8
If A 1 f PT;.' x- - r.-- J I I I I dnj's If you Nowb, wnnt toMliiy to TT 1VT Tim llimnllniiHtur Ik Iho tlmt THE HAW pnper rou tan find It in A THE STAII ' Ki's lioiiicHoflloiiolriln Into (ho fopst I I CLASSIFIED ADS, THREE LINES, THREE TIMES TWENTY-FIV- E CENTS. QUICK RESULTS Vol. XI. HONOLULU. H. T.. MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1903. No. 3607 mi THE PHILIPPINE ENGAGE A BAND OF FILIPINO HEADHUNTERS IN ttUEVA VISCAYA AND POT FIFTY-THRE- E OF THEM TWO OF THE CON- STABULARY ARE KILLED. Associated Press Cable to the Stat. MANILA, P. I., October 12. The constabulary bad a serious en- gagement with a band of hcadbunters in Nttava Viscaya. The head-hunte- rs made a desperate fight but were unable to withstand the on- slaught of the constabulary. Fifty-thre- e of the hcadbunters were killed and two of the constabulary lost their lives in the engagement. ' Associated .Press Cable to the Star. Montana, October 12. Flathead Indians jnflamcd with whiskey, murdered seven white persons in their beds. ' Fear TIE Associated Press Cable to the St&r. HMDIRIIS CONSTABULARY MM AND WHISKEY BROWNING, England Will Be Involved In War LONDON, October1 12. There is the utmost disquiet is felt here in diplomatic circles over the Eastern situation. The ministry and otlier government leaders are fearful that the recent alliance with. Japan may involve the British Empire the approaching struggle between Japan and Russia. The Japanese' minister here admits the possibility of hostilities with- in a short time, unless Russia accedes to Japan's demands regarding the evacuation of Manchuria. He deprecates, however, the rumors that Have been circulating regarding an alleged ultimatum from Japan to Ruftia. No such notice is admitted in Japanese diplomatic cclns. to have passed between Japan and Russia. The negotiations between tho rcpiesentatives of the two nations have not, it is asserted, reached such an acute stage that the Japanese have dispaired of effecting an amicable agreement with Russia. SAYS WAR VERY NEAR Associated Press Cable to the Star. WASHINGTON, D. C, October 12. The Japanese minister ad- mits that his country is preparing for war with Russia. He says, how- ever, that the situation has been exaggerated and that affairs have not .yet reached the crisis that the news reports would indicate. The nego- tiations are progressing between the Japanese and Russian diplomats, regarding the occupation of Manchuria. There have been, he adds, no developments of a favorable character. Thus far, the Russians con- tinue to pursue a policy of procrastination whenever the evacuation of Manchuria is suggested. It is believed here in diplomatic circles that the negotiations will soon result in Russia being forced into a positive declaration of her in- tention to permanently hold and occupy Manchuria. Such an admis- sion on the part of Russia will, it is thought, be followed immediately by a declaration of hostilities by Japan. CRISIS Associated Pcess Cable to the Star. BERLIN, October 12. A crisis has been reached in the Eastern situatioil. The Japanese and Russian legations 'are uninformed how- ever regarding the latest developments in the negotiations between their governments. M M K H H H B n IU M U m B H EJ m H u D El m sa M H m M M M H U HI H M H M M M M WHILE WAITING FOR CAR. While waiting for car at Lyons cor- ner, drop In and, have a glass of Whit-mar- 's Ice Cream Soda. HEALANI MASQUE BALL. Large assortment MASQUES just opened. Call early for good choice. See .our Window (Ewa) display. Wall Nichols, Co. 2 lIlIBIIIIirtlHIIIIIIIlHl Did It ever occur to you that a period of business depression makes Insurance doubly, valu- able. Insurance Department Hawai- ian Trust Co., Ltd. Fire, ' Life; Accident, Plate Glass Insurance, Surety Bonds. 923 Fort St. Tel. Main 184 .0 :-- m ' A STORY IK FIGURES. The following figures are taken trom one of the certificates of the Phoenix Savings Building and Loan Year. First . Second Third . Fourth Fifth . Cancellation Payments. Value, ..40b San Francisco Examiner The following figures taken from Somi-Annu- al Statement the Pio- neer Building and Loan Association: Year. First . Second Third . Fourth Fifth . Total .. '80 ? E5 ICO 130 ' 210 215 320 305 400 are the of Total Cancellation Payments. Value. $ 80 1G0 21ft 320 400 Yes. Another Shipment of fresh dog cakes and puppy food has Just boen received. j Also a completellne of Spratt's Dog Re- medies und Kennel sundries at Pears.on & Potter Co., .Ltd., Union & Hotel Sts. J 82 80 172 73 269 86 374 66 4S9 93 INTEREST ON BONDS SECRETARY CARTER CABLES., THAT IT HAS BEEN FIXED AT FOUR AND A HALF PER CENT BIDS RECEIVABLE NOVEMBER 18 WILL RETURN TO HONOLULU ON ' THE SIBRIA. The follqwing cable from Carter, dated at New York this morning, was received by Treasurer Kepoifcai: "Rate four-half- ', bids;' received Honolulu New York November i8th, delivery 24th, will catch' Siberia, bringing bonds execution." This means that the rate of interest on the bonds has been fixed by Carter at four and a hauf per cent, instead of five per cent. From this it is supposed that the Secretary has found that there is no doubt about a market being found for the bonds; and that he will bring the bonds with him to be executed here. Returning on the Siberia, Carter should arrive on October 29, or five days before election. :o: i KOHALA DITCH The Executive Council definitely fixed the terms of the Kohala ditch license this morning and dqqyjed to advertise it at public auction. The date fixed for the sale is November 28. This allows over six weeks time for competitors. .. The specifications for the biddersSare substantially according to the terms already published, and discussed with the parties who are after the franchise. ' The proposed license is for fifty years. The rent to be paid to the government for the first four years is $1,000 per year. After that 5 per cent of the gross receipts are to be:paid additional up to twenty years, When the rate is to be adjusted by arbitration. There is'to be another similar adjustment in the 35th year. The company is to begin actual construction of the system, spend- ing not less than $10,000, within 18 months from the. issuance of the license and is to spend not less than $400,000 on' the. work withon five years. Water is to be supplied at reasonable rates, to all customers :in the districts covered bv the franchiscfand- - only surface water is to be made use of.' no tunnelling or digging for underground water being al- lowed. Violation of any of the terms is cause for forfeiture of the license. KAMUELA JURY CONTINUES TRIAL THE HOW OVER COLOR. LINE SUGGESTIONS ENDS VERY QUIETLY. The jurors In the Kamuela case, be fore Judge Gear, had got over being "sore" by the time court was called' this morning, and the trial proceeded after a report by Andrews as to the possibility of taking legal steps on ac- count of the publication which the Jury complained of. Quite a crowd had gathered in court expecting to hear some more discussion, but they weru disappointed. None of the jury had anything to say and the attorneys on both sides expressed themselves as sat isfied that the Jurors would give an Im- partial verdict. When the case was called Judge Gear asked Attorney General Andrews for his report. Andrews said that In view of the request of the court and the evi- dent strong feeling among the jury he had gone Into the matter very careful- ly. "My first Impression was that there was nothing In the article on which charges could be based," he said, "but I wanted to be sure an the jurors seem- ed to feel very aggrieved and theie should certainly be some way to pro tect them when, as I believe, they are trying to. be fair in all cases. 'I find, however, that there Is abso lutely nothing In the article which, un- der the authorities, I can bring before the grand jury. The general Idea seems to be ihat where tnere Is men criti cism of n jury without nnytl.ir.g tesd ing to bias them, there can be 110 char- ges. Nothing in this article that I can see affectH them at Andrews said that the only criticism to bo found in the article, If there was any at all, was of the defendant's at torney. "The jurors are bound by their oaths to try the case on the evidence rrcsented to them," he sa d, "and they should not be affected by newsnancr articles. In fact in many jurisdictions it is the rule for Judges to instruct Jur- - ors not to read anything In the papers about the case they are hearing. "Tno article Itself Is not true, there- - fore It Is Impossible that there should be any hidden meaning. It mentions the race line and the color line, but there Is nothing In it derogatory to the natives. Suppose the paper had said that there was a red-head- Jury and some one should object.' There would not no anything that could be taken up under tre law." Andrews quoted several eastern cases ' In which newspapers had passed severe criticisms and aspersions in Juries ain courts, while a trial was In progress. una in wnicn tne supreme courts had held that there, was nothing uctlonabla. Judge Gear enquired what was to be done with the case. Andnwi said the Attorney General's Department was ready to proceed with tho trial. At- torney Long for the defense said that he was satisfied also, and the taking of evidence was resumed. ERUPTION TO BE SEEMS INCREASING WIRELESS MESSAGE FROM CAPT. MOSHER STATES THAT KILAUEA IS SMOKING NOW. Evidently the eruption of IJouna Loa Is the greatest that has been known In years. Contrary to the usual rule when the mountain breaks out on the upper slopes, the lower crater of KI-lau- Is smoking. This news was re- ceived this morning by the Inter-Islan- d S. S. Company from Captain Mosher of the'steamer Iwalanl which went up last week with a special excur- sion party from Honolulu. The message from Captain Mosher was as follows: "Kona, Oct. 12, 1903. "Great activity Mokuaweoweo. Kl-lau- ta smoking. Grand display visible from steamer along the coast.'" According to schedule, the party was to have reached Honuapo Saturday 'night and gone ashore yesterday. They were to go to the Volcano House at Kllauea and from that place take horses and make the'ascent of Mauna Loa If possible. Later advices received yesterday and Saturday Indicate thn,'t the lava is liowlng down the side 6f Mauna Loa. Within the course of the week If the eruption continues, some body ought to be able 'to make a definite report on the flow; Captain Mosher of the Iwa- lanl will bring complete details when his vessel returns this week from Pu-nul- and Honuapo. The steamer 'Mauna Loa will sail tomorrow at noon for Korfa fipd Kau ports. She will take a number of tourists It Is thought for' a1 fair number have already booked by her from Honolulu. MORE PEA-,- TO Pill 1PiMNI' Captain Nlblack of the Naval Sta- tion will send another consignment of alligator pear seeds to tho Philippines. They will bo i?ent by the S. S. .Siberia this month. This will be the lust ship- ment of pears for some months, as tho season Is closing. Captain Nlblack has ber-1- 1 ery enterprising In sending ut the pears to the Philippines. He sent a t'hiniiH'iU by the transport Shermai last Friday. ISLEWORTJI MAY SAIL FRIDAY. The British S. S. Isleworth may sail Friday for Ocean Island. S:ie has her new propeller In place arid is now dis- charging the remainder of her cargo of Tguano. J. T. Arundel, the. manager of this guano company, Is expected to ar- rive on the Vfntum Wednesday morn- ing from San Francisco. He will ac- - company the vessel to Ocean Island. Twenty-fiv- e ce.i.ts pays for "a Wpnt ad In the Star. A bargain. FIRST PROCEEDING UNDLR TQRRENS ACT MRS. IDA B. CASTLE, WIFE OF W. R. CASTLE, FILES THE , . FIRST PETITION JN THE LAND REGISTRATION".? COURT ASKING CONFIRMATION OF TITLE TO THE J FAMILY HOMESTEAD. K The first application 'to Judge Weaver of the new land court for a title under the Torrens act Is that of Mrs. Ida B. Castle, whose petition is now on file with Registrar Savldge. It has .been referred to E. A. Mott-Smlt- h as ex- aminer of titles and on his report being made, it will be advertised and a day set for hearing, after which, If the pro- per proof Is made, a clear title, which cannot' bo attacked, will be Issued by the Judge, shutting out all other claims The first petition Is In form as fol- lows: "To the Honorable Philip L. Weaver, Judge of the Court of Land Registra- tion: "I the undersigned, hereby apply to have the land hereinafter described brought under the operation and pro- visions of Chapter 66 of the Session Laws of 1903, and to have my title 'therein registered and confirmed. And I declare: "That I, the below mentioned Ida B. Castle ,am the owner In le of a certain parcel of land with the butld-Ing- s thereon, situate In Honolulu, Isl and of Oahu In the County of Oahu and the Territory of Hawaii and particular- ly described as follows:" in case. mat of of of of not jun in of on NO IN cures of this drug the nnd tho relief as of off, the In more The also and to cold In any It and tho In It and For sale by nil Co., S. Co. the of to their of on and 13 and Pure Here ..' thr showing to be square feet, at and nt Containing: sets forth "That I by deed from. Mary dated 27, 1900 and In the of the Registrar of Conveyances of Book 217. 84. "That now occupied by and as homestead, post office box 151, Honolulu. "That tho names In full and far as to of the of all lands adjoining said McKeague. Honolulu, John Farmsworth, Honolulu. N. Castle estate and the government as owner df Luna-lll- o, and I was to RV by Dr. at Plttsfleld. In 1875, have then in "That my full name, nn post office as 1301 Pi. O. Box 154, Honolulu, "IDA B. CASTLE." Contempt Is Now An Infamous Crime TUDGE GEAR'S DECISION AN EXTRAORDIN Ll FliCT COURT HELD TO BE POWERLESS . UNDER STATUTES OF HAWAII TO SUMMARILY PUNISH. THOSE..IN. CONTEMPT. The Kamuela jur.y complaints and the question of contempt -- growing out of it has served to attention to an extraordinary, predica- ment which the circuit stands Judge gave his deci- - T t. .1 . . . . o.wn in nit iv a oui 11 tliat contempt court is an infamous and if this is the case, the lawyers say, the court move the decision without the aid a grand jury. The court has thus lost its to summarily punish for contempt and enforce in its own presence. Section the penal code Hawaii says that any fine im- posed by court is the person failing to pay it shall he con- fined, at or otherwise, in Judge Gear's Wa Sin decision to the that any offense for which might be with or hnrr1 l.ihnr in nin, :..r . . , ... itua 1111 also that no such be charged without a grand indictment. The punishment provided the contempt is fine or imprisonment, it is held that contempt clearly falls the judge's definition an infamous "A person might go into the court and me judge all he (Continued five.) CHAMBERLAIN'S REMEDY. Many cough contain The effect is 16 dimlnl&h secretion of mucus, Is onlv temporary. As soon the effect the opium passes returns a form. system Is weakened rendered more susceptible Chamberlain's Cough Remedy does nqt opium form. affords relief leaves system a healthy condition. cures cures quickly. Smith & general agents. AUTUMN MILLINERY OPENING. N. Sachs' Dry Goods Invito Ladies Honolulu attend autumn opening millinery goods Monday, Tuesday Wed- nesday, 12, 14. THE OLD RELIABLE POWDER Absolutely THERE IS SUBSTITUTE follows a description property, It 152.0SO Lunnlllo Victoria, assessed $30,000. the petition as title Clench October recorded Oirice Honolulu page said land Is myself family a address ad- dresses so known me occupants land as as 'Sarah S. Ha- waiian Victoria Klnau streets. "That William Castle Bartlett Mass., but always since, resided Honolulu residence address are follows: Ida. Beatrice Castle, Klnau street. WA SIN HAS ARY THE THE draw court since Gear cm.-..- :... o: appears uncier ejection crime cannot under natural power can't order 576 when a. paid, hard Oahu jail. was effect there without .... 11IUII11UU crime; crime could jury statute for hence within crime. insult page OPIUM COUGK opium. afforded maladv "severe contnln always dealers. Benson, grand October NO streets, follows: obtained follows: limited married Hawaii. labor SURE OF ELECTION. For each one of the new county offi- cers at least one man Is sure nf elec- tion. Thon comes the question oC bonds. Since the law makes the county-pa- the premium on surety company bonds furnished by officials, personal pftntes will not have to be put up to guarantee the nets of an ofllcer nnd nil his deputies. One of tho best surety companies is represented by Henry' Wnterhouse Trust Co. l 1 Price, 83.50' Made oZ box calf, Pennsyl- vania and Es-s- cx lasts, com- fortable, easy; and durable Every p a I'r E u a r a nteed. A 1 1 leather. Sizes from 5 to IL 1 hers' Shoe Co Lid IOOI Fort Street i t '''

I THE HAW I · 2015-06-02 · If A 1 f PT;.' x--r.--J I I I dnj's If you Nowb, wnnt toMliiy to TT 1VT Tim llimnllniiHtur THE HAW Ik Iho pnper tlmt rou tan find It in A THE STAII

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Page 1: I THE HAW I · 2015-06-02 · If A 1 f PT;.' x--r.--J I I I dnj's If you Nowb, wnnt toMliiy to TT 1VT Tim llimnllniiHtur THE HAW Ik Iho pnper tlmt rou tan find It in A THE STAII

If

A

1

f PT;.' x- -

r.--

JI I

I I

dnj'sIf you

Nowb,wnnt

toMliiyto TT 1VT Tim llimnllniiHtur

Ik Iho tlmtTHE HAW pnperrou tan find It in ATHE STAII'

Ki'slioiiicHoflloiiolriln

Into (ho fopst

I I CLASSIFIED ADS, THREE LINES, THREE TIMES TWENTY-FIV- E CENTS. QUICK RESULTS

Vol. XI. HONOLULU. H. T.. MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1903. No. 3607

miTHE PHILIPPINE ENGAGE A BAND OF

FILIPINO HEADHUNTERS IN ttUEVA VISCAYA ANDPOT FIFTY-THRE- E OF THEM TWO OF THE CON-STABULARY ARE KILLED.

Associated Press Cable to the Stat.MANILA, P. I., October 12. The constabulary bad a serious en-

gagement with a band of hcadbunters in Nttava Viscaya. The head-hunte- rs

made a desperate fight but were unable to withstand the on-slaught of the constabulary. Fifty-thre- e of the hcadbunters were killedand two of the constabulary lost their lives in the engagement.

'Associated .Press Cable to the Star.Montana, October 12. Flathead Indians jnflamcd

with whiskey, murdered seven white persons in their beds. '

Fear

TIE

Associated Press Cable to the St&r.

HMDIRIISCONSTABULARY

MM AND WHISKEY

BROWNING,

England Will

Be Involved In WarLONDON, October1 12. There is the utmost disquiet is felt here in

diplomatic circles over the Eastern situation. The ministry and otliergovernment leaders are fearful that the recent alliance with. Japan mayinvolve the British Empire the approaching struggle between Japanand Russia.

The Japanese' minister here admits the possibility of hostilities with-

in a short time, unless Russia accedes to Japan's demands regardingthe evacuation of Manchuria. He deprecates, however, the rumors thatHave been circulating regarding an alleged ultimatum from Japan toRuftia. No such notice is admitted in Japanese diplomatic cclns. tohave passed between Japan and Russia. The negotiations between thorcpiesentatives of the two nations have not, it is asserted, reached suchan acute stage that the Japanese have dispaired of effecting an amicableagreement with Russia.

SAYS WARVERY NEAR

Associated Press Cable to the Star.WASHINGTON, D. C, October 12. The Japanese minister ad-

mits that his country is preparing for war with Russia. He says, how-ever, that the situation has been exaggerated and that affairs have not

.yet reached the crisis that the news reports would indicate. The nego-tiations are progressing between the Japanese and Russian diplomats,regarding the occupation of Manchuria. There have been, he adds, nodevelopments of a favorable character. Thus far, the Russians con-tinue to pursue a policy of procrastination whenever the evacuation ofManchuria is suggested.

It is believed here in diplomatic circles that the negotiations willsoon result in Russia being forced into a positive declaration of her in-

tention to permanently hold and occupy Manchuria. Such an admis-sion on the part of Russia will, it is thought, be followed immediatelyby a declaration of hostilities by Japan.

CRISIS

Associated Pcess Cable to the Star.BERLIN, October 12. A crisis has been reached in the Eastern

situatioil. The Japanese and Russian legations 'are uninformed how-ever regarding the latest developments in the negotiations between theirgovernments.

MMKHHHBnIUMUmBHEJmHuDElmsaMHm

MMMHUHIHM

HM

MMM

WHILE WAITING FOR CAR.While waiting for car at Lyons cor-

ner, drop In and, have a glass of Whit-mar- 's

Ice Cream Soda.

HEALANI MASQUE BALL.Large assortment MASQUES just

opened. Call early for good choice. See.our Window (Ewa) display. WallNichols, Co.

2

lIlIBIIIIirtlHIIIIIIIlHl

Did It ever occur to you thata period of business depressionmakes Insurance doubly, valu-

able.

Insurance Department Hawai-

ian Trust Co., Ltd.Fire, ' Life; Accident, Plate

Glass Insurance, Surety Bonds.

923 Fort St. Tel. Main 184

.0 :--

m

'

A STORY IK FIGURES.The following figures are taken trom

one of the certificates of the PhoenixSavings Building and Loan

Year.First .SecondThird .

FourthFifth .

CancellationPayments. Value,

..40bSan Francisco Examiner

The following figures taken fromSomi-Annu- al Statement the Pio-

neer Building and Loan Association:

Year.First .SecondThird .FourthFifth .

Total

. . '80 ? E5ICO 130 '

210 215320 305

400

arethe of

Total CancellationPayments. Value.

$ 801G021ft320400

Yes.Another

Shipment of freshdog cakes and puppyfood has Just boenreceived. j

Also a completellneof Spratt's Dog Re-

medies und Kennelsundries at Pears.on &

Potter Co., .Ltd.,Union & Hotel Sts.

J 82 80172 73269 86374 664S9 93

INTERESTON BONDS

SECRETARY CARTER CABLES., THAT IT HAS BEEN FIXEDAT FOUR AND A HALF PER CENT BIDS RECEIVABLENOVEMBER 18 WILL RETURN TO HONOLULU ON

'THE SIBRIA.

The follqwing cable from Carter, dated at New York this morning,was received by Treasurer Kepoifcai:

"Rate four-half- ', bids;' received Honolulu New York November i8th,delivery 24th, will catch' Siberia, bringing bonds execution."

This means that the rate of interest on the bonds has been fixed byCarter at four and a hauf per cent, instead of five per cent. From thisit is supposed that the Secretary has found that there is no doubt abouta market being found for the bonds; and that he will bring the bondswith him to be executed here.

Returning on the Siberia, Carter should arrive on October 29, orfive days before election.

:o:

i

KOHALA DITCH

The Executive Council definitely fixed the terms of the Kohaladitch license this morning and dqqyjed to advertise it at public auction.The date fixed for the sale is November 28. This allows over six weekstime for competitors.

.. The specifications for the biddersSare substantially according to theterms already published, and discussed with the parties who are afterthe franchise. '

The proposed license is for fifty years. The rent to be paid to thegovernment for the first four years is $1,000 per year. After that 5 percent of the gross receipts are to be:paid additional up to twenty years,When the rate is to be adjusted by arbitration. There is'to be anothersimilar adjustment in the 35th year.

The company is to begin actual construction of the system, spend-ing not less than $10,000, within 18 months from the. issuance of thelicense and is to spend not less than $400,000 on' the. work withon fiveyears. Water is to be supplied at reasonable rates, to all customers :inthe districts covered bv the franchiscfand- - only surface water is to bemade use of.' no tunnelling or digging for underground water being al-

lowed. Violation of any of the terms is cause for forfeiture of thelicense.

KAMUELA JURY

CONTINUES TRIAL

THE HOW OVER COLOR. LINESUGGESTIONS ENDS VERYQUIETLY.

The jurors In the Kamuela case, before Judge Gear, had got over being"sore" by the time court was called'this morning, and the trial proceededafter a report by Andrews as to thepossibility of taking legal steps on ac-count of the publication which the Jurycomplained of. Quite a crowd hadgathered in court expecting to hearsome more discussion, but they werudisappointed. None of the jury hadanything to say and the attorneys onboth sides expressed themselves as satisfied that the Jurors would give an Im-partial verdict.

When the case was called Judge Gearasked Attorney General Andrews forhis report. Andrews said that In viewof the request of the court and the evi-dent strong feeling among the jury hehad gone Into the matter very careful-ly. "My first Impression was that therewas nothing In the article on whichcharges could be based," he said, "butI wanted to be sure an the jurors seem-ed to feel very aggrieved and theieshould certainly be some way to protect them when, as I believe, they aretrying to. be fair in all cases.

'I find, however, that there Is absolutely nothing In the article which, un-der the authorities, I can bring beforethe grand jury. The general Idea seemsto be ihat where tnere Is men criticism of n jury without nnytl.ir.g tesding to bias them, there can be 110 char-ges. Nothing in this article that I cansee affectH them at

Andrews said that the only criticismto bo found in the article, If there wasany at all, was of the defendant's attorney. "The jurors are bound by theiroaths to try the case on the evidencerrcsented to them," he sa d, "and theyshould not be affected by newsnancrarticles. In fact in many jurisdictionsit is the rule for Judges to instruct Jur- -ors not to read anything In the papersabout the case they are hearing.

"Tno article Itself Is not true, there- -fore It Is Impossible that there shouldbe any hidden meaning. It mentionsthe race line and the color line, butthere Is nothing In it derogatory to thenatives. Suppose the paper had saidthat there was a red-head- Jury andsome one should object.' There wouldnot no anything that could be taken upunder tre law."

Andrews quoted several eastern cases '

In which newspapers had passed severecriticisms and aspersions in Juries aincourts, while a trial was In progress.una in wnicn tne supreme courts hadheld that there, was nothing uctlonabla.

Judge Gear enquired what was to bedone with the case. Andnwi said theAttorney General's Department wasready to proceed with tho trial. At-torney Long for the defense said thathe was satisfied also, and the taking ofevidence was resumed.

ERUPTION

TO BE

SEEMS

INCREASING

WIRELESS MESSAGE FROM CAPT.

MOSHER STATES THAT KILAUEAIS SMOKING NOW.

Evidently the eruption of IJouna LoaIs the greatest that has been knownIn years. Contrary to the usual rulewhen the mountain breaks out on theupper slopes, the lower crater of KI-lau-

Is smoking. This news was re-ceived this morning by the Inter-Islan- d

S. S. Company from CaptainMosher of the'steamer Iwalanl whichwent up last week with a special excur-sion party from Honolulu.

The message from Captain Mosherwas as follows:

"Kona, Oct. 12, 1903.

"Great activity Mokuaweoweo. Kl-lau- ta

smoking. Grand display visiblefrom steamer along the coast.'"

According to schedule, the party wasto have reached Honuapo Saturday

'night and gone ashore yesterday. Theywere to go to the Volcano House atKllauea and from that place takehorses and make the'ascent of MaunaLoa If possible.

Later advices received yesterday andSaturday Indicate thn,'t the lava isliowlng down the side 6f Mauna Loa.Within the course of the week If theeruption continues, some body ought tobe able 'to make a definite report onthe flow; Captain Mosher of the Iwa-lanl will bring complete details whenhis vessel returns this week from Pu-nul-

and Honuapo. The steamer'Mauna Loa will sail tomorrow at noonfor Korfa fipd Kau ports. She willtake a number of tourists It Is thoughtfor' a1 fair number have already bookedby her from Honolulu.

MORE PEA-,- TO Pill 1PiMNI'Captain Nlblack of the Naval Sta-

tion will send another consignment ofalligator pear seeds to tho Philippines.They will bo i?ent by the S. S. .Siberiathis month. This will be the lust ship-ment of pears for some months, as thoseason Is closing. Captain Nlblack hasber-1-1 ery enterprising In sending utthe pears to the Philippines. He senta t'hiniiH'iU by the transport Shermailast Friday.

ISLEWORTJI MAY SAIL FRIDAY.The British S. S. Isleworth may sail

Friday for Ocean Island. S:ie has hernew propeller In place arid is now dis-charging the remainder of her cargo ofTguano. J. T. Arundel, the. manager ofthis guano company, Is expected to ar-rive on the Vfntum Wednesday morn-ing from San Francisco. He will ac- -

company the vessel to Ocean Island.

Twenty-fiv- e ce.i.ts pays for "a Wpntad In the Star. A bargain.

FIRST PROCEEDING

UNDLR TQRRENS ACT

MRS. IDA B. CASTLE, WIFE OF W. R. CASTLE, FILES THE , .

FIRST PETITION JN THE LAND REGISTRATION".?COURT ASKING CONFIRMATION OF TITLE TO THE JFAMILY HOMESTEAD. K

The first application 'to Judge Weaverof the new land court for a title underthe Torrens act Is that of Mrs. Ida B.Castle, whose petition is now on filewith Registrar Savldge. It has .beenreferred to E. A. Mott-Smlt- h as ex-aminer of titles and on his report beingmade, it will be advertised and a dayset for hearing, after which, If the pro-per proof Is made, a clear title, whichcannot' bo attacked, will be Issued bythe Judge, shutting out all other claims

The first petition Is In form as fol-lows:

"To the Honorable Philip L. Weaver,Judge of the Court of Land Registra-tion:

"I the undersigned, hereby apply tohave the land hereinafter describedbrought under the operation and pro-visions of Chapter 66 of the SessionLaws of 1903, and to have my title'therein registered and confirmed. AndI declare:

"That I, the below mentioned Ida B.Castle ,am the owner In le of acertain parcel of land with the butld-Ing- s

thereon, situate In Honolulu, Island of Oahu In the County of Oahu andthe Territory of Hawaii and particular-ly described as follows:"

incase. mat

of

of

of ofnot

jun

in

of

on

NO IN

curesof this drug

the nnd tho relief

as of off,the In more

The alsoand to cold

In any Itand tho In

Itand For sale by nil

Co.,

S. Co. theof to their

ofon and

13 and

Pure

Here ..' thrshowing to be

square feet, at andnt Containing:

sets forth

"That I by deed from.Mary dated 27, 1900 and

In the of the Registrarof Conveyances of Book 217.

84.

"That now occupied byand as homestead, post

office box 151, Honolulu."That tho names In full and

far as to of theof all lands adjoining said

McKeague.Honolulu, John Farmsworth, Honolulu.

N. Castle estate and thegovernment as owner df Luna-lll- o,

andI was to RV

by Dr. at Plttsfleld.In 1875, have

then in"That my full name, nn

post office as1301 Pi.

O. Box 154, Honolulu,"IDA B. CASTLE."

Contempt Is Now

An Infamous CrimeTUDGE GEAR'S DECISION AN EXTRAORDIN

Ll FliCT COURT HELD TO BE POWERLESS. UNDER STATUTES OF HAWAII TO SUMMARILY

PUNISH. THOSE..IN. CONTEMPT.

The Kamuela jur.y complaints and the question of contempt -- growingout of it has served to attention to an extraordinary, predica-

ment which the circuit stands Judge gave his deci- -T t. .1 . . . .o.wn in nit iv a oui 11 tliat contempt

court is an infamous and if this is the case, the lawyers say,the court move the decision without the aid a grandjury. The court has thus lost its to summarily punish forcontempt and enforce in its own presence.

Section the penal code Hawaii says that any fine im-posed by court is the person failing to pay it shall he con-fined, at or otherwise, in Judge Gear's Wa Sindecision to the that any offense for which might be

with or hnrr1 l.ihnr in nin, :..r. . , ... itua 1111

also that no such be charged without a grandindictment. The punishment provided the contempt isfine or imprisonment, it is held that contempt clearly fallsthe judge's definition an infamous

"A person might go into the court and me judge all he

(Continued five.)

CHAMBERLAIN'SREMEDY.

Many cough containThe effect is 16 dimlnl&hsecretion of mucus,

Is onlv temporary. As soonthe effect the opium passes

returns aform. system Is weakened

rendered more susceptibleChamberlain's Cough Remedy doesnqt opium form.affords relief leaves systema healthy condition. cures

cures quickly.Smith & general

agents.

AUTUMN MILLINERY OPENING.N. Sachs' Dry Goods Invito

Ladies Honolulu attendautumn opening millinery

goods Monday, Tuesday Wed-nesday, 12, 14.

THE OLD RELIABLE

POWDERAbsolutely

THERE IS SUBSTITUTE

follows a descriptionproperty, It 152.0SO

Lunnlllo Victoria,assessed $30,000.

the petition as

titleClench October

recorded OiriceHonolulu

pagesaid land Is

myself family aaddress

ad-dresses so known meoccupantsland as as 'Sarah

S. Ha-waiian

Victoria Klnau streets."That William

Castle BartlettMass., but always since,

resided Honoluluresidence

address are follows: Ida.Beatrice Castle, Klnau street.

WA SIN HASARY THE

THE

drawcourt since Gear

cm.-..- :... o: appears uncier ejectioncrime

cannot undernatural power

can't order576 when

a. paid,hard Oahu jail.was effect there

without ....11IUII11UU

crime; crime could jurystatute for

hence withincrime.

insult

page

OPIUMCOUGK

opium.

afforded

maladv "severe

contnln

always

dealers. Benson,

grand

October

NO

streets,follows:

obtained

follows:

limited

married

Hawaii.

labor

SURE OF ELECTION.For each one of the new county offi-

cers at least one man Is sure nf elec-tion. Thon comes the question oCbonds. Since the law makes the county-pa-

the premium on surety companybonds furnished by officials, personalpftntes will not have to be put up toguarantee the nets of an ofllcer nnd nilhis deputies. One of tho best suretycompanies is represented by Henry'Wnterhouse Trust Co.

l

1

Price,

83.50'

Made oZ boxcalf, Pennsyl-

vania and Es-s- cx

lasts, com-

fortable, easy;

and durableEvery p a I'rE u a r a nteed.A 1 1 leather.Sizes from 5

to IL1

hers' Shoe Co Lid

IOOI Fort Street

i

t '''

Page 2: I THE HAW I · 2015-06-02 · If A 1 f PT;.' x--r.--J I I I dnj's If you Nowb, wnnt toMliiy to TT 1VT Tim llimnllniiHtur THE HAW Ik Iho pnper tlmt rou tan find It in A THE STAII

i

rwa THE HAWAIIAN STAR, MONDAY, OOirlfftllTO

onarihn.lliiotnriQni Qmial

STEAMSHIP COMPANY

2.' the abve line, running In connection with theKAILWAY COMPANY between Vancouver, B. C, and Sydney, N.

3. W., and calling at Victoria, B. C, Honolulu and Brisbane, Q.

Dno at Honolulu on or about tho dates bolow Btatod, tIz:TOR AUSTRALIA.

VOANA SEPTEMBER 26AORANQI NOVEMBER 21MOAN A DECEMBER 19

FOR

MOANA

Calling at Suva, Fiji, on BothDown Voyages

H. &

The fine Steamers of this line will arrive at and leave this portfta

FROM SAN

ALAMEDA OCTOBER 2iVENTURA OCTOBER 14

OCTOBER 23BIERRA 4

NOVEMBER 13EONOMA NOVEMBER 25

DECEMBER 4.VENTURA DECEMBER 16

ALAMEDA DECEMBER 25

Local Boat.

SAN

In with the sailing of the. above the Agents areto Issue coupon tickets by any rail.oad

Iran Ban to all points the United States, and from New Torn byline all Ports.

For further apply

S. S.

of the above will call at and leave this$ert on or about the dates below

FOR CHINA JAPAN. FOR SAN

MARU SEPT 26

CHINA OCT. 6

iDORIC OCT. 1

MARU OCT 22OCT 30

NOV. 7

MARU NOV 17NOV. 25DEC. 2

MARU DEC. 10

CHINA DEC. 19iDORIC ..a DEC. 29

1904

MARU JAN. 6

tar Information apply

Hme.

VANCOUVER.OCTOBER 21

18

MIOWERA 1C

Up and

Passengerhertunder:

FRANCISCO.

ALAMEDANOVEMBER

ALAMEDA

ALAMEDA

FOR

SONOMA

SIERRA

Mail

NOVEMBERDECEMBER

IEO. DAVIES CO.. Ltd., Gen'l Agts.

toanic Steamship Company.

TIME OPASXE

In

to

W. 13.

ALAMEDA.

ALAMEDA..

ALAMEDA..VENTURA...ALAMEDA.,

OCTOBEROCTOBEROCTOBER

NOVEMBER

DECEMBER

connection steamers, pri-9re- d

passengers throughFrancisco

SUamshlp Europeanparticulars

Irwin Si. Co.(LanTHD)

Gteneral AgeiiB Oceanic Company.

Pacific Mail Steamship Co,Occidental & Oriental S. S. Co.

and Toyo Kisen Kaisha.Steamers Companies Honolulu

mentioned'AND FRANCISCO.

KtONGKON-- i

NIPPONSIBERIACOPTIC1AMERICAKOREAGAELICHONGKONG

JNIPPON

csmeral to

MARU SEPT.

COPTIC OCT.MARU OCT.

KOREA NOV.NOV. 10

MARU NOV.CHINA NOV. 27

DORIC DEC.MARU DEC.

DEC. 22

COPTIC DEC. 291904

MARU JAN, 11

JAN. 16

JAN. 23MARU JAN. 30

CHINA FEB.

H. Hackfeld Sl Co.AMERICAN HAWAIIAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY.

MONTHLY BETWEEN NEWIORK AND HONOLULU, VIA COAST.

FROM NEW YORK.S. S. HAWAIIAN to sail about September IE.S. S. OREGONIAN, to sail about October 10.

received at wharf 42d Street, South Brooklyn, at all

FROM SAN TO

via Puget Sound to sail about Oct. 1.S. to sail direct October 27.

and every sixteen days thereafter.received at wharf, Stewart Street, Pier No.

FROM TO' SANS.S.

1. to sail 25.NEBRASKAN. sail October 27.

FROM AND TACOMA:S. S. NEBRASKAN, to sail about October 7.

0. P. MORSE, General Freight Agent.f

I n ry

AORANGI

SIERRA

Intending

NIPPONSIBERIA .'..OCT.

AMERICA

GAELIC

NIPPONSIBERIA

AMERICA

GAELIC

DIRECT SERVICEPACIFIC

3Trelgnc

Freight

SEATTLE

H. Haolrfeld s

s'for a Wanti.

Ad in Star

... 7... 13... 28

NOVEMBER 318

NOVEMBER.. DECEMBER 9

15

to

to

I

296

1624

3

HONGKONG 17

E

14

KOREA

HONGKONG9

Company's

FRANCISCO HONOLULU.S. S. NEBRASKAN

S. NEVADAN,

Company'sHONOLULU FRANCISCO:

NEVADAN, SeptemberS. to

The

FRANCISCO.

24

20.

Co.,AGENTS.

a mm

ant in(For additional anil le.tor shipping setpage 4, 6, or 8.)

TIDES, SUN AND MOON.Last Quarter of the Moon on the 13th.

M M Mt: hp k, P cnP

:SS:5:&:&8

a m K

re : : : : : . sOct. n.m. p.m. n.m. p.m. Rises12 8.04 1.6 8.GG 0.G4 3.27 G.R5 B.38 11.0313 9.12 1.6 10.32 2.01 4.40 fi.3 n.m.

a.m.14 10.26 1.5 11.48 G.40 3.33 C.B6 5.36 0.0315 11.33 l.G 6.25 G.10 5.G6 5.36 1.02

p.m. a.m.16 12.32 l.G 0.42 7.04 6.25 G.56 5.35 2.0117 1.33 1.4 1.24 7.45 7.28 5.57 5.34 2.0J18 2.20 1.4 2.01 8.25 S.15 G.57 5.33 4.03

n.m. p.m.

p.tn,

19 2.45 1.6. 2.59 9.00 9.01 G.5S 5.32 B.Oj

Times of tho tide are taken from theU. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey tables. The tides nt Kahulu. and Hilooccur about one hour earlier than ntHonolulu. Hawaiian standard time Is10 hours 30 minutes slower than Green-wich time, being that of the meridianof 157 degreess 30 minutes. The timewhistle blows at 1:30 p. m., which Is!the same as Greenwich, 0 hours, 0 min-utes. Tho Sun and moon are for localtime for the whole group.

ARRIVING.Saturday, October 10.

Stmr. Lehua, Nnpala, from Molokal,Maul and Lanal ports at 6:30 p. m.with 23 head cattle, 50 hogs, 150 packages sundries.

Sunday, October 11.Stmr. Wnlaleale, Cooke, from Knual

ports nt 5:20 a. m.

tn

Stmr. W. G. Hall, S. Thompson, fromKauai ports at 3:40 a. m. with 155 bagstaro, 2 horses, 1 mule, 6 pigs, 28 bdls.hides and 50 packages sundries.

Stmr. Maul, F. Bennett, from Maulports at 5:10 a. m. with 100 sacks coffee190 sacks corn, 14 sacks potatoes, 5 poloponies,, 28 hogs, 128 packages sundriesan d45 sacks taro.

Monday, October 12.Schr. Lady, from Koolau ports at 12

a. m. with 2C0 bags rice.Schr. Knwallanl, Ulunahaele from

Koolau ports at 12 a. m. with 350 bag?rice.

Tuesday, October 13.S. S. Sierra, Houdlette, from Sydney,

Auckland, Pago Pago. and Fanning Isl-

and, due early In morning.S. S. Doric, Smith, from San Fran

cisco, probably arrive In afternoon.Wednesday, October 14.

S. S. Ventura, Hnyward, from SanFrancisco, due In morning.

DEPARTING.Saturday, October 10.

Br. Cable S. S. Iris, from anchorageoff port for Fanning Island at 6 p. m.

Monday, October 12.

Stmr. Noeau, Pederson, for Kaana- - i

pall, Lahalna, Mnnlaca, Makena, Ho- -nokaa and Kukulhaele at 3 p. m. '

Stmr. Nllhau, V. Thompson, forWnimea and Kekaha at 3 p. m.

Stmr. Walalealo Cooke, for Anaholaat 5 p. m.

Stmr. J. A. Cummins, Searle, forKoolau ports at 10 a. m.

Schr. Ada, for Puuloa, may sail Inafternoon.

Stmr. Lehua, Nnpala, for Molokalports at p. m.

Stmr. Noeau, Cooke, for Mauiports at 5 p. m.Stmr. Ke Au Hou, Tullett, for Ana-

hola, Kllauea, Hanalel and Kallhlwalat 5 p. m.

Tuesday, October 13.Schr. Lady, for Koolau ports .it 10 a.

in.Schr. Kawallanl, Ulunahaele, for

Koolau crts at 5 p. m.Gaso. S:hr. F.ci.ppe, Gahan, for Maul

Kohnln and Knna ports at 5 p. m.S. S. Sierra, Houdlette, for San Fran-

cisco, probably sail In afternoon about4 o'clock.

Stmr. Mauna Loa, SImerson, for La-halna, Mnalaea, Kona and Kau portsat noon.

Stmr. Klnau, Freeman, for Hilo andway ports at noon.

Stmr. Maul, F. Bennett, for Maulports at 5 p. m.

Stmr. W. G. Hall, S. Thompson, forKnual ports at 5 p. m.

Wednesday, October 14.S. S. Doric, Smith, for the Orient,

probably sail In afternoon.S. S. Ventura, Hayward, for Pago

Pago, Auckland and Sydney, probablysail In evening. .

'

PASSENGERS.Arriving.

Per stmr. W. G. Hall. October, 11,from Kauai ports G. N. Wilcox, C. H.Wilcox, J. H. Kalwl Jr.. J. A. Palmer,J. H. Kawelo, S. Lesser, Mrs. Winkler,Ah Sing, L. Ah Tock, Mrs. J. H. Kal-wl, N. G. Smith, airs. S. Kanewanul,Yuen Hnu, Mrs. Kalo, H. B. Sinclair,H. Blake. S. Sasaki, L. Kahlbaum,Chong Wo, See Chew, and sixty deck.

Per stmr. Maul October It, fromMaul J. Lanl, Hasegawa, S. N. Lukua,Chun See, wife and child, snkannshl,C. B. Cockett, T. Aonn, wife and 5children, W. Ferry nnd wife, GeorgeWeight, F. F. Baldwin, wife, child andservant, C. C. Krumbaar, W. A.Hardy, M. M. O'Shnughnessy, Mrs. J.Hulhul, Mrs. C. Wills, Mrs. A. G.Martlnsen, C. Copp Jr., wife nnd 4 chil-dren, Edward Devauchelle, August

J. FuJIyoshi.Per stmr. Lehua, October 10, from

Molokal and Moui ports HughHugh Robertson, Mrs. Ku-pihe- a,

Mr. and Mrs. Smith and 4 deck.

BROKE THE DEWEY'S MAST.While cruising nbout Pearl Harbor

yesterday, the yacht La Paloma col-lided with the yacht Dewey, and brokeoft the Dewey's mast. The Dewey'srail and house were considerably dam-aged. The Dewey's mast fell over theside of the yacht and did not Injurean yone on the other craft. No onewas on booni the Dewey nt the timeof the nccldent as she was lying ather usual moorings. The exact causeof the collision does not appear. TheLa Paloma Is said to be quite unwelldyIn going on to the wind and whenCommodore Macfarlane tried to bringher Into the wind yesterday she did not

r'Mnnl nulcltlr to hr helm mid ernnh-im- I

into the othtr Ixmt.

WATKIl IS IMCMAlUCAltLY I'MSAIt.Arriving paMeiiReis on tho xtenmer

KIimiii report that the (tea whb so clearabout Diamond Honil Saturday morningthat they could distinctly see the I'n-cll- lc

cable lying on the bottom of theocean In a depth of S3 fathoms off thoSunn SoucI landing.

VISITED I'ROTUT YESTERDAY,Tho French cruiser I'rotot was

thrown open to Inspection by theThe vessel was visited

by large crowds during the nfternoon.Light refreshments were served.

BAD ROAB3.WAILUKU, October 10. The stage

roan between Wnlluku nnd Lahalna isin deplorable condition In places, niulthe road boards should use the firsttunas available to make permanent repairs.

WAREHOUSE AT PAIA.KAHULUI, October 10. The Knhulul

J i. it. Co. Is building a commodiouswarehouse at Pala In which to storesalt petre and other fertilizers. Theynave nau qne depot burne don accountof careless handling of matches toonear salt petre and do not propose tonavo it occur again.

NEGOTIATIONS STILL PENDING.Associated Press. Morning Service.

l OKOHAMA, Japan, October 12.The Russian Minister to JJnpan Is

awaiting further Instructions' from St.Petersburg with reference to the ns

with Japan over Manchuria.

FRANCE AND GREAT BRITAIN.Associated Press. Mornlmr Sirv!r..

BERLIN, Germnny, October 12. ItIs believed that Frnnce nnd Englandhave entered into an understandingthat neither country will interfere Inthe event of war. England thus re-fuses to assist Japan, disregarding theAngio-japane- se treaty, and Francedoes not help her old ally, Russia.

BIG ATLANTIC STORM.Associated Press. Morning Service

NEW YORK, October 12. The bigstorm which has been sweeping alongthe Atlantic Coast for the past threedays is subsiding. The storm haspiled up many wrecks along the At-lantic Coast and steamers arrivingfrom Europe report heavy hurricanesat sea. Several vessels are overdue.

BALLOONIST KILLED.Associated Press. Morning Swvlce.

SAN FRANCISCO, October 12. Bealsan aeronaut, was killed In mnklflg aballoon ascension here today. A wo-man who was riding on a street car,leaned far out of the car to watch theascension and striking her headagainst a post was instantly killed.

BULGARIAN FUGITIVES.Associated Press, Morning Service.

SOFIA, Bulgaria, October 12. TheBulgarian nnd Turkish governmentsare negotiating for the repatriation of20,000 Bulgarians who have become fu-gitives in Macedonia nnd in other por-tions of Turkey.

NEW JERSEY FLOODS.Associated Press. Morning SPrvice.

NEW YOIIK, October 12. The floodsIn northwestern Now Jersey and east-ern Pennsylvania are receding. Thedamage to property In both states fromthe floods amounts to many millions.

SOCIALISTS' RIOTS.Associated Press. Morning Service.

MADRID, Spain, October 12. FourPersons were killed In a Socialist de-monstration which culminated In ariot here today.

RIOT AT SAN ANTONIO.Associated Press. Morning Service.

SAN ANTONIO, Texas, October 12.Striking street car men are riotinghere. Troops will be called out.

MRS. MOODY DEAD.Associated Press. Morning Service.

BOSTON, October 11. The widow ofEvangelist Dwlght L. Moody Is dead.

JAPAN FIRST.Associated Press. Morning Service

PARIS, October 11. It is believedthat In the event of war, Japan willstrike the first blow. It Is denied atthe Japanese legation that Japan hasalready landed forces In Koren.

Star Want nds pay at once.

Witter WaterA medicinal water direct from

Witter Springs.WITTER WATER Is an un-

failing remedy for tho

STOMACH,

LIVER ANDKIDNEYS.

Witter AVater is noted for Itscures of RHEUMATISM, EC-

ZEMA and all dlsase3 of theSkin tnd Blood.

Witter Wnter is used as amedicine not as a beverage.

Call and gf.t a Booklet.

Fort and King Streets.

..LTD

Tobacco Heart ,

may be cured. Don't neglect yoursymptoms. Dr. Miles' Heart Cureis a great heart and blood tonic aboutwhich you will learn a groat dcul and alsoabout, heart trouble by sending postal forfree book on diseases of tho brnrt and nnrres.

Dm Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind.

Tho Only NoUnder Shadow

THERE'S NOTHING MISLEADING ABOUT THAT BLADING.

THE) ANGIE IvAMPis, in its effect, exactly like sunlight. It is, like the sun, up out of tinway, and throws its clear, enjoyable light both outward and downwardwith no bothersome shadows to annoy or to spoil the lighting effect-There-

's

no other light docs that no other light that has" "

But don't stop at that; look at the other features too. With a mini-mum of expense, of trouble. and of heat there is obtained a' maximumof light and real satisfaction. Every annoying feature of gas, elec-tricity, gasolene and acetylene is obviated. This tells the story ofgreat combination.

It uses ordinary kerosene (or coal) oil one quart in sixteen hourxIts light is more brilliant than gas or1 electricity, with no more heatno smoke no odor no "drawing up" no removing of globe or topto light filled while burning.

Theo. H. Davies & Co.,Sole Agents for Hawaiian Islands.

choice variety from Just

Also poultry and

Meat Go.,Telephone Main 45

BEAVER LUNCH ROOM,Fort Street Opposite Wilder A Co.

H. J. Prop'r.First-Cla- ss Lunches served with tea.

coffee, Boda water, ginger ale or milk.

Smokers Requisites a Specialty.

JfcE.Contractor and Builder

WMITJSD

California

oysters,

NOLTE,

House PainterKewalo, Sheridan Street, near King.

Honolulu Jti. i.

Do xkOJXXXXLIMPORTER ANDDEALER IN

Springs

Ltd

OHTA,

LIQUORS,Japanese Provisions.

General Merchandise)AND PLANT ATIr

CO. HOTEL STREET, HONOLULU.Telephone White 241L

Box X.

No.

Out !

BOOKS - RETAILED

ATWHOLESALE 1'IIICES

20 to 30 per DiscountAll Sales From

ad Cents Up

The entire stock must soldi Wosimply sacrificing goods or-

der get the money out the stockas quickly as possible.

lMHOTFL STREET.

LIGHT

Aarrived on the

sowroiwtA.crabs, a

new lot of our populary

Butlir

Metropolitan

if SUPPLIES.

4t

P. O.

bearo In

to of

HeadquartersFor

FURNITURE,RUGS,LINOLEUn ANDWINDOWSHADES

Also

Furniture made to order, UP-

HOLSTERING; REPAIRINGand FRENCH POLISHINGdone by first class workmen.

Hopp &

King and Bethel Street.Phone Main 111.

Twenty-fiv-e cents pays for & Wantad In the Star. A bargain.

Preserving

Has N Equal

A?ptiyt,onrs Peerless Preserving Paint Co. 30en

Closing Sale

AND STATIONERY

dentOn

the

Gfyslal

Co.,

IN GOODCOMPANY

Many dollars are turn-e-daway annually by The

Star In rejecting offensiveand Improper advertise-ments offered for Inser-tion Ir Us columns.

This Is a cogent reasonwhy The Star's adver-tising columns are sogenerally used and sowidely rad.

Twenty-fiv- e cents pays for a Wontad In the Star. A bargain.

elfcS!."-..-"- '

Page 3: I THE HAW I · 2015-06-02 · If A 1 f PT;.' x--r.--J I I I dnj's If you Nowb, wnnt toMliiy to TT 1VT Tim llimnllniiHtur THE HAW Ik Iho pnper tlmt rou tan find It in A THE STAII

r ' "iu lUiiUiiniTin oi Lull unnn.ii uu oilhivilim

f

I

. ' ' - "m mLimited.

ESTADLISIIED 18S0.

Capital Subscribed Ten 24,000,000Capital Paid up 18,000,000Reserve Fund 9,210,000

HEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.

Bronchos:Honolulu, New York, San Francisco,

London, Lyons, Bombay, HongkongNewchwans, Pekln, Shanghai, Tientsin

Kobe, Nagasaki, Toklo. j

The Bank buys and receives for col- -

lection Bills of Exchange, Issues Craftsand Letters of Credit, and transacts ageneral banking business.

Honolulu Branch 67 King Street

DR. M. OYAMA.ivlng Street, Pa'.ama.

Office hours: 8 a. m. to 12; 7 to 9 p.m., Saturday excepted.

PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.

..Dr. George W. Burgess 13S7 Forttreet, corner 'Mneyard. 10 a. m. to 3

p. m. and 7 p. m. Tel hone Main 128. ,

DR. M. J. J. MARLIER DE ROUTON,DENTIST t

Rooms 27 and 28 Young Building. Be-tween Hotel and King streets. Hours

to 6.

Moana HotelWaikikiBeach

Rapid Transit Electric Cars arrlvat, and depart from, the main entranceof the Moana Hotel every ten minutes.

BaldnessI

Is the result of a diseased scalp. Ninetimes out of ten it is dandruff. Atfirst the hair falls very little, but gra-

dually continues until one spot Is bald,iien follows baldness.

Pacheco's DandruffKiller

. Applied at the beginning would naveeaved the hair, by cleansing the scalp,removing the dandruff, keeping theccalp in a healthy state.and the hairfirm at the roots. A few days' usewill prove its virtue.

Sold by all Druggists and at theUnion Barber Shop. ' Telephone Main232.

A QuickSpin

When the days are nice, nowIs the best time of all the yearto be out on a wheel or for anyother healthy exercise. Whenyou are warm drink

Nothing tastes 'better, andthere Is no more healthy drinkmade.

i BOTT

AGENTS FOR HAWAII.

PHONE WHITE' 1331

P. O. BOX 517.

Sturtevant Drag Co.,

PURITY

160 Hotel Street - - Oregon BlockTELEPHONE MAIN 151.

V. O. Box 16 Phone Blue 933 and 1791.

WING SANG CO.WHOLESALE AND RETAILDEALERS IN

Groceries and Fresh Fruits.Commission Merchants.

IS Hotel Street. Honolulu, n. T.

Jesse MooreA. A. Whiskey

3313 (SOD on

OLD lH RGED

PflLflT- - gll WOOD

Aflaldonado&Co,( INC. )

Spreckels Building,Honolulu H. T.

General Export Agents ForJESSE MOOKE-WUN- T COSan Francisco Cal., and Louis-ville Ky.

GUN CLUB

HAS II SHOOT

EIGHT CONTESTS IN BRINGINGDOWN CLAY PIGEONS ON SAT-

URDAY.

Eight matches were shot at the Honolulu Gun Club grounds on Saturdayafternoon, on the occasion of the firstshoot of the club. The scoies were asfollows:

First Ten Bird Match.W. E. "Wall 1110 10 110 0 f,F. E. Greenfield ...0 00000010 01H. P. Roth 0 01011100 15J. E. Fullerton ....1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 04R. B. Booth 0 01010011 04O. E. Wall 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 13

Second Ten Bird Match.W. E. Wall 1 0 11111 1 19F. E. Greenfield ...0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1J. E. Fullerton ....0 110 10 10 1 8H. P. Roth 110 0 1 0 0 0 0 03R. B. Booth 0 111 0 0 0 1 0 15O. E. Wall ,.0 10 0 10 110 15

Third Ten Bird Match.W. E. Wall 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 o 1- -6F. E. Greenfield ...1 00000000 01J. E. Fullerton 1 001,01010 0 tH. P. Roth 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 12O. E. Wall 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 13

Fourth Ten Bird Match.F. E. Greenfield ...0 0000010,0 12O. E. wan 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 04J. E. Fullerton ....0 00000000 0 0H. P. Roth 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 03R. B. Booth 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 13I. Spauldlng 10 10 0 10 10 15

Fifth' Ten Bird Match.F. E. Greenfield ...0 01011101 030. E. Wall 1 10000101 04J. E. Fullerton ....0 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1

H. P .Roth 1 I 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 04R. B. Booth 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 131. Spauldlng 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 13

Sixth- - Ten Bird Match.F. E. Greenfield ....0 0 0 0 0 01 1 1 030. E. Wnll 0 10 111110 06J. E. Fullerton ....0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 05H. P. Roth 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 :t

R. B. Booth 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 021. Spauldlng 0 01010001 03

Seventh Ten Bird Match.F. E. Greenfield ...0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 17O. E. Wall 0 1 1 0 10 0 0 0 14H. P. Roth 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 03J. E. Fullerton ....0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 03

Eighth Five Bird Match.H. P. Roth 0 10 113J. E. Fullerton 1 0 0 0 12Another shoot was had dt the grounds

yesterday morning. The club will haveshoots every Saturday afternoon ut 2p. m. and Sunday morning at ten.

AFTER MANY YEARS.Mrs. Sarah Hnnn Writers nf Voiv

York City, has been visiting Mrs. C.H. Dickey at Haiku, Maul, the pastweek. Mrs. Waters is an island girl,the daughter of Rev. Titus Coan, ofHllo, nnd visits the islands for tho firstnine m rorty years.

A. O. H.A meeting was hold Saturday even-

ing at the rooms of the Catholic Be-nevolent Union for the purpose of or-ganizing a lodge of the AncIent'OrderPf Hibernians. Temporary ofllcers weieelected ns follows: P. Mclner'ny, presi-dent: Thomas F. McTIghe,

F. D. Creedon, secretary: JohnLyng, treasurer. Another meeting willbe held October 21.

DENTAL OFFICERS.The Hawaiian Dental Association

has elected the following olllcers: J.M. Whitney, president; M. E. Gross-man, vice president; C. B, High, sec-retary; O. E. Wall, treasurer.

JUNIOR FOOTBALL.A difference of opinion has arisen In

the Junior Football T.pncriin nu tn u.ht.ther the rules of 1902 or those of 1903should be used. The teams from Puna-ho- u

and Knmehameha will piny a se-ries of gams the best two out of Hire'sunder the 1003 rules. St. Louis Collegeand the High School favor the 1902rules.

TWO MILLIONS' DAMAGE.AssoiMntPd Preps. Mornlntr Service

PATERSON, N. Jv October 11. Thednmage done by the flood in and aboutthis city amounts to $2,000,000.

tar Want "ada pay at once.' M

DUE THIS WEEK

TWO WILL ARRIVE TOMORROW

AND FOLLOWING DAY TWOARE FROM SAN FRANCISCO.

The S. S. Doric Is likely to,arrive to-morrow afternoon from San Franciscowith six days later mall and news files.She will sail the following day for theOrient.

The S. S. Sierra is due tomorrowmorning from Sydney, Auckland, Pago I'ago nnu Fnnning Island. She willprobably Ball In the afternoon for SanFrancisco.

The S. S. Ventura Is due Wednesdaymorning from San Francisco with onedays' later mall. She will sail In theevening for Pago Pago, Aucklanu andSydney.

The S. S. Coptic Is scheduled to arrive October 16, Friday, from the Ori-ent. She will probably arrive the nrc- -vlous day and sail the same day for

an I'Tanclsco.

STEAMBOAT BASEBALL.The Wilder's nine won from the Inter-

-Island nine at baseball at Maklklyesterday by the score of 22 to ii. Theteams and score by innings were asfollows:

Wilder's R. S. On; Mnnlim n n rScott, p.; J. Kekuewa, lb.; A. Alwohlj.'.: u. Liyncn, 3b.: urunner, cf.: Breed,If.; M. Hopkins, rf.

Inter-Islan- d S. N. Co.: M. Pannen-te- r(Cnpt.), a; John Peters, p.; Capt.

Lane, lb.; Delaney, 2b.; Capt. Plltz, 3b.,Kaal. as.: W. Ttnmnkn. If. AT.VI,ilovrf.: McNamara, cf.; Douglas, substi-tute.Score by Innings 1 2 3 4 5 6

Wilder's 7 i a 1 innInter-Islan- d o 2 0 4 0 6 12

LONDON BEETS.By Cable to the Plnntprs' AasnnlntlnnFrom Williams, Dlmond & Co.

SAN FRANCISCO. CiMnUar. inTV.o.London price of 88 analysis beets thisaay is snnnngs, 10 pence. The lastprevious quotation was October 8, Sshillings, 9 pence.

RAG PICKERS ON STRIKE.NEW YORK, September 30. Rag

pickers of the East Side have struckfor the recognition of their union, re-cently formed. A picket belonging tothe union was arrested, but the strikeleaders are confident of victory.

TEACHERS FOR PHILIPPINES .WASHINGTON, September 30. The

Civil Service Commission has receiveda call from the Philippine Governmentfor 150 male teachers and will hold ex-aminations at varlnlus cities on Oc-tober 19 and 20. The salaries rangefrom $960 to 11200 per annum.

ANOTHER NEW RECORD.Aooofiaion Mornlnr Sprvlce.

LEXINGTON, Ky., October. 11. LouDillon, the horse that broke the trot-ting lecord, has now broken the wa-gon record In 2:01.

Lou Dillon is the great animal, whichat Readvllle Track, Mass., on Septem-ber 21, lowered the world's trotting re-cord to two minutes. The best pre-vious record for one mile, trotting towagon, was made by the Abbot fouryears ago, the time being 2:05V.

HOSTILITIES IMMINENT.Associated Press. Mornlnsr Service.

CHEEFOO, China, OctobeV 12. It Isbelieved here that hostilities betweenRussia and Japan are imminent. Thenaval forces of both Japan and Russiaare now placed in advantageous posi-tions In proparation for a quick strikein the event of war

BULGARIANS MOBILIZE."""- "-

Associated Press, Morning Service.SOFIA, October 11. Further mobili-

zation of troops has been ordered.

BABY'S COUGH MUST NEVERLINGER.

Nothing Is more distressing than tosee a helpless little infant sufferingwith a cough, nnd to be fearful of usinga remedy which may contain someharmful Ingredient. The mnkers ofChamberlain's Cough Remedy positively guarantee that this preparation doesnot contain opium in any form, or anyother harmful substance. Mothersmay confidently gfvo this remedy totheir little ones. It gives prompt re-lief and is perfectly safe. It alwayscures and cures quickly. For safe byall dealers, Benson Smith & Co., gen-eral Agen.ts.

Twenty-fiv- e cents pays for a Wanad In the Star. A bargain.

For Sale

CONVENTION TENT Large nndcommodious. Just the thing for rallymeetings, in good condition, complete.Will sell cheap.

BUNTING FLAGS one 12-f- t., one18-f- t. American Flags. But little used;for sale at a bargain.

TELESCOPE An excellent TelescopeField Glass, with fine lense, In goodorder.

KNOCK-ABOU- T BUGGY Cnnor.vTop, side spring, well ironpd: will sellwith or without Pole nnd Yokes.

WALTER C. WEEDON,Room 5 Mclntyre Building.

NOTICE.No one is authorized to contract any

bills In tho namo of the RepublicanCpunty Executive Committee un'ess

uihoilzc-- d by the tfhalrman.WILLIAM HENRY.

Chairman.

AntiPain Pills(Dr. Miles') prevent as well as cureheadache, the commonest afflictionof mankind. Carry in your pocket.No opiates. e, There uro nosubstitutes. 6olii und Kuarantccd by alldrupslats. 25 doses 23 cents. over wld iabulk.

Da. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, I no.

gANKOFjjAWAIILIMITED.

Incorporated Under th- - Laws of theTerritory of Hawaii.

PAID-U- P CAPITAL - . $600,000.00SURPLUS .... - 300,000.00UNDIVIDED PROFITS - 70,283.95

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

F. W. Macfarlane..2nd Vice-Preside- nt

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

H. Waterhouse, E. F. Bishop, E. D.Tenney, J. A. McCandless and C. H,Atherton.

COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS DE-

PARTMENTS

Strict attention given to all brancnesof Banking.

JUDD BUILDING. FORT STREET

Claus Spreckles. Wm. G. Irwin.

Clans SprecMs & Go,

B A. Iff IE 1$ K 63 ,

HONOLULU, H. I.San Francisco Agents The Nevada

National Bank of San Francisco.DRAW EXCHANGE ON

SAN FRANCISCO The Nevada Na-tional Bank of San Francisco.

LONDON Union of London & Smith'sBank, Ltd.

NEW YORK American Exchange Na-tional Bank.

CHICAGO Corn Exchange NationalBank.

PARIS Credit Lyonnals.BERLIN Dresdner Bank.HONGKONG AND YOKOHAMA The

Hongkong and Shanghai BankingCorporation.

NEW ZEALAND AND AUSTRALIABank of New Zealand, and Bank ofAustralasia.

VICTORIA AND VANCOUVER Bankof British North America.

TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKING- AND EXCHANGE BUSINESS.

Deposits Received. Loans Made onApproved Security. Commercial andTravellers' Credits Issued. Bills of Ex-change Boughf anl Sold.

COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY AC-

COUNTED FOR.

ESTABLISHED IN 1858.

BISHOP & CO.

BANKERS

BANKING DEPARTMENT.

Transact business In all departmentsof Banking.

Ollectlons carefully attended to.Exchange bought and sold.

Commercial nui) Travelers' Lettersof Credit Issued ou The Hank of Cali-

fornia nnd 3) M. Rothschild & Sons,London.

Correspondents: Tho Hank of Cali-

fornia. Commercial Hanking Co. ofSydney, Ltd., Loudon.

Drafts and cable transfers on Chinaand- Japan through the Hongkong &Shanghai Banking Corporation andChartered Bank of India, Australiaam China.

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

Seven days' notice, at 2 per cent.Three months, at 3 per cent.Six months at 3 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-keepin- g.

ACCOUNTANT DEPARTMENT.Auditors for Corporations and Pri

vate Firms.Books examined and reported on.

Statements of Affairs prepared.Truateeo on Bankrupt or Insolvent

Estates.Ofilce, 924 Bethel Street.

SAVINGS DEPARTMENT.Deposits received and interest allow

ed at 4V4 per cent per annum, in accord-ance with Rules and Regulations,copies of which may be obtained onapplication.

INSURANCE DEPARTMENT.Agents for FIRE, MARINE, LIFE,

ACCIDENT AND EMPLOYERS' LIA-BILITY INSURANCE COMPANIES.

Insurance Office, 924 Bethel Street

THE FIRST

CO. OF HAWAII, LTD.

Capital, $250,000.00.

President Cecil BrownVice-Preside- nt M. P. RobinsonCashier W. O. Cooper

Principal Office: Corner Fort andKing streets.

SAVINGS DEPOSITS received andinterest allowed for yearly deposits atthe rate of 4 per cent per annum.

Rules and regulations furnished upon application.

OIV TAI XwlUISSuccessor to On Tal Co.

Will open on Saturday, July 25.Chlldrens' nnd Ladles' Underwear,

and Netting made to order a specialty,1180 Nuuanu Street, near Beretanla.

Twenty-fiv- e cents pays for a Wantcd In tho Star, A bargain.

"White Seal"

rioet & a

Chandon

ChampagneHappiness Is Incomplete Without It

H. Hackfeld & Co.,Limited

Agents for the Territory of Hawaii

y

More Light

Less Heat

Use incandescent electric lights in the home and avoid the

heat, smoke,-- trimming of wicks, danger of fire and constant

refilling that belongs, to kerosene lamps.

Estimate cheerfully given at

Hawaiian Electric Co., LtdOffice King Street, Telephone Main 390

Telephone White 3271. P. O. Box 883.

SAY EG USA 5H0TEN,1 121 Nuuanu Street.

Importer and dealer in Japanesenos, Crepe, Matting, Crockery.

Taney Goods received by everyAttended to.

StatementsCommercial PrUtlBS

Pi

n

Silk Goods, Handkerchiefs, Kimo-- v4ff

WHOLESALE JAPANESE PROVISIONS,steamer Island orders Promptly, 't

FUKUROOA,'

M28 and 32 Hotel St. Robinson Block. S

THE BEST DRY GOODS STORE IN CITY.'-

Also manufacturers of a fine line of STRAW HATS for Ladles and Gen- -tlemen. HATS trimmed 1ft the very latest styles at lowest prices. .,.,"

VTo JtjLt ReceivedNEW LINE OF

KIMONOSAND GUARANTEETHE COLORS.

b:. isoshima,NO. 30, S. KING STREET NEAR BETH Ell

DO IT NOW....

Insert Your

Want Adv'tIn the STAR

Note Heads, BUI Heads,and Fine at theStar Office,

and

"Waal ada 1b tfi Star Mg nMt tauit. Tbif 11km tkrr tffn-i- T 1m Iest .' "

ax

:4

r.

THE

Page 4: I THE HAW I · 2015-06-02 · If A 1 f PT;.' x--r.--J I I I dnj's If you Nowb, wnnt toMliiy to TT 1VT Tim llimnllniiHtur THE HAW Ik Iho pnper tlmt rou tan find It in A THE STAII

m- 11

joIV.

I'llDAILY AND

IKblUfcd every Afternoon (exceptAssociation,

mnmiBiwiiiMBM

Hawaiian Stio.x--,SEMI-WERKL-

SUBSCRIPTION HATES.ll&ocal, per annum $8.00IWForelin, 12.00

Payable In Advance.

'Prank L. Moors, - Alnnnger

&MONDAY.. ............... .". .7. . .OCTOBER"i2,i903.

A DISTANT

Nothing' ca'u show better than the present uncertainty about thelocation of the present volcanic outbreak on Hawaii, how distant it isiiot only from Honolulu, but even from the shores of Hawaii, the islandAvhere the outbreak occurs. At the present time though we have somefair knowledge of where, the flow is likely to be, we really have no cer-tain knowledge. Is'o one during the past five days has reached thesource of the flow, no one is assured in what direction it is going, noone can give an accurate account of it yet. All the knowledge we have5s derived from a distance of from forty to fifty miles on land and fromeighty to a hundred miles on the sea.

That there is an eruption there is no doubt of. That it is of a veryextensive and awe-inspiri- character. Allowing for some natural andperhaps unconscious exaggeration there have been columns of liquid.lava shot from a mile to a mile and a half into the air. But the pcopieon the Island of Hawaii have experienced no ill effects. The ordinarydaily work has been conducted as ably and as carefully as ever, canelias been planted,, cane has been ground. The Mahukona railroad andthe Hilo railroad have made their regular trips. Mokuawcoweo or theaninor craters of Mauna Loa may be spouting lava, but it causes not atremor in the heart of any one on the island, and certainly occupies lit-

tle attention in, Honolulu save as a wonderful natural sight which is wcli--worth taking some trouble to examine.

lo thbroughly realize how far the eruption is from Honolulu, it mustbe understood what means of communication there arc. In. the firstplace there is a telephone system around Hawaii by which news fromany part of the island can be transmitted to any other part. There area number of steamers at various ports in Hawaii, which bring any newsreadily and inform the public through the press upon any point of in-

terest. There arc' two regular steamers which make weekly trips andvisit respectively all the principal ports on East or on West Hawaii.

"The pursers of.these steamers land and can hear the very latest details of.news. Finally we have a direct wireless system by which messages maycome from the Island to Honolulu in the twinkling of an eye. Yet withall these advantages of communication we know only tliat there is aneruption, and that it is probably heading towards South Kona andNorthern Kau. Of details we have none.

Forty or fifty miles from the sea shore to the summit of a mountaindocs not appear such a very great distance, but when in that space themountain rise's 14,000 feet it becomes quite a journey. The cultivatedand the inhabited part of Hawaii is really a strip extending as a ribbon

- .nearly around the whole island varying in width from one to ten miles.Af a certain .elevation a dense forest commences, and above the foresti)ejt the mountain rises more abruptly, a mere mass of lava flows, cover- -

ing lava flows, rocky, rugged, bare, without vegetation of sort,without water, a blistering mountain flank under the mid-da- y sun, and a

t' disjnal, wind swept, chilling scrap by night.S. It catl readily be understood that no one ventures here for pleasure,

Sometimes a curious traveller makes the ascent, sometime a scientistt'i like Dr. Guppy bfrives the solitudesi . . .ii. i .

110 sound save tne roiling tocks, or me snuing sarins urea me primevalsilence of that cold, unfinished dome of creation, until earth's cyclopeanworkshops belch forth flames, with a crash of heaving rocks and

' ploding gases, and pandemonium seems to have broken loose, only to

again into 01

We to have duringthe fact that have knowledge conclusivelyhow little volcanic

spectacular, magnificent, thev are harmless.lava nor our very earthquakes cost life.

IN "HASTE TO GET RICH.

The concerns of one

class and another are such aii vogue on the mainland, particularly

In the east, that a campaign of educa-

tion against them Is seriously consider-

ed, and has actually been undertaken.New York Commercial has begun

the publication of a series of articlesunder the title of "Gold Bricks ofSpeculation" which are directed at the

t inental and morcil state of the "down

2, easters" which makes It possible for," schemes, to flourish.

the campaign of education mayhave a wider field, the New York Com-

mercial is seeking to enlist Its contem-poraries In the good work.

' series of articles are written byJohn Hill, Jr., a member of the Chi-cago Board of Trade! who was chair-man of the committee of the Board ofTrade that was appointed about tenyears ngo to conduct the fight theninaugurated the bucket shops.

Though there are not wanting In' these and the announcement of

their publication, signs that both the- writer and the publisher have' a keen

' I commercial in the campaign, ItIs probable that some good will bedone. ,and the articles are exceedinglyInteresting, and contain a surprising

of Information on the subject,a fund of surprising facts and con-

clusions. At the very outset of thenrtlcle the author says:

"One Hundred Million An-- ,'

uually Is about the Sum this high-

ly Civilized Nation Is Contributing tothe and nt

Swindlers."Of this vast sum wrung the

thrifty by false pretenses, aboutIs spent for newspaper ndver- -

tlslng about an equal amount for post-age stamps, and vast sums black-mal- l,

attorney's fees, circulars, book-lets, stenograpers, telegraphingnnd furnishing suites of offlces. Theswindler is usually a reckless spendernnd squanders his gains."

Probably more surprising than eventhe extent of the fraudulent businessare some of the regard-ing the victims, such as the following:

"The sharper having perfected hisscheme of robbery and adopted a hlgh-soundl-

nnd nameadvertises, in the metropolitan andcountry newspapers. He also pro-cure. (If he does not already possessit ns the result of a prior and cqunllyvillainous what is knownamong this class of rascals as 'suck-- ,er list. That Is, a list of persons whohave previously been caught by otherschemes, or by reason, of their opening

rirreapopflence with the operators of

i25 . --i mi iii

"

--

.

'

'

. any

Sunday) by tho Hawaiian Star NewspaperLimited.

VOLCANO.

in the interests of science, otherwisei - 1 1. ii. 1

earlier schemes have Indicated a de-

sire to be caught."These lists are interchangeable or

purchasable. A possible victim, hav-ing written to one of these 'fakers' willbe surprised at his rise from obscurityto popularity in the course of a fewmonths, as indicated by his increasedmall nnd numerous offers of goldenopportunities for acquiring aIncome or great wealth."

It is one of the aphorisms of a cyni-cal world, "there Is a sucker bornevery minute." But It would seemfrom John Hill, Jr's. Investigationsthat "suckers," haven't the ephemeralcharacter that Is so generally assumedfrom the extreme fecundity with whichthey are produced, but that thoughspawned In myriads, many of themattain longevity.

But though Is a pewterm to describe the schemes, being ofthe same era as Senator Burton's,

on the stage where big actionsare going forward, the thing Itself Isn'tnew. One form In which It seems yetto be particularly successful Isvaried In the slightest., from the old"Fund W" fraud which twenty yearsago made a million or two In a fewweeks for the' twb men that were run-ning It, though It landed them both Inprison with long terras to serve, whichwere greatly shortened, for one of themby a pardon from President Arthur,and for the other by the skill andability of his attorney, Emory A.Storrs.

The Instincts which create both thesucker and the operator, is probablyas old as the human race. At any rateIt is not the creature either of our cen-tury or of our nationality. OliverGoldsmith in "The Vicar of Wakefield"has most entertainingly described theoperations of the swindler and the sus-ceptible victim, and hns drawn, with-out suggestion of cant or homiletlcs,the moral of it all.

Many excellent Inventions have beenmade on these Islands for the purposeof Improving the methods of extractingthe Juice of the cane, and of econo-mizing In the mill. This has helped usto have machinery In our mills In ad-vance of other suvrar growing countriesMany of these devices have been pa-

tented and are now In general use. Thecentrifugal was an Hawaiian Invention,though few people remember the fact.Albert Horner of Kukalau has made afresh departure and has Invented a ra-to-

plow. This Is said to be a mostIngenious agricultural device which

will save much labor. The white manin the Territory of Hawaii does not de-teriorate mentally. Mr. Horner belongsto tho second generation of his stock.

The breeding of horses continues tobring about Improvements in snped

sink the deep suence space anu eicmai swuumv,' hope accurate knowledge the Coming week, but

we not that accurate showsour eruptions affect man and his avocations. They

are they are but Neitherour flows rare have ever a

having

The

'

That

' The,

-

against

articles

motive

fundand

firstDollars

that

from

for

clerks,

generalizations

confidence-Inspirin- g

scheme)a

steady

that

scarcely

Tins ?ru mondav, octonnn 12, 1003.

Beef,

Iron and

Wine

The Great FamilyTonic

For certain rundown conditions of

the body no medicine is better.

The BEEF strengthens the tissues

and increases MUSCULAR.' ACTIVITYand the IRON supplies what is wanted

for the CIRCULATORY SYSTEM-MAK-ES

THE BLOOD RIGHT; j the

wine Is a general stimulant. It PRO--MOT-

DIGESTION, IMPROVESTHE APPETITE, and GIVES ENER-

GY to the entire system.

Try Ours"WE GUARANTEE IT'S PURITY.

Price 75 Cts.

in 1FORT STREET

which are certainly marvellous. Itwas not so long ago that an Americanhorseman who had studied the horsehad bred the horse, had raced the horseand in fact knew more about the horsethan any one in the States, wrote alearned treatise to prove that struct-urally greater speed could not be gotout of the horse, that the limit hadbeen reached. And then lions cameLou Dillon and brought down the trot-

ting record to 2 minutes flat, and onSaturday she lowered the trotting ' towagon record from 2:05 to 2:01, again of 3 seconds. This is simplyphenomenal, for records are loweredususally by fractions of seconds, buta record which suddenly goes downto 2:01 is something almost un-

heard of. Even clever horsemen wj,ll

hesitate now as to what the limit ofspeed In horses shall be.

A great success was made at the flagraising by the Young Republicans. Dis-

trict Attorney Breckons made one ofhis happy speeches In Which humorand good sense were pleasantly com-mingled. The other speakers madeexcellent points.

t

Floods on the Atlantic seaboard con-tinue,' and though few lives have betn'lost, there has been an enormous des-

truction of property. The losses Will

amount to many millions, and comingat this season of the year will entail'very great hardship. Again may theTerritory of Hawaii congratulate Itselfon Its freedom from climatic changeand the destructive forces of nature.Our natural phenomena are pictures-que and not destructive.

The Socialists of Europe are keepingtheir end up. They have frightenedthe Czar from visiting Rome. Theyhave had a grand demonstration inBerlin, they keep France on the Jumpand they have been having quite apleasant little row In Madrid. If thatU not Socialistic success one would-llk- e

to know what la.

In considering the Information aboutJapan and Russia one must considerthe source from which the telegamsemanate. Cheefoo Is a long distancefrom Korea and news from there Islargely If not entirely guess work.Japanese news from Tokyo and Yo-

kohama, Is of course reliable. Newsof the intention of France or Englandemanating from St. Petersburg or Ber-lin is In nine cases out of ten unau-thetl- c.

News from Russia 13 not to bebelieved under any circumstances. ItI3 made up by the press censor to suit.

Jury politics add neither dignity to'the court In which they are permlttdt'or the law which the Judge represents.

The Russo-Japanes- e question Is ap-proaching an acute stage. But thenIt has been so before, and nothing cameof It. Japa Is In better fighting trimthan she has been all the year. ' A

wwMwac. .x unL

Classified Ads in Star.A Three-Lin- e Advertisement (IS

words) will be Inserted In tho STAR'SClassified Columns for 25 cent Eachadditional Una at the ralo of 10 centsextra.

Ads under "Situation Wanted," Inaertedtree until further notice.

Foi Salo

For salo cheap, two hue lots In Kul-muk- l

Charles L. Rhodes, Star Olllce.

A magnificent building site on thePunchbowl slope near Thurston ave-nue. Particulars at Star office.

Building lot corner King and Kame-hame-

road. Palama terminus ofRapid Transit road. Apply at Staroffice.

Lost

Pass book No. 740 Issued by Tho FirstAmerican Savings and Trust Company,of Hawaii, Ltd., to Mrs. Mary A.Rhodes, has been lost. Paymentsthereon have been stopped. Finderwill please return to the bank.

To Kent

Desirable unfurnished rooms for rent,reasonable, en suite or single. Best lo-

cation In town. 1189 Alakea, corner ofBeretanla

Furnished lloums To Lot

A nicely furnished front room. Mos-quito proof and electric light. 494 Bere-tanla near Punchbowl.

Gleaning nnd Dyeing

T. MASUDA Clothes cleaned, dyedland repaired. 1416 Fort St.. DearVineyard.

The Pacific Hotel,1182 Union St, opposite Pacific Club

Newly Furnished Rooms

The Best Restaurant In the City.MRS. HAN A. Proprietor.

GuaranteedInvestment,

bao InterestPaid on Savings of $1.00 to $5000.00.

When withdrawn 30 days notice re-quired.

Higher IerfcesPaid on Investments for long term

Contracts.

Money LoanedON REAL ESTATE.

Phoenix Savings, BuildingAnd Loan Association

Judd Building, Fort St. Entrance.

Guaranteed Capital - - - $200,000.00Subscribed Capital - - $8,nfi0,000.00Paid-U- p Capital - - - - $300,000.00

Loving Cups....

'We have nn attractive line of Sterling silver, and Royal Copper, silvermounted loving cups, suitable for cardprizes and for gifts of every descrip-tion.

Prices vary from 1.75 to 7.50.

The' 1.75 cup is of Royal Copper andsterling silver, standing on an ebonybase, total height 4V4 Inches.

The cup at 2.50 Is all sterling silversame height, beautiful In form. Youhave never seen such values In sterlingsilver anywhere. Larger sizes at cor-responding prices'. You'll have no

a suitable prize here, as ourstore' Is full of good things to choosefrom.

H.FJicliiiian&Co,Ltd1048 FORT STREET.

careless shot, a sailors' row, might pre-cipitate a naval battle, and all the fatwould be In the fire. It was an un-

intentional shot that precipitated thebattle of Navarlno.

France nnd Englad may desire tokeep peace in Manch'urla If possible,but once let the dogs of war get looseand It will be Impossible to keep outof the row. One can never tell howfar such a war will spread, It will benext to Impossible to localize it,

A stranger who had missed the elec-tric cars and blundered Into a tram remarked yesterday: "Honolulu' Is ratherbehind the times." It was pointed outthat Honolulu was someyhat of a pro-gressive city. "Well," was the answer,"I Judged from this tram." The quick-er the Rapid Transit gets rid of ItsNuuanu street tram line the better willit be for the credit of the city.

The post office scandal will soon bobefore the courts. Six prominent

were Indicted by the grand" Juryyesterday adding to the list alreadypublished, There will be a set of themost striking and dramatic trialswhich have ever been held. Wherathe record of corruption will stop It Isdifficult to predicate.

The Man Behind the GunHe's All Rlelitlay w

BUT YOU riUST SUPPLYHinWITH THE

Right CunAND THE

Right AmmunitionPROPERTYLOADED

THESE .CAN BE SUPPLIED BY THF

Pacific Hardware Co., LtdSole Agents for Walsrode

FORT AND MERCHANT STREETS.

JUL,LIMITEE

Importers andCommissionflerchants

SOLE AGENTS FOR

Little JackSmoking Tobacco

Be and 10c packages.

Agents fnr

BRITISH AMERICAN ASSURANCECOMPANY, of Toronto, Ontario.

DELAWARE INSURANCE CO. ofPhiladelphia.

TRUNKS

RidiculouslyLow Prices

LIMITED

Tel. Main 198 P. O. Box 192.

LORD & BELSER,GENERAL CONTRACTORSFOR CONSTRUCTIONWORK, ETC., ETC

No. 1 Rock from $1.25 per yard up.No. 2 Rock from $1.35 per yard up.No. 3 Rock froni $1.50 per yard up.No. 4 Rock from $1.70 per yard up.Black sand from $1.00 per yard up.

Office and Yards, Beach Street, Kewalo

YILLA nova saloon,Queen Street, Opposite South.

All kinds of Beers and Soft' Drlnkiserved with a free hot lunch from 1 p.

m. to 3 p. ti.Rainier and Frlino Beers on tap.

FIGUEREDO & LUIZ, Proprlefora

Tray Cloths, '

Tea Cloths,"Side Covers,Stamped Linens,Doylies,

OCTOBER

THIS MUST BE SOLDAND BELOW

M I IE,1Commission Merchants.Sugar Factors....1

AGENTS FOR

The Ewa Plantation Company.-The "Walalua Agricultural Co., LtdThe Kohala Sugar Company.The Walmea Sugar Mill Company.Tho Fulton Iron Works, St Louis, MaThe Standard Oil Company.The Georgs F. Steam Pumps.Weston's Centrifugals.The New England Mutual Life Insur-

ance Company of Boston.The Aetna Fire Insurance Company ol

Hartford, Conn.The Alliance Assurance Company

Hawaiian Stock-Yard- s.

COMPANY, LIMITED

The Big &Livery, Hackstands, Carriage Paint-

ing, Boarding, Horse Market,--

Horse-shoeing, Blacksmlthlng, Lraylng andExpressage, Contracting.

E. H. LEWIS, Manager..

It requires no more exertion 'tochoose a good article with a good namethan to pick out a poor article with a.cheap reputation. After you havebeen annoyed in a dozen differentways, bV running water, leakage, bad,plumbing and inferior material, callon me and I will prescribe the rightremedy.

There is but one way to avert dan-ger, dqn't look for tt. The daily in-

crease In our sales are .sufficient proofof the popularity of the Douglas PatentCloset. Bath the Plumber, 163 Kingstreet, Phone 61 'Main.

NOTICE.

Persons needing, or knowing of thosewhd do need protection from physicalor moral they are notable to obtain for themselves, may con-sult the Legal Protection Committee ofthe Antl-'Salo- League, 9 MclntyreBulldlntr.

12TH TO 17TH.

Silk Piano Covers.Satin Bed" Spreads,'Cushion -

Pin Cushions,Splashers.

WE OFFER THESE GOODS AT

Great Alteration SaleOF

PINA SILKS. JAPANESE SILKS, FANCY SILKS, PRESSED SILKS,.VELVETS AND FANCY PLUSHES, ALSO

AN OPPORTUNITYTO PURCHASE j

Your Christmas Art Materials

Board

Blake

which

Handkerchief Cases,Necktie Cases,Fancy Pillows,Hug Pillows,Bureau Covers,

STOCKCOST.

Injury,

T6psr

E.W. Jordan & Co., Ltd' 'FORT TLTR15I01S

4

"V

(

Page 5: I THE HAW I · 2015-06-02 · If A 1 f PT;.' x--r.--J I I I dnj's If you Nowb, wnnt toMliiy to TT 1VT Tim llimnllniiHtur THE HAW Ik Iho pnper tlmt rou tan find It in A THE STAII

1

i.' 5y

Autumn Millinery Opening

THE N. S. SACHS DRY GOODS CO.

CORDIALLY INVITE TUB LADIESOP HONOLULU TO BE PRESENTAT THEIU MILLINERY OPENING,

Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday,October 12, 13 and 14

WHEN THEY WILL BE PREPAR-E- D

TO' SHOW THEM THE VERY

NEWEST AND PRETTIEST CREA-

TIONS OF THE MILLINERY ART.

Comer Fort and Beretania Streets.

Solid Comfort

Is what one of our leading plantation men says he gets fromwearing- - "SCRIVENS IMPROVED PATENT ELASTICSEAM DRAWERS." .

Nothing to rip or tear, fit comfortably and snugly, are self

adjusting, and do not bind about the hips and legs.

They are cool in summer, warm in winter.

Especially adapted for use by heavy, stout men.'See the display of these model garments in our Merchant

street window. Try a pair; you will never regret it.

MERCHANT AND PORT STREETS.

a millARRIVING.

Monday, October 12.

Am. bktn. James L. Eviston, Jenson,55 days from Newcastle, at 1 p. m.

PASSENGERS.Booked To Depart.

Per S. S. Sierra, October 13, for SanFrancisco: Miss E. G .Cartwright, MissU. E. Pearson, H. P. Baldwin, H. E.AValty, Mrs. H. T. Lucas and child, C.C. Vaughn and wife, P. C. Jones, H.Boulton, wife and daughter, L. L.

S. B. Rose, Col. McClellan,Thomas Fitch and wife, Lieut. Com-mander M. Tadle, J. Fensler,- - D. Dow-se- tf

and wife, C. H. Wilcox, G. N. Wil-.co- x,

Hikolchi Furohashi and wife, K.Nlshlo, S. Murlmoto, J. Berthevas, K.Xange, Fr. Carbotto and son, P. S.Sandbury, J. N. Wilson, H. M. Worse-le- y,

Mrs. E. M. Perry, Mr. and Mrs.JBrent, E. M. Blaylock, A. S. Ferrin, E.

V ; - TP

. S"scs

Place your flre

insurance with U8'.. .

and be relieved-o- f

all danger of

lapses and losses v

Henry Waterhouse

Trust Company, Ltd,

.

IS CO,

v

Mrs. Dowling, Prof. Hart

WILL NOT STAND

FOR MY PERJURY

DETERMINED TO ENFORCE

TESTIFyiNG FALSELY.

The ,lmmiBra.tlon

jury, will be The laws arqvery strict subject and thethorities propose toirlalnna r r rnra noffence. The" statutes are of recent LJ

Twenty-flv- e cents paysad in the Star. burcain.

Correct Hat StylesFOR ALL OUR ARE "IT,"

THE REAL DICTUM OFEITHER YALE OR ALPINE BLOCKS TO SUIT.

$7.50, $10.00,

LEVINGSTON'SBISIIol'

Alex. Young Bldg.

i HAWAIIAN STAR, MONDAY, OCTQnnit 1. lOOt.

CONTEMP T IS

f Continued from pape hue.)

MOD E

Iioosc," said an attorney, "and I doriVste what the juclirc could do,under the Wa Sin decision. As soon as,tUe judge found him guilty ofcontempt he would he in danger of imprisonment at hard lahor in Oahujail. Judge Gear held that it was not the actual sentence thatthe matter, hut that if the law simply left it that there might

imprisonment, the ofTensc was in the infamous crime category."

LIKES MOOS1C.

WAIALEALEHER

THIS

change hns made Inter-- !schedule thin week.

The steamer horun and will be

But if the United States stands first in the circulation of letters and' Atmhoiu Instead, this afternoon at 5

. - . . n'clnrk. Hnr Mini! run w 111 Iib tuknn livpost cards, it does not stand first in the number of telegraphic messages .! stonmi.r Noi-n- u which nniin ..t r,

Thsre

transmitted. According to the latest Germany had 24,471 tele- - o'clock tonight. The Nooau will not, so favored were women. Taey hut! beenr,ffic iA nnn i ct t,w.i, f c l,n lTnit,l Ctnw f,:J n .,,1 Mi ., however, touch all the ports usu- - arrested in a raid In the le-i- r nf tlm

b.p;. 0w,w ...w.w ...yu.n.v., fly made by Walaloale. After Chinese theater L. I a.p,irt.f!00O instruments, While Great Britain had rI1,5I2 telegraphic Oiiices and nmklnff of the Maul ports, the that tholr husbands were mnkliiK nifsht38,000 instruments. The of" messages transmitted was: Great Nuau will continue to Honokaa hi.., hideous evidently endeavoring with

" Kukulhaele. 'swipe Jags to drowji the muslp fromBritain 92,000,000, United States 63,000,000, Germany 46,000,000. This Thc st0umer will sail 3 p. Chinese orchestra. The sextette ofis curious m as much the general idea that the people of the today for Aaimea Kekaim with defendants said they would am'

makq use of the most rapid means of Of rL Mauna Loa am! KUw.Z "Tbaii. TW f the U,or Mthe telephone may have some bearing upon telegraphic communication, will depart tomorrow at noon on their svt n boys were rounded up lastbut UD011 this are lackintr .regular salllnB dates Maul Ha- - night by the police. The youngsters

SARCASM.

wall people were ljinbe.Judge

volcano ot Mnuna Loa. lunch... .. .,1 Captain Napala will his vaca- - Hookano escaped

Whistler, the had one quite a with Tom Taylor, the tlon this month. He will not tnke the' morning in the police court, aftenart critic Of the London Times, who had made StreillYjilS objection to "tenmer Lehua out her weekly run being arraigned many times. The de- -

"'"uw!lru JioioKai pons, uaptam lenciani kiiockch ner Hi tneiho irtist frnm hie nrtirlpa Dy on ciasqtiez, layior (icciar- - w. Bennett, late steamer J. eye with a broom stick some weeksing that the quotation standing alone as Whistler it gave just the Cummins, take out Lehua ago. since the assault he had beer: ioicontrary impression to that which it when rtad with the con- - ln,eA,ltn' "bsTe"" th,e re?ular, J," Juntil uMs

he'nornln

intoto appear against

came court ho rc- -text. Why squabble? wrote in reply. "You did print what British West York was fusel to testify against his wife, saI quote, you know, Tom; and it is unimportant what you yesterday by Captain Police Flint, tthc was discharged.have written the master. That you should have written anything arrived aftpr mi,i,,iM,

'

at all is your crime. Leave vengeance to the Lord, who will forgive night with partial cargoes of rice. Theyby garbling Tom Taylor's writing-,- "

'Fre,clirick Wedmore, a critic, S'0 Bet aWny tomorrowifo

complained as Taylor had 'done that.Wliisil,eohad treated him unfairly, The schooner Ada is dischargingain a quotation from his writings. Whistler liad substituted, said, cdrgo fire wood at the Fish Market"understand" for "understate." s is culpable," wrote Cioa this afte AcrnShL?Whistler. "The misprint is without' excuse. I have all along known cargo The is being op- -

that with Mr. as with his brethren, it is always a matter of aPuuToTbnPood110understating not 'at allof understanding. . When Taylor died place.Whistler remarked to a friend:, "I haye hardly a personal enemy MAul the bark w- -

iff B- - Pllnt sea Knhulul Sat- -le,t- -

, urday. The Flint is bound forfoindsco with a partial load scrap

cs OF

OW

LUDWIG

WHISTLER'S

r,Th,?,BJe?mer

THE COUNTRY1

UNITED STATES TREASURER ROB-

ERTS MAKES HIS ANNUAL RE-

PORTS TO SECRETARY SHAW.

Sept. 30. Ellis H.

house last night. bark James Nesmlth is takinglarge, as he decamped ballast today at the Sajison

the man was In the face She will sail tomorrow "or the following.day for Puget Sound.

WAS BECALMED. The Abby finished dis- -

The schooner Aloh the Quarantineday for becalmed Isl-- Sne wl" sail probably tomorrow for'nfcd.."!!? to yesterday. Puget in ballast.

HTjljmCANE ,

The of United Stateabureau and fol- - $34,00.

MAUI

Liit; uuttj iiu(jiuui muriim WHICHhave visited withinlast few that Its fncillties C. Brewer & Co $are not all that could be wished. Con- - nn

Roberts, of the United cernlng thetljrst of these it was impos- -States, has submltteu his .report to Sec- - to obthln definite, for iinu-niinr- . rmM

.J,....., u.. iwc ws or unys auciT 11 over, ti,...nli. o,,Treasury on June 9. 1903, its opera- - Jamaica. The next niie. fromg "3,B0

during the past fiscal year. The" Bahamas In time to warn "onomunet revenues for the year were Was lost view for a when It onokai1

of $3S,9SS,4G'J entered thn of Mexico. The'

over year preceding, the total cyclone came na n Klhelexpenditures $506,099,007, an of nenr or continental station KlpanuluS3r. 7R1 na4 Tho win Sr.4 !tT fif.7 .... ... . .." T -- vr- was iuio.ipossioip until ..as compared with $91,2!7,3,5 In 1902. nst TueBday evening. It gfiVQlMcBrydc

11 mis ruueipiB wieie ua an hints of its existence off Hatterns. Sus-lO- anf tvinrn finrt nf.H frnm ... . .... .. . SugarXnrt rVni w tii iSftT;. ?! m was tnus-excite- l.v n wind vo,, onomeau.iu lauuiG u.t Ul ,v: thirty-eig- ht rnllns hour.Intnrnnl thn lntir-i- ' lielnir thu u.. x. . .. .

OokH-- i

STEAMER

lnast.eJ- -

surely

Quotations.

information

Ratlgan, Mrs. D. Nicholson daugh- - of legislation enacted thai for. exercising caution ,9,0

c, , iiiiain rtiuui 1, .uio. ax. xuciiuuc ' luirn oi in" fnllnrl flnl,-- n

so"e

wNu.uui.and

son, Mrs. Cross, Alfred there was an Increase in every Impor- - month before bureau un- - nc,Wc

Harry Jonnson, Mrs. R. Wilson, V. W. tant account except pensions and Inter-- deservedly but sharply criticized for 120.00Straube and wife, M. Voss, C. est, in there were slight savings, premonitions of a differ-- nt

AV. Voss. The for the two Again, the path usuallv vj by Wnlalua ;J-- ti tj iciuuiU) vt.vj uti ii iui viv: uvjnnm.niu) ttjt brovitv.! unu m fllIrrlCflll0S tlint H T

Colonies: Miss R. Newth, Miss M. to $191,227,554, forming by far the iieav- - when Hattoras I

iNewm, jurs. nooeri uraig, Jir. anu ieai ouiiay ior uny single purpose, not northwestwardL. W.

NEW

OTHERS

local United States

Vi atntntoj

,,

Treasurer Hawaiian

iv

have,

time

more woman

wood. vessel

warm towed

other

which sailed wharlpilo

iSnntlmmlm

hu

,ocltJ.

EXCHANGEweeks

shows

whn

result reasonswnrniniret

Johnson, 210.00

whichfollow

If Wilder Cob'""" md ful r news of thf dtrover Inter-Islan- d 115.00he before

The aggregate Including be- - fornfrvobt,,1'nlbIe Washlnrrton- - Hawaiian 95.00

the revenues, the receipts from tm, ir-,- rt,., been sninr. Klecjbonds, notes coin certificates, was ;

X'tV"u"K- - Hon. Rapid Transit c... SO. 00$1,211,394,097, and tne average outgo "(T!rtEArMiP r.wfon mutual Telephone

nXT Z' oahu & Co RK.nnAt the close, of the .yc4r.,i fcomnlnW--n- ri ......the Treasury held IS93.068.SCO of gold !7 Vw "., Zr niI "allroad ..and silver deposit against outstand- - gangs young Flre CIn,ms 4s.rilfflnntSO Vtl nrt i)lnr ..1.1 a . . iing certincates ana Treasury notes, be- - " "M". huihc, mm tnat n R Co 6ssides the $150,000,000 In gold which trev : ofoWIy Insult and threaten peo- - T.

' " """OFFICIALS ma the

treasury amounted

against United P"'. "ut that they are "sponsible ,... ,.. .... .. "the robberies occur.

TronHIIWP T?nllrfa nlfinno f 1m mnnr.- - Tim n.hlnV. tn .1. .

280.00

T",wv,vuv

reserve

. v.. . ...v. ' " ..v. I . 1 V. 1 . 'la III' 1. III' I' I 11 II . . .

Jiy stock of on June 30, larger, can be ,'" "LAWS JAPS AND .usually handled, and the 'i"

enforce

wo ,uui..b emu u.m ouver. unueu mob its very worst is not responsible '" T a "the of the that is caused by........ uuk ,It. !.:.. , ,...... e,..b. iiavt uauseu Hangings

963 for the.j'ear. The In gold and 0Urn"iBS, and the suni-tot- al ofauthorities are determined was $60,137,401 and in national bank' these murders and the subsequent vio- - iomiB "otel Saturday

Japanese understand that any . notes WWJ TL -- hTh Luluokalan. Is the esNIS nrrrnnloH r,Immlrnnts nrrlvlnn- nt this nnrt. dfi-- 1 . '" A .

"-- " " '"'tected in the act of committing per- - uu",ir.i X I 8 w"nout - aiding Hawailans who In

on this authe

f l thla

he

r

iui(r

wu... nn

and

at

perin the789, a gain of $7120,180months.

i

R.

II

rr

1

K cumstances.- The is beings ii new iore out tnetwelve ,ipv, iir.,1 n I a. f..n I.

I

the ..year l.,-- ;'as deposited at minis j., A- - i "V . . 7a"b

m r ii.. ia tut: uiceuii K iiiucB nr r no priminn l .

and i.mport is tlnko 7i the of New Voting who are too cowardlyMrnthr5PPreCiated y Japanese,York, constituting 67 r clnt ot the act alonednotjiesltate to act in con-La- st

week: a Janam.se Kinzo' whole 88 ner cent were Bold. The cert wlthpther Souths of likearrested to a proport,on of BOld at other ports ness and like cowardice. The result IsytarVS pert tlZPLnri ,an np.pall,.ll8t ot crimes

named Nakagawa was detained 1 " Ins'.,lt- - and assault rglaryat this port by the He f" nt,J' ,li and mUrder-- Tnero ls ln Dorchesterhusband did not appear to claim her. the nUCleUS ot BanBS that ;uId B0 aaof 46 was mThere was an excellent reason for his 'B far as nny ln cltlea- - Usua'-absen-aa old and $54 -as he and the wife had npar-- - 0 193 national bank notes. Iy these Bana aro tlle Primary schoolated. thought he would be able for in? of tramps and crlmlnota producedto woman landed, so lUs creased 89 centa und prol ortlon of It Is safe for the police act on

hi ls allseed haVe gotm ,., . , nrnmnHnn n,ImmliTpit-ro- (mneison- - v,,ulc ,uae l'r cent B.ls Temple, and

T,rort n.nn gungs. ll,iu, wciuueris only way city cansoon becamu satisfied that was not

telling the truth. returned ft itutoZ bKZS aS!Wstation Saturday and wanted to,ecuplate0,;vubhUt Telegram.

lintta fnrmnf tm'nr-- atntamnnrr t can Increased Congressstraightened put, but warrant for his wlll authorize gold cer-arre- st

had already been sworn to, so tincates $10 and remove re-h- ewas taken into custody. The woman Issue notes by

ls 'be. deported by S. national banks. To meet con-- S.

Doric. Istant nressure ires strenuous effort

for sue.A

AROUNDHAT ELEGANCE.

AND

1071 ST.

about

inree

day

currency this that the

theBtriction

the

the currency 100Kdogs with

The national bank notes, presentedfor redemption the yearamounted $196,429,621, per cent

the outstanding. Of thenotes the were per

the $10, per cent; the $20,per cent; the $50, 61 per' cent,

$100, per Thesethat the $10 and $20 notes

circulation longest.

SLASHED A KNIFJ0.-- ,

appeared the ofTlce diddeputy Ilgh this morningsecure for arreBt, Ko-doma, Jap. The latter waschurged with cutting Uyamoto on t.io

side the face withThe occurred row

the men Japanese lodging

VMt-

CI

governed

to

31 inon

on

to

of

Kodoma Iswharf,

ALOHA barkcharging coal

FORECASTS.experience

weather In detectingluvvmt,

this

Ewa

sible

92.50total

Gulf

miLlmna

160.00S.

most minor

.uuua

ueneutnll'ntha..

enactment

rangingt0

money each personto

paper

cent:

Uyamot

Worchester

Pavl, announcedMarch

states has examined morenatural Inborn

average

figuresremain

WITH

Sheriff

right,

safety.

tory and npver failedfind 'thenerve centers. other hand

has found

BRIDGE..,,.Work Wnliash bridge acrossthe river Pittsburgbeing rushed order complete.structure The bridgedesigned carry heaviest trains

double when com-pleted, jthe longest; truss span (812 feetbetween centers) America, and

SONS t6 BURN.There woman Virginia who

has whom overleet and over pounds.

changes

SLAND ROUTES

THE WILLNOT MAKE RUN TO

PORTS WEEK.

beenIsland steamer

Walnloale takenMuul sent

comnitmicatioli.

ports. number caught.hooked them for the, water Lii.tltiiypurpose viewing outbieak them

Namea

nusuana

used

shortly in'Li

Wedmore,and

WASHINGTON,

still The

after

Palmer

was offSound

STOCK

thu

0IT

Between ago, re--

weeksBid. Asked.

Agrl 220.00

passeu

tlons Floridi.

increase third Kuhuku

increase

revpnue.

120.00

33.00

with'

nli"('y Wallukunortheastward.

Income the Electricsides

L.'$1,122,647,005.:tHWyI.;VBO

ullon.,,,LOCAL IMMIGRATION

that

ror

to "nSver

2?'

rtincatVs

for

PANAMA

conveyed

f4S44S4-fc- S

HYDROPHOBIA.

microorganism hydrophobia.

hydrophobiamicro-organis- m

WONDERFUL

thothlijd world.

HONOLULU,"ushe,r

ToC0,39G,C73,-- an

OS 1UU.UU

Of

to

$300.0022.375

25.00

13.7521.0010.00

1.0095.0035.0010.00

99.00

had beenlt3lPata

storm 160.00expenditures 50.00 60.00

Want

Nevortholess.year '?r

Haw.

ry

their

Yoki

and,

cent.

that

pier

110.00125.00105.00

10.00

20.0097.50

102.50

Walalua 100.101.00REGARDING country

increase

authorities. !Zl

PRICES $15.00.

statistics

redemptions

Immediately

Monongnhela

100.00

DANCE YOUNG HOTEL.The Iolani Society will give

that.hall

tiiunc liicic dpnt."catn poor

'.m fights which the dance given6,.iiBS Society.

Duringthe

full

th?h

larBe

Klnzo here,

claimed,K m l"c --- "t

hn his " v" me it, oln of lnho

Vila 1 -" supply bea of

on of $5to

red u

.

OFDr. last

the- theHe

in the or

duringto or 51

of$5 05

of 46 of49

of 73

ln

.

at of .

toa warrant ofanother

of aassault during be-

tween In a

country

Inutjjii.

"f

A; at

ofhe

to Inthe On thehe In

A

on theat ls

In to theby

to theon will

InIn the

In13 sons sixtail 180

' 'A In theforwill

oft hor

at

on theof the the

the

J

F:i- - atthe

the

A l .

to

of

In the

nt spt

S.ar

th

....on

1

of

the

man

J:

Co.

AT

DO.

vj

101 00

Cs 2&

Cs

il fa -

cir- -47

is inet'...

to

mis

to

tne

of

of

Is

of is

a

cents a' Wantad in the Star. A bargain.

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS

llawniinn Jiodgo No. 21,F. & M.

There will be special meetIng of Hawaiian Lodge, No.r . et a. ac its Mason

th atatlon anil lu lu ,..a no ic corner or Hotel Alakei

ln tpstlmr.nv im.l' m o ciock.

The htoif

Issue

a

show

knife.a

specific

How

specific

never it other dogs.

tracks, have

largest

a.eachweights

USUAL

lectured

renorted

90.00

Agrl.

....

Ahahui

pays

a2

nan,imenun

WORK IN THIRD DEGREE.Members of Pacific Lodge. Lodge "Lt

Progres, and all sojourning brethrenInvited to be present

iiyoraer 01 tne w. ax.,

R. G. WALLACE.

Heetlng Notice.

Notice Is hereby given that there willa meeting of the Republican Coun

ty Commutes at Republican Headquarters, on Monday, the 12th day ofOctober, 1903, at 7:30 o'clock p. m.

The members of such committee areearnestly requested to bo present.

00

55.

notare

ju.,

are

K.

be

E. C. PETERS,

Honolulu, T. II., Oct. 9, 1903.

TRIED TO DROWN

CHINESE MUSIC

UK NATIVE MA.1CM

UNSUCCESSFUL ATTEMPT TO

OUTNOISK CELRCT1AL M'OhlC.

were eighteen chhkh of uitox-IcHtl-

mi the polleo court CHlcndur uMmorning. Judge Lindsay guvc till hutfev a ponl-i.u- of to and coala fnr.Three of those who escaped the lino, re-ceived tnlld and rntr tuhukoHfrom his honor. I he three d"fi-ndiin- t

ofU)e lust nigh

pomenumber

Nllhau at theas is United ani

States course

statistics for andof s.inl

HawalJ, for front.of and discharged- -

take plosccutionartist, tilt this

of A.win the

bark capturedof

he of

of

from lastSan

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iciuij

hail

and nnwH

and

F.military

pro- -

hnve

tup

for

oSSthn

of andthe

cut

the

the

the

BACILLUS

discovery

November.

'iihu

the

10.00

Miss

the

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for

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Secretary.

Secretary.

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and

WRECKS ON THEAsoocintPf) Pre". Mnrnlnz

NORFOLK, Va., October 1L Threowrecks are reported on the Virginiacoast. Several lives were lost.

THE CZAR SHOWS FEAR.Associated Press. Morning Servlcn.

VIENNA, October II. Thc qaar willnot visit Rome on account of his fearof the anarchists.

DENY THE PARTITION STORY.Associated Press.' Mornlnsr Service.

TOKIO, Japan, October 12. It Is of-ficially denied that Russia, 11 h pre-viously reported, offered to divide Ko-rea with Japan In return for the lat-te- r's

permitting Russia to remain InManchuria- - undisturbed.

RETURNED FROM SEA TRIP.Walter Lee, Jr. son of the 'late Wal- -.

ter E. Lee who was killed In .the rockBoards-Sal- es: 10 Onomea, several

i,pePeekeo

prosecuted.

Wednesday

WEAR

possible

quotation

currlnf

proportions

preparation

Twenty-fiv- e

SHXTE'PTL

Whistler

Waimanalo

ATLANTIC

iutiicu uii tut; ai.iivuin.-- i iiiiuj iut 1' irsit.1last week from Port Blakeley. YountfLee Is a member of the crew and haajust completed his first round trip onthe vessel.

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS

BY AUTHORITYNOTICE TO CANDIDATES FOR

ELECTION TO COUNTY

OFFICES.

Territory of Hawaii;Secretary's Office.

Notice ls hereby given that, whereasIt Is required by law that candidatesfor election to county ofllces on theIsland of Oahu shall file their nomina-tions with the Secretary of the Terri-tory not less than Ten Days before the1Special Election for County Officers, lfrwill be necessary that Bald nomina-tions be filed' in this olllce not laterthan Five O'clock on the afternoon ofFriday, October 23rd, A. D. 1903.

No person shall be eligible to aCounty or District office unless of theage of .twenty-on- e years, a citizen ofthe Territory ,nnd an elector of theCounty or District in which the dutiesof the office nre to be exercised, and aresident therein for three years Im-mediately preceding such election andno person shall hereafter be eligible tothe office of District Attorney whoshall not have been admitted to prac-tice in the Supreme Court of the Ter-ritory of Hawaii.

Each nomination ,must be accompa-nied b- - a deposit of Twenty-fiv- e Dol-lars, and be signed by not less thanTwenty-fiv-e duly qualified Electors othe County for which such elbctlon Is-t-

be held.G. It. CARTER.

Secretary, of the Territory.C. R. BUCKLAND,

Electbral Registrar.1 Capitol, Honolulu, October 1st, 1903.

Oct. 1, 3, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 17, 19, 21, 23.

25 REDUCTIONAT

The New Era HotelFort Street above Vineyard.

FROM SEPTEMBER 1ST, 190J.

Telephone 3841 Blue.

Excursion to VolcanoAnd

Across Hawaii

Sailing Tuesday, October 13,Going One Route,Returning Another.

Richard II. Trent, Gen. Agent.Corner Fort andMerchant.

The firm of "EXPERT DENTISTS" Allen and Ferguson, Is this day dis-solved by mutual consent, Dr. W. E. Allen retiring. The business wlll icontinued by Dr. F. L. Ferguson, who will assumo all responsibility.

W. E. ALLEN,July 16, 1903. . F. L. FERGUSON,

1 n

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Page 6: I THE HAW I · 2015-06-02 · If A 1 f PT;.' x--r.--J I I I dnj's If you Nowb, wnnt toMliiy to TT 1VT Tim llimnllniiHtur THE HAW Ik Iho pnper tlmt rou tan find It in A THE STAII

BIX.

Sjmmcr Proposition.Well, now thero'a the

CE QUESTION I

Tou know you'll need Ice; you knowtea a iiuovKslty In hot weather. WetwMeve j'ou aro anxious to get that Icewhich will kIvo you satisfaction, andm'H like to supply you. Order from

qui ice wm CO.,

telephone J151 Clue, Postoniee Box 606.

f G. IRWIN & CO., LTD.Wm. G. Irwin. .President and ManagerOnus Spreckels.... First nt

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

H. 14. Whitney Jn.Sec'y and TreasurerGeo. J. Ross Auditor

SUGAR FACT0R3,, COMMISSION AGENTS

AGENTS FOR THEOceanic Steamship Company of San

Francisco Cal.

AGENTS FOR THEScottish Union National Insurance

Company of Edinburgh.Wtlhelma of Magdeburg General n- -

m ranee Company.Associated Assurance" Co., Ltd., of

Munich and Berlin.AJU&nce Marine nnd General Assurance

' Co., Xitl., of London.Royal Insurance Company of Liver

pooLAlliance Assurance Company of Lon

don.Kothester German Insurance Company.

DenguoAN 3

Mosquitoes

If you Intend to mosquito-proo- fyour house, you want screendoors. We carry In stock.

All sizes.

Plain and Fancy,Galvanized Wire.

W

ilder & Co..Limited

TOUT L .KEET.

IB BOW!

There's notnlng more annoy-ing to the careful housewife thana, houseful of flies, (unless It bea. houseful of mosquitoes.) Andthe annoyance is shared byevery member of the family In alesser degree. No one cares tohave them prancing through allsorts of llithy places which theyscolt out of doors and then alighton the butter or come to an endIn one's cup of tea or coffee.Eternal vigilance and the useof door and window screens thekind that keep flies and mos-quitoes out are the only surepreventive. We liave the screensand can supply you at a verylow inice. Better get themearly.

II I lit.LIMITED

177 South King St.

astle& Cooke, Ltd

Xvi" andFirelisorasioe Agents

AGENTS ron

New EnglandMutual LiftInsurance Co

OF BOSTON.

iEtna FireInsurance Co.,OF HARTFORD, CONN.

9mll 1 gFjgdl

"Wo uro old friends, tills uottlo andI. Wo havo known each other for oversixty years. When a hoy 1 was alwaystaking cold, but a few doses of thisnicdlcino would at onco sot nio right.

" Whoa a young mnu I had a weakthroat and weak lungs. My friendsfeared soino lung trouble, but

CbAyer'srry Peetoral

greatly strengthened my throat, oloaredup my voice, and took away tho ten-dency for every cold to go to my lungs.

" Last year I had a bad attack of lagrippe. Tho only medicino I took was'from this bottlo, and I camo out allright. I know it's good, too, forasthma, bronchitis, imeumonia,croup."

Thcro aro many substitutes and imi-

tations, llowaro of them! l!o suroyou get Ayer's Cherry Pectoral.

Two sizes. Largo and small bottles.Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co.. Lowell. Mass., U.S.A.

BY AUTHORITYSEALED TENDERS.

Sealed Tenders will be received bythe Superintendent of Public Worksuntil 12 m. of Saturday, tho 31st ofOctober, for Dredging Section No. 1 ofHonolulu Harbor.

Plans and specifications on file Inoffice of the Engineer of Department ofPublic Works.

The Superintendent reserves theright to reject any and all bids.

HENRY E. COOPER,Superintendent of Public Works.

SHERIFF'S SALE NOTICE.

Under and by virtue of a certainExecution issued by Lyle A. Dickey,First District Magistrate of Honolulu,Island of Oahu, Territory of Hawaii,on the 2oth day of September, 1903, in

the matter of Allen W. T. Bottomley,Trustee, vs. J. A. Magulre, I have, on

this 3rd day of October, A. D. 1903, atsaid Honolulu, levied upon, and shalloffer for sale and sell at public auctionto the highest bidder, at the PoliceStation, Kalakaua Hale, In said Honolulu, at 12 o'clock noon of Tuesday, the4th day of November A. D. 1903, all theright, title and Interest of the said J.

. Magulre in and to the following described personal property; unless thesum of Sixty-fou- r and Dollars,that being the amount for which saidexecution Issued, together with interestcosts and my expenses are previouslypaid:

That certain liquor business knownas the "Orpheum Saloon" located at

264 Fort street, in said Honolulu, together with the fixtures, furniture andstock In trade therein contained.

CHAS. F. CHILLINGWORTH,Deputy Sheriff, Territory of Hawaii.

Honolulu, Oahu,Oct. 3, 1903.

JmVAIIAS AUKICUJJ UKAL CO.

Notice Is hereby given that the stockbooks of the above Company will beclosed to transfers from the 10th to theltli Insts. inclusive.

GEO. H. ROBERTSON,Treasurer.

Honolulu, Oct. S, 1903.

MORTGAGEE'S NOTICE OF INTENTION TO FORECLOSE MORT-

GAGE ANEy OF SALE .

In accordance with a power of salecontained In that certain mortgagemade by James H. Hakuole of Hono-lulu, Island of Oahu, Territory of Ha-waii, to A. L. Shaw of said Honolulu,dated the 29th day of November, A. D.1902, and recorded In the Registrar'sOtllce, Oahu, In Liber 247 on pages 02

and 63, notice is hereby given that saidMortgagee Intends to foreclose saidmortgage for conditions broken, to wit:the nonpayment of principal and inter-est when due, and upon said foreclos-ure will sell at public auction at theauction rooms of Jas. F, Morgan,

street, Honolulu, on Satur-day, the 17th day of October, A. D.1903, at 12 o'clock M. of said day, thepremises described In said mortgagea3 below specified.

Further particulars can bo had ofthe undersigned pr at the auctionrooms of Jas. F. Morgan.

A. L. SHAW,Mortgagee

All of that certain piece or parcel ofland situate at Kunawal, Kawalolena,Honolulu, Oahu, being Apana 2 ofRoyal Patent No. 0704, L. C. A. No.G247 issued- - to Kanaulu, containing an

'area of 3 08-1- Acres, and being thosame premises conveyed to said mort-gagor by deed of ICekuialono (w) datedthe 2nd day 01 January, A. D. 1900, ofrecord in Liber 201, Page 333.

PURE WHOLESOME BREADBy a First-Cla- ss Baker of Twelve

Years Experience In Honolulu.7 LOAVES FOR 25 CENTS.

All kinds of Cakes, Pies, Ice Cream,Etc., made to order at very short

aotlce.SUNRISE BAKERY

Nauanu Street, near Beretanla.1

aill! HAWAIIAN BTAIt. MONDAY, Ot'TOHKU 12, 1013.

mmThe commerce of the Philippine Islands continues to increase, not-

withstanding the adverse agricultural conditions that have prevailedduring the past year. This fact is demonstrated bv the trade figuresfor ten months ending April 30, 1903, received by the Insular Bureauof the War Department.

In the month of April, 1903, the total value of imports aiid exportsof merchandise was $6,733,778, as against $3,845,673 in 1902 and

in 1901. For ten months ending April 30, 1903, the tradeamounted to $53,703,263, while for the corresponding period of 1902the amount was $46,145,891, and in 1901 it was $44,199,558.

The great bulk of this gain has been due to an inoease in exports,shipments from the islands for the month of April 1903, approximatingnearly $4,000,000, made up, for the most part, of heavy cargoes ofhemp; in fact the largest monthly output since American occupation,and from present indications the figures for the fiscal year ending June30, 1903, will show a balance of trade in favor of the islands, a positionthey have not occupied for the last seven years, or from the date of theinsurrection against Spain in 1896.

The volume of trade at the present time is larger than in any previ-ous year, regardless of the interruption to business by reason of quar-antine restrictions, as a result of cholera, heavy losses .owing to the de-

struction of corps by locusts, and an almost total annihilation of farmcattle, due to the ravages of ridcrpest, all of which, naturally, bad .1

depressing effect.The distribution of exports for the ten months ending April 30, dur-

ing the last three years, according to the principal agricultural prod-ucts, is shown as follows:

. 1901. 1902. 1903.Hemp $11,404,261 $12,698,355 $17,506,220Sugar '. 1,967,324 2,068,645 2,942,014Tobacco 1,954.299 2,194,565 1,646,607Copra :; 2,382,900 782,102 3,696,186Sundries i325.385 1,623,815 908,845

Totals $19,034,169 $19,367,482 $26,699,872The most noticeable increase in value is found under hemp and

copra, the trade in both of these articles having made exceptionallylarge gains during the past year. Of the hemp produced and creditedto exportation in 1903 the United States easily ranks as the principalbuyer, receiving nearly $10,000,000 worth, or 57 per centum of thetotal, as against 18 per centum of the shipments in 1901.

Although more than two-thir- of the Philippine exports consist ofhemp, it may prove of interest to note the comparative value of UnitedStates trade in the 'leading commoditVs as enumerated above. Theexports to the United States were as tollows:

1901. 1902. 1903- -

Hemp $2,106,630 $5,129,974 $9,9",549Sugar 93.472 293,354 921,150Tobacco 5,027 8,317 46,070Copra 4.450 7 9.358Other articles ' 62,712 117,062 124,938

Totals $2,272,291 $5,548,714 $11,012,765

With regard to imports into the islands, while their value for the tenmonths of 1903 does not show so large a gain as might have been ex-

pected under more favorable conditions, nevertheless an averagemonthly trade of nearlv $2,750,000 has been maintained, this beingsomewhat in excess of the showing for the year previous. The impor-tation of rice is still heavy, and will in all probability continue so forsome time, though it is 'hoped that the home production, which is be-

ing stimulated, will tend to greatly reduce the purchases from abroad.Aside from rice imports, which reached nearly $7,500,000 worth in

1903, the United States is supplying over one-six- th of the trade inother' commodities, steady increase being made in such lines as wheatflour, practically the total importation coming from this country, can-

ned salmon, meat products, illuminating oils, machinery of differentkinds, paper, cotton goods and leather manufactures, principally bootsand shoes, the figures showing a constant and growing demand for theAmerican make of shoe..

GOOD NEWS FOR ELLIS LANDO.

WASHINGTON, D.. C, Sept. 25. Hazing at Annapolis was oneof the subjects discussed at the Navy Department today between Sec-

retary Moody and Captain Willard H. Brownson, superintendent of thenaval academy. Since returning from his vacation Captain Brownsonhas carried out a thoroughly investigation of affairs at the academy,and today reported to the Secretary that no hazing existed at Annapo-lis. There are not more than twenty upper-clas- s men at the institution.As soon as the midshipmen return from their holiday, the superinten-dent will renew the vigorous policy against hazing which proved ef-

fective last year. Secretary Moody recently said to Captain Brownson :

"If hazing exists at Annapolis, stop it, and the Navy Departmentwill back you."

:o:LET THEM ALL COME.

Mr. Sargent, United States Commissioner of Immigration, is madenervous by the number ofpeople coming over here to grow up with thecountry. In the last three years nearly two millions have landed, andMr. Sargent is sure that a round million will come in the hscal yearTune 30, loo-?-

, to June 30;. 1004. Well, what of it. Let them come-

The wretched "foreigners" were going to run the country more thanfifty years ago. So many good people thought. Arc the sons andgrandsons of those immigrants going to shut the door in the face ofthese later comers? Oh, but these arc different. These are not Ger- -

ma ns or Irish or Scandinavians, but "low-dow- n" Italians, Huns, Slavs,Russian and Roumanian Jews.. These will never do. They can never"assimilate with our people."

All this simply because we don't yet know the newcomers. Fiftyyears ago some persons who regarded themselves as particularly "goodAmericans" ignorantly hated the "ignorant Irish." They didn't know"the Irish," that's all. Wait a generation or two, and these dreaded im-

migrants of 1903 may be highly respectable, conservative citizens fullof apprehensions about the immigration of the Persians or the Abys-sinian-

Everybody's Magazine for October.:o :

FIND EVIDENCES OF A PIRATE'S CACHE.

AUSTIN, Texas, Sept. 18. Martin Lcdder, who has been a mem-

ber of the United States dredgeboat crew employed in deepening thechannel in Galveston bay, is visiting here, and tells an interesting storyof the discovery of strong evidences of the treasure hidden by Lafittethe pirate chief, which he savs lies at the bottom of Galveston bay in-

stead of being buried on Galveston island, as has long been supposed.He says the dredgeboat George Sealy has been pumping up old

Spanish coins and other rare relics of ancient times from the bottom ofthe bay fo"r several days past, and the boat crew believes the bulk of thetreasure, which is said to amount to hundreds of thousands of dollarsin gold, will be recovered.

In addition to (he coins several hundred pounds of copper boltshave been pumped up from the same locality. These bolts were usedin the construction of ancient seagoing craft. The latest date on thecoins is 1812. Huge stones have also been encountered in the bottomof the bay, and it is thought they were placed there by Lafitte to markthe location of the sunken treasure. A rusty shell of ancient type hasbeen recovered in the same manner. Lafitte and his crew of pirateslived on Galveston island from 1816 until 1825.

..J

V

!?:

..

..'

.;.;!:

"'fW-JHTf'- -'

'? ij .;.. a ?

Hammock Season

BALL

LASTS MOST OF THE YEAR ONTHE "SUNNY SHORES" EVEN IFYOU CAN NOT USE THEM AT ALLTIMES ON THE "SNOWY SLOPES,"SO IT IS AS GOOD A TIME NOW TOLOOK AT OUR FINE NEW ASSORT-MENT OF

ITAIIVrOOICiSAS IT EVER WILL BE. WE HAVETHEM FROM

!5l.OO to SC.OO IraolxYOU CAN LOOK AT THEM AND

TRY THEM FOR NOTHING

E. 0. HALL & S01, LTD.',"".Jitji Jm's . ." ?

Selected Olives InLarge Variety

;.

The Olive, financially speaking, is no longer a luxurySpeaking from a digestive and palatable standpoint, it is a necessity. It stimulates the appetite and promotes digestion.

THE BEST CONSIGNMENT EVER

IMPORTED IS NOW SHOWN

IN OUR WINDOW.

Twenty-fiv- e sizes of plain and stuffed Olives, bottled fron.selected fruit.

fc fe

H. MAY & COMPANY,LIMITED.

22 DOUBLE TWO TELEPHONE DOUBLE TWO 2i

AnnouncementThe DEN MORE, after ten years of success and constantly grow-

ing popularity, signalizes Its entrance upon the second decade of Itshistory, as well as upon the new era, by appearing In new modelscontaining many advanced and practical ideas. The manufacturersfeel a Justifiable pride in being able to offer In the new DensmoresInstruments that not only save the operator time and labor, but thattake a long lead in the number of ends accomplished by typewritingmachines.

BEARINGS LIGHTEST TOUCH

Hawaiian News O o., I,tdH AGENTS.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFirst Circuit, Territory of Hawaii.At Chambers In Probate.

In the Matter of the Estate of M. E.Luce, deceased.Order of Notice of Hearing Petition

for Allowance of Final Accounts, Dis-

tribution and Discharge.On reading and filing the petition and

accounts of A. M. G. Luce, Admini-stratrix de bonis non, the estate of M.E. Luce, late of Honolulu, deceased,wherein she asks to be allowed $12,815.24

and charges herself with $19,963.73, andasks that the same may be examinedand approved, and that a final ordermay be made of distribution of theproperty remaining in her hands to thepersons thereto entitled, and discharg-ing her and her sureties from all fur-ther responsibility as such adminltra-trl- x.

It Is ordered, that Monday, the 2ndday of November A. D. 1903, at teno'clock a. m. before the Judge of saidCourt at the Court Room of the saidCourt at Honolulu, Island of Oahu,be and the same hereby is appointedas the time and place for hearing saidPetition and Accounts, and that allpersons Interested may then and thereappear and show cause, If any theyhave, why tho same should not begranted, and may present evidence asto who are entitled to the said propertyAnd ,that notice of this Order In theEnglish, language, be published In theHawaiian Star a newspaper printedand published In Honolulu once a Weekfor three successive weeks, the lastpublication to be not less than twoweeks previous to the tjme therein ap-

pointed for said hearing.Dated at Honolulu, this 3rd day ot

September 1903.

J. T. DE BOLT,First Judge Circuit Court First Circuit.Attest: P. D. KELLETT, JR.,

Clerk.Holmes &' Stanley for Petitioner.Twenty-flv- e cents pays for a Want

ad In the Star. A bargain.

..

.

m :.

"."V

.ml'

LONGEST WEAR

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

Manufacturers of Soda Water, Gln-t- er

Ale, Sarsaparilla, Root Beer, Cream3oda, Strawberry, Etc., Etc.

mCagoIn Less Than

3 DaysSanFranoloco &t 10 a. m.

CHICAGO, UNION PACIFIC

& NORTHWESTERN LINE

Pullman fourteen-sectto- n Draw-lng-Roo- m

and Private Compart-ment Observation Sleeping Carswith Telephone. Electric-readin- g

Lamps in every Berth, Compart-ment and Drawing-Roo- Buffet.Smoking and Library Cars, withBarber and Bath, Dining Cars-me- als

a la carte. Electric-lighte- dthroughout.

Dally Tourist Car Service at 6 p.m. and Personally Conducted Ex-cursions every Wednesday and Fri-day at 8 a. m. from Ban Francisco.The bent of everything.

K. R. RitchieGen. Agent Pacific Coast.

617 Market St. Ran Francisco.(Palace Hotel.)

Twenty-flv- e cents pays for a Wautad In the Star. ' A bargain.

Page 7: I THE HAW I · 2015-06-02 · If A 1 f PT;.' x--r.--J I I I dnj's If you Nowb, wnnt toMliiy to TT 1VT Tim llimnllniiHtur THE HAW Ik Iho pnper tlmt rou tan find It in A THE STAII

THH Hawaiian btah, mondav. orroiiMit h, 100a. BKVBN.

(WHAT ARE THE WtCD WAVES SAVING- -

TENNIS TOURNAMENT IN'HUWANCIC VIn tho lentil tonrnntnent. f.Hl?in imi'h double, Saturday ftfurnwn, llwck

niul Aloxuiidat-- won from Demy nnd Uolo, with the ikhii, J, M, iC. Tillafternoon at 4 :30 o'clock, the finals will he played, the emitmtnnu living

Jroi-- uiul Alexander vx. CuiiIih and Kfhg.

Wo drink it everywhere PRIMOWe hear it everywhere PRIMOSold everywhere PRIMO

Old Sol furnishes warm weatherPrimo is the antidote

BREWER & CO,, LIMITED

QUEEN STREET,HONOLULU H. T.

...AGENTS FOR...Hawaiian Agricultural Company, Ono-me- a

Sugar Company, Hpnomu SugarCompany, Walluku Sugar Company,Ookala Sugar Plantation Company,Haleakala Ranch Company, Kapapala'Jtanch.

planters' Line Shipping Company.Charles Brewer & Co.'s Line of Bos-

ton P kets.LIST OF OFFICERS.

Charles M. Cooke PresidentGeo. H. Robertson. .V-Pre- s. & Mgr.H. Faxon Bishop.... Treas. & Sec'y.W. F. Allen AuditorP. C. Jones ..DirectorH. Waterhouse .'.....DirectorOR. Carter DirectorAll of the above named constituting

the Board of Directors.

A Bargain.

rA fine large Building lot on thelopea of Punchbowl graded and ter-

raced, and commanding a FeautlfulView of Diamond Head and the sea, Is

offered for sale at a bargain. Theplace Is high and dry, yet not two min-

utes distance from the Rapid Transitears. Just the place for a home out oftown as far as dust and smoke areconcerned, yet within such an easy

distance that a man could have plentyof time to go home to lunch.

Anyone Interested can have full par- -

mlars at this office.

ApollinarisMineral Llthla "Water.

Queen of Table Waters

Prices to Family Trade as follows:

Cases of 50 quarts, $8.50 per case. Perdozen, $2.25. Py bottle, 20c.

Cases of 100 pints, $10.50 per case.Cases of 50 pints, $5.50 per case. Perdozen, $1.50. Two bottles for 25c.

Special prices to the trade.

LEWIS & CO., LTD.. The Big Grocers

The Lewers & Cooke Building.169 KING STREET.

2402 Telephones 240.

S. SAIKB,Bamboo Furniture

ANDPICTURE FRAMESNeat and HandsomeDesigns, made to order.

Ml, Beretanla Street, near Punhbowl.

OAHU RAILWAY AMD LAND CD'S

PIME TABLED

MAY 1st, 1903.

OUTWARD.

For Waianae, Walalua, Kahuku andWay Stations 9:15 a. m., 3:20 p. m.

For Pearl City, Ewa Mill and WayStations 17:30 a. m., 9:16 a. m.,11:05 a. m., 2:15 p. m., 3:20 p. m.,

t:15 p. m., 5:15 p. m., t9:30 p. m.,til: 15 p. m.

INWARD.' Arrive Honolulu from kahuku, WaN

lalua and Waianae 8:38 a. m., 5:3iJP. m.

Arrive Honolulu from Ewa Mill andPearl Ctty--'6:- 50 a. m., tT:46 a, m8:36 a. m., 10:38 a. m., p. m

4:31 p. m., 5:31 p. m., 7:40 p. m.Dally.

t Sunday Excepted,t Sunday Only.

,A O. P. DENISON, (F. C. SMITH,Supt. G. P. & T. A.

REDUCTIONSALE

NOW ON AT

S. OZAKIWAVERLEY BLOCK

HOTEL STREET.

LESS EXPENSE, ,

Can be obtalnodby using ourreliable M, & MArc PortableLamps Jor Storeq.Street Lighting,Churcnes, Halls,and In fact, anyplace where youwant light of 504Candle-powe- r.

One M. & 11.Arc Lamp give,more light thanone electric ArcLight at cost ofonly one-ha- H centper hour.

This lamp Is sold on trial subject icperfect1 satisfaction; Is fully guaran-teed for one year; over 30,000 In actualcommercial use In the U. S. today.

If you want MORE LIGHT, do alittle figuring. Note how many hoursyour burn your Gas, or Electric Lightsthen figure cost of our Gasoline ArcLamps, which are ABSOLUTELY

They meet In everyway the requirements of the NationalBoard of Fire Underwriters. You willbe astonished at the CUT IN YOURLIGHT BILLS, and you will be MOR"astonished at the INCREASE of youilight.

Don't turn us lown because you havehad some other lamp that did not rVsatisfactorily, but GIVE US A TRIAL;if not perfectly satisfactory it COSTSYOU NOTHING TO FIND IT OUT.Write for particulars. Agents wantedfor all unoccupied territory.

CHICAGO, ILL.Dept 3.

THE

ew Uver and

SAN FRANCISCO TOCHICAGO IN

Less Than 3 DaysAND NF.W YORK

3 Days 19 HoursAN

EVERY DAY TRAIN

Bath, Barber, Buffet, Library,Electric Lights, Reading Lamps,in Every Berth, Observation CargTelephone Service.

Southern Pacifice. o. Mccormick

Passenger Traffic Manager

T. H. GOODMAN, 'General Passenger Agent.

SAN FRANCISCO. CALIFORNIA.

PANG' CHONG,Nuuanu Street, opposite Emma Hall,

Contractor, Carpenter, Painter, PaperHanger. A very nice line of wall pa-oe- rs

on hand.

Twenty-fiv- e cents pays for a Wantad In tho Star. A bargain.

C. 8. Dolf8. II. Derby....

W. KothI. Dillingham....

BrookAloxnndor.. ......By defnult. ......

C. G. BockusII. Bloknell..

CunhaKingBy default

A. T. Brock...W. Alexander..

J. P. Cooke....Q. Wnterhouso.

W. H. Babbitt..W. Williamson.,

A. R. Cunha....L. C. King

J. H. Harrison...E. A. Mott-Smlt- h

E. R. AlnmsW. F. Dllllnghan

A. F. Grimths....II. W. Forbes

TWO MEETINGS

OF REPUBLICANS!

SATURDAY NIGHT WAS A

GREAT ONE FOR THE PARTY

CAMPAIGNERS.

A large crowd gathered at the cor-ner of Bethel and Hotel streets onSaturday night at the rally and bannerraising of the Young Men's Republicanclub. The banner was raised acrossHotel street from Waverley hall, amidthe glare of red fire, rockets, Romancandles and the rivalry In music ofthe Portuguese band, the SalvationArmy and a quintette club in a near-by saloon.

President Lorrln Andrews IntroducedJ. A. Gilman as the first speakers, re-

marking that the supervisors should"be business men. Gilman was greetedwith applause. It was his firstspeech as a candidate. He spoke ofthe responsibilities of county adminis-tration and asked for the support ofthe whole Republican ticket, declaringthat it contained the names of themost competent men.

United States District Attorney R.W. Breckons was the next speaker. Inthe course of his address he said thatCongress and the people of the statesgenerally were watching the experi-ment of here and nsk-ln- g

if the people of the islands areequal to the task. Congress had giventhe islands free suffrage and was ableto take it away if the experiment wasa failure.

Clem Quinn spoke next, referring tothe failure of the Home Rulers to passa county 'bill In the first Territorial le-

gislature. United States Commission-er Douthlt't followed. He said that

was a most important oneand should be fought out on solid de-

cent principles, without any thought ofrace prejudice. James Holt spoke inHawaiian and Frank Andrade in bothHawaiian and English. John D. Wil-lnr- d

and Representative Gandall ofKauai were the last speakers.

At Ewa the Republicans held an im-

mense meeting. J.udge Hookano actedas chairman and introduced IsaacSherwood as the first to address themeeting which he did in Hawaiian.George Renton, who was given heartyapplause, followed with a business talkHarry Murray, Sam Dwlght, R. N.Boyd, Jack Lucas, Archie Meheula, J.W. Pratt, S. E. Damon, A. M. Brown,and W. T. Rawlins spoke In the ordernamed. The crowd returned on the11:30 train.

THE ANGLO-JAPANES- E TREATY.EDITOR STAR; In this mornings"

paper the following cablegram Is pub-lished viz:

BERLIN, Germany, October 12. It Isbelieved that France and Englandhave entered Into an understandingthat neither country will interfere inthe event of war. England THUS RE-FUSES TO ASSIST JAPAN, DIS-REGARDING THE ANGLO-JAPANES- E

TREATY, and France does nothelp her old ally Russia.

The captltals nre mine this implica-tion of bad fnith Is unfair to Englandand may perhaps be actuated by Jea-lousy caused by the good understand-ing now existing between France andEngland. If the gentleman who sentthis cable from Berlin had studied thisAnglo Japanese treaty before sendingIt he would have learnt that Englandonly agrees to assist Japan If she Is at-

tacked by MORE TJIAN ONE POW-ER.

I am, sir,Yours faithfully,

W. C. SPROULL.Honolulu, October 12.

TO THE FRENCH OFFICERS.The- reception tehdered by Mr. and

Mrs. Albert Raas to the officers of theFrench cruiser Protet at tho Alexin'der Young Hotel Saturday evening wasa" very brilliant affair and largely at-tended. '

Mr. and Mrs. Raas received at thoentrance to tho drawing room, Intro-ducing the guests first to Captain Adl-gar- d.

In the receiving line were alsoMrs. B. F. Dillingham. Mrs. AlexanderG. Hawes and Mrs. Henry E. Cooper.Mrs. Raas wore an exquisite gown cntralne, of Heavy black silk, cut decol-lett- e.

STRANGERS' FRIEND SOCIETY,The quarterly meeting of the Strnnir- -

er's Friend Society will be held tomorrow morning, October 13, nt 10 o'clock,In thb parlor of the Y. M. C. A.

Want ads In Star cost but 25 cents.

Dole.....Derby...,ICS, 4

BrookAlgxtinder...4i0,.0-4- , 0.

Brock.,. ir,i in .it,Alexander, (,iM,'

ms v.'

Cunha.King.'..;

'3, 4

CunhaKing

1

Grimths.Forbes..

4,

BORN.BURLEM At Walehn, Maul, October

6, ls)03, to Mr. and Mrs. T. Burlem, ason.

GRAFF In Hllo, October 6, 1903, toAir. and Mrs. William Graef, a boyand a girl.

SURVEY OF WAILUKU.WAILUKU, October 10. A survey of

wauuku is being made by the underwriters, for the purpose of readjustingnre insurance rates.

GOING TO ST. LOUIS.LAHAINA, October 10. It Is under.

stood that John Hose has joined a company of musicians, that will give con-certs on one of the China steamers.Next year they will probably vlirtt theworm s air at St. Louis.

BY AUTHORITY

Proclamation !

WHEREAS, Act 31 of the regular ses-sion of 1903 of the Legislature of theTerritory of Hawaii provides that anelection shall be held on November 3rd,A. D. 1903. fOr tho mimnca nf alnnflnr.County officers, and that at least sixtyu.ij.-- i priur io me ra aay or .November,A. D. 1903, the Governor shall Issue aproclamation ror such election:

NOW, THEREFORE, In accordancetherewith. I. SANPnnn n nnt.pGOVERNOR OF THE TERRITORYOF HAWAII, herohv clvo nnH,.n thnt nspecial election for County officers ofme Buverii.uounues oi tne Territory orHawaii, will be hold on Tuesday, the

tween the hours of 8 o'clock A. M. and5 o'clock P. M., In each County through-out the Territory, except the County ofKnlawnn InVlnrllnp' Trnlfinnnnn Tni0.wao and Walkolu, on the Island' of Mn- -lOKai.

The Counties nre ns follows:COTWTV OH" rATTTT-TnM,l!r.- ,

Islfinrl nf O.lhll nnrl nil nthor Talnrifla ntthe Territory not Included in any othercounty.

COUNTY OF MAUI: Including thoIslands of Maul. Molokni. Lannl nndKahoolawe and all other Islands withinthree nautical miles of the shores there-of, but Tint Inp.lllrtlni? thn nnrt nf thoIsland of Molokal known as Kalaupapa,iaiawno ana walkolu.

COUNTY OF WEST TTAWATTf- - Including the Districts of Kau. North Ko-hal- a,

South Kohala, North Kona nndoauin ivona, upon tne island or Ha-waii, and all othr elands within threonautical miles of the shores thereof.

COUNTY OF EAST HAWAII: In-cluding the Districts of Hilo, Puna andHamkua, upon the Island of Hawaii,and all other Islands within three nau-tical miles of the shores thereof.

COUNTY CtV WATTAT- - Tr.l,,rtlr, ,

Islands of Kauai and Nllhau, nnd alloiner isianas within three nauticalmiles' of the shores thereof.

County officers to be elected:FOR THE COUNTY OF OAHU.

Seren Supervisors, two of whom shallbe elected from the Fourth Representa-tive District, twn frnm tho Ulfth TJon- -resentative District and three from the

Sheriff, who shall be Coroner, ex of-cl- o;

County Clerk, who shall be Recorderex officio;

Auditor;Assessor and Tax Collector;District Attorney;Treasurer, who shall be License Co-

llector ex officio;Surveyor.

FOR EACH OF THE COUNTIES OFMAUI, WEST HAWAII, EAST

HAWAII AND KAUAI.Five Supervisors;

" Sheriff, who shall be Coroner ex of-ficio;

County Clerk, who shall be Recorderex. offlclb; ,

Auditor;Assessor and Tax Collector;District Attorney;Treasurer, who shall be License Co-

llector ex officio;Surveyor.The Registration Precincts are as to-lo-

FIRST DISTRICT.Puna, Hilo and Hamakua, Island of

Hawaii.

First Precinct All of Puna exceptKeaau and Olaa.

Second Precinct The lands of Keaauand Olaa.

Third Precinct That portion of Hllolying between Puna and PonahawalStreet and Rond and the line of its ex-tension to the sea.

Fourth Precinct That lortlon of Hllolying between the Third Precinct andthe Uonollt Stream.

Fifth Precinct That portion of Hllolying between HonollI Stream and theland of Maknhannloa.

Sixth Precinct That portion of Hllolying between the Fifth Precinct andthe bed of the Walkaumalo Gulch.

Fire S MarinIVIoIPCISnsiMY BLOCK, POUT 8THEBT

Goo Kim & Co., &v:rancyPERRY BLOCK,

NEW GOODS BYAnd everything just as represented.

OrieniaNEW DESIGNS IN LINEN GOODS, EMBROIDERED

LINEN BEDSPREADS, ALL SIZES; CURTAINS, DOYLIES,TEA CLOTHS, ETC. FINE COTTON DRESS GOODS, ALLCOLORS.

Waity Building, Street, opposite Advertiser Office.

Phone White 2746.

Seventh Precinct That portion of theFirst Election District lying betweenthe Sixth Precinct and the bed of theKaula Gulch.

Eighth Precinct That portion of theFirst Election District lying betweenthe Seventh Precinct and the land ofKalopa.

Ninth Precinct That p.ortlon of theFirst Election District lying betweenthe Eighth Precinct and the bed of theMnlannhao Gulch.

Tenth Precinct That portion of theFirst Election District lying betweenthe Ninth Precinct nnd Kohala.

SECOND DISTRICT.

Kohala, Kona and Kau, Island ofHawaii.

First Precinct North Kohala.Second Precinct South Kohala.Third Precinct That portion of North,

Kona lying north of the northerlyboundary of Holualoa and a line running from the north corner of Holualoato the south corner of Puuanahulu.

Fourth Precinct That portion of theSecond Election District bounded by th?Third Precinct. Hamakua, Kau, theboundary of Keauhou from Kau to

the north boundary ofnnd the sea.

Fifth Precinct That portion of SouthKona lying between Keel and Olelo-moan- n.

Sixth Precinct That portion of SoutiiKona lying between the Fifth Precinctand Kau.

Seventh Precinct That portion ofKau lying between South Kona andPunaluu.

Eighth Precinct The remainder ofKau.

j

THIRD DISTRICT.

Islands of Maul, Molokal, Lanal nndKahoolawe.

Second Precinct That portion of theIsland of Molokal excepting Kalaupapa,Kalawao and Walkolu.

Third Precinct That portion of WestMaui lying between tho lands of Walkapu and Honokawnl.

Fourth Precinct That portion ofWest Maul lying between the lands ofHanakaoo and Walhee, known as Ka- -anapall.

Fifth Precinct Tho Island of Lanal.Sixth Precinct That portion of the

District of Walluku lying west andnorth-we- st of a line running from themouth of Walluku Stream southed!along the sand hills to Mnalaea Bayand Including the Island of Kahoolawe.

Seventh Precinct That portion ut thethe District of Walluku bounded by theSixth Precinct, the lands of Pulehunul,Keliallnu, Knllua, Hokuula and Hama-kuapo-

and the sea.Eighth Precinct All that portion of

Kula on East Maul lying west of a linotunning from Honuaufa to the northboundary of Pulehunul on the line ofthe two hills Puu o Kali nnd Puu oKoha.

Ninth Precinct The remainder ofKula and that portion of Hamakuapokolying south-we- st of the Mallko Gulchnnd mauka of the Road running fromKnluanul to the Mnkawoo Jail and aline In extension thereof.

Tenth Precinct The remainder ofHamakuapoko and that portion of Ha- -makualoa lying west of the KahalehakuStream.

Eleventh Precinct That portion ofEast Maul lying between Halehakunnd Opuola Streams.

Twelfth Precinct That portion otEast Maul lying between Opuola andKapaula Streams.

Thirteenth Precinct All tnat portionof East Maul lying between theTwelfth Precinct and Kipnhulu.

Fourteenth Precinct KIpahulu andKaupo.

Fifteenth Precinct That portion otEast Maul lying between the Four-teenth Precinct and the Eighth andNinth Precincts, including Kahlklnuland Honuaula.

FOURTH DISTRICT.

All that portion of tho Island of Oahulying enst and south of Nuuanu Streetnnd a lino drawn In extension thereoffrom the Nuuanu Pali to Mokapu

Point.First Precinct All that portion of

the said District comprised In the Dis-trict of Honolulu and lying east of aline running from the Ion. bridge onAla Moana to the north angle of Kingnnd Punahou Streets, the true bearingbeing N. 30 30' E. thence along Puna-hou Street to tho foot of Manoa Road;thence mauka to and along the westernedge of Manoa Valley to the head oftne same.

Second Precinct All that portion ofthe said D strict lying between tnewesterly boundary of the First Precinctand a line running from tho seashorealong Sheridan Street, Pllkol Streetextension and Pllkol Street to nndalong tho western houndary of thLunalilo Homo premises to the southcorner of Kalawahlne and along theeastern boundary of Kalawahlne until

Corner Hotel and Nuuanu Street

King

EVERY STEAMER.Small Musical Instruments.

0

It strikes the western side of the Fl: tPrecinct at a point about 1400 feetmauka of Tantalus.

Third Precinct. All that portion oithe said District bounded by the west-erly boundaries of the First, Secondand Eighth Precincts, Nuuanu andSchool Streets a line running from thoJunction of School nnd Punchbowlstreets to the old flag pole crest ofPunchbowl nnd the summit of thoKonahuanul range.

Fourth Precinct AH th- - portion ofthe said District bounded by the Thirdand Eighth Precincts and Beretanla andNuuanu Streets.

Fifth Precinct All that portion of thosaid District bounded by the Eighth,Precinct nnd Beretanla, 'Punchbowl,King and Mllllanl Streets and the wa-ter front.

Sixth Precinct All that portion oftho said District bounded by Mllllanl,King, Punchbowl, Beretanla and Nuu-anu Streets nnd the hnrbor.

Seventh Precinct All that portion ofthe said District lying outside of theDistrict of Honolulu.

Eighth Precinct All that portion ofthe said District lying between thowesterly boundary of the Second P

and a line running from the shorealong South, King nnd Alnpal Streets,and from the head of Alapal Street tothe old flag pole crest of Punchbowl;thence to nnd along ensterly edge ofPauoa Valley until It strikes tho west-erly line of the Second Precinct nt apoint just mak.il of the hog back atfoot of Tantalus cone.

FIFTH DISTRICT.All that portion of the Island of Oahu

lying west and north of Nuuanu Streetand a line drawn In extension thereoffrom the Nuuanu Pall to Mokapu Point

First Precinct All that portion of thoJudicial and Taxation District of Koo-loupo- ko

lying west and north of a Unadrawn from the Nuuanu P.-tl-l to Mo-kapu Point.

Second Precinct The Judicial andTnxntion District of Koolnuloa.

Third Precinct The Judicial andTnxntion District of Wainlua.

Fourth Precinct The Judicial andTnxntion District of Waianae.

Fifth Precinct All that portion oftho Judicial and Taxation District ofEwa, comprised In the lands of Hoaeaeand Honoullull.

Sixth Precinct All the remainingportion of the Judicial and TaxationDistrict of Ewa.

Seventh Precinct All that portion ofHonolulu or Kona lying mnkal of thoKing street Road from the Ewa lino totho King street bridge and all maukaof said Road from the Ewa line to thomain Road up Kallhl Valley.

Eighth Precinct All that portion ofHonolulu or Kona lying mauka of theKing Street Road from the main' Roadup Kallhl Valley to Lillha street and aline drawn from the head thereof Inextension of the lino of Judd street, tonnd nlong the ridge forming the wester-ly border of Nuuanu Valley.

Ninth Precinct All thnt portton ofHonolulu or Kona lying between theEighth Precinct and Nuuanu Street,nnd mauka of a line drawn alongSchool street, the Nuuanu Stream andBeretnnla Street.

Tenth Precinct All that portion otHonolulu or Kona bounded by King,Lillha and School streets, tho NuuanuStream, Beretanla and Nuuanu Streetsand the harbor.

SIXTH DISTRICT.

Islands of Kauai and Nllhau.First Precinct The Island of Nllhau.Second Precinct That portion of the

District of Wnlmea extending from theThird Precinct to the Puuanaaua point.

Third Precinct Thnt portion of theDistrict of Walmea extending fromHanapepe to the boundary lino betweenWnlmea and Kekaha Plantations andextending nlong a line In continuationof the said boundary to the sea.

Fourth Precinct From and IncludingKalahea to and Including Hanapepe.

Fifth Precinct Tho District of Ko- -loa from Its Junction with Llhue to andIncluding the land of Lawal.

Sixth Precinct The District of Llhue.Seventh Precinct Extending from

the land of Papoa to and Including tholand of Wallua.

Eighth Precinct Extending fromKallhlwal River to and Including theland of Papaa.

Ninth Precinct Extending from Kallhlwal River to the north' boundary oftho District of Walmea.

IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I havehereunto set my hand nnd

(SEAL) caused the seal of the Terri-tory of Hawaii to bo heretoaffixed.

DONE AT THE CAPITOIlIn Honolulu this 31st day otAugust, A. D. 1003.

(Signed) SANFORD B. DOLE.

By. tho Governor,(Signed) G. R. CARTER.

Secretary of the Territory.

Page 8: I THE HAW I · 2015-06-02 · If A 1 f PT;.' x--r.--J I I I dnj's If you Nowb, wnnt toMliiy to TT 1VT Tim llimnllniiHtur THE HAW Ik Iho pnper tlmt rou tan find It in A THE STAII

lEtOHT.

L. C. ABLE 5Independent Candidate

FOR

WILL AUDIT AND ADJUST THE.OCCOUNTS OF

RopuUUonnM,DemooratH orHomo Ruloi'H

Itooms 1 and 2, Alexander YoungBuilding.

Telephone 139 P. O. Box 243.

SPECIALTIES !

TRIMMED HATS, TAPAS, TASMANIA SHELLS, AND ENAMELEDJEWKL11Y.

Woman's ExchangeHOTEL STREET. NEAR FORT.

Fire Insurance!THE B. F. DILLINGHAM CO., LIMITED,

Oeneral Agents for Hawaii

jLtlas Assurance Company of London,'hoentz Assurance Company of Lon-don.

Hew York Underwriters Agency.roviJcnce Washington InsuranceCompany.

"hontr Insurance Company of Brookl-yn-

Albert Raas, Hanagerinsurance Department office Fourth

Floor, Stangenwald Building

&ART & CO., LTDTHE ELITE ICECREAM PARLORS

Chocolates and Confectionstee Cream and Water IcesBakery Lunch.

m FINEST RT IN THE HIT

M. PHILLIPS & CO.,Wholesale ImportersAnd Jobbers of

HiCJIll AND EUROPEAN DRY GOODS

Corner of Fort and Queen Sts.

PlayFootBail on

1 weoweoIf you did we could furnish

jtm with the latest 1903 sup-

plies nt surprisingly "hard

tlxap.H" prices.

But to visit the crater

A Tent,Sweater,

I Leggings,1 Canteen,

w '"All of which we have and

al the right prices.

LIMITED

Phone Main 317.

Union and Hotel Streets.

saw Aivi5ifrisini!'iNotice to PimaeliKer hrp B

E. XV. Jordan l'nup I

II. V. Wlihnmn '. Pane 4

PhoeiilvHav. 11. & 1.. Ahhii Page I

NKIVS IS A NUTNHKLI.

rurugraiiho Thai (Jive Omlt'iisedAnwB of I hr Day.

THE WEATHER.Weather Bureau, Punahou, 1 p. in.Wind light westerly airs; clear wea-

ther.Morning minimum, temperature, CI;

midday maximum temperature, 82; ba-

rometer, 9 a. m., 30.01 steady (correctedfor gravity) ; rainfall, 24 hours ending,9 a. m. .00; dew point. 9 a. m. C4; hu-midity 9 a. m., 07 per cent.

K. C. LYDECKER,Acting Observer.

l'Tencn cruiser i'roiet yesieriiay.Speclnl meeting of Hawaiian Lodgi

tonight nt S o'clock. Work In third de-gree.

W. G. Cooper, of the First NationalDank, sails by the Sierra tomorrow forthe coast, on business.

There will be a meeting of the Hono-lulu Football Association this eveningat the Y. M. C .A. nt 7:30 o'clock.

Thomas Fitch and his wife leave bythe Sierra tomorrow to make theirhome In Tonopah, Nevada, hereafter.

Judge Estee lost his dog again onSaturday. It was found by WardenHenry of Oahu jail wandering aboutthe Iwllel district.

Mrs. James Dougherty will receivethe third Monday of the present month,and first and third Mondays thereafter.

There will be a meeting of the lloolaand Hooulu Lahul Society nt the Ma-ternity Home at 10 o'clock a. in.,Wednesday. All members are reuqest-e- d

to attend.The well known horse Cyclone hart

been purchased by W. G. Scott and D.L. Meyer of Walluku, and will be useuas a buggy horseuntil time to get himIn condition for the races.

The regular monthly meeting of theMercy and Help Department of theEpworth League will bo held at thtresidence of J. Bryant, 1239 Lunalllf)street, this evening, at 7:30.

After you have been annoyed in adozen different ways by running wa-ter, leakage, bad plumbing and infer-ior material, call Oi Bath, and he willprescribe the right remedy.

The valuable city property of theOahu College situated on Beretania,Miller and Vineyard streets, will besold at public auction on Saturday, No-vember 7, by Jas. F. Morgan.

The officers of the French cruiserProtet were the guests of ActingFrench Consul Albert Bans yesterdayin a trip down the Oahu Railway, vis-iting a number of points of interest.

H. Boulton, chairman of the LondonLabor Conciliation and ArbitrationBoard, who has been here on a visit,sails with his wife and daughter onthe Sierra for San Francisco, tomorrow

It Is said that the cable Is visible. atthe bottom of the ocean In 23 fathomsof water, where It curves out to roundDiamond Head, when the water is

'

smooth, so clear is the water at thispoint.

Mr. and Mrs. Klamp are expected onthe Ventura Wednesday. She was MissAgnes Glrard, daughter of Col. Girard,U. S. A. They will lfve in the Neu-mann "ottage on King street near Alo.ha Lane.'

The cars on the Waialae division ofthe Rapid Transit system, running toPalolo and Kaimuki, connect with olh- -

j er cars of the system at McCully streetat 17 and 47 minutes past the hour.They leave at the other end on ththour and half hour.

The monthly meeting of the Ahahullolani will take plnce In St. Andrew'sCathedral Sunday School room tomor-row Tuesday, October 13, at 3 p. m.

Morgan will hold a cash sale tomor-row morning at 10 o'clock.

S. B. Boulton, chairman of the Lon-don Labor Conciliation and Arbitia-tio- n

Board Is a guest at the Moanu.The board consists of twelve selectedby the London Chamber of Commerceand a like number selected by thetrades unions.

Owing to an nccldent to the duminvengine that hauls the cars connectingthe Peninsula with Pearl City, passen-gers from the Peninsula yesterdaywho expected, to arrive In Honolulu at5:30 o'clock did not arrive until twohours later, another engine being sentdown meanwhile to take the plate ofthe disabled dummy.

FOR THE VOLCANO.The S. S. "Mauna Loa" leaving Ho-

nolulu Tuesday at noon gives a fine op-

portunity to all persons desiring to seethe Volcano of Mauna Loa In eruption.Arriving nt Kallua early Wednesdaymorning, she proceeds along the Kono.coast where It Is predicted the lavaflow will occur." rrlving at Hoopuloathat evening, the steamer will remainthere all night before proceeding on toKau. All parties wishing to embracethis opportunity of an enjoyable tripand the possibility of observing one ofthe grandest sights to be seen, will dowell to book early us the accommoda

tions on the steamer are being rapidlyreserved.

YESTERDAYS' BASEBALL.The Pacifies defeated the La Palomas

yesterday In a game of toseball atKaplolanI park the score being 20 to 19,

The Pacifies were made up of amateurswith A. K. Vierra as captain whocovered himself with glory at firstbase. While the La Palomas had fourleague players. It Is said.

BANKERS CONVENTION.

P. C. Jones and H. E. Walty leave bythe Sierra tomorrow to attend the annual convention of the American Bank-ers' Association which meets In San

Organized under the laws of

THE HAWAIIAN REALTY

Loans, Mortgages, Securities,. Investm

Frnnpl!oo thin month. The.V nre tielognttxl by the Ominlwr of Coinnifrret(i Invite the member of the ronven-tln- n

to visit Hawaii, and to Recti re nsmany as pdimlblo of Hunt to come.

DUTRAG E 0

JUDGE ROBINSON SETS ASIDEAND CRITICIZES THE A XT EL

VERDICT.

"Outrageous and, appalling" was theverdict of the Jury In the damage caseof Axtel against Hendricks, accordingto Judge Robinson, who this morningset aside the verdict and ordered a newtrial. Axtel sued for $10,000 , damagesfor malicious prosecution and Uie Jurybrought In n verdict for $5,000, said tobe about the largest verdict In the lawbooks In a case of that kind.

The motion to set aside the verdictand grant a new trial was argued be-

fore Judge Robinson this morning, byColonel Fitch and C. C. Bitting. Thelntter contended thnt the court had noright to set nslde the Judgment of thetwelve men who heard the cases case,and quoted authorities to the effectthat the jurors were the sole Judges ofthe measure of damages. "Concedingthat the facts In this case were suchas to justify the court in directing averdict for the plaintiff," said the courtIn deciding the motion, ''still Ithink It would have been properfor the court to scrutinize the verdictand if it were Inadequate or excessive,to set it aside.

"In this case there is absolutely noproof of actual or express malice, withthe exception possibly of one statementmade by the defendant on the witnessstand. I have looked carefully overmalicious prosecution cases and amunable to find one with a verdict Inamount anything like $5,000. At thetime the verdict was reached It struckme as being not only excessive, butoutrageaus and appalling. This courtwill certainly not let It stand. Itseems to have been rendered, notthrough passion or prejudice, butthrough some misunderstanding ormisapprehension In the jury room. Letthe motion to set aside the verdict begranted and a new trial be ordered."

Bitting asked that the court grantthe motion only on terms, "specifyingan amount at Which the plaintiff mightaccept a verdict, but the Judge declinedto do so, saying that as the case wasone in which a verdict for the defen-dant would not have been set aside, hewould leave It to another Jury. Heassigned the case to Judge De Bolt foranother trial.

GOING TO NEWCASTLE

BRITISH SHIP BRODICK CASTLECAN NOT GET CHARTER ON

PCuET SOUND.

The British ship Brodick Castle hasreceived orders to proceed t'o NewcastleThis is probably the first time in localshipping history that a vessel has leftHonolulu In 'ballast for Newcastle. Or-

dinarily Honolulu is a sort of way portto vessels coming from1 Newcastle.They usually s;o down ' to ' 'Australiawith cargoes of lumber or Wheat andthen go to Honblulu with toal. Fromthis port, the vessels almbst invariablygo up to Puget Sound: Frdm the lat-ter port they go back to Au'StValla withcharters. No charter evidently Is ob-

tainable for the Brodick Castle, so herowners have decided to send her backto Newcastle after another load ofcoal. She may return to' Honoluluwith this cargo.

She arrived liere August 27 fromNewcastle with a cargo of coal. Shehas been discharged considerably overa month and has been lying 'Idle in thestream waiting orders. Captain Olsenexpects to get away tomorrow after-noon. '

NEW MATTING NEEDED.Many kicks are niade'reg'ardin'g'the

condition of the matting In the officeof the clerks of the circuity court. ItIs worn away and has many holes andragged edges. '''

NOMINATION PAPERS.Senator Crabbe on Saturday filed the

nomination papers of Isaac Sherwood,S. E, Damon, Harry Hurray, J. W.Pratt. A. M. Brown, R. N. Boyd, J. A.Gilman and Frank Pahla. Nearly allthe Oahu papers are now In.

ESTEE OPENS TERM.United States Judge Estee opened the

October term of the Federal court thismorning. Only ten of, the 23 GrandJurors summoned were ncceptejl asjurors and the Judge rtssuedoa .specialvenire returnable at two o'clock thisafternoon for 14 citizens, 'ir.

SUPREME COURT.The Supreme Court met this morn

Ing and adjourned to next MondayAdjournments will probably be takenweek by week until Justice Perry returns.

Capital350,000

the Territory of Hawaii,

AND MATURITY .CO., LTD.

ents and Real Estate. Homes' 'Built on

A Home Company

me niBititifiicMi. .emu.Home Office Mclntyro Building, Ho nolulu, Territory of Hawaii

Tht Hawaiian Really aid Maturity GoI K. KENTWELL, General M.najrer

Tamos E. Morgan,AUCTIONEER ANDBROKER

S47-85- 7 Knnhumanu St. Tel. Main i2.P. O. Box 684.

AT AUCTIONBy order of the Trustees of the Oahu

College I will offer for sale at PublicAuction, at my salesroom, 857 Knahu-nian- u

street, on

SATURDAY. N0Y. 7 1903AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON,

That valuable parcel of City Property situated on Beretania, Miller andVineyard streets.

Property has a frontage of 119.5 feeton Beretania street, 707.8 feet on Mll- -

ler street, 153.5 feet on Vineyard streetfind contains- an area of 142,210 squarefeet( a little more or less.)

This property will be offered nt auc-tion at an upset price of $45,000.00

Terms : The present mortgage of$40,000 can remnln on mortgage at 4V4

per cent, per annum until Novemberlfct, 1904, to a purchaser satisfactoryto the mortgagee.

A small portion of this property (cor-ner of Miller and Vineyard streets), Isunder lease until December 16th, 1904,

at an annual rental of $240.This valuable property can be divid-

ed into business and residence sites,and it one which commands the In-

spection of investors.Maps can be seen at my office where

all Information can be obtained.

JAS. F. MOKttAN.AUCTIONEER.

CASH SALEAt my salesroom, 847 Kaahumanu

street.TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1903,

At 10 O'clock, a. m.,

I will sell the following:Iron beds, Springs and Mattrasses,Wooden Beds. Springs and Mat- -

trasses, Bureaus,Wicker Chairs, Dining Room Chairs,One Extension Dining Table, Gentle-

man's Saddle, Ladies Side Saddle,Etc., Etc., Etc.

JAS. F. MOKGAN.AUCTIONEER.

Ring

'' it what it

in theListen to the

now

!

SPECIAL SALE

you load up

Sole in the Hawaiian

n n r 1. Tt t--i

uegisier, 11ms name

53-5- 7 KING T.

Honolulu Words,

STEAM ENGINES, SUGAR MILLS

BOILERS, COOLERS, IRON, BRASS

AND LE- -

jtfachlnery of Every Madeto order. Particular attention paid laShip's Blacksmlthlng. Job Work Exe-cuted on Short Notice.

Don'tHave

Dengue ,

WhenYouCanWardIt

TakingAnti-Gripp- e

These tablets can be relied upon forbreaking up colds, grippe, and evendengue if taken In time. Here's whata customer says: "Your Anti-Gripp- e

Tablets are all right. I felt the symp-tom- s

of dengue coming on and at once

took tablets with the results thatI broke up the attack. I have had itonce and don't want another selge."

If they will cure others they will cureyou. Do not be without this remedyif you wish to kee'p well.

25c. PER BOTTLE.

Corner flercliant and Alakea Streets

Primo,PacificARainierIrpk $2.00 X--er

Dozen QuartsColdBeer Camara & Company,

Llq.uor Do.tlorw

We Dead Ones

Up

Are No

BeAlways

Its

Croclccry

Before elsewhere

AgentsGurney

STREE

CASTINGS.

Description

OffBy

your

Telephone flain-49- 2

may, We are ' ' ' ,

Lead,

,

rocScory !!

IN DINNER SETS,

come in and see our bargains.

Territory for Detroit Jewel StovesU. S, Cream Separators,

. . ., .-- m r t-- ., r- 'un aioves, uiue Piame Uli

Oban Pattern, English ware,112 pieces, Regular Price $32.50, Cut to $22.50.

Wild Rose Pattern, China,112 pieces, Regular Price $30.00, Cut to $25.00.

W. W. Dimond & Co., Ltd.,IMPORTERS OF

CROCKERY, GLASSWAREHOUSE FURNISHING GOODS

Cleanable Refrigerators,luunarcn

Iron

The

Tablets

Drink

Call,

Dey Timeruritan

Green

Stoves, Prinjus Stoves and Dandy" Wind Mill. ,

, HONOLULU, T. H

STARBRAND

Typewriter Ribbons andCarbon Papers

Aro speclnlly made to withstand ftho climatic changes of the Isl-ands.

ONLY (55 EH

INTRODUCTORY PRICES FORONE MONTH ONLY.

We also reduce tho price onStar Brand Carbon Papers fromregular $4.00 to special $3.00 boxfor one month only.

This is a money 'saving prop-osition for you.

All ribbons guaranteed firstclass In every respect. If founddefective, wo will replace same,provided ribbon Is returned withidentification slip, for our ex-amination.

Wall, Nichols Co., Ltd

W. G. IRWIN & CO.

AGENTS FOR ,

Western Sugar Refining Co., .SanFrancisco, Ca).

Baldwin Locomotive Works, Philadel-phia, Pa.

Newell Universal Mill Co., Manufac-turers of National Cane Shredder,New York, N. Y.

Parafllne Paint Company, San Francis-co Cal.

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

Francisco, Cal.

fLtd.

OFFICERS.H. P. BALDWIN PresidentJ. B. CASTLE First Vice-Preside- nt

W. M. ALEXANDER... 2d Vice-Pre- s't

J. P. COOKE ...TreasureiW. O. SMITH SecretaryGEORGE 11. CARTER Auditor

Sugar Factors andCommissionflerchants

AGENTS FORHawaiian Commercial and Sugar Cony

pany.Haiku Sugar Company,Paia Plantation Company,Nahlku Sugar Company,Klhei Plantation Company,Hawaiian Sugar Company,Kahului Railroad Company,

AND

The California and OrientalSteamship Company

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

F. Hustace SecretaryChaa. H. Atherton AuditorW. H. Hoogs Treas. and Mgr.

TELEPHONE' MAIN 295.

Host Oo.9 Ltd'w i-- aincbi

Firewood, Stove,Steam and Blacksmith

WHOLESALE 4.ND BKTAIL.

facial aiSsnfiost given to

aSO, WHITE AND BLACK SAND

Union PacificRailroad

SUGGESTS

Speed omlcIComfort

Tnree trums dany throivgn ours flrland second class to all points. Reduced rates take effect soon. WriUtoday.

S. E. Booth,General Agent.

N. 1 Montgomery Street,San Francisco.

Removal Notice !

Lta.(jThe Sun Chung Xwock Bo,

removed to King strec-.- , between Smithand Maunakea streets In. the netv build-

ing of the United Chinese Society.

The only Chinese newspaper publish-

ed three times a week in tho Territory.

We take orders for all kinds of printingin Chinese, etc. '

P. 6. Box 1022. Tel. rialn 42$.