8
MAILS From San Frncico: I.urline. Aril T. For $an Franctsco: Sierra. April 1". From Vancouver: Niagara, April 21. For Vancouver: Maktira. A - HI ?,. Evening Bulletin. Est. 1XH2. No. 6131 12 PAGES. HONOLULU, TERRITORY OF HAWAII, 'ITKShAY. APRIL . l!ii:. -- 12 PA13E8L PRICE FIVE CENTS Hawaiian Star. Vol. XXII. No T1T1 ITAL Y MKT A ID) R JAPAN EXPECTS nan cloud to CLEAR UP SOON Predicted Negotiations With China Will Come to Peaceful Conclusion In April YUAN SHIH-K- AI NOW DENOUNCES. DR. SUN Says Former Provisional Presi- dent Has Been Plotting to Stir Revolution Anwx-Ute- d VrH by Federal Wirelenn TOKIO, Japan, April 6. The Tokio. Asahl, known to be close to the gov- - eminent, says that Premier Okuma, in addresaing t. group of officiate at Kocu, charged that the hitch in the China-Japanea- a negotiationa haa been to German influence a, which, ha asserted, aro at work to : undermine Japanese plana in the Orient. " - China la convinced, he aaya, that , annexation ia not the object of Japan nd he predicts that successful con Relation will be made to in April. CHINA THROWS BOUQtlET; AT PREMIER OF JAPAN PEKING,' China, April 5 The Cfif-ne- a government, made , a .statement today expressing . its gratification at Premier Okuma'a appreciation of the frankness shown by. China In the with Japan. : The Chinese government. aaya it la reassured by the premier's Interpretation of the demands outside the strict letter of the tet. PLOTTING WITH JAPANESE PEKING. China. April reJdent Yuan Shih-kal- V In in official -- mandate 1 luat issued, denounces Dr. -- Sun Yat Ct.V Aral prttldent. ef , the republic v for plotting o IhcUS 'a'?, revolutibn? gainst tht Yuan fiovernnjent. . , i According .to tht report of detect ' tivea, agents for Sun were sent to various parts of the Yangtse coast to stir up local disturbances and agita J due tlona during the . Japanese negotfa- - tlons. ' : - : v The- - mandate orders vigorous pre cautionary measures to b taken against any revolutionary movements, Tm ftriM mhu. ntlrflun In TaWIa.. I " ; charged by his political enemies with conniving with the Japanese. v - . - ft nnintn rnriii - 1 LLLUlU UllLiH IAMrwatvi?jr,'i,Tvf . Inii ?i ?h! Apy w""TV liner Hemlnols hssrsscued crew of the schooner Robert Graham Dun, abandoned In i dangerous ' condStion offyVIrglnls Capesj y. r4 ' FIGHT BROUGHT DIGSlir.l THOUGH innn in rm nrr, April taxen in win exceev ouver of all denominations piled up barrels, making, the "counting slow. There wilt be a public reception for WtJIard tonight, at which he will be presented with a god watch. Showing the Interest in th fight, the cables cleared words in 24 hours.' . Johnson-t- s going from here Mar- tinique. SUGAR 1 SAN FRANCISCO April Sugar: 96 degrees test, 4.77 cents. Previous quotation, 4.765 cents. . Asayama Kutaro" "a Japanese, at- tempting to reach top of a cocoa- - : nut tree, fell . a' distance, of 15 -- feet. I lie received a number of bruises about j the head and body. He was taken honnltat for trntment FOR RENT OR LEASE APRIL 30 Second story of. building,. Merchant . and offices, single or suite;' large hall, store on Alakea street H. E. HENDR1CK, Graphic Sketch of a: Alakea From th illustrated London Dardanelles extend for 33 miles frcm Kum Kale Gallipoli, at the entrance the Sea of Marmora. , The average depth ia 40 fathoms (240 feet"). The current flows from the Sea of Marmorarlnto the Aegean at about 2 2 knots an hour. . For the first ten miles from the batteries and forts at Kum Kale and Sedd el Bahr by Cape JHelles to Kephez Point, the Asiatic side, the average width of the straits is four miles, with batteries and forte near Cardanua and Baikrah. "The Narrows," the key of the Dardanelles, where the passage less1 than a mile wide, are three miles be- yond Kephez Point, with the principal Turkish mine-fiel- d and the heavily armed forts of Kilid Bahr. and of Chanak and Hamidieh on either side. The Turkish works are, however, not only assailable from the Dardanelles channel, but also within of heavy guns firing over the isthmus from the Aegean sea. For five miles to the forts ef Bokali Kalessi and Nagara, by Abydos Point, the Jijgh ground on the European side is crowned with bat- teries.' Nagara passed, the Dardanelles has an average width of from two to three miles to Gallipoli. The fortifications are open to enfilade-fir- e by ships from both the Gulf of Saroa and tbe Dardanelles. Owing to the immense of modern guns and the facilities for controlling the firing by air-craf- t, the attack on the Dardanelles forts no longer the difficulties on account of which they were reputed impassable. The 15-inc- h guns of the Queen Elizabeth fire projectiles weighing nearly a Ion each and discharge a broadside of some 15.6C3 pounds, seven tons. The 12-In- guns of the other battleshipc in the attack, both British and! French, fire shells each weighing 850 pounds. The squares on the map represent three jniies each way. 3!H Indirect Story From San .Fran-Cis- co That In . Addition to . Offering :; Resignation as Chairman, of Fair Cdmmis- -' ion, He's to Quit Promotion committee it its - .... i ... . r . ' MemDerS VllSn nimiO UO O0 v r f II. P. Wood, secretary of the Ha waii Promotion Committee, Is forward-- : lug hia resignation to tue committpe. according an Indirect but well tbentlcatrd report received ttere today M .Several days ago it was reported ' nffarlnff Y' a poalirniitli'm as chairman of the Hawaii Fair Com-- j mission. While serving as chairman I tfl Mnmmleo4nn 'cV Con liPuntlaArk. I Whas virtualir been taking a leave of 'assenco fr6m hiB duties as secretary , r, n.Mmut' Te reason tor nis reported resisha Uon as secretary is given as the same as his reason for resigning the fair commission, because of local criticism of him and local attacks from certain sources.., .Chairman Brrndt of the Promotion Committee said toflay that he has re celved no of Wood's resig nation, but imdersUod Supervisor Len Hbllinger. who U a member of the j Promotion Committee, heard from Carl Nieier, who Is employed at the Hawaii building, that Wood was going resign. It believed that his resignation, i Loth as commission chairman and as BURGLARS MAKE HAULATHO HE 0FE.E, PAXTON Associated Press bv Federal Wireless SAN FRANCISCO, Cal- - April 6. The of E. E. Paxton, formerly of Honolulu has been entered by bur-glar- e and several diamond rings and valuables taken. Private Duncan, member of the 2nd i HAVANA, Cuba,1 - 6. Tho promotion secretary, Is not final, but count of the receipts for the Johnson- - Ig piacei at tne disposal of the govern-Willar- d fight yesterd.y Is still iincom- - or and the Proraot!on Committee, eteted but it Is believed the money i m , Is in world-wld- s 60,000 to 5. the to the Alakea; en Intimation vestigation the assault. Duncan' was treated injuries Fort fcil Mercian! Stajter. Dardanelles and Ew.ji . J News. Thf to to on reach range approximately Willing an- - mml to is home other at Found Men Terre Haute Scandal Far-Reachi- ng In Its Implications 1 16 to Be Sentenced on Monday Pleaded Guilty Mayor and Judges? Amog Those. Convicted : ' r Associated Press Service by feeders) Wire less. 1 INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., April 6; One hundred and sixteen men, guilty of electio.n frauds in Terre Haute and other districts of Indiana, .wifl be sentenced next Monday as the culmination of the revelations of bribery and corruption that have stirred Indiana ' to; the depths. . Twrrtvvn nf th aiMitri n uir f AlinH nuilti tndav hv th iurv " - which has been sitting in their cases ed criminally in the election frauds Circuit Judge Redman, City Judge Eighty-nin- e accused men pleaded guilty previously and will be with the other on Monday. ARE TANGLE TO SUPREME Ask Ruling on the Number of Names to Be Placed on West District Ballots Another primary election mixiip lias developed cn llawii. with the result that Arthur Akina. who received the smallest vote of the three Repuhlican suierviKorial candidates' on the west' side, has obtained a writ of mandamus against County Clerk John Kai to compel the clerk to put his name on the ballot at the general election ' May 4. Backed by an opinion by County At- - torney W. H. Beers, the county clerk. I refused to place Akiua's name on the ballot and now the case has been brought to the supreme court for a further interpretation of the primary statute. Beers came over frcm Hilo today and the case will be argued in supreme .court next Thursday. Attorney-- general Stainback and County At- torney Beers upholding Kai's conten- tion and Holmes, Stanley & Olson ar- guing for Akina'. The trouble arose over tne fact that Julian Yates, lone Home Rule candi1 date for supervisor from West Ha- waii, received a majority of the vote cast and thereupon was declared elect- - ed Three supervisors were to be chosen from thU side of the Big Isl- and. Yates' electicn therefore nar- rows down the contest In the final election to two offices. There were three Republicans and three Denio- - ning: for the two remaining positions Infantry, has told the police that cratic candidates at the primary, for while he was seated in an alley in . the three jobs. the Iwilei district last night he re-- J County Clerk pai and Attorney Beers ceived a blow across the skull struck hold that Yates' election eliminates with a two-inc- h iron pipe. He says the Democrat and the Republican who that he is unable to identify bis as-- 1 received the lowest vote, thereby leav-sallan- t. The police are makine an in- -' ine two men of each party in the run- - 1 of for Shaf and hospital. K. t (Continued on page two) 4 , ;'' lfI0f JSllTO SHUSH LAUNCH WESIffiM ATTACK; 5o Edition WAR Allies9 Warships Indiana Bribers GuiltyjCnY Prominent Malority;HayingH HAVMH ELECTION TWO HURT TAKEN COURT m Proved Corru x 11 ...... , 9 j -- , j j Those declared to have participat include Mjor Roberts of Terre Haute, Smith and other prominent officials. AS AUTO GOES OVER THE BANK Mr. ann Mrs. C. G. Bartlett In- - jurejd, Latter Painfully, In Night Accident Charles' (!. Uartfett. president and manager of the Honolulu Brewing & .Malting Company, and Mrs. Bartlett narrowly ' escaped very serious injur ies last night when the runabout which they were driving home from downtown went over a hank on th Diamond Head road and they were thrown with it. Mrs. Bartlett is the more painfully injured of the two. She suffered a broken arm, severe bruises and a bad shaking up. Bartlett was bruised, scratched and is also suffering from the shaking up ln't is expected to be able to attend his office in a day or two. Rain driving uion the windshield obscured the road, it was said today, causing the accident, the machine plunging over the bank after skidding. The accident occurred between 11:30 and 12 near the Magoonf beach resi- dence. ; Drs. Judd and HodginSattended Mr and Mrs. Bartlett. Deputy Sheriff Aich has decided that no inquest wil be necossary in the inauirv at theie of Benjamin Kekahuna who fhs taken suddenly ill last evening while seated upon the lanai at his hne in the Ah Leong block. The ma was dead before the police ambulance could reach the scene. Mrs. Artljtir Talbot and l tr thrre children were burned to death in t!ieir home in Qnebec. According to the bureau of crop es timates; the amount of wheat on farms March 1 was 152,903,000 bushels. Battering at Forts presented ENGINEER 7 OUTLINES PLAN FOR MORE WAT ER Nuuanu Shortage Brings Rec- ommendations For Saving More Than 3,000,000 Gal- lons Daify Valley Res- idents to Appear Before Sup- ervisors With Objection to Hawaiian Electric's Use of Reservoir, Supply Investigation by the Star-Bulleti- n at tfie city engineer's oflice today dis-clofce- d the fact that" the Hawaiian KlW-trl- c Company quit using the Nuu-ant- i reservoir water vlast Thursday. ' City Engineer VVhitehouae and Su- perintendent of Waterworks Murray toli the St:r-Biilleti- n that the electric (rriiany.. when advised that the water supply was short, slid it did not wish te use the water unless there was a stirplus over the needs cf Xuuanu val-lt- t residents. y 'ThesJ facts probably will he consi- deredamong other things by the su- pervisors tonight when the Nuuanu valley yfolk appear with their petition tp caacel the contract between the ity arid the Hawaiian Electric Com ny by which the company lias been ftUng ofl.000 gallons daily of Nuuanu afer. Some firt Nuuanu people, as old in the Star-Bulleti- n yesterday. have signed the petition, among them many well-know- n residents of the val-le- v. They declare that while the elec- tric company is using water freely, they are short of the liquid for actual necessities. "We shut off the water from the electric company's speclr.l pipe last Thursday simply, closed it down," said Engineer Whitehouse. "We knew that they could get along and fts the water was needed for the people, we closed the valve." "Abcut the time we shut them off, the artesian and surface water was mixing in together and about the time we shut ofT, the electric company shut off its intake too," said Superintend dent Murray. "The electric company was very fair and frank about it. Man- ager Blake said they didn't want the water unless there Was a surplus, but if there was a surplus, they would like to use it." Engineer Whitehouse explained to the Star-Bulleti- n today that the pres- ent serious water famine is partly due to the demands of the electric light plant upen water from reservoir No. 4 for power purposes. He says that City Electrician Frazec says that he can't get encugh power out of the lower reservoirs and therefore he is using water from the storage reser- voir. But the main point on which En- gineer Whitehcuse lays emphasis is that if recommendations he made years ago, when he was engaged in building the Nuuanu dam system, are (Continued on page two) GEN. FRENCH HURLS HEAVY MASSES OF TROOPS STRAIT AT ENEMY'S ENTREUTS ALLIES CANT GAIN, INSIST THEGERMANS Berlin Bulletin Denies Stories of Gains Also of Russian Vic- tory In Carpathians Submarine Warfare Claims New Vi- ctimsRome Hopes for Diplomatic Settlement With Austria Associated Press Sen ice by J'ederal Wireless. NEW YORK, N. Y., April G.-G- uarded despatches Trom the war zone show that Sir John French. commander of the British forces on the western battlefront, has opened a strong attack on the Germans along the line from Meuse to the Moselle. The German war chiefs regard this move as the opening of a new phase of the western campaign- - and there is specula- tion that it indicates the beginning of the long-heralde- d spring campaign by the new Kitchener army., BERLIN, Germany, April 5. Official. The French have employed strong forces and much artillery at several points in an effort to advance against the Gertnan positions. There is no evidence that they have been able to make much gain. On the Russian border, the enemy's attacks have been re- pulsed. Allies' Ships Missing; Fear fiprman Sn FAKIS, France, : April whicK,leftBaltunore for Genoa nijiiii.fi. ji lit iTiHi.iri iiiiiiiii.H i.i by a German submarine because irom any uerman Dase. xuc xia.ua u. snip rind, uas month and it is feared she has eThe Matin expresses Dunkirk reports that the British nets guarding Dover harbor from undersea attack have aught a German submarine. Italian Military Movement Still Goes on; Diplomats Still Talking LONDON, England, April 6. Despatches from Rome show that the Italian military preparations are increasing. However, the Italian government official statements say that the negotiations with Austria' in an attempt to smooth oyer the difficulties are continuing and that there is hope that a settlement will be reached by diplomatic means. Russian Claim of Carpathian Victory Doubted by Germans BERLIN, Germany, April 6. Berlin doubts the reports that Russia has won a decisive victory over the Austro-Germa- n forces in the Carpathian region. The official bulletin does not show that the reports are regarded seriously. British Merchant Ships Are Sunk LONDON, England, April 6. The British steamer North- lands and the trawler Agantha have been sunk by submarines on the English coast. The crews of both were rescued. JAIL TERMS FOR JOYRIDERS IN PRISON AUTO Sheriff Rose breathed a sish of re- lief today when he learned that three joy riders, former inmates of rhe city and county jail" who had confiscated the police department auto on a mad and merry journey to the windward side of the islands, were in durance vile. "The police auto is now safe," he said as he ordered the car to the re- pair shop. Ilenrv Fofter. a tnisrv at the mu- nicipal prison, who had aceess to t'ie machines, was sentenced to one year imprisonment by Distiict Magistrate Monsarrat. Simeon Trinidad, a Filiii.o. who masqueraded as a woman and figure 1 in the ride over the Pali, will spend eight months at tbe institution. George Wilson, who had ben re- leased from custody the day before the excursion, was given six months Paris last , Januaryand has not jeW, r. inn (TuaniBr nni noon biitiit of the distance of her course f ueen overuue at uaruin ior a " been torpedoed. 25-YEA- R SENTENCE FOR FILIPINO ON CONFESSION TO MURDER CHARGE AiKdinario, a Filipino who run amuck at Waipahu on the night of February lu, cutting six men, one of whom died later, pleaded guilty before Circuit Judge Ashford today to eec-on- d degree murder. He was given a sentence of 25 years' imprisonment. He had been indicted for murder in ihe first degree. $30,000 STILL NEEDED BY MISSION MEMORIAL FUND The Hawaiian Board of Missions Is istill approximately :i0.ooo shy of the $!o,tMo needed to build and equip Ua memorial building. The finance com- mittee met this morning to ratify and approve the papers for the sale of the downtown pnperty Saturday which bro 'eht in $ 4r.,mu. Of the $45.00 realized. S21.00O will h ive 1 1 ie paid out- - tt settle the debt on the i r'snerty. The building com-- n 'jtee v. iii p ct soon to ma' plans fir the teat of- the money r;i i!d. ' . i ' y-..- , at lIo,'l Fe:n. - The men were charged with lsrteny; in the. second degree. , v . J

Indiana Found 3!H - University of Hawaiievols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/30282/1/1915040601.pdf · the Iwilei district last night he re--J County Clerk pai and Attorney

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Page 1: Indiana Found 3!H - University of Hawaiievols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/30282/1/1915040601.pdf · the Iwilei district last night he re--J County Clerk pai and Attorney

MAILSFrom San Frncico:

I.urline. Aril T.

For $an Franctsco:Sierra. April 1".

From Vancouver:Niagara, April 21.

For Vancouver:Maktira. A - HI ?,.

Evening Bulletin. Est. 1XH2. No. 6131 12 PAGES. HONOLULU, TERRITORY OF HAWAII, 'ITKShAY. APRIL . l!ii:. -- 12 PA13E8L PRICE FIVE CENTSHawaiian Star. Vol. XXII. No T1T1

ITAL Y MKT A ID) RJAPAN EXPECTS

nan cloud toCLEAR UP SOON

Predicted Negotiations WithChina Will Come to Peaceful

Conclusion In April

YUAN SHIH-K- AI NOW

DENOUNCES. DR. SUN

Says Former Provisional Presi-

dent Has Been Plotting toStir Revolution

Anwx-Ute- d VrH by Federal WirelennTOKIO, Japan, April 6. The Tokio.

Asahl, known to be close to the gov--

eminent, says that Premier Okuma, inaddresaing t. group of officiate at Kocu,charged that the hitch in the China-Japanea- a

negotiationa haa been toGerman influence a, which, ha asserted,aro at work to : undermine Japaneseplana in the Orient. " -

China la convinced, he aaya, that ,

annexation ia not the object of Japannd he predicts that successful con

Relation will be made toin April.

CHINA THROWS BOUQtlET;AT PREMIER OF JAPAN

PEKING,' China, April 5 The Cfif-ne- a

government, made , a .statementtoday expressing . its gratification atPremier Okuma'a appreciation of thefrankness shown by. China In the

with Japan. : The Chinesegovernment. aaya it la reassured bythe premier's Interpretation of thedemands outside the strict letter ofthe tet.

PLOTTING WITH JAPANESE

PEKING. China. April reJdent

Yuan Shih-kal- V In in official --mandate 1

luat issued, denounces Dr. --Sun YatCt.V Aral prttldent. ef , the republic

v for plotting o IhcUS 'a'?, revolutibn?gainst tht Yuan fiovernnjent. . ,

i According .to tht report of detect' tivea, agents for Sun were sent

to various parts of the Yangtse coastto stir up local disturbances and agita

J

due

tlona during the . Japanese negotfa- -

tlons. ' : - :

v The- - mandate orders vigorous precautionary measures to b takenagainst any revolutionary movements,Tm ftriM mhu. ntlrflun In TaWIa.. I

"; charged by his political enemies with

conniving with the Japanese. v

- . - ft nnintn rnriii- 1 LLLUlU UllLiH

IAMrwatvi?jr,'i,Tvf. Inii?i ?h!

Apy w""TVliner Hemlnols hssrsscued crewof the schooner Robert Graham Dun,abandoned In i dangerous ' condStionoffyVIrglnls Capesj y. r4 '

FIGHT BROUGHT

DIGSlir.l THOUGH

innn in rm nrr,

April

taxen in win exceev ouverof all denominations piled upbarrels, making, the "counting slow.There wilt be a public reception forWtJIard tonight, at which he will bepresented with a god watch.

Showing the Interest inth fight, the cables clearedwords in 24 hours.'

. Johnson-t- s going from here Mar-

tinique.

SUGAR 1

SAN FRANCISCO April Sugar:96 degrees test, 4.77 cents. Previousquotation, 4.765 cents. .

Asayama Kutaro" "a Japanese, at-

tempting to reach top of a cocoa- - :

nut tree, fell . a' distance, of 15 -- feet. I

lie received a number of bruises about j

the head and body. He was takenhonnltat for trntment

FOR RENT OR LEASE APRIL 30Second story of. building,. Merchant

. and offices, single orsuite;' large hall, store on Alakeastreet

H. E. HENDR1CK,

Graphic Sketch of

a:

Alakea

From th illustrated London

Dardanelles extend for 33 miles frcm Kum Kale Gallipoli, at the entrance the Sea of Marmora. , The average depth ia 40 fathoms(240 feet"). The current flows from the Sea of Marmorarlnto the Aegean at about 2 2 knots an hour. . For the first ten miles from the batteries andforts at Kum Kale and Sedd el Bahr by Cape JHelles to Kephez Point, the Asiatic side, the average width of the straits is four miles, with batteriesand forte near Cardanua and Baikrah. "The Narrows," the key of the Dardanelles, where the passage less1 than a mile wide, are three miles be-

yond Kephez Point, with the principal Turkish mine-fiel- d and the heavily armed forts of Kilid Bahr. and of Chanak and Hamidieh on either side. TheTurkish works are, however, not only assailable from the Dardanelles channel, but also within of heavy guns firing over the isthmus from theAegean sea. For five miles to the forts ef Bokali Kalessi and Nagara, by Abydos Point, the Jijgh ground on the European side is crowned with bat-teries.' Nagara passed, the Dardanelles has an average width of from two to three miles to Gallipoli. The fortifications are open to enfilade-fir- e byships from both the Gulf of Saroa and tbe Dardanelles. Owing to the immense of modern guns and the facilities for controlling the firing byair-craf- t, the attack on the Dardanelles forts no longer the difficulties on account of which they were reputed impassable. The 15-inc- h

guns of the Queen Elizabeth fire projectiles weighing nearly a Ion each and discharge a broadside of some 15.6C3 pounds, seven tons.The 12-In- guns of the other battleshipc in the attack, both British and! French, fire shells each weighing 850 pounds. The squares on the maprepresent three jniies each way.

3!HIndirect Story From San .Fran-Cis- co

That In . Addition to. Offering :; Resignation as

Chairman, of Fair Cdmmis- -'

ion, He's to Quit

Promotion committee it its- .... i ... . r . 'MemDerS VllSn nimiO UO O0

v r f

II. P. Wood, secretary of the Hawaii Promotion Committee, Is forward-- :

lug hia resignation to tue committpe.according an Indirect but welltbentlcatrd report received ttere today

M .Several days ago it was reported' nffarlnff Y' a poalirniitli'm

as chairman of the Hawaii Fair Com-- j

mission. While serving as chairman I

tfl Mnmmleo4nn 'cV Con liPuntlaArk. I

Whas virtualir been taking a leave of'assenco fr6m hiB duties as secretary

, r, n.Mmut'Te reason tor nis reported resisha

Uon as secretary is given as the sameas his reason for resigning the faircommission, because of local criticismof him and local attacks from certainsources..,

.Chairman Brrndt of the PromotionCommittee said toflay that he has recelved no of Wood's resignation, but imdersUod Supervisor LenHbllinger. who U a member of the j

Promotion Committee, heard fromCarl Nieier, who Is employed at theHawaii building, that Wood was going

resign.It believed that his resignation,

i Loth as commission chairman and as

BURGLARS MAKE

HAULATHO HE

0FE.E, PAXTON

Associated Press bv Federal WirelessSAN FRANCISCO, Cal- - April 6.The of E. E. Paxton, formerly of

Honolulu has been entered by bur-glar- e

and several diamond rings andvaluables taken.

Private Duncan, member of the 2nd i

HAVANA, Cuba,1 - 6. Tho promotion secretary, Is not final, butcount of the receipts for the Johnson- - Ig piacei at tne disposal of the govern-Willar- d

fight yesterd.y Is still iincom- - or and the Proraot!on Committee,eteted but it Is believed the money i m ,

Is in

world-wld- s

60,000

to

5.

the

tothe

Alakea; en

Intimation

vestigation the assault. Duncan'was treated injuries Fort

fcil Mercian! Stajter.

Dardanelles and

Ew.ji

. J

News.

Thf to to

on

reach

range

approximately

Willing

an- -

mml

tois

home

other

at

Found

Men

Terre Haute Scandal Far-Reachi- ng In Its Implications 1 16to Be Sentenced on Monday PleadedGuilty Mayor and Judges? Amog Those. Convicted : '

rAssociated Press Service by feeders) Wire less. 1

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., April 6; One hundred and sixteen men, guiltyof electio.n frauds in Terre Haute and other districts of Indiana, .wifl besentenced next Monday as the culmination of the revelations of bribery andcorruption that have stirred Indiana ' to; the depths. .

Twrrtvvn nf th aiMitri n uir fAlinH nuilti tndav hv th iurv" -which has been sitting in their casesed criminally in the election fraudsCircuit Judge Redman, City Judge

Eighty-nin- e accused men pleaded guilty previously and will bewith the other on Monday.

ARE

TANGLE TO

SUPREME

Ask Ruling on the Number ofNames to Be Placed on

West District Ballots

Another primary election mixiip liasdeveloped cn llawii. with the resultthat Arthur Akina. who received thesmallest vote of the three RepuhlicansuierviKorial candidates' on the west'side, has obtained a writ of mandamusagainst County Clerk John Kai tocompel the clerk to put his name onthe ballot at the general election '

May 4.

Backed by an opinion by County At- -

torney W. H. Beers, the county clerk. I

refused to place Akiua's name on theballot and now the case has beenbrought to the supreme court for afurther interpretation of the primarystatute. Beers came over frcm Hilotoday and the case will be argued insupreme .court next Thursday. Attorney--

general Stainback and County At-torney Beers upholding Kai's conten-tion and Holmes, Stanley & Olson ar-

guing for Akina'.The trouble arose over tne fact that

Julian Yates, lone Home Rule candi1date for supervisor from West Ha-waii, received a majority of the votecast and thereupon was declared elect- -

ed Three supervisors were to bechosen from thU side of the Big Isl-

and. Yates' electicn therefore nar-rows down the contest In the finalelection to two offices. There werethree Republicans and three Denio- -

ning: for the two remaining positions

Infantry, has told the police that cratic candidates at the primary, forwhile he was seated in an alley in . the three jobs.the Iwilei district last night he re-- J County Clerk pai and Attorney Beersceived a blow across the skull struck hold that Yates' election eliminateswith a two-inc- h iron pipe. He says the Democrat and the Republican whothat he is unable to identify bis as-- 1 received the lowest vote, thereby leav-sallan- t.

The police are makine an in- -' ine two men of each party in the run- -

1 offor Shaf

and hospital.

K.

t(Continued on page two)

4 , ;''

lfI0f JSllTOSHUSH LAUNCH WESIffiM ATTACK;

5o

Edition

WARAllies9 Warships

Indiana Bribers GuiltyjCnY

Prominent

Malority;HayingH

HAVMH ELECTION TWO HURT

TAKEN

COURT

m

Proved Corrux11

...... ,9 j -- , j jThose declared to have participat

include Mjor Roberts of Terre Haute,Smith and other prominent officials.

AS AUTO GOES

OVER THE BANK

Mr. ann Mrs. C. G. Bartlett In- -

jurejd, Latter Painfully, In

Night Accident

Charles' (!. Uartfett. president andmanager of the Honolulu Brewing &.Malting Company, and Mrs. Bartlettnarrowly ' escaped very serious injuries last night when the runaboutwhich they were driving home fromdowntown went over a hank on thDiamond Head road and they werethrown with it.

Mrs. Bartlett is the more painfullyinjured of the two. She suffered a

broken arm, severe bruises and a badshaking up. Bartlett was bruised,scratched and is also suffering fromthe shaking up ln't is expected tobe able to attend his office in a dayor two.

Rain driving uion the windshieldobscured the road, it was said today,causing the accident, the machineplunging over the bank after skidding.The accident occurred between 11:30and 12 near the Magoonf beach resi-dence. ;

Drs. Judd and HodginSattended Mrand Mrs. Bartlett.

Deputy Sheriff Aich has decidedthat no inquest wil be necossary inthe inauirv at theie of BenjaminKekahuna who fhs taken suddenlyill last evening while seated upon thelanai at his hne in the Ah Leongblock. The ma was dead before thepolice ambulance could reach thescene.

Mrs. Artljtir Talbot and l tr thrrechildren were burned to death in t!ieirhome in Qnebec.

According to the bureau of crop estimates; the amount of wheat on farmsMarch 1 was 152,903,000 bushels.

Battering at Forts

presented

ENGINEER7

OUTLINES PLAN

FOR MORE WATER

Nuuanu Shortage Brings Rec-

ommendations For SavingMore Than 3,000,000 Gal-

lons Daify Valley Res-

idents to Appear Before Sup-

ervisors With Objection toHawaiian Electric's Use of

Reservoir,Supply

Investigation by the Star-Bulleti- n

at tfie city engineer's oflice today dis-clofce- d

the fact that" the HawaiianKlW-trl- c Company quit using the Nuu-ant- i

reservoir water vlast Thursday.' City Engineer VVhitehouae and Su-

perintendent of Waterworks Murraytoli the St:r-Biilleti- n that the electric(rriiany.. when advised that the watersupply was short, slid it did not wishte use the water unless there was astirplus over the needs cf Xuuanu val-lt- t

residents. y

'ThesJ facts probably will he consi-deredamong other things by the su-

pervisors tonight when the Nuuanuvalley yfolk appear with their petitiontp caacel the contract between theity arid the Hawaiian Electric Comny by which the company lias been

ftUng ofl.000 gallons daily of Nuuanuafer. Some firt Nuuanu people, as

old in the Star-Bulleti- n yesterday.have signed the petition, among themmany well-know- n residents of the val-le- v.

They declare that while the elec-

tric company is using water freely,they are short of the liquid for actualnecessities.

"We shut off the water from theelectric company's speclr.l pipe lastThursday simply, closed it down,"said Engineer Whitehouse. "We knewthat they could get along and fts thewater was needed for the people, weclosed the valve."

"Abcut the time we shut them off,the artesian and surface water wasmixing in together and about the timewe shut ofT, the electric company shutoff its intake too," said Superintenddent Murray. "The electric companywas very fair and frank about it. Man-ager Blake said they didn't want thewater unless there Was a surplus, butif there was a surplus, they would liketo use it."

Engineer Whitehouse explained tothe Star-Bulleti- n today that the pres-ent serious water famine is partlydue to the demands of the electriclight plant upen water from reservoirNo. 4 for power purposes. He saysthat City Electrician Frazec says thathe can't get encugh power out of thelower reservoirs and therefore he isusing water from the storage reser-voir.

But the main point on which En-gineer Whitehcuse lays emphasis isthat if recommendations he madeyears ago, when he was engaged inbuilding the Nuuanu dam system, are

(Continued on page two)

GEN. FRENCH HURLS HEAVY

MASSES OF TROOPS STRAITAT ENEMY'S ENTREUTS

ALLIES CANT GAIN,INSIST THEGERMANS

Berlin Bulletin Denies Stories of Gains Also of Russian Vic-tory In Carpathians Submarine Warfare Claims New Vi-ctimsRome Hopes for Diplomatic Settlement With Austria

Associated Press Sen ice by J'ederal Wireless.NEW YORK, N. Y., April G.-G-

uarded despatches Tromthe war zone show that Sir John French. commander of theBritish forces on the western battlefront, has opened a strongattack on the Germans along the line from Meuse to theMoselle.

The German war chiefs regard this move as the openingof a new phase of the western campaign-- and there is specula-tion that it indicates the beginning of the long-heralde- d springcampaign by the new Kitchener army.,

BERLIN, Germany, April 5. Official. The French haveemployed strong forces and much artillery at several points inan effort to advance against the Gertnan positions. There isno evidence that they have been able to make much gain.

On the Russian border, the enemy's attacks have been re-pulsed.

Allies' Ships Missing; Fearfiprman Sn

FAKIS, France, : April

whicK,leftBaltunore for Genoanijiiii.fi. ji lit iTiHi.iri iiiiiiiii.H i.i

by a German submarine becauseirom any uerman Dase.

xuc xia.ua u. snip rind, uasmonth and it is feared she has

eThe Matin expresses

Dunkirk reports that the British nets guarding Doverharbor from undersea attack have aught a German submarine.

Italian Military Movement StillGoes on; Diplomats Still Talking

LONDON, England, April 6. Despatches from Romeshow that the Italian military preparations are increasing.However, the Italian government official statements say thatthe negotiations with Austria' in an attempt to smooth oyerthe difficulties are continuing and that there is hope that asettlement will be reached by diplomatic means.

Russian Claim of CarpathianVictory Doubted by Germans

BERLIN, Germany, April 6. Berlin doubts the reportsthat Russia has won a decisive victory over the Austro-Germa- n

forces in the Carpathian region. The official bulletin does notshow that the reports are regarded seriously.

British Merchant Ships Are SunkLONDON, England, April 6. The British steamer North-

lands and the trawler Agantha have been sunk by submarineson the English coast. The crews of both were rescued.

JAIL TERMS FOR

JOYRIDERS IN

PRISON AUTO

Sheriff Rose breathed a sish of re-

lief today when he learned that threejoy riders, former inmates of rhe cityand county jail" who had confiscatedthe police department auto on a madand merry journey to the windwardside of the islands, were in durancevile.

"The police auto is now safe," hesaid as he ordered the car to the re-

pair shop.Ilenrv Fofter. a tnisrv at the mu-

nicipal prison, who had aceess to t'iemachines, was sentenced to one yearimprisonment by Distiict MagistrateMonsarrat.

Simeon Trinidad, a Filiii.o. whomasqueraded as a woman and figure 1

in the ride over the Pali, will spendeight months at tbe institution.

George Wilson, who had ben re-

leased from custody the day beforethe excursion, was given six months

Paris

last ,Januaryand has not jeW,r. inn (TuaniBr nni noon biitiitof the distance of her course

f

ueen overuue at uaruin ior a "

been torpedoed.

25-YEA- R SENTENCE FORFILIPINO ON CONFESSION

TO MURDER CHARGE

AiKdinario, a Filipino who runamuck at Waipahu on the night ofFebruary lu, cutting six men, one ofwhom died later, pleaded guilty beforeCircuit Judge Ashford today to eec-on- d

degree murder. He was given asentence of 25 years' imprisonment.He had been indicted for murder inihe first degree.

$30,000 STILL NEEDED BYMISSION MEMORIAL FUND

The Hawaiian Board of Missions Isistill approximately :i0.ooo shy of the$!o,tMo needed to build and equip Uamemorial building. The finance com-mittee met this morning to ratify andapprove the papers for the sale of thedowntown pnperty Saturday whichbro 'eht in $ 4r.,mu.

Of the $45.00 realized. S21.00O willh ive 1 1 ie paid out- - tt settle the debton the i r'snerty. The building com-- n

'jtee v. iii p ct soon to ma' plansfir the teat of- the moneyr;i i!d. '

. i'

y-..-,

at lIo,'l Fe:n. -

The men were charged with lsrteny;in the. second degree. ,

v . J

Page 2: Indiana Found 3!H - University of Hawaiievols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/30282/1/1915040601.pdf · the Iwilei district last night he re--J County Clerk pai and Attorney

TWO

kupihea mmNEW DEFENSE;

'VICTIM OF PLOf

Says He Will Prove SoldiersAccused Him at Behest of

Superior Officer

ll ju HnlatiVf ltavid M Ku-pihea- ,

" )m ti.is l)-- tn unJi-- r lnisIalU uivhk-- '

IK'? ti-- tor th- - past tnmith. sprung aJitinrt s irpris- - uxla. hwi an-nou- n

eJ tuat li has iiis u-- r twow ltri-Bses- - ho will attempt to provethat French Oldham and WilliamIlradhrook, J.he two soldier defendantsin the trial In which th Kupihea girls

re crornjiiaining witnesses, involve'!Kupihea in the scandal at the behestof Liut. L. O Mathews of trie LM Intantry. Fort Shal'ter. " Leiut. Mathewstook an interest in the case as an ol-nc-

of the rerfment.Ah a reHiilt and at the request of the

representative, :tfee house' judiciarycommittee, through Chairman Raw-linw- .

called a special hearing for thipalternoon in Ilawlins' office. The oth- -

r hearingK were held in the repre-sentative' hall. Kupihea requestedthat iLent. Mathews be present thisafternoon and it wag reported earlierin the day that the two witnesses dis-

covered by Kupihea ne soldiers andthat they will accuse tine army officerof Bubornation of perjury.' It was fur-

ther charged that Mathews inducedOldham and Bradorook to throw theblame on Kupihea for the delinquencyof the representative's two youngdaughters to save themselves.

The legislative investigation startedat the request of Kupihea to investi-gate the charges of negligence on thepart of the representative Which weremade by Circuit Judge Ashford at theclose of the Oldham and bradbrooktrial.

HOUSE COMMITTEE iHEAPS ARGUMENTS ON

HILO, ELECTRIC SYSTEM

At the; hearing of the house oC rep-

resentatives' special e,

composed of Representatives Rawlins,Vieira and Goodness, in HUo. Satur-day, insurance agents of the big islandtestified that so great was the dasfcerfrom fir because of (he HUo ElecteeCompany's overhead jvire system thatth risk rates had to be advanced twoper cent higher than he rates of iHaV

noiiu. - ; ,; ;v :.Chairman Rawlins of thp .committed

aaM that the company" presented fig-

ures frorrf the' rnainland tr show thattt would cost, frtiw three t fryr-ChDe- a

' much money to put the 'wiring sys-

tem vndergrouad, whlc Is requiredin the Hud dy bill, as it would cost bythe overhead system. Advocates ofthe "pity beautifa!- - scheme, tor HUostrongly advocate passage of the bill.

SOLONS' BALLTOSSERS'

t jWlLL LINE. UP THIS WAY

In anticipation of the benefit base-ball game for. the submarine F-- 4 1 re-

lief fund between , the army playersand the- - legislative team, the okmbalMossers have been busy the pasttwo or three days tossing other thtogabesides' words, and a great contest isexpected. Senator CasUe and Repre-sentative --Etkit" Fernandes, tht

. legislative managers, announced thelineup today as follows f Kelly Hen4saaw, tatcheu Ret. Alex Desha, pitch-er; "Ekkie" J Fernandez, first base:Senator AI Castle, second base) Rep-resentative, Williamson; third base;Lang Akana, shortstop;tive C. H. Cooke, right field; Sergt'-a-tArms Aylett, , centerfield; CharlesRice, left field. Akana, who . Is atpresent one of 'the senate clerks,promises to supply the necessary hits.

BREWERY HAD NO IDEA OF

PWTINGOD FRIDAY"

The ; Star-Bulletin- 's attention- - hasbeen drawn to the fact that the invita-tions extended to businessmen of thecity to visit the Honolulu brewery lastweek were originally given for Tues-day and later postponed for Friday,and that there was no intention of tak-ing advantage of the fact that the datefinally settled upon was Good FridaysNo thought was given to the point thaiit was Good Triday, the Star-Bulleti- n

la informed. .'

PERSONALITIES

W. H. BEERS, county attorney ofHawaii, arrived from Hilo today, toappear In supreme court Thursday Inan election cse instituted by ArthurAkina,: Republican candidate for su-pervisor from West Hawaii.

"Asthma CatarrhrBoofrxG couch. gaONCKITU

2ff-- -

DRUGGISTS

STiSXOUC CKOCfcoughs cou

ah ii effeeri treatment tot bronchialtn&tea. with t oaiM tbe nan wfck draft.

Tk mSM tmmvmtiam www inum wua

Lhruc no twpi i1i l. i. finable ta MKbcn wnk roojur ctuid- -

ALL

Mic Tk Tmtktot tbe itrtnnrf ttro.IVy tire. efee-i- rt

MtiKfUc. Offwtr i.rifi Ino. IIW. ia atanet.

t

..

I

I LEGISLATIVE NOTES

The health committee of the housesuhstitu'ed a broader bill for the'ro' kett child lbor measure today.

Kula's bill to provide more simpler aders for the schools of the territorywas reported iijon favorably in thehouse

Makekau introduced a resolution inthe house to appropriate t."7.'.'i4.4" fora macadamized te)t road at Keanmuku. Hawaii.

Makekau's house bill providing forvar-atiorif- t for territorial and countyemployes was rejiorfed upon favorablyby the judiciary committee today.

Kula introduced a resolution in thehoue today to appropriate $2;V) forthe erection of an entertainment hallfor the inmates of Kalihi receivingstat ion.

The health committee reported tothe house today that the report thatthe keeper of Kalihi receiving stationhas allowed visitors to remain allnight was false.

Representative Vieira introduced athree-lin- e bill in the house today topany the patient to the institution wasend dairies from the various boards ofsupervisors of the islands.

Senator Penhallow'B bill to create abpecial governing board for the ter-

ritorial industrial schools was report-ed iion favorably in the house.

The county committee of the housereported favorably on Senator Desha'sbill to provide punishment for govern-ment employes who wrongfully certi-fy payments out of the governmentfunds.

Eli Crawford's bill to punish parents and guardians who allow theirminor daughters to become delin-quent, passed second reading in thehouse today on recommendation of thejudiciary committee.

Kupihea introduced a resolution,which was adopted requesting thesuperintendent of public works to pre-

sent a statement of the amount duethe territory from the Honolulu RapidTransit and Land Company.

Fernandez's hill to allow husbandsand relatives of females ordered com-

mitted to the insane asylum to accom-pany the patient to the instituion wasreported upon favorably by the healthcommittee of the house today.

Whether the biennial visit of thelawmakers to Kalaapapa, Molokalwill be made Sunday remains uncer-tain and will not be determined un-Jt- il

next Friday or Saturday. Ex-ceedingly' rough weather is. reportedon that coast, and unless the, sea mod- -

t'rates considerably the journey wouldefeelefis, because the legislators

would be unable to make a landingthrough- - the high surf. : In roughweather the landing at jtatanpapa tsexceedingly' dangerous. . Two ship'sboats were wrecked and one man bad- -

ly hurt ta an attempt to get out of thePlace last inursaay.

The governor yesterday signed thefollowing bills:

H. B. 145 as Act 4V relating to elections.

H. B. 46 as Aet 43. appropriating17 000 for mada through the homestead tract at Makaokn. Hilo, Hawaii

H. B. 184 as Act 44, amending thecurfew law. ;

H. B. 22 as Act 45, relating to licenses to sell milk.

H B. S3 as Act 46. relating toelections to determine the issuanceof municipal bonds.

H. .B.T5 as Act' 47, reguiaUng Ueladoptkm of minors.

H. B. 140 as Act 48, recordins orbirths.

H. B. 198 as Act 4 reiaung to coroners.

tt. B. 199 aa Act 50. providing further penalties for furious and heed-less driving.

S. B. 49 as Act 51, relating to tnecommissioners ot education.

ONLY LARSEN TIRADE,4SAYS WHITEH0USE OF

ATTACK ON MURRAY

Supervisor tatsen Is after (he official scalp of Harry E. Murray, assistant manager of the water and sewersdepartment, only as another of histirades, says Engineer Whitehouee, towhom Murray bad sent the reportwhich caused the supervisor to growwrathy last night.

I only report the conditions as Ifind them," said Murray. "The boardof supervisors has the powet-- to acceptor reject such reports, but whereMr. Laraen gets his idea of insubor-dination is more than I can see,' for Ihave not spoken .to him for twoweeks.

Murray had recommended a repairof the present Kaimuki pumping plantInstead of expending the 119,000 for anew pump s advocated by SupervisorLarsen. He also ' recommended theCompletion of the Nuuanu project.

I VESSELS T0 ANDFROM THE ISLANDS

(Special Wirtfcst Xeirkuts

Tuesday, April 6.SAN FRANCISCO Sailed, April 6, U.

S. S. Maryland for Honolulu.PANAMA Arrived. April 5. S. S. Tex

an from Hilo, March 18.Radiograms.

S. S. ANYO MARU arrives from Yokohama today at 3 p. m., and proceeds to Hilo Wednesday morning

S. S. HYADES arrives from SeattleWednesday morning.

The opening of the annual sessionof the Newfoundland legislature wasset by Governor Walter E. Davidsonfor April T.

HONOLULU STARBULLETIN, TUESDAY. APRIL 6, 1915.

ilFFFIIUfiFR WIIUSLl I IMUL1I II 1I1U

fflRTOION

Senate Ratifies His Appoint-

ment to Commission AfterFight Is Made on Him

Friends of John Effinger. fair com-misskme-

triumphed yesterday whenthe senate, after postponing action sev-

eral weeks and threatening to rejectEffinger's appointment to that posi-tion, took up the subject again andconfirmed hinx It was the last nameremaining on the list of the governor'saDoointments and thus every appoint

bf"jse.

senate

again.

page one)

t carriedwatershed be

a

first

from

"Years

public works,lead wa-

ter theof

recently leg-islative committee of

the paper,of conseouence made by engineer thereupon furnished

ernor has been approred by the upper statement. "Report on Improving

When Effinger's appointment was

the

considered the opposition was so pervisors.

ago

thethe

thethe

the gov- -

madethe tbe

Some pointsstrong, said, that had definite are:vote been taken, would has been that thehave been rejected. Members of th Xnuanu watershed good for 7.800.- -

obtained postponement toavoid turning down the governor's arnpointee. His name came up again

with

ment was For theand last time it came up

late in ses- -

"Metzger.

supervisors.

CITY ENGINEER

OUTLINES PLANS

FOR MORE WATER'

(Continoed

out.

recommendedthenthat la-

teralsheinto

' this

supervisors.-- '

thisment a copy

f athe Nuuanu

legislative

it aconfirmation ' determined

a

a

yesterday

C00 gallons a day throughout the"At tbe present

that of galweek two the situation ions per day goesto waste out of No.apparently unchanged, and postpone-- 2

obtainedthird again

afternoon, secret

Water Sygtemi,"

conditions

later,spillway."The resolves itself into

the whichsavesion, and after the brief meeting end- -

A. ,u ,k k i.A ev"T drP rn off from the watersheds of the varloD8 reservoirs. Thebeen i

scussioTof d & ththe general appropria-- ' htfHon bill for the ensuing biennium 2 S,TWPgan yesterday with the and erP,pe.means committee's report on that ' "eto?ent.go.fOQ t0 ?ve de,

t 3,19ofmeasure. One the first items to ,nicePi,ng d,lt5Khe8 p,pf

attract attention was an appropriation vatlonof, th, valJy of eca"

of 1250 a month for the-- Promotion wo!:k doubftleCommittee. The committee has been of re!er !f 3 fnd ? ad of the lay"o--v f.mo n mnnth last two of additional mains down into thePhalrmnn T?lr ntiA tht nmninatinn ! Valley

N'u can

At

its

are

be- -

l0

virThree schemes are proposed, thereoelrina- - a total 12410 a month

the territory and business or--' flrst WS.4B0, the second $90,000ganlxatlona at present and that $806 of ,

an the tnird Fie

this is going for salaries. favors the first scheme. This theAnother attention cneme ratercepnng aucnes ana

was the salary tf Col. W. Jones, ad- - PP llnes- -

juiauLCfici i kyn ua4iru uaiUiwhich tbe committee has set at $275.1 a remedy for the annual shortageMetzger objected to this and water supply the Pauoa valleyan amendment to reduce to $150, but project, which has up before thereceived no second and the Item pass- - legislature several times, may be coned temporarily. I sidered , by the supervisors tonight,

"matron for the room" ia ronowing the receipt a letter froma feature suggested by a $50 per J. . uait, acting administratormonth item in the bill, inserted by the C. W. nooth estate, to MayorSenator Curtis Iaukea. He explained Lane. .The letter in is:a woman conversant with Hawaiian "The taxpayers of Kalihi, Alewahistory should be employed point Heights and Nuuanu Vallev are aeainout the pictured celebrities in the ordered stop using water for irriga- -

throne room to tourists, relieving the ; tion as has been the annualclerks the various offices from theonerous duty.

Senate bii 191, making an appropriation from Hawaii county's revenue

remediesstop-

pingreser

for the .waslnetloa, of a road from 9 and onttlag ofl! the supply pinesNfenie gulch Into Waipio valley wtato the Electric, which hastabled, on a by Rice, seconded enough water its artesianby Makekau, who introducedthe measure, admitted that while theImprovement was badly needed he did

6'2. theU UA1 BUH.IIJ WIIMUI LUC 10VUCI O

province; The bill was killed on theargument that the Is amatter belonging solely to the county

naaeand

this

hours

presented

bail

more inI at

I Mar-sto- n

Campbell,sWe ditches

slopes reser-voirs." explained.I

request

su--

isIt

is

such an 3,5000,000or

problems, first isso as

opacities

th

costgenerally

j isreceiving

offered In

it

A throne oror

plied a expense, asupper

reservoir, connecting the

Hawaiianmotion wells.

even if these defects were remthe would be

cient The recommendation Mr.

S'.i&e ,??'?:Wr. involving development of

Improvement

superintendent

the water atter through 12

and a $1,000,000.lsra more economical way

and bring immediate

tltmmr nmtnA l'u', imutcij, iu acquire ine waierIII 1 1 1L n 111 water the1111 1 IF fir ill 1 ir.I ver door of tne c,tv has ,or sourceUjU 1 LJ LilU 1 1 LU two perpetual springs with a mini

mum flow gallons every

are not by

The permeable

iifiTii Dirt iip i uto sned ln t19 f anu is tnel'illrl 1 1 H ' source and can be furtherWilli ow niMwi?. ...

' : '; I owner all the in val- -

lev Dut offered the same to theThey are gone. Honolulu with all Territory noo ooo or mhw t

the impassiveness acquired by cus-- condemnation.torn aiona tnis morning to tupgirls from tbe western prairies

to

to

Is

"Butsupply

'.There

1

which

Pauoa

ask..Vr T3 Pa n authorizing the Territory, 'oo1,v tha owtn to aequire the Pauoa under

Oahu in thre days and away condemnation proceedings anda8k the support boardSiberia with many a regret

and a promise to return for a longer supervisors the8ray i uait aiso points out that in 1,911 and

Hawaiian scenery and Hawaiian ".AA legislature appropriatedhis.vtit.mir folmtoH the visitors w me rauua waier ngniafrom the but it was Hawaiian out they were never purchased for va- -

pMislc that pleased Gath-- rious reasons. He says also that theered as thev were near the railvof Hawaiian Electric Company bedeparting vessel, their last message stopped from the iNuuanu valleyfrom Hawaii Nei was from Bergar's it can get artesianband and of ter without depriving Nuuanu resi- -

sineers. "Aloha Oe was aents or supply.rhansed to the "Star Spangled Ban- -

ner" of the homeland, the new lovers' Lengthy sessions are the ruleof Hawaii stand in the now. The calendar to.

no longer and wept after tne day caned for consideration in comknown only

MR. KIM WILL BE WITH US

YET A WHILE, IT SEEMS,

RESTIVE THOUGH HE IS

M. S. Ktai, a Korean, well inlocal police annals, waived a plea tothe charge gross cheat when ar-

raigned in the district court morn-- 'lng.

Kim had completed sentence or io-

inontns at the county npontaining money from fraudulent checkswhen, within 24 after leavingJailer hostelry, he fell into the .

meshes of the detective dragnet AJapanese complained that he gave'Kim $25 in good money ior apaper, which he said was pronouncedworthless when at a localbank.

Klra intimated in court today thatbe greatly desired an opportunity toleave the territory. District Magis-trate Monsarrat set preliminaryhearing the Kim case tomorrowmorning. Until the Korean can secure$250 he will languish at the cen-tral receiving station.

BHBBHaaa MaaWwaaHaaaaaBaAn official celebration the 100th

anniversary of the birth of the latePrince von Bismarck will held inGermany on April 1.

much watersecured

slight additional expense.

of

constructed tofrom

be Part,to th

of

committeeof salient

year.time

average

problemminor ofto empound the water to.

ways

1,nesof

offrom to

$43,000.

item iorJ.

An

been

part

toto

necessity.In "Some minor could be

at small suchthe seepage in the large

all

from

edied still insuffiof

Punaluu, would bringHonolulu miles of

conduit opst

one which will

UL ILv In Pauoa val,ev- - Thls at1 lts

L"of 1,100,000

24 hours."These springs affected

rainfall, proves their subter-ranean source. water--

1111(3(116

I probable

watertea

for

ob-- "

anr.

'We the present legislature to

t0, waterof sailed now

of thefofon the in measure.'

north,them most!

the shouldusing

water because wa- -

the sweet voices nativeWhen their.

busycould the strain of senate

leavingmanner girls.

known

of

bastlle

Fern's

piece of

theof

of

le

of

ap

wato

of

of

of

to mittee of the whole on the general appropriatiott bill and house bill 169; forthird and final reading four senatebills and 11 house measures, and onsecond reading senate bill 60 andhouse bill 142.

GoodiPiathof

lyrees

TREE'S-- ANTISEPTIC

DCR

Antiseptic PowderI ' Ak a wttc Bakaa aUfcdArd ' aotiaeptlo aolodoo

ready for Immediate nma. Qlrnlauit fate to catarrhal andlarected, condlUouof th mo-cot- u

membrane. uMSOfCALKDIUS A DOyCHS.

Tyree'a Astlieptle Powder la. powerfaf kennlcid aad ra

and doeaiwi with tke dm ot daacrr-oiu- .

aotaooooav Mal-ta rr reaaediea, wch aa raxboUcacid, anlphata etalnc. Wchlorldtablet, etc. '

A 25e box of !Tyie'a AaU-aept- le

Powder make 2 falloutof etaadard aatUeatte eolutlon.

For aia bj drajciate 0Ti7-wber- e.

FOR FREB SAatPLaAJSD BOOaUJIX.

25c. 50c, SIJ.S.TYREE,CbGnist,inc.,

Waahlanttoav, O. C.

HAWAII ELECTION

TANGLE TAKEN TO

(Continued from page one)

on the board. Arthur Akina is the Re- -

puMican who received the smallestnuniter of vots but he refuses to ac-

cept the county clerk's opinionA somewhat similar situation has

arisen on Maul, but instead of seek-i- n

a court ruling on the Miui prob;!cru. Dave Fleming. Republican whoreceived a majority vote, is going torun again at the general election.

j On the Valley Island four supervis-ors are elected at large. Fleming, ac-

cording to the totals turned in by the'

election Sni"?ctors. obtained a raajor- -

it y by margin of one or two votes.Apparently there is some doubt as tothe inspectors' accuracy in making thecount however, and so. to cover thedoubt, it is said. Fleming is willingto enter the lists at the general elec-tion. The Maui situation. It is under-stood, is still undergoing investiga-tion and if the county clerk finally isconvinced Fleming was elected at theprimary he may issue a certificate ofelection to that candidate.

But if Fleming goes into the finalsand gets beaten and later becomes con-vinced he drew the majority vote atthe primary he is expected to start aleal contest.

Hawaii Sugar List.According to P. T. Phillips of the

steamer Mauna Kea the following su-gar is awaiting shipment at Hawaiiports to Honolulu and the east andwest coast of the United States: Olaa18,000, Waiakea 6000. Hawaii Mill1776, Hilo Sugar Co. 14,300, Onomea2862. Pepeekeo 300, Honomu 5200 Ha-kala- u

in.500, Laupahoehoe 800, Kai-wik- i

2564,- - Kukaiau 3.")08. HamakuaMill 1479, Paauhau 12,500, HonokaaSHOO, Honuapo 240.

:

The standard of tKis estab--ii8fi3?.eiitmay be judged fromthe fact that we aeli f IananSKoe

Th ere is no more em-phatic, way in which we canstate our business principle.

ShoeStore

Fort, above King St

Lumber and Building Materials

City Transfer Co.,JAS. H. LOVE

Furniture and Piano Movers

SUPREME COURT Diifcch Cookies

Kan&ii

Mclnerny

Sayw ("t)ki's in tho lam!. iiIwmvs fn-sli- .

Sold at all

Love's Biscuit and Bread Co.MACFARLANE LEAVES

FOR COAST TOMORROWF W. Macfartant1, i resident of Lib-by- .

McNeill and l.ibb v of Honolulu,will leave tomorrow morning on theMatsonia on a business t r i to thecoast. He will remain on the coast torsome time and then posibly go toChicago to visit the leeneral office ofLibby. McNeill and I.il.by

He will remain on the mainland fiveor six weeks. On his return the an-

nual meeting of the stockholders ofLibby. McNeill & Libby of Honoluluand Its subsidiary companies will beheld. These meetings have been post-poned from time to time because ofthe changes in the officers of the. cor-poration caused by the de.th f President E. A. Tilden.

Tilden's place has been taken byVice-Preside- Y. V. Burrows anlBurrows' place is unfilled. As thevice-preside- nt of the corporation is adirector of the Honolulu company, nomeeting of the Honolulu company canbe held until a vice-preside- ischosen.

r

Phone 12S1

FinestStor.

mm

For Assured Comfort,on sea voyages use

MOREHEAD'S GUARANTEED'SEASICK REMEDY.

5Cc Per Boxat ail Honolulu drug stores.

. FOR RENTTHr-kdr- m furnlhd house, Kairhukf, rtntat $45 to pr mnK

Trust Co., Ltd

PHONE 2295 REACHESHuctace- - Pecli Co., Ltd.

ALL KINDS OF ROCK AND SAND FOR CONCRETE WORK.FIREWOOD AND COAL

98 QUEEN STREET. P. O. BOX 212

SAYEGUSANuuanu St.

All Styles of Kimonosmade to order, silk andcotton. Make your

clioice in our store.

atest !

New Patterns m JapaneseToweling ahd Table Cloths

JAPANESE BAZAAR,Fort St., Opp. Catholic Church

OSTEOPATHY

Arrivals

Fronv Its !'name, ?ii m ight bi In-

ferred that Osteopathy :

dealsonly with the adjustments ofthe bones. This idea Is erron

eous. Muscles, ligaments and various organs are dealt with inregard to position, relation ana, size. Osteopathy is not Massage,but a drugless method of removing the cause of the disease bycareful readjustment, thereby establishing structural harmony.

DR. F. SCHURMANNHOURS 8-1-2 a. m. OFFICE 175 Beretania, cor. Union.

2-- 5 p. m. PHONE 1733.

Special Two Weeks' Sale ofHOSE and SPRINKLERS

) Wfo OFF

From April 7 to 21 we will reduce all grades ofHose, and all kinds of Sprinklers, 20.

Kemembcr tlu irri?atin hours: (i to a. in. and 4 to ! ). ni. n want t iz: t

as miicli water as possible during tliese liouis.Hero's the opportunity to et the ne-esar- distrilmtinir rhcaply.

Lewers & Cooke, Ltd.,177 So. King St.

i

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It

V

;

7

V

We can furnish you with detailsand estimates for any and

all excursions.Cor. Hotel and Union Sts.

Phone 5396 Honolulu, T. H.

BAGGAGE

lGt Honolulu ConstructionfrTM A Draying Co., Ltd.

65 Queen StPhone 4981

HANANSHOES FOR MEN

'MclNERNY SHOE STOREFort, above King

Tr- y-

WHITE WINGS

Ask Your Grocer

Once

MILLINERYHONOLULU HAT CO,

Hotel St., nr. Bethel SL

New Ear DropsCRESCENT JEWELRY CO.

Conkllng's Self-Fillin- g

Fountain Pens1130 Fort St, nr. Pauahl

LAUNDRYllessenger Boy

Phone 3461

Silva's Toggery- Limited.

"THE 8TORE FOR GOODCLOTHES

Elks' Building King Street

The "Honolulu Iron WorksCompany" solicit correspondenceend will gladly furnish .esti-mates relative to the modernequipment of Mills end Factorlee.

Canton Dry GoodsCompany

Hotel St, near Bethel 8L

Y.TAKAKUYa&CLV: - Limited..

NAMCO" CRABS packed Intenltftry Cans, wood'lfned,

YOU GET

(at It near inns? It

Keelox CarbonAT ARLEIGH'S,

you know.

OAHU

ICEPhone 1128 CO.

Collegian ClothesSold Only At

The Clarion

Extra LargeChiffoniers

BAILEY'S FURNITURE STOREAlakea St, near Kino.

S p r i n k 1 e r s

LEWERS & COOKE, LTD.

Men's WearLOWEST PRICES

M. H. BENN,

Bishop and Hotel Street

Laces andEmbroideriesHAWAII & SOUTHSEAS CURIC CO.

Toons Building

SALVAGING

PROCEEDS WITH

GREAT CAUTION

Ao ,.,..,! lr .. I.v F. !. :al W.r. l.sSAN FRANCISCO, Cal.. April 6.

The cruiser Maryland, carrying diversand equipment to be used in the F-- 4

salvaging, sailed for Honolulu today.

Th- - transfer nf gear from thedri'dxv ( aiilcrrna to tlu- - Drede. (lay-lord- ,

whifli limuuht u fromWatertown this morninir y th navytup Navajo, as the -- ter.t of activityin tle F l salvaee up to early afternoon. It is probable that th workof dragging, started aeain t(Klay, willresult in the passing of a wire slingaround th- - Hiinkcn submarine, so thatas soon as thf lifting pontfmns areroinple ted til' actual operation ofraisins the F-- 4 and towing her shore-ward ran be immediately commenced'.

There will he no descent in the div-ing tube until tomorrow. Final testahave -- been made, and the apparatusturned over to Lieut. Smith by CivilEngineer Parks, but the necessity of(hanging the wrecking gear from onedredge to the other held up the pro-posed deep sea observation. Probablytomorrow morning Agraz or Evanswill be sent down in the tube to de-

termine the exact position of the sub.marine and report on the location ofthe slings.

Whoever descends in the cast ironcylinder will have plenty of light towork by, the f4'tf c. p. cluster lightanswering the tests satisfactorily.This light will be let down alongsidethe tube, but at some distance fromit. and will then be maneuvered un-til the diver reports over the tele-phone that it is in the best location toaid his observations. It is a matterof conjecture now just how far thtlight should be from the bell, or atwhat height above the sea floor itshould be swung. Only actual experi-ments will show this.

GENEROSITY OF RELIEFFUNDS INSURES NEEDS

WILL ALL BE SUPPLIED

More than $120 has been contrib-uted for the families of the F-- 4 vic-tims by the employes of the RapidTransit & Land Company, the com-mittee in charge consisting of E. B.Bridgewater and F. Barrett, Themoney has been divided equallyamong the five women and four chil-dren now here. The contributors areas follow

H. G $ 1.00Hedegaard, F. V r,o

Dav.A.H. ..." i.ooParkinson, R. E 1.00urjagewaier, E. li i.ooJohnson, E. B i.ooRoj. H. J 5.00Schilling, William 1.00Melanphy, R. J i.ooWaUon, W.Ramsey," E.Higginbptbam, T.

1.0050

5.00Joseph, M. M 1.00King, J. L. soCain, J. D 1.00Wood, Harry i.ooClauhsen, F. N 1.00Watson, James i.ooFraser, 1 i.ooMartin, A. E 50Wilson, J. W. 1.00Schilling, G. E.Uncola, C. R. .Barnett, JThomas, J.Visser, L.Ollveira, J. r. .Kearney. J. E.Aveiro. JSilva, M. M. , . .Barrett, F.Freltas, M, . . .

Block, ASmith,-- T

Chase, J. E.Taylor, J. H. . .

Christian, F. S.Stewart, P. C. .

Sey, C. :

Honan. J. A. .Fern. J. K. ...Alexander, J. . .

Ml son. C. ( . .

Pierce, I.Gray, CharlesMcClurg, B. . . .

Mitchell, JohnCavaro.-M- . S.Ollveira. JDarcy, James .

Undo, J. P. . . .

Ziegler. C. J.Otterson, O. H.Klerame, EmilWells, William

1.001.001.001.001.001.00

., 1.0050

1.005.001.00

50i.oo1.00.50

i.oo.50

1.001.001.001.001.001.00

1.00.50.50.50

1.001.00.50

1.001.00

Ostergaard. J. M 1.00Prcut, George I 1.00Smyth. J 1.00Pali. D. K 50

I Hanson, F 1.00

Sterling silver saltsSterling salts poppers.Sterling silver depositSterling silver deiosit vases.Dresden china saucers.

trays.Fern dishes.Beleek china dish.

Ickes. . . .

Schilling. F. . .

Patwo-- . J. IIVilsoti. V. m W.'i!s.n. Henry .

P.i t --'.(H..p'-r. P. K. .

I.in'i.-i:- H ;. . .

a kin ii. J S. .

WVl bourne. A F

We! bourne, ". J

Karratti. B. I. .

Ahr-n- s. A. II. . .

West. .

Menauch. RobertP.allt-ntyi)- .'. T. C,

Sanborn. .1

Rennie. JA FriendSmith. I. S.Mortfeld. W.Cibson. T. c P.McPlwrson. .1 FP.oyle. ,f. K

ar. R. .1.

Trabbold. W. .1.

.Manjues, F. S. .

f'arreira. M. It..Medeiros. K. A.Hilsland. FrankPratt. A

P. D. . .

Stephens. C. S.Meyer. H. D. F.Heirne. .1. F. ...Yasconcellos. M.Prenikamp. U. .

(anario..M. S. . .

Vinson. J. W. . .

Kearney, J. K. . .

Hall. ()Young. T. H.Harrison, V. M.Rowe, P.. ('.Johns. H. .T

Strom, C

Sherman. G. P. .

St. John. T. H. .

Wood. Charles .'.

Spencer. J. P. .

Souza, J. RI.ucier. A. P. ...Tosh. P. EMaxwell. J. I). ..Mackie, K. F.Ballentyne, C. G.

6.

Total $120.60Pierard written

lowing letter thanks RapidTransit employes:

1013.

"We wish thank employesHonolulu

their kindness shownfreely help assist both

babies. gratefully received.Pleas accept most heartfeltpreciation thanks.remain, most sincerely,

"MRS. PIERARD,MMRS. LUNGER,

Greene street."Every Dollar

illustration desirenolulans something those

needgiven afternoon when lady en-

tered office Star-Bulleti- n

askedrelief fund. When as-

sured said, ."Justdowftft-ffto- Friend'," turned

fund.Every dollar, every nickel, fact,

helps relieve widows or-phans some their anxietyfuture.

AND MRS.

TO

TO AD CLUB

Admiral Mra. Mooreattend Club luncheon to-

morrow membersrelief fund families sub-marine victims distributed.Secretary James Levenson, treas-urer committee,make report.

"Yacht Hawaii Committee"make report other unfinishedbusiness Thomas

Bolton sing.

MAY SENDTO TO

PAY VISIT

Word brought NiagaraAlexander Hume Ford PercyHunter Australia,sidering asking leave absence

spend timefomiW ITunoi

been front Belgiumheading work Belgian

Relief Fund New South Wales.

Planmovement Facnielands worked together advertiselands about great ocean, with cen-tral Honolulu.

officers organizersmovement, Honolulu branch

which entertain BrockmanJack London Thursday Out-

rigger Club, being enthusiasticsupporters work. meet-ing Hunter receive formal in-

vitation from Honolulu ,bodyHawaii organize

here.

Dimond Ltd., bountiful suppjyattractive, useful prize goods. Every article mentioned belowmarked ONE DOLLAR, and worth giving worth receiving:

and peppers.and

baskets.

cups andA6h

bon bon

Jt-ss- e

John

Dow

Stevens.

l.0

1

.54)

1 '

1

l.tifi

l.tMj,(

1

1."

L'.t'O

l.OI.'

1.001 .""

1MI'M

1

1.0.1 .00l.i'M

."0

...01 .01

1.00i .ooL'.oo1 .ooi.oo.:i).r.o."o

1.00

1.00.50.50.50

1.001.00

Mrs. has the folof to the

to the ofthe H. R. TV & L. Co. of for

inso to us and

It wasour ap

and beg to

F. C.A. H."919

Helps.An of the of Ho

to do forleft in by the loss of the F-- 4 was

this athe of the

and if it was too late forto add to the

it was not. she put itA and

a dotlar into thein

to the andof of for the

and C. B. T.will the Ad

to tell the how thefor the of the

F-- 4 will beD.

of the F-- 4 also willhis

The willits and

will be cleaned up.L. will

by the tois that

is still in but is confor a of

that he may some in Ha- -

wait wifVi Kia V a aIX 1 " I HI It 11. 11 J . 1.1 U .J-at the In and Is

now the of thein

TT A " J ... 2 A X i J ii1 'no f of the

to have ail or tneto the

thein He is

one of the and ofthis theof will Mr.and at the

bothof the At this

may athe to

visit and

glass salts peppers.Nippon vases.French bronze jewel boxes.Brass baskets.BrassCrystal vases.Silver plated casters.Brass paper knives.Bohemian glass nappy.

W. W. DIMOND & Ltd-ISss-;

HONOLULU STAR-BULLETI-N, Tt'ESDAY, APRIL

contributing

ADMIRAL MOORE

EXPLAIN RELIEF FUND

MEMBERS

INVITATIONPERCY HUNTER

HONOLULU

i3

headquarters

thoroughly

Ml

f$l.QOiCard FrizesW. W. & Co., has a of inexpensive,

isat is and

Cut and

candle-sticks- .

giltInd.

CO., !

.'

."

i0

1.00

1.00

We

her

The nextMother' Clnl

rpsutar meeting of thei of kainmki will be held

at the IJliuokalani schoolApril '!.

Honolulu Lodge No. 409.M . siwM ial. third degree,7 ;'.0 o'clock.

at 1

F andtonight

The members of the Honolulu Cityl.eaeue will meet this evening at 7o'clock at the Oakland house.

On statutory uroiind Peter Santoswas granted a divorce by Judge Whit-ney today from Lou tea Santos.

Regular mee'ing of Haw.Hiin tribe,(tier Red Men. in Frateriity IiaM,Old lii'ows' building, at 7:;v o'c!oc.

There will be a public dance anaconcert at the public baths tomorrowninht. Bandmaster Berger will fur-nish the music.

Two hearings in the Thelma ParkerSmart will contest which were set fortodav were continued a week furtherby Circuit Jiidse Whitney.

The jury in Circuit Judge Ashford'scourt will not be needed until nextMonday, no jury trials being scheduledfor hearing before that date.

This evening McKinley loo"ge willhold regular meeting in Pythian hall.

Excelsior lodire, I. O. O. r .. meetsthis evening at 7:3o o'clock.

The appointment of W. B. Lymer tothe office of deputy city and countyattorney vacated'bv P. L. Weaver willbe indorsed by the board of supervisors tonight.

The business men's Bible c!a?s ofthe Y. --V. C. A. will meet 'oiiish'. atfi .icir.k. Rev. A. A. Ebvso'? w:ll

ive the fifth lecture on "TIi Sermonon the Mount. "

According to a letter from the Outdoor Circle to the supervisors, theladies are ready to lay out the playground in the old Fort street schoolpremises as soon as the plot can bplowed.

Cadet officers of Kamehamehaschools are wearing the mourning insignia and the school flag is at halfmast, owing to the death of Rev. William Oleson, first principal of thaschool, at Seligman, Arizona.

A meeting of the Puunui Improvement Club will be held at the resi

A.

B.

dence of W. O. Barnhart, 2467 Puunuiavenue, this evening at 7:30 o'clock.All residents or property owners inthe district are earnestly requestedto attend.

D

Music in Hawaii's fair building willnot be augmented by the Royal Hawai-ian band, expected,. accord--

ng to the message received from Musical Director G. W. Stewart yesterday. The reason for not taking Ber-ger- 's

musicians to the exposition issaid to be lack of funds.

Y. M. C. A. work as a world factorn the race problem will be discussed

at the international dinner in Cookehall tonight All the races which havetielped develop Hawaii will be represented. Th main speaker is to beFletcher S. Brociman, national sec-retary of the Y. M. C. A. in China.R. H. Trent will preside.

Honolulu children of the first gradegathered for their annual egg-rollin- g

on Easter Monday as guests of jMIssesVirginia and Margaret Frear jat theArcadia home of former Governbr andMrs. W. F. Frear yesterday afternoon.Refreshments were served to the littleones and the afternoon was enjoyedby children and grown-up- s alike.

At noon Thursday, at the front entrance to the capitol building, Joshua

Tucker, commissioner of publicands. will sell at public auction a

piece of government land on Kalakauaavenue, waiKiKi, aireciiy opposite meMoana hotel. The lot contains an areaof 14,660 , square feet, or a third ofan acre, ana win ue oiierea ai meupset price of $4400.

G. I Parker, formerly an attorneyof Buffalo, X. Y.. but now a worldtraveler, will be the speaker for the

hursday night Y. M. C. A. lecturethis week. His subject will be "WhatWe Owe to Italy." He is qualified tospeak upon Italy's beauties aftermany successive winters spent there,the present season being spent in Ha-

waii as a result of the war.

The Women's Board of Missions ofthe Central Union church met thisafternoon in the church. Devotionalservice was under the leadership ofPresident Mrs. B. F. Dillingham andbusiness in charge of Vice-Preside- nt

Mrs. G. H. Gere. In the morning theWomen's Society of the church metin the Bible rooms, after which therewas a basket luncheon in the parishhouse at 12:30.' r

MominiOiio

Onomea shot up today, goinp: from?,1 4 to 33 and then 33 Buyingorders from the coast are said to havebeen the cause. Ewa also was strong-er, going to 21 Olaa weakened,dropping to 6 8 and then 6.

Pioneer lost much of its gain of yes-terday, opening at 26 and declining to25 3-- Waialua sold at par. Olaabonds advanced to 89, a gain of

. Col. Frank I. Stone, a showmanwidely known throughout New Eng-land, died of pneumonia recently atWellesley, Mass. He conducted a"dime museum", in Boston for morethan 2 years. He was prominent inmilitary and Masonic circles.

" I s. & w.S. vV w.

f S. Y.

i

i

Wednesday SpecialsYellow Cliim lV;u-h- t

Sauerkraut. . . .

SuiM'otasliSiiua-l- i

HENRY MAY & CO., LTD.

DAILY REMINDERS

Round the Island in auto, $4.00.Lewis Stables. Phone 2141 Adv.

Fashionable gowns to order. Mrs.W. E. Bell, Love Bldg.. Fort St. Adv.

Tickets for Mrs. Mackall's concert,on sale at P.ergstrom Music Co. andThrum's book store; $1 each Adv.

Book for auto trip around islanddaily; 4 to 6 pass. $4.00 each, in first-clas- s

automobile. Phone 2999, opp Y.M. C. A. Adv.

Dr. W. L. Moore has moved to thehome of W. li. Castle, corner of Kinauand Victoria for the summer. Tele-phone 2983. Adv.

Milton & Parsons are receiving newspring and summer millinery withevery steamer. Tne season's pret-tiest styles are shown in profusion.Adv.

A social will be held at the Metho-dist church April 9, at 7:30 p. mi.

Music and pictures will be a part ofthe good things provided. AH arecordially invited. advertisement

Got a good dog? Keep him thatway with Spratt's dog or puppy cakes.Use Spratt's dog remedies when he'ssick. Spratt's products are sold at theCalifornia Feed Co., Ltd.. Alakea andQueen streets.

Joseph G. Pratt is resumingthe practise of law in this city. He isopening offices in the Magoon block.Merchant and Alakea streets. Mr.Pratt is licensed to practise in allcourts of the territory and admittedto practise before the United Statescircuit and supreme courts. adv.

MARRIED

NORTOX-CROS- S In Honolulu, April

r

5. 1915, Rev. Edward Potwine ofSt Elizabeth's Mission. Palama, officiating, Charles H. W. Xorton andMiss Emily Ada Cross. Witnesses,A. L. C. Atkinson and.JMiss MabelSchaefer.

MONTE SEBASTIAO In Honolulu,April 2, 191o, Rev. F .Reginald Yendoorn of the Catholic cathedral (Off-iciating, John Monte and Miss LouiseSebastiao. Witnesses, B. A. Gilbertand Bernice Sebastiao.

MAHUKA KAHINAWE In Honolu.lu, April 3, 1915, Elder AbrahamFernandez of the Church of JesusChrist of Latter Day Saints officiat-ing, D. K. Mahuka and Mrs. Kahina-we- .

Witnesses, David Manono andMrs. Manoanoa Kalamaia.

BIRTHS

FERRY At St. Paul, Minn., to Mr.and Mrs. Edward C. Perry, a

SUTTON In Honolulu. April 5, 1915.to Mif. and Mrs. E. White Sutton ofManoa, a .son.

FURTADO In Honolulu, April 4, 1915,to Mf. and Mrs. Manuel J. Furtadoof Captain Cook avenue, a daughter.

SAMPSQXVIn Honolulu, April 3,1915, to Mr. and Mrs. William Samp-son, Jr., of 1534 Luso street adaughter.

DEATHS.

KEALII In Honolulu, April 4, 1913,Mrs. Kaimi Kealii, a native of Punea, Hilo, Hawaii, aged 60 years.

RAPOSO In Honolulu. April 3. 1915,Mrs. Antania L. Raposo of 715- - Puu-hal- e

street, KalXii, a native of theIsland of St. Michaels, Azores, Por-- J

tual.MELLO In Honolulu, April 3. 19715,

Phillip C. de Mello, married, of 56South School street, a native of thiscity, aged six months.

The Greek government purchased40,000 barrels of flour at Winnipeg.

THE SIGN OF RELIABILITY

IVilV.

IV.IV.

Trice.I'ri.i-- .

1 .V

'J",- -

tin.tin.tin.tin.

sim:u.i..SPKt 1AI. AT J

SPKflALSI'KCI.W.

AT

turAT

AT

1.K?

I.V

the disc to 1-2-- 7-1

PAMER R

tube:;

Turn little

ANCM

Com Fed BeefriMiiu'stionably tin finest irnulc of luf in t he workl and.

(U'liviM'tMl to coiiMinu'is at iviIih'imI prices.

Spiced Corn BeefA decided luxury, deliciousin flavor; sells at 20 cents apound for choicest cuts. "

Supply Limited

Metropolitan Meat Marked

L

P&ONE 3445

AnEuropeanAt a Moderate Price

ONG-STROK- E four-cylind- halt bearing motor. Electric lightingand starting. Ball bearing transmission, relective, three speed andreverse type. Multiple ditc clutch. Full floating rear axle. Central

control. Right or left side steering, as desired. Wheel-ba- , 112.tacrres.Tread, 56 inches. Raven blue body (five pawerrger); black chats!and hood. Crowned fender. We will gladly send our complete cata-log on application. We are also manufacturing a model equippedwith an eight-cylinde- r, V type motor. - -

The Detroiter Export Department Is familiar with business- - deal-ings in all countries and gives instant and intelligent n.

There is still open territory. Write or cable. ,-

Briggs-Detroit- er Company66 Holbrook Avenue, ' Detroit; Michigan, U. A.

Cable Address: Detroiter, Detroitmich. Codesand A. B. C. 3th Ed.

or

-.- HI

8.

used: Western" Union

If you are shy on health and want to get "pep" intoyour .system r

TRY GOLF TENNIS BATHING AND MEALS

HALEIWATickets via Oahu By. atWells-Farg- o Office

--OES1 RIGHT THROUGH

PERFECT. FAMILY SOAP

CUT GLASS," DISHWASHINGFINE LINENS AND.LACES

VOUT.INJURY.totCLOTH HANDS

For Sale at all Grocers

King Streetnear Fort St,

Page 4: Indiana Found 3!H - University of Hawaiievols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/30282/1/1915040601.pdf · the Iwilei district last night he re--J County Clerk pai and Attorney

i

f

FOUR

RILEYTUKSl). APKIL

NOll MILITARISM BUT PRUDENT

The Star Bulletin fail to niiv causeIbe slrout of

pasmoncaiiy m

newspapers eontr

PRECAUTION.

"iiiilitarini ".the ten ltoi v

. 0. 1!H5.

icothat i gomir

is readers of

forupthe

tnplate4f he military educationbill now before? tfM lagitflafcure.

hi no scum' wh'ver doe this bill lor com-

pulsory military citation breed militarismtaking that term to mraii the domination of themilitary over tin civil influence in currentlflairs. l

The bill aims to provide a great deal of use-Tu- l

physical training an hygienic knowledge

ind a comparatively small ainount of military

cience and tactics. It (5 disciplinary ratherthan martial. It will give the youth of Hawaii

far more wholesome exercise than preparation

for armed combat. It will tecch self-relianc- e,

not aggression. T

There is not a man in Hawaii who withommon-sens- e can advance the claim that

.Ymerica is in no danger whatever of war. We: ope and pray that war will never visit thebores of this renublic. but our eves are open

that war least pessimist the littlef give .her in Canada the

ome ''It its sturdyart of to fit the of campaign to

rritory that if the tinTe comes'lwhen theymst take up arms in a righteous cause, theyill hot be rawest, the greenest, the mostnorant of recruits, but will have some ability

) care for themselves in the field.It is, true that America has won her greatars with recruits, but the decisive victoriesere won only after the recruits had been givenvere training, and meanwhile there was ap-illi- ng

loss of life from disease well from.diets,'; The facts on this point are all against3 man who argues that Uncle Sam shoulti not

a xivilian reserve.Let. the man who objects to House Bill 148

the to a of theby a foe, I bustling

1 A. i .. 1 T n 4 f. lint-- A;n ior my couiiiry, wuuiu i uui wu w wacd some military training T"

be only one answer to this ques- -

The Star-Bulleti- n sees only one objection::t may seriously be urged that the' icli trains its males for combat is more likely

1 . 1 - 1 4. n tt ! Afl .;mt-t- o but to ,

A .A1.

Vioni with standing The professionalrrior and the military trainingj essentially The nation men3 engaged in the pursuits of peace, in

and education and literature and art, willfclowi to make war. ; The men will not

,vc the wish for they will have everyto avoid

With the military training the territory pro-

ves, go moral and ethical training in: man and international

i is and it is essentially

Y y

YIELDING.

There is good basis for belief that China has

with thatClub

:e the! Japanand pro- -

ss of oyer new:the old.

iiad than

Id knows toto

xwar rcithwill Hot be known for some time

the has at;:pense of China than held

uj) attack on

here is every to that will

an of in,r in to her

to those by theThe will at

h.isis but Yuan rules

amy and short ofunless he eives

Ife give it

L I.

FOR WAR

one hears the fearthat even prices for food-

stuffs are high, the Cnited Statescan export little or to 'ill the need

thenormal and home

In the case of wheat, thisreisort just issued

upply below

not true A

thatUncle Sam can export amount of grainat. high price without really thehome The report says:

"The wheat Hour) dur-

ing the four months to last yearwere KXU KM) or '17) per cent of theyear's exports; in the past months the ex-

ports March and July haveor 25 er cent of the

average It would appear,that the United States able, by

its to small toexport four months March to

year twice the amount inlast year and treble the average of

the past five years in like

APIS 6,

A

of

FOR

!a the truth may come. It is the The and have

for Hawaii to youth chance war

slight military is the' hit the Dominion terribly hard, folkwisdom vounsr men started an bring

so

the

as as

can

It

is

back good times.Yes,Hawaii might get or from

Under "Are YouSigns of

is being madeand

are being used to urge ''more less"inore

"Be First, Talk War ifYou is of ope thatis used "Good only on

:t himself: United proper state. mind. is handates is assailed and am to of times. that your

There

country

to

is

The ofto fact

that after warMr. was to

ofHe was an of abil

nmiw xgr imuu .ua, and of andwith civilian

armies.

different whpseindus-- .

simplyconflict

conflict

shouldjustice

entirelyluerican.

CHINA

of

March

death Curtis Guild, formerrecalls

brokeGuild moved

nations reserves,

talked of hordeslands of

Elihu Root of New York is center of real boom. hewill be 72 years when next is

Root is better fighter as wellas a than of favorite who are now

critic, iswith Lord

than swordof pen, too!

don't notice vast cheer ofgoing up in of attack

iclded to to avert war. As on Carter for his of

minted in these columns weeks ago, bin...pan has-no- t to back up diplo- -

.

a. The believe

show of and army. even their proximity to themuch less Pali

moment doubled her garrisonsManchuria Shantung by the simple

garrisons and failingo withdraw

water.

hope defeatmarks public

Yruan- - to make strong txes bhrcer print Ham- - Thaw.f to the the

warrior-statesma- n enough notaaintaih his ohstinacy the point of

Japan's efficient fighting-machin- e.

.Probablyrights acquired the

are those- Gertnany the

reason believe Japan:: re extension and

ritage enjoyed Teutons.people

settlement Shih-Ka- i

a3K .Tnnnn the

rd. Is noi't alriikel

i

of

STAB-BULLETI- N. TCKSPAY. I

t-wnl-Mm

H.ALLEN EDITOR

(TiHliaVwUli

READY MARKET

Occasionallythough

abnormallynothing

without domesticthu raising

prices.

government indicates.

a vasta

market.exports (including

1 July 1

.'(,( bushels,live

between 1 1 aver-aged bushels,

yearly exports.therefore, re-

ducing carry-ove- r a amount,during the 1 July

1 this exported thesame period

the period

ADVERTISING PROSPERITY.

grouchnowadays. Though

training.this-ha- ve advertising

bringing

nothing

advertising.a pointer two this

movement. the heading,Reading the the Times?" a nationalcampaign throughout the do-

minion for optimism renewed prosperity.Billboards, and placards

speculation," individual action," andcontinued buying.

Patriot BusinessWill," the subtitle pamphlet

widely. business waits'question ilt the

needed maiden Rememberoptimism

Americanambassador St. the

shortly the present outprotest against the

German practice calling the Russians "barbarians." admirer Russian

FP"jity particularly Russian literature

.sonindecd,'

good-feelin- g.

practicable

provinces establishing

m

consumption

HONOLULU

preparation

pamphlets,production,

'Optimism

contagious.

Petersburg,

the "barbarian over-runnin- g

the and enlightenment."

Senator thea presidential

old the presidentinaugurated. a

brainier man nine-tenth- s thesons over the corn-top- s.

Ambrose Bierce, the well-know- n

Kitchener. For once the pen has notmightier the and fierce

wielded considerable a

We any approvalthe long-distan- ce

Japan far General indorsement theout some military education

hesitated herrtic representations conspicuously . Nuuanu, people obviously.sinesslike battle-cruiser- s Country and.visioQ&Kna's tunVbecame war the glorious does-no-t entirely compensate

pending

them for lack

Let's that the 6f Jackhis from

a show a pest inresistance people, but wilyj

rhether Japangreater

Tsingtau.

rights Manchuriaaddition

Chinese probably protest-

revolution willj.:i.;,

expressedEuropean

leaving

affecting

2(i,000,000

newspaper

civilization

Though

looking

proved

supportenough

Johnsondisappearance notoriet

Shih-Ka-isatisfy

New York despatch: "One Hundred PerishIn Eastern Blizzard." And Hawaii withinreach!

Kiug George's household has joined the"drv" ranks. 'The waterwagou is rolling on.

We perceive that the Nuuanu dam will againbe a popular topic of conversation.

Compulsory military education now is betterthan unpreparedness later on.

Bulgaria gives Evidences of needing more--attention from the fool-kille- r.

191.

(Tie Star-Bulleti- n lnrlte free and overwhelms i;s.with prat mi b .or allfrank discussion in this column on all the kind h) ..:il .vnero.i i;ipor;legitimate subjects or current interest, received. We le no; har ! i..ie uaCommunications are constantly re-- ktnd criticism al-ru- : it. n. thins havingceiTed to which no signature Is at-- ' reached our cars but pre f tarcached. This paper will treat as con- - havior of the i ljrfios 1 .mrrifldentlal signatures to letters M theniters so desire, out cannot glTe

space for anonymooa

THE ETERNAL FEMININE.

Editor Honolulu Star-Itiilleli-

Sir: I attended a performam ofQuo Vadis last evening and was asmuch grieved as shocked to observethat there was but one person in thevast audience who did not remove herbat during the whole evening of enter-tainmrnt- .

It was a Tani (VSh inter cre-ation that completely cut two-third- s ofthe screen from the iew of peopledirectly behind her. This head cov-

ering might be extended an ini h oneither side, in which event it wouldbe considered a blessing, in as muchas it would be impossible for a personsitting behind to6ee any of the screenand thereby prevent such person fromdislocating the neck in such an en-deavor.

Dut then, she was young, quiteyoung, not more than lfi, and well,we will forgive her, m forgivenesswas a special feature of the photo-play- ,

so we are told.GLOOM.

TO BELGIAN DAY CONTRIBUTORS.

Honolulu. April 3, 191."

Editor Honolulu Star-Bulleti-

Sir: The results of Belgian day

NO DECEPTION ON

PAVING PROJECT,

SAYS DAN LOGAN

"There is absolutely no truth in thestatement that the board of supervis-ors tried to deceive the taxpayers intothinking that the cost of the Allenstreet paving was to he 'borne by theterritory," Supervisor Ixgan, chairmanof the ways and means committee, de-

clared this morning."The improvement was first submit-

ted to the board in the form of a pro-posal from President Gilman of theBitulithic company." Ixsan continued."This was referred to the committeeon roads, which at the next meetingreported in favor of accenting the pro-posal.

"While the resolution tp appropriatethe money out of the permanent im-

provement fund was under way, I sug-gested to the board that, as I believedmost of the Allen street frontage wasunder the control of the territorialand federal authorities, ' an effortshould be made to have the legislatureappropriate a sum to reimburse thecity and county for the contract priceof the improvement.

"This suggestion was accepted andthe matter referred to the legislativecommittee of the board. As chairmanof that committee I drafted a jointresolution, which was approved by thedeputyfeounty attorney, but was after-ward changed under advice to a bill.This bill was placed in charge of Rep-resentative C. H. Cooke and after heintroduced the measure it was referredto the house finance committee. Atthe hearing, through Mr. Cooke, I sub- -

mitted a blue print map of the pro--

posed improvement, which showed thatthe entire frontage was owned by theterritory, including a considerable por- -

j

tion occupied by the t'nited Statesnaval authorities.

"I argued to the committee that Hieterritory was not only the owner butwas deriving a constant revenue fromthe property and that on the principleof the frontage tax laws the territoryshould bear the expense of the work.A bill is pending somewhere to makethe territory liable to assessment ofits property benefited under the front-age tax law, but at present the cityand county is powerless to make theterritory pay for the Allen street orany similar improvement.

"To my surprise the house financecommittee .liad the Allen streec billtabled, the only explanation of thatcourse as far as have learned, be-- 'ing that the bill did not recognize anyauthority br control of territorial offi-

cials in the matter. My answer wasand is that it was a simple matterfor the legislature to amend the billso tint the work should be subject tothe approval of the superintendent of ,

public works, also that it would havebeen premature to bring that official;into the business until the principle !

of the bill had been recognizedsome favorable action on it.

"Exactly. the same procedure for obtaining reimbursement of the city andcounty was initiated in regard to Luso

FOR

For furthercall on

gTW

l latinos on the results ol tii ncdWe acknow lo;b;e or in le'ndnes.-- i

to the community at lar.: and veryspecial thanks are due to the pre-the Advertiser. Star-Bulleti- and .lapnnesc papers, v hich lcr leng a ti'iiev.cr kind enough lo call the attentionof the public to t!.:s ecort; to MrCohen and Mr and .Mrs. Prick. whoadvertised it in all the nmv'ng u tnretheaters: to the yotiag i.'dy who dsigned and made all the beautiful pos-ter; to Mr. Lennox who allowed theit.c of his store, anil t all his employ-es, who assisted in every possible-w- a

; to Ima San. who mi over 1." '

Belgian bows and who, with WakeSan. made nearly all tin Belgian lh;to the many ladies who made ever1 ." more: to the triemls who s M

them in their own home; an i to allthe young ladie;; who went on thestreets to sell them, many of whomgave up a day of thei.-- vacation to helpp.long the good cause and finally tothe Bank of Hawaii who lent the banksand the gentleman at the bonk whoso cheerfully and patiently countedseveral hundred dollars, largely indimes and nickels.

While the exact amount donated forthis cause cannot be stated at thismoment, all the returns not havingyet come in. we, are virtually sure of$750.

Very truly yours.DOROTHEA EM EKSOX.

For the Belgian Hay Committee.

street, . with the exception tint theclaim set up in that case was basedon territorial obligations under theAuwaiolimu Improvement scneme.When the Luso street matter was in-

troduced in the house, however, itwas in the form of a bill making itsobject purely a territorial affair, aspart of the larger scheme of complet-ing the Auwaiolimu improvements. In-

stead of the $ 1 4.000 asked by the su-pervisors by way of reimbursement,the bill carried the entire balance ofthe fund, $41,000, and included sev-eral other thoroughfaies awaitins Im-provement.

"As to both Allen street and I.usostreet, the board of supervisors in-

tended to carry the works tnrouIiwhether the legislature reimbursed thetreasury or not. It is now havint? theAllen street work done as originallyintended, while the Luso street matter is tabled on account of the nor-abl-

action of the legislature, so tar aait has gone, cn the Auwaiolimu im-provement bill this having passed th?house and being now in the senate.

"The published advice that the Lusostreet scheme will bear watching isborn in ignor'nee I will not say

jyfervoteRAYMOND A. DRU.MMOND. mem-

ber of the Maui board of supervisors,is visiting the city.

MRS. HYPOLITO PKRKIRA indchildren were arrivals in the Sierrafrom San Francisco yesterday.

ATTORNEY M. F. PROSSER was apassenger from the island of Hawaiiin the steamer Manna Kea.

L. D. RUMOR I. of Santa Fe haEreturned to the states after an en-joyable vacation trip in the Orient andHawaii.

MRS. SUSAN ANDREW'S, widow ofthe late Judge Iorrln A. Andrews ofHilo. will leave in the Matsonia to-

morrow on a visit of several monthsto relatives and friends in Oaklmd,Cal.

JAMES A. KENNEDY, president ofthe Inter-Islan- d Steam Navigation Co-retur-

from a business trip to thoisland of Hawaii iu Cue Manna Keathis morning.

A. YVT BRONVN, manager of the in-

surance department of von llamm-Y'oun- g

company and secretary of theInsurance Club of Hawaii, left forSan Francisco on the Siberia todayto represent the club at the World'sInsurance Congress at the expositionmi April 13.

WILLIAM THOMPSON has resign-ed from the assistant managership ofthe drygoods department of Davies &

Co. after 18 years of connection withby j the firm, and will sail for the mainl?nd

on April 21 with his family for a visitof several months. He exjiects toenter business for himself upon re-

turn. Managing Director Swanzy of

SALEModern three-bedroo- m cottage on 14th avenue, Kai-muk- i.

Good condition. Sleeping porch, servants' house

and garage. Corner lot. 7oxlo0. Proce $.'J7"0.

particular: and list of other property,

Guardian Trust Co., Ltd.Stangenwald Bldg., Merchant St.

WICHMAN & CO.,Leading Jewelers

!): vies A: Co cm, h:iizes the regretof the firm So losser ;

Mr. Thou

I

I C II W NORTON an I MiKmi! Ada i'ro,-- were married es-- !

tenlay altenioi n at the chapel of St.! Eliz3t eth s Mission. Palama. T:i '

wedding was quiet. Miss Male',Si hai ft r was maid if honor aiti Mr. j

A I i Atkins'Ui best man Tbejv. ill spend the'r ln'ivyniorn on Hawaiiand return to nvy the r n- hninei n I'acilic Heights. I

CIIAKI.KS H. I I('K KY. former s. n ;

ati r. ;trminianied by Mrs ii Wv. :

liiMr sen, Imlse l.lt A. Iii n of thoK.niai irruit court, and their datu;Y ,

tpr. Mrs. .lames IV Dole, will loave in1 1 .Mfts im tetnerrow for S;in Fran-cisco, to take in the bin f tir and lalorf tour the states. The party will a(end ;! familv reunion at Piedmont.Cal. Spn'tor Dickey will alao attendfh" anti-silou- i lemur convention inAtlaut c City, N .1.. in July. j

MISS FKLICK IAN F. m. ri ;Vs j

"s( ngliinl," accompanied by her iroth-- t

r. .Mrs. F. I.yne. who is h r constantcoippanicn. arrived yesterday on thSierra. Miss I.yn comes trom NewYork, where she has iust completedher first records for the Columbia.Kn route she gave five concerts. Inthe party also are Mrs. F. K. Mooreof Portland. Oregon, and Mrs. T. K. '

Purdom of Kansas City, Missouri, auntand grandmother of Miss Lyne. While!in the city M;ss Lyne and party arejthe guests of the Alexander Young ho- -

113 Hotel Street

our

1232 Kinau St,3f8 St., PuunuL.

2352 Jones ManoaSts. . .

1605

1328 St

1126 King StCor. and

St201 Oahu . .

Cor.

1434 Ave1646 King St702 Wyllie St. & Av1231 St

St1313 StDayton Tract. Liliha St

Liliha St.2130 Kam. Ave., Manoa ...

and

Lane

Our ctens!e ;ui.l favorable nniiet

ticns w ith the leading diamond ui

I.ts and brokers ef the ln;led States

Jtul Karri e enable t nu.--o .ttr.ii livr . dues in ImtMm t ;;e'i;

CUR CLIMATE AND THEIRS.-

in the tlar'v. ilii.ir of winter.While tiiers are h.-iiu-s their inn

In their fl rt to keep fioniYVe l ik in a health ivin snn.

When they & abcut as thePundlrd ia firs Mid wraps.

We in the ulorious opnAle takini; our mf-l-d- nips

In the ltit, hot das ofWhen scan eh a leaf stirs on their

trees,W e re in the surf, at old W'alkiki.

by the t rade's 'zeph r breeze.

When their nithts are like lli- - fur-nace plow

And old ' Mcrphcis" quit Im j,l,We in solid comfort are slv;inK.

The sleep that insomnia cannot ro!.

Aye' Thfse isles of blue, a rar'disrtrue

In the Pacific's vastAnd once, my friend, that you settle

he eI think th:it you'll always remain.

In theirs is the bittpr cold.In Mimmer the deadly brat.

When you want to go backr just try itI'll bet yours is a quick retreat.

Verv trulv yours.H M. M'CANCK.

212 Ceachwalk.

tel. Duo ta Miss Lyne's social jmikI-tic-

as well as her wonderful voice,she and party will be entertained

For Sale $1200

Summer House at Kaneohe

room cottage with furniture close

to "Kaneohe Hale" and very close to thebeach. The house has large living room,

1 bedrooms, front and back lanais and

kitchen. The lot is about 100x100 feet.

If yon wish a summer home on the wind-

ward side of the island, close to swimming,

boating and fishing, see this property atonce.

25PES)

Discount on big line of GoldMounted Combs is something un-

usual. A fine line at extra goodvalues.

Vieira Jewelry Co., Ltd.,

"Waterhonse Trust"HOUSES FOR RENT

FURNISHEDWMkiki

RookeSt.,

Kinau nnd Makiki

Klnau1877 Ave

ColburnKalihl

PuunuiLunalilo

Kewalo

Lower ManoaHillside

otter

d;iy

frce.nu

K?kimn.

Mini'ner.

Five

3 bedrooms.3 bedroom.4 bed room v4 bed room a.

Cr. lit 8U.

Honolulu, T. H.

.$40.0040.0073 0060.00

3 bedrooms 50.00AnapunI cor. Wilder 3 bedrooms 50.00

2326 LIloa Rise, Manoa.... 2 bedrooms 50.f0

UNFURNISHED

Kalakiua

Wilder Ave.Alexander

Ave.. Manoa.Mokaueaand

Thurston

Makiki

Mendonca Tract,

Road

Adams

Fi'.nned

domain

winter,

3 bedrooms $33.003 bedroomr 2J.OO3 bearontns...... 50.00

2 bedrooms 30.002 bedrooms 30.00

Sts.,3 bedroom 15.002 bedrooms 27.502 bedrooms 30.004 bedrooms 50.003 bedrooms 50 003 bedrooms 40.003 bedrooms 30.003 bedrooms 20.003 bedrooms 20.00

bedrooms 40.00

2 bedrooms.3 bedrooms. .

"Waterhonse Trust"rri MerfeAit

.

.

.

.

37.5035.00

Page 5: Indiana Found 3!H - University of Hawaiievols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/30282/1/1915040601.pdf · the Iwilei district last night he re--J County Clerk pai and Attorney

BOOKS ABOUT

The WARBy Dest Writers

Low - Priced

EDITIONS

Hawaiian News Co.LlmiteO

In tn Young biOa

- BUSSESTo and from SCHOFIELD BAR.RACKS, Atakca'and Hotel St.,every Two Hour 75c one way,$1.25 rownd trip.

HAWAIIAN TRANSPORTA-TION COMPANY

MUTUAL TELEPHONE CO., LTD.

Sachs (Or

HAWAIIAN PICTURES. STATION-ERY- ,

PICTURE FRAMING,

OFFICE SUPPLIES

VE ARTS AND CRAFTS SHOP1122 Fort St

FOR ICE COLD ORINKS AND14 PER CENT ICE CREAM,

; TRY THE

HAWAIIAN DRUG CO.Hotel and Bethel Street

Yat Loy Co.DRY GOODS

; 12-1- 6 King Street

Laundry. 777 King StTelephone 1481.

P R E N O H LA U N DRYBranch Office, Union and Hotel

Telephone 2919.

Put Your Poultry Problems "

" tap to tha '

California! fe ed co, .' -

: Alakea, corner Queen.They will tell you the trouble

King St. Auto StandLATEST CARS PHONE 4700

Sam McMillan. 8am PetereAntone Rodriguee

Reliable Transfer Gov Pboxve 5319' hel t, bet.Klna " Hotel Ste

HEYWOOD SHOFSti.Oo end M--

at theMANUFACTURERS' SHOE

STORE.

VICTR0LAS. PIANOS.

CERGSTROM MUSIC CO.

"Mayflower" CoffeeFROM SELECTED BEANS

HENRY MAY & CO LTD.Phone 1271

JAS. NOTT, JrPlumber and Cheet Metal

Worker.Sache Block, Beretanla nr. Fort

Phone 2566

STEINWAYBargains In Other Piano.

PLATER PIANOSTHAYER PIANO CO LTD.

156 Hotel Street Phone 2311

HOTEL

STEWARTSAN FRANCISCO

(VICC. CT. WftCICCltCD CVI- -imc. raaoaaatc .an., cioac to

"On the BeachAt Waikiki"

YOU WILL FIND THAT

"Hustace Villa"H Accommodations for La

diet and Gentlemen. Phone 282

Pleasantoi HotelLUXURIOUS ANDCOMFORTABLE

STRICTLY FIRST CLASS100 ROOMS FIFTY BATHS

HAUULA HOTELA Home Away From Horn'

An Ideal Vacation SpotWhite Cooking

Phone 772. Hauula, OahA. ZUMSTtiN, Prop. j

A REAL CHANGE OF CLIMATEcan be bad at the oew

boarding house is

W AHlA W Anearly 1000 feet eleTation. Dear depotgrand scenery; One bass fishing Foiparticulars address K L. Krusa. Whlawa Phone 0393.

CORAL GARDEN HOTELSee the Wonderful Marine Pictures in KANEOHE BAYGlass-bottome- d tail and row-boat- s

for hire Good MealsServed.

A. L. MacKAYE, Proprietor.

You dop't really love Hawaiiuntil you have dined, danced

and slept at theSEASIDE HOTEL

J. H. Hertsche, Manager

VIENNA BAKERYThe Best Home-Mad- e Bread

in Town.I1 Fort Si Phone 2124

HAVE YOU HAD YOUR FEET"FOOTOGRAPHED" YETT

REGAL BOOT SHOPFort end Hotel 8trts

HONOLULU MU8IC-.CO- .

CverytMng Mueleal

Fort, next to the Clarion

While your eyes are closed In sleep

te 1 . r of

BOWERS' MERCHANT PATROLwill watch your home' or store.

Phone. 1051

The H U:Bfor Glomes

Suggestions and designs forRESETTING . AND REMODEL- -. v , NO . OLD JEWELRY

Gold and Platinum Settlnge

WALL 4 DOUGHERTY

E. 0. Hall & SonGENERAL

MERCHANDISEFert eno King Sta.

Sugar Factors. Importers, end

H. HACKFELD & CO.Limited.

Commission Merchanta.HONOLULU

PACIFIC ENGINEERINGCOMPANY, LTD.

Consulting, Designing and Con-structing Engineers.

Bridges. Buildings, Concrete Strncturea. Steel Structures, Sanitary Systerns. Reports and Estimates on ProUrta PhonV 1048

HAWAIIAN DISTRIBUTING CO.

1109 Alakea St., Honolulu. Phon; 5114.

Something Hat patterns 25c.Free Instruction on how to make yournew hat, bj pur Milliner.

flTAR-RFLLFTI- Tf fllYEA TODTODAY'S JIKffa TtlUAT

TTOXOTTLTT STAK HI'IJiTIN, TI'KSHAY. APKILr.. 1915.

Will Boost Philippines on Mainland

y:

y--j -

-

l " i

ROBERT F.

WILL REPRESENT i

PHILIPPINES AT

AD CONVENTION

On his way to the mainland to rep-repe-

the Philippine Islands in ancampaign for wholesome pub-

licity, Robert K. .Murphy, a resident inthe Far East for the past 1") years,spent a busy day in Honolulu duringthe stav of the I nited States armytransport Thomas. Murphy has beenlrectien of Miss Fditfr'C. Catfiel'J. orleng associated with the newspapergame in a business capacity with theManila Daily Pulletfn. While herehe was given details, concerning theHonolulu Ad Club. He was made morefully acquainted with its aims andpurposes.

That the merchants of Manila andbusiness interests generally are aliveto the substactial results of high classpubHcUy is shown by the Manila AdTilth's election oD a' representativeto the convention' of the Ad Men's As

'sociation of the World to he held at i

Chicago in June.This will be the first occasion on

which the Far East has been repre-sented end it iripons much in a publici-ty way to the Philippine Islands.

Murphy said that business gener-ally in the Philippine islands was anthe Increase. One of the most seri-ous drawbacks was the inability tsecure bottoms t" carry' ;:ay lhproducts. The withdrawal of all Jerman vessels and many British shipsfrcm the carrying trade has of courseseriously interferred with trade allover the world, and Manila feels itkeenly. However, a good showing foithe year will be jiiade and it i confidently beiieved that IIIT. will he thebanner year in exports.

The tendency for several monthspast, he said, has been increased ex-

ports and decreased imports with theexception of rke, which for January,1!1!, showed an increase cf S.1Q0.0OO

over January, KH. Exiorts for Jan-uary. 1 !!.", show an increase of about$2,0!)0,(00 over the eorresiondingmonth of the previous year. Thirty-on- e

thousand tons of copra and .13.000tons of hemp were shipoed last Janu-ary and It is estimated that $l.".0no.000worth if sugar will be exported dur-ing the present year.

The failure of the Jenes bill to pass( ongress. news of which was receivedat Manila early in March, will not aT-fe-

the eernoniic affairs of theislands, according to Murphy. Recent-ly a noticeable indifference as to theultimate grantine cf independencehas been observed among the think-ing. Filipinos. The disappointmenttherefore w;is net painful.

Nineteen new cases of tuberculosiswere registered at the tuberculosis bu-reau yesterday, four for Honolulu and!" from Maui. All except two of thenew patients on Maui have bpen takenin by the Kula sanitarium. Fourdeaths in Honolulu from the diseasehave occurred sincg Saturday.

a tmw or beauty is a joy row even

Dr. T. FELIX GOURAUD'S ;

Oriental Cream08 MAGICAL BEAUT1F1ER

mMS IUbotm Tu, rimpUi.51 C E"!1"as ya omMmuiuiiiMti,

itteetion. It hu stoo4Um Uit OfMrMfi, aa4ia to btrmLvi w tMit to b lara It la ora--parlymada. Aeeaptneoontwf.it of aim Uar !

in.. Dr. Ii A.. Sajraaid to m lady of tba

haatton (a patient):As you ladlaa will naa

(aim, I racommondGorBra Crataaa'

Mthoioaatkanafnlor all th. akto pr.parationa."At Pnicciata and Dvpartmaiit atoraa

Fart T. aspkau 4 tos, Prspt, J 7 6rm Jobo , IT. 6. fi

w

7 I

ifi -

i

MURPHY.

EASIER CANTATA

IS FEATURE AT

CENTRAL UNION

.Music lovers cf Honolu'u spent amost enjoyable evening at CentralUnion church Sunday night, listeningto the splendid presentation of theEaster cantata, "From Deaih to Mfe,"'by iJartiett, as rendered by the doublequartet of that church under the di

ganist. This composition, a recentproduction cf the author, was givenfcr the firBt time in, Hawaii Sundayand is thoroughly modern in its feel-ing. The composer is not known tothe general publjc but musical criticspredict a glowing future Tor him. Hisstyle is so Huent. mplodicus and sym-

pathetic that it makes an instant ap-

peal to artist and audience and allwho heard the cantata were enthusias-tic in their praises. All the choruswork was capitally done, the ensembleeInK excellent, and the solo work was

brilliant. The make-u- p ot trie cnoir isas follows: .Mis3 Kditli Hatfield, or-ran'.-

and director. Sopranos, Mrs.(Y I.. Hall. Miss Clara C. Pearson.Aitf.s. Mrs. ('. S. Weight, Miss LucyKeefF. Tenors. Mr. T. Rolton. Mi.J. I). French. Masses. Mr. C. A. flrownend Mr. I.. C. French.

The prologue, a baritone recitative,which was impressively given by Mr.Cenrgo A. town, precedes Part I." I he Crucifixion'." As is appropriate,this divi sion is full of rich harmoniesand somber, majestic cadences. PartJT. 'The Ues'irr'-rfioii.- " introduces theblithe note oT jov hope and in ex-

quisite and dramatic fashion porlravsthe events cf the first Easter morn-ing. The libretto as well as the mu-

sic is well v.ortn while and the ar-rangement varied and diversified.An enumerat e:!! of the notable fea-

tures nf the urogram wcuhj end in acomplete recitation of the enntat'. OnIhe'rmue.st 'rf thr.se who desired tohear this b3';:tifi:l music ;igain andthose who were4 unable to hear itSunday night it 1ms been decided torepeat the performance next Sundayevening.

GIRLS! THICKEN AND

BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR

Bring hark it gl!s lustre, charmand get rid l dandrnff-- Tr

the mit clolh '

To be posse-sue- of a Lead of heavy,beautiful hair; soft, lustrous, fluffy,wavy and free from danrjniff is mere-ly a matter of using a. little Dander-m- e.

It is easy and inexpensive to havenice, soit hair and lots of it. Just,get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton'BiDanderine now all drug stores rec-- J

ommend it apply a little as directed-an-

within ten minutes there will be I

Ian appearance of abundance; fresh-- lness, fluffiness and atx incomparaMegjoss and lustre and try as you willyou cannot find traca ofdandraffor falling hair; but your 'real surprisewill be after about two weeks' use,when you will see new hair fine anddowny at first yes but really newhair sprouting out all over yourscalp Danderine is, we believe, theonly sure hair grower; destroyer ofdandruff and cure for itchy scalp and

never fails to stop falling hair atonce.

If you want to prove how pretty andsoft your hair really is, moisten acloth with a little Danderine and

jcarefully draw it through your hairtaking one small strand at a time.Your hair will be soft, glossy andbeantiful in just a few moments a de--

Llightful surprise awaits everyone whoer. this.- - -- ;id el ti?cn.4 lit

fATFRMIIISF 111

! GETS UNDERWOOD,

LOCAL AGENCY

H;c Watnluuso Company an-i- n

uu 3 that it has recently securedthe local H?fiu v for the I'ndcrwoodTypewriter Company.

The lirst xi those mu-

ch ncji has arrived in the dmn andtiny ;re now in dsuy in the rwxnst ( the eotupany in the Alexander

t unu I uildius. grcund Ker.('. Ktu-iJorfc- r comes directly

firm the New York factery to pennan-tn- :

y enter t lie employ f he tyie-wrte- r

tiepariment vt the ..terhi us- -

any . ile and a met hani al assltari! ;tt all tims he at the com-mand nf I iiderw(Mi -- ptjn liaers. A

sri vice (lepartnicnt w ill he inaintaiTie I

for the cciivciiicm c of users of thesiinaehincs.

It is InterePtiiiK to ante that for thelast nine years, in fact ever s!uce thenU'cnal speed contests have hecn in;i iisui a tel, tnP winners of these con-test- i

have operated I nderwcod ma-

chines. The quality of these typewrit-ers is recojniized evei-ywher- and itis expected that the establishment ofa local auicy will meet with lustint;success.

MRS. HOWLAND SINGSHAWAII'S SONGS ON COAST

Mrs. Drssie Ahhot I low land, whoplayed a leading nde in "The ShoCun" given Carnival weeK is pre-paring to give a Hawaiian night at

If You Are Nervous 5

and are losing weight, we recommendthat you take

OOCaSIL Erosioneonlaininf Hypojhotphitet

for a short time. A prescription whichwe gladly endorse.

Benson, Smith & Co.. Ltd..

Look

(W)VI etecretc J

AbsoIutelyPureROYAL the most cclebnitcd(of all the baiting powders tnthe worldcelebrated for lisgreat leavening strength didpurity. It makes your.dces,blsculte bread, eta, hcalthlxil, ItInsures you against alum andall forms of adulterattqjh thatgo with the low priced brands.

Roi bakmg Powder Cook Book sentHonolulu.

l.ons: Itcarh, Cai., where she has beenfor the past mouth. nd has writtento the promotion committee for morliterature on Hawaii to illustrate herfctereonticon talks.

Her first concert. will be given un-- 'fier the auspice 'of the Teachers and j

Parrnts' Association of l.oug Peach,but she will also make a tour of Cali-fornia high schools, telling of Hawaiiin story and song. J

' With all Hawaii has to offer withher great industries she should havean exhibit which would interest thepublic." writes the singer.

at. These

rnces on. t

Westinghouse Mazda

10, 15, 20, 25 and 40 watts60 watts ......

100 watts - - - - - - f

3 t

free on request. Ada ess few

Hawaii. . 'A

TO BE ON c

BY CLUBi,

Members of the Honolulu Automo-- "

bile Club propose to. bind the traffic:laws in. pocket form, as soon as

legislature adjourns, and eachvmember will he furnished with a copyrfor his I

Road signs giving the direction andd'stattce front crossroads to variouspoints on Oahu are being made at thedirection cf the club and three will'be 'located on the roade in the nearjfuture. !,r

iif

-

25 cents35 cents

-

'

1

Honolulu

When the cost of other necessities is going'W' '

.- -

. r- -the cost lighting goes down. f

' .'.,-

Phone 3431

SIGNS PLACEDROADS

the'-prese-

up.

Just use --plain scalding hot water as an insecticidein your poultry houses. Apply with a spray pump

and the lice and mites will be exterminated.(Have the water 160 F.)

Now as to the Poultry Feed Question state yourproblems and let us recommend the proper diet.

California Feed Company,Corner Alakea and Queen Streets

FIVE

AUTO

information.

Mew

'Lamps

65 cents-;- -

of

HawaiianlectricCo.,ttd.

. ;

'

1 i (

. t..i i I

Mm

iti i

(IK1

31 1;

..!

r.'

.11;.-P-

,

' .'ft

til

'

-- 'U.. -

01?

"t .

') I

i..f .

rPP

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A).

.'.'

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Page 6: Indiana Found 3!H - University of Hawaiievols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/30282/1/1915040601.pdf · the Iwilei district last night he re--J County Clerk pai and Attorney

our SelectionshouM not lo irorrn-- l by t lie size of the Corn-p.m- y,

tin ;i!;tfimt of busirn-- - transact-- , nortin- - p.itToii;ic liinxU. Neither in a vital ele-

ment ol

u ranee that SatisfiesA JnMinm.-- e Policy is a CONTRACT

between Vou and the Company.

Get the Best ContractSend n;ime. .lire nn address for information

as 1o tic New Policies of the

New England MutualLife Insurance Company

Castle & Cooke, Ltd. c

rirdfLife, Manne, Automobile andAccident Insurance Agents

1Young Man!

start a

Savings

Account

TODAY

BANK OF HAWAIILTD.

2

Bank ofHonolulu

; 7 f i

Issues K. N. A K. Letters ofCredit and Travelers' Checksavailable throughout the world.

Cable Transfersat Lowest Rates

v. "j

v. mewer mlo.(Limited)'

SUGAR. FACTORS.COMMISSION - MERCHANTS,

SHIPPING and JNSUR-"-- .ANCE AGENTS. :

FORT. ST, 'H0N0UJLU.Vt.V H.

tdit of Officers and Directors:F. BISHOP. ...... .President

a IL ROBERTSON..Vice-Preside- nt and Manager

. R-- IVERS . U. . ...... SecretarrE. A! IL; ROSS.......TreasurerQ.i TC CARTER Directora H.', COOKE DirectorJ. H.'ULT. .Director

r R, A COOKE DirectorA. CARTLEY Director

. do. MAY.... Auditor

FIRE INSURANCE

THE

B. F. Dillingham Co.LIMITED

- General Agents for Hawaii:Atlas Assurance Com pan;-- ofLondon, New York. Underwrit-ers' Agency; Providence Wash- -Ingtes-- Insurance Co.

' 4th floor Stangenwald Building.

I

THE YOKOHAMA SPECIEBANK, LIMITED.

Yen.Capital eubscrlbed .... 4.000,OMCapital paid cy. 30,000,000

. Reserve fund ...19,600.000S. AWOKI. Loc Manager

wtrara & KointUngenwalc 3ldi, t)2 Merchant St

STOCK AND DUnu onwrxsiowMembers Honolulu St:ek and cona

Alexander&

BaldwinLimited.

Sugar FactorsCommission Merchantsand Insurance Agents

Aegnts forHawaiian Commercial & Sugar

Co.

Haiku Sugar Company.Paia Plantation.Maui Agricultural Company.Hawaiian Sugar Company.Kahuku Plantation Company.McBryde .Sugar Co., Ltd.Kahului Railroad Company.Kauai Railway Company.Kauai Fruit & Land Co., LtdHonolua Ranch.

Bishop & Co.j BANKERS

Pay 4 yearly on Savings De-

posits, compounded twiceAnnually.

Ma rtin GruneREAL ESTATE

INSURANCE89 Merchant St Tel. 2350

C. G. BOCKUS.Authorized Agent for Hawaii for

First Preferred Stock of Pacific GasA Electric Company of California.

Phone 2784. P. O. Box 542' Office, 503 Stangenwald BJdg.

AGENTS WANTED

HOME INSURANCE CO. OF HAWAIILtd, 6'Neil Bldg, 93 King SL, cornerFort St Telephone 3529

FOB BENTFine cottage In town; gas;

screened; electricity; $22.New house; screened; gas,

electricity; fine locality; $30.Renovated 54edroom house; $30. 'A cottage; $15.

J. H. Schnack,Real Estate

842 Kaahumanu St. Telephone 3633

HAWAIIAN TRUSTCO, LTD.

Carries on a TrustBusiness in all itsbranches.

J. F. MORGAN C(L LTD.STOCK BROKERS

Information Furnished and LoansMade.

Merchant Street Star BundingPhone 1572

iwivi n h

mmIIPMakiki K'eigbts Poultry Ranch.

S. C. White Leghorns and S. C. Orp-ingtons. Hatching eggs, day-ol- d

chicks, young and laying stock. Rec-ord of breeders: 180-24- 3 eggs. Wetrap nest every bird every day in theyear. Cockerels from hens with over200-eg- g record. Strictly fresh tableeggs and choice table poultry Visitour plant; write for price list.Tel. 3146. F C. Pohlmann,P. O. Box483.

HONOLULU STAR-BULLETI- N, TUESDAY. APRIL G, 10ir.

Honolulu Stock Exchangi

TufS'iay April

MERCANTILE. Bid. AakedAlexander fc Baldwin. Ltd ....('. Brewgj Ac Co

SUGAR.Kw;i Planta'Kn Co 21 21f i a i k Sucar '' 1"" 1 ".

Haw Ti t .

Ha v. C S Co ::4sHaw Sn.r CoH"r k;a SiiarHrmniii Sutiar (' 11"Mutt Mnson S. I'lan. Co.... l 3Kahuku I'lau. CoK'kah.i Siisar C". i:Koloa Suy'ir 'o ir"M( !lr ) Suar 'o . Ltd .

Ualiu SiJtar Cm 21 21 UOlaa Suear ('., , Ltd "'t( iiou a Suar Co. :;:;,Paauhai S I'lan. Co. . .

'aniic Sut'ar Mill 7"Paia Plantation Co . . . l.'uI'epeekeo Sanar Col"ic-ne- Mi!) CoWaialtia Acri. Co. . . r.- . 1 " 1"2Wailuku Supar Cm 14'1

Waimatialo Su:ar '?. . . .

Vaima Suuar Mill 'o. 1 MMISCELLANEOUS

Haiku V. K l Co. ITd .

Haiku F. & P. Co., Com.Haw. Klfctric Coflaw. Irr. Co.. LtdHaw. I'inoapi.lM Co ::i

j Hilo R. R. Co . PfdHilo U v. ( '(.. ( 'inn .7". 1

Hoiim. I! - M Co.. Ltd. 1". i:I Hon. (Jus Co.. F'fd MO

Hon. (las Co.. Com 100Hon. R. T. A L. Co i:,o it:

j InU-r-Islan- P. N. Co it:.Mutual Tel. Co. isi; i s!-- j)alm Ry. & Land Co. . . . 137V2 14 ."i

Pahang Rubber Co 10Tanjong Olok Rub. Co.. . . 20

BONDS.Hamakua Ditch Co. 6s...Haw. C, & S. Co. ."8.....Haw. !rr. Co. tsHaw. Ter. 4s, Ref. JD05..Haw. Ter. 5a, Pub. Imp..Haw. Ter. Pub. Imp. 4s..Haw. Ter. 4sHaw. Ter. SWsHilo R. R. Co. 6s Is. 01. ; 60

jHilo R.R.Co. R.&E.Con. 6a 4o .".()

Honokaa Sug. Co. 6sHon. Gas Co., Ltd. fs. .. 100U"Hon. R. T. & L. Co. 6s.. 103Kauai Ry. Co. 6s 100iMcBryde Sugar Co. 53... . 100..

' Mutual 11. 6s 102Oahu Ry. & Land Co. r.s. . 102 ....Oahu Sugar Co. 6s H'3Olaa Sugar Co. 6s 88Pacific G. & V. Co. 6s.. 103 ....Pacific Sugar Mill Co. 6s 80 uPioneer Mill Co. os 100San Carlos. Milling Co. 6s 100Waialua Agri. Co. 5s 100

Sales: Between Boards 3 Pioneer26; 50 Pioneer 25; 200 Oahu SugarCo. 21;20, 50. 50. 50, 50, 175 OlaaC; 50 McBryde 6; 15, 30. 20 Waialua100; 30, 10 Ewa 21.

Session Sales $1000 Olaa 6s 89; 5H. C. & S. Co. 34; 15 Oahu Sug. Co.6i xg; w wnomea os; d unomea S3 vs.

Latest sugar quotation: 96 degreestest, 4.77 cents, or $95.40 per ton.

Sugar 4.77ctsBeets

Henry Waternousi Trust Ct,Ltd.

Member Honolulu 8tock and BondExchange.

Fort and Merchant StreetsTelephone 1208

NOTICE

Noiiee is hereby given to all mem-bers of the Hawaiian Humane So-ciety holding badges that their commissions, to be valid, must bo issuedby the sheriff dating from January 1,1915.

All members who desire to havetheir commissions renewed willplease report to Miss Lucy Ward, 1123Alakea street on or before April 10,and those not wishing Buch renewalwill kindly return their badges beforethat late.

MRS. L. L. Mc'CaNDLESS,(Adv.) . President

FOR SALE.

Maxwell roadster in good running order; $150 takes it.( Reply Box 165,this office. 613r-5- t

FOR RENT.

One large room witn kitchen; closein. Phone 2543. 6131-3- t

AUTO.

R. Seki, auto for Waialua. 4 u. m.,daily. 6131-t- f

Nishi. auto for Haleiwa, p. m..daily. - 6131-l-

FURNISHED COTTAGE.

Furnished cottage and light housekeeping rooms; all conveniences;electric Mghts; bath, running water;short distance from postoffice; mod-erate, (ianzel place. Fort and Vine-yard. Tel. 1541 6104-t- f

FOR. SALE$550 100x200 on Kaimuki Ave., near

6th; improved, marine view; mustbe sold at sacrifice.

$20,0 to $300--Fe- choice lots, Lana- -

kila tract, above Insane Asylum;fine view; good roads; $25 down,$10 per mon.; no interest

$160 Lots 50x100, 10th ave., Paiolo;$10 down. $3 per ma; no interest

P. E. R. STRAUCHWaity Hldg. 74

MWkkFIVE LARGE SHIPS

TO CALL HERE IN

48 HOURS

KIVK SI II I' Ks.'i'f- - M

Five bin st'ari'ors trr 'i; ;nan pointsd ih. 1'Hf itu :iii d.'.t- - to bertli at

Honolulu w:tliin t lie next 4 hours.'1 hat thp Panama canal ;i a trar.s-(ea-

waterway lias adlcil to the hr.si-nes- s

and imjjorUince of Moricltilu as ashipping fntfr is 'shown in th

number of larse passenger;ind fr.Msht carriers now on the berthto visit the cress-read- s tor coal andoilier supplies.

Completing cargo at Seattle, theBritish freighter Strathcudrick is onits wav to Australia by way or Monolulu. It is due Thursday.

With a heavy ca'ro supplied at var-ious jiorts along the eas: coast ot theUnited States the Russian freighterMopileff. en route to Siberia andNorth China, is expected to call Thurs-day to take bunker coal.

The Inter-Islan- d Steam NavigationCompany has been advised the Rritish freighter Tuscan Prince is pro-ceeding Troni New YorK to the Orientby way of Panama, 'ft is due tomor-row or Thursday.

The Matscn steamer Hyades, with6000 tons of mainland freight Tor de-livery at Honolulu, vort Allen. Kahu-lui, Kaanapali and Hilo is reiorted byCastle & Cooke to be nearing theport.

With nine cabin rassengers. .theMatson steamer Lurline from SanFrancisco, is exnected to berth atPier 19, tomorrow morning.

PSMonteagle Back in Pacific Service.

Again in iossesion op the .Mont- -

eagie, requisitioned Dy the tintish gov-ernment at the beginning of the Avar,the Canadian Pacific Railway resumedits transpacific service Februarv 24. ;

when the MnntpaHp saiioH from iinno.iirroitr fnr Vo n,,,- - Thi, nctfrom Vancouver to the Orient beganMarch 2i

i

Applications have been filed withthe bureau of navigation by the Luck- -

fnbach Steamshin Company for permission to change the names of thesteamships Lyra and San Mateo. Theformer is to be called the Hattie Luck-enbac- h

and the latter Frederick Luck-enbac- h.

PAgSEXfiEES ARRIVEDii

Per steamer Manna Kea from Hiloand way ports. For Honolulu, Apr I

6. J. A. Kennedy, J. Ichikawa, F. E.

Berg wife. Wm. Harlow,

W.

Missand Mr.

True,

Gay.Kinnev.

Mr- -

r.onA-- . Joe Do Rego.' a!

Garcia. K. Zedwitz, S. AusGeo. Silva, H. Pogue, Warren,

Bond.

Girls With beautiful orGraceful Figures

American girls have world-wid- e

reputation for but, at thesame time, there are girls our cit-ies who jwssess neither beauty f;iconor form, because these instancesthey suffer nervousness, the re-

sult disorders the womanly organism. regular theysuffer so much that their strength

them; they so prostratedthat it days for recover strength. course, suchricdic bad onthe nervous system. withered

drawn faces, the darkcrow's feet the eyes, the

figure without curveslend so much to

are the unmistakeable signswomanly

When girl becomes awhen a woman becomeswhen women pass the

middle life, are thelife when and

strength most needed to withstandthe pain and often bysevere organic disturbances.

At critical times arebest fortified the use Dr.Pierce's Favorite old

proved worth that keepsthe entire system perfectlyregulated in excellent condition.

Mothers, if your daughters are i

weak, lack arewith latitude and arepalo and sickly. Dr. Favorite

lust npedsurely bring the totheir cheeks them strongand healthy.

If you are if your daughmother, sister need hell), get

Pierce's Favorite Prescriptionliquid or tablet form. Then addressDr. Pierce, Hotel. Buffalo.

and receive advice8

v:1;-i:icr- book on

si IIMM 11

harbor notesatout ?Hwi of suear.

ireiphter Hakotanis expected to leave Hilo tor New

crk Wednesday venin?.

The Japanese Shinyo M.iruSan Francisco, due at Honolulu:! the Antioles.

Friday, will bring a mail j'romthe mainland.

I last of tons of bunk'rwas put aboard the ireighterIndraehiri late last night. The esseisteamed to the co,it earlythis morning.

Cocke will despatch theAnyo Marti

about 11 o i le k ton orrowThe will leave no freight .itHonolulu.

The sleamor Man! hasIrom Hawaii with 727 sacks of sugar. and small amount of sundriesThe brought SO head cattlto the local market.

The I'nited States army transportSherman, now en route to the slandsfrom San Francisco, is due at the portnext Mondav. The vessel will takecoal before proceeding to Manila bythe way of Guam.

Melody from two bands accompanied the I'nited States army transportThomas to San Francisco 10 o'clockthis morning. The carriedmore im cabin and second-clas- s

passengers, booked at Honolulu

To discharge general cargo, theMatson Navigation chartered steamerFrancis Hanify left fcr islandlast evening. The Francis Hanify will

at Port Allen, Kahului. Kaanapaliand Hilo. It will depart from Hilo

San Francisco about April taking tons sugar

r PASSENGERS BOOKED

Per N. S. Matsonia for SanFrancisco. April 7. Mrs. Hurdtwo children. Miss E. Mrs.Deas child. Chas. M. Remey. ()Latimer, L. M. Zee). L. Collis. HarveyWhiteside. Geo. X. Day, S. E. Hannestradt, J. Sackevitz, B. Randall,Prown, L. W. Burroughs. .1. F. Jordan,E. .1. Smith, Mrs. E. .1. Smith, Mrs..1. M. I.ydgate. W. H. Mathews, W. GDIetzjsch, A. P. D. Ydreu. R

Zane, P. M. Woodworth, Miss C.

Schuster. Mrs. L. Wolcott, Mrs. R. I--

Christie, Miss M. Gorges, Sam Blair.Mrs. Blair, W. Patten, W. L.MnTMplfen M1s tariA Ms.L. Andrews, E. Cresswell. A., .nr, Mp anH Mrs G Hoterhoff.j ahd Mrs. J. C. Wallace, Mrs.D Miss Brown. Mrs. M. S.

I Kn owl ton, Mr. and Mrs. E. Hildreth,i and Mrs. Mr. Mrs.

M. M. Brooks. W. D.Mr. and Mrs. M. I. Cogswell, Mr.Mrs. W. L. Davis, Mrs. A. San-born, Mrs.. B. McMechen, Mr. andMrs. G. K. Sweeney, Mr. and Mrs. R.S. Cast, Dr. and Mrs. R. H. SHyden.Mrs. J. C. Parrish, Jr.. Miss M. Hosack,Mrs. M. K, Hosack. Mr. and Mrs. W.F. Cooper, Miss Ethel Davis, Mrs. A.Becker, Mrs. Holiday, Mrs. F. McFar-land- .

Miss Alice McFarland, andMrs. C. H. Dickey, Mr. and Mrs. L. A.Young, Miss C. Harlow, Mrs. R.Harlow, Mr. and Mrs. C. Ersenman,F. C. Denison, Mrs. B. I. Denison, F.W. Wm. Gtfford, Miss E. Crist.Mrs. John A. Scott, Mrs. I. P. Bell.Miss Florence Miss V. M.erton, Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Mr.

nfi Mrs R. E. Mlxon. Mr. and Mrs.c M Wood, Miss X. Ring, Mrs. J. J.PhnonK Mr anH Mr R R n.-ff-

Mrs. C. Henderson, Master P. Dole,Master J. Dole, Jr.. Master Chas.Dole, Miss Dole, Mrs. Jas. D. Dole.Miss M. Dole. Mr. and Mrs. C. R.,Smead, Mr. Mrs. H. L. Chase, D.

Raymond, Walter Texton. Mr. andMrs. Geo. Huntington, Mrs. E. Wil-hort- .

Mrs. A. C. Kelsey. Mr. and Mrs.L. J. Mailer, St. Geo. Tucker, C. Py-

thon. Miss Zettfe Tucker, Mrs. H. II.Geo. Tucker. Master Hugh M. Tucker,Mrs. Wagner, Miss G.

Collier Achillea is Launched.Achilles, one of the two col-

liers which the Maryland Steel Com-pany is buiding for the Panama canal,was successfully launched February6, at Sparrow's Point. Achilleswill be used to caTrv coal from Xor- -

folk to Panama. She is tonsd. w. and will reany icx trial eariy

June.

STAR.nrLLETI UIVIS YOUTODAY'S NEWS TODAY

If Your Hair is Falling Outwe know of no better remedy than

m "93--Hair Tonic

Richardson. F. D. Richardson, M. F.( p0isai, Miss N. Campbell, Mr. and

Prcsser, M. D. Duane and wife, A. ! Mrs. R B. Wallace, Miss Wallace, R.and A. numburg, Sa- - a. G. J. Campbell. Mrs. A. W.

galcwsky, W. H. Beers, Masters Beers Whitcomb, Mrs. E. T. Roland, Miss V.(2), Mrs. S. Matsubayashi. Mr3. N. Roland, Miss L. Grace, J. McAndrews,Hiratsuki. Mrs. Cummings Smith, Miss Miss K. H; Farm. Miss M. Jauregay,E. Patten, H. V. Patten, Master maid, . Mrs: Parrish, Mrs. S. Meake,

Cullen. A, Morrison, Miss B. Tay-- , Miss G. Baker, Mrs. A. Herring, Mrs.lor, Miss N. Benevitz, Mrs. K. Morita, R. Cuthbertson, Mts. H. Spellman,C. Andrews, H. R. McBeth, Miss F. L. A. Dickey, R. Cuthbertson, John C.Dutton, Mrs. R. A. C. Anderson, Miss M. Wond, Mrs, T. J.Upson, .1. S. Vierra, F. A. Clowes, A. Nolan infant, and Mrs. W. G.Perry, G. W. Bigelow. S. M. Kanaha-- ! Chalmers, Jr., Miss C. E. Crawford,nui, A. Smith,. Mrs. Fugimoto, Misses Miss E. Frazier, Mrs. Gerard Hoyt,Fugimoto (3),,Miss E. H. Moir,

' Mrs. M. A. Mrs. L. P. Prron.R. C. Walker. Mrs. Wilkie. Miss Wil-- , Miss E. True, "Miss True, Miss L.kie, Mrs. Jas. Mattoon and two child-- , Schenck, Mr. a-- d Mrs. S. E. Thomp-ren- .

Master De Me'.lo. From son iflss E- - Mrs. D. F. Kelley.Miss E. Gay, Miss M. Miss Mc-- ! Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Kelley. Mr. and

H. Baldwin. C. Laldwtn, C E Mrs- - R- - J- - Coddington and infant. W.Gay, R. Gay. H. Baldwin, F. A. Edge- - R- - a"on, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Adams,comb, M. Coiiev, Miss J. Betts. C and Mrs- - E- - R- - Mr- - andfThlnpn Dr v Rnrt pviart n ! Mrs. J. L. Stack, Mr. and Mrs. P. H.

Nomura. Nomura.Ishi. K. Y.

tin, J.D.

Faces

abeauty,

inof

infrom

of ofAt intervals,

leaves aretakes them to

their Of pe- -

distress has its effectThe

ana" circles andabout

straight thosewhich feminine beauty of

disorders.a woman.

a mother.through

changes of threeperiods of health

aredistress caused

these woment by of

Prescription, anremedy of

femaleand

ambition, troubledheadaches,

Pierce'sPreserintion is what t'ev to

bloom of healthand make

a sufferer,ter, Dr

in

Invalids' X.

confidentialfrom staff of specialists, that's free:nlso woman's disoas- -

3dvertisament.

Takinjt ten

steamertrorp

large

TheBritish

Siberian

Cast!eJapanese steamer to Hilo

vessel

returned

avessel of

atvessel

than

ports

call

to 8,

3200. of

M. S.and

Myers.and G.

L.

Lucier,R.

Sam N.Gordon.'

A. R.

Mr.Mille. S.

L.Col. Roulett, and

Curtis, F. Adams,and

F.K.

Mr.

A.

Butler,

Guney, Ath- -

Dexter,

F.D.E.

andL.

L.

Hadlaw.

The

The

of 13.2"0

in

Mrf

Young.

Gibb,K.

Lahaina Kelley,

A preparation which we eladIt recom-mend to 50c. a I t t Ic.

Benson, Smith & Co., Ltd.

.i

The steamer .Maun Loa has loadedfirewood a: Hilo for delivery at Ka-- 'i:ului. j

Arrangements have been made tobnnp the Hritisii steano r V rribee to

berth inside the harbor to take bunk-er coa!. before rontir.uinj: the voyageto Australia. The vessel is rejorteJji'1 have leadel earo at 1'iiet Soundj

Purser Phillips of the steamer Manna Kea reported ar iahle winds to1 aupahoelice and moderate seas ndweather returning to Honolulu. Th"1vessel brought 4 " sacks of sugar, asmall shipment of livestock and 133,packages of sundries from Hilo.

Taking r'u cabin passengers fromHonolulu, the Pacific Mail liner Si-

beria steamed at o clock this morn-ing tor San-Francisc- The departureof a score of young women from Mon-

tana who had been spending a fewdays in Hawaii, brought a large crowdof spectators to Pier 7. The territor-ial band played a parting serenade.

The Japanese steamer Anyo Marufrom China and Japan w th Oriental)cargo fcr delivery to Hilo, will arriveotf Honolulu late this afternoon, ac-

cording to a wireless message to Cas-tle A-- Cooke. Federal Customs Inspectors McXicoll, Arcia and Examiner!Hem rose will accompany the vessel to'the Hawaii port. The Anvo is boundfor Mexican, Central and South Amer-ican ports.

MEW TODAYPOSTER AND CIRCULAR.

Sealed proposals for furnishingGROCERIES. MEATS, HARDWARE.COAL, OILS. SHIP CHANDLERY.ETC., for the Honolulu QuarantineStation for the fiscal year ending!June 30, 1916, will be received at thiseffice until 9 o'clock, April 13. 1915,and then opened in the presence ofsuch bidders as may present themselves.

Proposals must be signed In triplicate and addressed to the Chief Quar-antine Officer, Public Health Service,Honolulu, T. H.

The right to reject any proposal isreserved.

Schedules and further Informationmay bo obtained at this office.

F. E. TROTTER.Surgeon, Chief Quarantine Officer.

6131-l- t

HIGH SHERIFF'S SALE NOTICE.

Under and by virtue of a certainWrit of Execution issued by the Honcrable J. M. Monsarrat, district magistrate of Honolulu, City and County ofHonolulu, Territory of Hawaii, on the10th day of March, A. D. 1915, in thematter of Matoba, plaintiff, vs. Wakan atsu Dote, defendant, for the sum ofSeventy-thre- e and 53-10- 0 ($73.53) Do!lars, I did, on the 3d day of April, A.D. 1915. levy upon and shall offer andexpese for sale and sell at public auction to the highest bidder, the property hereinafter referred to, to satisfythe said Writ of Execution, at O. A.Steven's auction rooms, Fort andQueen streets, Honolulu, City andCounty of Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, at 12 o'clock noon of Friday, the

th day of May, A. D. 1915, all of theright title and interest of the saidWakamatsu Dote fn and to the follow- -

ng property of the defendant, unlessthe sum due under said Writ of Execution, together with interest costs and.my fee and expenses are previouslypaid.

PROPERTY TO BE SOLD.All of the right- - title and interest

or the said Wakamatsu Dote in andto that certain lease from Choy Seem.

w to W. Dote, dated July 10, 1908,of land situate at Pawaa. Honolulu.City and Countf of Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, and more particularlydescribed as follows:

Beginning from on the north sidealong Tanaka 155 feet, on the eastl."3 feet on the south along bananaplantation 174 feet and along west 170 I

feet, more or less, being a portion ofthe same premises leased to ChoySeem (w) from Queen LiliuokalaniGrant 20."7. Term, thirteen (13) yearsand six (6) months from 1st day ofJuly, A. D; 1908. at a rental of OneHundred and Seventy and 00-10- 0

($170.00 Dollars per year, pnyablesemi-annuall- y.

Terms, cash in United States GoldCoin.

Dated at Honolulu, City and Countyof Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, this5th day of April. A. D. 191".

W. P. JARRETT.High Sheriff, Territory of Hawaii.

6131-Ap- r. 6. 20. May 6.

Hotel PlazaSan Franci sco'sNEWEST HOTELX. W. cor. Post & Stockton Sts.

Facing the Plaza of Union S.Open February"20, 1915.

Tin the heart of the shoppingand theater districts.

Situated on a corner opposite abeautiful park and having thelargest interior hotel court inthe city, insures sunlight and

ventilation in all rooms.TCuisine and service of the best.Stockton street cars direct tothe Exposition in eight minutes.

JOHN G. BARKER,Formerly Hotel

Stewart.nor.T. j. noniNsoN,

As sistairf --Manager.-

M I L Kof superior tpaality. sterilizedand delivered to residences andto any steamer calling at Hono-lulu.

ICE CREAM un bricks)and

SHERBETS .High class, inly pure ingre

dients used. Many natural fruitflavors.

WHOLESALE RETAIL

Honolulu Dairymen'sAssociation

Phone 1542

PURE ss

o Ice Cream O

ssButtermilkButter and ss

O OFresh Dally at

ss ss

o Rawley's oss Phone 4225 ss

)J1

THE von HAMM-YOUN- G CO.,LTD, Honolulu

Afjenta

A, N. SaiifordOPTICIAN

Boston Building, Fort StreetOver May & Co.

fncrrrx:ysra.iminauwi

NOMOkUUtT.M

P. H. BURNETTB 'Commissioner of Cted for Californiaand New York; NOTARY PUBLICDraws Mortgages, Deeds Bills ofSale, Leases, Wills, etc Attorney forthe Olstrict Courts. 79 MERCHANTSTREET, HONOLULU. Phone 1846.

IF VOU WISH TO ADVERTISE INNEWSPAPERS -

Anywhere, at Any Time, Call on orWrit

EL C DAKE'S ADVERTISINGAGENCY

124 Sansome Street 8an Francisco

HONOLULU DRY GOODS CO.

GRAND TWO WEEK'SSALE NOW ON.

27 8. Hotel St Opp. Bijou Theater

CITY MILL COMPANY, LTD.Importers of best lumber and building

a .(materials, trices low, ana we kivwyour order prompt attention whetherlarge or smair. We have built hun-dreds of houses in this city with per-

fect satisfaction. If you want to buildconsult us.

Latest Mlllfnery

MISS POWER'

Honolulu PhotoSupply Co.

KODAK HEADQUARTERS1059 Fort Street

MEAT MARKET A GROCERY

PHONE 345IC. Q. YEE HOP A CO.

Jordan'sDRY GOODS

Fort SL

PARKER RANCHand

SPICED CORNED BEEF

Metropolitan Meat MarketPhone 3445

Page 7: Indiana Found 3!H - University of Hawaiievols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/30282/1/1915040601.pdf · the Iwilei district last night he re--J County Clerk pai and Attorney

I nil'"

LASTNight

..I' M.i. lyn Arlni-kl- i

In the

Comity Chairmanlit. u ::) ( Vnts. 7:4.') !'. M.

Tomorrow N" i ir 1

Miss Nella WebbAmerica's Greatest

- I iiiii ;i Siiir Active. Aim-rim'- s ircatc-t- .Kn li'oiilf to Autralia

WithSn.MKTIIIXC N'KW

John BarrymoreIn the Famous Phi vers Film

' THE MAN FROM MEXICO ' '

ri,.. 7.1c, ."A. '.")(. Reserved Seats. Phono W.7,

'11

S.Af ft-;'- -

TONIGHT7:30 P. M.

ONLY TWO MORE NIGHTSMATINEE WEDNESDAY

GENTLEMANFROM

Eleventh Episode of the

MILUON DOLLAR MYSTERY

COMING THURSDAY

MISSISSIPPI

PATHE WEEKLY

"Ujj to the Minute'

HIS LAST DOLLAR--The Famous Race Horse Play. Featuring David Higgins

PRICES 10, 20, 30 CENTS.

It's Hard to BelieveBut you will agree, after yon have once fallen

(An Aromatic Castor Oil)

that the disagreeable taste oi" the Castor Oil is entirelydisguised in this meritorious product..

'It is a safe, efficient, non-irritatin- g laxative forchildren as well as. adults.

Sold onlv bv

Benson, Smith & Co., Ltd.W The Rexall Store 'fau '

Fort and JJotel Sts. Phone 1297Open Until 11:15 p. m.

FEBi JCE111E

Leading Prima Donna of the London, Bostontand Paris Opera -- Companies

Two Song Recitals t rROYAL HAWAIIAN OPERA HOUSE

APRIL 10 and 19

Tickets: $:i.00, 2.(X, $1.50; Gallery Seats, $1.00

Tickets now on SaJe, Territorial Messenger Service.

Honolulu Skating RinkThe Tuesday Evening RolW Skating Club has dis

organized and the general public will be welcome onthese evenings in the future.

HONOLULU STAR BULLETIN. TT'RSDAY. APRIL rt. 1915.

FELICE LYNE IS HERE FOR TWO

CONCERTS; HAWAII CHARMS HER DECIDED ON FOR

"-- ,.f

T it(f KfWj!!

-- Wiss Felice Lyne, American, prima denna, who will give two concertsin Honolulu.

! Distinguisbed in that she is the onlyAirerican opera singer to be presenteotc the present King and queen of Eng-

land, Miss Felice Lyne of the BostonOpera Company arrived in Honoluluin the Sierra yesterday and will givetwo concerts at the Opera House dur-ing her two weeks' stay in the islands.

Miss Lyne is the youngest primadonna on .the stage today. Born inMissouri, she received her training inParis and since has spent the greaterpart of her 'time in Great Britain andFrance.

Like many other Americans she,with her mother, was stranded 10miles from Pans when the Europeanwar broke out. Miss Lyne tells in anamusing way of the trouble and wor-ry she and her mother experienced intraveling that short distance into theFrench capital and thence into Eng-

land. That was last August. .

"My long residence in London andParis naturally made m very well

r

T. ROOSEVELT SAID, ITS BULLY!'

Theodore Roosevelt said, "It'sbully." Teddy said this about a num-

ber of different things. But in thisparticular instance he was referringto "A Gentleman from Mississippi,"the big five-a- ct comedy of Washingtonlife. And anyone who was sufficiently i

fortunate to secure a seat for last ;

night's performance at Ye Liberty the-- 1

i ater can readily understand why T. R. :

said "It's bully." Nothing less would, have covered the field. - i

I Tom Wise not John Wise of localphoto-pla- y fame is the particularstar in "A Gentleman from Miasissip--

' pi," and Tom is fat and laughable.Just to watch him move .aroundthrough the picture is sufficient tobring a laugh to the most somber face.Incidentally, Tom, in the role of Sen-- ,

ator . Bill Langdon the gentlemancan Bhow an entirely different disposi-tion when the occasion warrants andin this daring offering of present-da- y

politics the occasions are not infre-quent. I

Opera

"Iin

nip

I Intermingled comedy of Dollar ispolitics are a of interesting before.

' love stories. The entire to nunte f.nEpisode number of Million more, is "bully."

i . - '

' TIME HERE EXTENDEDft 'r n

- -;

"Quo Vadis" will be presentedafternoon and evening during all ofthis week at the Popular theater. Man-ager Bredhoff yesterday received ad-vices that his contract for presentingthis big spectacular production, whichwonld have expired tonight, has beenextended until next night.Tbus be hopes to be able to aecommc.date the crowds that are yet to seethis play in Kvery nightsince last Wednesday the Popular hasbeen while matineeshave been the largest in the historyof the house.

Pupils from Kamehameha school d

the roatinee yesterday. P.utfor the fact that it is vacation weekin the public echools it was hoped tohave the students of each of the dif-ferent schools in Honolulu attendafternoon during the balance of theweek.

The plav. dealing as it does withthe davs of Vero in "Rome, is fine that

-- 'appeals to nearly everyene. and them manner which it is staged and thb

different thrilline scenes enacted arebound to anpeal both to those whohave studied the early history as wellas others who have given it but littlethought.

Seats are being reserved clear upto SMnrf'av n'cM snd it would bewell fcr these who he; e to pee "Quo

'.''".'-'-7

ncxiuainted there and all the menwhom I knew in those cities havegone lo the tront. Many of them al-

ready have been killed."Miss Lyne sang before the king and

queen of England in 1912. when shewas playing the role of Marguerite :n"Faust." At the close of the opera shewas presented to their MissLyne says n.at the queen does' notfavor the people of the stage.

Next spring Miss Lyne will join theInternational Company, now be-

ing formed in Paris, and which, shesays, will tour Europe in spite of thewar. "During the paftt six months MissLyne's work has been largely alongconcert lines on the

Miss Lyne first visited Honolulurbout a year ago when fromAustralia.

have traveled about the world andhave been many places," se says,"but I find Honolulu to be the mostbeautiful place of all."

v;.

1

Scene from "A GeirtJemaii FromMississippi, now being shown at YeLiberty theater.

with the Mystery" as thrilling as anyseries and that has gone

entertaining bill, Ti,iv11 "The

each

Saturday

Honolulu.

crowded, the

each

in

majesties.

mainland.

returning

Vadis" to order tlirir tickets early. Atelephone order will insure ycur tick-ets being held at the Ik. office untilyou call for thm.

.Manager Bredhoff last night hadspecial attendants on the outside toarrange for the parking cf the largenumber of automobiles lined up onboth skies r,f Hotel street fronting thePopnlar theater.

ORIENTAL FILM

HEADLINE!! AT

EMPIRE TODAY

Amid brilliant settings 'only found inth- - niilpn past. ;i comiKinv of t.--i lfntf!

' players have made much of thf high-- .

ly pictorial dramatic offering in two!

i artb, "The Moonstone of Fez,"' thej Empire theater's headliner today.! V'auiice Costello. a universal favorite,will be spen in a delightful role inthis prttcntxus rodurtirn. It is th?

SHRINE BALL IS

24TH0F APRIL

Bal Masque on Roof Garden of

The Young Hotel Will Be

Big Social Event

Alter considerate discussion it wasdecided by the committee in charse ofthe lans for the lal masque of theArab patrol. Mystic Order of Shrine,of which S. A Walker is chairman,that the masquerade which hid ireviously been set for ril : but post-poned owinn to the disaster to thesubmarine F-- 4 be now set for A i ril24.

At this meet inn. held today, a ma-

jority of the members of the commit-tee were present, the sub-chairme- n reIKirtinsi fine progress in their differ-ent brandies and a general report onthe advance sale of tickets provingmost gratifying. The Aral) p'trol balmasque will be one of the big socialevents of the present seison. numer-ous members of the local snnrt setbeing busily engaged at the presenttime arranging costumes and selectingthe personnel of parties that will re-

main together throughout the evening.It is anticipated that this event willsurpass in gorgeotisness any masquer-ade that has been held in Hono.'ulu inseveral years. The Shriners are knownthe country over as royal entertainersand Aloha temple refuses to take aback seat for any.

The bal masque will anticipate thevisit of the patrol to the 1915 sessionof the imperial divan, to be held inSeattle in June. At this session a fightwill be made to bring the liflfi sessionto Honolulu. This fight will be led byJ. S. ("Sunny Jim") MeCandless. anofficer of the imperial divan and oneof the strong Hawaii boosters.

The masquerade of April 24 will beon the roof garden of the AlexanderYoung hotel, where preparations forcaring for the Shrtners and. their nu-merous friends who will be presentwill be handled by the hotel manage-ment

first screen appearance of T Law-rence Mills, the emotional actor. Inthe cast are Robert Gailloard, Eliza-h- u

Jensen, Constance Talmadge andRex Hitchcock

The plot is laid in the legendarydesert of Algeria. - The-- story has todo with the attempt on the part ofwarring tribes to secure possession ofpriceless gems held by a reigningsovereign. Several pitched battlesare featured. The coloring is mag-nificent.

A fine comedy photoplay, called"The Fable of Napoleon and theBumps, is an attraction that shouldbe accorded an enthusiastic reception.It will serve to Introduce several newcomedians to local theater-goers- .

"Accused" Is a powerfully acted dra-ma, produced by Edmund Lawrence.It tells a tale In which high financeplays an important part

Extremely pleasing and vividly de-picted, the trials and tribulations ofthe "Walko Sisters" will amuse. Itwill give an opportunity to a numberof funmakers to make the best out ofa late mainland release.

Brown's

Bronchial

Trocbes,

recommended byraarty promiAOAtpriesla and cler-gymen for bron-chitis, a5th macougha and throataffectioivs.

John L Brcwa Soa, Bostoa, Uiu, U.S.A.

510 Caille Street.Detroit, Mich., U. S. A.

S J

'

!

J

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6lfflr8 KLFIlc'S MlMHOTtf --lt olTi('- -

ys. eiidl for

jyrs.oJaieJ&Kenzie7tin.J0nr1- - la the wonderful K C Book.SIrs. :

McKenzie nm cungtells housewife how to become an bow to prepare

such appetizing the family will go simply wild you set

The K C is illustrated In 9 colors, contains 90 andrecipes that will be successful

time if the few simple suggestions are followed.The K C has prepared

at an expense of thousands of dollars,and if purchased at a store would easily cost50 yet we it as we

want yon to exactly what 16. v:

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MARINE ENGINES 2 h. p. to 30 h.

p. Perfection in design and construction.

STATIONARY ENGINES For Farmor factory use.

PORTABLE MOTORSMake boating a real pleasure.

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A Special Sale Is Now OnAT

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EAST INDIAN STOREEverything in Chinese, Japanese, Javelian and Philippine goods

Now on Display until April 15th onlyDon't miss it. Not another chance like this ! Great reductions in price.

DHARAMDAS & WATUMULL1150 Fort St. . Blaisdell BIdg; -

I

Page 8: Indiana Found 3!H - University of Hawaiievols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/30282/1/1915040601.pdf · the Iwilei district last night he re--J County Clerk pai and Attorney

eight ITONOLlTTiU STARTUJLLETIN, TTKSPAY. APISH, r.

Mjs NYIl.'i Y1I is the ami in my the

et who has ever in .1.

TUc cadets of theSchools began, their last terra ofschool morng after

an Easter vacation Incanon at Makua.

The 160 strong, left the was that timefcchool last Monday tinder

v

of theLieut Booth. Camp was atthe old favorite spot. CampIpsa, at Kaena Point. The cadets .car-fle- d

"their arms along, but the onlywork while in. camp, during

the six days was guard duty. Amplesupply of was carried8long,. and 'the older boys were giventen Tounds daily for goat Therecord of wild goats on the Ka-aJ- a

ridge; thla year 'was not so goodas that of. the year.30 "goats were killed andtbejr. skins, were asiriies. .. ' v

The younger boys had the1 time oftheir ;llvesv -

There were no of , any kinAOn four, cadets leftcamp when they w,erfmissed at roll call during retreat much

'was Tell-- : among Hbo facultyand v When tne four Doysr

K.v Martin anda Kama, failed to show at 8:30that Lieut Booth toone of theknew the" trails veil. 'Heto make a hunt for the tobt cadets and,

left camp at 9 o'clock witha lantern. "': He-- atJ 2: 30 the aaraev night with: the. losttoys and waa, given- - a hearty threet beers. . There was.

during the wtek. J Camp was'

'The' cadets ,m in? sometard work for the next nine week ofthe , School term, k .,

kind many of the mew tsspent the week ajso'. Tfte.cadets; the, , outing verymuch. v. .tv-- i; H. E. of, the NeV Jork firmbearing his name has written the

for. to beIn NeV York ;,CJty. Mr.

reaided ; In thetlanda.'.- - .: "U'H' : .

l

L

,; or x

iag oa or Iand r

-

; V: ! 3

are aD for

the yon

the In this wayyou will be sure ofthe

and ?

; by the

. .S. A.

. For Sal x

-

-

It

Be atIn '

Big

One of the few of theOpera of Messina

at the time of the whichthat place is

the of the Bevan!Grand Opera which willopen a limited at the Bi- -

YJou theater April 15. Sac- -

cnetti at by

killed

at

up

ta

Puccini to create the role ofin hit great opera "La

'" The at 5 o'clockon the of the day set for the

of the grand opera season atAll. of the lost their

lives with the, of Madam KeTlliech, the lyric

Slgnotv the famousItalian and Mr.

andwaa most andThe hotel .'In "which they were

was Asthe walls and roof of the

fell around . the .a rtists mhowere the same room a largetimber as lodged -- on an . angle inthe debrtB and the two men were ableto crawl down,, lo thestreet below or rather, what had beenthe .. ,

has never fullyfrontv thV ' which

hia three day of heroic workIn the' and dying.

fr 72 hours he and the fewof the - disaster ' worked without

sleep or" food, several of thelater to the ofthis .work! "'

The tenor role In The Olrlof the Crlden West," Is ere-atlo- n

of he ha zing made atouf of In Hhl :;r;i

jvblcn : he was h Euro--

pean senpon.

was made of theof Andrew J. Currier of

New MasSw, as agent of theat

R. I which big cot-ton milla.v - --J " .

I i

V

'vdK.M:..SSC--

tnor Bevani

Nella Webb, the artist who sprang-- , shall know tluit sho isinto Instant favor-i- n the sreat jtte of

music hails' sVmer five years ago. and Ur t,v1 i...... that, odHwnose weeaiy envelope aouDiea day8 andsize several times within a few weeks, she et4a tulaand whose ability has kept her in con-- 1 line of andstant demand In and Au3tra when an artist wins the thatlia since that time, will appear as the' she has won in, these abilityfeature at the Bijou theater g the for the

one week, rona of the music hall are very severeLight. To say that Miss Webb will critics and that "gets by"be the feature Is saying a with them must be well above thegreat deal for the feature film offereJ average.at the same time Is "The Man From

John Aclever, wXn anclever actor.

While and havethe cradles the rearing Horace Keats,

miss a acuity as, a "single'and while she is

orwoman, she is very anxious that all

will colorafforded to enjoy big who delves intolaugh over George Ade's famous cora- -

",TheThia Famous Player feature closes at

, the theatlr with ier--f

or nee and MacJn ;Sweatnam will have their

credit the fact that they have cansedin this cfty laugh and

laugh at their clever work in -- thestory love politics In

days."The County is

worth while, being aneven upon' ihe

owing to the tact that the filmallows for much greater detailstory. The work artists is equal

the living drama for the reason thatthe for many years onstage are also the in thepicture. created the namepart while to goes thecredit for being Sas- -

"vj

O i

4

:.::-n-;:::;:;::t v i- w ,

v I ' "'v -

f , .

?

vvithGrartd Qpera .

s

.

.

pat-fo- r

,'

.' Miss Webb is no en route to

- response awhich reached her while in New York,and expects to the

for several yeafsTbeen for of . to Miss

weoo

for an

offer

Webb, is clever pianoforte artist and has worked with the

for severalyears..

be the last safras a ofto a but

Bijoumi

P. to

tobigof and

a

ing,of

of theto

the

the of

In to

in

an

withal' remains leastis xloubJy being of

stripe the po-

litical boss with' whom he to

steamerfmm with

V .

sailed61 :? bales of

cotton for Bremen.Fielder of New Jersey

signed the bill, theof women as police officers.

Eat what yon want and not bewith if you win take a

auici.before and after each meal. Sold onlyby ua 25c a box.

Snien, Smith A Con Ltd.

The of thewill he

held at the churchand Friday. Pas-

tors ?nd from all of thein the islands

are to attend. Theand the Sunday

schools will join with the main church-es in .the

night at 7:15 thewill meet outside the church

with the1 of tha Oahu YounsUnion and, led by

the society f the Chinese church, thei. will march into the

church at 7j?0 where a program willbe carried out. A social wiythe of the

motor .

lit)THE GREATEST OF ACTRESSES

Will play at the Theater for one week only beginning Tomorrow Night, 7th

Nclla Webb is the only American who achieved success in England to that won bytheir own great vaudeville, stars such as Vesta Vesta Victoria, Alice and Ada Reeves.

highest salaried vamlovilU artiste opinion elever

singing actress apjeareo! Honolulu. COHKX.

HAM CADETS

RETURN

ENCAMPMENT)

Kamehamehn

yesterday spend-ing, enjoyable

battalion.morning

command military instructor,pitched

McCandt

military

ammunition,

taunting.

previous Atttold"reported

brougM back)

awlmmlng ;tishlpgaccidents

Friday morningoclockand

anxietystudents.

Kauhahe, Croen,V.evening appealed

neighbors, obn;Katpn,ho"volunteered

tarefotted,rettirned kocamp

noherV'excUeJnentstruck Saturday.

vwlllnow

President WebstermaieTacuhinTrampv

appreciated

Websterpro-

motion committee literatureHistributed

Vehstef, 'formerly- -

?: --Maih?

The frec!y-sK(n-g corJbsck&djusts itseif tocvtfv.

morion posture avoki- -strkia clothes

thoulders. ensuring

Absolate ComfortAvoid imltadoiis They

inferior. Lookwords SHIRLEY

PRESIDENT stampedbuckler

getting

genuine goods light,cool, strong sujaemelycoxnfortab!e,iirKorididonafly

guaranteed makers.

Shirley,Etftywhmr

Tenor Who Will HeardBijou Theater Was

'Quake

survivorsMunicipal Company

earthquakedevastated Umberto Sac-chett- i,

firlrao-tenor- e

Company,engagement

commencingengaged

RudolphBoheme."

earthquake occurredmorning

openingMessina. company

exceptioncelebrated Blemish

soprano; AnchLschl,baritone, Saccbettf.

The-escap- e. oPAnchlschf Sac-

chetti remarkable thrilli-ng!-residing literally .demolished.

wreckedbuilding

occupying,

squirrel-like- ,

--street...,;Sacchetti recovered

'nervous breakdownfollowed

assisting' woundedsurviv-

orssurvivors

qcuTnbin& exhaustion

leadinganother

Sacchetti'asAmerica follow-

ing featnml.on

Announcement ap-

pointment,Bedford,

Warren. Manufacturing CompanyWarren; operates

NE A

EAMERICAN

SACHETT1

WlDD

SURVIVOR OF MESSINA

irrnn

UmbertoCompany.

DISCOVERED ABROAD

n

London' claiming Georgia Jstate

rncestore bT!,?SinIcnit, fcniand Australia,

admits, discoveredparticular' entertainment

England popularitycountries

attraction essentiaf demand.,commencing tomorrow

anythingattraction

Mexico," starring Barrymore.photo-pla- y exceedingly

England Australiaaccompanist

frequentlymistaken English Australian

TOMIAIM' FOR LASHI1Tonight gentleman

Honolulans deeply politics

edyrania, Cohnjty

tonight'a

.Willis

hundreds

ante-bellu-

Chairman" photo-play improve-ment animated

principalsprincipals

ArbuckieSweatnam

originator

Aus-tralia, cablegram

remain. southerncontinent

exceedingly

charming' entertainer

opjwrtunlty Livingston,

Chairman.T

Arbuckle-an- d

Sacchetti,

partisan, whateverpolitlc'i particular

happensassociate.

AmericanGalveston

Navajo

Governorallowing appoint-men- t

You Can Enjoy Lifetroubled

indigestion

EVANGELICAL

CONVENTION

annual, convention Ha-

waiian Evangelical AssociationKawaiahao Wed-

nesday, Thursdaydelegates

Evangelical churches,expected Christian

Endeavor societies

convention.Thursday Endeavor

societiesmembers

People's Christian

organizations

concludeChris-

tian Endeavor.'

stopped

I have lu-ar- d Xella Wehh in Australia ami in Lomlon. In loth instances she wjts the ri

liit of the hill. Honolulu is fortunate in having tin oortunitv of hearing this clever per-

former. SAM BLAIR.

IS

all

ADVERTISING

GETS RAN ON ALL

ON TOMORROW, WHISKY POSTERS

ccnventionThuraday

Government-authoritie-

ricejn.flgrjfct,

CD

F.irtlif r details of an iuiirtfor

takfu ly tho Posterin which whisky posters are

buruti rame intnafl in the form of an official

to the Pioneerof this city.

The by the direc-tor:, of the is as follows:

That on and after thefirst day of May, Ptl". no contractsposters which whisky, rum,gin, brandy or other liquorsshail he posting by anymember of this and allcontracts for such prod-

ucts shall not later than.31, 1 9 1 r and no

posters suchshall appear on the boards ofof the under any

The was

I )

MmJ

;alopted by the directors at the meet-ing held at Palm Heath, Fla.. Marchli..

This action is due, lu large part, tothe uplift which the

has been In all over thecountry as by the

posters, "loy Scout,"Da v." (Irant" and other losterswhi ii have already seen.It was as the height of In-- (

( for the toj o;nt!nue to explc.it whose.reputation

ant step proclaimed.Advertising As-

sociationfrom billboaida yes-

terday'snotification Advertis-ing Company

resolution adoptedassociation

"Resolved,for

advertisespirituous

accepted forassocfatlon.

advertisingterminate

December ; thereafteradvertising products

membersassociation circum-

stances whatsoever."resolution unanimously

mmmm- -

e

TD)

movement associ-ation engaged

evidenced "Nativi-ty" "'hlldren'S

Honolulansregarded

nsistency organizationproducts

ill enects is so wmeiy

" "Kramer,Pioneernolulu, out his

w posters' ,i v- -

he t(X)k over business some tenyears ago.

To recover for Territory a tractat Keoneula. Kapalama-kai- , Honolulu.

Commissioner Joshua ' Tuckerfiled an ejectment suit against the

United Chinese Henevolent Society,which the grant from,Republic of Hawaii in 180B. The land,

acres, was hospital pur-poses. The commissioner avers It hasnot been used for that purpose. Rep-

resentative W. H. Crawford recentlyIntroduced a In thewhich would require the commissionerto Issue a fee simple patent to the so-

ciety for the land.. , ;...- - 'T--

TREFZG11LChampion iyp

TO)

SONG

Bijou April

Artist equalTilly, Lloyd

FROM

A MEDICIN0F MERIT

A proprietary medicine, like everything elae that comes before the pub-lic, has to prove its merits. Thelaw of the survival of the fittest ap-plies ia this field . as In others. Thereason for the tremendous success, ofI.ydia E. rinkham'a Vegetable Compcund is because it has been fulfillinga real numan need for 40 years, sothat today thousands of Americanwomen owe their, health, andnesa to the marvelous power of this -

Charles R. owner of the meuiuue, l)tmAdvertising Company of Ho, an? f!!lJ!&? ff-- f

points that company jggBSMBnIras refused hisky ever since '

the

the

Landhas

received the

1.84 given for

bill . legislature

Tha House of 8IInt Drama, - I

Evening (Two shows nlahtly) l:4sand 8:30 'clock.

TODAT8

THE MOONSTONE OF FEZTwo-ree- l drama..... Vltagraph

Walko Sisters-Com- edy

LublaAccused ; .

Drama KatemThe Fable of . Napdlor and His. !Bernap-r-Cpmed7r.ii- Eaaanay

CONTENli tlbcrllis no writing niliclrre in; gthe world that cah toni Bpare with the Under- - ' g

wood for ipeed and accuracy. ,--

World's typewriter records prove gthis. Every professional! amateur gand school championship has jj

been won by operators using the 'ijjj

underwood" I

The Machine You Will Eventualljf But

PROGRAM:

q

J