & Co's Line of Boston

Packets.Agents Boston Board of Underwriters.Agents Philadelphia Board of Under-

writers.

LIST OF OFFICERS.C. M. COOKE PresidentGEORGE H. ROBERTSON,,., ManagerE. F. BISHOP Treasurer and Secty.COL. W. F. ALEN Auditor

Directors.P. C. JONES. H. WATERHOUSE,

GEORUE R. CARTER.

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

"::

IM:

:

arrived

PeasCornTomatoesAsparagusMushrooms, tins and jars

YOU TO-DA-

LTD

" SIERRA

near Nuuanu

New Goods

ietropolifian Mtai (So.LIMITED

Just received ex-Ell- Thompsonfrom Seattle a shipment of Choice beef,Veal, Mutton, Lamb, and Pork, alsoPoultry, Salmon and Halibut.

FOR SALE AT

Metropolitan Market Co., KingStreet, Telephone 45.

The Booth, FIsli market, Tele-phone 879

Central Market, Nuuanu Street,Telephone 140.

WILDER COMPANY

Established in 1872.

IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN

LUMBER AND COAL

Building MaterialsSUCH AS

DOORS, SASU, BLINDS,

Builders' HardwareFaints, Oils, Glass,

Wall Paper, Etc.

Cor. Fort and Queen StreetsHONOLULU, M. L

Page 7: III HE f IK I illII - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · ir yon want to--The lltnrnllan Star day's News, lotlay Is the nnpnr that yon can llnil It In goes into the best THE STi.lt

" Canadian Oltalb"

Is distillled with it, not added aHorwnrd, nndlvntir ennnot wash it out. A lJiuh Itall mndofrom "Cnnndinn Club" Is an oxtoiiHion, notan extinction, of the jicrl'cct qualities whichhnre mudo "Canndinn Club" ho populnr withconnoisseurs

Etctv liolllo near over the cnpsnla an ofllclnl Ktninitof tho Cnnndinn GoTcrnincnt guaranteeing ago nnugenuineness.

Who will do it?Tou are going to have your house

Papered, Painted or Decorated.Who's going to do It?ila one does or can do better work

than we. Investigation proves that(w do a r-- d.

All we ask f r It Is a fair .price-- not

high, not. low. Either extreme IsBangerous.

Xny one who gives us work gets thebest going at the fairest and equarestprice.

. THEJSTERLING,Office: Union Street, opp. Bell Tower.

Jas. F. Morgan PresidentCecil Brown Vice-Preside- nt

V. Hustace SecretaryChas. H. Atherton AuditorW. H. Hoogs....Treas. and Mgr.

TELEPHONE MAIN 295.

Husface&Go.,Lfds QUEEN STREET

I3V

Firewood, Stove,Steam and Blacksmith

CoalWHOLESALE AND RETAIL.

Special attention given toDRAYING

ALSO. WHITE AND BLACK SAND

e carry a full line of

Gent'sGoods

1181 STKLESIIN II HATS

Call and beConvinced

Wavorloy Block, Hotel Street

FROM MAUI!

Kahikinui MeatTRESH EVERY DAT.

FOR SALE AT THE

Fish Market, Stalls 1 9 and 20C. Q. TEE HOP & CO., Proprietors.

As soon as the new building is com-plet- ed

on the corner of Alakea and Ber-etan- ia

streets we will open a branchmarket.

YJBE WO,King Street, opposite Railway Depot

Has Opened aRESTAURANT ANDGROCERY STORE.

Island and California Fruits, CigarsBind x'obacco and California Potatoes.

WING LUNG,King Street, corner Alakea Street.

Fresh Salmon, Grapes, JtJears, ApplesOranges, Frozen Oysters, Prunes

and Lemons.Received by Sierra.

WING LUNG & FAT,CORNER VINEYARD ANDFORT STREETS.

Received per SierraV Frozen Oysters, Prunes,

Oranges, Pears and Peaches.

Fresh Island Butter and Kona Coffeealways on Hand,

"Goods delivered to all parts of the City.

Fine Book find Commercial Printing;at the Star Office.

H. & CO.- - & CO.- -

The Renovation 1

n of Rugs.Is a matter that will bear look-

ing1 Into In a dusty climate likeours where the sun is a dallyvisitor the best and most ex-pensiveo rugs fade, stain andV look shabby Let us doctor themfor you, we can restore to ...emmuch of their former glory.

1 LinoleumAlways useful for hall, kitchen

I or ofllce Use etc. Wears longestand cleans readiest. We have a

6 varied stock.u4 Mirrors

All sizes and, casting no reflec-tion on our competitors, the bestin the market.IA GENERAL STOCK OF FUR-NITUREo FOR ALL PURP ES.

u8 J. HOPP & CO.

KING BETHEL STREETSt 'Phone 111 Main.

J. H. & CO. J. H. & CO.

OurStoreHaving been inExistence for10 Years. WeWill hold a

Reduction SaleFOR

SO DAYSFROM DATE

All Goods will be Sold at15 per cent discount.

" Come Quick and Avoidthe Rush."

CHIYATelephone 3311 White.

Corner of Nuuanu and Hotel Streets.

The Yon Hamm-Youn- g Co., Ltd.,

Importers andCommissionMorchants

Queen Street, Honolulu

AGENTS FORThe Lancashire Insurance Co.The Balolse Insurance Co.Union Gas Engine Co.Domestic Sewing Machine, Etc.

ff. 6. IRWIN & GO.(Limited.)

AGENTS FORWestern Sugar Refining Company of

San Francisco, Cal.Baldwin Locomotive Works of

Fhlladelhpia, Penn.Kewell Nn'versal Mill Company

(National Cane Shredder),New York, U. S. A.

N. Ohlandt & Co.'s Chemical FertilizerHigh Grade Fertilizers for Cane and

Coffee.Alex. Cross & Son's High Grade Fer-

tilizers for Cane and Coffee,

field's Steam Pipe Cars.

Also Offer for SaleParaflne Paint Co.'s P. & B. Paints and

Papers.Lucol and Linseed Oils, raw and boiledIndurlne (a cold water paint) In white

and colors,niter Press Cloths, Cement, Lime and

Brick.

Note Heads, Bill Heads, Letter Headsand all kinds of Job and Commercialprinting neatly and promptly ezeoutedat tLe Star Office.

TUB HAWAIIAN BTAIt, WHDNH8DAY. AVOVAT U. 1001.

GRRDEH Our New PlantatioMANAGER WATT, OF

HOSE TALKS. I

m Mowers

Sprinklers

Grass CatchersIVcw Htoolc

FORT STREETEHLERS BUILDING

Hawaiian Brick

A first-clas- s article

which can be deliv-

ered as wanted, in

whole condition, at a

reasonable price.

Inspection invited.

EWERS I Ml lit.Stile Agents

WHS HICOMPANY

Freight andPassengers forIsland Ports

"The Crisis," by Winston Churchill."The South African War," Illustrated

by Capt. Mahan. U. S. N."The Helmet of "Navarre," by Bertha

Bunkle."Love Letters of Bismarck.""The Column," by Chas. Marrlatt."Henry Bourland," by A. E. Han-

cock."Power through Repose," by Call."Without a Warrant." by Brooks."The Puppet Crown," by Mac Graith."The Disciple," by Paul Bourget."The Inlander," by Harrison Robert-

son."The Successors of Mary lhe First," i

by Elizabeth Stuart Phelps."Miss Pritchard's Wedding Trip," by

Burnham.And many others Just as new can be

had at

I GOLDEN RULE Bffll316 FORT STREET.

(AROSE SHOTEH,1070 Alaa Street

NEW BY EVERY STEAMER.

P. O. Box 885. Tel. Blue 392.

H. W. BARTH,Successor to W. H. Barth and H. W.

Barth.

Honolnla Slieet Met 1 and Go:nicB forksGalvanized Iron Skylights and Ven-

tilators Metal Roofing. Conductor Plprand Gutter Work Jobbing Promptlyittended to.

ttefcard Street, between Queen an"Merchant, Honolulu.

fti mi ON H IllONOKAAl

1'lnntntlons Would Like More PortoMeans If They Could be Procured.Colonel Luke's Saliemc.

John Wntt, manager of Honoknaplantation, arrived in the city on theKu Au llou, and Is nt the Hawaiianhotel. Ho attended the meeting of bu-g-

planters of Hawaii held nt Hllo lustThursday. At that meeting only rou-tin- e

matters were considered. It wasexpected that some action In rogurd toPorto Rlcan laborers would bo taken,but Colonel Lake, one of the men Incharge of this class of immigration, didnot show up so that nothing wus done.

"From an Interview In the HawaiiHerald," says Mr. Watt, "we Imaginedthat Colonel Lake had called the meet-ing himself and was going to run it.But ho did not show up, so we had nochance to consider his labor scheme. Iunderstand that he proposes bringing Ina number of new Porto Hlcans and theplanters of Hawaii certainly wish himsuccess.

"Wu nre short of labor on Hawaii,though the consequences have not yetproved serious. Higher wages thanever before are being paid. Wages arehigher than they .were a year ago. Inthis respect Hawaii Is in much thesame boat as Maul and Oahu.

"Porto Ricans nre about like thePortuguese on first arrival. They havetheir faults, but are about the best ma-terial in sight. On Hawaii we could usoa number of them.

"The Honokaa Sugar Company hasnot suffered from the forest flro prevail-ing in the mountains of Hamakua. Wehave no forest prperty in that neighbor-hood. I understood Just before leavingHonokaa that the fire was still burning.In our own fire about fifteen acres ofcane were burned over but there wasno considerable lcis."

Mr. Watt Is accompanied by his wife.They will return home by the Klnaunext week.

II El 11 BUSINESS

BRITAIN'S CABLE, ACROSS THEPACIFIC.

Fear That the British Cable, if InOperation First, Will Get a LongStart in Competition.

The New York Tribune, long an earn-est advocate of an American transpa-cific cable, sees In the announcementthat the British cable will be complet-ed by the end of lltOi cause for seriousalarm, if England succeeds in thisenterprise, as Austen Chamberlainsays she will, the Tribune argues thather success will kill the American cableproject. There is business enough forone, but not for two, and the first in thefield for this business will be the gainer.The Tribune may be ultra-pesslmlst- ic

In nil of this, but there Is certainlycause for all America to feel humiliatedbecause of our dllatorlness.

A plain and simple transpacific cableproposition was before Congress lastsession. Tho enterprise was shown tobe a worthy one, but nothing wns done.We own a chain of IsUuhIb stretching'across the Pacific that would greatlyfacilitate and simplify the problem oflying the cable, but wo took no steps tomake use of them. Our Interests In thefar East commercial, diplomatic, civil,naval and military are now greaterthan those of any otner power, yetnothing was done to give us quick com-munication, via American media, withthe centers of these Interests. All thatIn spite of the fact that the annual tollspaid foreign companies on governmentcablegrams between Washington andManila would pay the Interest chargeson bonds covering the entire cost of anAmerican cable. It was truly a matterof regret that congress did not act atsuch an opportune moment.

England's announcement is mademore unpleasant by the fact that innearly every other line of human en-deavor we overshodow her and the re-mainder of the world. Our commercialtriumphs ure too well known to need re-countingIn this one enterprise only itseems that England has the best of us.Seems, we say, for we do not know howmuch of bravado there may be In tlieannouncement, it comes from n goodsource and seems creditable: the sameattributes characterize Kitchener's fre-quent "end of the war" announcements,The war goes on, and the British trans-pacific cable may bo equally long Inreaching Its completion. For that rea-son the Tribune's advice is commend-able: "If Americans acted In this mut-ter with the energy they have display-ed in some other things they might evenyet beat the British In the race."Baltimore American.

CONCERT TONIGHT.The .band will play nt Thomos square

this evening, presenting the followingnumbers;

PART I.Overture "Italian In Algiers".. RossiniFantasia "Autumn Leaves" CarlSongs--fa)

"Malkai Walplo."(b) "Muul 1 ka 01."

Miss I. Kelllna.(c) "Puu Ohulu."(d) "Pollpumehana."

Mrs. N. AJapal."PART II.

Cornet Solo "Lizzie Polka". ..HartmanChnrles Kreuter.

Selection "Little Christopher".. CarrylWaltz "Los Angeles" GodfreyMarch The Invincible Eagle" Souza

'"Star Spangled Banner."

SMALL PLANTATION.

Kenan Land and Planting CompanyIncorporates.

The Keaau Land and Planting Com-pany has filed articles of Incorporation,with a capital stock of $30,000. Thecompany will raise sugar cane to boground at Olaa mill, Its principal placeof business being at Olaa. The com-pany has 200 acres of land on the linoof the Hllo railway and will plant atonce. The stockholders are J. F. Clay,Henry A. Gerlach, J. Hastings How-lan- d,

A. R. Cameron. Joseph P. Lino, Jr.Frank Sakamaki, Mrs. E. A. Huron,Chnrles Cowan, H. A. C. Isenberg, C.R. Blake. C. J. Glddlngs, A. G. Curtis,F R. Glddlngs. J. Iwusukl. J. P. .Lino,Sr., E. D Lance, Jnmes P. Lino, JamesScott, J. A. Magoon, B. Onome, W. II.Lambert, R. W. Blake. W. D. Schmidt,Miss Frances Washburn, L. F, Turner,W. S. Wise, trustee, Johnson Nlckeus,who Jointly hold 1875 shares of Btockvalued at $37,500, or three-quarte- ofthe total stock. The officers-are- ; L. F,Turner, president, Hllo; J. F. Clay vlce- -

Wein at

w.m.. 7se and

NO BOOT HAS AB MANY

carry BootPour Grades, selling

S5.00, 86.50, $8.00 S9.O0

vSporting stand any kind

Mining

Boot

OTHERWATER-PRDD- T QUALITIES.

Mclnerny

:I HAWAIIANEngineering & Construction Co.

Rooms 508, 500, 510 StangonwaldAll classes of Engineering .'ork solicited. Examinations, Surveys

and Reports made for any class of Waterworks, Steam and ElectricalConstruction. Plans and Specifications and Estimates prepared, an.Construction Superintended in all branches of Engineering Work. Con-tracts solicited for Railroads, electric and steam; Tunnels, Bridges,Buildings. Highways. Foundations. Piers. Wharves, etc.

SPECIAL ATTENTION given to Examinations, Valuations, andjjj Reports of jpertles for Investment purposes.--I FREDERICK J. AMWEC, M. Am. Soc. C E.,V and Manager.J W. R. CASTLE, JR., Secretary and Troasurer.

president, Olaa; A. G. Curtis, secretary,Olaa; James Scott, treasurer, Olaa;Charles R. Blake, auditor, Olaa.

HOME OF THE ELKS.After figuring on numerous proposi-

tions, of nil sizes and kinds, the Elkshave tnken the second lloor of a newbuilding at the corner of Bcretania andMiller streets for its permanent home.

I HONOLULU ATHLETIC CLUB.Honolulu Athletic Club will give a

dance at Progress Hall August 31, theproceeds for the benefit of the club. Acommunication has been received bythe club from the Maul Athletic Asso-ciation expressing a desire for a seriesof basebull games between the twoclubs to be played here and on Maul.

A GOOD THING.There's one good thing when they feel

dry.That business men cannot pass by,For far and wide It's fame you hear.They stop to drink of "Rainier" beerOn draught or In bottle at. Criterion.

BY AUTHORITYSEALED TENDERS.

Will be received at the office of theSuperintendent of Public Works till 12

o'clock noon of August 26th, 1901, fortho construction of Counters in TaxOffice and Land Office; also skylight.

Plans and specifications on file InOfllce of Superintendent of PublicWorks.

Bidders will state In their proposalsseparate amount for each Counter.

Tho Superintendent of Public Worksreserves the right- - to reject any or allbids.

(Signed) JAS. H. BOYD,

Aug. 13th, 1001.

NOTICE TO HOLDERS OF REGIS-TERED TREASURY WAR-

RANTS.

Treasurer's Office,

Honolulu, August 13, 1901.

Notice Is hereby given to holders ofRegistered Treasury Warrants num-

bered from 1 to 200D Inclusive, to pre-

sent them for payment at the office oftho Treasurer In Honolulu on or afterAugust 23rd, 1901, on which date In-

terest will cease.WM. II. WRIGHT,

Treasurer, Territory of Hawaii.

SALE OF GOVERNMENT LOT ATNUUANU VALLEY, HONO-

LULU. OAHU.

On Monday September 1C, 1901, at 12

o'clock noon, at the front entrance ofthe Capitol (Executive Building), willbe sold at Pubtlc Auction GovernmentLot No. 10, Nuuanu Valley, Honolulu,Oahu.

Lot No. 10, upset price $1,000.

TERMS AND CONDITIONS.Tho terms of tho sale are cash, or at

tho option of tho purchaser, one fourthof the purchase price ,and the remain-der in equnl Installments In one, twoand three years, with Interest nt therato of seven (7) per cent per annum,payable semi-annual- ly In advance.

Other special terms and conditions Inconnection with this sale can bo ascertalned and maps of said lot can bseen at tho Department of PubllWorks,

JAMES II. BOYD,Supt. of Public Works.

Department of Public Works,Honolulu, August 12, 1901,

a Boot

this same

and

Building,

Englnoor

ViV.VmViVrf.VMV.V.-AVV.V.VAViVWi'WWAVi-- i.

of wear, and alwaysremain soft and com-

fortable. Por sur-

veying or generalplant j tion work;they had no equal- -

Shoe Store,

CURE YOUR DANDRUFF and youyhair will stop falling. Pacheco's Dan-druff Killer Is an unfailing and Imme-diate cure for dandruff. It keeps thoscalp In a healthy condition and In-

vigorates the hair; one application willstop that awful itching.

PACHECO'S DANDRUFF KILLER.Sold by all druggists and at the UnloaBarber Shop.

P. O Box 918 Tel. Mm

H. HAMANO,IMPORTER OF

Japanese ProvisionsA.IVZ

General rerchaidisPLANTATION SUPPLIES

IClng Street, - - - - Corner StttS-KATSE-

BLOCK

Honolulu Iron Works,

STEAM ENGINES, SUGAR MILIABOILERS, COOLERS, IRON, BRASS

AND LEAD CASTINGS.

Machinery of Every Description MAto Order. Particular attention paid tenShip's Blacksmlthing. Job Work Ex,

cuted on Short Notice.

CASTLE & COOKE, LIMITED

Life and Fire

Insurance Agents

t3 AGENTS FOR -- OA',

HNTBW ENGLAND MUTUAI,

LIFE INSURANCE CO.

OI BOSTON.

ETKAFIRE INSURANCE CI

OF HARTFORD. CONN.

Page 8: III HE f IK I illII - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · ir yon want to--The lltnrnllan Star day's News, lotlay Is the nnpnr that yon can llnil It In goes into the best THE STi.lt

TO LET I

- .Iwo fiiio B iacli LJronftrLius.SuvorilI furtiislitfcl HLuisoa. i

iV tiuinbur of uiifiirinahodHouses.

inquire of

L. C. ABLES,

Eeal Estate AgentTELEPHONEMAIN UO

Pacific Transfer Co.Jab. II. Lovk

Handles Baggage, Furniture,Sates, Pianos, Etc.

TELEPHONE, MAIN B8.

fh'ce, . 147 King Street

Telephone Main, 101

P. O. Box 683

irj Urate,Sto"k and

Bond BrokerSombsr Honolulu Stock and Bond Exchange

"Office, Campbell Block,Merchant Street.Honolulu, T. H.

WELL SHAKENAFTER TAKING

arideover aWe3ft& road

or cobblestone navemem on a

iHg'idt frame bicycle--tHaft's tbe experi

ence of many riders.To CUSHION FRAMEIMPERIAL, m a K e strough roads smoothsartd doubles tbe envoyment of bicycle

riding'.PEARSON &

SPOTTER CO., LTD., AsKtheflGHTB dealer.

ChainlessCushionFrameCoasterBrake

Get a!Free

iSON X POTTER CO., LTD

O20TFORT STREETTELEPHONE 317

m:v Aivr.it'riM:ui!.TsDepartment Public Work ......Pngf 6

imwHlmn loiiteMay & Co .... iS!in r it.. It e. IJj. w, tint ,t otrilJ. iimm & Co 1'hrThe HurHnln Store Page G

Wall. Nichols Co rase 8

MitVS IS X .NUTSHELL.

rnrngrnplK 'ill at 'Jlvu CondensedA'ows of the Hay.

Morgan will soil two Jersey cows onUi 17th.

Honolulu Chapter will meet tomor-row night.

A package of papers has been lost.See advertisement.

Hawaiian Lodge will meet tonight forwork In third degree.

Hopp & Company, the leading furni-ture house, renovate rugs.

Dr. Cofer the chief quarantine officer,left by the AV. G. Hall yesterday after-noon for Kauai.

E. O. Hall & Son have a big ship-ment of Cleveland bicycles and Juve-nile wheels on band.

The Superintendent of Public "Workspublishes a notice In this Issue for thecompletion of the Diamond Head reser-voir.

At the meeting of the Hawaiian Agri-cultural Company held this morning on-ly routine matters Incident to the run-ning of the plantation were considered.

A. Blom, proprietor of the BarenlnStore nt Ueretanla and Alakea streets,offers for this week, a large assort-ment of ginhams, In the very latestpatterns at 10c. a yard.

That Ralph Yardley has popularizedhimself by his drawings. Is amply at-

tested by the crowds that ga'V dallyto view his work now being exhibitedIn "Wall, Nichols Company's window.

The starting point on the road tohealth Is at your grocers, H. May &Co., Fort street. Their goods pleasethe palate, especially their fresh can-ned goods. Head ad on page G of thisIssue.

s PPNiG NT I(Continued from Page 2.)

ARRIVING.Wednesday, August 13.

Stmr. Lchua, Napala. from Molokalports at 10 p. m.

DEPARTING.Thursday, August 15.

Stmr. Ke Au IIou, Mosher, for n,

Kaanapall, Honokaa andat 5 p. m.

Stmr. Iwalanl. Greene, !'or Eleele,Makawell, Walmea and Kekaha at 5p. m.

PASSENGER.Arriving.

Per S. S. Gaelic, August 14, from theOrient for Honolulu: C. F. McComb,Mrs. B. Williams, Mrs. A. S. Dcvln, Mrs.C. Carroll.

For San Francisco: W. Asthelmer, J.Von Bounlnghausen, Hu Tung Chao, G.D. Costlgan, U. S. N., D. Craig. JamesE. Galbralth, Dr. C. Garllpp, T. V. Hal-se- y,

Charles Hermsdorff, Max Kerko-viu- s,

Miss Julia Leavltt, Lieut. G. Lip-per- t,

Mrs. H. Lyon, Victor Marsh, N. J.Martin. Prof. A. A. Nyland, Captain M.A. Roberts, It. A., George It. Winn,Chen Chin Tao, Miss M. E. Wilson, MaxWolff, Wang Chung Yu, Lieut. H. M.Heasley, R. A., M. G. Vanderburg,Chang Yu Chunn, John Cowan, U. S.N., Captain II. Credner. Mrs. James E.Gnlbrnlth and child. J. R. Gllllngham,Mrs. T. V. Halney, E. J. Van Iloboken,Franz jvyll, Wu Kim Ling, L. Lukban,Lieut. E. Mansfeld, M. J. Martin, T. A.Noble, Lieut. N. Reuss, A. Taimon,Miss Julia A. AVInn, Wang Chung Hul,J. II. Wilterdink, Miss I. M. Worth, YenChing Ylng.

Departing.Per stmr. Kinau, August 11, for Hllo.R. Hauxhurst. J. R. Wilson. W. A.

Ray, R. G. Holt. Miss Julia Perry, MissJulia Dnmon, Miss N. King, Miss A.King, Miss E. M. Brown, Young Dow,for Mnlmko-- - Rev. E. S. Timoteo, MissC. Paleckl, Marston Campbell, E. L.Cutting, Miss Cameron, Miss C.Cameron, Master William Cameron,.Tamos Ralph Miss E. H. Blcknell; forKiuvaihne, Miss RIckard, Mrs. j. deWard. M. F. Hammond, A. W. Carter,Mrs. S. M. Spencer 2 children and maid,AV. R. Jones, George Paris, . J. Wilson,for Laupaliophoe, II. Irwin, for ManlaeaMiss M. AVlddldeld, May AV. Cornwell;Mrs. T. E. Lamor, for Makena, LangHe, Lee See,, Rev. Kang Gin Yet.

MAKING MORMON CONVERTS.Some surprise Is manifested because

the Mormon missionaries nre makingconverts all over the world, and par-ticularly among persons who are cred-ited with having Intelligence. Butthat Is nothing new, even If It mayappear somewhat odd. Half-educatio- n,

which makes n pretty good Im-itation of intelligence, is peculiarlysusceptible to the pretender. Personswho are so Ignorant that they arestolid cannot be caught by the charla-tan. There is nothing for him to

catch unnn. Hut a ullh tnniriio ni-n- -

neilod by assurance and cunnlncr caneasily make converts among men andwomen who have not learned enough toknow how little they do know. Nu- -merous Instances of the working ofthis rule can be remembered by anyperson of experience and observation.That the Mormon missionaries, wlioare shrewd, and who moreover are un-doubtedly sincere to a great degree,are making converts In Intel-ligent circles, Is not surprising. Thesurprising thing Is that the convertshave succeeded In creating the Impres-sion that they are Intelligent. NewBedford Republican Standard.

HOT I CO

CORNER MFRCHANTAND FORT STREETS

Stock and Bond Brokers,Fire Insurance Agents,Commission Merchants

Careful Attention Given toBusiness Trusts

BOOK-CASE- S

AMD!OFFICE FURNITURE

In Stock or Ordered from

Manufacturers.

TIIH HAWAIIAN STAR, AVHDNR3DAY. AUOUUT U, 1901.

.IAS. F. M01MJAN,

Auctioneer and Broker.

05 Queen Street,

AUCTION SALE '

OP

JERSEY COWS.

OiN SATURDAY, AUGUST 17,AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON.

At my salesroom, 05 Queen street, Iwill sell at Public Auction, by order ofMRS, J. H. HUNT, two fine Jerseycows In perfect health and condition.

JAS. F.v MORGAN,AUCTIONEER

UNDERWRITER'S SALE

0i THURSDAY, AUG. (5,AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M.,

At the store of Lewers & Cooke, Ltd.Fort street, between Mercha t andKing streets, I will sell at Public Auc-tion a large quantity of builders hard-ware, consisting of Locks Butts,Screws, Sash Lifts c .d Fasts, 2olts,Etc., Etc., Window Shades Wall Pa-per, Etc., Etc., all damaged by fire andwater.

JAS. K. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER

Piano jor Sals.Fine J. & C. Fischer Piano In good

conditionCost ISIlOj will be on sale week

for $250 at my salesroom, Co r ..enstreet.

JAS, F. MORGAN,(5 Queen Street.

JAS. F. M0KGAN

Auctioneer and Broke?65 Qneen Street

P.O. Box .VJ4 Telephone 72

At the Book

Counter

IT DOESN'T NECESSARILYFOLLOW THAT BECAUSE"THE CniSIS" HAPPENEDTO BE THE BEST SELLINGBOOK OF THE PAST MONTH;IT IS ONLY ONE OF THEYEAR. DROP IN AT THESTORE, AND AVE WILL MENTION A FEW THAT YOU'VEPERHAPS OVERLOOKED.

ML, NICHOLS CO,, LTD,

Merit in ..

Kodak . Work

When customers send filmsfrom California to us for de-veloping and printing ther mustbe more than ordinary merit Int e class of work we turn out.They claim that they cannotget the same excellent resultsIn San Francisco, and are willingto send 2000 miles and be sureof having good Kodak pictures.That's why we get the businessmerit.

We turn out uniformly goodwork. Every roll of film receivesthe ..eatment that skill andexperience can give It. "

Our Photographic DepartmentIs full of work, but we dre ableto turn out work when promised,and no order Is slighted.

Our popular prices will savemany a dollar for the amateurthat's another reason for you tobrln; us your work.

Remember we are headquar-ters for Kodaks, fresh films,plates, printing papers every-thing In the photographic line.

. et us have your nc- - rollan! we will demonstrate ourclaims for excellent and carefulphoto work.

J&hronJJrwGhFOJZT

& Java.

,Lid.

OFFICERS.

H. P. BALDWIN PresidentJ. B. CASTLE. ...First-Vice-Presiden- t

AV. M. ALEXANDER. ...2d VIce-Pre- s't

J. P. COOKE TreasurerAV. O. SMITH SecretaryGEORGE R. CARTER Auditor

Sugar Factors andCommissionrierchants .

AGENTS FORHawaiian Commercial and Sugar Com-

pany,Haiku Sugar Company,Pala Plantation Company,Nahlku Sugar Company,Klhel Plantation Company,Hawaiian Suiar Company,Kahulul Railroad Company,

ANDThe California and Orientaltnmshlp Company

NAItANISHI CO.,Contractors nuJ DnlldorsTainting ami Paper Uangliig

Opp. Oahu Lumber and Building Co.

King street, No. 450Telephone. Blue 3531.

H.J.HARRISON,QUEEN STREET,

Opposite Judiciary Building.

Ho seSho'elng,WOR.. NEATLY DONESATISFACTIONGUARANTEED.

M. PHILLIPS & CO.,wholesale ImportersAnd Jobbers of

AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN DRY GOODS

I ' ' Corner of Fort and Queen Sts.

.

"...

...

:::;?:

...

1mr TU:. I

ma ay

Yes, this way for Silk Linings made from Cotton. Theyhave all the appearance of Silk that's one reason why Gil-bert's Dress Linings achieved popularity nt a bound.

But they wear better than Silk that's another reason.Then they nre purchasable at about M the cost of Silk

that the third reason. rr-- -

AVomen have learned that taffeta silks are boundcrack at some stage of their use.

Gilbert's LiningsWill Not 'Crack

They will not fade nor discolor the undergarments.Gilbert's Linings are made In many styles for many

uses. There are:PERCALINE.SATIN SURAH.INDIA and IMPERIAL BATISTES.SULTANA SATIN.SILVER SHEEN.MERCERIZED SATEEN.NEARSILK andAMISILK.

New lines are In Parisian Silk coloring to harmonizewith the present shades In dress goods. They are so beauti-fully finished that they look fit for the outside rather thanthe inside of a dress.

They make an Ideal foundation for evening dresses; be-ing far lighter stronger than Silk. They are not inthe" least papery like many cheap linings.

WE WILL REPLACE ANY OFGILBERT'S LININGS WHICH DONOT GIVE PERFECT

WHITNEY k"a.

Croat RSale for

A Law Is In vogueIn Paris that thisShall be used In all

Shops.

IN USE THE

JOSEPH

Arlington Block, Hotel Street.

. .

The Harbor Restaurant, Fort StreetAllen & Robinson's .Lumber

yard Is now open for buslneos.

r"lne Job Printing; Star Office.

iiFor

and

AT

.

".

.

v.;

".Ito -?;

v."i.

THECorner Nuuanu and Kins Streets,

NEWJUST OPENED.

All Meals 25c.

Cigars, Tobacco and Cold Drinks.Everything New and Clean.--

K.Corner King and Beretaala Streeta

Manufacturer of Straw Hats.Hata made to orderWashing and Cleaning.

ALSOGents' Furnishing GoodsJapanese Silk Crepe and ,Bilk

Silk

etc. Stock atLow

Next Door toCentral Meat Co.

White 3271.

Antiseptic Solution

Barber

Silent Barber ShopFERNANDEZ,

PROPRIETOR.

NewRestaurant

opposite

Linings

MARSH, LTD

eductioneics

EMPORIUM RESTAURANT,

RESTAURANT.

TAKETA,

Handkerchiefs.

Goods, Kimonos, Handkerchiefs, Flags, Shirts, Pajamas,

Entire markedPrices

Nuuanu Street,Market

Telephone