6
IB 4 r s Jk J What Ih Bewt for Wliul Ih Bent lor M A WAIL Ih Best for Hllo Ih Bent Jot Uh 1! rr !T' tt Vol. 9. HILO, HAWAII, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, FRIDAY, MAY 20, .1904. No. 29. 1)C gUci Gfcilnmc PUoMHIIKI) KVKRY FRIDAY IrHICK, IClNII STKKKT, Hll.O, HAWAII. ThIUUNK Ul.OCK. Hllo Tribune Publishing. Company, Ltd. Publishers nd l'roprlctot. President C. C. Kkxnkdv .....'.... it. E KtciiAHtir iecrctnry-lreaimre- r. w c- - CooK Auditor A. K. Suttom Director H. M.Tiiomison. I). W. Mahmi . Advertisements jimccoiiipntiicd by specific itslrucllons Inverted until ordered out. Advertisements ill.cotulmieil before expiration the undersigned, in Hllo, Hawaii, within of specified period will be charged n ir con- - tgx molllull tlle Jalc f tJ,jg notice, tluued for lull term. 'or such claims, if any, will be lorevcr Address nil communication either to the Klrrt.,l Hdltorlalor HiKlnentJopartmeiitK or Thk Hilo" TRIBUNE PtJHLISHINO COMPANV. MK&. liKftLH 1IL.AV.K 1 A, ThecolumnolTilKmi.oTRlnu.-Kareatway- l . mT o.ieuto coiuinimlcatloiia bn subicct within the "Ho, Hawaii,!. H., 1904. e of the paper. To receive proper attention, each article must be algned by itn author, The! name, when desired, will be held confidential. TUB IIilo TKliiu.Vfc la not rcrponiibte for the opiuloua or statements of correspondents. ATTOUXKVS-AT-1-A- Wise & Ross, j ATTORNEYS-AT-LA- Will practice In alt or Hie Territory, and j the Supreme Court of the United States. Office; Trwunk Building, Bridge Street, 1iii.o, hawaii C. M. I.KUI.ONI) W. II. SMITH LeBlond & Smith ATTORNEYS-AT-LA- Hawaiian, Japanese, and Chlncac interpreters, and Notary Public In Office. Office: SnVKRAtiCK Huilmng, Opposite Cour House, HILO, HAWAII J. CASTLK RlDGWAY TllOS. C. RlDGWAY I Ridgway & Ridgway ATTORNKYS-AT-I.A- Solicitors or Patents General Law Practice HILO, HAWAII. Notary Public in Office. Ol'VICH : Walanuenue and Uridge Streets HEAL ESTATE, ETC. - I. E. RAY ATTORNEY AT - LAW and NOTARY PUBLIC Wuianueuue St. Hilo, Hawaii DENTISTS. M. Wachs, D. D. S DENTIST Office Hours: 9 to 12, 1 to 4. IIILO, HAWAII Geo. H. Williams NOTARY PUBLIC CONVEYANCING In Laud Office Walanuenue Street, - - Hilo IS A. H. JACKSON FIR15 AND LIFE INSURANCE AGENT FOR NEW YORK LIl'E WAIANUENUE STREET, - HILO S. GRACE Agent for PACIFIC MUTUAL LIFE, FIRE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE CO'Y OF CALIFORNIA HILO, HAWAII. f W. H. BEERS INTERPRETER and TRANSLATOR (English and Hawaiian) Commission and liusiuess Agent. Will Act as Administrator. Guardian and Executor. Rents and Hills Collected.. Office with I. E. Ra. Telephone 146 j . UHTAULlBHUU 1U5H. BISHOP & CO.! Bankers. ' Honolulu - - Oahu, H. I. 10' Transact a General Hanking Ex-- , change busines Commercial and Traveller's Letters of Credit Issued, available in all the principal cities of the world. Special attention given to the business entrusted to us by our friends of the other Islands, either as Deposits, Collections Insurance or requests for Exchange. iljO Notice to Creditors. fron, Courts United States of America, ) ... Territory of Hawaii, S In the Circuit Court of the Fourth Circuit. AT CltAMUKKS IN 1'HOUATK. In the mutter of the Estate of JOHN I). KEAWEHANO, deceased. Notice is hereby given that the under- - signed has been nppoiutcd Aclmitiistrn- - Irix of the estate of John I). Keawehano, 0f Hllo. Hawaii, deceased. All creditors of said deceased are here- - by notified to present their claims, whether secured or unsecured, duly veri- - m a licit niul with nroner voucliers. It mi v. to p. S. LYMAN & K. A. LYMAN, Attornevs. 27.4 Hilo Railroad Co. Short Route to Volcano TIME TABLE Iu effect July 13, 1903. Passenger Trains, Except Sunday. I A.M. P.SI STATIONS A.M. P.M. 7:30, 3:00 IV IIilo.... 9:3 6:00 7:50 y. ar...01an Mill. 9:10 5:30 :oo, 340 ar Keaau.., 9:00 5:i5 8:15 4:00 ar... Ferndale . 85 5:00 8:30 4:30 ar..Mount. V'w..lv 8:3. 445 A.M. i'.M SUNDAY. A.M P.M. 8:00 3:30 lv Hllo ar 10:30 5:30 8:so 3:50 ar...Olan Mill...ar IOHO 5:i0 8:30) 4:00 ar Keaau ar 10:00 5:00 8ms! 4:iS ar... Perndale...nr 945 4MS 9:00 4:3oar..Mount. V'w..lv 9:30 4:30 A.M.! POR PUNA P.M. 10:30,., lv Hilo ar 350 10:50,., nr...Ulaa flllll...ar 3:30 11:20.. ar..Pahoa Juucar 3:00 12:40.. ar Pahoa .....ar 2:40 12:00.. ar..l'ahoa Junc.ar 2:20 12:20... ar Puna lv 2:00 I A.M. Sunday. P.M. 9:00 lv IIilo ar 4:50 9:20 ar...01aa Mill...ar 4:30 10:05 ar..Pahoa June 4'.00 10:25 ar rauoa....nr 340 10:45 ar..Pahoa Junc.ar 3.20 1 ar Puna lv 3:00 Excursion tickets between all points nre sold on Saturdays and Sundays, good returning, until the following Monday noon. Coinniutat.ou tickets, good for twenty-fiv- e rides between any two points, and thousand mile iickets nre sold at very low rates. W. II. LAMBERT, Superintendent. WH. G. IRWIN & CO., Ltd. Sugar Factors, Commission Agents. Sole Agents for National Cane Shredders, Baldwin Locomotives, Alex. Cross & Sons' Sugar Cane and Coffee Fertilizers. CRESCENT CITY BARBER SHOP CARVALHO BROS., Proprietors. The Old Reliable Stand is still doing WORK Razors honed, Scissors and all edged tools perfectly ground. Satisfac- tion Guaranteed, I'HPDGrVTnr J Cf I KC,I I Ot sLvll. - HONOLULU. COMMISSION MERCHANTS AGENTS AND BROKERS Correspondence Solicited, ROBERT INNES LILLIE WHOLESALE COMMISSION MERCHANT AND I1ROKER. Exporter f Inlana Produce, ,,ooks Kept aml Audited. Koom ' Spread.' Block, - Hilo Notick Neither the Masters nor Agent of vessels or the "Matsou Line" will be responsible for auv debts con - trailed by the crew. R. J GUARD, Agent. IIilo, April 16, 1901, 34- - BY AUTHORITY. for ih Construction of i li p Main ttomlBHween Oo-kn- hi and Kukainii, II Hawaii. Honolulu, T. H., May 12, 1904. Ploposals will be received at the office of the Superintendent of Public Works, Honolulu, until 12 o'clock 111. of Mon- day' MHy 23, 1904, for the construction of Sections 1, 4, and 5 ( 4800 A. ), of the main road between Ookaln . Kukninu, in Hatuakua District, Hawaii. Plans and revised specifications arc on file nt the office of the Ast. Supt. of Public Works, and nt office of E. E. Richard Agent Public Works Depart- ment, Hilo, copies of which will be furnished intending bidders on receipt of $5.00, which sum will be returned to the bidder after he has deposited his bid and returned the plans. Proposals must be submitted on the blank forms, which will be furnished by the Assistant Sujicriiiteiiilent of Pu)!ic Works, and enclosed iu a sealed envelope addressed to Hon C. S. Holloway, Supt. of Public Woiks, Honolulu, T. II., dorscd "proposal Ookala-Kukai.- en- -' miles ot railroad were crippled yes-f- or tenlay between Hingyo and Wa- - road." Each proposal must contain the full name of the pirty or parties making the same, anil must w accompanied by a certified check ol 5 of the amount of the proposal, payable to C. S. Holloway, Superintendent of Public Works, as surety that if the pioposal be accepted a contract will be entered into. No proposals will be entertained unless made on the blanks furnished by the Assistant Superiutennileut ot Public Works, and delivered at the office of the Superintendent of Public Works previous to 12 o'clock ui. on the day specified. The Superintendent reserves the right to reject any or all bids. C. S. HOLLOWAY, 27-- 3 Superintendent of Public Works. LEGAL NOTICES. United Stntcs of America Territory of Hawaii ) In the Circuit Court of the Fourth Circuit. In Bankruptcy At Chamhkks. In the matter of the Estnte of GEORGE M. DEACON. The petition of Fjauk A. Medc.ilf. assipeeof the above estate having l,een he asks that the Court may set b tlay for the hearing of this petition, that n notice may be published notifying nil persons interested herein to apptar ana snow cause, ti any mey nave, why this petitioner should not be dis- - charged ffom all further liability from his obligation ns assignee of the said ramie, that vuui ijtiiuuui'r s UCCUIIIUS may be examtued aud approved. And that he may be discharged from further duties and that his bond maybe declared cancelled. Notice is hereby given that Mondav the 13th day I). 1904.nl and ed the of Court At and cerucu may appenr tnow cause, II any they have, why petition should be granted. Tlilr. Ilnu-ni-i M,.t. It ' the Court: DANIEL PORTER, Clerk. ') united states A.neric. Territory of Hawaii, J,ss Iu the Court, of the Circuit At'Chamiikrs In Pkohath. the matter of the Estate of EKAEKA of Kalaoa. deceased. PETITION FOR ALLOWANCE OF ACCOUNTS AND FINAL DIS - CHARGE. The Petition of llila Waialee nilininist - rntor of the Estate Ekacka deceased, been filed, wherein he his niiAitmlc avmiiliiiifl n . .il i1 ". Hie has been She o bilitys administrator. ordered, that Tuesday the 28th day of lunc 1904 nine o'clock A. the time set for hearing of the ition the Court of the Fourth Circuit South Hawaii, H'l ,)lacc i".1.1 l,crso,,s Ifeon" uiiiiu miuj ujiJi;iii rmuvi .iiui 11 liny they have, why the prayer the pet- ition should be granted. Hawaii, May iS, 1904. Ily the Court: DANIEL Ily Chas. Hitchcock, Deputy Clerk 'P. Lyman. Attorney Petitioner. 29-- 4 Lost. Hilo Light Co.'s drawn First Hank of Hilo, Ltd. I9"3. favor T. Guard. amount 0f $33,20. Payment same stopped. N. C. WILI.FONG, Treas. IIilo Co., Ltd. Hilo, April 1904. "27.3 & SHOUT CAIH.KOItAMS. Hiruiingham, England, May 13. Chanincrlain 1ms resumed his campaign. London, May 14. Russia is con - centrating 125,000 just beyond the Caucasus. Ncwchwang, May, 16. to- - tal number of troops landed at Pitzwo is now 30,000. Moscdw, May i7.-- The C7.nr was received enthusiastically and has left for Klmrkoff. i v.iiu.uig, iiiuj iiiiu Iniitennfle 1imA lM.tiln.1 frrtfr.e liorn ' , ...,. aim more are cxpecteti wciincsuay Tokio, May u.-- The Japanese GovenRiicnt has decided insue an additional war loan of ?20,ooo, 00, j Constantinople, May 14. The . n 1 i 1 i inrKS uavc VJiiaRcs , Sassottn, Armenia, killing many people. Newchwany, May 16. Thirty fjuticu. Loudon, May 12. Japanese war loan floated on the British market has teen oversubscribed twenty times. Tokio, Japan May ti. The Jap- - janese g&Vrison at Anju has repulsed an attack made by a force of 200 Cossacks. Rome, May 14. It is reporled that internal situation of Russia is serious and that a revolution is threatened. Seoul, Korea, May 13. The Russian Vladivostok squadron has been bnyfd up in the harbor the Japanese. Washington, May 15. Congress- man Hearst hns declared that he will whomsoever the party names for President. New York, May 15. Marconi has arrived. He says he main- - ,tajllcd sl)ore communication with ' Europe 1 700 miles. London, May 17. btxty Jap- - anese warships and transports are it Hlackny bay. Heavy firing has ! been heard Kinchati bay. Ltaoyang, May 17. The Chinese governor of-- Foochau personally led an attack on the coal mines at , i,.. a.i... .if....:.. 'nil rnnmpcc tnpot flip Riiomv An attempt will probably be' made 'to cut off Vladivostok , Liaoyang, 14. he advance 8nl of the first Japanese army is six miles below Liencheiigkun on the road to Liaoyang. This place is strongly fortifying. tt 1 T r A iokio, japan, .uay 13, v jap- - ' !lesc torpedo-boa- t was accidentally ' blown up while removing the mines laid by the at Dalny. Seven of the crew were lost. St. Louis, May 11. Ex-Quee- n will leave . Saturday on her way ' t0 Honolulu. Atlttilig, .Maj 15. During ihn l darkness of Sunday night a fight between Russian detach- - Clients near Hamilton. Each be- lieved the other an enemy. The loss was no killed. Tokio, May 12. The Japanese war officials deny the Russian icport 'that communication with Port Arthur has been restored. The Japanese claim that the Rus-- 1 sian naval base is practically isolated. Newchwang, May 14. The re- - treating Klissians are minting the railway stations and such they arc unable carry with ' them. The Chinese are committing depredations near Yinkow. of June. A. 9iiu'1 i w.jb o'clock m. be hereby is appoint-- 1 tons. for hearing said petition "in Court- - room this nt Hilo, Hawaii. Posstet, May 12. A Japanese which time place all persons con- - boat has been seen in the roadstead nnu said not r.r.. Bv of Circuit Fourth In ol having asks Iwa ntwl that """"" a final Order i""""" be made "I't" of distribution Lihttokalaui, who recently arrived ,'fU,LMropcrtyrcmalnlnKin his Imiid!. to, l,erc xvith Delegate Ktthio to visit the persons thereto entitled, dis. charL-iiiL-hi- , from nil furlliLT rPMionsi. Fair, quite ill. ' r ." such It is nt M., said pet- - iu room Court at Hilo, nt ?'h!.ch, Vf. aim ol not Hilo, PORTER, Clerk. S. for Electric check No. 599, on Aug. 15, R. on F.lec. Light ag, men The here .T. i. W 1... . uiirncti near The , the by support for 111 111 In May I T Russians ll01c occurred railway foodstuffs as to ." a. ". "" and l4. j is NO HANK DEAL, (.!. M. CooKcSnys Tluil The Deal Is off. Honolulu May 10. Tlie down town district lins been very much excited this week over an alleged deal for the combination of the Bank of Hawaii and the First National Hank. The town had a riKt e interested because, if the mcrBcr wcra madc h WCMI,,nM! one lof ,h, b,8Bt business transactions thiU !,as t,,ken P,ace " the lllsi,ies history of the Islands. oiuriea a.- - iu iiic mrius in ine deal have bscn numerous There have been varus of the Hank of Him.aii.s dt,,ire t0 obtal1 Nal!oiini bank ndvflntngcs nud cons;dcring Ue purehase of the Fir3t Natjonai majority stockholders held their se- - curities at too high a figure for the '. . - Hank o Ilawa 1 non to reach. C. M. Cooke, of the Hank of Hawaii, was toda the first one of those interested willing to talk for publication. Mr. Cooke said to a Bulletin re porter: ''It is all talk. Nothing whatever in connection with the consolidation has even been sub- - milted to our Hoard of Directors. I know there has been all kinds of talk 011 tlu streets. I have even had applications for positions. I have heard that we had it all ar- ranged to locate the main bank where the First National now is and that the "savings institution would take our place here." What is the rijal story about the deal?" "There is no story," replied Mr. Cooke, "except that the deal is off. I personally had a verbal option on shares iu the National and had iu mind a consolidation. The price asked, however, was jumped up $25 a share and I dropped the matter. You may say the deal is ofT." W. G. Cooper, cashier of the First National Hank, said:' "NjOi option on the control of this bank has been given anyone nor will any be given." Beyond this Mr. Cooper would say nothing. Object to Married Wo num. A grievance is finding muttered veut among young school teachers of local training, which has nothing to do with the cutting of salaries. It relates to the employment of married women as teachers, while many single women who have qualified for the profession cannot find situations. The complaint has particular reference to married women whose husbands are earning good salaries in public or private employment. It is said that this very thing is strictly forbidden iu San Francisco. A story is current of a woman who formerly taught in San Francisco having got married iu Honolulu aud cone back to the I Czar it journey of with intention of empire. trip being for purpose bidding now thc ehm NO It KH 1(1. NATIONS YET. The- - Proposed Cut hi Salaries of Tear hers Not Felt. Honolulu, T. H. May 12. was stated the office of Department of Public Instruction that the reduction of teachers' sal- aries under changes and economies instituted by the Legislature iu special session, had not brought forth any resignations. Upon the approach of the summer vacation, every year there are always a number of teachers dropping out of the Terrilorial service. These are generally young folks who have come down from mainland educa- tional institutions to labor in Ha- waii's fields of knowledge awhile. They enjoy the climate, scenery, variety, change and recreation, then yearn for home-folk- s, perhaps receive more remunerative offers elsewhere, or get married and leave Hawaii. This year will doubtless see the usual number these tutorial exits from Paradise, but the crcat army of Hawaii's, children need not feel alarmed or fear that will not be enough teachers to go around, for Territory, in its excellent academies, turns out its own teach- ers and there arc plenty hand. The general policy of the depart- ment, however, is to get here folks to instruct who arc a little more advanced and more experienc- ed than young teachers just turned out. For this reason does the arm of the Education Board reach out to Chicago and other mainland for talent. They come, stay awhile (some course remaining for periods) aud then go on their way rejoicing at the ex- perience gained here and the pleas- antness of having visited Hawaii. While some mny influenced leave by the cuts which take effect in July, 110 resignations have been received. Liaoyang, May The Russians succeeded in crippling a Japanese cruiser Tuesday in Salieuwan Hay. A lieutenant and three jackies in a naptha launch under cover of dark- ness were successful in reaching the cruiser as she lay iu the bay and exploded a hand torpedo under her. The cruiser was not sunk, but was badly damaged. Seoul, May 16. The prefect of a town near Anju reports a Sunday invasion by Cossacks. The invaders seized provisions and horses, taking and valuables and assaulting women. The pre- fect reports also that the Cossacks opened the jail aud liberated prisoners which had been confined there. The greatest excitement prevails iu the village over the out- rages. officers aud a number Chinese soldiers. Saturday bandits attacked the coal mines near Port Adams and drove out the officials and looted I the place. Coast. Her marriage was not pub-- ; St. Petersburg, May 16. The lished here and she obtained a posi-- ! Russian authorities claim to have tion as teacher in San Francisco bce informed of a secret agreement upon the strength of her former between China and Japan whereby record. When the school author- - the Japanese are planning to drive ities of that city, however, were Kuropatkiii aud his troops formed that she had a husband iluo Mongolia. The plan then, capable ofsupportiug her the women I say thc Unssian authorities, is for the Chinese to assail the invaders, was dismissed. Here, it is said, there are instances of husband and thus avoiding the appearance of wife both employed by the Hoard of ' a"' infringement of the neutrality Education at salaries aggregating a, as already proclaimed by China and handsome income, all the insisted upon by Russia, that single teachers are without Liaoyang, 16. Bandits, on chance utilize their hard-obtaine- d Friday, attacked the coal mines ten diplomas for gaining a livelihood, j miles north of here. Three liuud-Wive- s of men doing well iu other red Russians successfully defended prolessions and callings are also the place and pursued the bandits on the educational payroll, if all' to neighboring villages. Tim accounts are true. Advertiser. Russians killed fifty and took '"" . many prisoners. Among the pri st. Petersburg, May 16. The soners were two Japanese army has started on 2, 000 miles the of visit - ing nine cities the The is made the of farewell to the troops leaving for front. It at the yet of there the on down are cities of long be to yet 16. small money the of while May to '&& 'uW im raa iri...

Jk J iljO - University of Hawaii · market has teen oversubscribed twenty times. Tokio, Japan May ti. TheJap--janese g&Vrison at Anju has repulsed an attack made by a force of 200

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Page 1: Jk J iljO - University of Hawaii · market has teen oversubscribed twenty times. Tokio, Japan May ti. TheJap--janese g&Vrison at Anju has repulsed an attack made by a force of 200

IB

4

r

s Jk JWhat Ih Bewt for Wliul Ih Bent lor

M A WAILIh Best for Hllo Ih Bent Jot Uh

1! rr !T' ttVol. 9. HILO, HAWAII, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, FRIDAY, MAY 20, .1904. No. 29.

1)C gUci GfcilnmcPUoMHIIKI) KVKRY FRIDAY

IrHICK, IClNII STKKKT, Hll.O, HAWAII.

ThIUUNK Ul.OCK.

Hllo Tribune Publishing. Company, Ltd.

Publishers nd l'roprlctot.President C. C. Kkxnkdv

.....'.... it. E KtciiAHtiriecrctnry-lreaimre- r. w c- - CooK

Auditor A. K. SuttomDirector H. M.Tiiomison. I). W. Mahmi

.Advertisements jimccoiiipntiicd by specific

itslrucllons Inverted until ordered out.

Advertisements ill.cotulmieil before expiration the undersigned, in Hllo, Hawaii, withinof specified period will be charged n ir con- - tgx molllull tlle Jalc f tJ,jg notice,tluued for lull term. 'or such claims, if any, will be lorevcr

Address nil communication either to the Klrrt.,lHdltorlalor HiKlnentJopartmeiitK or Thk Hilo"TRIBUNE PtJHLISHINO COMPANV. MK&. liKftLH 1IL.AV.K 1 A,

ThecolumnolTilKmi.oTRlnu.-Kareatway- l . mTo.ieuto coiuinimlcatloiia bn subicct within the "Ho, Hawaii,!. H., 1904.e of the paper. To receive proper attention,

each article must be algned by itn author, The!name, when desired, will be held confidential.TUB IIilo TKliiu.Vfc la not rcrponiibte for theopiuloua or statements of correspondents.

ATTOUXKVS-AT-1-A-

Wise & Ross, j

ATTORNEYS-AT-LA-

Will practice In alt or Hie Territory, and j

the Supreme Court of the United States.

Office; Trwunk Building,Bridge Street, 1iii.o, hawaii

C. M. I.KUI.ONI) W. II. SMITH

LeBlond & SmithATTORNEYS-AT-LA-

Hawaiian, Japanese, and Chlncac interpreters,and Notary Public In Office.

Office: SnVKRAtiCK Huilmng,Opposite Cour House, HILO, HAWAII

J. CASTLK RlDGWAY TllOS. C. RlDGWAYI

Ridgway & RidgwayATTORNKYS-AT-I.A-

Solicitors or Patents General Law PracticeHILO, HAWAII.

Notary Public in Office.Ol'VICH : Walanuenue and Uridge Streets

HEAL ESTATE, ETC.-

I. E. RAYATTORNEY AT - LAWand NOTARY PUBLIC

Wuianueuue St. Hilo, Hawaii

DENTISTS.

M. Wachs, D. D. S

DENTIST

Office Hours: 9 to 12, 1 to 4.IIILO, HAWAII

Geo. H. WilliamsNOTARY PUBLICCONVEYANCING

In Laud Office

Walanuenue Street, - - HiloIS

A. H. JACKSONFIR15 AND LIFE INSURANCE

AGENT FOR NEW YORK LIl'E

WAIANUENUE STREET, - HILO

S. GRACEAgent for

PACIFIC MUTUAL LIFE, FIREAND ACCIDENT

INSURANCE CO'Y OF CALIFORNIAHILO, HAWAII. f

W. H. BEERSINTERPRETER andTRANSLATOR(English and Hawaiian)

Commission and liusiuess Agent.Will Act as Administrator. Guardian andExecutor. Rents and Hills Collected..

Office with I. E. Ra. Telephone 146 j

.

UHTAULlBHUU 1U5H.

BISHOP & CO.!

Bankers.'

Honolulu - - Oahu, H. I.

10'Transact a General Hanking Ex-- ,change busines

Commercial and Traveller's Letters ofCredit Issued, available in all the principalcities of the world.

Special attention given to the businessentrusted to us by our friends of the otherIslands, either as Deposits, CollectionsInsurance or requests for Exchange.

iljO

Notice to Creditors.

fron,

Courts

United States of America, ) ...Territory of Hawaii, S

In the Circuit Court of the Fourth Circuit.AT CltAMUKKS IN 1'HOUATK.

In the mutter of the Estate of JOHN I).KEAWEHANO, deceased.

Notice is hereby given that the under- -

signed has been nppoiutcd Aclmitiistrn- -

Irix of the estate of John I). Keawehano,0f Hllo. Hawaii, deceased.

All creditors of said deceased are here- -by notified to present their claims,whether secured or unsecured, duly veri- -m a

licit niul with nroner voucliers. It mi v. to

p. S. LYMAN & K. A. LYMAN,Attornevs. 27.4

Hilo Railroad Co.Short Route to Volcano

TIME TABLEIu effect July 13, 1903.

Passenger Trains, Except Sunday.

I

A.M. P.SI STATIONS A.M. P.M.7:30, 3:00 IV IIilo.... 9:3 6:007:50 y. ar...01an Mill. 9:10 5:30

:oo, 340 ar Keaau.., 9:00 5:i58:15 4:00 ar... Ferndale . 85 5:008:30 4:30 ar..Mount. V'w..lv 8:3. 445

A.M. i'.M SUNDAY. A.M P.M.8:00 3:30 lv Hllo ar 10:30 5:308:so 3:50 ar...Olan Mill...ar IOHO 5:i08:30) 4:00 ar Keaau ar 10:00 5:008ms! 4:iS ar... Perndale...nr 945 4MS9:00 4:3oar..Mount. V'w..lv 9:30 4:30

A.M.! POR PUNA P.M.10:30,., lv Hilo ar 35010:50,., nr...Ulaa flllll...ar 3:3011:20.. ar..Pahoa Juucar 3:0012:40.. ar Pahoa .....ar 2:4012:00.. ar..l'ahoa Junc.ar 2:2012:20... ar Puna lv 2:00

I

A.M. Sunday. P.M.9:00 lv IIilo ar 4:509:20 ar...01aa Mill...ar 4:30

10:05 ar..Pahoa June 4'.0010:25 ar rauoa....nr 34010:45 ar..Pahoa Junc.ar 3.201 ar Puna lv 3:00

Excursion tickets between all pointsnre sold on Saturdays and Sundays, goodreturning, until the following Mondaynoon.

Coinniutat.ou tickets, good for twenty-fiv- e

rides between any two points, andthousand mile iickets nre sold at verylow rates.

W. II. LAMBERT,Superintendent.

WH. G. IRWIN & CO., Ltd.

Sugar Factors,Commission Agents.

Sole Agents for

National Cane Shredders,

Baldwin Locomotives,

Alex. Cross & Sons' Sugar Cane

and Coffee Fertilizers.

CRESCENT CITY

BARBER SHOP

CARVALHO BROS.,Proprietors.

The Old Reliable Stand isstill doing

WORKRazors honed, Scissors and all edged

tools perfectly ground. Satisfac-tion Guaranteed,

I'HPDGrVTnr J CfI KC,I I Ot sLvll.-

HONOLULU.

COMMISSIONMERCHANTS

AGENTS AND BROKERS

Correspondence Solicited,

ROBERT INNES LILLIEWHOLESALE

COMMISSION MERCHANTAND I1ROKER.

Exporter f Inlana Produce,,,ooks Kept aml Audited.

Koom ' Spread.' Block, - Hilo

Notick Neither the Masters norAgent of vessels or the "Matsou Line"will be responsible for auv debts con -trailed by the crew. R. J GUARD,Agent.

IIilo, April 16, 1901, 34- -

BY AUTHORITY.for ih

Construction of i li p

Main ttomlBHween Oo-kn- hi

and Kukainii, IIHawaii.

Honolulu, T. H., May 12, 1904.Ploposals will be received at the office

of the Superintendent of Public Works,Honolulu, until 12 o'clock 111. of Mon-

day' MHy 23, 1904, for the constructionof Sections 1, 4, and 5 ( 4800 A. ), of themain road between Ookaln . Kukninu,in Hatuakua District, Hawaii.

Plans and revised specifications arc onfile nt the office of the Ast. Supt. ofPublic Works, and nt office of E. E.Richard Agent Public Works Depart-ment, Hilo, copies of which will befurnished intending bidders on receiptof $5.00, which sum will be returned tothe bidder after he has deposited his bidand returned the plans.

Proposals must be submitted on theblank forms, which will be furnished bythe Assistant Sujicriiiteiiilent of Pu)!icWorks, and enclosed iu a sealed envelopeaddressed to Hon C. S. Holloway, Supt.of Public Woiks, Honolulu, T. II.,dorscd "proposal Ookala-Kukai.-

en- -' miles ot railroad were crippled yes-f- or

tenlay between Hingyo and Wa- -

road."Each proposal must contain the full

name of the pirty or parties making thesame, anil must w accompanied by acertified check ol 5 of the amount of theproposal, payable to C. S. Holloway,Superintendent of Public Works, assurety that if the pioposal be accepted acontract will be entered into.

No proposals will be entertained unlessmade on the blanks furnished by theAssistant Superiutennileut ot PublicWorks, and delivered at the office of theSuperintendent of Public Works previousto 12 o'clock ui. on the day specified.

The Superintendent reserves the rightto reject any or all bids.

C. S. HOLLOWAY,27-- 3 Superintendent of Public Works.

LEGAL NOTICES.

United Stntcs of AmericaTerritory of Hawaii )

In the Circuit Court of the Fourth Circuit.In Bankruptcy At Chamhkks.

In the matter of the Estnte of GEORGEM. DEACON.

The petition of Fjauk A. Medc.ilf.assipeeof the above estate having l,een

he asks that the Courtmay set b tlay for the hearing of thispetition, that n notice may be publishednotifying nil persons interested herein toapptar ana snow cause, ti any mey nave,why this petitioner should not be dis- -

charged ffom all further liability fromhis obligation ns assignee of the saidramie, that vuui ijtiiuuui'r s UCCUIIIUSmay be examtued aud approved. Andthat he may be discharged from furtherduties and that his bond maybe declaredcancelled.

Notice is hereby given that Mondavthe 13th day I). 1904.nl

anded the

of Court Atand

cerucu may appenr tnow cause, IIany they have, why petition should

be granted.Tlilr. Ilnu-ni-i M,.t. It '

the Court:DANIEL PORTER, Clerk.

')united states A.neric.Territory of Hawaii, J,ss

Iu the Court, of the CircuitAt'Chamiikrs In Pkohath.

the matter of the Estate of EKAEKAof Kalaoa. deceased.

PETITION FOR ALLOWANCE OFACCOUNTS AND FINAL DIS -

CHARGE.The Petition of llila Waialee nilininist -

rntor of the Estate Ekacka deceased,been filed, wherein he his

niiAitmlc avmiiliiiifl n . .il i1".Hie has been She

obilitys administrator.ordered, that Tuesday the 28th

day of lunc 1904 nine o'clock A.the time set for hearing of the

ition the Court of the FourthCircuit South Hawaii,

H'l ,)lacc i".1.1 l,crso,,s Ifeon"uiiiiu miuj ujiJi;iii rmuvi .iiui 11 linythey have, why the prayer the pet-ition should be granted.

Hawaii, May iS, 1904.Ily the Court:

DANIELIly Chas. Hitchcock, Deputy Clerk

'P. Lyman.Attorney Petitioner. 29-- 4

Lost.

Hilo Light Co.'sdrawn First Hank of Hilo, Ltd.

I9"3. favor T. Guard. amount0f $33,20. Payment same stopped.

N. C. WILI.FONG,Treas. IIilo Co., Ltd.

Hilo, April 1904. "27.3

&

SHOUT CAIH.KOItAMS.

Hiruiingham, England, May 13.Chanincrlain 1ms resumed his

campaign.London, May 14. Russia is con -

centrating 125,000 just beyondthe Caucasus.

Ncwchwang, May, 16. to- -

tal number of troops landed atPitzwo is now 30,000.

Moscdw, May i7.-- The C7.nr

was received enthusiasticallyand has left for Klmrkoff.

i v.iiu.uig, iiiuj iiiiuIniitennfle 1imA lM.tiln.1 frrtfr.e liorn '

, ...,.aim more are cxpecteti wciincsuay

Tokio, May u.-- The JapaneseGovenRiicnt has decided insuean additional war loan of ?20,ooo,

00, j

Constantinople, May 14. The.n 1 i 1 iinrKS uavc VJiiaRcs ,

Sassottn, Armenia, killing manypeople.

Newchwany, May 16. Thirty

fjuticu.

Loudon, May 12. Japanesewar loan floated on the Britishmarket has teen oversubscribedtwenty times.

Tokio, Japan May ti. The Jap- -

janese g&Vrison at Anju has repulsedan attack made by a force of 200Cossacks.

Rome, May 14. It is reporledthat internal situation of Russiais serious and that a revolution is

threatened.

Seoul, Korea, May 13. TheRussian Vladivostok squadron hasbeen bnyfd up in the harborthe Japanese.

Washington, May 15. Congress-

man Hearst hns declared that hewill whomsoever the partynames for President.

New York, May 15. Marconihas arrived. He says he main- -

,tajllcd sl)ore communication with' Europe 1 700 miles.

London, May 17. btxty Jap- -

anese warships and transports are

it Hlackny bay. Heavy firing has! been heard Kinchati bay.

Ltaoyang, May 17. The Chinesegovernor of-- Foochau personallyled an attack on the coal mines at

, i,.. a.i... .if....:..

'nil rnnmpcc tnpot flip RiiomvAn attempt will probably be' made

'to cut off Vladivostok

, Liaoyang, 14. he advance

8nl of the first Japanese army issix miles below Liencheiigkun onthe road to Liaoyang. This placeis strongly fortifying.

tt 1 T r A

iokio, japan, .uay 13, v jap- -

' !lesc torpedo-boa- t was accidentally' blown up while removing the mineslaid by the at Dalny.Seven of the crew were lost.

St. Louis, May 11. Ex-Quee- n

will leave . Saturday on her way' t0 Honolulu.

Atlttilig, .Maj 15. During ihnl darkness of Sunday night a fight

between Russian detach- -

Clients near Hamilton. Each be-

lieved the other an enemy. Theloss was no killed.

Tokio, May 12. The Japanesewar officials deny the Russian icport

'that communication withPort Arthur has been restored.TheJapanese claim that the Rus-- 1

sian naval base is practically isolated.

Newchwang, May 14. The re- -

treating Klissians are minting therailway stations and such

they arc unable carry with' them. The Chinese are committingdepredations near Yinkow.

of June. A. 9iiu'1 i w.jbo'clock m. be hereby is appoint-- 1 tons.

for hearing said petition "in Court- -room this nt Hilo, Hawaii. Posstet, May 12. A Japanesewhich time place all persons con- - boat has been seen in the roadstead

nnusaid

notr.r..

Bv

of

Circuit Fourth

In

olhaving asks

Iwa ntwlthat"""""a final Orderi"""""be made

"I't"of distribution Lihttokalaui, who recently arrived

,'fU,LMropcrtyrcmalnlnKin his Imiid!. to, l,erc xvith Delegate Ktthio to visitthe persons thereto entitled, dis.charL-iiiL-hi-, from nil furlliLT rPMionsi. Fair, quite ill.

' r."

suchIt is

nt M.,said pet--

iu roomCourt at Hilo, nt

?'h!.ch, Vf.aim

olnot

Hilo,

PORTER, Clerk.

S.for

Electric check No.599, onAug. 15, R.

on

F.lec. Lightag,

men

The

here

.T.i.

W

1... .

uiirncti near

The

,

the

by

support

for

111

111 In

May I

T

Russians

ll01c

occurred

railway

foodstuffsas to

."a.

". ""

and l4.j

is

NO HANK DEAL,

(.!. M. CooKcSnys Tluil The Deal Is

off.

Honolulu May 10. Tlie downtown district lins been very muchexcited this week over an allegeddeal for the combination of theBank of Hawaii and the FirstNational Hank. The town had a

riKt e interested because, if themcrBcr wcra madc h WCMI,,nM! one

lof ,h, b,8Bt business transactionsthiU !,as t,,ken P,ace " the lllsi,ieshistory of the Islands.

oiuriea a.-- iu iiic mrius in inedeal have bscn numerous Therehave been varus of the Hank ofHim.aii.s dt,,ire t0 obtal1 Nal!oiinibank ndvflntngcs nud cons;dcringUe purehase of the Fir3t Natjonaimajority stockholders held their se- -

curities at too high a figure for the'. . -Hank o Ilawa 1 non to reach.

C. M. Cooke, of the Hank ofHawaii, was toda the first one ofthose interested willing to talk forpublication.

Mr. Cooke said to a Bulletin reporter: ''It is all talk. Nothingwhatever in connection with theconsolidation has even been sub- -

milted to our Hoard of Directors.I know there has been all kinds oftalk 011 tlu streets. I have evenhad applications for positions. Ihave heard that we had it all ar-

ranged to locate the main bankwhere the First National now isand that the "savings institutionwould take our place here."

What is the rijal story about thedeal?"

"There is no story," replied Mr.Cooke, "except that the deal is off.I personally had a verbal option onshares iu the National and had iumind a consolidation. The priceasked, however, was jumped up $25a share and I dropped the matter.You may say the deal is ofT."

W. G. Cooper, cashier of theFirst National Hank, said:' "NjOioption on the control of this bankhas been given anyone nor will anybe given." Beyond this Mr.Cooper would say nothing.

Object to Married Wo num.A grievance is finding muttered

veut among young school teachersof local training, which has nothingto do with the cutting of salaries.It relates to the employment ofmarried women as teachers, whilemany single women who havequalified for the profession cannotfind situations. The complaint hasparticular reference to marriedwomen whose husbands are earninggood salaries in public or privateemployment. It is said that thisvery thing is strictly forbidden iuSan Francisco. A story is currentof a woman who formerly taught inSan Francisco having got marriediu Honolulu aud cone back to the I

Czar it journey ofwith intention

of empire.trip being for

purpose biddingnow thc

ehm

NO It KH 1(1.NATIONS YET.

The-- Proposed Cut hi Salaries of

Tear hers Not Felt.

Honolulu, T. H. May 12.

was stated the office ofDepartment of Public Instructionthat the reduction of teachers' sal-

aries under changes and economiesinstituted by the Legislature iuspecial session, had not broughtforth any resignations.

Upon the approach of the summervacation, every year there are alwaysa number of teachers dropping outof the Terrilorial service. Theseare generally young folks who havecome down from mainland educa-tional institutions to labor in Ha-

waii's fields of knowledge awhile.They enjoy the climate, scenery,variety, change and recreation, thenyearn for home-folk- s, perhaps receivemore remunerative offers elsewhere,or get married and leave Hawaii.

This year will doubtless see theusual number these tutorial exitsfrom Paradise, but the crcat armyof Hawaii's, children need not feelalarmed or fear that will notbe enough teachers to go around,for Territory, in its excellentacademies, turns out its own teach-

ers and there arc plenty hand.

The general policy of the depart-ment, however, is to get herefolks to instruct who arc a littlemore advanced and more experienc-ed than young teachers justturned out. For this reason doesthe arm of the Education Boardreach out to Chicago and othermainland for talent. Theycome, stay awhile (some courseremaining for periods) aud thengo on their way rejoicing at the ex-

perience gained here and the pleas-

antness of having visited Hawaii.While some mny influenced

leave by the cuts which take effectin July, 110 resignations havebeen received.

Liaoyang, May The Russianssucceeded in crippling a Japanesecruiser Tuesday in Salieuwan Hay.A lieutenant and three jackies in anaptha launch under cover of dark-ness were successful in reachingthe cruiser as she lay iu the bayand exploded a hand torpedo underher. The cruiser was not sunk,but was badly damaged.

Seoul, May 16. The prefect ofa town near Anju reports aSunday invasion by Cossacks. Theinvaders seized provisions andhorses, taking and valuablesand assaulting women. The pre-

fect reports also that the Cossacksopened the jail aud liberatedprisoners which had been confinedthere. The greatest excitementprevails iu the village over the out-

rages.

officers aud a number Chinesesoldiers.

Saturday bandits attacked thecoal mines near Port Adams anddrove out the officials and looted

I the place.

Coast. Her marriage was not pub-- ; St. Petersburg, May 16. Thelished here and she obtained a posi-- ! Russian authorities claim to have

tion as teacher in San Francisco bce informed of a secret agreement

upon the strength of her former between China and Japan whereby

record. When the school author- - the Japanese are planning to drive

ities of that city, however, were Kuropatkiii aud his troops

formed that she had a husband iluo Mongolia. The plan then,

capable ofsupportiug her the women I say thc Unssian authorities, is forthe Chinese to assail the invaders,was dismissed. Here, it is said,

there are instances of husband and thus avoiding the appearance of

wife both employed by the Hoard of' a"' infringement of the neutrality

Education at salaries aggregating a, as already proclaimed by China and

handsome income, all the insisted upon by Russia,

that single teachers are without Liaoyang, 16. Bandits, onchance utilize their hard-obtaine- d Friday, attacked the coal mines tendiplomas for gaining a livelihood, j miles north of here. Three liuud-Wive- s

of men doing well iu other red Russians successfully defendedprolessions and callings are also the place and pursued the banditson the educational payroll, if all' to neighboring villages. Timaccounts are true. Advertiser. Russians killed fifty and took

'"" . many prisoners. Among the prist. Petersburg, May 16. The soners were two Japanese army

has started on 2,000 miles the of visit -

ing nine cities theThe is made the

of farewell to thetroops leaving for front.

It at the

yet

of

there

the

on

down

are

citiesof

long

be to

yet

16.

small

money

the

of

whileMay

to

'&&'uW

imraairi...

Page 2: Jk J iljO - University of Hawaii · market has teen oversubscribed twenty times. Tokio, Japan May ti. TheJap--janese g&Vrison at Anju has repulsed an attack made by a force of 200

m

12

&)C Uor vtlumc.

l R I DAY, MAY 20,

F.nteiidntthe Postoliiec at Illlu, IIn

wall, ns nccoiul-clti- matter

1'Ulll.lHlllll) KVKKV I'HItiAV.

V. C. Cook - - Hditor

BOLTERS WANTED.

sucu a us wus uiulli,ft 1 Mil' tliuil 1 a r ( f aa . ..

are for, let them step up tothe front and endorse

1904.lengthy editorial, and

reasons, Parsons

judge.the dis--

erect silencethe

whereupon set

lfl...r.,.,.v. Uu-1i.i- t holier pipmglooktng the

P.irsons." sons candidate. The "originalHerald. , Parsons" man did not originate in

The above is nil appeal to nil ranks, and withoutbolters from the ranks stultifying republicanism, theto support the bolter candidate for espouses the factionist causejudgeship. The friends of Parsons ' with poor grace. We fail to

in asking ceive where the appointment of the

suppott for a poor ' Straw man." Herald's candidate promote

The Herald berates any effoorts harmony, and after all that haslooking toward h.irmony or the ap- - said in of Parsons in

vtointnieiit of any oilier man cxeent his fight on Judge Little, theown candidate, They would jectionists can find liotning to the

deny the right of Little and disparagement of Homer L. Ross.his friends to support any man ex- - j Mr. Ross man of highest

ccpt the factionist candidate, yet on honor integrity, is iti no inan-the- ir

side make no overture of j ner identified with any faction orinr,'tinn In. tvitlulmwiiiiT flip tinmc Mnrtimis. rmd if would be

" , ... ,, . ....1.! 1 ...i : ..:..i like knowOI J'arSOUS supporting nuiiiti ill iiuunui, uuuuim:u uiiu iiiii.iiii.iiL. Ross. Well knowing that the Judge.continuation the strife which re- -

suited in launching the name of U. Smith, the redoubtable,

Charles V. Parsons as a judicialaspirant, meant the loss of the ap-

pointment to a Hilo man, JudgeLittle withdrewhisown name and ifhis opponent were animated by

the same spirit, all classes wouldnow be united 011 L. Ross

It impertinent to assume thatthe supporters of Little wouldsupport Parsons or sit idly by andallow the plum go to. Honoluluby default.

ECONOMY.

Great has beencaused in the ranks of Hilo teachersby the announcement from Hono-

lulu of the proposed reduction of

20 per cent, in school teachers' sal-

aries. Rcirjnchment by cuttingdown the present meagre salaries ofthe splendid corps of teachers ofHawaii is a very short sighted pol-

icy. There is no royal or rapidroad to learning and a teacher mustspend years of study andapplication to prepare himself orherself for the work of educatingthe'army of children growing upmanhood and womanhood. A

school teacher is obliged to per-lor- m

a period of probaticn in teach-

ing before he or she receives a fairlyremunerative salary, and theent scale of wages for this class ofskilled labor is entirely too small acompensation for the training andpreparation required of publicschool teachers. The HawaiianIslands have established for them-

selves an enviable reputation in thematter of public schools, and thehigh standard of education of itsyouth. This has been possible onlyby means of a splendid school system of employing only the best

teachers to preside over our publicschools. The unfortunate school

teacher, aside from the annoyanceand embarrassment of being unablefor the past several months to col-

lect their earnings account of

repudiated treasury warrants, nowis confronted with the prospect of a

cut in salaries, which will force

many to seek employment in otherwalks of life. This is heaping in-

sult upon injury and the teachershave good cause to be indignant.The Territory can ill afTord to econ-

omize by substituting cheap teach-

ers for the. present high grade oflearning which has marked theteaching force of the Islands andmade iguoiauce in all classes in

the exception and not therule.

To any one familiar with the

ranee the part of the Herald to

what they propose eipeeiallyin matters of appointment the tenureof which has not It is

and rank arrogancesuggest that Little's

ever informationsuggested by the Herald.

WHERE THE HARMONY.

THIS WKHKW TklhUNU, III1.0, HAWAII, FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1904.

In abriefer ones, our contemporary con

tinues to without giving tothe public any satisfactoryfor, its sudden support offur It was a notable fact

that Herald maintained auntil the withdrawal of

'Judge Little from contest,the genial editor up

before in behalf of Stuith'Par- -

Republicanrepublican its

Herald

would

behalfob-the- ir

Judgeis a the

and

nniiointcd

atlll

ofJohn

Homeris

FALSE

consternation

Hawaii

do,

lintls liimseli a stauncn supporterof Home and at naval

being Iunous stirringmanager of for waves, led

be edifying to Gov- - think cries,with allernor as well

to poli-- j her light put five

tical acrobats as nautical mile PortHerald and Hygenic to sing

refrain of his claims for recogni-

tion at hands of a republicanadministration.

BENEFIT CUXUEUT.

(liven at tho Haiti Church lieu

ellt or Wnlakua Mission.

The concert and held atthe Haili Church last 'Friday

u pronounced success. The program,though a lengthy one, was meritorious

many the numbers evok-

ing generous upplause. The Mission will

benefit by sale of tickets 85.65.In as much as all the expenses con-

nected with the concert were contributedgratis, the entire proceeds are availableto begin work on the found ition of the

home to erected in Waiakea.

Same

The following was the piogram:1. Greeting Chorus Choir2. Solo (Native)3. Glee Club (Solo chorus, native)

Hen Spalding4. Songs Little primary S. S. Class

5. Solo "Last Night" Nnole6. Selections by Mem. Adult Class

7. Drill "Red, and Illue"Small men of S.

8. Solo (Selected) Mr. Kalaina9. Vocal Duct in Native Mary and Kealaro. Trombone Solo -- Prof. Carvalhoir. Recitation and Song "Spilling"

Young Class

12. Solo (Selected) Mrs. Siemsou

13. Selection Mrs. Curtist4. Killarny Quartette15. Organ Solo Mrs. Lewis16. Solo and Chorus Fishermen"

Glee Club17. Prof. Carvalho18. Culture Class Gestures, Recitations,

Songs and Tableaux.

Circuit Court Opens.The May term of the Circuit Court for

the fourth Circuit convenedat 10 o'clock in courtroom

in Hilo, Judge Little presiding. TheGrand Jury was properly reach

as to by the Court,and proceeded immediately to the trans-action of business, with 15. N. Holmes asforeman. The calendar for the term

and all cases passed temporarily.I'. M. Prosier, Deputy Attorney-Genera- l,

appears for the Territory in all criminalcases. The Grand Jury is expected toreport this morning.

The personnel of the juries is as fol-

lows:Jury H.N. Holmes, Foreman;

Clius. R.Garcia, Duncan, Adam Lind- -

Kawaihae,

Sousa, R. A.Byrne, D. I.ycurgus

Petit Jury H. WPuhr, C. W.multiplicity ol duties Todd, Chas,

nihilities which the President has Moore, J. Iturkenshaw, J. Cosgrove, J.mnei riailv. it shows ilmio- -' "il'rg. joaquiin Carvalho, Geo. W,

on

C.

Jas. C.ibb, C.Il'reil Haley,

Lehman, J, M. Ross,Pua, Isaac Krickson,

Sayinauue rreMiiuiu i.usmiiiuwiHx-i- i K(lM cmSi J. McGuire,he not to reappoint T. Cany, Jas. Pollock,Judge Utile. I'te-ddenl- s are not O. P. Anderson, Albert Homer and John

given to announcing in advance '"lto

expired.not ptobible isto Judgeopponents receivedas

HILO

several

explain,

entertainment

throughout,

S.

Wednesday

nitiable

Muetlng.Rev. Curtis the

at the Waiakea Set-

tlement on "Home Responsibilities amPrivileges. Mr. Kalaina will as 'in-

terpreter. Songs by Waiakealiveryoue

HOIK) II 11AVKK.

Japanese Fiction Founded 011

Fact.ITrinmlnlrit from "Blilnbum"

jApanmc Kt.lriciil.by n

No more untrustworthy thingthan the ,.. priceprinciple and Viceroy AlexielT'sdeclared safe protection over theJapanese residents have ever exist-ed in the world, every window has,we understand, panes dur-

ing the in St. Petersburg.Uut it was contrary to our expecta-tion to learn that the Russian him-

self has double tongues- -

Thosc Russians wounded in

battle off Chemulpo are receivingkind medical ticatments under thecare of our Red Cross Society, onthe contrary the Japanese were notallowed to withdraw from PortArthur. A lUhish ship, which wasmeant to take thetn on boatd, ar-

rived Checfoo without nttaiiiiuuher end. Those strikingly contrasted pieces of news may r:ach,probribly at the same 'time, civil-

ized countries and what impressionthey will make on the people, we

r.s.i.r-.- i should to

to

several

to

on

The colossal silhouette of theGolden Hill fort stood out againstthe murky sky. Its shadowthe water wavered it were

both the Rule Reru'- - trembling our glorious

lican parties, besides the victory. gales,Parsons the judge- - the naturally one to

ship. must of warCarter, as gratifying Japanese torpedo-boa- t

Mr. Parsons to have such oat, was cruisingthe editor of the ott Arthur, mak

Smiththe

the

for

eveningwas

of

worker's

WaiakeaSam Lilikone

girlsAlbert

HibleWhile

Girls

"The

Trombone Solo

morning the

impaneled,charged their duties

wascalled

Grand11.

Ileamer,and respou- -

A.

Paty,

vidid

Social

the

at

if

ItA

be

J.

P.

iug head against wind and tide.The billows incessantly .dashing

against her covered the deck allover with a coating of ice and

on deck kept a vigilantwatch. Casting his eyes around as

as a needle, his shoes, andeven his limbs, seemed on thepoint of being turned into ice.

All of a sudden, a phosphorescentrevealed a dark object drift-

ing towards her. An order wasin an instant. Communicated

through the pipe into the engine-roo- m

to slacken speed. Whatcould that be? 1 he remain ot adestroyed Russian warship? No.The corpse of an enemy? No. Itwas a small battle. How brightthe light might be, one but a

veteran, perhaps, unaided by somemiraculus intervention could

such a small in thedark and in the vast expanse,of water. The waves breakingover the deck served tb help the

in stretching himself as faras the would allow him'and picking up the bottle.v

A letter was carefully concealedin the battle It ran as follows

We Japanese subjects two hund-

red in number, are detained in thispart and prohibited from leavinghere in a ship by theRussian authorities on the groundthat there is threatening danger on

the the truth is, however,that we are mnch more exposed todanger in staying here. Theytreat us no better than prisoners.As to the maltreatment, we needscarcely enter into any detail. Ifthe letter be fortunate .enough to

one of our war-shi- weshall be very glad to tell ourcountrymen of our readiness tomeet death. Alexieff is anxious toavoid our attack that would be

severe by detaining us here. Hehas put into practice the old, old

story of shutting up hostages in

the castle. We can tell you thatall of us are ready to submit to ourfate, calmly however cruel it maybe, pray make not the least hesita- -

n. F. Clink. Mu, w.,, Seta.,, j. , , newlne y0r auackRickard, H. 15. Kelsey, J. T. .J

1 lle ltitterLewis, W. S. McLean, J. M. Gouvca, Jr.. s,,PPed out

J. R.

P. Ilentou.Kldarts,

P.

P. K.

as

hisLyman, Jr., 15. liana, t'orgetting situation otW. T. Iialdiug and stealthily coasting; under the cotn- -'

maud of his enemies cannon, ex- -S.Terry, K. .,,,,,

toa

Pearson. J.propose k. Walker,

'

,

WaiakeaShields will address

men tonight

actchildren,

welcome.

llic

;

doublewinter

!

otTiicer

sharp

light

given

no

dis-

cover thingnight

offiicerlife-lin- e

British

routs,

ofR. ins

he

The brutal Russians shall dearlypay for it, our brave brethren mustbe rescued.

Horn.H.U.niNi; Thursday, May, 18, 1904, to

the wife of Wm. T. Italding, at Wai-nnk- u,

a bou.

ALL KINDS OP

RUBBER GOODSCOODYEAR RUBBER CO.

R. II. PKASH, President.

SAN I'RANCISCO, CAL., U. S, A.

Dr. Cooper Itrprcnonts Territorial.Medical Men.

Honolulu, T. II., May 11 I

The Hawaiian Territorial Medical,Association at its meetings held I

Saturday evening elected Dr. C. H.

Cooper as the delegate of the Asso-- 'ciatiou to the annual meeting of theAmerican Medical Association tobe lield at Atlantic City June .

Dr. Cooper leaves in the SiberiaMay 21 to attend the conference ofState and Territorial health officersin Washington, June 3. It is an-

ticipated that thin conference willclose in time to allow him to attendthe meeting at Atlantic City. Dr.Cooper is chairman of the sectionon leprosy and while in Washingtonwill endeavor to interest the Federal authorities in local problems.Plans for original research and thepossibility of expenses for specia-

lists are matters Dr. Cooper has in

mind. The conference will doubt-

less be taken up with reports from

various sections and general

Notice.

All members of Company I), NationalGuard of Hawaii, nre ordered to report ntthe Armorv toniiMit nt T.xo o'clock tort.ittdi1.it liMdtiwiad nf JlMMftntli'ft

W. A. FI5TTI5R.Cnptain.

Mortgagee's Notice of In-

tention to Forecloseand Sale.

Notice is hereby given that under andby virtue of a power of sale contained ina certain mortgage made by Y. Hninada,of Hilo, in the Island and Territory ofHawaii, to J. Iwasaki and II. Tancmotoof Olaa, Inland avid Territory of Hawaii,dateil December 17th. 1903, and recordedin the office of the Registrar of Convey-ances in Honolulu, T. II., on the 31stday of December, 1903, in volume 252 atp iges 257 and 258 thereof, and the said J.Iwasaki ami 11. innemoio intend to tore-clos- e

said mortgage for a breach of condi-tion in said mortgage contained, t:

The nou payment of the principal sumand interest, thcrcb secured, when thesame became due ami payable.

Notice is hereby also given that all andsiueular tlie property covercu ny siuituorteaue will be sold at public auctionat the front door of the Court House inthe town of Hiio, Island and Territory ofHawaii, on Tuesday, June 14th, 1904, atn o'clock a. m.

The property described in said mort-gage and which will be sold at said timeand place is described as follows:

1st. That certain indenture of leaseexecuted by the Hilo Sugar Company tosaid Y. Hamada, bearing uatc June 9U1,1S9S, for lot 11 Punahou, containing 1.20acres, together with the crop growingupon said lot.

2nd. That certain indenture of leaseexecuted by the Hilo Sugar Company toFukuda Saikichi on the 16th day of June,1898, for six acres of lot I, and i)i acresof loc 3 Punahoa. Together with thecrop growing upon said lot.

3rd, That certain indenture of leaseexecuted by the Hilo Sugar Company tosaid Y. Hamada on the nth day of No-

vember, 1903, for lot 38 Punahoa 2nd,containing six acres, more or less, to-

gether with the crop growing thereon.4th. One hack, number 235.5th. One black horse, 7 year9 old.6th. One black horse, ten years old.Terms of sale, Cash.

S IWASAKI.II. TANRMOTO,

Mortgagees.Wish & Ross.

AttorneysHilo, May iS, 1904. 29--

lloolalia Hoopaa Molaki.

Ke hoolaha ia aktt nei, e like me kamaim kuai i hoike ia maloko o kekahimolaki i liana ia e V. Hamada o Hilo,Mokupuui ame Tcreton o Hawaii ia J.Iwasaki ame II. Tauemoto o Olaa, Moku-puui ame Tcretori o Hawaii, hana ia maka la 17 o Dekcmaba, 1903, a i hookomoia ma ke keeua o ka mea kopc Palapalama Honolulu, T. II., ma ka la 21 o

1903, buke 252 ma ka aoao 257ame 258.

Nolaila, o J. Iwasaki ame II. Tauemotoke mauao nei e lioopaa i ua molaki nei,no ka uliiiki ia u ua aelike iloko o uu mo-1,'i-

nei, oin hoi, ka uku ole ia ana o kekuiuu paa ame ka uku Paueu i ka wa oka uku ana.

Nolaila, ke hoolaha ia nku nei o 1111

waiwai apau iloko o ua molaki nei e ku-dal- a

ia ana tun ka puka luamua o ka HaleHookolokolo, ma ku town o Hilo, Moku-puui ame Teretori o Hawaii, ma ka Poa-iu- a,

June 14, 1904, ma ka hora 11 o kekakahiakauui.

O ka waiwai iloko o ua molaki nei a eI kuai ia uku una hoi penei no ia:

(i) Ke la paiap.ua uooumaiima t nanala e ka Hilo Sugar Co. ia Y. Hamada,liana ia ma ka la 9 o June, 1898, upauaainahclu 11 Punahoa, iionu na Iika he1,20, me na ko e ulu una maluua o uauiim ala.

(2) Ke la palapala hoolimalima i lianaia u ka Hilo Sugar Co. ia I'ukuda Sai-

kichi ma ka la 16 o June, 189S, apauaaina helu 1, uonu 11 u Kkn he 6, ameapauaiiina helu 3, Punahoa 2, noun na Iika he'2I4 , me na ko e ulu una maluua o ua mailaina ala,

(3) Ke la palapala hoolimalima i hanaia e ka Hilo Sugar Co, ia Y. Hamada, makn la 11 o November, 1903, apaua ainahelu 38, Punahoa 2, nana ua l'.ka he 6, oiaku pahti emi mai palm, me na ko e ulu ,

ana maluua o ua aina ala.

a Hookalii kua plo helu 235.Hookahi lio eleele. 7 uiakahikl.

6) Hookahi lio, eleele, 10 makahikiMe ke Dala kuike ke kuai.

J. IWASAKI. .

H. TANICMOTO,Na Mea Paa Molaki.

Wish & Ross, Na Loio.Hilo, May 8, 1903.

San Francisco Prices Prevail

ALL NEW STOCKJUST RECEIVED:

P. O. Box 94Telephones

4 A4B

AND

NOBBY NECKWEAR

Plain and Fancy Negligee Shirts

Straw Hats, Latest Spring Styles

Panama Hats, Reasonable Prices

Steamer Trunks, All Sizes

Our Motto: "QUICK SALES, SMALL PROFITS."

I The Globe Clothing Co.WAIANUENUE STREET

PEACOCK BLOCK

HILO MERCANTILE CO.LIMITED

DEALERS IN

Plantation Supplies

OF DESCRIPTIONS

AGENTS

Port Costa FlourColden Gate CementSimmons'

" Keen Kutter" Knives and HoesSan Francisco

Pioneer Varnish WorksPeninsular Stove Co.

A FULL

- Complete Line of Groceries

Hilo Wine and Liquor Co.

Hilo Saloon

P. O.90Church

RetailP. O.

41St.

St.

Choicest American Wines, Beers,Gins,

S. CANARIO, Manager.

THE HAWAIIAN FERTILIZER CO., Ltd.

SPECIAL FERTILIZER

Cane, Vegetable and Banana Fields.Soil Analysis Made and Fertilizer Furnished to Soil, and

LAND'S OUR

Sulphate of AmmoniumBono

Sulphate of Potash

ofH. C.

Tor sale in or small your with ourLawn

Brewer Illock,Queen

P. O. 1IOX 767,

C. M.K. F. Treasurer.G. II. ROP.F.RTSON,

ALL

FOR

AND

WholesaleBox 396

TolephonoFront Near

Box 396Telephone

Noar Front

and European Whiskies,Brandies, Liquors, Etc.

J.

ForSuit.ible Climate Crop

FOR THE SAKE USE FERTILIZERS

MoalNitrate

PhosphatosGround Coral

Fertilizers large quantities. Fertilize lawnsSpecial

OFFICE:

Street

COOKK, President.lHSHOP,

Auditor

King

Soda

Fertilizer.

HONOLULUFACTORY :

At Iwileilleyoud Prisou

15. I). T15NNF.Y, t.

J. WATI5RIIOUSI5. Secretory.W. M. ALI5XAND15R, C. H. ATHERTON

Dlirctom,

ai

Ht

SIP

(HP

mzmmmM

Page 3: Jk J iljO - University of Hawaii · market has teen oversubscribed twenty times. Tokio, Japan May ti. TheJap--janese g&Vrison at Anju has repulsed an attack made by a force of 200

"

wmsssmsm

Business men,

lawyers, doc-

tors, bankers,

ministers,teachers,merchants

ftHead thi'so strong words

from M. Ilnuo Smith, Esq.,tho iwpoclud Secretary Col.Mut. Firo Ins. Co., Sydney.

Ayer'sCherry Pectoral

"Tor many years I suffered frombronchitis, for which 1 tried a varietyof remedies including sprays and

These did mo no good and Ithon began to use Ayor's Cherry Pec-toral, with most satisfactory result.One doso qulotod my cough andenabled mo to got much noodod sloop.I would not now bo without It for anyconsideration. I bavo passod throughthis winter froo from tho cough, andI am glad to say that several of myfriends liavo boon honoflted In tho sarooway. I am sondiug a bnttlo to a friendin New Zealand by today's stoamor."

In Urge and imal! bottle.Prtpirta ij Df i J. C Aja Co., Lowell. Mm., U. S. A.

For Sale by HILO DRUG COMPANY

Oceanic 55 Company

Time TableThe steamers of this line will ar-

rive and leave this port as here-under:

FROM SAN FRANCISCO.Alameda May 20Sonoma June 1

Alameda June 10

Ventura June 22

Alameda July 1

Sierra.' July 13Alameda July 22Sonoma August S

Alameda August 12

Ventura August 24Alameda Septemher 2

FOR SAN FRANCISCO.Alameda May 25Ventura May 31

Alameda June 15

Sierra June 21

Alameda July 8

Sonoma July 12

Alameda July 27

Ventura August 2

Alameda August 17

Sierra August 23Alameda September 7

In connection with the sailing of theabove steamers the agents are prepared toissue, to intending passengers CouponThrough Tickets by any railroadfrom San Francisco to all points in theUnited States, and from New York by

an steamship tine to all European ports.For further particulars apply to

Wm. C. Irwin & Co.LIMITED

General Agents Oceanic S.S. Co.

Union Barber Shop.GARCIA & CANARIO, Props.

01 c Shave, Cut fair and Shampoo

at Ect'Civt Rates.

We also take particular pains with Chil-

dren's Haircuttiug.

' Union Buh,d:ng,Wai anuenue St

PLANTERS' LINEOF

SAILING VESSELS

Direct Line between SAN FRANCISCOAND HILO.

Hark St. L'ntlinrliie, Capt. Saundersllttrk Amy Turner, Capt. WarlandHark Marlhn Davis, Capt. McAllmnn

QUICK DISPATCH

For freight and passage apply to

WELCH & CO., Agents, San FranciscoC. BREWER & CO., Ltd., Agents,

Honolulu, or

H. Hackfeld & Co., Ltd.A (IK VIS, HIM).

White

Horse

titifrtttfttWtfrtttttttttt'H

THE WEKKLY HILO TRMUNH, 11110, HAWAII, MIDAY, MAY :oL loj,

-

&he hlazedTrail

JJ Copyright, 1902, by

jfttttttttjAs hooii as loading began the cook

served breakfast nt 3 o'clock. The menworked by the light of torches, whichwere ofteu merely catchup Jugs withwlcklng In the necks. Nothing couldbe more picturesque than n teamsterconducting one of bis great pyramid-lea- l

loads over the little liiciiuulltlcs of '

the road, In tho ticklish places stand-ing atop with the bent knee of the Ho-ma- n

cbnrlotecr, spying and forestall-ing the chances of the way with a fixedeye and an Intense concentration thntrelaxed not one inch In the miles ofthe haul. Thorpe had become n full '

Hedged cant book man.Ho liked the work. There Is about It

a skill that fascinates. A man gripssuddenly with the book of his NtroiigInstrument, stopping one end that theother may slide. He thrusts the short,strong stock between the log and theskid, allowing It to be overrun. liestops the roll with a sudden sure graspapplied nt Just the right moment to beeffective. Sometimes he allows himselfto be carried up bodily, clinging to thecant hook like an acrobat to a bar, un-

til the log has rolled once, when, hisweapon loosened, he drops lightly, eas-ily to tho ground. And It Is excltlug topile the logs on the 'sleigh, first n layer'of Ave, say; then one of four smaller, ofbut three, of two, until nt the veryapex the last Is dragged slowly up theskids, poised and Just as It Is about toplunge down the other side Is grippedand held Inexorably by the little men j

In blue flannel shirts.Clinlns bind the loads. And If ever

during the loading or afterward whentho sleigh 1a. In motion the weight ofthe logs causes the pyramid to breakdown and S(unsli out, then woe to thedriver or whoever happens to be near.For this reason the loaders are pickedand careful men.

At tho banking grounds, which lie Inand about the bed of the river, the logsarc piled Into a gigantic skldwoy tonwalt the spring freshets, which willcarry them down stream to the "boom."In that lnclosure they remain untilsawed In the mill.

Thorpe, In common with the othermen, had thought Hallway's vacationat Christmas time a mistake. He couldnot but admire the feverish anlmntlonthat now characterized the Jobber. Ev-ery mischance wns ns quickly repaljedas aroused expedient could do thework.

Esprit de corps awoke. The mensprang to their tasks with nlacrity.gave more than an hour's exertion toeach of the twenty-four- , took a prideIn repulsing assaults of the great en-

emy whom they personified under thegeneric "She."

Ono morning In February Thorpewas helping load n big butt log. Hewas one of the two men who stand nteither end of the skids to help the

log keep straight and true toUs bed on the pile. His assistant'send caught on a silver, ground for asecond and slipped back. Then thelog ran slanting across the skids In-

stead of perpendicular to them. Torectify the fault Thorpe dug' his canthook Into the timber and threw hisweight on the stock. He hoped in-tu-

manner to check correspondingly theascent of his end. In other words, hetook tho place on his side of the pre-

venting sliver, so equalizing the pres-

sure nnd forcing tho timber to Its prop-

er position. Instead of rolling the logslid. The stock of the cnut hook wasJerked from his hands. He fell back,nnd the cant hook, nftcr clinging fota moment to the rough hark, snappeddown nnd hit him a crushing blow onthe top of the head.

They took Thorpe up and carried himIn, Just ns they had carried Hank Paulbefore. Men who had not hpoken 0dozen words to him in as many daysgathered his few belongings nnd stuff-ed them nwkwnrdly Into his satchel.Jackson HInes prepared tho bed ofstraw and warm blunkets In the bot-tom of the sleigh thnt was to tako himout.

"Ho would have made a good boss,"said the old fellow. "He's a hard manto nick."

CHAPTER VIII.?llIEX Thorpo finally enmo to

himself he was In a long,IW bright, clean room, nnd the

sunset tvas throwing splashesof light on the celling over his head.

Ho watched them Idly for n time,then turned on his pillow. At once heperceived a long, double row of cleanwhite pnlntcd Irpn beds, on which layor sat figures of men. Other figures ofwomen glided here nnd there noiseless-ly. They wore long, spreading dovegray clothes, with a starched whitekerchief drown oyer their shouldersand across tho 'breast. Their headswere quaintly white-garbe- d In stiffwinglike coifs, fitting close ubout theovul of tho fitce. Then Thorpo sighedcomfortably and closed his eyes andblessed the chnnce that ho had boughtu hospital ticket of tho agent wbo hadvisited cump the month before. Forthese were sisters, and the young manlay In the hospital of St. Mary.

Like u great 'many other charitiesbuilt on a common sense, self support-ing, rational basis, the woods hospitalsare iinuer the Roman Catholic church.From one of the numerous agents whoperiodically visit the camp tho lum-

ber Jack puichuHUd fur $8 u ticketwhich udualU him ut any tluio durluu

AAA.A..AJ.AA4.A.'.A.'..AAAJ.AA.AI.liiiLiiililllllllZIJZlIIITrf1"J,J"J''?''J"?'ril"!"l' 'O'V

?..... I AA.

U m n? I I n n

uluuuBy STEWART

EDWARD

Tlttar1 Edtuard

WHITE

XOhtf j ff!

.j.aj.j..:.aa.j..;..;....j...,:.....-..;.,-,.....;- .

me j ear to the hospital, where he 1

privileged to rcumlu free of furthercharge until convalescent. So valuableare these Institutions and so excellent-ly are they maintained by the sistersthat a hospital agent Is nhvays wel-come even in those camps from whichordinary peddlers and Insurance mennre rigidly excluded.

In one of these hospitals Thorpe layfor six weeks suffering from 11 'severeconcussion of, the brain. At the end ofthe fourth his fever had broken, buthe was pronounced ns yet too weak tobe moved.

The roofs were covered with snow.One day Thorpe saw It sink Into Itselfand gradually run away. The tinkletinkle tank tank of drops sounded fromhis own eaves. Down the furofT liversluggish reaches of lee drifted. ThenIn a night the blue disappeared fromthe stream. It became a menacinggray, and even from his distanceThorpo could catch the swirl of Its- - ris-ing waters. A day or two later dorkmosses drifted or shot across the Heldof his vision, and twice he thought hedistinguished men standing uprightnnd bold on single logs ns they rusheddown tho current.

"What Is the dute?" he asked of thesister.

"The elcvent of March.""Isn't it early for the thaw?""Listen to Mini" exclaimed tho sister

delightedly. "Early, Is It! Sure tli'freshet co't them nil. Look, dniilut:yo con see tho drive from here."

"I see," said Thorpe wearily. "Whencon I get out?"

"Not for wan week," replied the sla-

ter decidedly.At the end of the week Thorpe said

goodby to his ntteudant. H,o took twoiloys of tramping tho little town to re-

train tho use of his legs and boardedho morning train for Reeson Lake. He

lid not pause In the village, but benthis steps to the river trail.

Ho followed the trail by the river.Duttcrbalts nnd scoters paddled up athis approach. lilts of rotten Ice occa-sionally swirled down the diminishingstream. Around every bend Thorpelooked for Fome of Railway's crew"driving" tho logs down the current.lie knew from chance encounters withseveral of the men In Ray City thatRadway was still Id camp, whichmeant, of course, that the season's oper-ations wore not finished. Five milesfarther Thorpe began to wonder wheth-er this last conclusion might not be

The Cass branch had shrunk-11- 1

almost to ItH original limits. Theirive must have been finished even, thisearly, for the stream lu Its present con-dition would hardly float saw logs.

Thorpe, puzzled, walked on. At thebanking ground he found empty skids.Evidently the drive was over. And yeteven to Thorpe's Ignorance It seemedIncredible Uiat the remaining millionand n half of logs hod been hauled,banked and driven during the shorttime he had loin In the Ray City hos-pital. More to solve the problem thanIn any hope of work he set out for thelogging road.

Another three miles Jirought him tocamp. It looked strangely wet andsodden nnd deserted. In faCt, Thorpefound a bare half dozen people In ItRailway, the cook and four men whowere helping to pack up the movables.The Jobber showed strong traces ofthe st ruin he had undergone, but grest-e- d

Thorpe almost Jovially."Hello, young man!" he shouted ut,

Thorpe's 111 nt splashed figure, "('oniebuck to view the remains? AH wellagain, heigh V That's good!"

"I didn't know you were through,"explained Thorpe, "nnd I came lo seeIf I could get a Jo'i."

"Well, now. I am sorry!" cried Rad-way. "You can turn In and help,though, if you want In."

Thorpe greeted the cook and old .lack-so- n

Illnes, the only two whom hoknew, and set to work to tie up bun-.lie- s

of blankets and to collet c axes,pernios and tools of all ilesci 'pttons.riiut evening the seven dined togetherit one end of th" long table. The bignioiii exhaled already the atmosphereif d'sertlon.

"Not much like old times, Is she?"laughed Railway. "Can't you Just shut.our eyes .mil hear Il.iptlstu Kay. '.Mnk''leem de mup one tain more for me?''lie's pretty empty now.".lacUsou lllnes looked whimsically

low n the hare board. "More roomhan Cod made for geese In Ireland,"vus his comment.After supper they sal outside for 11

tittle time to smoke tluir pipes, chairtilted agalii.Ht Hie logs of the cabins,but soon the chill of melting snowdrove them Indoors. The four team-sters played seven up hi the cook campby the light of a barn lantern, whileThorpe and the cook wrote letters.Thorpe's was to his sister.

"I have been In the hospital forabout a ,111011th," ho wrote. "Nothingserious n crack 011 the head, which Isall right now. Rut I cannot get homethis summer, nor, 1 am afraid, can wearrange about the school this year. Iuni about $70 ahead of where I waslast full, so you see It Is slow busluesii.This summer I 11111 going Into a mill,but the wages for given labor are notvery high there either," and so on.

When Miss Helen Thorpo, aged sev-

enteen, received this document shestumped her foot almost angrily."You'd thluk, he wub u day luborerl"

Mil

Hill

Side

ffiiuX

Bonccia

Where a team can walk and draw a plowTiik Rkvkrsihlk works perfecuy.

The combination of features in ... .

Make it the most valued of all DISC It can be used right er left hand,around the laud or furrows all one way. Will plow

between terraces without leaving A WATKR furrow. onty in sulkj

8ns- -&! 1.

The Above Cut Shows tho

SOLE FOR

sni' crtefl. "Wiry doesn't no try ror nclerkship or something lu the citywhere he'd have u chance to use hisbrains?"

And thus she came to feeling rebell-

ious!- that her brother had boon a Ut-

ile sclllsh In his choice of tin occupa-tion: that he had saciillcod her luiiiua-IIoii-

tn his own.After finishing the letter Thorpe lit

his pipe and strolled out Into the dark-ness. Opposite the little oillco heflopped iiliiii.ed.

Through the narrow window he couldsee Riidwny sauted in front of theHtove. lie had sunk down Into hisclmir until he ivMed on alinot thesmall of his back, his legs were stuckstraight out In front of him. hh chinrested on his breast, and his Iwn armshung listless nt his side, a plp halffalling from the lingers of one handAll the facetious Hues had turned npathos

"What's the matter with the bowanyway?" asked Thorpe 111 n low voleof .ladiMiii HInes when the seven ujgame, was ilulshed.

"Hain't ye heard?" Inijulrod the oldman lu surprise.

"Why.no. What?""Rustul," said the old men senten-

tious!'. '

"How? What do you mean?""What I say. lie's busted. Thai

freshet caught hlni tin quick. Thoy'pmore than a million and a half log'left lu the woods that c.m't be got on'this year, and as his contract calls rora llnMied Job he don't got nothin' foiwhat he's done."

"Th.it's a queer iijr." conimi'iiteilThorpe. "He's done a lot of vnliinblrwork bore. The timber's cut and skidiled anyway, 111 d he's diilvo.vd a gooddeal of It tu tic main drive. The M& D. outllt get all the advantage nftlmt."

(to ins continued)

Santiago De Chile, May 11.The Chilean cruisers Ksmeraldaand Chacabuco have been sold toC. R. Flint of New York. It isbelieved lhat Flint is the purchas-ing agent for some nation, but thefinal destination of the ships is notknown.

How to Avoid Tkouw.k. Nowis the time to provide youiself andfamily with n bottle of

Cidic, Cholera and DiarrhoeaRemedy. It is almost certain to beneeded before the summer is over,nnd if procured now may save youa trip to town in the night or invour busieU season. It is every-where admitted to lu: the most suc-cessful medicine in use for' bowelcomplaints, both for children andadults. No familv can afford to bewithout it. For sale by the HiloDrug Co. '

Stf

pw w wacm w im.feo.

3

Tho. Above Is tho Disc Plow.

DH

Made

Benocia Ratoon Disc Plow.

Cure For Leprosy.

New Orleans, April 23. In alecture delivered here today Dr.Isadore Dyer, the of thelepers' home of Louisiana nnd oneof the most expertson tliis disease in this country, aftersaying there were 3,000,000 lepersin existence, or one to every 500living persons, announced that inthe last two years the problem ofcuring this dread disease had beensolved.

In ten years, Dr. Dyer said, he!and his assistants had succeeded iniemoviiig every trace of the diseasein twelve lepers. In the past twoyears, since the latter part of 1902,every case .at the Louisiana leperhome, except those in the very Inststages of the disease, have been improved and in three casesthe lepers arc almost well, and itwill be possible to discharge thim j

within a short time, j

on leprosy, which Dr. Dyer attend-ed, there had been, he said, a fewcases of the disease cured. Thatthere were not more cures was dueto the fact that the disease was nottreated. Treatment means perseve-rance for years, not for weeks ormonths. Dr. Dyer expressed con-

fidence that if the treatment of lep-

rosy was begun early enough andmaintained long enough, thedisea.secould be cured ns easily as any other.In another decade, he said, it will j

be that lep-los- y

is ns curable as typhoid oryellow (ever

China, May 11.- - TheUnited States cruiser New Orleans,in command of Admiral Stirling,has been ordered to Chefoo. TheNew Orlenns is probably orderednorth to protect foreign residents at

now a center ofhostilities.

Tokio, Japan May n. AdmiralTogo reports that a series of heavy

have been observedwithin the harbor at 1'orl Authtir.It is believed to be possibe that theRussians have blown up their war- -

ships to prevent their falling intothe hands of the Japanese '

...r. r V7

1

sSbiWReversible

ThtTk ReversiblePLOWS.

plowing rkvkrsim.K, throwinga

THIS

PLOW

H.HACKFELD & Co.AGENTS HAWAIIAN ISLANDS

Chamber-lain's

physicians

distinguished

materially,

comparativelyHeforetuerecentUerlinconference

universally recognized

Shanglint,

Newchwaug,

explosions

neosa

Hills up the dirt betterthan a hoc, besides leav-

ing the soil behind it in asplendid pulverized con-

dition. It is the ONLYPLOW for ratoous thatactually does what it issupposed to do.

Melieula Seeks New Trial.Honolulu, T. II., May 11.

Sentence of Solomon Melieula,convicted in Federal Court by juryof destroying certain public do-

cuments, vouchers of the House ofRepresentatives, was set fur thismorning before Judge Dole. Cla-

rence V. Abliford, Meheuln's coun-

sel, was present, having returnedfroih his Kauai trip, and enteredmotion for a new trial. Matterwas taken under advisement andsentence deferred until Mondaynext.

New trial motion was based onthe record; conviction wts contraiyto law and evidence; Melieulashould not hnve been hailed beforethe Grand Jury against himself; ithad not been proven' that defendanthnd destroyed any vouchers, or

.that they had ever existed suchvouchers as were alleged to havebeen destroyed; that but one member

jof the Grand Jury, Andrew Adams,had testified as to what Melieulahad said before the inquisition;that it was presuming greatly totake such unsupported statementas accurate and as absolutely so.

-

Subscribe for the TkihunrIsland subscription $2.50 a year.

,5"m

o 1fesap 1

o 3dnhS2 CDX5' I10OsoSJ)' x m 4

" MM Jn 3 r;mG0' w O 2. rrSO 5

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S is 3 ox WTrtf-T-

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rMfca""-'-a-f-riMlf- c

Page 4: Jk J iljO - University of Hawaii · market has teen oversubscribed twenty times. Tokio, Japan May ti. TheJap--janese g&Vrison at Anju has repulsed an attack made by a force of 200

SVEA -- 2

Of (lotlienlnirjf, Sweden

Atsels(.llonieOl1lce) .... J7.3a2.063.3G

Assets in U.S. (fur Additionil Security of Auictiviiii Policy Holder) 656.67H.43

I'noific Coast liepartinciit: EDWARD DROWN & SONS, General Agents

41 1413 California St., San Francisco.

H. HACKFELD & CO., Ltd., Rosiaont Agents, HILO

The Favorite

COMPANY

"LIEDERKRANZ"CIGAR

For Sale by

THEO. H. DAVIES & GO. Limited

m What was ttfUM r ) MIAm that IJm VC Z )MMaon him wk B lpv v ' II ?.. I RAINIER I IIJ3EJTTOFALL fMkl BOTTLING

WORKS flKIMHH AGENTS. HONOLULU f

PLANTERS,

SPECIAL ATTENTION IS CALLED TO THE FACT THAT

THE ONLYORIGINAL AND

CELEBRATED

INSURANCE

L-.-raH

ATTENTION!

FERTILIZER

7

and for sale San Francisco

Is that which has been manufactured for the past fifteenyears exclusively by the

California Fertilizer WorksSAN FRANCISCO, OAL.

When purchasing be sure that in addition the brandthe name of the California Fertilizer Works is on everysack, otherwise you will not be getting the genuine article.

A large slock of our Diamond A and our

XX HIGH-GRAD- E FERTILIZERIs kept constantly on hand at

to

prices, plus only freight and actual expenses,

By Our Hilo Agents,

L. TURNER CO- -LIMITED

HtfSXi

THE WEEKLY HII.O 'TRIBUNE, HILO, HAWAII, FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1904.

N ATI) UK STUDY.

Inli-ri'sllnt- r I'tipor Until I.111I Tench'cm .Mrrlltiir.

Ily Ml.. Wnril, (Mm.

When a pupil readies the highschool or college he studies physicalgeography, geology, physiology,physics, botany, mineralogy, chemistry, zoology, etc.. with their interlacing topic, niul thus his outlookat the universe and the laws thatcontrol it are broadened, his atten-tion enlisted, his interest engagediu proportion as his heart respondsto the many voices of nature thatcuter into his environment.

But when we estimate the smallpercentage of pupils who partakeof the privileges of high school oracademic work, how important becomes the consideration of givingto the very large majority everyhelp toward becoming a little acquainted with the various naturalthings around them; no .scientificinstruction, but simple studyingout and explanation enough to en-

courage them to reason about thewhy of everything for themselves.

The product of a thorough edu-

cation is a cultivated man or woman.President Kliot says: "Culture in-

cludes a quick and wide sympathywith men and nature. We havebecome convinced that some inti-

mate acquaintance with the earthand sky adds greatly to the happi-ness of life, and that this acquaint-ance should begin iu childhood,and be developed all through ado-

lescence and maturity. A brook, a

hedge row.ior a garden is an inex-

haustible teacher of wonder, re-

verence and love."He also gives as the four elements

of culture: character, language,the store of knowledge and imag-

ination. As we contemplate ourpupils of today, it seems beyondthe bounds of the most vivid imag-

ination to sec even the smallest per-

centage 01 them achieve any highdegree of this ideal culture. Letus, nevertheless, the more earnest-ly strive that they may be liftedsome nearer the mediocre at least.

How shall we do this throughtalks on nature? Of first import-

ance is beginning with objects andexperiments that the pupils can see,hear, and handle. Then absolutefreedom of expression on the partof the child and how often wefind that he has sharper eyes andquicker wit than our own. Observ-

ing Arbor Day, Christmas Day,Bird Day by emphasizing thespecial thoughts of kindness to andcare and love of birds and flowers.

Line upon line. If the childrenreally believe that we read theselessons ourselves, they will attemptto follow us.

The language work may be

reached in a variety of ways. By

the Five-Ste- p Method. Very shortreproduction stories to be read tothe class by one of the best readers;then find out how much of it somechild can tell you. These storiesconcerning some object previouslystudied, give the slowest children abetter chance to understand and re-

produce. Some mornings we havethree or four, and I ask the pupilsto tell me which words they wishme to write upon the black-boar- d.

These words are left there duringthe day, and studied or written, orsentences banded iu containing cer-

tain ones.Some days ten or fifteen questions

are on the board, 'and a pupil call-

ed on to read one and answer it.In this exercise, one purpose is for

the teacher to make no explanations,but to have the closs work out satisfactory answers, fairly well ex-

pressed.For two weeks we worked on

"The River," not geographically,but its natural features.

Another method to develop lan-

guage along this line of nature workis from some poem. We studied"The Wreck of the Hesperus" iuthis way. Undertaking it for theFourth Reader clajs, but findingthe Second Reader most attentive,we suited it to all with much sat-

isfaction. The following expres-sions gave material for several days'work: the wintry sea, fairy flax,icicles, white and fleecy waves,sheathed iu ice, day-biea- k, sea-beac- h,

salt sea, brown sea-wee- d.

After this study, the close attention

given as the poem was then read tothem, showed a very different con-

ception of the incident, thanpossessed before the study.

Shortly after this I placed severalpictures on pupils' desks at intermission, and was surprised to hear'some of these words used as readilyas they were.

We also make these words apincticc for phonics.

Then that other exquisite bit ofNature painting l)a -- breakHA Wind rntni tit, nut tifllip spiAnil said, '6 Mists, mike room for me." j

As we follow the morningbreeze on its mission of arousingnature from the tranquility of thedeparting ight, hailing the mariners, shouting to the forests, touch-ing the wood bird's folded wing,whispering to the fields of corn,reaching the farm, the haunt ofman, until he himself is awakenedby the chime from the belfry, ourspirits are prepared for the climax,as "It crossed tlu church-yar- d

with a sigh, acknowledging thathetc its power end. that here toarouse the sleepers must be felt thetouch of the supernatural or divinepower."

Another gem is "The ChamberedNatilus," containing the history ofthat "Child of the Wandering Sea,"frail tenant of that "Ship of pearl,"in gulfs enchanted near the coralreefs, year after year, until hesteals with soft step its shiningarchway through, bringing to thethoughtful mind of the poet theheavenly message he so grandlysings for us.

Is it not by tracing such thoughtsas these that the soul really feels

the "sweet influence" of mothenature? And children are capableof more iu this line, than is usuallyaccredited to them.

There are few exercises that sosurely arouse a cordial sympathybetween teacher and pupil and tendtoward that comradeship so muchto be desired, as the imformality ofthe time devoted to investigation iuand conversation about some na-

tural object or phenomenon. Thepupils arc alert with interest, forchildren as well as adults thinkwith greater pleasure and accuracywhen the mental activity is asso-

ciated with the observation of someconcrete thing or action, and whatthe reason does not understand,the imagination supplies.

It is one of the inherent rights ofchildhood to be happy. Froebelsays, "The things of nature form amore beautiful ladder between Heav-en and eirth than that seen byJacob; not a one-side- d ladder lead-

ing in one direction, but an all-side- d

one leading iu all directions.Not in dreams is it seen; it is per-

manent, it surrounds us on allsides." How much of happinesscomes to the children iu apprehend-ing the structure of this creation.

The habits of observation andthinking started in childhood,largely decide the tendency of thereading in later years. And maynot the nature talks iu early school-lif- e,

prepare the abult to under-stand the beautiful thoughts ofwriters, who have so fully spokenof all phases of nature?

It is possible to prepare manyprograms for Friday afternoonrheioricals containing choice se-

lections on nature subjects, easilywithin the comprehension of theyoungest children. Ponderiugthese things tends to bring out thenoble iu thought and character. Iread the following a short timesince, on the idea some people hold,that we should leave the taste ofthe young to take its choice.

Coleridge tells of a friend whothought it very unfair to influencea child's mind by inculcating anyopinions before it should have cometo years of discretion and able tochoose for itself. Coleridge says;"I showed him my garden, andtold him it was my botanical gard-

en." "How so?" said his friend,"It is covered with weeds!'"

"Ohl" Coleridge replied, "thatis only because it has not come toits age of discretion and choice.The weeds, you see, have takenthe liberty to grow, aud I thoughtit would be unfair to prejudice thesoil toward roses and strawberries.'-- '

Shall we have weeds or strivefor roses and strawberries?

II

riA j it iw i' 1

IT fev rjtwffllrf Drink to your

1 "" ' W H Y K K 1

1 WilM WATER 1

fcf IMl fm M 1 Sparkling and pure

Wlj UlJl with i delightfulMi Ami II smack of its, own. H

mnwM rwHtw or sa n n first-clas- s barsHi1 IKmF an( ky Ifflkjf VJS) W. C. PEACOCK & CO., Limited I

HSSJ Ifa Agents, Hilo. . 1

N. OhUiiJt.J. C. Ohlanilt, ESTABLISHED 1864

N. OHLANDT & CO.Manufacturers

FERTILIZERSOf finery Description.

Bone Meal,Sulphate of Potash,Sulphate of Ammonia,Alaska Fish Scrap,

Office:137 Market Street.

High Grade Tankage.

SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.

Ulick11. Ulick

Certificate of Analysis accompanies our shipments, wlilcli we guarautee

to be correct.

R. OP. GUARD,Agent for the Hawaiian Islands

ORDERS FILLED AT SHORT NOTICE

Enterprise Planing Mill Company.

GEO. MUMIJY, Mgr. I'ront St., in rear of Hilo Mercantile Co's niiildinnPlaning, MouloiiiK, Scroll Work anil all kinds of Turned Work, Window Frames, etc

WATER TANKS A SPECIALTY. Household and all kinds of Furniture,Store Fittings, Counters, etc., made to order. Cross-cu- t Saws audmade as good new, at easy rates.

Manulacturer of School Seats, Chinch Pews, mid Redwood Gutteia, all sizes

OD o

CO .

o

O03

5 ?

ook.O -

13a s

o o

I w

iV)

J w5 J

W ?!

7.

J. A.C.

as

and Ukai.kks in

Hoof Meal,Muriate of Potash,Nitrate of Soda,Double Superphosphate

Factory :

Indiana & Yolo Sis

--AT-

Waiakea Boat HouseR.A. LUCAS & CO., I'rop'rs.

WAIAKUA BRIDGE, HII.O

HAVE NOW A FLEET OF

Gasoline Launchesand

FOR PUHLIC HIREl asseujjers and b.ij;Knj;e taken to and

from vessels in the harbor at reasonable'rates. Launches and row bouts to hirelor private picnics and rides.

RING UI ON TKMJPHONK

AGENl'S FOR

Wolverine Gasoline EngineSelf-starte- r and reversible engine. Iu

practicability it is equal to the steam eu- -Igiue. Sies from li h. p. upwards.lloats fitted with this engine or frames otany she to order. For applyto R. A. LUCAS, Mauuger,

HAND MADE SADDLES AND HARNESS

CARRIAGETRIMMING.

RICHARDS & SCHOEN,Hilo Harness Shop, Hilo, H. I.

JS2 Small Boats

moonlight

particulars

'

si

f

Page 5: Jk J iljO - University of Hawaii · market has teen oversubscribed twenty times. Tokio, Japan May ti. TheJap--janese g&Vrison at Anju has repulsed an attack made by a force of 200

(t

LOCAL- - ITEMS.

Mr. nml Mrs. I'. I'cck returned liy theKiunu Wednesday.

Mrs. David Forbes returned ti Kukubhaele Inst Monday.

Mrs. W. H. Smith U sloylng nt 22

tulles for 11 few days.Subscribe for the Dclluntor of Moses &

Raymond for one yenr only ft.00.

Win T. Balding, bookkeeper nt Wni

naku, Is smiling nnd happy. It's a boy.

Mr. Jnnies Gihb, manager of Pnahnuhas relumed from n trip to Honolulu.

Moses & Raymond tuku old machinesin exchange foi new Singers. Call and seethem about it.

Messrs Kullhcrg mid Guard made alarge haul during their fi thing excursionon last Monday.

Mr, Grossherr won the championship '

111 the late periro tournament held atliouokaa recuntly.

Tom Cook while surveying for Mr.Furucaux found u 15 hand hunch ofbananas weighing over 140 lbs.

Mr. C. It. 11. Fowler of liouokaa, hasbeen suffering from n severe attack ofgout during the last few weeks.

Dr. Archie Irwin, Mrs. llteuliAUi andMrs, Mc Donald left for the Volcanolast Tuesday, returning Wednesday.

Ernest Ilarttiiann, consulting chemistof the Hawaiian Planters Assn. leftPaaliau, last Wednesday for a short tripto Hilo.

I

Six streets arc being macadamizednnd g gangs are engaged attwenty-fiv- e different places in Honoluluttlis week.

Mrs. George Rolfe, Mis. Win. Rolfcand Miss Hessic Rolfe of San Franciscoare the guests of Mr. mid Mrs. C. C. Ken-

nedy at Waiaken.Messrs Prltchard and Lindsay of liouo-

kaa arc enjoying midnight gallopsthrough Ilamakua astnote of a pair offiery untamed steeds.

Mrs. C. C. Kennedy, Mrs. l'rnuk Dea-

con and Mrs. Charles Furucaux arc stay-

ing for a few days at Kukuilani the moun-

tain residence of the I'urncnux's.G. F. Metrke, formely employed with

the On hit Railroad, Honolulu, arrived bythe Kinau to take C. N. Prouty's placeas cashier nt the Hilo Railroad duringthe latter's absence.

A. It. I.oebensteiu received news bytelephone of the death of a very valuablemule iu Kohala. The cause of death isascribed to glanders, which is ragingamong horses and cattle throughout theKohala district.

The S. S. "Enterprise" will run onschedule time beginning luue 1st. Her'tween decks are being fitted and ventilat-ed for the storage of bananas. It is ex-

pected that she will carry about 5000bunches on her next trip.

Da ron Von Hagemau of St. Croix,Danish West Indies, Lcuitenant, DanishRoyal Guards, and prominent sugarplanter, is visiting Hawaii, and will spendtwo or three weeks in Hilo. The Baronis the champion tenuis player of St.Croix.

Thos C. Cook has been appointedfor Olaa and Putin districts.

There were two other candidates ill O. A.Steven and Geo. W. Faty, but the

in making the appointmentgave preference to Mr. Cook, who is nsurveyor and experienced road man.

Mr. Michael F. de Spiuola of the FirstItank of Hilo and Miss Henrietta Carval-h- o

were quietly married Sunday morningnt the Catholic Church, only the imme-

diate families of the contracting partiesbeing in attendance. Mr. and Mrs. Spi-

uola hove taken up their residence onVolcano street.

The Hark Roderick Dim, which sailedfor San Francisco last Saturday, carriedfourteen passengers, as follows: Mrs.Thos lllack and 3 children, Miss Donald,Mrs. T. A. Drauga and sou, Mr. and Mrs.John shermau, Mrs. and Mrs. SilverMiss. Quinton, W. A. Ray and Lieut.Schofield of the Salvation Army.

PAUSE, PLEASE, ANDPERUSE!

HUNTER RYEIS NOT

"Nearly the Best"NORISITMERELYAS

"Good as the Best"ITIS

ABSOLUTELYAND

POSITIVELYTIIF.

BEST WHISKEYMADEBYANVIIODVFORANVIIODYANYWHERE

Hoffschlaeger Co.,LIMITED.

CHURCH STREET

THK WKKKLY 1111,0 TRIBUNK, IIII.0, HAWAII, FRIDAY, MAY ao, 1904.

ItKOKI'TION AMI HANCK.

To Miss Mnrlp Nichols lit Hie t'nn-- ,

nrlo Itrsldciicp.

One of the prettiest functions of the I

season wis the reception and dancetendered to Miss Mnrlc Nichols by Mrs,

J. S. Cauario and daughters last Fridayevening. Miss Nichols is a NativeDaughter of the Golden West, one ofSan l:r.iiiclco's most charming belles,whose lively disposition and kindlinessof lieurt must win favor wherever shegoc,s.

The spacious drawing rooms and dinlug room of the Cauario residence wertransformed into a ballroom with beauti-ful decorations in blue and gold silks,with 11 profusion of ferns and flowersscattered throughout the room and overthe latiais.

" KVfMriliiiliBil ttlimli n tunst 1n1filtfiiliiiiiunuvu iiiuniv Jt m iii3v tiviiKiikiui

character, and the dancing was continuedto a late hour, refreshments being servedat various intervals.

Those present were: Mesdames Canarlo,W.J. Stone, Stone, ftldgood, Reid, Laur-

ence, Smith, Lyman, Arnaud; MissesEaton, Hnpai 3, Richardson, LocIhmi-stei- n

2, Stone, Weight, Farnuahar, Peck2, Wery, Souza 2, Vennblc, Sumner,Cauario 2, Nichols, Rose, Marliu;Mcssets. Stone, Nichols, Morehead, Ha-pa- l,

Schocu, Cook, Kennedy, Ridgway,Sticti, Hicght 2, Html, Hngalls, Schoen-- !

u g, Grace Rotnanc, Castendykc,Rocrick, Day, Jackson, Henderson,Frazcr, Smith, Hidgood, Frost, Guard,English, Louisou, J. U. Smith, Lyman,Wachs, Rose.

Catholic Mission, Hilo.The Right Reverend Libert, Bishop of

Lcngma, Intends to visit Hilo about thethird week of June to administer theSacrament of Confirmation.

After His Lordship's visit, FatherOliver of Hilo, who has worked in theCatholic Mission of Hawaii since l83l,leaves for a few months' absence in Bel-

gium, his native Country.

The smiling countenance of AlbertHomer of Kitkaiati is seen upon thestreets this week.

Charles P. Parsons, candidate forJudge, returnsfrom Honolulu lessjubilaut,but hopeful to the last.

Manager and Mrs. Geo. Ross of Hakaluu were guests of Mrs. Shipmau onWednesday and Thursday.

Miss uuima t'orter cutcrlaitica anumber of friends at cards Tuesday even-

ing in honor of Mr. Ollic Shipnian.Company D. meets tonight to further

discurs ways and means of continuingthat organiz atiou as a military Company.

A public meeting will be hold Saturdayevening at 8 o'clock at Firemen's Hallto consider a proposed Fourth of Julycelebration.

The Schooner Charles L. Woodbury,Harris, master, arrived Tuesday after,noon after a record trip of 3 days' sailingfrom Honolulu.

Franklin Howland of 1'upaako is saidto be somewhat under the weather,suffering from weak knee caused by over-practi-

at base ball.M.F.Frosscr, Deputy Attorney General,

of Honolulu, arrived Monday eveningoverland from Kailua to attend tit' Mayterm of the Circuit Court.

Wm. Lindsay, captain of police atWaimea, has been appointed deputy sheriff for that district. He is now doingspecial detail work in Hilo under DeputySheriff Fetter. .

The Young Men's Republican Clubheld an open meeting at Waiaken bridgeon Wednesday evening. Speeches weremade by Rev. S. L. Desha, Kauhane andRufus A. Lyman, Ji.

Bock beer is still on tap at UnionSaloon.

I want to rent my Puueo residence-Al- lanWall.

Lost. On May 12II1 between FirstForeign Church uud Spreckels' Block oron Government road to Waiuaku, a smalloxidised silver watch with carved back.fS.oo Reward. Return to TRIBUNEOFFICE.

IT Works Likij Magic The reliefobtained from Chamberlain's Bain Balmwhen applied to a burn or a scald is sonearly instantaneous that it seems almostmagical in its effect. An injury of thiskind heals without maturation when thisremedy is applied and unless the woundis very severe does not leave a scar. Forsale by Hilo Drug Co.

THE OLD RELIABLE

tmnmTtTLI J M"HJ

IkPPOWDERAbsolutely Pui

THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE

UOAItl) OF TKADi:.IMmmissos Mnllcr or IntiTrst to Vr

pcrly Owners 11 ml liirrstor.At the Special Meeting of the lloaul of

Trade of Hilo held at Fireman's Halllast Friday tvcnlng, for the purmsv ofmaking sundry additions to By-la- Mr.Richards drew attention to the fact thatthe Territorial Government could not ac-

cept the roadways running through l'uueoReeds Island, and Villa Franca, as saidroads had not been constructed in accord-

ance to law, the regulations providingthat roadways shall be built not less thanfifty feet wide. The roads mentionedare only forty feet in width, nnd pro-

perty owners would be compelled togrant the additional ten feet right of waybefore the government would assumecontrol.

Mr. Richards thought that this wouldmeet with considerable opposition fromthe property holders nnd that some stepsshould be taken with a view to havingthis law repealed at the next session ofthe Legislature. Mr. Brughelli, andothers, argued that a fifty foot road wasnone to wide, nnd belelved that propertyholders would gladly cede the necessaryright of way, as such action would tendto increase the value of their holdings.

No definite action was taken in thepremiss. Mr. Biirghelll advocated thebuilding of a road from Piihouua toKaiwiki, which would give settlers inthat section access to markets for theirproduce. He claimed that the soil ofHawaii would produce vegetables andfruits in such quantities as would support settlers with reasonably largefamilies, and that fruit raising and smallfarming should be encouraged.

Mr. Terry supported Air. Brughelli inhis arguments and gave an exhaustivediscoutse on "Coffeeand Coffee Culture,"which proved vastly entertaining and instructive to many of the planters presentwhose methods of handling had not beenquite so successful as those of Mr. Terry.

In reply to Mr. Turner, the Secretarystated that nothing definite was known regarding the transfer of the Reeds Islandbridge.

llllo II 11 nil Concert.Below follows the program given by

the Hilo Baud yesterday evening.v tart 1.

1. March "The Crimson Flush"Alexander

2. Overture "The Elves" Kicfer3. Waltz "Leola" iC. W. Bennet4. Volka "Elena" Kicfer

Comet duet by Jules and Gouvea.

l'ART 11.

1. March "Seventh U. S. Artillery"E. C. Ramsdell

2. Overture "Quite Right'VD.S.McCosh3. Waltz "Marina" Vandervell4. March "The Jolly Coppersmith"

Peter"Aloha Oe"

"Star Spangled Banner"

Shtpninn Luuu.Mr. and Mrs. Wm. H. Shipmau gave

an elaborate luau nnd farewell dance attheir home in Riverside Park Wednes-day night to their sou OUie Shipmau,who leaves this morning for California,where he will resume his studies in vet-

erinary surgery. Covers were laid forforty guests, mid the feast oi Hawaiiandelicacies was of the rarest and choicestknown to the native epicure. Music wasfurnished by the Woiakea string ijuar-tett- e

during the luau and the dancingwhich continued until a late hour. A

most enjoyable cvaniug was spent by thehost of friends of Mr. and Mrs. Shipmauand their popular sou,'

Elks L'edro Contest.The result of the Elks' pedro tourna-

ment remained unchanged after Saturdaynight's playing. J. W. Mcintosh and II.L. Williams of Puna were easily the winning team, scoring 12 out of the 13games played. There were several teamstied for second honors, with a score ofeight out of the series, but after the firstnight's play none of the players were ableto make any headway against the win-

ning team. Mr. Williams received a j

silver smoking set and Mr. Mcintosh a I

handsome pair of military brushes.

, Kiunu Arrivals.C. F. Parsons, J. II. Fuller, Julian

Moutserratt K. Taketa, II. Kendal, C. B.Hall, O. F. Metzer, I. Peck and wife, W.G. Shaw, L. Severance and wife, F.Grace, F. S. Holt, Miss 15. G. Rolph,Mrs. W. II. Rolph, Mrs. W. G. Rolph,

j Baron Munck T. GeOrgis, Miss M. Byrne,J, F. Budclmann, C. T. Caine, and wife,J. R. Cunningham, J. R, Cunningham,Jr. Miss F. G. Cunningham, Miss A. F.Cunningham,

Kiunu Departures.Baron, Munck, C. Georgie, Miss M.

Byrne, J. F. Uudelman, Miss E. D. Rolph,(Mrs. W. N. Rolph, Mrs. Geo. N. Rolph,

' F. S. Holt, Mrs. F. Deacon, Mrs. Rognl- -'

sky, J. G. Serrao, wife and four children,H. W. N. Mist, H. Deunison, O. T. Ship- -

man Jr. L. Severance, Mr. Bartlet, Jamesj Devlin, W. Berlowitz, E. L. Austin , Mr.

Levy, and Mrs. J. Dower.-

. First Foreign Church.Sabbath, May 22, 1904: Morning

service "Subject to the RightiousnessofI God. "Rom. 10:3. Evening servicej 'I Will Bless Thee, and Thou Shalt be a."Blessing." Gen. 12:2.

'Wall, Nichols Co. will give you new

I Victor Records for old ones. a7-l- f

.1. U. SMITH FOIt SKNATOIt.Tin' Home Itulc Lender Auk Hudor- -

semen! From llotli I'lirllcs.Honolulu, Ohau, II. T., May 12

AliiKKtcoiucideut with the time thatJ. U' Smith of Hilo, successful candidatefor the office of County Attorney of EastHawaii, was bienking into the YoungMen's Republican Club over a bridge ofoaths and affidavits at about the sameidentical moment, he was writing to theHome Rule leaders of this city for a

"letter of recommendation." The au-

thor of the letter of recommendation,now in the hands of John U.,isKupihca,secretary of the Home Rule party.Kuplhea said: "I made the letter strong.Smith I think is going to Washingtonand wants Roosevelt to believe that la-ha-s

the confidence of the leaders nmntigthe Hnwaiinns. I made the letter strongnnd if the President rends it, he willknow that John V. Smith Is the besthnolc Home Killer III Hawaii,"

J. U. Smith Is the arch-politi- c an ofEast Hawaii In so far as activity and ini-

tiative goes. He bus promoted thecandidacy of Parsons forjudge, nnd willprobably use his Home Iftile letter ofrecommendation to convince Jnck Atkin-

son that he is a way-upp- with theHhwnliaus.

Kiipihca says J. U. Smith will probablybc the next Home Rule Senator fromEast Hawaii, although personally, hewould prefer to see Senator John T.Brown returned.

Secretary Kuplhea says the HomeRule party is a little shaky in Honolulubut is stronger than ever on Maui andHawaii. Kuplhea is so confident of thesituation 011 Hawaii that he even now iswilling to predict who will be the Re-

presentatives and Senators elected onthat island next fall. In East Hawaii,Kupilicn says the four Representativeswill be: Win- - Kcolanui, T. II, Ah Leong,Tony Fernandez and Thos. Nalelhua.In West Hawaii he believes Knidho, Pu-la- a

uud S, Lazzaro will be scut up.The Senators he names arc Sim I'ua andcither John T. Brown. The Home Ruleparty in East Huwaii is under (he man-

agement of Fernandez, Ah Leong, Kco-

lanui with J. U. Smith, the mistrustedadviser, since he took the Young Re-

publican oath.

.Murine Intelligence.Office of the Assistant to the Inspcc-"- )

tor of the Twelfth Lighthouse Dis-- i

trlct.35 Alexander Young Building,Honolulu, T. II., May 16, 1904. J

Notice to Mariners, Honolulu HarborEntrance, .Islnud of Oahu.

In Notice to Mariners from this office,dated February 2, 1904, it was staled thatthe buoy, nun, marking thefairway entrance to Honolulu harbor, T.II., had been removed, owiug'to dredgingoperations then in progress. As thedredging operations on the bar and out-

side approaches of Honolulu harbor havejust been completed, notice is herebygiven that a red, nun buoy, marked "2"in white, has this day been placed in 30feet of water, 50 yards S.E. by E. (Mag.)from the former position of what wasknown as the mid-chann- buoy, on thelollowiug magnetic bearings:

Chimney of sewer pumping station,N.E.. Honolulu range light station, N. by E.

Right tangent of Quarantine Island,N.N.W. ( W.

This buoy should be left on the star-

board hand in entering.Notice 'is also' hereby given that the

iron spir buoy, red, marked "2," whichformerly marked the starboard hand en-

trance of the channel, has thisday been permanently discontinued, andonly one channel is now recognized forentering Honolulu harbor, of which thered, tiun boy, No. 2, this day placed, isthe starboard hand entrance buoy,

The newly dredged channel is 240 feetwide and gives 34 feet water across thebar. The entrance range, N. 25 E. (true),gives practically the same depth of waterns heretofore, ns it skirts the eastern edgeof the new 34-fo- channel. This newchannel requires that the Honolulu hnr-b- or

light (red, front, range light) be re- -

built in u new position about 40 feet westof its present site, and until such time asthis may be effected and notice givenvessels drawing over 25 feet should enterthe channel a little to the westward ofthe range, or, in other words, keep thelighthouse open a little to the eastwardof the rear range mark mid steer a mid-chann-

course between the buoys andbeacons as heretofore. This will carrythem through the 34-fo- channel.

By order of the Lighthouse Hoard.A. F. NIBLACK,

Lieutenant-Commande- r U. S. N.Assistant to the Inspector of the Twelfth

Lighthouse District.

immmmmmmmmmmmmNOTICE TO

IBANANA SHIPPERS; THE STEAMER

ENTERPRISEWILL SAIL FOR SAN FRAN-

CISCO ON

June, I, 1904R. T. CUARD, Agont.

liumMmmmaamiiMMiial

Subscribe fc.r the Tkihunu, Island subcriplion $2,50,

Get Acquainted with the

UPTODATE

SPORTING GOODS HOUSECorrespondence solicited nnd goods sent bv mall

WOODS & SHELDON91 King Street, Honolulu.

THE HENPiY WATERHOUSE TRUST GO.

LIMITED.

BUYS SELLS

HEAL ESTATE,STOCKS AND BONDS

SECURES INVESTMENTSNEGOTIATES LOANS

WRITES FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCEISSUES SURETY BONDS

ACTS AS ADMINISTRATOR, EXECUTOR, TRUS-TEE AND IN ALL FIDUCIARY CAPACITIES

P. O. BOX 348.

ocoo040.ocou

Q0OO

ocou

AND

. Newflillinery

For the Spring and Summer of

1904

L. Turner Co.Limited

From

Steamers of the above line running in with the Canadian Pacific Railway Company, B. C, nnd Sydney, N. S. W., uud calling nt Victoria, B.C., Honolulu,Suva ami Brisbane. are duo n't on or iluit-- liel.iu.stated, viz:

From Vancouver and Victoria B.C.For Brisbane, Q., and Sydney:

MIOWERA MARCH 12

MOANA Al'RIL 9AORANGI MAY 7

The magnificent new service, theBETWEEN VANCOUVER AND making run in 100 hours..

change. The finest service in thetickets .ssued from Honolulu to Canada, United States and Europe

For freight nnd passage, all general apply to

H. & Ltd-- ,

Sale.

Notice is hereby given that in pursu-ance of nn order imtde mid entered bythe Circuit Judge of the Fourth CircuitCourt Territory of Hawaii, in Probate, ,'

on the 12 day of January, A. I). 1904, inthe matter of the estnte of Knmuliiwu-- ,bine, of Puutuoi, Hilo Hawaii, deceased,the undersigned Administrator ,of saidestate will bell at auction subjectto confirmation by said Court, the follow-ing described real estate, situated on thelaud of Piiumoi, District of Hilo. Islandnnd Territory of Hawaii, namely;

Twenty-si- x nnd one half of thej laud set forth in the deed of conveyance

from S. L. Austin and wife, recorded inLiber 107, on pages 133 and 134, in theRegistry of Conveyances for the Territoryof Hawaii, at Honolulu, Oahu, the por-tion to be sold is on the Ilamakua side ofMid laud, adjoining the gulch.

Saul sale will be made at public- - auc-tion nt 11 o'clock a. 111. on Saturday theiHthihiy of June, A. I). 1004, at the frontdoor of the court house iu the town ofHilo, island of Hawaii, to the highestbidder for cash iu United States goldcoin. Conveyance nt purchasers expense.

Hilo, Hawaii, Muy 11, 1904,

FREDERICK S. LYMAN.Administrator of the estate of

deceased. 28-- 4

e

HONOLULU,

.COOO

U093

III0003

ocou

Sydney, Brisbane (Q).For Victoria nnd Vancouver, H. C:

MOAN MARCHAORANGI Al'RILMIOWERA MAY

"Imperial Limited." is now runnim? dallv

w.(1

Vkn. .IS 4hrf&p

V '" H "I7VA"'m SPORTING

k 8j AND

"it ?kUmmfjpypg.

NO OTHER BOOT HAS As MANYWATER-PROO- F QUALITIES.

SHOE CO..

Subscribe for the TuuiUNK. Sult,crip-tio- n

J2.50 per year.

Canadian-Australia- n Royal Mail SS. Co.

connection

O.: Honolulu nhotit the

MONTREAL, thewithout r.iilwnv world.

Throughnnd information,

Theo. Davies Co., Agts.

Administrator's

public

ncres

Kuuuilii-walilu-

HAWAII,

MWW.

BooT

ECONOMIC HILO

Cen'l

Page 6: Jk J iljO - University of Hawaii · market has teen oversubscribed twenty times. Tokio, Japan May ti. TheJap--janese g&Vrison at Anju has repulsed an attack made by a force of 200

m

m

thk

FIRST BANK OF HIL0,,(",r,u,"f nom ',r",", mm Trn'11,

i.iMiriiU.

Incorporated t'ndcr tlic Laws of theTerritory of Hawaii.

CAPITAL, fjoo.ooo.

1'EACOCK" BLOCK, HILO.

I I'KCK I'tclilent.C. 0. KHNNUDV Vlcc-1't-

JOHN T. M0IK...JIU1 Vlce-I'rr-

C. A. STOMH Vn.liler.TllOrt. C. KIIKUVAY, Hrcutary.

MKliCTOKS:. Cnimrio, John J, Orace,

P. S.'l.ymmi, II. V.

Wm. Fullur, V. IliSlilpmnn.

Oruw Uxcliunue onThe Hank of Hnwiill, Ltd HonoluluWells, Fargo & Co. lliitik...S.ui Francisco

Wells. Fargo & Co's Dank New York

The National Itauk of the Ue- - m.j0iu,opublic "

Cilyiiii. Mills, Currie & Ci London

Hongkong Shanghai Hank- - Hongkong,iii Cor)oiaiiou ) China.

HougkongSh.iughai llink- - (Shanghai,iny Corporation., ) (.liliiit.

Vokoliamull.lllgK ""KMH1l Illujine CoriHir.ilion 1

Japan.

SAFE DEPOSIT BOXESRented by Hit: Month 01 Year, Par-

ticular on Application.

UNIONSALOON

SlIIPMAX STKKHT

Open from s A.M. lo n P.M.

First ClassLIQUORSWINES AND

CORDIALSAt Moderate Prices.

Mixun and Fancy DrinksConcocted by

HxPhRiKNcuD Mixologists

The Celebrated

Honolulu Primo Beerand

Rainier BeerOn Draught.

Ten Cents a ClassFRF.H LUNCH

J. C. SERRAO,Proprietor.

Matson Navigation Co.

1 lie only Direct Line between San Fran- -

cisco and Ililo, Comprising thefollowing Past Sailers

-- t

tj i" JV

Steamer ENTERPRISEBark ANNIE JOHNSONBark SANTIAGOBark RODERICK DHUBark MARION CHILCOTTShip FALLS OF CLYDETui; CHAS. COUNSELMANLaunch LURLINE

nil other Specially Chartered vesselsmakes this trip with at least one of theseboatu each mouth, carrying both Freightand Passengers.

Por dates of sailing and terms,Call upon,

no. 1). Sprecliels & Bros. Co,Ageuts,

327 Market St., San I'raucisco.R. T. OUARD, Agent,

Hir.o. Hawai'

LlAJKSfJtALAAtAAidAJi1 The Largest Importers of

Also, Dealers in Dates, Oranges,Apples, Lemons, Limes, Potatoes,

Onions and All Kinds of Nuts.

L. C. JiRESOVICH CO.i Sin Francisco. California

hrvwrw

FRANK OREE1MAN

OAliRIAGE andSIGN PAINTER

HACKS A SPECIALTYSTRICTLY FIRST.CLASS WORK

Ponohawai and Volcano StsHILO

WJ&KLYTHU

HOUND TAIII.K TALES.

wows.

"Well, I don't know!" said theProfessor, as lie glanced quizzicallyover the rim of his gold soectuclcstowards the Cashier who had justconcluded a most harrowing storyconnected with snakes and snakepoisoning. "There may be a wholelot of truth in that story, but myexperience in the handling ofsnakes and other reptiles has shownme that the terrible dread whichmost people have of snakes ingeneral is very very silly, and thatmost of the remedies used tocounteract the poison of a snakebite are far more harmful than thepoison itself.

"As a boy while pursuing mystudies in natural history, I wasrather fond of snakes, and wouldtrequenuy carry tnem around 111

my pockets. I remember one occasion when I picked up in the woodsa beautiful little fellow about a footand a half long; sleek, sinous andgraceful, and possessing that lovelygreen tint which is so hard tomatch, and putting him in mypocket started for home.

"When I arrived in town, a ladyacci-ste- me at the street corner andenquired the way to a certainlocality. While giving the direc- -

tions I was startled to see her throwup her hands in horror, and, with ayell of fright dash across the street,utterly regardless of the dangerfrom passing teams and cars whichthreatened her at every step."

"Now, what on earth can be thematlftr with that woman?" said 1 toa friend who happened to conic upat that moment, "she seems to havegone crazy all of a sudden!"

"Wouldn't be surprised if shehad, after seeing a necktie likethat!" was the response. "Why,the devil can't, you be content withordinary cloth instead of wearing athing like that?"

"You see the little fellow hadcrept from my coat pocket, crawledunder my vest, and was makingplayful jabs at my chin, thrustingout his little red tongue, and ap-

parently having a high old time.""But why the dickens should the

woman have got so scared? Evenif the snake had been poisonous,she wasn't the one thai was goingto get hurt."

"Talking about antidotes forMiakc bites many peole claim thatwhiskey, taken in large doses, isthe most effective. My privateopinion is, that more snake-bitte- n

people have died from an overdoseof the remedy than from actualpoisoning."

"And that remind me of a ratherfunny incident which happened toa friend of mine while out hunting.Tying his horse to a fence, hepassed through some thick shrub-bery, and while in the act of leapingfrom a fallen log he saw a huge'rattler' coiled within a foot of thespot in which he was bound toalight

"As soon as his feet touched theground he gave a side spring toget clear of the reptile, but a sharpsting in the calf of his leg warnedhim that he had been struck) andon looking aroundhe found thatthe rattler had disappeared.

"Frautic with terror, he threwdown his rifle and started for hishorse, making, according to hisown account, better time than hehad ever travelled in his life before.Ripping open his saddlebags, hetook out a pint flask of whiskeyand swallowed the whole contents,his hands and his whole body all aquiver with nervous excitement.The whiskey steadied his nervessufficiently to enable him to get athis hunting knife, with which slithis canvass leggings and hose. On

J laying bare the skin he perceivedtwo small punctures on the insideof the calf, and around these heimmediately proceeded to carve.

"Hcfore making any deep incisionhowever, a closer examination dis-

closed the fact that the punctureshad been made not by the fangs ofa snake, but by the rowell of hisown spur, wucreupoii ue promptly.iu.iiiniim.u ma iuc. ui acii-uime-

ton and. lv nir down under theshmlu of an alder bush became oneof the drunkest men that creationever saw,1."

HILO TRIBUNE; HILO,s- - ii- -mi

SIS.V1, llAUASSK.

U Helm; Utilized For MrtllnTiiclltrcof Paper.

Experiments already made havedemonstrated the possibility ofmaking paper from sisal bagasseand three bales of bagasse arc beingsent to the coast on the Nevadanfor extensive tcsls of the paperqualities of the fibre remnant. Thepaper which was made here frombagasse is very crude, being a grayish white and or the consistency,almost, of blotting paper. V. C.Weedon, secretary of the HawaiianFibre Co., is of the opinion, however, that good note paper can bemade from the refuse. On theNevadan which sailed Sunday fromHonolulu for San Francisco, viaKahului, there was a shipment ofthirty-tw- o bales of sisal, of whichthree bales are to be used in paperexperiments. About eight tons ofsisal was shipped altogether, andthe total output of the HawaiianSisal Co this year will be about 200tons. Sisal is bringing about $165per ton in San Francisco now, therehaving been an increase in theprice per pound of seven-eigth- s ofa cent within the last few weeks.

It requires about twenty tons offibre, and about forty-fiv- e per centof the,remainder is water. The re-

mainder, or about one half of thetotal, is bagasse and other refuse,which can be utilized in the manu-facture of paper.

It is not the company's intention,if the experiments prove successful,to manufacture paper here. Iffound to be profitable the bagassewill be reduced to a pulp and shipp-ed in that form to the mainland forpaper manufacture. A plant forthe manufacture of paper in theislands would require an investmentlarger than the production of sisalin the islands will warrant at pre-

sent. There is no intention, either,of putting in a cordage plant untilthe acreage of sisal has been con-

siderably increased. The companynow has 800 acres under cultivationhaving recently put in 200 acresmore. Expenses of production arcbeing reduced by the use of cheap-er fuel, an article with which ex-

periments are being made, tha re-

sults of which are kept secret.

Kiiitua Jurors Wait on Prosecution.Julian Mousarrat, who is in the

city on busiuess, was a juror at thepresent Kailua term of court andfrom what he says the jurors in theThird Circuit have anything butbouquets for the Attorney General'sDepartment. The delay and ex-

pense entailed upon jurors whomust leave their work and traveleighty to a hundred miles to attendcourt is the phase of the businessthat causes jurymen to kick.

"Here are the facts," said Mou-

sarrat. "The Court was called forWednesday, April 27. On thatday no Attorney General was thereand Court adjourned till Saturday,April 30. On Saturday a represent-ative of the Attorney General wasthere but asked an adjournmentuntil Wednesday, May '4. Allthis time the jurymen who hadleft their business to attend courtwere waiting at their own expense.

"It's not that any of them objectto jury duty," said Mr. Monsarrat,"but we don't like long vacationsin Kailua in busy times. I my-

self had to go a hundred miles torespond to the summons to serveon the jury. There are lunas andmechanics who draw $3.50 a day athome and who for the week ofidleness in Kailua will draw downfour dollars. These men in theAttorney General's office have cer-

tain duties to perform and I shouldthink one of them is to be ready totry cases when Court and jury areready to do business. The jurorsin Vnilnn fflt that tliov lind hpcn

Willi lieu ciiu 111111 uui uieach term an imposition on everyman who has do jury duty."

runs, rarncc, wiy 13. ueporisfrom Armenia state that, the Turksare blirilhlJ, Armenian villages andKilling tue luunuiiuui.s. 1 ne out- -

rapes are of the same characterthat have kept Armenia in turmoil

laud its inhabitants in fearfor years.

HAWAII, i'RtDAY, MAY

XKW MTKAMMillt1 LINK,

Australian Liner to (,'nll at lloiinlulu.

I11 July next the British steam-ship Mnoti King, 7000 tons gross, i

will sail from New Zealand ports'

and Sydney, New Smith Wales, forthe port of Vancouver, with freightand passengers, says the VancouverProvince. She will be the first ofthe large three steamships placedon the route by the R. A . Alley &Company.

Such is the gist of an interviewR. A. Alley, of Tacoma, gave TheProvince this afternoon, says theVictoria Colonist of April 19. Mr.Alley arrived from Tacoma thismorning on business in connectionwith this "new line of steamships.

Mr. Alley announced that at thestart sailings will be made every sixweeks between Vancouver and Aus-

tralian and New Zealand ports, finroute, inward and outward bound,the steamships will call at Honolulu,and most probably at Suva, in theFiji islands.

The line will serve three ports inNew Zealand, and it is calculatedthat on account of the preferentialtariffs existing between Canada andNew Zealand a large trade will bebuilt up between the two countriesshortly. Leaving New Zealand,the steamships will call at Sydney,New South Wales, sailing thence toSuva, and calling Honolulu enroute to this coast.

Vancouver will be the first portof call on this coast. Alter dis-

charging passengers and freight atthis port the steamship will proceedto Puget Sound, their principalports of call being Tacoma, wherethey will load such out-bou- freightas offers from the United States.Of course, out-bou- freight willalso be received from Vancouver. '

Preliminary arrangements for theinauguration of this new line ofsteamships have been proceedingfor a year past. Mr. Alleystated today that the service wouldhave been in operation some mouthsago, had not the war between Russiaand Japan broken out. He hadnearly completed the charter forseveral steamships for the run, whenJapan stepped in and outbid him onthe charter prices, and consequentlyhe lost the vessels. Now, however,the steamship Moari King, whichis now on the Australian coast, hasbeen chartered, and it is expectedthat she will be ready to sail forVancouver in July. Negotiationsare now proceeding for the charter-ing of two other steamships, eachlarger than the Maori King. Theywill followed the latter vessel' tothis coast. Docking facilities forthe new service in the pprt ofVancouver are now being arrangedfor, and it is probable that theEvans, Coleman & Evans wharveswill be used.

On Tuesday next Mr. Alley willleave for San Francisco, where hewill meet an agent of his who hasrecently been in New Zealand andAustralia completing traffic arran-gements connected with the steam-ship service. From San FranciscoMr. Alley and his agent will proceedto New York, thence they will goto Ottawa to interview the Domin-

ion government in connection witha subsidy for the new line, which isnow receiving consideration at the '

hands of the Cabinet. From OttawaMr. Alley will proceed to England011 busiuess connected with the newline.

..

St. Petersburg, May 12. TheRussians have practically dismantl-- 'ed the city of Dalny. All the!structures, including the piers anddocks, that could be of use to theenemy have been blown up. Splen-- 1

did shipping facilities' costing Jhous-- ,

auds of dollars, have been wrecked!I... 1.inm!,n '

laud always cures. It is intended.especially for coughs, colds, croupand whooping cough, and is theoesi meuiciue mane ior uiese uis-- 1

'eases. There is not the least dan- - i

'Bcr i giving It to children for iticomal,lsno opium orotlier Injuriousdrug and may be given as confi-

dently to a babe as to an adult. Forisale by the Hilo Drug Co,

outrageously treated and they wantr ti ,

to be heard from. We people overin the Third Circuit want to assist Chamhi;ki.ain'.s Cough Rkmkdyin the carryiug'out of justice, but is the mother's favorite. Itispleas-w- e

want the officials to be ready ant and safe for children to takeinane

to

constant

at

over

20, IQ04,

A Life SavadNever glvo up. hti tiwtiir h w '11

you are. Avor'. JtarMiii-iii'- l li'i- - nui df.oinutorrlblucaso3,aij(lli.ni.b .. 1,0..

I! llSfrvl PW

Mr. Thou. II. Calic1, Ilnrrcl TiccL, J)rlr-ston- e,

Jsow Mouth Wales, wi III si"I fuel It myilntj: t' let millrriiif proiOo

know what it '.vnmlcrfnl Mi'oil.piuifyi'ifincillrmo IsAjrr'g MtMi'arll. 1. .My illrcjlifj-a- n with sharo tili.s In lliu HriIh.mIiIIi)I was haiiillhic wt't wool. Allir a il.ty ortwo I could lint w.ilk.nnil Fillirr-,- 1 IcirilUpalm. My I.ico tutneil nearly liLich, Imp)reil llnie)n;q eaipn cut ollovi'r my Ji'iil,wulthen I lietninuricllrloiiit. I vnw In lw li3-ltul- ft

for Loiiio tiniv, Mid eici'jtlil.i;; w.mtiled, Inn I i'Itw rii nMl wrikci, ui'illiuenum ciiiiviihtiI tint iwililnx eoiilil lm(lima lor mo. 1 luil IrMrii n.ui li admitAjcr'u S.irfUiirlll 1 tint I thmu-li-t I wmltl(jlvo Itn tr'nl llii l.uu lionu. After ti.lln0110 lottlo I liM.'icht I f(lt A little lirUt-r-.

Ho I irorei?il utmtlter Ixittlo, nii'l tlicnnntl nt III .urn iei. I ri.i'hu:'l

met In tliix tlmo left lay l'il fi.rUrn ilrxt tlmo In kIx mo'illit. I am now hiXmkI health, mill I av lo erery ono that

Sjrsaarllla saved lay lire."

AYER',8Sarsaparilla

Thern n' nnny luiltitlnn RirganarllUs.i.o Mini )jiitf!"A)i-r'- .

IVs.iirtd ty "r. i. C. Ayef Co., l.mc!I.Mtf ., U. S. A.

For Sale by HILO DRUG COMPANY

llilo Electric Light Co., Ltd.

Houses Wired andLights Installed

In accordance with the rules of the Na-

tional Hoard of Fire Underwriters.A complete stock of

ELECTRICAL SUPPLIESFixtures, Shades, Table, lied and Desk

Lain pi, etc., always on hand.

Fan Motors . . . $15Fan Motors, swivel frame, 18Sowing Machine Motor 20Power for operating them $1 a month

Installation charged extra.

Estimates furnished on ull classes ofElectrical Work and Contracts taken toinstall apparatus complete.

IAAAAMsc

I

113I I

X X n0) o 3

i r? s?5"S O 0) o3 O $S 3 o M

re 1 O 23 Q. CO

5 a5' s rn

toJa

a. o

oo

nrvrrFffv?rHWffifii

J. Ivancovich & Go.WHOLHSALI-- :

Commission MerchantsSAN FRANCISCO, - CAL.

IMPORTERS OF

HAWAIIAN BANANAS

and OTHER ISLAND FRUITSCONSIGNMENTS SOLICITF.I)

PAY FOR THE BESTIT'S CHEAPEST

AND THAT'S TIIF. CLASS OF WORKHXIJCUTKD I1V

CAMERON

TUT DIIIUDCDI HE. f LUiTiULIl

FRONT ST., Oi. Sl'RF.CKF.L'S IlLOCK

- -

PACIFIC TRANSFER CO.

Handle and Store BAGGAGE126 KINC ST. HONOLULU

Phone, Main 5'

IIMPflRTFIl-

!!' CIGARS

You will find your favorite below

La AfricanaCabanasHigh LifoDock & CoLurllnoSanchoz & HayaManuol LopozVan DyckEl Principo Do CalosConoral ArthursVlllar & Vlllar

Always fresh at the

HILODRUG

f

H.COMPANYL. SHaW, Manager i

HILO MARKET CO.,LIMITED.

Telephone No. 39.

Bkidok St. - HlUO, II. I

Pacific Meat Market

Front St., Hit.o, H. I,

Choice Cuts oft

Beef, Mutton,Pork, Veal.

POULTRY of all Kinds

FRESH ISLAND BUTTER

Fine F,at Turkeys.. . Sucking Pigs.

KEYSTONE

SALOON

Draught Boor IO ContsWhen you need a drink call

at the KEYSTONE, corner

Front find Ponohawai streets.A first class line of

WINESLIQUORSBEERS

always on hand.

Telephone IO

W. DOWNERProprietor.

Koa! Koa!!Koa Lumber in small and large quanti-

ties; well seasoned.Furniture made to order, any style

wanted. Repairs made on any kind otfurniture. Prices moderate.

Sorrao Cabinot Shop.Apply to IOSF. O. SRRRAO.

Wilder's Steamship Go.

Change in Sailing Time of

Steamer "MAUI"Connecting with

"ALAMEDAFrom the Coast.

Commencing FI5I1RUARV 5th, 1904, theSteamer "MAUI," Itennett, Master, willsail from HONOLULU at 5 p. in.

For LAI1A1NAMAALARA HAYKAWAIHAHMAHUKONALAUPAHORHOF. andHILO

With Mail and Passengers.

Wilder's Stcnnisliin Co.

Mi

.1