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i 't't' I 't' I 1 I I i 1 i I i t i I i I i i i WEATHER FORECAST FOR TODAY. SUGAR 96w Centrifugals, 3.375 f Light trades, fair with occasional showers. cents. ESTABLISHED JULY 2, 1856. VOL. XXXIX. NO. 6688. HONOLULU, HAWAII TERRITORY, THURSDAY, JANUARY It, 1904. PRICE FIVE CENTS. 22 r UBLIC OP ift SESSION : p0K ;:nPK-;.ARwy- . iransport-- ' service. GAINST EXT 9 1 1 C.J. M'CARTHY, DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL COMMITTEEMAN Russia Has Requisitioned Services of the Whole Volunteer Fleet of the Empire. A Variety of Advice is Offered as to What is Best to Be Done Appeal to Congress and Supreme Court of United States Suggested. 4 9 o ? 0 In order that Governor Carter may arrive at a consensus of opinion of Ho- nolulu's representative ' citizens on tne Powers Considering 'Mediation Between the Belligerent Nations A Panic at Seoul. What Japan Asked of Russia. result of the Supreme Court's decision on the County Act, he has sent out a Smith, R. X. Boyd, E. C. Winston, A. Lewis, Jr., A. V. Gear,-T- . McCants Stewart, Fred Macfarlane, Judge Hart-wel- l, Government officials, Albert Judd, W. R. Castle. The discussion will be informal and open to . all present. 1 WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING OF OUTLOOK call to a number of prominent citizens of all parties to meet with him this A o o o o o o o f o o o t u o o o morning: at 9 o'clock in the Hall of Rep- resentatives to discuss the situation. $ j, i i - " ' " - " V ! 1 , -- f ' " "OJ - " Hip-- ? V ? i : . Suggestions "will be asked of all pre- set .as to what, course to pursue with regard to County Act measures. , o o Air. nuckiand communicated with a large number of people .by1 telephone o late yesterday afternoon to be present. and in most iftstances the responses "were sufficient to. indicate that the 'Where are we afT' was the question on everyone's lips yesterday after the decision of the ..Supreme Court in the County Act case became known. Ana every one had an answer. A special session of the Legislature was the re- ply of many. 'An immediate appeal to Congress was another' favorite theory. Allow the government to run along aa it is now on th old appropriations 'was still a third solution while the majority opinion was "Deliver us from another o t o o A session of the present Legislature." meeting will be a large r and an impor- tant one. The list of gentlemen re- quested to attend is as follows: E. D. Tenney, S. M. Ballou, W. O. Smith, U. S. District Attorney Breck-on- s, L A'. Thurston, George tv. Smith, the members of the Senate, A. G. M. Kobertson P C. Jones, Judge Dole, S. 3L Damon, Cecil Browii, W. G. Cooper, H. E Cooper, Walter G. Smith, W. R. Farrington, A. Qartley, William Henry, A. S. Humphreys, the "County" Super- - Representative citizens will get a chance to say just what they think (ASSOCIATED PRESS OAJBUSQXLAJSS.) SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 14. Japan has impressed the Hong- kong, Nippon and America Marus, running on the trans-Pacifi- c route, for transports. r ; MOSCOW, Jan. 14. The Government has claimed the services of the entire Russian volunteer 'fleet. "s v PARIS, Jan. 14. The powers are considering mediation be- tween Russia and Japan. TOKYO, Jan. 14. It is stated that Japan, in her ultimatum to Russia, did not ask for the evacuation of Manchuria, but only de- manded that Russia should fulfill her pledges respecting the integ- -' rity and freedom of international trade. - SEOUL, Jan. i4.--Th- ere is a panic in the palace and the city is turbulent. - The Emperor has issued an ordinance warning the Army not to fire in the event of a collision with foreign troops. "PORT SAID, Suez, Jan. 13. Two Russian cruisers convoying seven torpedo boat destroyers have arrived at Port Said, on their way to the Orient. WASHINGTON, D.C., Jan. i3.The Japanese Minister at Washington denies that Japan sought to secure a protectorate over Korea. -- o o o o ? o o ? o o o 9 o ought to be done at this morning's? meeting in the old throne room, and out of the multitude of wisdom offered probably some solution will be found for what everyone says is a very diffi- cult problem. o o o o o 9 A few days ago the government had i ij" visors, C. M. Cooke; Mr. Spalding, J. H. no money and a plenitude of appropria- tions. Now the Territory will have money In plenty but no appropriations under which it may be spent. - Immediate appeal to Congress is the Boyd, Frank Hoogs, representatives of the Advertiser, Star, Bulletin and In- dependent, C. P. laukea, Judge Whit- ing, J. WV Matthe wman, A. A. Wilder,' Samuel Parker, Prince Kawananakoa, A. W. Pearson, E. S. Cunha, ,C. W. Ashford, John Colburn, E. A". Mott- - course advised by many and there has been some talk that United States At- torney Breckons would go to Washing- - (Continued on page 4.) O COL. C. J. M'CARTHY, THE NEW DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL V 6 .. COMMITTEEMAN. At the meeting- - of the Democratic' Executive Committee in Waverly hall last evening C. J. McCarthy was unanimously selected as the choice of the committe for National Committeeman in Ha- waii. His name will be sent to the chairman of the National Com v NO CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION. SUPERVISORS APPROVE CURTIS lAUKEA'S BOND r " - ' i ; J ' r" ; 1., ' i ' " ; ; Probably the Last Official Action of the Board Is Taken Before the Final Decree mittee with a recommendation that he.be appointed. .WASHINGTON, Jan. 14. The House Committee of the of a committee Whole, by a vote of 78 to 65, struck out from the Appropriation bill The committee also authorized the appointment pi three to raise funds to organize the party in Ha wan. the provision for the Civil Service Commission. DELEGATE KUHI0 WOULD TEN PEOPLE KILLED. and Judgment Is Entered. i i! I! r r t i p it BE WILLING TO RUN AGAIN ST. LOUIS, Jan. 14. Ten people were killed here in an eleva and referred to the county attorney, Mr. Rawlins immediately giving an opinion that it was in conformity with the coun- ty act tor accident yesterday. Oahu Supervisors will hold on to their jobs until final judgment, and decree is entered by the Supreme Court in the County Act test case. What will prob Mr. Mahoe then moved that the bond o '. " . PORTE ACCEPTS REFORM. CONSTANTINOPLE, Turkey, Jan. 13. -- The Porte has form ably be the last official act of the board , be approved, the sureties being satis-w- as taken yesterday in the approval of j factory. - Supervisor Gilman amended detriment of his territory's interests. Prince Kuhio is non-commit- tal on the next nomination, but it is believed he would accept it if offered to him. WOULD BE A DELEGATE. , WASHINGTON, December 28. Dele- gate Kalanianaole has written to Gov- ernor Carter and Secretary Atkinson this to make the approval be only as far the bond of Curtis laukea, as assessor of the county. laukea has qualified but ally accepted the Macedonian reform scheme to be carried out by may not get an opportunity to act as Russia and Austria. c 4 assessor, although he wanted his office General amnesty has been granted all political prisoners with in case anything should happen to place him in the position again, or at least to that he would be pleased to serve Ha as the board was legally empowered to do so. ' , Chairman Hocking suggested that the district attorney be asked for an opinion as to the legality of the board's action. He said he saw no reason why the ap- proval should not be the same as with other county officers, if the board had the right, and if the board was not legal- ly existence then there should be no ap- - the exception of the dynamiters. WASHINGTON. Dec. 28. Delegate Kalanianaole has received letters bear- ing upon his candidacy for delegate at the next election', and in one from a prominent official he was asked blunts ly whether or not he would be a candi- date. The Delegate since his arrival in Washington, has keenly observed the workings of Congress, and is of the opinion, while not directly broaching his own candidacy, that it is against the interests of Hawaii to have a new delegate enter Congress at each new session. Prince Kuhio's opinion, like that of a majority of congressmen, is that the changing of a delegate, who is the only representative in 'Congress a territory has, necessitates the official learning the ropes' over again, to 'the waii as one of the delegates to the Re publican Convention to be held at Chi cago. In making the effort to have the Fed rproval at all. eral Government take over the light houses of Hawaii, the Delegate stated to the bureau officials that the Hawai EBEN LOW HEARD FROM. PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 13. The National Live Stock Con- vention, in session here, was addressed today by E. P. Low; of Ha waii. Mr. Low gave an extended and interesting report of the ef- forts to develop the cattle industry in the islands. . ) 0 THE TREATY WITH CHINA. WASHINGTON, D. C, Jan. 13. The President issued a proc- lamation today declaring the commercial treaty with China to be insure his salary if the county act is passed by Congress or by the Legislature. ! It was a gloomy lot of county offi- cials and hangers on which met in the Castle & Cooke's hall at four o'clock. . Jack Lucas was the only member absent when the meeting was called to orHer by Chairman Hocking, and when he came in he asked the supervisors what they were doing, and took a seat in the rear with the spectators. Judge Whit- ing who was in attendance at the meet- ing, told the supervisors that they were not "pau" yet, and District Attorney Rawlins said he hoped to get a trip to , Washington out of it. Judge Whiting said he guessed not as Breckons was go- ing on Friday. , - Supervisor Harvey said that the best way was to accept the bond and let the Supreme Court pass upon the matter if the question was raised. He said the court had given the supervisors no no- tice, and . he knew nothing excepting what appeared in the papers. . ian government would cease to main tain the lights after December 31, 1903, (Continued on pag S.) in District Attorney Kawlms gave an opinion that until a decree had been signed the board could act, and would TY ACT be acting under the law. He agreed in force, Under this treaty the ports of Mukden and Antong arc THE COLIN IS KNO with Judge Whiting that it was simply an opinion, and the judgment had not opened to foreign trade. OUT DEATH OF FORMER MINISTER DENBY. JAMESTOWN, N. Y., Jan. 13. Hon. Charles Denby, former United States Minister to China during the Cleveland administra been entered. As counsel in the case he had received no notice and it was his opinion that every man was entitled to hold his office until the decree had been signed. ' He said he intended to hold on to his office until notified that a decree had been signed, and then he proposed to object to the decree. Supervisor Lucas said that if a man had qualified properly he was entitled to his office and he moved that the bond be approved. , Mr. Gilman stated that he would vote tion, died here today. In calling the meeting. Mr. Hocking said it was for the consideration of the assessor's bond which had been sub- mitted with August Dreier and Mrs.. Samuel Parker as sureties, each in the sum of $150,000. -- Judge Whiting stated that he had ex- amined the qualifications of the sureties, and had found each of them possessed of much more property ,than the amount given in the bond and added that the supervisors could satisfy themselves also as to the qualification of the bondsmen. Judge Whiting said he also wanted to suggest, in view of the reports of the - county act decision in the papers, based on the ground that it -- was not in ac- cord with the Organic Act, that it was simolv an opinion, not a decision. In 1 i I i3 : 1 n 1 ' i v I I i ! for the approval of the bond if the hoard could legally do so, and would " ) The County Act is dead. It was declared wholly null and void by a unanimous decision o the Supreme Court, filed at 12 o'clock noon yesterday. ' Although-th- fate of the famous measure was decided on the single question of taxation, the Court's language in waiving con- sideration of other points indicates plainly enough that the Act is honeycombed with delects more or less "obviously and imminently dangerous" to its life. The full text of the decision here follows: . IX THE SUPREME COURT OF THE When the valid and invalid parts of TERRITORY OF HAWAII. an act are so mutually connected with October Term, 1903. or dependent on each other as to war- - rant a belief that the Legislature intend- - Territory of Hawan .Superiors of Vj ed and that, if the in- - the County Oahu. vaiid pam CQu!d nQt carrie(J jntQ Appeal from Circuit Judge, First Cir-- effect, the Legislature would not pass the cuit Submitted December 30, 1903 valid parts independently, the whole Decided January 13, 1904 Frear must fall. C J., Galbraith and Perry. J.J. J (Continued on iag;e 3.) ' Col. Charles Denby, lawyer and diplo- mat, was born in Virginia' in 1830. lie was educated at the Georgetown-Universit- y and was a graduate cf the Virginia Military Institute. He taught school for two years and then located as a lawyer in Indiana. He fought during the Civil War in the Union Arnfy, first as a lieutenant-colon- el and later as a colonel. He was the United States minister to China from 1885 to 1898, and in the latter year was appointed by President McKinley as a member of the commis- sion to investigate the conduct of the war against Spain. . this case the Supreme Court had original "- - jurisdiction not as an ordinary case ' viewing a decree, and therefore until a ; decree had beeri signed, the supervisors accept the opinion of the county-attorne- The bond was then approved unanimously. Supervisor Gilman reported for the committee on health that a conference had been held with the trustees of Queen's "Hospital, the Leahi Hospital and the Kapiolani Maternity Home, but no decision had been reached, and the committee was given further time. An adjournment was taken until Mon- day morning at ten o'clock or if not called sooner by the chair. The mem- bers were notified also to attend the conference with the Governor at nine o clock this morning. . . were still in office. He said that under these circumstances Mr. laukea had a right to, qualify as the board was still legal, and woud remain so until a decree had been signed, and if a writ of error was taken out, until a final decree in the United States Supreme Court. Mr. Iaukea's bond was then presented COLGXEL CT1 ARIX3 PEXBT.
10

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Page 1: UBLIC OP p0K iransport-- service. - University of Hawaiievols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/43570/1/1904011401.pdf · WEATHER FORECAST FOR TODAY. SUGAR 96w Centrifugals,

i

't't' I 't' I 1 I I i 1 i I i t i I i I i i i

WEATHER FORECAST FOR TODAY. SUGAR 96w Centrifugals, 3.375f Light trades, fair with occasional showers. cents.

ESTABLISHED JULY 2, 1856.

VOL. XXXIX. NO. 6688. HONOLULU, HAWAII TERRITORY, THURSDAY, JANUARY It, 1904. PRICE FIVE CENTS.22

r

UBLIC OP

ift SESSION: p0K ;:nPK-;.ARwy- . iransport-- ' service.GAINST EXT

91 1

C.J. M'CARTHY, DEMOCRATICNATIONAL COMMITTEEMAN

Russia Has Requisitioned Services ofthe Whole Volunteer Fleet

of the Empire.

A Variety of Advice is Offered as to What is

Best to Be Done Appeal to Congress andSupreme Court of United States Suggested.

4 9o?0

In order that Governor Carter mayarrive at a consensus of opinion of Ho-

nolulu's representative ' citizens on tnePowers Considering 'Mediation Between the

Belligerent Nations A Panic at Seoul.

What Japan Asked of Russia.result of the Supreme Court's decisionon the County Act, he has sent out a

Smith, R. X. Boyd, E. C. Winston, A.Lewis, Jr., A. V. Gear,-T- . McCantsStewart, Fred Macfarlane, Judge Hart-wel- l,

Government officials, Albert Judd,W. R. Castle.

The discussion will be informal andopen to . all present. 1

WHAT PEOPLE ARESAYING OF OUTLOOK

call to a number of prominent citizensof all parties to meet with him this A

ooooooo

foootuooo

morning: at 9 o'clock in the Hall of Rep-

resentatives to discuss the situation.

$ j, i i -

" ' "- " V

! 1

, -- f '

" "OJ - " Hip-- ? V? i : .

Suggestions "will be asked of all pre-set .as to what, course to pursue withregard to County Act measures. , o

oAir. nuckiand communicated with alarge number of people .by1 telephone olate yesterday afternoon to be present.and in most iftstances the responses"were sufficient to. indicate that the

'Where are we afT' was the questionon everyone's lips yesterday after thedecision of the ..Supreme Court in theCounty Act case became known. Anaevery one had an answer. A specialsession of the Legislature was the re-

ply of many. 'An immediate appeal toCongress was another' favorite theory.Allow the government to run along aait is now on th old appropriations 'wasstill a third solution while the majorityopinion was "Deliver us from another

otooAsession of the present Legislature."

meeting will be a large r and an impor-tant one. The list of gentlemen re-

quested to attend is as follows:E. D. Tenney, S. M. Ballou, W. O.

Smith, U. S. District Attorney Breck-on- s,

L A'. Thurston, George tv. Smith,the members of the Senate, A. G. M.

Kobertson P C. Jones, Judge Dole, S.3L Damon, Cecil Browii, W. G. Cooper,H. E Cooper, Walter G. Smith, W. R.Farrington, A. Qartley, William Henry,A. S. Humphreys, the "County" Super- -

Representative citizens will get achance to say just what they think

(ASSOCIATED PRESS OAJBUSQXLAJSS.)

SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 14. Japan has impressed the Hong-

kong, Nippon and America Marus, running on the trans-Pacifi- c

route, for transports. r

; MOSCOW, Jan. 14. The Government has claimed the servicesof the entire Russian volunteer 'fleet. "s v

PARIS, Jan. 14. The powers are considering mediation be-

tween Russia and Japan.TOKYO, Jan. 14. It is stated that Japan, in her ultimatum to

Russia, did not ask for the evacuation of Manchuria, but only de-

manded that Russia should fulfill her pledges respecting the integ- -'

rity and freedom of international trade.- SEOUL, Jan. i4.--Th- ere is a panic in the palace and the city

is turbulent. - The Emperor has issued an ordinance warning theArmy not to fire in the event of a collision with foreign troops.

"PORT SAID, Suez, Jan. 13. Two Russian cruisers convoyingseven torpedo boat destroyers have arrived at Port Said, on theirway to the Orient.

WASHINGTON, D.C., Jan. i3.The Japanese Minister atWashington denies that Japan sought to secure a protectorate overKorea.

--o

ooo?o

o?ooo9o

ought to be done at this morning's?meeting in the old throne room, andout of the multitude of wisdom offeredprobably some solution will be foundfor what everyone says is a very diffi-cult problem.

ooooo9

A few days ago the government hadi ij" visors, C. M. Cooke; Mr. Spalding, J. H. no money and a plenitude of appropria-

tions. Now the Territory will havemoney In plenty but no appropriationsunder which it may be spent.

- Immediate appeal to Congress is the

Boyd, Frank Hoogs, representatives ofthe Advertiser, Star, Bulletin and In-

dependent, C. P. laukea, Judge Whit-ing, J. WV Matthe wman, A. A. Wilder,'Samuel Parker, Prince Kawananakoa,A. W. Pearson, E. S. Cunha, ,C. W.Ashford, John Colburn, E. A". Mott- -

course advised by many and there hasbeen some talk that United States At-torney Breckons would go to Washing- -

(Continued on page 4.)

O COL. C. J. M'CARTHY, THE NEW DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL V

6 .. COMMITTEEMAN.

At the meeting- - of the Democratic' Executive Committee inWaverly hall last evening C. J. McCarthy was unanimously selectedas the choice of the committe for National Committeeman in Ha-waii. His name will be sent to the chairman of the National Com

vNO CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION.SUPERVISORS APPROVE

CURTIS lAUKEA'S BONDr " - 'i ; J

' r" ; 1., ' i ' "; ;

Probably the Last Official Action of the BoardIs Taken Before the Final Decree

mittee with a recommendation that he.be appointed. .WASHINGTON, Jan. 14. The House Committee of theof a committee Whole, by a vote of 78 to 65, struck out from the Appropriation billThe committee also authorized the appointment

pi three to raise funds to organize the party in Ha wan. the provision for the Civil Service Commission.

DELEGATE KUHI0 WOULD TEN PEOPLE KILLED.and Judgment Is Entered.

i

i!

I!

r

rt

i

pit

BE WILLING TO RUN AGAINST. LOUIS, Jan. 14. Ten people were killed here in an elevaand referred to the county attorney, Mr.

Rawlins immediately giving an opinionthat it was in conformity with the coun-ty act

tor accident yesterday.Oahu Supervisors will hold on to their

jobs until final judgment, and decree isentered by the Supreme Court in theCounty Act test case. What will prob Mr. Mahoe then moved that the bond

o '. " .

PORTE ACCEPTS REFORM.CONSTANTINOPLE, Turkey, Jan. 13. --The Porte has form

ably be the last official act of the board , be approved, the sureties being satis-w- as

taken yesterday in the approval of j factory. - Supervisor Gilman amended

detriment of his territory's interests.Prince Kuhio is non-commit- tal on thenext nomination, but it is believed hewould accept it if offered to him.

WOULD BE A DELEGATE., WASHINGTON, December 28. Dele-gate Kalanianaole has written to Gov-ernor Carter and Secretary Atkinson

this to make the approval be only as farthe bond of Curtis laukea, as assessor ofthe county. laukea has qualified but ally accepted the Macedonian reform scheme to be carried out bymay not get an opportunity to act as Russia and Austria. c 4assessor, although he wanted his office

General amnesty has been granted all political prisoners within case anything should happen to placehim in the position again, or at least to that he would be pleased to serve Ha

as the board was legally empowered todo so. ' ,

Chairman Hocking suggested that thedistrict attorney be asked for an opinionas to the legality of the board's action.He said he saw no reason why the ap-proval should not be the same as withother county officers, if the board hadthe right, and if the board was not legal-ly existence then there should be no ap- -

the exception of the dynamiters.

WASHINGTON. Dec. 28. DelegateKalanianaole has received letters bear-ing upon his candidacy for delegate atthe next election', and in one from aprominent official he was asked bluntsly whether or not he would be a candi-date. The Delegate since his arrivalin Washington, has keenly observedthe workings of Congress, and is of theopinion, while not directly broachinghis own candidacy, that it is againstthe interests of Hawaii to have a newdelegate enter Congress at each newsession. Prince Kuhio's opinion, likethat of a majority of congressmen, isthat the changing of a delegate, whois the only representative in 'Congressa territory has, necessitates the officiallearning the ropes' over again, to 'the

waii as one of the delegates to the Republican Convention to be held at Chicago.

In making the effort to have the Fedrproval at all. eral Government take over the light

houses of Hawaii, the Delegate statedto the bureau officials that the Hawai

EBEN LOW HEARD FROM.

PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 13. The National Live Stock Con-

vention, in session here, was addressed today by E. P. Low; of Hawaii. Mr. Low gave an extended and interesting report of the ef-

forts to develop the cattle industry in the islands. .) 0

THE TREATY WITH CHINA.WASHINGTON, D. C, Jan. 13. The President issued a proc-

lamation today declaring the commercial treaty with China to be

insure his salary if the county act ispassed by Congress or by theLegislature. !

It was a gloomy lot of county offi-

cials and hangers on which met in theCastle & Cooke's hall at four o'clock.

. Jack Lucas was the only member absentwhen the meeting was called to orHerby Chairman Hocking, and when hecame in he asked the supervisors whatthey were doing, and took a seat in therear with the spectators. Judge Whit-ing who was in attendance at the meet-ing, told the supervisors that they werenot "pau" yet, and District AttorneyRawlins said he hoped to get a trip to

, Washington out of it. Judge Whitingsaid he guessed not as Breckons was go-ing on Friday. ,

-

Supervisor Harvey said that the bestway was to accept the bond and let theSupreme Court pass upon the matter ifthe question was raised. He said thecourt had given the supervisors no no-tice, and . he knew nothing exceptingwhat appeared in the papers. .

ian government would cease to maintain the lights after December 31, 1903,

(Continued on pag S.)

inDistrict Attorney Kawlms gave anopinion that until a decree had beensigned the board could act, and would TY ACTbe acting under the law. He agreed

in force, Under this treaty the ports of Mukden and Antong arcTHE COLIN

IS KNOwith Judge Whiting that it was simplyan opinion, and the judgment had not opened to foreign trade.OUT

DEATH OF FORMER MINISTER DENBY.

JAMESTOWN, N. Y., Jan. 13. Hon. Charles Denby, formerUnited States Minister to China during the Cleveland administra

been entered. As counsel in the casehe had received no notice and it washis opinion that every man was entitledto hold his office until the decree hadbeen signed. ' He said he intended tohold on to his office until notified thata decree had been signed, and then heproposed to object to the decree.

Supervisor Lucas said that if a manhad qualified properly he was entitledto his office and he moved that the bondbe approved. ,

Mr. Gilman stated that he would vote

tion, died here today.

In calling the meeting. Mr. Hockingsaid it was for the consideration of theassessor's bond which had been sub-mitted with August Dreier and Mrs..Samuel Parker as sureties, each in thesum of $150,000. --

Judge Whiting stated that he had ex-

amined the qualifications of the sureties,and had found each of them possessedof much more property ,than the amountgiven in the bond and added that thesupervisors could satisfy themselves alsoas to the qualification of the bondsmen.Judge Whiting said he also wanted tosuggest, in view of the reports of the

- county act decision in the papers, basedon the ground that it -- was not in ac-

cord with the Organic Act, that it wassimolv an opinion, not a decision. In

1 i

I i3

:1

n1 ' i

v I

I i !

for the approval of the bond if thehoard could legally do so, and would "

)

The County Act is dead. It was declared wholly null andvoid by a unanimous decision o the Supreme Court, filed at 12o'clock noon yesterday. '

Although-th- fate of the famous measure was decided on thesingle question of taxation, the Court's language in waiving con-

sideration of other points indicates plainly enough that the Act ishoneycombed with delects more or less "obviously and imminentlydangerous" to its life.

The full text of the decision here follows: .

IX THE SUPREME COURT OF THE When the valid and invalid parts ofTERRITORY OF HAWAII. an act are so mutually connected with

October Term, 1903. or dependent on each other as to war--rant a belief that the Legislature intend- -

Territory of Hawan .Superiors ofVj ed and that, if the in- -the County Oahu. vaiid pam CQu!d nQt carrie(J jntQ

Appeal from Circuit Judge, First Cir-- effect, the Legislature would not pass thecuit Submitted December 30, 1903 valid parts independently, the whole

Decided January 13, 1904 Frear must fall.C J., Galbraith and Perry. J.J. J (Continued on iag;e 3.)

' Col. Charles Denby, lawyer and diplo-

mat, was born in Virginia' in 1830. liewas educated at the Georgetown-Universit- y

and was a graduate cf the VirginiaMilitary Institute. He taught school for

two years and then located as a lawyerin Indiana. He fought during the Civil

War in the Union Arnfy, first as alieutenant-colon- el and later as a colonel.

He was the United States minister to

China from 1885 to 1898, and in the

latter year was appointed by President

McKinley as a member of the commis-

sion to investigate the conduct of thewar against Spain. .

this case the Supreme Court had original"- - jurisdiction not as an ordinary case

' viewing a decree, and therefore until a; decree had beeri signed, the supervisors

accept the opinion of the county-attorne-

The bond was then approvedunanimously.

Supervisor Gilman reported for thecommittee on health that a conferencehad been held with the trustees ofQueen's "Hospital, the Leahi Hospitaland the Kapiolani Maternity Home, butno decision had been reached, and thecommittee was given further time.

An adjournment was taken until Mon-day morning at ten o'clock or if notcalled sooner by the chair. The mem-bers were notified also to attend theconference with the Governor at nineo clock this morning. . .

were still in office. He said that underthese circumstances Mr. laukea had aright to, qualify as the board was stilllegal, and woud remain so until a decreehad been signed, and if a writ of errorwas taken out, until a final decree in theUnited States Supreme Court.

Mr. Iaukea's bond was then presented COLGXEL CT1 ARIX3 PEXBT.

Page 2: UBLIC OP p0K iransport-- service. - University of Hawaiievols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/43570/1/1904011401.pdf · WEATHER FORECAST FOR TODAY. SUGAR 96w Centrifugals,

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, JANUARY M, 1904- -

(0 LI WmHrCEM. ItRiir-.,Mn-

an rim ft 11 w nnnprn Jli&- -ood-iseddin- a

Greatly Reducedprices ao'

riiifiLLi ;nti.oiul ATTRACTION SAT OUR STORE

The Licensee Must Pay Minimum Annual Tribute;

of $3000 Protection of Homesteadersand Small Consumers.

You'll need plenty of comfortable bedding for the cold

nights now due and you can get it here this week at tempt-

ingly low prices.BLANKETS 10-- 4 size, price $1.00; now $ .75BLANKETS 10--4 size, price 1.25; now 1.00BLANKETS 10-- 4 size, price 1.50; now 1.25BLANKETS 1 1- -4 size, price 2.00; now 1.50QUILTS reduced to $1.00, $1.25 and $1.50

' SHEETS 72-9- 0 wide hem, good quality; 65c each.PILLOW CASES 45-3- 6 12 1-- 2C and 20c eachCOMFORTERS reduced to $2.25 and $2.50 each.MOSQUITO NETTING 90, 100, 120 inch at reduced

prices.

. ii

TABLE DAMASKS.cSFfnches wide, 25c. vard60 Inches wide, 50c. yard66 inches wide, 75c. yard.70 inches wide, $1.00 yard.72 inches wide, Si.25 yard.74 inches wide, $1.50.

ort Street-- '

First CloooGood

Muslin UnderwearSEE WHAT WE OFFER FOR ONE WEEK.

Corset Covers, were 40c. now at 20c. ; 40c. at 30c. ; 50c. at 40c. ;

65c. at 50c.Chemises, 60c. at 45c; 75c. at 60c. ; 85c. at 70c. at 75cGowns, 65c. at 50c; 75c. at 60c. ; 90c. at 75c. ; $1.25 at S1.00.Muslin Skirts, $1.50 at $1,257 $2.00 at $1.50; $2.25 at S1.75;

$2.50 at $2.00; $3.00 at S2.50.

All-Ov- er EmbroideriesHERE'S A SNAP FOR A WEEK, IF THEY LAST.

Were 75c, now 40c. ; $1.25, now 75c. ; $2.00, now $1.00 yard.No two pieces alike. 90 patterns to choose from.

SPECIAL 50 Dozen pairs Ladies' Full Finished Black Cot-ton Hose, 2 pairs for 25c.

BOXING BLOVES, PUNCHING BAGS

s2!r Whitman

HARDWARE, SPORTING GOODS AND BIKES. SHOE DEPARTMENTANOTHER LOT OF OUR FAMOUS

Barofoot SondQioJLH6 INFANTS' SIZES,. 90c. MISSES' SIZES, $1.35.CHILDREN'S SIZES, $1.15. WOMEN'S SIZES, $1.65.

MEN'S SIZES, $2.00.

WE INVITE COMPARISON.Epicurean and

855 Kaahumanu Street. E(La

LIMITEDAlakea Street between King and Hotel.

Por One TTeeHs: Om.l3TCLOSINGOUT SALE

' OF OURi

4."

22BONY CHAIRS, TABLES, STOOLS, Etc-.-Also, a large assortment of

o-- DECORATEDAll sizes. The prices are practically a giving away of the goods.

Wins Ao931-93- 5 Nuuanu, Three

MAIL ORDERS--

BEDSPREADS.10--4 size, reduced from S1.00

to 75c.10- -4 size, from $1.5 to $1.001 1- -4 size, from $1.50 to $1.2511-- 4 size, from $1.75 to $1.50.1 1 -4 size, from $2.00 to S1.7J12- -4 size; from $2.50 to $2.00

'3$

THOUSiO

EMBERS

Central Union Church'sMany Good Works

Reported.

- Central Union Church held its annualcongregational meeting for the hearingof reports in the church parlors yester-day evening. A sociable followed.

The first report was the pastor's let--

ter to the people, by Rev. W. M. Kincaid,D. D. Other reports, were presented bythe following-name- d officers;

W. W. Hall, church clerk.W. 0.Atwater, treasurer.Jonathan Shaw, treasurer of trustees.E. J. Walker, superintendent of Sab-

bath school. ,

' W. J. Forbes, treasurer of Sabbathschool.

Rev. Arthur Logan, superintendent o.j?Palama mission.

Mrs. O. P. Emerson, president Lades'Aid Society.

Herbert' E. Younpr, president Y. P.S, C. E.

Charlotte V. Hail, president Mission-ary Gleaners.

Rev. O, H. Gulick. superintendent ofJapanese Sabbath school, also of thePleasant Island mission.

W. A. Bowen, superintendent Portu-guese Sabbatn school.

m the church, i he figures at the be--ginning and end of the year show a netgain of thus : Membership end ofprevious year, 985. Added on confes- -sion of faith, 34; on reaffirmation offaith, 7; by letters from other churches,91 i total accessions, 62. Removals bydismission to other churches, 39; y

. . .T - - T 1 Tin..ucain, iz; loiai removals, 51.membership at the close of the year was

. .yThe iargest attendance at Sabbath

school on any one Sunday was '08; thesmallest, in rainy weather, was 160 odd,-- nfl th avpraor- - ,,hnt 4or- .

The Carmen Bheartal. 4"The principals of "Carmen' will m-j- et

at the Opera House this evening. To-

morrow, Friday, evening the choruswill assemble with the principals'. Th .

hour on each occasion is 7:30. Mrf

Montague Turner requests a full at-

tendance at both rehearsals.

proved by the Superintendent of Pub-- :

, lie Works and the Commissioner ofPublic Lands, or such other officer as j

the Governor may direct, before the j

construction shall be commenced by i

the licensee.No Exclusive Right. This license

shall not bo construed to confef anyexclusive right in the waters- - of thesaid Kohala Watershed to the licensee,but the licensee shall have a right,under this instrument, for the periodherein granted, only in so much of saidwaters as he or they shall be the firstone to appropriate and use for thebeneficial purposes herein set forth,,and for no other. It shall not in anyway attempt to develop water in saidKohala Watershed by means of drains,ditches or tunnels, but the' licensee'srights are strictly limited to the sur-face water flowing in the natural water--

ways, and the confining, conveying,and the use of the same as herein setforth.

Delivery of Water. The licenseeshall furnish water to all consumersdemanding the same from the ditches,flumes, reservoirs and tunnel con-structed for the conservation or con-veyance of said water, giving prefer-ence first, to private parties, for do-mestic purposes and uses, second tohomesteads for agricultural purposesand third for agricultural purposes ingeneral. ,

Further Delivery of Water. In fur-nishing water to all consumers, for do-mestic, agricultural or other purposes,the licensee shall deliver such water atsuch points of the ditches, flumes andtunnels as shall be reasonably conven-ient to such consumers. Should anycase "of dispute arise between said li-

censee and consumer as to the point ofdelivery, the same shall be settled byarbitration, as hereinafter provided.

Charges for Water. For all watersupplied to consumers for domesticuses and purposes, a uniform rate ofcharge shall be maintained. Suchrate shall be fixed by the licensee withthe approval of the Commissioner ofLands at the date of the license, andrevised and redetermined by the sameparties at the expiration of each fiveyears from the' date of the license until its final determination.

Homesteaders are to be charered "aslo. a rate as is charged to any otherconsumer for agricultural purposes."

Homesteaders. The word homestead-ers, as used in the license, shall meanall persons, or their heirs and assigns,holding from the Government of eitherthe Territory or the United States; orfrom special agreements of sale underthe Land Act of 1895 and its amend-ments; or from kuleanas held underLand Commission Awards or Patents.

Other Applicants. All other appli-cants for water, who are iV possessionof lands conveniently accessible to wa-ter from the ditches, flumes, pipes, tun-nels or reservoirs built-- and constructedby the licensee, shall be equitably sup-plied at reasonable rates.

Protection of Forests. The licenseemust build fences wherever deemednecessary by the Commissioner ofLands or . other officer designated bythe Governor, to protect the forestsfrom cattle or other animals, and shallmake all reasonable efforts to preventand extinguish a.ll forest or brush fireswithin the Kohala watershed.

Insufficient Supply. If the licenseeshall, at any time during the contin-uance of this license, be unable to sup-ply all its consumers with the fullamount of water required by them, be-cause of insufficiency of water underits control, then sueh water as shallat such time be under the control ofthe licensee, shall be, by arbitration,apportioned equitably among the va-rious consumers, so long as such in-sufficiency of water shall continue.

Officials. Changes of names of offi-cials, through change of government,shall not affect the license.

Ownership of Water. The licenseehereby admits the ownership of allwater mentioned in this license to bein the Territory of Hawaii, and agreesthat no rights shall accrue to the li-

censee through the use of the said wa-ters by way of prescription, beneficialuse or otherwise after the terminationof this license.

Acceptance of License; The licenseis to be accepted by endorsement ofthe licensee and the payment of . thefirst annual fee of $500.

Payments. All payments of monej-- s

due to the Territory shall be made tothe Commissioner of Public Lands.

Weirs. The licensee must constructmeasuring weirs in all its ditches, soas to measure the water from publiclands in distinction from water ob-tained from private sources.

Bridges and Fences. The licenseemust cons-truc- t "bridges across itsditches intersecting public roads andfences, wherever required by the Com-missioner- -of

Lands. If this is neg-lected the Commissioner may do thework at the expense of the licensee, tobe immediately paid to the Territory.

Repairs and Additions. The Com-missioner of Lands may require the li-

censee, at its own expense, to makesuch repairs and additions as may in i ahis judgment be necessary to preventiujury to life, or damage to public or '

private lands. If not done by the li- - i

censee, the Commissioner may make j

sucn iciJuiif. aim aauuions at T.ne 1:

censee's expense, payable on demand?Surrender of License At the ond of

50 years all the rights acquired and im-provements made by the licensee shallbe surrendered to the Government ofth" Territory.

"At any time aften ten years fromdate of execution of "ieenss, the Terri-tory is empowered to take over the en-t'- re

works on payment of cost of con-struction with the addition of per-centages,

athus: before the end of 15

Governor Carter yesterday passedupon the final draft of the Kohala wa-

ter license, made by Attorney GeneralAndrews after consultation with him.An abstract of the document is here-

with given. Portions closely affecti-ng- public interests in the distributionof the water are printed in full, whilethe technical details of terms and con-

ditions are condensed.ABSTRACT OF LICENSE.

Whereas the surface waters that arenow running to waste from the moun-tain watersheds in the District of Ko-hala, on the Island of Hawaii, can beused to the advantage and benefit ofthe residents of that District, and off t." Territory of Hawaii, if divertedfro." their natural channels, for do-

mestic, homestead, agricultural andother purposes, and such diversion andincreased use of these waters cannotfail to Increase tne prosperity of thepeople residing there, as well as thewealth of the island through a greatervalue for Jts lands, and a larger outputfram its soil, the productiveness ofwhich is the mainstay of this Territory,

Following the preamble is the granting clause, wherein James W. Pratt,Commissioner of Public Lands, In con-

sideration of the premises and of $500,

does grant unto the party who obtainsthe license, for the term of fifty years,"all the running natural surface wa-ter" upon and over all the Governmentlands on the Island of Hawaii, boundedas follows:

Boundary. Bounded on the north bythe sea, on the east by Waipio Valley,on the south by Waipio "Valley, and theboundary line between the lands ofLaupahoehoe I. and II., Nakooka,Apua, Waikapu and Honopue on oneside, and the lands of Puukapu andKawaihae I. on the other side, untilsuch boundary line reaches an elevation of 4,200 feet, from which pointthe contour line of 4,200 feet elevationshall form the balance of the boundaryof the south, and on the west by thelands of Honokane and the privatelands of Awini, the wiiole of such areabeing hereafter called the Kohala Watershed.

Objects. The licenses'' is Authorizedto sell such water for "domestic uses,irrigation and other purposes," andto construct the necessary works forcarrying the water across Governmentlands.

Construction. The licensee is to construct its works so as to deliver waterto consumers upon the following lands:

1st. For domestic and agriculturalpurposes at any point oetween tneland of Honokane iki and the Westernboundary of Hawaii, within two yearsof the date of this license.

2nd. Shall deliver water to all consumers for any purpose whatsoever,within a period of three years from thedate of this license, at any point within the District of Honokane Iki andLaupahoehoe II.

3rd. Within a period of four yearsfrom the date of this license will complete the construction of its lines anddeliver water to all consumers betweenthe District of Honokane iki and Wai--manu, and between the Western boundary of Hawii and the land of Kawai-hae I.

That any failure by the said licenseeto complete any of these lines withinthe specified time shall act as a for-feiture of all right of said licensee tofurther extensions along the line wheresuch failure occurs.

Dealing in Lands. The licenseeagrees that it will not buy, sell, leaseor otherwise deal in real estate, beyondthe direct necessities of. its businessunder the license, upon penalty offorfeiture of the license.

Compensation and Taxes. A fee of$500 is to be paid on the issuance of thelicense and on the corresponding dateof each year thereafter an additionalfee of $500. In addition to such an-nual fee of $500 the licensee agrees topay each and --every year a percentage(at present left blank) of all the grossrevenues received by the licensee,"from all sources whatsoever," but inno event, after the expiration of twoyears from the date of the license, shallthe percentage received by the Terri-tory be less than $2500 during eachand every year, .regardless of whethersuch $2500 is in excess of the percent-age agreed upon or Jiot.

And during the term of the licensethe licensee shall also pay all taxes, ofwhatever kind or nature, assessed bythe Territory or any subdivision there-of, upon the lands and properties ofthe licensee; and nothing stated, ex-pressed or implied in the license shallbe deemed to exempt the licensee fromthe payment of such taxe's; and anyfailure on the part of the licensee tocomply with the terms of this sectionshall act as an immediate forfeiture ofthe licqpse.

Accounts. Annual accounts of theaffairs of the licensee are to be ren-tle- rI

not later than February 15, sachaccounts to be sworn and classifier!,howing the actual cash received as

well as disbursements. The Auditoror such officer a.-- the Governor maydesignate is to have free access to thebooks of the licensee at aU times.

Materials. The licensee is given theprivilege of using all earth, rock andtimber upon the lands in question,necessary to the construction, mainte-nance and repairof its works:"

Vested Rights. All righto and privil-ege?! herein d to the licensee are.ad rnst be. subject to existing vest-ed rights of private parties in all suchwaters, and to the rights of the UnitedStates therein..

Fters and Surveys. All plans andsurveys must be submitted to and ap--

; from the other ISLANDS promptlyattended to, satisfaction guaranteed.

HARNESS :- -: SADDLERY :- -: AND :- -: HORSE :

C. R. COLLINS, Est.P. O. Box 507.

AND PLATFORMS.

AT

91 KING STREET& Co. 928 FONT STHtEl

eyer Go

Palace Goods

I . AAA A L K E R, AG E N T.

SCREENS

Chan & CcDoors Below King Street.

--4

GOODS1891. 82-8- 4 S. King St.

Phone Main 144.

50OSOSX3SO0C

HOTEL STREET

for the Mm

25 cenise!ivere by

Hotel Street.

LMJNDKY3552. Opposite Hawaiian Hotel.

years, 25 per cent; after 15 years, 20per cent: after 25 years, 15 per cent;after 35 years, 10 per cent.

Forfeiture of License. This licenseshall be forfeited if, at any time, anyof its terms, conditions, provisions . orstipulations, as set forth herein, arenot complied with by the holder of saidlicense.

Arbitration. In case of disputes, the'Commissioner may appoint one arbi-trator, the licensee another and thesetwo a third. On the failure of either

iof the principals to name an arbitra-tor within ten days after the otherhas requested arbitration, the ChiefJustice or any Justice of the SupremeCourt may, on application to him, ap-point the second arbitrator. The samerelief is given where the first two, ineither of the foregoing caces, fail toagree on the third arbitrator.

A decision by any two of the arbitra-tors shall be final and binding upon allparties concerned. All expenses ofarbitration shall be paid by the licen-see. --

. Sale of License. This license for tak-ingwa- ter

from the Kohala Watershed, ;

and the delivery and sale of the sameand all power developed therefrom, un-

der the stipulations and conditionssubstantially set forth in the foregoinglicense, will be offered at Public Auc-tion, at Honolulu, afcer duo advertise-ment, and may be granted to the bid-der of the. highest rate of per cent onthe gross revenues of . the licensee, asherein st forth, the upst price of 'which shall be twelve and one-ha- lf

(12) per cent, to be paid annually to !

the Government of the Territory ofHawaii, in addition to the annual feeof Five Hundred (500) Dollars as here- - ji

In set forth.

FORESTER HOSMER

ARRIVES IN TOWN

Silk embroidered and open workSilk Scarfs, Silk Kimonos, Chinaware, Japanese Curios

tiser.

WAVERLEY BLOCK,

ubscri bever

menth,carrier.

PANAMA H

Ralph S. Hosmer, the Territorial for- - Miss Whitman, superintendent Japa-este- r,

arrived from "Washington in the nese mission, read by Rev. E. W.steameV Siberia and registered at the j Timing.

, .1 Every branch of religious and benev- - :Alexander Young Hotel. He is engaged ' olent effort was shown to have been vby the Board of Agriculture and For--

fweu sustained with encouraging results, i

estry, on the recommendation of Gifford j At one period of the year there was a ;Pinchot, chief of the Bureau of For- - 'membership of more than one thousand 4 .

AT REASONABLE PRICES

estry, Department of Agriculture,Washington, to take full charge of theforestry division of the Board.

When W. A. Hall, the expert for-ester, was here last year to inspect andreport on the forests of Hawaii for theFederal bureau, a request was forward- -

t Vl mn trl him', ft-- i t Vi o .nnminaflnn rfcompetent supeamenaent or torestry

for the Territory. Different names wereback and Mr. Hosmer became the

choice with the recommendation ofChief Pinchot as stated. While pre- -serving nis connection witn tne unitedStates civil service, he Is in the pay j

of the Territory.Mr. Hosmer's arrival has been eager-

ly awaited by the Board, forestry work j

having been held in abeyance ever sincehis acceptance was received. The re-foresting, of waste places and the con-

servation and improvement of existingforests, it is anticipated, will now pro-ceed upon a scientific basis and produce

gratifying transformation of Hawai-ian landscapes before many years..

28 and 32

HPHITOURISTS' WORK PROMPTLY ATT ENDED TO.

Phone Blue

Page 3: UBLIC OP p0K iransport-- service. - University of Hawaiievols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/43570/1/1904011401.pdf · WEATHER FORECAST FOR TODAY. SUGAR 96w Centrifugals,

THE : PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, JANUARY H, 1904.,rag mmm m w

t.o00000000000 BLO ifiuslin Underwear Sills 1WN UP BY

DYNAMITE PACIFIC IMPORT CO. will commence MON-DAY, JANUARY 11TH, the Greatest (value sir-ing) Muslin Underwear Sale ever held in Hono- - -.

"'lulu. :- -: ;- -; ... ..NEW, ATTRACTIVE

Oooooooo

'

oo?o9o?o

2nd FLOOR1st FLOOR 2nd FLOOR Murder ReportedFrom Garden

Isle.

AND WELL-MAD- E

Chemises, Gowns, Skirts, Corset-cover-s

AFJD DRAWERSat prices that will make this stock of underwear

Two Japanese Under

Children's DressesWhite arid colored; 2 years old.

2 to 12 years old

White Poke Bonnets$3.00. Reduced to

Son BonnetsPink, Blue and Red, 50c; reduc-ed to

vc iasc. :o: :o: :o: o:

Cotton SkirtsIN PLAIX

LINEN AND WHITE

PIQUE.

Woolen Skirts and Suits

Woolen Jackets

Slack Silk Coats

Sill Shirtwaists

Curtains

Art SquaresCouch-cove- rs

Tablecovers

Arrest for theCrime. GREAT REDUCTION SALE IN- - tf

Arthur Glennan Murdered WhileLADIES' TAILOR-MAD- E DRESS SKIRTS

o Do Not Miss This Chance oHe Uy in Bed Tele-

phone Cut.40c Pacific Import Co., Ltd.Arthur Glennan, in charge of the Ma-

kaweli ditch on Kauai, was murdered PROGRESS BLOCK FORT STREETlast Friday night by Japanese, two ofF.15 whom, believed to have a knowledge ofthe matter, being now under arrest.The crime was most dastardly. A stickof dynamite was placed under the bedin Glennan's tent and a fuse attachedwhich was ignited from the outside

F3"

presumably from a cigarette. H. C.oo000CiiO00000000 O00000000000000,0-- 0

Smalley, Glennan's assistant, the onlywhite man in the vicinity, was led offafter his horse which had been stolenTHE COUNTY ACT IS KNOCKED OUT. The Act is entitled "An Act Providing

for the Organization and Government ofCounties and Districts, and the Man-agement and Control of Public Works

away, and the telephone wires leadingto the camp had also been cut justprior to the commission of the crime.

The full particulars of the crime weresent in a, private letter to Mrs. Dr. W.G. Rogers from her brother, H. C.

out by counsel as being, according to' .:aaat:,Z. Act relating to taxation could cover boththeir contention, void or Territorial and county taxation. Wheth-othe- r.whole or in part for one reason or an- - !

i er an act relating to Territorial govern-han- dWithout professing on the one ment could properly cover county gov-t- oto 'enumerate fully on the other t

or an act relating to Tern- -confine ourselves strictly to the pro- - foment, could .properly coverreasons advanced . by . them m each in- - .. ,r ..

county taxation might be a questiontSf bVanch goTthe cJse

of illus" although under an act which accordingSated he fowlS Snt of t0 itS le related to state and county

! (Continued from page 1.)

So much of Act 31, Laws of 1903,known as the County Act, as providesnew; features in Territorial taxation notincidental to county organization orgovernment, is void under the provisionof Section 45 of theOrganie' Act, "thateach law shall embrace but one subject,which shall be expressed in its title.'

Said void portion is sucii an essentialfeature., as to .vitiate the whole Act. .

Smalley, who with Glennan was incharge of the work, and who was the Sold in the bottle by all dealers.

o?9first man at his side after the tragedy.

B. B. O'Shaughnessy, the engineer in In case lots direct from the brewerycharge of the work, arrived on the Si ?9arguments : 1 hat certain provisions are

beria yesterday only to hear of thevoid or ineffective in whole or in partO0000-000000000- '

on municipal revenues, the SupremeCourt of Tennessee held not only thatsection but the entire act void. SeeBugher vs. Prescott, 23 Fed. 20, - But

crime. He was much grieved over thenews as Mr. Glennan was one of his

because ,they are made to depend uponlaws which were assumed to be still inforce but which had in fact been re- -

OPINION OF JTHE COURT BY FREAR, C.J.This is an appeal from a decree dis-

missing, a... petition ..fora writ . of quowarrqnto brought by the Territory for

an act relating to county taxation or most valuable sassistants. had to walk home after having menout for about fifteen minutes huntingfor him, otherwise I would have been

"Mr. Glennan was first employed ini comy gov ernmem coum not cover ler-sho-

455,- - relating to contested asContelt, "i"al .taxation. No doubt a numberby In re Election ante);

MR. EMMELUTH IS

FOR EXTRA SESSIONthe purpose of inquiring by what au-thority seven named respondents claim the survey of the canyon at the Maka at home when it happened., ul JI UV1S1UI15 III IH13 CUU1U UC SUS- -

weli river," said Mr. O'Shaughnessy,to hold office as Supervisors of the or .uecauM mey purport y taiW not nart, nf th. Trritnrial I tried all night to hit upon someCounty of Oahu.. The real object ol rtam county or 1 erritorial omccrs ; q y incidental to "which was very dangerous work and theory which would hold water and

explain the cause of explosion, disrethe nroceedinsr is to test the validity of Powers ana auties wnicii were assumeuto-- have been in certain other officers, J

county government although they relateless to what previouslyu 1 k t:i. more or wereAct 31 of the Laws of- 1003, known as garding the suspicion of foul play, we

I parts of the Territorial system of taxa- -

which four, or five white men had al-

ready vacated. He was a thoroughlygood and reliable man, and .was pro-

moted until he got charge of this ex- -

had received a tin of oil a few daysed by the Organic Act or whos duties

Honolulu, Jan. 13, 1904.

Editor Advertiser: The county billthat was, is not, and the question,arises, "What are we going to do aboutit?"

t.j u t j u.. ?t. Ition. An act relating to counties ere-- before and I thought it might haven a v'k,, w'ated m a fully organized Territory with been placed under the tent for safekeeping and the place set on fire byrl :a centralized government would natural- - tension He was also of good habits

the County Act, most of the provisionsof which were to take effect by its terms

n January 4, 1904.'. Tf the Act is void, the respondents do

not lawfully hold the offices which theyclaim to hoFci solely under that Act.

No question has been raised by therespondents as to procedure or jurisdic-tion, but on the contrary . they seem

Mr. G. overturning a lamp which heufmajly burned at night, but I foui.d394, which purport to transfer to other ly a.nd Propably necessarily contain some , and character, and his death will be a

officers the powers and duties of the i Lyi!LnS- - .?u f .demarcatT ' heavy'bW to his father and mother at the oil uninjured in another placeM--mister - of the Interior relating to

- cum. imiisicis. . . . ivuum. nave. in,im;niliu ue maue

Redwood City," California. He was 32 had a number of theories, but whenmorning came and I found the fusemedicine, surgery, pharmacy, dentistry; -

clus,on' amendment or repeal so far as years of age and unmarried."jand orisons) --or becaue they relate and other damning proofs of theengineer u snaugnnessy aemes tneequally desirous with the petitioner to V: to necessary for the purposes of providing1

have the case decided on the merits. fre !!'riaS,, for the organization and government of diabolical cunning which had been disstatement, appearing in the Bulletin,t . . . . i i mi rr t r f . iirnviiinn tT inp i jro-a- n r . " played, I could no longer doubt thatine arguments against tne vaiiaity ot , iC u 1 -- 1 Z. r counties. But this Act goes much fur- - ;Llldt. CdV,U IcL W SlltXXX ItlUl UUl VUC . .1. . . 1. Ti 1 e , that he had predicted the death of Mr.'the Act are in general as follows which I had feared. I set trustworthycKIom i,,Vi, cK,11 K .vnr(.J ; :.e i..uuii uiis. xi proviaes ior mosiguards and not a soul was allowed neartitV fnr nVtanrP Winn, rw t imPrtant changes 'in the system of Ter-- Glennan before the completion of thethe tent until Mr. Rankin and Mr,.0, .q-- , . --r. ritonal taxation, and that. too. with work on which the latter was eneaered.

1. That the Act-wa- s never passed bythe House of Representatives as requiredby the provision in Section 46 of theOrganic Act, that in order to become alaw the final passage of a bill in each

Wes,ton arrived at 9 o'clock. They careritorial Board of Pnhlic Institution,, a . nothing in the title of the Act to mdi- - . Mr. states that he hasfully examined all that was to be seenv.aic nus. 1 never saia anytmng or ine sore ana

What is the result? The provisions objects to being put in.,a false position and at 1:30 two police officers arrivcdJshown in Dole vs. Cooper, ante) ; or be-

cause of two or more of the foregoingreasons (as, for instance, Sections 305--

who said that the sheriff was not coinhouse shall be by a majority vote of all l relating to county and territorial taxa- - in regard to an event he had no reasontion, covering nearly a fourth of the' to anticipate and which he has every ing up and had sent them to look at the

401, 495, 496-50-1, which place the Ter- -

Immediately after the general elec-tion in 1900 the Home Rule ExecutiveCommittee proposed, in the public in-

terest, that the several parties repre-sented in the campaign just closed,should appoint members of a committeeto draft a county bill for presentationto the legislature.

Their kind intentions were at thattime ignored, from motives which It isunnecessary now to discuss, but is itnot time, in that same "public inter-est." to determine the best means ofmeeting the requirements of the situa-tion and to honestly face the conditionsbrought about by the annexation ofthese islands to the United States?

In the States and Territories of theUnion "county" government is an In-expensive, as well as simple means offormulating and administering laws forthe governance of those residing in thecounty.

The poorest man, having the qualifi-cations" to commend him to the elector-ate, is on an equal footing with hiswealthier brother In seeking office"Bonds" are given by those actuallyhandling cash, provision is made formalfeasance In office and its punish-ment and that is all the check required

scene and have evidence and witnessesritorial nenitentiarv in thp rontrnl of entire Act, are interwoven, and were in- - ; occasion to deplore.brought down. We then took the pa-pers and ditch records and stored themthe Territorial Board of Public Institu- - to be parts of a general scheme, i Mr-- O'Shaughnessy further states

tions and provide for a transfer oftIf the Part relating to county taxation : that Glennan's principal trouble wasin my tent and I rounded up the witpowers and duties from the Minister of j would have to tail with the part relating. in Keeping rascaiiy Japanese gamDiers

to Territorial taxation, the counties fnd worse from the camp and had thusthe Interior not to go into the question nesses and started them down. Halfway down we met another officer whowhether the ;ii?iiert of a Territorial 'themselves would be without the greater incurred ineir enmity, xnese japs, air.said that Mr. Coney and Mr. Rice wereiteait :a i : portion of their contemnlafpd mnt nf O'Shaughnessy says, are a different

LTVllIlVllLiCll J ,1LJVII VVUiU IJIKJITIIJ LC 1 1 ' 1 " ' '- " " half way up on another road. Mr.suDsisience ana tne entire act would tuIM '" "iu"" x ijibuwuuh

the members to which such house is en-titled, taken by ayes and noes and en-tered on the journal, in that, as con-tended, --Jhe House journal shows thatthe finaE action in that body was theadoption of the report of the conferencecommittee which recommended certainamendments and does not show that thebill as s6 amended was passed at all bythe House.

2. That the Act makes the CountyBoard of Supervisors an elective body,contrary to the provision in Section 80of the Organic Act, fBat the Governorshall appoint, with the advice and con-sent of the Senate, certain specified offi--cers and boards and "any other boardsof a public character that may be create '

Weston and myself hurried back andfouncTthe sheriff and deputy there.

nef.-.ari- y fau jf tj,e part re-- ana are vagabonds in many instances.lai;ng'..to Territorial taxation could, THE DETAILED STORY.

eluded in the Act or how far the mat-ters of prisons, criminal procedure, se:i-tenc- es,

etc., in general might be affect'?'!by the failure of the provisions in ques-tion) ; or because they purport to alter

After giving them all the informationbe separated from the part relating1. The following is the account writtento county taxation, then, if the Vatt "VfT firriQ 1 loxr rf f Vi murmur nnd Viwe possessed I went with them to Camp35 and pointed out two men who, It

laws that cannot be altered at all by the res,r 01 tn,e Act. coma stand, it would be events following it seemed to me, from circumstanceswhich I explained to the sheriff, mightTerritorial Legislature, the power to ! oniy ?n me meory tnar, as to l erntonal "On last Friday evening Mr. Glennan

alter which is reserved exclusively to j taxation, previously existing laws would was most foully murdered while in bed reasonably be suspected of having someCongress by the Organic Act (as, for ; remain in iorce. mere would then be asleep by being blown up by dynamite,instance, Sections 171-17- 2, 450-45-1, re-- fwo. systems of taxation, each complete placed under his bed and ignited by a

knowledge of the affair. These twomen were arrested the following day. on the remaining officers.by law. I 1 ' a ! .1 1 f 1 1 " i ITT itSlt WltVl tlVft CrftC r( ffCimrc- - i tt A i j . t. r I 3 . e

iTliaf thr Art Territorial lallns 10 lnc sciiiemeiu ui uounuanes : 1 - " " 0 iuse iraumg " " lroni me uuisiub uicreates a . , . . oiWr marhmprv fmm Ktm .v. m.. , , .v.i i3 Whether some evidence has appearedagainst them I do not know.

The course that appeals to me as the'most consistent to be pursued, is fo

the Governor to call the legislature in--

', aim me rciuriis. caiivais anu ccriincaies . - j - uuuu"'. iuc iciil. aiic resuu wtis nuniuie uKAOi-ii- - r t (nin h7itAti rAncictiniT -- t tharcT election in the case of Territorial ' wun autie expenses, two returns, as-- the extreme. He was thrown to theAuditor of the "The coroner's jury this morning returned a verdict that death was caused extra session for the purpose of mak-

ing. Territorial appropriations covering:by an explosion of dynamite placed un

Secretary,. Territory, not appointed by the Gov-

ernor, with the consent of the Senate,at all .as to one of its members, theSecretary, nor appointed by him as

Senators and Representatives not to ! sessments, etc., to be made in the case other side of the tent, which was aconsider whether the latter subject could eac!1 tax-paye- r, the possibility of two total wreck. His left thigh was crush-proper- ly

be included in a county act at ' valuations by different assessors or ed and he was otherwise mangled. Iall); or because they --.violate provisions boards and two appeals, etc., in each in- - arrived in about three or four minutes

the remaloder of the biennial periodder his bed and Ignited by a personor persons unknown.

j . . .. of the Organic Act or other Acts . of &1""-- clc- - etc.. ine .territory wcjuld from an adjoining camp where I had "The motive- - was revenge and in myand also to frame and pass a law pro-viding for the election of a commissionfrom the several representative dis-tricts In ratio to their representation.ontrn?n,JS & of ' Congress relating to the Territories pro- - ' also have, to collect most of the taxes as gone to give orders for the next day's

members, bection legislation in K nxed by previous laws, sufficient perhaps work, and carried him from the burnopinion the guilty parties will soon bebrought to justice."hihitirnr snecial rejrard tothe Organic Act the election to take place within sixtyMr. Smalley writes further that thecounties, as, for instance, the proviso to support the entire government as it ing tent, when the cook helped carry

of Section I relating to the County of was previously, notwithstanding that the him to my room. I then sent the Jap3Kalawao, and Section 14 relating to the ) Sreater part of the expense were to be to put out the fire and save the valu- -Supervisors of the County of Oahu. j hereafter borne by the counties. The able records. They were'-afrat- of fur- -

camp is to be changed but he proposesto stay with the work until the end.

4. That the Act requires the transferto the counties, to be controlled by vari-ous elected county officials, of muchpublic property that was ceded bv the

days after passage of the act and thecommission to frame a county govern-ment bill together with a set of amend-ments to our present law to make same

Mr. Glennan carried an Insurancepolicy for $2000 oh his life.But we will assume for the purposes cuuuucs .WUU1Q. a nave to collect the tner explosions rrom explosives Known

tiiic-.ra- rrZ' "T,a; all curb nro- -. rate which this Act purports to au- - or suspected to have been left in theKepublic of Hawaii to the United btates 4- - conform thereto, for presentation to the

next legislature.visions are Valid and effective, except so horize. The people would then be taxed burning tent, so I left him for a few KH,0 VOIII Tjfar as held otherwise in the cases above much more heavily than was contem- - minutes until the fire had been extin-- 1 M4"-Ur- t 1

BE WILLING TO RUN AGAINand was by Section 91 of the OrganicAct placed by the United States in thepossession of, the Territory of Hawaii",to be controlled, as contended, by vari

mentioned or else that if invalid or P'ated or is necessary. In view of the guished and I could thus reach the tele-ineffecti-

they may, important though : exte.nf to which the intention of the phone to summon help,some of them are all fall without caus- - Legislature would be frustrated and in- - "I could get no answer by "phone, and

ous appointive 1 erntonal officials, until the Act as a whole to fall. convenience ana narasnip would result as ne was unconscious ana nis pngniotherw I in case the rest of the Act were allowed was desperate, and the five Japs re--ise provided for by Congress or"

for the uses and purposes of the L There is, however, one subject that,taken to stand without the part relating to fused to make the trip, being panicUnited btates by direction of the Presi-- i our opinion, is improperly inuuueu m wrPc in Territorial ttinn ,V stricken. I rod th two miles to theient or of the Governor of' Hawaii." the Act, without

"the provisions in re-- t .

suonoSed that thP Wit',, tool house telephone, to eet the doc--. . . - -- - - I J x . V 1 It. a 1 J tor. He told me to bring him to Wai

I see by the evening papers that theGovernor is in favor of a commissionbut Of only three members and theyto be appointed. I doubt If the Gov-ernor hs the right to make such ap-pointments in the absence of legislationto that end.

Any partisan commission would meananother appeal to prejudice at the bal-lot box next November. It is about upto the voters of this Territory to de-termine what is best for them and It isthe duty of the Governor and Legisla-ture to pave the way for the oppor-tunity by creating an elective commis-sion.

For County Government.JOHN EMMELUTH.

TO PREVENT CROUP, begin In

5. -- 1 hat the Act practically abolishes Jra 10 wnicn n cannoi uc presmmcu woud have passed the rest of the Act inthe offices of Superintendent of Public that the Legislature would have passed hs sent shape For the court t sus.Works and High Sheriff by transferring the rest of the Act. Tnat is the subject .tain the resf.of the Act under the cirjmost of their powers and duties to other of Territorial taxation the very means cumstances w0uld be to assume legis.officers, contrary to Section 75 of the j ulon which the Territorial government j ti power.

(Continued from page 1.)

that after that time the coasts wouldbe in darkness, and the Federal Gov-

ernment would then be responsible forany wrecks that might occur. Thedelegate was told thatHawaii was ona par with Porto Rico and the Philip-pines in this respect. The delegateexplained that Hawaii was a. territory,and after a display of data convincedthe officials having the matter in hand,that Hawaii, in its political status, wasunlike Porto Rico and the Philippines.Upon this showing the control of the

organic nci(n.u ' wwi u ere "ZriZr. " "7 Ji" "-- t:l. We fullv realize that, as we have heldof Public . ai ine lerruoriai rsoara 01 xz.uua.nzn- - . . ' V ; .shall be a Superintendent

tion might properly be constituted as it m tne past, me organic provision relatingis in terms by this Act, notwithstanding to tul,es of laws should be liberally con--

the provisions of Section 80 of the Or- - struea, f"urulc. court snouia sustain an"Works, who shall have" certain enumer-ated powers and duties, and Section 79which contains a similar provision inTegard t(5 the High Sheriff.

6. ' That the whole Act is void be--

mea If he still lived and I got the headluna to send a spring-wago- n to thetrail he would be carried out by. Imade the round trip of four miles ofdangerous trail in forty minutes, but hebreathed his last just as I returned,having never fully regained conscious-ness. When I first picked him up, hesaid, 'Where amir and to the bestof my belief was almost rational atthat moment. I remained there untildaylight when I had a litter made andthe remains carried out to the wagonroad and taken by wagon to Maka-wel- L

"I found that morning that the tele-phone line had been broken about 300

game Act Still the subject of Terri- - a of the Legislature, if possible. Butis one that like the sub-- the superior law must control in a cleartorinl

iect of the Territorial Board of Public case of conflict. The court cannot, nor---cause it contains two subjects, one m ;

: Institutions inrlnl in can a large majority any more than acannot De theandrelation one -to county government thV T over- -in relation to Territorial .works and Act, in view of the provisions of Section f.ulI,i muchcontended, ; 4o ot tne Organic Act relating to titles organic however, anyinstitutions and because, as particular law or form of law may bef of laws

Hawaiian lighthouses was taken over.t

Irian NatiaoaUat Bere.P. O'Brien, an Irish Xationalist of

Brooklyn, prominently identified withRepublican politics in that city, arrivedon the Siberia yesterday and registen-e- d

at the Young HoteL Mr. O'Brienis one of the leaders of the Irish ele-

ment of the Republican party in

the title of the Act is likewise corres- - ' desired.The Act makes radira! rbano-f- inpondingly double, in contravention ofsvstem of Territorial tavation Tt mav I In our opinion the Act in question is yards from the tent. It showed signsSection 45 of the Organic Act, which . -

-- vvravides "that each law shall embrace ! almost be said to provide a new system,i void, the respondents are not entitled of having been tampered with, and as

-- T&K-one snbiect which shall be expressed j Among other things, it provides ior the to the offices which they claim, the x had used the line at 8:15 p. m. and

time. The first symptom is hoarseness;this Is- - soon followed by a peculiarrough cough, which i3 easily recognizedand will never be forgotten by one whohas heard it. The time to act is whenthe child first becomes hoarse. IfChamberlain's Cough Remedy is freelygiven, all tendency to croup will soondisappear. Even after the croupycough has developed, it will prevent theattack. There is no danger In givingthis remedy as it contains nothing In-

jurious. It always cures and curesquickly. Benson, Smith & Co., Ltd.,Wholesale Agents, sell it.

New Year's Advertiser ready for mafing at 5c each to be had at the office.

Mrs. Omsted had tried to ring me at.Brooklyn, and assisted largely in theanits title j equalization or valuations ot real prop- - aiu'--

among the several counties, far "appropriate decree Jn conformity with7-

- That so many and such important , erty asportions of the Act are void and in-- as regards the Territorial tax, by a this opraon may be entered m this

purely Terntonal Board. This board court. .effective that none of it can stand.We will assume for the purposes of .also is required to determine the rate' J- - A. ilatthewman and C. R. Hemen-thi- s

of the Territorial tax both real and ay, for the petitioner,case that the first six of these argu- - upon ,

ments are unsound, and base our deci- - 1 personal property, and in case of its i Kinney, McClanahan & Cooper and S.-- sion on the seventh alone.' (failure to do so, the rate is fixed at H. Derby, counsel in another case, ar- -

8:30 and Mr. Baldwin had tried to getGlennan at 9 p. m., the explosion takingplace at 9:30, there seems to me to beconclusive proof that it was cut be-

tween 8:15 and 9, even granting thatMrs. O.'s ring was all right, but notnoticed by Glennan.

'My horse mysteriously disappearedfrom Camp 33 ..while I was there, so I

campaign which elected Rooseveltgovernor of Tew York.

Mr. O'Brien participated in the Fe-nian raid on Canada in 1870.

He has written several poems,among them being "Roosevelt's Chargea San Juan Hill, "The BattleshipMai ne," and "Dewey, the Hero."In support of this argument a number five mills on the dollar. Sections ISO, gued on the same side, Dy permission,

.nf nrovisions in the Act were pointed 321, 222- - A. S. Hartwell, for the respondents.. f

Page 4: UBLIC OP p0K iransport-- service. - University of Hawaiievols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/43570/1/1904011401.pdf · WEATHER FORECAST FOR TODAY. SUGAR 96w Centrifugals,

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL 'ADVERTISER, JIONOLULU, JANUARY 14, 1904.

f agreement to deal only with; legislation before a special

countysession DistressTHE PACIFIC

COMMERCIAL ADVERTISERThe Pacific Hardware Co., Ltd.

CORNER FORT AND MERCHANT STREETS.

WALTER G. SMITH .: ; : : .. : : : EDITOR.

THURSDAY, : : : : : JANUARY 14 THE TTEWSPECIAL FOR YEARCommencing .

MONDAY, JANUARY 4TH,'

We will sell

PRESSEDLASS100 D

THE NEXT STEPS. j -J The unanimous decision of the Supreme Court declaring the

County Act invalid, devolves important responsibilities upon the

Governor and the people. So many perplexities appear that it is

necessary to go slow ait determining what is best to do. Governor

Carter fully realizes this, and has called a conference of leading

citizens to meet this morning to consider the outlook a method

resembling the recourse to the "elder statesmen" in Japan, and al-

together admirable "in its assurance of calm deliberation and a sat-

isfactory procedure afterwards., Two or three conclusions seem to be clear already to many cit-

izens, friends as well as opponents of the County bill ;

Toin tilersozen Q

V

at

Gtsj Regular price,

(i') The communitv cannot afford to have and does not .want

the present Legislature to beTin rn blip faith in its inteeritv1H - a - jbe kept to one subject nor to athe Legislature would insist onCounty bill and thirty, days toan cvnpntp nf not less than Sl.OOO Oer dav. There is no assurance

1-

that a second County measure. . a 14- - i;i-K- r

"1U1C uwucul ' M 1L

so modified as to render them 01 Uttie value as a saieguara. vcr'

ma.nAlr.rrc lirnllll ho OC htfrrp thp trail Cttr tllP fTatter.fiuuif,s nuu.u iv., v..v.v.,"- -Y2V The annulment of the' County Act-- does not make it im- -

I Are sm ''

:

-- - ff You Waiting? fl.

perative that the Legislature should convene and make new appro- -

priations. To arm against contingencies such as the failure of a,

Legislature to provide tor theic Act empowers the Treasurer of the Territory, "with the advice ofthe Governor, to meet such obligations from the public funds as

may have been authorized by the last previous appropriation bills.

iV INCANDESCENT ELECTRIC LAMPS are almost in- -

dispensable in the home and the cost now is very low.JJon t delay availing yourself of the convenience andoffered.

HAWAIIAN ELECTRIC Co., Ltd.j umce Jtung near Aiasea, .fnone Main 390. .

Thus, where the Legislature of 1902-- 3 deprived the Territory of

certain appropriations which were passed over for County enact- -'

tnent, and which the annulment of the County law again makes nec-

essary, the appropriations made by. the Legislature of i960 apply.In brief Hawaii goes directly back to the void form of governmentestablished by Congress and to the appropriations made by !thefirst Legislature which were not continued by the second. So therewill be no "chaos" and no hiatus; simply an orderly and safe rever-

sion to first principles. Meanwhile every official chosen under the' County: Government ActV ceases his functions, his election beingvoid by virtue of the illegality of the Act under which the County

, election was called and held. '

What not to do seems clear enough ! What to do is somethingthat may be safely left to the Governor and his veteran advisers.

o f ,;"'V-'- '

eronly

a Ejoze50 cents a dozen.

; -

Will sell thebalance of his

HOLIDAY STOCKat a- - o

GREAT SACRIFICE1 120 Nuuanu Just Above Hotel.

HoDO'ulu MuiDal BurialAssooat on

J. II. TOWNSEND, Secretary.Office with the Townsend Undertak-

ing Co. 124 Beretania Street.

J$fier EatingNausea between meals, belching, vom-iting, flatulence, fits of nervous head-ache, pain iu the stomach, arts all6ymptoms of dyspepsia, and the longerit is neglected the harder it is to cure it.

Hood's Sarsaparillaand Pills

Radically and permanently cure itstrengthen and tone the stomach andother digestive orgadfe for the naturalperformance of their functions.

- Accept no substitute for Hood'c"I bad dyspepsia twenty-fir- e years anr"

took different medicines but got no helpuntil I began taking Hood's Sarsapari.la.Have taken four bottles of this medicineand can now eat almost anything, sleepwell, have no crampa in my stomach, noburning and no distress." Mas. WilliamG. Babreti, 14 Olney St., Providence, B. I.

Hood's SarsapariUa promises toeuro and keeps the promise.

FreshVegetableSeeds

IN

5ct. Packages

Just Received

CompleteAssortment

flollister Dri Co;

FORT STREET.

THINGS WILL GO WRONG;WHY LEAVE THEM SO?

Better right them now. Alittle . JLooKing; into v - on yourown account; not taking toomuch for granted, will workwonders. Start the year, bysupplying your table , with solidsilver. It is cheap now, but maynot be so very long, as silver issteadily rising in price.

We.are selling at the old priceand will continue . to do so, forsome time, and as that price isas low ag the lowest catalogueprice from the States, it will payyou to make your purchases now,and right at home. Take ourprice list and compare it at yourleisure, we know the result.Many patterns to select fromand no remittance with order.

F. Wichman & Co, Ltd.Jewelers and Opticians.

Fort Street. or

OAN5!Made on

Improved Real EstateRepaid in Monthly Instalments

For particulars see

PMHiH

Assoeiatisn,

Judd Building, Honolulu.

Guarantee Capital against loss.$ 200,000

Subscribed Capital.- -. ........... 8,500.000

Paid-u- p Capital ................ 1,000,000

R. CAMPBELL, Cashier.

' H. E. POCOCK, General Agent.

J. FV Morgan, President; C: J. Campbell, Vice-Preside- nt; J. L. Mc-Lean. Secretary; A. F. Clark, Treasurer; N. E. Gedge, Auditor; W. H.Hoogs, Manager. ,

SZ-u.sta.ce-cc-ns Co., XjtdL.

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS INFirewood, Stove, Steam, Blacksmith's Coa!

Also Black and White Sand. Telephone Main 295.Special Attention Given to Draying.

upsets :

nutritiithe bioagainstBia, Tlnerves rtion, b! ,ate afhand butry it.

STO

Fol

tt

r

t

(

I

--f3

t1i ri

i&

OF

should be called-Representativ- e

Aylett; thought thathe twenty-thre- e Republicans wouldbind themselves to pass a County biiland then quit. He did not b?iieve theold appropriations could be made to doduty. The idea of a special sessionwith a written agr?ement to consideronly the County bill seems to have beenquite generally, discussed - among themembers of the Legislature".- -

Senator Brown intends to leave thismorning on the Siberia- - for Japan sothe benefit of his counsel will be, lostto the Senate. He is, the only lawyerin the upper house.

It seems to be the general opinionthat if a special session is called anda new law passed, a new election willbe necessary. Another, view is that thelegislature can validate the election al-ready held under the County Act.

The collection of taxes is not inter-fered with, provided officers can be ob-tained who will carry out the law withtheir salaries a matter of uncertainty.It is said that Treasurer ISepoikai isconsidering the appointment of CurtisIaukea as tax assessor to fill the va!

cancy in the Oahu office.The merchandise tax is jjau, which

will save the Merchants Association' the necessity of testing it. Other li- -' cens,ea are also knocked "out". The in- -

icijv c.ciiiiiju is iuwerea again, to $1,000 instead of raised to $;soo asSJcofiected bncTaeansteof

; in June and November as provided in- the County Act.

The Territoriai Board of institutionwas long- - ago knocked out and with theSupervisors out of existence the Super- -intendent of Public Works again as

i sumes his old duties.I - .j judge Dickey again becomes firstjudge and Judge Lindsay will take hisold place. Vida will no longer be ableto hold office as roa1 supert.isor as itis an office of the Territory and he asa member of the Legislature cannothoid the job

The famous hack clause which it wasbelieved would involve Hawaii in trou-ble with Japan is also a thing of thepast. . ' )

VIEWS OF ALEADING CITIZEN

"I have had conversations today witha number of leading ' members of thebar," said W. R. Castle yesterday,"and the impression seems to be thatit is possible to get over, the financialdifficulty engendered by the county actdecision, by the operation of the. Or-

ganic Act, which makes provision incases of failure of the legislature to '

appropriable, the appropriations of thelast preceding legislature can be used.The six months bill passed by the ",

present legislature would be a guide inthis way. The passage of the eighteenmonths bill is taken as an indicationthat the legislature intended to providemeans for carrying on the government

"The gravest danger in my opinion iswith tne criminal law, , Suppose theSupervisors appeal to the SupremeCourt at Washington and in the meantime- - rne county omcers continue incontrol. The police make arrests, andthe courts try and convict them andthey would be condemned.

"Suppose that these condemned menapply to the Supreme Court for a writof habeas corpus on the ground thatthe county officers had no right tomake arrests, their contention must beupheld upon today's ruling that thecounty act is void, and they would bereleased. There would be a regularjail delivery.

Take the other side. Suppose thereis no appeal and the Supervisors ac-quiesce in the decision, and the Tei-ri-tori-

officers resume their duties.They make prisoners and they are con-victed and condemned. Then the con-victed man goes to Washington on anappeal on the constitutional groundthat he has been arrested and convict-ed by some ore not authorized to doso. Then if the Supreme Court holdsthe act to be valid chaos will resultand there would be another jail de-livery. The criminal side of the lawappeals to me a3 the serious one and itmay make a great deal of trouble.

"One thing is certain no one wantsanother session of the legislature.Everyone I have talked with today isopposed to such a thing."

OLD SHERIFFSARE RECALLED

Acting under instructions from Sec-retary Atkinson, High Sheriff Brownyesterday afternoon sent wireless mes-sages to all the former sheriffs and dep-uty sheriffs in office before the CountyAct displaced them, instructing them toagain take over their offices and re-

port to him as before.Governor Carter gave orders, .shortly

after the Supreme Court decision wasfiled, for High Sheriff Brown to assumehis former powers, taking charge of allTerritorial and "county" prisoners, andreappointing deputy sheriffs. The mat-ter was brought up at a conference ofGovernor Carter and Secretary Atkinson with United States District Attor-ney Breckons, W. O. Smitli and L. A.Thurston. It was decided by the Gov-ernor that the Territory must imme-diately assiyne jurisdiction in all policematters, involving the proper guardingof prisoners, so as to prevent jail de-liveries.

The High Sheriff's messages went toSheriffs Andrews at Hilo, Baldwin atMaui and Coney at Kauai. This orderwill release "Sheriff" Bill White ofMaui, and "Sheriffs" Keolanui and Ka-mauo- ha

of West' Hawaii. It is believedthat in, these districts where "county j

sheriffs" were elected, other than the J

former incumbents, there will be trou- - j

ble in making the change.Territorial Tax Assessor and Collec-

tor Pratt also sent wireless messagesdeputy collectors on the other isl-

ands. He wired Treasuier Kepoikaiyesterday asking if he would rmt guar-antee the payment of the nww.rv t.ifblanks out of the treasury incident;".!.'

other funds so that the tax return-- "

be ma!' this month.

r ew Year's Advert ser ready for mall- -

at 5c each to be had -4 the office.

PEOPLE WHO KNOWrsay that when we paint a house it gives such good ? r(satisfaction and stays painted so long, that it; is ; L

economy to have us do the work, even if the price ;;- - r

does happen to be a little higher than some othersmay offer. .

S. STEPHENSON, THE PAINTER.

called into extra session There ' is

or ability as a whole. It could notminimum limit of time. Probably

sitting sixty clays to consider a new

consider appropriations under it, at

. r--

would be. more valid than tne nrst orK-j- i- ,"tc hnnflintr clauses would be

& ---- --

expenses 01 uovernment, tne vjrgd.ii- -

iltry going on, Kauai is the Red Light,island of the group. It needs a stronginfusion of law and wholesomeness toredeem its evil reputation. "

If the war correspondents don't findany fighting in the Orient, they mightreturn here. Hawaii generally hassomething doing.

To Oily Bill .White:' Scat!

PUBLIC OPINION IS

AGAINST EXTRA SESSION

(Continued from page 1.)ton on the Korea Friday and push theHatch bill through Congress. Buteven this has its drawbacks as therewould be some delay and the possibil-itie- s

of failure in the end. An appealto the United States Supreme Courtis also suggested which would permitthe county governments to exist, al-though there would still be the diff-iculty of obtaining credit in the un-settled state of affairs.

If a special session is called the leg-islature will be at liberty to act as itpleases, and introduce bills of everyvariety, not to mention innumerableresolutions which some legislators arealready said to be preparing: for in-stance a vote of want of confidence inthe Supreme Court, and a few choiceones relative to the Governor and Ke-poik- ai.

Home Rulers who were talked withyesterday say they are willing to bindthemselves to pass the county bill andgo home when that is done.

W, O. Smith, chairman of the Re-publican Commissioii which framed theCounty . Act, said it was a good timenow "to stop and think." As the speed-iest remedy he suggested an immediateappeal to Congress which he consider-ed the surest method of settling thepresent difficulty. He did not believethe Supreme Court having held theCounty Act invalid in two different de-cisions, that the legislature could passa bill that would stand the test of thecourts in view of the limitations of theOrganic Act.

Chairman Crabbe, of the RepublicanExecutive Committee,; said the com-mittee would meet with the-- Governorthis morning. He thought that itwould require at least sixty days forthe Legislature to pass a new bill.

Curtis Iaukea, chairman of the HomeRule Committee, said the committeewas to hold its regular weekly meeting this afternoon at which the ques-tion would probably come up. He saidthat the committee passed a resolutioncondemning the Hatch mission, but hadafterwards reconsidered it, and waswilling to have the County Act endorsed by Congress.

Representative Andrade was of theopinion that anything would be betterthan a special session of the Legisla-ture.

Representative Jonah Kumalae, for-mer, Republican leader in the House,now a Home Ruler, said a special pes- -

bound to take up only the count v bill toor the appropriation bills, for which thGovernor would call them. He sailhe would sign such an agreement. "Itseems as if we are children and can't

a comity hi!!." said Kumalae. or' Kanr.Ka try it. no t in i canit. vow lt J;ipr.ne?e and Pake do it."rid a n.itivo poucemon w!w was stand- -jn? niir hv.

Representative Harris favored an ing

Byron Hot SpringsOnly 68 Miles From San Francisco on

Main Line Southern Pacific Co.

MOST WOHOERFIil SPPJfcGSIN AMERICA.

HOT SALT, HOT, MUD AND SUL--PHUR BATHS.

Fine warm swimming tanks. Drinking waters of wonderful curative qualities. " Pronounced the best In Americafor Rheumatism. Gout, Sciatica andMalaria.

Thoroughly modern steam heated ho-tel as comfortable In Winter as Sum-mer.

Call at Advertiser Office for booklets,on Mr. J. EL Burkett, who kindly

allows the use of his name.Address, H. K. WARNER,

Manager.Byron Hot Springs, Contra Costa

County, CaL

n

8

f

- Si

r.

, THE WORK OF TEACHERS.

Th Advertiser is glad to ' see thatpublic interest in the school questionkeeps up. In .. . another column weprint a strong letter from Mr. E. D.

Stone withbut, however, concurring in"Ills' criticisms of the Superintendent of

JPublic. Instruction who, like other'suc-ssf- ul

men, may pursue an avocationwithout harm to his vocation or to hispublic Usefulness under it. With thegenerai attitude of Mr. Stone, however,this paper has concurred m advanceand it welcomes his concrete illustra-tio- n,

of the fact that teachers have aneasy time,under our system as com-pared with the eight, ten and fourteenhours' a day people, who constitute the

. majority of those who labor. PerhapsMr. Stone credits the teachers with toolittle work when he times the dailytask, Saturdays and Sundays excluded,at only four hours. The correction ofpapers prepared by school childrentakes considerable time, in spite of thefact that some of this work is notaccurately done. It is open to debatewhether so many papers are needed,particularly in view of the practice ofsending small girls home to investigateand write upon .De Sotor Savonarola,John Milton and the Chinese question.Such papers as these youngsters mustprepare are millstones about the neck,f primary education, though wherethey are required considerable work issupposed to fall on the teacher outsidethe four hour limitin reading and cor-recting them. Still, if we put theteachers actual hard work at five anda half hours daily, with a week of fivedays 'and a year minus 165 days, wemake out a case for Mr. Stone whichseems unanswerable.

:;

When the "Maru" steamers go offthe! trans-Pacif- ic route,' it will makea difference in the import business oflocal Japanese merchants. It is doubt-ful if the Pacific Mail and O. & O.liners, in the event of a Russian block-ade, would afford much if any relief.They might avoid Japan and do busi-ness with the treaty ports of Chinaand with Manila only. Among thepossibilities of war in the Orient is ascarcity of Japanese food products hereand a higher price for tea.

The legislative grafters were all onthe. street yesterday, smiling likesharks in the expectation of a deadhorse. They thought they scented anextra session.

,

Judge Dickey, the- Sunny Jim of theJudiciary, held on to his commissionto good purpose. Observe "the smilethat won't come off."

fiir,Wj rnhhoriHS and the lik on '

Kaua are notning unusual. With awhiskey ring, a gambling ring, a cor- - I

rupt police force and all sorts of dev- - j

UTTER&

,

NEW SPRING CHURNING.Crystal Springs spring butter is now here, sweet as the clovertn" h aSndais' Jt will be the best part of breakfast,

. mmTel. Main 45 eiropolitan Meat Go., Tel. Main 45

LIMITED.--:-

you can obtain an up-to-d- ate office in the new ALEXANDER YOUNG BUILDING f f20 asfper month and upwards. The price includes hot and coldThe ew-firepr-

,f

warehouse back of .he Young liuiWintt'noStfe.ielevator, and storage room may be obtained cn application to the agents of the building

THE VON riAMM-yoUN- G CO, LTD.'

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THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL' ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, JANUARY 14,1904.

I ...-..-- - r--

YARDLEVS COMPLIMENTS TO JACK ATKINSON. Bishop &Co., BankersO ESTABLISHED IN 1S58.

i ., :

o BANKING DEPARTMENT.o Transact business iu all departments

of banking.o o Collections carefully attended to.o 6 Exchange bought and sold.o o fcCommercial and Travelers Letters ofo o Credit issued on the Bank of Califor-

niao o and X. M. Rothschild & Sons,London.o v,ii -- si'onue.Tis: me jan or uau- -"Pit is the most exciting of all o fornia. Pommirrlal UiTiVinw Co. of

games that have become popular Sydney, Ltd., London.o Oifads." o A I Drafts and cable transfers on ChinaBoston Herald. and Japan through the Hongkong and

For sale by-- o o o Shanghai Banking Corporation ando o Chartered Bank of India, Australia axdChina,o

ooolPrr o

ooooooo

ooo

f

o9o9

Interest allowed on term deposits atthe following rate, per annum, viz:

Seven days' notice, at 2 per cent.Three months, at 3 per cent.Six months, at per cent.Twelve months, at 4 per cent.

- TRUST DEPARTMENT.Act as Trustees under mortgages.Manage estates, real and personal. .

Collect rents and dividends.Valuable papers, wills, bonds, etc,

received for safe keeping.ACCOUNT DEPARTMENT.

Auditors for corporation-- and pri-vate firms.

Books examined and reported on.Statements of affairs prepared.Trustees on bankrupt or insolvent

estates. JtOffice, 924 Bethel street.SAVINGS DEPARTMENT.Deposits received and interest allow-

ed at 44 per cent per annum. In ac-

cordance with rules and regulations,copies of which may be obtained onapplication. .

INSURANCE DEPARTMENTAgents for FIRE. MARINE, LIFE.

ACCIDENT, and EMPLOYES' LIA-BILITY INSURANCE COMPANIES.

Insurance Office, 924 Bethel Street.

1

f - yr

9oo6o

9o6

-- 000000K00-0

THE SCHOOL QUESTION

K0000

HonblQln People Are Respect-foll- y

Asked to Answer

These Qaestions.

Is there anything in the evidence ofone"S sensesr

Is there anything In the testimony ofone's friends? "f

Can reliance be placed upon state-ments from people we know?

Are the opinions of local citizens ofany greater moment than those ofstrangers?

Would you sooner believe people liv-ing in some far-aw- ay place than resi-dents of your own city?

We think not! for. home proof caneasily be investigated.

Mr. W. J. Maxwell of this town, Tru-ant officer, writes thus: "I sueffredwith a horrible pain in the small ofmy back (an almost invaraible symp-tom of kidney trouble) for a number ofyears. I was advised to take some ofDoan's Backache Kidney Pills, and fol-lowing the suggestion, I went to thoHollister Drug Co.'s store. Fort street,and got some of these. Having takenthem, they relieved me straight away,and are, I may say, the best and in factthe only cure for backache. I havementioned the virtue of this wonderfulremedy to several persons, amongwhom is my friend, Mr. Frank Metcalf,who found relief, and he is now a firmbeliever in Doan's Backache KidneyPills."

Doan's Backache Kidney Pills aresold by all chemists and storekeepersat 50 cents per box, six boxes $2.50, orwill be mailed on receipt of price bythe Hollister Drug Co., Honolulu,wholesale agents for the HawaiianIslands.

REAL ESTATETRANSACTIONS

HONOLULU, OAHU.Recorded Jan. 11, 1904.

Virginia Heally, t als. to A. G. dePasos, D. Realty Mokauea, Kalihi,5000 sq. ft.; $1.00. Dec. 7, 1903. I

Hu Poo" to fhang A. Chong, Rel.Realty at Auwaiolimu, 24-1- 00 acre;$2000.00. Jan. 9, 1904.

T. Ito to O. Shioda, c. m. Newspaperknown as "The Honolulu News" andprinting plant at 11S1 River St., $300.00.Dec. 4, 1903.

Chang A. Chong & wf. to Shiro Nis- -

nnnATrn talcum

i w. C,7 vVx-v-t-- -'

0000a0C -0-

we started at lessons at 8:30 a. m. andfinished, if we were not "kept in," at4 p. fn., with a cold lunch at noon. Aproposition like this would send thecold shivers down the back of someof our modern teachers, but would Ithave that effect on the parents? Tryus. ,

V , CD. STONE.

WHAT IS A COUGH?A spasmodic effort to expel the mucus

from the bronchial tubes. A cold causesa more abundant secretion of mucus,1and when the lungs and bronchial tubesare Inflamed, they are extremely sensi-- jtive to the Irritation. Unless care is!taken, the cold may result in pneu-- 1

monia, which is swift and deadly. If j

the cold is a lingering one, the more'leisurely but equally fatal consumptionmay set in. . Do not neglect a cold orcough. Take Chamberlain's CoughRemedy. It always cures and curesquickly. Benson,- - Smith & Co., Ltd.,Wholesale Agents sell it.

Bt. Douglass.'Twas the night before Christmas,And all through the house,Not a creature was stirring,Not even a mouse.When mama awoke with a start and

a shake,And wondered why papaWhs so wide awake;Aci ambling and roaringSoon came to their earsA noise that would follow them,All through their years.For down near the bath roomThe water rushed out,And it caused poor papaAnd mama to shout. --

"Oh, why did we make such a fearfulmistake;"

"Oh, John dear, I fear thatMy poor heart will break,Unless you will promiseThat tomorrow you'll callBath, the plumber, and have himGo over It all.And then no more leaks,For we know" that 'tis true,That folks always call BathWhen there's plumbing to do."

Phone 61.-

Half hourly cars up the Heights con-nect with Rapid Transit.t

New Year's Advertiser ready for mail-n- g

at 5c each to be had at the office

IT

AA Positive

andRecommended

-

Other toiiet,

der. Trie

C ON count! ejure of pttinsr

FOR SA- L- BT All. DRCCCISTR. ivtTAr nf ti A

Wall, Nichols CoLIMITED.

Th Worth ofthe floney

The Complete happiness and satisfactionthat is found in every box of HonoluluCandy Company's Candy makes theprice of it money well spentA 6-l-b. Box of PURE MIXED CANDY

for $1.00.A 6-l-b. Box of FRENCH MIXED

CANDY for $1.50. -

A 5-l- b. Box' of FRENCH MARSH-- .MALLOW DROPS for $1.50.

New Year's Cakes,Pies and Pastry.

New England BakeryHotel Street near Bethel.

HOMEPLEASURES

Have an added charm where allthe family enjoy the drinking f agood beer, t ,

It makes a prince drink and thereis new strength and vigor in everydrop.

Eafnler Bottling Works.AGENTS FOR HAWAII.

Phone White ,1331. P. O. Box 157

Fresh Fruits and Vegetables: AT :

C. Q. Yeo Hop & Co.

Received by the last steamer

Turnips, Naval Oranges, Cran-berries, Chestnuts, Oregon Ap-

ples, Frozen Oysters.We also have a fine line of HOLI-

DAY GOODS, FANCY CANDIES andBON BONS. TURKEYS and SUCK-LING PIGS.

Rahikinni MeatAND GROCERY.

Blue , 2511 TELEPHONE Blu 2511Corner Beretania and Alakea 3(s.

Barber's SuppliesRAZORS All kinds and sizes.STROPS The very latest styles.SHAVING SOAPS. SHAVING

STICKS, WITCH HAZEL, COLOCREAMS, TALC AND VIOLET POW-

DERS, HAIR TONICS. BAY RUM.

LEWIS & CO., LTD.THE BIG GROCERS.

769 King St. The Lewers & CookeBldg. 240 2 Telephones 240.

E. RowePainting In all its branches. Paper-bangi- ng

and Decorating. King andAlaiea Streets. P. O. Box 293.

AH PAT & CO- -

193 South King, near Alakea.MERCHANT TAILORS.

Expert cutter, formerly with J. lTregloVn. Cleaning and repairing

'

Bpeclalty.

mi CBAMW AND D7EIN5 WOSS

Fort St.. OW"gr23iiTTA.ve your

Tailoring. The renewingtag. Priee. W ltw.specialty.lot-I- n,? aphone White 88B.

oooo69o6

o

hi, mtg. Realty at Auwaiolimu, 24-1- 00

acres; $450.00. 4 mon. at S percent. an. As additional security forpayment of $450.00 the mtgr assigns tomtge rents from bldgs on above prem-ises as follows: 1st, 2 months $65.00 amon. and $50.00 every month there-after till whole amount is'pd. Jan. 9,

1904. . '

Charles E. Moore & wf. to Q. H. ;Ber-re- y,

c. m. on machine shop, UnioHj St.;$30000. 6 mon. at 1 per ce.nt per mon.Jan. 11, 1904.

Chang A. Chong & wf. to Hu Poo,mtg. Realty at Auwaiolimu, 24-1- 00

acre; ?1600.00, 2 yrs. at 8 per cent. Jan.11, 1904.

Luke' Mon "Wan, assigned int. inSang Chong Lung Co. (butchers) andleasehold at Kalihi to Lee Sing .

M. J. Alexander, mtgee gives noticeof. intention to foreclose mtg and ofsale of land of Elizabeth K. Smith,mtgr. ,

C. Bolte, Tr. mtgee gives notice ofintention to foreclose mtg. and of Saleof land of M. F. Lucas, mtgr.

F. A. Schaefer, mtgee. gives notice ofintention to foreclose mtg. and of saleof land of T. Masnda, mtgr.

H. Renjes, mtgee gives notice of in-

tention to foreclose mtg. and of saleof land in Honolulu of T. Masiida,mtgr. ,

H. Renjes. mtgee gives notice of in-

tention to foreclose mtg. and of saleof land in Honolulu of T. Ozawa, mtgr.

Schumann Carriage Co., Ltd. givesnotice of intention to sell and of saleof 1100 shares of capital stock of Hono-lulu Stockyards Co., Ltd., of W. S.Withers.

EWA, OAHU.O. R. & L. Co. to Bishop of Zengma,

D lots 7 to IS, inclusive, blk 3S, PearlCity, $2,000. Dec. 30, '03. i

KAILUA, HAWAII.In the matter of the estate of Ng

Sun Akana, deceased, order of noticeof hearing petition for probate of willon Feb. 17, '04, at 10 a. m.

DISTRICT COURT.G. Akuna vs. Sang Chong Lung, asat.

$50.00 note.C. W. Booth vs. Ah Wai, Chee Kau,

alias Si Yuck and Wong Wa Kee, as.st.$175.00 rent and summary possession.

C. W. Ashford vs. Hon. Rapid Trans.& Land Co., Ltd., asst. $300.00 damage.

H. Hackfeld & Co., Ltd. vs. S. Shu-mamot- o,

asst. $244.65 notes. Settled outof court.

Emil Keemmed vs. C. H.'WiHs, asst.judg. for pltff, $32.70. Rent.

TONGS ?1C OH I,

VmEvery inch one pushes off beyond the

normal distance of twelve inches, aftereye failure begins, means an inch ofdanger.

Ninety-nin- e persons out of a hundredmay do it safely; you may be --he onewho can't.

Those having the best eyes when oldage comes will be those who heed thefirst call for help.

A. N. SANFORD,OPTICIAN

BOSTON BLDG., FORT ST.,Over May Jt fj.t

Eyesight Testing and Spectacle P"ittingare our Exclusive Work.

Qillman rfous j

Roquet cigars I

SKAVSR LUNCH ROOMSH. J. SOtTB.

Honolulu, Jan. 13, 1903.

Editor Advertiser: One of the mostglaring mistakes in our school systemis the small work required at thenands of the teachers. Have you everfigured it out? The school calendarhas just been published by the Boardof Education for the coming year andit will be interesting "to see Jiow verylittle ground the impudent assertionof the teacher "that he is overworked"has to stand on. Every holiday, relig-

ious --tnd patriotic," is taken advantageof. In the 365 days of, the year afterMr. Pedagogue has his ' summer, mid-

winter and Easter holidays, he haslabored (?) less than 200 of themactually teaching school! In those200 days he has worked at actualteaching on an average day of 4 hourssteady work making a total of a year'swork at a year's wages of 800 hours.In the banks and business houses, thegovernment offices, the mercantilehouses, the work shops and, In fact,most of the positions in this city, menare working steadily the year throughseven to eight hours a day, or from2200 to 2400 hours a year. 13 it not afair question to ask whether the teach-

ers of the Territory are earning theirsalaries, especially when they turnback to the parent, the pupil to bereally taught at home?? ' '

I have had the same bitter exper-

ience as those of hundreds of otherLparents in this city. "Home-work- "

has been the bane of my existence forsome years past and the stand yourpaper has made in behalf of the suffer-

ing freeholder and taxpayer has strucka responsive chord in my family. To

have one of your children in tears be-

cause he couldn't understand the pe-

culiar system of working out an arith-metical problem when you are tiredout with your day's work was(a cir-

cumstance in many of the Honoluluhomes in the past. But we now un-

derstand that ours is not the only'stupid boy or girl that has to. do"home-work- ," but that the shirking ofthe teacher's duty has been .the ex-

perience of most of our people.One could, however, forgive. In the

inaptitude of J;he scholar, the desire ofthe teacher to have him taught athome, if he did not know hovr littletime the teacher really gave to hispupils. The above figures will showit.

One word more. We all have thedeepest respect for the teacher whomthe above does not apply to. We allknow her. The earnest, affectionate,devoted teacher! She is praised allover the city and "her works followher." Her rooms are always crowdedwith pupils and she don't bother theparents of her pupils with work forthe child to do at home.

There is the other one. The headsome time of the whole system, givingmost of his time to editing a daily pa-

per or booming a resort for rheumatics,or the flighty young woman on thestill hunt for a holiday or two o'clock

in the afternoon that she may forgetuntil 9 o'clock next morning the fewhours that she has spent with her pu-

pils.Where are the good old days of our

childhood when we trudged throughtwo feet of snow In this same monthof January forty years ago. We know

The. Hawaiian Trust Co's SafeDeposit Vaults are provided withTIME LOCKS and all Modern lm-- j

provemenU.

rsr QMw?3 60F43iS!5A3 centsifiOrPr;"f"ll aulrtssfffS-fe- i month

Iilliif923 Fort at

WM. G. IRWIN & CO., LTD.

Wm. G. Irwin... President and ManagerClaus Spreckels First Vice-Preside- nt

W. M. Giffard... Second Vice-Preside- nt

H. M. Whitney, Jr. .Treasurer and Sec.George W. Ross AuditorSugar, Factors and Commission Agents

AGENTS FOR THEOceanic Steamship Company

' Of San Francisco, Cal.

AGENTS FOR THEScottish Union & National Insurance

Company of Edinburgh.Wilhelma of Magdeburg General In

surance Company.Associated Assurance Company of

Munich & Berlin.Alliance Marine & General Assurance

Co., Ltd., of London.Royal Insurance Company of Liver-

pool, Alliance Assurance Company ofLondon.

Rochester German Insurance Com-pany of N. Y.

WM. G. IRWIN & CO., LTD.

AGENTS FORWestern Sugar Refining Co., San

Francisco, Cal.Baldwin Locomotive Works, Philadel-

phia, Pa.Newell Universal Mill Co.. Manufac-

turers of National Cane Shredder, NewYork, N. Y.

Paraffine Paint Company, San Fran-cisco, Cal. -

Ohlandt & Co., San Francisco, Cal.Pacific Oil Transportation Co., San

Francisco, Cal.

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

Merchants.LIST OF OFFICERS.

C. M. Cooke, President; George :.Robertson, Manager; E. F. BUhop,Treasurer and Secretary; Col. W.Allen, Auditor; P. O. Jones, H. WaUr-hous- e.

O. a. Carter, Director.

HAWAII SHINPO SHA.

THE PIONEERoffice. The publisher of Hawaii

Shinpo, the nly dally Japanese paprpublished In the Territory of Hawaii.

C. SHIOZAWA. Proprietor.Y. SOGA. Editor.

Editorial and Printing Office 1M

Smith St., above King. P. O. Box MXTelephone --lain 48- -

HONOLULU IRON WORKS.T COMPANY. I

RTKLAM KGINKP !

BOILERS. SUGAR MILLS. COOL-- M

n, BRASS AND LEAD CASTTNGfla,Bd machinery of every descriptioiaTUu!e to order. Particular atUntloStpaid to ahip'a Macksmfthlng. .o wotxcatd 00 akortest notkw. '

ft "

Beautifies the Complexion JDELIGHTFUL AFTER BATHING.

LUXURY AFTER SHAVINC.Relief for Prickly Heat. Chafing, Sunhurn

Aching Keel, and all atEictio--s of theS:n. Jby eminent Physicians and Kuis as

At.. ?. narf.t v viriri 4

ToiletPowderforlnfantsand Adults, irK. Afr-fi- .n . it 1 irtt!Tfl'' Hiffrwnt from a:i

infan and complexion powders- - It ctrntAins no 5er imiaQM 10 common in oruuwj i v

- rml...nan merit or j.r.i t xr-- c' - wtt.- -- v - - -lien auu K

Imitations, mtnt rwM. ;e cerou.tho g&ai&e. look tor Idennca aco on um

box. -

GERHARD MENNEN CHEMICAL CO., Newark, K. J.. U. A. 5vvvwvvvvvvvvwvvvvvvyvvvvvvw

Depot: HOBRON DRUG COMPANY.

CHINESE AND JAPANESE

Received by last steamer. It will pay you to come in and see ournew Goods.

OBIEHTAIi : BAZAARKING STREET.

Page 6: UBLIC OP p0K iransport-- service. - University of Hawaiievols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/43570/1/1904011401.pdf · WEATHER FORECAST FOR TODAY. SUGAR 96w Centrifugals,

PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, JANUARY 14,, 1904.THE

0CK00XDP1NI0MS UPON Varicocele Ruins tlie lives of Ihousonds of MenLEGALfacts here set forth. Every right-mind- ed

person will agree that such acondition of things ought not to con-tinue in our midst, and that decisiveaction is urgently called for. ThisBoard has again and again called at- -

oooooo00000

HOSPITALThat's what's dragging your life out. That's

what is making you so tired, so listless andstupid. That's what is robbing you of yourstrength, your nerve force, your ambition. It isdraining the very sap out of your body and will

make a wreck of you in time. Cure it now be-fore it ffoes too far on you.

I Ouier-jRftr-i-fc- c u r--3

I have cured thousands after the knife hadfailed. Don't be cut and ruined. Let me cureyou naturally. M3' Electric Belt works direct-

ly upon the swollen veins by a special at-tachment. It removes the dead blood and gives

IS0

t v

District Attorney General Peters Holds Special

Appropriations at Extra Session Are

Illegal The Cemeteries.it)

"N8' "vfigafrooiiS circulation. It Is a certain cure.

Carson City, Nev.DR. McLAUGHLIN Dear Sir: I can truthfully state that I have

not felt the least bit of pain sii -- e I commenced your treatment, andthe varicocele is, to all appearances, cured. I think the Belt a won-der, and its convenience of application remarkable. I gladly rec-ommend the treatment to all sufferers.

WM. DECKER. JR.It will cure you, too. Come to me now, and it will be the hap-

piest day of your life. If you can't call,, send for my book. It willtell you if you are afflicted. Consultation free.

j (; $

dr..m. g. Mclaughlin,OFFICE HOURS 8 a. m.

oooooo

0CO0OOOOO-OOOOCOOOOO-- f ,

i

eu UBSIOIES

The Maternity Home occupies thesame position in relation to the Gov-ernment as the Queen's Hospital. Andupon the same grounds as stated in theopinion of this department in relationto that institution, of even date here-with, am of the opinion that the ap-propriation in question is illegal as notwithin the, scope of legislative author-ity exercised in extra session under theOrganic Act.

I have the honor to be, sir, ,Veryrespectfully yours,

E. C. PETERS,Deputy Attorney General.

ON GOVERNMENT HOSPITALS.Honolulu, T. H., January 7, 1904.

Dr. C. B. Cooper, President of theBoard of Health, Honolulu, . H.

Sir: In reply to the request of yourdepartment for an opinion as to thelegality of the appropriations in favorof the Eleele Hospital, Waimea Hospital, Malulani Hospital and Hilo Hos-pital, in the amounts set opposite therespective names, as contained in Act13 of the session laws of the extra ses-sion of 1903, have the honor to say:

In those cases in which the hospitalis purely a government institution andunder the direct supervision of yourdepartment or its duly authorizedagents, the appropriation is legal, andcoming within the terms of Sec. 54 ofthe Organic Act, providing for appro-priations "for the current running ex-penses of carrying on the Govern-ment." On the other 'hand, those hos-pitals which are private institutions,arid receive the appropriations simplyas a gratuity, are not entitled to it un-- !

der the law, and should not receive itI have the honor to be, sir,

Very respectfully yours,E. C. PETERS,

Deputy Attorney General.

CONSIDERATION. DEFERRED.Dr. Cooper suggested that, as the

knocking out of the County Act putthe Board in a different position fromthat it held when the opinions w.?re re-

quested, the only thing to be done wasto receive, and file the commmf ca ,

tions. 19 1

It was voted, on motion ofSmith, seconded by Dr. Mays , . ff fijVA

communications be received andaeterred until the next meeting. ofBoard. if:

Dr. Cooper reported orally forcommittee on Government physic

QOF GOOD THINGS FOR THETABLE o?

Ask your grocer for a bottle of

Heinz Sweet

906 MARKET tT..Above Ellis, t?n Francisco.

to 8 p. in.; Sundays, 10 to 1.

Pickles:o:--

& CO., LTD.

COOKS COOKSCOOKS COOKS

COOKS COOKSCOOKS COOKS

COOKS COOKS

Mineral WaterCOOKS COOKS

COOKS COOKSCOOKS COOKS

COOKS COOKSCOOKS COOKS

BICIFELDDISTRIBUTORS.

4

COOKS COOKS COCOOKS COOKSCOOKS COOKSCOOKS COOKS .COOKS COOKS

COOKS

aI

If yoa are young,you natural Jy ap-pear so.

If you are old.why appear so?mi 4 Ayer"s Hair Vigorwill surely restorecolor to your- - grayhair, and Tviil give

to it all thewealth andJmmM gloss,of ear-ly life. Itwill stopfalling ofthe hairalso; andwill keep

the scalp clean and healthy, entirelyfree from dandruff.

And it makes the hair grow thickand long. This is because it is a hair-foo- d,

giving to the hair just what itAeeds to make it grow as nature in-

tended.

Ayer's Hair Vigor.There's a pleasure in offering to you

such a preparation ; while you will cer-tainly feel a sense of security in usingsomething that others have used forhalf a century.

Do not be deceived by cheap imita-tions which will only disappoint you.Make sure that you get the genuineAyer's Hair Vigor.Prepared by Or.' J. C. Ayer 4 Co., Lowell. Mass., U.S.A.

HOLLISTER DRUG CO., Agents.

If p'You

Are MInterested InKodaks

Come and snap some of thenew ones now in stock.

Kodakery is only photogra-phy made easy. We have themnew from $5.00 upward;Brownies $1 and $2.

HONOLULUPhoto Supply Co.

FOBT STREET

Popular Novels for Evening Hours

The book store is always afascinating place td roamthrough but seldom more sothan now. Here are new ar-rivals:

"The Boss," Alfred HenryLewis.

"Peggy O'Neal," Alfred Hee-r- y

Lewis. .

"The Five Nations," Kipling."Two Little Savages," E.

Thompson Seton."The Yellow Van," Whiting."In Babel," Geo. Ade."That Printer of Udells,"

Harold Bell Uright."The Way to the West,"

Hough."The Heart of Rome," Craw-

ford.

HAWAIIAN NEWS CO.,

LIMITED.YOUNG BUILDING STORE.

PIANO TALKCome and hear of our

easy . payment plan ofowning a Kroeger piano.

Bergstrom Music Co.. Lti- -

:

Fire InsuranceThe B. F. Dillingham Co., Ltd.

, General Agents for HawaiiAtlas Assurance Company of London,Phoenix Assurance Company of Lon-

don.New York Underwriters' Agency.Providence Washington Insurance

Company.Phoenix Insurance Company of Brook-

lyn.ALBERT RAAS, Manager.

Insurance Department , office, fourth' floor, Stangenwald Building.

. Phone White 801. P. O. Box

, '.' 118 King St., near Maunakea,"HOUSE PAINTING, Contractors and

Builders, Paper Hanging and Decorat-4- n

done by first class workmen.

NOTICE.

WOMAN OR GIRL NEEDING'is invited to communl4td or advice,

eJte. either in person or by letter. wltSCS M. Undm.tL Salvation Armv Wonum' Tn.

bPtvrn '--tr trpet.YU Home, -

fean and McCully street.Honolulu.

I tention to the magnitude the evil is as-suming and the danger to public healthit involves. There is every reason tobelieve that the managers of the sev- -,

eral city cemeteries will be foundI ready to work in harmony with thisI Board and the county authorities in amatter so deeply concerning the publicwelfare.

The Board of Supervisors of this! County, acting under the advice of this

Board of Health, have full jiower toiupc ilh bucq uimt'uiue.their powers and duties, as set forthin Chapter 8 of the County Act, wereaa :

"Section 24. To make and enforcewithin the limits of the County all lo-

cal police, sanitary and other regula-tions, not in conflict with the generallaws of the Territory, or the rules andregulations of the Board of Health."

In Section 16 we also read :

"The Board of Supervisors shall adoptall orders made or recommended bythe Territorial Board of Health for thepreservation of the public health of thecounty."

In San Francisco this question hast recently been brought to a finish, andj a reference thereto, may not be out otJ place. It may be remarked in passingthat the conditions confronting us hereare decidedly, worse than those that ledto such decisive action there.

On" the recommendation of the Boardof Health the Supervisors of that citypassed an ordinance making it unlaw-ful for any person or association tobury the dead body of any person with-in the city and county of San Francisco, from and after the 1st day ofAugust, 1901. Penalties were attachedfor violation of this ordinance. Thereupon a plot owner in one of the citycemeteries, backed by the wealthycemetery association, commenced suito declare voftt the ordinance andenjoin the authorities from its enforcement. The Superior Court found theordinance valid, and, "appeal was takento the Supreme Court. Here defeatagain awaited him. The Supreme Courtconfirmed the decision of the loercourt, declaring that the power of tJiauthorities to prohibit burials in citycemeteries is unquestioned, and Watthe ordinance in question was aYlIdexercise of the police power. H"!

Your committee offer the followirigroamiir 1 rm a or1 voviuiiviidi f j

Resolved: That the Board of Hklthcall the attention of the Board of Supervisors of Oahu County to the oyercrowded and insanitary condition ofthe cemeteries in this city, and earnestly ask their in abating theevil.

Resolved: T this Board, in theinterests of 1 health and decency,advise the clc'' I by ordinance, of allme cicy cemf 'as 10 iuriner nuerments from .Jafter a certain datesaid date to lkdetermined and fixedtr the Board Supervisors.

Fiesolved: TJiit inasmuch of. . s 1 . . .

as one....cemeteries fwitnin tne city limits,Sown as the Mikiki cemetery, is own- -

s Board 'ecommends that c theard of Supervisors begin the good

ork by closing said government cemery at Makiki to further burials as

oon as possible, and that a site in lieuf same be selected from the public

a city.(Signed) W. H. MAYS,(Signed) C B. COOPER,

Committee.

FOUNDED IN HONOUR.No doubt you have seen in the

papers such announcemeiita asthis concerning some medicine orother: "If, on trial, you writethat this medicine has done you Ino good we will refund yourmoney." Now, we have neverhad reason to speak in that wayconcerning the remedy named inthis article. In a trade exten-ding throughout ' the world, no-body has ever complained thatour medicine has failed, or askedfor the return of his money. Thepublic never grumbles at hon-estly and skillfully made bread,or at a medicine which really iand actually does what it ?.wasmade to do. The foundations of f

VVAMPOLE'S PREPARATIONare laid in sincerity and honour,the knowledge of which on thepart of the people explains itspopularity and success. There isnothing to disguise or conceal.It was not dreamed out, or dis-covered by accident; it was stu-died out, on the solid principlesof applied medical science. It i3palatable as hoDey and containsall the nutritive and curativeproperties of Pure Cod- - LiverOil. extracted y U3 from freshcod livers, combined with theCompound Syrup of ITypophoe-phite- s

and the Extracts of Maltand Wild Cherry. This remedyis praised by all who have em-ployed it in any of the diseasesit is recommended to relieve andcure, and is effective from thefirst dose. In Anemia, Scrofula,Xervous and General Debility,Influenza, La Orippe, and Throatand Lung Troubles, it is a spe-cific. Dr. Thos. Hunt Stuckysays: "The continued use of itin my practice, convinces methat it is the most palatable,least nauseating, and best prep-aration now on the market."You can take it with the assur-ance of getting well. One bottleproves its intrinsic value. " Yourannot be disappointed in it."Sold by all chemists everywhere.

5EWIYR0YAL PILLS T

j r i n'i(.'.nrr ;.mu- -

dispensary and subsidized hospitiUsiands outside

Before more than half the order of

business was overtaken the Board of

Health adjourned yesterday. This wason account of a telephonic request of

the president to attend a conferencecalled by the Governor. Three opin-

ions from the Attorney General's de-

partment were read, which are of greatimportance with regard to the appro-

priations for hospitals. A report of

the committee on cemeteries was alsopresented, which, though written un-

der the presumption that the County

Act would be sustained, contains tell-

ing facts that will be useful in any

further consideration of the subject.With Dr. Cooper, president, there

were present Fred. C. Smith, Dr. W. H.Mays and John C. Lane, members; Dr.J. S. B. Pratt, chief health officer; C.

Charlock, secretary, and Miss MaeWeir, stenographer.

Following are various legal opinionabove mentioned:

ON QUEEN'S HOSPITAL.Honolulu, T. H., January 7, 1904.

Hon. C. B. Cooper, President ofBoard of Health, Honolulu, T. H.

Sir: In answer to the verbal requestof your department, as to whether ornot the appropriation of $30,000 to theQueen's Hospital at Honolulu, as con-tained In Act 13 of the session laws ofthe extra session of the Legislatureof the year 1903 was subject to repudi-ation by the Territory, have the honorto reply:

Sec. 54 of the Act of Congress provid-ing a Government for the Territory ofHawaii, approved Ai ril 30, 1900, pro-vides:

"That in case of failure of the Leg-islature to pass appropriation bills pro-viding for payments of the necessaryrunning expenses of carrying on thegovernment and meeting its legal ob-ligations as the same are provided forby the existing laws, the Governorshall, upon the adjournment of theLegislature, call it in extra session forthe consideration of appropriationbills."

The Queen's Hospital is not a Gov-ernment institution but a private cor-poration governed by a board of trus-tees, and financial obligations incurredby it are not "current expenses of car-rying on the government." Nor is aidto the hospital obligatory by virtue ofany existing laws. A debt of thatinstitution does not constitute a claimagainst the Territory. And I am con-sequently of the opinion that the ap-propriation of the sum of $30,000 for theQueen's Hospital is not within the le-

gitimate scope of legislative authoritywhile that body is in extra session.

I have the honor to be, sir.Very respectfully yours,

E. C. PETERS,Deputy Attorney General.

ON MATERNITY HOME.Honolulu, T. H., January 7, 1904.

Hon. C. B. Cooper, President of theBoard cf Health, Honolulu, T. H.

Sir: In reply to the verbal request ofyour department, .as to the legality ofthe appropriation of the sum of $7,000in favor of the Kapiolani Maternity-Hom- e

as contained in Act 13 of thesession laws of the extra session ofthe Legislature for the year 1903, havethe honor to say:

GRIP CON VALESCENCEThere's nothing better than

Scott's Emulsion after thegrip. When the fever is gonethe body is left weak and ex-

hausted; the nervous systemis completely run down andvitality is low.

Two things to do: givestrength to the whole bodyand new force to the nerves.Scott's Emulsion will do it;contains just what the worn-"ou- t

system needs.Rich blood, healthy flesh,

resistive force, more and betternourishment are what Scott'sEmulsion supplies to theconvalescent. a

Scott s Emulsion is theoriginal and has been thestandard emulsion of cod liveroil for nearly thirty years.Why buy the new, untried,cheap emulsions or so calledwines, cordials and extractsof cod liver oil, when you canbuy what is sure to help you?

We'll send you a sample free upon. request.SCOTT & BOWSE, 409 Pearl Street, New York.

be

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. 117

and Government wash-house- s. Hesaid that on Friday the committee metwith the board of supervisors and helda discussion that amounted to nothing.They adjourned till -- Sunday, when, af-ter a discussion lasting three hounjf icm

' "'-..1- . "" i c.i.nuintying or the County Act, how-ever, made all of the proceedings use-less. The Board would have to re-

sume its control over the different sub-jects of conference.

CONDITIONS OF CEMETERIES.Dr. Mays, from the committee on

closing of cemeteries, stated that onlysince entering the room had he learn-ed of the fate of the County Act. Hehad drawn up a report of the findings ,

of the committee, but some of them !

involved concurrent action by the late !

county supervisors. However, perhaps j

the Board might like to hear, the re-

port for the facts it gave on the pres- - j

ent condition of cemeteries. He h;ulnot seen the Attorney General to ob-

tain his signature.The president signed the report at

the meeting, when it was accepted andplaced on file. It reads as follows:

REPORT OF COMMITTEE.Honolulu, Hawaii. Jan. 11, 1004.

To the President and Members of th--

Territorial Board of Health.Tour committee appointed to investi-

gate the present over-crowd- ed and in-

sanitary condition of the cemeteries ofthis city present" the following factsand recommendations:

From the statistic s of the Chief Sani-tary Officer it appeals that from Sep-tember 1st. 1903. to I').-- , ...i.I. r 1st, li 3,

period of three months, thirty-seve- n

coffins were disturbed by the grave-digger- s.

Some of these coffins wereactually chopped in two, and part ofthe remains of their former occupants

ed beneath the new coffin.To dig a grave without disturbing

another coffin is becoming more andmore a matter of difficulty. As manyas three and four holes are sometimesdug and filled in again, before a spotof unoccupied soil can be found.

Some of the cemeteries, wholly or Inpart, lie so close to sea level that bythe time a grave is excavated to therequired depth of six feet, it will oftenbe half filled with standing water. Inthe past three months, five burials tookplace in which the coffins were entirelysubmerged. In such cases it is foundnecessary, before the interment can

completed, that two men shalldescend into the grave and stand uponthe coffin, one at either end. to weigh

down into the water until sufficientearth is thrown on.

Others of the cemeteries are locatedso unyielding a foundation that the

grave must he blasted out with dyna-mite. It is only a few week" aao that.

tne native cemetery at Kahhi. a j

dad bodv remained above groin d two (

. , . . ..v note ciays. winmg 1 ' 1 1 a crave v.';iblasted out of the solid rock. '

It is unnecessary to dilate upon the

FROM THE LITERARY BRANCH OF

The KIL0HANA ART LEAGUE

Telephones Wholesale 92.

Warerley Block. Bethel" Streit.

A neat and interesting souvenir of Havaii, neatly gottenup and handsomely bound.

The stories are ALL HAWAIIAN, having a distinct Islandflavor and apart from its value as a souvenir the book is aninteresting one.

FOR SALE BY

The Hawaiian Gazette Co. g

PRICE 25 CENTS.

FRED PHILP & BRO.

Manufacturers ofHarness, Saddles and Turf Goods.

txrpairm- - promptly attended to

TUP

Page 7: UBLIC OP p0K iransport-- service. - University of Hawaiievols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/43570/1/1904011401.pdf · WEATHER FORECAST FOR TODAY. SUGAR 96w Centrifugals,

1 -

5 'G?I i If 'I

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERT! HONOLULU, JANUiJf 14, 1904.i

I2O0 bales FAMOUS WAR C9RRESP0ND -l A S - I 1

1 1! f 1 1 1Commissioner's Salt

OF VALUABLE li.EAL. i:TA1X STTVATE IX THE 1IST 1UCT

KON'A. ISLAND tF UJ-WA- 1I.

TEK!1IT.RY tF UAWA.

! ENT5 HASTENING TO FRONT

barrelsCrttf 'H.

Freder 2.er ii tr.e war err es- -

fj r!i3er.t C .'ier- - Week!;'-ie- r

arfivils for Hon-- I

I wtre Mr- - 7...: tv, I . KaWiir.s. vv:tcDi?tri-:- t A::; --

?- v, n id- -;tn ei :n r.rricep :r .

Conn.. 01 lrna Otnnir.shan of!

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lr im . .

ice If r m

ifcie lor til sc. v, im

f4 It tbos n.ak S U. cj,r us.rosii ic. LSii closes a thick-Isor-

atpnwtfe to replaceiarmer lJua kir.gentlemen win fcisoEn4 it ao irestimabj. boonto tnm. aa it irk i.l

J jmciit be proud ot "ron.

. ILLSrtra.iiII?!in'y Rood II

For Sak at an FM3aj. Drag Stores, j

HOIX1STEB lRUO CO LTD.cta,

BY AUTHORITY.SEALED TENDERS,

Sealed Tenders will be received by

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th0.P?i?tenaen "o ..H' rV?!?jhay 'wind prevailing off shore theuntil 12 m. of Monday, the 1st of Feb'tbow of the vessel sagged Ewa ward andruary, for construc-ttnf- f school --house at 500,1 kne tightened and strained al- -

' Wailuka ' Maui - .' . Irnost to the breaking point. There was

' 1 a scurrving of peopJe from the dsneer--Plans and specifications on file in.'.ouf lociry -- and Captain Niblack, who

oSce of Superintendent of Public was on the dock, requested every one to"Works. Honolulu; also in office of Set away from the hawser. The lineSchool Agent Mrs. E. U Austin. Wal-fwa- 5 dipped "P d down, striking the

! dock with tremendous force, bat luckilyluku. Ma UL v j remained intact. In order to get theThe Superintendent reserves the right Siberia in the dock, a coal barge along--,

to reject any and all bids. Tenders to! side the cableship Eurnicde was slipped

t r- - lit f .,.C Ji ". - i

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41

1 .

The big- - Pacific Mail liner Siberia ar-

rived in port yesterday afternoon fromSan Franrico with a heavy list of pas-

sengers both for Honolulu and throxtghfor the Orient. The vessel left SanFrancisco at 5 a. m. on the morning ofJanuary B. having been delayed for pas-

sengers, and mails. One of the lastpassengers was a war correspondentfrom London, for whom the vessel washeld.. '.' t ; - ' , -

The voyage of the Siberia was a pleas-

ant one, unattended by rough weather.The ship docked at Naval Dock Xo. 1

owing to the Bishop dock being crowd-ed with oriental freight. The Siberiadeparts for the Orient at 9. o'clock thismorning.'

The incoming of the big liner becameinteresting to the big crowd of peoplewaiting for the vessel to dock. As theSiberia came past the lighthouse a four-inc- h

hawser was sent ashore andf wrapped around the stanchion 2t the

astern- -:

Jsengers is the record of she Siberia thistrip unusual for this time of the year.

rqjrcsenuDg mc .xamiiier; rtrrcivai r.Philipps. representing the London Ex-press; Captain Lionel James and Mr.Frazer, representing tee London Times;Sheldon-WriIIiam-s. representing the Lcn--don Sphere ; .0. K. Davis. the magazinew"ter, representing the New York Her- -

XJU.Earl Shaw, ; son ;of the Secretary- - of

the Treasury, was to have been a pas-senger for Hongkong, bat failed to makeconnections at San Francisco.

Frank W. Wakefield and bride, former-ly Miss Lena Sefton of San Diego, areon their honeymoon, trip to Hongkong,but . will ? stop over tn HonolHia for afew davs. Lieut. Leopold. LT. S. N., isen route to Cavite to join the Oregon.

Among the passengers for Hoflolulawere Robert Lewers.- - wbo rettrrrts froma lengthy" 'visit' orT the' irsarnhindT" JudgeGeorge D. Gear who made a round tripvis:t to California. Mrs. Gear win re-

turn on the Korea from San Francisco.Col. and Mrs. W". F. Allen, who spentseveral months in Southern California,are heme again; Mrs. J. B. Atherton,accompanied by daughter, KaeAtherton. returned from the mainland;J. V. Brewster, who recently marriedMiss Along, returned from New York;Mr. .and Mrs. John Era will make avisit in Honolulu: Mr. and Mrs. A. H.Fleming are wealthy people travellingfor pleasure; T. A. Hays returned froma six weeks, business trip to San Fran-cisco; Southard Hoffmann of the Cali-fornia Feed Companv. returned from ashort pleasure trip to his old home inCalifornia; Dr. and Mrs. F. HowardHumphris, after spending several monthsin England, were welcomed home by alarge delegation of friends: Mrs. M. A.Madsen is the wife of the master of theship, John Ena; joe Marsden. the welknown Honolulu kamaaina. will be herefor about six weeks, having been ab-e- nt

for about four years; Mrs.. George Mc- -

Leod. wire of the Fact he coa- -t represer- - i

be endorsed on envelope-"Proposa- ls foreebool-hous- e, "vTafluku.

C. S. HOLLOWAT,

LONDON. WAR CORRESPONDENT FOR THE EXAMINER.toupermtenfiemt- - of PudUc vVorks. 1 Prominent among the passengers are

Department of Public Works, Jan--1 war correspondents en route to Japan,nary 13. 1904. ,: egjjThey are Jack London, the novelisf,

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called suddenly from the Balkans, andspent only one day in London, en routeto San Francisco to take the Siberia.

The other correspondents are Fred-erick Palmer for Colliers Weekly, Per-civ- al

Phillips of the London Express,Sheldon Williams of the LondonSphere,

4

Kiuei Plantation Companj, Ltd.

ftQTJQr: Qp ANNUAL MEETING.

Ey order of the Board of Directorsof the Kihei Plantation Company, Lim-ited, the annual meeting of the saidcompany for the year 1S04 will be heldat the office of Alexander & Baldwin-Limite- d,

on the second floor of theStangenwald Building, on'- - Merchantstreet, in Honolulu, Territory of Ha-waii, at 10 o'clock a. m., on Friday,January 15, 104.

LORRIN A. --THURSTON,Sfcretary Kihei Plantation Company,

January 6, 19(4.

The foregoing proposed meeting iicalled pro forma to comply with theby-la- which require t!e annualmeeting to be held in January.

It is intended that an adjournmentof the meeting shall he taken to Tues-day. March 1st, 1S01. when reports willbe ready.

LORRIN A. THURSTON,66S2 i Secretary- -

MEETING NOTICE.

THE WAIMEA SUGAR MILLCOMPANY.

A special meeting of The WaimeaSugar Mill Company will be held in theassembly room over the offH-e-s tf Cas-tle & Cooke, Limited, in Honolulu, at j

10 o'clock a. m.. on the 2Sth d-- y ofJanuarj", for the rurpose of au-

thorizing the execution and delivery ofa. promissory note and mortgage secur-ing the same to Castle & Co-jke-. Lim-ited, for the outstanding indebtedness,and for any business in conniontherewith; also to SI? existing vacancies in the Board of Directors, onci totake such steps relative to the Ii-e- c

tors as may be necessary.By order of the President.

E. D. TEN NET,Secretary The Waimea Sugar Mill Co.

Ifonoiuiu. Oahu, H. T., Dec. 30th1903- -

ANNUAL MEETING.

NAHIKU SUGAR COMPANY, LTD J.J.

Bv order of the Board of Directors, j.the annual meeting of the Nahiku Suear Company, Ltd.. w-;- be hell at theorSce of the Company. Stangenwald j.building. Honolulu, on Friday, the 15th M.r.---v of Januarv. 19CL at 2 o'clock p. m.

H. ARMITAGE,Secretary.

Honolulu. Jan. 7. 1C-0-4. &S3

the

and? 3 ; ;

ii

Sa!t W C5y. who jCol. Cur.nir.ghim. here "He"c : en -

gaire in bu.einej in the :

An.'n;' thoe hoc-ke-

ITonoInlu are Senator Lec-- I

Brown ird Miss I re it I - - - v. awi!l spend a few weeks in Japan. Mr.and Mrs. Ff 'ten of Denver, who havebeen in Hnolnlti for the past month,continue tneir pleas-r- e tour to-da- onthe vessel.

Lehua's Boat Bmaahed.The steamer Lehua while at Molokai j

had a rough experience. One of her ,

boats was wrecked on the rocky shoreat KaJanpapa and a load of kerosene 1

and redwood posts was lost. The crew j

swam ashore safely. A hole was made j

in the bottom of the boat, but the craftwas hauled out later on and will berepaired. A sailor in another boat re-- j

ceived a wound on his forehead madeby a bucking oar. The Lehua did notland freight at Halawa on account of i

rough weather. The vessel brought toHonolulu yesterday morning 243 sheep,20 lambs and three packages of sun-dries.

Kauai Sugar.Purser Wright of the Mikahala, which

arrived from Kauai yesterday morning,reports the ship Henry Viliard arrivingat Eleele January n. The schoonerKailua had finished discharging her coalcargo at Eleele, and expects to sail Jan-uary 15. He reports the following sugaron Kauai ready; for shipment; Malt,9.700 bags; G. & R., 1.322; McB.. 15,-00- 0;

K P.. 24751 H. M., 1,440; L. P.,3; H. S. Co., 8S1 bags. .

The Mikahala's cargo comprised 400bags K. S. M. and 600 bags V. K sugar,100 bags rice, 70 bags rice bran, 54 emptybarrets, 11. barrels bottles, 12. bags bot-tles. 7 barrels poi, 40 bags taro andpackages sundries.

B. S. War Risks.The war risk on Japanese steam-

ships between Japan and Hongkongwas quoted , yesterday at 3-- 8 per cent;on American steamships from PugetSound to Siberia direct, 3-- 4 per cent.According to a cablegram receivedfrom Hamburg the German under-writers declined all risks on Japanesesteamships bound for Japan and onAmericans vessels for Siberia direct.Call.

... .Shipping Kotes.

The S. S. Oregon which was to" sailfrom Seattle for Honolulu on Janaarvt - .;ii . t

Young Bros. w-ii- F begin diving focrcoaj mis morning m iaval slip .No.ine coal was iost rrom a bare-- e whdaf'Evans's fleet was here. tJ

The Aorangi arrived yesterday fure-noo- n

from the Colonies and departedlate in the afternoon for Mctona andVancouver. She carried a smaJLl list ofpassengers!, with but one passenger for"Honolulu. Four hundred tons of freightwere on board for the North.

Capt. Weed on, formerly of the Xe-vada- n.

has been placed in command ofthe Xebrakan which is to sail on Jan-uary 20 from San Francisco for XewYork direct. The Xebraskan now has acapacity for 1C.CK0 .barrels of oil. Capt.Greene now commands the Xevadan.

A WOMAX TO BE PRETTY

Must Have Luxuriant and Glossy Hair,Xo Matter What Color.

The finest contour of a female face,the sweetest smile of a female mouth,loses something if the head is crownedwith scant hair. Scant and falling hair,it is now known, is caused by aparasite that burrows into the scalp tothe root of the hair, where it sarts thevitality. The little white scales the

throws up in bun-owin- g are calleddandreff. To cure dandrulT permanent -

ly, then, and to stop falling hair, that

a

ciae Co., ietroit, ucn.Hoilister Drug Co.. Special Agents.

SCHOOL BUSINESS

IS DISPATCHED

Reports e Boys' Industrial Schoolat Waialee were made bv Princiral Gib- -son at a Board of Education meetingvesterdav. There are 02 pupils.- the Ha- -

a ading among nationalities with4t, the next being Porto Ricans with16. One of the beys released on parole,- '

L-r'nn"l

-

Uay has a; topartment for employmen

Mrs. Dexter will take the superinterid- -he Girls' Industrial School atomorrow. There are only six to

pupils there, but Superintendent of Edu-cation A. T. Atkinson finds that themstitutK'n is aving a good moral ef-- of

among girls the nee'ected casscut -- ice.

The teachers comm. tee reported tnefollowing named ptrpi's ot the NormalSchoc-l- , to be tenenciaries c-- the legis-lative appropriation for aid to thewo"hv of that institution : Miss BebaHanamaikai. Robert Plurket Miss HeMarv Nailima. Miss L?uisa freeman.

Helen Ha.na. Ms?? Alice Ahana anaramrl Mrok-rs-t. 1 he aid is St

was lurtner recoinnits.x-r- ;th-- t direct assistance be given to a;

j cants in Kawaiahao Serrir.ary anditrlani Heme. The rer-cr-t was a dor.

Charee in the teach' rce w ere' reooned bv tn ten dent Atk:r

A. K;c :d succeecs c v

Catherine L'vr.

takes the place cf Mis Cartwrtght.the High Schoc-l-. J. N. Bell goesKihttk- -. Oahu. Mis?. Miry Colour-- ?

s;er; t'rem Kail'-a- . Hawaii, and Mi i ir.g.Marv In-- h from Mahukc-ns- .

Punsuaiu ta a Irvr mui Vr'tlw:Hon. J. T. IK? I F:rst JudsT f tfcr.Circuit Court of the First Juasiimi Cir-cuit, file! on ti day f Cr-t-e- r,

A. D. 11 S, f:s a jsf tlft;,John Vivkhav- - vs. Manu-- ; F. It.o- ar.d Kaaihue Kahu'.ar.ui; P:JJ i Porr--

i; 'se MortsMsrf... Kauitv riv5:.."3 N. rSJthe under. gii, as Cor.J.--- !

ario.ntr-d- . will exj-os- tor sc.1 he Auction, to the hi.h-- t U- to tor.ftm-.atioi- i by th tV&rc,

Oil.at if o cux--K so::x OF Oi U riAT,at the frort vrnauka) entfiUcr-- u iJavJudiciary Uuildin. in HonoJufia. 3sihid01 Oiusu. ierruory 01 nawau,right, title and of the n rt- -gror, Manuei F. Pedro, in tinefollowing described real ests.t's, h w'l:

All that certain part-e- l &r fe;.4uate at Halaoa, I , North Ki?a, Jk- -

!and of Hawaii.,, des.rifrJ i.i fi.(Grant) 160S, to Kaikeleauksi r Kj?ie--

leaukai (k), rontaining an aro. esT i"fc4'acres, and being the sanj rwoistat.conveyed to Kaaihu-- , lCaiisfeMB Itsdeed dated April ?th, 1SS, ana ..x.rsfiin Liber 110, Pages 1S ajsui iiconveyed by the said Kaaihae Kji.- -lanui to Manuel F. Pedr by tia

I ed December 22nd, ISKw; toyftiirrail improvements thereon tad tputenances thereunto belonsic.

Terms of sale are Cash la U. S. CMCoin. Deed at expense f jiun-hsnsac-

,

For further particulars inairMessrs. Thayer & Hemenm-aj-c .t TSfcfc- -ofEces Xos. 6''2 and 03 irvSiAxjFmjW.:Building, on Merchant estreat, Ukmst!--Il- u.

T. H., or to the undersigs2 e.t h.iolrice in the Judiciary BulVEisg.

p. d. KELLErrr, xru, CotnnrJi!i6a- -

Dated at Honolulu, Oa.hu. DteaRmVarO.SCth, 1903L

6Tfr-D- ?c. 31, Jan. 7. 14. 21, 28. FtU

ESTATE W. H. COiiXVVEU

IX THE CIRCUIT COURT OF TfTFIRST CIRCUIT. ' TEPairTOJiJ'.OF HAWAII AT CIIAMBE23--JJK- '

PRORATE. ,In the Hatter of the Estate ,! W. 3

Corn well. Deceased.- XOTICE TO CREDrriT.R.vThe undersigned having b JiaS!"

aj'pointed Administrator wUk t3teannexed of the Estate oi W. Jl. Or-we- iL

deceased, all creditoru of Se

ceased are hereby notified to srwarriS!their claims, duly authenticatftL wtiwith the p'roper vouchers, if any eiis.even though said claims may tf secur-ed by mortgage upon real testate.the updersigned at its office ma the bp

ner of Fort and Merchant eareeta. toHonolulu, Territorj- - of Hawaii, jrilb'msix months from . the date berewf,(which is the date of the first

of thi3 notice;) otherwise sucirclaims will be forever barred.

And all persons indebted t Kiid E-ta- te

are hereby notified to malemediate payment to the under-Ricie-

Dated Honolulu, Territory cf Sla.ar4Jan. th. lf4.

KENKY WATERHOUPE TRXZSTCOMPANY, LIMITED,

Administrator with the Win aiuraof the Estate of W. 1L CniwiLdeceased.

Robertson & Wilier, Attorney rsrAdministrator. '

GCS2 Jan. T, 1. 21. '2., FeV tELECTION OF OFFICERS

OF THE HONOLULU RAPID TRA5r-SI- T

& LAND CO.At the annual meeting of the sto ers

of the Honolulu Rapid TransiL.and Iand Company, held on January12th, 1'4. the following dirett3rsduly elec d to serve for the eatra jestyear:

L. T. Peck.1 A. Thurston.J. B. Castle.W. R. Castle,C. H. Atherton,F. W. Klehahn.Geo. P. Thielen.

At a meeting of the Board of Dire-tor- s.

held on the same diy, the tt-lowi- r.g-

ofheers were elected to nnreofficers of sail Honolulu Rapid TmrsU.and Land Company during the ensuircyear:

L. T. Pek.. . .. ...TTedtL. A. Thurston. . Vice-Pr- e IdentGeo. P. Thieln.. SftcretsnyC. H. Atherton.. TreJLurT'F. W. Kiebahn.. A firlVtor

GEO. P. THIELKN,Secretary.

ELECTION OF OFFICERS

SOCIEDADE PORTUGUEZA DE STU-AXTOX-IO

BENEFICENTE DKHA WAIL

At the annual meeting of the abonamed Society the following ffficr-rj- i

were elected to serve during the ear-re- nt

year:Jose de Frias Prs'fSC.

S. Azeve3o Vce-Preaid'a- ci

P. Rodrlgues TreasurerF. rmrao Secretars"

BOARD OF D IRECTORS.fc. Axevecso. jr rr?sij-z- - ,

R. Eisho Setret-SJTJ-

J. C. Oliveira. J. F. Nobregi sJ. II. Silva.

J. F. DURAO,Pcrva.ry- -

Honolulu. January 11th. l&vt.

ELECTION OF OFFICERS.

JAPANESE RICE MILL CO- - LTJX

The fourth annual meetisg T

Japanese Rice Mill Co., Ltd,held on the 5th diy of January. 124.

the following officers and di toswere elected to serve for the C

year :

Presid-r- .t Y. Sojri.Vice-Pr-:de- nt D- - Yoneksix.

ecretarv W. Mo-'Srlr-

e&c-j-p- r ........ Y. Tak-t'-- -

iitor S. EOJi-KSE-

Ki rr.ura X rec-to- an 1 MaMr"!.r. Kawahara r. '(: ti.1"

Zj'.rc'-t-rv. .fC9M. Kat3r:har;i l.f

W. MOTOSHIGE.Jsps-nes- e IUce Mill LbU

Honolulu. Sf

- EXECUTX k'tZ JiOTICE. . ?

Notice is hereby given that the Gov- -eruor has appointed the following: nam--jed persons members of the Honolulu i

T 1 .1 . . . , 1

A. S. Cleghom. Esq.,; E. S. Cunha, Esq., ,

: 1a. A.' Thurston, Esq.,II. E. Cooper, Esq. , . . . :

't."W.M. GifTard, Esq..

' F. M. Hatch. Esq. '".'

. A. I C. ATKLVSOX,Secretary of the Territory.

Capitol. Honolulu, January. 13, IK'-L- ,

1 1 rMrnm).- -

$100 CashAnd $19 per month will buy the mr

lot. &0x?l. oS School street, on

the lane adjoining- - the Dr. Emerson

gtireznises and opposite the home of

Judge Perry. But a tninute'a walk

from the Electric Car line.

WILL E. FISHER,Auctioneer.

I ;cture"On Somoa and S amoan Missions"

v byMISS VALES CA SCHT5LTZE

For benefit of fund to establish aGerman Home on the Molokai Settle-ment,

ON MONDAY JAN. iS, 1904, T

AT 8 P. M. ,

In the German School Building rearof German Church, Beretania Street.

tative of the Metropolitan Meat Co.. is germ must be killed. Xewbro's fcTerpi-he- re

for a brief visit: Albert Raa-- , cide, an entirely new result of theFrench Consul. 'returned from San Fran- - chemical laboratory, destroys the dan-cisc- o,

where he left Mrs. Raas and druff germ, and, of course. stors thechildren who are making a visit with j falling hair, and prevents baldness,relatives: Elmer E. Paxton of the Di!f j Sold by leading druggists. Send 10o.

linsham Company, returned from a ' in stamps for sample to The Herpi- -

War In the Far East seems near athand, if the presence in port of half adozen well-know- n war correspondentsconnected with the leadmg journals ofEurope and tne Unite! States countsfor anything. The? Siberia was evenheld at San Francisco to await two warcorrespondents, who were late in cross- -

ring the continent- -'

Prominent among these scouts of thepres. is Jack London novelist, whowill represent the Hearst papers in theimpending Japanese-Russia- n war. Lon-

don is well known in the world of let-

ters, and is the author of "The Callof, the 'WiliV orteof the most note-worthy books of the past year. It ionly about four years ago that he star-

tled the literary world with his strongshort stories of the Arctic These hehas followed with a; number of books,mostly about life in the Far North.

London is only 28 .years old. Sincehe was nine years old he hits had "toearn his living, and his boyhood wasfilled with adventure as a sailor in a

long voyage to the Siberian Islands.He is a San Franciscan, but he ha?rubbed shoulders with many peoplesand he has even lived for months as atramo. ' He spent a year at the StateUniversity of California and evidentlythere learned to write as few coiiegegraduates ever hope to write. Whatmakes him a .power is his untrammeledhuman nature. Hi bo-!r.- s art? strongmeat but they deught people with redblood in their veins.

One of the most noted correspondents in the group, and .one who hasprobably seen more stirring service intbo interest of ionrnalism. 15 CartamLionel James, who with Mr. Frazer,renresents the Lon-ao- Uirn.es. in ct,Captain James is the chief of thTimes' staff, and has the choice of as--

sismrnents. Kc is a typical Briton, anamost pleasant companion.Captain James hopes to enter upon

his ninth campaign of war. In his longexperience as correspondent he servedon th- - Hir.drsta.nee-Ind- o frontier atWazaristan and Manipur, aKd laterwith the famous column of Highland-ers which went to. th.relief cf the fortat Chitral Pass, one of the most in-

accessible passes on the,f rentier. Therelief of the fort is oae of the historicalevents of the last decade and the menwho survived the campaign Werehonored by their government. The cor-respondent was also at Maiakand,Tirah and Mohmund.

When Kitchener made his - secondcampaign in the Soudan. James represented the Times in the stirringsuit or the Dervishes.

Wher The Bjer war "broke out Capt-- .

James was in Ladysmith during thesieee, ; .r.d served continuously as. ui? i

front until the end of the war. On his j

return he was sent to tne in:tea Stateswrite up the United States army,

visiting West Point. Fort Myer, FortRiley and other posts. He thought well

what he saw. "Tour American armyofScers are the finest fellows in theworld very entertaining," said thecaptain last night.

He was then assigned to the Balkans,remaining there for several months, ac-

companying Col. YankofI of the Bul-garian Army along the Balkan frontier.

d:i not meet Sarafoff.Mr. Eraser was paymaster cf Lum-don- 's

Horse in South Africa and wasoasjy w ounaed in tne Knee at j

. He was capture 1 and taken.--ev.' .i. v, e n..--.

O. k. Davis, fo-- the New York Her-ald, is a well known American cor-respondent, and sdw con.--. ciera Fer-vi- ce

in the Philippine? and China. He7i t nun-.b-- r cf entrtinir.r

stories f--i Philir pine l:fe for magazines.All the correspondents express them-

selves of the opinion that thehe Far E-.- st are

else they believe they wou! i r.o:have been sent. In fact, James wa;

busirsess trip: Mr. and Mrs. Dems j

Searles wnl spend their honeymoon inHonolulu. They are prominent societypeople of Sacsalito.Of the through passengers F. H. Jerman

and Oaude HT Smith, are both survivorsof the recent Iroquois theater disaster.Rev. F. L. Hawks-Pot- t. D.D., accom-panied by his wife, daughter and son.is returning; to Shanghai, where he isat the head of a large Episcopal college. :

T J M. T .Xie mace an auuro- - iii cii;ua n.Chinese Mission Chapel i the St-- An-- ,'

'drew's premises. He was met thedock by Bishop Restarick. j

A passenger for Honolulu is P. O-- 1

Brien. a leader of the Irish party in '

New York.Or the second dav out from ban ;

Francisco, a daughter wa bom to '.irs.E. P. Bcyd who is en route to Hong- -kong with her husband and another ;

1 erjcv! Fafama

I-- r

TICKETS 50c, CAN BE HADof members of the churca and of Pastor

Felmy.

NOTICE TO CONSUMERSOF SODAS.

Owing to the advance in cost "f rawmaterial used in the manufacture ofCarbonated Beverages, we will n thefirst day of February next, make aslight advance in the prices of ourgoods, viz.:

All assorted Sodas. 35 cents oer doz.Ginger Ale, 40 cent3 per doz.Shipping prices will be advanced ac-

cordingly.STAR SODA WORKS.HAWAILAX SODA WORKS.ENTERPRISE SODA WORKS,ARCTIC SODA WORKS,FOUNTAIN MINERAL AXD SODA

WORKS, 'CONSOLIDATED SODA WAxER

WORKS CO.. LTD. 5i4

In her cargo ot 7.000 tons, are ,uutons of nitrate of soda to be used inthe manufacture of powder in China:2000 tons of flour for various ports. 250

HAWAIIAN TRIBE, NO. 1. 1.0.R.M

A SPECIAL MEET-in- g

of Hawaiian TribeNo. 1. Improve! Or-

der of Red Men. wultake place this (Thurs-day) evening. Jan. 14.

1$4. at 7:30 o'clock, atSan Antonio Hall."Vineyard street.

RAISING UF OFCHIEFS.

Members of Powhat-ta- n

Tribe Xo. 2 andVisiting Improved RedMen are fraternallyinvited to be present.Per order.

EDWIN FARMER, P.Chief of Records.

i J

PANAMA H47S CLEANED r , ti ; !lyThe Panama hat cleaner formerly at (

be Toun-- ithe Aloha Millinery can r.owHotel jat the GLOBE CLOTHING CO.

street.Old hats made to look like new.

J

Page 8: UBLIC OP p0K iransport-- service. - University of Hawaiievols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/43570/1/1904011401.pdf · WEATHER FORECAST FOR TODAY. SUGAR 96w Centrifugals,

Ii f.

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISES, HONOLULU, JANUARY 14. . t904!53

HOW MRS. OWENS AND HFR I

OT MUCH rDAUGHTER MET THEIR DEATHS

itmSSL MOOREi f A A. WHISKY

it WIS DONE

Castle Cl Cooke, Ltd.HONOLULU.

Commission fierciiants

SUGAR FACTORS. ,

AGENTS FOR )

The Ewa Plantation Co.The "Waialua Agricultural Co., Ltd.The Kohala Sugar Co.The VaimeaxSugar Mill Co.The Fulton Iron Works, St. Louis.The Standard Xil Co.The George F. Blake Steam Pumps.Weston's Centrifugals.The New England Mutual Life In-

surance Co., of Boston. '

The Aetna Fire Insurance Co., ofHartford, Conn,

The Alliance Assurance Co., of Lon-don.

U.S. GrinbaumGCoLIMITED.r

Importers and Commission Merchants

1'

. - . . ,? ; "V f" - ' f

i - ' . '.-,- ' ' - ,, . " : - i - v jt . - f' f . .5 - 11 - ' ?.

vA - - 1 - , - ;4-.- v- - . -

' "4- -- iv"i , . , ,t -

I - f , -i ' - - - X' v

..

$ r K. ' " 'i - v

of Ructions

MRS. FRANCES E. OWENS, WHO LOST HER LIFE IN THE IRO-

QUOIS THEATER DISASTER.--KO0OC0(OOCCK0 0MM(000000fGuy Owens yesterday received details copy of "Mrs. Owens' Cook Book"

At Meeting of Board of

Agriculture andForestry.

The Board of Agriculture and For-

estry held its weekly meeting in theRepresentatives hall qf the Capitol yes-

terday afternoon. With L. A. Thurston,president, there were present W. M.

Giffard, J. F. Brown, A. W. Carter andC. S. Holloway, secretary and executiveofficer, of the Board, and A. F. Tudd,secretary of the Hawaiian StockBreeders' Association.

Mr. Carter reported from the committee on seeds that the list had beencompleted and the orders would be forwarded by the outgoing mail. Mr.Giffard would order some from an EastIndia firm, while he would oroVr fromAustralia. Both would order on theirown credits and when the seeds camemake out their bills to the Board. Itwas mentioned that the allowance forthis purpose was $150.

The president made a statement aboutthe cost of trees at the nursery, frominformation eriven to him by Mr." Austin,gardener. It came to about 3 1- -8 centsapiece for propagation and if the expenses of the nursery were added thecost would be 4 cents.

Mr. Holloway read a letter fromAugust Knudsen referring to forest seedshe had imported for Mr. Austin andwhich he was donating, to the Board.He returned thanks for vegetable seedsreceived.

On. motion of Mr. Giffard it was directed that a letter of thanks be sent toMr. Knudsen. '

Mr. Holloway stated that WardenWm. Henry, who had been at Thomassquare with a gang of prisoners, hadreported a black blight on the treesthere. The executive officer asked ifthe Board would advise the use of thefumigating apparatus to eradicate thepest.

On the suggestion of the president.the matter was referred to the commit-tee on entomology.

Mr. Carter was granted further timefor the committee on transportation toreport.

President Thurston recommended thatthe committee on regulations be instructed to prepare a new rule, providing in effect that if the entomologicaldepartment, at any time, does not seefit to admit imported plants the entomol-ogist shall file a report giving hisreason for refusing to admit the plants.He explained that, for the avoidance ofmisunderstandings, there should be awritten statement.

A motion was made and carried tocarry out the recommendation.

Mr. Holloway reported letters fromJared G. Smith, Director of the FederalExperiment Station, regarding appropri-ations. They were referred to. thefinance committee without being read.

The Board then went into executivesession.

--f-i

The bark coronado sailed from SanFrancisco for Honolulu on January 1.

CONGRESS MAYAMEND COUNTY ACT

OM EARTH

lU Aged

Fs&t ! ;'8J8S wosd

Sr.

ft!ran cd., a1 nawrilJtepwt Art", BpreokeU' Bid.

Essehilo, H. T,

Jesse Ooore-Hu- nt Co.&

Cal. and Ixmiiyllle, rjr.

fjyPTER FOR SALEsksa,

3AE3rTlC SODA.,22Su2JPGATE OF SODA,

KSSIiS, IN QUANTITIES TO SUIT.

aW.McChesney&SonsXiIMITED.

Queen Street.

n o- d4

'

f H

wI

'o. J VO- -

rrPO ar

AXTELL'S.Z04S-105- 0 Alakea Street.

Pacheco

Wandruif Killerla a scientific preparationpossessing marvelouscarative properties for

humors of the scalp.

SOLD BY ALL :

DRUGGISTS and atthe

Union Barber Shop.TELEPHONE MAIN 232.

0RSE SHOEING !

m'W. Wright Co., Ltd.

&av opened a horse-shoe-2- ag

department In connec-tion with their earriasreoftop, etc Having secur-- d

. the services of a ftrst-2- aa

shoer, they are ore-par-ed

to do all work in-tras- ted

to them In a first-cla- ss

manner.

PERFECTION

o

o

oooO

?

oo

which has since reached a sale of over150,000 copies.

She was treasurer of the IllinoisWomen's Press Association for over tenyears, and was very often elected as adelegate to attend the conventions ofthe National Editorial Association whichmet in all parts of the United States.

For many years she owned and editedthe "Journal of Industrial Education"which was finally sold out to a Bostonfirm and then merged into the "NewEngland Kitchen Magazine". She alsocontributed cooking recipes to the Chi-cago Times. She was an active mem-ber of the Woodlawn. Woman's Cluband was an honorary member of the Ha-waiian Women's Board.

She came to Honolulu December, 1900,resided with her son Roy Owens, Elec-trical Engineer for the Oahu Sugar Co.,at Waipahu.

Miss Amy Owens joined her mother inthe Islands in November, 1901, and both,returned to Chicago May, 1902.

Miss Amy Owens was a school teach-er, in the Chicago schools for manyvears. She was also a member of OliveBranch No. 2, I. O. O. F., RebekahLodge of Honolulu.

Mrs. Owens surviving children areMrs. J.-- Kinsey, Los Angeles; MissIvy Owens, Chicago; Roy Owens, Chi-cago; Guy Owens, Honolulu.

day to enjoy life here for about sixweeks. During- his absence he becameconnected with snipping interests onthe coast and evidently did not meetwith success in his venture.'''Well, I went into the shipping trade

with about $80,000 and just sold outmy interest for $50,000. Then I camedown here to take a rest."

He will make a tour of the Islandsduring his stay.

M From CaliforniaOrange, Olive, Fig.

Everything in Fruit Tree Line.WINE, RAISIN AND TABLE

GRAPE VINES.Place orders now for delivery

season 1904.Complete illustrated nursery

catalogue published in English orSpanish mailed for 5c postage.

Paid-u- p Capital, $200,000.00FANOHER CREEK NURSERIES, Inc.

CEO. C. ROCDING. Pres. A. Cck Man. JFRESNO,EST

CL, U.S.A.

The Real ThingTHIS AGE of imitation

tN in all creationinclined to substitution:

They sell you Jersey butterThat never saw a cow,

There's lots in a bag of flourThat never felt tne plow;

They take all kinds of dried-u- p leavesAnd brand the package "tea,"

They sell you high-grad- e JavaThat never crossed the sea;

They sell you pretty nutmegsThat are. simply made of wood,

They do the same with everythingAnd say "It's just as good."

So if you want the genuine,The kind that ne-e- r grows faint,

That'll stick like glue and stop leaks too,

GET ELASTIC CARBON PAINT.

It is the antidote for small leaks. Forlarge leaks we have good shingles andcorrugated iron.

ewers & Cooke Ltd.

177 S. King Street.

Moss sod Wire WencThis week at

MRS. TAYLOR'SAlexander Young Building. Telephone

Main 339.

o5

D

r

.4 :

'I

J

ktr--

ti.

0

c '

f

i f2

0':I;ad v

k

Hici

ft

0XXXXXXC'000000

Big Auction SaleON THURSDAY, JAN. 34,

AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M.,At $47 Kaahumanu street, New Rugs,

Tea, Oranges, Ladies' Waists, Collars,Cuff3, Japanese Lanterns, Cigarettes,Mexican Cigarettes, Smoking Tobacco,Cigarette Tobacco, Ladles' Bicycle,Child's Billiard Table, Boots, Soap,Tooth Powder, Pictures, Mirrors,Iron Beds, Extra Fine Hair Mattresses,Show Case,- - Fine Ice Box, Bird Cage,Hams, Baby Carriage, Sewing Ma-chines and sundry Groceries and othergood things.

JAS. F. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER.

THIS DAY

Auction SaleOP

ORGANETTEON THURSDAY.. JAN. 34,

AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M.,At 847 Kaahumanu street, I will sell

at public auction, an Organette in goodorder. .

JAS. F. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER.

THIS DAY

Auction SaleOF

Millinery GoodsON THURSDAY, JAN. 14,

AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M.,At 847 Kaahumanu street, I will sell

at Public Auction, a large quantity ofnew and up-to-da- te trimmed and un- -trimmed hats and millinery goods.

JAS. F. MORGANrAuctioneer.

THIS DAY

miction SaleMediGol books and fnsfrumeofs

ON THURSDAY, JAN. 14,AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M.,

At 847 Kaahumanu street, I will sellat Public Auction, a medical librarytogether with instruments, etc

JAS. F. MORGAN.AUCTIONEER.

Auction Sale of Stock

ON SATURDAY, JAN. 16.AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON,

At my salesroom, 857 Kaahumanustreet, I will sell at Public Auction, foraccount of whom it may concern, Certificate XSiO. 37 for 15 shares of paid-u- p

stock in the N. S. Sachs Dry Ooods Co.,Ltd., as collateral security on an un-paid note.

JAS. F. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER.

FOR RENTMODERN COTTAGE: Centrally lo-

cated. Double parlors, bedrooms, din-ing room, clothes closets, stationarywashstands, electric lights, hot waterboiler, pantries, enamel bath tub, patentcloset, large rear lanai, wood shed, ser-vants quarters, chicken house, assort-ed fruit trees in bearing.

JAS. F. MORGAN,847 Kaahumanu street.

FOR SALE.

1. Piece of land at Kalla, Waikikl,area about 6234 square feet.2. Land at Palikea, Nuuanu Valley,

about 1 acres of fine Taro land.The above two pieces of property are

offered for sale at bargain prices.

JAsTfT MORGAN,AUCTIONEER.

SOLE AGENTS FOR

Little JackSmoking Tobacco. 5c. and 10c

Packages.

Agents forBRITISH AMERICAN ASSURANCES

COMPANY, of Toronto, Ontario.DELAWARE INSURANCE CO., of

Philadelphia.

W. W AHflfiA & CO.

Limited

Merchant TailorsWalty Building, King St.

Phone Blue 2741Oppotite A.fKxxertir Office

American and ForeignWorstoada

HOUSES MOVEDHOUSES RAISED -

HOUSES REPAIREDNEW HOUSES BUILT

Stores and Offices Repaired.

W. T. PATTY''Contractor and Builder

Office 1048 Alakea Street,between King and Hotel.

'Phone Blue 1801.

Union Oil Co.of California

Office of Hawaiian Department,room 307 Stangenwald Bldg.

C. C. PERKINS, Supt.Main office, Mills Building, San

Francisco.JNO. BAKER, Jr., Mgr.

Visiting CardsPrinted from plate.

W. BEAKBANE.Masonic Bldg.

Phone Blue 646. P. O. Box 992

Kwong Yuen Hing Co..40 m. AO TkV w.u o.nu 00 in. jving street.

Importers and rioaiaraSilks. Fine MAttine-- a TQr tthf xu UUily X1 Uiniture, Bamboo Stools, Rattan Arm

Grass Linens, an v .! of a -

prices.

Hot Buns and CoffeeLIKE TOUR MOTHERS MAD3

ATaiLLER'5 on Hotel St.

vsiieu u-o- a. m. to 11 p, ;Courteous treatment.Prompt attention.Best Quality and lota more at

consolidated Soda Water SortsPhone Main 71.

COTTON BROS. & COENGINEERS AND GENERAL, CON- -Plans and Estimates furnished for allclasses of Contracting Work.

fusion J3IOCK, Honolulu.

Horse ClippingBY EXPERIENCED MEN ATClub Stoboox vjh. j. 6TKEET. TEL. MAIN 109

HACKS Nos. 3. 7. 24, 32, 63, 87. 124,1.82.

ALL KINDS OF

Goodyear Rubber Co,R. H. PEASE, President.

San Francisco, Cal., U. S. A.

PACIFiCHOTELUnion Strot-- - w--- raunc C1UD.First Class Accommodations for Board

aim oaging-- .

MR. HANNA, Proprietor."1378 and 1180 Union etret.

WASHINGTON, Dec. 2S.- -It is inti- - Monterey Subsequently he left Mbn-mat- ed

by those closely in touch with , terev and went to" Honolulu, where he

of the death of his mother, Mrs. FrancesOwens, and sister, Miss Amy Owens, inthe Iroquois theater disaster, at Chi-

cago. In a letter from- - Roy Owens, hisbrother, is the following : .

"When I arrived the bodies had beenfound. Friends looked at 475 bodiesbefore they found them. They weretogether, and were the only ones thatcoukl be recognized by their features.They were not burnt a bit and fromtheir shoulders down their clothes werenot even dusty. They evidently re-

mained in their seats jbst as we sup-posed mother would do. She said thatif she was ever in a fire in a theater shewould be perfectly calm and cool.Mother looked as if she had seen whatwas coming, and had gone to sleep. Herarms were folded across in front of herjust as she was in the habit of standingwhen talking.

Amy looked as if she had fought tokeep the crowds off. Her hands wereup in front of her as if she was guard-ing herself and mother."

Mrs. Frances E. Owens was bornMay 4th, 1843 at Sidney Plains, N. Y.,and Miss Amy Owens was born January14, 1871 at Chicago, 111. About twentyyears ago Mrs. Owens got out the first

LOCAL BELL BOY

HEIR TO FORTUNE

SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 7. R. F.Johnson, Mayor of Monterey, and hiswife were purged of contempt by theSupreme Court yesterday in the matterof t the disappearance of Leo J. Christal.The temporary writ of habeas corpussecured by Dr. J. F. Christal, the boy'sfather, was dismissed.

Leo Christal left his father's homein Santa Cruz last February and went

. 1 1 .nas since Deen living witn ms sister.The father claimed that the Johnsonshad practically abducted his son andsought the aid of the courts to havehis child restored to him. -

It was alleged that the uncle, antici-pating the issuance of a writ of habeascorpus, had caused the boy to flee toHonolulu. It was aiieered on the otherside that the boy left home of his ownaccord because of dislike- - for hisfather. Johnson and his wife werecited for contempt of the SupremeCourt early in June, T903.

Ihe dismissal was signed by all oftne Justices with .the exception ofChief Justice Beattv.

SANTA CRUZ, Jan. 6. Leo Christala son of Dr. J. F. Christal, left Hono-lulu recently as an attache of the San-for- d

theatrical company bound forAustralia. Young Christal was for sixweeks employed as bell boy in a Hono-lulu hotel, but lost his position. Heand his sister. Anita Christal, are heirs

4to $200,000 left by their grandfather. Abig sensation was caused a few monthsago, when the boy was supposed tohave been spirited away from hisfather and shipped on a schooner toHonolulu.

COMPANY F TOHONOR TAFT

A feature in connection with the vis-it of Governor Taft will be a specialguard of honor from the First Regi-ment, National Guard of Hawaii, whichwill be sent to the dock to meet theKotea on which the distinguished vis-itor will arrive. The guard, whichwill be a picked set of men, four setsof fours from Company F, will be com-manded by Captain Sam Johnson.

If Governor Taft has the time tospare, he will be given an opportunityto witness an exhibition drill In Unionsquare by' Company F. They hope tosecure Governor Taffs assistance ingetting his sanction to the Hawaiiancompany going to St. Louis during theExposition, under United States Gov-ernment auspices.

Joa Kaia len Pack.Joe Marsden, looking hale and hearty-afte- r

a few years' absence from Hono-lulu, returned on the Siberia yester- -

the committee of Congress having inhand the County Act for the Territoryof Hawaii, that some of the membersdo not like the bill oh account of sec-

tion 46, Chapter II, which they say isThe section, under the

caption of Qualifications, reads:"No person shall --- eligible in a

County or District office unless of the 'age of 21 years, a citizen of the Terri-- 1tory, and an elector of the county ordistrict in which the duties of the of-fice are to be exercised, and a residenttherein for three years immediatelyincv-cuiu- s suwi cici-iiy- u, anu jiu pei sun j

oiiii.il .uerKitiier ue engiDie to me orcceof District Attorney who shall nothave been admitted to practice in theSupreme Court of the Territory of Ha-waii"

4

Secure a home on Pacific Heights andenjoy life.

INSTALLATION OFI. 0. 0. F.' OFFICERS

The officers of Polynesian Encamp-ment No. 1. I. O. O. F., for the ensuingyear, were installed last night by Ed.Hingley, D. D. G. S.j, A. F. Clarke, P.C. P.. Chas. Murray, P. C. P., J. J.Lecker, P. CP.

The officers were: Chief Patriarch,Chas. S. Crane; Senior Warden, F. A.Smith: High Priest, Chas. Sawyer; Ju-nior Warden, H. Gehring; Scribe, B.Beyden; Treasurer, F. W. Wood; I. S.,F. N". McGrew; First Watch, J. J.Lecker; Second Watch, Chas. Murray;Third Watch, W. Hall; Fourth Watch,F. G. Noyes; First Guard of Tent, P.Smith; Second Guard of Tent, E. Ja-cobs-

--tWahiawa Pineapples.

Just received some of the fine Wahi-awa pineapples; also cabbages. Ma-n- oa

parsnip.", spinach and leeks, freshevery morning. Fresh garden seedsjust received.

CLARK FARM CO., LTD..1139 Fort St.

New Year's Advertiser ready for mailing at 5c each to be had at the office.

"i" all kinds of BREAD andEVERT DAY.

SZn Baked Beans every Saturday'..Tfenna and Parker House rolls hot

Sattania street near Emma. Phone

Sdren enjoy feeding the monkeys

Sa Use Heights.

Page 9: UBLIC OP p0K iransport-- service. - University of Hawaiievols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/43570/1/1904011401.pdf · WEATHER FORECAST FOR TODAY. SUGAR 96w Centrifugals,

THB PACIFIC COMMERCIAL, ADVERTISER, . HONOLULU. JANUARY 14. ioa.&' " ' r t jb

i : m- i- u..., iBUSINESS LOCALS. LOCAL BREVITIES. HaveYou a Cold? ADIUMJ. T. Van Valkeaberg left onAorangi for St. Louis where he

thewill A great many people are down witn I Corset sale!them. Perhaps you don't know wha

Ctieese straws today at "Perfection."Linen saJe at Sachs, only a few days

more. .A competent Japanese cook or yard

man wishes work from 1 to 6 p. m.

to take to cure quickly and pleasantly REPRESENTATIVES

On ExhibitionWhy not try the well known

Anti-Grip- peMONDAY, JAN. 11TH.

ALL SIZES ALL KINDSis impossible, butPerpetual motionperpetual llrht not. ALL PRICES

reside.Dr. Yorba, the dentist, leaves in the

Siberia today to establish himself inbusiness in Shanghai. ' "

Hawaiian Tribe will hold a meetingthis evening. Raising up of Chiefswill be the degree --work.

C. Brewer & Co. hell a meeting yes-terday. There was no quorum andonly the quarterly report was present-ed.

V. G. Cooper, cashier, was added tothe board of directors at the annualmeeting of the First National Bank ofHawaii.

The framework for the concrete con-struction of the Government dispensary

TABLETS In nilr 1 i - a : 1... .iotr uispiay window are

fee our ulasslhed ads.A young- man who is not afraid to

work, desires situation. Will do anyt-hing-. See our Classified ads today.

A furnished cottage, mosquito-proo- f,

and all modern conveniences, to be hadupon inquiring at 2 Hotel street.

Unbleached table linen, CO Incheswide, 43c. per yd., at Sachs' Linen sale.

Lewers & Cooke have the antidotefor leaky roofs in good shingles, cor-rugated iron and many kinds of roofpaints.

There is no guess work about them

riiany new saapes and sizes of R .DI-U- M

representatives, beautiful in them-selves, saying nothing of the light theygive.Go over the large assortment and seeif there-isn'- t somethlne the -

'They are a specific for colds, srinand dengue. Nip tne cold at the firstsymptom. Then it's easy. Don't allow

have been wanting-- .it to "run its course" because thereisn't any reason for it.

Muslin UnderwearAND

CHILDREN'S SHORT AND LONG DRESSESAT

WAL-F-" E PRICES

Electroliers. iisni'0 to Miss Power for svell hats for Anti-Gnp- pe Tablets are the most Piano Lamps.traveling-- . She always keeps a line is up and the building process hasfairly begun. , satisfactory medicine we ever sold.suitable for the coast. Boston bi'.nd You will find a bottle the best 23c. ining. Fort street. F. J. Lowrey will be elected a trustee

Reading Lamps j2 50Eanquet Lamps ,...!!!!!! 'iSQParlor Lamps r'nr,vestment you ever made. Get a bottleof the Chamber of Commerce in placeA school house is to be built in Wai today and you can stop colds, and den-

gue before being inconvenienced. Theseof J. P. Cooke, who resigns on accountof contemplated absence.

student Lamps 5 00Library Lamps ""!""!" 2'miluku. Tenders for construction ofsame will be received by the Supt-- of tablets are safe to take. Sold on'y by Nickel LampsDr. Pratt was able to assist at thePublic "Works up to noon of Feb. 1st

Princess Lamps. i"nnDelicious cream pufFn today at Per Board of Health meeting yesterday forthe first time in some weeks. He is Bracket Lamrisfection Home Bakery. WOOLEN DRESS GOODSNight Lamps -gradually regaining strength.

. Kodakery is simply photography Nickel Lanterns. ... Mmade easy. ir you are interested in ETC., ETC.. ETC.A meeting of the trustees of the

Chamber of Commerce was held yes-terday. F. J. Low-re- y was reccm- -

kodaks call at Honolulu Photo Supply FANCY BROCADES, BLACK CREPONS,FANCY PLAIDS- ,- -

Co. and see the new ones now in stockymended to .succeed J.' P. Ccoke on theThe two-stor- y house on the corner 4t board of trustees.Victoria and Green streets is offered for blKlFfcD SERGES AND FIGURED ALPACASW. W. DimoDd & Go., Ltd.James . Lloyd yesterday acceptedrent on reasonable terms. Fine mar tn position of assistant clerk to Secreview. Apply A. Harrison, P. O. Box TAKE THE ELEVATOR TO TTTT AT HALF THEIR REGULAR PRXSLtary Atkinson. He had the Republican552.- .. SECOND FLOOR FOR HOUSE FUR- -party s endorsement and has the ad MfclIJNGS.HILO

TheEgyptian

igaiettcf Quality

vantage of skill in stenography.Three juries at the Paris Expositionof 1900 conceded to "Milo" cigarettesgold medal and Prix d'Honeur, giving Olive Branch Rebekah Lodge, No. 2

will give a Valentine dance at Progressthem preference over all competitivehall on Friday, February 12. One doicigarettes made in any part of the Not connected with On Tal Lee.

1183 Nuuanu near Beretania street. E. W. Jordan & Co., Ltd.world. Jar will admit lady and gentleman, Attickets to be had from members.woman who loves fine linen two uoors above old stand.

A jolly party of war correspondentshas the opportunity this week of buyIng fine linen at prices lower than ordi rt Otroot.from the Siberia who dined at the Oreosmokor

LADIES' and CHILDREN'S UNDER-WEAR made to measure.

Toung Hotel last evening were Mr. andnaruy paid lor poor linen. The saleMrs. Frederick Palmer, Mr. and MrsIs for this wees only ul X. S.

IVy Good' Co. u. is.. .Davis. Capt. Lionel James andPercival Phillips.

Three Juries at the ParisExposition 1900, conceded to"Milo" cigarettes, gold medaland Prix D'Honeur, givingthem preference over all com-petitive cigarettes made inany part of the world.

1st. For extreme mildness.2nd. For aromatic delicacy.3rd. For exceptionally high

quality of tobacco and paperused.

rasn linen dish cloths ready foruse, $1.90 a dozen at Sachs' linen sale. Assessor Pratt by his attorneys, Rob

ertson & Wilder, has entered appealsr raieraai societies or tne city arefinding the schedule bonds issued by from the Tax Appeal Court to the Su

preme Court ,.n the cases of C W $ THE ISLAND MEAT 00.GOO KIM

Corner Hotel and Nuuanu Streets.CALL EARLY TO SECURE BAR-

GAINS.No old goods in stock, everything

new and fresh.

the Henry "Waterhouse Trust Company,Booth, Pacific Hardware Co., Kash Co.covering locge omcers, a great conand Mary Richards. A new enterprise located on Fort Street, opposite Love Bmldixgvenience and not expensive. One ad

vantage is that all officers are covered Joe Cohen received a cablegram yesterday from "Australian" Tim Mur extremely

that theymost ner- -

phy, asking for a match with BarryIf acceptable he will come to Hono

"MILO" are somild and delicatewill not effect thevous smoker.

NEW STYLES BY EVERYSTEAMERlulu cn the next steamer. Cohen has

V

4

at

cabled him to start at once. atJoe Cohen received a letter from"Weber & Fields yesterday to the effectthat the company will be in Honolulu

Miss Power's Millinery ParlorsBOSTON BLDG.. FORT STREET.

under one bond, with privilege of sub-stitution without extra charge.

Commencing at 10.a. m. today at hissalesrooms on Kaahumanu street, Jas.F. Morgan will hold several auctionsales, particulars of which may behad by consulting hU advertisementson page 8 of this paper. Among thearticles advertised are, groceries, fruit,surgical instruments, Wganette, furni-ture, etc.

Fresh water bathing a feature on theHeights.

. .

LOCAL BREVITIES.

Gunst-Eaki- non its way to Australia in May. An

IMow Oport iFor GuQlnoaoA supply of the finest quality of..Island Meats, Poultry and Game

ALWAYS ON HAND.We have now on hand a supply of..

- from the KAHIKINUI RANCH.

arrangement will probably be made tohold the company here between steam Cigar Co. Oahu Ice &ers.

in tne trial of Daniel Nuuanu for- Electric Co..DISTRIBUTORS.manslaugher, before Judge Robinson,

the prosecution rested at 3:15 yesterday. Counsel for the defense wantedtime for consultation and the trial was Cor. Fort and King Streets."

Iftc Jellvered to any part of the city,orders promptly filled. TeL Bin

U5L P. O. Box tea. Offlc: Eftwala.adjourned until 10 o'clock this mornThere was no business done in the ing.

A fire at two o'clock Monday morning totally destroyed the home ofRichie, a young man who runs" a cigaritand near the Criterion. The housefwa.s located near Kapiolani park injWaikiki and no alarm was sent in to

THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINES. HThe New Home Machine is considered the best scM.irrr c(

machine for all purposes and all classes of trade ever phecedZ 1

on the American market. It has numerous features iKStpossessed by other machines, which tried o make it a rge--sensitive easy machine to operate. The cunning hand of ia-- fventive genius never produced a better machine. C

If you consider convenience, beaut)'- - and durability aary )object, see one of these machines before purchasing. lf.

o We Carry All Extra Parts o p

Federal court yesterday.Henry E. Highton, D. I Withington

and R. B. Anderson have applied foradmission to the Bar Association.

A hlhimanu from Evva, from six toseven feet In length, attracted atten-tion at the public market yesterday- -

Norman Halstead has retired fromthe automobile business and taken theplace or V. F. Jocher with the Hollis-t- er

Drug Co.Miss Maud Cheek of Oakland and Mr.

James P. Sisson of Hawaii, were mar-ried at Oakland on January 5. Thecouple will make their home at Hilo.

Dr. Nicholas Senn, well known in Ho-nolulu, and four French scientists,have gone to Tahiti to combat nativediseases which are killing off the na-tives at an alarming rate.

Night blooming cereus has beenplanted along the stone wall on theocean side ot King street near Piikoi,

99Oooo?ooooo

the fire department.M. M. O'Shaughnessy, the civil en-

gineer and water expert, who latelyconstructed the immense water ditchfor the Makaweli plantation, and is nowconstructing a similar ditch for the Ha-waiian Commercial Co., Maui, was apassenger on the Siberia. He registeredat the Hawaiian Hotel.

A meeting of the County CentralCommittee was held in headquarterslast evening at which the County Actstatus was discussed at length. A

I we are now removing to j

J our new quarters in theJ building formerly occupied J

j by Lewers & Cooke, Ltd., on J

j Fort Street.I Pearson & Potter Co., Ltd. I

Ooooooofooooop

THEO. H. DAVIES & CO., LTD. fSole Agents for Jlawaiian Islands. ijresolution was adopted which was not j

given out, but which, it is presumed,calls upon Governor Carter to askCongress to ratify the County Act.The resolution will be presented toGovernor Carter this morning.

which In time may rival the display atOahu College. Mr. Swanzy has alsoplanted it along the Manoa road front-ing his place.

Three brides and their husbands THE TRUE CRITERION IS QUALITYriving Dy the Liberia entertained C For This Week Onlylat

tain Iremaine Smith at a special diner at the Royal Hawaiian HotelArrivals at Toung- - Hotel.

W. M. Speyer, Scranton, Pa.; F. H.evening. The dinner was enlivened bya concert by the Hawaiian Government A beautiful house on Young St., Pawaa Tract, near Pu- -

Jermya, Ithaca, N. Y.; C. H Smith, band. It is seldom that so many hand- - nahou St., can be had for $3,500. $500 down. Large lot,fine cool climate. See

! some young brides have come here onBoston; Mrs. G. H. Hosmer, Boston; j

itaipn y. Hosmer, Washington, D. C.a single steamer from California socialcircles. The party consisted of Mr. andMrs; Oxnard Enrague. Mr. and Mrs.

Kmil 'admen. San Francisco; J. C W. MATLOCK CAMPBELLAt office, 1634 Young St., near Punahou.

Coppage, San Francisco: Rev. and Mrs.E. T. Simpson. Portland, Or.; G. Mac-intosh and wife. New York; P. O'Brien,

Searles and Mr. and Mrs. Wakefield, allof whom registered at the Moana Ho-tel. The honeymoon couples will leaveNew York; Mrs. Leo D. Miner. Wash- - t shortly for the Volcano.

o o

The attention ot counoissenri i. called to the np?ri&-tiv- e

quality of ,

Pomrnery Champagnewhich is being shipped into rhis country. In London, tfwacknowledged home of wine connoisseurs, where 1

QUALITY REGULATES PiCEPommery commands from two to six dollars more a caje

than other leading brands, as per figures taken from RidleyWine anrj Spirit Trade Circular, London.

POMMERY. Vintage 1833, 8a. to 91s.G. H. MUMM, Vintage 1S33. 70s. to 78.PERRIER JOUET. Vintage 1893. Extra Cuvee G. 65s. to Ss.MOET AND CHANDOX, Vintage 1893. Extra Cuvee 20, 79s. M. s

84s. 3d.LOUIS ROEDERER, Vintage 1833, Extra Cuvee J, 68s. to 74s.

In Honolulu, however, Pommery is sold at the earaaprices as other leading brands.

W. C PEACOCK & CO., LTD.Bole Agerts.

Lovers ofFine Lin n

ington, D. C; J. S. Cunningham, Jr.,Salt Lake City; Fred M. Lewis, SanFrancisco: Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Flem-ing. Pasadena; MIs McCormick, Pasa-dena; Miss Gardner. Pasadena; W.Parker Lyon, Fresno. Cal.; H. D.Smith. Philadelphia, Pa.; Robert Lew-er- s,

T: A. Hays: H. G. Leopold, U. S.N.; Mrs. F. R. Breed, Fresno, Cal.

m f m

'Burn Celebratlor.

ooooo

oo6

SoWill Profit Here o

oooo

ooooo

FRATERNAL SOCIETIES

can secure the most attractive schedule bonds for their officers'from

THE UNITED STATES FIDELITY AND GUARANTYCOMPANY

at reasonable rates.

HENRY WATERHOUSE TRUST COMPANY, LTD.,General Agents.

Every woman who loves fine linen.and what woman does not. has the oI

The Honolulu Scottish Thistle Clubwill celebrate the anniversary of thebirth of their premier bard with asmok'ng concert on Monday evening,January 25. the day on which, in 1759,as the poet sings himself, "a blast oJanwar win' blew hansel in on Ro'in."The concert will take place in the Elks'hall and Burns songs and recitationswill have a leading place on the pro-gram. Among those who have alreadyagreed to assist at the entertainmentare Isaac Dillingham, Stanley Living-ston, George Davies, J. L. Coekburnand Carl Mett. . .

Hawaiian Uodgs InstallationThe newly elected officers of Hawa-

iian Lodge No. 21. A. F. & A. M.. were

o '

5 GOLD CROWNS - - - $5.00 3 PLATES

9 j WHITE CROWNSU"

oooo0ooo

opportunity this week of buying finelinen at prices ordinarily paid for poorlinen.

The goods are all new and every piecehas our guarantee to be exactly as rep-resent- eL

The sale continues

This Vak Only

White Table Damask,

q BRIDGE WORK - 3J5.UU per tOOtn

vvny let your teetn go. "vc.; r j. "v-- t-- -" to-

Installed last evening by Mr. Patton. t

P. G. M., of the Grand Lodge of Cali- - j

fornia, and Marshal C I. Spalding. I iiaa--a- i

We buy all our material at wholesale cost and therefore raw

give you good work at low prices. All our work fully guaranteed.Lady assistant. No charge for examination.

THE EXPERT DENTISTS.Hours, 8 to 3. Sundays, 9 to 12. 215 Hotel St., opp. Young HotrL

The officers Installed yere: A. Lewis,Jr.. W. M.; J. G. Rothwell, S. TV.; C.

i ESTABLISHED 1864.Hall, J. W.: Robert Catton. Treasurer;K. R. G. Wallace. Secretary; RobertHair, S. D.; Charles P. Grim wood, J.D.; B. S. Gregory, Marshal; EdwardSwan and A. C. Noble, Stewards.

Unbleached Table Damaek,Red and Blue Table Damaskr,Linen Napkins, ,

Linen Toweling,Turkey Red Damask Table

Covers,White Damask Table Covers,Sheet and Pillow Cases.

S

JN0. N. MFEk arido ...Park Commissioners.r

Secretary Atkinson yesterday signedcommissions , to theand forwarded

PRACTICAL PLUflBERFORMERLY AT 213 QCJEhX STREET

JYoit with

JNO. NOTT, 85 King Street.

XAIL.L. SVIO!E: to --fcHoOregon Block, 152 Hotel St,opposite Young Bldg., where he will be located until

If. S, SACHS DBY GOODS CO,following newly appointed Park Com-missioners: A. S. Cleghorn. W. M. Gif-far-d.

F. M. Hatch. H. K. Cooper, L. A.Thurston and E. S. Cunha.

t.A ride on the Heights electric cars

Is the best tonic. Ccraer Fort arid Beretania Streets. completion of bis new store ht the Odd Fellows bulldi

Page 10: UBLIC OP p0K iransport-- service. - University of Hawaiievols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/43570/1/1904011401.pdf · WEATHER FORECAST FOR TODAY. SUGAR 96w Centrifugals,

THE' PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, JANUARY 14, 1904.

HONOLULU STOCK EXCHANGE.11 I IttAA: . iai.Srfil I II hi 1 1 V I I jd 1 1

EVANS HELD TOCLOSE NEUTRALITY

CHRONICLE'S STORYOF KUHIO'5 ARREST

WE OFFER 6 LOTS IN THE

Kaplolanl Park AdditionFor S75.C0 Each, ,SlefUL-ver- a running in connection

i! Tinolulu on or abuut the folio

OH FIJI AND AUSTRALIA.190t

I.ixa rK;:'.!'A':Y G

AOKA-XG- l 13

'Zzrwth. tickets Issued to all points in Canada, United States and Europe.

Theo, H. Davies & Co., Ltd.- General Agents.

Stalfic Mail S. S. Co.,

Honolulu, January 13, 1904.

NAME OP STOCK. ; Capital, i Vftl.j Bid Aski !

MEBCANTILE.

Brewer & Co... i SIS

SrGAR.

Ewa 5,000.000 i 20 90Haw.AgrriculturalCo.! 100 ITSHaw. :o!i.& SucarCo. 2.S12.7.H) 100Hawiiau sugar Co ; 2.W.0 0 JOlloiwmu 7"0.000 100 loaUotinkaa 2,0 0 0(10 20Haiku SOiUiOO 30i 100 'Kahuku ftOO.OOO 20 ?6Kihei I'lan. Co., Ltd .! 2,500.000 f0Kipahulu .: IHO.000 100Kuloa i 500 000 100 "isoMcBry.leSue Co.. Ltd. 3.500.000 -- 0 4Oahu Sugar Co. 3.W0.000 ioo 67 90momen... l.OOU.000 CO ss

riL-- a a 500.000 20 7'"Olaa Suear Co' Ltil. 5,000.000 20 9

l"ltfJ'u - 100.0U) 100Paauhau Sugar Plan

tation Co 5.000,000 50Pacific 500MK) 100 90Paia 7.30.000 100 125Hepeekeo . 750.000 100 161Pioneer 2.750,0 0 J0O 93Waialua Agri. Co. .. 4.500.000 100 VWailuku 700,000 100Waimanalo 252,000 100 161

Steamship Co's.

Wilder S. S Co.. 500,000 100 1!9Inter-Islan- d S. S. Co.. 600,000 no 125

MltiCKLLAXEOt'S.

Haw. Electric Co. . . . 500,000 100 8 U2XH. R T. L. Co., PdH. R. T. A L. Co., C. 'i,'io,bbo ioo" "65Mutual Tel. Co.. 150,000 JO 8jO R. & L. Co 4.000.000 100 ..... 85Hilo R. R. Co 1, 10,000 20 .... 17

S. S. Co., and Toyo Kisen Kaishatamrs of the above companies w

ta &&ut the dates below mentioned: .

TJtOM SAN FRANCISCO:SIBERIA JANUARY 14

ISQSmC JANUARY 22

.AMERICA MARU. .... .FEBRUARY 1

ZZOXKA. FEBRUARY 2

Ji$5lELlC FEBRUARY 17

Va farther Information apply toL HACKFELD 6 CO&PAHYt LTP ACE NTS.

Oooonlo StoornohlTIMID TASXjSS

i6i

vo1C4

...... . 10

"ioo100

110

Tfc fhae passenger steamers of thSsexttsnder:

... SAN FRANCISCO: .

2aA3E3A ..JANUARY 15SSBfCMA .JANUARY 27

.a&JfcarZDA FEBRUARY 5

"ESSTURA FEBRUARY 17

- ...2 eeoaeetlon with the sailing of the alnve steamers, the agents are pre-Tmr- t&

1 issue, to intending passengers, Coupon Through Tickets by anyEailrotul, from San Francisco to all points in the United states, and from

1Sm Ysvk by any steamship line to all European ports.

FOR 7DRTHER PARTICULARS. APPLY TO

'WE. Gk. XttWXlXT 3Z CO., 21itcl.imerican-Hawaiia- n

SHreei Monthly Service Between New York and Honolulu viaPacific Coast.

TtL SPLENDID NEW STEEL STEAMER- S-PROM NEW YORK.

5 a A&uskan, to sail about Jan. 1

S &. Cilifomian, to sail about.. Feb. 1IPreigh-- t received at all times at the

&BEticy'5 wharf, 41st street. South

ffi22B SAN FRANCISCO TO HONO-LULU.

3S6.a. lCeradan, to sail. Jan. 18

H. HACKFELD & COMPANY, LTD., AGENTS.C P. MORSE, General Freight Agent. ''gSSSl

ira 1 1 ETIIWIl If 11 II 1 ,1111.

with the Canadian-Pacifi- c Railway Co.wing dates:

FOR VANCOUVER.tQf'4

AORANOI ...JANUARY 13

MIOWERA FEBRUARY 1

MOAX A MARCH 15

Occidental & Oriental

ill call at Honolulu and leave this port

FOR SAN FRANCISCO.AMERICA MARU JANUARY 11

KOREA JANUARY 16

GAELIC JANUARY 23

HONGKONG MARU JANUARY 30

CHINA FEBRUARY 9

Is line will arrive and leave this port

FOR SAN FRANCISCO: .

ALAMEDA .JANUARY 20VENTURA JANUARY 26ALAMEDA . FEBRUARY 10

SIERRA FEBRUARY 16

Steamship Company.

And each month thereafter.Freight received at Company's wharf,

Greenwich street.FROM HONOLULU TO SAN FRAN-

CISCO.S. S. Nevadan, to sail Feb. 2

FROM SEATTLE AND TACOMA.S S. Oregonlan, to sail about.... Jan. 15

Co.YOUR BAGGAGE.goods and save you money.

King Street. Phone Main 58

NEW REGULAR SERVICE,CONNECTING WITHOTPAIUPD "AT A HTfT A"

FOR PORTS OF HAWAII.

Commencing Jan. 1st, 1304, WILDER'S STEAMSHIP CO. will dispatchthe steamer "Maui" for Mahukona,Kawaihae and Hamakua ports, to connect with the steamer "Alameda," sail-ing on the day of her arrival at 12 m.,carrying U. S. mail,' passengers andfreight.

This steamer has been recently refitted and provided with large, wellventilated deck staterooms and allmodern accommodations.

Above schedule is subject to changewithout previous notice.

WILDER'S S. S. CO.6870

GHAS. BREWER CO.'S jHEW YOEK LINE I

Ship Tillie E. 8tarbuck sailingfrom New York to HonoluluMarch 1st. FREIGHT TAKENAT LOWEST RATES.

, .u or rreignt rates apply to '

CHAS. BREWER & CO.27 Kilby St, Boston,

OB C. BREWER & CO.,LIMITED, HONOLUXTJ.

DON'T RENT, DON'T LEASE'BUT BUY A HOME.

SIX-ROO- M MODERN COTTAGE ingood location, nearly new. Price,(2900. Cash $300; installment of $30 perEonth.

J. H. CUMMINGS,1837 Col'ege street. P. O. Box No. 53.

PIANO FOR SALE

A fine Woodward and Brown squareGrand Piano in excellent conditioncost originally $650 for sale for $75.00.

WILL E. FISHER.6666 Auctioneer.

METEOROLOGICAL RECORD.

the Government Survey, Published- Every Monday.

acSfSc Transfer

WASHINGTON, Jan. 6. Navalficials are somewhat embarrassed as to j

the best disposition to be made ofs t i Oi. - - . .i ..; mini u;ics warMims on inc -- A.siaiicstation in view of the imminence ofwar between Russia and Japan. Thepolicy of the administration is to ob-serve the strictest neutrality and keephands off.' excep t in the single con-tingency of infringement upon Ameri-can treaty rights.

When Admiral Evans' fleet was or-dered back to its station from Honoluluit was arranged that the cruiser squad-ron should stop at Midway Island,where there is a cable station, to receive any instructions the department ?

might desire to send These instruc- - 1

tions were simply for Admiral hvansfleet to await instructions at Guam.That dispatch was delivered to thecruiser squadron, which touched atMidway on the 3d instant and left thesame day for Guam, the rendezvous ofthe entire squadron fleet. 1

It is expected that Admiral" Evanswill .reach Guam in a few. days and re-port his arrival to the department.Inquiry at the navigation bureau de-velops the fact that up to this mo-ment the admiral has received no spe-cial instructions for his guidance inthe event of hostilities in the Far East.

It is now the purpose of the depart-ment to cable to the admiral a specialset of instructions to meet the presentconditions in the Far East, and thoseinstructions will be delivered to him atGuam, according to the present pro-gramme. It is said at . the departmentthey will show no discrimination what-ever between the parties as to any pos-sible hostilities, but the admiral willbe expected to so dispose of his forceas to maintain the appearance of strictneutrality as between the belligerents.

WEATHER BUREAU,ilonolulu, Alexander St.,

January 13, 10 p. m.Mean temperature 73.7.--minimum temperature 68.Maximum temperature 7S.Bi rometer at 9 p. m. 30.15; stead y.Rainfall, 24 hours up to 9 a. m. .11.Mean absolute moisture 6.2 grs. per

cubic foot.Mean relative humidity 71.Winds N. E. Force, 2 to 0.Weather Cloudy and showery to

fair. '. .

Forecast for Jan. 14. Light tradesfair with occasional showers.

- R. C. LYDECKER,Territorial Meteorologist

BORN. i , ;

At Kealia, Kauai, on Jan. 10th, 1904

to the wife of E. J. Morgan, a daughter.

Classified Advertisements,

SITUATIONS WANTED.YOUNG American wants position; any-

thing. Address "J," this office. 06SS

COMPETENT Jap, cook or yard manwishes work from 1 to 6 p. m. Applyat Kawaiahao Seminary. 66S8

BY young girl of 16 to take care ofchildren or do light housekeeping.Inquire at Queen Hotel. 66S7

A SITUATION as sugarboiler by com-petent and experienced man. Addrr3sA. B., this office. 6GS4

YOUNG man wishes position as book-keeper; experience in banking, realestate and fire Insurance. "A," Ad-

vertiser. 6686

FOR RENT.TWO-STOR- Y house, cor. Victoria and

Green Sts. Reasonable. - Fine marineview. A. Harrison, P. O. Box 552.

6688

A FURNISHED cottage; all mosquitoproof. 235 Hotel street, opposite theClifton. 668S

THAT commodious residence on Nuu-an- u

Ave., formerly occupied by Minister Stevens. Modern improvements,stable and servants' quarters. Rentreduced. Apply to C. H. Dickey, SiKing street. 65M

TWO furnished rooms; modern; private entrance; suitable for a gentleman or married couple; central. Apply Advertiser office. 66S7

TWO nice front rooms over the Honolulu Photo Supply Co. Apply at Ho-nolulu Photo Supply Co. 6684

THE two-sto- y residence on 12S6 Beretania St., bet. Piikoi and KeeauniokuSts. Rent, $45 per month. Apply toC. J. McCarthy. 66S4

A- - NICE front mosuito-proo- f room Ina private family. On car line. Rentreasonable. Apply N. E. corner Vic-toria and Lunalilo streets. 6683

FURNISHED rooms (mosquito proof)at HELEN'S COURT, rear of Hart'sIce Cream Parlors. Rates reasonable.

6670

COTTAGES; Chrlstley lane, off Fort St.Rent reasonable. Apply Wong KwaL

634

FOR SALE.FURNITURE of 30 rooms; suitable for

lodging house. Can be seen at ware-house of Pacific Transfer Co., 126 S.King street. 6687

OFFICES FOR RENT."TTTTT" HT i Vni?VW A T n " r,l,. 1.o

proof office building in city

IN BREWER building. Queen street,on reasonable terms. Apply to C.Brewer & Co., Ltd. .

ROOMS AND BOARD. kiIN private family for lady and gentle-

man at 1335 Wilder Avenue. 6'J77 925

AT AHIAWA, $10 ; per week, $2 perday' Stae meets 3:1 p" m" trafn fromHonolulu at Pearl City, on Tuesdaysand Fridays. Parties desiring a fourdays stay at Na Lehua will be metat any convenient train any day ex-cepting Tuesdays or Fridays at regu-lar stage rates, providing sufficientnotice is given. Address MRS. CARO-LINE RHODES, Pearl City. Tele-phone King 57. 6669

V.'ASII INGTON, January Z. JonahKalanianaole, better known as PrinceCupid, delegate to Congress from Hawaii, had a belated celebration ojNew Year's day last night and landedin jail charged with disorderly conduct.He had a wordy war with a bill col-

lector and was arrested with the col-

lector.Prince Cupid tried to make it plain

to the policem'an that the law did notapply to members of Congress andPrinces of the blood royal, but his ar-gument fell on dull ears. At the FirstPrecinct Station Prince Cupid becameso angry that he would not put up $5

collateral and .spent the night in jail.This morning a friend heard of hisscrape, and put up the money 'withoutCupid's knowledge. Cupid was stillangry and wanted to fight the case.He was provided with a cup of coffeeand sandwich at the expense of theDistrict of Columbia and conveyed inthe Black Maria to the police court,where the case was postponed untilThursday.

KUHI0 INFORMEDABOUT COUNTY ACT

Secretary Atkinson sent the followingcablegram yesterday afternoon to Delegate Kalanianaole at Washington:

"County Act knocked out by SupremeCourt. Recommendations later."

.

SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE.ARRIVED.

Wednesday, Jan. 13.Stmr. Mikahala, Gregory, from Kauai

ports, at 6:45 a. m. ;

Stmr. Lehua, Xaopala, from Molo-k- ai

ports, at 12:25 a. m. .

C.-- A. S. S. Aorangi, Phillips, from theColonies, at 11:30 a. m.

P. M. S. S. Siberia, Smith, from SanFrancisco, at 3 p.m.

DEPARTED.Wednesday, Jan. 13.

C.-- A. S. S. Aorangi, Phillips, for Victoria and Vancouver, at 4:30 p. m.

U. S. A. cableship Burnside, for Manila, at 5:30 p. m.

Stmr. Lehua, Naopala; for 3Iaui, JIo- -lokai and Lanai ports, at 5 p. m.

SAIL TODAY,P. M. S. S. Siberia, Smith, for Toko

hama and Hongkong, at 9 a. m.PASSENGERS.

Arrived.Per P. M. S. S. Siberia, from San

Francisco, Jan. 13. For Honolulu WF. Allen, Mrs. W. F. Allen, Miss M. J- -

Allen. Miss J. Anderson, Mrs. J. B.Atherton, Miss Kate Atherton, W. H,Baird, Mrs. F. R. Breed, Capt. H. MBenson, Miss M. Benson, J. W. Brewster, Mrs. F. Carty and child, J. C. Coppage, Miss E. M. Crosett, John Ena,Mrs. John Ena, Miss Flaxman, A. H.Fleminer. Mrs. A. H. Fleming, MissMariorie Fleminsr. Miss KatherineGardner, Judge G. D. Gear, Mrs. G. F,McLeod, Mrs. H. P? Nadeau, H. P.Nadeau, F. D. Nelson, P. O'Brien, M.M. O'Shaughnessy, E. E. Paxton, ARaas, Mrs. W. T. Rawlins, E. T. Simpson, Mrs. E. T. Simpson and two children, Denis Searles and wife, Miss A.E. Grobelier, T. A. Hays, F. L. Hadley,Dr. Jennie Hildebrand, Southard Hoffman, Mrs. M. Holmes, R. S. Hosmer,Mrs. G. H. Hosmer, Dr. F. HowardHumphris, Mrs. F. H. Humphris, F.M. Lewis, Robt. Lewers, W. P. LyonMrs. M. A. Mad3en and two children.G. Macintosh, Mrs. G. Macintosh, MissM. Mackie, J. Marsden, Miss M. Math-er, Miss Rose duller, Miss M. L. Mc-Cormi-

Dr. Kathrine Mckay, B. O.Sprague, Mrs. B. O. Sprague, W. M.

Speyer, H. D. Smith, E. Tschumi, P.W. White, Mrs. P. W. White, R. F."White, .Percival White, E. A. Winship.Mrs. E. A. Winship, Mrs. A. Logan.For Yokohama IT. Abe, Howard Ayres,

L. Dunn, T. Funemiza, J. H. Hare,C. lilies, Jr., Mrs. C. lilies, Jr., F. H.Jermyn, Lt. H. G. Leopold, Jack London, Fred Palmer and wife, M. Matse-nam- i,

S. T. Matsumoto, Carroll Miller,Mrs. Carroll Miller, J. Okurmura, P.Phillips, E. C. Sharpe, Mrs. E. C.Sharpe, Claude H. Smith, Miss M. Up-perm-

For Kobe Miss M. M. Cook,Miss A. E. Garvin, Rev. J. C. C. New-ton, Mrs. J. C. C. Newton, Miss RuthNewton, J. Shea, T. Uyeda. For Shan-ghaiRev. F. L. Hawks-Pot- t, D. D.,Mrs. F. LT Hawks-Pot- t, Miss OliveHawks-Pot- t, Master Walter Hawks-Pot- t,

Rev. A. S. Mann, Mrs. F. L. Rich,Miss Johnnie Sanders. For Hongkong.

T. W. Allen, Mrs. T. W. "Allen, E. P.Boyd, Mrs. E. P. Boyd, and 2 infants,J. A. Brien, Mrs. Tom Brown, Rev. F.W. Davis, Mrs. F. WV Davis and infant,Asa Fisher, Rolland Gardner, Capt.Lionel James and servant, Mrs. T. H.Love joy, Mrs. L. D. Miner, M. Baran-sk- i.

Rev. J. M. Montaner, L. G. Rein--burg, Rev. S. B. Rossi ter, Mrs. S. B.Rossiter, Miss. A. S. Rossiter. Miss F,Rossiter, H. H. Stanley, W. H. Taylor,E. W. Tilden, F. W. Wakefield, Mrs.F. Wr. Wakefield, I. Sheldon-William- s.

From Honolulu A. F. Reid, W. B.White, Mrs. W. B. White. For Naga-saki O. K. Davis, wife and child.

'Lay-ov- er at Honolulu F. H. Jermyn,Claude H. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. F. W.Wakefield.

From the Colonies, per S. S. Aorangi,Jan. 13. For Honolulu: G. L. Robinson.For Vancouver and Victoria: A. H.Owens, T. Lawless, Dr. A. Money, B. D.Rogers, M. B. Ewart, Mrs. G. Luneyand family. A. Burns, T. Screen, Mrs.Welsh, K. Harke. M. Montangees, Mrs.

t tt ,,i rv a. iiiii, uirs mil, .wiss XI i u.G. E. Brady, Miss M. Smith. Mrs. W.Phillips, A. Burton, Miss E. Howard,J. Ullman, R. Petmann. Mrs. J. Nojara.

From Kauai ports, per stmr. Mika-hala, Jan. 13. Miss D. Kruse, Rev.Kaauwai, Miss B. Piles. C. S. Au. T.R. Robinson, Miss L. Kaleimakalii. rr.Goodhue and wife. Dr. Wilkinson, G. F. !

Wright and 63 deck. I

From Molokai torts, per stmr. Lehua. '.

Ja"n-- 13. William Mud??, Mr. tind Mrs. :

Dyer, maid and chiid.Booked.

Per P. M. S. S. Siberia, for Orientports, 9 a. m. Jan. 14. Mr. and Mrs.Cecil Brown, Miss Irene Dickson. J. T.Fritch and wife, W. R. White and wife.Dr. Wm. Danel and wife, Manfred A.Hanchild, B. A. Yorba, C. M. Hing.

PLAT AND PARTICULARSAT

Halstesd & Co., Ltd,REAL ESTATE AND BROKER,

Fort Street.

The Overland Routeof the

Southern Pacificla the great

flil) 01 TrOOS-GOQliQSDl- Ql IfCicI

between Sam Francisco and Chicago, ItIs the

Shortest and Quickestand the

Overland Limitedl the most luxurious Train in ts

world1 hrough Without ChangeTime-L- ess Than 3 Bays

Libraries, Writing Desks, Booka,Magazines, Current Literature, Electric Lights, Reading Lamp, in eventberth and..- .-

The Best of Everything:.

Southern PacificE. O. MoCORMICK,

FasseDger Traffic Manager.T. H. GOODMAN,

tian Fraticieco, GeneralPassenger Agent, CaL

W. L. Howard's New Year'i Offer.

The Andrew's homestead, Kaimuki,at a bargain; preferred stock ClarkFarm Co., 8 per cent guaranteed ; 2partly cleared lots, Kaimuki, on "easyterms; 1 lot Palolo near residence ofR. D. Mead; money loaned; titlessearched; corporation books audited;special attention given to financialbusiness left in my care; money placedwith me invested in approved securities. Room No. 7, Mclntyre building.

Service forTravelieis

TICKET ANDPRESERVATIONS

:AT:

SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.

Any citizen of Hawaii planning ajourney which will take him throughSan Francisco, may have all arrange-ments made for railroad, sleeper i orHotel accommodations by the PacificCoast agent of the

Hawaii Promotion CommitteeNo charge Is made for securing Pull-

man reservations,HOTEL ACCOMMODATIONS,RAILROAD TICKETS.Consult Tourist Information Bureau,

Hotel street, or

F. M. Jenifer,Xo. 17 New Montgomery Street, San

Francisco, California.

brSaleandtd RenResidences on Thurston avenue. Pros-

pect street, Kaplplanl street, Punahoo.Pacific Heights, College Hills, Kameha-meh-a

IV road, Kalihi; a business siton King street, a fine property at Olaa,and eight exceptionally fine lots at Ka-imuki on easy terms.

ALBERT BARNES,78 Merchant street.

FOR RENTJR SALE.

IN KAIMUKI TRACT.Los Nos. 3, 4, 6 and 8, Block 36, as a

whole;- - 200x300 or 60,000 sq. ft.A beautiful resident site, three blocks

from the Walalae Electric Road.A stone-wa- ll . surrounds the lot, that

Is mostly cleared and planted withfruit trees two years old. Water laidon. Apply to

A. F. COOKE.Room 7, Mclntyre Building.

Home CompanyCAPITAL $50,G8G.

Organized under the laws of theTerritory of Hawaii

THEHAWAnAN REALTYand MATURITY CO Ltd.

Loans, Mortgages, Securities,Investments and IlealEstate,

Homes Built on the Installmerit Plan.

Heme Office Mclntyre BId Hono-lulu- ,

T. H.

ite igiin Benin ssn

llii! lW&, Wi

Id. K. KENTWELIi,Geceral Kutjw,

oniHaw. Gov't., 5 p. cHaw. 'ler.. 4 p.c. (Fire

Claims . . . .

Hilo R R. Co., 6 p. c.Hon. R. r. fc-- Co.,

e P. CEwa Plant , 6 p. c.. ..O R. A L. CoOahu Plant , 6 p. c...Olaa Plant., 8 p. cWaialua Ag. Co., 6 p.cKahuku 6 p. c .......Pioneer Mill Co., 6 p. c

SALES BETWEEN BOARDS.Seventy-fiv- e Ewa, $20.

U. S. G. WHITE LOSESINCREASED PAY

The United States Supreme Court to-

day affirmed the decision of the Courtof Claims refusing to grant increasedpay to Ulysses S. G. White, a civil en-

gineer in the navy, under the NavyPersonnel act of 1S99. Mr. White wasappointed in 1SS7. He contended thathe had reached the maximum rate ofpay in the army by reason of fiveyears' service before entering the navy,and that he was entitled to a higherrate for the time of his entire navalservice. The court held otherwise,however, on the ground that the oper-ation of the law is prospective and notretrospective. This was a test case.N. Y. Tribune.

IT WILL NOT DO to fool with a badcold. No one can tell what the endwill be. Pneumonia, catarrh, chronicbronchitis and consumption. Invariablyresult from a neglected cold. As amedicine for the cure or coids, coturhsand Influenza, nothing can comparewith Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. Italways cures and cures quickly. Ben-son, Smith & Co., Ltd., WholesaleAgents, sell it.

Profcsslonl.il Cards

ARCHITECTS.W. MATLOCK CAMPBELL Office 1SJ4

Young street.

ATTORNEYS.HENRY E. HIGHTON Attorney-at--

Law. Southwest cor. Fort and King.

DENTISTS.DRS. A. B. CLARK and P. F. FREAK

Mclntyre Bldg., ITort and King.

ENGINEERS.ARTHUR C. ALEXANDER. Survey

or and Engineer. 406 Judd Bldg.; P.O. box 732.

JOHN NEILL Engineer and machin1st. Late of Catton, Neili & Co., Ltd.Address 1227 Matlock Ave, City.

INSURANCE.THE MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE

CO. OF NHiW YORK.3. B. ROSE, Agent : : : Honolulu.

MUSICIANS.COOK'S MUSIC SCHOOL Plana, Or

gan, singing and harmony. Love bldg.

PHYSICIANS.DR. B. KOBAYASHI. Office Alakea,

near Beretanla. Phone White 12L

DR. T. MJTAMURA. --Offloe, 68 KukulLane. 8 to 10 a. m.; 6 to 7:30 p. m.TeL Blue 2365. Res. 1649 Nuuanu.

TYPEWRITERS.BOUGHT, sold, rented and repaired at

Remington Typewriter office. Hotel St.

HOTEL. riELROSE.Phone Blue 8081.

A first class family boarding house,tropically built. Electric cars pass thedoor every few minutes. King streetnear Waikikl turn.

MRS. W. H. WILKINSON,Manager.

FOR SALE.

Kaimuki Lots.Six of the choicest lots In the KaimuTract; high ground, 2 blocks from

electric car line. Inquire C. W. Dicker.Fort street.

C. H. DICKEY.C645 KInsr and Rethal ptrot

FOR SALE.Good family horse, cheap. Apply

RED FRONT.Cor. Queen and Nuuanu

streets.

IIWILL CALL FOfe

'We pack, haul and ship your

Storage in Brick Warehouse, 126

THE PACIFIC

Commercial Advertiser3iarfl at the Post Office at Honolulu,

B5. H., as second clasa matter.

(SUBSCRIPTION RATES:

!2NaTr .I12.Miffix nantLa . . It

&&vrtlB)ng rates on application. .

3g3Mb3 every morning except Sundayby the

12LLWAIIAN GAZETTE CO., LTD.,

nesa SicSt Block, No. 65 South King St.A. W. PEARSON, Manager.

& LAN D GO.

TIME TABLEMay 1st, 1903.

OUTWARD.Walanae, Waialua, Kahuku and

"Way Station 9:15 a-- m., S:20 p. m.iJtar Pearl City, Ewa Mill and Way aataikms 17:30 a. m., a. m.,

531M a. zn.,.2:15 p. m.. 3;20 p. m--,

:1S p. m., 6:15 p. J:3 P. m.,931:1 . m.

INWARD,ftextre Honolulu from Kahuku, Wal-e3- aa

and Walanae 8:36 a. rru, "5: 11

&wrrye Honolulu from Ewa Mill and&arl City 16:50 a. m., t7:46 a. m.,9:a a. iru, 10:38 a. m., 2:05 P. m.,

:S1 p. m., 5:31 p. m., 7:40 p. m.3ally.Rnnday Excepted.

t Sunday Only. 'Si 2. DENISON, F. C SMITH,

JTnpt. Q. P. & T.

TIDES. SUN AND MOON.

Sf srt s,

e. ai(s his. a- c - 2

yt. m p.m. Rise11 0.21 4 41. 6. 4d0 40 5 87. LSI Seea.u I I t

28M- - 8 15 1 5 11 tl 5.32 7 10 6 40 5.37 2.2S

a 1 C6 1.7 li.U 6 20 8 C8 6 40 5 88 S 18VChiu,

lii 2 27, a 0: 2 13; 7.47 84 6 40 5 J 1W2l U: S 01 2 01 3.0 8.20 10.08 6 4J 5 40 5 53 By

I IIIIT 8.841 a. 0 3 40 9 0310 37 3 40 6 41 SetSista.tk' 4 Mi I 8. 4 ! 9 40 .1 10 6 40 S 41 58

2Cew moon Jan. 17th at 5:15 a. m.aim. of the tide are taken from the

l$fclva States Coast and Geodetic Bur-sw- y

tables.tides at Kahulul and Hilo occur

4&vt n hour earlier than at Hono-i-r.

awailan standard time Is 13 hours 30sn&sts slower than Greenwich time,3ata taat of the meridian of 157 de-Bb-wm

W minutes. The time wh'atleSSam at 1:30 p. m., which la the same2 Greenwich, kours minutes. Bun9&i asoon are for laal S3E fr tk

1 gp g g ?: i" Z b B : ? : :

f .

8 i 2 80 C7 30 Oi 70 79 18 77 3- -5 NB S--l8 S8'M SQ 03 7' 77 18 71 4 N 2--4M J 4 30 0' 30 0 7 7fl i'2 fS 1 Kb 1- -0

T I R SO J2 01 67 77 .05 74 5 H 2-- 0W . 8 80 16 30 7j 71 78 C 7S I KB 1- -0

T 7) MSO rti 7 .18 78 3 h 3-- 08 30.17 SO 10 69 77 .5 72 2 K 2--0

Barometer corrected to 32 F. and sealevel, and for standard gravity of Lat.45. This correction is 06 for Honolulu.