LL SAYS ANOTHER GIVEN WILL MaDE labor TO OAHU...

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XT. S. WEATHER BUESAU, FEBRUARY 2 Last 24 hours' rainfall, .00. Temperature, Max. 74; Min. 60. Weather, fair. SUGAR. 96 Degree Test Centrifugals, 3.48c; Per Ton, $69.60. 83 Analysis Beets, 7s 11 d; Per Ton, $74.00. ESTABLISH ED JULV 2. 1856 3S' VOL. XLrlll., NO. 7329. HONOLULU, HAWAII TERRITORY, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1906. PRICE FIVE CENTS. ALBERT S. WILCOX LL SAYS ANOTHER RAID SENATE FIXES TIE TO HAS GIVEN $25,000 WILL BE MaDE oh labor TO OAHU COLLEGE VOTE 01 RAILWAY BILL 9 .... 0 ij -- - 0 Thinks the Northwestern Railway Will Draw Heavily on Our Japa- nese Field Hand Supplies. President Does Not SeeR to Influence Legislation, but Intimates That He Favors Hepburn Bill. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 $ 0 0 0 1 and possibly more. The fact that Ha- waii is American territory will enable contractors to bring in alien laborers without infringing the immigration law d V "jrJf V' ' Seattle, Washington, January 23, 1906. Editor Advertiser: I herewith send you several clippings that no doubt will ba interesting. There is a great demand here for common laborers to work on several (Associated Press Cablegrams.) ' " WASHINGTON, February 3. The Senate will take a vote on the railway rate bill on February 16. President Roosevelt has made unofficial announcement that he is not trying to influence legislation, but that he favors the Hepburn bill. against contract laborers. The Japa- nese are to be used on the various rail- road "construction work both in Alaska and through Washington. The Olympia is now laid up in Eagh lines of railroads that are now build-- ! Harbor, but she will be brought to this ' fitv chr rt I r o nrl tii4- In nnmmiaci'nn TVna mg in this State, or will soon com-"- '' 7 ' " - vessel was recently chartered to a 0 0 0 As long ago as 1905 Congress was struggling with the President's plan for the regulation of railroad rates. After several individual essays hy eager reformers, a bill carrying out the ideas of the Administration wa prepared by Representatives Esch and Townsend, and introduced in the House and the supply here- - J Portland firm to run between Portland mence building, that strenuous' and San Francisco. She was too large abouts is so inadequate I for the bar at the mouth of the Colum- - a c txttt rnr y on January 30. It authorized the Interstate Commerce Commission unnn com- - efforts will be made to fill the deficien- - bia river, and after making one trip , 1 plaint and hearing, to declare any given rate unreasonable, and to substitute had to be returned to her owners. When the present charter expires she-wil- l be returned to her old run to G 4&-- llr. P. C. Jones, treasurer of Oahu ter accommodations in the boarding College, has received a gift of $25.6o i department but also for an increase in ' class rooms and halls for recitation from Mr. Albert S. Wilcox of Kauai one which it considered reasonable, the rate so fixed to stand until revoked hy the courts. This bill passed the House ten days later by an almost unanimous vote 326 to 17 but failed of passage in the Senate. Nome. cy by drawing on the Japanese labor- ers of the Hawaiian Islands. It is quite likely that as many as several thousand Japanese will be ob- tained from your islands within the next several months, if the schemes now on foot can be successfully worked. At the present session of Congress the Esch-Townsen- d bill was reintroduced with some modifications, and Dolliver introduced a similar bill in the Senate, Seattle Times, Chicago, Jan. 22. Railroads in the West and Northwest need fully 30,000 laborers whom they are unable to obtain. Owing, therefore. still further perfected from the Administration's view point. In the meantime Congressman Hepburn of Iowa introduced into the House a bill that is almost identical with the Dolliver bill, and this is the measure which, from the cable You will notice that large labor con- - j to a great scarcity of labor, much of tracting firms are now engineering the the railroad construction and better- - omt Th0 Mtpnt trt which the ments which had been planned for this gram, is soon to come up for a vote in the Senate and which President Eooso-ve- lt has unofficially indicated a desire to have passed. vear hv Westprn roads have been game may be worked will depend on abandoned. purposes staring them in the face and with funds in hand, already generous- ly given by Mrs. S. N. Castle, and Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Cooke and others, which would partially meet the ex- pense of the new buildings, there was a serious problem before them which this latest gift of Mr. Wilcox's will do a great deal towards solving. The many friends of Punahou are congratulating the institution upon this latest windfall and are speaking in highest commendation of Mr. Wil- cox's unostentatious generosity. which is to be applied to the building fund of the college. The gift is in cosh and is given wijfhout conditions. Mr. Wilcox has a lifelong aloha for th school which he has shown in many ways. At present he has more than the usual interest for he has two children living at the college. . It is needless to say that the trus- tees are more than delighted to re- ceive this munificent gift which comes almost unsolicited. With the impera- tive need not only for more and bet- - circumstances. If the first trip of the FIFTY PEOPLE ARE INJURED Efforts have been made in all of the large cities of. the country to induce laborers to go west for railroad work, but little success has boen attained. Pay is from $1.75 to $2.50 for day labor Olympia is allowed to pan-ou- t. suc- cessfully, financially and otherwise, of course, you may expect the promoters to proceed without limit. Owing to the small number of Japa IN FRENCH CHURCH RIOT ers, and the wages have been offered everywhere without attracting men nese who have arrived in the islands ne railroad president who has been turns' vainly to secure 3000 men for oo ,o- - t ar. PARIS, February 3. Fifty people have been injured in resist ..H J ' J railroad construction in the Northwest ing the inventories cf property in the churches, now being made by' J Jciaie the fact that now is an inoppor- - Rtatert tndav that v.o ne. t the government. COTILLION A SUCCESS V tune time to further draw on your la- - labor to be so scarce in the last twen-;- f "bor supply, and I trust that your plan- - ty-fi- ve years. . , . fter3 f Th scarcity is especially felt In the may be successful In averting any , For some time past the cables have been filled with accounts of troublo ' w , xtxi .nuriuwesi, wnere a greax aeai 01 growing out of the efforts of the French government to get accurate knowledgo eerious depletion unui sucn time as construction work is progressing and they may be able to import a reliable where a great deal had been planned, class of laborers. The St. Paul, with other roads, is hav- - GREAT NAVY FOR JAPAN Will Suffice to Keep the Peace in the Far East. With best wishes for the Interests ",& ""-""j- - "'a "a possible that some of the St. Paul ex University Club Assenv bly a Very Pleasant Society Affair. of the islands, I am. Very respectfully jours, J. P. BALL tensions will be abandoned and efforts centralized on the new Pacific Coast extension. Among the extensions, plan- ned by the St. Paul are the following: Presho to Rapid City, S. D., 175 miles; of the church property, which step has followed the legislative action provid- ing for the final separation of church and state. It is a question upon which considerable future friction may be expected to arise. In France, since the days of the great Xapoleon, the state had always aided and in a measure rec- ognized the church and in return has had the powerful aid of the church in preserving the established order. If the weight of this influence is now to be- come hostile, the republic will meet the most critical stage of its existence. A SCHEME TO SETTLE RUSSIA'S AGRARIAN TROUBLES The enclosed clippings Seattle Post-Intelligenc- er: Steamer Madison to Sioux Falls, forty miles, ten Olympia, owned by the Northwestern miles "of which, from Madison to Sara-Steamsh- ip Company, has been char- - nac, has been completed; forty-thre- e tered by the stevedoring firm of Grif- - miles of second track on the La Crosse nth & Sprague for three months. The division, between Watertown and Port-vess- el is to be sent to Honolulu prin- - age, Wis.; thirty miles of second track oipally for the purpose of bringing in- - on the river division, between La Cros-t- o this country Japanese laborers. The se and Dakota station, and between vessel will make at least three trips Lake City and Wabasht. It The society of Honolulu was out in its beauty and bravery at the Uni- versity Club assembly and cotillion last night. The function had been an- ticipated by the dancing set, particu- larly, as something out of the ordinary, and the managers saw that it came "As to the navy which Japan will have for her future greatness it will be such- - as to maintain the peace of the Far East and to keep her place under the new treaty relations she has with England." Air. Xorekiyo Takahashi, familiarly known away from home as the Pierpont Morgan of Japan, who is a passenger on tne S. S. Siberia, visited Honolulu yesterday. In the course of a conver ST. PETERSBURG, February 3. The scheme announced for the solution of the agrarian question provides for the appropriation of one hundred and fifty millions of roubles to reimburse the land- lords who have sold their estates to neasants. r up to promise. It was an affair en- tirely by invitation. The Governors of the club, headed by Dr. F. R. Day, CARTER ASKED TO J. L. M'dDLESS l e AUSOB BCPOHT ON CUMMINS A HALF A MILLION WILL STRIKE. sation with an Advertiser man he made the above important statement. As a financier Mr. Takahashi is re- garded as one of the foremost in the world. He it was who raised the "107,-000,00- 0 loans with which Japan carriea on the war with Kussia. As long as the war chest culled for 'more, Mr. Taka- hashi, who had his finjrers oa the money the president, received their guests on the lanai of the pretty little clubhouse on Hotel street, just Ewa of the Royal Hawaiian hotel, and the gentlemen and ladies were shown into dressing rooms in the cottages in the grounds. The guests were then conducted into the nrfneipal cottage, and here the patron- esses stood in a line to receive them. inose m the line were Mrs. Judge Frear, Mrs. Babbitt, Mrs. Griffiths, The White House, wasnington, January 20, 1906. My Dear Sir: I beg to acknowledge The Denver Post of Jan. 21. says: "Pearl Harbor, near Honolulu, one of the finest harbors in the Pacific ocean, should le dredged and fortified by the United States government if it intends INDIANAPOLIS, February 3. The conference between the coal miners and the mine operators has been fruitless, and a strike that will involve half a million miners is expected to occur in April. NEW YORK, February 3. The foreign missionary boards pulse of London, Xew York, Paris ami Berlin, was able to respond. After two years in affairs of this kind, he is now the receipt of your letter of Decem- ber 30, with enclosure, and to state that by direction of the President it : on liis way home where he hopes to re to retain its in the Pacific, said Jolin L. McCandless of Pittsburg, has- - been referred to Governor Carter 'gave a banquet tonight to the Imperial Chinese Commissioners. Mrs. Gartley, Mrs. Captain Humphrey, Miss Humphrey and Mrs. Dr. Day. Passing the patronesses, the guests were shown into an inner room from which a covered and carpeted incline main. Mr. Takahashi was seen aboard the Siberia shortly before the vessel sailed. lie was sitting in the midst of a large ior report. V ery truly yours, WM. LOEB, JR., Secretary to the President. MR. J. A. CUMMINS, Honolulu, H. I. led to the dancing room, which a guest of the Oxford hotel, who is on his way to his home after an extended tour of far Eastern countries. "The harbor is midway between the western coast of America and the Phil- ippine possessions of this country and AFTERNOON REPORT. ROME, February 2. The Ministry has resigned and the King has asked for was j number of .Jatmiiese those who have the diningroom of the Royal Hawaiian j been with him in the East, and several. Hotel and which had been elaborately including Vice-Cons- Matsubara from time to consider. Honolulu. SAN FRANCISCO, February 2. The sailing of the transport Meade has i?iiJd easilv be nut m such shnno that The above letter was received in decorated for the occasion. The dec- orations, dainty pepper tree boughs it would accommodate a fleet twice as answer to a communication from Mr. ur. lananasm is (upioniatic an 111s b nostl)oned for ten days. and apple blossoms, and gaily colored wit'h ; hastr "ire weTehs his wrds I SAN FRANCISCO, February 2.-Se- cretary Atkinson of Hawaii arrived here before speaking. Likewise he sizes up today. He will sail on the Mongolia Monday. any man who asks him questions. His j ST. PETERSBURG, February 2. Anticipating an agrarian outbreak the streamers, were the work of Captain Xiblack, and were very beautiful. In the dancing room the Ellis Orches tra was stationed, and there was a responses are brief but courteous, j Emeror ha3 addressed a mandate to the peasantry stating that the rights of Cummins, in which he set forth the whole evidence in the case where he was tried by eourtmartial in 1S93 and, notwithstanding the opinion of his seven judges, wherein they stated he was the least guilty of all who were brought before thera, he was fined S)C0'. which he was compelled to pay j to obtain his liberty. He requested the I President to look into the matter and large as the entire naval strength of the United States. Hawaii should be a powerful factor in the system of na- tional defense and as Pearl Harbor is adapted by nature for the needs of a j;reat naval base it would become one of the strategic outposts in the Pacific. "The future of America, in both the naval and commercial sense, will be centered largely in the Pacific ocean. AVhen the Panama canal is finished a J property are sacred and promising a relief of their grievances. great bowl of punch for the refresh- ment of the dancers on the Ewa lanai. est 111 tue subject does he speak treely. When asked what he thought about the cablegram recentlv received to the The dancing was general for half a dozen numbers, and then the luckv forty couples who had been drawn for!effect that Jal,an lias asked Great Brit-th- e cotillion took possession of the ' am to reorganize her army, Mr. Taka-floo- r and led bv Mr Walter Dilling- - j hashi remove'l "igr f rom his mouth the Governor that an ap- - SMALL TIDAL WAVE OBSERVED AT BILQ : ...;u i. u; suggest to GOVEBNDB CARTER STILL GETS BETTER ham and Mrs. Ivers. went through the aml ,lall"el. ,learnl ' ?a-vln- g: of the amount of which he was " Whv. mat s nonsense. 1 nere is mulcted. beautiful figures of the prettiest cotil- lion ever danced in Honolulu. The nothing in it at all. Japan would not iaors were tiny flags, with large flags,' tT . T. . x ? ,. I ?'iiiping and the American government I will have to meet many questions that I will arise in that part of the globe. I "T do not think there is much danger I of Philippine sugar being imported into I this country, tariff or no tariff, in quan- - tities to destroy the sugar beet indus- - try. There is a good field in the far !' Esst fur all the sugar that can be man- - i factured there. In Hawaii all the I sugar manufactured at home is used in REPORTED LOST AT SEA. David Spaulding, or.e of the best known Hawaiians of this part of the that the dancers waved as they danced, and the swing and rythm of the pic- tures that the dancers made, and the ture, continued the financier, "ue will certainly have a great navy, but. sheen of the dresses of the beautiful j stores for the war we must be econom women, under the green and vellow district, and two other natives went out fishing on Monday and no trace ical. At the same time we must be and pink of the decorations made a has been , had of them since. Tester "I let the Governor get partly out of bed today." said Dr. Judd last night. "That is, he sat up for awhile." Governor Carter continued to ret easily yesterday, and to manifest a desire to get out of bed. Indeed. Dr. Judd is apt to find his patient more difficult to handle in the convalescent stages' than when he was at his worst. A cablegram from San Francisco yesterday afternoon stated that Sec- - People along the waterfront at five-thir- ty last night had a shock which lasted but a few minutes but was strong during that time. Without a moment's notice the nea receded and that part of the ocean bed a few hun- dred yards from shore was as dry as the Red Sea when Moses crossed dry shod. Then in a moment the wat'-- r come shoreward arid covered the floor of the old wharf at the foot of Wala- - most striking picture. day Kekino and a number of friends of the men went searching for them After the cotillion, dancing became general again while in the room of 3 the ls:ands and in addition to this a considerable quantity is imported from I America. " I Mr. McCandless is engaged in the j banking business in Pittsburg and took and when they reached Keauhou they saw an upturned boat some distance from the shore. It is believed by Ke i the ttip to Uncle Sam's far Eastern the club proper refreshments were served at small tables set out, for four. The affair did not break up until very late, and all of the best of the beauty and fashion of the city were among those who were present. retarv Atkinson would sail from there prepared both with our army and navy, to maintain our position in the Far East: our treaty relations require that. "Japan will meet her obligations as they fall due. I do not think there is anv question about that. I rather think that the countries that made loans to us feel that way, too. "Japan will now develop her re- sources to the utmost and open up ?verv industry. Korea will 1 e devel- oped. Manchuria is a courtrv I cat, not speak of to anv extent, for T hav ' een too Ion? aay in foreign lands. r do n"t know what the government's kino that it is the boat used by Spauld :ng. Hilo Herald. nuenue street. The waters rushed up to Honolulu on the Mongolia the Wailuku until instead of the water f j possessions on the advice of his physi- - cian. His he;lth is now greatly im- - roved. He intends to settle up his in Pernipvlvania and return to IVV" i which he declared "the most svot 1 in the world to live in.' the Coast next Monday, instead of on the Alameda, sailing today. The Sec- retary has been advised of the Gov- ernor's improved condition, and so has perhaps conclude,! that there is no great hurry about getting home. Also, the Secretary will find time to attend affairs the Coast o some Territorial on by remaining over. coming- over the bank. It flowed up- stream. This is the first wave of any size since ISftl. No damage was done at this time, the tracks of the Hi!o Railroad Co. were covered between Waiakea and the depot uptown, but the trmin came in as usual. Ilil , Herald. f Captain Morrow is still army quarter- master of the Sheridan. He was re- cently made assistant to Major Devol, in charge of the transport service at ?an Francisco, but was ordered to nake one more trip before taking up -- here duty. Captain Morrow is re-nrd- d as one of the best transport iiiartermasters in the service. Dr. Merrill of Rochester. New York wiil preach in the First Methodist Episcopal church on Sunday morning, it 11 o'clock. Subject: "The Way, the Truth, the Life." In the evening Rev. Mr. Simpson, father-in-la- w of Mr. F. C. Athtrton, will speak. will le. Maru Toco r Prrser Roberts of the Xippon JiV stated vestt-rda- y thnt Admiral enev "If " " J7 ... j. T - ' - .. 1 .. we do not maintain our treaty (Continued on Page 7.) t j, :s srre i j;o 10 cue cmieti oimt-- s via Honolulu. J

Transcript of LL SAYS ANOTHER GIVEN WILL MaDE labor TO OAHU...

Page 1: LL SAYS ANOTHER GIVEN WILL MaDE labor TO OAHU …evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/44320/1/1906020301.pdf · mg ' fitv chr rtI r o nrl tii4- In nnmmiaci'nn TVna in this

XT. S. WEATHER BUESAU, FEBRUARY 2 Last 24 hours' rainfall, .00.Temperature, Max. 74; Min. 60. Weather, fair.

SUGAR. 96 Degree Test Centrifugals, 3.48c; Per Ton, $69.60.83 Analysis Beets, 7s 11 d; Per Ton, $74.00.

ESTABLISH ED JULV 2. 1856

3S'VOL. XLrlll., NO. 7329. HONOLULU, HAWAII TERRITORY, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1906. PRICE FIVE CENTS.

ALBERT S. WILCOXLL SAYS ANOTHER RAID SENATE FIXES TIE TOHAS GIVEN $25,000

WILL BE MaDE oh labor TO OAHU COLLEGE VOTE 01 RAILWAY BILL

9 ....0ij -- -

0Thinks the Northwestern Railway

Will Draw Heavily on Our Japa-

nese Field Hand Supplies.

President Does Not SeeR to InfluenceLegislation, but Intimates That

He Favors Hepburn Bill.

0

0

0

000

0

0

0

0

0

0$

0

0

0

1 and possibly more. The fact that Ha-waii is American territory will enablecontractors to bring in alien laborerswithout infringing the immigration law

d V "jrJf V' '

Seattle, Washington, January 23, 1906.

Editor Advertiser: I herewith send

you several clippings that no doubtwill ba interesting.

There is a great demand here forcommon laborers to work on several

(Associated Press Cablegrams.) ' "

WASHINGTON, February 3. The Senate will take a vote onthe railway rate bill on February 16. President Roosevelt has madeunofficial announcement that he is not trying to influence legislation,but that he favors the Hepburn bill.

against contract laborers. The Japa-nese are to be used on the various rail-road "construction work both in Alaskaand through Washington.

The Olympia is now laid up in Eaghlines of railroads that are now build-- ! Harbor, but she will be brought to this

' fitv chr rt I r o nrl tii4- In nnmmiaci'nn TVnamg in this State, or will soon com-"- '' 7 ' " -vessel was recently chartered to a

0

0

0

As long ago as 1905 Congress was struggling with the President's planfor the regulation of railroad rates. After several individual essays hyeager reformers, a bill carrying out the ideas of the Administration waprepared by Representatives Esch and Townsend, and introduced in the House

and the supply here- - J Portland firm to run between Portlandmence building,

that strenuous' and San Francisco. She was too largeabouts is so inadequateI for the bar at the mouth of the Colum- - a c txttt rnr y on January 30. It authorized the Interstate Commerce Commission unnn com- -efforts will be made to fill the deficien- - bia river, and after making one trip , 1

plaint and hearing, to declare any given rate unreasonable, and to substitutehad to be returned to her owners.When the present charter expires she-wil- l

be returned to her old run to

G 4&--llr. P. C. Jones, treasurer of Oahu ter accommodations in the boarding

College, has received a gift of $25.6o i department but also for an increase in' class rooms and halls for recitationfrom Mr. Albert S. Wilcox of Kauai

one which it considered reasonable, the rate so fixed to stand until revoked hythe courts. This bill passed the House ten days later by an almost unanimousvote 326 to 17 but failed of passage in the Senate.Nome.

cy by drawing on the Japanese labor-

ers of the Hawaiian Islands.It is quite likely that as many as

several thousand Japanese will be ob-

tained from your islands within thenext several months, if the schemesnow on foot can be successfully worked.

At the present session of Congress the Esch-Townsen- d bill was reintroducedwith some modifications, and Dolliver introduced a similar bill in the Senate,

Seattle Times, Chicago, Jan. 22.Railroads in the West and Northwestneed fully 30,000 laborers whom theyare unable to obtain. Owing, therefore.

still further perfected from the Administration's view point. In the meantimeCongressman Hepburn of Iowa introduced into the House a bill that is almostidentical with the Dolliver bill, and this is the measure which, from the cableYou will notice that large labor con- - j to a great scarcity of labor, much of

tracting firms are now engineering the the railroad construction and better- -

omt Th0 Mtpnt trt which the ments which had been planned for thisgram, is soon to come up for a vote in the Senate and which President Eooso-ve- lt

has unofficially indicated a desire to have passed.vear hv Westprn roads have beengame may be worked will depend on abandoned.

purposes staring them in the face andwith funds in hand, already generous-ly given by Mrs. S. N. Castle, and Mr.and Mrs. C. M. Cooke and others,which would partially meet the ex-

pense of the new buildings, there wasa serious problem before them whichthis latest gift of Mr. Wilcox's willdo a great deal towards solving.

The many friends of Punahou arecongratulating the institution uponthis latest windfall and are speakingin highest commendation of Mr. Wil-cox's unostentatious generosity.

which is to be applied to the buildingfund of the college. The gift is incosh and is given wijfhout conditions.

Mr. Wilcox has a lifelong aloha forth school which he has shown inmany ways. At present he has morethan the usual interest for he has twochildren living at the college. .

It is needless to say that the trus-tees are more than delighted to re-

ceive this munificent gift which comesalmost unsolicited. With the impera-

tive need not only for more and bet- -

circumstances. If the first trip of theFIFTY PEOPLE ARE INJURED

Efforts have been made in all of thelarge cities of. the country to inducelaborers to go west for railroad work,but little success has boen attained.Pay is from $1.75 to $2.50 for day labor

Olympia is allowed to pan-ou- t. suc-

cessfully, financially and otherwise, ofcourse, you may expect the promotersto proceed without limit.

Owing to the small number of JapaIN FRENCH CHURCH RIOTers, and the wages have been offered

everywhere without attracting mennese who have arrived in the islands ne railroad president who has been

turns' vainly to secure 3000 men foroo ,o- - t ar. PARIS, February 3. Fifty people have been injured in resist..H J ' J railroad construction in the Northwest ing the inventories cf property in the churches, now being made by'

J Jciaie the fact that now is an inoppor- - Rtatert tndav that v.o ne. t the government.COTILLIONA SUCCESS

V tune time to further draw on your la- - labor to be so scarce in the last twen-;- f"bor supply, and I trust that your plan- - ty-fi- ve years. . , .

fter3 f Th scarcity is especially felt In themay be successful In averting any , For some time past the cables have been filled with accounts of troublo '

w , xtxi .nuriuwesi, wnere a greax aeai 01 growing out of the efforts of the French government to get accurate knowledgoeerious depletion unui sucn time as construction work is progressing andthey may be able to import a reliable where a great deal had been planned,class of laborers. The St. Paul, with other roads, is hav--

GREAT NAVYFOR JAPAN

Will Suffice to Keep thePeace in the Far

East.

With best wishes for the Interests ",& ""-""j- - "'a "apossible that some of the St. Paul ex

University Club Assenv

bly a Very PleasantSociety Affair.

of the islands, I am.Very respectfully jours,

J. P. BALL

tensions will be abandoned and effortscentralized on the new Pacific Coastextension. Among the extensions, plan-ned by the St. Paul are the following:Presho to Rapid City, S. D., 175 miles;

of the church property, which step has followed the legislative action provid-ing for the final separation of church and state. It is a question upon whichconsiderable future friction may be expected to arise. In France, since thedays of the great Xapoleon, the state had always aided and in a measure rec-

ognized the church and in return has had the powerful aid of the church inpreserving the established order. If the weight of this influence is now to be-

come hostile, the republic will meet the most critical stage of its existence.

A SCHEME TO SETTLERUSSIA'S AGRARIAN TROUBLES

The enclosed clippings

Seattle Post-Intelligenc- er: Steamer Madison to Sioux Falls, forty miles, tenOlympia, owned by the Northwestern miles "of which, from Madison to Sara-Steamsh- ip

Company, has been char- - nac, has been completed; forty-thre- e

tered by the stevedoring firm of Grif-- miles of second track on the La Crossenth & Sprague for three months. The division, between Watertown and Port-vess- el

is to be sent to Honolulu prin- - age, Wis.; thirty miles of second trackoipally for the purpose of bringing in- - on the river division, between La Cros-t- o

this country Japanese laborers. The se and Dakota station, and betweenvessel will make at least three trips Lake City and Wabasht.

It

The society of Honolulu was out inits beauty and bravery at the Uni-

versity Club assembly and cotillionlast night. The function had been an-

ticipated by the dancing set, particu-larly, as something out of the ordinary,and the managers saw that it came

"As to the navy which Japan willhave for her future greatness it willbe such- - as to maintain the peace of theFar East and to keep her place underthe new treaty relations she has withEngland."

Air. Xorekiyo Takahashi, familiarlyknown away from home as the PierpontMorgan of Japan, who is a passengeron tne S. S. Siberia, visited Honoluluyesterday. In the course of a conver

ST. PETERSBURG, February 3. The scheme announced forthe solution of the agrarian question provides for the appropriationof one hundred and fifty millions of roubles to reimburse the land-lords who have sold their estates to neasants.

rup to promise. It was an affair en-

tirely by invitation. The Governorsof the club, headed by Dr. F. R. Day,

CARTER ASKED TOJ. L. M'dDLESS

l eAUSOB BCPOHT ON CUMMINSA HALF A MILLION WILL STRIKE.

sation with an Advertiser man he madethe above important statement.

As a financier Mr. Takahashi is re-garded as one of the foremost in theworld. He it was who raised the "107,-000,00- 0

loans with which Japan carrieaon the war with Kussia. As long as thewar chest culled for 'more, Mr. Taka-hashi, who had his finjrers oa the money

the president, received their guests onthe lanai of the pretty little clubhouseon Hotel street, just Ewa of the RoyalHawaiian hotel, and the gentlemen andladies were shown into dressing roomsin the cottages in the grounds. Theguests were then conducted into thenrfneipal cottage, and here the patron-esses stood in a line to receive them.

inose m the line were Mrs. JudgeFrear, Mrs. Babbitt, Mrs. Griffiths,

The White House, wasnington,January 20, 1906.

My Dear Sir: I beg to acknowledge

The Denver Post of Jan. 21. says:"Pearl Harbor, near Honolulu, one of

the finest harbors in the Pacific ocean,should le dredged and fortified by theUnited States government if it intends

INDIANAPOLIS, February 3. The conference between thecoal miners and the mine operators has been fruitless, and a strikethat will involve half a million miners is expected to occur in April.

NEW YORK, February 3. The foreign missionary boards

pulse of London, Xew York, Paris amiBerlin, was able to respond. After twoyears in affairs of this kind, he is now

the receipt of your letter of Decem-ber 30, with enclosure, and to statethat by direction of the President it : on liis way home where he hopes to reto retain its in the Pacific,

said Jolin L. McCandless of Pittsburg, has- - been referred to Governor Carter 'gave a banquet tonight to the Imperial Chinese Commissioners.Mrs. Gartley, Mrs. Captain Humphrey,Miss Humphrey and Mrs. Dr. Day.Passing the patronesses, the guestswere shown into an inner room fromwhich a covered and carpeted incline

main.Mr. Takahashi was seen aboard the

Siberia shortly before the vessel sailed.lie was sitting in the midst of a large

ior report. V ery truly yours,WM. LOEB, JR.,

Secretary to the President.MR. J. A. CUMMINS,

Honolulu, H. I.led to the dancing room, which

a guest of the Oxford hotel, who is onhis way to his home after an extendedtour of far Eastern countries.

"The harbor is midway between thewestern coast of America and the Phil-ippine possessions of this country and

AFTERNOON REPORT.ROME, February 2. The Ministry has resigned and the King has asked for

was j number of .Jatmiiese those who havethe diningroom of the Royal Hawaiian j been with him in the East, and several.Hotel and which had been elaborately including Vice-Cons- Matsubara from time to consider.

Honolulu. SAN FRANCISCO, February 2. The sailing of the transport Meade hasi?iiJd easilv be nut m such shnno that The above letter was received in decorated for the occasion. The dec-orations, dainty pepper tree boughsit would accommodate a fleet twice as answer to a communication from Mr. ur. lananasm is (upioniatic an 111s b nostl)oned for ten days.and apple blossoms, and gaily colored

wit'h ; hastr "ire weTehs his wrds I SAN FRANCISCO, February 2.-Se- cretary Atkinson of Hawaii arrived herebefore speaking. Likewise he sizes up today. He will sail on the Mongolia Monday.any man who asks him questions. His j ST. PETERSBURG, February 2. Anticipating an agrarian outbreak the

streamers, were the work of CaptainXiblack, and were very beautiful.

In the dancing room the Ellis Orchestra was stationed, and there was a responses are brief but courteous, j Emeror ha3 addressed a mandate to the peasantry stating that the rights of

Cummins, in which he set forth thewhole evidence in the case where hewas tried by eourtmartial in 1S93 and,notwithstanding the opinion of hisseven judges, wherein they stated hewas the least guilty of all who werebrought before thera, he was finedS)C0'. which he was compelled to pay

j to obtain his liberty. He requested theI President to look into the matter and

large as the entire naval strength ofthe United States. Hawaii should be apowerful factor in the system of na-tional defense and as Pearl Harbor isadapted by nature for the needs of aj;reat naval base it would become oneof the strategic outposts in the Pacific.

"The future of America, in both thenaval and commercial sense, will becentered largely in the Pacific ocean.AVhen the Panama canal is finished a

J property are sacred and promising a relief of their grievances.great bowl of punch for the refresh-ment of the dancers on the Ewa lanai. est 111 tue subject does he speak treely.

When asked what he thought aboutthe cablegram recentlv received to the

The dancing was general for half adozen numbers, and then the luckvforty couples who had been drawn for!effect that Jal,an lias asked Great Brit-th- e

cotillion took possession of the' am to reorganize her army, Mr. Taka-floo- r

and led bv Mr Walter Dilling- - j hashi remove'l "igr f rom his mouththe Governor that an ap--

SMALL TIDAL WAVE

OBSERVED AT BILQ: ...;u i. u; suggest to

GOVEBNDB CARTER

STILL GETS BETTERham and Mrs. Ivers. went through the aml ,lall"el. ,learnl ' ?a-vln-g:

of the amount of which he was " Whv. mat s nonsense. 1 nere ismulcted. beautiful figures of the prettiest cotil-

lion ever danced in Honolulu. The nothing in it at all. Japan would not

iaors were tiny flags, with large flags,' tT . T. . x ? ,.

I ?'iiiping and the American governmentI will have to meet many questions thatI will arise in that part of the globe.I "T do not think there is much dangerI of Philippine sugar being imported intoI this country, tariff or no tariff, in quan- -

tities to destroy the sugar beet indus- -

try. There is a good field in the far!' Esst fur all the sugar that can be man- -

i factured there. In Hawaii all theI sugar manufactured at home is used in

REPORTED LOST AT SEA.

David Spaulding, or.e of the bestknown Hawaiians of this part of the

that the dancers waved as they danced,and the swing and rythm of the pic-tures that the dancers made, and the

ture, continued the financier, "uewill certainly have a great navy, but.

sheen of the dresses of the beautiful j stores for the war we must be economwomen, under the green and vellowdistrict, and two other natives wentout fishing on Monday and no trace ical. At the same time we must be

and pink of the decorations made ahas been , had of them since. Tester

"I let the Governor get partly outof bed today." said Dr. Judd last night."That is, he sat up for awhile."

Governor Carter continued to reteasily yesterday, and to manifest adesire to get out of bed. Indeed. Dr.Judd is apt to find his patient moredifficult to handle in the convalescentstages' than when he was at his worst.

A cablegram from San Franciscoyesterday afternoon stated that Sec- -

People along the waterfront at five-thir- ty

last night had a shock whichlasted but a few minutes but wasstrong during that time. Without amoment's notice the nea receded andthat part of the ocean bed a few hun-

dred yards from shore was as dry asthe Red Sea when Moses crossed dryshod. Then in a moment the wat'-- r

come shoreward arid covered the floorof the old wharf at the foot of Wala- -

most striking picture.day Kekino and a number of friendsof the men went searching for them After the cotillion, dancing became

general again while in the room of

3 the ls:ands and in addition to this aconsiderable quantity is imported from

I America. "I Mr. McCandless is engaged in thej banking business in Pittsburg and took

and when they reached Keauhou theysaw an upturned boat some distancefrom the shore. It is believed by Ke

i the ttip to Uncle Sam's far Eastern

the club proper refreshments wereserved at small tables set out, for four.The affair did not break up until verylate, and all of the best of the beautyand fashion of the city were amongthose who were present.

retarv Atkinson would sail from there

prepared both with our army and navy,to maintain our position in the FarEast: our treaty relations require that.

"Japan will meet her obligations asthey fall due. I do not think there isanv question about that. I ratherthink that the countries that madeloans to us feel that way, too.

"Japan will now develop her re-sources to the utmost and open up?verv industry. Korea will 1 e devel-oped. Manchuria is a courtrv I cat,not speak of to anv extent, for T hav' een too Ion? aay in foreign lands.r do n"t know what the government's

kino that it is the boat used by Spauld:ng. Hilo Herald. nuenue street. The waters rushed up

to Honolulu on the Mongoliathe Wailuku until instead of the water

f j possessions on the advice of his physi- -

cian. His he;lth is now greatly im- -

roved. He intends to settle up hisin Pernipvlvania and return to

IVV"i which he declared "the mostsvot1 in the world to live in.'

the Coast next Monday, instead of on

the Alameda, sailing today. The Sec-

retary has been advised of the Gov-

ernor's improved condition, and so hasperhaps conclude,! that there is nogreat hurry about getting home. Also,

the Secretary will find time to attendaffairs the Coasto some Territorial on

by remaining over.

coming- over the bank. It flowed up-

stream. This is the first wave of anysize since ISftl. No damage was doneat this time, the tracks of the Hi!oRailroad Co. were covered betweenWaiakea and the depot uptown, butthe trmin came in as usual. Ilil ,

Herald. f

Captain Morrow is still army quarter-master of the Sheridan. He was re-

cently made assistant to Major Devol,in charge of the transport service at?an Francisco, but was ordered tonake one more trip before taking up

-- here duty. Captain Morrow is re-nrd- d

as one of the best transportiiiartermasters in the service.

Dr. Merrill of Rochester. New Yorkwiil preach in the First MethodistEpiscopal church on Sunday morning,it 11 o'clock. Subject: "The Way, theTruth, the Life." In the evening Rev.Mr. Simpson, father-in-la- w of Mr. F.C. Athtrton, will speak.

will le.MaruToco

r Prrser Roberts of the XipponJiV stated vestt-rda- y thnt Admiral

enev"If" "J7 ... j. T - ' - .. 1 ..

we do not maintain our treaty(Continued on Page 7.)t j, :s srre i j;o 10 cue cmieti oimt-- s

via Honolulu. J

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THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, FEBRUARY 3, igc6.

O POLITICS IEWWO

The Strainin Youth

of LifeTHE HOUSE II SCHOOLS

it Money-Savin- g Sale of

Begins 2 Muslin UnderwearNew Men to Lead in Honolulu Teachers toAND

oalways equal to thetree vourself. Then

Samson Suspenders for boys are

strain. Suppose you try climbing a!itjrsda! o

CongressionalFight.

(Mail Special to the Advertiser.)WASHINGTON, D. C, January 18.

LADIES' SHIRT WAISTSCommences Wednesday Morning, Jan. 31.

Take Up Manual

Training.

Between twenty and thirty teachersin the Honolulu public schools haveagreed to take up the matter of manualtraining in the public schools, in ad-

dition to their other work. The move-ment, has grown out of the followingletter addressed to the teachers by Su-

perintendent of Public InstructionBabbitt, prior to his recent trip toMaui:

Within a very short time, probably

you'll know why a boy likes a Samson suspender.

Mothers will find this suspender waist the most conveni-

ent and modern arrangement to fasten her boy's garment and

cause them to hang- - evenly without bulging or straining.

Boy's Star Waists and StarBlouses

Every little man ought to be equipped with a Star waist

or blouse. They are very trim in appearance and serviceable.

Alert buyers have learned the value of our specialsales and a reduction in ladies' 'muslin underwear meanspretty, well-fittin- g and durable garments at prices lesthan most stores pay for the goods. The best muslinand nainsook are the materials employed in makingthese garments and they are handsomely trimmed withembroderies and dainty laces. No skimping in theseams.

during February, the House Repub-

licans must organize for the Congres-

sional campaign. In the old days theCongressional Campaign committeesdid not count for much. During thelast ten years, the Republican Con-

gressional Committee, Joseph W. Bab-coc- k,

a native Vermonter represent-ing the third Wisconsin district, beingchairman, has been a most importantfactor in carrying close districts. Morethan once the splendid organization ofthis committee, with the sinews ofwar at its command, has undoubtedlyheld the House for the Republicans.This was the cae especially in thecampaign of 1898.

Large new stock now on hand.Price, $1.00 each. Here's an opportunity to make your money go faryou want pretty underwear:

To the Teachers, in Honolulu: Themanagers of the Boys' Brigade haveoffered to the Department, free ofcharge, the use of the Manual TradeSchool located on King street, justbeyond the railway station. The onlyexpense attached will be the keepingin repair of the tools and material

if

used. This expense the Department iso willing, to assume if the teachers areenough interested in the work to makeILJ CI

$M. Mclnerny, it an object.

The funds at the disposal of the DeAssociated with Mr. Babcock has

been a rare coterie of politicians. Rep-resentative Jesse Overstreet, of In-

dianapolis, who has just gotten in ahuff because the President will notappoint his man as surveyor of the

partment will not allow the engagement of a trained manual teacher toCorner Merchant and Fort Streets.

Night Gowns. 50c, 75c, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50, $2.00and $2.50.

Skirts, 75c, $1.00, $1.15, $1.25, $1.50 and $2.00.Drawers, 25c, 35c, 40c, 50c and 75c.Chemises, 50c, 65c, 75c and $1.00.Corset Covers, 25c, 35c, 50c, 65c, 75c and $1.00.

SHIRT WAIST SPECIALOver 300 dainty shirt-waist- s, in mulls, lawns and

madras will be closed out far below cost.SEE WINDOW DISPLAY.

J js j

superintend the work. It does notj seem wise to take up the work thereport of Indianapolis has for years been

the Secretary of the Committee. Rep-resentative J. A. T. Hull, of DesMoines, Iowa, chairman of the HouseCommittee on Military Affairs, whose'sister. Mrs. Minor Morris was the cen-

tral figure in the ejectment episode atthe White House offices, was the lead-ing member of the Executive Committee, spent much time at headquartersin the St. James Building, New York A.BLOM

outside of regular school hours.At a meeting of most of the prin-

cipals, it was thought best to snd aletter to the various teachers in Ho-nolulu, explaining to them a little ofthe plan, and to ask them to makedirect reply to the Department as totheir desire and willingness to under-take this work.

The Department is well aware of theamount of work required of the teach-ers and it does not intend to obligateor even urge the proposed work; butif there are teachers who are suff-iciently interested and who can affordto give the time and energy to it, itis certainly an exceptional opportunityfor starting the work.

As we can not hire a trained teach-er, it will be necessary for the teach

PROGRESS BLOCK,FORT STREET.City, and wa one of Mr. Babcock's

most trusted lieutenants. Representa-tive James S. Sherman, of Utica, NewYork, has been and still is vice chairman. Perhaps he will be elected cnair- -man, if he will have the office. He canhandle to advantage the great mass ofinformation which the committee hasabout Congressional districts the coun

Make Your" BREAD ,

Taste BelterBy adding a little good Apple But-

ter! It makes you forgive indifferentbread, while good bread and good ap-

ple butter make an irresistable combi-nation. We do not hesitate to recom-men- d

Heinz Apple Butter. The manufacturers authorize us torefund your money if you do not likeit, but no one has ever asked us tomake that guaranty good. We sell agreat deal of it too.

In fcione crocks ol convenient sicv

M. Mackfeld & Co., Ltd.Wholesale Agents.

try over. Mr. 'Hull has been mentioned for the chairmanship. He has many HALEIWAqualifications, which Mr. Sherman alsohas. Representative Nicholas Long- -worth, of Cincinnati, soon to becomethe President's son-in-la- w, has served J On ihc Oahu Railwayon the executive Committee of theCongressional committee. It has beensuggested that he take up the difficult task of running the Congressionalcampaign. The work is always harder 1in an off year. Then the Congressionalcommittee is nearly "the whole thing."Presidential years the National Com-mittee overshadows it. '

ers in different schools to oversee thework undertaken by the children. Inorder that they may do this intelli-gently, Mr. Pope of the Normal Schoolhas agreed to conduct a class for teach-ers on Tuesday and Thursday after-noons, from three fo four, at the Nor-mal School. In this class, he will giveteachers such instruction as will fitthem to take up the work with studentsin an elementary way.

As soon as teachers have enough ex-perience, classes of from ten to twelvemay be formed in different schools, andperiods arranged whereby classes maygo to the Manual Trade School forwork.

Will you kindly reply to the Depart-ment at once., stating just what wouldbe your own views and wishes in re-gard to this matter? Kindly bear inmind that this is optional and not re-quired; but please let us have replyas soon as convenient.

Yours very respectfully.(Signed) . W. H. BABBITT,

Superintendent of Public Instruction.

Mr. Babcock has no idea of becoming.it'chairman again. Months ago, he be-

gan to talk to his friends about the1pitcher that goes to the fountain once

too often. He has won six Congres-sional campaigns in succession andAvoid Heat and Worry! shared the honors that fall to a suc- -

GRt

RPHEl

lidanu iI

j

3 i

essful Congressional chairman in theHouse. - With 50 or 60 new memberscoming in every year, full of gratitudeA

Golf, Tennis, Fresh and Salt Water Bathing, Riding and Driving are someof the pastimes. The Table and Service are of the Highest Quality. Ticketsand Information at the Honolulu Station and Trent & Co., or ring up HaleiwaHotel King 53.

for what has been done to them, theCongressional Chairman is a pretty bigman in the House. That is demonstrat- - ,

To this letterI replies were received1 011 ounaays tne liaieiwa Limited a two-hou- r train leaves at 8:22 a. m..ed by the influence Mr. Babcock hasGas recently had with members in organ various in character, but for the most returning arrives in Honolulu at 10:10 p. m.part favorable, and the matter was j

' " "I1"!"1 J -izing a revolt against Speaker Can-

non on the statehood and Philippinebills. Mr. Babcock has been unusually B BIB B 21 B B B fl B B B ISEBsBSBa Bl Bi' B k B B BE?B

Wn BRange successful in raising campaign contri-butions. The insurance companiesgave to him in New York,-- as was 1x1

SuIk!

brought out in the late Armstrong investigation. For divers reasons Speaker Cannon has become antagonistic toMr. Babcock. His own district has be-

come decidedly antagonistic to him al

WHILE THEY LASTSpecial SaleOf the Celebrated

taken up at a meeting of the proposedclass at the Normal School Thursdayafternoon. There were some nineteenteachers present at the first meeting,but this number is expected to be in-

creased at subsequent meetings of theclass, it will meet, by the way, everyTuesday and Thursday afternoon, at4:30, at the Normal School and afterthe teachers have received their courseof instruction and begin to get a lineon the work, they in turn will pass theknowledge on to the pupils, and thevery important educational feature ofteaching the children to work withtheir hands will become a regular partof the public schools course in Ha-waii. There has, to be sure, been somework done along these lines already.

so, it being a hot-be- d of La Folletteism.He will therefore have a fight for hispolitical life this year to win a re- -

will go a long way toward securinga comfortable house.No unnecessary heat in the house.A saving in labor.A clean kitchen,

1 Hot water at short notice and many- -

other comforts. J

Gas Ranges and Water Heafers sold by Dealer and

HONOLULU GAS CO . LTD.

lection. It is not beyond the improbabilities that Mr. Babcock will soon gointo private life, as may Representa- - :

tive Overstreet, who has announcedthat he will retire from the Congres-sional Committee. Mr. Overstreet is

nw

Him

a

mi

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Uism

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Bla

'Hi

BBBB

PIBIK

BtoBBaBB

"'""""L---- : """". .r,-- -; '"'"'j

I but nothing at all commensurate with' the importance of the matter. The

technical training and manual train-ing schools on the mainland have at-tained to such proportions of late yearsthat scholars are actually fitted forlife's battles in them, and go rightfrom the schools to factoriesand workships, earning better pay thanmany older workmen because theirtraining has been so thorough.

1

also threatening to retire from Con-gress altogether.

While the selection of the Congres-sional committee one member of Con-gress from every state that has a Re-

publican delegation devolves entirelyupon the House, there will be a dis-

position to leave some of the organiza-tion to President Roosevelt, especiallythe selection of a chairman. Men re-

alize that he will be a factor in theCongressional campaign and that ap-peals for votes will generally be madein his name. Mr. Babcock has servedhis recent terms as chairman at thepersonal request of the late PresidentMcKinley and subsequently of Presi-dent Roosevelt. As Mr. Sherman comesfrom New York, where there will be alively Congressional fight, it is not un-

likely that the President will favor hisselection, or that of some other NewYorker, possibly Representative Par-sons, now chairman of the New YorkCounty Committee. Sneaker Cannon

WASHING TON'S BIBTHOAYIK!

BH 5 cents a Tin

WILL BE CELEBRATED I

SB

BIK

u'

00

l

B

nM0aa

0000W0wg0

'J J J JBFOOL, A aooi?

is likely to show a big interest in the j

, LE eatThe members of the Y. M. I. have

taken the first steps looking to a prop-er celebration of Washington's birth-day. The celebration will be held inSun Antonio Hall, on Vineyard street,and there will be a program of literaryexercises, followed by a dance. Theprogram follows:Overture "Our Own United States"

Ellis Quintet ClubIntroductory Remarks by the Presi

BaBhi

He Knowj ThatWaity Block

reorganization. He has the most atstake, possibly, in the election of aRepublican House, for it would mean,probably, his on as Speaker fora third term.

ERNEST G. WALKER.

Telephone 14911J nMyv M I 111RAINISE BOTTL'G WKS,fiewalo. Pione W Hite 1331. B B a B k B s B B B 5 3 B B BUH KB s B ? IlBKB BnB2sn?B?

dent J. Andrade iEER I II1llll T II ft IHl'fi .i i, " ilirh

ld--fc

Cure WbiYou

Address Judge Henry E. HightonSong "The St;ir Spanned Banner"

Mrs. AlapaiRecitation Miss A. H. FrancaComic Song Thos. F. McTighe--Address "Y. M. I."....V. S. FlemingSong "America" W. S. Ellis

The literary exercises will begin at7:45, and dancing will begin at nine.

T

TRAVELERS FIND CHAMBER.-IAIN'- S

COUGH REMEDYEVERYWHERE.

Mr. C. "VT. Eckerman. manager of theSmith-Premi- er Typewriter Co. atOmaha, Nebraska, U. S. A., who is astaunch friend of Chamberlain'sCough Remedy says: "I have takenparticular notice that this remedyseems to be carried by drug stores inill parts of the country, which is quitean item when one i traveling. It givesme pleasure to say that I have usedit for years and have always found ithighly satisfactory, effecting a cure ina shorter time than any other medi-cine." For sale by Benson. Smith &Co., Ltd., agents for Hawaii.

For Whooping Cough, Croup. CoughicBronchitis, Influenza, Catarrh.

For Sale or LeaseLc2g in Galick Tract, Kalihr,

OK CATV LINE.

0350.00 and UpwardIt cores because

ta carried over thethe air rendered strorg'y antivpHediseased surfaces of the broncf..I

breath. frivinK prolong and contoittihee with everv uiTer- -

treatment. Those of a consumptive tendency, r s

ers from chronic bronchitis, find immediate reuia I." m

THE ALAMEDA FEB. 14th.Takes the next shipment of Tropic

Fruit Co.'s pineapjdes to the Coast.Address P. O. Box 50, Honolulu, or

leave orders with TVelis-Farg- Kingstreet.

cougba or inflamed conditions ol tne tr.roat.t-- L... n AatHViTTCSParticulars of LKMLCN D 1 B 1,1 ' ' .... .MRS, 5, A. GULICK.

KALIHLAll Dbi coihts. j

Vt E CO.. 1 HO Fulton St.. Hw Tortc City S,"f...-ijtiT- P txvitict with proof! of Itsva'ne on reqovi.

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7 )TOTtC"kUARY --

3: l9o6.

HAPPY TINF: WANTS THEo ELK NGREAT CLEARING SALEWEDDING

r T1VES TO BRACE UP INMr. and Ars. O'Dowda

LAOES 1 EMBROIDERIESTe!ephone'Ma!n'424Entertain Their

Friends,toSays That the nawaiians Oughtit n progressive pedro, a sociable

feast and delightful music, comprisedTry and Produce Some FirstClass Men of Affairs.

itI

i;

Now in ProgressOne of the greatest Bargain

Events of the season.

Regular Sales Day

SATURDAY

SEND IN YOUR GOODS.

in a whole evening of neighborly fore-gathering and mirth, Mr. and Mrs.Thomas O'Dowda of Ewa were assist-ed on February 1 in tha celebrationof their tin wedding. As fairly wellsophisticated people know without themnemonic assistance of the EmeraldIsle's dialect a "tin" wedding is duoon the tenth anniversary of a couple's

W. B. Elkin, whose newspaper con- - dan was much interested, and brought.. A V. . 1 I, 1 i.troversy with the late Editor VY. ;. ie uhu.u iue uu ui We are now offerinp; thousands of yards of Embroider-

ies and Laces of every description at about half regularprices.

If you want to have first ch'ance to select best patternsT T? T? T T V r .... . .

d here isArmstrong is inof the chief difficultiesnow a professor of philosophy in the the wav of getting anything: done byMissouri State University. The Hilo the people of the mainland for the edu- -

Herald prints a letter of his to Kev. S. cation of Hawaiian-- , so far as I can sec,is that the Ilawaiians are doing so lit- -

T 1esna la whlch lie urSes better ehl- -tie for themselves."

uncommonlinuLi, ior many will be attracted by thecharacter of the oflerinp;s.

cation for the Ilawaiians. Prof. Llkin Prof itjn makes three propositionssays at. the outset: "I suppose by this to the Ilawaiians:

marriage. Well, the host and hostesson this occasion were ten years weddedon Thursday blissfully as all theirfriends are aware and blessedly astheir cosy home and a bright cluster

f little "olive branches" fully attest.So with due notice thCy called in their

o0tii.r wi.a some intimatecity friends, to share their seasonedfelicity. 7

For the celebration the beautiful pa

PHeiFie import e.FORT STREET.

time you have got county government,or local government of some sort. Butin order to make the most of the op-

portunities thus arising tne Ilawaiiansneed better education. You know that

WILL E. FISHER.AUCTIONEER.

TODAYSATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3. 1906,

At my salesroom, corner Fort andQueen streets, I will sell

150 Sks. Bran20 41 Shorts15 f1 Barley

I. To meet the withdrawal of theBishop scholarships for Ilawaiians atOahu College by establishing threetimes as many of their own. Thiswould answer Mr. Bishop's challenge,"open the eyes of the missionarychildren' and give the ablest Hawaiian

0000CKSs OGKgS)this is the Educational Age, par excel

Every people needs intelligence boys and girls a chance to enter mainlence

vilion in the midst of the plantation'spark, directly in front of the O'Dowdahome, was obtained and fitly prepared.This is a trulv elesant n'aoe of assem The ice-che- st is not complete in its

unless several bottles of

r

3

land rmversiues. rror. iMKin suggeMthat the expenses be borne by the n.

Princes David and Cupid, theParkers. Campbells, etc.

II. Establish a Territorial Univer-sity with government scholarships forthe education of young men and womenal Tiqd. ,

III. TheHawaiian delegate toCongresshould make it his business to securefederal aid for higher education in Ha-

waii. Hawaii receives at present afew thousand dollars a year from theU. S. government for the ExperimentStation, but nothing for university or

of the highest kind to enable it to lookafter its own affairs and best intereststhese days. The Ilawaiians shouMhave some good lawyers, doctors andjournalists all first-clas- s men as wellas teachers and preachers. But whatare they doing to get them?

"I enclose you a cupping from a re-

cent copy of the Baltimore Sun to giveyou an idea of what the Filipinos aredoing at the present time. The Ha-waiian- s,

I suppose, need never expeetto obtain independence again, as theFilipinos hope to do. There are too few

nmo Lager1 case Grape Nuts,2 cases Sausages,12 cans Milk.10 bottles C. & B. Malt Vinegar,V-- doz. Milk Pitchers,6 Coffee Mills.Painter's Overal's and Jumpers,7 bales Codfish.2 Tubs of Sauce.6 Candy Buckets.Etc., Etc.

bly, well lighted with electricity.Blossoms of the bougainvillea vinecomposed a mound of color upon thebilliard table, whereon were arrangeda great array of gifts appropriate tothe event. Ferns, palms, etc., com-pleted the decorations of the hall,which had been arranged by ' theladies of the plantation. Speaking ofthe presents, they revealed the re-markable variety of useful and orna-mental articles that can be made outoz tin. Besides there was proof thatsome of their friends thought tin not!?oou enough ft-- Mr. and Mrs.O'Dowda. for trje estimate of theirqualities was exemplified in some in-

stances by the. glitter of sterling silverware.

During the progress of the pedrj

Forty-eig- ht statesof them now left, and too many Amerl- - higher educationand territories have already received

are stored therein. This splendid beer is in-

valuable for luncheon purposes, indoors or in

the open air. It adds to the pleasure of a

yachting cruise immensely and its presenceon the link gives enhanced zest to the gameof golf.

important federal aid for higher edu-

cation. See the Report of the U. S.Commissioner of Education for 1903,

Vol. 1, p. 1179, that is, all the statesand territories, except Hawaii, Indian

WILL E. FISHER,AUCTIONEER.

p M

THIS DAY ggy TillTerritory and Alaska. And -- f these,Indian Territory and Alaska have re-

ceived federal aid for education inmany ways that Hawaii has not. Ha-waii has a claim here that should be

contest delicious fruit punch withfloating strawberries was served atthe card tables. The play resulted asfollows, the prizes being all handsome;Lady's prise, Mrs. Douglas; gentle-man's, Mr. Gouveia; ' lady's boobyprize, Miss Koelling; gentleman's, Mr.Nyswander; flinch table prize, Mrs.West.

Dushed. and pushed vigorously and

caus, jcngusii, japs anu irortuguese onthe Islands. But they should aim tohave a large voice in the affairs of gov-ernment, and exercise a force in indus-trial life, agriculture, fishing, trade andthe professions. How is this to bedone? By means of more education, bysending a number of the best Hawaiianstudents every year to the mainland toget knowledge of American history,law, government and education; in aword, a knowledge of American civili-zation.

"I had once a great plan to get Car-negie to give a number of scholarshipsto educate Ilawaiians in American uni-versities. I went to New York City tosee him about the matter, but thescheme did not succeed. I have alsotried to have a number of free scholar-snip- s

provided at Stanford University,and at Cornell University. For a timeit seemed as if the Stanford planwould be carried' out. President Jor- -

SATURD AYFeb. 3, 1906

T will sell a number of pure bred

continuously.Prof. Elkin concludes as follows:

"I have now outlined my latest planfor improving the education, the industrial conditions, and the civiliza

Music being next In order, Mrs.Crane rendered a song that elicitedlong-lastin- g applause and general ex-

pressions of admiration. A quartettion of Hawaii. You are a good speaker. and can present a matter well. If

Prize Winners)

BUCK MINORCA

CHICKENSIN LOTS TO SUIT.

consisting of Messrs. Melchers, Mann,Edmunds and Greenfield then sang in

you and King, and Kanuha, and Na-kuin- a,

and others will start a cam-paign of education, agitate, make the manner, bringing an irresistible ' en

core. Solos were rendered by Messrs.Edmunds and Melchers which evoked

question of government scholarships apolitical question, if necessary, you

enthusiastic plaudits.will carry the thing through, in a fewMay be seen at my salesroom today. That Tired Feeling Following the music refreshmentsyears. There are some Hawaiian stud

Clap of ThunderOut of a Clear Sky

couldn't be more startling than our Great Clearance Sale ofblisses', Children's and Infants' Shoes.

Highest grade shoe wear for one-fourt- h, one-thir- d andone-ha- lf the regular price. Every mother is interested andasking "How can they do it?"

We can and will easily explain when you come in.Note the reduced prices, then come early and buy. You

will.be sure to meet some'of your friends here.200 pairs Misses' Tan Shoes; lace, button and slippers.

Sizes ii 1- -2 to 2 1-- 2. Former price $3.75, $3.00, $2.50;now 75c.

300 pairs Chlldrien's Tan Shoes; lace and buttons only.Sizes 8 to 11. Former price $2.75, $2.50, $2.00; now 50c.

100 pairs Infants' Tan, Red and Black Shoes. Sizes 2 1- -2

to 5. Former price $2.00, $1.75, $1.50; now 50c.TERMS CASH AND POSITIVELY NO EXCHANGES.

were served upon the small tables disents at Stanford University now, someWhich is so CS posed about the hall. They consistedof my old students. But without asWILL E. FISHER,AUCTIONEER. dishearten of a variety of toothsome sandwichessistance such as I have Indicated, they

coffee, ice cream and wedding cake.Throughout the repast unconstraineding is often

caused by sociability reigned. Manager Renton'sproposal of the health of the host andhostess, with gracefully expressedpoor, thin

blood, result

are not likely to accomplish much, ex-cept ruin their health. Students canstudy, and do something at the sametime to support themselves, but notall. There is hope for the Filipinos,for they are aggressive, they are do-ing something for themselves. Andthere are many young people in Hawaiiwho would act likewise, if they weregiven an opportunity. This is my plea."

Wednesday,FEBRUARY 7, 1906.

I will sell at my salesrooms,

ELEGANT

wishes for their long-continu- ed happi

I!If-

ii

v

I.'.,

i ,

ii7,

.

hf:

1

ness, brought the company to its feeting in defi and, in response to an added call bycient vitality .117 iH JM Mr. Renton, three rousing cheers were

given for Mr. and Mrs. O'Dowda. InThe blood needsresponse Mr. O'Dowda, after utteringto be enrichedHousehold Furniture II the hearty thanks of his wife and himand vitalized:self for the attendance and felicitaand for this there is no medicine in

the world equal to Manufacturers' Shoe Co , Ltd. 1051 Fort Street'Phone Main 282ALSO tions of their guests, regaled themHOTcL ARRIVES with a series of stories illustrating Hi

bernian wit.LOTS OF GROCERIES Ayers The social time was prolonged untilmidnight, when the party dispersedThe following are registered at thewith renewed congratulations to thehospitable couple. Those present were

Clean, Sweetas follows: Mr. and Mrs. George F.Renton. Mrs. G. Fisher, Mr. H. S.Fisher, Miss Fisher, Mrs. J. Guild,Miss Guild, Mr. A. S. Guild, Mr. andMrs. David Douglas, Mr. and Mrs.McKeever, Mrs. Boswell, Miss Bos-we- ll,

Mr. and Mrs. John Evanson. Mr.

Bags of Peas,Bags of Beans,Boxes of Oranges,

ALSOPERFUMES.

TOILET WATERS.TOILET SETS.ETC., ETC.,Ed. Pinaud Paris Toilet Water,Colgates Cashmere Bouauet,Etc., Etc.

ALSO

three hotels:Hawaiian Hotel M. II. Sigofaa,

Philadelphia; Lieut. T. B. Maghee andwife, U. S. A., Mrs. J. P. Whitney, Seat-tle, Wash.; Dr. J. R. McGough and J.A. McDough, Toronto; N. G. Mitchell,Toronto; Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Fort welland daughter, Cambridge, Mass.; How-ard A. Turner and wife, San Francisco,Mr. and Mrs. Paul McCormac, NewYork; H. L. Woodburn and wife, Boise,Idaho; Dr. W. S. Laton, T. S. Harris,Minneapolis; Mrs. ' Laura B. Durden,Margaret II. Wallace. Portland. Ore.:

FEATotS? PSLL0WSand Mrs. C. E. Eklund, Miss Eklund,Mr. and Mrs. West, Mr. and Mrs.Lohrengal. Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Swift,Mrs. C. S. Crane, Mrs. W. Patterson, sr je

PONY (saddle horse).A

SarsaparillaThe cures it has worked, the men,women, and children it has restoredto health, are countless in number.One such experience is as follows:

" I have used Ayer's Sarsaparilla in myfamily for years, and would not be withoutit.- - I used to suffer with boils and skineruptions, attended with great lassitudeand exhaustion., In fact, I was so ill thatI could not attend to my business. Beingadvised to try Ayer's Sarsaparilla, I did so,and I am happy to say that the medicinerestored me to perfect health. I have sinceused Ayer's Sarsaparilla for my children, invarious complaints, and it has always provedeffective. I can safely recommend it to suf-ferers as a true blood purifier."

There are many imitationSarsaparillas.

Be sure you get "AVER'S."Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass., U.S.A.

AYER'S PELLS, the best family laxative.

Mrs. F. J. A m wear. San Francisco- - MrnMiss Lloyd, Miss Craig:, Miss Koelling,Mr. and Mrs. Masters, Mr. and Mrs.TtTulholland. Mrs. Lee Todd. Dr. McM. A. Mordant and Mrs. MWILL San. Francisco; Mrs. P. K. Brigham andE. FISHER.

AUCTIONEER. Lean, Messrs. T. W. Chase. . Thos.Jones. C. J. McKellican, D. F. Mann,H. C. Schmidt. N. J. Polmere. F. Boo--

Miss Helen Brigham, Portland, Ore.;Allen Wheeler, Denver.

Young Hotel A. Eisni and wife.

J. Hopp & Co.,Young Building Furniture Store

1053-105- 9 Bishop Street.Japan; A. F. Bloomer and wife. New lan. C. A. Gault, J. W. Jenkins, l . aic-Leo- d,

C. McEaehren, A. Wlssman. C.

"H. B."Canned Goods

York; E. J. Waddell and wife, Aurora,New York; J. O. Talbott and wife, Den-ver. Colo.; J. A. Finch and wife, Spo-kane, Wash.; Mrs. J. S. Drumheller,Spokane, Wash.; C. J. Chilling SanFrancisco; S. F. MeKnight, Minneapo-lis. Minn.; P. J. Cosgrove, Minneapolis,Minn.; J. A. Siekley and wife, Chi-cago; X. S. Miller and wife, Chicago;

Edmunds. It. W. Edmunds, fccottWright. F. Melchers, N. J. Gouveia,F. J. Penny, F. E. Greenfield. M. E.EasUm, W. Schieffer, W. P. Johnson.F. Ohrt, W. Deal, W, Nyswander andD. Logan.

f--.

SALE OF OLINDA.

The Baldwin mountain home on Ha-leaka- la,

which, under the name of'Olinda." has furnished entertainmentand enjoyment to so many, is to besold at auction by the government to

KOLLISTER DRUG CO.. AGENTS.

In the party were two women aJiIthree men, one of the later being1 veryold and blind. The leader of the partyasked for Jones, the guide, and Baldthey wanted to go down to the crater

PAGAN OFFERINGS

TO FIRE GODDESSA WONDERFUL DISCOVERY.Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Engler, Dubuque,Iowa; Jerome H elding, The Hague, Hol-land; Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Forma n, Min-neapolis, Minn.; Mr. and Mrs. McCourt,Denver; Mr. and Mrs. Feldhauser, Den-ver; Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Curzan, Spring-field, Mass.; Allen Wheeler. Denver:

This Is the age of research and experiment,irben e!l nature, so to speak. Is ransacked bjthe scientific for the comfort and happlneiw ofman. Science has Indeed made giant stridesduring the past century, and among the by nomeans least Important discoveries Id medicinecomes that of THERAFION.

This preparation Is unuuestionably one of th-

day.

in obedience to instructions from a Ka-huna in Honolulu who told thern theymust go to Kilauea and make gifts UtPele. They would have to be at the cra-ter on Monday night because the moot:would be right for the first p;irt tthe ceremony and they would have togo two weeks later for the final act.

Jones went down to the pit withthem and on the way learned that the- -

Full weight 3-l- b. Tn3packed in he -- vy

rruit byrup.PEACHES, PEARS.

APRICO IS, PLUMS,

CHERRIES. Etc.

Pur9t and best of Cal-ifornia's cnoicest

Fruits.

The Hilo Herald says:In days of old it was customary for

the Hawaiian chiefs to make pilgrim-ages to Kilauea and do homage to Pelebv making offerings of pigs and

W. W. Hoag, San Francisco; Mr. andMrs. Harlock, Minneapolis; C. E.Young, San Francisco; B. Gilpin. Bal

"Olinda" is on government land, andhas for many years been under leasemost genuine and reliable I'atent

ever Introduced, and has, we understand, beeiinwd In the Continental Hospitals by RIcord,Kostan, Johert, Velpeau, Malsonneore, the well-know- n

Chansaignac, and Indeed by all who are

to H. P. Baldwin. The lease has nowexpired, and upon the request of Mr.Baldwin the fee of the house and lotupon which it is located is to be soldby the government at public auctionat an upset price of $2SC0.

regarded as authorities in such matters. In-

cluding the celebrated Lnllemand, and Ronx.by wh-i- It was some time since unlfmiiadopred. and that It Is worthy the attention olthose who require sncb a remedy we think there

timore, Md.; Arthur J. Hughes, Toron-to, Canada; Miss Hilda B. Hughes,Toronto, Canada; C. C. DuBose, China;A. Yeeder, San Francisco.

Moana M. Xeumneustoin and wife,Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Rettig, Mrs. J.leitrer. New York; Mr. and Mrs. Jas.S. Bell and family (6), Minneapolis;K. C. Sterling and wife. Redlands; R.C. A. Peterson, Honolulu; Wm. R.

'sbo" and wife. New York; Mr. andMrs. Jas. Xewlands, Jr., San Franciseo;E. J. Waddell and wife. Aurora. Neb.

Is no doubt. From the time of Aristotle down-wards, a potent agent In the removal of thesediseases has (like the famed philosophertone) been the object of search of some hope-

ful, generous minds; and far beyond the men-

Lewis & Go., Ltd.GROCERS SOLE 'AGENTS

169 King St., 'Phone 240

WHO SAID CHICKEN?

Scottl of course. He will serve a

chicken lunch today from 11 a. m. to2 p. m. that will go down in historyas an example of what a chicken lunchshould be.

power if such could ever have been disc,ered of transmuting the baser metals Into goldis surely the discovery of a remedy so potnias to replenish the failing energies In the oncase, and In the other so effectually, speedily

"square face.-- ' The presents weregiven often with a view to appeai;.the wrath of the goddess and it is inhistory where the late Queen Kapio-la- ni

made a visit to Hilo during a lavarlow and threw in a pig, whereuponthe flow ceased.

Kahunas have been known to sendtheir patients to Kilauea with red orwhite roosters and a bottle of gin as acure-a- ll for complaints of mind orbody and the results have been vari-ous. Last Monday night the ceremonyof making offerings to Pele was wit-nessed by the guide at the VolcanoHouse and two or three of the guests.Manager I.yeurgus was 'n Hilo. so hemissed the sight of his life.

One of the gu-:- s of the hotel saysfive Ilawaiians came up to the hotellato Monday afternoon carrying a live

a bottle of gin. a rooster, a bott!-'-o- f

brandy and a piece of red cloth.

blind man, whose name is lirown, wasonce a guide at the crater and thehocus pocus was in his behalf. Afterreaching the brink they first threw inthe live pig, at the same time repeat-ing Incantations. The pig was follow-ed .by the rooster, gin and brandy, andthen there were more prayers. The re!cloth was then thrown into the Pit andfinally a sealed letter wa-- s droppedover the bank to be destroyed withthe other articles by the burning lava,

Jones, the guidf, remained with tru-part- y

throughout tHo reremony andreturned with them midnight.He said the m'--n and women hailprayed steadily for more than twohours. The blind man did not recoviThis sight according to sheduK and

party i. expct'-- d bat k at the c ra--cr

on the night of February 12.

nd safely to expel from the system the poisiof a quired or inherited disease In all theirprotean Puma as to leave no taint or trace be-

hind. Such Is the New French RemedyTHEItAPION. which may certainly rank withIf not take precedence of. many of the dis- -

overies of our day, abont whlcn no iitmi.jstenfation and noise have been made, and tbtjrroi.iivf. ami g demand that has

BE QUICK.Not a minute should be lost when a

child shows symptoms of croup.Chamberlain's Cougrh Remedy given assoon as the child becomes hoarse, oreven after the croupy coug-- appears,will prevent the attack. It never fails,and is pleasant and safe to take. Forsale by Benson. Smith & Co. Ltd..agents for Hawaii.

Mrs. Harllee, Mrs. Meridith and Mrs.W. L. Howard, who started on a walkTing trip around Oahu. returned to thecity yesterday evening by train fromWailee. At the latter place Mrs. Harl-V- e

became ill and it was decided tobring her home. Mrs. Meridian and""Tt-s- . Howard will Ftart out again thismorning via the Pali.

F. D. WIGKE,CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER.

Store Fittings f. Specialty.Vtepaiiing. Cabinet Work and Polishing.

1082 Alakea St.. rear of Y. M. C. A.Phone M. 447. residence Phone W. 161L

bi-e- crested for this medicine wherever Intro-duced sppenrs to prove that It is destined fcast into oblivion all those questionable reme-rti.-- a

tlt were formerlv the sole r"'iance ofmedical men. Diamond Fields Advertiser. Kim

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THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER. HONOLULU, FEBRUARY 3. 1906.iiiuiMaaMM

xxoc)ooooooodbonooooooooooooooTHE PACIFIC Nutrine Latest INOTES FROM

COAST FILES TheCOMMERCIAL ADVERTISEREDITOB.

WAL7TE1E. G. SMITH ElectricMorton Razorrales of Ecuador has startedCol. CoFEBRUARY 3SATURDAY an uprising.The recent imutiny at Vladivostok

SEA.thv PTSTNf, OF THE SALTON was serious.The Trans-Siberia- n Kv. has resumed

Ideal Maltthan the r.s-in- g

Few phenomena of modern times Lave been more impressive

of the Salton Sea, changing the Colorado desert, in Southern California

Sf . inhmd lake and it may be working a change in the climate of 4full operations.

Emma .Cjlfe scored a great success.'. ..y.VS.

in San Fraaeasco.auw ' " ' - " " . , ' I. , ,. 000Partly, perhaps, tne ereanou ui luhall New England.reirion larger than A Jewi'.sh.JerueriB-t- o be organized

So simple that anyone can use it.No stropping necessary, always sharp.Impossible to cut yourself.Consists of a silver triple plated holder and twelve double

edged blades packed in a handsome velvet lined case.

in the Colorado river. ine water recom- -is the result of the rising of flood waterso wnen ine run aa 7 bv an earth- -l.ooan flowincr into trie sea several s

at San Francisco.Arizona was shaken

quake on Jan. 25.Hearst has scored

man to reclaim a vastiV. i. ...,,f ; h99 from an effort made by

the statehood mended byland lying partly within the Lmtedand very rich section of agricultural Call and examined one.measure as unju?t.

Not a woman or child wasStates, and partly in Mexico.rr. t- - t--. .w,;, fhrAniplo which newspaper lately savedsent a special cor- -

savs thatti, ,Pnp to rather the facts of the rising of the seaindeed, that it;. . xt: i,,i,. wator is likelv to have and

Pacific Hardware Company, Ltd.Fort and Merchant Streets.OKI.

4:

from the wreck of the Valencia.San Francisco entertained a big del-

egation of Chicago business men.Thos. Hardy, who built the Hunter's

Point Drydoek, died at Angeles, Cal.The State Bauk Commissioners have

closed up the Bank of San Luis Obispo.An unusually large flight of robins

was observed recently at Marysville,Cal.

The City Council committee of Chi-

cago is expected to declare for cheapergas.

S. J. Nathan, a former merchant and

CCKXCXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXKXXXXCK

in that the Lmted States wouldwas intended to have political consequences,

be forced to purchase a part of the peninsula of Lower California trom Mex-

ico of American citizens in the reclaimed lands.in order to preserve the rights

' of wonderful possibilities, and physical-

lyLower California is a rich country

as much a part of the United States as the peninsula of Florida, but un-

fortunately the law of Mexico prohibits absolutely the sale of any part ofIt is the other importantto foreign power.the territory of the republic any

consequences of the inflow of the river waters that are interesting. The sea,

lying directly inland from San Diego, beyond the San .Jacinto mountain range,

is from ten to eighteen miles wide, according to the Chronicle's correspondent,

Hollister DragCOMPANY. Electric Sparks!r ot ran xrancisco, aieu in-ie-about fortv-fiv- e miles long, twenty-thre- e leet tour inenes in uepm at in. . piat- --

benevolence. Electric lirht is man'sSunlight; is nature'sSocietyStationery

deepeBt plaee, and. js mi) PtwiW? tb Fat of OPe.lialf to three-quarte- r, of york.

an inch daily, '".trican imports and exports c?

V A a result of this inflow of waVeVh? Colorado river Is saM to be dry as approached the $3,000,000,000

J&l f10 Poiflt twelve mileS WW Yuma to the Guf of California. The m(( Amerioa First publicitv

Vi rift einpHwi Into the Colorado three miles above uma. Twelve miles. eonj?ress at Salt Lake opened auspi- -

Uiw Yuma, and four miles below the Mexican border, the American and Mex- - ci0lisiv.

lean companies formed for the reclamation of the desert lands built the first chas. L. Currier, prominent in insur-intak- e

canal which was to carry the waters of the combined rivers to the Im- - ance circles in Chicago, died at LosAngeles.

VtZTU ..4 the settle. --j Wggof -.-er into ,MS was s,ow,

Imperial could not get water for irrigation, and began clamoring about it. jA Corona(j0Then a second intake canal was constructed, and at once the water began! tfayor Wood of Santa Barbara ha9nonrinf? into it in a stream that was soon beyond all control. It is this water withdrawn his resignation and will con- -

appreciation of nature.If you want to keep your friend?-- , keep a light house and

'a light heart.Nerves are the enemy ot happiness. Electric light the

enemy of nerves.Electric light is thfc "best modern nerve tonic you can

prescribe for yourself. You can take it as often as you wish,and give to others without extra charge.tihue in office;.

inyou are get nig

robs the mind

that is now filling the Salton Sea, through the channels of New River and theAlamo, and that has destroyed the salt works at Salton and compelled theSouthern Pacific to move its track backward toward the mountains to keep

out of the wet. The river bed of the Colorado below the intake is said to beactually at higher level than the streams through which the water is rushingwestward, and if that is true there is small promise that the river will ever

To use electric Iig"ht just means thatthe habit of being cheerful.

A good light has a moral value. Itwell as the room of shadows.

Representative Foster introduced abill making sweeping changes in theexclusion law.

J. J. Miltenberger of St. Louis wentinto bankruptcy with $ai1,916 of debts,and $300 n Assets.

as

We macs a specialty of En-graving Dies and EmbossingCorrespondence Paper.

A large and complete stock ofonly the very finest paper Iscarried by us at all times.

PROFESSIONAL AND OF-FICE LETTER HEADS, in cop-per plate printing and embos-sing, a specialty.

All orders for WEDDING andRECEPTION INVITATIONS re-

ceive prompt and careful

F. I. Sherman, who is said to havepaid a bribe of $5000 to Tacoma'smayor, must stand trial.

President and Mrs. Roosevelt issuedinvitations on January 25 to the Roose- - Hawaiian Ekcfrfc Co., Ltd. Office, King St., near Alakea

St. Phone Main 330.

again find its way to the Gulf through the old channel.Physically, this flooding of the desert is apt to be followed by the most

momentous consequences. It may even, as has already been indicated, worka change in the climate of all of the southern coast counties of California.The eool summers of Southern California are caused by the inrush of air frorti

the sea to take the place of the heated air constantly rising from the surfaceof the desert, and if the desert is itself covered by water, this inrush willstop, naturally.

The resignation of a member of theHouse of Commons for the City of Lon-don, gave Balfour a seat. ooooooooooooooo OOO

Bunkers' testimony in the SacraThen the summers of California will grow warmer, and increased humidity mento court favors French, who is on

will be followed bv slimmer rains and in all probability by a tropical vegeta- - trial for accepting bribesOne hundred and eighty-fiv- e cases of JIM

Arrived ex "Dumfriesshere"Andrew Usher's Special Reserve,Buchanan's Black and. White, "Khod-eric- k

Dim" .

Egyptian antiquities have been addedto "the Berkeley collection. '

,

Philip James, who shot John Lodgeat Sacramento, was sentenced to Im-prisonment in San Quentin.

Thirty miles of track on the NorthLIMITED.

tion that will destroy the healthfulness that now makes that country one ofthe most desirable in the world for residence purposes. Summer rains andthunder showers, and dense tropical growth would so transform Southern Cali-

fornia that its promotion literature would no longer be descriptive of it, and its."boomers would have to find new reason for drawing people to it from otherlands. More, the Salton Sea will be apt to change the winter climate, also,possibly increasing the rainfall but certainly tempering the atmosphere by somuch as the warm winds from the Gulf of California wouldr moderate thesouthwest trades coming over the Pacific.

ern Pacific Ry. have been rendered use Fort Streetless bv the storms in UregonSenator McLaurin made an attack on WhiskiescofciiSecretary Metcalf because of the lat

ter's alleged views on exclusion, i rv.Altogether, the rise of the Salton Sea will be watched with interest, for Jasper Jennings ot urant s .fass,

many reasons besides any fear of internationall complications that the coining. of..-Ore,- , was convicted and w;ill be exe j jcuted. His sister escaped conviction.The Siinplon tunnel was opened Janthe waters may lead to. Mexico and the United States are not likely to have

eerious trouble. The two countries have too many things in common, and theeommercial conquest of Mexico is proceeding too surely. But when the climate Matting!uarv 26. The first passenger train

passed through amid artillery salutes. W. 0. PEACOCK & CO., LTD.SOLE AGENTS.

of Southern California is endangered there is much more at stake for the peopie' of the United States than would be involved in any foreign war. That

The tug Pioneer arriving at PortTownsend, reports having seen anothertug bottom upward off the Washingtonelimate is an asset in which the entire nation is interested. 5oxxxoooooooooocooc:k? ooooooooooooooo

District Attorney Jerome of sNew

Bu

7aI

9

M

York has not abandoned his plan toSUGAR IN 1905;1 1 I I 1 ..4 i . . '. . 1 . i rt W .1 n li t. . .1 t kp rniiiiiiiti aciiuu iii mc inauiamlhe value ot sugar brought into the country during the year 19f)o will far caseg

xceed that of any earlier year. Statements just prepared by the Department A Fresno judge decides that! the. tj ii ii li 11 4 11 J?of Commerce and Labor, through its Bureau of Statistics, show that the value grand jury has no right to ask news

i'iof. sugar brought into the country during the eleven months ending with No-- ' PaPr ?ien. whcre the obtain their in-- j

We are especially well stocked atpresent with Japanese and ChineseMatting, also Chinese Matting Rugs,both plain and twisted patterns, andJapanese Cotton Rugs, in prettyblue and white design?. Better getsome new matting instead of turn-ing the old. The improvement willbe great and the cost won't bemuch.

"The Water of QualityWaukesha's Original Mineral Water

vember was $148,575,34.5,-o- f which $51,485,256, or more than one-thir- d of the Shonts 'nas admittel getting $30,000total value, was from the noncontiguous territory of the United States, and from the government and $12,000 frOm I

it was quite clear that the figure of the remaining month of the j'ear 1905 the Clover Leaf Ry., as salaries at the:Conld hrincr fti trranl tnal nf ni&nr imnttrt ronsidprnVilv nVinvo ISO tti i 11 inn Same time. 1 NaturalSparkling.j 11 , .. . , ... , . . . , . x The new fort at San Diego bav has!was in.. . been named Pio Pico in honor of the J

millions m the year 1894, when an unusually large quantitv of of that name under Mexican !sugar was governor Quarts, Pintfe, Splits Crcwn Paient CorksFor Sale Everywhere

MACiFARLANE & CO.. Sole Agent.

brought into the country in anticipation of a change in the tarifT on that article.1

Sovereignty.'2 The United States is increasing steadily and rapidly its consumption

'of (

Ajjpiicatit has been made to Duiiubreakwater at the mouth of the Saul-- rri , i. i ; A , . . . . ' a

iBBi"' " v v .-- v6 or ootn caneoutput Gabriel riv (West Long Beach), Cal.,and beet sugar, but even their rapid increase in production is not keeping pace to cost $1,000,000.with the increasing home demand, and as a consequet.ee the quantity of sugar ' Young Decatur, midshipman at the ItllIB BBMM

brought into the country increases from vear to year. It has doubled in the --Navy Academy, and .great-granaso- n ori Commodore Decatur vof 1812 war fame,last twenty years, while population meantime increased but 50 per cent. The i?7 iSOUTH KING STREET.has been dismissed for hazin. I The Snow onannual average importation during the five-yea- r period ending with 1885 was, The National Tube, Co. has closed &.

1,031,149 tons and during the five-yea- r period ending with 1905 the annual contract with the: Unioh Oil Co. for.o omfl nil nc. Uoif. i. u a iU a r,,, , ,1 4 : i. t,- - Ti i t v miles or mmi'ir iu uacu

had frown from 176.035 tons in 1885 to amirnximntpt 600.000 tons in 1P,05 th fui?r.inF .aPr081. the Isthmus. OUR GRAND akeaMann- ' ' 1 1 J ' ' ' .1 iAlisonj the wizard, wins a suit;elect flgurtS for the full year being not yet available. ! against the Goulds after thirty years

(

The United States is the largest sugar-consumin- g country in the world,- of litigation involving $50,000,000". It .j

though the per capita consumption in this country is not as "great as in thej, wa (1"e to telegraph patents. riArtf Chief Constructor Capps, U. S. s.JJJmted Kingdom. The total consumption in 1904 aggregated 2,.6i,000 ton, says that Work on the naval collieprf

making an average consumption for each individual for tire year of about 75 tairio will co?t more at the Mare Islandpounds. The estimate of Willett and CJrav, acknowledged authorities in sugar yard than if built at a private yard. j

production and consumption, puts the consumption for the vear 1905 at 2.632,000 Monongahela district of Pennsylva-- ,

' . l nia is terrorized by the Black Handtons, though this doubtless represents a larger value than that of the preced- -

orRaTlization Pmi the authorities have ,ing year, by reason of the increased prices which prevailed in the various appealed to the state for assistance. :

mrr!r-Tir.-wliirin- countries of the world. 1 Iinrlintrton nassensrer train No. d

is no purer than the famous Crystal Springs Butter. We

guarantee it absolutely pure and you may order it at all

times With absolute confidence that it is as good and sweet

as can be. We deliver it frozen hard in neat cardboard

cartons.- - r iC?i

of with those of the struck a landslide on the G,"eat Xorth." "ready-TO-WEA-RA comparison of the figures our own consumption of APPAREL IS

World's total production indicates that the United States consumes about one- - "a" Vlit'ched!1 The train "messenger aV NOW 'IX ' FULL. SWING.

METROPOLITAN MEAT CO.Telephone Main 45.

item is a bargain, and" there'sfor all.

'Everyenough

fourth of the sugar production ot the world. Comparing our consumption vvitn , ,rnwr.ed. 1

the accepted authoritative statement of the world's production for a term o Bishop O'ConneU of MaiT who i

vearv the figures indicate that in the five-vea- r period ending with 18S0 our passed through Honolulu en' . route to .lat'Hii, has been aiibointed bvronsumption was about 2( per cent, of the world s product, in the five vears, the lope as coadjutor Archbishop ot

ending with 1890 a little over 28 per cent., and in the five years ending with Uoston. !

1905 about 26 Tier cent. i The Italians have seized the customshouses in the Italian zone of Crete be- -

LADIES',MISSES',CHILDREN'SANDINFANTS'

XOCKXX)00X)OOOOCCKOCKX

BUILDER AND REAL ESTATE AGENT.

cause of the "refusal of the people topay indemnity for the murder of anItalian soldier.

A St. Louis ViVgro declared before thegrand jury thst'he had been directed) v a high police official to kill OliverBeck, a .judge of election, and JohnWheejer. negro editor.

David Stnrr Jordan has been namedby the President to be leader of aparty to go to Japan to investigatefisheries. The investigation will bemade this summer. Dr. Evermanv, whoassisted Dr. Jordan in the investiga-tion of Hawaiian fisheries, will be anassistant.

Announces that he Is prepared to furnish homaa complete.

the lot and latest modern 1 mproved cotvagts for $1000 and up.

Lots for sale at $350 each o n easy terms.Five-roo- m cottage, good plu mbing, for $700.

WEAR AT GREATLYREDUCED PRICES.

If it's a dress, a skirt, a suit, a shirt-waist or a coat that you are needing,you cannot afford to miss this sale.

If the baby needs a bonnet. lawn orsilk, a dress or a coat, you'll find ju?twhat is needed.

If the older ciii'dren need school suitsor dresses, bring them down and suitthem.

This sale will continue for severaldays longer, so if you have not beenable to get in yet. don't give up theidea, but come when you can.

GOOD PROMOTION WORK.The hard work of the Promotion Committee during the past two and more

Tears is now bearing fruit. Last week it was estimated that 500 sightseerswere in town anil the last two steamers have probably increased that numberby thirty-fiv- e per cent., allowing all deductions for those who went away.Hotels are doing a good business and the boarding houses are said to be full.The prospects are good for heavy visitations to come.

Surely it pays to advertise. Thanks to Secretary P.oyd and his suefssor,Mr. Wood, Honolulu has been and is getting the sort of advertising that draws.The traveling public has been compelled to stop and talk Hawaii over. Thename and fame of the Pacific Paradise have been dinned in its ears. FromParis to Calcutta our promotion literature has done and is doing its work. Andthe harvest is ours.

With' the object lesson now shown there ought to be no trouble about givingthe Promotion Committee all the money it needs. That body spends moneywisely and gets results.

PHONE OR ADDRESS WHITE 951. .

8oCKC0XCOX5X5000C o cooxooooooo"35

IQUALITY. ECONOMY.

Si O A. IFX-Hori.cl--a.l-ui Soap -- Tcxlrs Co.- -

FRED. L. WALDRON,.

Sprcckels Block. : : : Sole Agent.

Perhaps isMr. Bill mny not know all abort the Olympia's mission,coming with Molokans, not going away vith Japs. h SHI I H ifa & j

VThe truth is oat at last about the "Major." He is selling malted milk. GOOD GOODS.

Page 5: LL SAYS ANOTHER GIVEN WILL MaDE labor TO OAHU …evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/44320/1/1906020301.pdf · mg ' fitv chr rtI r o nrl tii4- In nnmmiaci'nn TVna in this

7THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, FEBRUARY 3, i9o6.

1

ht over town, may look, see andabhor!a. rjmnirnpjA 0 run in i s &z xOn W ima Sidu season, I wish tomy Mongolian brethren, engagedn ith the Boycott in entertaining American missionaries i are Deal I"ASquand boycotting American productstkit V, , a -Valuable 5 By VOLCANO MARSHALL. I ror everyi. wo. i. American congress has re

jected, emphatically, most emphatical MEETINGSly rejected, all amendments to the Man."Chinese Exclusion ActHerod Herod who slew all the childrenWithout bombastic boastfulness, I00k Ana now, in conclusion, at this glademphatically declare that no man, im in Bethlehem, and in all the coaststhereof, from two years old and under. season, when there should be no ranperfectly acquainted with the English"Racha-e- l weeping for her children, and Interesting Sessions Bothlanguage, during a similar period of

residence in China, has written morerreekle in the human breast, I want toand shall propose a toast to my Mon-golian brethren at the feast I havefurnished them today. We will drinkit standing and in silence. It is this:ON WITH THE BOYCOTT! Again:ON WITH THE BOYCOTT!

t

pro-Chine- se articles than I. As editor

To be independent, withthe right to look every manin the face, let us investyour savings for you, se-

curely and profitably as ourexperience dictates.

The World win Give EveryMan a Living,

But the World Doesn't Runa Delivery Wagon.

would not be comforted, because theywere not."

With my editor's permission I wantto recall an incident that happened nmy life, when I was much younger inyears than now, and which can not be

Afternoon andEvening.

eradicated from my mind. It was at

of the first and - only American news-paper published in China, I was thestalwart supporter of China's entity;I denounced, with all the vigor of mystammering pen, the Boxer indemnity,declaring it exorbitant and outrage

Big Sandy, Wyoming. The sky beREALTY TBANSACTIOHS The meetings of the Farmers' Insticame overcast with ominously dark

clouds and the blackness of night came tute, which are to be held this after

Ask me to send you sealed, free, a bookjuit completed, which will inspire any manto be bigger, stronger, younger (if he is old),imii more maniy tnaa he ever felt. 1 am abuilder of men.

I can take any weak, puny man and makehim feel like a Sandow. Of course, I can'tmake a Hercules of a man who was neverintended by nature to be strong and husky.X don't mean that.

But I can take a man who started with afair constitution and before it got fully de-veloped began tearing it down. That tellowis weak-nerve- slow, poky, lacking in vim,ambition and I can make aman of him in three months so that his own

noon and evening at Kamehameha Man- -on with furious rapidity; the lightningforked and the tempest's wrath thunous; I brought the Supao prisoners out

of jail and made the case internation xiaiuiug odium wm artract manvdered. With companions far braver Entered for Record February 2, 1906,

From 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. who are interested in agriculture, andal. Mv work was the work of a con than I, we were apprehensive that anits development in Hawaii A nowawful struggle would happen a battle

I M Till CO.

rL53 limited. bI V Fort Street, $V4ij3' Honolulu.

Mary Reyes et al by afft of mtgeescientious man, seeking no reward butbetween the elements, the resolve of ieature is to be introduced this afterto Julia Edwards FAthe knowledge of duty well perform man and the cowardice of the brutal G J Kamakama to .T W T'Almpida M noon in the form of a spraying demon-

stration. Practical instruction will beanimal kingdom for we were on the I Mary E Leslie and hsb to Lung Dotrail withv8000 Oregon cattle. Sudden given in the preparation and use of

ed. Again, without bombastic boast-fulnts- s,

I mention these things to re-

move the stain of prejudice from whatI am about to write.

Iriends won t know him.I want you to read this book and learn the

truth about my arguments. If you are notas vigorous as you would like to be, if youhave rheumatic pains, weak kidneys, loss, ofvitality, prostatic troubles, nervous spells,' orany ailment of that kind that unmans you, itwouid- assure your future happiness if youwould look into this method of mine. Don'tdelay it: your best days are slipping by. Ifyou want this book I send it closely sealedfree if you inclose this Ad.

Kerosene Emulsion, Bordeaux Mixture

Wai Co LCharles W Booth and wf to Frank

de Mel'.o DFrank de Mello and wf to Rich-

ard H Trent tr MJoaquim Dutro to Frank Robello.. D

and other insect and fungus destroyers.

ly, above the thunder's roar, a greatnoise was heard: it was the bawlingand the bellowing of the brutes. Andthen followed a mighty sound of hoofbeats, blood-curdlin- g, marrow-chillin- g

A letter will be read and discussed I WM. G. IRWIN & CO., LTD.The longer I reside in China the morefirmly I am impressed with the fact addressed to the Institute, from Ha

excep-- in its cruelty. The earth trembled, , Mataiki to Kapahu Archer et al... Rthat the Chinese, with rare waii's delegate to Conre nrtrintr tho Wm. O. Irwin.. President and Mancgf i .n 1 . l - V. n .1 Makawao Prot Native Church to cooperation of the organization in seBd of Hawn Evan Assn tr D W.

dr. m. g. Mclaughlin,906 MAEKET ST.,

SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.

M. Giffard.. Second Vice-Preside- nt

M. Whitney Treasurercuring, from the Federal government, H.

wavisi aim shook. iue emue iicu-- i

stampeded. On fleet steeds, with pul-sating hearts but fixed resolution, werode into torrential rain, into the bel-lowing, roaring mass of terrified crea-tures, into the lightning's blinding

soil surveys and further assistance in Richard Ivers., Secret n;

tions, are incorrigible gamblers, incor-rigible liars and incorrigible thieves.They believe, firmly believe, in the im-

morality of the soul. Their fingersare tarred with take. They will bur-glarize your trousers' pockets andsteal your false teeth reposing over

E. L Spalding.. Auditortobacco culture.Recorded January 24, 1906.

Sarah U von Pfister to GodfreyBrown, P A; special powers. B 274, SUOAE FACTORS ANDMr. Jarejl G. Smith will present somenasnes. aeterminea to conquer animai j p 453 Dated July 23, 1S87 new ideas at the evening meeting relaW.W. Ahana&Co. fear r.nd God's malice,

tive to the local agricultural situation.COMMISSION AGENTS.

AGENTS FOROceanic Steamship Co., San Fran

Wong In and hsb to L L McCand-les- set al, D; niakai half R P 2613 kul

9003. Kikihale. Honolulu, Oahu. $S0O.B 27S, p 84. Dated Jan 13, 1906.

B SB a E H M.SM B B 2 5 H S I 9 a 33 a 28 a 2 BJ a"3 a 2 a 3 a a K aagg Prof, U. Thompson, who has just reeaturned from a tour of the mainland.

cIbco, CaLAbraham Fernandez and wf to W P Western Sugar Refining Co., Baawill bring much inspiration to the meet-ing. Prof. Thompson attended a largeand representative meeting of Farmers'

aa.na

ea

Francisco, CaL1Fuller & Co, M; lots 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, JO, 17,19, 22, 25, 2. 27, 28, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45 and46, R p 1616 ap 3, of Fernandez tract.

Baldwin Locomotive Works, PhUAV'-ll.r- .- 5:3eMi" 1 1 SJVk I l institute workers at the University ofCalifornia. Mr. Wm. Weinrich. Jr.. delphia, Pa.

Limited

Merchant TailorsWaity Building. King St

Phone Blue 274!(Opposite Advertiser Office.)

AMERICAN AND FOREIGNWOP.STEADS,

Newall Universal Mill Co., Mannwho also has recently returned from a facturers of National Cane Sbreddr(tour of investigation, will exhibit alarge number of commercial fibers and New York. N. Y.

Pacific Oil Transportation Co., Baa

H

tsa

fc3

Ma.a

discuss their economic importance.It should be clearlv understood that FTanclsco. Cal.

the meetings of the Farmers' Institute

ivaum, nonoiuiu, uanu. uuo. a zio,p 4S0. Dated Jan 24, 1906. i

John Manini and wf to Waianae Co,M; ap 2 R P 2151 kul S84, Puumaia,Waianae, Oahu. $150. B 275. p 463.Dated Jan 23, 1S06.

David K Kaiiieha and wf et al toWaianae Co, M; ap 2 R P 472 aps 1 and2 It P 463 and R P 397, Wailele, etc,Waianae, Oahu. $400. B 275, p 464.Dated Jan 23, 1906. -

Helen L. Isenberg (widow) to George

xam Fire Insuranceare open to all who care to attend,

whether members or not. Go and getthe benefit of the full program. Ifyou care to give the Institute your sup-port as a member you will be welcomedas to membership.

BEGINNING JANUARY 17.

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT. THE B. F. DILLINGHAM CO.aniAstor House Restaurant LIMITED.

General Agents for Hawaii.

Rodiek, P A; special powers. B 274, p454. Dated Aug 5, 1903.

W Matlock Campbell to E M Wat-son tr, D; int in lot 8 and 1- -2 of lot7 blk A, Kulaokahua. Honolulu, Oa- -

aaa'aa Atlas Assurance Company of London.

183 KING STREET.First-clas- s cook in attendance,

new, neat and clean.21 meal tickets for 54.50. Meal 25c.

Phoenix Assurance Company of LoEBj hu. $1000. B 278, p 85. Dated Jan 20, don.

19UU. New York Underwriters' Agency.Pro vfdence Washington. In surance Com

pany.

na&iiBaKi

Ki

aalE

X

The program will be as follows:AFTERNOON SESSION.

2:30 p. m. Business meeting. Re-port of the Secretary-Treasurer- .' Elec-tion of orticers. lieport of committeeon cooperative marketing.

3:30 p. m. Spraying demonstration,D. L. Van Dine, J. E. Iliggins.

4 p. in. Inspection of the farm rndshops of Kamehameha Manual TrainingSchool.

EVENING SESSION.Music Kamehameha Glee Club.Address of Welcome President P. L.

Home.Response and President's Annual Ad-

dress Mr. Jared G. Smith.

Maria Smith to Charles Costa, RelDow; pc land, Emma St, Honolulu,Oahu. $1. B 278, p 86. Dated Jan 24,1906.

Fourth Floor, Stangenwald Buildln.

aE3

IKaam

HONOLULU IRON WORKSCOMPANY.

Machinery. Black Pipe, GalT&nlMPipe. Boiler Tubes. Iron and Steel, Ha.gineers' Supplies.

Office Nuuanu street.Works Kakaako.

HAWAII SHINPO SHA.THE PIONEER JAPANESE PRINT--LET TflEM TELL IT.VOLCANO MARSHALL, ing office. The publisher of Hawaii

ykft-iir-- l from Life by A. Artz. Shinpo, the only daily Japanese pappublished in the Territory of Hawaii.

C. SIIIOZAWA, Proprietor.Editorial and Printing Office 102tMusic Kamehameha Mandolin Club

The Public Utterances of HonoluluCitizens Are What Count. Publicityis What the People Want.

night in a glass of rain water. God,in His Infinite Goodness and Mercy,made the Chinaman to be a preda The Use of the Agricultural Colleges Smith St.. above King. Phone Main 48.

I recently passed through a similarincident to the one described. This one,however, did not happen on the house-less, coyote-haunt- ed plains ofming. The scene was in our boasted

Prof. U. Thompson.tory incursionist on the rest ofVVM. G. IRWIN & CO., LTD.

S. FUJIMURAMASSAGE

Rheumatism, Bruises, Sprains, TiredFeeling and other Ailments QUICKLTRELIEVED.

' 444 King Street, Palama,PHONE WHITE 135L

When Benjamin Franklin affixed his ; model Settlement, on Nanking Road;name to the Declaration of Independ- - i the hour, 9 o'clock in the morning. Ience, turning to Oliver Wolcott of Con- - was, accompanied by the blessed as- - AGENTS FOR THE

Music Kamehameha Glee Club.Sisal and Other Commercial Fibers

Mr. Wm. Weinrich, Jr.All those who are interested are cor-

dially invited to be present at b'oth theafternoon and evening sessions.

(Signed) J.'E. HIGGIXS,Secret arv-Treasur-

Royal Insurance Co., of Liverpool,nee ticut, he said: "Now is the time suranoe of safety which senility givesEngland.

Alliance Assurance Co., or Ixnaowhen we must all hang together, for if to man, going to honorable toil, mywe do not we shall each be hanged thoughts canvassing the joys of theseparately." heavenly life in store for me, when a

And now is the time when every

Let tfcem tell It.Let the public speak on the subject.It means better understanding.Means less misery in Honolulu.Means confidence in a good thing.Home endorsement counts.Easier to believe your neighborsThan strangers in a far-aw- ay town.Every box of Doan's Kidney PillsIs backed by home testimony.Kidney disorders urinary troublesAre on the decrease here.Doan's Backache Kidney Pills areRelieving backs and curing citizens.It is their daily work.Here's a case in point.Cyrus S. Edison of KapiolanI Park,

foreigner in China; in fact, in theterrifying uproar aroused me fromrevelation. ) ;

Up the street, in solid phalanx,came the flotsam and jetsam, fully 3000

Orient, must stand together.The Chinese, have, in their unholy

attack on foreigners, in the confisca- - ' strong, of Mandarin society. Pock--in their defiance of marked faces were numerous; retreat- -tion of property,

WANT TO KNOWABOUT HAWAII

"I have been receiving a number ofletters from intending settlers," saidLand Commissioner Pratt yesterday."They come from Florida, where aman writes that he wants to go into

"Blessed are they (hat mourn, for theyshall be comforted."

What a great comfort to knowthat we have paid respect to thememory of the loved ones who havepassed away. Do you need a plainMotuary Tablet, or a descriptiveTombstone, or a sculptural Monu-ment?View my Designs, learn my Prices,

and be comforted.

A. G. Montgomery,P. O. Box 152 Warehouse Queen,

rear Judiciary Bldg.A Postal Brings an Answer.

law and order, demonstrated their j ing foreheads and obliquely-incline- d

hatred of conditions not correspond- - j eyes, flashing hellish hate, everywhereing to the low, debased and depraved j appeared. In their profanity these

England.Scottish Union & National Insurant

Co., of Edinburgh, Scotland.Fire Association of Philadelphia.Alliance Insurance Corporation X-- til

' Wilhelma of Magdeburg Gferv --

surance Co. ' ..

C. BREWER & CO., LTD.Srgar Factors and Commission

Merchants.LIST OF OFFICERS.

C. M. Cooke, President; George M.Robertson, Manager; E. F. BishopTreasurer and Secretary; F. W. Uaefarlane. Auditor; P. C. Jonea, C. H.Cooke, J. R. Gait, Directors.

the business of raising oranges, andhas a desire to get away from a placewhere they have frosts; one from NewSouth Wales, another from Victoria.

creatures churned the air into cyclonic this city, says: "I am at present afury. As they advanced they hurled a 'teamster and came to the Islands

of missiles at every object j teen years ago. ?rev:ons to that Iforeign in character, even foreign in drove a stage coach ia the Unitedaspect. On came the tidal wave of j States. These occupations necessitat-hybri- d

villains, bent on destruction, ing my being out at all seasons werespoliation and slaughter. I was torn j no doubt the cause of my kidney dis-fro- m

my rickshaw, trampled on, dis- - j order. I had the ordinary symptoms ofligured, the vehicle being demolished, j this complaint, and resorted to a hostIt flashed to my mind that the vale- - of things to cure it. All of them faileddiction of life had come. But this mob to do so, however, and when I liai al-- of

thieves, cutthroats and, murderers jmost given up hope I heard aboutpassed over my prostrate body to burn Doan's Backache Kidneys Pills and got

equality of their civilization.It is the height of idiotic idiosyn-

crasy, idiotic folly and idiotic knaveryfor the Viceroy and the Taotai to vain-ly attempt to convince, even the moststupid foreigner residing in Shanghai,that the attack Monday on this Set-tlement was not a concerted attack,deliberately planned, most belligerent-ly executed. True, there were mobs.There is certainly nothing extenuatingin this statement for wasn't it devis-ed by the leaders that there should

Australia; one from Los Angeles, and'STILL. A LOT OF

Holiday GoodsLEFT AT

FUKURODA'S.28-- 32 HOTEL. STREET.

be plenty of mobs, plenty of looting J the police station, attack the city hall some at the Hollister Drug Co.'s store.

Money to X-ica-.xi

ON JEWELRY, ETC., ETC., AT

m j. carlo mmmm co.

CoK.NhK UNION AND HOTEL Sie.

FINE RESIDENCE FOR SALE.

and appalHng plenteousness of foreign land gut the Hotel Annex. Oh h'ow They did indeed relieve me and I ambloodshed? Behold the criminal inde- - j every one of those infamous creatures, ; quite satisfied with the benefit they

of these peacock-bedecke- d offi-- J conceived in iniquity, born in sin, fos- - j have been to me."cials, in attributing the action of every j tered in crime, deserved killing! Bit- - Doan's Backache Kidney Pi'ls ar

one from Fresno."All these people want to get homes

here, or at least they want informationabout getting homes. Their letters arecarefully answered, of course, the in-

formation asked for in each particu-lar cafe being supplied, anj than thesereplies are fiied away for future refer-ence. The chances are about a hun-dred to one that the next writer willask an entirely new set of questions,and the replies to the old Utters willbe of no value to the new man. How-ever, whatever they want to know wefind out for them."

Chinese merchant in closing his store ter. pay you" Not at all. I can not 'for sale by all der.lers; prico 50 centsFine White Bamboo for wearing.Hats, Mats. Fans. Brasses and

Pottery. Parrot Fish. Fay anything more flattering in merci- - (per box (six boxes $2.o0). Mailed oyful kindness. j the Hollister Drug Co., Honolulu,f3Q

As I regained my feet I looked for ; wholesale agents for the Hawaiian Is- -

on Monday, to the command of ananonymously printed and anonymouslycirculated placard from an irresponpi-b!- e

Chinese printer! Again behold thecriminal enormity of their declara-tions! '

Who were the officials that employed

some place of security. There was.ianas.HAWAII AND SOUTH SEAS

CURIO COMPANY.

Alexander Toung BiilIingica none,somewhere

I looked for some kindly face,assisting hand. No. Every-in- y

eyes turned deep-visag- ed SUNDAY CONCERTAT MAKEE ISLAND'FRESH SEEDS ARRIVED BY THE this irresponsible printer and gave of- - hate was there,

tiation of whatAnd here is substan-- I

have already said, FIFTY CENTS. S. NEBRASKAN. 5ficial sanction to his printed s.reed- - '

Who were the gentry that paid this

Situated on car une U the xaolIctiiaoie itbident locality of tui ciijr.

Viae lMirv.vewifc4iLa cuiinisi Otwotuige, containing parlor, reoep-cio- xi

ball, drawing room, large din-

ing room, 3 bed chaindtre, kltcha, pou-ltry and all modern improvement.

Largs grounds Improved with manyva.kua.Crie and rare fruit tree,oti'vttiiu' yuartem wita eiatlou-- ;

w&shstands uud porcelain bath; liasUible witii box stills.(Size of lot: avoxioo feet.Price, very reasonable, tiiuc WlcW

it actual value.TerUii: luasy.

that this was a deeply conspired plot,purely antiforeign in character.

Limpingly, but with clenched fists,as I slowly crawled down Nanking

The Hawaiian band will give aconcert on Sunday afternoon. Feb- -

irresponsible printer and greased withunholy coin the polluted hands of thecoolies that scattered them promis-cuously throughout the Settlement?And this, too. when this community

Road this thought was conspicuously j ruary 4, at 3 o'clock, at Makee Island.in China- - i Following is the program jin my mind. The Arnerie

wnether he be Volcano Marshall orwas on tne eve 01 ceieorai insj uie ."

Mrs. E. M.TaylorYOUNG BUILDING.

JOHN REILL Engineer,Dealer In

NEW AND SECOND-HAN- D MA-CHINERY.

Repairing of All Kinds.GASOLINE ENGINES A SPECIALTY.

125 Merchant Street. Tel. 116.

niversary of the birth of the humble ! American Consul General Rodgers,Xazarene who came out of Galilee who. for the purpose of selling Stnnd-- l

reac hing peace on earth, good will &rd Spoils or St. tiavvle. Dream, vi.'ltow-.'r- men! j advocate unrestricted Chinese Coolie

These are pertinent, burning, vital immigration to his great and grandnueston. The acts of the officials orthe gentry, who excited the mobs ofthoxiPftnris Monday to attempt theslaughter of innocent residents out- -

country, deserves to b- - hansred fromthe highest elevation of the WaterWorks, his carcass to remain in sus-pension, that every jack snipe, in its

PART I."The Old Hundred."

Overture "Semiramide" RossiniIntroduction "Carmen" Bizet(a) "Pilgrim Chorus," (b) "Evening

Star" WagnerSelection "The Lombardians" ...Verdi

PART II.Vocal American Songs.. arr. by Berger

Mrs. N. Alapai.Selection "La Traviata" VerdiBallad "Love's Old Sweet Song"..

BuealossiFinale "The Spirit of Libert "..Sousa

"The Star Spangled Banner." j

fxutcer particulars upon appUeattwa

J. H. FISHEk.

KMG WEN BING.WHOLESALE LIQUOR AND GRO-

CERY DEALERS.36-3- 8 North King Street.

VICTORS.We --ell VICTOR TALKING MA Honolulu Symphony Society

J H. STOCKTONCHINES at the lowest possible.

some conditions theINgain from the use

of Scott's Emulsion isvery rapid. For thisreason we put up afifty-ce- nt size, which isenough for an ordinarycough or cold or usefulas a trial for babiesand children. In otherconditions the gain is

slower health cannotbe built up in a day.In such cases Scott'sEmulsion must be takenas nourishment; a foodrather than a medicine.It's a food for tired andweak digestions.

Scott & Bowr.e, 409-41- 5 Pei st.Chemists New lorlt

gca and Si.oo. All drucglsU

figure. Also new Victor Records ingreat variety. U

BESGSTROM MUSIC CO, LTD., 1

Odd Fellows' Bldg. theTickets

One UoZr .Snrrly frce Cents

Ftty 0Programs will be distributed at

concert.COTTON BROS. & CO.

ENGINEERS AND GENERAL CON--TRACTORS.

Plans and Estimates furnished for allclasses of Contracting Work.

Boston Block. : : : : Honolulu.Catton, Noill & Co., LtdENGINEERS and MACHINISTS j

QUEEN AND RICHARDS STREETS.J

Boilers re-tub- ed with charroal-lro- r i

teel tubes; general ship work. j

For K?srnd Scjts

4 H'jft SchoU Cx s TRY OUR

Convict No. 6824 (convicted of graft-ing): "I wish to send a petition to thegovernor for a pardon." ;

Guard: "All right, old boy; write Itout, and yon needn't put a stamp or.the envelope, either."

Con-ic- t No. 6S?4: "You don't youreally don't mean to say you'll see thatit trets into his hands safely?" :

Guard: "That's what! Didn't youknow he was occupying cell number9653?" Puck (New York).

Hawaiian Opera House, Friday Evening, Feb. 9, 1906Our Celebrated Bromo Pop, Pmi.

Bounce, Bishops Tonic, Klondike Fi.&nd many others.

ARCTIC SODA WORKS,Miller St.. Honolulu. H. T.

S.ti O'CLOCKBEAD THE ADVERTISES

WOULD '8 NEWS DATT.T

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Si

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, FEBRUARY 3, 1906.

Oi .

0RPBE0M THEATRE

illSPORTS OF THE DAY

REPORT OF RESOURCES AND LIABILITIES

OF

Hawaiian Trust Company, Ltd.,AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS DECEMBER 31. 1905.

r 1

o'RICHARD BUHLER

I!A1

RESOURCES. LIABILITIES.Cash on hand $ 667.27 Capital fully paid up $100,090.0Cash in agents' hands 6S7.30 Undivided profits 35.071.17Stocks and other investments 16.05S.00 Trust and agency accounts... 9S, 972.1Loans, demand and time 88,815 33 Liabilities other than thoseFurniture and fixtures 2,049.22 specified above 10,146.75Real estate 52,009.82Mortgages secured by real es-

tate 15,410.33Bonds 65,300 00

Other assets 3,192.83

$244,190.10 $244,190.10

I, J. R. GALT, Treasurer, do sole mnly swear that the foregoingare true to the best of my kn owledge and belief.

uO T JW ( J'BtoSauS" ak' CAhE AJ,.,t Q

'GnH

j5' f2S6t A TRIFLE 0M'U.' oo ,

Q rE CAEC30-C70.A- 4Q "A&oAfctV 8HE .5 A stuoent

J. R. GALT,Treasurer.

Subscribed and sworn to before

(Seal)

7311 Jan. 13, 20, 27, Feb. 3.

Meat Market Moved I

me this 12th day of January, 1906.(Signed)

JONATHAN SHAW,Notary Public, First Judicial Circuit.

BIK

.te-rn

aHl!m

HOP 5C CO. a

IH'

BB

xflRfl flfl fl k B B B k fl .k BM fl B B.

We are now settled in our new place of business, situatedon King- street, between Kekaulike and Maunakea streets,where we will be pleased to serve our patrons with first-cla- ss

gfoods in the meat line, in a first-cla- ss manner and for pricessuitable to the times.

0000CCCC03CO0OOOGCCCi CCOOCCKD0C0CO00000"Hiello, you old landlubber. Just may never take another cruise until the occasion in the yachting game.

cruising around on a leeward tack toget my bearings. Lay aft and pipe al!

Old Pop Charon rows him across theGreat Divide, but he never will quit

a

aHBit!nHi

BBnH)

hands to grog. Reef the jibtopsail and chewing the rag about his yachting with the thirst of thei crew. Some-cle- ar

the hurricane deck for action." experience. The "marks" all eat up times the dampness contributed by theWhen a fellow comes up to you on his hop and the talk makes good with water is a mere drop compared to that

Wholesale and Retail Stitchers, and dealers in all kinds ofmeat, fresh, corned or smoked; also fresh fruits and vege-tables.

TELEPHONE, MAIN 251.

THUA

Trac

POli

OR68L

ADMJ

, Thunmusic,'?sua lenimlnatrovenaAnyb

taa doise of;ha.n ej

Few.,lelllgeni differsxamittrur to :

I

.

BostonS

Pumo

tftman

PLYou ;

than tbrandlthere $

18ht

dmRESNT

20 nit

QUAI

Efl xBi: B 3.B x HxJB k B BB! S S k 8

m

ntofitsationIs Always ...

TT "ft IT dwanteBY--

Business MenWho desire up-to-da- te Offices that stimulate clericaland make for increased efficiency.m

AND- -

And.

RATIONAL STOCK COMPAHY

THURSDAY, FRIDAY. SATURDAY;

ALSO SATURDAY MATINEE.

Traded Ironed the World

GREAT MELODRAMA.

POPULAR PRICES: 25c, 50c, 75c,

ORPHEUM TELEPHONE, WHITE

81.

ADMISSION TO MATINEE. .25c

Thumping the keys of a piano is notmusic, and putting successively vari-ous lenses before the eyes is not an ex-

amination, even though certain Im-

provements In vision are obtained.Anybody can test your eyes you

can do it yourself, but the scientificuse of lenses involves something morethan experimenting.

Few can examine eyes and do It In-

telligently and satisfactorily quitea difference between eye-tes- ts and eyeexaminations. Did that fact ever oc-

cur to you?

A. N. SANFORDOPTICIAN.

Boston Building, Fort Street OverMay & Co.

Pure Winesand Liquors

Family Trade Solicited.

Lovejoy & Co.Ntitianu St. : : Phone 308.

Pure Soda WaterTou can't get better Soda Water

than that bearing the FOUNTAINbrand, for the simple reason thatthere isn't any better made.

Fountain Soda Works.Bheridahy Street, near King.

' Phone Main 270.

Kimonos, Silks,ORIENTAL GOODS AT REDUCED

: PRICE AT

o X Y c: o u a a ,1120 NUUJINU ST.. NEAR HOTEL.

QUALITY, STYLE AND FITIN OUR

$25.00 SU1T8George A. MartinArlington Block, Hotel Street.

OPEN ON SATURDAYS TILLP. M.

NOW LOCATED IN OFFICES 2 AND 3.

Mclntyre Buflding.

J. S. MARTINMERCHANT TAILOR.

Fort Street - - - - Honolulu, T. H.

RICE & PERKINS,

ARTISTIC PHOTOGRAPHERS.

Studio: Hotel Street, near Fort.

Dry CleaningGarments cleaned by this process at

Mrs. A. M. Mellis'Dressmaking Establishment.

Sachs Black, Honolulu.SATISFACTION GUARANTEED,

THE FAVORITE GROTTO.There are liable to be

some knock-out- s at theOpera House tonight TheGROTTO lunch has knock-ed all competitors silly Thereis no knock-O'i- t in theGROTTO'S liquid refresh-ments.

Today's lunch and dinnermenu:

SOUP PUREE OF SPLIT PEASCORN BEEF AND CABBAGE

VEAL AND HAM PIEBOILED POTATOES

STEWED ONIONSFISH SALAD

FEED KTTJIY, Prop,Cor. Hotel and Bethel Streets.

Home BuildersWhose Ideals are not confined to mere theory.

Information

8 1 micK bits ifl nmsid

--- I

GeeArlini

3PEN

is valuable, but can be obtained at 931 Fort street for theasking-- .

J J & JX

Hawaiian Office Specialty Company,

Generally yachts swim in water, butthe degree of humidity varies directly

of the liquid joy on board. Beer is asimportant to a yacht as the giant- -ciub-topsa- il whatever that isrs Beer isthe cargo and rigging and ballast,Those on board usually become iden- -

tifled with the beer.The real yachtsman spends his even--

ings studying the geometrical curvesof rudders and the different shades ofyachting caps. A college student hasnothing on him for study. When he'snot hguring out the nest quality oicanvas for the balloon jib-umps- he strying to determine tne price oi oeerper thousand barrels.

Yachting is a great business if youare not inclined to have a wreakstomach.

LOOKS LIKECLOSE GAMES

Today's Socker ContestsHave Very Even

Aspect.The "socker" games today will be

between the Iolanis and Punahous at2:30 p. m., and the Diamond Heads andY. M. C. A. at 3:30 p. m.

The teams will be as follows:Iolanis Goal, J. Kea; full-back- s, F.

Carter. J. Kellett; half-back- s E. Kel-let- t,

M. Anderson, F. Harrison; for- -E" ea on Yin' J- - Anderson,;vas'

. fO VV "U U. VI. xjjavn.iuo.il.Bolster's place is being taken by Car-

ter, a new league player.Punahous Goal, A. A. Catton; backs,

W. Soper, G. Fuller; half-back- s, R.McCorriston, A. Lowrey; forwards, W.Campbell, C. Cooke, R. R. Catton, J.H. Catton, J. L. Cockburn.

Diamond Heads Goal, H. Chilton;full-back- s, E. Grune, J. Clarke; halves,Ed. Desha, R. Clarke, D. Sherwood;forwards, E. Fernandez, Pat Gleason,Al. Williams, G. Desha. Lam Kee.

Chilton is playing goal in place ofW. Chillingworth who is on the sicklist. Chilton played for the Iolanislast season. J. Clarke is back in thegame today and Lam Kee has beensubstituted for Sam Chillingworth.

Y. M. C. A. Goal, Beardmore; backsTurner, Macaulay; halves. Gill, Spald- -ng, lsenuerg; lorwarus, iiumteii.

Waterhouse, Robbins, Haley, Oss.The Iolanis and Punahous should

furnish a memorable struggle but theformer eleven should just squeezehome winners.

An equally well-contest- ed gameshould result between the Y. M. C. A.and Diamond Heads and the latter, ifthey play together and shoot accurate-ly, should score their first league vic-tory.

The standing of the teams is as fol-

lows :

PointsP. W. L. D. For Against

Iolanis 3 2 1 0 7 5

Mailes 4 3 0 1 7 2

Punahous 3 1 0 2 4 2Y. M. C. A 3 0 2 1 1 6D. Heads 3 0 3 0 3 7

Points Iolanis, 4; Mailes, 7; Puna-hous, 4; Y. M. C. A., 1; D. Heads, 0.

Foreign Sport.Sam MeVey defeated Denver Ed.

Martin in four rounds.

It has been figured out that if Bat-tling Nelson and Terry McGovern gothe six rounds at Philadelphia, theywill receive at the rate of $708.38 forevery minute they are fighting. Thelight takes place on March 14th.

Eddie Ames, the California jockey, ;

is riding in grand form in India. jI

1,1 vl'orI,1i8 billiard championshipwill be played at Madison Square Gar - !

den April 9th. jI

To.t- - Toffno u v: ;

fight with George Gardner.

the street and greets you with a stringof bull like that, side step and beat itto the nearest courthouse for an in--terpreter. When once a mutt getsinto the habit of dispensing the sea- -faring salve it's good night to all in- -

telligible conversation. If his grandaunt takes sick he carts her off to adrydock for repairs. He becomes achronic water dog for ktsps and whenyou collide with him on the Rialto you

can't tell from his talk whether he'strying to make a touch or inviting youin for a jolt of "oil."

Take a Flossie boy out in your yachtonce and he becomes a sailor for life,He gets infected with the sea. air. He

PLENTY OFSLUGGING

Huihui and Sullivan toDo Battle This

Evening.Tonight sees the much discussed bat

tle between Bill Huihui of Honoluluand Dick Sullivan of San Francisco.Judging- - from the demand for ticketsthe crowd at the Opera House will bea bumper one.

The curtain raiser will be a six-rou- nd

go between Kahaulelio, "TheWild Swan," and Jim Brown of theU. S. S. Iroquois. These middleweightsshould furnish a lively mill.

Next will come a ten-rou- nd affairbetween Wahilani, "The Whirlwind."and Sailor Morch of the U. S. S. Man-ning. The men are welterweights;This should be a slugging bee from "theword "go."

Both preliminaries are evenly match-ed bouts and should provide sport oian exciting order. '

The main event is a flf teen-roun- d gobetween Bill Huihui and Dick Sulli-van and another splendid contest lookslikely.

Both men are in good condition andconfident of winning and will have noexcuses to offer for defeat.

Huihui's fistic capabilities are wellknown. He is fairly game, fairlyclever and has a dangerous left. Heshowed well against Australian TimMurphy and should have won fr-- n

that husky lad had he followed up theadvantage gained early in the fight.Murphy is today the champion heavy-weight of Australia.

Huihui has been out of the ring forover a year but is said to be boxingbetter than ever.

Dick Sullivan was brought here byDick O'Meara, to fight Huihui. WhenDick brought him down he knew exactly what game his man would haveto go up against.

Sullivan is more or less of a noviceat the game and this is said to be hisfirst professional fight. He has beendifficult to get a line on here becausehe has not worked with sparring partners who could make him extend him-self. He is a clever, two-hand- ed boxerand appears to have lots of endurance

Sullivan will have a pull of severalpounds in the weights and this shouldstand him in good stead. The articlescall for Sullivan not to exceed 145pounds ringside and Huihui has to getdown to 136 pounds. Sullivan's averdupois is being kept dark but it issafe to figure on his not being moreunder the 145-pou- nd limit than isnecessary to save forfeit money.

It looks as if Huihui should whipPuliivan at even weights or there-abouts. If he can do so at a differ-ence of eight, nine or ten pounds isanother matter entirely. Sullivanlooks to be a good betting propositionat even money.

Paddy Ryan will probably referee.Larry Dee will tap the gong, Fred S.Adams will act as announcer and JackMcFadden will officiate as master ofceremonies.

Betting last night ruled even.

the ladies. Probably during the wholetrip he was standing in the shape ofa semicircle impersonating a freelunch counter for the little fishes. Hewas charitable and gave up all he had;in fact, it was lucky for him that therewas no undertaker on board with asupply of embalming fluid. He was adead one for sure.

But when once again on dry land hebecomes the reincarnation of the Ancient Mariner. He has killed a dozenwhales with one punch and gone six

v, .v., tto'cdetails in every particular. He can lielike anything.

Dampness seems to be the order of

SULLIVAN SANGUINE.I am acclimated and in good shape.

I am cleverer than Huihui and thinkthat I can hit .as hard. I expect to winwithin the limit. If beaten I shall haveno excuse to offer.

DICK SULLIVAN.

HUIHUI HOPEFUL.I am in good shape and feel better

than I have for a long time, still Ihave been out of the boxing game formore than a .year and did not put aglove on in that time until I startedtraining for this fight. I think I amboxing as well or better than ever be-

fore and will give Mr. Sullivan thefight of his life tonight.

BILL HTJIHUI.

WHO'LL WIN?TOM HOLLINGER Can't pick them.DICK O'MEARA-Sulli- van in about

9 rounds.PADDY RYAN If Huihui doesn't

win in 8 rounds, the white lad willlick him.

J. A. MORGAN Sullivan, becausehe's Irish.

. DINK DAVIS Huihui looks good tome.

LARRY DEE Don't know, but hopeHuihui. We want to keep all thefeathers in our hat.

W. HEILBRON Sullivan is mychoice.

SAM DECKER Huihui.LUKE ROGERS A snip for Sullivan.JACK McFADDEN It's a toss up.BILL SMITH Looks like going the

limit. I can't call the turn.W. R. SIMS I'd not be surprised if

the best man lostBILLY WOODS-Hui-hui has a hand

punch and is fairly clever. It'll takea good amateur to do him.

FRED KILEY Sullivan if it goesover 10 rounds.

ALBERT LUCAS Huihui.JIMMY FOX Huihui in 8 to 10

rounds."POP" SIMPSON Huihui all the

way.J. J. SULLIVAN Huihui.SAM CHILLINGWORTH Huihui.MANUEL RICHARDS Huihui by a

block.JIM HARVEY Huihui for mine.W. C. BERGIN Huihui is my fancy.HENRY VIERRA Huihui."SCOTTIE" MERTON A cinch for

Huihui.JOE COHEN Huihui. easily.

BOXERS GO TO MAUI

The steamer Claudine which sailedfor Maui ports yesterday afternoontook as passengers to Wailuku SamDecker, Harry Wilson and Jack Daly.The two latter are "scrappers." Wil-son is an Island boy and Daly is a re-cent arrival from San Francisco.

Decker will act as impressario of abig fistic carnival to occur in Wailukua week from today.

The program will be:Jack McFadden vs. Kupa, 15 rounds.Harry Wilson vs. Ernest Heine, 6

rounds.Jack Dfily v. W. Johnson. 6 rounds.From Maui Decker will take his sta-

ble of boxers to Hilo, where SullivanaDl Huihui may join the aggregation.

There are evidently hot times aheadfor the village of Wailuku and thehamlet of Hilo.

WLOCh

tcm:

rt Stre.

RIC

ARTIST

Studio

Concerning

Phone Main 143.

AgentsmRnmami

iir'T ni

.lead gymnasium. After exercise andcompetitive games in the field, theliiLs wiJl by a previous schedule of ap-

pointments enjoy the plunge. Thev:iter in the pool is renewed twice aweek.

The Roys' Field was never before sowell equipped as it is today.

For the first time in the history ofthe clubs a summer camp was inaugu-rated. During the last of June 80 bov3vere taken to Makua for a week's out-

ing. The seniors went the first half ofthe week and the juniors the latterhalf. Many of them had never knownsuch an experience and they enjoyed itto the lull. Every day found "themswimming, fishing and climbing moun- -ains wiu an ever-increasin- g appetite,

f r,e!h ,nPat anl poi Ca,ne from HDt- -luhl ever--

v other da'- - The t'ova them- -

selves...gave. $40 towards the- exnenxe.

T 1 I

"tine was freelv contributed bvthe friendly business men of the citv.

Superintendent E. II. Turner speaksof the future of the Bovs' Clubs in thefollowing words:

"As we look into the future we cansee immense possibilities ahead. Theonly way to realize them is to workupon the capital we already have inuanu. a Till! Of o T J sinn TiAi-- n 4nIIle people of these Islands that theBoys' Clubs are a decided factor in thewelfare and the development of ourIsland bovs "

2sXSSXonnrtlfitf.W V

.gh

"iWSWSXsXSXThe Diamond Head track team will

start training for the March meet onMonday next. All candidates for placeson the team are requested to meet atthe Healani boathouse for practice at4:15 p. m.

f 4to. t.-- - h t.- -- 11 nusna v,nanenge top nan oeen

round It is now in order to rae forit.

Drjarmenta

Mn. Dressi

SaolATISFil

931 Fort Street,

be-Wer- ni

1! iiim

FACTOR FORMUCH GOOD

Boys' Clubs Report Tells

of Very Successful

Year.

The report for 1905 of the Boys'Clubs of Honolulu has bee issued andshows a very satisfactory

IVY--nf af

rairs. a casn oaiance or .is wason hand on Jan. 1st.

The past year was a busy one, tenboys' clubs have been organized, mak-ing a total of eleven clubs.

The number of boys in each of theseclubs varies from twenty to forty. Theclubs therefore have their grip uponbetween three and four hundred ofHonolulu 's bovs.

u.ulu. .a. ,u, 0.,ul,Uaa i.,us.ressed very satisfactorily. Classeshave been maintained five days ornights in the week, throughout theyear.

The athletic field on Liliha street isrenorted to be in (rood shanp Craft'sand declivities have been filled in andthe field has been piped for watering.A shower bath is likely to be installed

I"" the dressing room under the grand- -

stand in the near future.The cement swimming pool 20x2'

feet and from four to six feet deephas been connected with the Bovs'Field by means of an overhead bridge.Before the cement was scarcely drythis 1100I was nrovinc its nnmilaritv"Jt. .

, ... , r7- j : suiinn uctius, nv- -ing trapeze, a spring board and an over- -

I

Can bethev reqi

Hotet and bwhen yo

Very ecent sui

Sold atB

hone M

Page 7: LL SAYS ANOTHER GIVEN WILL MaDE labor TO OAHU …evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/44320/1/1906020301.pdf · mg ' fitv chr rtI r o nrl tii4- In nnmmiaci'nn TVna in this

1THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER HONOLULU, FEBRUARY 1906.

GRAND

Carnival! ' v, Ufa ;:.si 'iiTan''e never BY AU IHORIFYI "! mu-- t tav-- ,;.r..? '

- s

Boxing

Hawaiian Opera HouseSATURDAY NIGH I, FEB. 3.

'!');

,i

UMm-mmMii&sfi- i

I A tr'p tn the Zoo, at Kauru! ! t5SJL-W-- w AitSAtf-lI;- -

114?' "L" " '''fc' VHLh!

ri- i ihr Uiit t :,ir. ;

on t ; of th l,ysa;.-- ; ii.fv 'r.-!-: : e. iv- - j k!

e UT:Til I t r--t u:vsflfthe Te'-k- a. "

LOST KIS SCHOONER.I iriaster the

"'ner Challearer. wLi'-- w run ,

re on the .Tai-aae- e f'i;st ..'vnvrr.ik- - from Ki.l.e. wiile thecaro was on f re, passed through Mono-iui- ii

'yestrr.Iay on the NifTon Maru.ftCCi :.j r.r.ie i tv as wile aril three

i j i rei:. j

The Challenger carried fertilizertroiii Alaska. About three weeks re

ireaching Japan tbe varyo ijut onfire. Fur ilays while the rew was trv-i- n

to save the ship. Captain PeIersonkept the knowledge from his familv.Eventually, the fire got the best of thecrew and the vessel was run ashore tostave her in and let the water extia-jruis- h

the flames.The eaptain went to Yokohama to pet

pumps to raise the vessel, but on re-turning to th boat found they werenot the rig;ht size. He went hack ayainand on rnurnin,r the second time, founda grale had eompletely wrecked his ves-sel. He is traveling; home in the steer-age.

SHIPPING NOTES.Chief Officer MeCorobe of the Nippon

Maru was formerly on the Australia.The barkentine Art-he- r sails today for

. gang-plan- k. There was mystery aboutThe Salt Lake Tribute says:The Utah-Paci- Sc Coal & Navigation

company, organized recently to open upnew coal fields in southern Utah, theexact location of which has not yetbeen divulged, is negotiating for thecharter of two modern steamers toconnect with the Salt Lake route atSari Pedro and to ply between SanPedro harbor and the Hawaiian is-

lands.J. B. Jensen, secretary cf the com

pany, said yesterday that aaoffer has been made by oneof the largest tropica frait com-naniea in tfc islands to eive

oftransporting "its products, which atpresent are oemg sa :'ied from Hono--

I

lulu to the eastern states via SanFrancisco. This company, it is said.is willing to extend aid, financial andotherwise, to the establishment of aline of steamers between the islandsani Los Angeles, because, it says, such j

a line would obviate many of. the de- -lays to which the shipments are nowjsuV.eot I

Vi" "is "also anr.nur.rt, hv Mr. Jensen1

Mr. Ozawa s departure"I'll have to refer you to Mr. Breck-ons- ,"

said the beleied Ozawa. "What- -

nK"' - 5'- -

natever Breckons might have wish-ed to say. he didn't say. "He's justgoing to Japan," said Breckons witha smile. And that was all Breckonswould say.

Mrs. Develin of Pittsburg, who hasbeen a guest at the Hawaiian for several weeks, and Mrs. Dwyer of Seattle,

j who has been at the Toun?, departed I

! oni jau.i. lj M, .! and Mrs r O Tvc,.,.. . j' ' i..lne Vessel frit uxiir o K.--v 1 o:o p. m.

NIPPON MARTJ HZRS AGAUJ.The T. K. K. steamer Nippon Maru

arrived in port yesterday from Yoko- -hama on her first trip since the closeof the war ghe eft last eveninff forSan Francisco. The Nippon MaruFh-C--s few signs of war in her cleanlyappearance. Although the liner wasnt hit by Russian shells yet she hasto her credit the capturing of six ves- -

Rjfstvensky's fleet off Singapore while

San Francisco with 43,000 bags of.Oahu, until 12 noon. February 30th,suar- - J 1K, for the erection and completion

that the tomnanv is neeotiating for mainly merchantmen. The Nip-prope- rtv

coal yard, ' Vn Maru in the bombardingin Salt Lak- - for aat which it purposes to keep from 10.- - fleet off Port Arthur, and at one time

' u was supposed she had been sunk.0 tr, 2'..0v) tons at a'i times to drawr,n n c.q r.f Tf th'is she lva-- s scout vessel whir-- h sighted

ix wa? niaking' its way into the FaciSc.-- , tv;5 jzi- - ?ni(The Nippon Maru participated hi the ! the ehannr-- 1 agpiil.

project is carried out ;t wii! renderjrnpo.5)ble coal short iires. q ne or which j

is arViir-Tir:-r Salt Lsk- at rreent. .

The ccmpar.v says it will run an ex- -j

cursion from "salt Lake, via Los An- -;

geles. to Honolulu in May. The newf

steamers will make travel Comfortable.and a large number .Z eastern people,'it is expected, will takethe rsile to join in w? ,ot W!rii be'ione r,4 t, e.riv "S. America First" I

excursions. The rate has not been fix--

ea ret.The officers of the company are:

President, C. O. Harris: vice president,R. E. Miller; secretary, J. B. Jensen;treasurer, W. H. Bywater. These J

'with H. J. Faust, constitute the boardof directors. Tbe jfficers of the corn- -,

r,anv sav thtv have rractical'v suc i

ceeded in a lan; amount of!

3 . 1 - . : 1. - If:',av'11 oeiure nie inf ;"uka(I Sil November and she was thenturned back to her owners.

The int-Hri- fiirnishirtro nf tVo Vir.iVn wer pPped out as was en- -

on tte "top-sid-e" merely to make room.ior "er armament.

pi.ain ureer.e is again ner commander and E. J. Roberts is again in-

stalled as purser.The Nippon Maru left Yokohama on

January 23 and encountered badweather. She brought 534 tons ofheight for Honolulu and has about

600 tons for San Francisco. Mr. C.K.. Ai, the well known Chinese resi- -dent, returned from a trip to his home

M. to. i?. Co., at Shanghai, was making,

eastern capital in their enterprise, but! Among the through passengers wasRear Admiral Reiter. U. S. N.. former-wi- llwho'thev are net ready as yet to say ,y ln command of the Philippinesfurnish it or to ma.e known the

location of their coal properties. I squadron of the Asiatic fleet, who isJ homeward bound. He was accompa-- S

IBERIA EEINGS A LOAD. j nied by his aide. Lieut. Blakely. Com-fh- e

P M S. P Siberia came into; mander Rohrbacher, formerly on thefrom San e battleship Oregom was going homeport yesterday morning on leave. Lieut. Washington, well

Francisco with one of the. .largest lis.s,, known to Hono!uJans was returning toof passengers in her career. There-- ; Washington to report. Mrs. H. E.were about 200 cabin passengers, over; Hunter, wife ?JT the cashier of the P.

TENDERS FOR Fl'IZNISHING MLIGHT CONSTANT Cl'RIiENTTRANSFORMER FOR THECOUNTY OF OA HI.

Bidders win make proposal? for de-

livery of machinery fob. Honolulu,ladders will state sh-rt.- -st time or suchdelivery" after contract is The Com-

mittee on Public Improvements aniKlectric Lights reserves the right treject any or all tenders,

One General Electric :0 ILsht onecircuit Constant Current series Tran- -farmer C ft 1 tt- .. crt VaI&

with proper quantity of oil for same.One General Electric 5d licht om

circuit) Constant Current series Transuformer panel switch biard complete, ofblue Vermont marble.

One Sab-bas- e of blue Vermont marWewith recording watt meter complete.

Sealed proposals will be received atthe office of the County Clerk. Countyof Oahu, until 12 noon, February 10.lSw. ' 733

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS.

Sealed tenders will be received at tfc

office of the Count' Clerk. County of.

or a Handstand and public Toilet forA a la Park.

Plans and specifications are on Sleat the office of the County Clerk.

The Committee on Roads and Brldwand Park reserve the right to rejectany and all Tenders received.

Certified Check for One HundredDollars must accompany all Tenders,payable to the Board of Supervisors.

J. LUCAS,E. R. ADAMS,Road Committee.

Honolulu, February 1. J5e. .732

PUBLIC LANDS NOTICE.

Notice is hereby given that at TX

o'clock noon, Saturday, February S

1906, there will be sold at Public Auc-

tion under the provisions of Part I.Section 17, Land Act 1S95, at the frontentrance to the Judiciary Building.Honolulu, that certain portion of Pub-lic Land situated in Hamakuapoko, In-

land of Maui, and known as"OLIXDA."

These premises contain aboutacres of land, mostly pastoral, to-

gether with certain residence and out-

buildings, adjoining road to summit ofHaleakala, and at an elevation eabout 4000 feet above sea.

Upset price $2800.

Terms: Cash United States goldcoin.

For plan and further particulars, ap-

ply at Department of Public Lands.Judiciary Building, Honolulu.

JAS. W. PRATT.Commissioner of Public Land.

Honolulu. January 3. 1905.

7303 Jan. 4. 6, 13. 20. 27.

TENDERS FOR BONDS

iDiii aitii doiiii- 11

Pursuant to a resolution of the Boardof Directors of the Waialua Agrrkrul-tur- al

Company, Limited, duly passedat a meeting held on January Ti, 19GS. :

sealed tender are hereby invited forFive Hundred Thousand Dollars (JaCW

000.00) of the 5 per cent. 10-2-0 Gold j

Bonds of the Waialua Agricultural i

Company, Limited, to be issued March f

31, 1906. (Total issue Jl.DOO.OOO.OO.) ;

Tenders will be received at tte office '

of the undersigned up to 12 o'clock r.on the 21st day of February, A. D-19-

06,

and may be for the full amountof Five Hundred Thousand Dollar '

$500,000.90)' or any part thereof, but ;

for not les3 than Fifty Thousand Do- -;

lars ($30,000.00) in any one tender. t

Tenders should b addressed to W.'rA. Bowen, Treasurer of the Waialua;.Agricultural Company, Limited, undercover marked 'Tender for WaialuaBonds."

The Waialua Agricultural Company.Limited, does not bind itself to ac-cept the highest or any tender.

W. A. BOWEN.Treasurer Waialua Agricultural Con- -

nny, Ltd.Honolulu, January 24, 190C. 732J

THE LEMMON-EARL- E

DIRECTORY CO.Have Offices in the Waity Euilding-Thi-

will be the permanent head'iuar-- '

ters forTHE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS DI-

RECTORY.We will publish an up-to-d- ate am

complete Directory in every respectand ask the public for their patronageIf our Directory is not SUPERIOR l

'any published heretofore, no chargwill be made for our book.

L. M. LEMMON.GRACE M. EARLE. ,

7213 Publishers.

ANNUAL MEETING.

('. BREWER & COMPANY. LTD. (

The annua! meeting of the aha.holders of C. Brewer & Company, Ltd 'wii! be held at the off.ee ff the cor'.'4poration. Queen street. Honolulu, oSaturday, February" 10, ISr. at 1 '

o'clock a. m.E. F. BISHOP.

Secretary. ,

Honolulu. T. H-- February 3, WA.

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BILL Ht-IHt-TI vs. DICK SULLTTAX

San Francisco.Honolulu.

15 Rounds for Lightweight Champion-ship.

WAHILANI vs. SAILOR HORCHTbeVhirlwInd. U.S.S. Manning.10 Rounds, Welterweight Champion-

ship..

KAHAULELIO vs. JIM BROTXjjje Wild Swan. U.S.S. Iroquois.S Bounds for Middleweight Champion-

ship.

Tickets for pale at "Wall, Nichols Co.,Thursday, February 1.

Admission Sue, $1. 51.5-0- , $2; Stageseats, $2.50.

to theSweet

and the best and sweetest of allare RAM ON A SWEETS, The purestand most delightful candies made.Try RAMON A SWEETS. You arecertain to like them and to usetbem in preference to all others.

ASSORTED CHOCOLATES,FRENCH MIXED MARSKM AL-

LOWS.

In ri-T- b. 1-- lb and -- Ib Packages.2iic, 10c and $1.00, respectively.

If you harvfi't tried CAILLER'Sfcer.uine fSWISS MILK CHOCO-LAT- K,

do so at once.So, 10c, 25c and 50c Packages.

Henry May & Go., Ltd

TELEPHONES:Retail, Main 22; Wholesale. Main 92.

YAMATOYAMERCHANT TAILOR AND SHIRT

MAKER..Nuuanu Street, one door above PauahL

P. O. Box 822

HIRTS OF ALL KINDS, KIMONA8AND PAJAMAS MADE TO OR-

DER AND ON SALE.

Smoke

CEKERAL ARTHUR CICAFS

GUNST-EAKI- N CIGAR CO.

Distributor.

Valentjnk NOVELTIESAT

THROE'S : BOOK : STOREIOCS FORT STREET- -

SENTIMENTAL AND COMIC IN'VARIETY.

'FUN WITHOUT COARSENESS.The assortment includes suggestive

material for 'valentine socials or par-

ties. Quite, new and unique.Furthermore, they are inexpensive.

UseNove-t- y Mills

EXCELLENT FLOOR

CALIFORNIA JTSgP CO., JLfnt

TBE tOiWEB CAFEQueen bBd Alakea Eta.

THE FINEST MEALS.WINES, LIQUORS, ETCTO BE HAD IN THE CITY.

CAMARA & CO.. Propi

f Pyrographic Outfit B150la Aa r w Cw sVk

HhMmcw Soft fwl 'jnac C- - Bilov taste. AsbMb

1 i in i f

Hsndkercfc-s- f

Box, No. 6SS

GALLAGHER BROS.San Fnudco, Cal9j Grant Avenue

ill li iDRY CLEANING AND DYEING

DEPARTMENT.Telephone Main 73.

1b enjoyable to children andparents alike.

Besides the wonderful collec-tion of animals and birds thereare other delights too numerousto mention.

ADMISSION 10 CENTS.

FeverHonolulu has the improvement

fever. Nevertheless, it is a signof health. Tear down the shacks,lower the fence, but, above all,don't neglect to paint your proi-ert- y.

Call on us artd talk it overwith us. Cur color artist will bep'eased to show you combinationsand quote you price prices thatwon't break you, ei;ser.

Stanley StephensonTHE PAINTER.

Phone 425; 1ST King street-G- et

that habit the S. S. Signhabit.

rapid bath HeatersCan be installed anywhere. A3they require is gas and water.

Hot Water in plenty for toil-et and hath at a second's noticewhen you have the Rapid.

Very economical z bith for onece5t-5ure- ly that se cheap enough.

Sold-an- l insiaUid Ij

1 Phoae M. (1. ItS S. Kin St.

DIARIESFOR

1906AT

WAIiL NICHOLS CO,Eepublic Elock.

EAGLE CLEANING ANDDYEING WORKS,

Port Street, opposite Star Block.XIi' AND GENTS' CLOTHING

CLEANED AT LOWESTPRICES.

Phone White 25C2.

Ukuleles !We sell the best Ukuleles ait the

lowest prices. Insrect our ftaestock.

HAWAIIAN NEW3 CO, LTD,Youns Building Store.

NOTICE.ANY WOMAN OR GiBL NEEDING

jelp or advice, is invited to eornnnmi--at- e,

either Ln person or by letter, withSnsign L. Anderson, matron of theSalvation Army Woman's IndustrialHome. No. 16S0 King street.

0dWR2SlfCfliHtoS5Sfi3ltS.

Everything new. First-cla- ss cooks;courteous waiters.BEST MEAL TO BE HAD IN TOWN.

Open from 5 a. m. to S p. rn. PrivateDining Room for "Ladies.

"320 LEON G HOY, Proprietor.

Panama HatsS 5 . 5 0

GLOEE CLOTHING CO,04 Hotel Street.

ELECTION OF OFFICERS.

HUSTACE-PEC- K COMPANY, LTD.

of tne ?annual meetingAt the reguiarstockholders of Hustace-fe- c -- "m-t

Tvanv. Ltd.. held on Wednesday. Jar.j-- .ary 31. 1& the foIowir.e

for the en- ---electedr!:rectors weresuing year:

PresidentJa. F. MorganC. J. Campbell Vice-Preside- nt

Secretary jJas. L. "McLeanTreasurerA. F. Clark

.AUC'tor -

N. E. GedseDirect o-- s: Ja. F. Morgan. C.

Jfines L. McLean. W. Pfo-tenhau- er.

Frank Hustace, Cecu Brownand G. P. Wilder.

JAS. L. McLEAN.Secretary.

Honcluta. Ttirutrry L 105. 7S27

a trip to San Francisco. Lieut. Jelish-jne- v!

kevitch and Lieut. Pavlov. Russian

..m in '""-"Ji-" " are u :

sail today for San Francisco with suirar I

cargoes.The schooner Camano sails for Port

Gamble this nK'rrnr. She will returnwith a cargo of lumber.

The Siberia has 540 tons of freightfor tee Orient. ihe vovage from SanFrancisco here was most agreeablewith the exceptions of two days ofrough weather.

The dredger PatiS" went on theMarine Railway yesterday for scrajdngand an overhauling. She will be taken

will then work in

The ftearr.fr 0. Hall brought r20;hags of P'.ijjtsr yesterday from Kauai.The Rail uepartel for Kauai again lastevening and will return on Sundaymorning as usual, with another cargo.

The transport Sheridan will leave at9 a. m. today for Guam ant Manila.The :24th s colored soldiers are a wellbehaved lot of men. The troopshiptook on 700 tons of coal here.

Officers aboard the Nippon Maru donot believe that the Minnesota will callat this port. Mr. Xiswanler. formerlypurser on one of the O. & O. boats, isnow purser of the Minnesota.

Mr. Howe, who has been the Bulle-tin's waterfront reporter for a fewmonths, leaves for San Francisco todayeither on the Archer or the KaiulanLMr. Howe's health has been bad re-

cently. He made many friends duringhis short stay in Honolulu.

Purser Roberts of the Nippon Marutook a trial lot of Primo beer on thevessel yesterday for use in the stew-

ard's department. The beverage willhe given a fair test on the trip to SanFrancisco and baek here. If it standsthe test. Mr. Roberts assures Honoluluth?t he will be glad to patronize homeindustry. Mrs. Reams mango cliut- -

is now used extensivelv on thePacific Mail boats. ;A,ltrv Uforging to the front.

THE 1ATURE MAI

SETTLES 111 TAHITI

Advices from Tahiti show that theNature Man has become a smallfarmer.

E. W. Darling, the Stanford gradu-

ate, who has acquired some prominenceas "the nature man," has taken up

thirty acres of Government land,

which h- - is putting under cultivation.Da ling's plantation is situated about1,V' feet above sea level. He paysnothing for the land and if he lives onit and cultivates it for thirty yearsthe French Government will give hima deed t the property.

He has cleared about ten acres onwhich he has planted 4'XJ bananaplants and an acre of corn. He hasbuilt a road from ms roouniani ii

The natives haveto e main road.grown to nxe mm very iuum, tcapta'n Lawless, on account of the

jt"jtan life he lives. He is wortunhard getting- his iana mw uuiau-- c

shape and devotes everal eveningseach week to instructing his duskyr eighbors in the English language. H

also has a physical culture cla-s- s. andalready, declare? the commander ofthe Mariposa, is an influence mostbeneficial to the natives, who bxV

upon him as a kind of god. Some dayDarling is going to establish a sanitar-ium on his plantation, where he pur-

poses to teach the world weary thereal secret of the simple life.

'Darling is a ciean-iivin- g. i.aru- -

working young man says CaptainLawless. I an proud to counthim one of my friends.

Although he still dresses lightlywhUe on his plantation. Darling wearsa white surtout. trimmed with scarlet,and whue duck pantaloons when bevisits Tahiti. For footwear, however,he has no use.

.

GREAT NAVY FOR JAPAN.

.n ., e a

'relations in the Far East and are rotprepared for any emergency, the treatyrelations will become a dead letter.

Both in bis pictures and in realityMr. Takabashi has a strong resm- -

hlance to King F.J ward. He receivedeanv attentions crossing tne continentfrom Sir. Harrirnan. It is known thatMr. Harrirnan is reaching out to getmore business in Japan and to mergevariou steamship interests, nowcornpe ition, with the Pacific Mail.

Mr Takahasbi is the viee-zovemo- r

cf the Bank of Japaii. appointed by the

vt, rr wr. fnr Hono--lulu. There were not more than eight;or nine Honolulu people in the lot. The;

Icorr!r ;tt&s"to the hotels the crowd created

o" ,r,rrrr,t,v,n a , t- - vael null-- 1

ed into the Naval dock, managers ofthe three hotels were there. ManagerHertsehe held up three fingers to apassenger who hailed him to makeinquiries about rooms. Three roomswas all he had, the Hawaiian had notmany more at its disposal,and despitethe bignecs of the Young Hotel, Man-ager Gray was not overstocked withaccorr.rro,?t'fr. Tw esult is thatall three hotels are filled.

Among the local were R. C. A.Peterson who went to New York on"business. He returned, it is said, withinancial backing for st vera! dealswhich he has on hand in ral estatematters. A. Robinson of Kauai andNiihau. accompanied by Mrs, Robin-son, chi! 2 and M"s E. Robinson, re-

turned after a long absence on themamiar.d. Many friends wtre on thedock to greet Mrs. C. W. Sehultz.formerly Miss Alice Kitchen of Hono-lulu, daughter of Mrs. Clarence Mac-farlan- e.

She was accompanied by Mr.Sehultz and two children. Senator D.P. R. Iser.berg returned from a longvacation on the mainland where hewent f :r the benefit of his health.

Among the new arrivals were Jam1?R. F.ell an 3 family cf Minneapolis,president of the Washburn flouringmills. The party went to the MoanaHoteh Mr. Bell brought an automo-bile. Among other Minn-apcl- is peoplewere Dr. W. . Laton and T. S. Harriswho went to the Hawaiian. Mr. Latonwill leave for the Orient on the Mon-golia. A. E. Sage of the same citywill remain here several weks. Mr.De Laittre cf Minneapolis who washere a year ago and was h3rmed withthe ilj.r.ds. is scii-- to be responsiblefor th":s ; peoyle.

Mr. and Mrs. James New!and. Jr..fr- m ?an Francisco are at the Moana.Mr. is a nrjh-- v of theSer.avr from Nevada.

ar.l Mrs. 11. L ! "b n rn a refrom 3o:se. Idaho. M .d'ourn isa r. r try rl.-sc-r nr.ir.

- McCctrrt. rx-i-r of the TaborGran Ct.era He use and BroadwayThaler cf Denver. actomianied byMrf!x:r";r a well rss Mr. and Mn.Currar: an 2 Mr. an Mrs. F Idhauser.

an fti (;f sraI weks.v ..... tv. rtrw v to seeVrss-- 1 come :g

ro-.- . d ti:-r- e to watch the steamerer-:-;r- t for Japan. Most cf the through

came back to the boat load--2with leis. Among those departing

re A. A. Frvrr;er who goes to joinj A. M. cn and associates my a. E. E. Hartman also left

--.t. A. K. Ozawa. who ish "he "secret service' agent

I Intret? relative to the labor; V. parted for Yokohama- - Mr.

f'zawa wo "5?n off" by U. S. Dis-

trict Attorney Breckons, and evenMarshal Ktr.dry was at the foot of the

naval officers who were exchanged, I

were returning to St. Petersburk.L. E. Beraiss, wife f L. E. Bemiss ofthe T. K. K. line was going home inadvance of her husband who is corn

on fh--e Hongkong Maru.MARY IiTUSGHOVE, HEROINE.

By a strange coincidence the news ofthe death of Mrs. Mary Musgrove inthe sinking of the steamer Valenciacame to Honolulu just as the NipponMaru arrives from Yokohama, tor Mrs.Musgrove was formerly stewardess ofthe Nippon Maru. Slc had been onwaiting orders for about a year, orsince the NipKn Maw was taken bythe Japanese foyernrnent as a errdser,and had TesiiJed in New York and SanFrancisco. Mrs. Musgrove is de-

scribed as tbe real heroine of theValencia wreck.

from sn V'r,i-,- . Mr Orchard therpomlnr sTwnrdes k;i nskel rn allow !

Mrs. Musgrove to take her place forthe one trip in order that sue mightearn money so lhat she couhj luydresses ana get n new outfit, as she was !

to become the Nippon Maru's steward- - j

ess airain on tbe steamer a arrival at ,

Franetseo. Mrs. Mu-gro- ve hasmany frienis in Honolulu. She was l

nc the test known stewardesses onthe Paeih. The officers of the Nippon j

Mru were deeniy pained yesteruay tolearn of their former comrade's death.Tbe following dispatch from Seattleshow-- hew :rave the little woman waswhen left on the steamer:

Seattle (Wash.). Jan. 26. WalterRaymond of the officers' mess, who ar-

rived with others rescued from the liferaft hv the City of Topeka describesMrs. Mary Musgrove, the stewardess ofthe Valencia, as "the greatest hero onboard." As Raymond paused a mo- -

mei: plunge into thewater, she stoke to H:n and sai-i:- '

"Are you goiur. Walter? He nodded ;

his head, and then the woman, smiimzbravely at nin. opened her l'js an--

ssDi-- . "Nearer. My Go i. to Thee." asthe iitan Ktendv'cjj himself as t hecould on the quivering ship, leapedupon the rail and jumped out into tbesea tow ara trie tossing- ra,,.

"As I went down. down, dowrt. IdRaymond to a reporter todr.y. "trwords of that sons kept rineingin my

fears. I had never sung or spoken to j

God in my life. It is" strange what j

thonrht a man will have at such a 1

timn bet T Miii.li't heln savin 2 to inv-- 1

self, "I am nearer to Him now than. .. - 1 , , ' . I , : - - - e

n '..iV tht T would neveragain rea-- the top "of the water. Ibad irr ero?:-- h left ant tobreathe and'affthe time my lungs keptlainin until I thoi bt "thev would

surely break. Ail of a suuden I poppedinto the air. and oh. what a reMef it

was! Jot for a moment I floated,content to inhale 1 the oxygen Icould. I somehow did not seem to re-

alize my position. When I did. I lookedfor the' raft, and it was fully fifty feetfrom me. I gae up then for the firsttime since the Valencia struck- - I was

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MBS, HlifOS LYMANGUARDIAN

POLYNESIA ENCAMPMENT,SURPLUS UF

MORTGAGEHEINO. i, I. O. O. F.

Meets every first and third FRIDAYvf rnnntVi Mt 7:30 r. m.. iil Odd

yellows' Hall, Fort Street.Visiting brothers cordially invited to

attend.PAUL. SMITH, C. P.1 L. LA PIERKE. Scribe.

EXCELSIOR LODGE NO. i,I. O. O. F.

uta verv TUESDAY evening att'.Xi, in Odd Fellows' Hall, Fort street,

Vtelting brothers cordially invited to

E. F. LEE. N.G.1 L. LA PIERRE, Secretary.

PACIFIC REBEKAH LODGE,NO. i, I O. O. F.

ifa evprv second and fourthThursday, at 7:30 p. m., Odd Fellows'SmU. Fort street.

Visiting Rebekahas are cordially Invited to attend.

FLORENCE LEE, N.G.,JENNY JACOBSON. Sec'y.

OLIVE BRANCH REBEKAHLODGE NO. 2, I. O. O. F.

Meets every first and third Thurs- -

4Uy at 7:30 p. m., ln Odd Fellows'BalL Fort Street.

Visiting Rebekahas are cordially Invited to attend.

AGNES DUNN. N.G.THORA OSS, Secretary.

LEAH I CHAPTER NO. 2,O. E. S.

Ifteeta every third Monday at 7:30 p.w. in the Masonic Temple, corner ofAlaxea and Hotel streets.

vi.tnir sisters an. Brethren areordlaUv Invited to attend.

XiUlALONGSTREET RICH CRABBB,P.W.M.. Secretary.

MARY E. BROWN.Worthy Matrou.

LEI ALOHA CHAPTER,NO. 3, O. E. S.

Meets at the Masonic Temple everysecond Saturday of each month, at7:30 o'clock p. m. Visiting sisters andbrothers are cordially invited to at--tend.

MARGARET HOWARD, W.M.,MARGARET LISHMAN. Sec'y.

LADIES' AUXILIARY,A. O. H.,

DIVISION NO. i.Meets every first and third Tues- -

day, at 8 p. m. in C. B. U. Hall, Forttreet.Visiting sisters are cordially Invited

to attend.M. ALICE DOHERTY, Pres.,MARGARET K. TIMMONS, Sec'y.

HAWAIIAN TRIBE NO. i,I. O. R. M.

Meets every second and fourthFRIDAY of each month, in I. O. O.V. HalL .

Visiting brothers cordially invited toattend.

"W. C. McCOY, Sachem,A. E. MURPHY, C. of R.

WILLIAM McKINLEYLODGE.t

NO. 8, K. of P.

. Meets every SATURDAY vening atT:$0 o'clock , in Harmony Hall, KingAfreet. ' i

visiting brothers cordially Invited tovttead.

MERLE M. JOHNSON, C.C.,E. A. JACOBSON, K of R. 4fc S.

HONOLULU TEMPLE NO. i,RATHBONE SISTERS.

Meets every 2nd and 4th Monday, ateights of Pythias' Hall. King street.

AH visitors cordially invited to at-

tend.IWALANI K. DAYTON, M.E.C.,GRACE O'BRIEN, M. of R.&C.

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

Honolulu Lodge No. 616. B. P. O. E..Will meet in their aaU, on Miller andBeretania street", every Friday even-ta- x.

Uy order of the E. It.HARRY H, SIMPSON,

Secretary.GEO. H. ANGUS, E. R.

COURT CAMOES, NO. 8110,, A. O. F.

Meets every 2nd and 4thTuesday of each month at7:30 p. m. in San AntonioBall, Vineyard etreet.

Visiting brothers cordial-ly invited to attend.

A. K. VIERRA, C.R.JOHN P. DIAS, F.S.

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3ION:

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:s befn, evits Inly cait yoisnses terlmem exiy antice b;ions. i

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Castle & ifyoko, Ltd.HONOLUV

.

COMMISSION MERHAMTSUGAR FACTORS'.

AGENTS FORThe Ewa Plantation Co.The Waialua Agricultural Co.. Lta.The Kohala Sugar Co.The Waimea Sugar Mill Co. iThe Fulton Iron Works, St, Loi. 'The Standard OH Co.The George F. Blake Steam PuaWeston's Centrifugals.The New England Mutual Lif Tt,

ance Co.. of Boston.The Aetna Insurance Co.. at rr.

ford. Conn.The Alliance Assurance Co.. nr

don.

"HOW SAVINGS GROW."Our little booklet with the aboT

title free for the asking.rrasT ametucan saving and

TEUST CO. OF HA WAIT, LTD.

ALL KINDS OFRUBBER GOODS

Uoodyear Rubber Co.R. H. PEASE, President.

San Francisco, Cal., U. 8. A.

Established 1858.

BISHOP & CO.,BANKERS.

Cor. Merchant & Kaahumanu Sts.

Smoke--IL J. N.

PANETELASCIGARS

BEAVER LUNCH BOOMSH. J. NOLTE.

HORSE SHOEING!

W. W. Wright Co,, Ltd.have opened a horse-shoein- g department In connection with their carrlshop, etc. Having secured the flervlnaof a flrst-cla- es shoer. they are preparto do all work Intrusted to them la Afirst-cla- ss manner.

IMPORTED STOCK.Jan. 26, PER NEBRASKAN

Fine Driving Horses and Fine BredMilch Cows.

CLUB STABLES.TLE PHONE MAIN 109.

Cboose tbe ArtisticMANY NEW DESIGNS IN

MonumentsCan be seen at 1048-5- 0 Alakea Street.

J.C. AXTELL & CO.Phone Blue 1801. P. O. Box 641,

JAPANESE AND AMERICAN

Dry and Fancy GoodsManufacturers of Straw Hat.

HOTEL STREET.

TRY OUR DELICIOUS"Peacn Mellow" and "Kasporr

AT

sods ftfiiEfi mmPHONE MAIN 7L

NOTICE.

At a meeting or tne Board of Controlof the Harrison Mutual Associationheld in the Townsend UndertakingParlors, November 17, 1905, AssessmentNo. 3 was called, payable December 1and delinquent December 31, 1905.

J. H. TOWNSEND, Secretary.

JNO. CASSIDY,ElectricalW orker.

159 KINO ST. TEL. 1CAUT 1U

IMPORTERS AND DEALERS EBUILDING MATERIALS:

DOORS, SASH, SHINGLES.Builders Hardware at lowest ratal

Alakea Kf-ee- t. mauka Sailors' Horn.

We Dye ClothesAny Color guaranteed same not to

fade.Ladles' and Gents' Clothing made to

look like new atSUNRISE DYEING HOUSE.

DIES ON BHThe sad intelligence of the death of

Mrs. Rufus A. Lyman at Hilo, Hawaii, was received by wireless yesterday. bhe died on the 1st inst., butthe message is silent as to the causeof her death.

Mrs. Lyman was one of the bestknown ladies on the island of Hawaiiher husband having filled many important omces on that island fromthat of Lieutenant Governor, undei'Kamehameha V. down to tax collector.She was the daughter of the presentMrs. Brickwood by a former husbandand leaves a very large number of rela-tives and. a large family of sons anddaughters.

bhe had been associated with theHawaiian kings and high chiefs andwas well versed in Hawaiian lore. Inold times she entertained very muchand leaves a laree circle nf warmfriends.

She was a most affectionate motherand enjoyed the closest confidence ofail her children and was their advisor in all matters.

in cnurch work and local charitiesshe was a faithful worker and didmuch for the upbuilding of the Hawai-ian- s.

Many of the present and older ka- -maainas will mourn Mrs. Lyman'sdeath and will miss her kindly pres-ence in Hi!o.

Charles Lyman, now at Punahou isa son of the deceased. There is a sonAlbert B., at West Point and another,Clarence, is a lieutenant in the regulararmy.

WHARTON CHILD'SSLAYER IN COURT

Frank Johnson was arraigned beforeJudge Lindsay yesterday for the hor-rible murder of the little boy, SimeonWharton, at Waialua a few weeksago. He gave no sign that he felteither horror or remorse for the awfuldeed wherewith he was accused. Savefor a paler cast of countenance fromconfinement, with perhaps a morewizened appearance than he bore athis arrest, his demeanor was as despicable for its moral vacuity as ever.

Answering the court, Johnson saidhe had no counsel nor means of retaining any. Judge Lindsay thereuponassigned S. B. Kingsbury to his defense, who accepted the position. Thedefendant's plea to the indictment wasset for 9:30 a. m. Tuesday next.

In, the phrasing of the indictment th,details of the mutilation of the bodyof the victim of the crime are set forthmaking the most revolting story thaihas ever appeared on court records inHawaii.

MORTGAGEE'S NOTICE OF INTENTION TO FORECLOSE MORTGAGE AND OF SALE.

In pursuance of th-- . power of salecontained in that certain mortgagefrom H. A. VAVRIOKA to the SOCI- -

EDADE PORTUGUEZA de STO. ANTONIO BENEFICENTE de HAWAII,a corporation duly organized and ex-isting under the laws of the Territoryof Hawaii, dated the 13th day of April,A. D. 1903, recorded in the RegisterOffice, Oahu, in Liber 244. pages 277 and278, notice is hereby given that themortgagee intends to foreclose saidmortgage for condition broken, to-w- it:

the non-payme- nt of principal and interest when due, and will on Saturdaythe 17th day of February, 1906, at 11

o clock noon of said day. expose forsale and sell at the auction rooms ofJames F. Morgan, 857 Kaahumanustreet, Honolulu, the land described insaid mortgage.

The terms of sale are cash in UnitedStates cold coin.

Deed at the expense of purchaser.SOCI EDADE PORTUGUEZA de STO.

ANTONIO BENEFICENTE de HA-WAII.

By its President.M. C. PACHECO.

By its Secretary,LOUIS R. MEDEIROS,

By its Treasurer.J. S. AZEVEDO.

Mortgagee.The premises described In said mort

gage and to be sold as atoresam consist of:

AH that certain piece or parcel ofland situate in Kalihi, Honolulu. Oahu,that was conveyed to said H. A. Vavricka by deed of Emma Metcalf Na- -

kuina and her husband, dated OctoberA. D. 1900, and recorded in the Reg-

istry of Conveyances in Liber 216,pages 70 and 71, said premises beingknown as Lot 17 in the Apili-Kane-pai- ki

tract as shown on a plat of saidtract of record in the Registry of Conveyances in Liber 20o, page 162, andmore particularly described as viz:North 54' 30', East 50 feet along Lot

16;South 34 50', East 100 feet alonsr Lot

18;South 34' 30'. West 50 feet alone 45- -

foot road;North 343 50', Wet 100 feet along 30- -

foot road to initial point, an con-taining an area of 5000 square feet.

For further particulars apply to A.Castro, office. St. Antonio Society,

Vineyard street, or toJAMES F. MORGAN.

t

Belongs to the Heir ofMortgagee-Esta- te

Jones Minors.

Judge Lindsay rendered an opinion

on an important point yesterday, inthe suit of Wm. L. Whitney, adminis-trator of the estate of C. Ahi, deceas-

ed, vs. John Ross. Castle & Withing-to- n

appeared for plaintiff, and Ma- -g:on & Lightfoot for defendant. Theaecjsjon is tor the plaintm, being asfollows:

'This is an action in assumpsit formoney ($iV)) alleged to nave been received by the defendant for the use ofthe plaintiff administrator of the es-

tate of C. Ahi, deceased, trial by jurybeing waived. The decedent died in-

testate September 1, 1901. On September 28. 189S, the said C. Ahi execut-ed a mortgage to one Lange for $1000on certain real estate, which mortgagewas assigned to defendant, who, onOctober 31, 1904, foreclosed the same bypublio sale, as provided by statute,receiving therefor the sum of $1825;thus leaving in his hands, after deducting the amount of his claim withexpenses, a surplus, the amount ofwhich, in view of the conclusion I have

-- H"lt it is unnecessary now to determine.

otvuon 2163, R. L., provides that'when public sale shall be made of themortgaged property the remainder, if any there be, shall be paidover to the owner of the mortgagedproperty, after deducting the amountof claim and all expenses attendingthe same.' The mortgage likewise provides that 'the surplus, if any," shallbe paid 'to the grantor or his heirs orassigns. Hence, it would seem clear.Inasmuch as the mortgagor, C. Ahi,died prior to the sale of the propertyunder foreclosure of the mortgage, thathis heir then became 'the owner of themortgaged property' and that he, notthe plaintiff, is entitled to receive 'theremainder, if any there be,after deducting amount of claim andall expenses attending the same.' Hav-ing reached the conclusion that theplaintiff can not maintain this actionit will be unnecessary to consider otherquestions presented at the trial. I findfor the defendant. Judgment may beentered accordingly."

ESTATE JONES MINORS.Hawaiian Trust Co., Ltd., guardian

of Edwin Austin Jones, Helen Jones,Margaret Jones and Catherine HayJones, minors, has filed its annual ac-

count for the year ending January25. 1905. showing: Amount receivedon account of principal, $63,158.2S; balance of principal invested, $62,333.67;balance of principal uninvested, $824.61;amount received on account of 'income,$4210: payments, $3665.93; balance ofincome, $544.07. The inventory showsthe estate to be valued at $63,158.28,of which $12,500 is represented by realestate, the remainder by stocks, bonds,household furniture and cash balance.

COURT NOTES.The assumpsit suit of G. J. McCarty

vs. L. M. Whitehouse was restored tothe calendar by Judge De Bolt.

The proceedings for the foreclosureof mortgage by the trustees of theestate of S. C. Allen against Joe Morris and Mary Morris has been discontinued by Kinney; McClanahan &Cooper.

At th? close of a further hearing ofthe Obed vs. Andrade trespass case before Judge Lindsay F. Andrade frdefendant said a settlement might beeachd before the case was again call

ed. The hearing was continued withAssessor Holt's cross-examinati- on byC. F. Peterson for plaintiff not concluded.

HUMP3REYS CLAIMS

HE HAS THEM LICKED

"The Ah Nin contempt case? Wellyou may just say I have them licked."

Thus 'A. S. Humphreys, leadingcounsel for respondent, answered aquestion late yesterday afternoon regarding the status of the contemptproceeding at that moment. a"You may remember," Mr. Humphreys added, "that when I was on thebench I had a good deal to do withcontempt cases, all of the Cabinet ministers once having been interested insuch a matter. So I am rather fa-miliar jwith the law on the subject. inIn the morning Attorney General Pe-ters filed a notice to George Lucas,clerk of the Supreme Court, to the ef-

fect itthat all the requirements for plac-ing ofthe contempt case on the calendarhad been complied with.

This was promptly followed by a no-tice from Mr. Humphreys to the clerkthat the requirements in question hadnot been fulfilled. atClerk Lucas at office closing time astated that the case was not on thecalendar.

The Supreme Court, at the conclu-sion of the spraying ordinance argu-ment on Wednesday, adjourned untilMonday. Therefore a special sessionwould have to be called to hear anymatter in the meantime.

Fred. W. Milverton, Deputy Attor-ney

ttGeneral, also took a hand in the

matter. He filed a motion to va-cat-

and set aside the order of JudsreLindsay releasing Y. Ah Nin on his

wn recognizance from committal forcontempt, on the ground that no ap-peal or exception lies to the SupremeCourt of the Territory of Hawaii fromthe judgment or sentence of the Cir-cuit Court in the contempt proceed- -

TROUBLE

Judge Lindsay Declares

Kalama's Accounts

Fraudulent.

Of a guardianship matter before himyesterday, Judge Lindsay said it"reeked with fraud" and ought to bereferred to the Attorney General.Guardian and ward, too, were fatherand son. Perjury by the guardian wasone of the things, to the court's mind,clearly established.

An objectionable feature taken noticeof was the payment of two $50 attor-ney's fees to T. McCants Stewart, thesecond one having been paid for per-forming practically the same servicesas those for which the first one hadbeen charged.

It was in the matter of the estate ofM. K. Waalaaulani, a minor whosefather, T. s. Kalama, was the guardi-an. A sale of the minor's real estatehad been advertised to be held today.and Frank K. Inompson appeared onbehalf of the minor to protest againstit. Owing to the discovery of ir-

regularities by W. R. Sims, master,Judge Lindsay had previously revokedan order approving the accounts ofthe guardian.

C. F. Peterson appeared yesterdayto argue for the sale as "in the in-

terest of the minor," but the develop-ments in court were such that, afterthe hearing, he withdrew as Kala-ma's counsel. To an Advertiser reporter he stated that his reason forso doing was the fact that Kalamahad made false and misleading state-ments to him.

Judge Lindsay at first considered on-

ly a postponement of the sale, but ul-timately canceled it indefinitely.

In his account the first one present-ed in about five and a half years ofthe trust the charges scheduledagainst -- the minor amounted to $664,of which $100 was in fees to T. McCants Stewart, $26 court expenses and$520 "allowance to guardian for boardand lodging of ward July 6, 1900. toDec. 6, 1905, 65 mos. at $8." For therest store bills aggregating $17.50, pre-sumably for the ward's apparel, areitemized.

He charged himself, did the guardi-an, with but $160, being two solitarypayments of rent by T. F. Lansingwho, by the way, appeared in courtwith Mr. Thompson. For the stew-ardship of about 32 acres of land forsixty-fiv- e months this was decidedlya bad showing in itself it dsmuch worse from the added fact thatland bought with inventoried cah ofthe minor's estate, stated in evidenceto be rented for $20 a year, is not reported upon at all by the guardian

On December 17, 1805. Kalama petitioned ror leave to sell the minorsreal estate. It was stated in the petition that the minor was the owner infee simple of one-ha- lf a piece of landcontaining 59.4 acres and of all of apiece containing 3.05 acres. An offerof $600 had been made for the minor'sinterest in the property. The state-ment was made that it would be forthe benefit of the minor that the property be sold, the proceeds thereof applied for the maintenance of the minorand the balance invested for his benefit. It was also stated that the estatewas indebted for taxes and other obligations, and tne income from it in-

sufficient to pay the debts and supportthe minor.

In his petition to be appointed guardian of his minor son, dated Julv 6.1900, not only were the interests inland stated as above, but $573.45 in theHawaiian Postal Savings Bank was secdown in the schedule of property owned by the minor. This, Kalama saidin an investigation conducted by themaster, was used to buy a piece ofland, but, notwithstanding his swornstatement in his petition to be appointed guardian, he stated that thesavings bank deposit did not belonto his son, but to a "hui" on the otherside of this island.

Mr. Sims took the stand yesterday,at the court's request, and told abouthis investigation. He objected on thatoccasion to Mccants Stewart s fees asexcessive, because the second was forwork very similar to that for whichthe first $50 was paid. Then, as to the$8 a month charged for board andlodging of the minor, the guardianwas maintaining a family of five children and the cost of food for themwould not average more than $3 or $4

month each. In view of the relationship between guardian and minor hetherefore set down the charge of $520as excessive. He next testified aboutthe "discovery" that the savings bankmoney did not belong to the minor.

nis was tne reason it aid not appearthe accounts.

In the course of the hearing JudgeLindsay refused to concede either that

was a necessity or in the interestthe minor to have the land sold.

He held that the guardian should besurcharged with the $5S0 and odd ofsavings bank denosit besides perhnns 6.other sums on different accounts, butultimately allowed the matter to rest

revoking the order of sale pendingfull report by the master which he

ordered.

ng. The motion will be presented before Judge Lindsay at 10 o'clock today, according to the notice.

It was with this notice in his handthat Mr. Humphreys spoke privat'v

Judge Lindsay just before he wasaccosted bv an Advertiser reporterwith the result above stated.

-4.

The grand jury was occupied duringtne greater part of yesterday forenoon D.with Ahoo. who. it is said, can giveexpert testimony concerning che-f- a.

The jury has adjourned until Monday,when Ahoo will be expected to be on

THIS DAY'3

Auction SaleSatu-da- y, Feb. 3, ICC6,

AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M.,At my salesroom, Kaahumanu street,

Honolulu, I will sell at Public Auction,for account of whom it may concern.

13 sfcs Hawaiian SugarMarked Circle D

Aand damaged on voyage ex schooner"KA MOI," Captain Hipa, from Ko- -halalele.

Terms: Cash U. S. gold coin.

JAS. F. MORGAN.AUCTIONEER.

THISJDAYSATURDAY

AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON, AT MYSALEROOM,

55 AcresCANE LAND, DAIRY OR

CHICKEN RANCH.Vs ACRES FINE TARO LANDS. ALL

ADJOINING.Controls valuable water near propos

ed survey of "Waikane" railroad "Wa- -iahole."

Now cheap: in a short while mustadvance considerably.

Why, will you pay high prices. Letme locate you.

Title perfect.

JAS. F. MORGAN.AUCTIONEER.

Auction SaleTuesday, Feb 6. 1906,

AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON,At my salesroom, ' 847 Kaahumanu

street, I will sell by order of Chief ofHonolulu Fire Department,

2 Big Brown HorsesSUITABLE FOR DRAY OR FARMi

PURPOSES.

FARMERS A ENTIONJ

JAS. F. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER.

Auction SaleTuesday. Feb. 6. 1906

AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON.At my (Salesroom, 847 Kaahumanu

street, I will sell1 Al grade Babcock Surrey, full

leather;1 Bike Runabout, Studebaker;Double Set Hand-mad- e Harness.The above is the property of G.

Davies, Esq.ALSO

1 Fine Single Surrey, Studebaker,light running:

1 Business Buggy, Al grade, fromthe stables of Mrs. H. A. Isenberg

ALSO1 Fine Canopy Holmes Brake, new;Sale at 12 noon promptly

JAS. F. MORGAN.AUCTIONEER

Auction SaleWednesday, Feb 7, 1906

AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON,

At my salesroom, 847 Kaahumanu 1

street, I will sell

19TARO PATC HES

U?i INTENSION OF SCHOOL ST.Now leased and in cultivation.

JAS. F. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER.

MWO COTTAGES. Emma Square. $20and $2o per month.

Two hf'-nr- - 'room,bath, pantry and kitchen each.

JAS. F. MORGAN.AUCTIONEER.

FOR SALE3 VERY CHOICE MILCH COWS

'rom the dairy of Mr.?. H. A. Isenberg.Arply only to

O. A. STEVEN.

y um clee

ig a m

smaki HONOLULU AERIE iao.oh I",ACTI

iF. O. E.

Meets on 2nd end

VO Ti,gwT evenings of eachmonth at 7:30 o'clock in K. of P. Hall,

2 ai Street.knn; VUJtlng Eaglea are Invited to at--

SAM'L McKEAGUE, W.P.H. T. MOORE. Secty.

THEODORE ROOSEVELT,Camp No. i, U. S. W. V.

Department Hawaii.

Hou"O 1

)rTj.Pe

r(y c

1

PUREBEE

p.

POTA

Meets every first andthird W E D N E S D A Y.Suites 15 and 16 ProgressBlock. Fort and BeretaniaStreets, at 7:30 p. m.Visiting comrades cordial-

ly Invited to attend.T. MOORE, Comdr.

R. II. LONG. Adjutant

tj&rjm--est Auctioneer.1906.10, 17.

Honolulu, January 17,

Jan. 27; Feb. 3,hand to tell it some more. co Jas. F. Morgan. Fhcne Main 457, 1346 Fort Street.FIS

BED 1

lotel a

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)

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, FEBRUARY 3, i905.f f

BUSINESS LOCALS. LOCAL BREVITIES. ):? 1

" " rT i'Hj;HAVE YOU EVER TRIED A KAY I jffe. v H 40OS02 i j

IHiTLIl ON YOKE KODAK OE VI ' I X V jj.

i 0. )gSftesJ I WHITNEY & FsIARSH I s- -jBla- - k Minorca chickens at auction

today by Fi.ht-r-.

For a Ion? lif" and a happy onedrink Rainier Leer.

I III f fc..- mdrnm LS ' " 4 1513 I IThirteen sacks of sugar at Morgan'stoday at ten o'clock.

The school children think Mrs.Kearns' jam is hotter than candy. Headquarters for Automobiles

with a fully equipped fireproof

Cotton Organdies,Silk Organdies, --

Fancy Silk Mulls,

25c35c50c

Manager Geo. F. Renton of Ewaplantation was in town yesterday.

Superintendent J. D. McVeigh willreturn to the Settlement on Tuesday.

William McKinley Lodge meets thisevening in Harmony Hall, on King st.

Buildings that shut out the view ofSt. Andrew's cathedral are being re-

moved.Col. W. F. Allen does not seem to

be rallying much if any from his re-

cent stroke of paralysis.The annual meeting of the Honolulu

Tentorial Medical Association hasbeen postponed until February 10.

W. R. Castle while in the East In-

vestigated insurance matters on behalfof the Henry "W'aterhouse Trust Co.,

parage.

r yVON HAM-YOUN- G CO.

The use of the IDEAL RATFILTER ensures the rendering ofthat soft, elusive tone quality whichconstitutes the chief charm of alandscape at any season of theyear.

This RAY FILTER can be usedwith any make of dry plates orfilm?. It gives true value to allobjects in a picture, whetherlandscapes, snow scenes, interiors,flowers, portraits, etc. It should beused in photographing mountainsor distant objects. It presentshalation, as it absorbs the rays thatcause it. The most beautiful cloudeffects are obtained with it.

ALL KINDS OF BUILDING ANDREPAIR WORK DONE ON

SHORT NOTICEby

All new SPRING DESIGNS, now being opened will beplaced on sale.

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, '06.m. T. Patv. C5OSKOO01048 ALAKEA STREET.

Ltd.Fanny Sun, a incorrigi-

ble, has been transferred from the Ka-kaa- ko

Mission to the Girls' IndustrialSchool.

Marshal Hendry has been authorizedto incur the expense of photographingconvicted Federal criminals in this

b k b x b x x n &vkbtkbiEAGLE Jilt AN I

Good bran, barley, peas, beans andgroceries will be sold at Fisher's to-

day.First-clas- s imported perfumes and

toilet waters to be sold at Fisher's atauction today.

A large asortment of Pamoan tapasjust received per S. P. Sonoma at D.C. Rietow's Curio Plore, 1154 Fort st.

Scotty's (C. E. Meston) Royal Annexopposite Police Station. Hot lunchserved from 11 to 2. It will please you.

Greater New York Cafe, corner ofLiliha and King streets. Open allnight. First-clas- s meals and liquorsserved.

A number of electric light machinesare advertised lor by the County Su-

pervisors. Particulars in the "By Au-thority" column.

A gentleman (not an invalid) desire:?sleeping accommodations on a lanai orelsewhere, outside open room. See our

- "Wanted ads. for particulars.Morgan sells at his salesroom, S47

Kaahumanu street, this morning atten o'clock, 13 sacks of Hawaiiansugar, ex schooner Ka Mol.

A Leonard cleanable refrigeratorkeeps things cool and pure, uses lit-

tle ice and can be taken apart to becleaned. H. Hackfeld & Co.

First-clas- s tickets to all stations on

CONDENSED MILKAUTOMOBILE PARTS.

We keep everything you may needfor your auto, no matter what makeof machine it Is.IMHIP.Fort S . r & &

Territory.Real automobiles on the stage in the

play "Tracked Around the World" atthe matinee and evening performanceo the Orpheum.

LTDSCHUMAN CARRIAGE CO.,

Garage. Merchant St.

Kauuwai, once King Kalakaua's Elegant Footwear "Miresteward, died yesterday. Lately he hasbeen janitor of the Campbell estate

FASHIONABLE MILLINERY AT

Miss Power'sbusiness blocks.

Borden's Eagle Brand CondensedMilk is the finest condensed milk inthe world.

Its peculiar method of preparation re-

tains all the nutritive value of the milkand preserves all the elements of thefresh milk unchanged, thus making thebrand particularly desirable for infants,children and invalids, on account of itshigh nutritive strength which is greaterthan in any other brand.

Eagle Brand Condensed Milk won'tcoagulate or thicken. This in itself is atremendous recommendation.

Lieut. Crawford of the SalvationH

THE FINEST STOCK IN THECITY NOW ON DISPLAY AT

MclNERNY SHOE STORE.Army arrived in the Siberia and. after MILLINERY" PART.OTfS PnQTflV i Hi IIa stay of two weeks here, will be stationed at Wailuku. BUILDING, FORT STREET.

MPJWMIIIII" iv on.Mr. Jens M. Ostergard, a Rapid 3 womZSATransit conductor, and Miss Mary Nelson will be married at 7 o'clock thisthe Oahu Railroad and Haleiwa coupon

tickets are now on sale at the officeevening, at 1S64 Punchbowl street.

Frank E. Thompson announced yes (Bhina : DecoratorsWill be Interested

of Trent & Co., 936 Fort street. '

Energetic men of good appearance T. H. DA VIES & COMPANY, LIMIT 0 WMesale Agents- -M Grocerv TVpartment. 'Phone P att Kxchanjje 5.

terday that the libel suit of J. H. How-lan- d,

Assistant Superintendent of Pub-lic Work. was practically settled outwith references; living wages paid and HKBxBi:BxnBxQxHi:BsBof court.other inducements. Apply to Burton

Tl. Charles, Arleigh & Co., corner ofThe band will play this morning atFort and Hotel.

the departure of the transport SheriThe Manufacturers' Shoe Co. is con day and in the afternoon at the footballgames. Sunday afternoon concert atducting a remarkable sale of misses'

childrens' and infants' shoes at one Makee Island.

in the announcement that we havereceived and placed on sale a largeand very complete line of purewhite French and German china fordecorating. The assortment corn-pric- es

the very newest designs. Bothuseful and ornamental pieces will befound, many of which are-designe- andmade especially for us."WE SUGGEST EARLY SELECTION.

half, one-four- th and one-thi- rd of theft"lAn executive session of Honoluluregular price.

iiercnants' Association directors wasThe annual meeting of the share held yesterday, when, it is reported ThePLUMBERencouraging reports on the new steam

ship proposition were discussed.holders of C. Brewer & Co., Ltd., willhe held at the office of the corpora-tion. Queen street, Saturday, Febru-ary 10, at 10 o'clock. Following the return in the Nippon

Maru yesterday of C. K. Ai, treasurer At 85 King StreetThe Astor House restaurant on Kingstreet near Alakea will serve a. spe of the City Market Co., it was decided

that an ice factory and cold storageplant be established by that company.

W. W. DIMOND & Co., Limited,KING STREET, HONOLULU.

J THE LEADERS IN HOUSE FURNISHINGS.cial 25c. dinner tomorrow from 11 a. m. Gas and steam fitters. Estimates in work cheerfully given.to 8 p. m. Baked mullet, and roastturkey and fresh oyster patties willbe included in the menu.

Bright, helpful service in the GospelMission hall, Hotel street, between Nu- -uanu and Bethel streets, tonight at 8o'clock. Mrs. L. E. Damon will speak

Good service is a featureon "Modern Captivity." A cordial welcome to all.

Rev. and Mrs. "Wm. J. Cleveland ar fr 1of the CRIThHION. Ourrived on the barkentine Irmgard from

South Dakota, where they have been SHIRTS, FROM 75c AND UP.NECKWEAR, FROM 15c UP TO $1.50.

SpringYou get what you orderpromptly and you g t exactly engaged in work among the Indians,

Trunksand

ValisesShirts

Gloves

Etc.

SusendersHanck'fs

DuckPants

Belts

Hats

and are the guests of Rev. Alex. Mackintosh and Miss von Holt. Osall and 000 our

andSummer

StockThe lot adjoining the Marquesville

K. IS0SHIMR King nearBethel1054 Fort Street, I. O. O. F. Building and 152 Hotel Street.

church, on Wilder avenue, has beensold by Willie Savidge to the Catholicchurch, and a parsonage will be built

what you want.It isn't a case of "any old

thing goes" at the CRITER-ION.

Courtesy and intelligenceare cardinal featu es of theCRITERION'S service.

there for the use of Father Clement. ;&bhhhbH!HhkbbbxbThe price paid for the lot was $1500.

On the report of W. R. Farrington, Just Opened ex Sierra a Tremendous Shipment ofchairman of the organization committee,the Punahou-Maki- ki Improvement Club

J. MCCARTHY, Proprietor,Corner Hotel and Bethel Streets.

elected General Davis as president andMarston Campbell as secretary. Com-mittees were also appointed as recom

a1mended.

Further denials of the complaint inthe "beef trust case" have been filedin the Federal court, being from H. F.Beckley, Hawaiian Agricultural Co.,Julian Monsarrat, A. A. Meyer, H. R.

jf 1 p

1 :':f Iff

'i M PiI Sill

Meyer, Otto S. Meyer. Saml. Parker,Eben P. Low, Humuula Sheep StationCo., John Ii Estate and J. A. Magoon.

U. S. Deputy Marshals Winter and14Roenitz were hunting for two desert

LOCAL BREVITIES.

Dick B-al-y is running' a restaurant InShanghai.

The Kapiolani Park road from theentrance to the grass house has beenoiled.

The finals in the tennis match forthe Cooper trophy will be played at4 p. m. today on the Oahu Collegecourts.

E. W. Quinn, the plumber states-man, returned from San Francisco yes-

terday on the Siberia, wearing thehappy smile of health.

Mr. A. M. Merrill of Mills Institute

ing sailors from the French barkChampigny yesterday. While Mar-shal Hendry was comparing a manbrought in with the written identifications, he repeated the words "can not

THIS IS THE LARGEST LINE OF "WALKOVER" SHOES EVER RECEIVED BY US IN ONE SHIPMENTAND REPRESENTS $9,287.00 IN VALUE.

Messrs. Keith & Co. advised us that owing to the big rise in leather they would shortly be compelled to increase theprice of Walkover Shoes; we ourselves recognizing the margin on this famous line of Footwear is now as small as we canpossibly do with, we increased our regular order and got in before the advance. We expect to pay more money for theseshoes in the future, and therefore will have to charge more, but in this shipment we have nearly every style of Walkoverthat is made and will sell them at the old price, which is absolutely the best value the world produces. (

speak English." "No sabe English,"the suspect exclaimed, unknowing thathe was only confirming the suspicionin his case. He was sent to the ves

will address the meeting for men in sel, thence to be taken to jail if provedto be one of the men wanted.

a!aa Walkov alkoverer

Y. M. C. A. hall, tomorrow, at 4:30.Supper follows at 5:30. Strangers es-

pecially welcome. ,Mr. Lyon, a brother of Mrs. A. Raas,

was a through passenger on the Sibe-ria, but he was so charmed with Hono-lulu that he had his trunk brougntashore just before sailing time and willwait here for the Mongolia.

Fred Van Dine of Troy, Pa., a cousinof D. L. Van Dine of the Federal Ex-periment Station, passed through Ho-

nolulu yesterday on the Siberia. Heliked Honolulu so well that he maycome out here next winter to remaina few weeks or months.

The concert given at the Moana Hotellast evening by the 24th Infantry(colored) band was one of the mostenjoyable musical entertainments heardin Honolulu in many months. Theopening overture, Tannhauser, was par-ticularly well-playe- d, local musicalcritics pronouncing it a splendid ren-dition. The Southern melodies werequite popular, and the buck and wingdance of one of the members of theband caught the crowd's fancy. Thehotel grounds were crowded to theirutmost and all available chairs werein use on the lanais. Dancing follow-ed for the officers and ladies of the

in fancySholeathers a

M

Ojv 6" r-- f co

Ct EtU- X-

4-- Ti

a

aaBia

aaaaaia

aa23

k

m

OA

awatitaaaanaa!?Bao

GUARANTEED

Silk PetticoatsThey do not split or crack.

Elegant, Modish. Durable.Heretofore a Taffeta Silk Petticoat

has been an expensive luxury, becauseof almost universal splitting ana crack-ing. But now the Guaranteed SilkPetticoat is within reach of all. be-

cause each one bears this positive

Sheridan.4

DOES NOT SPECULATE.

Cornelius Doremus, head of the G?r-fnan- ia

Life, said he prefeired bonds

and mortgages, and gilt-edg- ed railroadbonds, as proper investments for an in-

surance compuny. He did not approveof speculative stock ventures. Of the$I'.00O.0X investments in securitiesheld by the Gennania Life, he said,about $.".0o0,000 was in the safest bondinvestments. The investments in bondsand mortgages amounted to $1S.OOC.O(:0.

Da Dam

If through any defect the silkgarment should split or crackwithin three months from dateof purchase, we agree to replaceit. with a new petticoat.

aar,nn

0o AlakeaStreet

The real estate in its possession, hesaid, was worth $3,111,000.

Vever did the company hold anystocks! other than bank stocks, and thad ceased to put its money even inthose, having decided to hold no stocksat all The New York Evening Post,December 20, 1905.

In black and leading colors at 56.50,$5.50 and $12.00.

N S. Sachs Dry foods Co.. Ltd.FORT AND BERETANIA STREETS. lBIBBBIBEBIBKB:

i

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THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, FEBRUARY 3. 1906.10

Z Canadian-Australia- n Royal Mail Line Robinson the HONOLULU STOCK EXCHANGE. Halstead&Oo.,Urj.Honolulu, February 2, 1906.El CITY BEAUTIFIERPacific Railway Co.Rfamers running in connection with the Canadian ,

all at Honolulu on or about the following dates: j NAME OF STOCK, Fa d tp Vu. Bid ; ltk. STOCK AND B05DCharles Mulford Robinson of Roches- - MBBC4.Sxi.Lt..

I

FOR VANCOUVER. J

FOR FIJI AND AUSTRAILIA. C. KKiwiii i t;0 ti.000.000 $100

5.000,01 0 501. 0 .liO. 1002.

1905

MOANA FEB. 10

AORANGI MAR. 10

wmwERA APRIL 1

..

EwaHkw Agricultural...'llaw. u.u.duar oHawaii m ails r Co..HouoinuHonour, a ..HaikuhttlUKU i

FEB. 7 ly one of the most interesting mis- -

MAR. 7 i sions in the history of American ex- -

APRIL. 4 tanSi0n. President Griffiths of Oahu

AORANGIMIOWERAMOAX- A- FOB, BENTThrough tickets issued to aU points In Canada, United States and Europe. College, Governor Carter and other?,

became interested in the possibilities

;i Ou!.CM 07 .(Xi 1U i ...

2,0(Kl OX' i 10iXOXIH' 10-- j

r4'UV :i) J000.000 5 , 9

liP.0l-- 10"ftOO OlX) 100 -

!t5

30t'i'-ie-

i nan. Co. Ltd..'THEO. H. DAVIES & CO., LTD.,GENERAL AGENTS.

LOANS NEGOTIATED.

Members Honolulu Stock andExchange.

CrAecre Hills . 5nrtrt Kiahuluo ....vw.ww Kot .

b3.5 0,0i0 -- 0Uahu Sugar Co-- . S 6t).i 00 If I 65 f 88

cf beautifying Honolulu, with specialemphasis on the park possibilities.They read Mr. Robinson's books andhad some correspondence with him,turning the matter over to the Boardof Supervisors, "in order that an of-

ficial body might feel responsible for

1.1M1.0 0 20 f i .500.1X0 i ri

5.000 fXt 20 i 4

Waikiki Beach 40.001245 Kinau St 27.50Dewey Ave. 15.00

in 1 Kinau St 30.00

jsonoo: 10! . 65Pacific Mail S- - S. Co., Occidental & Oriental

S. S. Co . and Toyo Risen Kaisha.Steamers of the above companies will call at Honolulu and leave this

port on or about the dates below mentioned:

W L. HOWARD, Financial Ageut.FOR SALE.-Reside- nce on Youngstreet; elegant residence, Beretaniastreet, near Thomas Square; houand lot. Prospect street.FOR RENT. House on Wyllie etreetLoans negotiated: abstracts of tltl.5 McINTYRE BUILDING 6

5.0-1- 00" 5'j : 20500.H)0i 10 i ... "210JSO.OOO 100 j

7W.000! 100 ! 160?.750,0! HO ;125 j

4.0ri.0 0; UK) f tO 647O0,T00( 100 - i ..

)AY.

SA'College Hills 35.00r.mma ot qo.oo

FOR SAN FRANCISCO.OTIOM SAN FRANCISCO TO THE Also Stores and Offices.

uuuaicaOuKalaOiaa Migar t'o. Ltd...Olowaluf aauhau utiPlabCoFaeiiicHaia ;

Pepeekt--PioneerWaiaiua g-- i. Cti.'. '...WallukuWtiJiukii ugar Co.

i

Waiwanalo . . .Waiinea -- uirar Mi'l- -

MlSCKLL NKOI'8Inter-islan- d s i. CoH w. Elt-ctri- c f.o

U. 1. A L. Co., htdH K. i iL.Co. C--Mutual

Tel. Co .o.R.4L,cchiloii R.CoHonolulu Krowtne

Aiutiug Co. l.tn . .

ORIENT. jl&S.OOfl 100 !

2 NIPPON MARUSIBERIA FEB. FEB. 2

FEB. 9

FEB. 1C

FEB. 23REA

DORICMANCHURIAHONGKONG MARU

...FEB. 5

..FEB. 13

.FEB. 20

1.5OT.00O 100 ""Vl255f.O,000 100 ll-- i

1.I50.0.J 100 ,

AMERICA MARUMONGOLIACHINA

69 iFor further information apply to

H. HACKFELD & COMPANY, LTD., AGENTS.3S0.000 10

4,tC0 OOP. I' C

I.C00.OUU 20

400 00 J 2f'

FOR SALEImproved and unimproved prop-

erty in College Hills, Kaimuki,Kalihi, Makiki and Punahou

C3

CHAS. BREWER & CO.'S

New York LinoRegular line of vessels plying

between New York and Hono-lulu.FREIGHT TAKEN AT LOW.

EST RATES.For freight rates apply to

CHAS. BREWER & CO..27 Kilby St., Boston, or

C. BREWER & CO.. LTD.,

,ARSUM- Bokd. jAmt.uut,

Uaw.Ter., 4 p. c.(FireitniintrClaims, Ji5,WitHaw. Tr. 4 p. c (Re--1 i

funding m,5ICO

.' ...

carrying out the recommendations."The board made the necessary ap-

propriation, and Mr. Robinson willmake the trip early this year. Exceptfor the distance, to be sure, there Isnothing particularly novel about theenterprise, for within little more thana year he has made such reports forBuffalo, Detroit, Syracuse, ColoradoSprings and Columbus, and will advisesome other Western cities on his pres-ent trip.

Numerous instances could be citedwhere other outside experts have beencall i m by citus, especially in plan-nin- e

pm k areas. For instance, Fred-erick Law Olmsted has been askedto make a study of th'.- - park situation

fhe borough of Richmond, New-Yor-

and it is probable that an Amer-ican playground expert will be "ailedto Pcrto Rir to r'velop the play-ground system in San Juan.

There would seem to be here, indeed,the spontaneous rise of a new special-ty or profession, for in Mr. Robinson'svane at least we have something dis-

tinct from landscape architecture, inthat it goes before and prepares a wayfor that. It is encouragingly signifi-cant that towns and cities are gettingso aroused on the subject that suchreports are demanded; and to quotefrom this American missionary to Ha-waii, "That is the really fine andthrilling thing about it." Charitiesand the Commons.

ier.p.c ; l.f0,i0!

ONl.W,00i ,

W9.000i

Lwo.mo,ouo

aw erp c . ..f?a.w'Jwv 5 Po -Cal Beet A oue. Hnt.

C O tt. p. c.Haiku 6. p. c.'.. '....Haw. Com. A mi ear

Honolulu.

!:co i ....i i

l',! .....03- - ....! !

V1 ....

Oooonic isoomoHip Oo.The fine passenger steamers of this line will arrive and leave tola port

M hereunder:FROM SAN FRANCISCO. I FOR SAN FRANCISCO.

BIERRA JAN. 31 SONOMA JAN. 30

Al FEB. 9 ' ALAMEDA FEB. 14

oSa. fEB. ventura f.ALAMEDA MAR. 2 ALAMEDA

In connection with the sallling of the above steamers, the agents areto Intending passengers, Coupon Through Tickets by any rail-JwSfr-

San Francisco to al) points in the United States, and from New

York by any steamship line to all European ports.

FOR FURTHER PARTICULARS. APPLY TO

W. G. IRWIN & CO.. LTD.

l,f77.0CO500,000

I.O0O.H1O 3

HENRY WATERHOUSETRUST CO., LTD.

Corner Fort and Merchant Sts.,Honolulu.

70,00o.... 08

' o.S p.c j

Hlo R. It. Co.. 6 p. c !

Hou K T. A L Co .!6 p.c , ... j

'Kafluki. 6p c.O. A LCo.6p."c.!.lOahu .ug-arCo.p..-

01aau,:ar Co.. 6 p. C!Ha!a6p.c i

Pjoi.e.r Mill Co.8 p. c.Waialua K.Co.6p.c.1:irvf!i Pillar Co j

110

103105

loO

2,000,000 .750.000,

1.250.000!45ii.tiO0i

1.250,'tO:1.000,000;2,0 O.Ot i

P"OR SALS.SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY TO

PURCHASE.Beautiful homestead at mouth of

Kalihi valley. Lot about 1 1-- 3 acres.Planted with fruit trees In full bear-ing. House of 7 rooms, In good condi-tion. Price very cheap.

Apply to W. W. CHAMBERLAIN,room 206 Judd Building.

1 5'i.00 (

100!

American-Hawaiia- n Steaaaship Company23.1275 paid, f 25 per cent. paid.

SESSION SALES.(Morning Session.)

None.SALES BETWEEN BOARDS.

For SaleFROM NEW YORK TO HONOLULU. Freight received at Company's wharf,Greenwich street.FROM HONOLULU TO SAN Kaimuki Lots 3 2o0 Onomea, 28.75; 450 Haw. Sug.

ANOTHER CASE OF RHEUMATISMCURED BY CHAMBERLAIN'SPAIN BALM.

The efficacy of Chamberlain's Pain

32.50; 20 O. R. & L. Co., 89.50 ; 65 McSeveral splendidly locatedlots near to car line are offer

Bryde, 5.50; 20 I.-- I. S. N. Co., 120.

S. S. Nevadan Feb. 18 For Rentr Sale

ed at exceptionally lowprices for this week. LOCAL OFFICE OF THE UNITEDS. S. Nebraskan March 18

Balm in the relief of rheumatism is be-ing demonstrated daily. Parker Trip-lets of Grisby, Virginia, U, S. A., says

8. S. American Feb. 15

5. S. Massachusetts March 10

Freight received at all times at theCompany's wharf. 41st street. SouthBrooklyn.

"7HOM SAN FRANCISCO TO HONO-

LULU DIRECT.

, 9. S. Nevadan Feb. 8

6, S. Nebraskan March 1

And each .month thereafter

STATES WEATHER BUREAU.FROM SEATTLE AND TACOMA TO that Chamberlain's Pain Balm gave RENT and COMPANY Alexander Young Building. Honolulu,

Friday, February 2, 1906.HONOLULU.

S. S. Nebraskan via San Francisco

him permanent relief from rheumatismin the back when everything else fail-ed, and he would not be without it.For sale by Benson. Smith & Co., Ltd.,agents for Hawaii.

TO LET.Feb. 23 THERMO. WINDL NS. S. Nevadan March 16 3tc ,

:tZ 9 - t5 "I ' SJL

9 1or

.

a :

osi5CP

H. HACKFELD & COMPANY. LTD.. AGENTS.

RESIDENCE in Nuuanu Valley,lately occupied by Judge W. L. Stan-ley. Lot 150x115 ft., with tennis court,barn and stable. House has 4 bed-rooms, 2 bath rooms, mosquito-proo- fden, parlor, diningroom, breakfastroom, pantry and kitchen. Modernplumbing and connected with sewer.Electric lights. Good location and

' o

3ulldl

C. P. MORSB. General Freight Agent.ri e Honckoncr Mam left Hongkong

yesterday for Yokohama and Hono"l;lu.

SHIPPING . INTELLIGENCE.civic u rarisvep o.3 easy access to electric car line.

Waikiki Beach. 2 B. R... 20.00Palama, 2 B. R $10.00Kalihi, 2 B. R... 12 00

King St., 2 B. R 25.00Nonpariel Lane 2 B. R.. 17.00Rose and Middle Sts.,'2 B. R 8.25

Young St., 2 B. R... 30.00Lunalilo St., 4 B. R 50.00Beretania St., 2 B. R 25.00Pacinc Heights, 2 B. R . . 15.00Aloha Lane. 2 B. R 17.50Lunalilo St.. 5 B. R 31.25Miller St,, furnished. 3 '

B. R 60.00Nuuanu St., store.. 40.00

Rent reasonable or will sell on easyLi monthly instalments.WILL CALL FOR YOUR BAGGAGEv We pack, haul and ship your goods and save you money.

Dealers in stove wood, coal and kindlings.Storage in Brick Warehouse, 126 King Street. Phone Main 58

ARRIVED.Friday, Fenruary 2.

P. M. S. R. Siberia, Zeeder, from SanFrancisco. P a. m.

Stmr. W. G. Hall, S. Thompson, fromAhukini and Kauai ports, 6 a .m.. with

1900 'so.re 78 68 73 .01 62 !1 SB

1901 j29ft. 77 57 37 .10 7i 6 8

190i jS0.12 74 6S 72 44 73 6 ne130 30-1- 0 75 69 72 .03 65 5

19C4 29-9- 9 73 63 68 . 00 63 5 nk1905 '30-0-

3 72 63 63 .01 71 8 NB

lgoaso-o- t 74 eo 67 .0' 6-- j 5

AvKe ! "75 64 ! 70 i 07 70 5 N

Fan

St. !

For further particulars enquire of

THE WATERHOUSE CO.JUDD BUILDING.

5900 bags sugar.Branch of--

DEPARTED.s Union Express Co. ProfcvsimaJ CardsHustace, Peck Co., Ltd. simr. uidudme, Parker, for Mauiports and HIIo, 5 p. m. ALEX. M'C. ASHLEY,

Section Director.63 Queen Street. T. K. K. S. S. Nippon Maru. Greene. ARCHITECTS.for San Francisco, 7:30 p. m. W. MATLOCK CAMPBELL. PhonP. M. S. S. Siberia, Zeeder. for the Classilicd Advertisements White 951.

t bear tht anjratallaiylPhoi

Having baggage contracts with the following steamship lines:Oceania Steamship C. - Pacific Mail Steamship Co.

Occidental & Oriental Steaaahlp Co. Toyo Kaisen Kaisha Steamship Co.

We check your baggage at your homes, saving you the troubleOrient, 5:2-r- , p. m.

Stmr. W. G. Hall, S. Thompson, for DENTISTS.WANTED.Kauai ports, 5 p. m.HENRY BICKNELL. D. D. H. TTnGENTLEMAN (not invalid) desiresDUE TODAY.

Stmr. Kinau, Freeman, from Hilo street, corner Hotel; Tel. Main U9.ci checking on the wharf.

Piano and Furniture Moving' a Specialty.

liimim YOUNG HOTEL

Absolutely fire-pro- of, finest cui-sine, elegantly furnished and thebest of service.NOAH W. GRAY, Manager,

HONOLULU. T. H.

Telephone Main 86 sleeping accommodations, on lanai orelsewhere outside. Address "W," thisoffice. 7329

and way ports, due in forenoon.)fl MUSIC.Stmr. Likelike, Naopala, from Molo- -kai, Maul and Lanal ports, due. ' HUGO HERZER Teacher of singing.ftESK?) ENERGETIC men of good appearance,SAIL TODAY.

U. S. A. T. Sheridan, Pea body, forcorner of Beretania and Miller sts.,or Bergstrom Music Co.

Ouam and Manila, 9 a. m.with references; living wages paidand other inducements. Apply toBurton R. Charles, Arleigh & Co.,corner of Fort and Hotel. 7329

J. F. Morgan. President: C. J. Campbell, Vice-Preside- nt; J. I Mc- - QLean, Secretary; A. V. CGftrk, Treasurer; N. E. Gedge, Auditor; Frank qHustace, Manager. A

KCijLstace-acli- z Co,, 3Ltd.fc"S. N.; M. H. Sakol, E. Thomas. T.Vadagawa, E. T. Williams, Lt. M. P. PHYSICIANS.Washington, U. S. N.; M. Young, A. K.

PASSENGERS.Arrived.

Per P. M. S. S. Siberia, February 2.

EDWARD ARMITAGE, M.D. HotelKieser.

Departed.from San Francisco. For Honolulu: J.street, Honolulu. Office hours: 8 to11 a. m., 3 to 5 p. m., 7 to 8 p. m.;Sundays, 9 to 10 a. m. TelephoneMain 377, residence Royal HawaiianHotel.

Heldring, M. S. Miller, Mrs. Miller A. Per stmr. Claudine, February 2, for

DUAYMEN", 63 Queen Street.DEALERS IN

FIREWOOD, STOVE and STEVI COAL.Also Whlls And BlactiSand. Telephone Main J95.

Ty K.. - T Tl t Maui ports. Charles Stark, W. G

MEN to keep the flies off the loaferswho hang around Dietz' window.

7328

EXPERT dry goods salesman forwholesale house. Good salary toright party- - Address "G," this of-fice. 722S

Hall, Charles O'SulHvan, Mrs. O'Sulligrove, E. A. Engler, Mrs. Engler,van and infant.. Francis O'Sullivan,Christina O'Sullivan. Mrs. E. J. ('"cV.ttt. T. A. Hays, E. D. Rosecrans, F. A.

METEOROLOGICAL RECORD.THE PACIFIC Wickett, S. S. Litchfield, K. M. Car kaiji ufvl LOTS On car line;none cheaper and none better; onIssued Every Sunday Morning by ttm lisle, O. Strirton, Ira Wells, George

Local Office. fj. Weather Bureau. easiest terms, no interest.Commercial AdvertiserIclnt; Entered at the Post Office at Honolulu,

Robertson, Rev. L. K. Kakani, MrsKamakani, Master Tung, Ah Ling,

GOOD family cow; Jersey preferred.Address W., Advertiser. 7323

CLEAN washed rags at Gazette of-fice. 7310

LOTS IN NUUANU TRACT Anideal health resort, no heat and noTHBft

:urs. w. ti. Oarlock. Mrs. J. Geiger,T. S. Harris. W. S. La ton, S. T. Mc-Knig- ht,

Charles A. Xeff, John G.Neuineister, Mrs. Neumeister, A. W.Itettig, Mrs. Rettig. Mrs. F. J. Am-we- g.

Miss Arnold, J. E.sBell, Mrs. J.E. Bell and daughter, J. F. Bell, Mrs.J. F. Bell, son and nurse; J. S. Bell,W. D. Bishop, Mrs. W. D. Bishop. Mrs.F. S. Boedefeld, Mrs. P. E. Brigham,Miss Helen K. Brigham. Prentiss W.Brown. Mrs. M. t'rawhall, F. J. Cur-ra- n,

Mrs. F. .J. Curran, Mrs. L. B.Darden, Miss Margaret W. Darden, W.

MCAH ao Rev. Tung. Ah Lung, Rev. C P. Hong,Miss E. Drummond, J. K. Kamanoulu.T. H., as second-clas- s matter. dust, at lowest prices and your own2s s

4 oBABOM terms..2! a VESSELS IN PORT.aSUBSCRIPTION RATES: LARGE LOT AT LELEO Close

(Army and Navy.)IRCHOne Tear .....$12.001 Six Months 1 6.00

FOR -- RENT.CONVENIENT modern house,

large ground and stable accommo-dations. Apply 1327 Pensacola street.

7329

U. S. S. Iroquois (station ship), Nib- -

lack, from Pearl Harbor, Jan. lo.Advertising rates on application.

t ! i i

S 21 73 61 .08 68 4 w 21Al ti va a Ti fit .OjI Tl 6 N 5

T 74 2 .o-l- i 11 5 N ftW ;24; 75 64 .00' Tl 4 var 7T 125 Vrt-- 7 66 T I 75 4 Ng 6K !, mjtl 77 67 -- CM) 1.6 6 vak 6S 27 30-0- 77 65 87 81 9 VAB 5

L I

to O. R. & L. Co.'s office; highground; suited for any purpose;very cheao.

FOR RENT Several modern cot-tages cloe to town. Good horse-pastu- re

within easy reach.J. H. SCHNACK.

U. S. R. C. Manning, Roberts, fromMaui and Hawaii cruise. Jan. 12.E & yu&lished every morning except Sunday

IT. S. A. T. Sheridan, Peabody, from JUDGE Dole's lanai, at DiamondHead, for 6 months or a year, at?30 per month. 7311

by theGAZETTE

i Drake, Mrs. J. Drumheller, Mrs. H.C. Dukes, Miss K. I. Dukes. E. E.Evans. F. W. Everton, P. Feldhauser,Mrs. P. Feldhauser, J. A. Finch, Mrs.J. A. Finch, Mrs. F. B. Forman, F.W. Forman. Miss Ethel Gay, W. W.Hoag, R. F. Holbrook, D. P. R. Isen-ber- g,

P. MacCormac, Mrs. P. Mac- -

IC t CO., LTD.,s HAWAIIANjTon Holt Block. No. 65 South King St.

San Francisco, Feb. 1.

(Merchant Vessels.)Archer, Am. bictn., Lancaster, Kaint

lui, Jan. 16.-- MANAGERS. CRANEHoti FOR SALE.

Cormac. P. McCourt. Mrs. P. Tc- - Cainano. Am. schr. Saxe, from Port GOOD mules. Inquire L. Marks, ato k. sac --o

Note; uarometer readings are cor-rected for temperature, instrumentalerrors, and local gravity, and reducedto sea level. Averaga cloudiness statedIn scale from 0 to 10. Direction of windIs prevailing direction during 24 hoursending at 8 p. m. Velocity of wind laaverage velocity In miles per hour.

ALEX. McC. ASHLEY,Section Director.

TIDES, SUN AND MOON.

Gamble. Jan. 9.Court, A. J. McDonogh, Dr. G. 11.McDonogh. Mrs. E. A. McBride, W.

GUY OWENS CO.

ELECTRICALFJVGINEKKS

Phone Main 315. Union Street.

McCabe, Hamilton & Renny Co..Ltd. 7316Champigny, French bark, Castex, CarIA5LWAY & LAND CO. J. Mitchell, Mrs. M. A. Mordaunt. .Tas diff, Jan. 31.

V Edward Sewall. Am. sp., Quicfc, New ACRE PROPERTIES for sale. In andNewlands, Jr., Mrs. Jas. Newlands,Bert Peterson, E. W. Quinn. A.Robinson and valet. Mrs. A. Robin

near Honolulu, at from $300 to $400per acre. Charles S. Desky. ProgressBlock. 7279

i cleav

S. Amakith H.CTIC

son, infant and maid: Miss E. Robin-son. J. A. Sackley, Mrs. J. A. Sackley, THE HAWAIIAN REALTY.

TIMP TABLEOctober 6. 1904.

OUTWARD.B. F. Schaen, Mrs. B. F. Schaen, Miss COMPLETE set bound volumes Plantit

O tS Q B0-- 3

O - Alice Schultz, Mrs. C. W. Schultz, in-

fant and nurse: C. Schilling, Alvin F.ers' Monthly. 22 vols., 1882 to 1904.Uniform binding: full sheep. Price$175.00 Address P. M., care HawaiianGazette Co.

t For Waianae, Waialua, Kahuku andVOrfTay Stations 9:15 a. m.. 3:20 p. m. Sortwell. Mrs. Alvin F. Sortwell, Missf m. Ft it. ,i-.i- in.

M I 29 6.33: 1 3 7 59, 1 30 0 10 .SS5 49 10.37' i I i I

T 30 7 08. 1 1 00, 2 00 1 li 6 S8 5 49 11 27Clara Sortwell. Miss Frances Sortwell,

castle, Jan. 10.George Curtis. Kelly, from San Fran-

cisco, Jan. 7.Helene, Am. sch., Thompson, San

Francisco, Jan. 29.Irmgard, Am. bktn., Schmidt, San

Francisco. Jan. 30.

Kaiulani. Am. bk., Colly, from SanFrancisco, Nov. 16.

Kenilworth, Am. sp., Colley, fromjJewcastle, Dec. 25.

Mohican, Am. bk., McDonald, fromSan Francisco, Feb. 1.

Morning Star, Am. s.s.. Garland. Gil-bert Is.. July 15.

Robert Lewers, Am. sch.. Underwood,from Port Gamble, Dec. 30.

For Pearl City, Ewa Mill and W ayan, E. C. Sterling. Mrs. E. C. Sterling, J.11:03Stations 17:30 a. rn., 9:15 a, m.

l m in-- III I

AND MATURITY CO.Limited.

REAL ESTATE, MORTGAGE.LOANS AND INVESTMENT SECU-

RITIES.Office: Mclntyre Bldg., Honolulu,

T. H. P. O. Box 265. Phor.e Main 14L

Oahu Ice z

Electkic Oo

31 10 15' 1 1 7 38' 2 40 2 35 6 88 5 50 .... OFFICES FOR RENT.O. Talbott. Mrs. J. O. Talbott, MissBlanche Tisdale, H. Turner, Mrs. H.I

1,11 19 1 3 8 10 S 18 4 32,6 37 5 50 0 10 ALEXANDER YOUNG BUILDING.I

W

TF

S

3

Turner, E. J. Waddel. Mrs. E. J.Waddel, Ira Wells, Allan Wheeler, H.L. Woodburn. Mrs. H. L. Woodburn.

I I !

6 89 6 37 5 .51 1 04I

7 52 6 37 5.52 1 55

2, 9 08 4 09s.m.l I

3 0 12 1.5 10 40 5 03

knOCa. m., 2:15 p. m.-3:- 20 p. m., 5:15 p. m.,

Hoii530 p-- m-- ' 11:15 p" m- -

Q INWARD.

mne'VArrive Honolulu from Kahuku, Wai-- 1

stiiia and Waianae 8:36 a. m.. 5:31

.9-- mV-- .

?0 S Arrive Honolulu from Ewa Mill andVoarl City t": 46 a. m.. S:36 a. m.,

only up-to-d- fireproof building;rent Includes electric light, hot andcold water and lnitr service. Ap-ply the Von Hamm-Ymin- g Co., Ltd.

7276

Per T. K. K. S. S. Nippon Maru.! P m4 0 54 1 6 11 07 5 55 8.33 6 165 52 2 44 February 2, from Yokohama. For Ho-

nolulu: J. A. Kennedy. C. K. Ai. F. S. G. Wilder, Am. bktn., Jackson, fromFirst quarter of the moon Feb. 1st.Times of the tide are taken from the Ferner. For San Francisco: Lieut. Guaymas, Dec. 29. --THE ST ANGEN WALD." nnlvm., ' United States Coast and Geodetic Sur fire--J. R. Y. Blakely. t S. N.: Mrs. L. E.

Tee delivered to any part of the city.Island orders promptly filled. Tel. BluHIL P. O. Box 600. Ofle: Kwalvey tables proof office building !n city

, 10:3S a. m.. 1:40 p. m.. 4:31 pr S IlS:31 p. m., 7:30 p. m.

" Daily.Bemiss, Capt. W. E. Carmichael. Mrs (lasslfcd AdvertisementsThe tides at Kahului and Htlo occur j Carmichael. Master Carmichael, B.

REMOVAL"uuu' e nour earner man at iiono-- j Raxter, V. Dilsivian. Mrt Sunday Excepted. Eisen, Mrs.t Sunday Only. sen. Miss M. Fox. It. Gardner B.UREI

BEEI t J.I THE IMPERIAL Barber Rhnn hasHawaliau atanaard time Is 10 hours Gilsin. E. A. Hazard, Mrs. H E. STEIN WAYAND OTHER PIANOS.

AL A' ,. u.,.i.,i snd:tv il minutes slower than Greenwich moved to 110 Bethel street, near King.7327

HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS.One, two or three rooms for house-

keeping: conveniently located; reason-able rent. Kitchen and diningroomattached. Apply after 2 p. m., 1108Alapai street, opposite Rapid Tran-sit power house. "

7325

M, f n;,,r aCS SeSS . V. Pavlow. Russian navy:at "e blows at 1:30 p. m., which Is the --Mrs" Pavlow. T. Kasuya, H. Linn.Ia,rtop.sonly at Pearl City mnl W aianae. Bame as Greenwich. 0 hour. 0 mlnilte.. May... S. X. Aruse, F. A.

JG. P. PKMno., . 1... Sun and moon ar fr. i Oldis. Rear Admiral Ci C Tfiote. T' A GOLD bar pin with amethyst in 156 AXD 15S HOTEL STREET,G. P. & T, A. the whol croup. Comdr. Opposite Young Hotel.H. Rohrbacher, U.Supt.

otel aiiteara 11 returned to this

office. tsR