xursllxjxt jtc - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduthe new copper box, which will bo 0x7x12 inches, and...

12
m 3 r F w 4, XUrSLlXJXT 1 jL Jt"C Telephone 2365 Star Business Office SECOND EDITION 4E VOL. XVI11. TWELVE PAGES. HONOLULU, HAWAII, WEDNESDAY, FJ3IIKUAKY 1, 301 1. TWELVE PAGES. No. o871 REAR ADMIRAL SPtRRY DIE h IN WASHINGTON . (Associated Press Cable to The Star.) WASHINGTQN, city of pneumonia. February 1. Ad mlral Sperry died suddenly In this Admiral Sperry commanded the battleship fleet when It visited and reviewed the men of his command In company of Governor Frear. FIFTEEN COTTAGES TO BE PUT up on on. iraEin property As still another indication of tho Trust Co. to erect a splendid apart-rapi- d growth of Honolulu comes the ment house on tho corner of th.it Dr. McGrew is tania and Miller streets, Is a strong nrpnnrlnir fifteen mod- - Indication of what is of, never known for a certainty, for sent cottages, reach of builders who appreciate demand j eg differ as to a deep in to on for Just such institutions and are.iy is and a brief examination showed near the corner of preparing requirements oi close lad's thigh was Beretania and Punchbowl streets, in a growing city. big where not many years ago There has from time to time in re-so- eight old buildings were torn cent months been considerable talk l0Wn. about the erection of cottages for the ' It is tho plan to erect such cottages accommodation tourists, but the . ... " 1 1 ...Inn n.n n n i (' n.'l ni CI 1 ' ir Yl ci fl OT"! T1 CT as win do convenient to men oi uubi- - "- - uu.ov....,.,, who desire to bo town and the entertainment or tourists in this to charge rental within the means manner, for to invest in homes for of the man with a modest incomer The only or three months occupancy buildings will rent for ?25 is not believed a paying proposition and per month and will in every by those with the money to into way be strictly mere such ventures. Dr. McGrew build-fac- t, that It 1a the enterorise of Dr. Ing for residents; he believes in the McGrew insures satisfaction. The resident as a tenant. A tourist and cottages and bungalows, for of Ma family may pay a deal them will be bungalows, & works for a month or so, but a "tourist" cot- - of art as well as habitations' of com- - tage is likely to remain vacant for the fort. It is that building op- - rest of the year, which time the moth and rust doth corrupt, to ornHnna will hn heiriin as soon as the say weather is settled. nothing ot thierves breaking through j.v This new!? following Immediately y on, the plans of the Trent ' . i in iiiiiiTiiiiS70,r,n ARCHITECTS' DRAWING C. . afternoon set for laying corner tain amongst tnings, an Amen- - tt stone of the new $200,000 Y. M. C. A. Tmlldlng at the corner of Alakea and . Hotel streets. If the weather t not prevent, It Is expected that there be a large crowd, as tho entire community interested in build- ing and an interesting program has heen arranged. The new copper box, which will bo 0x7x12 Inches, and will bo laid with Death Benefit $1,000.00 for $5.00 per year select Weekly Indemnity. Can you afford to bo without protection? Hawaiian Trust C o mp a ny , Limited s 923 Fort 8treet. A. I 2 (Continued t)n Page Eight) BUILDING. the revised version of Bible, tho constitution of the association, list of subscribers to the building, tho va- rious church annuals, copies of news- papers of tho stamps tho Re- publican and Provisional governments, Hawaiian the report of tho association as well as thoso of other Institutions, cards the and builder, ana list of tho contents. old box has all ready to be rein with the Alakea street stone af- ternoon. Special trowels wltii handles have been made for the occasion, these will bo kept by Judgo Dole Clarence Cooke, Jr., as Interesting momentoes' of today's ceremonies. now building bo opened of debt, for tho wholo of the money for Its construction has raised. total subscriptions amount to $195,000 and to b'o added the proceeds of' the of the present building, making total ot about $220,000. The program Is as rollows: Reces- sional, "Rudyard Kipling." by Central Union Church quartet; presentation of the building, by T. Cllvo Davles, chair- man ot tho building committee; Scripture, by Doromus Scuddor; prayer, by Rev. John W. Wadman; laying of the Alakea street stone, by Judge Snnford B. Dole, president of tho Y. M. C. A. In 1S60; reading ot contents of street box, by T. Cllve Davles; laying of Hotel street (Contintiea on Page 8.) BOY KILLED BY EXPLOSION A shocking accident occurred on a and tho Inevitable happoned. There vacant piece of land at the head ot was an explosion. Tho was stand-th- o Queeulne c,ose to th sasollne drum whon Hackfeld wharf ana close to explosion occurred. The top of result of street, morning, as a drum the end nearest to the Domekl which a Russian boy named Zazilov his Tho ed lad was blown off and the lad was thrown was playing with rs shortly soveral feet away by the force of tho after seven o'clock in tho vicinity 01 Impact. The drum, wnlch was lying gasoline oil drums, some of which on Its when the explosion occur- - were empty, others partially He rcd stood upright and the flames from saw one drum opened at the bung- - th gasolene inside rose high Into tho hole on tho top, lying close to tho wa- - ter's edge and he seemed to have con- - The lad lay motionless where he foil, celved the idea of experimenting by knocked unconscious by force of placing fire-crack- er inside the drum, the explosion. He was picked up by Whether tho boy actually placed the a couple of who were cracker inside the drum or standing by and the police patrol was to construct in the minds be for. em within the tho what actual- - fusely from wound of moderate' means, be located who happened. It certain, however, thigh, and Ewa-mak- ai to meet tne that boy put a er that bono crushed the lot of ness near a two projected $30 put The is some great more will expected during -- definite time is of been Is id of been Hnwalians to In a drum containing haps couple of gallons of gasoline (Continued on Page Five.) 0XKXXX00XCX00000 M'BRYDE IS FAVORITE, There was little doing on Change morning outside McBrydo of been discovered on Maui, time which 150 changed hands at $4, plen ty of reservoirs doubt- less making appearances just much brighter. Dividends noted today are as fol- lows: Haiku, $1 per share, $15,000; Pala, ?1 share, ?22,500; Pioneer, $1.50 per share, $41,250. WILL LAY THE 10 CORNERSTONES THIS AFTERNOON ii i ii jj.hu m J I ).-- . .k- - ft i THE OF THE PROPOSED NEW Y. M. A. Half-pa- st four is the the Hotel street corner stone, will con-,,00- sv the of other does will the Accident Insurance risks. this can a day, of coins, annual archi- tect the a Tho this koa and und Tho free The this will sale a Dr. first Hotel boy the this boy lost lire. side full. air. the a not will LIR OF TO-D- AY s s RAMI HI! "Another factor which The lad was pro- - man the left the the the tho hole per- - a rain and full that per uw'ii' ynl this and will I Bl If J! IS STILL I JLRO LUCK One more case of scarlet fover luu this of this at Puunene. The patient Is a Japa- nese. Dr. has notified Dr. Pratt that he thinks that he has traced the source or Infection to a house In Pala. As the house In ques Hon has already had scarlet fever In it', there is very little cause for an xlety, especially in view, of the fact that no news has. yet been received from Chief Sanitary Officer Charlock who went to Maul yesterday. Dr. Pratt thinks that had there been any thing of mention, Mr. Char- lock would have forwarded a wireless message this morning. On Sunday next some of the staff engaged In tho cleaslng operations at Maul will arrive in Honolulu. Dr. Pratt wishes to hold a conference with them concerning the of tho work and the manner In which It is being He that this would be a favorablo opportunity for the men to come here, as Mr. Charlock will be able to watch tho work In their absence. Don't wait for the mail. Use tho Wireless. The office of tho Wireless Is on Adams Lane oft Hotel street, and Is open dally from 7 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. and on Sundays from 8 to 10 a. m S HUD GET LABOR FROAH ENGLAND "Link" McCandless, The fooling with Filipinos who will novcr n'o citizens in tho that finds good sense Breeders' Gazetve, January 11, we desire good citizenship, when the paragraph in an article husky AngIo.SaxonSf mcn of our own entitled "Among the Tenant Farm- - race famlunr wlth nea wo, are liv ers In Great Britain": ign on such small wages In Great conspires to Britain. bleeding Sawyer worthy progress conducted. considered perusing following .. ,t,.,. ia ti, mnnrntivn "Where is the necessity of look- - '"B lf we CI1" 'B any f"rthe,r' ln, cheapness of farm labor. They argue fnror with hi.olnoas Kfinsn wu 10 U""B a" " lul"' nffnr.i tn ,in munh manual labor of England to theso Islands. Tho art lc'o I refer declares that havo when ho can secure efficient help at to they from to 14 a week, tho hands 10 suumit to small wages lor 1110 rcas- - boarding themselves. Labor Is cheap 011 that they aro too poor to como to because It is plentiful; It Is abundant America. They need not consider the i,0(.n,,Bn it la tnn nnnr tn come to cost or transportation to this tern Amori Tt la imlformlv comnotent tory of tho United States should tho because it is constantly under tho uoard ' Immigration take tho mat- - . Iron necessity of remaining om- - in nanu. we migni wen cease ployed " ' our P11,Plno Cuban and Porto Rlcan "And here we aro In Hawaii," says efforts if wo can securo farm labor Mr. McCandless, "sending agents from Groat Britain, scouting over the world In search of "Wo do not havo to put them to labor and In search of farming set- - work on tho plantations, oven If they tiers, when good Anglo-Saxo- in were willing to do that work, but wo Grent Britain, men fnmlllar with ag- - could man tho land which so much rlcultural work and speaking Kngllsh,' requires intelligent agricultural effort, are under tho iron necessity of re- - These men, working at three and four malning employed at three or four dollars a week In Great Britain, could dollars a week and boarding thorn- - bo put on tho Hawaiian agricultural selves. lands for which labor is needed and "It seems to me that hero Is pre- - for which we are seeking farmers, sented an opportunity for our board "I think there is a great opportun-o- f immigration to get busy and bring Ity here presented and I hope that to Hawaii some of this fine material the proper authorities will seriously for citizenship. Wo aro wasting time consider what may bo done." COTTRILL NOW COLLECTOR OF THIS DISTRICT (Associated Press Cable to The Star.) WASHINGTON, D. C, February 1. Charles A. Cottrlll has been con. firmed by the senate for collector of Internal revenue In Hawaii. 'X NEW JUDGE OF CUSTOMS. WASHINGTON, February 1. George E. Martin of Ohio has been . nominated for Judge of the Customs Appeals court to succeed Hunt. BONILLA'S STEADY SUCCESS. PUERTO CORTEZ, February 1. This city and the entire Atlantic coast of Honduras is In the possession of Bonllla. SENATE AND EXPOSITION. WASHINGTON, D. C, February 1 The Exposition resolution has been referred to the Senate Committee on Industrial Expositions which Is expected to act on Friday. EDITOR'S LIGHT SENTENCE. WASHINGTON. February 1. President Taft has commuted the sen- tence of Warren, the socialist editor, to $100 fine and no Imprisonment. ARCHBISHOP DYING. PHILADELPHIA, February 1. Archbishop Ryan Is dying. LIBELLED THE KING. LONDON, February 1. Edward Myllus has been sentenced to Imprison- ment for a year for circulating a libel about King George. The libel was a statement that the King, when Prince of Wales, contracted a morganatic marriage with a daughter of Admiral Seymour. ANOTHER DREADNOUGHT LAUNCHED. LONDON, February 1. The dreadnought Thunderer was launched FATAL NEW JERSEY EXPLOSION. NEW YORK February 1. An explosion of dynamite which was being loaded on a barge here today killed several people and Injured hundreds, he explosion was felt In New York, w here it broke thousands of windows and caused panic. MORNING CABLE REPORT. EL PASO, Texas, February 1. Yesterday reports from the south told of the capture by revolutionists of two important towns, Galanea and San Buena Ventura. The revolutionists also cut the line of the Mexican Central Railroad, capturning two through passenger trains. Several gov- ernment officials,, passengers. on the trains held up, were taken prisoners, a quantity of foodstuff was commandeered. GUAYAQUIL Ecuador, February 1. Yielding to the will of the peopjo of Ecuador, expressed In recent riotous demonstrations. President Alfaro yesterday announced that all negotiations between the United States and Ecuador, looking toward the acquiring of a naval base by lease on the part of the United States, are to be regarded as abandoned. SACRAMENTO, February 1. Governor Johnson yesterday signed the antlraclng bill, which is now law. The measure is a particularly drastlo one, Its provisions making any further use of the Emeryville track an lm possibility. SAN FRANCISCO, February 1. San Francisco is Jubilant over the signal victory won by her representatives at Washington over New Orleans. A hurried meeting of the business men was held yesterday, as soon as the result at Washington was officially announced, and It was resolved that the victory should be properly celebrated. Plans covering five days were drawn up, and presented to the public through special editions of the newspapers. DO YOU WANT RELIEF. CLEAN-U- P SALE AT SACHS. Are you frequently hoarse? Do you Tho Clean-u- p Sale at Sachs Wed- - have that annoying tickling in your throat. Does your cough annoy you at night, and wo you raise mucus In tho morning? Do you want reller? If so, tyiko Chamberlain's Cough Re- medy and you will be pleased. For sale by all dealers, Benson, Smith & Co., gents for Hawaii. NEW ruck MIL0U The IC, Tamamoto Rice Mill Is the largest as well as tho finest ln the Islands. AH machinery is of the very latest pattern. The famous Tengu Rice is cleaned at this mill. With tho large cleaning capacity they are able to handle considerable out-aid- e parti- cular work which they guarantee. MAKING POWDER Absolutely Pure Tho only baking powdot mado from Royal Grape Oroam of Tartar No Alum, Ho Lime Phosphite resday, Thursday, Friday and Satur- day of this week will create keen interest among the careful buyers. This sale will bo of wash materials. Fine Job Printing, Star Office. Educator $4, and $5 Sfjoes Solid, senslblo Business man's shoe. Tho shapo of this shoe allows freo action of all flvo toes and gives rellof to those tired feet. Sold only by us. M anufacturers' SHOE COMPANY, LTD 1051 Fort 1 '3 3 .J if .1 V T. '

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Page 1: XUrSLlXJXT JtC - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduThe new copper box, which will bo 0x7x12 Inches, and will bo laid with Death Benefit $1,000.00 for $5.00 per year select Weekly Indemnity

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XUrSLlXJXT 1 jL Jt"CTelephone 2365 Star Business Office SECOND EDITION

4EVOL. XVI11. TWELVE PAGES. HONOLULU, HAWAII, WEDNESDAY, FJ3IIKUAKY 1, 301 1. TWELVE PAGES. No. o871

REAR ADMIRAL

SPtRRY DIE

h IN WASHINGTON. (Associated Press Cable to The Star.)

WASHINGTQN,city of pneumonia.

February 1. Ad mlral Sperry died suddenly In this

Admiral Sperry commanded the battleship fleet when It visited

and reviewed the men of his command In company of Governor Frear.

FIFTEEN COTTAGES TO BE PUT

up on on. iraEin property

As still another indication of tho Trust Co. to erect a splendid apart-rapi- d

growth of Honolulu comes the ment house on tho corner of

th.it Dr. McGrew is tania and Miller streets, Is a strongnrpnnrlnir fifteen mod- - Indication of what is of, never known for a certainty, for sent

cottages, reach of builders who appreciate demand j eg differ as to a deep into on for Just such institutions and are.iy is and a brief examination showed

near the corner of preparing requirements oi close lad's thigh wasBeretania and Punchbowl streets, in a growing city.

big where not many years ago There has from time to time in re-so-

eight old buildings were torn cent months been considerable talk

l0Wn. about the erection of cottages for the' It is tho plan to erect such cottages accommodation tourists, but the

. ... " 1 1 ...Inn n.n n n i (' n.'l ni CI 1 ' i r Yl ci fl OT"! T1 CTas win do convenient to men oi uubi- - "- - uu.ov....,.,,who desire to bo town and the entertainment or tourists in this

to charge rental within the means manner, for to invest in homes forof the man with a modest incomer The only or three months occupancy

buildings will rent for ?25 is not believed a paying propositionand per month and will in every by those with the money to intoway be strictly mere such ventures. Dr. McGrew build-fac- t,

that It 1a the enterorise of Dr. Ing for residents; he believes in theMcGrew insures satisfaction. The resident as a tenant. A tourist andcottages and bungalows, for of Ma family may pay a dealthem will be bungalows, & works for a month or so, but a "tourist" cot- -

of art as well as habitations' of com- - tage is likely to remain vacant for thefort. It is that building op- - rest of the year, which time

the moth and rust doth corrupt, toornHnna will hn heiriin as soon as the say

weather is settled. nothing ot thierves breaking through

j.v This new!? following Immediatelyy on, the plans of the Trent

'.

i in iiiiiiTiiiiS70,r,n

ARCHITECTS' DRAWING C.

. afternoonset for laying corner tain amongst tnings, an Amen- - tt

stone of the new $200,000 Y. M. C. A.

Tmlldlng at the corner of Alakea and. Hotel streets. If the weathert not prevent, It Is expected that there

be a large crowd, as tho entirecommunity interested in build-ing and an interesting program hasheen arranged.

The new copper box, which will bo

0x7x12 Inches, and will bo laid with

Death Benefit$1,000.00

for$5.00

per yearselect

Weekly Indemnity.

Can you afford to bo withoutprotection?

Hawaiian

TrustC o m p a n y ,

Limited s

923 Fort 8treet.

A. I 2

(Continued t)n Page Eight)

BUILDING.

therevised version of Bible, tho

constitution of the association, listof subscribers to the building, tho va-

rious church annuals, copies of news-

papers of tho stamps tho Re-

publican and Provisional governments,Hawaiian the report of

tho association as well as thoso ofother Institutions, cards the

and builder, ana list of thocontents. old box has

all ready to be reinwith the Alakea street stone af-

ternoon.Special trowels wltii handles

have been made for the occasion,these will bo kept by Judgo Dole

Clarence Cooke, Jr., as Interestingmomentoes' of today's ceremonies.

now building bo openedof debt, for tho wholo of the

money for Its construction hasraised. total subscriptions amountto $195,000 and to b'o addedthe proceeds of' the of the presentbuilding, making total ot about$220,000.

The program Is as rollows: Reces-sional, "Rudyard Kipling." by CentralUnion Church quartet; presentation of

the building, by T. Cllvo Davles, chair-

man ot tho building committee;Scripture, by Doromus Scuddor;prayer, by Rev. John W. Wadman;laying of the Alakea street stone, byJudge Snnford B. Dole, presidentof tho Y. M. C. A. In 1S60; reading otcontents of street box, by T.Cllve Davles; laying of Hotel street

(Contintiea on Page 8.)

BOY KILLED BY

EXPLOSION

A shocking accident occurred on a and tho Inevitable happoned. Therevacant piece of land at the head ot was an explosion. Tho was stand-th- o

Queeulne c,ose to th sasollne drum whonHackfeld wharf ana close toexplosion occurred. The top ofresult ofstreet, morning, as a

drum the end nearest to theDomeklwhich a Russian boy namedZazilov his Tho ed lad was blown off and the lad was thrownwas playing with rs shortly soveral feet away by the force of tho

after seven o'clock in tho vicinity 01 Impact. The drum, wnlch was lyinggasoline oil drums, some of which on Its when the explosion occur- -

were empty, others partially He rcd stood upright and the flames fromsaw one drum opened at the bung- - th gasolene inside rose high Into tho

hole on tho top, lying close to tho wa- -

ter's edge and he seemed to have con- - The lad lay motionless where he foil,celved the idea of experimenting by knocked unconscious by force ofplacing fire-crack- er inside the drum, the explosion. He was picked up by

Whether tho boy actually placed the a couple of who werecracker inside the drum or standing by and the police patrol was

to construct in the minds be for.

em within the tho what actual- - fusely from woundof moderate' means, be located who happened. It certain, however, thigh,and Ewa-mak- ai to meet tne that boy put a er that bono crushed

the lot

of

ness neara

twoprojected

$30 putThe is

some great morewill

expected during

-- definite

time

is

of

beenIs id

of

been

Hnwalians

to In a drum containinghaps couple of gallons of gasoline (Continued on Page Five.)

0XKXXX00XCX00000M'BRYDE IS

FAVORITE,

There was little doing on Changemorning outside McBrydo of been discovered on Maui, time

which 150 changed hands at $4, plenty of reservoirs doubt-less making appearances justmuch brighter.

Dividends noted today are as fol-

lows: Haiku, $1 per share, $15,000;Pala, ?1 share, ?22,500; Pioneer,$1.50 per share, $41,250.

WILL LAY THE 10 CORNERSTONES THIS AFTERNOON

ii i ii jj.hu m J I

).-- . .k- - ft i

THE OF THE PROPOSED NEW Y. M. A.

Half-pa- st four is the the Hotel street corner stone, will con-,,00- sv

the of other

does

willthe

Accident

Insurance

risks.

this

cana

day, of

coins, annual

archi-

tect the aTho

this

koaandund

Thofree

Thethis willsalea

Dr.

first

Hotel

boy

thethisboy

lost lire.

sidefull.

air.

thea

not will

LIR

OF

TO-D- AY

s s RAMI

HI!

"Another factor which

The lad was pro- -

man the left

the the

the

tho hole per- -

a

rain and fullthat

per

uw'ii' ynl

this

and

will

I Bl If J!

IS STILL

I JLRO LUCK

One more case of scarlet fover luuthis of this

at Puunene. The patient Is a Japa-nese. Dr. has notified Dr.Pratt that he thinks that he hastraced the source or Infection to ahouse In Pala. As the house In quesHon has already had scarlet fever Init', there is very little cause for anxlety, especially in view, of the factthat no news has. yet been receivedfrom Chief Sanitary Officer Charlockwho went to Maul yesterday. Dr.Pratt thinks that had there been anything of mention, Mr. Char-lock would have forwarded a wirelessmessage this morning.

On Sunday next some of the staffengaged In tho cleaslng operations atMaul will arrive in Honolulu. Dr.Pratt wishes to hold a conference withthem concerning the of thowork and the manner In which It isbeing He thatthis would be a favorablo opportunityfor the men to come here, as Mr.Charlock will be able to watch thowork In their absence.

Don't wait for the mail. Use thoWireless. The office of tho WirelessIs on Adams Lane oft Hotel street,and Is open dally from 7 a. m. to5:30 p. m. and on Sundays from 8to 10 a. m

SHUD

GET LABOR FROAH ENGLAND

"Link" McCandless, The fooling with Filipinos who will novcrn'o citizens in tho thatfinds good senseBreeders' Gazetve, January 11,we desire good citizenship, when

the paragraph in an article husky AngIo.SaxonSf mcn of our ownentitled "Among the Tenant Farm- - race famlunr wlth nea wo, are livers In Great Britain": ign on such small wages In Great

conspires to Britain.

bleeding

Sawyer

worthy

progress

conducted. considered

perusing

following

.. ,t,.,. ia ti, mnnrntivn "Where is the necessity of look- -

'"B lf we CI1" 'B anyf"rthe,r' ln,cheapness of farm labor. They arguefnror with hi.olnoas Kfinsn wu 10 U""B a" " lul"'

nffnr.i tn ,in munh manual labor of England to theso Islands. Tho artlc'o I refer declares that havowhen ho can secure efficient help at to they

from to 14 a week, tho hands 10 suumit to small wages lor 1110 rcas- -

boarding themselves. Labor Is cheap 011 that they aro too poor to como to

because It is plentiful; It Is abundant America. They need not consider thei,0(.n,,Bn it la tnn nnnr tn come to cost or transportation to this ternAmori Tt la imlformlv comnotent tory of tho United States should tho

because it is constantly under tho uoard ' Immigration take tho mat- - .

Iron necessity of remaining om- - in nanu. we migni wen ceaseployed " ' our P11,Plno Cuban and Porto Rlcan

"And here we aro In Hawaii," says efforts if wo can securo farm labor

Mr. McCandless, "sending agents from Groat Britain,scouting over the world In search of "Wo do not havo to put them tolabor and In search of farming set- - work on tho plantations, oven If theytiers, when good Anglo-Saxo- in were willing to do that work, but wo

Grent Britain, men fnmlllar with ag-- could man tho land which so muchrlcultural work and speaking Kngllsh,' requires intelligent agricultural effort,are under tho iron necessity of re- - These men, working at three and fourmalning employed at three or four dollars a week In Great Britain, coulddollars a week and boarding thorn- - bo put on tho Hawaiian agriculturalselves. lands for which labor is needed and

"It seems to me that hero Is pre- - for which we are seeking farmers,sented an opportunity for our board "I think there is a great opportun-o- f

immigration to get busy and bring Ity here presented and I hope thatto Hawaii some of this fine material the proper authorities will seriouslyfor citizenship. Wo aro wasting time consider what may bo done."

COTTRILL NOW

COLLECTOR OF

THIS DISTRICT(Associated Press Cable to The Star.)

WASHINGTON, D. C, February 1. Charles A. Cottrlll has been con.firmed by the senate for collector of Internal revenue In Hawaii.

'XNEW JUDGE OF CUSTOMS.

WASHINGTON, February 1. George E. Martin of Ohio has been .

nominated for Judge of the Customs Appeals court to succeed Hunt.

BONILLA'S STEADY SUCCESS.PUERTO CORTEZ, February 1. This city and the entire Atlantic

coast of Honduras is In the possession of Bonllla.

SENATE AND EXPOSITION.WASHINGTON, D. C, February 1 The Exposition resolution has

been referred to the Senate Committee on Industrial Expositions which Isexpected to act on Friday.

EDITOR'S LIGHT SENTENCE.WASHINGTON. February 1. President Taft has commuted the sen-

tence of Warren, the socialist editor, to $100 fine and no Imprisonment.

ARCHBISHOP DYING.PHILADELPHIA, February 1. Archbishop Ryan Is dying.

LIBELLED THE KING.LONDON, February 1. Edward Myllus has been sentenced to Imprison-

ment for a year for circulating a libel about King George. The libel was astatement that the King, when Prince of Wales, contracted a morganaticmarriage with a daughter of Admiral Seymour.

ANOTHER DREADNOUGHT LAUNCHED.LONDON, February 1. The dreadnought Thunderer was launched

FATAL NEW JERSEY EXPLOSION.NEW YORK February 1. An explosion of dynamite which was being

loaded on a barge here today killed several people and Injured hundreds,he explosion was felt In New York, w here it broke thousands of windowsand caused panic.

MORNING CABLE REPORT.EL PASO, Texas, February 1. Yesterday reports from the south told

of the capture by revolutionists of two important towns, Galanea andSan Buena Ventura. The revolutionists also cut the line of the MexicanCentral Railroad, capturning two through passenger trains. Several gov-ernment officials,, passengers. on the trains held up, were taken prisoners, aquantity of foodstuff was commandeered.

GUAYAQUIL Ecuador, February 1. Yielding to the will of the peopjoof Ecuador, expressed In recent riotous demonstrations. President Alfaroyesterday announced that all negotiations between the United States andEcuador, looking toward the acquiring of a naval base by lease on the partof the United States, are to be regarded as abandoned.

SACRAMENTO, February 1. Governor Johnson yesterday signed theantlraclng bill, which is now law. The measure is a particularly drastloone, Its provisions making any further use of the Emeryville track an lmpossibility.

SAN FRANCISCO, February 1. San Francisco is Jubilant over thesignal victory won by her representatives at Washington over New Orleans.

A hurried meeting of the business men was held yesterday, as soonas the result at Washington was officially announced, and It was resolvedthat the victory should be properly celebrated. Plans covering five dayswere drawn up, and presented to the public through special editions of the

newspapers.

DO YOU WANT RELIEF. CLEAN-U- P SALE AT SACHS.Are you frequently hoarse? Do you Tho Clean-u- p Sale at Sachs Wed- -

have that annoying tickling in yourthroat. Does your cough annoy youat night, and wo you raise mucus Intho morning? Do you want reller? Ifso, tyiko Chamberlain's Cough Re-medy and you will be pleased. Forsale by all dealers, Benson, Smith &

Co., gents for Hawaii.

NEW ruck MIL0U

The IC, Tamamoto Rice Mill Is thelargest as well as tho finest ln theIslands. AH machinery is of the verylatest pattern. The famous TenguRice is cleaned at this mill. With tholarge cleaning capacity they are ableto handle considerable out-aid- e parti-cular work which they guarantee.

MAKINGPOWDER

Absolutely PureTho only baking powdotmado from Royal Grape

Oroam of TartarNo Alum, Ho Lime Phosphite

resday, Thursday, Friday and Satur-day of this week will create keeninterest among the careful buyers.This sale will bo of wash materials.

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

Educator $4, and $5 Sfjoes

Solid, senslblo Business man'sshoe. Tho shapo of this shoeallows freo action of all flvotoes and gives rellof to thosetired feet. Sold only by us.

M anufacturers'SHOE COMPANY, LTD

1051 Fort

1

'3

3

.Jif

.1

V T. '

Page 2: XUrSLlXJXT JtC - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduThe new copper box, which will bo 0x7x12 Inches, and will bo laid with Death Benefit $1,000.00 for $5.00 per year select Weekly Indemnity

11.'

DAILY AXD I KMNWHHKLY.

wHAWAII nun, Swatjij5AYt PiliiRiJlAftY

THE HAWAIIAN STARDully published err flni(Hin toxMpt Swntlnjr) br tha Hawaiian 8tr

MowMfmpor AtMclaiton, UU1., McCftHdleim Building, ll&thel Homelulu, 11.

Iniwed t the poetotftcs Honolulu m Monntl o1m moll nmttsr.

SUB8CRHT10N UATIW. PAYAHI.W ADVANOlt.

l)llr, anywhere lit the Uland. pur. monthDully, anywhere In the lluide, three moiitlm 2.00.

unywhoro In the Island, tlx month 1,00.nywhre In the Islands, one year $.00.

Daily, to foreign countries, one year , IS. 00.aiiywhore lit the Ifcltuitln, one yopf 2.00.

Semi-Week- ly to Foreign countries, one year 3.00.

Advertising rntee supplied upon request.

D. TIMMONS MANAGER.

LEAVE S. F.

BiininesF oftlre telephone, 2365; postofllco box, 300.

Oceanic Steamship GompanySierra Schedule

ARRIVE HON. LEAVE HON.

FEB. 4 FEB. 10FEB. is5 MAR. 3MAR. 18 MAR. 24

APRIL 8 14APRIL 29 MAY G

MAY 20 MAY 20JUNE JUNE 1C

JULY 1 JULY 7

JULY 22 JULY 28

APRILAPRIL APRIL

JUNEJULY JULY

RATES rrom wonolulu to San ancisco?no. extra.

Reservations will not be held lat er than twenty-fou- r to theadvertised time unless tickets are paid for In full.

FOR PARTIC ULARS. APPLY TO

GENERAL AGENTS.

of the line in with thoB. C, and

S. W., and at B.

FOR FIJI AND33

CalIs at Island.

8

i

o.,

Canadian-Australi- an Royal Mail Steamship Co

Steamers running connection CANADIANPACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY between Vancouver, Sydney,

Victoria,

AUSTRALIAMAKURA FEBRUARYZEALANDIA MARCH

Fanning

C,

MOANAMAKURA MARCH

CALLING AT SUVA, ON BOT H UP DOWN

Theo. Davies & Co., Ltd., Ge'i Agents

Pacific Mail Steamship Co.Steamers the company will at and this

on or the mentioned below:

S.S.S.S.S.S.

FOR THE ORIENT:S. KOREA FEB. 3

S. SIBERIA FEB. 21S. FEB. 27S. MANCHURIA C

S. 22

S. MONGOLIA 27

Will call at

FEB.

MAR.

CHIYO MARU.

oS'.f

tTIb

RtrMt,

Dully,Dally,

APRIL

FEB.MAR. MAR.MAR.

MAYMAY JUNE

VUG.

First Clss, ?65;Family

hours priorBalling

above

calling and Brisbane,

FIJI, AND VOYAGES.

E

above call leaveport about dates

CHINAMAR.

ASIA MAR.MAR.

Manila.

For to

v SAN

S. S. 11 S.

S. S. FEB. 21 S.S. S. FEB. 28 S.S S. 16 S.S. S. 21 SS. S APR. 1 S.S S. APR. 16 S.

W

T.

at

IN

L.

10

F.FEB. 15 21

1429

19 2G

10 MAY 1C

3121 2712 18

AUG.Fr

Trip,

N. Q.

'Of

FRANCISCOS. S. JAN. 28S. S. CHINA FEB.S. S. FEB. 11

S. S. ASIA FEB.S. S. MONGOLIA MAR.S. S. PERSIA MAR. 24

S. S. KOREA MAR. 31

general information apply

H. Hackfeld & Co.,

DIRECT SERVICE BETWEEN FRANCISCO AND

LURLINE

HONOLULANLURLINE

MAR.HONOLULAN

LURLINE

lOH.

JUNE

RoundHoom,

Ltd

VANCOUVER.

MANCHURIA

Agent

MatsonNavigation Co.'s Schedule, 1910-- 1HONOLULU.

WILHELMINA

WILHELMINA

SAIL.

S. LURLINE FEB. 21S. WILHELMINA MAR.S. HONOLULAN MAR. 10S. LURLINE MAR. 25S. WILHELMINA MAR. 29S. HONOLULAN APR. 11

LURLINE Vli. 26

S. S. of this lino sails from Seattle for direct on orabout February 4, 1911.

,& COOKE GENERAL AGENTS.

American-Hawaiia- n Steamship Co.FROM NEW YORK TO HONOLULU, via Tehuantepec, every sixth

day. Freight received at all times at tho Company's Wharf, 41st Street,South Brooklyn.

FROM SEATTLE OR TACOMA TO HONOLULU DIRECT:S. S. ALASKAN to sail February 2

S. S. ARIZONAN to sail February 14

For further information apply toH. HACKFELD & LTD, Agents, Honolulu.

C. P. MORSE, General Freight Agent.

Toyo Kisen Kaisha.Steamers of the above Company will call at and leave Honolulu on or

about thc dates mentioned below:FOR THE ORIENT.

S. S. NIPPON MARU....FEB. 14thS. S. ...MAR. 14thS S. AMERICA MARU. . . .ARP. 4th

IS

men for

AH J

,TI,

ARRIVE S

84

C

2

Honolulu

FORMARCH

i

Honolulu

ARRIVE

FOR SAN .

SIBERIA5

54

1

S.Hyades Honolulu

CASTLE LTD

CO,

FOR SAN FRANCISCO.S. S. CHIYO MARU.... FEB. 18thS. S. AMERICA MARU. . . . MAR. 10thS. S. TENYO MARU.... MAR. 17th

Castle & Cooke, Ltd., AgentsOUR STORAGE WAREHOUSE ESPECIALLY

STORING HOUSEHOLD GOODSExperienced packing.

ADAPTED FOR

Union-Pacifi- c Transfer Co.. IChtgjtjeetjjppos

18.

Pel)

TIDES, SUN AND MOON.Klrat ntmrttr of tha moon, Keb. Clh.

1

I7JT

4 ten

4M

615

P. MSI 9M0l

8

l.t

i.r:

1.2

1.2

TOT

tsiw;

8 AT

6 m

7:20

8:J7

A. M.

1lira:

9:19

10 !HM

10 iM

12:U

1:M

SOI

11:21

11:W(

'. M.lltGtf

5.52,

count order from tho do- -

A. SIi:ou

2M

8:87 5:51

01X7 7:21

suit

9:15 new war

0:356.M 11:08

5:6l.

Times of tiae nre taKen thoU. S. CoaBt nnil Geodetic Survey tables.

along

fliafi5:w

fostlvl- -

The Kahululana ties not butabout earlier than Hono- - department commnndor, General ?

Honolulu standard tlmu Ishours minutes slower than Greenwich time, that the meridian

degrees mlns. Tho timewhistle blows at 1:30 p.m., which Is thosame as Greenwich hours minutes.Tho and moon for local timethe whole group.

NORMA N

nsslstnncemilitary.

military ona

f, f

at

is In inone nt

1030

ofof 107 30

0 0sun are for

I

V. u I

, fBliss, "

DocontberOrdors,

Goneralit t- - t- - . . . . . .

i,VUI "ei'ru"ou. Aiarcn n, 1907,

n". Id rOKClllflP1 nnil tllo fnltmvtnn.

in ;

4 HI or the War Depart- -. . U IV 1 1 it.iu (U

vessels.) lroi's m ArmyU. S. II. Kukui, from cruise, sions hereinU. S. C. Thetis, from ns folImvs:

' - Wheneverl normlttetl toAllen, from Belling.

January 28. ."mi ui uisuuv-uo- tiio'

from "eu 111 "ntional celebrations ofMidway, 25. 51 nature commemoral- -

Zcalandin, Br. from historical in30. to which government aid

Peachy, Ur. str., from Ptiget hns been extended, and militaryJanuary 18. arc and

Coronado, bk from Fran- - strictly military in character andcisco, 15. not combined with kind of

M. Phelps, sp., from celebration or SuchNorfolk, tako place

R. P. RIthet, Am. bk., from years only notFrancisco, 30. ono for each nnv

For Francisco.witneiraina, m. n. mortal uepartmcnts concerned

! to ofM. N. Co., February 4.,. month reserved Tor

P. M. 5. RequestsP. M. Co., February in kind of

11.

co.

Sierra, O. S. S. CoChiyo Marti, T. K.

, 13

Februar

Lurllne, M. N. Co., FebruaryAsia, P. M. Co., February

C.-- R. M. S,, March 1.C.-- R. M. S., Marcl

28.FIJI and Australia.

Makura, R. M. , FebruaryR. M. S., March 3

China Japan.P. M. Co., February 3.

Nippon Maru, T. K. February14.

Siberia, P. M. Co., February 21.China, P. M. Co., February

P. M. Co., March C.INTER-ISLAN- VESSELS.

Ports..Mauna S. N. Evory

Tuesday.MIkahala, every Tuesday,

Kauai Ports.W. G. Hall, I.-- l. S. N C.

Thursday.Klnatt, I.-- I. S. N.

Tuesday.

Every

Every

Maui Ports.Claudlne, I.-- N. Co., Every

Friday.ports.

Mauna Loa, I.-- I N. Co., alterTuesdays Fridays.TRANSPORT SERVICE.

U. A. T. Crook at Manila.U. S. A. T. Warren at Manila.U. S. A. T. Sheridan Fran

cisco.U. S. N. T. Buffalo, Francis

U. A. T. Buford, atU. A. T. Thomas at Fran

cisco.U. A. T. Logan route Hono

U.U.

S. A. T. Sherman at Manila.S.

PASSENGERS ARRIVED.

str. Claudlne, Hllo: W.Rycroft, W. C. Lee, Mr. and S.Burke, Dttaolt; from Hana,

and Mrs. Glenn, D. L. Austin,and M. Cabral; Kahulul,Mrs. W. G. Scott, Mrs. C. G

Kct

of

0:5

the

I.-- I.

S.

S.

at

at

S.S.

to

ajid J. W.R. Robinson, D.

andW. G. Hall, from

Mrs. C. B. S. K.K. akahashi, W. Motoshige

deck.

Fine Printing, Office.

MILITARY OUT

OF IE PUDEThe Flornl Parade committee was

greatly disappointed yesterday whennotlflod that It mtiat get thla W ATKINS Troftauroryonr without the of the

to out no- -U:iom:M5:52

partment. According to Intorpretu- -fiSMSlM, 10:11 liw TI.ini1Ur.ni,nrillilU lllll UU. .'I'fj.llUUI-UUIIDM- ll

Mncomb, commanding tho district ofHawaii, thore Is alternative to

of the parade leasteral Macomb points out that au-thority for taking part In tho

tides 1,1m thohour 7, 1 Y ohrm

being

department of ;cr -order in question Is as follows

Up to Department Head.Department,

Washington,General No.

Paragraph III, Orders, No.miasiW3ffaraiIt r.l.ll

Shipping Port I in ?,crefor,;

mnilt vncnnnffpAAS,?tfWstpssv5tf; uiu iiuuuuunce(Government 01 ueguiar onL. T. such thog mentioned

isR crutso,Merchant vessel. practicable, troops

S. O. Am. bk., participate In

ham, wttn orgnn- -

Flaurence Ward, sch., "lllumJanary purely patriotic

str. Sydney, Important events,positions

Sound, Inournaments that exclusively

Am. SanJan. other

Erskine Am. entertainment.Dec. 6. tournaments will during thP

San and willDec. .exceed such vear In

PROJECTED DEPARTURES.San

territorial They arebe larger cities of the ter- -

February!nt prior the commencement

Honolulnn, last field training.China, Co., February 2- - for troops particl-Manchurl- a,

Patc any other celebration.

FebruaryK.,

21.25.

For Vancouver.Moana,Makura,

ForC.-- ij 3.

Zealandia, C.--

andKorea,

K.,

27.Manchuria,

For Hllo ana HawaiiKea, Co.,

For

Co.,

For and Hawaii

Kau and Kona

nate and

S.

San

San

San Francisco.San

S. enlulu.

A

Per rromMrs.

and

from and'

Camara, Mr. Mrs Robert-- ,son, Kahaulollo,

Achune.Per str.

Mr. and Ka-e- o,

and

The has stny

thennlnr

trom

lulu.

For

butstny out Gen

tho

Hllo occur

J

The

War

30, 1910.230.

J

occn- -

wm

Am.

,nB

any

Mr.

department. toheld In the

uo., andthe

to

in btato county fairs, carnivals,festivals, reunions, and celebrations ofa local or commercial character, ex-cept as noted below, will be denied.

3. Whenever troops are stationedin cities or in the immediate vicinitythereof and where long custom has in-volved their participation in rolphrn- -Hons a

, RENNY. u ...nj niiutin 1. u uuuptj IUparticipate in such celebrations in ac-cordance with custom, participation does notinvolve absence from their usual du-ties, or any expense to the govern-ment.

"By order of the Secretary of War:"LEONARD WOOD,

"Major-Genera- l, Chief of Staff."

6EHMHIS IN 10CELEBRATED TOO

HILO. hall the certlfled CPVv..vii hub ituuu iusc .pn- -

day night, with the members of thatorganization and a few invited

celebrate the birthday ofwntiam ot uermany. The occasionwas a festive all such oc-casions should be, and from 7:30 inthe evening till longsongs, music, speeches and laughterwere Intermingled. Light refreshments of salads, sandwiches, to bo f Sa,d Gth

were on hand and

allmost Jovial time was enjoyed by

Ono of the features of the occasionwas the violin playing of Plo Reyes,a young Filipino boy who wns presentand who has, with little assistance, mastered the violin to a fargreater degree ordlnarllv

J. D. Kennedy also favoredT. DIx en route to I

t,,ose Present with a violin solo and

S.

Chas.Mr. J.

or

to

is

a song. The speech of tho eveningwas that of Henry Hagens, tho as-

sistant manager of tho local branchof Hackfeld and Co., who called for ahealth to the Emperor in tho follow-ing words:

assembled here to cele-brate tho 52nd. of birth

1u1.f1. t "'"I'uiui tv mum uiu

overyone arisedrink the his

Eniperor the 2nd.Three for Kaiser,

Kaiser)".

Fine

PINRGTAR SALES OOMPANY. LTD.

At a meeting of the PrNltaTAltBALER LTD., ltuld January 38,aaji, m mo uotnimiiya office, No.S85 Karhiimattn Honolulu, T.ii., ma rtmrvinjc officer wore olootodror me ensuing jonr:JS.MII, A. IIHRNDT ProsldontO 8. LlfllTHlSAD nt

wi.u HOENITZ SecretaryThe abovo nnmod olllcors, with W.

R. WAR11AAI oonptltnto tho Hoard ofDirectors.

GEO. nOHNITZ,Secretary.

NOTICE BIDS.

Soalod bids will bo recolved by thoHonolulu Rapid Transit & Land Com-pnn- y,

at its omco, Alopnl Street, Ho- -at vestedV.00"'

of the California.

as

midnight,

anniversary--

tlon.Plans and specifications mny bo

seen at tho Company's offlcc.Tho lowost any bid not necos-Btitil- y

accepted.Honolulu, January 28th, 1911.

C. G. BALLENTYNE,

NOTICE.

All visiting Nobles of tho MysticShrlno who desire to attend or takonny tho festivities during thoimperial Potentate's visit to ourOasis February 21st to March1st, 1911 will please call at onco onour Recorder, Charles F. Murray, andregister.

Charles F. Murray, Recorder. Tele-phone 1109.

ByJAMES S. McCANDLESS,

Illustrious Potentate.Honolulu, Jan. 30, 1911..

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THEuiNiitu SIATES IN ANDTHE TERRITORY AND DISTRICTOF HAWAII.

THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff, vs. HAWAIIAN SUGAR COMPANY, et al., Defendants.

THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITEDSTATES, GREETING:HAWAIIAN SUGAR COMPANY,

corporation organized and existingunder and by of the laws ofthe Territory of Hawaii; TERRITORYOF ELIZA SINP.t.att?JANE R. GAY, HELEN McH. ROB-INSON, FRANCIS GAY and AUBREYROBINSON, copartners busi-ness under tho firm name and styloof GAY & ROBINSON:

WATSON; GEORGE W.fact forMACFARLANE, attorney inof local character, department WILLIAM WATSON- -

whenever

Emperor

profusion

Manager.

HAWAII:

WILLIAM

RENNY WATSON; MRS.SHELBY; MARGARET WAT-SON; SPENCER SHELBY; andCLARA KILAUEA. ELSA H1T.O.A1AKION MAKENA, DAVID PUU-LO-

ALBERT PUNAHOU, ROBERTWAHIAWA, ALEXANDER LANAI,GEORGE KEWALO, HENRY KAMA-LO- ,

WALTER HAWEA PHILIPLAHA1NA, unknown owners andclaimants.

You are hereby directed to appear,and answer the an actionentitled as above, brought against

in the District Court of thoStates, in for the Territory of

Hawaii, twenty days andafter upon you of certifiedcopy of Plaintiff's Petition herein,

' wlth of U'13January SO.-- The of G.ether

guests

as

after

ueer, in

found.

have

or

from

order.

virtue

doing

MARYMARY

MARY

in

Uni-ted

within from

And you are hereby notified that un-

less you appear and answer as aboverequired, tho said Plaintiff willjudgment of condemnation of tholtnds described in the Petition hereinand for any other relief demandedin tho Petition.

AV1TNESS THE HONORABLE SAN-FOR-

B. DOLE and THE HONOR-ABLE A. G. M. ROBERTSON, Judges

helped down with imported 'Munich D!strl.ct Court' th,s da of

outside

that

Manila.

"Wo

street,

FOR

January, In the year of our Lord onethousand nine hundred and eleven andof the Independence of the UnitedStates tho ono hundred and thirty-fifth- ..

(Seal)(Sgd.) A. E. MURPHY

Clerk.(Endorsed)

"No. 71. DISTRICT COURT OFTHE U. S. for the Territory of Ha-waii. THE UNITED STATES OFAMERICA vs. HAWAIIAN SUGARCOMPANY, et al. SUMMONS. ROBT.W. BRECKONS, and WILLIAM T.RAWLINS, Attorneys for Plaintiff.

UNITES STATES OF AMERICA,DISTRICT OF HAWAII: ss.

I, A. E. MURPHY, Clerk of the

and child W. Kemps er F. Hurst, 'reat niany dceds wh,oh , of America, In and for tho TerritoryMrs Seville, Miss Lani, Lrnest Mana- - comi)Ushea up t0 hIs vnaont reiglu and District of Hawaii, do herebyca, Mrs. Isaac and child, Mrs. Langsl, ns we are well awre of these facts, certify- - tho foregoing to bo full, trueMr. and Mrs. E. Sllbano, Mr. and Mrs. through jajers and magazines, how- - 1,11(1 correct copy of tho originalFoster, Jane Chatinl, Miss E. Fauche, ever I would like to mention that Summons In tho caso of THE UNI-J- .

Sllbon, Toto Siegrist, Joo Lags, 'tho credit is all his for making Ger- - TED STATES OF AMERICA vs.Princo Euturkoy, Toto Dttcion, Bill many" country as it stands today. HAWAIIAN SUGAR COMPANY, etTafo, F. Fisher, D. H. Dalze, E. Polo, C. "Every one admires the German n,i as tho S!lmo remains of record andSllbon, G. Settlor and H. McGIenen; Army nnd Fleet; tho capital which on flI in tl oi"co of the Clerk offrom LaTTalna, P. S. Riley H C Co- - l,nder n,s reign Iias turned to BaI(l Court.burn, K. Nakamura Mrs. Dow 'Mrs ile 0110 ot EuroP's most magnificent1 N WITNESS WHEREOF, I havo

T. K.H. L.

Kauai:Makee,

four on

Job star

iiitn

no

are

one,

FOR

take

iiicn. .tb.uuiiiu dui, in) jiunu mm umxeii"With prido and honor wo look tho seal of said District Court this

upon this great ruler and with this 17th dav ot January, A. D. 1911.thought I request toand to health of Maj-esty William

cheers the (Hochder

Job Printing, Star Office.

CO.

part In

a

RENNY

and

Petition

youand

service ato

a

a

a

out

A. E. MURPHY.Clerk of United States District

Court, Territory of Hawaii.By F. L. DAVIS,

Deputy Clerk.

Fine Job Prlnticg, Star Office,

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF T.UNITCD STATES, FOR THE TER-RITORY OF HAWAII.

71115 UNITED STATES OF AMDJBJOA,Plaintiff, vs. PACIFIC SUGAR iSUJBct al., Defendants.Action brought In aald District

Court, and tho Petition filed In thaofOco of tho Cleric of sold DlstWotCourt, In Honolulu,

TIM PRESIDENT OF THE UNITEDSTATES OF AMERICA, GREETING :l

PACIFIC SUGAR MILL ,a corpora-tion organized and existing under andby vlrtuo of tho Laws of the Territory,of Hawaii; THE TERRITORY ORHAWAII; ICEAU LIILII; KOLOU;KAMA1PELE; E. KAUHI, whoso fulland true namo Is unknown, wife ofN, KEAU, whoso full and true nampIs unknown, deceased; LOUISE OOKA-L-

SARAH PAUKA, ELIZABETHWAIMEA, ROBERT WAILUKU, SAM-UEL WA1KAPU, DANIEL MAKENA',unknown' heirs at law of N. KEAU,whose full and true namo Is unknown-- ,

deceased; R. p. KUIKAHI, whose fulland truo namo Is unknown; J. HU-MERI!, whofo full and truo name launknown; NAONE, wife of J. HUME-K-

whoso full and true namo is unknown: ELENA, wife of S. W. HOO-MAN- A,

whose full and true name laui.known; S. W. HOOMANA, whosefull and true namo Is unknown, husband of ELENA; SAMUEL PARKER;ANNA KAILUA, JULIA KIHOLO,FLORA WAIKI, HELEN KAUHOLA,CARRIE KEAUMOKO, MARTHA KM,GERTRUDE LOA, WILLIAM PAU-WAL-

THOMAS RTPAHULU, FOR-STE- R

NUU, DAVID KUAU, FRANKLANAI, CHARLES KVDELE, andHENRY PAALAWAI, unknown ownetoand claimants,

Defendants and Respondents.You are hereby directed to appear

and answer tho Petition In an actionentitled as above, brought against youin tho District Court of tho UnitedStates, in and for the Territory otHawaii, within twenty days from and

service upon you of a certifiedcopy of Plaintiff's Petition herein, to- -

gether with a certified copy of thinSummons.

And you are hereby notified thatunless you appear and answer tigabove required, the said Plaintiff willtake Judgement of condemnation otthe lands described In the Petitionherein and for any other relief de-manded In the Petition.

WITNESS THE HONORABLE SAN-FOR- D

B. DOLE and A. G. M. ROBERT-SON, Judges of said District Court,thia 25th day of October, in the yearof our Lord one thousand nine hun-dred and ten and of the independenceof the United States the one hundredand thirty-fift- h.

"

(Signed) A. E. MURPHY,(Sea,) j.vV!KK-- , Clerk.

(Endorsed)"No. 65 DISTRICT COURT OF THE

V. 0. for the Territory of HawH.THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA'va. PACIFIC SUGAR MILL, et l.SUMMONS. ROBERT W. BRECKONSanil WILLIAM T. RA'WJUNS, Plato -

UNITED STATES OF AMEKfCftrTerritory of Hawaii, City ot Haasha-l- u

ss.I, A. E. MURPHY, Clerk of the W-trl- ct

Court of tha United State otAmerica, in and for the Territory sadDistrict of Hawaii, do hereby cartlfythe foregoing to bo a full, truo andcorrect copy of tho original Petitionand Summons In the case of THEUNITED STATES OF AMERICA va.PACIFIC SUGAR MILL, et al., aa thosame remains of record and on file tothe office of the Clerk of said Court.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF. I havohereunto set my hand and affixed theeal of said District Court this tSth

day of October, A. D. 1910.A. E. MURPHY

Clerk of United States District Court,01 Hawaii

Dress GoodsMen's Furnishings

YAT HING, - 127 Hotel St.

3 ForcegrowthI WILL DO IT.

X A P 15 RAll Kinds Wrapping Papers and

Twines, Printing and WritinR Papers.American-Hawaiia- n Paper & Supply

Co., Ltd.Fort and Queen Streets, Honolulu,

phone 1410. Geo. G. Guild Gen, Mgr.

A CLEAN HOUSE AND

Pau ka HanaARE FAST FRIENDS.

I

after

DrinkMAY'S OLD KONA COFFEE.

BeRt In the MarketHENRY MAY & CO.

Phone 1271.

Oat & HossmanSTATIONERS AND

BOOK SELLERS.

Merchant Street near Post Offloo.

Page 3: XUrSLlXJXT JtC - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduThe new copper box, which will bo 0x7x12 Inches, and will bo laid with Death Benefit $1,000.00 for $5.00 per year select Weekly Indemnity

AMUSEMENTS.

H o n ol u I uAmusementCompany, JUd

THE SAVOYGo and see theDORIC TRIO,

WONDERFUL HIT OF THE SEASON

DOLLIVER AND ROGERS,.Pretty Dancing Duo, with Now Songs.

LAREDOS,JIarcols o Flexibility,

Present ALL Their Fonts.

AMATEURS TUESDAY.

Motion PIct'res nro or SelectedSub!e ts.

Popular Prlces- - -- Never Changed.

Empire Th eaterHighest Salaried Show In the City.

Take The Night Off And See The:.GLADSTONE SISTERS.

Acrobatic Dancers.MUSICAt. BENTLEYS,

And Their Marimba Xylophone.With Many New Popular Selections.

GEORGE STANLEY,More Ballads.

CRAWFORD AND MEEKERComedy Team,

With Loads of Nonsense.

FINE LOT OF MOVING PICTURES.

POPULAR PRICES: 10c, .15c, 25c.

THE BIJOUTonight's Program

JONES AND GREINERFun by Those Funny Boys.E. HASSON BEN ABDIE.

Pyramid Building The Human Vice,

CONCHITA CARRANZE,Specialty Change Artist.BURKE AND BURKE,

Bits of Vaudeville.JOS. D. CARROLL.

The Boy With the Educated FeetRICHARD KIPLING.

The Flag That's Tours and MineIllustrated

Amateurs on FridayPOPULAR PRICES 10c, 15, 25c.

PARK THEATERt, Fkrt, below Berctania. rt

PROGRAM FOR TONIGHT

LE MAREST BROS.,William Rubin.

Featuring Top6y-Turv- y Piano Playing

HARDING AND WASSON,

Sinalna Their Own Composition.Dancing Their Own Eccentric Steps,

The Charming Singer.WINNIE BALDWIN.

PRETTIEST OPEN AIRTHEATER IN HONOLULU

Popular Prlces- - -- Cunra's Music

FIRE INSURANCEATLAS ASSURANCE COMPANY OF

LONDON.NTW YORK UNDERWRITERS

AGENCY.PROVIDENCE WASHINGTON IN.

SURANCE COMPANY.

ilit B, F, Dillingham Co,, Ltd,

General Agents for Hawaii.Fourth Floor, Stangenwald Building.

Y. WO 8ING CO.

Groceries, Fruits, Vegetables, EtcButto. 35c lb.; Fresh Dried Fruits.

1186-118- 8 Nuuanu Street.Telephone 1034. Box 952

ComfortersBlankets, Woolen Shawls

You need 'em these nights, jj

Get them cheap and good at

Chan Kee127 Hotel Street.

Sow's Special salve For PilesGuaranteed to contain nothing lujurloui.

Cures chronic sores, cuts, burns and allkin dlsema of the human race

Prepared by

G. SOMMASecret Balve BpeciallitNo, 10 King St Honolulu, T, H,

TWAltAN IffiAfi, IbKlilU?, PHBffitAltY

Over the

The Ignominy of a mere grammar shool education, coupled with a dell-clo-

In aptitude for geographical comprehension which very frequently char-act- e

Ize the "nouveau rlche" will sometimes even succeed by persistentbattering In felling the barriers which money and social distinction haveerected for tno seclusion of Its more Ignorant members.

Such was certainly the case with a young chap, prominent In an easternmetr poll6, who, Innocent of ridiculous criticism bared his educationalstatus, and In a flood of reiteration succeeded In Inviting a personalestimation, which otherwise would not have been disfigured.

They were at a dance given by a matron whose social triumph hadfor many years been a feature, and In the seductive mazes of a

conservatory the island girl sank against a background of softgreen, her strictly modish evening gown of satin and rare accoutrementspersonally selected from the Paquln establishment, crumpling In a verylong train about her seventy-five-doll- slippers.

The swain, immaculate in a dress suit of the season's latest cut, stoodbeside her, and In answer to the mute suggestion hinted in her dark andlustrous eyes, availed himself of a small gold French Louis the Steenthchair close by.

Now, doesn't this set your pulses Isn't it just like a MarieCorelli Introduction?

"So you are from Hawaii!" he exclaimed, letting his eyes linger on herrich black hair, and her soft shoulders of slightly olive hue.

"We always Imagined it's a most romantic spot!"The girl's fan, with the grace of a duchess, whipped whiffs of

an elusive perfume from its folds, and the face anove u smiled at him,revealing a neat row of shining teeth. ,

"Yes," she replied in a blase attitude, "it certainly is a charming placeto live."

"Your grass huts," he continued, "they must be tremendously pic- -

fiirenii "A protest which had hastily arls

to aawn on ine isiana gin, ana comp reusing nps a miscnevous iookcrept slowly into her eyes.

"Oh, yes," sc replied suppressing a yawn, "they really are most pictu-resque."

"Your disdain for the conventions," he persisted, "your naked children ofnature, they mus.t be deucsdly unique." ,

"Yes," she agreed, "they are certainly deuceoly unique.""You were all savages once, wereyou not?"Then the girl played her trump card. '

"Pray, why do you use the past tense?" she asked. "We are all of ussavages yet. Do you see this piece of ivory which in a gold mount-ing I wear as a handsome brooch? Well, it Is the tusk of my grandfather,an especially savage specimen, from whom I inherit many traits. It wasextracted by order of our cannibal king after he had eaten a missionary!"

She smiled at him giving vent to a muffled growl.With & glance of fear the youth made hasty excuses, and was seen no

more among the guests that eveningl ."" "

rfi

SOCIAL NEWS OF THE DAY.

Invitations have been issued forInnnnnnn nt nrntMi ATica TCrlitfi Wil '

' "unms win entertain next aaiuruay uiher home at Walklkl.

4flowers and kind little notes of present entertaining as their house

Inquiry being sent to the home of.Buest, Mrs. Sam Johnson of Pahoa.H , . 1 1 i t r , , I , . . .mr. mrs. Aiian iierueri, wnere tnolatter lies very from the effect of asevere fall. Mrs. Herbert's improvement, however, is assured, and herfriends will delighted to hear ofher recovery.

"

Mrs. Smith, wife, of Dr. Smith ofFort Shnftpr (o onlort nlnlni. nl n

bridge luncheon at her quarters thisafternoon

Mr. and Mrs. Raymond en- -

torfntnorl ni'onlnw n t.tnf11.- - v i IV 1, cj

Japanese dinner at the Mochitsuki,Club at Walkiki, when covers were ar- -ranged for twelve. The dinner wasserved in the private guest dinlngroomof the club, and tho mombers of theparty donned kimonosand sat on the floor at the character-istic Japanese table, decorated withvases of chrysanthemums.

After dinner Mr. and Mrs. Brownand their guests occupied a box at aChinese theater. Those present were:Mr. and Mrs. Willinm T. Rawlins, Mr.and Mrs. Douglas MacKav. Mr. nmlMrs. William MacKay, Mrs. Newell.Mr. and Mrs. L'hommedieu, Mrs. Gar-diner Wilder, and the hosts.

4 UMrs. Ida Newbv of Pas.iilnnn lAfr

this morning In the Wllhelmlna forSan Francisco, after haviner enloveda delightful six months' visit In Hono-lulu. Mrs. Newby was the house cuestof Dr. and Mrs. Charles Bryant Coop-er and has figured prominently in nilunairs or a social nature this seasonMrs. Newbv will nrnppnrl In ihn

York.home.

rf (ft (ft

Mrs. ClntrA Wllllnmo nnn.nii.0 lUllllllat luncheon and brldgo this afternoon i

at her homo at Walklkl, compliment-- ,ary to Mrs. Clarence Short.

A verv tlellcrhtfiil nrUi-nnn- ,i io nn- a - - - .v. timju iq till- - i

tlclpatod tomorrow by a number ofladies In tho smart set. Mrs Arthur!Wilder and Mrs. Atkinson tint'.ing Issued invitations for bridtco atwhich they will entertain at the Country Club.

5

Many girls and boys of the youncersot arc eagerly anticipating the danc- -ing party at Which Miss Marcarotj - -

tfiiB I, Ilti,

wafted

ner

curved

Brown

en, died on"her lips, as a light began

Thurston will entertain a coterie-o- f

uvju rwvLaiii. mjKuuwn neirs at lawTher f,rtlend on cveln& ncxt'of NAPA1PAI deceased; ISABELLA

Manyare

nf.n TaI.auuill

behasty

loot

Poll

VULUl

iShlpman of Hawaii. Over one hundredinvitations have been issued.

W

Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Douthltt are at

,lio- - """ uxijucis io remain ioraai'ntinl TV rr1r c.

Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Prather ofOakland, California, entertained at aprettily appointed dinner-part- at theCourtland Hotel last evening, whencovers wero arranged for eight. TheCenterniGCe Of rnso tinfoil ATnlinnlcrin

l'inks and maidenhair In a cut glassbowl, was as charming as the bamboolvand-palnt- name cards, bearing theword "Aloha" intertwined by a pinkcarnation lei. After dinner, a musicalevening was enjoyed Those presentwere Mr- - and Mrs. Abe Lewis, for

'whom the dinner was given. Dr. nndMrs. Philip Frear, and Mr. and MrsThurston.

5 a VMr. and Mrs. Douglas MacKay and

Mr. and Mrs. William MacKay, whoare staying at the Moana Hotel, mo-

tored down to Halelwa yesterday afternoon, expecting to be gone forabout a week.

4 t

Mr. and Mrs. William T. Rawlinsentertained at a handsome dinnerparty on Saturday evening, at theirhome on Wilder avenue. A willowbasket, brimful of white marguerites,occupied tho center of the circular ta-

ble on a lace cloth, the blossoms, In-

terspersed with maidenlialr being veil-ed by soft golden tulle. A large but-terfly bow of golden liberty satin ribbon adorned tho of tho baskot,and caught hero and there, rippleddown amnnrr thn ,inlntSilver candlesticks

land place cards, hand.nntni.nfi in the!I

uesigns or oaskets of daisies, complet- - '

ed tho oiinnlntmnnlo A f io- - ,i i ., ., n..uilil UIIU1GI t"t3ovonl"B was devoted to bridge. ThoB,lestf included wore Mrs. Newell, otMinneapolis; Mr. and Mrs. DouglasMacKay, Mr, and Mrs. William Mac-Kay. Mr. nniT Mrs T1nvmin,l ..n- - - .mj iiai'itx i7i u i) ii.Mrs- - k'hommedleu, and Mrs. GardinerWilder.

Shipping Notes.The Wailele reports the steamer

Maul at Kukalau discharging freight.The bark Albert. tho nclmnnnr

Oceania Vance nnH

sourian were reported at Hllo onMonday hv H.n rin..,iinw w wtuuuiUUi UUU IUU

- io ' ,.,.wv .,....,,.to New Which Will liohpr fnHir-JSll- k in tho form of invertn.l flnwort.

Robert

.

handle

TeacupsBy

schooner Melrose and steamer HIlo-nla- n

at Kahulul on Tuesday.The Claudlno will leave on Friday

nt ftvo o'clock Tor Maul and Hawaiiports, returning ns usual on tho following Wednesday. Tho followingpassengers have booked: T. Cllvo Da- -vies, Mr. and Mrs. W. Q. Scott.

By tho W. Q. Hall which is scheduledto leave for Kauai ports tomorrow afternoon at five o'clock, tho followingpassengers will leave: A. HancborgW. C. Parke. Master H. Wright, Mrs.J. W. Wright, Mrs. O. Wlnckler, Mrs.S. Kanewanul, W. T. Frost, G. Wink- -icr and S. Kanewanul.

Nothing had been heard this morning by Theo. H. Davles & Company regarding tho whereabouts of tho Cana

steamer Makura,which i3 due to arrive in port on Fri- -

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THEUNITED STATES IN AND FORTHE TERRITORY AND DISTRICTOF HAWAII

THE UNITED STATES OF AMERI-CA, Plaintiff, vs. KOHALA SUGARCOMPANY, et al., Defendants.Action brought in said District

Court, and the Petition filed in thooffice of the Clerk of said DistrictCourt, in Honolulu.

THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNI-E- D

STATES, GREETING:KOHALA SUGAR COMPANY, a

corporation organized and existingunder and by virtue of the laws ofthe Territory of Hawaii; THE TER-RITORY OF HAWAII; SAMUEL M.KANAKANUI, ANNIE KANAKANUI,wife of Samuel M. Kanakanul; S. M.W. KAWELO, Jr., whoso full andtrue name is unknown; HANA

(w): MABEL WAIALUA,EDITH MAKUA, CHARLOTTE MA-KAH-

ALBERT WAIANAE, CHAR-LES NANAKULI and ALFRED WAI-PI-

unknown heirs at law of KAAI- -HINAHINA, deceased; DOROTHYWAIKELE, ANNIE WAIAU, MAR-THA PUULOA, ALEXANDER MOA- -

?vL,'.15 S JLAMA and SAM- -

HULU, DAISY MAKIKI. MARGARETAiNAPUNl, HARRY HAKALAU, WILLIAM KAf and CURTIS NALU, unknown heirs at law of LIHI, deceascd; KU; KAUI; LULAWALE (w)MU; KANAKANUI; and REBECCAHANALEI, FANNY K1LAUEACLARA KAWAIHAU, ELIZABETHKOLOA, CORA MAKAWELI. MORRIS WAIMEA, ERIC KEKAHA. OLINLIHUE, ALLAN KUALOA andFRANK MALULANI. unknown own.ers and claimants

You are hereby directed to aDnear.and answer the Petition In an actionentitled as above, brought acalnstyou In the District Court of the United States, in and for tho Terrltorvof Hawaii, within twenty days fromand after service upon you of a certi-fied copy of Plaintiff's Petition herein, together with a certified copy ofthis Summons.

And you are hereby notified thatunless you appear and answer aaabove required, the said Plaintiff willtake judgment of condemnation oftho lands described in the Petitionheroin and for any other relief de-

manded In tho Petition.WITNESS THE HONORABLE

SANFORD B. DOLE and THE HON-ORABLE A. G. M. ROBERTSON,Judges of said District Court, this10th day of December, in the yearof our Lord one thousand nine hun-dred and ten and of tho Independenceof tho United States the one hundrednnd thirty-fifth- .

(Ssd.) A. E. MURPHY,Clerk.

(Seal)(Endorsed)

wo. 68. DISTRICT COURT OFTHE U. S. for tho Territory of Hawail. THE UNITED STATES OFAMERICA vs. KOHALA BTTflAnCOMPANY, et al. SUMMONS. ROB- -KKT W. BRECKONS and WILLIAMT. RAWLINS, Attorneys for Plaintiff.

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,Dlatrlnt nf Hnn,oM

I. A K. Miinp'fTv "rir., c t.o' " - J L IUVuistnct Court of tho United Statesof America, in and for tho Territoryana uistrlct of Hawaii, do herebycertify tho foregoing to bo a full, trueand correct copy of tho original Sum-mons In the case of THE U.NITEDSTATES OF AMERICA vs. KOHALASUGAR COMPANY, et al., as thosame remains of record and on file Intho ofilco of tho Clerk of said Court.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF. I havehereunto sot my hand and affixed thoseal of said District Court this 30thday of December, A. D. 1910.

A. E. MURPHY,Clerk of United States District

Court, Territory of Hawaii.By F. L. DAVIS,

. . i . Deputy Clerk.

tfnf ftwH vtfMrr, m rMti to Au i

trull. It It MtlefiNMtMl thai the vp--

will ttiMke Htrt an after-noon, In which cum it ! probable thaiaha will m Mm away again late onthe mine day, llioiiah li la ivosalbl-- 'that iie will bo kept nrer until Sut-tinln-

The Miikura will take awayquite a number of pnsongora fromHonolulu. Wlroloas ndvlcea nro ex-

pected tomorrpw.

OFFICERS and DUIECTORS.H. P. BALDWIN PresidentJ. B. CASTLE 1st Vice-Preside-

W. M. ALEXANDER. 2ndR, GALT 3rd Vice-Preside-

E. E. PAXTON SecretaryJ. WATERHOUSE TreasurerW. R. CASTLE DirectorJ. GUILD DirectorC. H. ATHERTON DirectorO. G. KINNEY Acting Auditor

SUGAR FACTORSCOMMISSION STEIICWANT8

AND

INSURANCE AGENTS.AGENTS FOR

Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Com-pany.

Haiku Sugar Company.Pala Plantation.Maul Agricultural Company.Hawaiian Sugar Company.Kahuku Plantation Company,Kahulul Railroad Company,rialeakala Ranch Company.Honolua Ranch.McBrydo Sugar Company.Kauai Railway Co.

CookOAS

MoHama Specie

We try to conduct! our store so thatwhenever you need any Sick Room,Bath, Toilet, or Household Drug orappliance, our name will instantly cometo mind. Let us emphasize that

Oujt Stocks are fxlutOojc Goods are JLtig;litOtr Prices are KiglitOir Service is lilxt1,1

LIMITED.

Fort and HotelStreets

The Rexall Store

The Bank Of

STATEMENT OF CONDITION

ASSETS

Lfoans, Discounts, & Overdrafts $3,106,539.68

Bonds 722,217.47Bank Premises & Fixtures 108,500.00Customer's L,inbllltles un

der Letters of Credit.. 266,706.33Cash and Duo from banks 1,390,198.87Other Assets 10.683.35

$5,604,845.70

LIMITED, 1911,ensuing

II. COOKE.TENNEY,

A. LEWIS, Mgr.

II.TENNEY,

JR.,

Honolulu, January 1911.

W I T H

Tie MlLIMITED.

IEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.

Capital (Paid Up) Yon 24.000.000teservo Fund Yen 1G,GOO,000

General business transactcd. Savings account $1 and upwards.

Fire burglar proof vaults, withDeposit Boxes rent f 2

year upwards.Trunks cases kept on cus-

tody moderate rates.Particulars be applied

AKAI. Manager.

Honolulu Office, Bethel Mer-chant Tel. 1594. P. O,

1C8.

filiiiilOSTEOPATHY 1

I BERETANIA STREET. I

Hawaii, Ltd.DECEMBER

LIABILITIES.

Capital Paid $ 600,000.00Surplus Profits 550,100.76Pension Fund 34,724.86Deposits 4,152,685.83Letters Credit Cut-standi-

265,890.10Dividends Uncalled for... 1,416.00Other Liabilities 28.15

$5,604,845.70

following wero elected servo as'year:

v n nAMnva. Ftll.TR rt. Pnahlm.

R. McCORRISTON, Asst. Cashier

J. A. McCANDLESS,C. II. ATHERTON,GEORGE R. CARTER,R. COOKE,F. DAMON,

C. ATHERTON.

F. C. ATHERTON,

I, F. B. Damon, Cashier, solemnly swear that above Is truebest of knowledge belief,

F. B. DAMON,Cashier.

Examined found correct:F C. ATHERTON )

F. MACFARLANE) Directors H. H. WALKER,E. D. TENNEY ) Auditor.Subscribed sworn to before this 10fh day of January 1911.

(SEAL) D. MARQUES,Notary Public. Judicial Circuit,

Territory of Hawaii.At annunl meeting of tho Stockholders of THR hank cm wawatt

herd on January 25,Officers Directors tho

C. President.E. D. Vice President.

JR., &

ATHERTON, Secretary.

DIRECTORS.C. COOKE,

LEWIS,BISHOP,

W. MACFARLANE,

H., 25,

banking

for

Safe at perand

toat

to for,

YU

andSts. 21 and

Box

175

AT 31, 1910.

Up&

of

the to

G. Anqf

the to themy and

and

W.

andJ.1st

tho

and for

andfor

and

AS

OFFICERS.

F. C.

E. D.A.E. F.F.

T.

be

A.B.

F.

do

mo

Secretary.

Page 4: XUrSLlXJXT JtC - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduThe new copper box, which will bo 0x7x12 Inches, and will bo laid with Death Benefit $1,000.00 for $5.00 per year select Weekly Indemnity

f

ft:

n TH8 HAWAIIAN itlAR.FUP ' - .... -

r H E HAWAIIAN STAR'

Pabllata4 tvsry rtrnooR (ribtpt funky) by lh MiWlln Star

Wtpniwr AMorlatton. LM.. JKeCwiu Um ItnlMliiR. mKtari rtrt, Honolulu."

. WALTBR 6. SMITH... EDITOR

aWdxishpav ...7. wtimrAHY i, 1ngp-- Any Bel ex.use for howlnn the Island garrls.n, In full force,

to the alien population of Oahu, ought to be a good enough excuse for the

War Department. Why not mareh on Washington's Birthday?

DKA1X T1IH MAUSIIKS.

It is Unto to begin h systematic campaign in Congress for an ap-

propriation to drain the swamp lands or Honolulu, in tho sanitary

in.turo.st of the port and garrisons.

The project is too large for this county or for the Territory, and,

'from the viewpoint of ocean traffic and of military occupation, is one

With which it is proper for the United States to deal.

The only reason why these great swamps are not an active menace

to public health is that we do not possess the malaria-bearin- g

mosquito nor the disease which makes our yellow fever mosquito

dangerous. If the malarial insect comes or a single case of yellow

fever appears, then the swamps will turn to breeding places of

pestilence.Shitw South and Central America may be the means of

I

putting Honolulu into quarantine at any time. They may bring us

despite the efficient marine hospital service, the greatest disaster in

our history. Should not all this be' forestalled, so far as may be, by

precautions which would cost the Federal government no more than

those devised for tropical cities like Manila, Havana and Santiago de

Cuba, which are not incorporated, as Honolulu and Hawaii are, in

the American Union?Ten per cent of the fulfilled demands upon the government under

the River and Harbor bill arc not so defensible as the request for a

million dollars for a Honolulu drainage canal would be.

Such a caual, flushing the swamps by tidal action, or, better yet,

turning the marshes iuto a' salt water lake with islands, would be a

most efficient protector of the public health; a veritable. safeguard to

the commerce of the port from transmittable maladies.

We all tAlk of the need of better sanitation. Much must be done

on our own account and at our own expense. Rut the big need should

be carried to Washington and pressed for all it is worth. Drainage

Us an enterprise in which the Chamber of Commerce and the Mer-

chants' Association acting with the Governor, Legislature and Dele-

gate, might well lead the way, and one in which the commercial

bodies, Senators and Congressmen of the coast States Would readily

assist.

The change in the Presidency has given Nicholas Lougworth achance to prove up as a useful legislator. As author of the TariffCommission bill, he no longer shines by reflected light. It is Theodorewho is in eclipse.

Tfp.mlprs of tlm Star will llnd the Associated Press news daily on

the first iKice. published without expansion, in its strictly originalform, except for the necessary connecting words to make sense. Any

"explanatory words required will not be woven lino uiu pnnisuig i

tin- - desnat'eh. This is done so that the Star's readers may knowprecisely what the Associated Press sends, and so that the papermay have room lor local news.

- "

PHASES OP THE MONROE DOCTRINE.

Ecuador wants to pro lit by the .Monroe doctrine but it objects togiving the United States a naval base from which to defend it. Thelittle republic makes no particular use of the Galapagos islands; itwould uaiu in security and in revenue by letting tne American governnient use them under lease for naval purposes; and our occupationwould not menace the independence of Ecuador any more than theMagdaleua bay lease has menaced the liberty of Mexico. Indeed, ifthe United States wanted Ecuador this government could take it

"easily enough whether it bad a station off shore or not.The Star mentions this mutter simply as evidence of the spirit

which responds to the Monroe doctrine at all times from its SouthAmerican beneficiaries. Our sister continent has little use for us ex-- ,

eept as an unpaid policeman. It does business with Europe by pre-

ference. With few exceptions it buys all its mechanical agencies ofdefence, ships and guns, in the Old World. Some of its republics sub- -

sidize Euronean steamship lines but withhold encouragement fromAmerican projects to compete. United, they have framed up theDrago doctrine, which isas much against us as anybody. And yet if

'"''Europe should encroach, the South Americans would turn to theMonroe doctrine pay?" Is it not likely, in the long run, to cost

" anv cost in blood and cold.Under these circumstances it is a fair question: "Does the

" Monore doctrine pay?" Is it not likely, in the 'long run, to costvastly more than it conies to? Moreover, does it not keep houthAmerica a vast, undeveloped treasure house fron! a developmentin European and North American hands which would enrich theworld, establish peace and order and spread the arts of civilization?

The Health Inspectors used to have power enough. There wasno lack of it in plague times. Has county government so dividedresponsibility that forcible sanitation has become nobody's business?

If the 100,000 Club doesn't get its till during the Exposition yearand be able to reorganize as a 200,000 Club it will be its own fault.

Speaking of relics of Captain Cook, the best one extant is the hulkof the ship in which he discovered Ilawaii, which, at last accounts, wasused for the storage of coal in the harbor of Alexandria, Egypt.

The first concrete effects of Jack Loudon's anarchist propagandaseem to have been the hanging of twenty-fou- r Japanese whose un-

fortunate leader he converted to his homicidal faith.

While Wilson and ITarnion are fighting for the prize of the Demo-cratic Presidential nomination it will be well to keep an eye on thedark horse, John A. Dix, who carried the pivotal State of ilew Yorkagainst a man who had Koosevelt behind him.

If the American Peace Society in Japan would recruit some hon-

orary members from the California legislature prospects might im-

prove.

New Orleans made a spirited light, but, despit6' her claims' ofbeinc the "logical point" for the fair, the logic of the situation wasagainst her. To siim up, New Orleans lacked the necessary funds, the

I TnTrT-r-- T

niBntlAnf liii.

Uncle WaltThe Poet Philosopher

() Hnltlesnukc .tint was an orncrv limb, who waded knecdeep Ingore; he carried a gun that weighed half a Ion, he snorled and ripped

and swore, lie painlcd things red and imried ms dead.HATThK- - and bluffed all the people down, till Alkali .lay, on hisSXAKK .II.M ewe necked bay, came peslcring into lown. This

Alkali ,)av had a nlcasant way of shooting at peopleshats; he shot the brim from fhe lid on .lim, ami (he latter cried: "Dogmy cats!" Then (he guns they popped and the shootists dropped,both winged in a rrightfnl style, and their Tonus we bore to a syca-

more, a distance of half a mile. And Rattlesnake .lim swung fromone limb, and Alkali Jay swung near; and the robins sang where thebad men swung, and Hieir song was sweet and clear, aiki it seems tome that that lynching bet' was the best that I ever knew; and theguesls agreed it was fine indeed, when the funcfion all was through.If you go your wav like Alkali Jay, or Rattlesnake Jim, my friend, ifyou're mean and bad, then we'll all be glad when your journey hasan end. r"Copyright, 1910, by Geo. Matthow AAanu WALT MASON.

comfortable and healthful summer climate, the hotel accommodationsand the well-to-d- o local population which is depended on for dailyattendance upon a big show. These handicaps could not be overcome,though New Orleans struggled manfully to the last. Perhaps she willgot some consolation three years hence in a great celebration of thecompleted Lakes-to-the-Gu- waterway and in the double centenaryof her foundation.

LITTLE INTERVIEWSM PHILLIPS, Shrlner. Wo should half-pa- st three, most ot them had gone

into n hear Mr. Hsrtsche say some- - to work ami the watchman had gone

thing.GOVERNOR. FREAR. The question

seems to lie between a new taxationsystem or a raise In taxes.

ADMIRAL COWLES. The navy

bandmasters have great respect forCaptain Horger, leader of the Hawaii-

an Band.GEOROE A. DAVIS. Any man who

can clearly repeat the phrase: "Anunion or lndestructlblo

States" Is fit to go home.S. n. COHEN. Sydney, in. a. W.

Honolulu is a city now. When I waslast here, in 1874, It was simply abungalow village among the trees.

E. D. Tcnnoy. For the first timein thirty years I have a business officethat just suits me, and now It ap-

pears that we must move on, vaultand all, to make room for the. newpostofflce.

RHRI1IPP J FTT. was InvlteH ,vo1

Supervisor and Mayor1101 elther- -

Fern on their inspection trip yesterday. But I don't like to travel withEben. He never sleeps and never getstired. The last time he kept me upall night and then rousted me out atfour in the morning. Never again.

SECRETARY RIVENHURGH. Su-

pervisor Low made a break when hetold of going to., tbe governmentstables at six in the morning and find-

ing the mules unfed and the keeperasleep. The mules had been fed .t

HPPNG NEWS

Rough weather all round tbe Islands'is the tenor of the reports made by

the Inter-Islan- d steamers Claudlne W.

Hall and Wailolo this morningThe Claudlne came In from Maul nn'tHawaii ports, the Wallele from Hawaii, while the W. G. Hall came fromthe other end of Cue Islands, Kauai.But In each case tho reports were siin-- 1

liar in as far as general weather con-- ,

dltions were concerned.

Purser Chas. A. Kibling, of thoClaudlne, states that they experiencedrough weather during the whole t.t

tho trip, consisting of heavy swellsand strong winds from the northward.Owing to this they were unable to landmalls and passengers for Hana at theregular landing, but had to put themashore on the other side of the baywhere the sea was calmer on accountof better shelter. At Laupahoehoe theClaudlne could not approach the land-

ing and In consequence had to takemails Hawaii on to HIIo, but heroalso the sea was very rough and In

stead of berthing ni the wharf asusual tho Claudlne had to He out intho bay.

Considerable anxiety has been causedIn New York, London and Australiaowing to the lack or news regardingthe cargo steamer Parlslana,. boundfrom Now York to Melbourne. Wlienthe last mall left Australia no wordhad been heard of her. Sho was thensoventy-sl- x days out from New Yorkand 63 days from St. Vincent, andshould have arrived there many daysago. Tho goneral opinion of "nauticalmen is that her ongmos havo brokendown or 'her propeller fs lost, and thatsho Is drifting nt the mercy of thoelements. As far ns can be ascer-tained there are 27 lives at stako inthe Parlslana, and 200,000 worth ofcargo, and tho vessel Is valued at

5C,000. Peoplo wltn cargo on boardhavo been reinsuring it In Melbournesince January 13, ana they appear to'be very doubtful as to the vessel

vjiniffimmAY, 1,

back to his bed, before Eben got there.It is one on Mr. Low.

HENRY N. ALiMY. I Uo not under-

stand why the military can not join In

the Floral Parade on February 22.

The orders do not forbid participation

in patriotic celebrations, and the!Floral Parade, as I understand It, is'tho day of tho anniversary of thebirth of George Washington. Aren'twe celebrating Washington's birthday,and is not- - the miliarychief essentials to such celebration?

I ..net rf 'Mm 1 Q 1 I c. (

A T? n T . 1 a

go

G.

THE ROAD DEPARTMENTAS IT 18 AND WAS

llBHoftilN, Pebrtmry till.To tha Ntlllor of tin llRwnimn llnr.

Mir: Two yanm ngn on mvlvtwimy sppolntimnt chief dark andbookkeeper in the lUwd Daiwrtmmit,

nnd after careful liimHwitlmi I round

Hint rery loose eystem iiivIIch1.lpiiiornnduni Iwroks wtrn the only

method of account keeping. I oblnln- -

ed n reader net of book and kept ticomplete rocord of the trniiHRCtlons of

the dopartmont, nnd acting under Mr..1. 11. Wilson's Instructions proceededto put tho ofllco affairs In a businesslike nmiincr.

It wns also round that tho pay otseveral hundred Inborers was drnwnunder a single warrant, and disbursedby tho bookkeeper of tho dopnrtment,Mr. Wilson stated to me that this system afforded opportunity of misusingpublic funds, and that ho would lec- -

ominond to the board of supervisorsthat eath laborer.be glvon his paywarrant direct. Tho Doard sanctionedthe change.

One hundred ami sixty-si- x thousanddollars was the amount allotted forthe uso of the road department during1010, yet an. "official" stated to methat books ot record were unneces-sary, and useless work.

The garbage service had for a longtime been a source of several thousand dollars loss annually, Since Mr.

Wilson took the matter In hand, thishas been changed and the garbage de-

partment is now on a sound financialbasis.

The late board of supervisors inrecognition of Mr. Wilson's servicesIncreased his compensation to $250per month, and commended him forhis efficiency. I also honored byan increase "of salary when it had beendemonstrated that by economy andattention to duty 1 had materiallyconserved the public money.

I have had a local record of thirtyyears in business, which I submit tothe public. I do not mind being made

nolltical goat, yet I can not rest un- -OUe Ot tnO ,, .,, imnll0lnn of nnt hnvlnrr fnlth.

fully done my duty, or drawing myGOVERNOR FREAR The 1915 ex- - salary for no service,

position if held In San Francisco will Thanking you for giving this com- -

do Hnw&ll n lot of good In many wnys. niunlcation space In your valuableLots of people will come here from paper.the East nnd from Europe who woulo Yours truly,not make the trip specially to see Ha- -, ROBERT WM. CATHCART,wail, but when they are so close they Chief Clerk and Bookkeeper, Road

i will feel that they might as well come . Departmentfl.n t.t i.rni."l luc

E0 farto with Low

for

1,

was

a'

Flne too Printing. Star Oftlc

THE CRIMINAL

CALENDAR SET

OwIiik to the protracted henrln otthe McQunld trial the criminal courtcalendar could not be nrmiiRod, andtin1 only tile I thnt was let wits Unitof Volney Driver for "ubnmry IS.All other had to bo nubservlont tothe McQimid homing. Ycatirriny aftornoon, Jui'ito Cooper announce 1 thnthe would (nil the cnlnndnr tlilu morning. This was accordingly clone, andthe following Ir tho disposition of thavnnous casts:

February , Hen Ross, present nt n.

gambling game; a, M. OUnl, so'llnsfish whot-- net permitted, MntssubnruPnk Yonf?-oha- , nssault nnd batterjvAh Nln ard ttn othors, present at agambling game, Ahuna Walkaloa, twocharges ot umbezzlemont; 6, MalculoKamaka, two charges of murdor intho first degree, Harry Charman, as-

sault nnl Lo'tery, Jose b'o-t')- e, lar-ceny, first dcfiee; 7, Ramon Hurladannd others, burglary; 8, A. Villamnna,nssnult with Intent to romtn!: mur-der; Leong Kum, silling H'lsonousdrugs; 9. Mary Adaim, common nul-sonc- o;

Klnlmnkn, ass-iui- t nnd battery;10, Helo Mann nnd Toy 1, selling Honorwithout a license; Volnoy O.Driver, assault with intent to commitmurdor.

White

Houses For Rent

UNFURNISHED.Aiea, 3 B. It $50.00Kaimuki 7th C B. R 45.00Kam. IV ltd. 3 B. It. . . . 25.00Lowers Road 3 B. R 30.00Kam. IV Rd. 4 B. R. . . . 25.00Wniplo, 3 B. R 12.00Kam. IV Rd. 2 B. R 15.00Klnau Street, 3 B. R.... 30.00Waialao Rd. 2 B. R 32.50Beretanla & Alapai Sts..

4, B. R..,. 37.50'Kinau Street, 6 B. R. ... 40.00Cartwrlght Rd. 2 B. R.. 18.00Kaimuki, 2 B. R 30.00Gamlall Lane, 3 B. R. .. 25.00Lazarus Lane, 2 B. R.. 15.00Emma Street, 2 B. R.... 35.00

Trent Trust Co.,LIMITED.

iee:an this morning", andeverytiling tliat is White will beoffered at especially low figures.

This takes in large shipmentsjust to hand of Muslin Under-wear, Laces and Embroideries,Linen Damasks, Towels, Bed--

spreads, Hosiery, Glovesevery other line

andwe carry so

long as it is white.A splendid opportunity

save money on White Goods.

'.is

to

Page 5: XUrSLlXJXT JtC - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduThe new copper box, which will bo 0x7x12 Inches, and will bo laid with Death Benefit $1,000.00 for $5.00 per year select Weekly Indemnity

w .

ffflAH, 'WbUHMDA?, wmmwi? i, tail.- - - T -

Financial Commercial PromotionTHE WORLD NEWS

ENTERPRISE IN

Tlis romantic history of tho (levelopulent of tho oil Industry In NorthAihorlcn has often boon nnrrntoil, butRoldom In bo Interesting a fashion asby Mr. RubboII Hastings Mlllwurd Intho Bulletin of thoUnion. Tho romnrknblo progress In

in this country is graph-ically illustrated by this wrltor in thofollowing pnragraph:

Tho total flow of oil in th0 UnitedStates for tho year 1S30, tho first of

NEWSPAPER

There are sovornl Westerninventions for which a more or lesssatisfactory claim of priority can bomade for China; e. g. tho telejpbono,gunpowder nnd the mariner's com-

pass, But China's claim to havo theoldest newspaper is beyond dispute.For nearly twelvo hundred years thoTchlng-pa- o (News of the Capital), or,as It is commonly known to Western-ers, the Peking Gazette, has been

dally. According to Mr. Frank-lin Ohlinger, who writes nn artlclo inWorld's Work, (London), its twenty-od- d

octavo pages still make theirregular appearance, filled with im-

perial decrees, notices of appoint-ments, and memorials from such highdignitaries as havo been accorded thoprivilege of addressing the throne.These leaves aro loosely s'titched to-

gether In a cover of imjperial yellow,which distinguishes the publication asthe official organ of the Government.

Though tho Gazette had its imita-tors in the provincial capitals, therowas nothing in the way of criticism,in tha direction of molding publicopinion or of giving general inform-

ation. Not until Christian missionswere established in the Middle King-dom did newspapers in the modernsense of the word come to bo print-ed in Chinese. From tho publicationof religious books the missionariessoon branched out into journalism.Of their religious papers, the ChineseChristian Intelligencer and thoChristian Advocate, both of thempublished in Shanghai, are the prin-cipal ones. These were so successfulthat tho Sift Wan Pao (Dally Chroni- -

cle) nnd tho Tung Pao (EasternJU?i5)xc UlR jpldeat JUM 1 esgf . S hang-- ,

hal, were Instituted.It was, however, the uprising of

1900 that gavo the greatest impetus.to journalism in China. To quotefrom Mr. Ohllnger's article:

Tho occupation of Peking by for-eign armies, the flight of the imperialcourt, and the terrible ipunltlve ex-

peditions, all combined to shatter thetraditional notions of their own supe-

riority which had so long been en- -

' tertalned by the .Chinese. Theywere now willing and anxious to learnthe sources of western efficiency . . .

In 1905 It was estimated that no lessthan six hundred treatises on scienti-fic subjects had been translated fromforeign languages into Chinese. Stu-

dents were sent abroad in great num-

bers. In 1897, CommissionerjBrowfa had .established tyie

Chlneso Imperial post and had putinto effect a schcduleof postal rateswhich Wcis probably me lowest in theworld. Thus, both the demand andthe facilities for a secular press hadcome into being.--

It was tho Japanese who first ap-

preciated the opportunities affordedby the new conditions. A college,where Japanese youths were Instruct-ed in the geography, resources, andcommerce of China, had for severalyears been maintained at Shanghaiby the chambers of commerce of

the leading Japanese cities, andJapanese interest had owned theUniversal Gazette of Shanghai; andnow Japanese enterprise started newjournals at Foochow, Hankow, andother important cities. At, the pres-

ent) lime the British nnd Germanseach control a newspaper In Peking,

Brown & Lyon Co.,Limited

Only exclusive book store In Ilono-- 'lulu.

" !N BOOKS"

Young Building

Bowers' Merchant PatrolAnd Confidential Agency

Reliable Watchmen Furnished. Phone:1051. . .V. O Tlnv 9Si r.itv Honil.quartere, Club Stables.

FOR THE OIL Ell 100

CHINA

EVERYTHING

which any official record 1ms beenkept, amounted to only 2000 barrels.For tho yoar 1009 the productionamounted to ovor 178,000,000 barrets,which, If placed In a slnglo body,would be suftlclont to float a gigantic,fleet of 035 Dreadnought battleships oftho now 2C,000-to- n Arkansas type ofthe United Stntos Navy,

And tho accompanying table shown

(Continued from pago ten.)

nnd the French 'Impartial at Tien-tsin is n semi-ofllcl- al organ.

uau,7 ItlUUJICI I

In the past that a favorito plan nowis for the Chinese to apply for a char- -

ter of incorporation from the British!Crown Colony of Iiong-kon- g, Thisentitles the newspaper company to thorrotectioir of the British flag, althoughtho persons of tho editors aro stillsubject to Chinese authority; andmany a editor has been

,000 CLUB WANTS

CITIZENS TO HUSTLEBorvices

exiled to tho bleak deserts of Mon- - j At tne meeting of the council of tho tained their plans were Dlocked by thegolia or subjected to punishment more Auckland Chamber or Commerce re- - contract referred to.severe. In spite of this, journalism is cently a letter was read from Mr. t After referring to the company's of- -sprcading so rapidly in tho Interior H. Samuels, assistant president of tho for to Sir Joseph Ward, and his replyof China that statistics of the news- - Oceanic Steamship Company, San declining It, Mr. Samuels went topapers of the entire country cannot Francisco, confirming the cables which state:bo opined. It is known, however, were sent by the company to the Wo woro aware that our joint ser-th- atShanghai has eight dallies, Pe-- chamber In September last, relative to vice with the Union Steamship Corn-kin- g

and Tientsin five each, Hankow the proposed resumption of the San' pan., via as 1 facton'ZZ: Auck,ad-Sydne- y -- 1 ser- -

zfz-- s dYVT' rrment, come from Japan, are operated !,hnt aS C,'Tber, r" bUt W wouI? not do ,,lIsby men who receive about two dollars comI)an'8 message of September because of our belief that such a ser- -

17, they Were ab0Ut 10 Subrait n V,C woul(1a month. As the Chinese no prop" not sat,sfy cither theSltlon t0 the Domln,on for the re- - Dominion,alphabet, the type is necessarily a the United States, or our- -

much larger item in the expense than sumntIon t the former service, .when selves. If w0 expend 160,000 on ourwith us. To quote Mr. Ohlinger fur- - tncy were forestalled uy the arrange - vessels we must have In view the es-th-

ment entered into with the Union tabllshmcnt of the best service thatThe paper Is usually the poorest Steamship Company. The reason they the available subsidies and traffic will

quality of tissue thnt will hold ink; had not acted earlier in the matter al'ow, and the only service thnt wouldit also comes from Japan. Even with was that they were awaiting a thor- - seem to suit would bo along the linesthis saving, the poverty of the people ough try of the SIerraA which vessel of our former one. The desire of yourcLnnaneeSce0ssafyn.a, Tl places "T Tt T " ITthe same editions are successively lt over number .ur oun for of the old

distributed to different sets of sub- - of vo"ases ,to Honolulu that tho oil soventeen-da- y schedule between Auck-scriber- s,

boys being employed to fl,el was a grcat success- - and that land antl San Francisco over twenty-gath- er

up tho papers as soon as they there could no longer be any doubt one llays w are sure that willhave been read and carry them toanother set--.o-f readers. .TheChinese dailies usually sell for sevenof eight cash a copy (a little less than.1half a cent)

Notwithstanding the arbitrarinessof official interference, the criticismsof the powers that bo are exceedinglyfree; one editorial, cited by Mr. Oh-linger, going so far as to Inform thoProvincial Assembly that "wheneverthe editors deem it advisable, theywill express their views of thecourse taken by the Assembly us awhole or by any Individual member."Nothing could more vividly portraythe march of events in whatwas onco slow old Clvtua.

BOY KILLED

(Continued from Page One)

to a pulp. He was hurried to theQueen's Hospital but all efforts tosave his life were unavailing, andwithin an hour or so arter his admis-sion to the hospital he expired, deathbeing due to internal injuries, as wellas to shock and loss of blood. Thepoor fellow suffered terrible agony be-fo-

he expired. ,x

Round about where the lad wasplaying before he met with the acci-

dent which resulted in his death wereabout sixteen similar gasolene drums,all containing more or less of the fluid.These drums are the property of thoowners of Japanese fishing sampans.It is the practise of the fishermen toleave the drums on tho shore close tothe water, bring their craft. close inand with tubing replenish their gaso-lene tnnks .from the drums, leavingthe halfomptled drums on the shoreuntil tho contents are nil extracted,when a full drum replaces the emptiedono. Tho practiso seemed on tho faceof it to bo most roprehensible. Anyyoungster might inadvertently causodire misfortune by Uie careless useof matches in the vicinity of thesedrums, and with tho largo amount otshipping in tho immediate vicinitytremendous losses might bo entailed.It Is thought that some supervisionshould bo exorcised by tho homor au-

thorities or by tho police over thesefishermen who so cnrolossly cxposoothers to danger. Or course, tho un-

fortunate lad contributed to his owndeath by his carolessness, but ho wasonly a youngster or about 'fourteenyears old, and could nardly havo beenexpected to have understood the explosive properties of gasolene, Theboy's body was removed to tho morguelate in the forenoon. , ,

The parents, of the unfortunate boyaro Russians in poor circumstances

.

The complote roport of SecretaryC. A. Stnnton of tho Honolulu Hun- -drod Thousand Club, to tho chairman

oxecutlvo commltteo Is ns fol- -

'

'Jiu"imuu ui una uiuuon Novombor 28th, 1910, wo havoSecured 3flR mntnlinra nnd rnrnlvnil n. . i V, Viu..iUrSmp ices nnu iromrV::n 'to of'nn'T"'3 ?21'25' nm,5lnB

The money, together with a listoi me members. I Havo turned ovor toMr. H. P. Wood, treasurer of thoclub.

Tho membership to date was secur- -

OCEANIC OFFERED

MAIL SR

as to the fleet being able to accomplishthe lormer--. service with. abHolukvschedule regularity, tho company took,, the question of the cost of conver- -

sion of the Sonoma and Ventura. Bythat tlme.'however, they had ascer- -

nnd have been depending in somemeasure on the earnings of thior son,who followed the occupation of ashoeblack and newsboy. The lad wasa bright little fellow and spoke Eng-

lish well. The parents have had greatmisfortune since they arrived herewith their three children. Thero weretwo boys and a llttlo girl, but bothboys are now dead. Shortly aftertheir arrival here one of the boys wastaken Into quarantine and thero diedand now the second son has been tak-

en away. Vi"v

PUT CAFE

IN ART THEATER

Talk of a second theatrical mergerwon't down and again Is the asser-tion made that Ed. Lqnl is going toput up some of the money for thecompletion of the Auditorium, thegreat skeleton of which rises backof the Art theater. One plan, it ap-

pears, is to complete tho Auditoriumand distribute the talent engaged forthat theater among the Art here, thoGaiety in Hilo, and possibly a theaterto be put up in Walluku as previous-ly announced.

But thero is also talk ot tho PalmCafe moving from its present site in-

to the Art theater premises pendingtho construction of the proposedbuilding on tho corner of Union andHotel streets; the Gaiety theater InHllo is likely to get all Its talentfrom the Honolulu Amusement Com-pany, and there Is little promise fortheatricals In Walluku. Tho secondmerger may dwindle to tho Auditor- -ium alone unless tho Art Ib refittedor another theatre is establishedelsewhere in town.

j

ALEWA HS A

LIVELY GLOB

At a meeting of tho Alowa Improve-ment Club held last nlglit it was definltely decided to enter a decoratedautomobile In the Floral Parade. Theladies of the heights with Mrs. J. S,.Donaghho as chairman will formcommittee to carry' out the plans jof

ed at n cost of $75 for tho of

has

you

own

a canvasser In making a poraonal so- -Ilcltntlon ttyi to and including Jnnuary15, 1011. On this date I discontinued

ice 01 me convnsor for thoiuubuh mai i louiid i s Hint mil nfsecuring members Inpractlcal nnd en- -Hrnlv frw. t..- - i .,. .. m'uiioho hi coiiHiuoraiiQii

ot.

ule 8"T membership fee the clubT"0:0 "1Uf b a Clmn80 ,U

our securing members, andI would recommend that the oxecu.llvo committee outline a systomwherebv

(Continued on pago twelve.)

TO RESUME

: TO TRE COLONIES

,lever bo contented with less and Ifw over undertake lt again, you maybe certain as to regmarlty and a vastImprovement over our former at- -tempt.' The letter was formally received.

FIVE MONTHS

SENTENC E FR

EMBE2ZLEMEI T

Judge Edings appeared in the policecourt this morning, acting on behalfof R. K. Pahau, who was under acharge of embezzlement. Edings ex-

plained to tho court that the accusedwished, to plead guilty and In plead-ing for a lenient senlpnce Edingssaid that tho money embezzled by theacpuscd had been paid.

Judge Lymer said ho understoodthat though the amount on the chargevns only $25, tho accused had actu-ally embezzled between ?C00 and $700from tho Hawaiian Meat Company,and to this Prosecuting Attorney A.M. Brown agreed, adding that friendsof tho accused had made reparationfor him.

Judge Lymer remarked that as ageneral rule the court was Inclined tobe very lenient in cases where a pleaof guilty was made, but herethe prosecution tiad only broughtngninst this man one trivial chargeof $25 embezzlement, when a numberof greater charges oould have beenmade, under which ho would havebeen liable to the maximum penalty.He Imposed a sentence of five months'Imprisonment.

While tho Wuilelo also reports roughweather, being unable to work freightnt Honokaa on tho 2Dth and 31st, thaconditions do not seem to bo as bad as

. .xu.ose reported Dy tne umuuino.,uluul ensiony winus provaueu, uu- -

companled by rains. Purser Logan re- -

ports very rough sea at NawlIIwIll,also crossing tho cnannol. He alsoadvises being in receipt of reports

eastern and northern Kauaiports stating thnt rough sons prevailed.

tho club in this connection.The matter of having sidewalk

grades established was discussed nndIt was determined to make a strenu-ous campaign to havo the proper au-

thorities act In this matter.Tho Alowa club is ono of the most

active improvement clubs in tho clty,ana through Its efforts a jungle hasbeen converted into a garden in lessthan .three years.

HONOLULU ifT OBCCO 01 P

I When tho last boat from the Ori -

eMt ,"M",ud throuSh hero 1,1,0 Ioft aWg conB8uent of graded Philippinec,&urs' tho Philippines having quit

' iinwaiuui isinnud a"ump lor careless v made and infe.rlor smokes., it will bo remembered.,.... ...uiai tne ueuer local tobacco concernsput up a huge roar some ttime ago bo- -cn,,B0 1,10 PlIPllno. w,ero sending

L00.,B? horo U .aer. "ot good, throwing on Hawaii brands that they wouldnot send to tho mainland States. Thisnecessarily hud a tendency to glveillaw- - S"K- - c& 36.00Manila cigars a black eve nnd nnrtl.ni. IJouokaa Sur. Co... 10.76lar smokers fought shy of tho doubtfulweeds. Chinese small dealers andother small dealers, ordering Manilacigars, wore supplied with the moatinforior brands at such low pricesthat' good business was cut into nndthe sale of good Manilas was affectedbecause of the impression which start-ed to gain headway that they were allalike.

Local dealors took the matter tipwith the Philippine covcrnment withtho result that nothing now leaves thePhilippines in the way of cigars with-

out careful government InspectionThe flrst big shipment of fine gradedcigars In a long time came in on thoSiberia tho other day and Honoluluwill continue to get as good Manilacigars as are delivered on the main-land.

CHANGE OF MANAGEMENT.

Mr. E. Wolff retired yesterday fromthe office of manager of tho HawaiianStar, and win leave near the end ofFebruary for Germany, via the Orientto recuperate. He will return withina year. Mr. Wolff has been succeededby Mr. Ij. D. TImmons.

The W. G. Hall brought in 20?0 bagsof sugar, eleven empty gasolene drums,four empty carboys, ono package ofcoin and eight packages of sundries.

WIURPH GUARDS

ANSWER ROLL

"Captnin" Gus Murphy, commandingthe; side-sho- w forces of the great Elkscarnival, got his men together lastnight and they answered roll call asfollows: :

Electrical shower: Caldwell, e,

Williams, Dekum.The Remurknblo Maze: Mackin-

tosh, WItte, Johnston, Bachelor.Geisha Girls: Swallish, Howes, H.

Rycroft.Electrical Photos: Ray Irwin, St.

John, T. S. O'Brien, Roger Taylor,Wilder.

Hula: James Lynch. Murray, I.ord!Muhlqr, Hons, Baugb", Buffandeau.

Country Store (where they glvoaway an auto for $1): N. B. Young,the Boy Scout, Dodge, Chester Irwin,Boyer, Marsley.

Del Monte Restaurant: Frank Win-ter, Thielon, Barrcre, Lansing, Hell-bro- n.

Freaks: Martin, Bergstrom, Mc-

Coy, Chnrllo Lynch, Wallace.Voting Contest (to send a lady to

the coast on vacation): O'Neill, P.Prescott, Buchley, McCIellan, T. P.O'Brien.

Lilliputians: 'Andrews, 'ihnyer,

and Quinn, Tho Big Four.Vnudovlllo 1: Drake and Scully.Vaudeville 2: Cohen and Sonny

Cunha.Applegato Court: Douthilt, Coko,

norner and Whltehouse.Baby Elk Booth: By the latest in-

itiated Elk.

A message from London states thatthe balance of opinion nt Lloyds isthat tho Parlslana caught fire, owing

i

uf

.'" " 'down A iainy ,largo volumo of re -

I

Jnsnranco business h,, .. II

Cl,

Fine Job Printn.p.

5'?yu,f,romI,w,Jol?Iwnlln Pineapplesltcflne.1 fano

At Soda Fountains and Stores.

Arctic Soda WorksHonolulu Distributors,

EJNECTAR BVHUP for use on Hot Cake.Waffle., etc. A Pellc'o,,, Flavoring lerPnnchea and leeCreflnu.At Grocers

PIncctar Snlos Co., Ltd.

STOCK EXCHANGE

Dividends Haiku, $1 OO a hnr;I'Hln, $1.00 a nlmn-- Pioneer, $t.U

nhart--

', 8",W,r wi"-- M dog. Cantrf.

id? '

Between Hoard PO Oahu Sti Co.$ar,.: 10 Qhu Sue Co tin M Muniiu Sug. CO., $8(1.25; $1000Hrvi n fi. iua.nn' an vtMi,.v,i,. nn.

'50 McBrvdo. $4.00

Swaiim Stile 16 McBryd, $4.00;35 MoBryifo, $1.00.

Stocks ftld AskedKwn Plant Co $7.75 28.00llato. Agr. Co 200.00"aw. C. & . Co.... 32. SO

11. S5Haiku Sug. Co 115.00lltllcIllllKOU Sllg. ... 14.00 18.00Kahuku Sug. Co... 00Kekaha Sug. Co... 105.00McBrydo Sug. Co... 4.00 4.125Oahu Sug. Co 2C.25 2C.80Onomca Sug. Co... 33.50 31.50Olaa Sug. Co , 3.76 1.25Paaulmu Sug. Co. . . 10.00Pala Plant. Co 145.00Pcpookeo Mill Co.... 115.00Pioneer Mill Co ISO. 00 182.50Wnialua Agr. Co.... S7.50Walluku Sug. Co 1S5.00Waimanalo Sug. Co.. 185.00Wafmca Mill Co.... 120.00I. 1'. S. N. Co 110.00H. R. T. & L. Com... 100.00 .Mutul Tel. Co 13.50O. R. & L. Co.... 135.00 145.00Hllo. R. R. Com 9.00lion B. & M Co.... 19.50Haw. Inc. Co 35.00 3G.25Tnnjong Rub. Co.... 40.00 44.00I'ahar g Rub. Co - 21.00Cnl. Beet Cs 100.00Hamakua Ditch Gs.. 102.00Haw. Irr. Cs 100.50 101.25Hllo R. R. Gs 99.50Hilo R. R. Ex. Gs 95.00Houokan Sug. 6s.... 101.50Kohala Ditch Gs ioo.ooMcBryde Sug. Gs 91.50 92.50Walalua Agr 5s.... Dd.00 100.00

Sugar 3.42cBeets, 8s,. 1 1 I4d

Henry Waterhouse Taist Co,

Members Honolulu Stock and BondExchange.

FORT AND MERCHANT STS,

James F. H organ.Stock andBond

Member ov Honolulu Stock andBond Exchange.

Stock and Bond Orders receiveprompt attention.

Information furnished relative toall STOCKS AND BONDS.

LOANS NEGOTIATED.Phone 1572 P. O. Box 594

IN FEDERAL CIRCUIT.

One Chlneso and two Japanesewore released this morning after theyhad taken tho oath that they were toopoor to pay their fines. Kim Moon-sun- g

was sentenced to eighteenmonths Imprisonment for having im-

personated a United States officer,and at tho same time was fined withcosts $595.85. T. Fujlmoto was,, con-victed of having forged a money or-der. Ho too was sentenced to eighteenmonths with a fine ot $161.64' and costs.Fujikawa was sentenced to a year'simprisonment for haying harbored, analien woman for immoral purposes.His fine and costs amounted to $31.-9- 1.

Each took an oath this morningthat ho had no money to meet theselines and costs of court and all weroaccordingly discharged from custody.

DUCK SOON HIT SING.Chung Song Sing appeared in tho

police court this morning with his faceall daubed with blood, which evidentlyflowcd'from a wound on tho bridgo ot

.l"KMa "p n cnnlr nn"

.hit him over tbo bond with it. Thecase will bo gono into tomorrow byJudge B. Lymer.

Fine Job Printing, nrar Ofllco

the "ua"a,,u from a cut 011 tho fore- -to )ll0 0 ftnd turnontlnn nhn7r,iZTnC "UorcatI"',,,," Sl'v ?' ...... "Ji?10011' 0"e hlS e,n03'

hns

PINEOTARBest

All

Water

All

Me- -

IS.

Broker

W.

i

4vI:

K

Page 6: XUrSLlXJXT JtC - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduThe new copper box, which will bo 0x7x12 Inches, and will bo laid with Death Benefit $1,000.00 for $5.00 per year select Weekly Indemnity

KX

Alt run down, easily tired, nerv-

ous? And do not know whatto take? Then go direct toyour doctor. Ask his opinionof Ayer's Sarsaparilla. It con-

tains no alcohol, no stimulation,and is a blood purifier, a nervetonic, a strong alterative, an aidto digestion. Ask your doctor '

about Ayer's non-alcohol- ic Sar-

saparilla as a strong tonic for

the weak.

Ayer's Sarsaparillai

Pnpirad by Dr. J. C. h" & Co., lowsll, Ktts., U. 8. A.

fraternal Jloetl nge

HONOLULU LODGE NO. 1,B. P. O. ELKB.

Meets In their hall on King Btreet

tear Fort, every Friday evening. Visit'lag Brothers are cordially Invited tomttend.

JAMES D. DOUGHERTY, E. R.

GEO. T. KLUEGEL, Secretary.

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

iuont. over vMonday evening at7:30 In Odd Fellows Hall, Fort StVisiting brothers cordially invited toattend.

J. G. B. CAMERON, N. G,

PAUL SMITH, Sec.

HONOLULU IRON WORKS CO., LTD,

Steam Engines, Sugar Mills, Boilers,Coolers, Iron, Brass and Lead Cast- -

lnes. Machinery ot every Description

U Je to Order. Particular AttentionPaid to Ship's Blacksmithing.

Work Executed on Short Notice

Quarter SizesRegal Shoe Store

King Hotel Streets.

TOO MUCH stress cannot belaid on the Importance of havingyour eyes fitted with properglasses.

S. E. LUCAS - - OpticianMasonic Temple, Alakea St.

Curios Of All DescriptionsHand Embroidered Work

Hotel Street Near Union.

SILVA'S TOGGERY

The Store for Good Clothes.

PAGO'S.

Job

and

Stunt for GrowthTho bald spot will not expand It

you take it in time and use

Pacheco's DandruffKiller

SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.

ilF YOU WISH TO ADVERTISE

t IN NEWSPAPERSANYWIIliRI? AT ANYT1MB

P. ' CM on or Write

S S ft PAKE'S ADYERTISEGG AGESCIu iu4. Satisomo Street5 BAN FRANCISCO, CALtP. ?

Kno Job Printing, Star Office.

-- 11 - I- - - - -

SPORTS"Soldier" Ki.ig Accepts

t Kin. iIiIk mornlnK ex- - weigh about 108 pounds, Hint It 1

prewted hi wllllngnr to race

KltKKcnihl. the lrlh-Cn(lls- n. any

distance from ten to fifteen miles, up-

on terms which will no doubt be suitKlUKernld. King has alrendv if Fitzgerald can matte connections

had several races with Fltzgornld. ot with tho at Sydnoy ho will

whom sneaks In tho highest terms. In Honolulu on March 1st, which will

He Is as pretty a runner ovor was give him plenty of time for putting on. . I . . r.i ... 1. .. i mm ii jio . lila Irnltillltrseen, said lung to aisr rupie- - uic linisuiiit; iuuuibo iu v. ......

sentattve. "Ho runs all the way on ho having stated that could raco... . - 1 1 J

bis toes and Is so only ton to fourteen nays nuur iuuuiub.

FIFTEEN MILES

mmE

Soldier Kinc ran fifteen miles attho Knpiolani Pari; yostoruay alternoon in one hour thlrty-hv- o minutes

t .. 1 I Vi.Him secunus. bouu " iMmiC8 place on tho V. M. C

prevailing are takenconsideration. The track was natur- -

allv somewhat on tho heavy sldoowing to tho wet weather, a sunbreeze was blowing nnd rain fell dur-

ing tho trial. King and his trainer,"Nigel Jackson, aro quite satisfied asto the trial, in which groat interestwas taken, ns King had not run thatdistance since leaving Honolulu andhad yet to find out how he wouldstand tho pace and distance. Kingvan splendidly and his track workwill strengthen tho opinion of those,who give him a chance to go againstKaoo In tho marathon race. On Friday next King will run from the .

M. C. A. building to Pearl City anaback, to test the roads and his trialin this respect should watched by

host of people. He will be accompanied by his trainer, who willcycle over the route.

JAPANESE nH IN JULY

of the held atprojected of team offices next Friday even- -

of from the Unlver- - committee of.... c Tn.nn is naturally '"iianawuhiSliy, OL 1UU1U, uuytiit,

...

being discussed among Tans in tnecity. The Japanese team is scheduledto arrive here some time in July,

when tho Oahu League games willabout over. The international aspectadded to the game by the visit ot thoJapanese team will give increased

interest to the sport, though that ishardly needed, so keen are players

end fans alike on the baseuau pro-

position.For the Oahu League this season

it is probable that teams composedJapanese, Portuguese anu

Hawallans rcspectlvely-wi- ll be enter-

ed, but no official announcement on

this score can be expected tho

League meets on March 2nd next.

Tho season gives promise 01 uvtut,

a very keen one, and as the Athletic

Park managers will have better con-

trol over players as Individuals andns .1 whole. It Is anticipated

Jlinmte wonderful well

into

the matches scheduled will

played without any bickering or for-

feits enact aIt issevere penalty for the breaking of

any of contracty as thispenalty take the form a fine

It Is hardly expected that thewill wittingly lay themselvesto It.

Basketball will occupy tho attentionf h v. OA. ntnietes 101 mo

next few weeks, as tournamentnranited ls to commence iu

morrow evening. teams haveeach team will meet the

other. The games will extend tomm, n n.i will nlayod on Thurs

only, excluding the lhst.,

until tho ilvo rounds are piayeu ou.

niDHTHERIA HOW ITMAY BE AVOIDED,

Diphtheria is usually

when the child has a cold.

w

lie can stny. kiiir

bo

heits

inohefihe

be

bo

theof

open

M.the

mtMvFive

23rd

contracted

prepares the child's system for tho

reception and development of tho.u..i.M.n,.ii rrormH When there arouiiiuiiic.

how

that

andwill

Tho cold

cases of diphtheria In the neighbor

hood children that have colds should

be kept at home and off tho street

until recovered. Give them Chamber-

lain's Cough Romedy and thoy will

not have to remain at home long. Italso cleans out the culture beds,

which form in a child's throat wnen

it has a cold, and minimizes tho riskof contracting infectious diseases. For

salo ny all Benson, Smith &

Co., agents for Hawaii.

"Lend hand, Hiram, and helpketch the selectman's pig." "Let theselectman ketch his own pig. I'm out

of politics for good." WashingtonHerald.

HI rWWMU tTAB, WWMffltDAY. PJWrWAHY 1. 1111. rJ ,;

u..iiiir

miggests tlmt He race Fiwgornid overa distance ot llftoon tulles, which la

Flturnrnld's beat dlBtnnco, nnd thnttho raco take place on Mnrch 17th

able toMoann

small,

MINES LOSE

TO COLL EG AN

Yesterday's play In the handballtournament now being contested bo

tween tho College of Hawaii and thotook

conditions I A. courts and, as in tho former tournament, tho Marines wore barely beaten at this convincing ground. TheMarines aro not familiar with thebockwall (proposition and In the twi

matches yesterday they only aggrogated 45 points against their opponents' 90.

The immense advantage gained by

the collegians in these two matchesputs them ahead but only by fivepoints, as tho four precedingmatches tho Marines had gained 10

points. Fook On and Rico won outfrom PIcarlcllo and Holohan by 45

to 17, and Marcallino and Biart beatOgur and Williams by 45 to 28. Twomatches aro still to be played tocomplete this tourney, and as theywill bo played on the Y. M. C. A.courts it Is quite likely that thestudents will retain or even increasetheir advantage and defeat the Marines.

The soldiers have infused a good

deal of life into hand-ba- ll playersby their challenges and though beat-

en by the Y. M. C. A. and behindIn points to tho collegians they areafter another a challenge be-

ing issued to the St Louis CollegeAlumni.

With the approach baseball At a meeting to bo theseason the visit a RGrvisors'

ball-playe- rs Kelo m& health the su- -

mi.l

be

of Chinese,

until

proposed to

players

upbo

days

dealers,

a

in

contest,

,orvfanrs. headed uy

Kruger, and assisted by City Physi-

cian Mackall, will take up the ques-

tion of whether the stringent termsof the milk ordinance are to be en-

forced or not. Tho meeting has beencalled at tho request of the Dairy-

men's Association.

Fino Job Printing. Slur Office.

PUBLIC AUCTION.Guardian's Sale.

fc0 nntipo thnt I shall expose for

MerchantFebruary,

them. of said day to tne. highest bla

des the following described property:

anuN50o 10'

Apana notAwnrd

Nalhe. N G8' 30' W 38. a reetKuana. N 57 40' W

112.K feet Kuana to Auui. S 3i'

Award

Llllha street. Tiience N;39 50' G

Initial point containarea of ot acre.

On Is upset pricetwelve hundred (?1200) dollars;

and also thesituate Walmanalo,

Island of Oahu, Hawaii:All that or parcel sit-

uate at Walmanalo, Islandof Oahu, of Hawaii, describ-

ed Royal Patent No. 351, L. C.No. 234, containing and

On Is upset price offour hundred (?450) and dollars.

of 10 cash attime ot balance paid

five daysW. PRATT,

Auctioneer, Merchant street,H.

particulars apply Mrs.

sts., ofKe-kah- lo

and Lorrinat Law,

Specie Bank

Jan. 30-Fe- b.

RACE PREJUDICE

IN THE FAR. by MELVILLE H. STONE,

General ot tho Associated Press.

EAST

The author of the following remarkable Indictment the

methods Anglo-Saxon- s In their the peoples of the

Far East spent some time in Honolulu last year, returning

from a trip round the world, during which he many of thefacts and Impressions so forcefully given. He Is the general head

the largest newsgatherlng organization the world, and had un-

usual opportunities all lands to get close touch with

wholo libraries have boon

written Asia and tneAsians, there Is a widespread boliof

because the our

mentalities, It is not possible for ub

ovor to understand thorn, or they us.

Kipling snys thnt "East Is and

Is West, and never tho twnln

shall meet." The "oluest

India or China or Japan is totell you thnt the Oriental mind is

unfathomable 1 have not the temerity to these Andyet 1 venture to suggest that thereis older holding a dlf'

view, nnd that I still have somerespect for Cicero's idea that thereis a "common bond" uniting all of thochildren of men.

And whatever our Ignorance orlor, uie m tom prerorenco

past, it well note that condl- -her Qn ,

Hons, both for and for them, haveentirely changed within the last de-

cade. There is a new United Statesand a new Asia. The Spanish Warcreated tho one; the Russo-Japane- se

War the other. Wheh wethe Philippine Islands assumedthe government eight millions ofOrientals and touched elbow with all

When Japan defeated Russia,the Oriental learned his power. For

centuries he had respectedpower. His native was an

who enslaved him, beat him,killed him, If need be. Then cametho with powder and gunsand warshins: and thewhite man behind tho gun represent-ed power. A handful of British with

could enforce obedience fromhundreds of mlllitns people. Sud-

denly the little Empire of Japan, onoof tho least among the Asiatic pow-

ers, challenged, fought, and defeatedthe great Colossus, Russia.

The Asian discovered then that itwas not the white man, but the gun

that tho he learnedthat a yellow man behind the guns

quite as effective as a white man,and ho found that the Christian soldier was afraid of death. Thenfollowed travail the birth of thenow There were actual revolu- -l .. i I t. rPuflrAtr nrwl Pnvotn n OTnrt

Maxunrest in IndiaCeylon, and,

assume thataferment. only

tnCity future

(

I hopet ,i beliefs

14th day of D., 1911, from thent nubile auction, at hour of 2:00. and moral aspects.

G000

PhilippinesPnmmnncinc at East corner afloat among 8 000,000

4.I.0 VnrtllwPSt. ITnm lnnir tlin SOl""I'. V;of Llllha street running: juiers ...c......

W magnetic 32.2 feet sovereignty over

along remaining portion ot Asians? Believe me, these areCommission No. 704 to. idle questions. They are to for

magneticalong magnetic

alone30' W 00 are can our

58 00'of tne

on of

2. tne at,to

toan 21-1- an

there anof

at on theof

ptece of

In A.G5-1-

there an

perbo

J.

toE.

of

T.H-- .

of

of of

of InIn In

that, ot In

Ea&t,

West

In

anforent

us

woof

Asia.

cannonof

did

was

aloneIn

Asin.

are

cer- -

;

,. i 1 1 I

" --, I

uic iu j

01

an whether willupon our make answerdepend the future what

magnetic along auui. pieasea to ivcsumualong fence. E magnetls ) T would have feel that175. G feet along mnxal portions j Macauley's

Commission No. Zealander a arch Lon- -

2154 and Commission don sketching ruins 01

No.E magnetic feet along

Lilihning

which

following describedperty

Territoryland

Knpulkl,Territory

twoacres.

whichfifty

Terms centpurchase,

thereafter.

Hono-

lulu,For further

Kapeka Cummins, Bingham andAlexander TerritoryHawaii, guardian Elizabeth

and Kokahlo, An-

drews, Attornby Yokohamabuilding, Honolulu,

Manager

treatmentwhile

gathered

Althoughconcerning

differences

inhabitant"sure

challouge opinions.

authority

acquired

untoldsovereign

autocrat,

European,thereafter

European

business;

Honolulu,political,

theological

vestments

iOU.OOU.uuu

nnd

suggestion

Honolulu,

Paul, come to be more thanfigure of

And convinced that therereal danger awaiting us unless we

mend our ways. It not Asian

who needs educnting; the Eu-

ropean. I am worryingmuch about the heathen In his blind-

ness as I am about Christian inhis blindness.

Asia awake and preparing forcoming struggle, and are

much to force Issue and toprepare for the contest. Forcentury we ueenenormous cost our missionaries allparts of the civilize.

There may be to the amountot proselyting we haveaccomplish:doubt of work have donestrengthen Asian people political-

ly and commercially.A statesman ot Japan said recent

ly, conversation 1

"Your missionaries have

done good the ourthey have done far more

our health and strength aThey come to us with doctors, andnurses, and hospitals, andBefore Perry's 2,000,000 In

fants born overy year In Japan,

and for lack of proper sanitary measures they died. Now, with tho hos-

pitals nd snnltary and hyglonlcmothods introduced by tho mission-

aries, tho 2,000,000 children aro born,but thoy do not die." This trueot ovory othor Orlontal country. Mean-

while, In tho countries of Europe theIncrease of population slow,In some countries, ns in France, itis Increasing at all. In Amer-ica raco suicide is becoming alarm-ingly prevalent.

In recent war betweenand Dr. Louis Seaman, whovisited their field hospitals and talk-

ed with their army surgeons,found Japanese had out-

stripped us in almost every depart-

ment of military surgery. Theeign colonies of Toklo and other Japnnpsn oltlns nmnlov native physicians

indifference unemais mo Europeans,is to

was Asia through Arabia whichEurope the literature, tho arts,

and the which wo have developed and which wo now boast.Gunpowder was probably Invented in

China: it was certainly Introducedinto Europe from Arabia. The finely'tempered steel of Damascus wentover from at the of theMoorish invasion of Snaln and Itsmanufacture was continued at Tolcdo. The coppersmiths of Bagdad sup- -

nlled world's with theirwonderful productions centuries before there were any industries In

Europe. Weaving of silk and cottonhad its birth as industry in Arvbin. and tho. weaving of wool was

by Crusaders In the samewonderful country. Astronomy, mathematlcs, the mariner's compass allcame to us from the Arabs

One can have forgotten tnatthe Gospels, thethe Koran are all of Arabian originThe inhabitants of Arabiahave today the oldest liberal governmentpractically a republic ionearth. And, if you go afieldto India, and China, and youshall find civilization older thanhistory and marvelous in its character. One can not read that greatlibrary of Eastern Sacred Writingsedited by Dr. Muller, without being recrudescence of 7"'""

and at this moment, ""I""""Is in state of revolutionary " not do for us to

ours ls the civilization. Whatwfcnt'k ho thP outcome? What the basic virtues, the sum of

sale, at tho Auction rooms, 125 does all this mean for the of which we

St.. on Tuesday, the world? Let us view the problem tlon? wc

street

T.

China

Christian civinza- -

are agreedflinv nro tint nrlmnrllv In

tho A. thethe

coiuniBruiui,dogmas, or certainHow long

the soldiers we have in the forms of church polity or in the shape

be nb'e to keep our flag or length of priestly but

the of natives" auriuuies cui-ryu- i uuusu,u.will TK.finf) EnCllshtnis piece I:"' Asian far exceeds frugality.

side mumBritish

Land upanswer,

ability

reetizatlon. you

inow

Apana Land brokenApana Bridge,

79452.

pro

salo

within

4ts

of,

will

of in me 01

In Isin ub

2,us

we no,

of we

S

to

orto

or1,

has anextravagant speech.

I am Is

is theit ls

not so

the

Is thewe doing

very theher a

have senaing ntto

hemisphere todoubt as

been able tothere can be no possible

the we tothe

In a nau witn mm:undoubtedly

for morals of peo-

ple, but foras nation.

schools.arrival

were

Is

Is and,

hardly

the RussiaJupan

freelythat tho

for

Itgave

sciences,of

Arabia time

the market

an

lefcrned the

notPsalms, tho and

central

fartherJapan,

a

call ourall that

tain

will

will

half

liviner. Is fruKality a virtue? Yourus

industry a merit? No people on earthwork as long, as persistently, and asconscientiously as they. Is Integrityesteemed? It is the unchallengedjudgment of every European writerthat the word of an Asian was good

until they were corrupted by the In-

roads of Westerners. Is politeness,which is but another name for thogolden rule, to be commended? No

where will you find such scrupulouspoliteness as Is dally and hourly ob

served, east of Suez.Is observance of law desirable? The

peaceable and orderly lives which thegreat mass of tho people of Asia haveled for centuries attest their habitsof obedience. Thero are cities In India, Japan, and China with crowdedpopulations running from a hundredthousand into the millions wherethere is scarcely the semblance ofpolice control, and where crime ishardly known. They are a calmthoughtful people, to whom what Mr,

Arthur Benson has so well called "thegospel of push," and what ownvigorous Roosevelt calls a "strenuouslife." is unknown. But I am not atall sure that this ls an unmixed evilfor thero aro no "brain-storms- " thereand neurasthenia is provided for no

tW M.

our

where. In tho light ot tho fact thatthe number of Inmates In the Insanehospitals of our country doubled In

six years, according to tho latestavailable statistics, I can not but feelthat wo need less strenuoslty ratherthan more. Compared with Westerncivilization, theirs will not suffer per-

haps as much as you would imagine;and perhaps you will agree that thechief characteristics of our civiliza-

tion are push and extravagance, and

UMi ih urn mtm Urn ton tfcf tafrOf

All UtlM brlnit mt to mr topic. AndI mnst mr thn, pdrnpltrMlRE Mr.

Lincoln' word t Otttrbnri, In

Inrjif tnraiinro It I not for hi to win-cut-

but to be mlucMietl. Wo limitnerar tntet tho problmim growing outor our relation with tho Lnr mm tin-lo-

wo nlMOlutoly and once for allput nwny race projudlco. I bollovethe Kurnpenn Mnob In Anlr. Is dis-

tinctly the enemy of tho clvlllntdWont. And his coadjutor In thiscountry Is a fitting criminal yoko-follo-

Lot mo glvo you somo illus-

trations of what I mean cases whichcame under my porsonnl observation.From Bombay to Yokohama thorc Is

not a social club nt nny port ortreaty point whero a native, whatovorhis culture or refinement, will bo

At the Bengal Club at Calcutta lastyear a member In perfectly goodstanding Innocently Invited a Eura-

sian gentleman that ls, ono who lshalf nntlvo and half European todine with him. It became known thatthe Invitation had been extended, anda storm of opposition broke nmongtho members. Tho matter was finallyadjusted by setting aside the ladlesdepartment of tho club, and there thooffending member and his unfortiinatoguest dined alone. The next dny thomember was called before the boardof governors and notified that an-

other like breach of the rules wouldresult In his expulsion.

While in Calcutta 1 attended a ballat government house, and noted thatwhile ono or two native princesseswere on the floor dancing with whitemen, there were twenty or more na-

tive gentlemen standing about as'wall flowers." I called the attentionof Lady Mlnto to the fact, and sheexplained that no white woman wouldthink of dancing with a native; Itwould certainly result in ostracism.

The son of a maharaja goes to England, ls educated at Oxford or Lam-bridg- e,

is lionized in the West Endof London mayhap he Is honoredwith an invitation to Windsor. Whenhe goes back home he may enter nowhite man's club; if he be fortunateenough to bo invited to a white man'sfunction, no white woman will dancoor associate with him. and If by any

luck ho should marry a European, he,his wife, and hla. children become outcasts.

Although native troops, Hko thoSikhs, have shown undying loyalty totho British flag, and on frequent oc-

casions have exhibited courage in thehighest degree, no one of them everhas or ever can achieve the VictoriaCross.

I have no thought, In saying this,of criticising British rule In India. Ido not question that It has been ofenormous benefit. Neither do I doubtthat under tho administration ofLord Morloy there Is the most sin-

cere desire to do all for India thatthe cause of humanity or Christianitymay dictate. And I am also quiteready to say that the problem is adifficult one; that "the white man'sburden" is one not easy to bear. Iknow that attempts to do justice areoften misunderstood by the natives.are construed as evidence of fear. Iknow that the Bengalis, who are re-

sponsible for most of the unrest In

India, are a silly lot, whosa lives andproperty would not be worth a groatwere British protection withdrawn. Iknow that the beneficent British supremacy has been made possible onlyby the religious divisions among thenatives. But this is all the more rea-

son why the greatest care should beexercised not alone in India, butthroughout Asia, why the line otcleavage should not be permitted topass from a religious to a racial one,and the danger that it may do sogrows with every hour.

On tho one hand, thero is a veryperceptible loosening of the bonds ofreligious caste; not infrequently to-

day high-cla- ss Brahmins not onlyshake hands with Moslems and Chris-

tians, but even sit at table and eatmeat with them. On the other hand,thero was startling evidence duringthe recent war of tho secret racialtio that binds all Asia. We are accustomed to think and speak of Indiaas a British possession, forgettingthat after all only s of itsarea Is British, while there are overGOO native princes and chiefs, eachgoverning a state, which Is more orless independent. Somo ot theseprinces aro enormously wealthy. So

far as thoy have any religious bent,they are Hindu, or Mahratta, and inthis respect not at all at one withthe Japanese, who are either Shintoor Buddhist. Yet while the war wason, it was not uncommon for a richMnharaja to call at government housoand ask If it would be regarded asan unfriendly act for him to buy Jap-

anese bonds. Of course, tho viceroywas forced to say it would not, slncoBritain and Japan were In treaty alliance. Of course these Investmentswere made through London banks,and the extent ot the transactions willnever be known. We do know, how-

ever, that there was a mysterious ab- -

(Continued on Paso 7.). Ii l

Page 7: XUrSLlXJXT JtC - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduThe new copper box, which will bo 0x7x12 Inches, and will bo laid with Death Benefit $1,000.00 for $5.00 per year select Weekly Indemnity

I LJUST FROM THE AND NOW ON

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LHIllll vl iiuiiniCapital and aurplua 11.000,000

IN 1830.

BANKERS

Commercial and Traveller!"Liettera of Crodlt iBBued on theBank of California and The Lon-

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for the Amir- -

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j

I (Continued from page six.)

sorption of Japanese securities, whichnever could be accounted for by eitherthe London financiers or our own.

What I feel is that the danger ofAsiatic ethnic solidarity Is immense-ly accentuatedby the attitude of cer-

tain of the British themselves. Itgoes without saying that tho youngerson of a British nobleman, who doesnot succeed to his father's estate anddoes not go into trade, but who findsthe only outlet for his activities inthe army or navy, the church, or inthe Indian civil service, becomes farmore of a snob, and therefore farmore of a danger when dealing withnatives in Asia than he would be per-

mitted to be at home in England. Andthe harm that one such person cando it may take an army to undo.

I have spoken thus freely respect-ing the conditions in India because Ifeel at liberty to do so, since mymother was born under the Britishflag, and I have a very large numberof relatives in the British army, navy,and church. But I should be whollylacking In fairness if I did not askyour attention to similar cases of raceprejudice in which we are involvedand which are equally dangerous Inother parts of Asia.

Let mo tell yoil a story as It wastold me by a Harvard graduate, whois now a minister of the JapaneseCrown. "When Perry came here,"said he, "and Townsend Harris or

blessed memory followed him andmado the first treaty with Japan, itwas stipulated that we (the Japanese)should give them ground for their legation and their consulates, com-

pounds. We did so. Yokohama wasthen an unimportant place, a nativefishing village. It was the naturalport of Tokio, but as wo had no for-

eign trade that meant anything Wogave them ground in Yokohama fortheir consulate. Merchants andtraders followed, and wo gavo themground also for their shops. The Brit-

ish and tho Russians and other Eu-

ropean nations came in and wo gavethem like concessions. In Yokohama,as you know, houses and stores arenot numbered as you number them in

CARRIAG

RACE

America 110 Broadway, for instancebut are numbered in the order in

which they were built. Thus, "Num-ber 1 Yokohama" may be half a miledistant from "Number 2 Yokohama."This metnod of numbering still sur-

vives."Well, as time went on the village

grew Into a city. Under tho treatyof Townseud Harris and all the othertreaties the right of y

was recognized. That is, when-ever a case arose in which a foreignerbelonged. As time went on, Sir Har-ry Parks, the British minister, askedfor ground in Yokohama for a race-track. We cautiously suggested thathorse-racin- g was said to be wicked bythe European missionaries. But hoinsisted and we gave him the ground.Then wo were asked for ground fora social club for the foreigners, and,we gave them a plot on the sea front,the finest piece of land in the city.

"Later they wanted to play cricketand football, and finally golf. Well,we gavo them ground for this. Astho city grew, this cricket-fiel- d was sosurrounded by buildings that It waspractically in the center of town. Un-

derstand, all of this ground was do-

nated. Last year wo suggested thatwo could use the cricket-fiel- d, and wooffered to give in place of it a field inthe suburbs. As railways had beenbuilt meanwhile, the new field wouldbe even more accessible than tho oldone was when we gavo it. The foreigners demurred, and proposed thatwe buy the old field and with tho purch-

ase-money they would securo a nowone. Finally, wo compromised bypaying for their improvements andfurnishing them a new field with likeimprovements free of cost.

"The question of taxation arose.Yokohama had grown to bo a city of300,000 inhabitants, with millions ofdollars invested in buildings ownedby foreigners. Wo nBked no taxes ontho ground wp had donated to them,but we did think it fair that theyshould pay taxes on their buildings.They said no, that everywhere in thoWest tho buildings went with thoground. We submlted tho question to

the Americans, but they dodged theissue, saying they would do whateverthe others did. Then, under the lawof y, we were com-

pelled to leave the decision to theBritish consul, and he decided againstus. Tho case has now gone to TheHague Court.

"Finally, when I tell you that in thelight of this history no native Japa-nese gentleman has ever been per-

mitted to enter tho clubhouse or thegrandstand of the race-trac- k or toplay upon the cricket-fiel- d, perhapsyou will understand why there Is somefeeling against foreigners in Yoko-

hama."When Commodoro Perry went to

Japan in 1853 he wrote a letter to theJapanese Emperor containing thesewords:

"With the Americans, ns indeedwith all Christian people, It Is consid-ered a sacred duty to receive withkindness, and to succor and protectall, of whatever nation, who may becast upon their shores, and such hasbeen tho course of the Americans withall Japanese subjects who have fallenunder their protection."

With his warships Perry compelledJapan to receive citizens of the Unit-

ed States and to grant them extraor-dinary domiciliary rights. From thatday to this we have spent enormoussums to establish schools in Japanfor tho education of the natives. Yetwo now are seeking to deny them ad-

mission to this country and we arerefusing to permit them to attend ourschools.

In the Philippines a rulllan American soldier, recruited from tho purIleus of New York, shoves a natlvogentleman from the sidewalk of Manila with an oath, calling him a"nigger." Yet that "nigger" is verylikely n cultivated gentleman, educat-ed at the Sorbonne, in Paris.

Tho infamous opium war uponChina, and the equally infamous ex-

istent compulsion of China to recelvoIndian opium, are outrages no whitworse than our own extortion of ab-

surdly exorbitant damages for lossesof American ships to Chinese plratosIn tho Yellow Sea. For many yearsthere was no moro profitable under-taking for tho owner of an Americanclipper ship than to sell it and Itscargo to the Chinese government aft-e- r

it had been looted by tho pirates.Such, my friends, is something of

the shameful record of our relationswith the Far East. In India, in China,

I IB ll Mil ill II III II llll

and in Japan wo have been the guestswho have enjoyed their hospitality,only to rise in ihe morning and sayto our hosts, "You must not sit attable with us." Bellevo me, this condition can not endure. Politically weare in gravo danger. Commercially,with their industry and their frugality,they are fast outstripping us.

They have ceased buying flour fromtho Minneapolis mills, because they I

are grinding Indian and Manchurianwheat with Chinese labor at AVoosung.

(

A line ot ships is running from thoYellow River to Seattle, bringing 72,- -

000 tons a year of pig iron manufactured at Hankow, and delivered,freight and duty added, cheaper thanwo can produce it. In Cawnporo, India, with American machinery theyare making shoes so cheaply that thomanufacturers of Lynn can no longercomnlntfi with them, lin r.nttnns nndsilks which wo one time sent fromhere to Asia are now mado in Japanand China.

Thus aro wo related t othem politically nnd commercially. Sociallythey aro all saying to us, "Stop cheat-ing us; stop swindling us; stop yourtreating us as your inferiors who aroto bo beaten nnd robbed." Japan iscrying out, "Treat us fairly and wowill go moro than half way. Leaveto us the question whether Japanese I

laborers shall go to America to an-

noy you, and wo will stop them. Butdo not say that you will admit tholazaroni of Hungary and Italy andRussia, simply because they are white,and shut us out because we aro yel-

low.Tho Singhalese natives of Ceylon,

whilo I was in Colombo, addressed aremarkable communication to tho govern-

or-general. They said a hundredyears ago there was established inthe United States a new theory ofgovernment that thoro should bo notaxation without representation."Now," said they, "wo ask a ehro inthe government of the island. Wopay taxes. You may fix a propertyqualification and say that no one hitv- -Ing less than a thousand pounds

j sterling shall share in tho government.Wo Bhall not object. You may alsofix an educational qualification. Youmay say that no ono but a collegegraduate shall take part in tho gov-

ernment. Wo will not object. Inshort, you may fix any qualificationexcept a racial qualification. Thatwould not bo fair." "And what an-

swer have you to make?" I askedMr. Crosby Holies, editor of Tho

with Top and

Demountable

Rims

that madeDemonstrations by Appointment

ThanBank

PREJUDICE

Merchant andBishop Streets

1

1

Times, of Ceylon. "To meet their re-quest," ho replied "would mean toturn over the government of Ceylonto them at once, because there aroC00O of them and only r.000 Englishmen, women, nnd children. Wo muststop educating them."

What do you think of that for aremedy? Personally, I do not thinkit will work, any more than I thinkany rule of arbitrary repression can.endure. I tako rcfugo in the largoexperience nnd ripe judgment of LordCurzon, of Kedleston, who in July.1004, was g:ven tho hall, and on thatoccasion used these words: "Dependupon It, you will never rule tho Eastexcept through the heart, and the mo-ment imagination hns gone out of yourAsiatic policy your empire will dwin-di- e

and decay."I am also Impressed with the cor-

rectness of Lord Morley's attitude.Speaking in support of tho Indian ro-fo- m

proposals two years ago, ho said:"Tho Founder of Christianity arose inan Oriental country, and when I amtold that Orientals always mlstakokindness for fear, I must repeat thatI do not believe it, any moro than Ibelieve tho stranger saying of Carlyle,that after all the fundamental ques-tion between any two beings is, CanI kill thee, or canst thou kill me? Ido not agree that any organized so-

ciety has ever subsisted upon eitherof those principles, or that brutalityIs always present ns a fundamentalpostulate In tho relntlons betweenrulers and ruled."

'And Curzon and Morley have many-supporte-

in their view. In smugcomplacency, you may close yourdoors which look toward Asia, whiloyou open wldo those which look to-

ward Europe; you may refuso tho Ori-

ental admission to your schools, whileyou accord tho privilege to any child"of a European; you may pile Importduties mountain high, nnd raise ourstandards of living to any pitch otextravagance; you may build war-ships without limit, and you mny continue to treat the Asian as legitimateproy. But I am confident that it willnot avail.

As a soldier, whothor at Omdurman,In tho Sudan, or on o Hill, ntPort Arthur, tho man of color hnsshown himself a right good fightingman; in commerce ho has, by his In-

dustry, porsovernnco, Ingenuity, andfrugality, given us pause; and beforothe eternal throne his temporal andhis spiritual wclfaro aro worth aa.much as yours or mine.

rat

,1

Page 8: XUrSLlXJXT JtC - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduThe new copper box, which will bo 0x7x12 Inches, and will bo laid with Death Benefit $1,000.00 for $5.00 per year select Weekly Indemnity

Classified "Ads"LOT.

"Dividend warrant Wo'ro7a4."d"iH3l

nnl

91, HMO, drawn ttr Rwa Plant- - Waa tkoiinifhly alltlM Co., on tlM Bank of UL, ot Hawaii Pafla mil hopad arranawnanta

to the order 0, On, Wlrvhwa fM 10 may mado (o bund oonrcrtator Parnant or aaM warrant itrowit lw Co Itegt Hie litn liilarralit.

has own atopnad. W. L. Ilowan. the PromotionHon '" Dr c" commit! Indicate that wm HiewamhbBMPUOYM1NT v. To of mid 8mtt1o In

win thoao persona employ-- ,nimond & Co Paw Kttlng up nxcutnlons to Hwwall,

went to onVr ttiinalan men and ww--

men now realdtng In Honolulu pleaaeaitvlae the undersigned.

Hml of Immigration of the Terrl-iw- y

of Hawaii. P. O. Box r.43.

WANTfeD.

100 amateur. Apply WJou thenterbetween 12 and o'clock.

MEN'S CLOTHINGMen'i Clothing on credit $1.00 a

week. Suit given at once. FrancisLevy, Outfitting Co., Stichs Bldg., FortStmt.

BUY AND SELLT

Diamonds and jewelry bought, soldnnd oxchnnged. Bargain In musicallustrumonts. J. Carlo, St

See the now

the

Surfing Girl

the prettiest souvenir of theIslands to be had; they arcmade of felt, 3C inches long,

colors and handsome-ly finished.

PRICE, $1.00

Metal TripodsThe largest assortment of

metal collapsable bothround and flat shapes, thathas ever been shown in thiscity.

All sizes. Short and Longfolding.

Prices to suit.

Houolulu Ptioto Supply Company

"Everything Photographic."

PASSENGERS DEPARTED.Passengers departea per steamer

Wilhelmlna for San FranciscoAaron, Mrs. Mary A. Allen,, Mrs. S.

SaleD; Bisgaard, Mrs. A.newlay.

wright, J. Coppage, una nut-i- i

forth, E. Crawford, W. Damuth,Miss

UForrest,

Fouchet, Miss B. M.Haines, Hanscom, Miss E. L.Harpster, Mrs. J. Hedomann, Mr.and Mrs. A. Hennessy, H. 'Huber,Dr. j. Hyde, S. K. Jackson, Mrs.J. Kaal, Wm. Kempster, Nelson B.Lansing, Mr. and C. Lehners,

Mrs. H. Maxwell, M.Miss Nellie McCIoud, Mr.

Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. J. H.Mrs. A. Newby, Dr.

D. A. J. Patterson, S. Peis-e- r,

Mrs. Phillips, Mrs. A. L.Plerson, Mrs. E. Plerson, MissIda Ralner, Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Rit-te- r,

W. Roundtree, Mr. and Mrs.E. W. Rumble, Geo. Russell, MissMartha Russell, Saviers, A.Saxl, Mrs. O. J. Sedlmayr, Mrs.E. Schelberg, children, Shannon,Mr. Mrs. F. R. Shepherd, Mrs.E. S. and maid, Miss JuliaShepherd, Miss Josephine Shepherd,Mr. Mrs. Edward Sllbon, Mrs.M. WIsner, the Great Americancircus troupe.

WEATHER TRIP.This ifi wcatyier for

It is pleasant at the aud thecuisine is superior to anything Intown. Golf one of Uieof visit to this hotel and playerswho go down for the should takealong their sticks. Good fishing Islo be had within shortof tho as as boating andlathing. broad verandas of the

are always Inviting to thosewish to n siesta In

ono of tho groat chairs alwaysto be found there.

Every merchant who Invest-

itive the motor trucks on the mar-

ket on the "Grabowsjty"

with its removable power plant and

nthr nxcluslvo features. Honolulu

Power Wagon Co., 875 South street.

MWAIU

NCW ADVinfliBMRNfS, j "HONOLULU UNIT10M lir V'lKttti- - 12 mtt (r HtiwIulH. Help U reside

iiii.n-Pacini- - Trwiifcr Co... Pug 2 l" PLONAL PARADi.Hrhumnn Vo tM 7 TUm patlpnle at mM Mom wlnhAimm-lnte- tUrnnc " . W. Ornhin, Cep- -

Ptrneh i.undr Paw "nl th lnd fur

Pnwullaii New Co ! in rancwn pteray anertioon wnirnDm. Ml 8 ftnjoymt by

Hawaii, T H la thaipaaM dt . nlvo

fM-00- . 8 nt l regularB HaporU racalvwl by

' It

Jordan I "age I rivalry Portlandharlna ... ... 8

1

"

"

Fort

with

beautiful

tripods

D

Mrs.Martin, J

Meeker,Mrs.

I.

M.

2

excellent

Is delightsn

a distancehotel well

for

II

te

N. 8. Bach Dry GkmAa Co..THE WBATHEr"

Local Office, U. S. Wonlher Duronu,Honolulu, T. It., February 1, 1011.

8

Temporaturc, t . .n.; S u. m.; 10 (on venrs ,(J jCrenBo tho sanitarya. in.; nnd morning minimum:

00: OS; 72: 71; CB.

Barometer roniTnig Alwolute huni- -

siiont BishopIflstnte

ofIdlty (grulus per foot; rolntlvo to be done this yoar by plocomonl. nshumidity nnd dew point at 8 a, I thoy nro approved, ns nt Uio Inst

nO'OO; C.3S0; 72; fiS.I BtBsion. Qrontor saving In money nnd

vulocro and direction at C a. !tlnie arc tho roaaons which givenin.; 8 a. in.; 10 a. in.; and noon:

SN'R: 11K: 1iiVl! 1MJ.

Italnfall 8 t the forauras ending n.

in. .OS Inches rainfall.Total wind movement during

liDiir ended at noon 330 miles."WM. D, STOCKMAN.

Section Director.

NUTSHELL senco There were

Paragraphs That Give CondensedNews the Day.

The band will play nl thotomorrow, rain or shine.

HEADQUARTERS,

valuable

association

Thursday,

Grossman,

consistingtwenty-tw- o

ninety-si- x

Laundry,

telephone

advantage cfpportunltles.

ITAR, WiDMWJAY. FWTCtteR?

dividing btmlnaiHi,

paysappropriations

In

theof

v

2253

ostato

--Trent

'

Tilslinn. .Arlington.

andtn hin ir, florai rusncritclze omn s- - 3300

,building, October being the date

ofP- - tho opening. opening

Treasurer Shlnclo ' Sllbon American building markedpaid $25,000 sala- - '.circus arrived today exhibit given by

i steamer (Jlnumne and immedl- - the guidance Doctor Hand, anilhas on theHonolulu be

convince.A Will ui tn

visiting will aGeorge T. Kluegel. P. O. j visit will a

GIG, addresses. the..... ,.iu u .,r. Ukfilike. from

nrf Honokaa helping

FLORAL PARADE. mruuui nisi ieuur

The She quartet,but

pasengers,and

Wanted:for one FLORAL PARADE

donkeys or1065 Bishop

that you gelare buying the

call at and seethe .articles you get

meting- - teachers'was ueld

read by W.j. and Rev. Dr.

Doremus ScudderFLORAL PARADE

hat entirelyYou can this

mansists upon tyie bestCabinets and to the Hawalan

Co., AlexanderG. Infant, Geo. D. Becker, Building, and

Nolte's Matson thor(, seVeraldinners

leat, clean

confer

circus.

along

hcalty.

galesStreet.

stores.

them,

nightrapers

Horno

Uncle Sam's

buslneshaving

Ltd., YoungBabson

dinners

ets the Ynwman &

Nella A. Cabinets.Clean-u- p SachsBruer,

FridayMiss I. Buren, Cart--C. rnn wees win uiuuio

C. among the buyers.: WUB 1W.

Thos. Estle, and John1 our tomakCitizens. The FLORAL PARADEFischer. Chas.

G.

F.D.

L.

andThos.

F.S.

L.

E.

'V. C.L.

A.

E.

GOOD FOR

day

Tho

who rest

will

will decido

Vnrin

FM

21

of

liv

mnmhPH

arrived

Churcn

To borrow

stamps

It.

The

goes

I.

Interest carefulwlu

obJect

C.

Paine,

wil schools toward this end.Claudlne brought li. c.

cargo, orsacks of beans, fifteen

sacks of potatoes, fourteen crates ofonoof sundries one lot

fixtures.window for

specials. Cups, bowls,steens are all included in

sale.Get into that YOU arepart the the

FLORAL PARADE nueeds YOU.will be than satisfied

the laundry byFrench J. Abadlo Prop.,777 King Street. that

famous Laundry no branches.1491.

covering Kvalls andceilings find Dekorato

and for exteriorsurfaces Fuller's Cold Water Paintis tho by andCooke 177 So. street.

Nolte's Cafe, Fort stret betweenQueen, open

run down Haleiwa on tho limited. 'a. m. to .Meals at all

hotelor

roomy

trial

tho

venlngThe Honolulu and

Darylng Co. Robinson BuildingQueen street, has at Its quarries tho

grade of hard crushed rockin the Tenders furnished onre.piest No.

Ask any man how hohis ho will tell you

having ready money totake of ASavings Account you readymoney. Ltd. Fortand Merchant.

Warehouse of theCo., is especially

for storago of Householdand Companymen for packing of goods

and

1,

M.

l'age the which

suitedgoods

the

Office street, opposite LewersCooko,

THl Mil.

Mw

lioth of the proposed oxciirslnns fromthe Sound.

One hundred nnd twpnty tlwusnnddollar hoeji by tlio

In Knhnnko during the

condition of (lint district.The of tho coming "Sos-slo- n

1011," in book form, 1b

cubicm,:

Windthe ns this

Sam for the booksofhours

session expenses.Miss Eda Dcchcrt, for the two

stenographer the odlcesof Lightfoot & LIghtfoot, hasappointed official stenographer In thecourt of Judge Whitney, second judgeof tho first circuit, during ab'- -

NEWS A Mr. Hell.applicants.

Incoming l'nter-lslan- d boats broughtin 9719 bags ot sugar this morning,viz., 2990 L. A. on tho W. G. Hall,

Klpahulu nd 47G Honokaa onthe Wallelo. The W. G. Hall reported

folows

rou nanathe cry realdenta

few like

thethe will met

the newtho

mand willDr. McQrcw

Jnnunry, wasbusy

Co. oxnmplo,far

wnswuh

sovoral salesnewcomers

homo

lots andwaiting

newcomers lots

Jr.;W. Whitney;

72,327 awaiting shipment ica" uv aud40.2R9. liprimllntlon noatarlck.as M. A. K.coia oatn. notein.j rfnc bags, G. McD. planned, the

PARADE and the work1as8, for The the

City jyesterdav and Siegrist's great by gymna- -

out wages and from Maul underies. tlio

the ately embarked steam- - wlli ais0 clv- -

turant for generation, Wllholmlna for the 0nQ of giv.and ...wua t,, t.iB nlm-ir- v

Allby be

offu.. Tht

1065also

cowsore

See youryou

And the

the territoriallast

were

andGeo

Theand

lheBmi

and

andand

The

and of

See Dimond's

nnd

CltY and that

You

this has

will

For sale

Merchant and

got and

The

rise

law

islands promise.HonoluluElks favor

notifying there menagerie ac-llo- x

their tompanying

yesterday they have done

Headquarters sugar ironipAlexander Building. place

deinrtmentperfectly clean eighteen sundries, consented

milk 2890.Kona Nlghtln-asses- )

day.(sometimes called

greenwhen

showmany

whenFnrring-to- n,

suggestion:concealing

News

Mrs. Boll, Bisgaard, Miss,1''0"Wed-Burdic-

Bruce

Anna Dunham,scools

Miss good

Mrs.

Neustadler,

Shepherd

helpcompara-

tively small

automobile,packagescircus

$1.00

jugs

your head

with done

Remember

Telephone

most satisfactory

best.Ltd., King

fromInter--

hotel hours.Construction

Ltd.,

finestcity.

Office 2281.

successfulstmt

fiyim

givesBank

Transfer

have experiencedtheso

tclilphono

killed

King

hnvopast

'printingLnwa

hnvosuggestion, under

Uncle

pastyears

been

IN many

cool.

bagsKauai

when

cream.

1871.

OVER 80 LEFT

DD HELM!The Matson steamer Wilhelirihia,

of

gone

A.

D.and.

hold

Mrs. E. A.She will

left for

from

is

hasas the

K.Is Ylth

heof cane

G.

inby

will

this In

FIFTEEN COTTAGES

from (iin'i

a r for iiukI- -

nrn nnd

a very

of I

of beis to be

ofde

of bo met byand! ns

souio reallnat n nn

Thofor It as

on ns ns that

one snlo of toand

to who tothe a

n andat

went welllist of

who oron to In

RSTONES

by H. adL.

on t0 e... thnana ;

tho K., It is to onthen K- - and K- - first

3010 ofis to be

in slumby of

res- -

of a er The en is t0

H.

iiuu nf nn,1

uny

morework

trom

SU11B

the , agthat next Is I Ia

ir i

and Pulpitwill

and forthob i..... ' ooartnini nn

the urougnt zuuu Dags oi "t - k Til. I r r it. flb.l i. O 1 1 -

Young the ana will u nau,of Central kindly

is and the' bad to his

pure no

4

at

forA of

Perley

A

patentin

so

at

n r oi

"e olof ,sMr.

'y

J.

saucers,

thoit

of

Foryou the

Lewers

Is 5to 7 p. m.

itwas

Hawaii

the

toscheme

federal

Just

and

the

been

in b fc

nnnA

oitho

Idea.

and

W.

by

by

and Y.M. A. of

all

in' and In

uiu lue

of

.1.

11,8

of

C.

forby P. M. Hall had

this by

that that hadbe carried out, he re

to and thusChurch

this

with a of 5000 tons ger s was In attendance andof and played the of the dock.

left the on i A list of the passengers departed Isthis morning, for Coast. I column.She had on board upwards eighty , m

passengers, the BORN,lean and a couple ofing vaudeville artists. The of In Paaullo,

out on the Wil- - ary 22, to Mr. and F. W.were returning who a son.

were by a of, 1

residents gathered on the Ber- - fine jou star

PERSONS IN THE NEWS

BRUCE CARTWRIGHT left for tliocoast on tho Wilhelmlna today.

R. C. inspector-ln-cbarg- e

the federal Immigration station, hasto

BOARDMAN, recently a localnewspaperman, has a posi-tion on the Japan Times In Toldoi

J. CAMERON has selected asmanager of the Seaside Hoteltakes of tho property today.

MRS. JOHNSON of Pahoa Is aor Mr. and Douth-lt- t,

Kalmukl spend someHonolulu.

CHIEF SANITARY INSPECTORCLIFFORD CHARLOCK

yesterday morning tocampaign.

DR. RAYMOND, who has been In theHospital, recovering

effects of an operation forat his homo convale

MRS. CHURCH, who actingsocial manager Alexander

Young, Hawntian andduring two seasons, has resigned

that position.

ANDRLWS, once of Honomuplantation, connected a

' Spanish In Portowhere Is introducing Hawaiianmethods cultivation.

W. SCOTT, of Wailuku,ponied Mrs. Scott, arrivedtown this morning tho Clnudlnoand to again onFriday.

STENOGRAPHER from JudgeWhitney's left for Hawaii

to take notes' tho

'( ontlniK'il

to alonl Ther la groaiat rcaaouahlc rental

cornea from chielly,though tourlate

to have their own homea whileIn city. Something the demand

tourtata (ho"Pioneer," which tho nnme

Trent apartment Iiouboyesterday deacrlbod,

realdentahomea contem

plates constructing.With firms, tho

oxcoed- -period. Trust

thobiggest month recordoBtnblishmont concerned.

$15,000 a homo nreHldcnt considerable

Intend becotnoiwIdontB, among latter being?4.000 homo, $2,200 sev-

eral homos smaller figures.ing there Is agood residents

want homeswhich build specified

E

(Continued Page One.)

stone, Clarence Cooke,dress, Judge "Aruer- -

Sudlonce

1G.200 bags, workbags' haB'

others.a

back a team

Stand-b- y UQ

Coast. thege

rooms,

Filing

Diggs,

a

business knQwnpaid

which

Satur- -

trays

"Press dinner," the.take the opportunity

thanking the pulpit press'mii Kukulhaele

Everv Pond from,

Dairy .pacages postpone departureabsolutely Certified

Telephone

automobile.

Mrs.

chickens,

nnterior

the mainland until Saturday ncxtljjthe S. Mr.

planned to leave morning theMatson Wilhelmlna, but in order!

tho program arranged couldsolved remain the

quartet to sing at theopening afternoon

cargo close upon bandsugar miscellaneous merchan- - ship out

dise, wharf promptly timebound the published in another

ofincluding Great Amer- -

circus returnWALKER Hawaii, Janu- -

the passengers goinghelmina tourists, Walker,

farewelled large crowdwharf, printing,

BROWN,

Hawaii.

taken

been

SAMguest

weeks In

Maui re-

sume the sanitary

Queen'stho

scent

ofMoana hotels

from

largeconcern Rico,

accom

return Mnui

BELLCourt

morning,

Vnzr

wouldmuch

whllo

oiidi,mgly

roports

Thero

Build

Union

China.

linerbeen

enableUnion

ceremony

bulkMrs.

Office.

been

case of Scott vs. the Kona Development Co. it Is anticipated that hewill be away for about three orfour weeks.

ATTORNEY CLAUDIUS McBRIDEhas forsaken his forensic love temporality, and has gone to Hawaiiwith Stenographer Bell of Judgewnitneys court, jucuride is an

excellent shorthand writer, and hohas been retained with Bell to report the case of Scott vs. The KonaDevelopment Oa.

MR. AND MRS. J. H. NEUSTADLER,of San Francisco, who 'have beenstaying hero as the guests of Mrand Mrs. E. D. Tenney, left thismorning for the Coast by the Wil-helmlna. They were in Honolulufor just eight days.City, has charge of a bunch of llawaliau musicians and is making agreat hit with thorn In Omaha,

JUDGE DOLE intends taking a sixmonths vacation, and he has planned a tour of Europe In companywith Mrs. Dole. They will leavehere In about April next for themainland, and will then travel leisurely to Europe, where thoy willtuke In all the principal cities. NoItinerary Is to bo drawn up, as theyprefer to go Just to those placesthat they feel would prove inter'estlng. They will return via theUnited States.

DISTRICT ATTORNEY BRECKONSwas so much better this morningthat ho was ablo to venture downstairs and take his place at thebreakfast table, l't Is stated nowthat) he is on the high road toreoovery. but his original intentionof coming to the office this weekwill not bo adhered to, as It isthought bettor that ho should takeno risks. It is confidently expected, however, that he will be at hisdesk early next week.

Clean UpOF

Sale

Wash MaterialsIWIim'AKY Isl TO Itli.

This is ii snlo Unit should croaio (lie keenest inleresl. Sweep-ing reductions have been iniide in

FIOU1M51J J1ATISTK, LAWKS,DIMITIES, SHEHK ORGANDIES,

1MUNTED SWISSES AND FOULARDS

It gives nn unprecedented opportunity of securing bar-

gains h Wash Goods.

WEDNESDAY MORNING, FEIJRUAR.Y 1st.

Sachs Dry Goods Co.,Corner Fort and Bcretania Streets.

EMINENTLY SATISFACTORYIS THE WORK DONE DY

FRENCH LAUNDRY J. ABADIE, PROPRIETOR.777 King Street No Branches Phono 1491

Perfect CleanlinessIn every department

Pure Milk and Creamfrom absolutely healthy cows

THE POND DAIRYTelephone 2890.

For Road Worki

Wo offer tho finest crushed rock in Honolulu.

NO. 2 NO. 3 and NO. 4

Bins always filled. Never short of material and a stone thatfills the bill no matter the demand put ui-o- It.

j

Honolulu Construction and DrayingCompany, JLVtci

Robinson. Building,Office Telephone 2281,

Queen Street.Quarry Telephone 2180

QUALITY IS FIRST WITH US AND IT CANNOT BEHAD WITHOUT PROPER ARRANGEMENTS FOR KEEP--

ING MEAT. YOU HAVE NEVER HEARD OF PTOMINEPOISONING FOLLOWING A MEAL AT WHICH OURMEATS WERE SERVED.

Metropolitan Meat MarketW. F. HEILBRON and A. LOUIS, Proprs.

Telephone 181-J- .

2 J3l.OO

t

1

K

That Are "Hummers"OuivEwa window is full of useful tableware specialties. In order

to close out (he remains of the ninny short lines usually on handaround the holiday season, we are sacrificing everything unsold.

At $1.00 you are buying at a fraction of their value.

The assortment includes cups and saucers, celery trays, bon boiis,sugars and creams, mayonnaise bowls, jugs, vises, steins, olives,nut bowls, etc., etc.

Be Wise And Pick Early S

W. W. Dimond & Company, Ltd.,

53-5- 7 King Street. Honolulu

Page 9: XUrSLlXJXT JtC - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduThe new copper box, which will bo 0x7x12 Inches, and will bo laid with Death Benefit $1,000.00 for $5.00 per year select Weekly Indemnity

,1

i

2nd Section 2nd lltibnPAQE8 9 TO 12. PAQE8 9 TO 12.

HONOLULU, HAWAII, WE0NE8DAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1911.

HOW CAPTAIN

THE HAWAIIAN STAR.

Pi

'

SAN FRANCISCO, January 19. With .!

the lifting surfaces of his aeroplanepoised like a monster eagle, EugeneEly , the daring Curtjss blrdman,swooped gracefully to the quarterdeckof tho cruiser Pennsylvania yesterdaymorning and after paying his respects

. to Captain Charles F. Pond, command-

ing the vessel, and receiving the con-

gratulations of the assembled crowd,tuned up his biplane, and with anothergraceful sweep disappeared into thoupper air currents, en route to Sel-frid- ge

field. The whistles of hun-

dreds of 'large and Bmaii hay craftroared applause, and thousands of per-

sons who lined the wharves andcrowded the decks of steamers raisedcheer upon cheer in a grand ovationto the nervy aviator.

As early as 9 o'clock In the morningpeople began to gather on the docks,and (Small craft of every description,their decks crowded with sightseers,began to gather around the monstercruiser of the Pacific fleet, the deck ofAvhich had been prepared for the al

of-th- blrdman.By 10 o'clock every eye was strained

in the direction of Selfridge field inan effort to obtain the first sight ofthe aviator.- - The atmosphere was hazyand objects in the-ai- r were discernedwith difficulty, and every bird thatmade its ' appearance on the horizonstarted an excited argument as to itsidentity.

After many false alarms, during

.which a great deal, of good-natur-

badinage was passed between thecrews of the bay steamers, a smallspeck wa3 discovered moving rapidly

above the hills back of Hunter's point,

and tho observers, after a close ex-

amination through their glasses, an-

nounced that Ely was on his way.

Their surmises were confirmed by a

sudden stillness which settled over thegreat colony of sea gulls that hadbeen angrily quarreling for scraps

thrown overboard by ..the ship stew- -

the A.;

shore terror

S.

assumed the s.proportions a and a mlnuate later form Ely

as his pro-

peller whirring and engines singingmusically, swept onward, running rap-

idly with the twelve-kn- ot windwas blowing. He circled the

.of the fleet, his hand to the of-

ficers and he passed,completing a arc, bore down on

the landing platform hadon the tho vessel.

Alights on

The vast multitude gathered on tho

shore and the steamers held

breath as he approached the ship. Tnoi. tnnJlnrr u nfrn vlnWOfl mm fl

o smali whencompared with size tho delicate

and reckoned by the speed7Z tch it was With a

dip and a final ot theglides the beautfful craft settledthe platform ease of a feather

stray1which had been wafted by some

air current, a final skid,

slid he and came

a stop within7, a few feet of the

uiudi. '

As the came to a stoptho

assembled after cheeraroso from the shore and, Joining thohuzzas of the passengers and crews of

the smallljay combined with thenoise the whistles a mighty roar

of the device at oncotho. machine checked

REGEVED

AIRSHIP ON THE PHILADELPHIA

M RAL REESE IS ON DECK

rr,ruP

a standstill within twenty-fiv- e feetVi nil rrVi ra f tnlnrv

Ely Saluted Executive Officer.Ely Jumped to tho saluted and

said to Lieutenant-Commande- r C. C.Fewel, executive officer of the ship

"Come aboard, sir."Captain Pond hurried forward to con

gratulate the aviator, but Mrs. Elywas before htm and she she was firstto throw her arms around En- -

V rglnla was the next to congratulateEly, and then tho lnun- -

dated by a of well wishers. Mrs.Ely from her dress a bunch of

(

violets and placed them on the' ma- -

The aviator and his werethen escorted Captain Pond's cabin,where they were to thowardroom officers.

Flies From TheEly remained on the cruiser nearly

an hour,, during which time prepara- -Hons were made for his departure,The platform was cleared of all per- -

sons excepting the few necessary to ,

Ely in his departure, and tractive. Tho chairs will all beexamining his machine moved, and in their stead there will

possible damage, the daring blrdman"6 raucft seating accommouivclimbed again to seat in the

The propeller was whirled,

It

to

asto In of

the of

the

th0

the is tho" the

at wlu b0 ab,e t0 Which Is to be thrown to the tho to bo respect to ho ad- -those ag gQod y,ew ot tne as on 31 Pro- - tho beaten track travellers on mlts Honolulu

the back it go. lu The on tho ference will be to pleasure "lso beneflt Most otgracefully down the and be arranged in formation, engraving on It is within a tourists, If all, tho

dip downward and of bo word "Austra-- , the have Pacific touch at Honolulu, but fewthe amid the o? JJccordlng; fo must bo of tho as awakened to tho of ad Australia

of the stage. well the stamp value in vertising their a Itinerary. It Is desirewho were aboard interior necessary, be re-- flgura3, both the Nbw Wales of

at the invitation of Cap- - tho tens; 'A' prlzo of (f will be established tho Tourist fairs. he is totain Mrs. Oath-- fences the on two for tho design and ($250) for Bureau of Hunter Is head, but

T sides. the best. the results achieved on twelve.)Aviator C. not the decorators''

t.nn ItAAn nJn rrl mlf

ards, and, as though by prearranged of the Independence, Lieu-signa- l,

flock winged its tenant John Walker Jr., U. S. Mrs.

to the nearby in of the Paul Beck, J. McHenry, R. McHenry,

great birdlike shape which appeared Miss Margerie Rear

the miral Corwln P. Rees, U. N., (re-Th- e

speck rapldly as avla-- , Rear Admiral J. B. Milton, U.

tor approached, until It N., (retired) Aviator Willard, Dud- -

of biplane,the of himself be-

came visible machine, with

vesselswaving

crews as and,great

beenerected stern of

Warship.

on Its

the of

traveling.ul whir en- -

uponwith the

and, withalong platform to

afterUllllliuy

aerop'aneZnrn

pandemonium broke loosewatchers. Cheer

craft,of in

ulriess

wlfViitf

deck,

him.

aviatorhost

took

chine. wifeto

Introduced

Cruiser.

assist after

ueuer

readilyhand ci0Ses

platform, to years

part necessitythe

AviatorMrs.

grew

F. Pond, Miss Elizabeth Pond, J.McHenry, Mrs W Ham Mrs.George Davis, Miss Mildred Lans- -lng, A. Miss McDon--

aid. Miss Anna Peters, Lieutenant J.E. Pond, Mrs. J. D. Peters, JohnCoryell, Dr. and Mrs. William Martin,Miss Wynn Martin, Sue NIchol,Ensign F .G. Blasdel, and

lov 'Riirrnii-rh- s and host of acquaintof the various officers of

ship.

AT THE THEATERS

SAVOY THEATER RECEIVESA LARGE

A very large went to tho Savoy Theater last attracted by

wonderful-volce- u Doric irio, ono,of hits of the Season inville circles.. The tl ee younsjnen

a reputation inthat is as Is attested by thePacked houses nightly Last was

"o exception. The trio were In lino

silver and Rogers, the dancingteam of young women, to their

while the Laredos put onabout the best of their acts,

nrt tnwnrri nlllnfr th ntlll tho""lo ones and big ones, the awkward

merriment,

EMPIREWHEN GLADSTONES DANCE

"The Old Plantation" has greatest

of applause. Added to the shouts of tho loss of Crawford andcrowd were moans of Meeker, tho comedians, who to

the of cruisers, tho tho Coast today, tho Empire wlll haveof the larger a shortened bill, but the little GTad-an- d

tho sTirlll shrieks the gasoline stono Sisters are making up

dotted water for ting on a little ot their own per-- a

mllo In direction. formance. The Gladstones do not fallshut down his engine when to get an ovation every time they ap-te- n

feet from tho and a slight pear. They are llttlo porform-gu- st

of wind him up a few feet.He landed about feet from Tho MiiBlcal Bentleys are addingend of the platform, and the drag weekly to their fund of selections tohooks on tho skids caught tho bo played upon the Marlmba-xylo-rope- s

which had been stretched across phone, has lost none of Its popu-th- o

for that purpose. The use- - larlty. Among the Hawaiianf was ap-- 1

parent, to

was

for

his bi-

plane.

the

the

m

the

tho

IMPROVEMENTS

mounted

woilh

HI PARK THEATER

tlio meeting of tho Directors ofthe theatrical combine, or to itits title, tho Honolulu Amuso- -

intents Ltd., on Sunday last,Manager Congdon strongly thenecessity for renovating tho ,Parktheater. Ho has had this In view fora long and, as already mention-ed in these columus, ho had ear--

33 (inn fnr IrrmrnvompYitu intho Parki A11 thla was mappcd outLoforo tho combine was consummated

pointed out tho necessity for effecting the (Improvements,, I'njfil thoi

to his request,Accordingly next night

will witn'ess the performance Intho theater before thotransformation is begun. of tho

wllI emerge a lorl.flod park and ,t wlI1 then bo th0raost .to-da- to and comfortable

theater Honolulu.former will be

tainedj, or perhaps bettered,the theater is again.

After tho performance onnight the Park will be given overto tho contractors, and it willhn vnf ho rlntAr- -

mined but it will be tho earliestLjble date. Tho improvements to booffected are on a Alreadythe proscenium has been reared, andthis will be and made at- -

each person bo alloted much

oooto will hn irrnrtpil Hn thnt. thoso

""- -

for an razing. In of the'like structure will

lnstaUedlono tUat wlll add toot the theater.

The disposition of the present staffot wlll bo noted at ajater date,

continues to pleasq.usual and a

change of program tomorrow night,j

REPUTATIONBOOSTED BY FILMS

Not the least of the of

the Park Theater are Its moving plc- -

ture In fact tho theater made

lts first reputation by the excellenceh, Aim and this has been

.oinAliio.t ovpr slurp.Lo Marest Brothers, topsy-turv- y

musicians, feature piano play-

ing is one of their eccentric stunts,the eccentricity duo to ono or

tho team standing on ills head whilefingering the keys, are as asever.

Baldwin, the songstress, willhave new songs the week,an,i Harding and eccentric

and singers, change theiract.

THE IS HAVINGA MUSICAL WEEK

Music Is supplied this weekat the Theater Hughes',orchestra is rendering selections thataro derived mainly musicalcomedies. The orchestral part of theevening's entertainment is ono of thoBIJou Next in lino is thoBijou's amateur night, held on

when Kakaako, Kewalo, Palamaand mass their best amateur

upon tho and give thean entertainment that Is worth

many times tho of admission.present program Is running well.

Burke and find plenty of com-

edy stuff to while Carroll Is awonder a clog-dance- r,

The company will make achange ot program tomorrow nightwhen a varied assortment of entertalnment will be

UNIFORM POSTAGE STAMPSFOR AUSTRALIA.

Mr. Thomas, Postmaster General ofAustralia, has decided to call for de-

signs for a uniform stamp for thoCommonwealth. Tho designscontain features characteristic otAustralia. stamp must bo 1 1-- 8

ln. by In. and tlio designsaro not to exceed four times that,mesuremont. Each design must beaccompanied a photographic re

hold upon tho audiences. Stanley.-tho'jproducti- the, exact size required

THE H1LQ BURNS

CL0BJJG DAY

The Hllo Masonic Hall was crowd-ed to Its capacity last Saturday night,when tho Hllo Club entertain-ed in of the birthday Ito-ob- rt

Hums. A delightful .concortprogram was rendered. was fol-

lowed by dance, tho country peoplereturning to their homes on a specialtrain leaving this city for Papaikaushortly after midnight. The program,

under the direction of Mrs.J. T. Lewis, was well andrendered with ability.

Tno opening number was a bag-plp- n

solo by Mr. Robert Forbes, fol-lowed by a vocal selection, "Tho Bon-nie Lass of Balloehmyle,'" renderedby Mrs. Dnuglns, of Honomu, In ex-

ceeding sweet voice. A special fea-ture of the evening came In two vio-lin numbers by Miv Paul Tallet, ofHonomu, who was heard In inthis city for the first time and show-ed himself be a violinist of greatability. A quartette composed of Mr.and Mrs. Robert Forbes, Mrs. Louiseliapai and John Kennedy

"A Man's a Man for a' and"Tho Dell's Awa with tho Exlseman"most acceptably, and a piano"Hether Bells' by Mrs.Miss Jeanforth a gerat deal of applause, thoughthe number tho evening

the echo.Mr. George Lilllcoe sang two

song? very acceptably.

fnr sttnmn

Fewer Parts

AUSTRALIA'S DELEGATE SAYS

HAWAII IS PLACE TO DIVERT

TOURISTS

"Honolulu Is a lovely place," said convinced the legislators that thdPercy Hunter, standing tho deckstM a wise ono.of tho steamer Zealandla Monday A SOUTHERN PARADISE,afternoon that vessel came through Now Wales Is a paradlso fortho channel tho "I havotho tourlsts. tho confines thisalways had the most pleasant memo-Sho- rt

?.rtI,oI 11 Is ,ml's8lhle goover a11 tho Srund covered cnthusi--ries of Honolulu my previous 8tlcally by Hunter in his lengU.yvisit, ho continued, "but I must con-tal- k with representative tholess that I don't like this weather," Star. The beauties of Sydney har-an- das ho spoke Hunter gazed rue- - bor, tho world-fame- d Jenolan

the bank of mist which, heights Mount

S JS?xiSZ STrfn nUrT Vast shee runs S? interiorrlnrl nf U"'-- "ut CUOUgh l,OS been Said

at ft Pan-Pacif- ic?mmn" whet tho act,tes o ctt-weal-

th

ed Australia. toSSSSL 7 NrX,U UHPrrt,,T BlVe 8erIes ctures1 must atedttT'1 lten. and cinematograph

and'prlmary object conference f landing by

also brought to devise meahs for attracting- - of tirH i,fnr ., ,7

of was

on

of

inot

of

best received was Mrs. Paul Bartels'tho Philippines, and and Japan.vocal solo, "Twas Within a Mile," , It Is special province to seo

was cheered toScotch

tho Tho onmnoHUnn

harbor.to

towards

w ou..u, 4 . tQ9 back haye just open far south In Pacific as off ln tourists,tho wave of Elys holding a Btag0 thoso May next. for that whatever benefits

machine let It rolled fronti seats side will given designs which bent. may Australia.circular

'best lend themselves I only few that tne not who cross

without a Into theso boo, course, will a reduced Tho Australian Governmentssky redoubled raised 'their distance J Ha" design o them Include In theirthousands spectators. from The whole of the as Arabic resorts; short five Hunter's to

Among those the where will(

or In figures and ac bring about a different stateI painted, especially unsightly 500) given Government What contemplates

Pond were: Mrs. Ely, that bound theater adopted which

erlne Cachet Rad- - Even picture machine tho next have (Continued page

ley, Hubert Latham, gallery will escape6 4.1. t nA

Guy Brownentire way

Elemdorf, Ad-

en horizon.the tired) ;

' ;(

which

which

f

Mrs.

D.Miss Burroughs,

Mrs.

MissCaptain Mrs.

aances

VERY CROWO

crowdnight j

thov.nde-

i

have madelasting,

night

vo!ce;,

added

thontnr

GETS CROWD

the

i withthe tho weird return

t

sirens deep- -(

throated burrs steamersot by

which the moreevery

Ely aboutship, classy

carried ers.sixty

placed'( which

decks melodies

being

woridi

Atgive

correctCo.,

urged

time,

mnrknil

He

directors accededSaturday

lastPark real

Outdecorators.

summer in ThoPark's standard main- -

whenoperating

Saturday

whenpnnnnt.

pos- -

large scale.

painted

tlon, a

'

inanus' " " -early place

thoappearance

performers

ballad singer,The matlneo today

PARK'S

attractions

films.

norvlnn

lli(41tl.....'l( '

Tho

being

good

Winniefor coming

Wasson,dancers will

BIJOU

galoreBijou where

from

features.Fri-

days,Nuuanu

talent stage au-

dienceprice

TheBurke

offer,as

entire

made.

ORDERED

must

Tho7-- 8 Inside,

byof

Humshonor of

a

which wassolected

public

Mr. render-ed That,,

duet," Lewis

which

which

was

South

since

caves,fully snowy Kosclos- -

f '

slides

.

ChinaHunter's

scale.costs

South

James already

hands

whose

HUDSON

:n . --liU:tourists to the Pacific, which meansAustralia, as well as Honolulu, Fiji,

mat Australia Is advertised amongtho tourists of the world and thoaim .of that advertising is to directtho footsteps of tho tourists to the

'irrnnt tRlnnil rnnlltmnt whlnh Maa cn

and power, This meams

to Wear Out unci to

AMERICANS

and

views, in the course of willth. advantage to bo derived

fPPHvA mnnn

ti ....wumoio ntnt.

Hunter comes to Honolulu with anu,uu "e nas not nau tlio pro- -

l'osaIs of the Honolulu PromotionCommittee placed jbeQoro 'him yet,but' as ho realizes how Honolulu andAustralia Stand On common crnnnil

99

be Repaired

Are

t The best yetA BRAND NEW CAR AND A DISTINCT ADVANCE IN MOTOR CAR DESIGNING

900 fewer parts in the chassis of the HUDSON 33 than in the average car of equal size

DUSTSand and dlist is drawn through the radiators of most cars but the

Valves and all Moving: Parts of the HUDSON "33"Absolutely Dust Proof.

The HUDSON TOURING "33" carries five passengers . The body is made ofsheet metal. The dash is free from all attachments The wheel base is 114 inches, Rim-ing boards of cast aluminum. The HUDSON PONY TONNEAU 33" isbuilt for four passengers. Seats are low and tilt backwards. An easy riding car and the dashis bell shaped

Associated Garage,Merchant Bishop Streets

WANTED

-

"33

MEKR PROOF

PROOF

.

Ltd.

i1

1

X

.1

W4;

iI1

1

Page 10: XUrSLlXJXT JtC - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduThe new copper box, which will bo 0x7x12 Inches, and will bo laid with Death Benefit $1,000.00 for $5.00 per year select Weekly Indemnity

TNtf

For a Good Meal, Quickly Pre-pared And Well Served Go To The

PALM CAFE' j

PHONE 2011 HOTEL STREET

Remember the Palm Test la "The Beat" T

TOM SHARP pkohe 5HARP 5ign5The Painter jggr Are

Elite Building Trade Promoters

EXCLUSIVE PATTERNS IN HANDSOME GREYSEnglish and American Weaves. Made to your order witii &

and style unequalled.

W. W. AHANA 62 South King Street

The Yawman & ErbeFiling Cabinet

arc recognized by business men the world over as the best thathave been Invented.

Hawaiian News Co., Ltd.leXJieLYoou,,gTHE PIONEER PAPER HOUSE.

Tungsten LampsHouseholders and Merchants who are interested in reducing

their light bills should use these lamps. They give

TWICE THE LIGHT FOR THE SAME MONEY

A clearer, brighter, whiter, steadier and better light in every

way than that obtained with the ordinary lamp.

The Hawaiian Electric Co., LtcT

The owner is up in the airSayihgrTell roe I prayVVhylhia paint peek away,"Asnepulb outahandful ofhair.

J;" Now Hickory won't pull his hairIf he'll give us a trial that's fair

.. ..If :

t :!

o

And use rR"S-'-fL--For work on land or on sea"'Tis the best paint on earth," he'll declare.

Sherwin-William- s make pure prep ared paint from tho best material ob-

tainable, with the best machinery kn own. They have been making it forsome fifty years. It don't' pay you to try to mix your own paint when youcan get S. W. P.

E. O. Hall & Son, Limited.

The fact that so many attempts have been made toimitate the cleanable features of the ,

LEONARD(Cleanable)

REFRIGERATORis sufficient to demonstrate its superiority. Sold only by

H. Hackfeld & Co., Ltd.,Hardware Department Hackfeld Building

3

TUB HAWAIIAN 8TAII, WHDMIMDAY, FBHRUARY 1, Ml.

II FIJI'S TRIP TO KILAUEA

R

11. Wlnidoy, of Suva, wrote the fol- - lor nf(0r FIJI thnn any scenery onlowing account of Kllaitea to a Suva ttils island.friend: "Hut from tho oiitar rim to tho

Wo wont down to the volcano of scene of activity la whero your troit- -

KIHuca. Leaving onmp intending to be bias begin. It Ipi nil lavn hod, unuvon,

hack by tho following Sunday's liotit, and s rough n the road to Tnmnvtm,

we discovered that tho boat returned which In saying somotiting. 'lhoro '

011 Tuesdaytoo late for us sd wo the resemblance of a trail across, worn

had to got In and saw olt tlmo and by a continual stroam of slghtsoors.

so make Friday's boat. We spent tho romaJmlor of tho day ox- -

formed In the andPlorlHK caves lava,"Let mo show you the paco wo kept

' collecting 'Po os halr- -a halr-llk- cup- - Wo loft hero at 8 a. m. on Tuos

"Mtartnnco caused by tho cooling andday arriving at Honolulu at 0:15; hadcontracting of tho lava,

to visit the town and got down Just"Wo tho best view of the wholein time to catch boat leaving at 10. got

Qi.,n,i m snvnrnl imrtti on four of business at night. It Is then as nenr

Mm oilier-- Islands, nrrlvlng at Hllo (ISO a conception of Dante's Inferno or

miles) at 8 n. in. on Wednesday; jump- - Satan's nbodo as ono can imagine.

cd aboard train waiting nt dock, ar-

riving at Olcnwood 9:2020 miles In-

land. Had kal kal there, and set outfor the volcano "per boot," a nice lit?ale "hike" of 12 1- -i miles, all uphillwalking at that; arrived at volcano at1:30 p. m.. and stayed there till 2 a.

m. Thursday, when wo "hiked" backto Glenwood. arriving at 7:30; gottrain at 8:30, reaching Hllo at 9: 4 5.

and starting-- off again at 10:10;stopped at way ports, arriving at Ho-

nolulu at 7 on Friday. Now, that's

1859

1891

1887

1909

.

now

the andovedoos more good than alltho Many are

and to good andgo made spot.

wnat tnoy afterlife of and sin; and it

a place one wouldlike his soul to rest.

"It was nothing if not thewe spent We tried to get

a few winks of no luck,In tho place it as too ono

going some, but the did good, side (the crater Is 4000 feet above sea"That volcano is great sight. H level and It Is mighty cold up there)

has got Rotorua skinned ns an attrac- - and the side tho fire would botion for tourists. you see in d. during the nightboiling water at Itotorna you see there we had to shift round, as a change oIn lava rock. The original era- - wind brought the sulphur fumes andtor 7 miles in diameter; tho present smoke in our direction,crater, which Is three miles across, be- - "Leaving at 2 a. m. we had harding about the In the center of time getting back. The light of thethis again is tho of Are, about fire us for a way, but after thathalf-a-mi- io wide, with of flro it intensified the darkness, and weshooting up around the and were momentarily In danger of catch-boilin- g

up In great fashion In the lake; ing a leg In a of lava, whichIt flowing towards one end, but co is a very hard substance. The nine-whe- re

Providence only knows. The mile walk to Greenwood was cool andrest of the crater Is a smoking mass pleasant; it was altogether a fine out-- of

rock and sulphur, some day, 1 ing, rather short, but we took in allguess, ready to go up sky high. there was to and were fortunate in

"The road from Glenwood to the all there to see and were fortun- -edge of the is in good ate In the weather. It rains there, theyand prettier of scenery say, 3C4 days a year; wewould be hard to find anywhere. It Is struck the 3G5th.'

THE WORLD NEWS

FOR THE OIL

SP TUA

IN(Continued from page Ave.)

that to January 1, 1909, the produc-tion of oil In eighteen States of theUnited States during the previous fifty

of discovered. Is being organ2,000,000,000 barrels, 84,000,-000,0-

gallons.

State and Years of Production.Barrels of 42

Gallons.Pennsylvania and New

to 1900 C98.009.SC2

Ohio, 187G to 1909 377,108,902California, 187C to 1909 194,502,891Texas, 1889 to 1909 129.02C.4G5

Indiana, 1889 to 1909 93.411,140Oklahoma, to 1909 90,883,201Illinois, 1889 to 1909 G2.551.789Kansas, 1859 to 1909 44,158,931

Louisiana, to 1909 34,248,641Colorado, to 1909 9,253,938Kentucky and Tennessee,

1883 to G.004,315Wyoming and Utah, 1894 to

10.09 103,500Missouri and Michigan, 1889

to 1909 36,917

Total (United States 18

States) 1,9S6,180,942But the production of oil on the

American continent Is not confined tothe United States. Petroleum has been

both in Central and in SouthAmerica; and Mr. Mill ward gives acomprehensive survey of the

countries.Increasing Production In Argentina.After three years or persistent effort

and exploration, a spring of petroleum,at a depth of 1738 feet, and severalproducing wells are being worked

L HE 5

Standing on brink lookingspiritual

parsons living. the reso-lutions promises be

to church on that Theysee are to expect .1

wickedness isnot exactly where

excitingnight there.

sleep, but suchfirst cold on

outing uba

nextWhat Twice

moltenis

aconte.

lake helpedgeysers

edgesfissure

is

seewas

crater shape,a stretch evidently

nearly

York,

found

various

company at Comodoro Itlvadlva, Chu- -

but. The product compares favorablywith that of Ohio and Pennsylvania.An English company has a well ofhigh-grad- e oil, flowing at the rate of

(80 barrels dally, at San Itafael, Menuoza.

Brazil's New Discovery.Although asphalt of various grades

has been found and largely used inmanufactures in the republic, it wasonly quite recently tliat petroleum was

years reached tho enormous total A companyor

1902

Izcd to develop the Industry in thedistrict of Ibitinga, Sao Paulo. Extensive deposits of lignite occur atCamamu, on the Marahu River, froma ton of which three barrels of oil canbe produced.

Great Prospects In Chile.Until recently crude oil has been im

ported for use on the Taltal Itailway,but an American company has nowbrought in a 500-barr- eI well at Carel-map- u,

500 miles south of Valparaiso,and experts report that this field, will,under proper development, becomeone of the worlds great producers ofhigh-grad- e petroleum. '

Asphalt in Cuba.In 1881 five wells of excellent

naphtha were sunk at depths from 300to 800 feet, and tot many years theyhave been profitably worked; butcrude oil for refining on the Island islurgely Imported, gallonshaving been received from the UnitedStates In the year ending June 30,1909. The asphalt garnered for aboutseven years at Mariel, near Havana, isused in London ana Chicago for thepaving of streets .

Already a Large Business In Mexico.Although petroleum has long been

known to exist, systematic explorationof the Mexican oil fields has extendedover a period little more than sixyears. There is, however, every in-

dication that the republic will take nleading place In the production and

by the government and by ono private reflnlng of petroleum Wells have

Firewood and CoalfBest Grades Always On Hand

Concrete Brick, Crushed g

Rock and Sand

Hustace-Pep-k Go. IIP.rnone 2Z95 63 Queen Street

bHi bmNftht In Nt Juan OHstm (S400

bids, dully), timr the I'hiiupo Hirer,about llfltHtn iiiIIm from Tmnpleo (IW0

liblti) . nnd one of liquid asphalt (400

bills.), nenr the Tamos! ?Tlvor. A com-

pany that hns acxpilrod 400,000 acresnt ltl Kllmno, SO miles from Tnmplco,hns developed thlrty-flv- o Wolls (C000

bills.), anil tho oil Is usod on the im- -

tlonal railways of Mexico as fuol fortho locomotlvos. It was nonr SanQoroiilmo that "Dos tlocas," tho Hfent-o- st

gusher In tho hjstory of tho oil In-

dustry, wns brought in on July I, 1908.

This immediately caught flro, anilburned for a porloa or fifty-seve- n

days, during which time the ilnmosmounted to holghts ranging from 80Jto 1500 feet and measured forty tosovonty-flv- o feet In width, and It hasboon variously estimated that fromou.uuu to ouu.uuo barrels of oil wereconsumed dally before tho fire was extinguished and the fields exhaustedAt night the light from this gusherwas visible for more than a hundredmiles nt son, and newspapers could boclearly read at a distance of seventeen miles.

on the Isthmus of Tehuantopecabout 25 wells have beon sunk, nnd th0product (500 bbls.) is conveyed 10miles by pipe lino to a roflnery nt

In 1908 the total oil pro- -uuction of Mexico was 3,481.410 barrels, and in 1909, 27,554,581 gallons ofcrude oil were imported from the Unlted States.

A Growing Business In Peru.For-- tho calendar year 1908 tho total

petroleum production in Peru wasbarrels. Steamers between Cal-la- o

and Panama, malting 19 knots annour, hum Peruvian crude oil. Re-fined Peruvian oil products have takengold medals at Lima, Quito, Berlin,and San Francisco. Since 1883 over300 producing wells have been sunkin the Zorrltos district, and- - in PuntaLobitos, over 60 wells, producing an-nually 500,000 barrels. In the Negri-tos district over 250 wells have an ok- -

gregate flow of 500,000 barrels annually.A remarkable nsnlin iionnoit. W WO l UUUllleleven miles from Negritos, the prod-uct of which is evaporated for

paint, is known as the "Brp.iAsphalt Flow."

.Venezuela's Asphalt Riches.Some of the world's greatest asphalt

deposits are found here. The Guanocolake during the dry season January-Jun- e

produces over 20,000 tons ofasphalt. From July to December, 1909,17,000 tons of crude asphalt, valued at$85,000, were shipped from this dis-trict. Petroleum also is found inabundance in several districts.

In Other Latin American Lands.Petroleum exists in the Dominican

Republic, in Ecuador, Guatemala, Ha-iti, Panama, and Uruguay; but eitheruiu jieius nave not been opened forproduction or they have been workedonly to a limited extent. The uses ofpetroleum are almost unlimited, rang-ing from fuel for battleships to thehumble shoe-polis- h. Review of

CONSOLIDATED MM MITES

Is Absolutely Pure

TELEPHONE 2171.

Bank ofHonolulu

Issue K. N.Letters 0 f

t && K.Credit

and Traveler'sChecks availablethroughout theworld. J & Cabletransfers at lowestrates j & & jt

S. Brewer &CQ.,Li

Fire and MarineInsurance Agencies

Royal Insurance Co. of Liver-pool.

London Assurance Corpora-tion.

Com mercialUnion AssuranceCo. of London.

Scottish Union and NationalInsurance Co.of Edinburgh.Jedonian Insurance Co. ofEdinburgh.

American and Foreign Mar-ine Insurance Co.

Jwakami Ss CoJapanese Silks, Dry

Goods and Hats ofAll Kinds.

Koblnsori mode Hotel BtrMt

Real Estate Department

i

For RentFurnished houso of four Sleeping

rooms for ront for a period of sixmonths. Immcdlato possession. Ro-t- al

$05.00.

Furnished hous'o on beach nt Wal-kl- kl

for ront for three months fromMarch 1, 1911.

For SaleA few of tho "Walker Lots" on

King St left at 11200.00 and on Young

St. at ?900.00.

A very deslrablo piece of Kaimuklproperty on 12th Avo

Waterhouse TrustFort and Merchant

Streets.Honolulu, T. H.

WirelessOffice Hours Dally 7 A. M.

to 6:30 P. M. Sundays 8 to to10 A. M.

mmm bb ltdCHINESE NBWStAPfflJBPUBLI8HTNQ AND " '1

JOE FJHNTINQ. if

An $1809.00 bargain in Maldkl Dis-trict.No. 41 Cor. of Smith anil Hot Eta.

telle & CookHonolulu, T. H.

SHIPPING AND C0MMI88I0N MER.'CHANTS.

SUGAR FACTORS and GENERAL IN-

SURANCE AGENTS.representing

Ewa Plantation Co.Waialua Agricultural Co., Ltd.Kohala Sugar "Co.Apokaa Sugar Mill Co.Fulton Iron VorkB of St. Louis.westons Centrifugals.Babcock Wilcox Boilers.Green's Fuel Economizer.Matson Navigation Co.New England Mutual Life Insur-

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

Fire Insurance Co.)The London Assurance

iiui, FlUulX.1, and tons 15 H. P.Honolulu Power Wagon Co.,

Agents.Phone 2166. 875 8outh St. near

Kino

j

-

-"i

j

& .

'

... I

1 2 3

it

'

VALENTINE8 'A

Very choice assortment at W

A. B. ARtEIQH O. CO. LTD. l

MnrP I firm Tlnlfin It'

FOR jJL3$Bridge and Beach stoves ror Coal 01

W00A. 'Quick Meal Blbe Flame Oil BtovwPerfection Oil Stoves.Glint Barner Qasollne Stores.

EMMELUTH & CO.. LTD.Phone 1511. No. 145 King St.

BUY THE GREAT

"WHITE FROST"The Refrigerator Without a FaultSpecialty Adapted to the Needs oi

the Hawaiian Islands.

Coyne Furniture Co., Ltd., :

Young Building

Catton, Neill & Co.,Limited.

Engineers, Machinists, Blackimitnaand Boilermakers.

Tirtt clan wont at reawuable rate

Page 11: XUrSLlXJXT JtC - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduThe new copper box, which will bo 0x7x12 Inches, and will bo laid with Death Benefit $1,000.00 for $5.00 per year select Weekly Indemnity

I

''Wfajwn'iii '11 -

20 to 50 per cent Honolulu's GreatEconomy

Reductions Event

Tills Clearalico Salo which la to continue until the 18th Is everything that therles, nr.d lace curtains that haM, been on our floors since the season's beginning, or that represents lino remnants

The .old price cards remain on the goods. Tho now price cards bearing the srnisntlonnl nlmrnncn nrlcnn nm H.i.t ninglance will assure you beyond all question that the saving Is real.

Dear In mlpd that a great many of the bargains offered nro samples, so it

FramedPicturesHalf Price

..iv

FEBRUARY CLEARANCE OF LA-- I

iv DIES DESKS, ETC.

( j'fc&-;r- -- ' '.' .

' LADIES' DESKS '' l

Reg. Price Sale Price$ 48.00 Golden Oak $ 38.50

34.00 Mahogany 27.0034.00 Early English 27.0030.00 Golden Oak 24.0024.00 Mahjogany 1!I2520.00 Fumed Oak 16.0019.00 Mahogany 16.2528.00 Mahogany .. 22.50lO.OOTumed Oak ' 12.7510.75 Gplden Oak 8.50

DESK TABLES.Reg. Price , v. Sale Pricef 25.00 Fumed Oak $ 18.00

25.00 Golden Oak 18.00COMBINATION BOOKCASES.

Reg. Frlce Sale Price$ 48.00 Golden Oak :$ 25.00

50.00 Fumed Oak 40.0036.00 Golden Oak 28.0035.00 Fumed Oak 28.002S.00 Golden Oak' 22.00

Reduced toCretonne Waste Baskets $1.50 $1.15Sewing Baskets $1.50 $1.15

MUSIC CABINET.Reg. Price Sale Price? 28.00 Mahogany $ 22.50

25.00 Mahogany, 20.0022.00 Golden Oak 17.5020.00 Mahogany 16.0018.00 Golden Oak.. 14.0014.00 Mahogany 11.00

PARLOR CABINETS.' Keg. Price Sale Price$ 20.09 Mahogany $ 15.00

14.00 Mahogany 10.50

CHAIRS AND ROCKERS.

Reg. Price Salo Price

? 24.00 Early English $ 18.00

40.00 Fumed Oak 30.0022.00 Fumed Oak ' 17.5014.00 Fumed Oak 10.5010.00 Fumed O'ak 7.50

12.00 Fumed Oak 0.0019.50 Fumed Oak 11.50

13.00 Weathered ' 5.00

12.00 Bog Oak . 6.00

18.00 Malabar Fibre 10.00'

24.00 Malabar Fibre 150014.00 Malabar Fibre 8.00

28.00 Mahogany 20.00

20.00 Mahogany 15.00

FEBRUARY CEARANCE OF IRONAND BRASS BEDS.

DOUBLE SIZES.Reg. Price Sale Price$100.00 Satin Brass $60.00

60.00 Satin Brass 45.0000.00 Bright Brass 40.0038.50 Bright Brass 26.5040.00 Deoorated Iron....'.... 25.0032.00 Decorated Iron 19.0025.00 White Iron...." 15.0028.00 Green Iron 18.0030.00 White Iron 20.0026.00 Vernla Martin 18.0020.00 Green Iron 14.0022.00 Vernla Martin..'. 16.004.75 White Iron 3.25

t SIZE.

18.00 White Iron .. 12.0025.00 White Iron 16.5017.50 White Iron 11.6015.00 White Iron..' 10.0012.00 White Iron 10.5010.00 White Iron '.. 6.50

4.50 White Iron 3.00'

SINGLE SIZE.

27.50 Vernla Martin......... 15.0015.50 White Iron 10.0013.00 White Iron ,.. 8.5012.00 White-Iro-

n 8.00'11.00 White Iron 7.009.00 White Iron 5.508.00 Whitb Iron 6i00

PORTIERS AND COUCH COVERS

VERY UNDERPRICED.

PAR-

LOR, LIBRARY

ROOM ROCKERS.

' Mahogany ,.Mahogany

Mahogany 'olOO

23.00 Reed

17.00 12.00Reed 10.75

12.507.00 Reed

Implies. It's nn n stroro riddance if i

end6-

behooves you to mako selections.

KUGS QUALITY AT WONDER-

FULLY LOW PRICES.

RUGS.9x12 $17.00 $11.00

12x14 20.00 13.000x9 10.00 0.00' FIBRE RUGS.

Size " Reg. Prico Sale Price$10.00 $ 7.50

TAPESTRY RUGS.Reg. Price Sale Price

9x12 $20.00 $16.009x12 17.00 13.75

EXMINISTER RUGS.Reg. Price Sale Price

9x12: $35.00 $28.009x12 30.00 24.009x12 27.50 22.00

WILTON RUGS.Size Reg. Prico Salo Price9x12 j $50.00 $40.00

8.3x10.6 '45.004.6x7.6 18.00 14.5027x54 5.75 ' 4.50

' RAGLIN HAND-MAD- E 'RUGS.GRETCHEN.

Size Reg. Price Sale9x12 $12.00 $

7.6x10.6 10.00 8.006x9

,4x7 2.753x0 1.75 lUO

27x54 1.25 1.00, RAGLIN CRETONNESSize Reg. Price' Salo Prico

9x12 $30.00 $24.005x9 11.00 8.7530x60 3.75 , 3.0030x36 2.50 2.0024x36 . 1.50 1.20LOG CABIN BUNGALOW.

Sizo Reg. Sale9x12 $35.00 $28.00

6x9 15.00 12.004x7 8.0030x60 3.00 , 2.40

. LACE CURTAINS RADICALLY

PRICE REDUCED. '.

Reg. Price Sale Price -

Nottingham . .. ,l$ 7.509.00 Nottingham ., 6.758.00 Nottingham 0;00"6.50 Nottingham 4.855.00 Nottingham 3.75

'3.50 Nottingham 2.603,00 Nottingham 2.251.00 Nottingham 75

15.00 Brussels Net 11.0012.00 Brussels Net 9.00- -

10.00 Cable Net 7.508.00 Cable Net..., 6.006.00 Oible Net 4.505.00 Cable Net 3.753.00 Scrim 2.25.3.50 Cable Net 2.00

FEBRUARY CLEARANCE OF

AND BED- - ,

16,00 ..;12.75 9i50

9.75 Mahogany 7,008.00

15.00

Reed16.00 T.t

Reed 9.604.75

word opportunity, ccneunlce

early

OF

TWISTWEAVE

9xJ12

Size

Sizo

36.00

THEPrico9.75

7.00 5.503.50

ANDPrice Prico

6.25.

and pieces That have been si g y da mnwdi,i v .. .,.. .1 ." uu "u""""'

'

FEBRUARY CLEARANCE OF LIB-RARY AND PARLOR

TABLES, ETC.

LIBRARY TABLES.Res. Price Sale Prico

$22;00 Goldon Oak $17.5030.00 "Golden Oak 24.0028.00 Golden Oak 22.5035.00 Golden Oak.., 28.0028.00 Early English 22.50

' 20.00 Early English 16.0023 Fumed Oak .'. 18.5020.00 Fumed Oak . 16.00

PARLOR TABLES.Reg. Prico a Sale Price$24.00 Mahogany 12.00

16.00 Birch 9.0013.50 Birdseye 9.0010.00 Fumed Oak 6.755.75 Birdseye 4.257.50 Reed 5.00

2.75 Mahogany 1.752.00 Golden Oak 1.25

FLOWER STANDS.Reg. Price Sale Price

10.00 Fumed Oak 7.5010.00 Early English.... 7.509.00 Funted Oak 6.758.50 Early English 6.25

SMOKING STANDS.Reg. Price Sale Prico$ 10.00 Eariy English $ 7.50

8.00 Fumed Oak 6.006 . 75 Mahogany 5 . 00 ,

4.50 Fumed Oak 3.40

V

FEBRUARY CLEARANCE OF DIN- -

ING ROOM FURNITURE

BUFFETS.

CHINA CLOSETS.

Reg. Price Salo Pi ico$ 70.00 Golden Oak 15.00

05.00 Fumed Oak... 38.0055.00 Fumed Oak 36.0040.90 Early English 30.00

32.00 Early English 24.0030.00 Early English 20.0030.00 Fumed Oak 22.0022.00 Golden Oak 16.00

AURORA SUNFAST PORTIERS.Reg. Price - Sale Price$ 3.00 Tapestry Portiers.. $ 2.40.. 5.00 Tapestry Portiers.... 3.75

7,50 Tapestry Portiers-...- . 5.65.12.00 Tapestry Portiers.... 9.0015.00 Tapestry Portiers 11.2510.00 Camp Cloth 7.50..8.75 Camp Cloth 6,507.50 Camp Cloth 5.50

COUCH COVERS. ,

Reg. I'rice Sale Prico$ 3.50 values reduced to $ 2.6$

4.00 values reduced to.... 3.005.00 value reduced to.... 3.756.50 values reduced to.... 4.50'10.75 values reduced to.... 6.55

10.00 values reduced to.... 7.5010.00 Sunfast Portiers 7.008.75 values reduced to.... 7.50

1 lot odd dining room chairs, wood, cane and cobblerseats, slightly damaged at onef-hal- f price.

MLKYKN

'Z!" 8111Pmot- - isaving at a glance, alid tl same

Office rurniture20percent

Discount

BIG SAVING ON ODD DRESSES

CHIFFONIERS, ETC.

CHIFFONIERS.'Reg. Prico Sale Prico

56.00 Mahogany $ 39.0050.00 Mohagany ...... 35.0060.00 Mahogany .". 45. 0038. 001 Mohagany 24.00

35.00 Mahogany 220074.00 Birdseye 49.0064.00 Birdseye 42.0048.00 Birdseyo 32.0045.00 Birdseye 29.0042.00 Birdseyo 27.0038.00 Birdseye 25.0040.00 Fumed Oak 30.0027.00 Golden Oak 18.0014.50 Golden Oak; O.

' DRESSES.4

Reg. Price Sale Price5 93.00 Birdseye $ 62.00

75.00 Birdseyo 50.0060.00 Birdseye 40.0050.00 Birdseyo 33.5040.00 Birdseyo : 28.0045.00 Golden Oak 34.0037.00 Golden Oak...! 28.0036.00 Golden 27.0028.00 Goldon Oak 21.0024.00 Golden Oak IS. 0018.00 Golden Oak 12.0015.00 Golden Oak 11.25

WASH STANDS.

Reg. Prico Salo Prico18.00 Mahogany $ 10.0016.00 Mahogany 9.5015.00 Mohagany 8.50

I M

. BUFFETS.Reg. Prico Sale PricoS 85.00 Golden Oak 58.00

72.00 Goldon Oak 46.0065.00 Funjed Oak 43.0060.00 Fumed Oak 35.0058.00 Goldon Oak 38.0055.00 Goldon Oak 35.00

DINING TABLES.Reg. Price ' Sale Prico$ 38.50 Fumed Oak $ 28.75

34.00 Golden Oak 25.5030.00 Weathered Oak 22.5025.00 Fumed Oak 18.7522.00 Early English 10.5020.00 Goldon Oak 15.00

DINING CHAIRS.$9.00 valuos reduced to $7.006.00 valuos reduced to 4.754.00 values reduced to 3.203.00 values reduced to 2.401.50 values reduced to 1.20'4

i

i

Page 12: XUrSLlXJXT JtC - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduThe new copper box, which will bo 0x7x12 Inches, and will bo laid with Death Benefit $1,000.00 for $5.00 per year select Weekly Indemnity

TWNI.VM

DEKORMO

Wall Paperare nmdn from selected mnttr-IrI- h

mid nre Military, durtthleHllll

TH1C MCST COVIOItlNO KOItIKTMItlOlt WAMjS AND

CHI LINOS.

KULLllllt'S COIiI) WATKUPAINT.

Is mnieikir Tor all exterior

Packed In Dry Powder Form.

DimAllLK WASIIAHLE

KCONOMICAL.

L

Limited

177 S. King St

For

MM

Three bedroom houso on King

Street New, with all modern convenlonces. Lot 100x140. Prlco14250.00.

Three bedroom houso on KalalsauaAvenue. Hard wood floor beautiful

Interior finish. Price J4250.00.

Seven acres with two bedroom bungalow, garage, etc., In Manoa. A $10,

000.00 property for $5000.00.

Bishop Trust Co.,Limited

924 BETHEL STREET

islam investment Go.,

Stocks,Limited.

Bonds, Mortgages andEstate.

Real

Robert E. BondMember of Hawaiian Stock Ex-

change, Room 103, Stangenwald build-ing. Telephone 3149; Postofflce box,BOG. Cable address; "Bulldog,

WE INVITE INSPECTION OF OUR GOODS

K. FUKURODAHotel near Nnuanu. Honolulu

CBREWER&CD. LTD

Sugar Factors andCommissionMerchants

OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS.1. F. Bishop President

Geo. H. Robertson.' Vice President ManagtiW. W. North Treasurer(Richard Ivera SecretaryJ. R. Gait ,. AuditorGeo. R. Carter A... DirectorC. H. Cooke DirectorB. A. Cooke Director

Sweet VioletBUTTER

C. Q. YEE HOP & CO. TEL. 251

Shaw & SevilleNEW MONUMENT WORKS.

KING STREET NEAR ALAKEA.whone 3085. P. O. Box 491

Honolulu.

Empire Chop House(Lately Palace Grill.)

Bethel St Opp. Empire Theatre.Open Day and Night, Cuisine Unsur-

passed.

BEST MEALS AT ALL HODR8.

Woo dlawnMANOA VALLEY.

See CHA8. S. DESKY.

Ohio Clothes Cleaning and

Dyeing Co.'s new telephone is

496

000 CLUB

(Continued rrurn page five)

errant?'! more rapidly and nt n nonil-iih- I

rout t the rlnl). I do not thinkhii onoinlMttloti like the HonoluluHundred Thouiwnd Cluli. Imvlng forll ohject the Innrrane of nupulnttonnnd tlie htmutirylnK of our city, shouldhe compelled to pay for niuiuhorBhlp.I helleve tlmt every man, woninn nndihlld In the city should Indicate nwllllUKness to hnlld up nnd Improve

work In doing soIn every

way they cnu. While I no obto our email membership

fete, every having a high re-

gard tho purposes of.. . . I . ..... .... ... ' , I, n n,,l..l.

In our having secured a lnrgormembership up to date.

First

organized

the

WHUNHBDAY,

nldownlk,ItfllntltiK. etc. contest,

oonduotodfor

properly forsecured.

1 thehe sutllrlontly so

create an tinurKotlcwho

BURRcst lmprovomottta.the

ho rcnuostod contrlhutohy voluntarily joining the Hherally this for

club to thoy bo Improving tho gonornlfind

jectionsone

for splondld tho

nnd

liamllcd nnd

Honoluluand

nnd

condition of tho thereby

Carnivalthe

umu, l.u.u u ,.,l t tl.nof procrastination thnt hns ru ' ,,:";: "

club"

not

Semi-Annu- Prize.

Carnival. thedo not hut It

me beIn connection tho

According to the allotment of our Katmukl Land Co., and thetho first soml-f.lnnu- al prize h dovoto to same bo

goes to the securing tho great- - it the Committee wouldest number of members living out- - an assistant secretary tp look the

of tho territory. In view of the of tho contests, the minutes,progress we making In se- - correspondence and records tho

curing members. I think that dub; The assistant. Secretary to bea plan be arranged the ,ati nominal salary. I am perfectfirst semi-annu- al prize to the person iv wllllntr to connlnue to ansecuring the greatest number of and promise to permembers, would be Ji the form tho secretary's duties to theexecutive committee will this best of my ability without and corn- -

change, adopt tho sensation. done and mayand advertise It at once, it Is essen- - n0 f0r tho is cheerfully given.Hal anil absolutely necessary that h Hnrercly that the club Is

be thoroughly organized nt homo 0f forbefore any efforts should be to greater and beautiful Honolulu,get members. Wo ex- - in my opinion, is destined topect the people on the mainland to become Mid-Pacif- ic

our invitation to make i;imi the lovers of beauty andlulu their homo unless we can claim nature.that the club represents the presentpopulation and With tho proper effort I that every personin Honolulu could be Induced to jointhe club within the next sixty toninety days, and then wo could boin a position to accomplish something cn the mainland. I suggest thatwo get thoroughly at homebefore we take up our work on themainland.

Names of Prospective Residents.I find that a many of those

thetho names and addresses peopleliving outside Territory.cording our s, one elig'

membership cannot securetheir .certificates, until th'ey supplywith least two names. the30S applications for membership

be

jrecelvingmembership. Temporary,

ceipts

in.

TflM HAWAIIAN STAIt, FHDRUAHY 1911.

oiiHtniotliiK nThe would

rnonmmond, ho hy count,Klvon given ovqry

signed nnd ouch nndevery Imitrovomout

think prlxo thinshould

Interest anionsworkers will mnke n housohouso canvass seouro

successfullyresults effects such

contest ho astonishing. Thedirectors nnd trustees ostatosshould

boost willcity and

tho value properties.Elks'

T would recommend tthnt clubminim? KlltH

resulted Just what part canlake know, seems

something done.view

Ltd., tlmorlzois, must would

person Kindafter

side detailsslow are

localshould give a

takelocal active Interest

gladmake

rules for contest What 1" haveclub,

our believe onoclub means uniting our citizens a

made moreoutsldo cannot which,

homeaccept Ilono- - for

spirit.believe

great

could

Respectfully submitted,A. STANTON,

Secretary 100,000 Club.

AUSTRALIA

from pago

WUU lUltU iLIMJllU'U lUi Olllll 1111 , ..n mrtftnt.a 111 fit tji1llaTclub have failed to furnish us DU a"w" .

ofof Ac

to no Isable to and

usat Out of

to

1,

In

toto

toIf

of

of

to

of

tothat

of with

of

to

DELEGATE

(Continued

toi.rwithwho tne noi oniycall at Honolulu but will also callat tho leading of Todo this heIs all along the line.

Is too late us to tobe able to the after

uate we have received onlV 90 names ho has reached Yokohama, Shanghaiof nn'Jsnoctlve Iresldents. when we Hongkong or bingapore, ho remarket!should have received GIG or more, lo get tne tourists to inciuue ausThe names and addresses of outside tralla in their itinerary we must getprospective residents is the material M3 w'ol'k at the starting point, or as.

for the club to work upon, plan near there as possible. Uu its geobeinir to Induce the acquaintances and pniphical Honolulu Is thelelative of the people now one place where It be possiblehere, bv circular letters, for the tourist to change his plansenco and otherwise, to come arid make and go to the north or southHonolulu their home. as he chooses. My idea woulu: be to

Membership Certificates. get those who are touring the Pacifichave had some very attractive t so nrst lo Mononuu, mence to

membership certificates printed, but Australia, returning China andhave not issued any, thinking, pos- - to Honolulu, or vice versa. ThusEibly, it 'would better to wait until some action may be taken by thoexecutive committee in regard to anew system of and accepting re

have been given to all appllmembership

Since having 2,000 of ourlership certificates printed, at

ImllilliiK.I

count

contentattractive n

pledges

n wouldlnrgeto

aRieelngen

hanclng

I

Iappoint

r

America's

CHAS.

nine.)

nncrosses racmc win

ports Australia.realises that

essentialexpect

influence tourist

ourposition

Hying .wouldcorrespond- -

Pacific

I

JaPana complete tour or tne facmc comahe made, but such a plan could onlybe made effective if theof all the places mentioned weresecured. We will have agents in theStates, and elsewhere If it is neces

cants, for the fees paid sary. Australia has the attractionsmenv

my

ona

my

"It for

via

to offer and we are advertising them.Yes, advertising pays," lie added in

tentlon has been called to tho San conclusion.Francisco Million Club card, which I' Hunter has no definite plans as toleliovo could be handled more satis- - his movements, "here, or aflter. thefactory than our form of certificates. Congress has concluded Its dellbera- -

Newspapers are Helping. I lions, "There was so little tlmoThe newspapers of the city have given me before I le.ff Sydney that

extended the club every courtesy and it was Impossible for me to perfectasistance that could possibly bo ex- - any arrangements," he said. "Newpected. The Advertiser, Bulletin, Zealand would certainly have sent aStar, Mid-Pacif- Magazine and Para- - delegate haa there been time to dls"-dis- o

"it the Pacific have offered us cuss tho matter, but thero was not.the use of their advertising and news 1' have been asked to represent Newcolumns without any cost to the club, Zealand as well as Australia, but I

nnd I think they should be extended havo riot the permission of my ownthe thanks of tho executive commit- - Government yet and, of course, with.--teo. out that I can do nothing. However,.

Beautifying the City. what Interests and helps AustraliaThe most important purpose of the will also assist New Kealand,"

Club, outside of increasing the popu- - AUSTRALIA WANTS; AMERICANS,latlon, Is the beautifying of our city. It is probable that Hunter will tourNature has end-owe- us with scenery, the islands before he returns if ar--flowers and climate that cannot be rangeinents can be made to fit In,surpassed hy any other dace In the and after the Congress it Is quite- -

world, and all that Is necessary to likely that instead of returning tomake our city beautiful is cleanll- - Australia he will visit some of theness. The Club, Itself, cannot under- - western states of America, with atake tho work of cleaning tho city, view to obtaining the service of fr--hut can inaugurate and conduct a rlgation farmers, to visit Australiacampaign to encourage and Induce to teach- the Australian farmers someevery property owner bo clear his of their methods. A big irrigationpremises of all old shrubbery, decay- - scheme is to bo tried In New Southod'vegetatlon; to tear down old de- - Wce3 In (the' jMumimbtgee rvalleylapidated fences, undesirable build- - and it Is in connection with this ox- -Ings, and to remove the grass from periment that the New South Walesnnd Improvo sidewalks; put a little government is desirous ot gettingpaint where needed, and improvo and the services of American farmers whofreshen things up generally. As for a are familiar with Irrigation works.plan for bringing about thts movement Australia looked to America for

suggest that the executive commit- - many pointers, said Hunter, Instanc- -

teo offer the first annual rlze, or Its Ing as ho did so a proposal whichvalue, to the poison who will Induce ,was under (jVisSdern-tlo- when hothe property owners In the city to left Sydney. A proposal had beensign a pledge (form of which to be made, ho said, than an effort shouldfurnished by the Club) that thoy will bo made by tho States and the Corn-kee- p

premises clean and in. present-- monwealth to arrange a special tour- -ohlo condition for a period of five 1st trip for American farmers throughyears. The club to establish a "City the various Australian States, with aBeautiful Roll." and under this head- - view to inducing tho visitors 'toIng publish weokly or monthly the eventually make their homes in Ausnames and addresses of all who sign tralia, and encouraging thorn In thethe pledge and keep it. meantime to advertise on their roturn

On the blank lines of tho pledge the possibilities of the States whichthe owner can mention tho Improve- - thoy had visited. Mr. Carmlchael,n&nts lie thinks necessary to beautify Homo Minister, had talked the matterhis jiroperty, such as removing a over with Mr. Verran, PrImler offence, destroying an undesirable South Australia, and Mr. vnughan,

tho Stnto Treasurer. Thoy had not,It seems, carefully considered tho(liioKtlon. hut they readily fell In withthe Idea that It should ho n sugges-

tion by the States io the Common-

wealth thnt It should be taken Inhand right nwny.

Along other linos Australia, wasalso looking to Amorlcn, continuedHunter, nnd It was anticipated thntthe two countries would ho broughtInfo touch ns tlmo wont on.Hunter o))ccts to visit Colorado Ifhe goes to tho States, for It Is fromthis Htnto that he hoifbs to got themen who nre wanted.

During his stny In Honolulu Hunterwill roiiow his acquaintance with thopoints of Interest and so familiarizehimself with them all as to bo ableo give other Australians the benefit

of his knowledge. On tho trip up onthe Zcnlnndln Hunter Interested m'orothan hnlf the saloon passengers inHonolulu, so much so that tho bulkof them left tho ship at this port tosee the wonderful Islands Hunter sographically described.

Li. Squills What was tho matterwith that taxi chauffeur you werecalled to see last night? Dr. KallomlelAutomobillousnes. C an a d I anCourier.

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

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