P,. i Telephone 2365 Star Business Office SECOND EDITION . VOL. XVIII. TWELVE PAGES. HONOLULU, HAWAII, Fill DAY, FKIUU'AKY it, Hi 1 1 TWELVE PAGES. No. BS73 FRtAR HOT TIME SOUTH OF THE RIO GRANDE MEXICO IS NOW SAYS NO IN CONDITION OF Owing to roportB that Govornor Vroar might take the position ot chief justice, ho was asked today If there wag any prospect ot his seek ins the position. Ho replied that ho had never been approached with re- - Kurd to the matter, and he did not think that he would he. Uesldes that, he had no desire to bo chief justice again. Tito Governor stated today that so far there had been no developments in regard to tho matter of appointing a successor to Chief Justice Hartwell As far as he knew, there had heen no cablegrams from Judgo Hatch as 10 whether he would accept the position if It were offered to him. Further question hero depends upon tho attitude taken by Judge Hatch, M he signifies his willingness to take the place, there will be a strong feel Ing In the bar association In favor or recommending him. As there Is also a strong Cooper feeling, the chances of a divided vote are good. United States Judge A. G. M. Rob ertson is also likely to receive en dorsements by the bar. METZGER SUIT DISCONTINUED A discontinuance has been filed by Kinney, Ballon, Prosser and Ander son, attorneys for the plaintiff in the case of the Hilo Railroad Company vs. D. B. Metzger, with the Kahulul Railroad Company, and the First $ Bank of Hilo, Ltd., garnishees. Judgo "Whitney" has made an order accord ingly. DO YOU WANT RELIEF. Are you frequently hoarse? Do you have that annoying tickling in your throat. Does your cough . annoy you al. night, and wo you raise mucus in iho morning? Do you want relief? It so, thke ChamjOerlaln's Cough Re medy and you will be pleased. For sale by all dealers, Benson, Smith & Co., gents for Hawaii NEW K1CH. BtltXi. The K". Tamamoio Rice Mill is the largest as well as the finest in the islands. All machinery is of tho very latest pattern. The famous Tengu Rice Is cleaned at this mill. With the large cleaning capacity they are able to handle considerable out-sid- e parti cular work which they guarantee. A THIRD TRIAL. The Japanese namea Sato whoso trial In the Federal Court on a charge of having forged a signature to a money order in Hilo, was concluded yesterday was found not guilty. This is tho second charge of ths nature that has been brought against him, and he has been acquitted, on both There is a third charge pending. The date of hearing this will l)e set tomor row morning. CLEAN-U- P SAtE AT SACHS. The Clean-u- p Sale at Sachs Wed jiesdny, Thursday, Friday and Satur day of this week will create keen interest among tho careful buyers This sale will be of wash materials. Accident Insurance Death Benefit $1,000.00 for $5.00 per year select risks. Weekly Indemnity. Can you afford to be without this protection? Hawaiian Trust Compan y , Limited jfi J & 923 Fort 8treet. carier tells OF SEEING TAFT George R. Carter, formerly Hawaii's governor, who returned from round the world trip per Korea this morning, heard Mr. Taft exclaim "Poor Ha waii!" That's how Taft wound up an Interview with Carter with reference to tho appointment of Cottrlll as In ternal revenue collector here, after the presfdent had said "I must have forgotten about the recommendations1 coming from Hawaii," Cottrlll mean while having received the presidential endorsement. Carter presented tne matter of a suitable appointment to Taft, follow- ing a cable forwarded the former from Honolulu, the president not hav- ing at that time made up his mind. Carter stood for a local man as be ing more satisfactory to Honolulu peo- ple and as a local man would know more about the business. Taft said he would do nothing with out a careful consideration of the case. Cottrlll Is the result. KOREA LATER THAN EXPECTEO With close upon 200 cabin passen- gers on board and a full cargo, the Pacific Mall steamer Korea arrived in port this morning. Though the ves- sel was expected to be off the port at seven o'clock it was not until 8:23 that she was reported from Koko Head, and an hour and a half later tho quarantine flag fluttered down from the peak, Just as the hark R. V. Rlthet was passing out of the har- bor. Of the passengers on board 108 were for Honolulu, 35 for Hong Kong, 25 for Manila, cloven for Yokohama, ton for Nagasaki, seven for Kobe and two for Shanghai, but of these twelvo elected to lay over in Honolulu until the next Orient-boun- d vessel came along, or later still If It suited them. I LATEST FILIPINOS." Tho last batch of Filipinos who ar- rived from the islands to wark oa tho plantations hero arc now confined In tho Planters' shed and nre under the direct control ot Dr. Pratt. Of the 110 who arrived about forty are class- ed as undesirables from hook-wor- and they are quito numerous, are be- ing treated and It Is expected all will been cured. WITHOUT SALARY. At the supervisors' meeting last night Mayor Fern offered appoint- ments without salary of James Glbb, overseer Ewa district; Frederick Myer, Walanao; H. H. Plomer, Wala-lu- a; L. L. McCandless, Koolapoko. All were referred to a later meeting for ratification. Our San Francisco Letter By Ernest N. Smith. (Special Correspondence of The Star.) SAN FRXNCISCO, Jan. 27. The aviation meet, which started early In January with brilliant flights of Lath- am 'and Radley over San Francisco, has just been brought to a dismal close on account of a heavy storm, which prevented the airmen, from try- ing to lly for days at a time. Only the bad weather prevented a meet brilliant in every respect, but contin- ued disappointments owing to rains caused people to lose Interest In the meet, and from an assemblage of nearly 200,000 on the first Sunday of the meet, the final day saw a scant 5000 people on hand to bid the bird-me- n farewell. Lack of the spectacular features which characterized the meet at Los Angeles are compensated for by the military Importance of what tho bird- - "Makiki Beautiful" The Latest Land Cry There is about to burst Into bloom j a new garden in the heart ot Hono-- I lulu's residence district. It is the Maklkl tract and has been christened "Mnklki fceautiful." The property Is ' owned by the real estate firm of Don-der- o & Lansing, Is about twenty-fou- r acres In area, containing sixty-seve- n lots, and Is bounded by Wilder, Pli-ko- l, Kowalo and Lunalllo streets, with Liholiho street running through tho i center. The tract has been open to I the public for only a few weeks. Half a dozen houses are going up and tho next few months will witness great 1 E 1 SAYS HOTEL ROOM ; SERVICE In today's steamship Korea mail Secretary H. P. Wood of the promo- tion committee received tho following from R. P. Schwerln, manager of tho Pacific Mall S. S. Co.: I have your letter of January Gtb, togother with enclosures, and note you ask me to furnish you a paper relating to tho development and out- look for travel on the Pacific, to bo read boforo tho Pan-Pacif- ic Travel Congress . I should bo very glad to comply men accomplished. Flying was car- ried on with the assistance of United States soldiers from the Presidio who .were encamped on the aviation field. Officers were carried aloft by the avi- ators, and the former took photo- graphs, made plans of the surround' ing country, fired at targets, and dropped bombs of wooden dummies representing cavalry and Infantry. The amusing part of this procedure was the "scare' given the dignified Unit- ed States officers by the daredevil air- men who took particular delight In making the hair of the various off- icers who went up with them stand on end. Soveral of the officers who went up for observations had all they could do to hang on and pray, giving (Continued on Page Eight) activity In this section. The partners do not encourage the erection of any building to cost less than two thousand dollars, tho Idea being to maintain the class of tho district. Cement sidewalks have been laid all about tho property and each resident will have the facilities of gas, sewer, water and electric con- nections. Forester Hosmer will plant flower- ing trees along the streets and aven- ues. Pilkol Is to bo framed in golden shower and Kewalo street will bo lined with tho blushing polnciana. fl , HONOLULU LACKS BUT STEAMSHIP BE ADEPT E with your request, but as you know I have been In tho Orient almost six months and after having been In San Francisco but a few weeks, am now called East. The result Is I am oxtromely llusy miring the few days left mo to try to clean up tho matters which accumulated during my ab- sence and it will be absolutely im- possible for mo to give tho tlmo and (Continued m rag Fir.), CIVIL WARFARE (Associated Press Cable to The Star.) WASHINGTON, February 3. Three troops of United States cavalry are now departing lor the Mexican border. Juarez In Danger. JUAREZ, February 3 An attack on this city Is hourly expected. Racing programmed for today has been postponed and business places are closed. The town Is believed to be at the mercy of the revolu-tionlst- s. Approaching California Line. SAN DIEGO, California, February 3. The rebels are advancing on Tia Juana, a border village sixteen miles from here. More Troops Going. WASHINGTON, February 3. After a cabinet consultation 700 addi- tional troops have been ordered to the border to preserve neutrality. Yesterday's Developments. JUAREZ, Mexico, February 3. General Orozco, leader of the Insur- gent forces in this district, has sent word that he will commence an at- tack on this city today. All the wealthy citizens Immediately departed. Some of them went Wednesday and yesterday, and taking all their cash and most valuable personal effects with them. In anticipation of the at- tack all the money and records In the banks and postoffice have been re- moved; also the powder house here has been destroyed. A skirmish took place yesterday between the forces of General Arozco and the federal troops about twenty miles from here, and resulted In a victory for the rebels. Thirty-tw- o federal soldiers were killed"' In the fight. - THE TITANIA ASHORE. ROCHE HARBOR, Washington, February 3. The Norwegian steamer Titania is ashore. ROOT AGAINST LORIMER. J WASHINGTON, February 3. Senator Root In a speech today urged the unseating of Senator Lorlmer. SENATE AND THE FAIR. --' WASHINGTON, February 3 The Senate committee on expositions haa postponed action on the fair bill until Wednesday. KM TRYING TO MAKE PEACE, i WASHINGTON February 3. The government is trying to arrange an armistice In Honduras with a view to a peaceful adjustment of the boundary dispute. Loan Is Rejected. The Honduran Congress has refused to ratify the American . MORNING CABLE REPORT. NEW YORK, February 3. The body of Edward St. John, assistant treasurer of the Westlnghouse General Electric Company, was found In the urf at Coney Island yesterday. The Indications are that he committed suicide. An inquest will be held today. It is reported that he is short in his accounts to the amount of $50,000. WASHINGTON, February 3. The navy department has received a dis- patch to the effect that the gunboat Marietta is on the way from Puerto Cortez, Honduras, to Key West, with nine of her crew down with yellow fever. Andrews Is Near Death (Wireless to Tho Star.) HILO, February 3. Lorrin A. An- drews, district magistrato of South Hilo, is dying. Judge Andrews Is one of tho best known citizens of Hawaii. Ho was sheriff of the big island for many years nntl made a high record of effi ciency. Ho was appointed district magistrate by Chief Justice Hartwell. to succeed Judgo Hapjal. Last year Mr. Andrews suffered a very severe illness and camo to Honolulu for an operation, which was performed .it tho Queon's Hospltnl. POWDER Absolutely Pure Tho only baking powder mado from Royal Grapo Oroam of Tartar No Alum, Ho Lime Phosphate McCROSSON WILL FIGHT. Attorney F. E. Thompson, who re- turned this morning on tho Korea, says that the McCrosson Leilehua ditch proposition is not-b- y any means dead. McCrosson and associates pro-lo- se to continue to fight for tho water rights Involved. Tho general irriga- tion bill, known as tho Kau ditch scheme, has been given up. Just received a shipment of fresh Lehnhardt's Chocolates. The nrost delicious candy mado. Henry May & Co. Ltd., the Leading Grocers, Tele- phone 1271. Educator $4, and $5 snocs Solid, sensible Business man's shoo. Tho shapo of this shoo allows freo action of all flvo toes and gives relief to those tired feet. Sold only by us. Manufacturers' SHOE COMPANY, LTD 1051 Fort 1 .1
12
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P,.
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Telephone 2365 Star Business Office SECOND EDITION.VOL. XVIII. TWELVE PAGES. HONOLULU, HAWAII, Fill DAY, FKIUU'AKY it, Hi 1 1 TWELVE PAGES. No. BS73
FRtAR HOT TIME SOUTH OF THE RIO GRANDE MEXICO IS NOW
SAYS NO IN CONDITION OFOwing to roportB that Govornor
Vroar might take the position ot
chief justice, ho was asked today If
there wag any prospect ot his seek
ins the position. Ho replied that ho
had never been approached with re- -
Kurd to the matter, and he did notthink that he would he. Uesldes that,he had no desire to bo chief justiceagain.
Tito Governor stated today that so
far there had been no developments
in regard to tho matter of appointing
a successor to Chief Justice HartwellAs far as he knew, there had heen nocablegrams from Judgo Hatch as 10
whether he would accept the positionif It were offered to him.
Further question hero depends upontho attitude taken by Judge Hatch,M he signifies his willingness to takethe place, there will be a strong feelIng In the bar association In favor orrecommending him. As there Is alsoa strong Cooper feeling, the chancesof a divided vote are good.
United States Judge A. G. M. Robertson is also likely to receive endorsements by the bar.
METZGER SUIT
DISCONTINUED
A discontinuance has been filed byKinney, Ballon, Prosser and Anderson, attorneys for the plaintiff in thecase of the Hilo Railroad Companyvs. D. B. Metzger, with the KahululRailroad Company, and the First
$ Bank of Hilo, Ltd., garnishees. Judgo"Whitney" has made an order accordingly.
DO YOU WANT RELIEF.Are you frequently hoarse? Do you
have that annoying tickling in yourthroat. Does your cough . annoy youal. night, and wo you raise mucus iniho morning? Do you want relief? Itso, thke ChamjOerlaln's Cough Remedy and you will be pleased. Forsale by all dealers, Benson, Smith &
Co., gents for Hawaii
NEW K1CH. BtltXi.The K". Tamamoio Rice Mill is the
largest as well as the finest in theislands. All machinery is of tho verylatest pattern. The famous TenguRice Is cleaned at this mill. With thelarge cleaning capacity they are ableto handle considerable out-sid-e particular work which they guarantee.
A THIRD TRIAL.The Japanese namea Sato whoso
trial In the Federal Court on a chargeof having forged a signature to amoney order in Hilo, was concludedyesterday was found not guilty. Thisis tho second charge of ths naturethat has been brought against him,and he has been acquitted, on bothThere is a third charge pending. Thedate of hearing this will l)e set tomorrow morning.
CLEAN-U- P SAtE AT SACHS.The Clean-u- p Sale at Sachs Wed
jiesdny, Thursday, Friday and Saturday of this week will create keeninterest among tho careful buyersThis sale will be of wash materials.
Accident
InsuranceDeath Benefit
$1,000.00
for$5.00
per yearselect risks.
Weekly Indemnity.
Can you afford to be withoutthis protection?
Hawaiian
TrustCompan y ,
Limited jfi J &923 Fort 8treet.
carier tellsOF SEEING TAFT
George R. Carter, formerly Hawaii'sgovernor, who returned from roundthe world trip per Korea this morning,heard Mr. Taft exclaim "Poor Hawaii!" That's how Taft wound up anInterview with Carter with referenceto tho appointment of Cottrlll as Internal revenue collector here, afterthe presfdent had said "I must haveforgotten about the recommendations1coming from Hawaii," Cottrlll meanwhile having received the presidentialendorsement.
Carter presented tne matter of asuitable appointment to Taft, follow-
ing a cable forwarded the formerfrom Honolulu, the president not hav-
ing at that time made up his mind.Carter stood for a local man as be
ing more satisfactory to Honolulu peo-
ple and as a local man would knowmore about the business.
Taft said he would do nothing without a careful consideration of the case.
Cottrlll Is the result.
KOREA LATER
THAN EXPECTEO
With close upon 200 cabin passen-gers on board and a full cargo, thePacific Mall steamer Korea arrived inport this morning. Though the ves-
sel was expected to be off the portat seven o'clock it was not until 8:23that she was reported from KokoHead, and an hour and a half latertho quarantine flag fluttered downfrom the peak, Just as the hark R. V.
Rlthet was passing out of the har-
bor.Of the passengers on board 108
were for Honolulu, 35 for Hong Kong,25 for Manila, cloven for Yokohama,ton for Nagasaki, seven for Kobe andtwo for Shanghai, but of these twelvoelected to lay over in Honolulu untilthe next Orient-boun- d vessel camealong, or later still If It suited them.
I LATEST FILIPINOS."Tho last batch of Filipinos who ar-
rived from the islands to wark oatho plantations hero arc now confinedIn tho Planters' shed and nre underthe direct control ot Dr. Pratt. Of the110 who arrived about forty are class-ed as undesirables from hook-wor-
and they are quito numerous, are be-
ing treated and It Is expected all will
been cured.
WITHOUT SALARY.At the supervisors' meeting last
night Mayor Fern offered appoint-ments without salary of James Glbb,overseer Ewa district; FrederickMyer, Walanao; H. H. Plomer, Wala-lu- a;
L. L. McCandless, Koolapoko.All were referred to a later meetingfor ratification.
Our San Francisco LetterBy Ernest N. Smith.
(Special Correspondence of The Star.)SAN FRXNCISCO, Jan. 27. The
aviation meet, which started early InJanuary with brilliant flights of Lath-am 'and Radley over San Francisco,has just been brought to a dismalclose on account of a heavy storm,which prevented the airmen, from try-
ing to lly for days at a time. Onlythe bad weather prevented a meetbrilliant in every respect, but contin-ued disappointments owing to rainscaused people to lose Interest In themeet, and from an assemblage ofnearly 200,000 on the first Sundayof the meet, the final day saw a scant5000 people on hand to bid the bird-me- n
farewell.Lack of the spectacular features
which characterized the meet at LosAngeles are compensated for by themilitary Importance of what tho bird- -
"Makiki Beautiful"The Latest Land Cry
There is about to burst Into bloomj a new garden in the heart ot Hono-- I
lulu's residence district. It is theMaklkl tract and has been christened"Mnklki fceautiful." The property Is
' owned by the real estate firm of Don-der- o
& Lansing, Is about twenty-fou- r
acres In area, containing sixty-seve- n
lots, and Is bounded by Wilder, Pli-ko- l,
Kowalo and Lunalllo streets, withLiholiho street running through tho
i center. The tract has been open to
I the public for only a few weeks. Halfa dozen houses are going up and thonext few months will witness great
1 E1 SAYS
HOTEL ROOM ;
SERVICE
In today's steamship Korea mailSecretary H. P. Wood of the promo-tion committee received tho followingfrom R. P. Schwerln, manager of thoPacific Mall S. S. Co.:
I have your letter of January Gtb,
togother with enclosures, and noteyou ask me to furnish you a paperrelating to tho development and out-
look for travel on the Pacific, to boread boforo tho Pan-Pacif- ic TravelCongress .
I should bo very glad to comply
men accomplished. Flying was car-
ried on with the assistance of UnitedStates soldiers from the Presidio who
.were encamped on the aviation field.
Officers were carried aloft by the avi-
ators, and the former took photo-
graphs, made plans of the surround'ing country, fired at targets, anddropped bombs of wooden dummiesrepresenting cavalry and Infantry. Theamusing part of this procedure wasthe "scare' given the dignified Unit-
ed States officers by the daredevil air-men who took particular delight Inmaking the hair of the various off-
icers who went up with them standon end. Soveral of the officers whowent up for observations had all theycould do to hang on and pray, giving
(Continued on Page Eight)
activity In this section.The partners do not encourage the
erection of any building to cost lessthan two thousand dollars, tho Ideabeing to maintain the class of thodistrict. Cement sidewalks have beenlaid all about tho property and eachresident will have the facilities ofgas, sewer, water and electric con-
nections.Forester Hosmer will plant flower-
ing trees along the streets and aven-ues. Pilkol Is to bo framed in goldenshower and Kewalo street will bolined with tho blushing polnciana.
fl ,
HONOLULU LACKS
BUT STEAMSHIP
BE ADEPT E
with your request, but as you know I
have been In tho Orient almost sixmonths and after having been In SanFrancisco but a few weeks, am nowcalled East. The result Is I amoxtromely llusy miring the few daysleft mo to try to clean up tho matterswhich accumulated during my ab-
sence and it will be absolutely im-
possible for mo to give tho tlmo and
(Continued m rag Fir.),
CIVIL WARFARE(Associated Press Cable to The Star.)
WASHINGTON, February 3. Three troops of United States cavalry arenow departing lor the Mexican border.
Juarez In Danger.JUAREZ, February 3 An attack on this city Is hourly expected.
Racing programmed for today has been postponed and business placesare closed. The town Is believed to be at the mercy of the revolu-tionlst- s.
Approaching California Line.SAN DIEGO, California, February 3. The rebels are advancing on
Tia Juana, a border village sixteen miles from here.More Troops Going.
WASHINGTON, February 3. After a cabinet consultation 700 addi-tional troops have been ordered to the border to preserve neutrality.
Yesterday's Developments.JUAREZ, Mexico, February 3. General Orozco, leader of the Insur-
gent forces in this district, has sent word that he will commence an at-
tack on this city today. All the wealthy citizens Immediately departed.Some of them went Wednesday and yesterday, and taking all their cashand most valuable personal effects with them. In anticipation of the at-
tack all the money and records In the banks and postoffice have been re-
moved; also the powder house here has been destroyed. A skirmish tookplace yesterday between the forces of General Arozco and the federaltroops about twenty miles from here, and resulted In a victory for therebels. Thirty-tw- o federal soldiers were killed"' In the fight.
-THE TITANIA ASHORE.
ROCHE HARBOR, Washington, February 3. The Norwegian steamerTitania is ashore.
ROOT AGAINST LORIMER. J
WASHINGTON, February 3. Senator Root In a speech today urgedthe unseating of Senator Lorlmer.
SENATE AND THE FAIR. --'WASHINGTON, February 3 The Senate committee on expositions haa
postponed action on the fair bill until Wednesday.KM
TRYING TO MAKE PEACE,i WASHINGTON February 3. The government is trying to arrangean armistice In Honduras with a view to a peaceful adjustment of theboundary dispute.
Loan Is Rejected.The Honduran Congress has refused to ratify the American
.
MORNING CABLE REPORT.
NEW YORK, February 3. The body of Edward St. John, assistanttreasurer of the Westlnghouse General Electric Company, was found Inthe urf at Coney Island yesterday. The Indications are that he committedsuicide. An inquest will be held today. It is reported that he is shortin his accounts to the amount of $50,000.
WASHINGTON, February 3. The navy department has received a dis-patch to the effect that the gunboat Marietta is on the way from PuertoCortez, Honduras, to Key West, with nine of her crew down with yellowfever.
Andrews Is
Near Death(Wireless to Tho Star.)
HILO, February 3. Lorrin A. An-
drews, district magistrato of SouthHilo, is dying.
Judge Andrews Is one of tho bestknown citizens of Hawaii. Ho wassheriff of the big island for manyyears nntl made a high record of efficiency. Ho was appointed districtmagistrate by Chief Justice Hartwell.to succeed Judgo Hapjal. Last yearMr. Andrews suffered a very severeillness and camo to Honolulu for anoperation, which was performed .ittho Queon's Hospltnl.
POWDERAbsolutely Pure
Tho only baking powdermado from Royal Grapo
Oroam of TartarNo Alum, Ho Lime Phosphate
McCROSSON WILL FIGHT.Attorney F. E. Thompson, who re-
turned this morning on tho Korea,says that the McCrosson Leilehuaditch proposition is not-b- y any meansdead. McCrosson and associates pro-lo- se
to continue to fight for tho waterrights Involved. Tho general irriga-tion bill, known as tho Kau ditchscheme, has been given up.
Just received a shipment of freshLehnhardt's Chocolates. The nrostdelicious candy mado. Henry May &Co. Ltd., the Leading Grocers, Tele-phone 1271.
Educator $4, and $5 snocs
Solid, sensible Business man'sshoo. Tho shapo of this shooallows freo action of all flvotoes and gives relief to thosetired feet. Sold only by us.
Manufacturers'SHOE COMPANY, LTD
1051 Fort
1
.1
THE HAWAIIAN STARUAILY AND
Bally pnbltefceti every bIKmthwm iopt wiar) tir Oh 1 lawRliaM Starttuw'Sfjsper Association. LW., MeCftxtftoM riulMln, Mtiel street, llwwmm, t. h.
TBniered at the pestoMc al Honolulu na second etas tmU matter.
UBfCRTITlOM RATtCS, PAYABLE IN AUVANOB.
Dally, anywhere In the Inlands, per. month $ .71,SMI?, MO"wtrt In the Islands, three months 8. ft).&tly, anywhere In tin Islands, six months f .00.Dully, anywhere In the Island, one year .... S.00.Dtly, to fereign countries, one year 12.00.SMii-WeoM- y, anywhere In the Islands, ono year 2.00.Herot-Wsok- ly to Foreign countries, una yam 8.00.
Advertising rates supplied upon request
L. D. TIMMONS MANAGER.
GompanvSchedule
HUHlness offlrp telephone.
same SteamshipSierra
LEAVE S. F. ARRIVE HON.
FED. 4 FEB. 10FEB. is5 MAR. 3
MAR. IS MAR. 24
APRIL 8 APRIL 14
APRIL 29 MAY 5
MAY 20 MAY 2G
JUNE 10 JUNE 1C
JULY 1 JULY 7
JULY 22 JULY 28
RATES trotn Honolulu to San FrTrip, $110. Family Room, extra.
Reservations will not bo held latadvertised Balling time unless tickets
FOR PARTIC
GENERAL
300.
Canadian-Australi- an Royal Mail Steamship Go
Steamers of the ahove line running in connection with the CANADIAN-PACIFI- C
RAILWAY COMPANY between Vancouver, B. C, and Sydney,N. S. W., and calling at Victoria, B. C, Honolulu and Brisbane, Q.
FIJI AND AUSTRALIA FOR VANCOUVER.MAKURA FEBRUARY 3 MOANA MARCH 1
ZEALANDIA MARCH 3 MAKURA MARCH 28
CalIs at Fanning Island.
CALLING AT SUVA, FIJI, ON BOT H UP AND DOWN VOYAGES.
Theo. H Davies & Co., Ltd., Ge'l Agents
Pacific Mail Steamship Co.Steamers of the above company will call at Honolulu and leave this
port on or about the dates mentioned below:
THE ORIENT: FOR SAN FRANCISCO .
S. S. KOREA FEB. 3 S. S. SIBERIA JAN. 28
S. S. SIBERIA FEB. 21 S. S. CHINA FEB. 5
S. S. CHINA '.FEB. 27 S. S. MANCHURIA FEB. 11
S. S. MANCHURIA MAR. G S. S. ASIA 25
S. S. ASIA MAR. 22 S. S. MONGOLIA MAR. 4
S. S. MONGOLIA MAR. 27 S. S. PERSIA MAR. 24
S. S. KOREA MAR. 31
Will call at Manila.
S. S. LURLINE FEB. 11
S. S. FEB. 21
S. S. FEB. 28
S S. LURLINE MAR. 16
S. S. MAR. 21
S. S APR. 1
S S. LURLINE APR. 16
S. S. of this line fromabout February 4, 1911.
& LTD
of theabout the dates
S.S. S. CHIYOS S. 4th
DUR
Lowers
2.1Gf; pogtoftlcc box,
FOR
FOR
FEB.
LEAVE HON. S. P.
FEB. 15 FEB. 21
MAR. 8 MAR. 14
MAR. 29 APRIL 4
APRIL 19 APRIL 25
MAY 10 MAY 1G
MAY 31 JUNE G
JUNE 1 JUNE 27
JULY 12 18
AUG. 2 AUG. S
ancisco First Cluss, ?65; RoundI
er than twenty-fou- r hours prior to thepaid for in full.
APPLY TO
SAIL.S. S. LURLINE FEB. 21
S. S. MAR. 1
S. S. MAR. 10
S. S. MAR. 25S S. MAR. 29
S. S. APR. 11
S. S. APR. 26
Seattle for Honolulu direct on or
.GENERAL
will call at and leave Honolulu on or
FOR SAN FRANCISCO.S. S. CIIIYOS. S. MARU. .. .MAR.S. S. TENYO MARU.... MAR. 17th
FOR
and Oooko. VboJj
For general Information apply to
H. Hackfeld & Co., Agents
MatsonNavigation CosSchedule, 1910-- 1
DIRECT SERVICE BETWEEN SAN FRANCISCO AND HONOLULU.
ARRIVE
WILHELMINAHONOLULAN
WILHELMINAHONOLULAN
Hyades sails
CASTLE COOKE
American-Hawaiia- n SteamshipFROM NEW YORK TO via every sixth
day. Freight received at all times at the Company's Wharf, 41st Street,South Brooklyn.
FROM SEATTLE OR TO HONOLULU DIRECT:S. S. ALASKAN to sail February 2
S. S. ARIZONAN to sail February 14
For further Information apply toH. HACKFELD & CO, LTD, Agents, Honolulu.
C. P. MORSE, General Freight Agent.
Toyo Kisen Kaisha.Steamers above Company
mentioned below:FOR THE ORIENT.
S. NIPPON 14th14th
AMERICA MARU....ARP.
F IS
ARRIVE
JULY
arc
ULARS.
AGENTS.
WILHELMINAHONOLULAN
WILHELMINAHONOLULAN
MARU....FEB. 18th10th
ESPECIALLY
Co.HONOLULU, Tehuantopec,
MARU....FEB.MARU....MAR.
Castle & Cooke, Ltd., AgentsSTORAGE WAREHOUSE
HOUSEHOLD GOODSExperienced men for packing.
Union-Pacif- ic Transfer Co.,JKinBj3treet opposite
LURLINE
LURLINE
AGENTS.
AMERICA
ADAPTED
TACOMA
STORING
TIIM HAWAIIAN 8TAH, PHIDA?, PafiRtlARY I, Ilil.
TIDES, SUN AND MOON.Flrnt quarter of the moon, Feb. 0th.
T15 S3 fi
or 7T imr or.i
4:N M :17 0:7 Mil Snl
"Ist 4:Ml nae 10:0: 11: lot,817 6:81 7)31
Mi i.J I'. M.tun lOsSO is:lONfliSfiS.M 8:19
ft:Sfi 1.7 0 so 12:8ft 11: is C:Mfi:Mi 9:15
0:15 7:) 1:0ft G:80S;IW 10:11
A.M.7:00 8!27 1:38 i;oo 0:86 6 K1 11:0ft
--
I'. M. A. MS 9U0I 1.4 7iJ 2:501 2:831 IG:Rft5:ftl -Tlmos of the tlflo are taxen trom tho
U. S. Coast and Oeodotlo Survoy tables.The tides at Kahulul and IIIlo ocourabout ono hour carllor than at Hono-lulu. Honolulu standard tlmo Is 10hours 30 minutes Blower than Green-wich time, being that of tho meridianof 157 degrees 30 mlns. Tho timewhistle blows at 1:30 p.m., which Is thosame as Greenwich 0 hours 0 minutes.The sun and moon aro for local time foritho whole group.
c snipping in jfort
(Government vessels.)U. S. L. H. T. Kukul, from cruise,U. S. R C. Thetis, from cruiso,
Merchant vessels.S. C. Allen, Am. bit., from Belling-ham- ,
January 2S.
Flaurenco Ward, Am. sch., fromMidway, Jr.nary 25.
Zealandia, Br. str. from Sydney,January 30.
Beachy, Br. str., from Pugct Sound,January 18.
Coronado, Am. bk., from San Fran-cisco, Jan. 15.
Erskine M. Phelps, Am. sp., fromNorfolk, Dec. 6.
R. P. Rlthet, Am. bk., from SanFrancisco, Dec. 30.
PROJECTED DEPARTURES.For San Francisco.
Wilholmlna, M. N. Co., Februar1.
Honolulan, M. N. Co., February 4.China, P. M. Co., February 5.Manchuria, P. M. Co., FebruarJ
11.
Sierra, O. S. S. Co., February 15Chiyo Maru, T. K. K., Februar
18.
Lurilne, M. N. Co., February 21.Asia, P. M. Co., February 25.
For Vancouver.Moana, C,-- R. M. S,, March 1.
Makura, C.-- R. M. S., Marc28.
For FIJI and Australia.Makura, C.-- R. M. is , February 3.
Zealandia, C.-- R M. S., March 3.For China and Japan.
Korea, P. M. Co., February 3.Nippon Maru, T. K. K., February
14.Siberia, P. M. Co., February 21.China, P. M. Co., February 27.Manchuria, P. M. Co., March 6.
INTER-ISLAN- VESSELS.For Hllo ana Hawaii Ports.Mauna Kea, I.-- I. S. N. Co., Every
Tuesday.Mikahala, every Tuesday,
For Kauai Ports.W. G. Hall, I.-- l. s. N. Co., Every
Thursday.Kinau, I.-- I. S. N. Co., Every
Tuesday.For Maul and Hawaii Ports.
Claudine, I.-- I. S. N. Co., EveryFriday.
Kau and Kona ports.Mauna Loa, I.- -I S. N. Co., alter
nate Tuesdays and Fridays.TRANSPORT SERVICE.
U. S. A. T. Crook at Manila.U. S. A. T. Warren at Manila.U. S. A. T. Sheridan at San Fran
cisco.U. S. N. T. Buffalo, at San Francis
co.U. S. A. T. Buford, at San Francisco.U. S. A. T. Thomas at San Fran
clsco.U. S. A. T. Logan en route to Hono-
lulu.U. S. A. T. Sherman at Manila.U. S. A. T. Dix en route to Manila.
BREWERIES READY TO FIGHT.
POTTSVILLE, Pa., January 8. Withsix and a half million dollars at stakeon tho decision of tho license court,which meets this week, tho ton brew-eries of this county nave hired a dozenlawyers to fight tho contention of theand Order officials declared they canof every brewory which has a pecu-niary Interest In saloons should be d.
Tho court last year declared suchholdings to bo Illegal, and tho Lawand Order o.. rials declared they canprove that all but throo of tho brew-eries own such properties. Threo dif-ferent judges In as many differentcourts, will sit all week to hear thotestimony.
BRITISH DECRY
LONDON, January 8.which has been tried on a small scalehere, was the subject of a heated dis-cussion at tho annual meeting of thePrivate Schools Association, hut the
nreovlieltHlMK tefttlHHHtt of the mas(era was against It.
The Iter. Dr. Hums, renowned as anwtHoatnr, of Plymouth, gnld:
"Nature demands the separation f
the soxea early In life. The best edu-cationalist in America tire agnlnst
and public opinion Is In-
clining In the same direction. It Is onnof the American people's silly dioams.They are llko children trying experi-ments with new theories."
A PICTURE OF NIGHT.
Along the high hedged Inno JohnStrong swung, tho Juno glonmltiBdeepening Into night. Ho loved toshove his face Into the night. Hogloried In tho uncortnlnty of tho night,the IndaMnltoness of tho night, nnd hissoul cried back a wild answer to thecry of tho nlghthnwk nnd the owl.Night Is more primitive than dny; itIs more palnmltous; night is a savage:night everywhere Is tho true nborlglno.Day has taken on civilization. Nighthurls the world back to the day oftho war club, tho fllint arrowhead,the painted visage. John Strong lov-ed the night with nn almost malevo-lent love. In tho night lie could hearthe Vnlkyrles screaming, tho witchesriding their broomsticks, tho ghoulsscraping tho mold from the new burledcoffin. John Strong swung along, hisface set to meet oncoming night.Adventure.
WHAT HE SAVED.
Mr. Hubb I hnven't saved a dol-lar since I married.
Mrs. Hubb Oh, what a fib! You'vesaved nearly half you had in the bankat that time. Boston Transcript.
A MATTER OF CHOICE.Maud Miss Oldum declares fthat
she is single from choice. EthelThat's true. The man she expectedto marry chose another. Exchange.
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THEUNITED STATES IN AND FORTHE TERRITORY AND DISTRICTOF HAWAII.
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERI-CA, Plaintiff, vs. HAWAIIAN SUG-AR COMPANY, et al., Defendants.
THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITEDSTATES, GREETING:HAWAIIAN SUGAR COMPANY, a
corporation organized and existingunder and by virtue of the laws oftbo Territory of Hawaii; TERRITORYOF HAWAII; ELIZA SINCLAIR,JANE R. GAY, HELEN McH. ROB-INSON, FRANCIS GAY and AUBREYROBl'NSON, copartners doing business under the firm name and styleof GAY & ROBINSON: WILLIAMRENNY WATSON; GEORGE W.MACFARLANE, attorney in fact forWILLIAM RENNY WATSON; MARYRENNY WATSON; MRS. MARYSHELBY; MARY MARGARET WAT-SON; SPENCER SHELBY; andCLARA KILAUEA, ELSA H1LO,MARION MAKENA, DAVID PUU- -
LOA, ALBERT PUNAHOU, ROBERTWAHIAWA, ALEXANDER LANAI,GEORGE KEWALO, HENRY KAMA-LO- ,
AVALTER HAWEA and PHILIPLAHAINA, unknown owners andclaimants.
You are hereby directed to appear,pnd answer the Petition in an actionentitled as above, brought againstyou in the District Court of tho United States, In and for the Territory ofHawaii, within twenty days from andafter service upon you of a certifiedcopy of Plaintiff's Petition herein, to-
gether with a certified copy of thisSummons.
And you aro hereby notified that unless you appear and answer as aboverequired, the said Plaintiff will takejudgment of condemnation of thelands described in the Petition hereinand for any other relief demandedin the Petition.
WITNESS THE HONORABLE SAN- -
FORD B. DOLE and THE HONOR-ABLE A. G. M. ROBERTSON, Judgesof said District Court, this 5th day ofJanuary, in the year of our Lord onethousand nine hundred and eleven andof tho 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, ct 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 thoDistrict Court of tho United Statesof America, in and for tho Territoryand District of Hawaii, do herebycertify tho foregoing to be a full, trueand correct copy of tho originalSummons in tho caso of THE UNI-TED STATES OF AMERICA vs.HAWAIIAN SUGAR COMPANY, etnl as tho same remains of record andon fllo In the offlco of tho Clerk ofsaid Court.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I havohereunto set my hnnd and nfflxedthe seal of said District Court this17th day of January, A. D. 1911.
A. E. MURPHY,Clerk of United States District
Court, Territory of Hawaii.By F. L. DAVIS,
ivi Li ,. Deputy Clerk.
What BetterReference Thana Bank Account?
You can havo this referoncoat any tlmo you want by keep-
ing a Savings Account.
Ono Dollnr is snlllclont toopen a Savings Account and ifyou will systematically doposltyour looso ohnngo jyu will soon
have n snug sum In tho Bank.
ICapital and surplus 71.000,000
BSTABL1BHED IN 1830.
WAIWUVA TUX WBBANKEKS
Commsrcial and Travellers'Letters of Credit Issued on theBank of California and The Lon-don Joint Stock Bank, Limited,London.
Correspondents for the Anir-lea- n
Express Company, andThou. Cook ft Sob.
Interest allowed on term analaTlngs Bank Dspoiits.
r " " "
Bank ofHonolulusLV i m i t
Issue K. N. & K.Letters o f Creditand Traveler'sChecks availablethroughout theworld. J-- J-- Cabletransfers at lowestrates & J-- jf Jt ji
Tne YoKonama spec
LIMITED.HEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.
Capital (Paid Up) Yen 24.000,000
leservo Fund Yen 16,600,000
General banking business transact-ed. Savings account for fl and up-
wards.Fire nd burglar proof vaults, with
Safe Deposit Boxes for rent at ?2 peryear and upwards.
Trunks and cases to be kept on cus-tody at moderate rates.
Particulars to be applied for.
YU AKAI, Manager.
Honolulu Office, Bethel and Mer-chant Sts. Tel. 2421 and 1594. P. O.Box 168.
ilfflERlIIlS LTD
OFFICERS and DIRECTORS.H. P. BALDWIN President
. B. CASTLE 1st Vice-Preside-
W. M. ALEXANDER. 2ndJ R. GALT 3rd Vice-Preside-
E. E. PAXTON SecretaryJ. WATERHOUSE TreasurerW. R. CASTLE DirectorJ. GUILD DirectorC. H. ATHERTON DirectorG. G. KINNEY Acting Auditor
IN THE DISTRICT COURT 8P TtfPUmTCO STATES, FOfl THE TOR.RITORY OP HAWAII.
TUB UMTTED STATES OF AMBBICULPlaintiff, vs. PACIFIC SUQAft tSWOet nl., Defendants,Action brought in said Dlstrioa
Court, and tbo Polition filed In UioofOco of tho Clerk of sold DisthictCourt, In Honolulu,
TUB PRESIDENT OF THE UNITEDSTATKS OF AMERICA, GREETINOJI
PACIFIC SUGAR MILL ,n corpora-- ,(ion organized and existing under andby vlrtuo of tho Laws of tho Territory,of Hawaii; THE TERRITORY OB)HAWAII; KEAU LIILII; KOLOU;iKAMA1PELE; E. KAUin, whose fullnnd truo namo is unknown, wife ofN. KEAU, whoso full and true nameIs unknown, deceased; LOUISE OOKA-LA- ,
SARAH PAUKA, ELIZABETHWAIMEA, ROBERT WAILUKU, SAM-UEL WA1KAPU, DANIEL MAKENA',unknown heirs at law of N. KEAU,vhoso full and truo name is unknown,lecoased; R. P. KUIKAHI, whose fulland truo namo is unknown; J. HU-MEK-
who?o full and true name isunknown; NAONE, wlfo of J. HUME-KU- ,
whoso full and true name is un-known: ELENA, wife of S. W. HOO-MAN- A,
whose full nnd truo name loULknown; S. W. HOOMANA, whosofull and true name is unknown, hus-band of ELENA; SAMUEL PARKER;'ANNA KAILUA, JULIA KIHOLO,FLORA WAIKI, HELEN ICAUHOLA,CARRIE KEAUMOKO, MARTHA KAJ,GERTRUDE LOA, WILLIAM PAU-WAL-
THOMAS KIPAHULU, FOR-STE- R
NUU, DAVID KUAU, FRANKLANAT, CHARLES KOELE, andHENRY PitALAWAI, unknown ownereand claimants, v
Defendants and Respondents.You ore hereby directed to appear
and answer the Petition in an actionentitled as nbovc, brought against youin the District Court of tho UnitedStates, in and for the Territory ofHawaii, within twenty days from andafter service upon you of a certifiedcopy of Plaintiff's Petition herein, together with a certified copy of thinSummons.
And you are hereby notified thatunless you appear and answer ttsabove required, the said Plaintiff willtake judgement of condemnation ofthe lands described in the Petitionherein and for any other relief de-manded In tho Petition,
WITNESS THE HONORABLE SAN-FOR- D
B. DOLE and A. G. M. ROBERT-SON, Judges of said District Court,this 25th day of October, in the yeaof our Lord one .thousand nine hun-dred r.nd ten and of the Independenceof the United States the one hundredand thirty-fift- h.
(Signed) A. E. MURPHY,(Seal) Clerk, t
(Endorsed) 'W'1'' , i t
"No. 65 DISTRICT COURT OF THBU. S. for the Territory of Hawaii.THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA)X&. PACIFIC SUGAR MILL, et at.SUMMONS. ROBERT W. BRECK"ONSiSA WILLIAM T. RAWJjmg. Hpi.
UNITED STATES OF AMERJtCATerritory of Hawaii, City of Etautalu ss.
I, A. B. MURPHY, Clerk of the Sfe.trict Court of the United States, atAmerica, in and for tho Territory BadDistrict of Hawaii, do herebv otxHfvthe foregoing to be a full, true andcorrest copy of the original Petitionand Summons in the caso of TKHUNITED STATES OF AMERICA T.PACIFIC SUGAR MILL, et al.. as thesame remains of record and on file Inthe office of the Clerk of said Court.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF. T hnhereunto set my hand and affixed theseal of said District Court thla lKth 'day of October, A. D. 1910.
A. E. MURPHYClerk of United States District Court.
xerruory 01 tiawail
Dress GoodsMen's Furnishings
YAT HING, - 127 Hotel St.
Force growthWILL DO IT.
E A I IS JFeAll Kinds Wrapping Papers and
Twines, Printing and WrltinR Papers.American-Hawaiia- n Paper & Supply
Co., Ltd.Fort and Queen Streets, Honolulu,
phono 1410. Geo. G. Guild Gen, Mgr.
A CLEAN HOUSE AND
Pau ka HanaARE FAST FRIENDS.
DrinkMAY'S OLD KONA COFFEE.
Best in the Marke-HENR-
MAY & CO.Phone 1271.
Oat & flossmanSTATIONERS AND
BOOK SELLERS.
Merchant Street near Post Office.
X
V
ippjiiitifl mfirrmmr
AMUSEMENTS.
H o n ol u I uAmusementCompany, L,d
THE SAVOYNEW TONIQHT.
THE GREATEST SUCCESS IN
VAUDEVILLEDORIC TRIO.
DOLLIVER AND ROGERS,Pretty Dancing Duo, with Now Songs.
LAREDOS,Marrels of Flexibility, In
Prcsont ALL Their Feats.
AMATEURS TUESDAY. of
Motion Plct'rcs are or SelectedSublet ts.
Popular Prlces- - -- Never Changed.
r i 1 1
L,mDire 1 heaterHighest Salaried Show In the City.
MATINEE TODAY.
GREAT OVATION.J
For Return EngagementLast Chance to See
GLADSTONE SISTERS.Acrobatic Dancers.
MUSICAt. BENTLEYS,And Their Marimba Xylophone
"With Many New Popular Selections.GEORGE STANLEY,
More Ballads.
JUNE LOT OF MOVING PICTURES.
POPULAR PRICES: 10c, .15c, 25c.
THE BIJOU' NEW CHANGES TONIGHT.
JOS. D. CARROLL.Greatest of Foot Tappers.JONES AND GREINER
The Funny Boys.E. HASSON BEN ABDIE.
Pyramid Building The Human Vice.
CONCHITA CARRANZE,Specialty Change Artist.BURKE AND BURKE,
Bits of Vaudeville.
richard Kipling.The Flag That's Tours and Mine
Illustrated
Amateurs on FridayPOPULAR PRICES 10c, 15, 25c.
PARK THEATER, . Fort, below Beretania.
LAST THREE NIGHTS.Before Closing.
LE MAREST BROS.,William Rubin.
Featuring Topsy-Turv- y Piano Playing.
HARDING AND WASSON,
Singing Their Own Composition.Dancing Their Own Eccentric Steps.
The Charming Singer.WINNIE BALDWIN.
PRETTIEST OPEN AIRTHEATER IN HONULULU
Popular Prices- - -- Cunia's Music
FIRE INSURANCE
ATLAS ASSURANCE COMPANY OF
LONDON.NTW YORK UNDERWRITERS
AGENCY.l?ROVTDENOia WASHINGTON IN
SURANCE COMPANY.
'Thb B. F, Dillingham Co., Ltd,
General Agents for Hawaii.Fourth Floor, Stangenwald Building.
Y. WO SING CO.
Groceries, Fruits, Vegetables, Etc.
Butto.' 35c lb.; Fresh Dried Fruits.1186-118- Nuuanu Street
Telephone 1034. Box 952
ComfortersBlankets, Woolen Shawls
You need 'em these nights.
Got them cheap and good at
Chan Kee127 Hotel Street
Sow's Special salve For Files
Guaranteed to contain nothing lujurlouj.Cures chronic sores, cuts, burns ana allkln diseases oltbe human race
I'repared by
Q. HOMMASecret Halve Specialist
Ho, 10 King 81 UonoiulU. T, B,
u
Magnanimity, rare as the proverbialfines, but unconsciously developed In
VHI1RBI
their friendly rivalry for big accomplishments, wnen me pcny ...
more trivial tumbles over the rocky path of life are diminished In esti-
mation Inversely, to the greater conquered by the fall, Is one
the most precious Jewels for the delver Into the depths of Intraspectlon,shoulders with their fellows, are nat- -
and from the former, men rubbingurally more efficiently expanded, still from the latter, tnere is nine ecu.0for the tardy of
There ate few men of distinction who, round tne testive ooaru, uu
not take pleasure In relating some story on themselves, but one must
search more diligently for the society woman who can, or will delight herguests by an episode whose point of
Mrs. Fanny Vandes Grift Stevenson,Stevenson, Is an exception to this rue.
From the day when first In Parisassociation with the master writer of hisIn her artistic bungalow mansion In Santa Barbara, she smiles
upon Society from her perestal of prestige, she
has won all hearts by her alluring ways
her family.Amona the many quaint characters boasted by the late author as ms
friends Is a very old man who lives atshack, he makes tomales to eke outsistant, his disreputable looking grubby
One day, while on a visit to Santaof his erstwhile friend, and In his galabandana kerchief and hobnail boots helarge reception room(, In Itsand old editions, and which was soonlittle hostess In her customary empireand dainty French satin pumps.
During the conversation the oldto her usual kindness, the hostess decided to lessen his
by any display of formality and so rose to get It herself.When she returned with a tumbler of water on a silver tray, her
guest disposed of it at a single quaff, then wiping his beard with theback of his hand, proceeded to his hostess In his own peculiar
way."Well," he said slowly, "you even more like her now. wnen you
came In I thought of It right away. You're little and fat, and she is little
and fat. You don't wear any corsets, and she don't wear any corsets.
You wait on me, and she waits on me. By golly, but you ARE like my
old womanl"
Miss Claire Wllllamp yesterdayafternoon at her home at Waiklklentertained at an elaborate violetluncheon In honor of her cousin Mrs.Clarence Short of Montreal. Theshades of the appointments formingn snttintr ranired from deel) purple topaiC8t lavender, creating an alluring
loffnt An sirtlutln. linnU-nt- . of mlilint--rir- r,nJ T:
on an exquisitecluny lace brought fromMadeira, the lace center of Europe,a luncheon set o smaller dollies of
similar design gracing the table.Over these violets in dainty clusters
were strings of smllax run-
ning In between, the centerpiece be-
ing visible through a mist of lavendertulle.
The place cards, brought from Ger-
many, during the young hostess's re-
cent travels abroad, were violetwreaths, within whichappeared the names of the guests.
After luncheon the guests Indulged inbridge.
Those favored by Invitations by theyoung hostess were: Mrs. ClarenceShort of Montreal, Princess Kawana-ko- a,
Mrs. B. J. wife ofMajor Timberlake of Fort Ruger; MissBeatrice Castle, Mrs. William Wil-
liamson, Miss Sarah Lucas, Mrs. Eli-
zabeth Church, Miss Edith Williams,and Mrs. Charles Chllllngworth.
4
Mrs. Minnie Aldrlch, who arrived afew weeks ago to visit her old home,is being welcomed back by her many
friends. She is the house guest ofH. M. Queen LIHuokalanl at Wash-
ington Place on Beretania avenue.
Invitations have been Issued for aluncheon at which Mrs. BenjaminDodgo Marx will entertain tomorrowafternoon, in honor of her mother,Mrs. Claire Williams, who has recent-ly returned from a five years' sojournin Europe.
iMiss Edith Williams will entertain
tomorrow afternoon at a luncheon fora coterie of frlonds, at her homo atWaiklkl.
H (
Mrs. J. P. Cooke willMr. and Mrs. William Gardiner Cookeof New York with a pol supper to-
morrow evening. Mr. and Mrs. Cooko
arrived from tho malnlnnd In the Ko-
rea this morning.
Major and Mrs. Sam,uel Dunningat a dinner party this
evening complimentary to Admiraland Mrs. Cowles.
tt V
Mrs. E. J. Timberlake Is entertain-ing at her artistic quarters at FortRuger with a luncheon this afternoon,as a farewell tribute to Mrs. Payson,
run Hawaiian Itak, PfiliJAY, WlnntfARV i, IflL
Over the TeacupsBy L,ady Gay
achievements
development womankind.
condescend-
ingly
resplendent
according em-
barrassment
compliment
are
centerpiece
sprinkled,
hand-painte-
Timberlake,
compliment
are entertaining
haystack needle In small con- -
larger areas where minas coniuci
In
Inhumor may affect her dignity.
the widow oi rtoDert wu,.
she became prominent tnrougn nerage, to the present day,-whenc-
and the wit which is a teaturc or
a
Monterey, where, In a rude adobea livelihood tor nimseu ana nis as
old Indian squaw.Barbara, he called upon tne wiaow
attire of blue flannel shirt, redwas conducted by the butler into tne
rare old paintings, works of art,further brightened by a smilingstyle, of gown of rich black satin
'
guest requested a glass of water, and
wife of Lieutenant-Colon- el Payson, U.S. A., who with her husband will bedeparting passengers In the transportLogan tomorrow.
VMrs. Harry Macfarlane Is entertain-
ing this afternoon at a luncheon ntthe Country Club.
The most elaborate afternoon of tho'season was that given yesterday attho Country Club, when Mrs. RobertAtkinson and Mrs. Arthur Wilder en-
tertained ten tables at bridge. Al-
though the weather threatened duringthe earlier part of the afternoon It de-
terred no one from attending thisbrilliant function; and sixty guests at-
tired in elaborate toilettes turned outen nfasse to the occasion.
The lounging room of the club wagbrilliantly decorated with great jar-dinieres and bowls ,of scarlet Ixorablossoms, an effective drapery ofthese branches revealing a myriad ofcrimson splashes being festooned overtho windows and doors and about thetabourets of potted palms charminglycombined with great green and whiteelephant's ears, and the green andgold leaves of the parasite vine.
During the Intervals of cards, fruitpunch was passed around by the wait-
ers of the club, and at the conclusion,elaborate buffet refreshments wereserved, consisting of various sand-wiches, chicken salad, almonds, olives,cake, pineapple ice and bon-bon-
The prize for eacli table was asouvenir in cut glass, handsome jugs,vases, and bonbonleres being awardcd the winners.
Among these were Mrs. SamuelDunning, Mrs. A. M. Brown, MissAlice Macfarlane, Mrs. Bobbins An-
derson, Mrs. Klcbahn, Mrs. RanncyScott.
Among the large number of guestspresent were: Mrs. Samuel Dunningof Fort Shafter, Mrs. E. J. Timber- -1 1. ff T. Tt.. Tl .1 IIIiuku oi ron iiunur, flirs. uuuuiu, .urn. i
Hnrndon, Mrs. Henry Frederick Wlch-ma- n,
Miss Helen Aloxander, Mrs.Helen Noonan, Mrs. George Herbert,Mrs. Edward Tenney, Miss Wtlhel-mln- a
Tenney, Miss Irene Dickson,Mrs. William Williamson, Mrs. SamWalker, Mrs. Ranney Scott. Miss An- -
Arthur Berg, Mrs. Julia Macfarlane,PrlnceBS Kalanlanaolo, Ah- -
bio Kawananakoa, Miss May Damon,Harold Giffard, Mrs. Fred Mac -
farlane, Mrs. Harry Macfarlane, MissMacfarlane Mrs. Robblns Anderson,Mrs. Klebahn, Mrs. Arthur M. Brown,Mrs. George Mrs.Ivers, Mrs. Holloway, Mrs. WalterFrancis DIUInKham. Mrs. J. S. Walker,Mrs. Fred Smith, Mrs. Mac- -
farlane, Mrs. Charles Wilder and MissViolet Makeo.
The hostesses, who received at theentrance, were both similarly gowned
lacey lingerie frocks, Mrs. Wilderwearing a huge corsage of violets.
Mrs. E. D. Tenney wore a wistariasatin, mado In draped affect, with alarge wistaria satin Gainsborough hattrimmed In d plumes.
Mrs. Richard Ivors was very stylisha plum-colore- d broadcloth tailored
costume, and wearing a velvet hat ofthe same shade with touches of gold
Mrs. Walter Dllllnghnm appearedIn a clinging Importation of ch&mpagne crepe meteor, with a satin hatof the same shade trimmed in goldplumes.
Mrs. Charles Bryant Cooper worecreation of pearl grey satin with a
royal blue overdess of chiffon in tuniceffect, outlined in soft grey marabon.A large and becoming chapeau of asimilar shade trimmed with royal blueroses completed this fascinatingcostume.
Mrs. J. S. McGrew was charmingIn an Imported gown, with a handsome mantle or overwrap of whitecrepe de chine embroidered in clustersod lavender wistaria, and a whitechapeau trimmed with these daintyllowers.
Mrs. Newell wore a very smart- -
tailored suit of white broadcloth, withcollar and cuffs of white satin, and awhite satin picture hat trimhied' withwhite plumes and faced with pale bluesatin.
Mrs. Robblns Anderson was mostattractive in a very beautiful hand'embroidered French frock of daintymull trimmed with quantities of ltallan lace. A white and gold toquetrimmed with gold roses, completedthis modish costume.
Miss May Damon, In a soft linger!grown was very dainty. She worepicture hat elaborately trimmed withwhite willow plumes.
Mrs. Klebahn wore a grey embroldered chiffon, made over of self- -
colored satin, and a similar toned hattrimmed with ostrich plumes.
.Miss Ewart has sent out invitationsof a dinner party at which she willentertain tomorrow evening at theCountry Club.
4Mr. Frank E. Thompson, bon vlvant,
clubman, and society favorite, arriv-ed this morning .n the Korea fromSan Francisco, after a trip to Wash-ington, D. C.
rf
Mr. and Mrs. William Williamsonentertained last evening at a dinnerparty at their home In Nuuanu valley.
The table was abloom with an abun-
dance of duchess roses Issuing froma gold Indian basket, the place cardsdepicting Japanese scenes. After din-
ner the guests Indulged In bridge.Those present wore: Princess
Mr. ana Mrs. J. MortonRiggs, Mr. and Mrs. James Dougher-ty, Miss Irene Dickson, Mr. McMul-le- n
and Mr. Rice.Princess Kawananakoa was very
handsome In a black chiffon gown overblacK satin, and Miss Dickson wasattired In a creation of canary satinand gold thread lace.
Mrs. Dougherty was dainty In a,gown of white marquisette, whileMrs. Ulgga wore a charming confec-tion of white lace.
The hostess was very pretty in apale blue marquisette gown intor-wove- n
with silver threads and passa-nionterl- e.
Ill WAIT FOR.i .... CJ. ? f"li-UJ-
APPROPRIATION
The Territory has decided to take no
further lmmodiato action In the mat- -
against James Stelncr ot al., owing losome Irregularity In tho way the pa- -
'pers wore drawn. This was a trilling' matter In a way, and merely meantthat a delay would he occasioned byhaving to start over again. This theTerritory had decided to do, but nowAttornoy-Goner- al Lindsay hasto wait for a whllo, and the legislaturewill bo asked to vote a sum of money
with which to purchase the necessary
derson, Mrs. Newell, Miss Catherine tor of the acquiring tho land for tho'Goodale, Mrs. Mannle Phillips, Mrs. continuation of Bishop street from
Mrs. J. S. McGrew, Mrs. Chas. tel street. In tho supremo court, aCooper, Mrs Arthur Wall, Mrs. days ago tho Territory lost Its case
Princess
Mrs.
Potter, Richard
Clarence
drop
resolved
nnd, If the imttt In votwl ttiMdamnation nrooMdtnwi will lw twgun.ntnl an attempt will lie made to obtaintil land In thin wa.
I
s 1 E VEiS
IS INHABITED.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.. January 9.--- 1
'rof. William H. Pickering of tho Hnr- -
art! observatory is interested in merecent statement of Dr. T. J. J. See of
the Mare Island obscrvnlory that tho'
higher forms of life exist on t
Vonus.
The Hnrvard savant has held tontn- -
tlvely for many years that animal lifcjproof that any tWQ 1)lanots on rcachlngbeen in existence on Venus and the same stngo geologically wouldhas
that tho surface of the planet Is com-- 1
posed principally of steaming swampswhich abound with reptilian creaturesof antediluvian periods. The professor has certain theories on the geo-
graphical proclivities of the moon also,but does not care to discuss them.Concerning Venus Professor Pickeringsays:
"Certainly there are many physicalreasons for thinking that if any otherplanet besides the earth Is inhabited It
The Bank OfT
STATEMENT OF CONDITION
ASSETS
Loans, Discounts, & Overdrafts $3,106,539.68
Bonds 722,217.47Bank Premises & Fixtures 10S.500.00Customer's Liabilities un
der Lottors of Credit.. 266,706.33Cash and Due from banks 1,390,198.87Other Assets 10,683.35
$5,604,845.70
I, F. B. Damon, Cashier, do solemnlybest of my knowledge and belief,
" m
Examined and found correct:F C. ATHER't ON )F. W. MACFARLANE) Directors
F. ATHERTON,
H.D. .J'A. JR.,
E. F.F. MACFARLANE,
T, H., 25,
prataiMr Vmu."U la nbtmt lk nm MM M UM
oarth and IU dwalty ! atwwt Urn Miaf Supporting Life.
"Th force of warily wi IU MrffcMIs only altghtly Im titan that ah tMHHilh. 1 fpl Mm that atthe iiIhiu'I'k surface the atmoflt'lier Ismany time that of our own. WhanoverythlttK la taken Into coimttlarailenVenua seenta more capable support- -I up II fo than any other planet exoopttho onrth.
"The ten.poratnrc on Venua Is prob- -
inn) mo muni.' uB in uur uwn tropics.oud (ho douse ntmosphorc may be of acomposition such as enveloped thoearth In the carboniferous period. It
'I" "eon said, and with what appears1,0 BBOn- - ,hat tlle Burfllce ot
Venus Is todny mostly watorswamps or perhaps all water.
"It has said that there Is no
necessarily have same sort of at- -rnosphorc, and so the atmosphere onVenus may bo of such a compositionthat life l there resemblesnothing that ever was on this earth."
PEOPLE ARE WATCHING.
Congressman will bo more carefulthan usual; people arc looking.Memphis News-Scimita- r.
Flno Job Star Office.
Hawaii, Ltd.AS AT DECEMBER 31, 1910.
LIABILITIES. " '")Capital Paid Up $ 600,000.00Surplus & Profits 550,100.76Pension 34,724.86Deposits 4,152,6S5,83Letters of Credit Cut-standi-
E. D. . ) "" Auditor.Subscribed and sworn to before me this 10th day of January 1911.
(SEAL) J. D. MARQUES,, .... - Notary Public. 1st Judicial Circuit,
Territory of Hawaii.At the annual of tho Stockholders of THE BANK OF HAWAII,
LIMITED, herd on January 25, 1911, the following were elected to serve asOfficers and Directors for tho ensuing year:
OFFICERS.C. H. COOKE, President, F, B. DAMON, CashierE. D. TENNEY, Vice President, G. G. FULLER, Asst. CashierA. LEWIS, JR., & Mgr. R. McCORRISTON, Asst. Cashier
C.
DIRECTORS. ,tlC. COOKE,E. TENNEY,
LEWIS.BISHOP,
W.
Honolulu, January 1911.
Capable
reasonably
of
K,00'1perhaps
been
the
whatever
tho
Printing,
Fund
GEORGE
TENNEY
meeting
Once upon a time, a man who was too economical to take
a paper, sent his little boy to borrow the copy taken by his
neighbors. In his haste, the boy ran over a four dollar stand oibees, and in ten minutes looked like a watery summer squash.
His cries reached his father, who ran to his assistance,
and, failing to see a barb-wir- e fence, ran into it, breaking it
down, cutting a handful of flesh from his anatomy and ruining
a five-doll- ar pair of pants.
The old cow took advantage of the gap in the fence, got
into the cornfield and killed herself eating green corn. Hearing
the racket, his wife ran, upsetting a four-gallo- n churn full ofrich cream into a basket of kittens, drowning the whole "flock."In her hurry she dropped a seven-doll- ar set of teeth. The baby,
left alone, crawled through the spilled milk into the parlor andruined a twenty-doll- ar carpet. During the excitement the oldest
daughter ran away with the hired man, the calves got out andthe dog broke up eleven sitting hens. .
Moral Subscribe for our paper.
THE HAWAIIAN STARNEWSPAPER ASS'N. LTD.
P. O. BOX 366 PUBLISHERS PHONE 2365
Si
it .'
r,--
refill
THE HAWAIIAN STARPublished erery aftm-ww- ii (xpt SitnilHjr) tty the IIhwhIIrii Star
HJgf One of the Star's special news features appears today for the first time,
It Includes a nesslpy San Francisco letter from Smith, formerly
Honolulu, and a complete resume of the news of the files, not Including
matter already received by cable here, to the departure of the Honolulu-boun- d
steamer. The letters will sent us four times a month; the con-
densations will come by every mall.
POSITION AT
Tim fli'iiicoe iivii llinl ( 'onm-ioi- s
sulrtr exhibit the World's Fair, Philippine, Hawaiian,Samoan, Porto Kioan, Pananian and Ladrone (.Guam) displays.
The Exposition company's natural way would he group all Ihec(i, .:.,r r..,iit.nu iiiniiiiiiinr tvtiliMil vill:i'cs. liiitivi! life. etc.. andexhibits of products, manufactories
N. of
up
be
at
to
picturesque.It is for Ilnwaii to consider whether she can better serve her in-l- i
Hii nbnrbriiinl coinimnv or aiinoiirini: atthe Fair as7i Territory of the Tinted States, olferiiig civilized peoplea chance to live in a civilized iioine.
ii.iii ciu. silmw lim-Koi- r Ms !in intnm-n- l lmrl of the Union, a candidate for statehood, or as an outlying "possession' with unstablenrteuitiilii ins nf irm'fM'lllllfMlt.
The Star ventures no opinion.policy.
THE MKXICAX
The news from Juarez, the town
Ernest
by a bridge, shows that the insurrection is taking its ancient route.That part of Mexico which lies near the Hio Grande is mountainous;nnd its proximity to neutral ground, a safe place, has made it thefavorite campaigning field of men who tight .Mexico with a ropearound their necks. The great Indian soldier from whom he townof Juarez takes its name the man who wrestled with Maxinu ion andsucceeded him operated chiefly there; and from (hat vantage groundsafelv and gradually extended Ins area ol conquest.
Little is really known here of the scope of Ibis Maderist uprising.is the Mexican trovernmcnt understands the virtue of the censorshipBut as no alarming news comes from the American minister or theconsuls, one may safely believe that the trouble or the worst of it
'is still local to the region we have named. Of course it may go
farther. But as vet it has not appeared in the capital, in Vera CruzZacatecas, Guadalajara, Oaxaca, Mazatlan, Ilermosillo, Durango,Guavmas or Guanajuato, or any other important place outside of theState of Chihuahua, where Juarez is situated. Perhaps it may be
kept in the narrow boundaries where it started and perhaps not.The answer may wholly depend on the health of Diaz.
But after him, the deluge! Diaz is eighty, but his prestige is thatof an old and indomitable lion whom it will not yet do to harry in hislair. Some day, not far ahead, he will die, and there is, no great manto succeed liin'i. Half a dozen generals will then assert themselves;and all Mexico will enter upon civil war. It is never much of a risk toprophesy such a thing of any Latin American people whose naturalturbulence has been long repressed by military force.
DANGERS OF THE
was
THIS FA1K.
w ill itrovide Uie money for an in
art but emphasizing the
It merely rises to of
UPKISIXG.
connected El Paso, Texas
DIRECT PRIMARY,
)0)THE LAW:
dangerous cas6 appeared, on River
One objection to the direct primary is what it leads 1o in the wayof socialistic innovations. Behind it loom the recall and refer-endum and then chaos. If it is true that even the safe old planunder which the politics of the United States prospered for more thana century has been hard to operate because of the incapacity of mostof our voters to think for themselves, what may not happen when thevoters are turned loose without organization and direction, to actfor themselves?
Under the traditional American policy we have been gettingbetter Legislatures every two years. The one about to meet promisesto be the best of all. Suppose the membership of that body had beenselected from those having the highest votes in a direct primary,every man of any politics voting on his own hook, including the greatnumber that cannot speak Kuglisli, and what would nave neen tne re-
sult? Would not the Legislature soon to sit be as bad, in all proba-bility, as the Home Rule legislature of 1900?
Another reason why the Star thinks so is that the political enemywould have been free to the Republican ticket. There is no-
thing, in a direct primary, to really keep Home Rulers and Demo-
crats from voting to make the ticket of the dominant party as badas possible. A similar state of things shows why so many Socialistic
are now at the front in the politics of .California. It wasimpossible for the friends of representative government there tocombat the unholy alliances that met at the primary, in the Repub-lican name, to frame up a Winning ticket.
Bosses may be bad in their methods of ticket-makin- g, but thecommon enemy is worse.
HEALTH AND
This paper has not yet succeededany. less law than there used toHealth able to deal with filthyOnly three years, ago when a
and
a point
with
dictate
cranks
in finding out by asking if thereis be by ineanssof SVhiich',uie ,6jirdof or infectt'd' place's. ', '! '. '! "!
street, a building was seized, fumigated and is6ated, and theroundings cleaned up. Does not the law which, pqwutieu these neces-'sar- y
acts still exist?Here are some prevailing laws. What o( them?i AVe quote:
'ABATEMENT OP NUISANCES.
' Sec. 994. Removal, Prevention The board of health and Itsagents- - shall examine Into all nuisances, sources of filth and causesof sickness, on shore, or In any vessel, and shall 'icause the sameto be destroyed, removed or prevented, as the case rifay require.
Sec. 995. Ordering Owner to Remove. Whenever nny suchnuisance, source of filth, or cause of sickness shall be found onprivate property, the board of health or any health- agent shall orderthe owner qr occupant thereof, at his own expense, .to remove thesame within forty-eig- ht hours; nnd if the owner or occupant thereofshall neglect so to do, ho shall be fined In a sum not exceeding onehundred dollars. ,
Sec. 990. Removing at Expense of Owner. If the owner or occu-pant shall not comply with such order of the board of health, theboard or any of its ngonts may cause such nuisance, source of filthor cause of sickness to bo removed; and all expenses Incurred ,
thereby shall be paid by the said owner or occupant, or by suchother person as shall havo caused or pormltted the same.
Sec. 997. Entering Lands, Buildings, etc. Whenever any mem-ber of tho board of health, or Its ngent, shall think It necessary forthe preservation of the lives or health of the inhabitants, to enternny land, building or vessel, for the purpose of examining into anddestroying, removing, or preventing any nuisance, source of filth,or cause of sickness, and shall bo refused such entry, such memberor agent may make complaint to any district magistrate, who maythereupon Issue a warrant directed to any sheriff, deputy sheriff, orpolice officer, commanding him to take sufficient aid, and, beingaccompanied by such member of tho board of health, or agent, be-tween the hours of sunrise and sunset, to repair to the place wheresuch nuisance, source of filth, or cause of sickness complained qfmay be, nnd the same to destroy, remqve, er prevent, under the
of such member or agent.Sec. 998. Prisoners to Assist. For the purpose of removing
' nuisances, and causes of sickness, the board of health may require
'MtLl - sltfi- - j. if. wKUdulllUttJU, 4. : i .iLttbsiM.
t,iib .ifAlvftlTAft TOAHr-tfitrbA- Yf ifSMj7 it
tht high sheriff and Mlmiiffa tocharge to aid In audi work.
under their
Sh. HB. Who to Report NulwinoeK. It nhnll lis the duty orthe high Hherirr and nil officers of lidlloe, nnd phyMelHtm, to reportto the hoard or health, or Ita nen reft itnthorlned agent, the exlat-one- e
of any nuleanw Injurloiia (h thCpubllo health, or which any ofthem may be coRiilaant, m noon aatheir knowledge.
Sec. 1000. Court May Ordor Removal. When nny person shallhe convicted for n common nuisance that may ho Injurious to thenubile health, the-cour- t may, In Ita discretion,, order It to bo
or destroyed, at the expense of the defendant, undor thedirection of the board of health, or otherwise aa It may doompropor.
Soc. 1001. May Ordor Abntomonl. Whonovor any person ahnllbo convicted In any circuit court, of maintaining a common nuis-ance, tho court shall order that said nulsanco bo abated. Such ordershall not operate to suspend or vacate tho Hontonco Imposed, but shallbe a wholly cumulative remedy. In enso the ordor shall not havebeen mado at the time of Imposing tho sentence, It may bo madeat any regular term of tho same court holdoii within two yearnthereafter, upon motion by tho attorney-genera- l, and roasonablonotice to the defendant. Upon the hearing of each motion, tho judg-ment previously rendered shall be conclusive evidence of tho maln-tonnn-
of tho nuisance.Ill addition to all this the Board of Supervisors have been
to enforce sanitation by ordinance.One doesn't need "lilntr in enforcing uie laws we nave, lie
simply needs to give attention to duty, he and the public 1
The cost is up to the property-owner- s who insanitary condi-- j
lions to prevail on their property.
Honolulu has never had an epidemic which was not preceded bya period of civic and private carelessness about sanitation.
Between 70 cents a yard for macadam at one point and $1.J10 pervard at another there seems to be room for something doing.
Andrew Carnegie's choice for a new national hymn seems to bean international one which is based on the assumption that bothnations concerned are of one blood and one faith.
LITTLE INTERVIEWS- -
L. M. WHITEHOUSE. The' Nuua- -
nil uam is smnuing pai.I understand he is laying sidewalks on
.1IM McCANDLESS I exnect newsof the Shriners' tour bymall from the coast. Wo should geta lot of particulars then.
DAN RENEAR There will be more"funny stunts" at the Healanl boat-hou- se
on Sunday next. Wo are justworking the members up to a highpitch of enthusiasm and things arebooming along finely.
W. n. CASTLE. I have heard theItev. Dr. Harada speak several times,and can say that the occasion of hi&
speaking In Central Union churchwill be one no one should miss.
PERCY HUNTER. I want to findthe man who told me to go to Hawaiiin February and not in May. Mayweather here is delightful, as I knowby experience, but this is not. I havebeen told that this rain is not injur!ous. but 1 exnect the next thine will"i. w if iQ , ,.,fktlttb II ID 11UL IICl.
JOHN SMITH. Tho Lurline--,
which'is scheduled to leave here on.Mthe21st, ought to bo held over until af'terthe Floral Parade. fMany passengersare booked to leave on '(her, (andevery one of them would iike to seethe parade. I hope the agents can,see their way to delay tho departure,
JULIUS UNGER. I'd like to givea "Little Interview" on the bad con- -dltion of the city streets, but I can'tfind words to express it. But, tonl,ir,.r V oMor.t rl.r lon't ,!,..more President
the Most to
IS
The appeal of Henry St. Johnal., vs. H. A. Heen Jon
exceptions from circuit court yasdecided by supreme court yes-
terday afternoon,, Judge Dewriting decision, in which he sus-
tained the exceptions, set aside thedecision and granted
-
Thlsi an action tolowland at Kamakela, Honolulu, in
the plaintiffs claimed an un-
divided half-intere- st in fee simple,it being that defendantwas the owner the other undividedhalf-Interes- t. The circuit court gave'a decision in favor the defendant.
The decision raised an interestingregarding an estate tall. The
court said that tho technical languageto an estate tail was limitthe estate to a man and the heirs
his The phrase, "the heirsof her body" meaning Elizabeth Ka-hel-
wero appropriate words tocreate an estate tail, but antail could not be created this Ter-ritory. Tho court considered that thedeed September 13, 1873,bo most nearly carried out by hold-ing that Elizabeth should take a life-estat- e,
with remainder in fee simpleto tho plaintifTs, "the heirs of herbody." This view gave effect asnearly as possible those formalparts of the usually regardedas- - being sufficient, the law, topass title.
With regard to tho statute ot limit-ations, tho defendant soughtto Interpose, should heldthe plaintiffs took a fee simple, the
. .. !'1. 1.1 11 L t L acuuri uam mui u was ciear mat mo,statute did not apply, because the.plaintiffs wero not entitled to posset
IfJ
can the prlitotuHH
permit
tomorrow's
poaalble after It alialt come
in
ofbe leaving everything to tho Elks. Wesiiuuiu un jump m unu unuiusu mmdecorate I'm going to decorate my
W. H. BAUGH. of CaliforniaHere is to Hawaii, the Gem of
Sea,Here is to her people, so noble, so
free;tiere is 10 ner ciimnie aupunuing in
neaiin,nere is to ner oeauty ana ner joy,'
.llUILU, I
t . w ..n0on to barter
nd yet a great way oft its mightystarter. ,
ri.airr m hhratham-wi- th fhoHouse of Representatives the Sixty- -'
second Congress strongly Democraticand the Senate nearly half and half,I believe that Hawaii would do well tokeep itself clear from any alliancewith Philippines in the ofannronriatlons for the Snn Frnnrlstpn ,
, nun, ,JUJ.AlfUi31t.lUll. kXXZ 11111 IJ IllUCa I1UVK ill 1
ways been a thorn in the side of theDemocratic majority of Congress, andthe time has now come when this par--ty can do something more than talk.Further, It Is even now thought by toomany mainlanders that Hawaii is apart of the Philippines, which impres- -sion we should at all times endeavorto correct; the proposed proceedingwill only strengthen this, wrong Im- -pressicn. To have rushed into an al- -llance by cable as Promotion Com- -mlllot, ,11,1 ,ll,,.t
I
Fine Job Prmttnr. sur Office.
3 B. R $50.00Kaimuki 7th C B. R 45.00Kam. IV 3 B. RLowers Road 3 B. R 30.00Kara. Rd. 4 B. R.... 2500Waipio, 3 B. R 00ICara. IV Rd. 2 R 15.00KInau Street, 3 B. R. ... 30.00
2 B. 32.50Beretanla & Alapal Sts..
4, B. R 37.50Kinau Street, C B. R. ... 40.00Cartwrlght Rd. 2 B. . 18.00Kaimuki, 2 R 30.00
Lane, 3 B. R. .. 25.00Lazarus Lane, 2' R.. 15.00Emma Street, 2 R. . , . 35.00
LIMITED.
(Special mall report to The
THE WESTERN NEWS.
(Originating west of tho Mlmlaslpplriver.)
Idaho, Orogon ami Kansns sonnloshave passed resolutions favoring theIncome tax.
San Francisco tenchers havo wontholr fight for back pay owing them,and as n conscquonce 170 toachors willreceive $12,000.
Tho forty-fourt- h annual conventionthe American Institute of Archi-
tects Is being held In San Francisco.Tiio Orogon and the Idaho
house indorsed an amendment favoringtho of United Statessonntors.
San Francisco recently donated $75,-00- 0
to the Rod Cross fund."Borax King," F. Smith, of Oak-
land. Cal., who recently formed a$200,000,000 corporation to manage hisCalifornia properties, has filed incorporation to build an electriclino from Oakland to Sacramento andSan Jose.
California suffragettes who are making a hard fight for women's suffrage
California, seem to have for theirgreatest opponents other women whodo not believe in women's suffrage andhave organized to fight.
Miss Elizabeth Newliall, daughter ofMr. and Mrs. William Mayo Newhall
San Francisco W!ls married to Mr.Arthur Chesebrough of San Frnnclsco,nlelni,er 0f tno flrnl of Bates andChcsel)rough th nevr snlmng flrrawhich building un strong onnositionto the Pacific Mall and the American- -
- companies in the Panani!l traue.
The Sailors' Union of the Pacific hasbeen notified that the British Seamen'Union will strike in the spring to socure from the shipowners of Europeconsideration of certain grievances.
Madame Luisa Tetrazzlni was pre- -1 . tit. .
HU,UUU WIU1 a Bom plate by tho citi8 an rnnsco when she gave
program. The gift was In apl)rec,ation or ner free concert given
n Christmas eve on Market street.Tne antirace gambling bill is to be
remodeled by the present Californialegislature In an effort out an abso.lute stop to horse racine which winhappen it eambllntr cm ho --in,i
h. A. Unruh "Luckv" Bahlwln'n Uf. .
lons ana executor of estate.WUness stana that
ua'uw,n au been married four times,and two nls wlves are still living inCalifornia.
Secretary O. A. Tveitmoe ofCalifornia State Building Trades Coun- -ell declares that twenty-tw- o unionswill be called out on a strike in LosAncelRs on Mnv lot t.i, j"i' l"mand the carpenters for an advanceot flfty CGnt, n aJ ", ,Mti"ub"uil U VI Uie eSUlte Of UaVUl
any Form."Dr. James W. Ward, president of the
American Institute of Homeopathy,and resident physician of the HotelFairmont, San Francisco, was sudden-ly married in the' East to Mrs. F. S.Johnson of Menlo Park, California. At
, the time of his marriage ho was en-gaged to Dr. Laura B. Hurd, one ofhis professional assistants.I It Is charged that an employe, oftho Spring Valley Water Company
I furnished Secretary Ballinger a largenumber of reperts upon which Bal-linger based his Interference with thedevelopment of tho Hetch-Hetch- v
supply for San Francisco.' The California State BuildingTrades Council ha3 authorized thosecretary- - to negotiate for pur-chase of a farm of from 30,000 to
acres to operated as aLabor farm, both to supply working-me- n
with goods when they onstrike, nnd to servo as a place ofemployment for strikers when out ofJobs.
President Jordan of Stanford Uni-versity In a address attackedfraternities on moral grounds, andretold the of the dismissal ofPrqfessor Ross from tho universitysomo years ago. Professor Ross de-nied the truth of somo of the state-ments mado, and tho fraternities arencensed at what they term are un-tru- o
criticisms.Roberta Buist Janon, thewealthy Philadelphia girl eloped
with a waiter last year, takenout a marriage license In Los Angelesto Stephen Glazer of Now York, whoIs unknown. Both parties have dis-appeared.
mi -luo an Franclfjco police haveheen unable as yet to stop gambling
'
of tho carnival spirit shown out- - the sentiment of the community, was, f ' of the de-si-
Elks? people seenr to say the least, hasty and III advised.t California Safe Deposit and Trust
. 0XXCX;COC.00000000000000000 Company, involves his wife who is now
CIRCUT COURT
REVERSED
ctthe
theB'(5lt
the
and),jpdgment,a.iineX; trial.,
was quiet title
which
conceded thoof
of
point
create to
of body.
thoestato
In
of would
todeed,
under
whichit.be that
to
of
the
of
the matter
the
popular
to
his
of
the
the
who
uuiseu wiui a to defraudsion until their mother, 0l0 chlIdreil of Wal4.swhich event occurred about two years of ?500000 worth Qf securltl3SWlr
Ut
aEr' i Andrew Carnegie has $10,000,- -As stated the exceptions were sus- - 000 to Mount Wilson Observatory Cal-taine- d,
and a new trial granted. ifornla. 'Judge Wilder appeared for the Senator Bryant of tho California
and J. A. Magoon for tho islaturo is drawing u.o a bill to "Pre-defenda-
ivent Females from Using Tobacco in
FURNITURERIGS andDRAPERIES
J.Hopp&Co.,Ltd
puses Fof Bent
UNFURNISHED.Aiea,
Rd. 25.00
IV12
B.
Walalao Rd. R
R.B.
GandallB.
B.
TrentTrustCo.,
THE WORLD'S M 1MID
sonate
election
M.
papers
Is
"llWBUn
i"ena,
ofwages.
water
50,-00- 0
be Union
are
recent
story
de
has
Iornier
......given
Star from 8an Francisco.)
or cIoho up tho wimbling clubs o W
provnlont In tho city."An eye for an oyo. n tooth for n
tooth, and n life for a llfo." acom- -pnnled by a picture of a skull nndcTossbonos, is n signboard inscription placed besldo the road betweenSanta Cruz nnd Snn Jose, California,as n warning to nutolsts. Tho mountaineers In that district propose totnko mnttors Into their own hands.
Mnxlne Elliott Is in favor of wo- -mon's suffrage, according to a lettersont by her to the California suf-fragettes.
Caught In a coating of crude oilwhich was thrown upon the marshwaters in San Frnncisco hny, thousands of ducks are unable to fiv onnccount of their wings stlcklnc. Theyare being gathered in by farmers andfishermen.
The S, P. railroad refuses to allowmore than four nuiomobllee on itsSnn Frnnclsco ferry boats at one-time, as a consequence of which nuto-lsts sometimes have to wait hoursfor their turn to cross.
Mrs. Havlasa of Los Angeles hasjust returned from Tahiti. She is saidto be the first white woman who evertraveled overland across that' islandShe had narrow escapes from deatliat the hands of tho natives of the in-
terior.Henry T. Gnge, former Governor of
California and now U. S. Minister toPortugal, has returned to his home InLos Angeles. Ho is anxious to resignhls diplomatic post. He plunged intotho "Lucky" Bnldwln will case upon-hi- s
return, being one of the attor-neys for tho defense.
Subsidies to Japanese steamers willbo increased by half a million dollarsnext year on nccount of additions tothe fleet operating between Japan and tAmerican ports. When the entirefleet of the Toyo Kisen Kalsha is Inoperation a few months hence thebonus to this fleet alone will amountto $1,000,000 each year.
Some two thousand Doukhobors, atpresent living in the Canadian provinceof Saskatchewan, are about to move-t-
British Columbia under tho leader-ship of Peter Ve'rgln. Two thousandDoukhobors are already located inBritish Columbia. Tho majority willengage in fruit growing.
The Pacific Coast S. S. - Queencaught fire when going up the Coastfrom San Francisco. Wireless callsorougnt immediate assistance, and .
various boats stood by until, theQueen was able to make her warback to San Francisco. The passengers were saved, and the vessel wasbeached in the harbor.
The Sunset National Oil Comnanvof California is bankrupt. This wase?:eluslvely a Union Labor company.headed by Olaf Tveitmoe. The onlyasset the company had was a der-rick. Hundreds of Union Labor menwill lose all tho money they Investeda: the solicitation of many of the menat the head of the labor movement litCalifornia, who were the officials oftho company.
The Pacific Union Club of SanFrancisco has opened its new home,which was formerly the Flood man-sion, located on tho crest of Nob HllL,across the street from the FairmontHotel.
Robbers held up an electricof Los Angeles and after part-
ly robbing the passengers were driv-en off by a nervy passenger Who be-gan shooting,, and shot one robberthrough the mouth. He was capturedshortly afterwards when seeking-medica- l
assistance.Gustave Postler, a painter, who-ha-
lost all his savings 'in a gambling-de-
run almost next door to the-Sa- rt
Francisco police station, tried tfTholdup the Joint and regain his money,and was killed by the proprietor.
The S. S. Cottago City, of the Pa-cific Coast S. S. Co., ran ashore onVancouver Island on tho Alaska routeand is a total loss. The passengersand crew were saved.
City Engineer Manson of San Fran-cisco considers that $37,390,000 is apioper price to .pay the Spring ValleyAVater Company for their plant.
In experiment with man kites, niofficer from the cruiser Pennsylvaniawent up one hundred and fifty feet Inthe air while the vessel was anchoredoff Santa Barbara, and made navalobservations.
Tho most drastic marriage bill everP"esented to any legislature is tocome bofore the Colorado solons. Thrbll! provides a physical examinationand a bill of health provlous to mar-riage.
THE EASTERN HERS(Originating East of tho Mississippi
river).
Now York's street cleaning com-missioner, Wm, H. Edwards, received-
(Continued on Pace Flye.j'
V
CALIFORNIA BUSINESS IN TELLS
OF FIB EAST TRADE C0N0IT1S- ,-
OOESN'T WANT JAPANESE BUSINESS
V. II. Baugh, a Cfillfornla business sontntlvo ol some ot the largest com- -
man who has been on a mission to
the Orient to investigate business
conditions there and report to ellontsIn California, had given to Tho Staran Interesting statement of his Im-
pressions. Uaugh thinks that In some(
respects the United States will neverbe able to compete with orientals inthe Philippines, and he makes thestatement that he will not recommendto his California clients that theymake any attempt to cultivate tradewith Japan.
Mr. Daugh Is a business man, and hismission to the Orient, has been to seewhat tho conditions are like, in thePhilippines for American trade. Hohas had a long sojourn in the principaltowns there Investigating whether hewould be- - able to recommend to hisprincipals the opening up of trade re-
lations with the business men of thePhilippines. Mr. Baugh Is the repro- -
morclal
month,
SMALL
OFFICERS. , OLD OFFICE
Limited, Ci' year's that has......rnuaj rcuiuuij o, w.o uays
lowing were ofensuing year:President J. A.Vice President... L. L.Auditor J.Treasurer JONATHON SHAWSecretary P. C. JONES
The above constitute thoBoard of Directors.
ANNUAL
LAHAjNA AGRICULTURAL CO. LTD.By order of the Board of Directors,
the annual meeting of theof Lahalna said received
Honolulu,Saturday, February 18th, at
11 a m. the purposetransacting such other
business may brought beforethe meeting.
F. KLAMP.
3ts. February 3rd, 11th and 17th.
ANNUAL MEETING.
.PIONEER COMPANY, LTD..By order of the of Directors
the meeting of theof the Pioneer Mill
Ltd., will bo held at the office of H.& Ltd., Honolulu, T.
on Saturday February 18th, 1911,at 10 the purposeof electing officers and transacting
-- such other business may be broughtbefore the meeting.
The stock transfer books ofCompany will be closed Febru-ary to February 18th, both dates
F. KLAMP,Secretary.
houses on the Pacific CoastThey to tho Philippines, andtho genorally to report on thoprospects as found thorn, for Ameri-
can trade there. With regard to the
(Continued on pago ten.)
DIVIDEND CUT.
TODAY.,
L.
a
herein,
9,
Lahnlnn Coni-imny- 'n
meeting will bo In
llnokfold building Feb-
ruary 11 n. Pioneermeeting
n. of election ofofficers business.
nun uuveriior
es- -
as
as
in
011
an
J.
3,
onat in.
n . , .I i i1
ofto
tont
In Santhought
an excellentperhaps
torecalled
wererepresented at
Fericira Oil fVimrrnKnRobertson this morning 325,000,
to chargesBeginning March 10 tho dividend of 0f having Imported opium, and Phlllniilne
Hutchlnson Sugar Plantation assisted others names trbuted. irovernment imbo reduced Import It supplied n SpCnaid building at the between Cannda and tho United
cents to ten cents per shareuntil further notice
per
8ET.
held
Com- -,
from
other
Robertson American
sales between board the his own advocatetransactions constated three big cases, friendship, nnd
$34 and come before He delivered speechestwenty-fiv- e defendant the relations thothree were principal pleaded would countries. Interest, Japaneseevents. Into fact that n'n Immense
ELECTION OF BULLETIN RENTEDmonths.
KalmukI Land sentencC(, FcrreIra gladimprisonment stop over
Candless Building Bulletin Publishingon ii, open
officers electea the salesmen
MeCANDLESSMeCANDLESSMeCANDLESS
officers
P.C.JONES,Secretary.
MEETING.
Stockhold
forofficers
Secretary.
annual Stockhold-ers Company,
Hackfeld
o'clock for
the
I
Orient
HUTCHINSON
DEALS
W. L. DouglasCelebrated shoe for working
better anywhero.
SHOE STORE.NuuanU King,
CIRCUIT Japanese visitor, workman.Circuit, TerritoryChambers Probate. 4340
Samuel
pleaded to im- -
it. topleaded
Ita a
of one ofnt
Honokaa In of
In at
lor
In
ofis
of
on nn
"I
ho in a C.In
ho tMil nnf f I10 T nt fmwe ,n l nm
V to toby . Iof ,, .
Tnl. o 1011 . ... . , ., - , tuoi. , ironwin a iewtno use lts
S.
'
August,IN
taf In
on of Baltimore,In
is is McKlm,reading the Petition Honolulu
of C. ot tho which kar on Orient, madeAgricultural property of minor for addreSses many
Ltd., be the or n. uu u. ue. in 01 rea, ,0norg nttendod'
World'sHackfeld r. "'"J uciuubiub iuon
of electing
be
MILLBoardS
a. m.,
sinclusive.
it,
ES
he
the rnn- -
ror
AYAUof
minor estate, being
m.
or
in. of
inaof is in Is both, an ora-b- y
J.the peo:forth certain reasons such
estate to-w- lt:
To tho onother
by
IT IS ORDERED,heirs of kin of
a minorin tho estate, ap-
pear Courtof at
10 at Roomof in the City of Honolulu,
there to show causenot be for tho
of such1911.
By of the Court,A. THOMPSON,
Clerk.10, 17, 24.
opinionskilled
THIi HAWAIIAN WTORUAItY "Ilii.
M.EETING3Agricultural
18, TheCompany's occurs at tO
tho day, for
IMPORTER
OF DOPE GETS
ONE YEAR
Chinese concealing
lM... rear was nsKeu
tho
tho
waB
Aloskathe
Hawaii and thetne
was before 08ltlon. nrrnnlnnvote(, Hawaii
federal court regard BlmlIarAlaska
Tim snld
He guilty for tho
not guilty.was
sltles.caseSession buying opium for use.
the
but the he:
wns the Anierican-.lapancs- o
today. Onomea had tho has notablebenefit tho
lots guilty,the tha
jail for Y. A.It.
fnr flip mot himThe
0M,l ,u"u pay the ho
the Company''.anu tnem
Corner
1909," Castle,momlnc.ference 15oston.
NOTED VISITOR
ON THE KOREA
Gaynor
FIRSTHawaii be E.
moOf Of of
omce
1911
and
Co.,
lGth
Bont him
Themen. Non
and
No.
(k)
pay
next
day A. D.A.
2nd
Tho
same
Missionary Edinburgh
situated Oounty centennialHonolulu, particular descrlp- - American Board Doctor
whichWillis, Surveyor addresses
entitled interest thinking
shouldmortgage
property property ownedminor.
maintain minor.HEREBY
Kanae per-
sons interestedbefore Thursday,
Marcho'clock
Oourt,
should grantedestate.
Honolulu, February
February
BTAttt lli)AY
Saturday,
Fairthat
thatupon
that
Alaskn-Yuko- n
with nm, thnt
wore
Palr
that degrees
somethnt
take audiencehad laying
thatrpnenn
and time hereCo.,
said
Tho said
herothe
Tho this morning last attackedwho by
L,tU., oaiuuei
trial
page
Central pulpit the "Bro- -
durlng his stay tho1 Seltzer King," hasThe morning Hoi filed for His
tho Rov. Dr. T. Harada, who theand turninc tour throucb last
W. the he visit thethe Co.,
will held mue He theil., ivuiiiiu
H,
ati.1
real conference
the and and the meeting thoBoston.
set Surveys Harada scholar andfile tor, artd his aroused the
and deepest
be1st;
andsaid
To
the andSamuel and all
the 9th.M., the
and
4ts.
the
Mill
nnd
that
this
will
atof
moretlon
real soldsaid
2nd. said
said
saidthis
this
During his trip he was given
HAWAIIAN LODGE 21 A M.
BE A SPECIALmeeting of Hawaiian Lodge No. 21, F.and A. M., at Its ha'l, Masonic Tem-ple, corner of and Alakea streets,
(FRIDAY) EVENING, Feb.1911, at 7:30 o'clock.WORK IN THIRD DEGREE. ..
Members of The Honolulu LodgeD., Oceanic Lodge, and visitingbrethren are fraternally invited to
By of the W.K.
Secretary.
No difference ofamongcooks
aboutCenten-nial's BESTFLOUR
Having Good Qualites In The Highest Degreeall cooking which is;used CENTENNIAL'S
BEST will give perfect satisfaction. A new shipment hasjust received by
HENRY MAY & COMPANY, LTD.,Leading Grocers Telephone
FAVORS JON T
EXHIBIT
ho thought suggos-tlo- n
ot promotion committeeinvite the Philippines join Hono-lulu In bolug representedWorld's 1915 In Fran-cisco, ho replied that heIt Idea, and added
It would be ImprovedIf were asked too.
Ho factPhilippines all
thnr.In thoJudge subscribed a
amouilt ll0 BU,))ose(ihaving nlso
whosewill fifteen
having trIoported counts
WKWEWwac
Judco said by several unlver- -
and It Harada a stronersmall deals two or
Sixty court.at $10.75 would
each, 'two heard him
Minor
CO.,
awaiting M. cornerstoneJudge added W.
krtnw "nnd HmCompany lms(,0,
inn.
The Matter EstateKanae
at-
tend.
R..G.
in
today
Doctor
THE WORLD Ni(Continued four.)
Carnegie fund for hisact in preventing killing May- -
brought a or whenTHE COURT
At Union Emerson,probably
February 12. divorce. daughter,ref"Mrs. Reno
On home after the' Vorcee. nassedAchl Guardian world during has
ers praying man. andcgrwn
from
City
forthChris
Court settinglegal why
That
1911,Court
then whyordersale
Datedorder
other
Inot
THERE
U.all
M.
what
join
been'three
from
Isaac
suit
pie.
Hotel
order
medal
Korea
heard Capt.here,
Hollis dlfiling a
a to
at
aon
above among
F."&
WILL
THIS3,
aof
a
of
'shortly after her divorce was grantedEdna fourth wife of Nat
Goodwin, the comedian, has broughtsult for divorce. Goodwin Is trying'to 'break a trust fund that he made 'nlier favor before sho would marryhim.
The fight to elect U. S. senators bypopular vote Is making such headwaythat tho reactionaries are seeking todefeat the resolution by a series of."riders."
Senator Cummins of Iowa avigorous attack upon tho ship subsidybill before congress and was
by Senator Burton of Ohio. Sen-ntri- r'
Gnlllmrnr defended tlin measure.tilklSof Panama Canal
'""ding ofgen- -orni and
mlral Dewey is president. TTTe boardwas asked for an opinion on tho
Christian Scientfsts makingevery effort to have the Concord homoof former leader, Mary BakerEddy, dedicated to the uses "of theChristian Science Church. Under theterras of tho will the home mustdisposed of within threo months af-
ter the executor. Henry M. Baker, isconfirmed In his p'd'sltlon. ' '
The grand jury of Vermillion.Toe own
county, Is Investigating charges otbribe giving and voteand tho tremendous' political powerof Cannon's federal cllnue'"has been
to bear to stop the grandJury probe.
Mrs. Thaw, Jr., of Pittsburg, had $35,000 worth of Jewelsstolen, her home. No clues havens .yet obtained.
A bill Is before congress to increasethe salary of the President's secretary from $C000 to $10,000 year.
In tho passage of anocean mall subsidy. Senator Lodgeclaimed that foreign shipownerstrust controlled business both on thoPacific and in the South Americantrade, and that had tho power to
rates.There Is an epidemic of
tho big salaries of the Industrial andfinancial world. Slnco Paul Morton'sdoath the Equltablo will pay presi-dent $50,000 year Instead of $S0.- -
000. Tho Steel Trust will paypresident $50,000 Thstoad oT
wns paid to former PresidentCoroy.
Ellhu In In thoate, mndo a prediction that unless theUnited States took actlvo steps todevelop merchant marine. Japanwould tho controlling power of thePnclflc nnd the Orient. was urg-ing tho need of a subsidy.
The daughter of Francis Ar-
nold, wealthy perfumery ImporterNow York, has Tho
pollcp believe she has boi'ii HInapped. Letters have been rnelvei!doniandliiK a ransom m lnre thatMr. Arnold, althoughsays lie could not rnlw the ntlpuliit-o- d
sum,Minn Cora Outhrlo of Alleghnny,
Pa., went to Hammond, Ind., to lx'married her arrival she found Kxchaiifie notified that bagluiiiiigher had just died and twowoman who claimed to bo his wlfowore fighting for possession of thobody.
Charges of trongon to tho prohibi-tion cnuso and countercharges of"machine politics" and an "unholyalliance," were made at the sessionof National League $10. 76; $10.- -
noiu in (Jincago. 1110 cnargos wereIn reference to In Nebraska.
Smoke In Chicago cost thatin 1010. This Is an aver- -
nia rf n limit 41 ft ttnr nnnltnwill j Haw. & S.
pnlnrnlnc Haw Co...'..pany .unknown, to Into Honolulu, trade
States, was laid simultaneously beforecongress and tho English parliament.
Later advices state that congressIs tho Canadian tariff, men- -
tidned In these dispatches. I Qjnn SugIt Is stated In Washington that tho
United States has not yielded and hasno of to Japan on
give the tho tho subject of of questions relatethe of and immigration,
I consideration Kyoto,of
to1
distinguished discontented
Sunday
NO.
WALLACE,
For flour
been
1271
Alaska,
Goodrich,
made
support-
ed
purchaB.ing;
disappeared.
I
reciprocity
(OriginatingAmerica.)
HODMme. Is seriously 111
with grlppo In
outside of North
NellieParis.
Louis Breget, flying In Prance, hasbroken tho world's speed record for
carryingHe flew sixty-tw- o miles In one hou- -.
nine minutes and twentyelght sco- -
onds.A standard-beare- r in
London charged Home SecretaryWinston Churchill and endeavored tolance his hat with tho standard shewas carrying.
The Pope Is opposed to appointinganother Cardinal of the Church tnAmerica. v
The King and Queen of Englandare planning brief visit to Irelandthis summer.
Count Komura, minister of foreignaffairs, speaking In the lowerstated that tho foreign relations ofJapan were unmarred by a single incldent stnndlng In the way of international friendship.
The Austro-Hungarla- n budget callsfor an expenditure of forbattleships this year.
The official Income of PresidentFallleres of Franco has been raisedto $700,000 a year.
The now Portuguese governmentf"cln,s stea owwd thothe
is' desirable in tho opinion of the up a navy and are seekinghnnr,i tho nnw of whirl, Ad- - bI(,s from English American ship
are
their
bo
County, Illinois, Canntrffs
brought
William
frombeen
a
a
fix
lowering
Itsa
its$100,000
which
Root, a sen
Itsbo
Rootmail
R.a
of
h
flanco
politicsclt
So
intention yielding
a passenger
a
are
builders.shipping circles
alarmed over the prospects of a ratewar as a of a difference ofopinion between the Canadian-Pacifi- c
and the English" lines. The Canadian-Pacifi- c
has canceled all agreementsconcerning tho Liverpool-Canadia- n
traffic.
HONOLULU. LACKS HOTEL ROOM.
from Pago One.)
attention necessary to write such anarticle. I do not know of who1b better able to write such a paper,
moro familiar with tho travel con-ditions on tho Pacific, particularlyas regards llawali, than your goodself, and I nm sure that you coulddraft up a much more interesting pa-
per than II have had some correspondence
called to my attention recentlya party ot people desirous to visitHawaii were finally to fore-go tho pleasure owing to their
to accommodations ntHonolulu. It would look from this as
is not so much a question ofmoro accommodations to
people to Hawaii as Is to pro-vld- o
quarters for them whon they getthere. Thero is no question but what
travel to Hawaii will vory ma-terially Incroaso year year, and
PIK R v T AJInilc From linlc HmvHllan I'lncatmlesAnd The Pen Hcflni'il Cbiio Hiipiir
At All Fountains and Stores.
Arctic Soda Water WorksHonolulu Distributors,
riNECTAIt t UP for Calm,etc : ileus PUvnrlne forl'ut" i i i rinnisAt All OrucurH
Plncctui nle Co.
STOCK EXCHANGE
- 96 den. Centri-fUKRl-
."Mur ks Analysis liaetn,!s. Id.
Notice. Under dntn KpIi. 2 thOn Is
are
10. tho dividend of llutohln-so- u
Sugar Plantation Co. will be re-duced from 15c to 10c per share permonth, until further notice.
Hutchinson 14.50Kaluiku Plant' Co 18.00Keknhu Co.".McBryde Sug. Co 3.875
Ktiir Ho an. 25elsewhere 3 5
'O
in
&
a
'
nf
it
;
or
If It
It
If
M on
I't If
nf
Paauhau Co.... 17.00Plant. Co
Pepeokeo Sug. Co.Pioneer Mill .,
Waialua Co...,Walmea Mill Co....I I. S. N. Co..:..H. R. T. & L. Co.
Bids
Sug
nnlin
Sug.Pnla
Agr.
115.00180.00ss.no
120.00110.00106.00
Mutual Tel. Co 13.50O. It. & L. Co.... 135.00Hilo R. R. Com 9.00Hon. B. & M. Co.... 19.50Haw. Pine. CoTanjong Rub. CoCal. Beots 6s 100.00Hamakua Ditch Cs.. 102.00Haw. Irr. Cs 100.75Hilo It R. Cs
Hilo R. n. Ex. Cs
Honokaa Sug Cs 101.50H. R. T. & L. Gs 103.00Kohala Cs
McBryde Sug. Gs.... 92.00Mutual Tel. Cs 101.50O. R. & L. 5s 99.75
Sugar 3.42c
$1000
Asked27.75
226.00
Plant. 200.004.12520.504.12519.00
145.00
90.00
115.0')
145.00
20.003G.0043.00
101.7599.5095.00
Ditch 100.0093.00
100.50
Beets, 8s, II I4di
Heniy Waleitase Trust Co,
Members Honolulu Stock and BondExchange.
FORT AND MERCHANT STS.
James F. Horgan.Stock andBond Broker
Member oi Honolulu Stock andBond Exchange.
Stock and Bond Orders receiveprompt attention.
Information furnished relative toall STOCKS AND BONDS.
LOANS NEGOTIATED.Phone 1572 ' P. O. Box 694
San Francisco is able to get the Pana-
ma-Pacific Exposition of 1915, Itwill bring a great many peoplo outbere, many of whom will embrace theopportunity to continue on to Hono-
lulu and enjoy the delightful climateof Hawaii and the hospitality of itspeople.
While it is true that occasionallyduring the height of the travel seas-on there are not sufficient availableaccommodations on tho ships to giveeveryone a room to themselves, atthe same time our records show thatthere havo been practically no caseswhere our steamers have not sailedfrom San Francisco outward and fromHonolulu homeward with availablespace. Now that the Matson Naviga-tion Co. has put on tho Honolulan,and the Oceanic Steamship Co. ashort time ago substituted tho Sierrafor tho Alameda, sufficient additionalpassenger accommodations are avail-able for Honolulu travel, and as
grows thero Is no question,but what the steamship companies-wil- l
meet nny legitimate demand andprovide additional passenger accom-modations. But with all this, as 1
stated before, provision should bomado at the Islands to take care oltheso peoplo when thoy get there byproviding nmplo hotel accommoda-tions, both first class and secondclass.
Ltd.
MakesTheHairGrow
Wc arc talking about Ayer'sHair Vigor. Just note that word'"Ayer's." You are perfectlysafe with it. No harm to you orito your hair. Makes the hairgrow? It certainly does. Stopsfalling hair, too. Remember, it's"Aycr's" we are talking about.Ask your doctor about your hairand about Ayer's Hair Vigor.
Get his approval. Your owndoctor and "Aycr's" make astrong combination. It means
faith, confidence, satisfaction.
Ayer's Hair VigorDOES NOT COLOR THE HAIR
PrarJ by Dr. . C. Ayr & Co. lowell. Mill., U.S. A.
Fraternal Meetings
HONOLULU LODGE NOD. P. O. ELKS.
Meets In their hall on King Streetmear Fort, every Friday evening. Visitlug Brothers are cordially Invited toAttend.
JAMES D. DOUGHERTY, E. R,
GEO. T. KLUEGEL, Secretary.
HARMONY LODGE,NO. 3, I. O. O. F.
continuing accusationsyMonday evening at
in FortVisitingattend.
J. G. B. CAMERON, N. G.PAUL SMITH, Sec.
HONOLULU IRON WORKS CO., LTD.
Engines, Mills, BoilerB,Coolers, Iron, Brass Lead Cast-
ings, Machinery of every Description
II Jo to Order. Particular AttentionPaid to Ship's Blacksmitning. JobWork Executed on Short Notice
I 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
'sHotel Street Near Union.
SILVA'S TOGGERY
The Store for Good Clothes.
Eyew
Stunt for Growth
Mini
The bald spot will not expand If
you toko .it in time and use
Pacheco's DandruffKiller
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
I YOU WISH TO ADVERTISE j
S IN NEWSPAPERS?2 ANYWHtiRB AT ANYTIMUJT Call on or Write!i 8 C.DAKE'S ADVERTISING AGENCY
r i4 Sansome StreetBAH PRAKS18CO, CALIF. C
Fine Printing, Star Oftlce.
F C. A.
I There tiro live tennis In the
i, nmdo by one ot tournament, which menus that onch
Pankes couplo of days ago week one tonm gets a bye. week
to the effect that the Australian ref-
eree In tho Papkc-Smlt- h contest hadfiron mi iinfnlr decision, is not borne
YInst
matches playediiMHluni.
win.
out the various accounts of the bat- - nt the expense of "D
t1t ma til thr Australian papers, spcctlvely. The first
to the contest declare tweon "U mm "fc, nnu was won n
here was no doubt the foul.! 19 to 15. while In the second game "IV
though Snowy did not give bla won from a u 11 to i.decision until Smith been exam- - games Interesting in- -
incd tw6locnl doctors, both of dlcated that the material at tho Y.
tt'lii-kti- ilnnlnrod flint lin Jiml linen hurt.C. A. Is certainty goou
by a foul blow. The blow was unin-
tentional. Of that, also, thero Is nodoubt, though Smith was enjoying thobetter of the light. Pnpke was out
4
IF
nlso
pointed and barring accidents Smithhave won had not tho foul.Klemme.
" nonny. u. mils, a uunn, aoccurred. Hunter, who is nowthe ringside T. Mcuuire, cannon.in the city, was
and ho declares that the decision giv-
en by Snowy Tinker was a just one.deciding a contest betweenThompson and Tim Land, tho
latter a comparatively unknown tight-
er. Snowy Uaker fell foul of JiimnloClabby. who was behind Thompson.Clabby accused Uaker or having allow-
ed Land to take than the countto save the situation, Thompson hav-
ing floored tho Colonial towards thoclose of one round. Though Thomp-son won on a knockout in the nine-
teenth round this did not deter(from his
Meets over nganst so engaged he7:30 Odd Fellows' Hall, St. l(Betl a imrtiCulnrlj' foul epithet aguinst
brothers cordially Invited to .
Steam Sugarand
and
- -
'
Job
the American. Both were separatedany harm was done and the,
closed. Yet Clabby agreed toaccept Tlaker as referee In a subse-quent fight ho had with Dave Smith,when the latter got the decision onpoints. There aro Tew men in theCommonwealth who know the game asBaker does. He teaches boxing as aprofession and he Is almost idolizedby the local fans. He was one of theleading swimmers of Sydney a fewyears ago, was also amateur boxingchampion, and generally he had figuredprominently all branches of
Fine ton Hrlntlns. Office.
andStephenson.
committee recommends that
1 uiiucu oeuuie aimbody investigate Mr.
Stephenson is
under oath offiled, and.it also
pre-
meditated.
law which prohibits anycontributing money
blst a legislature
service law this
mm Hawaiian ar, prtday, tnmnisRv isiu
SPORTSTALK AMONG THE
IMS M. ImRkotball tourna-
ment up nH nighttwo being In tho
This,"K" team starts off wltu a uye. wntriicounts a "C" and "B" teamsnotched their llrst successes last night
byvtvnti
he
"A"gamo bo
Itnessabout
Bakerhad The were and
M.bv
would out,
more
While
real
Star
The teams lined up follows:"C" H. Nott. A. Sllvn, C. Louts, I'.
O'Sulllvan nnd Honnn."D" G. Dwlght, S. Ihmn, J. Nott,
(Cottrcll. sub.), P. and Ti.
Percyat Larimer.
lu Cy-
clone
Clabby
Baker.
before-incident
In
"IV K. M.P. Nott and J. Clark.
WTH
BASKET-BA- LL
McGuire, Ferreira,
tablo give the positions of the teams:
"IV I"C" 1
"E" 0
"D" 1
"A" 1
11
0
0
0
SALE OF HILO LAND
andwas
n. L. Pts.
APPROVED BY LANDThere wns short meeting of tho
land board yesterday afternoon in thosenate chamber.
At meeting an applica-tion was from Theo. H. Da-vi- es
& Co., for the purchase of blockof land known as tho armory site atHilo. The board resolved notpass the matter until
had been made. The appraisersnppointed stated that they consideredthe land worth seventy-fiv- e cents a
$14,062.50 for the block. Da-vi- es
Co., when they of thevalue, immediately withdrew
their first petition, and made anIn conformity the appraiser'sideas. The was by theboard.
The petition of F. Correa thelease of certain lots on at arental of fifteen cents acre atwenty-yea- r lease was granted.
ANOTHER UNITED STATES SENATOR
CHARGED G ELECTION
MADISON, Wis., January 11. Uni- - money to Levi H. Bancroft,, C. C.
ted States Senator Isaac Stephenson Wellensgard, Thomas Reynolds, Johnis charged with number of viola- - Mulder, E. A. and W. L,tions of the laws of Wisconsin. The Smith, who then were candidates for
is .made in a lengthy statement nomination to the assembly,filed with Gov. F. E. McGovern to- - sum Exceeds $50,000.uay uy the 19U& state senate com- - a large part of money distributedmittee wnicn investigated tne primary Jn the Stenhenson campalnn. nrobablvcampaign election of Senator
Thecopy
no suitesStephenson's
with
campaignexpenditures
that such
thatthe
fromthe
Thescheduled
Tho
appraise-ment
&
appraised
sale
a sum in excess of $50,000, wasStephenson's to unlaw
fully and corruptly procure the nonvof the report be submitted to inatlon and election of lBaac steph.
uiui
election.Senator charged
violatingaccount
alleged violation
further charged vio-
lated
candidate
started
.tuipniftit
Auerbach
present
Parsons,following
BOARD
previousreceived
learned
npproved
EveioU
charge
managers
enson the United States Senate."Further Isaac Stephenson was
elected tho legislature the Unl- -" --- v. -..j,..... ...I.I.I, ..,... !..
0
01
00
0 2
a
a
a
I
a
a
"IB OUU.LUIC "Uiui iuhuhko !, ,.( .l,ll 1, 1, ,. ,.rwillD VWD, , line, lilt? UUI 3 UL UUt -an
to bo Iswas
It Is
one to as- -
for re
of
as
re
ns
J.
js,.
A
P. W.
toon an
or
for
an on
by
to
by to
ruptlon against him were being Investigated by tho legislature.
"In addition to the several acts ofcorruption and fraud herein referredto, it should be remembered that theelection of Isaac Stephenson, onMarch 4, was made posslbte by threedemocrats, who, at the Instigation ofhiding outside of the district in which
ti. nnntriimtor rpiiips tho Stephenson managers and agents,ii,..j Mii c..,!. ,,u walked out of the Joint assembly
That the civil
gym- -
then
foot,
offerwith
Maul
used
when it became known that theirstate was violated when ho caused to presence would prevent the electionbo paid money, which the evidence of lsuac Stephenson,
shows was paid, to State Game War- - "Under the law, if a person electedden Stone and L. B. Dresser, then clearly participates In any act ofpresident of the board of control, is bribery he should be denied office
also charged. although the result of the electionThat he gave a sum of money to was not thereby changed. This, in
a supporter of McGovern for United the opinion ot the committee, SenatorStates senator, such supporter after- - Stephenson did.
ward switched to Stenhenson. and that "It is also the law that If, by hrib- -
lie paid large sums of money to others ery or corrupt practises on tne partwhich was afterward used by them oi the friends of the candidate whoto induce other persons to assist '.n aro conducting his canvass, votes arorrnrurliiir his election. obtained for him without which he
"On the whole record, therefore," would not have had a majority, thethe report states, "Stephenson is election, should bo annulled althoughcharged with knowledge of the man- - proof Is lacking that ho knew ot thener in which bis campaign was be- - bribery or corrupt practises,
ing conducted and the purposes for Bribery, Says the Report,whteh ninnev wns being disbursed. "This, in the opinion of the com- -
"The failure to keep w require ac- - mittee, Stephenson's managers andcounts and the practise of destroying workers did, thereby changing enough
orlginnl momoranda by those engaged otes to glvo him the nomination in
In disbursing Stephenson's funds In the primary and the election before
tho campaign makes It clear there tho legislature.and method on tho "The findings ot the commltteo aro
part ot Stephenson and his managers that tho nomination in the primary
to cover up their methods of con- - and the election to tho United Statesducting tho campaign. That ho ap- - Senate by tho legislature of Isaacproved of these methods cannot be Stephenson ot Wisconsin is null anddoubted. voI(1 on account f attempted bribery
Those managers, In plain violation and bribery, corrupt practises by hlm- -
of law, gave considerable sums ot self and by his campaign managers,
telftii '''''' '''- -
Mttttt Hi wvrtMTM niHt ftf rtstUo: lh Inwii f W'hwwwl itsHHtHB HHd
live rrattohlM."Th rommttHM that
copy of thia report ln cwrtlfM to tbVnltel atmes 8imi by th mtvarimrand tlit IellMlur, with ths rUHMtthat that IhmI.v Invtmtlnale Hie timnimrnnd mean b and thmuah whichInane Stephenaon necured lila olotlouto the United Stnte Semite, for Itsaction thereon."
The report further roconunonds Hinti.rose'iutlonM he conimunced by thodistrict attorney ot Dano countyngtilnst all porsotis shown by thoevidence to have committed perjuryIn the Invostlgntlon, nnd that n llkocopy of the ovldonco bo submitted tothe attorney gonorul, with tho recom-
mendation that lie cause to bo commenced prosecution ngnlnst nil per-
sons shown by tho evidence to havebeen guilty of corrupt practise or ofperjury.
Senutor Stephenson was Informedof the charges filed with the Governor of Wisconsin. Ho said the nin- -
lorlty of the committee which incstigatcd liis election filed Its report
two years ago, and that thero was nominority report at that time. Hesaid that there was a minority of thecommittee opposed to him. however,nnd that ho supposed that it was now
tnnklnz a report. Beyond this, liesnld, he hud no comment to make
THE CONFETTI HABIT.
The use of confetti, ticklers, an
such stuff in celebrating holidays. Is
prohibited in Now York city, nndshould be prohibited in every city
Such practices bring on familiaritywhich always constitues a risk among
tho young women and girls anionwhom tho confetti habit is mostlypracticed. It always leads to something mean. Sensible girls will stnyat home on such nights as confetti Is
thrown, and thereby escnpe the rude- -
ness which always attend it. It oughtbo Columbus Young
becomes nuisance. said Registry
Young ioreciube under byever has watched the influence of confetti throwinc in a foreign city willunderstand the harm there in
Ohio State Journal.
SMOKERS RESIST M.ENINGITIS.
PARIS, January After the Lancet's admission that tobacco aids digestion the report of an army!doctor whose regiment suffered an epidemic of cerebro-spm- al meningitis.
He found that smokers resisted thodisease and remain In the contaminated area without being attacked.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFirst Judicial Circuit Teritory oiHawaii. At Chambers, lu EquityRuth Richardson Guard, Complain
ant, vs. George W. Macfarlane aneJulia H. Macfarlane, his wife; FredW. MacfaUane, and Emilie Macfar
his Emma Macfarlane,widow and sole devisee under thewill of Henry Macfarlane, deceas- -
Countycum tcstamento annexo of tnetate of Henry II. Macfarlane, deceased; Clarence W. Macfarlane; BlancheCornwell Walker, and John S. Walker, her husband; William H. Cornwell, and Irene B. Cornwell, his wife;Kate L. Cornwell, formerly Kate
Braymer; Florence Balling-er Dreyfus, formerly Florence Ball.Inger Macfarlane, executrix underthe C. Macfarlane, deceased; Georgo W. Macfarlane, executor under the will of E. C. Mac- -
C. eel
Gold
G.
miiuuenealty
Lindsay, Jr.,
QF OF SUIT.whom may concern:
Take notice a suit has beenin said court by the above
named against tho abovenamed which suit nowpending; that the of suit
to foreclose aof record in office of Registrarof in tho City of Honolulu in Liber 40 pages et seq;that the affected by
are situated in said Honolulu onnortheastern corner ot Nuuanu
and Beretanla Streets, particuldescribed In said
knovyn U10 "Commercial Hotel"and Thursday tho
fourth day of May, 1911 atM. at tho Court House, Honolulu, bo-fo- re
tho .Tudgo of Courttho tlmo and place for
tho of said at timeplace you aro to ap
pear nnd show cause ngalnst said
WM. HENRY,HIeh Sheriff, Teritory of Hawaii.Honolulu, Hawaii, Jan. 19, 1911.
14ts 20. Feb. 3, 10, 17,
Mar. 3, 10, 17, 24, 31, 7, 14, 21.
DlPHTHERlA HOW ITMAY BE AVOIDED.
Diphtheria la utwally oautrnalealwhen the child haa a colt!. The mild
the child's system for theirceptlon and iteveliiiment of the
diphtheria uenim. thero tiro
chboh at dlphtlmrla in tho neighbor- -
IkxkI children Unit imvo colds shouldhe kept tit homo and off tho streetuntil recovered, (ilvo thum Chumbor-- !
11 Ill's Cough Remedy nnd they willnot luivo rouinlu nt homo long.
clonus out theform in 11 child's thront when
It has a cold, nnd minimizes the riskof contracting infectious diseases. Forsale .) nil dealers, Hanson, SmithCo., ngonts for Hawaii.
An unjust ncnulstion is llko a barbarrow, back- - deceased
ward with horrlblo anguish or elsewill be your destruction. JeremyTaylor..
Wo rarely confess thnt wo deservesuffer.
MORTGAGEE'S NOTICE OF INTENTION TO FORECLOSE, AND OFSALE.
Notice Is hereby given by the un-
dersigned, the present ownerholder of tho note and mortgage here-inafter mentioned, that In accordancewith law and by of theof sale contained in Unit certain mort-
gage' for ?G50 made by Alice Haynes,wife of Clarence Haynes, of Ho-
nolulu, City and County of Honolulu,Territory of Hawaii, (said Clarence12. Haynes thereto consentlug andJoining in the execution thereof insignification of Ills consent), to theTrent Tnlst Company, Limited, aHawaiian corporation, dated June 23,190S, recorded in the Registry
Honolulu, In Liber 30.'!, on page409-41- 3, and duly assigned to B.
to suppressed in by assignment dated Februaryit an established 1, 1911, nnd recorded in
to
is
8.
could
R
es
Cornwell
10:00
It
&
mortgage secured, being now-du- e
accrued interest Febru-
ary the Five HundredFifty-On- e Dollars
Notice also herebyand premises said mort-
gage to
nt
nsUl uw.Twenty
in "Mlhtona of
Blocks and asa certain
Tract", record
of24.
cxclusivo storelulu.
NOTIOE TO OREDITORS,
Uri'ATIO OF LIIKJATB,
Notice is Hereby Given un-dersigned Hxeotttor ot tha Will of Ann
to all persons Imv-Iti- K
claims the ealnlo ofdecadent, to prosent tho sumo, dulynuthonllontad, to tho undorslgned ntLlliuo, Knunl, to Messrs Smith,Wnrron & Hoiuonwny, hisin tho .ludd Building In Honolulu,Onhti, within six months thodate of the llrst publication of thisnotice, such claims bo se-cured or not, or they will bo foreverburred.
Honolulu, T. II., 27,1011.
JOHN M.
tho Will ot Ann Lld- -ed which must be drawn
what we
virtue power
E.
before
Jan. 27, 3, 10, 17,
NOTICE.
All Nobles ot the MysticShrine who dcslro to attend .or
part in tho festivities during thoImperial visit ourOasis from February 21st to March1st, 1911 will please call nt once on
Charles F. Murray, andregister.
Charles F. Murray, Recorder.1109.
order,JAMES S.
Illustrious Potentate.Jan. 30, 1911.
IN THE DISTRICT OFUNITED STATES IN AND FORTHE TERRITORY AND DISTRICT
HAWAIITHE UNITED STATES OF
Plaintiff, vs. KOHALACOMPANY, et al.. Defendants.Action brought In said District
Court, and the Petition filed In theofflco the Clerk of said District
In Honolulu.THE PRESIDENT UNI- -
ED STATES, GREETING:xrrtu ata QTir a n pnnmAvv
Office ill Liber 344, page 1J, saiu corporaUon organized nnd existinghand and for Who- - N. B. intenus saiu and virtue of tho laws of
comes
lane, wife;
of E.
arly
April
renaies
When
beds,which
Onice,
pleadmortgage tor Dreacn ot conuiuona of Hawaii; THE TER- -therein contained, to wit: the nonpay- - R1TORY OF HAWAII; SAMUEL M.mcnt of the principal and Interest duo ANNIEnnmi the iiromissory note by saiu wife of Samuel M. S. M
thereto
1911, sum ofand 0
'is given thatthe lands in
and hereinafter described,
Eight
being
ANN
the
from
Dated
E"te,
nny
THE
KAWELO, whose fullunknown; HANA
(w); MABEL WAIALUA,EDITH MAKUA, CHARLOTTE
ALBERT WAIANAE, CHARNANAKULI and WAI- -
heirs at law ofdeceased;
WAIKELE, ANNIE WAIAU, MARgether with all rights, privileges and THA PUULOA, ALEXANDER MOA- -appurtenances connected therewith, 1 NALUA, JAMES PALAMA SAM-wi- ll
be sold public auction by I UEL KALIHI, unknown heirs at lawsaid N B. Young through agency NAPA1PAI, ISABELLA
of the Auction Company, Llm- - HULU, DAISY MAKIKI, MARGARET
ited, at front entrance of tho MHfu"LrrnSTiT un-cla- ry
Building, in said Honolulu, on4th day of March, 1911,Saturday, cd; KU; KAJl; LULAWALB (w).
at 12 o'clock noon of day in fore- -KANAKANUI; and REBECCA
closure. HANALEI. FANNY K1LAUEA.The property covered by said mort- - CLARA KAWAIHAU, ELIZABETH
gage and intended to be sold afore- - KOLOA, CORA MAKAWELI, MOR-sai- d
consists of all that certain par- - RIS ERIC KEKAHA, OLINi f lonri cttiiuin Wal- - LIHUE. ALLAN KUALOA and
ea; George C. Porter, administrator island and of Oahu, Ter- - FRANK MALULANI, own
will
nnd
and
u p hoinn- - Vtiown era ana claimantsl J llllHti o -
Lots Numbers (8) and(20) Block "B", Tract",the said tract subdivision
21 22, Tract,laid out and byMap entitled "Mlnton
Feb.
book
Executor
Fob.
take
to
COURT THE
SUGAR
andname
ALFREDunknown
said
Knnaliiilu.unknown
Ti.roiiYou are hereby directed appear,
and answer Petition in an actionentitled above, brought againstyou in the District Court Uni
States, In and the TerritoryHawaii, within twenty days from
and after service upon you a certl- -ed In tho Registrar's Office in Hono- -
fi d . plalntiffa Petition herelulu, In Liber 255, folios rl, bi anu w, ln with a certified copy ot
same being a portion tne this Summons.Imuki Tract, as laid and designat-- 1 And you are hereby notified thated bv a certain map entitled "Map of unless you appear and answer
I ... - . I , trnA nnIA Til i .1 P. 11,
farlane Fred Mac- - Kaimukl Tract," recorded in saiu ui- - .u.,, mo unamm nulfarlane. executor under the will of fice in Liber 178, folio 294. saiu par-- .T" " "7,;."the lands describedE. Macfarlane, deceased; Fred W. of an area of II.-
QtherMacfarlane, surviving trustee for square feet. manded in Petition.Florence Balinger Dreyfus, and C. Terms cash in United States witness THE HOVORATU.wW. Macfarlane, under the will of E Coin, 10 per cent payable at time of SANfoRD DOLE and THE HON- -C. Macfarlane; Emll hus and balance ueltvery 01 ueea. ORABLE A. M. ROBERTSON.band of Florence Ballinger Dreyfus;
fDeeds at the expense of purchaser. judges of said District Court, this
Charles K. Frazier; uecn For further particulars ui 10m day ot December, in tne yeartrustee under tho will and of Auction Company, Limited, 916 of our Lord one thousand nine hun- -estate Rhodes, deceased; port street, or Smith, Warren & dred and ten and of the IndependenceTerritory of Hawaii by Alexander wpmpnwnv. .Tudd Building, Honolulu. 01 tne united btates one nundred
Attorney-Genera- l; Respondents.
NOTICE PENDENCYTo It
that
complainantrespondents Is
object theis certain mortgage
the theConveyances
32premises this
suittho
moremortgage and
asthat
A.
Presiding saidfs appointed
hearing suit, whichand summoned
suit.
Jan. 24,
toalso culturo
Quesncl.
and
N.
the
with
Kaimukl
February 3, 1911.N. B. YOUNG,
4t. 3.
&
Only in Hono
IN
And
Lldftute,against wild
or
whothor
January
LYDGATE,of
visiting
our
ofCourt,
on
Tcrritory
KANA.KANUI;Kanakanul;
1,
Jr.,true Is
LESPIO,
at theof deceased;
Realtythe
theMU.
as
ilUl
designated
to
asof
ofof
togetherof
as
land
B.B. Dreyfus, sale on
urown,
of Godfrey of
Honolulu,
Assignee Mortgagee.10, 17,
BooksBrown Lyon Co.,
Limited
"EVERYTHING BOOKS"
Young Building
Bowers' MerchantConfidential Agency
bjr
deconsod,
nttornoys,
Cts 24.
Potentate's
Recorder,
Tele-phone
By
McCANDLESS,
Honolulu,
OFAMERI-
CA,
OF
indulgence.
KANAKANUI,
W.
MA-KAH- A,
KAAI-HINAHIN-
DOROTHY
the
the
theted for
the Ka-- 1
out
nUn.deceased; W.
containing080 the
the
tne
commenced
premises,
27.
WAIMEA,
Patrol
and thirty-fifth- .
(Sgd.) A. E. MURPHY,Clerk.
(Seal)(Endorsed)
No. C8. DISTRICT COURT OFTHE U. S. for tho Territory of Ha-waii. THE UNITED STATES OFAMERICA vs. KOHALA SUGARCOMPANY, et al. SUMMONS. ROB-ERT W. BRECKONS and WILLIAMT. RAWLINS, Attornoys for Plaintiff.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,District of Hawaii, ss.
I, A. E. MURPHY, Clerk of theDistrict Court ot the United Statesof America, In nnd for the Territoryand District of Hawaii, do herebycertify the foregoing to bo a full, trueand correct copy of tho original Sum-mons in the case of THE UNITEDSTATES OF AMERICA vs. KOHALASUGAR COMPANY, et al., as thesame remains of record and on file-I-
the office of the Clerk ot said CourtrN WITNESS WHEREOF, r havo
hereunto sot my hand and afflxed th.oseal of said District Court this 30thday of December, A. D. 1910.
A. E. MURPHY,Clerk of United States District
Rollahle Watchmen Furnished. Phono Court, Territory of Hawaii.1051, P. O. Box 284. City Head- - By F. L. DAVIS,quarters, Club Stables.. I iViV, Deputy Clerk.
V
t,
Hawaiian IfAit, fwoay, fhiiRUARt i, ttii. mm)
THE ADVANTAGE THAT KAIMUKI HAS OVER EVERY OTHER DISTRICT IN THE CITY AND WHAT WILLEVENTUALLY MAKE THE WORLD'S MID-PACIFI- C HEALTH RESORT IS ITS SPLENDID ELEVATION, ITSSEMI-ARI- D CONDITION AND ITS INVIGORATING BREEZE. IT HAS AN ELEVATION EXTENDING FROM THEBASE OF DIAMOND HEAD TO THE MOUNTAIN TOP, CONTAINING HUNDREDS OF MAGNIFICENT BUILDINGLOTS THAT COMMAND A BEAUTIFUL LANDSCAPE AND MARINE VIEW. IT HAS A SEMI-ARI- D CONDITIONWITH SUFFICIENT RAINFALL, MAKING A DELIGHTFUL CLIMATE AND WHERE NO STAGNANT WATERCAN EVER BE SEEN. HAS A COOL BREEZE, BETTER KNOWN AS KOKO HEAD BREEZE. THAT SWEEPSTHE ENTIRE DISTRICT, PURIFYING THE ATMOSPHERE. FREEING FROM ALL HUMIDITY AND MANU-FACTURING A NATURAL OZONE THAT GIVES YOU HEALTH AND PROLONGS YOUR LIFE.
P a I o 1 o Hill
IMP""
Tifii
IT
ITIT
- . - LU
s" M 7 ) '. ' ,! I v
2
c e a n
Fife 1I
31.
of
l i'
'v 1
Opportunity is said to knock at the door of every person at least once in life, and most people can recall the time when a prompt response to that signal would have brought them,if not riches, at least a competency. But some fail to recognize the critical moment, and others are afraid, and the lack of ready money perhaps only a small amount has lost thousandsthe chance of a fortune or a home! And without a home few can ever attain to real success in life. This idea was in our minds when we began to exploit
KAIMUKI,and we resolved that we would so handle this property that the lack of ready money should not cause deserving ones to miss their chance when the opportunity came. And further thatit would so regulate its sale that men of small salary could become owners of homes and could stand on an equal footing with more favored ones in the enjoyment of treasures, comfortsand conveniences of this life. KAIMUKI is the most rapidly growing section of Honolulu. This desirable state of affairs has been brought about by the unceasing endeavor of ourCompany to meet the resources of the more limited pocket-book- s, and enable a small, original investment to secure a home, and after that payments in small installments that are felt notas much as rentals which, when paid to a landlord, are a total loss; besides this giving our purchasers an interest and pride in the city's prosperity that nothing so much as a landholding can give. Here then is your opportunity an opportunity that we will make very easy for you to grasp; so easy, in fact, that if you let it slip by it will be your own fault. Wewill make it possible for you to obtain a home in
KAIMUKI, PALOLO HILL OR OCEAN VIEWwithout scrimping or saving, and without burdening yourself with debt a home which even the most ordinary business judgment will assure you must quickly double and treble in value.
PALOLO HILL TRACT OCEAN VIEW TRACTSECTION A 3J4o.oq. ft. CORNER LOTS $500.0JSECTION B 4c sq. ft. T T n '1 1 D INSIDE LOTS , $400,00SECTION C 5c sq. ft. VvG OUlIU DllllSa.- - FirSt Payment- - $50-0-
SECTION D 5c sq. ft. O Balance, $10.00 per month.Five per cent discount for all cash terms. lTfA'C On (Jill Flve per Cent tJ,scount for ail casl1'Twenty per cent cash down and balance at rate of $10.00 to $20.00 per JiUlo We reserve the privilege of Increasing our prices or withdrawing
month on each lot. any of our lots from the market. (
tloa Co.. nn Hie Itmik of Uawnll, Ud, haln Ar. Co. ...payable to order of V. 0. Of. ' McCawttoaa BW. Co.
Hit IM.OO. Payment of mill warrant j Kalmukl Un On.
Hm beta itontiw).ttMPLQYMENT WAnYbE
those iieraoim burin employ- -
HMmt to iiffnr KmmImii iimmi and wo-HH- in
how renldlng In Honolulu lilenaeailfiM the ttnileralRiiml.
Hwirtl of Immigration of the Terri-tory of Hawaii, 1'. (). Box
WANTED.100 amateurs. Apply Tlljou fneator
batweon 12 and 1 o'clock.
MEN'S CLOTHINGMoli'8 Clothing on credit $1.00 n
Week. Suit given nt once. FrancisLevy, Outfitting Co., Sachs Dldg., FortStreet.
BUY AND SELL.Diamonds and jewelry bought, sold
and exchanged. Bargain In musicalinstruments. J. Carlo, Fort St.
See the new
with the
the prettiest souvenir of thoIslands to be had: they aremade of felt, 3G Inches long,benutlful colors and handsome-ly finished.
PRICE, $1.00
EML.ERS
Metal TripodsThe largest assortment of
metal collapsable tripods bothround and flat shapes, thathas ever been shown in thiscity.
All sizes. Short and Longfolding.
Prices to suit.
jtouolulii ptioto Supply company
"Everything Photographic."
PASSENGERS.Arrived.
Per str. Korea for Honolulu fromSan Francisco: Miss 11. Achilles,Windsor S. Aldrich. Mrs. S. M. An-
gus, Miss Ethel Angus, Mrs. E. A.Baldwin, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Beck-
er, C. Bolte. S. A. Broadhead, Mr.
and Mrs. G. R. Carter, G. R. Car-
ter, Jr., Miss Phoebe Carter, MissCarter, G. icash nrize $50,
H. andWm. G. Cooke,Barbara CottonG. W. Diener
F. the
Rose Edwards, Mr. and Mrs. C. A.Fellows, Mrg. Bush Fjiiiiiell, Win.
C. M. Gardner, A. F. Gay,Miss P. Gay, Vincent Genoves,Mr. and Mrs. .1. W. Godwin,and Mrs. E. H. Gould. Mr. nnd Mrs.U Hale, T. H. Hall, Mrs. H. E. Helton,C. W. Hodgins, Mrs. B. Holt,Mrs. H. Hough, Miss II. Hough,Mr. and Mrs. J. C. J. Hatch-ings, R. ,B. Irwin, Mrs. R. S. .lack-so- n,
E. E. Jenkins, Jenkins,Wm. P. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. J. II
Miss and PARADE
Mrs. R. E. P. h. McDcrmott,Mr. Mrs. V. H. McDoel, Mr.and R. McLean, Miss M.
Mr.. and Mrs. C. F. McNutt',
G. Miyamoto, C. Moore, Mrs.T'. Moore, Mrs. R. R. Musco, MissHelen 116 v. and Mrs. F. W.Oakes, J. O'Connor, Col. Sam. Par-
ker, W. U. R. Mr. and. Mrs.Rankin, P. Rigllettl, Mr. and Mrs.A. M. Robertson. Mrs. E. B. Sco-vll- le
Mr. and Mrs. Geo.and maids, and Mrs. H. Smith.
Dorothy Harry Smith,F. E. Thompson, S. C. Todd,B. T. Underwood, P. A. Wnrnock, I
Mr. Mrs. P. T. Walsh, Miss
This Ijs excellent weaftlier for arun down Halelwa on the llmltel.It Is plensant tho hotel and thecuisino Is to anything in
town. Golf is of Uie delightsa visit to this hotel and
who go down for tho day should takealong their sticks. Good fishing Is
to be had within aof tho hotel as well as boating and.athlng. Tho broad verandas of the
hotel are always inviting to those
who wish to rest or, or a siestaono of the great roomy chairs always
GEORGE MOOSER, of the China Mutual Insurance Comnanv. locetherwith Mrs. Mooser and Infant, were (J
through passengers on tho Koreatoday, having booked to Manila. ItIs only a few weeks since GeorgeMooser passed through Honolulu onhis way to tho States for thoChristmas and New Year at home.
MISS ALICE HATTIE of llllo- - hasboon reelected as Hawaii's PrincessIn the Floral Parade, to take theplaco of Miss Wilhelmlna Weight,
' who was prevented by tho recent I
death of her grandmother.
LIEUTENANT COLONEL F. L. PAY- -
SON, paymaster. U S. A, leaveson
onduty at re- -
an of 111
MISS R.ESTARICK, Mr.E. T. Allen briefly on her
arrival here from Honolulu, hasgono to San where she willmake a short stay with be
continuing East. Chronicle.
TEMPLETON CROCKER and higfiancee, Miss Helento be married on 28th,havo planned a honeymoonThey will and
in and ontheir will the Crocker
at Burllngnme. Chronicle.
I
Clean-U-p SaleOK
Wash MaterialsFHHItrAKY 1st TO llli.
This is it sale (lint nlioulri create the keenest interest. Sweep-ing reductions have been in
HAD WITHOUT PROPER ARRANGEMENTS KEEPING MEAT. YOU HAVE NEVER HEARD OF PTOMINEPOISONING FOLLOWING MEAL AT WHICH OURMEATS WERE SERVED.
Metropolitan Meat MarketW. P. HEILBRON and A. LOUIS, Proprs.
Telephone
LOOThat Are " Hummers"
Our Ewii window is full of useful tableware specialties. In
tho transit Logout lfor the to close out thc-reniai- oC the lines usually on handmainland Saturday. He has beenrelieved from his own around the holiday season, we are saerincing everything unsold.quest, account health.
who visitedand Mrs.
Diego,friends
fore
Irwin, who aroFebruary
abroad.spend tho spring
'early summer Europe,return occupy
home,
made
AND
1491
the matter
Queen Street.
FOR
A
1814.
ordermany short
At $1.00 you tire buying at a fraction of their value.
The assortment includes cups and saucers, celery trays, bou bons,
sugars and creams, mayonnaise bowls, jugs, vases, steins, olives,
nut bowls, etc., etc.
Be Wise And Pick Early
W. W. Dimond & Company, Ltd.,
53-5- 7 King Street. Honolulu.
2nd SectionTHE HAWAIIAN STAR 2nd SectionPAGES 9 TO 12. PAGES 9 TO 11.
HONOLULU, HAWAII FRIDAY, FHDRUARY 3, 1011.
TWO HUNDRED CHINESE HERE
GUT OFF QUEUES AND ULL THE
BEST AREJXPEGTEO TD DO SO
OOOOOOO. OOOOOOOOOO of Honolulu Chinese made tho kono- -
O O
O SAN FRANCISCO, January 11. O
O All tho local Chlnoso nowspa- - O
O pers publish what purports to bo O
O a message from Wu Tins Fang, O
O Into minister to the United States, O
O announcing the dato ho has fixed O
O for the removal of his queue. O
O The message reads: "His cxcol-- O
O lency. Wu Ting Fang, having glv-- OO on the matter deep consideration OO has como to the conclusion that O
O the most auspicious time for dls- - OO posing of superfluous appendages OO will bo tho sixteenth day in the O
O first month of the third year of OO his Imperial Highness Suen Tung. OO On that day therefore, he will OO order tho barber to cut off his OO queue." OO The date fixed Is January 30 on OO the western calendar. On that OO day, It Is reported, many localO merchants will follow his example 3O and celebrate parting with their OO queues at a big banquet. OO O
oooooooooooooooooFolowing the Illustrious example of
ono of t hegroatest statesmen, a lot
CALIFORNIA'S CANAL EXPECTATIONS
By H S Bates, of Bates & Chese-broug-
General Agents for California-At-
lantic Steamship Company.Now that the Panama is all but an
accomplished fact ana will be open tocommerce within three years, it is notmere speculation to consider what thiscanal means to the trado of California
and her sisters States on the Pacific.In anticipating tho tonnage which
will move through tho canal, I think,It may be properly divided Into fourclasses.
First, that class of cargo commonlyspoken of as water freight and whichhas since the early days of the clipper ship always been moved by water.This cargo includes wines, asphalt,salmon, canned fruit, dried frlut, leadand seasonable products of the Pacificwhich produced at ono time of theyear, are intended for consumptionthroughout the following months ofthe year.
This tonnage has been on the steadyIncrease for years, and following thenatural development of Western civil-
ization, principally through tho cutrting up of our large ranches Into smallfarms, it seems an assured fact that
hi season this year tho accaslon ofhaving their queues clipped off. It Is
estimated Hhat about two hundredpigtails were lost during tho pastfew days, and according to samo oftho Chinese, there will be a lot morecut off in tho near future.
"I think that all the Chlneso herowill soon bo without queues," saidC. Ming Him, ono of tho prominentlocal Chinese merchants, wh has longben without a queue himself. "TheChinese government has approvedcutting them off, whereas before ittook tho other view. Now a Chinesewithout a queue Is in good standing.This was not tho case before."
"Over two hundred queues worecut off this holiday saan. BaldL. Y. Ahoo. "The queue style Isfast being abandoned."
WOMEN AND THEIR IDOLS.
Women adore Idols."Do they?""Don't they? Why, when a woman's
idol proves human, she's stronger forit than ever." Toledo Blade.
this class of cargo will steadily In-
crease as our State and Us fertilevalleys aro developed through' colonization.
A conservative estimate of this classof business which ls now moving eith-
er by Cape Horn, the Isthmus ot Pana-ma or the Isthmus of Tehuantepec,would be 500,000 tons annually.
Second Lumber cannci now beshipped in any quantity via existingroutes to the Atlantic seaboard for
i tho two principal reasons that thoCapo Horn route entails too great a
' risk necessarily too high a rate ofinsurance, coupled with the uncertain(
ty of the voyage and time in transit,not less than 120 days. Lumber can-
not be shipped via the Isth-
mian routes for the reason that it willnot stand the necessary transship- -
I ment and consequential damage caus-- Ied through the handling at tho isthmus. However, wnen tne canal iscompleted, it is estimated that lumberfrom the Northwest will move throughtho canal not only to North Atlantisports, the present market of Southernlumbermen, but actualy 'Into suchports as Atlanta, New Orleans andSavannah, from where lumber Is now
BUSY DAYS FOR THE CHINK BARBER.
shipped in considerable qunntitlos to example of what thin tonnage may dt- -
Northern American oltlos. volop, It Is Interesting to know thatTho reason for this Is that with our It Is ostlmntod this year that South
I
vast forests on the Pacific and cheap- - orn Callfomln will produco for export
er cost of production por tuousand wo GO.OOO cms of citrus fruits. Tho rail-ca- n
compete nt a lower rato of freight rofull with their combined capacityon a much larger scnlo than we are can tnko care of but 40,000 cars of
now actually competing under a tlits commodity, leaving 10,000 cars,freight rato of $15 per ton. jor approximately 150,000 tons of or- -
It Is my opinion thnt lumber wlllja"Bs and lomons to cither movo bycarry a rato through tho canal of about water or rot on the ground. Whon$7.50 per ton, which rate It can be we consider tho marvelous develop-readil- y
seen will leavo a margin of mcnt of Southern California and itsprofit sufficient to develop a tremen-- 1 thousands of acres now under cultl-do- us
tonnage. votion and yet to be plnnted In orangeThird In nddition to the lumber ,an(1 lemon groves, It Is not hard to
tonnage which ls ready to movo thorcnlizo that this movement of fruitminute the canal ls completed, wo,from San Pedro to Atlantic and Gulthave on the Pacific a number of com- - j Prts will be ono of tho largest factorsmoditles which i believe will move,11 tho Intercoast transportation busi-I- n
very large quantities to the Atlnnt- - ness- -
1c seabord at a lower rate of freight I In tnIs article I havo only mentionedthan is now possible, at say about $3 , a fow of tho principal commoditiesper ton.
1 refer particularly to ninganeso orewhich Pennsylvania steel factors havoadvised mo can be moved at a $5
rate from the Pacific In competitionwith that now imported from the Or-
ient via Suez. It Is Impossible to es-
timate the amount of this ore whichwill be moved to Philadelphia con-
sidering the vast deposits of magan-es- e
in California ana the consumptionIn Pennsylvania. I would say that thismovement will be only dependent up-
on the rate of freight and availabletonnage.
In addition to ninganeso ore therewill bo a very large tonnage of infus-orial earth to the same market InPennsylvania which will emanate fromSouthern California.
There Is also a strong possibilitythat granite, graphite and other lowgrade bulky commodtles nownanaiea rrom tne Pacific coast in adesultory sort of way will be trans- -
naj
via
par
for
large ofnow glass
lciv mcae got suchequivalent to tho Pacificplus a rate of freight of about per
and It is not at Improbablethat the present movement boreversed granito, Tnarblc, graphite,etc., shipped to the East via tho
Southern California has some won-derful deposits of borax, ash andother chemicals In the nat-ural and an company ianow figuring tho development ofthese deposits on a very large scaleand it quite confident that a$5 rate of it competewith thj Syracuse product, which al-
though a manufactured one. Is infer-ior to that of California in naturalstate. The soda ash and borax alone,
they movo at this rate of freight,amount to thousands of in
addition to the cargo which wesure of through the canal.
Fourth It has aiready been demon-strated company that citrusfruits, both oranges and lemons,be profitably shipped in the Atlnnticseabord via Panama even with tho un-
avoidable (delay ot transfer necessary under present conditions. an
January 30th, the Chlnoso and queuo-wearin- g nations of the Orient will begin havingcut off. News 1 - ,
whlch aro not now moving, butI believe will movo through the ca- -
at n reasonable rate of freightand if they alone considered in aconservative way It bo readilyseen that tho develojment of intercoast trado tho is not dependent upon to move, but rath.er upon cclency of service and wellorganized agencies through tho Easton the of tho Pacific coast transportation companies.
TIPPING AND TREATING.
There arel two pruutlces In thiscountry that are Justly con-demned. One is tipping, and the oth-er treating, to be sure, we aro not re-
sponsible back inthe days of Queen Elizabethcoffee house had a box bearing the in-
scription, "To Promntness:being p. i. p.- - Neither is treatine an Inno
Some of the Caesers, so sayshistory, used to get huffy when their
poneu in quantities to tne uasi-- 1 guestg couid not see the bbtt0mem market, which stands ready
( the often enough. But both haveprouucis at a price a hold on Americans that
coast cost,$5
ton, allwill
andca-
nal.
sodalow grade
state, Englishon
'is withfreight, can
its
ifwill tons
arepassing
by mycan
As
other their queuesItem.
which
arecan
canalcargo
being
either. Awayevery
Insure
vation.
they have come to be recognized asnational habits, and the latter some-
times as a national evil. IndianapolisNews,
INTO
LET THE OCEAN, BY
THE KflPIOLAN! PARK AND
CONNECT KAIMUK1
Hawaii has many boosters, but place than It Is now. Ho has athere is none more enthusiastic than scheme by which ho would make ItW. H. Uaugh, of San Jose. Mr. Daugli n beauty spot that would appeal toIs In Honolulu Just now, having a all. His Idea is to have a widostop-ov- er between the arrival of tho boulovardo, whore vehicles of everyP. JI. S. Siberia on Friday la3t and description could bo shown to thothe departure on Sunday next of the fullest advantage, und be drivon un-- P.
M. C. China. dor tho best conditions, while thoMr. Uaugh states that ho has influenc pedestrlnns would have special walks
ed many people to take in Honolulu under the umbrageous shade of thoas one of the sights of the world, and splendid trees. The grounds wouldIn order to assist them he has map- - he ornamented In many ways, and apod out an itinerary, so that they trench would be cut that would allowwould have no trouble. For his the water from tho ocean to clr-pal- ns
ho has received many thanks, culato freely in this course. Overand lias added other boosters to the tnls Htrcam would bo stretched rusticalready long list. He always Includes bridges of nn ornamental character,tho Pall as one of tho sights, and to Numerous comfortable seats would bohear him describe in vivid language provided, and attractive kiosks would'tho beauties of this region, one can oo erected where bodily comforts couldeasily understand how it is that ho l)o obtained. Tho keynotes wouldhas been so successful in inducingmany others to visit these delightfulscenes. What appeals to him morothan anything else is tho handiness'of this magnificent scenery. Here "atour very doors," as ho says, thereIs some of the finest scenery in theworld," for frpm the Pnll there Is thomajestic splendor of tho high moun-tains that either stand in bold reliefagainst the sky line, or are veiled ina filmy mist that only adds to theirbeauty. Combined with this is thebroad expanse of the Pacific Ocean,whllo there ls a rugged beauty aboutthe precipitous heights thnt cannotfall to appeal to the most unapprc-ciative- .
But Mr. Baugh does not wish to cateronly to the tocirlst, who can view thesosights in a few days, perhaps in onoday. He wants to make additionalpleasure resorts-fo- those who mako
bo comfort and ornamentation. Howould add a car track that would'jconnect the Knimukl and Walkiklservices, so that a loop would beformed, and the residents of Knimuklwould be able to reach this pleasuroground by a short route. Ho hassomo other plans for tho beautlfica-tio- n
of this land.
THE DONKEY'S CHOICE. t
Tho vexed question of the futurelife of animals has troubled the Mo-
hammedan, as it has other religions.The question, it seems, was consid-ered by Allah a long time ago. andnil the animals were asked if theywished to enter paradise. They atonce said yes, except the donkeys.These were cautious, and asked if lit-
tle boys went to heaven. The answer being yes, they replied, "In that
'.their homes here, and with this cnd,case we prefer to go to the otherin view ne wouiu convert, tne inpio- - t,. i. ucuu, iukwd iui mo
' lanl Park Into' a much pleasanter fable in "Tfi"b Desert Gateway.
HUDSON "33
DITCH
99
III
The best yetA BRAND NEW CAR AND A DISTINCT ADVANCE IN MOTOR CAR .DESIGNING
WEHR PROOF900 fewer parts in the chassis of the HUDSON 33" than in the average car of e q
and power . This meams
Fewer Parts to Wear Out and to be Repaired
DUST PROOFSand and dust is drawn through the radiators of most cars but the
Valves and all Moving Parts of the HUDSON "33" AreAbsolutely Dust Proof.
The HUDSON TOURING "33" carries five passengers . The body is made of
sheet metal. The dash is free from all attachments. The wheel base is 114 inches, Rim-
ing boards of cast aluminum. The HUDSON PONV TONNE AU "33" is
built for four passengers. Seats are low and tilt backwards. An easy riding car and the dashis bell .shaped
wjTuivimnri m win immnauKfaHut.iu-iwat-
Associated Garage, Ltd.Merchant and Bishop Streets
For a Good Meal, Quickly Pre-pared And Well Served Go To The
PALM CAFEPHONE 2011 1IOTI5L STHBKT
Remember the Palm Test Is "The Best"
TOMSHARP PME 5HARP--
5IGN5The Painter gg Are
Elite Building Trade Promoters
EXCLUSIVE PATTERNS IN HANDSOME GREYSEnglish and American Weaves. Made to your order With S
and style unequalled.
W. W. AHANA 62 South King Street
The Yawman & ErbeFiling Cabinet
are recognized by business men the world over as the best thathave been invented. . .
Hawaiian News Co., Ltd.lexou,,gTHE PIONEER PAPER HOUSE".
The MacySectional Bookcasesare the best for the office and home.Built in sections that permit of the
greatest economy or space.Sanitary Desks and Office Furniture
Hackfeld & Co., Ltd.,
All customers of the HawaiianCompany are hereby warned against
admitting to their houses any personclaiming to be a representative of thisCompany unless that person can showa badge of the Company.
The Hawaiian Electric Co., Ltd.
1
lark! Bark!Art easy mark--
He specifies'any old paint.Some of it sad,Some of it bad,
And all of it bringing complaint.
V.Jst
m
But Hark! Hark!Tho easy markDon't do that any moroFor now he insists on S W PFrom the roof way down to the floor.
Sherwin-Willia- Paints an d Brighten Up finishes, at,
E. O. Hall & Son, Limited,
TUB HAWAIIAN 8TAR, PffiBAY, FHIititMltY 3, till,
CALIFORNIA
(Continued from nan Ave.)
Phlllpnlna, he wyn tlmt hla rfKrtwill he favorahla; with raanl to ,1a-pe- n
thin will mil b the oaa. ile atylea
((Ml
Dili
, toIn
It the nrHveynrd of Hllen commercial worl(( BUimle(1 Hnlit handy touiueriwB. iHiulliiK deiiot. From steamer to
Naturally, an ohnorvsnt man like thete Btonigo rooms no niiproolnhleMr. Hnugh withered n lot of distance, and, tho iiorlsh-Infnrmati-
(
that will he of Inestimable ablo noodg do got nu o)iportunlty(
vnluo to those who him on Ills lm- - to deteriorate Ho spofte In hlgh- -portant mission. Concerning .Inpnu est tonne of tho manner in which this
ho does not- - consider It trndo carried on, in thois necessary to say much. will snmo breath condoiunod tho Amorlcan he obllRcd enncol nil his nrrecommend Hint principals mothod of packing. Amorlcnns, lie do- -
any ondonvor to open up trndo roln-clare- d were tho worstHons the Japanese, 'vythrognid pnekers In the w6rld. Ho montlonedto sconory that no saw there he tho excellent state of presorvntlon
a lot of Interesting information to that Australian, including, of course.give. Fujlyamn ho thought wns beau-
tiful. Ho nn Interesting descrip-tion of this fnmous mountain and ranthink of no other mountain in tho United States that he has over seen tocompare with It in point of beauty, forho saw it in all its loveliness when thomorning sun was shedding Its fir3trays on the smooth snow thnt encrust-
ed it. Scenery, however, plays Im-
portant part In the business missionthat Mr, Haugli on.
In Manila ho found a rapidly chang-ing city, for since thoopening of free trade between the Uni-
ted States and the Philippines, Manilahas geen gradually surely changingher commercial relations, Formerly
Uermnny anil finglanj hold tlie tmik "fthe trade, but now American manufac-turers are coming into their own, andMr. naugh thinks that the dny Is not fardistant when the Philippines will buyonly in American markets that is, atnil events, eertnin commodities! .ThSi'dare many things that for many yearsto come America can not hope to sup-ply, for the Trusts, or the high wagesthat are paid In American factorieswill militate against her being a sttc-tftSsf- ul
competitor. A few of thesethings are Hour, butter.meat beef andmutton and coal. In these commodi-ties Australia holds superior posi-
tion. She is well-situat- ceoEranh- -
ically, and has the additional advantages of able supply good ar-
ticles in the most favorable circum-stances. From Australia to Manilathere are four mail steamship lines,and all the vessels employed are fittedwith refrigerating machinery, whilethoro is a frequent, if irregular, service of colliers.
aUtllwt, HHd lis tIon not thinkAmerica will iw able to eowpttaffalnat the chanr but wxrellent
priHliteUoni, nml for rm-01- 1
lie nun nut am that AinsrlrH Is go-
ing InlwD unrlmti eomitttor with theOiitntinnwanltli for many yaaracome, If ever. Manila there In on"of the Inrgeet cold atontRs nlitnta In
tlle thethe
ishaa umMI thererore,
notHunt the
commercially was being nndHo
his makeoniphntlcally,
withthe
has
gives
was
commercially,
but
being
Tasmanlnn, apples arrived at theirdestinations. While Amorlcan applesworo packed loosely In flimsy boxcathat allowed the npplcs to jerk about,and become bruised, those from thoCommonwealth were packed firmly, Inwell-mad- e substantial boxes, and st
invariably reached tho consignee8in thorough order. As an Instance ofthis he quoted cases that ho had seenIn Honolulu, and contrasted them withthe packing of sheets of glass con-signed to Manila by an American firm.Out of the whole number of sheets, notone was received in r. sound condition.
Mr. nnugh paid high tribute to thequality of the Australian mpqt, butteand fruit, but. regarding the coal he did
anythat it must have been greatly superiorto tho Japanese, or elso the Japan coalwould been purchased In prefer-ence, owing to the much lower pricesat which it could, be supplied.
With regard to calicoes, 01 prints asMr. Baugh preferred to caU tbenuthese being supplied by America,England, Germnny and Spain. Americahad gradually pulled Up the leeway un-
til now she occupied the leading posi-
tion in this class of goods. Japan,however, is just breaking into thisportion of trade, and a representativefrom one of the large Osaka manufactories Is now in the Philippines with aview to opening up relations betweenthe Islands and Japan for the
of Japanese light goods. Japan,Mr. Baugh aserted, will beable supp:y tiils class of goods atfigures that will cut all the Europeanand American manufacturers entirelyout of the trade, even after paying thoduty. The low rates of wages pro- -
Mr. Baugh was very much Impressed vail In Japan, together with longthe facilities that had been In- - hours that are worked in the factories,
wilt enable the nMHHfatrem to 00mpete atirwaaftillr anaitat the ICuropean
Imoortere, while eellltiK their rhh1 Ma miieli lower rate.
Mr. IbitiRh I full of IntereetliiR auec-dnte- e
hla trip, but preferstalk about the commerelal eondl-t.nn- s.
lie had made arranaamenta toMay over at SIihiihIihI for about tendays, but this he wns advised to aban-don, as smallpox was raging there. Hewent up to ShniiBhal from Wooatuiji.
whro tho Pnclflc Mall stoamors 113
dut'liiR their stay In Chlnoso waters,fully Intending to mnkc a thorough In-
vestigation concerning tho outlook.Hut tho conditions wore so bad that
not wns to
no
the
to
to
the
to
rnngemonts, nnd leave on tho Slborlangnln In continuation of his trip. Whileho was thoro ho hoard that thirty-tw- o
fatal casos of smallpox had so far oc-
curred among tho foreigners alone.How ninny occurred among the 550,-00- 0
Chinese residents it was not an-
nounced. It never is In such circumstances. As his business would bringhim Into tho sources of Infection, hotook tho excellent advice tendered tohim, nnd left.
WHIPPED THE LEOPARD,A vivid pen picture of a tight be-
tween a leopard and a troop of ba-boons is given in a German paper byP. Ititter, a sportsman and explorer inGerman West Africa. Leopards havea particular liking for baboon flesh,which is often used as a bait to trapthe.
'One afternoon," the hunter relatenot make inquiries, but thought jr-- f was resting on tho shady side of a
have
importa-tion
confidently
that
with
concernlnn
big rock which formed tho bank of aemail stream. On tho opposite sidea troop of baboons camo down chat-tering toward the water, a large malogoing cautiously in front, glancing andscenting around for danger. I remain- - j
ed Immobile. ""A deep grunt assured the herd that
ail was well, and down the steep slopethey came, last of all a female withtwo young, which' tlie mother tend-erly helped over the rough places.Suddenly a big leopard shot out frombehind a bowlder and with one blowof his paw grabbed one of the young.
"The mother, with a roar of fury,thrtw herseir upon the big cat. Theothers halted and with one accordclambered back to her assistance. Tholeopard had just settled the femaleand was about to make off with hisprey when ho found himself surround-ed by the whole horde, which closedin upon him.
' Ho gave as good as he got, andtwo big baboons rolled down the slope,apparently done for, but numbers told,
Began this morning, andeverything that 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, Gloves andevery other line we carry solong as it is white.
A splendid opportunitysave money on White Goods.
to
IE
Real Estate Department
For RentFurnished houso of four Sleeping'
rooms for rent for a period of bIx"months, Immcdlnto possession, Ro-t- al
IGG.00.
Furnished houso on beach at Wal-kl- kl
for rent for thrco months fromMarch 1, 1911.
For SaleA few of tho "Wnlker Lots" on
King St. loft at $1200.00 and on Young,
St. at $000.00.
A very deslrablo piece of Kalmukiproperty on 12th. Avo
Waterhouse TrustFort and Merchant
Streets.Honolulu, T. H
WirelessOfllco Hours Daily 7 A. M.
to 5:30 P. M. Sundays 8 to to10 A. M.
II SUS ill I LIB
CHINESB NEWSPAPER .
PUBLISHING AND "nj
JOB FAINTING. S
An $1800.00 bargain In Makiki Dlatrlct.No. 49 Cor. ol Smith and Hotel Bts.
Fulton Iron Works of St. Louis.Westons Centrifugals.Babcock & Wilcox Boilers.Green's Fuel Economizer.Matson Navigation Co.New England Mutual Life Incur-an- ce
Company of Boston.Aetna Insurance Co.National Fire Insurance Co.Clt.zen's Insurance Co. (Hartford
Fire Insurance Co.)
The London Assurance
1, 1 1-- 2 and 3 tons 15 H. P.Honolulu Power Wagon Co.,
THE GREATER TARIs here. With yesterday's issue the paper began to appear
with a minimum of twelve pages daily and a corresponding in-crease in the size of the usually large Saturday edition. Fromthe top line of the front page to its last word it will hence for-ward be a newspaper of which Honolulu and the HawaiianIslands may well feel proud.
Its motto will be "Get Everything And Publish It First."The city news service of The Star is now as complete as it is
possible to make it. The Island of Oahu will be fully coveredday after day. Arrangements have been made for a completeIslands' service, while cable.and letter correspondence will arriveregularly from San Francisco, Washington and other centers.
All the happenings of the day will be known to Star readers the sameafternoon
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STORY OF THE PLAGUE THAT 15
The following history of the plaguowhich is now raging in China is by
Frederick J. Haskln:
The black death, which devastatedand literally decimated the wholeworld in the fourteenth century, wassomewhat similar to itsand successor, the plague, with which,however, it should not boThe name "black death" arose fromthe color o-- Ithe spots or tumorswhich appeared on the bodies of itsvictims just before or soon after decease. The crude medical practice ofthe day offered neither remedy norcure. Those who were attacked invar-iably died in from forty-eig- ht to sixty--
two hours, and many sought byto anticipate their in-
evitable doom.
Like the plague, tho black death wasof oriental origin probably ChlnesoFrom 1333 to 1360 all Asia and Europewere racked and ravaged by a longseries of natural convulsions and disasters droughts, floods,
tornadoes, , swarms of locusts, and thoresultant famines. The chronicles ofthe time record that the order of theseasons seemed to have been reservedThunder storms raged in the dead otwinter, volcanoes long extinct becameactive, there wero no rainy seasons
' and the sun glared incessantly fromskies of brass.
Activities Fatal to Life.These malign activities wore fatal
to all kinds of animal life. Over il-
limitable areas there resulted a, vastof organic masses, car- -
casses of men and women, flsh, fowl
'and vegetable matter. This, accordingto 'both earlier and later theorists,gave rise to mephitic vapors whichrendered tho very air unfit to breathe,Indeed, tracing the fifteen-yea- r march
- of tho black death from east to west,
it was declared that the putrid cloudactually was visible as it mounted
from horizon to zenith, so that "a
'dense and awful fog was seen In theheavens upon Italy." This
view is borne out by tho further re-
corded fnct that tho organs of breath-
ing wero first attacked. Stupor anddeath speedily followed.
Exact figures, of the mor-
tality reaped by the black death are
people.
HOW
5WEEPIN6 THROUGH THE FUR ERST
confounded.
earthquakes,
decomposition
descending
TIIW HAWAIIAN 8TAH, FRIDAY, FKttHUAltY I, 1911.
of
ofof of
at in
predecessor
er
stupendous
jntMtifflnn rm
and years, black death was never tiic;.e appeared in the streets crowds'
death.known to reappear In a once-stricke- n oj uMidns and women he-- 1 Speaking a medical standpoint,area. Nor, modern of so they lost all it is considered probable thesanitation, and quarantine, would It semblance of self-contr- leaping and dancing was allied toever be possible for a cavorting they dropped dead, what has more recently knownto obtain foothold nowadays. Some declared they saw visions; i as St. Vitus' dance, or St. John's
History of the in despair the 'dance; this giv- -
Curiously enough, the black death or death, an at- - en to it In several localities. Some- -
to obtain, owing to the al- - left an Indelible impress Euro- - titudo suggestive of the reckless, say- thing to it In Italy was calledgeneral of vital statis- - pean letters. In "nienzl" "let ur, eat, drink and he mor-.th- e Tarantula, being supposedly caus-
tics. But In China alone, 13,000,000 there is a vivid account of the pestll- - ry. for tomorrow we ed by tho bite of a venomous spider,perished, while in the rest of the ori- - ence in Italy, but It Is in tho prefaco Naturally, under of this From this is drlved our modern dancePnf in northern Africa and In tho to tne or uocnccio mat reiiijiuus mo wildest excesses , movement cuueu a luranieiia,countries bordering on the we find a particularly minute descrip- - place, and there is little doubtranean 24,000,000 in three years, lion of the sights and scenes during that many Impostors joined the ranks
lost one-ha- lf of its nonulation,' the dread visitation at Florence In of the enthusiasts in the hope of plun- -
fifteen European cities lost 300,000,, 1348, published In 1353, less five uei or o: license. There is no means prominent detective, "tiiero useu to oe
Germany nearly 1,500,000. tho years thereafter. It will be remember-- , or esumarmp. accurately how great,11 sergeant on tne iorco wno uau it
three years' rage of the scourge ed that tho tales which go to was the mortality, hut it is certain 111 101 lne- - reported me lor various1347-5- 0, there perished 25,- - make up the book were supposed to mat in the low countries, Metz, Col- - delinquencies, anu s dead now
000,000 be narrated to other by aof 1'ulies and gentlemen were re- -Nor was the ocean any safer than r i . a a i i
cloud u.i ueiuuj coumry esuuu iim- -tho land. dire and dealyface the waters ia"' a of ten a'sswept over tho of Ui;- - j
ers full ot putrefying corpses poison-- 1 TUmctty traceable the human
ed the sea, and we are appalled oy,n"s growing out or tne terriuiestories of plague-stricke- n ships, their epidemics was a deadly mania known
numbered with cornses. s tile of death, which was fa- -
up and down tho Mediterranean, thoBaltic, the Black sea, the Englishchannel and the North sea.
Perish by the Million.
In 1348-5- 1 at least half of the popu
thobeen the
themen who from
with Cf.me frenzied that thatmania closely
such until beenthat
Plague.playim blsick adopted
difficultBulver's
quasi-- ;"Decameron
Mediter-- ,
Duringhundred
Europe,party
r,erlo
doneetal to untold thousands.
It had its rise in Germany in tho
"1"Iavemen
Hvlne re sack,latlon depression groanedpower
mn uuHiroyer
irlX auS 10,00 VO- g- of'rnieubeing borne by churches by various orders,
Constantinople many caravan successive visitations visions spirits, whose namonroutes; march plague they shrioked imploringly. Somo
from orient Occident blind tenor possession sorted during paroxysms theyindubitably traced these people. Frequently hoight-.fe- lt themselves immersed
trade routes. contagion reached tanatics declared .blood, which compelled them leapseaports Itoly southern scourges visiblo judg- - hich. fm linnvnno
i viw-mm- r
methods
BEAT HIM TO STATION." patrolman,"
won,tv.ierd and reported at
station that he oxpected live.So boss mogo around see could
for the fellow,see him. let mo in.
all tho tho ser--
was ln andby- -,
tenant around see you m.; arrives Honolulu.century, at Hrst I, at th he- -
"miracle '"f -or 1 theth Pinv . In ex- - couW out h0 .Go
to remind tho 'andof England , and ir 1KettlnS flnc- -r m l.on- - and of i . , . ." " " !. u .1 . - 1" "l cioins v,i n n11 nlw1. ii.. n hid 01 uu
iimo. r.t nnn t (in nnn W"1. consisted of , . anylllln& Im"
7 t of a
at 1 uuac - . . -- ..religious
of toHi anu me
j
No 111
anawno n .1..- .-
ofIt to
of to mysteryoutbreak in its dancing uiuhla, to hundreds
toto the
of in
inno
to
In
tho next vigorous way, aml got
the musIc
i i i n r
I a
moI
I"
I I
of
" Ia
hoo .
fu ... m T
f
ana
In ofmy
says needTim 4.ivtn- -j 11V ICUll-llllll-14 1, ,w.lu , inump.ngs , ,Do you mean gay
and the .8aya d Bay8 h0of In chil- - toU, ho wnf) , ht?. .ye 8,r
"iiuHiU y man .Yn llnr!' tho
thosaw to
tho, hut by
by tho , n,v ot( of 0vilfn fact of the the and tho death n.
to may took of tho I that thobo by j this was in sea of
By it ene( oy who that totho of and the wero tho so Oth a HOW
was says
got it was theto
tho and told toana if do any
old and if
room
to ln
and anTut
of
nf tell I'mS,'
-- ii. ,.sieui
and
hotter.station.
inoi' later. Then I made report. "He
he's better and doesn't nny- -
oni'd T llAiittnnnl JIII1I,!- -
,0 gawby h,m?. ,An
amono l.l.imo.l llm.lnn.
nor
tho black
latter a
rr
t
ant. 1 got a mossago ton minutes agothat' he was dead!
"And it was true. What do youthink of that old scoundrel trying toget mo in bad with his dying breath?"
Cleveland Plain Doalor.
THOSE OHIO BRIBERS.
It would appear that tho court authoritlcs in Adams county, Ohio, still-u u VV Mil- -
I
Kuropo, tnence to uenuiuiy, r luuwu. ( uuuiuw wny. iu iBnui- - en anu tno saints and tho Virgin Mary. have a largo amount of work on handRussia, Sweden nnd England, i nree ant onu i.ducateu aliKo ramiuar witn appear. When tho obsession was com- - in connection with those political cor
patch.
years ciapseu uetween mo uppuuiuu tn.-- .m muiumy piuy ueuui uecmiio pioto tho attacks began with opilepi' .ruptlon cases. In tho 1908 election
of tho black death In Constantinople a real and dreadful personality stalk- - convulsions, during which thoso nf- - the county cast 6,058 votos. So farand Its outbreak ln St. Petersburg. lng over tho land, swooping down on footed fell the ground senseless, only 2,500 voters have boon indicted
One rather romarKame ract r(
ci-.- ; ana town, now in tno guiso or a champing tho jaws, panting nnd labor- - or confessed guilt ln tho present invouched for competent autn 1 mes. bus.j Bheieion, now mounted on a paid ing for ureath. Sudenlv thov would vestliratinn. Hnwnvnr hn n,,nn,ino0Unlike the plague, which revisited the hewe, us in the Book of neTelatlon. spring tip nnd begin dancing anew n appear to bo conducting nffnlrs in asame localities for upward of a thous"- - In tha cities and towns of Europe a final frenzy which too often ended In ! manner to Justify bollof
'that the
round-u- p will bo completed. ChicagoJournal.
HEAVY LOSSES, THOUGHI
Tho fact is that this country was.not ready for any of its wars, but itwas never whipped. Columbus Dia--
Fine Job Prlntirg, Star Office.
Oahu RailwayTABLE
OUTWAIID.For Walanae, Walalua, Kahuku ana
Way Stations 9:15 a.m.. "3.20 p.m.For roarl City, Ewa Mill, and Way
W. W. North TreasurerjRIchard Ivera BecretaryJ, R. Gait AuditorGeo. R. Carter A DirectorC. H. Cooke DirectorR. A. Cooke Director
: fl r Sweet VioletU 0 L BUTTER
C. Q. YEE HOP & CO. TEL. 251
Shaw & SevilleNEW MONUMENT WORKS.
KING STREET NEAR ALAKEA.hone 3085. P. O. Box 491
Honolulu.
Empire Chop House(Lately Palace Grill.)
Bethel St Opp. Empire Theatre.Open Day and Night, Cuisine Unsur-
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WoodlawnMANOA VALLEY.
See CHAS. S. PESKY.
'Ohio Clothes Cleaning andDyeing Co.'snew telephone is
1496
YELLOW PERIL HQBSQN
DRINK 15
PIIILADRLPHIA, .January i. Theimigwiy ol Hie present generationwill hear the hoofs of the yellow man'shorse mid flip generation nftor thatwill witness the fall of the AmericaninnWon and nil its institutions ofliberty and justice unions tlio con-sumption of alcoholic drinks Is of--
fectimlly prohibited, according to(.'apt. Richmond Pearson Hobson, re-
presentative In Congress from Alaba-ma, who spoke yestorday nt tho Unl-- 1
verslty of Ponnsylvanla Sunday scr-- 1
vice In Houston I Tall. I
The speaker took as his subject,"Tho Great Destroyer," meaning al-
coholic drink, nnd shouted that thouse of liquor In any form and to anyextent whatever is destructive and de-
generating to the Individual and thonation. He said that so great hadbeen its ravages upon human char-- j
actor and Intellect, In the cities inparticular, thnt in ninny municipalelections, the element of alcoholic de- -'
generates hold the balance of powerand that In time this element wouldhold an absolute majority of tho en-- .
tire electorate. !
Liberty and wouldbecome- impossible, he said, and ourcivilization would sink ingloriouslyinto the dust before the savage on-- 'rush of the yellow races from acrossthe Pacific. I
The people of Pennsylvania areplaced under a peculiar handicap infighting the evil in that, they aredenied local option, he declared. "Youare slaves In Pennsylvania; every-body knows It."
Incontrovertible Facts."Tho statements which I shall
make," said Captriln Hobson, "arebased entirely upon the informationresulting from a rigid and scientificinvestigation. They are demonstratedfacts, to be accepted and no longertho subject for discussion.
"It was not until the time of theBoer War, when tho English Govern-ment recruiting officers discoveredthe appalling fact that a comparative- -
ly small per centage of those enlistedcould measure up to the requiredphysical standards, that a scientificstudy of the drink question was be-
gun. At this time it was found thatthe marked degeneration in the phy-
sique of men recruited at the timeof the Crimean war and of those ex-
amined at the time of the Boer Warwas due to alsohollc poison. Immedi-ately tho British Government placard-ed all that cities of the nation, call-
ing upon the people to bend theirenergies toward the wiping out ofthe curse.
"The same sort of investigation wasshortly begun by the nations of con-
tinental Europe, and the same ap-
palling conditions were discovered.These Investigations, which are stillgoing on, have cstrftllshed beyonda doubt that alcohol, taken In nvform or small amounts, is injitr'oraend dogenerating.
"If you take ono glass of boor itreduces your efficiency S per cent.; ifyou take three glasses of beer duringthe courso of jone day It reduces itfrom 25 to 35 per cent. Alcohol is atoxin and a narcotic, and it has beenccmonstrated absolutely that It hasi.o medicinal properties."
Capta'n Hobson then explained ina novel manner the way in which al-
cohol operated In the system. "Thewhite oorpuscles of the blood are thoarmy of defense which fight againstthe germs. Sometimes the contest issingle-hande- d, tho one corpusclograppling unaided with the germ.Sometimes the corpuscles surroundtho germ and close in on it, whileat other times, when tho germ Isstrong or Is accompanied by othergerms they form a phalanx and chargedovn upon tho germ.
-- The iolnt Is this: The physicalconstitution is dependent absolutelyon these white' corpuscles to protectit. from disease, and when a mantakes a good drink these corpusclesget drunk. So when a disease germcomes along, the corpuscle may at-
tempt to conquer It, but the resultwill bo failure. After tho corpusclohas been Intoxicated continually Itstissues will Ji'tr-iiHra- te and tho hu-
man constitution, which It was In-
tended by nature to defend, will be-
come defenseless. When iho system Isassailed by germs the powers of de-
fense will already have been utilized,rtml death will often result Outof ever? G2.000 peoplo In this country,1110 dlo annually. Out of tho samenumber, only 510 total abstainers die,while 1610 of those employed In sa-
loons or broweries die annually outof tho samo number.
2000 Deaths a Day."Alcoholic poisoning is killing off
Amerlcnns nt tho rate of 2000 a day.In all the wars that have over beenfought, it Is figured by tho War Col-
lege at Washington there iinve been 2,- -I
000,000 inon wounded and 700.000 menslain. Yet peoplo talk about tho des-- I
tructlveness and horror of war. If allI tho wars that have ever been fought; wore started simultaneously today,and fought out to their bloody con-
clusion, when tho nation nnd Conti-
nents would be soaking nnd recking l.itho blood of their dead and mangled,the entire destruction of llfo would
not be one tonthousandth part of thodestruction caused by alcohol In thiscountry nlono In ono year.
"Although war is destructive, war Isnot dogoncrntlng, nnd It is In this thatthe results of drink nro so appalling.Not only does It actually kill off mil-
lions of peoplo yearly, but In additionIt weakens those who aro left and,worst of nil, thoso myriads of peoplowho nro to como. It upsets nnd re-
verses nil the processes of evolution.For. while naturo transmits to tho off-
spring tho best that Is In the parents,It Is often tho case that tho parentshave degenerated so from drink thattheir progeny is a lower order of beingthan either of them were when thoystarted life.
"Degeneracy may take any of n doz-
en dlfforent forms. A study of tenfamilies in which the parents were to-
tal abstainers and of another ten In
which the parents were moderatesdrinkers, both families being of thesame general social class and equallywell off, revealed the fact that, whileonly 13 per cent of the children bornin the latter ten wcro normal, tho re-maining 87 per cent, being deformedor blighted in somo other respect, 90per cent of the children born in thefirst group were healthy and normal,while the other 10 per cent were mere-ly stupid."
The captain produced figures show-ing that tho productlvenpss of tho na-
tion is reduced by $1G,000,000,000 bythe consumption of alcohol. He thencame to his point that the use of al-
cohol Is endangering the very founda-tion of the State. He declared that thestandard of citizenship is becominglower and lower through the use of al-
cohol, until the very Institutions of lib-
erty and justice, which form the foun-dation of our government, are In danger of toppling over.
"Liberty," ho declared, "can not bemaintained after the. standard of citi-ensh- ip
has become so low that self- -
government Is out of the question. Ifthis degeneracy goes on yoUr offspringwill hear tho hoofs of the yellow man'shorse and their children will witnessthe fall of the nation. The yellow manis not degenerating. It is a mistake tosay that he takes morqdrug poison thanAmericans. There are 800,000,000 ofthem anxious to come to this country,and when it becomes apparent that weare powerless from the ravages of al-
cohol they will swarm in upon us andwe will go down as did the Romans before the barbnrians, the Greeks beforetho Romans and the Persians beforethe Greeks. Unless we take Immediato and effectual measures this willbo our fate."
ATTHETHEATERS
AMATEURS TO BE FEATUREAT THE BIJOU TONIGHT
Tonight Is amateur night at theBijou theater, where new amateurstunts will be presented. There willbe a large aggregation of local aspirants for Thespian honors nnd thehouse should be packed to see andhear the fun.
Two comedy acrobats arrived onthe Korea today and will make theirfirst appearanco tonight at the Bijou.They are billed as crackerjacks andwill greatly strengthen the presentprogram. Burke and Burke are put-ting on a very clever sketch thisweek.
FINE FILMS FEATUREOF THE SAVOY'S PROGRAM
Three exceptionally good films arebeing shown at the Savoy this week.Ono tells the story of a "WirelessRomance" in which a young woman,who has been carried off In a privatesteam yacht, Is rescued through awireless sfgnnl. Another Is the storyof a railway strike In which a heroicwoman's husband is saved from strik-ers, while nntlonal guardsmen appearjust In the nick of time. It Is fullof thrills.
Tho Doric Trio made another bighit Inst evening and Dolllver andRogers wero better than usual, whllotlfy Laredoft contortionists put onu p'easlng act.
PARK MAKING A GOODRECORD BEFORE CLOSING
Tho Park's new program is excep-tionally clever throughout and nil theperformers made a lilt. It is rc(- -
grotted that the theater Is to closedown on Snturday night for a fewweeks for renovating. The film servlco Is excellent.
Wlnnlo Baldwin was pleasing innew songs, Hnrdlng and Wassong appeared to advantage in songs anddances and the Do Marest Brothers
continued their topsy-turv- y piano netTonight nnd tomorrow night nre the
Isst nights.
EMPIRE POPULAR PROGRAM,WITH GLADSTONE SISTERS
Excellent throughout Is the wordfor the Umpire theater, whoro thoperformers lmvo chnngod thulr nets.Tho Glndstono Slstors nro Increasingtholr popularity stosdlly nnd have n
Thoro will be tho usual mntlncethis afternoon and nnothor tomorrowafternoon.
The Musical llontloys have nddedthe boautlful Hawaiian selection,"Like No a Like" to their repertoire,nnd it Is most nttractlve.
Now people will shortly leave SanFrancisco to augment the list of talentat tho Empire.
THEY DIDN'T FIGHT.
Two Spaniards wore conversingoarnestly, then excitedly, at last angrily. The young American womanwho passed them looked with frightened eyes toward her Spanish guide.
"What are they talking about, Sonar Jose?" she nsked timidly. "Do youthink they will fight, or maybe kill?
"Ah. no. Senorlta Marie," repliedJose, smiling nnd showing his prettyteeth. "One man that one, you sesenorlta, with the long mustachloshe Is saying, Me. I prefer much tho J
collnlro button which is steel, and.tho other one look senorlta he isrunning his fingers through his hairnow and his sombrero has a gold cord
he Is saying, 'Ah, no, senor, the but-ton which is of gold si, senor, thatIs the button for me.'
"But as for myself, senorlta, thobone that I prefer above all others.
"Do I not speak with good sense,senorlta? Listen. If the button is ofsteel, it will cut. If it is of gold onocannot afford to lose it, but if it ishone It does not cut, and If it goes,what matter? I have a dozen athomo in my little top drawer."
"You speak with great good sense.Den Jose, but tell me were the menreally angry?"
"Oh, no, not all, senorlta. It isonly our southern way of being inter-ested in what we discuss. If it hadbeen two Germans, sonorita, or may-be two Englishmen, you would neverhave noticed them." PhiladelphiaLedger.
Fine Job Printing, Star Office.
11
A WILLING WITNESS,
"Did his actions have mi sir ofIho lswyor asked the wit-noe-
"What was that, sir?""I sny, did his notions wonr nn nlr
of vorlslmllltudc?""Oh," ropllod the wltnoss, "Surot
Ho wns vorlsltnllltudln' nil round thoplace." Saturday Evening Post.
, .
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