8
l L If you want to The Hawaiian Sin day's day you Nowi can (Ind to THE H J?$lSRT j?5lIIjSl!N STj?5lI homes U COpk I III Into oPllonoInU III'T the th It In TUB STAR. VOL. VI. HONOLl'LU. H. I., MONUAY. AUOUST 21, 1899. No. 2331. Rolen BIUTISH Used London by ADVERTISING. Principal City. Papers In 11 IS Hi 10 If Hit IBHS UDtfl ft li-ii- o m 1ft I ifll As a rule, the London newspapers pay bigger dividends on the capital than thoso of Chicago or New-Yor- The English are great adver- tisers, but they do not understand the are of display or show the originality that makes the advertising pages of American newspapers attractive. The advertising rates In the Times, Tele- graph ana other first-cla- ss newspapers vary but little, and It Is curious that they charge more In proportion for large advertisements than for little ones. For example, the rate Is 37V4 cents a line for the first 48 lines, and after that 60 cents a line, for legal financial, educational, amusements and similar notices. "Trade" advert'sements as they call those furnished by mer- chants, auctioneers, etc., are charged for at the rate of 4 shIIUngs for the first five lines and' 1 shilling a line thereafter. "Situations wanted" cost 3 shillings for four lines and sixpence a llnp thereaftT. Domestic servantR an plying for situations are given reduced ratFs three lines fo- - 1 chil'ng find v. pence. Persons ndvert's'ng for help have to pay a shl'l'ng n l'ne no matter how lorg or how short their advert's-men- t. Rents nn other real pstnte ad- - vertlsement pay a shUl'mr a line for the first sly lines and t Bh'U'ng and s1"-pen- thereafter. Marr'age and death , notices are received at the same rate. Chicago Record. J IT XR W A I) V F.HT ISO KNTS. . WANTED. " jTwenty pretty children for "Hans, trjJ Boatman." Apply at Opera House 4 o'clock this day. HERBERT ASHTON, Stage Manager. ELECTION OF OFFICERS. At a meeting of the stockholders of Henry May & Company, Limited, held on the 22d day of July, the following of fleers were culy elected to serve until the next annual meeting: vr. Mnv President and Manaeer i. E. Mclntyre , nt .'. T. P. Waterhouse Secretary F. B. Auerback Treasurer F. W. Macfarlane Auditor E. F. Bishop and E. D. Tenney, di- rectors. F. T. P. WATERHOUSE, Secretary, ELECTION OF OFFICERS. At a meeting of the stockholders of the Kaplolanl Estate, Limited, held this day, the following officers were elect ed to servo for the ensuing year: D. Kawananakoa President J. Kalanianaole Vice-Preside- nt John F. Colburn Treasurer At. K. Keohokalole Secretary and Auditor The above officers, together with John II. Wise, constitute the Board of Directors. M. K. KEOHOKALOLE, Secretary. Honolulu, August 18, 1899. ELECTION OF OFFICERS. At a meeting of the stockholders of the Hono.u.u Stockyards Co., Ltd., held August 17th, 1S99, the following were elected officers of the Company for the ensuing year: Wm. H. Rice President T. B. Richards Vice-Preside- nt A. Newhouse Secretary Frank Hustace Treasurer "L. de L. Ward Auditor The abqve with W. S. Withers and G. J. Waller constitute the Board of Direc- tors. A. NEWHOUSE, Secretary. Iox Sale 1 COMPLETE PONY RIG. 1 ENGLISH TRAP CART. 1 ENGLISH ROAD CART, 2 RUBBER TIRED BUGGIES. 1 JUMP CART BUGGY. 1 GENTS LIGHT ROAD WAGON. 1 CHAEP CUT-UNDE- R SURREY. 1 CHEAP FRASIFR ROAD CART. 4 SETS SINGLE HARNESS. M 2 SETS HEARVY DOUBLE HARNESS 3 SETS LIGHT DOUBLE HARNESS. ' SADDLES AND BRIDLES. MULES. COWS. CHICKENS. HORSES. "W BUN 11.0 U STOTOKDS GO. W. S. WITHERS. Manager. Corner Alakea and Queen streets. 1 HI 181 1 ITS VALUE AS AN AGENT Takes caro cf Proporty Collects Rents Vl M altos Improvements Pays Taxes, Insuranco, Etc., and renders an account of samo at regular periods SETTLE ESTATES Acts as Gnurdlun, Trustee or Executor STOCK AND 1I0ND JUtOKERS SAt'E DEPOSIT BOXES QUO. R. CARTER, Treasurer Tel. 184 407 Fort St., Honolulu i1 COUNTRY HOSPITALS WILL BE INCORPORATED. To Pass From Direct Control of Board of Health Street Car Matters Before the Cabinet Again. The Cabinet today granted to the Boaid of .Health the authority to In- - n coiporate all hospitals outside of Hono-- 1 ,uiu and to place each in the hands of ' boar of three trustees. In future these trustees will have d.rect and abjo- - i iute conn ol, save for the general super- - vision or tne neaitn autnorities. ah matters 6f finance will ba directed by ; tne trustees in place ot Deing nanaieu by the local Board ot Health. Govern- - ment patients must be treated free anywhere. L. A. Thurston and C. G, Ballentyne were before the Cabinet this morning with nn additional proposal for a car me on King street. They now want permission to lay a track from LUIha street In Palama to Victoria street be-- 1 yond Thomas Square. A former permis- sion only contemplated a track to King street bridge on the west. Moreover, the rapid transit ask that their plan ror the road be approve! outright by the Cabinet. This brings the matter In a new and more complicated light. Owing fo Its Importance It has been taken un der advisement. It Is voted this morning that the at torney general be Instructed to use his authority In the Interest of the public safety, In the matter of providing ample xlts from play houses In the city, xno discussion and order had particular ref erence to the Orpheum theater, about which there has been more or less com- plaint In this regard. Cecil Brown was before the Cabinet with the claim of Dr. Miner for damage 'o his property by the widening of Bere-tan- la and Union street. HONOLULU STOCK EXCHANGE. Morning session Sales: Between! boaias, tuO Kihei y; 10J ionokua 2te; ji) honokaa 2iV; 15 Pioneer 265. tales: Un tne board, 16? uiaa 10 Haiku 250; 25 Oiaa, paid up 13; 20 jicittyde, paid up 18V4. Quotations: Brewer & Co. 450 asked; American 100 asked; American, paid jp 130 asked; Ewa 25 bid 26 asked; Ha- waiian Agricultural 300 asked; Hawal-a- n Sugar 205 bid 220 nske .; Honomu 157 bid 162 asked; Honokaa 27 bid i7 asked; Haiku 245 bid 260 asked; Kamalo IVi asked; Kihel 8 bid 8 ask-;- d; KIpahulu 135 asked; Kona 29 asked; Maunalel 14 asked: McRryde 3 bid 3 19-2- 0 asked; McBryde, pal 1 iip 18 bid 19 asked; Oahu 97 bid J02 asked; Oa-h- u, paid up 180 asked; Ookala 22 bid; llaa bid asked; Olowalu 150 bid 170 asked; Pacific 290 bid; Pala 290 bid; Pioneer 265 bid 272 asked; Wala-'u- a 102 bid 115 aske'; Waialua, paid up 153 bid 1C2 asked; Walluku 375 ask-'- d; Waimea 125 asked; Wilder Steam- ship 122 bid; Inter Island 160 asked; Mutual Telephone 16 asked; Oahu Rail- way stonk 175 asked; Government C's 101 bid 102 asked; Government 5's 100 b'd; Postal Pnv'ngs 95 bid; Oahu Rail- way bonds 106 bid. PASSING OF THE OSTRICH. The W. G. Hall brought eleven os- triches from Kauai. They are the sur- vivors of forty-thre- e which were taken tftere two or three years ago. They have been purchased for the ostrich farm at Passadena and will be ship- ped on the Mauna Loa. This probab'y marks the end of attempts at ostrich farming in the Hawaiian Islands. BROUGHT NITRATE. The barkentlne Gleaner which arriv ed In Kahulul last Saturday with her fore and ton mainmasts gone, sailed from one of the nitrate ports July 1st with 950 tons of nitrates for SprecKels vllle, Haiku and Paia plantations. Received, ex Mohican, handsome line of carriages and phaetons. W W Wright. Owl lunch room Is located opposite Criterion barber shop, Fort street. BUSINESS MEN'S MEMO. Monday, August 21, 1899. Special meeting of shareholders of Kohala Sugar Co , Wednesday, August 23, 1899, at 9 o'clocK a. m. Five per cent (tl per share) assess ment Is due and payable on the assess able stock of the McBryde Sugar Co., Ltd. on August 15, 1899, Five per cent ($1 per share) on October 1, 1899 and 5 per cent (?1 per snare) on January i, 1900. Fourth assessment of 10 per cent on assessable stock of Kona Sugar Co. due August 1, 1899, delinquent September 1, 1899. Third assessment of ten per cent on the assessable stock of Kihel Planta tior., due August 1st, delinquent Sep tember 1. 1899. Two and one-ha- lf per cent assess ment on thc assessable stock of Oiaa Sugar Co., Ltd., Is due and payable October 1, 1899, and 2 per cent addi- tional on the 1st of each succeeding month, including July, 1900. You're Another Sufferer from the result of poor re- pair work. But If you bring your Bicycle, Gun, Typewriter or any article of fine me- chanism to us when It needs repairs, and It will be overhauled and put In such shape that It will meet with your thorough satisfaction. Better still, telephone us 565, and we will SEND FOR AND DELIVER WITH- OUT EXTRA CHARGE. We employ only the best skilled help and guarantee nil our work. Kodaks repaired, Tennis Rackets re- - strung. Keya made. Fine enameling a spe- cialty. Tn fact repairing done In all Us branch?!. PEARSON & POTTER CO., LTD, 312 Fort Street Remember the 'Phono, BOG PRIVATE CAPITAL TO PUT IN A SYSTEM. Project Is Viewed Favorably by the Government No Public Money for the Purpose This Year. Lahalna will most probably soon have water svstem. A move tn that direc- - tlon lias been mude and it promises success. There is not an appropriation for the Lahalna water work.s The matter was Spoken of In the last legislature, but nothinir was done. the nroJeoi n.i.v H to put In the works with private capl- - of tal under certain conditions by which is the government may eventually come into contiol of the property. A proposal has been made to the gov- ernment by private parties to supply water, chaiging the regular rates there- for. This lias been cons.dered by Pre- sident Dole and the ministers and Is viewed with favor by 'them. Today Minister King was instructed to Inves- tigate the water suppiy and the whole subject and to report as soon as possi- ble. The parties who wish to supply water purpose drawing It from the neighbor- hood of the Lahalna school. This will give It a considerable drop, saving the expense of raising it. The water there is said to be first class. There will bo a stipulation In the contract that the government may purchase the works from the owners at any time It so chooses. Maul towns are all rather behind In the matter of water. No where on that Island is there a modern public water system. A start has been made on vork3 at Walluku and that town will be all right Inside of a year. It is now expected that Lahalna will also have Its system by that time. AN OLD VISITOR. The Toyo Marti Now Here Formerly thc Zambesi. The Japanese steamship Toyo Mom now In port was formerly the British steamship Zambesi, built in 1874. As the Zambesi she came to this port sev- eral times ten years ago or more, an1 there was always talk of opium landed in connection with each of her visits. WHO DID IT. The advertising for the ownership of lots and the personal solicitation with regard to Information about the lots In the Nuuanu cemetery was done by the secretary, David Dayton, and not by George It. Carter. Mr. Dayton took great pains in the matter and deserves great credit for his success. CRAZY ON THE STREET. During last night Captain Dick Bow ers met a man un the streets, walking and acting in a very peculiar manner. The fellow turned out to be crazy and was taken to the station. Ills name Is Carlson, formerly pattern maker at Catton. Neill company's iron works. It Is said he has had bad spells before. This time he will be sent to the Asylum for trfutment. DISTURBING CHURCH. A white man giving the name of Rob ert Johnson was lined $5 in the police court this morning for disturbing rell gious worship. Last night, while under the iullucnce or liquor, he entered tne chapel of the Penlal Mission and ralsol all grades of a disturbance. Ho was sorry this morning and paid his money without grumbling. THE NEW DREDGE. The dredger to be used In dredging the naval station slips is now almost completed. The boilers and engines are In place and coal Is being put aboard. The dredger Is of the "bucket" pat- tern and will dump Into a scow along- side from which the excavated mater- ial will be pumped through a pipe line to the shore. WALKING ON WATER. There Is a man In Berlin who sur- prises onlookers by exhibiting himself walking on the River Spree. He uses water shoes not unlike snow shoes, they being 12. feet long; and no broader than his foot.- - The shoes are, however, no broad pieces of wood, but hollow zinc cylinders, tapering to a point at each end, the feet being strapped to tho cen- ters. Along the bottom of each shoe five square flaps are hinged at right angles to the length of the shoe. The hinges of the flaps allow them to bend backwards but not forwards, so that when he mov- es one foot forward through the water the flaps beneath that shoe sw ng back and lie flat, offering no resistance to the movement, while the flaps on the other shoe remain vertical, and resist, to some extent, the tendency of that foot to slide back. By this means, though every forward step Involves a slight slide backward, ho shuffles along with surprising speed nnd safety. Ai'OU.INAJtrS. (The Quoon of Table Waters.) 18S7 11,891,000 bottles 1895 10,520,000 bottles 1890 21,973,000 bottles 1897 22,585,000 bottles Tho popularity and tho of Appollinarls arc clear to nil from tho foregoing quan tities bottled at the Apolllnnns Spring, Rhenish, Prussia. Far exceeding the fillings of nny other mineral spring in the world. The "Tillies," London, says, regard- ing Apollinaris: "These figures are more eloquent than words." MACFAItLAXK & CO., LTD., Sole Agents. A GOOD OPPORTUNITY. At tho alteration sale ordered by L. B. Kerr, a good opportunity will be ottered to buy dry goods at low figures. A mark down has been ordered on all goods In stock. UNIVERSITY EXTENSION. Tho special attention of Mothers and Klndergartners as well as Teachers la called to tho University Extension lec tures at tho High School on Tuesday and Friday evenings by Dr. John Dew ey on "The iviro or tne L'linn." SUGAR COMPANY CONDEMNS LAND AT HAL AW A. Court Decides That It May Take Gov- ernment Land for the Purpose Desi- redJudge ICalua Sitting. Honolulu has a new circuit judge to- day, n.u.uUfeii ne is In locui ituiiitss leiupoiaiiiy umy. Judge Kama oi W'ai-iuk- u, is iiuiauig com i in juuye ouui-it.- y s oillce at the Judiciary building, lue case before Inm is an equity mat-- ' ter entitled John Kaiuna, et .in. vs. bmythe. It comes here by agreement lespectlvc litigants, and the change made for the convenience of witness- es, most of whom res.de on this Island. The Honolulu Sugar Company has won Its suit against the Government for the cendeinnation of a right of way to its estate nt Halawa. The matter was - decl.ed by Judge htanley this morn- ing. The plantation Is required to pay flOO an acre for the land taken. Some- thing. ovel- - $200 was Immediately paid and tho condemnation declared com- pleted. J. R. Higby Is being tried In the clr- - -- .. . . . . 1 ....... . 1. . .1 . r n0 .. ' "U"'Z"'ST., "io,, th lf,V5?f0.u.rl nl .ttfpJ5,e?:. .e. copm......K . u . ... Accounts In the Charles R. Bishop trust have been tiled. The trust amounts Ui t857.000 added to which Is a uaiuiu.-i- : iii u. utton un nuiiu uu tww in uovcrnment oonas. The motion for new trial In the case of Mary K. Tlbbetts vs. S. Pallil guarl- - an. will be argued in Judge btanieys court Wednesday morning. W. J. Lowrle, manager of Sprcckels-- 1 vllle, was on the stand. In the Walnlua stock case today. He finished at noon. 10 HI ill A new telephone directory was Issued nygaunpd,hk.ki iJ2S& I 'To call a Walklkl subscriber give the operator the district, color and number II me uucv-iui- j no. iiumm,, Black, 771." This Is the beginning of a system that will be extended soon to all tele- phones. The object of It as explained by Superintendent Cassidy is to facili- tate making connections and reducing the time required. As soon as the oper- ator heara?he word Waikikl. sheltnows what trunk' line to connect with and docs it Instantly. "Black" or "Re " tells the operator at the Walklkl office what district the desired number Is In. So that by the time the subcrlber has given the direction "Walklkl, Black, 771," the operator in the central otllre has made tho connection with the Wal- klkl office, the Walklkl operator has been Informed what d'strlct the numbar wanted is In and can make the connec- tion the Instant she gels the number. It has this advantage, Mr. Cassidy ex- plains, over simply giving the number wanted, that In the latter case the op. era tor has to think what trunk lino and d'strlct that number belongs to, and In the rush hours there Isn't time to think. Tn other wor s the new system Is a plan to abolish thought tn the centrol office and to substitute automatic ac tion. THE WEATHER. Weather Bureau, Punahou 1 p. m. Wind, light northeast; weather cloudy and sultry; sky overcast with lunar rainbow last night; chano of weather likely. Morning minimum temperature 75; midday maximum temperature 84; bar- ometer 9 a. m. 29.9S, slightly falling, (corrected for gravity); rainfall, 24 hours ending 9 a. m. .01; humidity 9 a. m. 64 per cent; dew point 9 a. m. 67. CURTIS J. LYONS, Observer. OLAA PLANTATION. A letter from Hllo states that thc cane on Oiaa looks well. Several nun- - ured acres nave been planted anu wun- - in a month both sides ot the volcano Road will be planted with seed cane to be used during the coming year. Build ings are going up rapidly and every- - thing iooks encouraging. SMOKELLSS POWDER. Tho use of smokeless powder has its disadvantages, especially the Increased wear of the gun. it is rather a grave Inconvenience, for In time of peace sol- - their ly the C. Roberts Austin, B., has recently presented photographs to tho Iron and Steel institute or Great Britain wnicn demonstrated the ruin of rifled ordnance by cordite, melinite, and other smoke less powders. A quick-firin- g gun suf fered from cordite after live shots, al though the steel was the usual qual ity and tho tube had been tempered In oil. M. Merlel, a French writer, thlnki that if the sudden elevation of temper followed by cooling filing a shot could be avoided It would help matter. Alexander's History the Hawaiian Islands, from their discovery to tlu present time. The only work covering this ground. For sale only by the Golden Rule Bazaar, 216 Fort street Price $1 DO. MORE OF THEM USED. There nre probaoly moro Singer bbw- - Ing machines usot. the United State than of ary other one mako. This Is very excellent guaiantee that they an one of the very best machines. Tin points of merit are strength, durnbll ty, easy running and simple construe tlon. Very little mechanism get out if order makes repair bills small When In need of a new sewing ma nine examine the Singer before basing any other moke. B. Berger-ion- , agent, Bethel street. Only one BEST bicycle. The l Cleveland. Come nnd see. EXTENSIVE ALTERATIONS. Workmen will commence extensive alterations at L. u. Kerr's yueen street drv cood store. In order to make room for tho changes, ho commences this morning Immense alteration sale, MAGGIE MOORE'S COMPANY WINS FAVOR. Performance Opqra House Saturday Evening Audience Does Not Under- stand What un Afterpiece is. Virtue rewarded, vlco Bont to the right uuout, iiiu honest poor gutting iiibii' poiHeiB Illicit, winle tne w.uneu nun aie uuiy mulcted their dishon- est yiiii.fi, it is tnu motive oi a do.un, oi a. iiuii(ut.u, or a thousand other piuys, ana is tne main spnng of the dine lion-oie- .. "fenuck Oil." Audioes never tire if of the tale, and as for the guliviy It witii exceeding great giee when u.e v.liian he is niwajs dnssed in a tightly buttoned frock coat and has a lauititss hat, In the modern piay smokes cigarettes, In the older piays h s lnous and neither drinks nor smokes is foiled and h k mndiiilations conn to naught. W. I. Townshend achieved a distinct success as Deacon Skinner, the illtan of "Stttick Oil," for so wrought up dl i the gallery became when Ins schemes were exposed and he quitted the stage, that It unanimously hissed .ind no greater compliment could be paid to h,s rendering of the character M'ss Maggie More has played Lizzie Stofel mam- - times this 30 years, and ther(j were thwe ,n thc hous, wh) ,md seen ner when bhe n,:st mU(je the t.Iulr iiitnr Iiai nivti rTlihtitl'i nn In ti trot Innlr- - lng the art of tlle 1Q yenl. old Uzzle Hhe pinya It.wlth an Ue IWc and dash of hei vouth. 'an i makes one almost forget that a mature woman Is portraying thc mv anil tiathetlc. the humorous and tlu touching episodes that fall to her share n the dialogue. She has a very sweet voice and her songs were well received. winning an encore. John Stofel, the good n'atured, lazy. easy going Pennsylvania Dutcnman was well played by H. It. Roberts. He arrled the fun and the pathos inter-nlngle- d with true ability and his make up, without being unnecessarily exag-Terate- d, was very funny, though how h's commanding officer allowed him to .1 TO f"' w le" T ,le. nVlr HobeA-s'PoriunU- canf in the third whgn gtofel tne war. i lirnUnn l'rprk with mini! pone. ThPI'f 1p,.lnB wmch showcd wnnt hc C0Uld do. f h ...prB for tl fYererit Style Of haracter. In the afterpiece "The Chi nese Question," Mr. Robrts had an op- - lortnnlty for snow'ng his versatility as i comedian. His imitation ot a fiuna- - iion. and ills rendering qf Chinese mu sic Was laughable In the extreme. Tht other characters In the play up to, the lending roles, therr Vlng little nnnortun'ty for showing any lartlcular power. M'ss Mndne Corcur.ar' was a young looking Mrs. Stofel In spite of her make up. She playc- - her char acter well, and prom'sos to a plens-n- g actress who will be popular with ier audiences. IIeibrt Ash ton was siigcant Flynn, A'ec Cochrane Corpor-'- 1 Sharp and Fred Esmelton Dr. Pear- son, Maggie's lover. The p'ay Is a thoroughly wholesome me, and realistic enough to add inter-s- t to the action of the somewhat hack- neyed story. The scenery for the third irt was brought by the company, and -- eprcsented the oil wells of a Pennsyl- vania village. Honolulu audiences are not acustom-n- l to an aftPrplece, so when the cur-'al- n fell on "Ptruck Oil" a good half of the audience put on Us cloaks and hats nn-- 1 went home. Those who stayed had he opportunity of seeing a specimen of 'he genuine roaring farce, with p'entv of dish smashing, songs and a dance or wo. It was a reminiscence of the Lou- - Inn Strand with Ada Swanborough, Uodgers, Clark and young Robson, "ven the Inevltab'e band box anoared Maggie Moore made a capital Irish ser vant, and Townshend a good "old man." The performance of the company is bright, tho members are well drllle-- ' ind know their parts, which Is refresh- - 'ng after the ' per formances which have been given late- - 'y. There seems every prospect a good run. It Is the kind of entertnln- - ment that will grow upon one, und there Is an excellent chance of a'l the uembrs becoming popular with Hono lulu theatergoers. HILO EXPORTS. Collector General Endorses The Stnr's Statement ..The total exports from Hllo for the month July were $604,114 48, Instead $562,032 36 as stated in The Star of the 11th Inst. " Accepting however. Tho Star figures as correct we And that the exports from this place for the month of July were nearly one third the total amount of the group, and about one half ns much as the ex ports from Honolulu." Hllo Tribune. EDITOR STAR: In reply to your qulry I would say, the total value of ex ports from the port of Hllo for the month of July. 1899, ns shown by the report of the collector of that port to the Collector General of Customs is 30. RICHARD IVEItS, Collector General of Customs. Honolulu, August 21, 1899 "I have used Chamberlain's Cough Remedy In my family for years and at ways with good results." says Mr. W. U. Cooper of ki Rio, Cal. "For small hlldren we find It especially effective.' For sale by all dealers and druggists, uenson, Smith At Company, general agents, Hawaiian Islands. MESSENGER SERVICE. The Honolulu Messenger Service de iver messages and packages. Tele phone 378. FOR CAMARINOS' REFRIGERATOR Per S. S. Australia Cherries. Grapes, uranges, Lemons, uimes, celery. Caul tlower, Cabbage, Rhubarb, Asparagus Fresh fiaimon, Flounders. Halibut Crabs, Eastern nnd California Oysterc tin Tin anu sneni, an uame in season Turkeys, Chickens. New crop of Nut? anu urieo Fruits, unions, uurbank Po tntoes, Swiss, Parmasan, Rochefort Mew Zealand and California Crean: Cheese, Olives. All kinds of Dried Fruits, If you want a new carriage or your old one repaired can w, W. Wright, dlers have to practice firing, and throughout, instead of being deliberate-arm- s are the worse for It. Prof. W. (Mstorted to disadvantage of Hllo. C. of ature on the of In to put an nt of ht of of of In on WHAT MRS. HOLMES AND THE C. T. U ARE DOING. Flowers und Good .Cheer for the Sic In Hospitals and About the Cltyr Splendid Private Work. An important charitable work has. oeen uiiULTtaKen by the ladles of tha ,v. C. 1. U. and is now being carried on .nnst successfully. ;us. Jioiiuts aiu a few others are thit .mid woi Iters In the entei prise. Th(?jf tie around eveiy day, though the builc their endeavor Is put forward on Sat- urday. The work consists of vlRltlng the sick it the hospitals at.d other p aces in the ity and supplying Moweis, fruits or nher delicacies required. Though siml-a- r, the work is different to that to be undertaken by the Associated Chari-.le- s, proverty usually suggesting thc justness of the latter and the effort bc-n- g to supply necessities. Last Saturday Mrs. Holmes and a .'riend reached the hospital In a carri- age. In one large basket were several nindred beautiful bouquets of various lowers. Each wus neatly tied and ibottt the stem was left a bit of paper learlng a verse from the b ble. Some )f these referred to religion, some to emperance and so on, Another has-t- et was filled with fresh fruits, oranges, tpples, peaches and the like. All the .vards were visited and each patient ed a bouquet, a few k'n ' words uul, as many nri could tak" it, fruits. Inquiry developed tho fact that this, vork Is carried on almost exclusively 'jy private aid. Several business men nave given cash from time to time to "lelp It along. One merchant has given boxes of fruit on d'fterent ocrnsions. An mmense amount of work Is being found 'iy Mrs. Holmes and her ass'stants, and. 'he expense of keeping It up Is quite argc. At the same time the amount of -- ood being done can hardly be overestl-Tiate- d. Mrs. Holmes has "evotud a large por-'l-on of her life to this sort of work and ms systemat'7ed It Into a business. There Is no silly, gushing sentimental-t- y about It, but, rather, the methodical 'nlrlt and anceltc hand of the Samarl-'- n, that brings the greatest pond to 'he largest number In the shortest len- gth of time and makes the world bet- ter. POLICE COURT. D. Kapulwe, a native boy, was given one month on the leef for stealing Jt from his sister. Wehiu, assault and battery Walauika, was lined ?5. Mernoka, leaving horse untlen, wa ssessed $5. Twelve persons dlstrublng quiet of 'flit, wprp flne-- tl each. Two others forfeited ball. MARRIED. MACHADO-MEDEIRO- S III this city. August 19. 1899, at tho Roman Catho- lic cathedral, Manuel Machado and Medclros, both of this city. LAND WENT HIGH. Two small lots of Government land n Halawa were sold by Clerk Ed Boyd front of the Judiciary building at noon. The first, containing a little over two acres, went to L. L. McCandless for $210; upset price was $70. Another ot, containing s'x acres, went to the Honolulu Sugar Company for J505; up set $150. THE ORPHEUM. Tho Orpheum held its own against the counter attractions on Saturday evening tho house was well filled. A full change of program is scheduled for this evening, and there Is a promise out that It will be extra good. Go and see the "New Judge. DR. POSEY. Specialist for Eye, Ear, Throat and Nose diseases and Catarrh. Masonic Temple. Fashionable to the eye and easy to the foot. Thompson Brothers No. 4 shoe at Mclnerny Shoe Store. THE REASON WHY. The reason why we can sell you a bet ter piano for $250 than any one else, la because we buy In large quantities, and so get bottom prices. If you want a new piano or have an old one to ex change, you will do well to call on tho Bergstrom Music Company. Progress block. A Word to thc Wise! "The Broadway" Button Shoes are in style again SION OF THE BIQ SHOE.

L THE H STj?5lI J?$lSRT - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · thc Zambesi. The Japanese steamship Toyo Mom now In port was formerly the British steamship Zambesi, built in 1874

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Page 1: L THE H STj?5lI J?$lSRT - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · thc Zambesi. The Japanese steamship Toyo Mom now In port was formerly the British steamship Zambesi, built in 1874

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VOL. VI. HONOLl'LU. H. I., MONUAY. AUOUST 21, 1899. No. 2331.

Rolen

BIUTISH

UsedLondonby

ADVERTISING.

PrincipalCity.

Papers In 11 IS Hi 10 If Hit IBHS UDtfl ft li-ii- o m 1ft I ifllAs a rule, the London newspapers

pay bigger dividends on the capitalthan thoso of Chicago or New-Yor-

The English are great adver-tisers, but they do not understand theare of display or show the originalitythat makes the advertising pages ofAmerican newspapers attractive. Theadvertising rates In the Times, Tele-graph ana other first-cla- ss newspapersvary but little, and It Is curious thatthey charge more In proportion forlarge advertisements than for littleones. For example, the rate Is 37V4

cents a line for the first 48 lines, andafter that 60 cents a line, for legalfinancial, educational, amusements andsimilar notices. "Trade" advert'sementsas they call those furnished by mer-chants, auctioneers, etc., are chargedfor at the rate of 4 shIIUngs for thefirst five lines and' 1 shilling a linethereafter. "Situations wanted" cost 3

shillings for four lines and sixpence allnp thereaftT. Domestic servantR anplying for situations are given reducedratFs three lines fo- - 1 chil'ng find v.pence. Persons ndvert's'ng for helphave to pay a shl'l'ng n l'ne no matterhow lorg or how short their advert's-men- t.

Rents nn other real pstnte ad- -vertlsement pay a shUl'mr a line for thefirst sly lines and t Bh'U'ng and s1"-pen-

thereafter. Marr'age and death, notices are received at the same rate.

Chicago Record.

J IT X R W A I) V F.HT ISO KNTS.

. WANTED.

" jTwenty pretty children for "Hans,trjJ Boatman." Apply at Opera House4 o'clock this day.

HERBERT ASHTON,Stage Manager.

ELECTION OF OFFICERS.

At a meeting of the stockholders ofHenry May & Company, Limited, heldon the 22d day of July, the following offleers were culy elected to serve untilthe next annual meeting:

vr. Mnv President and Manaeeri. E. Mclntyre , nt

.'. T. P. Waterhouse SecretaryF. B. Auerback TreasurerF. W. Macfarlane Auditor

E. F. Bishop and E. D. Tenney, di-

rectors.F. T. P. WATERHOUSE,

Secretary,

ELECTION OF OFFICERS.

At a meeting of the stockholders ofthe Kaplolanl Estate, Limited, held thisday, the following officers were elected to servo for the ensuing year:D. Kawananakoa PresidentJ. Kalanianaole Vice-Preside- nt

John F. Colburn TreasurerAt. K. Keohokalole

Secretary and AuditorThe above officers, together with

John II. Wise, constitute the Board ofDirectors.

M. K. KEOHOKALOLE,Secretary.

Honolulu, August 18, 1899.

ELECTION OF OFFICERS.

At a meeting of the stockholders ofthe Hono.u.u Stockyards Co., Ltd., heldAugust 17th, 1S99, the following wereelected officers of the Company for theensuing year:Wm. H. Rice PresidentT. B. Richards Vice-Preside- nt

A. Newhouse SecretaryFrank Hustace Treasurer

"L. de L. Ward AuditorThe abqve with W. S. Withers and G.

J. Waller constitute the Board of Direc-tors.

A. NEWHOUSE,Secretary.

Iox Sale1 COMPLETE PONY RIG.1 ENGLISH TRAP CART.1 ENGLISH ROAD CART,2 RUBBER TIRED BUGGIES.1 JUMP CART BUGGY.1 GENTS LIGHT ROAD WAGON.1 CHAEP CUT-UNDE- R SURREY.1 CHEAP FRASIFR ROAD CART.4 SETS SINGLE HARNESS.

M 2 SETS HEARVY DOUBLE HARNESS3 SETS LIGHT DOUBLE HARNESS.

' SADDLES AND BRIDLES.MULES.COWS.CHICKENS.HORSES. "W

BUN 11.0 U STOTOKDS GO.

W. S. WITHERS. Manager.Corner Alakea and Queen streets.

1 HI 181 1

ITS VALUE AS AN AGENT

Takes caro cf ProportyCollects RentsVlM altos Improvements

Pays Taxes, Insuranco, Etc., andrenders an account of samo

at regular periods

SETTLE ESTATES

Acts as Gnurdlun, Trustee or Executor

STOCK AND 1I0ND JUtOKERS

SAt'E DEPOSIT BOXES

QUO. R. CARTER, Treasurer

Tel. 184 407 Fort St., Honolulu

i1

COUNTRY HOSPITALS WILL BEINCORPORATED.

To Pass From Direct Control of Boardof Health Street Car Matters Beforethe Cabinet Again.

The Cabinet today granted to theBoaid of .Health the authority to In- - ncoiporate all hospitals outside of Hono-- 1

,uiu and to place each in the hands of '

boar of three trustees. In futurethese trustees will have d.rect and abjo- - i

iute conn ol, save for the general super- -vision or tne neaitn autnorities. ahmatters 6f finance will ba directed by ;

tne trustees in place ot Deing nanaieuby the local Board ot Health. Govern- -ment patients must be treated freeanywhere.

L. A. Thurston and C. G, Ballentynewere before the Cabinet this morningwith nn additional proposal for a carme on King street. They now wantpermission to lay a track from LUIhastreet In Palama to Victoria street be-- 1yond Thomas Square. A former permis-sion only contemplated a track to Kingstreet bridge on the west. Moreover,the rapid transit ask that their plan rorthe road be approve! outright by theCabinet. This brings the matter In anew and more complicated light. Owingfo Its Importance It has been taken under advisement.

It Is voted this morning that the attorney general be Instructed to use hisauthority In the Interest of the publicsafety, In the matter of providing amplexlts from play houses In the city, xno

discussion and order had particular reference to the Orpheum theater, aboutwhich there has been more or less com-plaint In this regard.

Cecil Brown was before the Cabinetwith the claim of Dr. Miner for damage'o his property by the widening of Bere-tan- la

and Union street.

HONOLULU STOCK EXCHANGE.Morning session Sales: Between!

boaias, tuO Kihei y; 10J ionokua 2te;ji) honokaa 2iV; 15 Pioneer 265.

tales: Un tne board, 16? uiaa10 Haiku 250; 25 Oiaa, paid up 13; 20jicittyde, paid up 18V4.

Quotations: Brewer & Co. 450 asked;American 100 asked; American, paid jp130 asked; Ewa 25 bid 26 asked; Ha-waiian Agricultural 300 asked; Hawal-a- n

Sugar 205 bid 220 nske .; Honomu157 bid 162 asked; Honokaa 27 bidi7 asked; Haiku 245 bid 260 asked;Kamalo IVi asked; Kihel 8 bid 8 ask-;- d;

KIpahulu 135 asked; Kona 29 asked;Maunalel 14 asked: McRryde 3 bid3 19-2- 0 asked; McBryde, pal 1 iip 18 bid19 asked; Oahu 97 bid J02 asked; Oa-h- u,

paid up 180 asked; Ookala 22 bid;llaa bid asked; Olowalu 150 bid170 asked; Pacific 290 bid; Pala 290 bid;Pioneer 265 bid 272 asked; Wala-'u- a

102 bid 115 aske'; Waialua, paidup 153 bid 1C2 asked; Walluku 375 ask-'- d;

Waimea 125 asked; Wilder Steam-ship 122 bid; Inter Island 160 asked;Mutual Telephone 16 asked; Oahu Rail-way stonk 175 asked; Government C's101 bid 102 asked; Government 5's 100

b'd; Postal Pnv'ngs 95 bid; Oahu Rail-way bonds 106 bid.

PASSING OF THE OSTRICH.The W. G. Hall brought eleven os-

triches from Kauai. They are the sur-vivors of forty-thre- e which were takentftere two or three years ago. Theyhave been purchased for the ostrichfarm at Passadena and will be ship-ped on the Mauna Loa. This probab'ymarks the end of attempts at ostrichfarming in the Hawaiian Islands.

BROUGHT NITRATE.The barkentlne Gleaner which arriv

ed In Kahulul last Saturday with herfore and ton mainmasts gone, sailedfrom one of the nitrate ports July 1stwith 950 tons of nitrates for SprecKelsvllle, Haiku and Paia plantations.

Received, ex Mohican, handsome lineof carriages and phaetons. W WWright.

Owl lunch room Is located oppositeCriterion barber shop, Fort street.

BUSINESS MEN'S MEMO.

Monday, August 21, 1899.

Special meeting of shareholders ofKohala Sugar Co , Wednesday, August23, 1899, at 9 o'clocK a. m.

Five per cent (tl per share) assessment Is due and payable on the assessable stock of the McBryde Sugar Co.,Ltd. on August 15, 1899, Five per cent($1 per share) on October 1, 1899 and 5per cent (?1 per snare) on January i,1900.

Fourth assessment of 10 per cent onassessable stock of Kona Sugar Co. dueAugust 1, 1899, delinquent September1, 1899.

Third assessment of ten per cent onthe assessable stock of Kihel Plantatior., due August 1st, delinquent September 1. 1899.

Two and one-ha- lf per cent assessment on thc assessable stock of OiaaSugar Co., Ltd., Is due and payableOctober 1, 1899, and 2 per cent addi-tional on the 1st of each succeedingmonth, including July, 1900.

You're AnotherSufferer from the result of poor re-

pair work.But If you bring your Bicycle, Gun,

Typewriter or any article of fine me-chanism to us when It needs repairs,and It will be overhauled and put Insuch shape that It will meet with yourthorough satisfaction.

Better still, telephone us 565, and wewillSEND FOR AND DELIVER WITH-

OUT EXTRA CHARGE.We employ only the best skilled help

and guarantee nil our work.Kodaks repaired, Tennis Rackets re- -

strung.Keya made. Fine enameling a spe-

cialty.Tn fact repairing done In all Us

branch?!.

PEARSON & POTTER CO., LTD,

312 Fort StreetRemember the 'Phono, BOG

PRIVATE CAPITAL TO PUT IN A

SYSTEM.

Project Is Viewed Favorably by theGovernment No Public Money forthe Purpose This Year.

Lahalna will most probably soon havewater svstem. A move tn that direc- -

tlon lias been mude and it promisessuccess.

There is not an appropriation for theLahalna water work.s The matter wasSpoken of In the last legislature, butnothinir was done. the nroJeoi n.i.v Hto put In the works with private capl- - oftal under certain conditions by which isthe government may eventually comeinto contiol of the property.

A proposal has been made to the gov-ernment by private parties to supplywater, chaiging the regular rates there-for. This lias been cons.dered by Pre-sident Dole and the ministers and Isviewed with favor by 'them. TodayMinister King was instructed to Inves-tigate the water suppiy and the wholesubject and to report as soon as possi-ble.

The parties who wish to supply waterpurpose drawing It from the neighbor-hood of the Lahalna school. This willgive It a considerable drop, saving theexpense of raising it. The water thereis said to be first class. There will boa stipulation In the contract that thegovernment may purchase the worksfrom the owners at any time It sochooses.

Maul towns are all rather behind Inthe matter of water. No where on thatIsland is there a modern public watersystem. A start has been made onvork3 at Walluku and that town will

be all right Inside of a year. It is nowexpected that Lahalna will also haveIts system by that time.

AN OLD VISITOR.

The Toyo Marti Now Here Formerlythc Zambesi.

The Japanese steamship Toyo Momnow In port was formerly the Britishsteamship Zambesi, built in 1874. Asthe Zambesi she came to this port sev-eral times ten years ago or more, an1there was always talk of opium landedin connection with each of her visits.

WHO DID IT.The advertising for the ownership of

lots and the personal solicitation withregard to Information about the lots Inthe Nuuanu cemetery was done by thesecretary, David Dayton, and not byGeorge It. Carter. Mr. Dayton tookgreat pains in the matter and deservesgreat credit for his success.

CRAZY ON THE STREET.During last night Captain Dick Bow

ers met a man un the streets, walkingand acting in a very peculiar manner.The fellow turned out to be crazy andwas taken to the station. Ills name IsCarlson, formerly pattern maker atCatton. Neill company's iron works. ItIs said he has had bad spells before.This time he will be sent to the Asylumfor trfutment.

DISTURBING CHURCH.A white man giving the name of Rob

ert Johnson was lined $5 in the policecourt this morning for disturbing rellgious worship. Last night, while underthe iullucnce or liquor, he entered tnechapel of the Penlal Mission and ralsolall grades of a disturbance. Ho wassorry this morning and paid his moneywithout grumbling.

THE NEW DREDGE.The dredger to be used In dredging

the naval station slips is now almostcompleted. The boilers and engines areIn place and coal Is being put aboard.

The dredger Is of the "bucket" pat-tern and will dump Into a scow along-side from which the excavated mater-ial will be pumped through a pipe lineto the shore.

WALKING ON WATER.There Is a man In Berlin who sur-

prises onlookers by exhibiting himselfwalking on the River Spree. He useswater shoes not unlike snow shoes,they being 12. feet long; and no broaderthan his foot.- - The shoes are, however,no broad pieces of wood, but hollow zinccylinders, tapering to a point at eachend, the feet being strapped to tho cen-ters. Along the bottom of each shoe fivesquare flaps are hinged at right anglesto the length of the shoe. The hinges ofthe flaps allow them to bend backwardsbut not forwards, so that when he mov-es one foot forward through the waterthe flaps beneath that shoe sw ng backand lie flat, offering no resistance tothe movement, while the flaps on theother shoe remain vertical, and resist,to some extent, the tendency of thatfoot to slide back. By this means,though every forward step Involves aslight slide backward, ho shuffles alongwith surprising speed nnd safety.

Ai'OU.INAJtrS.(The Quoon of Table Waters.)

18S7 11,891,000 bottles1895 10,520,000 bottles1890 21,973,000 bottles1897 22,585,000 bottles

Tho popularity andtho of Appollinarls arcclear to nil from tho foregoing quantities bottled at the ApolllnnnsSpring, Rhenish, Prussia.

Far exceeding the fillings of nnyother mineral spring in the world.

The "Tillies," London, says, regard-ing Apollinaris: "These figures aremore eloquent than words."

MACFAItLAXK & CO., LTD.,Sole Agents.

A GOOD OPPORTUNITY.At tho alteration sale ordered by L.

B. Kerr, a good opportunity will beottered to buy dry goods at low figures.A mark down has been ordered on allgoods In stock.

UNIVERSITY EXTENSION.Tho special attention of Mothers and

Klndergartners as well as Teachers lacalled to tho University Extension lectures at tho High School on Tuesdayand Friday evenings by Dr. John Dewey on "The iviro or tne L'linn."

SUGAR COMPANY CONDEMNSLAND AT HAL AW A.

Court Decides That It May Take Gov-

ernment Land for the Purpose Desi-redJudge ICalua Sitting.

Honolulu has a new circuit judge to-day, n.u.uUfeii ne is In locui ituiiitssleiupoiaiiiy umy. Judge Kama oi W'ai-iuk- u,

is iiuiauig com i in juuye ouui-it.- y

s oillce at the Judiciary building,lue case before Inm is an equity mat-- 'ter entitled John Kaiuna, et .in. vs.bmythe. It comes here by agreement

lespectlvc litigants, and the changemade for the convenience of witness-

es, most of whom res.de on this Island.The Honolulu Sugar Company has

won Its suit against the Government forthe cendeinnation of a right of way toits estate nt Halawa. The matter was -

decl.ed by Judge htanley this morn-ing. The plantation Is required to payflOO an acre for the land taken. Some-thing. ovel- - $200 was Immediately paidand tho condemnation declared com-pleted.

J. R. Higby Is being tried In the clr- --- . . . . . . 1 ....... . 1. . .1 . r n0 ..' "U"'Z"'ST., "io,,

th lf,V5?f0.u.rl nl .ttfpJ5,e?:. .e.copm......K . u . ...Accounts In the Charles R. Bishop

trust have been tiled. The trustamounts Ui t857.000 added to which Is auaiuiu.-i- : iii u. utton un nuiiu uutww in uovcrnment oonas.

The motion for new trial In the caseof Mary K. Tlbbetts vs. S. Pallil guarl- -an. will be argued in Judge btanieys

court Wednesday morning.W. J. Lowrle, manager of Sprcckels-- 1

vllle, was on the stand. In the Walnluastock case today. He finished at noon.

10 HI illA new telephone directory was Issued

nygaunpd,hk.ki iJ2S&I

'To call a Walklkl subscriber give theoperator the district, color and numberII me uucv-iui- j no. iiumm,,

Black, 771."

This Is the beginning of a systemthat will be extended soon to all tele-phones. The object of It as explainedby Superintendent Cassidy is to facili-tate making connections and reducingthe time required. As soon as the oper-ator heara?he word Waikikl. sheltnowswhat trunk' line to connect with anddocs it Instantly. "Black" or "Re "tells the operator at the Walklkl officewhat district the desired number Is In.So that by the time the subcrlber hasgiven the direction "Walklkl, Black,771," the operator in the central otllrehas made tho connection with the Wal-klkl office, the Walklkl operator hasbeen Informed what d'strlct the numbarwanted is In and can make the connec-tion the Instant she gels the number.

It has this advantage, Mr. Cassidy ex-plains, over simply giving the numberwanted, that In the latter case the op.era tor has to think what trunk lino andd'strlct that number belongs to, and Inthe rush hours there Isn't time to think.

Tn other wor s the new system Is aplan to abolish thought tn the centroloffice and to substitute automatic ac

tion.

THE WEATHER.Weather Bureau, Punahou 1 p. m.

Wind, light northeast; weathercloudy and sultry; sky overcast withlunar rainbow last night; chano ofweather likely.

Morning minimum temperature 75;midday maximum temperature 84; bar-ometer 9 a. m. 29.9S, slightly falling,(corrected for gravity); rainfall, 24

hours ending 9 a. m. .01; humidity 9a. m. 64 per cent; dew point 9 a. m. 67.

CURTIS J. LYONS, Observer.

OLAA PLANTATION.A letter from Hllo states that thc

cane on Oiaa looks well. Several nun- -ured acres nave been planted anu wun- -in a month both sides ot the volcanoRoad will be planted with seed cane tobe used during the coming year. Buildings are going up rapidly and every- -thing iooks encouraging.

SMOKELLSS POWDER.Tho use of smokeless powder has its

disadvantages, especially the Increasedwear of the gun. it is rather a graveInconvenience, for In time of peace sol- -

theirly the

C. Roberts Austin, B., has recentlypresented photographs to tho Iron andSteel institute or Great Britain wnicndemonstrated the ruin of rifled ordnanceby cordite, melinite, and other smokeless powders. A quick-firin- g gun suffered from cordite after live shots, although the steel was the usual quality and tho tube had been tempered Inoil. M. Merlel, a French writer, thlnkithat if the sudden elevation of temper

followed by cooling filing ashot could be avoided It would helpmatter.

Alexander's History the HawaiianIslands, from their discovery to tlupresent time. The only work coveringthis ground. For sale only by theGolden Rule Bazaar, 216 Fort streetPrice $1 DO.

MORE OF THEM USED.There nre probaoly moro Singer bbw- -

Ing machines usot. the United Statethan of ary other one mako. This Isvery excellent guaiantee that they an

one of the very best machines. Tinpoints of merit are strength, durnbllty, easy running and simple construe

tlon. Very little mechanism get outif order makes repair bills smallWhen In need of a new sewing manine examine the Singer beforebasing any other moke. B. Berger-ion- ,

agent, Bethel street.

Only one BEST bicycle. The l

Cleveland. Come nnd see.

EXTENSIVE ALTERATIONS.Workmen will commence extensive

alterations at L. u. Kerr's yueen streetdrv cood store. In order to make roomfor tho changes, ho commences thismorning Immense alteration sale,

MAGGIE MOORE'S COMPANY WINSFAVOR.

Performance Opqra House SaturdayEvening Audience Does Not Under-stand What un Afterpiece is.

Virtue rewarded, vlco Bont to theright uuout, iiiu honest poor guttingiiibii' poiHeiB Illicit, winle tne w.uneunun aie uuiy mulcted their dishon-est yiiii.fi, it is tnu motive oi a do.un, oia. iiuii(ut.u, or a thousand other piuys,ana is tne main spnng of the dine lion-oie- ..

"fenuck Oil." Audioes never tire ifof the tale, and as for the guliviy It

witii exceeding great giee whenu.e v.liian he is niwajs dnssed in atightly buttoned frock coat and has alauititss hat, In the modern piaysmokes cigarettes, In the older piays hs lnous and neither drinks nor smokes

is foiled and h k mndiiilations connto naught. W. I. Townshend achieved adistinct success as Deacon Skinner, theilltan of "Stttick Oil," for so wrought

up dl i the gallery became when Insschemes were exposed and he quittedthe stage, that It unanimously hissed.ind no greater compliment could bepaid to h,s rendering of the character

M'ss Maggie More has played LizzieStofel mam- - times this 30 years, andther(j were thwe ,n thc hous, wh) ,mdseen ner when bhe n,:st mU(je the t.Iulriiitnr Iiai nivti rTlihtitl'i nn In ti trot Innlr- -lng the art of tlle 1Q yenl. old Uzzle Hhepinya It.wlth an Ue IWc and dash of heivouth. 'an i makes one almost forgetthat a mature woman Is portraying thcmv anil tiathetlc. the humorous and tlutouching episodes that fall to her sharen the dialogue. She has a very sweetvoice and her songs were well received.winning an encore.

John Stofel, the good n'atured, lazy.easy going Pennsylvania Dutcnmanwas well played by H. It. Roberts. Hearrled the fun and the pathos inter-nlngle- d

with true ability and his makeup, without being unnecessarily exag-Terate- d,

was very funny, though howh's commanding officer allowed him to.1 TO f"' w le" T ,le. nVlr

HobeA-s'PoriunU- canf in the thirdwhgn gtofel tne war.

i lirnUnn l'rprk with mini! pone. ThPI'f

1p,.lnB wmch showcd wnnt hc C0Uld do.f h ...prB for tl fYererit Style Ofharacter. In the afterpiece "The Chi

nese Question," Mr. Robrts had an op- -

lortnnlty for snow'ng his versatility asi comedian. His imitation ot a fiuna- -

iion. and ills rendering qf Chinese music Was laughable In the extreme.

Tht other characters In the playup to, the lending roles, therr

Vlng little nnnortun'ty for showing anylartlcular power. M'ss Mndne Corcur.ar'was a young looking Mrs. Stofel In spiteof her make up. She playc- - her character well, and prom'sos to a plens-n- g

actress who will be popular withier audiences. IIeibrt Ash ton wassiigcant Flynn, A'ec Cochrane Corpor-'- 1

Sharp and Fred Esmelton Dr. Pear-son, Maggie's lover.

The p'ay Is a thoroughly wholesomeme, and realistic enough to add inter-s- t

to the action of the somewhat hack-neyed story. The scenery for the thirdirt was brought by the company, and

--eprcsented the oil wells of a Pennsyl-vania village.

Honolulu audiences are not acustom-n- lto an aftPrplece, so when the cur-'al- n

fell on "Ptruck Oil" a good half ofthe audience put on Us cloaks and hatsnn-- 1 went home. Those who stayed hadhe opportunity of seeing a specimen of

'he genuine roaring farce, with p'entvof dish smashing, songs and a dance orwo. It was a reminiscence of the Lou- -

Inn Strand with Ada Swanborough,Uodgers, Clark and young Robson,"ven the Inevltab'e band box anoaredMaggie Moore made a capital Irish servant, and Townshend a good "old man."

The performance of the company isbright, tho members are well drllle-- 'ind know their parts, which Is refresh- -'ng after the ' performances which have been given late- -'y. There seems every prospect agood run. It Is the kind of entertnln- -ment that will grow upon one, undthere Is an excellent chance of a'l theuembrs becoming popular with Honolulu theatergoers.

HILO EXPORTS.

Collector General Endorses The Stnr'sStatement

..The total exports from Hllo for themonth July were $604,114 48, Instead

$562,032 36 as stated in The Star ofthe 11th Inst. " Acceptinghowever. Tho Star figures as correct

we And that the exports from this placefor the month of July were nearly onethird the total amount of the group,and about one half ns much as the exports from Honolulu." Hllo Tribune.

EDITOR STAR: In reply to yourqulry I would say, the total value of exports from the port of Hllo for themonth of July. 1899, ns shown by thereport of the collector of that port tothe Collector General of Customs is

30.RICHARD IVEItS,

Collector General of Customs.Honolulu, August 21, 1899

"I have used Chamberlain's CoughRemedy In my family for years and atways with good results." says Mr. W.U. Cooper of ki Rio, Cal. "For smallhlldren we find It especially effective.'

For sale by all dealers and druggists,uenson, Smith At Company, generalagents, Hawaiian Islands.

MESSENGER SERVICE.The Honolulu Messenger Service de

iver messages and packages. Telephone 378.

FOR CAMARINOS' REFRIGERATORPer S. S. Australia Cherries. Grapes,

uranges, Lemons, uimes, celery. Caultlower, Cabbage, Rhubarb, AsparagusFresh fiaimon, Flounders. HalibutCrabs, Eastern nnd California Oysterctin Tin anu sneni, an uame in seasonTurkeys, Chickens. New crop of Nut?anu urieo Fruits, unions, uurbank Potntoes, Swiss, Parmasan, RochefortMew Zealand and California Crean:Cheese, Olives. All kinds of DriedFruits,

If you want a new carriage or yourold one repaired can w, W. Wright,

dlers have to practice firing, and throughout, instead of being deliberate-arm- sare the worse for It. Prof. W. (Mstorted to disadvantage of Hllo.

C.

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WHAT MRS. HOLMES AND THEC. T. U ARE DOING.

Flowers und Good .Cheer for the SicIn Hospitals and About the CltyrSplendid Private Work.

An important charitable work has.oeen uiiULTtaKen by the ladles of tha,v. C. 1 . U. and is now being carried on.nnst successfully.

;us. Jioiiuts aiu a few others are thit.mid woi Iters In the entei prise. Th(?jftie around eveiy day, though the builc

their endeavor Is put forward on Sat-urday.

The work consists of vlRltlng the sickit the hospitals at.d other p aces in theity and supplying Moweis, fruits or

nher delicacies required. Though siml-a- r,

the work is different to that to beundertaken by the Associated Chari-.le- s,

proverty usually suggesting thcjustness of the latter and the effort bc-n- g

to supply necessities.Last Saturday Mrs. Holmes and a

.'riend reached the hospital In a carri-age. In one large basket were severalnindred beautiful bouquets of variouslowers. Each wus neatly tied andibottt the stem was left a bit of paperlearlng a verse from the b ble. Some)f these referred to religion, some toemperance and so on, Another has-t- et

was filled with fresh fruits, oranges,tpples, peaches and the like. All the.vards were visited and each patient ed

a bouquet, a few k'n ' wordsuul, as many nri could tak" it, fruits.

Inquiry developed tho fact that this,vork Is carried on almost exclusively'jy private aid. Several business mennave given cash from time to time to"lelp It along. One merchant has givenboxes of fruit on d'fterent ocrnsions. Anmmense amount of work Is being found

'iy Mrs. Holmes and her ass'stants, and.'he expense of keeping It up Is quiteargc. At the same time the amount of--ood being done can hardly be overestl-Tiate- d.

Mrs. Holmes has "evotud a large por-'l-on

of her life to this sort of work andms systemat'7ed It Into a business.There Is no silly, gushing sentimental-t- y

about It, but, rather, the methodical'nlrlt and anceltc hand of the Samarl-'- n,

that brings the greatest pond to'he largest number In the shortest len-gth of time and makes the world bet-ter.

POLICE COURT.D. Kapulwe, a native boy, was given

one month on the leef for stealing Jtfrom his sister.Wehiu, assault and battery Walauika,was lined ?5.

Mernoka, leaving horse untlen, wassessed $5.Twelve persons dlstrublng quiet of

'flit, wprp flne-- tl each. Two othersforfeited ball.

MARRIED.MACHADO-MEDEIRO- S III this city.

August 19. 1899, at tho Roman Catho-lic cathedral, Manuel Machado and

Medclros, both of this city.

LAND WENT HIGH.Two small lots of Government land

n Halawa were sold by Clerk Ed Boydfront of the Judiciary building at

noon. The first, containing a little overtwo acres, went to L. L. McCandlessfor $210; upset price was $70. Anotherot, containing s'x acres, went to theHonolulu Sugar Company for J505; upset $150.

THE ORPHEUM.Tho Orpheum held its own against

the counter attractions on Saturdayevening tho house was well filled.

A full change of program is scheduledfor this evening, and there Is a promiseout that It will be extra good. Go andsee the "New Judge.

DR. POSEY.Specialist for Eye, Ear, Throat and

Nose diseases and Catarrh. MasonicTemple.

Fashionable to the eye and easy tothe foot. Thompson Brothers No. 4shoe at Mclnerny Shoe Store.

THE REASON WHY.The reason why we can sell you a bet

ter piano for $250 than any one else, labecause we buy In large quantities, andso get bottom prices. If you want anew piano or have an old one to exchange, you will do well to call on thoBergstrom Music Company. Progressblock.

A Word to thc Wise!

"The Broadway"

Button Shoesare in style again

SION OF THE BIQ SHOE.

Page 2: L THE H STj?5lI J?$lSRT - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · thc Zambesi. The Japanese steamship Toyo Mom now In port was formerly the British steamship Zambesi, built in 1874

r rwo

THE MM CO,,

Importers andCommission Merchants

Q IT 12 IS IV WX'lTCJST

4&A'Full Lino of Amorlcnn nnd European

DRY GOODSHARDWARE GROCERIES

NOTIONSAs well as all kinds of Conoral Morchandloo

.. C30rI AGBNTS FOR ..'ITtio Lancaster Flro and Llfo Insurance Co., of Manchoster, EnglandTtio f alolso Insuranco Co , of Dasol, SwitzerlandThe Union Cas Engine Co , of San Francisco"The Domestic Sowing MachinesTtio Hand Sewing Machine " New r aclflc"- - and other ngcnc'os

PROTECT YOUR FAMILY aM PROPERTYNAME K COMPANY ASSETS

Germania 1 if'e Insurance Co of rew York. .$25 21 1,110 15Grecnwi. h' Fire lnsurni.ee Co. of New Y. rk. . 1,373,318 29Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society 0,553,403 85Canton Marine lneuiance Co 2,500,000 00Pacific Surety Co 295,000 00

GEAR, XABfSilCTG & CO,INSURANCE DEPARTMENT

rchnnt St. Mri Judd I'tilMIng

Canadian-Australia- n Rojal'

STEAMSHIP COMPANY

Vancouver Victoria.Ilrlsliunc, Sjdne):

WARRIMOO

HIOWKKA.WARR1MOO

information

MARIPOSA

E31METT MAY, Manager

Mai

From Sydney, Hrishnnc. (., and MuvnVictoria and Vancouver, It. C.

WARRIMOO AUG.AORANCIMIOWKRA OCT.WARRIMOOAORANU1

Steamers of the above line, running in connection with the CANADI-'X- S

PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY between YuiuMuver, 11. C, nnd Syd-- !.

h. W., mul culling Victoria, II. C, Honolulu, Suva (Fiji), andBrisbane, (Q.), are

Due nt Honolulu on or about the dales lielovr stated, viz:Prom mul 11. ('.,

for Suva, (., and

KIOWKRA SUPT. 1

SUPTAO KAMI I OCT. 27

NOV. 24

DEC.

Tor

31

SEPT. 28

23

21

.V at

29

22

The magnificent new service the "Imperial Limited" is now runningiUily

BtTWEEK Vfih'Cf UVER AD NONTREAlMaking the run 100 hours without change. The finest Railway ser-llc-e

in the world.

Through tickets issued from Honolulu to Canada, United States andEurope.

For Freight and Passage and all general information, apply to

THE0 H. DAVIES & CO., Ltd., Gen'l Agts.

Pacific Mail Steamship Co.

Occidental & Oriental S. S. Co

and Toyo Kisen Kaisha.Steamers of the above Compaines will call at Honolulu and this

Port on or about the mentioned below:

FOR JAPAN and CH1IVA. FOR SAN FRANCISCO.

..AUG. 24 NIPPON MARU 23

.SEPT. 1 niO DE JANEIRO SEPT. 2

SEPT. 9 COPTIC SEPT. 12

.SEPT. 19 AMERICA MARU SEPT. 19

.SEPT. 20 CITY OF PEKING SEPT. 29

For general apply to

H. HACKFELD

Time

30

13

Sept. 27

Oct. 11

LTD,

26

NOV.DEC.

leavedates

AUG.

Oceanic Steamship Company.

Ltd. Agts.

Table

FOR SAN

' ALAMEDA 18

AUSTRALIA Sept. 6

MARIPOSA Sept. 15

Oct. fMOANA Oct. If

THE FINE PASSENGER STEAMERS OF THIS LINEWILL ARRIVE AT AND LEAVE THIS PORT ASHEREUNDER:

FROM SAN FRANCISCO

AUSTRALIA Aug.

ALAAu.UA Sept.AUSTRALIA

CO..

FRANCISCO

Aug.

AUSTRALIA

In connection with the Sailing of the above Steamers, theAgents are prepared to issue, to intending Passengers, CouponThrough Tickets by any Railroad from San Francisco to allpoints in the United States, and from New York by any Steam-ship Line to all European Ports.

For further particulars apply

W. G. Irwin St Co.(LIMITED)

General Agents Oceanic, S. S. Company,

T1IH HAWAIIAN BTAll, MONDAY, AUOUHT SI, 1899.

JIG INIELLKENGE

ARRIVALS.8a tut day, August 19.

Stmr. Claudlne. Freeman, fioiu 11 Ho

and way poitH: .10 ban potatoes, 120 ofcorn, DO uunulcH awa, 21 or limes, 41hogs, 50 cattle, 1 home, 300 sundries.

Am. sh. Luetic, George M. Anderson,from Nnnalmo, July 28; 21S0 tons coalto Inter Island company.

Stmr. J. A. Cummins, Soarle, fromWalmanalo: 1600 bags rice, 3S0 musicmelons.

Schr. Wnlalua, Moses, from Kauai:f'SO bags rice.

Sunday, August 20.Stmr. Maul, Macdonald, from Maul

ports: SO cattle, til Ijogs, 156 bags pota-toes, 30 bags benns, 100 bags taro Hour,112 bags sundries.

Stmr. Lehua, Bennett, from Maul andMolokal: 25 cattle, 2 bigs, 44 sundries.

Am. schr. Mary E. Rubs, Carl We-kind-

from Eureka, August 4: 265,355feet of lumber to Lewers & Cooke.

Stmr. Iwalanl, Gregory, from Hono-ka- a:

42SS bags sugar, 12 sundries, 5 deckpassengers.

Stmr. Kllohana, Thompson, from3 sundries.

Stmr. W. G. Hall, Thompson, fromNawllhvlll: 11 cases ostriches, TO sun-dries.

Stmr. James Makee, Tullet, from Ka-pa- a:

22 boxes soap, 208 bags rice, 7 sun-dries and 4 deck passengers.

Stmr. Mokolll, Dower, from Lanal:150 sheep, 2 deck passengers.

DEPARTURES.Sunday. August 20.

Ger. bk. J. C. Glade, Stege, for SanFrancisco (and not Saturday as report-ed).

Monday, August 21.Stmr. Noeau, Wyman, for Lahalna

and Kaanapalt, 4 p. m.Stmr. Ke Au Hou, Mosher, for Maka-we- ll

and Walmea, 5 p. m.Stmr. James Makee, Tullet, for Ka-pa- a,

4 p. m.Stmr. Mokolll, Dower, for Kamalo,

Pukoo, Halawa, Pelekunu, Kalaupapaand Wallua, 3 p. m.

Stmr. Lehua, Bennett, for Kaunaka-ka- l,

Lahalna and Kahaelepaplaoa, 5 p.m.

Stmr. J. A. Cummins, Searle, for Oa-h- u

ports.Schr. Lavlnla for Eleelc.

VESSELS TO SAIL TOMORROW.Jap S. S. Toyo Maru, Timoto, for

P01 i.aiiU.Stmr. W. G. Hall, Thompson, for Ha.

naiimuiu, iNUWiuwiii anu noiou, 0 p. in.Stmr. Mlkahaia, Thompson, lor iMe-el- e,

iianapepe, Aiakaweu, Waimea andKekaha, 5 p. m.

beni. .l.uuj, martin, for Koolau, 10 a.111.

Stmr. Claudlne, Freeman, for Kauna-kak- ai

(mall and passengeis oniy) a,

Maalaea, Kiliel, Makena, Kawal-ha- e,

Makukona, Laupahoehoe, Kakalau,Honomu, fepeekeo, Unomea, l'apaikouand hllo, 12 noon.

Stmr. Maul, Macdonald, for Lahalna,Kahului, Keanae, Hana, Hamoa, Klpa-hul- u

and Nahlku, 5 p. m.

HILO.Arrived, August bark Archer, Cal-

houn, 14 days from San Francisco, withgeneral merchandise valued at $45,00,uuu a passclibeiS.

Sailed, August 16, bark Roderick Dhufor San Francisco: 10,077 bags Hakalausugar, 6000 Pepeekeo, 10,000 Walakea,and 6000 Walnaku, total 32,677, valuedat $162,038, 14 passengers.

PASSENGERS.Arrived.

Per stmr. Claudine, from Hllo andway poiis, Auyusi jii. K C Atcmbaid,R. Colgate, T. H. Brook, C. N. Spencer,Li. ju.i.l.i.v 1 e, ii. i.ool, ft. fc. Jrass- -dial anu wife, Miss Ella Pugsley, M. G.Silva, S. Berliner, J. C. Axtcll and w.fe,S. Jotinson, It. Johnson, W. Thompson,Rev. V. M. Massle, C. Block, C. W. Kc-cle- s,

Harold Axtell, J. T. Moir and wife,R. Iveis, lii. E. Hicliards, Miss LillnoeHapoe. Miss E. Esplnda, A. H. R. Vler-r- a,

wife and son, A. W. Neely, Mrs. J.P. Howatt and daughter. Miss Lehua,Dr. A. C. Wall, Dr. C. A. Peterson, ManChong, Ah Hip. H. W. Ludloff, L. C.Lyman, Mrs. George A. Turner, W.Shoenlng, It. Saddler, C. D. Lovejoy, A.L. Loulsson, II. W. Kinney, Master H.Horner, Mrs. R. Westoby and son, E.Savory, W. T. Boyd, Miss Helen Rob-ertson, Miss Mable Robertson, ErnestParker, T. Mills, Miss A. M. Walker, J.T. Woods and wife, Miss R. Dowsett,G. B. McClellan, Mrs. James Cornwelland children. D. H. Davis, G. M. Han-cock, W. F. Young, C. Martin, E. Hane-bur- g

and wife, George E. Smithies and140 deck.

Per stmr. Maul, from Maul ports, Au-gust 20. Mrs. S. W. Kaal and son, Mrs.M. Kaawa and son, Mrs. O. H. Gullekand maid. Miss Mary Green, J. K. a,

A. N. Kepoikai, J. U. Josepa, Rev.O. H. Gullek, N. E. Lemmon, W. A. Bai-ley, J. F. Taylor. E. S. Taylor, J. M.Kaneakua, Miss I. Zelgler, Miss Alex-ander, J. W. Hall, J. R. HIgby, C. H.Rose and wife, D. A. Ray, Look Sing,Rev. S. Kanda, Miss L. Lanl, Miss E.LanI, Miss F. E. Akona, Miss Mary Pl-h- l,

Miss L. Alwohl, A. de Souza, J. W.Kalua, H. Giles and son, E. R. Hendry,Rev. Akazawa, Miss Kahai, Miss Kau-ka- u,

H. P. Baldwin, F. Klamp and 51deck.

Per stmr. W. G. Hall, from Nawlll-wll- l,August 20. Prof. A. S. Blckmore,

C. C. Lankell, J. C. Davis, A. Toogood,George Smith, Miss M. Kanopo, C. AhChong, Hee Man, Chang Yet. Dr. C. H.Douglas, W. I. Gelfleld, S. E. Lucas, E.Cramer, J. C. Rogers, George Malho,Hee Krvock, Yee Wa, K. Odo and 96deck.

Per stmr. Kllohana, from Makawcll,August 20. Miss Laitghlln, F. A. Vlck-er- y

and 3 deck.Per ulmr. Lehua, from Maul and Mo-

lokal, August 20. G. Kanekau, C. XV.Schleiffor, P. McLane, W. Auld andwife, E. Itenkln nnd wife, W. Crook,Mr. Wels and 9 deck.

MEMORANDA.The Mnuna Loa Is loading sugar atthe Oceanic wharf.The bark Reaper at Kahului wasnearly ready for sea when the Maul leftthat port Saturday.The Walalua made a smart roundtrip of 5 days from here to Hanalel and

(Continued to page 7).

"DULY FEED MAN AND STEED."Feed your nerves, also, If you wouldhave them strong. The blood is thefeeder and sustnlner of the whole ner-vous system. Men and women who arenervous are so because their nerves arestarved. When they make their bloodrich and pure with Hood's Sarsaparilia

their nervousness disappears becausethe nerves are properly fed. Hood'sSarsaparilia never disappoints.

PrHce02en?sILre vatiol

A GOOD THING.There's one good thing when they feeldryThat business men cannot pass by.Hpr far and wide It's fame you hear.They stop to drink of "Rainier" beerOn draught or iu bottle at Criterion.

FloorLINOLEUMS AND 017.CLOTH.

HallLINOLEUMS, CARPETSAND F1URE MATTING.

RugsCENTER, SOFA ANDSTAIR.

Portierres,CURTAINS, TABLECOVERS, TABLE DAM-

ASK AND NAPKINS,ETC., ETC.

Largest Slock. Best Values.

Great Varietv.

--AT-

E. W. JORDAN

FORT No. 10 STREET

Manila CigarBand Tobacoo

La Insular, Flor de LaPel In de Oriente. aid Pest Brandsof Tea, in 'linn or packages, for

suit-- by

LEE TOMA & CO.,Corner of Iuuunu ni d Merchant

Streets, 11 noliilu, 11. I.

Just arrived n fine lot of French(). B D. I'ijw-B- .

Just received a I iir invoioo ofMexican Oigim.

S. Kojima.IMPORTHK OF.

Japanese Provisions.General Merchandise!

AND PLANTATION SUPPLIES.

No. 9 Hotel Street, Honolulu.Telephone 574. P. O. Box out

Don't . . .YOU want a good ofllco coat?Somtehlng that will keep youcool and at the same timewear well. If you do, ourserges In Blue, Gray and Brownare Just the thing. Come nndhave a look at 'em.

Wo are offering this montha line of Stiff-Boso- m ColoredShirts, latest style, and all te

patterns at $1.25. Yourgain, our loss; to many that'sthe reason.

We still lead In ready-ta-we- ar Cloth-ing. All you need to do Is to tell usyour wants; we guarantee to All themwithout any trouble to you.

Jk HashWaverly Block, 0 Hotel Street.

We make SHI UTS to Order.Telephone No. C70. No. 9-- Hotel St.

PEEK THE AN & lO.'S

i

Dellciously appetizing for delicatedigestions.

Albert, Arrowroot,Atlantic, Boudoir,

Celery, Colonial,

Dinner, Gingerbread,"Whole Meal, Oaten,

Florence, Opera andMaccaroons In 21bs. tins.

3LVEWIS & CO.Ill Fort Street. Telephone 24u

Cannon Cigarettes

New and Superior BrandBest Value for 5c.Holder for each Cigarette

For sale at all Retailers. Limited Supply at Wholesale by

HYMAN BROS.X White as Snow.

PORT COSTA FLOUR.

Wasmnff ton Mbi canti

SOLE) AOEKTSi Corner and Queen Streets?.::mkkk..::

Plumbing, Tin, CopperDIMOND BLOCK

NEW OPSilk Goods, in the piece,

Silt Ilandlu relucts,Silk Shu wis,Decorated Flower Pols,

in

onUre-i- t Varieiies of

AND

Also Full Assortment of

Etc.

nPn ltd I

Fort

CM..

Mi

and Iron75-- 7Q KING STREET.

New Porcelain Cups ai d SaucersTen nnd Dinner Sets,Carved Ivory, llnltmi Chairs,( arved Sandalwood Boxes.

ORIENTAL GOODS.IMPORTATION

These Goods are ihe Handsomest all Honolulu.

wirsro wo chan & co.SlO-ai- li Nuunnu Street.

Now View.

LADIES' GEHTLEMEH'S HATS

Metal WareLacquer Ware,Silks, ttilT"0

LIU

Sheet Woik

X. MURATA.Strcfw :! Hat Mantif aoturer

P. O Box 844. Telephone 814.118 NUUANU STREET ... HONOLULU

Another One Hundred Tons ofNew FurnitureJust Landed at

pi.. "V TT Corner Niinann and KingrLJL XX JL .rfiTkn. Streets, Honolulu

In II it room 8Mb, 2-- 3 4 nd 4-- 4 Hedstpads, Chi iron lers,Jleal Saf!S, ire. Wool and Moss Mattresses, lliirlier andDentist Chairs. Tallies, etc., to ho sold at San Franciscoprices at the 1 X L. 8. W. LEDERER, Proprietor.

P. O. Box 835. Telephono 478.

Page 3: L THE H STj?5lI J?$lSRT - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · thc Zambesi. The Japanese steamship Toyo Mom now In port was formerly the British steamship Zambesi, built in 1874

A. L. C. ATKINSONAttorney ui Law

Office, Corner lli'thel mill King StsUpstairs.

bU t: mayu wiiLL,

Attorney and Coun-sellor at Law.

IIIIwO, IIAWATI.int. uuo. .1. AUULU

floxac-opdtbi- PrHctttinner and surgeon.

Bpeolal Attention Given to ChmnlcDiseases. Otllce and llesldence. Bere-tanl- u

street, nearly opposite the Meth-odist church.

Office Hours: 10 to 12 a. m.; J to 4

p. m.; 7 to b p. m.; Sundays, 9:30 to10:30 a. m. Telephone 733.

DK. WALTKll HOmiANN.

Beretanla St. opposite Hawaiian Hotel.

Omce Hours: 8 to 10 a. m.; 1 to 3 p.m.; 7 to 8. p. m.

Sundays: 8 to 11 a. m.Tel. 610. P. O. Box 501.

DR. T. niTAHURA' Consulting Rooms. 427 Nuuauu Street

, 1. O. Box 842. Telephone 132.

Resioence, 524 Nuuanu Street.

Hours: 9 to 12 a. in. and 7 to 9 p.huiiuayh. m o p. ui.

i DR. I. MORI130 Beretanla St., bet. Emma and Fort

- Telephone 277; P.0. Box 843

Ofllce hours: 9 to 12 a. tn. nnd 7 to 8

p. ni.; Sundays, 9 to 12 a. m.

urn. a. n. wmi. ww. n. f. wai i .

)iD JB XTIS T s.LOVE BUILDING. FORT STREET."

OFFICE HOURS. 8 a. m. to 4 p. m.

k.S. IrlllNBAUAl & J0., Limited.

HONOLULU.H. I.

Commission Merchants and Importersof General Merchandise.

Ban Francisco Office, 215 Front Street.

EojntaMe Life ussnrance society

. OF THE UNITED STATES.

BRUCE CARTW RIGHT,general Manager for Hawaiian Islands

O. G. TRAfHAGiiiW,

ARCHITECT -

iSA MERCHANT ST., HONOLULU.Between Fort and Alakea.

(Telephone743.

Telephone 611.

BURNETTE & CO.STOCKS, BONDS. REAL ESTATE

ANDCUSTOM HOUSE BKOKERS

No'nry Public and Financial AgentsOffice: 13 Bethel, corner King Street.

F. W. THRUMSURVEYOR.

Room 10 Spreclcels' Block Plantation

Work a Specialty.

WILLIAM SAV1DGE

STOCK AND BOND

BROKER.

" McTnerny Block, Fort Street.

P. E. R. STRAUOHREAL ESTATE UROKEIt

Financial Agent and Collector.

639 KING STREET, LINCOLN BLOCKTELEPHONE 641.

"P. O. Box 371. Telephone 328.

EDMUND R BIVENSTOCK BROKER.

Island Stocks Bought and Sold,trustee for nt stockholders

OFFICE: CAMPBELL BLOCK.

i CHARLES J. FALKSTOCK AND BOND BROKER

...Member of the Honolulu StockExchange.

Room 3C1, Judd Building.

FREDERICK . JOBbUITE 815, MARQUETTE BUILDING

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS.

HAWAIIAN CONSUL-GENERA- L

for theSTATES OF ILLINOIS, MICHIGAN,

WISCONSIN, OHIO ANDINDIANA.

ATTORNEY-AT-LA- W

For Sale..A beautiful home. Lot 70x125 on Col-

lege street above Domlnls street, withnew cottage (Just completed) of sevenrooms; porcelain bath tub, patent W.C, electric lights, carriage house, ser-vants room, feed room, etc. Thesepremises are near Oahu College, nearcar line and for pure air and desirablelocation, cannot be excelled In the city.Terms part cash balance on long timeat 7 per cent. This glves'you a chanceto own your home which Is sure to ad-vance In price, and would be muchcheaper than paying rent.

For full particulars see

The Real Estate Dealer.1

Cel. 315 Fort street.

AFRAID OF TIIH VOLCANO.

Hiui Francisco Merchant Holding HackbiupmeiitR of UooUR.

HILO, August 18 W. Roekoy recelv.ed the following letter from n SunFrancisco wholesale house Instead ofthe consignment of shoes he had order-ed and expected:

"You rBteemod favor of the 8th Inst,with order Is nt hand. Owing to thepresent Mauna Loa eruptions we deemIt a vlRablc to postpone shipping theRoods until more favorable conditionsexist."

SQUATTERS WIN.HILO, August 18. The temporary In-

junction issued against Messrs. ln

and Wise by the agent of theSpreckels property, forbidding them tocontinue the occupancy of the lot onFront street, ndjolntng the ofTlce of HayBrothers, was dissolved by the court onSaturday laBt. The new occupants nregoing rapidly ahead with their build-ing. They can be proceeded against bythe Spreckels people only In an actionfor ejectment, which will require thelatter to prove their title to the prem-ises. Hllo Tribune.

CONSPIRACY CASE ENDED.HILO, August 18. The conspiracy

cases against Jnpanese laborers onplantation tried lost week nre at

an end. One of the men was acquittedand the charges against the balancewere dismissed. Hawaii Herald.

WATER FOR POWER.HILO, August' 18. W. S. Wise has

filed a water claim of 2500 miners' Indi-es, to be taken from the Walluku ashort distance above Rainbow Falls. JtIs to be used In HUo for power purpos-es.

CHINESE COMMITS SUICIDE.KAHULUI, August 19. Last Monday

the 14th, an old Chinese shoemakercommitted suicide at Knhulul, by hous-ing himself from a rafter with twopieces oi .acK twine, mis leet were onthe lloor. but he put Just enough weighton the string to strangle himself.

ST. VITUS' DANCE.In Columbia, Mo., 1b a little girl,

who a short time ago lost control ofher muscles and was not even able tospeak. Her parents called In the phy-sicians and nfter examining her theysaid she had St. Vitus' dance In Itsmost severe form. They left her somemedicine, but It did not relieve her ter-rible condition. In speaking of her re-covery her father says: "Dr. Miles'Nervlse was recommended and we be-gn- n

giving it to her at once. Before thefirst bottle was half gone we could seean Improvement, nnd by the time shehad taken two bottles she was cured."

M. W. COFFEY,Columbia, Mo.

All druggists are authorized to sellDr. Miles' Nervine on a guarantee thatfirst bottle will benefit1 or money willbe refunded. Be suro and get Dr.Miles' Nervine. Take nothing else.Write us about your troubles and ail-ments and we will give you the honestadvice of a trained specialist absolute-ly free of charge. Booklet on heartand nerves sent free. Address,

Dr. Miles Medical Co.. Elkhart, Ind.

fin .

That disagreeable state of mind, frequent loss of temper and consequentmental worry superinduced by the an-noyance of PRICKLY' HEAT Is quicklydispelled by one or two applicationsof DANDRUFF KILLER. While Itseffects In the eradication and final cureof Dandruff are remarkable, the easewith which It stops Prickly Heat Isnone the less so.

For sale by all druggists and at theUnion Barber shop. F. PACHEO,

Proprietor.

SummerCorsetsA FINE ASSORTMENT AT LOW

PRICES.

NEW LINE JUST RECEIVED.

IWAKAMIHOI EL STREET. HONOLULU.

AntisepticSolution.

A law is in vogue in I'arlithat this shall be used inall barber uhops.

In use ati THE SILEHT BARBER SHOP,

Joseph Fernandez,Proprietor. Arlington Hfl Hiti

M. YATSU137 Nuuunu Street, Honolulu.

CONTRACTORPAINTER AND . Al'ER IIANGER

All Kinds of Work in is Line nt Verylow Prices, (live Uh a Trlnl.

Art StudioBANKO H. KOBAYASHI

P. O. Box 874.

TIIH HAWAIIAN STAR, MONDAY, AUGUST SI. 1899, TURJBM '1

m ffti lecmJAPANESE CAUGHT BY ARM 8 OP

FLY WHEEL.

The Unfortunate Almost Torn to Shredsby Bolting Death Supervenes BeforeMedical Aid Could Arrive.

MAKAWELI, August 18. An acci-dent Hint proved fatal occurred on Ma-knw-

this week. A Japanese engagedan the centrifugal was sent to adjust abelt, and In the discharge of his ulilyWas hit by one of the arms on the itywheel. In the confusion and fright helost his presence of mind and being un-able to extricate himself from the belt-ing was almost torn to shreds. Thearm was torn apart at the Joints.

When attended to by the sugar boil-er and engineer, he had become uncon-scious. The main artery near theshoulder was ruptured and the bleedingcould not be stopped.. A physician wastelephoned for. but before he could ar-rive death had put an end to the Jap'ssufferings.

KAUAI HOUSE PA11TY.MAKAWELI. August 18. Mr. and

Mrs. Gay are entertaining a very Jollyhouse party which includes Miss King,Miss Hart, Mr. Savedllng and Mr. El.ston.

CLOSELY CONTESTED POLO.

An Exciting Contest at SunnysldeField, Pain.

PA1A, Maul, August 19. The Polotournament played on the SunnysldeHeld on Saturday afternoon last, was amost Interesting nnd successful affair.Play began about 3:30 p. m. with thefollowing teams contesting: A. D. Bald-- 1

win, captain; W. D. Baldwin and D. C,i,imRav and F. p. Baldwin, captain; S.13, Kllialna and Fred Baldwin.

This game resulted In a tie, C to 6. F,F. Baldwin's team securing 6 touch-downs, nnd A. D. Baldwin's 1 goal and1 touchdown. It was decided by a

should 'play the remaining team first.and after that the winner play the firstteam.

mi me nexi one up wus j. u. uuiu- -win's team ntralnst G. II. Bnllev. can- -tain; Sam Saldwln and W. O. Aiken.This resulted in favor of G. H. Bailey'steam, !i to 0; the latter team securing 5touchdowns. This team then contestedwith that of F. F. Baldwin, and aftera close and hard fought game lost tothe latter by the score of 16 to 14; thewinners securing 3 goals nnd 1 touch-down, and the losers 2 goals and 4touchdowns.

On account of the lateness of the hourIt was Impossible to pjay off the finalgame, so the result stands a tie betweenthe teams of A. D. Baldwin and F. F.BaHwIn. Some very good polo wasseen during the play, nnd a very satis-factory day had. A number of specta-tors were present In carriage and onhorseback.

HALEAKALA PARTIES.PAIA, August 19. Mr and Mrs. H.

Morrison of Makawell, Kauai, Miss J.Leanore Center of Alampda, Cal., Com-missioner D. A. Ray of Washington, D.C, Senator Clarke of Wyoming, andothers, have been entertained by H. P.Baldwin at Haiku, during this week.Messrs. Ray, Clarke and party havealso been the guests of W. II. Cornwellat Wolkapu.

On ThursdayMiss Center, guided by AJSiSsSivisited Hnlenkala's summthe wonderful view nt sunr'sp. Thesame 'jay Mrs. D. Dougles of Ewa, Incompany with F. W. Hardy nnd W. O.Aiken also visited the top, and viewedthe grand panorama.

NO FAULT OF THE CAMERA."I've come to tell you, sir, that the

photographs you took of us the otherday are not at all satisfactory. Why,my husband looks like an ape!" "Well,madam, you should have thought ofthat before you had him taken."

ATRIAL ...Is what I nsk. Satisfaction guar-anteed, i am prepared to do

ALL KINDS OF PLUMBING,

In a satisfactory manner, and atvery icasonable prices.

H. F. LUDEWIGBELL TOWER, UNION ST.

OYSTER G0GKTR1LS IIP 10 DME

(hartCco)

ELITE ICE ill nimUEMUKA HAKUKI

76 Queen Street, near Richard Street,Clothes Dyed in all Colors Desired..

Also Cleaned aud Repaired.Uuoluu u me iloloi l,ole.

HONOLULU, 11. I.

SAYEGUSAimporter a'1di:ali:r ix

Silk HandkerchiefsSilk and Cotton Crepes

Kimtnos, ShirtsCoffee set?, Matting

Flower Pots, Etc.418 Nuuanu St. I. O. Box 883

J. OUDERKIRK,CONTRACTOR M BUILDER

House Moving and all Kinds of HeavyWeights Handled.

NO. 617 FORT STREET, HONOLULU.(Opposite Club Stables.)

MIJUDD BUILDING, FORT ST.

In corporntd Under the Laws of tlvRepublic of Hawaii.

CAPITAL, $4(10,000.011

OFFICER8 AND DIRECTORS.Chas. M. Cooko PreslilenP. C. Jones nt

C 11, Cooke fashl.F. C. Atherton Assistant Cushlei

Directors Henry Waterhuuse. ToiMay, F. V. Mucfarlane, E. D. TenneJ. A. McCandless.

Solicits tlie Accounts of Firms, Cmporntlnns. Trusts. Individuals, and wlipromptly and carefully attend to nihi I business connected with banklnientrusted to tt. Sell nnd Purchase Forelgn Exchange, Usue Letters of Credit

Savings Department.Ordinary and Term Deposits received

and Interest ullowed In accordantwith rules and conditions printed lipass booki, copies f which may be hadupon application.

THE YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK

LIMITEDPaid Up Capital Yen 12,000.000Reserve Fund Yen 7,300,000

HfiAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.BRANCHES AND- AGENCIES.

Kobe. London. Lyons. New York.San Francisco. Shanghai.

Bombay. Hongkong.Tokyo. Nagasaki.

Transact a General Banking and Ex-change Business.

Agency Yokohama Specie Bank.INTEREST ALLOWED.

On fixed deposits for 12 monts, 4 pelcent per annum.

On fixed deposits for 6 months, 3 percent per annum." months, 3 percent per annum

Interest Allowed by the Head Officeat Yokohama.

Q n cllrrpn aep.?3ll.s' 1 -- 10 Ben Per day.On fixed deposits for 12 months C' per

cent per annum.

New Republic Bniliiiog,, Honolulu H I,

ESTABLISHED 1858.

BISHOP & Co.,Bankers,

TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKINGAND EXCHANGE BUSINESS.

COMMERCIAL AND TRAVELERS'LETTERS OF CREDIT ISSUED,

AVAILABLE IN T,L THEPRINCIPAL CITIES OF

THE WORLD.

INTEREST allowed on fixed depos-its: Three months, 3 per cent; sixmonths, 34 per cent; twelve months, 4per cent.

CLAUS SPRECKELS. WM. G. IRWIN.

Clans Spreckels Sl Co.

BANK 13 I JS .HONOLULU, H. I,

San Francisco Agents The NevadaNational Bank of San Francisco.

DRAW EXCHANGE ONSAN FRANCISCO The Navada Na-

tional Bank of San Francisco.LONDON The Union Bank of London,

Ltd.NEW YORK American Exchange Na-

tional Bank.CHICAGU Merchants' National Bank.PARIS Credit Lyonnals.BERLIN Dresdner Bank.HONGKONG AND YOKOHAMA The

Hongkong and Shanghai BankingCorporation.

NEW ZEALAND AND AUSTRALIABank of New Zealand.

VICTORIA AND VANCOUVER Bankof British North America.

TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKINGAND EXCHANGE BUSINESS.

Deposits Received. Loans Made onApproved Security. Commercial andTravelers' Credits Issued. Bills of Ex-change Bought and Sold.

COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY AC--COUNTED FOR.

BISHOP & CO.

Savings BankUntil further notice, Savings Dppns- -

Ca will be received and Interest allow-ed by this Bank at four and one-ha- lf

)er cent per annum. The ternvj, rulesind regulations of the Hawaiian Pos-- al

Savings Bank will be adopted as'ar as It Is practicable to apply them,ind the Casli Reserve of $50,000 as

under tho Postal Act will benalntalned.

Printed copleB of the Rules and Reg.ilatlons may be obtained on applica-tion.

BISHOP & CO.

C, BREWER & CO,, LID

Qaeen Sl,, Honolulu, H, I.

ACI1S.NTU FOU

MawAiinn Aifriuultura) Co., OnonieuHiiKU! Co,, Uonomu Sugar Co,, Wni-luh- u

Sugar Co., Walhio Sugar Co.Makt'u Huuar Co., Haloakaln RanchCo.. Kananaln Ranch.

Planters' Lino Hnn Francisco Packets.Chas. Brewer & Co.'s Lino of Roaton

Packets.Agente Roston Roard of UndorwriterfAgents fhilauoirmn isoara or uiuior

writers,List of Officehs :

1'. O. Jones PresidentGeo. R. Robehthon ManagerK. P. Bisnop Treaa. and Recy.Col. W. F. Alijcn AuditorO. M. Cookk jH, WATKnnousB,. DirectorsGoo, R. Cahtbb.... )

Wo huvo been authorized to toll

mm

H ARZERSAUERBRUNNEN

At S5.00 per ease of fifty bottlep

Dwing to spurious imitations having been brought to thismarket, the public is hereby notified that the only

"GENUINE...SAUERBRUNNE"

Ts bottled by the Harzcr Koenigsbrunnen-Quell- e,

aud every bottle bears their trade-mark and stamp.

H. HAGKFEL DSOLE AGENTS FOR THE

& Ltd.HAWAIIAN

OBACCO LidIMKOIiTKHN OIT

Havana and Manila CigarsSmokers' Articles

Fine Grades of Smoking Tobacco

Cor. Fort and Merchant Sts., Honolulu, H.L

Pacific Heights.NOTICE.

Applications will be received at the office of BruceWaring & Co., for the purchase of lots on

Pacific Heights,situated ou the magnificent hillside between Nuuanu andPauoa Valloj's and commanding a superb, marine and sceDioview stretching from Diamond Head over Punchbowl to theWaianae range of mountains.

A broad winding boulovard giving access to the propertyis now in course of construction and choice lots of sufficientarea for magnificent homesteads

On the Nuuanu side of the hillthe high winds and heavy showers of Nuuanu Valley, ensuring a salubrious climate.

The elevation of the property is from 150 to 750 feetabove sea love!.

Applications will be numbered and filed and choice will.

be allotted according to the number of the application.Only for lot feet. Terms

Brixce Waring BcOHicos 7 nnd 8, Block.

O lit

IXJIiar01I3Initio

RoolclncDIRECT

400 NUU VNU ST.

Artesian We

Chin Sank Well Co.Onico 1 h CITY .MILL CO.

J ii oi' n Strenlelcphonc 101 1'. Q. llox'.l.'il

Estimates given and contrncts made forwells on any of the Island.

Plants for heavy work operated by themost skilltul, highest class drillers.

FOR ONE

00.,

CO.,

will soon be available.is a Pali protecting it from

and MATTINGPine Toaar

$1,000 a 100x200 Easy.

Co.Progress

Ire,SSillc,

s

ISLANDS.

IMPORTATIONS.

Two doors aliore Hcrctanlu Strett

E. E. HITCHMarket rchouw Rullding, Queen St

I

Estimates Given for all Kinds ofWVM.NuS. TENTS, TRUNK COVERS,

TARPAULINS, WAGON COVURS,FIELD COVERS, ETC., ETC.

Stock Furnished at Fair Prices.

All Work Done Sntlifnotrrr.

WEEK ONLY

SAILOR HATS, nil stylesELEGANT TRIMMED HATS, latest styles

Thoso Coods will be sold nt groatly roducod pricesfor ono wook on y

MISS M. E. KILLEANArlington Block :: Hotel Street

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roan

iW x ii a iu a I i n il Star.(I)AII.Y AM) WKICICI.Y.)

IPiibllxiu'il Kvery Afternoon (KxceplHtinriiiy by tlii' lliiwiilliin Star

Vi.vMit'r AkhiicIiiiIiim. Kill.

LlAU T. ATKINSON KilllorVMAMC K. IlUUJ8,.lluslni'ss Miuiiigur

WttnsnifPT'ON UATKS:

Tmt Year (In Advnncc) $ 8.00JOrte Months (In Advance) .... S.00IW Month (In Advance 75

Trelgn, (PcrYcaV In Advance) 12.00

BPECrAlTAijvEnTlSINa AGKNTS.

Chicago .lames E. Colby, 300 StockCxvmuiKu liulliUng,

ouu tranolsvo Dalle's AdvertisingAgency,. C4 MerpUa.Ht'.a JJxchnngc.

BEM?-WEttia-Y SUBSCRIPTION?

fVwnt ci.v.r.r(nrq. per Annum .. $2 .0(1

Iferdgh Subscribers, 3.00(Strictly In AdTancc.)

MONDAY. AUGUST 21. 1809.

-

A change Iri Manila to which little at-

tention has been paid Is. that the Amer-ican legal system Is being made to su-

persede that of Spain. The. Spanish le-- al

system like that of alt the Latinraces Is eombersome and unsatisfac-tory. The simper methods of Ameri-can Jurisprudence will very soon com-

mend themselves to .the citizens of theconquered . city. Manila will prove tobe a good fleld'for American lawyers,especially such an .will apply themsel-ves to the 'Study ofc the Spanish lan-guage, or to those, who have been for-

tunate enough to. already ncqulro It.

One1 result 'Of the loss of her coloniesis that Spain's sugnr factories, witn ayearly pr6duotfon of about 60,000 tonsare 'unable to' supply the public de-

mand, which amounts, for the wholeSpanish' portion of the peninsula tonbout 100,000 tons annually. There Ija prohibitive duty of 102V4 per cent up-

on all foreign sugars to protect theborne Industry. The merchants andtradesmen of many Spanish cities havejjetltloned the Spanish Government toreduce the impoit duty of 50 per cent,which would protect the refiners undyet allow tlie foreign sugar to come in.In spite of the opposition of the refinersthe Spanish Government will reducethe duty. The American refiners willthen have an opportunity of supplying ul K"B

tlon andSpanish maiket. at least thinks croquetof Valencia, ed aml nlore than

It be an odd of the war a"VtlllnK else n bicycle. Forrefined be a capable a

Into-Spal- "y or nnywas odd at the beginning

A CREMATORY.

It very fortunate that the NuuanuCemetery Association had the assist-ance of Mr. Dayton in straighteningout the very tangled skein of the own-ership of grave yard lots. was onlysome one who was Intimately convers-ant with the family history, andwho had a retentive memory who couldJiave done what has bsen done satisfac-torily. few people wero aware ofthe unfortunate muddle hasbeen straightened out.

But the reportupubllshed by the asso-ciation another feature tothe public 'should attention. Theamount of ground, now left forpurposes is very limited, and there isneed thtj local government to make

lur in, uuriai ot me cityfor Its disposal by some

means: Tlie eem'tk'e'ry association pro-poses a way by a crematory may

esta"b'llsheii:''':tfpbn' advisabilityof cfltab'lfsh'ment there Is now

perfect unanimity.The wit opinion a cre

matory has beeri obtained by con- -wiiueu invB),on o,r ine subject. It wasnoi so long were almost

to touch the matter, be- -cause it was supposed that there wasinucn prejuuice against It. dls- -cussion hds that there was no"otbsii io nesuate, Decause a very .

number of people was very deri- -ous of havlng-a- - crematory established.

But discussion'ts only preliminary todecisive Though much Informa-tion has been acquired, It was neces-sary for some' Influential bo y to take

to materialize the thought. Thisthe Cemetery Association has andnow those who are interested can see

and p. prospect of the establish-jnen- tpf ,a- institution which, In many

minds, will voA death of some of its un-pleasant surroundings. The uponcremation in may be senti-mental, but they are also uponhygienic principals are comingforcibly to ,the,rqnt.

THE GALLEUY.

It is refreshing to that Ho-nolulu ,1s .developing, gallery It

a pleasing of uncertaintyto a shovvvwhen there, Is a good gallery.One never, knpwu exactly what the gal-lery will, say certain

and when It does saysomething it is intenselycases out of ten.

But the gallery's strong itsvirtue, always on the side of thopersecuted ''lovers. It detests, with ahearty detestation; ' nil meanness andbrutality, Vhen, man kicks his wifeon tho -- Htnge, .It promptly execrateshim. Having Itself with beer orwhiskey," It may' itself

nt home, butsuch things be confined to thodomeBtlo,plff;e(nfln-.the-stag- they aredistinctly to bo reprobated.

sentiment is a very strong Bultof the naller..!Ifiniong picturingdelights .of..ani Idyllic life with bh'dband lambs ianli.'ialdens withtresses Is, rvarbied.. Why gallery sitsentranced, and than'Mthunders out itsapplause a.nfJ;,aBksfpr more. If It Is apoem (ofAa ylng and his mother,the galjer'y.,18 uepell bound, andand " as ks "more..It.iff)thfljjPor4o.nlipllclty. of. the al- -

Ifiy Hint Is Its charm. It knows whatt llks hihI tliM not hmltntn In any so.It problem plays. It likes melo

and plenty of music and dan-cIii- k.

H sees the point of a Joke farsooner the dross circle and It Is akeen of net lug.

In places the nailery Is or usedto be the most Importnnt part of thetheatrical audience. The play toIt, nnd It has to be distinctly cateredto. It establishes Its favorites, and Itsjudgment Is very correct. It goes tothe theater regularly, sees everythingthat Is on, and readily acquirea standard of comparison Which Is usu-ally Just. The regular gallery Isanother of Honolulu's advance.

" "le u,,,u' "'rougn an evoiuwhlch be&Bn wIUlthe so

in tennls and Klf- -Agent Mertens j

would result the u

which would semi American womnn shot, roodj nsller' expert horse womanI regarded as

Is

It

local

Verywhich Just

shows which'give

burialI

for,juuwaiuuilead, or other

whiche the

such st

consensus abouttho

agp. that peopleafraid upon

Openshown

large

action.

stepsdone,

light,

viewsmany minds

basedwhich

quite findgods.

gives .s.qnse

under given

witty, nine

point isiHh.

filled.make very

must

Thenthe

brownthe

boyweeps

again J

lmtM

thatcriticmost

nctorft

going

veryproof

sugars

ON THE ItiqUT TRACK.

A gymnasium for .ladles Is Indeed anInnovation for Honolulu, but there Islittle doubt but that It will have ex-

cellent results. As thp physical cultureof man has been mor.i, systematicallyattended to of late years, so has thephysical culture of woman begun to boconsidered. There la no reason whywomen should no have as good a phy-

sical training as their sisters- of classictimes, when the thorough exerciseand well being of the body was scrupu-lously attended to. Even In medievaltimes a number of the ladles' wero al-

most as skillful us their lords In themilitary exercises of the day. Bandsof armed and accoutered ladles at-tended the Crusades, a fact Just nowmade popular by Marion Crawford'snovel of "Via Crucls."

IThe physical culture of women sankwith the commencement renaissanceperiod. This is the period which sup-plied the angular, anemic women thatare the heroines of the decadent schoolof poets of the present day, the vir-gins of the Rosettis and other lovers ofan Impossible past. The Chinese .Jeaprevailed In the popular notions of women. To bo all that was beautiful andhigh bred, a woman should not work.

'It Is for this reason that the Chlnr-s-o

distort the feet of their women nndcultivate the long finger nails. Wenever got to the point of distorting thefeet, but we had many fashions nearlyequally hideous.

This has passed away, however, wo-

man has gradually, within the memory

or even the middle of this century.Jviot that there were not women whohad these accomplishments, but theywere regarded as somewhat eccentric.Scott when he drew that most charm-ing and daring of riders, Di Vernondid It with a sort of fear nnd tremb.lng,and was very particular to show thather In the light of a reflued and womanly woman in the library.

The fact that lady Baker accompani-ed her husband on his Journey to theAfrican lakes, and was able to use herrifle made her, und another lady, whohad, In Asia, shown like ability, as anexplorer, the wonder of London for aseason. Neither would be regarded asanything so very astonishing now. Atthe time spoken of a woman who rodeand (.hot was associated In the publicmina wun me Amazon, a rough,beetle browed, Meg Merrilees, or HelenMacgregor sort of a creature. Thatgreat refinement should accompanysuch tastes was considered Impossible.

Rut all this has changed. The worldhas learned that because a women cul-tivates her physical qualities, she byno means necessarily loses the gentle- -ness and beauty of her sex. Indeedthe more she cultivates her physique,the better woman and mother Bhe islikely to become. and to be the motherof the coming race, Is woman's highestattribute.

As not all women have the chance ofcultivating their physical attributes byoutdoor sports, the gymnasium stepsforward and offers the opportunitywhich they need. Every te

city now has its female gymnasium,and it has been an untold boon to thou-sands. The ill health born of an inac-tive and sedentary life is banished bythe judicious exercise of the gymnasi-um under the skilled eye of the prac-tised teacher. One can welcome theaddition of a female gymnasium to Ho-nolulu, ns a step forward. Our youngwomen are many of them good swim-mers, tennis players, rideis and !o forthbut the discipline of the gymnasiumwill be very valuable to them.

T. O. 1IALLI2NTVNI3 II. I EAKlJv

BALLENTYNE & EAKIK

Real Estate and

Stock Brokers

If you want to buy or sell either

REAL ESTATE OR

SUGAR STOCKS. . Call and see us

CarofuKnttontlon given toevery commUslon

--Vlolnerny BlockFORT STIIEET, IIONOLUT.U.

Fln Honk find Commercial PrlntlnVat the Star Office. s'rm.ti,.

Tltn' HAWAIIA'N &TAH MONdAV, '"A'uhURT 21, 1M.

TimelyTopics

Honolulu, August, 12, 1S99.

A well selected stock with n, good as-

sortment Of goods mre both the liuyer'aand seller's delight.

We have Just received a large assort-ment of

I

Iron Wire Jj;,r

NqsV4v 5 and 6";Galvanized Fence Staples; In Kegs,

assorted Sizes, .1, 14 and 2 Inch, i

PAINTS IN QILPIONEER AND HUBBUCK'S WHITE

LEAD. ;

BOILED LINSEED OIL. '

RAW LINSEED OIL. ..,' ,

WHITE ZINC IN OIL AND JAPAN,ASSORTED COLORS. . i .

ADAM'S FLAT PAINT BRUSHES, 3TO 5 INCHES WIDE.

ADAM'S VARNISH BRUSHES; ASSORTED SIZES.

MACHINE OILSNo. 1 and 2 Engine Oil, W-- S Lard Oil,

In tins nnd barrels.Sperm Oil In tins and barrels.Neats Foot Oil. Carbollnlum.Coal Tar. Axle Grease. Best Refined

Tallow.Cotton Waste. Varnish of all Kinds.Packing, Asbestos, Soap Stone, Sheet

Rubber.Pipe Covering, assorted Blzeu. ,

The nbove are only a few of the manyarticles we keep constantly in stock,and our prices .will stand competitionwith any other dealers.

Pokt St., opp. Spreckels Bank.

.,1! X f '

V1

Another

Special Sale!

THIS TIME IT 18

INDURATEDFIBRE WARE;iNEA.T AND DURABLE

TUBS, BUCKETS,DISH PANS,PITCHERS,WASH1 BASINS,INFANT'S BATHS,SLOP PAILS,MEASURES,

And many other useful articles.

Prices are cut 25 per cent.All marked in plain figures.

Wc arc making this reduction becausewe have too laige a stock of thesegoods and want more room for twocarloads of JEWEL STOVES and onecar of GURNEY CLEANABLE RE-FRIGERATORS which are on the way.

W. Dill & CO.

(LIMITED.)

IMPORTERS OF CROCKERY, GLASSAND HOUSE FURNISHING

GOODS.

Sole Agents, Hawalan Islands.JEWEL STOVES, for Coal or Wood.GUERNEY CLEANABLE REFRI-GERATORS.NEW BLUE FLAME WICKLESSOIL STOVES.PRIMUS STOVES.

I r

,t.h.'

THOMPSON BROTHERSTho Grontost Manufacturers54, 84.00 nnd SO Men's Shoos Known

We've just opened an elegant display '

these goods, in all lasts and colors, andone ihpedtidii will convince you thatthey are the greatest shoe on earth fqrfor the price'. It took us many monthsto get thq, .agency for these goods, .hutwe've got tnem now, and got them for

,

keeps.- i, , ....

;

Mclnerny's Shoe StoreFORT STREET. llONOLULTJ.

SIEEL

The latest produc-ductio- u

of the mostsuccessful Wind MiiL. ',

invention in the worlds- -

Cyclone Wooden Wind Hills,have proved themselves the most listing and requiring least care

HOWE AND FAIRBANKS SCALES.CANE KNIVES of the mostand the "Disston." Our Planters Improved Cast Stee) No.2 Hoe is the best that lias e er be en made for cane cultiva-tion. New Goods constantly arriving.

HARDWARE

IMMENSE ALTERATION SALE !

ort nnd Merchant Streets.

I:.

L. B. KERR; ; ,

Queen 'StreeFS'orte

. J. V t ill,

Before L. B, Kerr left for Europe it wasdecided th.at extensive alterations must atonce be made in the store. Accordingly, itis necessary that the goods must be sold tomake room for the workmen. To do thishe directed that an Immense Alteration Salebe commenced at once. Anything andeverything will be sold at much lower fig-

ures than the same goods could possibly bepurchased elsewhere. This will insure bar-- g

dns in every line to all. '., :

;

f !"f

of

:

'

: TT :

approved patterns. Our own

COMPANY urrrnI LimilLUl

Kinpr nnd Bethel Street.

2.

:'

i.iff j

Ci

Page 5: L THE H STj?5lI J?$lSRT - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · thc Zambesi. The Japanese steamship Toyo Mom now In port was formerly the British steamship Zambesi, built in 1874

V2

JHHi.4F wi.ajppiww"

. THE , HAWAIIAN STAIL QK'V1 im. iivr

(ililiil l)f Willi 115 Shadow of HerseK

Intrinsie Values These mi iiihiinp replies to ins Stomach Was Too Weal,,,,T,, to Retain Food

' 'Ordinary Water CuiiIhIiim Llnilld Alt.A OompMe Ur0 EffCt0d bObjections Mno Are Irreiovanllo tl

Hood's SarsaparillaMam contention About volcanoes.

,fAJ,-AV00- L S12IIGES

In Navy and Black, at 60a, 7Gc. and Jl.,per yard. Worth Just half as much'gain.

'' !' BLACK CREPOiNS

I'i '6ur75i'ftnd'$l qualities are the BESTvalues ever ottered In these goods. Only

";a;'tewi pieces left., ( .

NUN'S VEILING AND

CASllMliKESIn every conceivable shade. Splendid

' ' for bouse gowns and wrappers. Only60c.. and '76c. per yard.

FRENQH--

OHG-ANDIES- "

We have Jmn opened a new lot;purb "designs-ari- d lovely colorings. Ele-ga-

goods, from 15c. to 35c. a yard.

DIMITIES! mMlTIESt

3i Reduced from 16c. to ,10c. a yard. .

XAWNS AND GINGHAMS

'jr'Au enormous variety of novel pat-- ,

terns from, at prices that can-not- ''

be beat.

TAFF12TA S'LKSi

In all colors, only 75c. a yard.

SHIRT waIS'8,Without a doubt we have the largest

variety of fashionable goods in whiteand colors ever brought to the city.

and Wt-itrill

FOWT

for

a

a

The uncrushable kind. Plain and fancyweaves. We are the sole agents.

AND

The vry latest novelties very choiceand effective.

.

IN EVENING SHADES.45 Inches wide; only 60c. per yard.

. LA( E

EDGINGS ANDA large variety In all widths.

LACE I

LACE

We have the largest and best stock of

VALENCIENNES

Ever brought to Honolulu, andTHE PRICES ARE DEAD RIGHT!

'

Wc'.are selling White Piques at

per yard, that other stores are asking30c. for. We want you to. sec them;they are dandles. Make no mistake,' weare

THE

We have them now In endless varietyand are selling like hot cakes.

We are for Mtllincrylnall Its branches.

N. S. Sachs Dry Goods Co., Ltd.

a

PEOPLE'S

TWO RETAIL STORESCor. Fort and Kins Streets, andWaverley Block, Bethel Street.

HENRY mTO

J. T. Waterhouse flay & Co.H. E. Hclntyre & Bro.

Wiiolowole

Retail Stores:

THE

Corner Fort and Klrg StreetsWaverloy Block, Bcxhol Street

STREKT

this week

Vests10c. 15c. 20c.

Fast3 50c.

75c SuitFast Black

10c. pair

FORT tSTJRJGCIST

LACE SKIRTS

LACE CAPES

Sill MULLS

REAL MAITKSE

INSERTIONS.

HANDKERCHIEFSHANDKERCHIEFS!

LACES

WHITE PIQUES

20c.

PEOPLE'S

NEW SAILOR HATS

headquarters

SUCCESSORSHenry

Tea Dealers andCoffee Merchants

Wholesale Department: Bethel StreetTelephones:

Special

Ladies'

Black Hose,pairs

Gent's BalbrigganUnderwear,

Socks,

dry fi; CO

THOVIPERS

PROVIDERS

& CO,, LTD

Fort Street, 22 ard 92Bothel Street, 24 and 040

T

Manufacture a full line of Dread, Am-

erican and German. Schwartzbrod mltkumel. milk brod and twist with mohn- -samen. French" Sn Its. Whole Whpnt.Graham, Hot Buns.. Snalll. Jenny Llnds.

Also the,most complete and extensive

Jelly Rolls. Angel Food. Wine. Citron.Walnut, Sponge and Marble Cake. LadyruiBcru, i. up uukcb, Aimonu Maca-roons: all kinds of cookies, fresh avpi--day.

WEDDING CAKES from J5 upwards.

Delicious highly frozen Ice Cream nnriSherbets, any flavor.

French Cream Bonbons anil PhncnlnfaCream Drops our own make packedii eiecuiii uoxes irom i upwards.

THE NEW ENGLAND 1IAKEHYAND (JANDY t'O.

J. OSWALD LUTTED,Manager.

IP. O. Jlox 388

INFANTS' AND GIIILS'SILK AND MUSLIN

BONNETS .

A complete range of desirable stylesalways .on hand.

'! TRAVELING RUGS

We arc showing some very choicepatterns of pure wool goods, Imparteddirect from the makers, at prices

FROM $4 50 TO $8 EACH.

R. & Vx. POHSETSAre undoubtedly the BEST CORSETMADE. We have them In six differentstyles, each' one a'leader.

Wo are headquarters for

LACE CURTAINS ANDCURTAIN MUSLINS

Just ask to see our CURTAIN LEAD-ER.

AT n 25 A PAIR.

BEDSPREADS!Honeycomb with Fringe. Honeycomb

without Fringe. MARSEILLESSPREADS.... Ready-to-we- ar Spreads,from $1 to $6 each.

T0WKLS!Linen, Honeycomb and Turkish. Real

honest goods at honest prices.

HOSIERYWe bought recently one thousand

dozen of Hermsdorf dye black cottonhose absolutely fast colors.

Yours for 20c per pair

For r0

To AttorneysAnd to Tt'liom il.iiiny concern:

I beg to call your attention to mycapabilities ns nn auctioneer, nnd respectfully solicit Buch business armight be at your disposal. I act as referee; conduct such sales ns are formally-dema-

nded in the transaction of legalaffairs; make, appraisements and act asadministrator of estates. I have all thtfacilities necessary for the successfulconduct of this especial class of busi-ness. I am n licensed auctioneer, thor-ough- ly

familiar-- ivlth all the require-ments demanded In the office as such,nnd PERSONALLY CONDUCT allsales. In short, I will take full and complete charge of all affairs appertainingto real estate.

Will E,Real Estate Auent & Auctioneer

FOHT AND MERCHANT STS.

12tiImprovements

'

n

TO THE FROHTAs usual, with theLargest and Finest Stock of

Elegant FurnitureEver imported into theHawaiian Islands

It has long been an acknowledgedfact that our

PRICES ARE LOWERThan can be obtained elsewhere,and we respectfully ask the publicto inspect ovr new and beautifulstock now on sale, feeling surethat the quality of the goods, withthe low prices we have placed up-on them, will sell them on sight.

The Porter Furniture Co,

i

Fisher

Cor. Hotel and Bethel Sts., Honolulu

EDITOR STAR: Your contributor'Cncoethes Herlbentll," exhibits not on-- y

fertility of tluiUKlit, but a familiaritywith chemical terminology which isnuch sperlor to my own. Like hint. 1

un oniy a "laymiin." 'C.' H." insoihowB n line eloquence In describing

t'hnos of collhllni,' meteorltCH.I cannot presume on uhiiir your xpntv

.o (imciiRR minor points at Issue between.js, nlthoURh "O. H." appears to me toniHConceive uic jmyslcnl racts, us well

'.h to mlHconKtrue my own mcnnliiK- I..vlll only stop to fortify my contentionhiit. carbonic acid plis in soda, water i

actually In the liquid state, by ihLup-ni- rJhe case oT air absorbed by water.

That air eems to be liquefied, and Iniiitlrely quiescent. Hut If the Water'rcfzes, the iilr contained refuses to y,

and resunicM its gaKt'ous condl-.lo- n,

appenrInK In minute bubbles In.he Ice. "C. S." objects that the mole-:ul- es

of the carbon dioxide in the waterire too far apart for It to be a liquid.3lii' lie would be the last one to place:he difference between the liquid andlaseous states of matter in the distanceof the molecules, especially when theirreparation Is caused by the Interposi-tion rif molecules of another substance.

As to whether gases can either llque-'- y

or solidify under the extreme condi-tions of heat and pressure existing Inhe earth's Interior. It Is Impossible to

do more than conjecture, because thoseondltlons cannot be reproduced on the

surface for actual experimentation. Iwrote of them ns "whether llqtii ' or so-''d- ."

In order to preclude the idea of'heir being less compact than the sub-stances with which they were associat-ed. All that, however, is entirely irrele-vant to my main contention, which Isthat all the gaseous elements of matterire Intimately distributed throughoutthe Interiors, of all planetary and solarbodies, vhatevcr tliPlr temperature maybe. It does not matter In the leastwhether the condition of those elementsunder the extremes of pressure involv-ed Is gaseous, or liquid, or solid, norIn what form of combination they arewith the heavier elements which theyprevade and Interpenetrate. The essen-tial point of my contention is that thosepases are necessarily present through-out the earth's Interior.

They must be there. If they are not,what became of them after the meteor-ites In which they were originally In-cluded because vaporized by the Im-pact of their collision? Those gases hadno opportunity to escape from the In-terior in which they first expanded. Im-all-

two vast cosmic streams of me-teorites gliding In opposite directions nt41) miles in a second, and suddenlyclashing against each other. Conceiveof those streams ns m.-in- b'lllons ofmiles In breadth, and hundreds of bil-lions In length, blng composed of a thinm'st of rocky nodules hundre's of feetnonrt. As they collkle, the force oftheir Impnct instantly vaporizes everynodule. As the process goes on. nn orbof tenuous but Incandescent gas Is gen-erated many b'lllons of miles In dia-meter. That orb Is composed of the

aecumu'ntlons of all the mete-orites which clnshed together. It Is de-scribed from earth us a "new star."In a few months the glowing surfaceof Ill's new orb cools by rud'at'on andbecomes dim. Hut ns the eons suc-ceed, condensation an1 gravitation con-vert the vast orb into a sun, which hasshed off from Its whirling preipherygreat masses of Its vaporous bulk toconsolidate Into planets, and has recov-ered solar brilliancy by Its condensa-tion. The process thus Imagined sub-stantially represents the latest conclu-sions of stellar science.

Now It was manifestly impossible forthe gaseous elements contained In theoriginal meteorites to escape out of theImmense orb in which they were vola-tilized together. Krom portions nearthe surface, the lightness of hydrogen,for example, might enable It to rise tothe other surface. Hut through themany million miles of Interior vaporthere could be no escape. The hydro-gen and other gases would abide help-lessly bound within the Interior of theglobo. There thus seems to be no possi-bility of evading the conclusion thnt thegreater part of all the gaseous elementsoriginally associated with the constitut-ing meteorites Is still in the Interior ofour globe. It mutters not whether theyare in solid, liquid or gaseous state.They are there present, and that Isenough to know. Whenever,' from anycause, the superincumbent pressure Isrelieved, those gases expand with vul-canic effervescence. There Is nn "erup.tion."

I need not discuss how "C. S." seemsmost strangely to immite to mo tim nh.surdity of supposing that the meteori-tes became embodied In the nebulousoru in a continued frozen slate.

S. K. BISHOP.Honolulu. August 21, 1899.

OniUNTAI. SITUATION.Great Britain was a bit Imnatlent to.

day,"China," she exclaimed, throuch the

regular diplomatic channels, of course,"you are getting to be such a chestnut!"

Ah, whom shall you cot to null moout of the fire for you?" rejoined China,not unacutely.

l'or it, remained to be seen whetheror not a monkey was to be made of theUnited States Of Amerlcn. DetroitJournal.

AGoodThing:

To know about your food Is Its ''purity. No one can afford tooverlook this Important thing Inbeverage. People, who know,say that women nnd childrencan use and be sure of Its abso-

lute purity mild and delicious

RatinierwBeer

It's ideal for homeuse a trialconvince!, iir.- m; :j i.i ,

Now Enjoying tho Bost of Health,With Digestion Pcrfoct.

"My mother was subject to tick head-aches and itidlgcBtlou for over a jrear.She wns unable to Maud for any lengthof time, and was obliged to stny In a darts,room ns she could not bear the light. Bba.bad no appetit o whatever and her stomactt.was bo weak she could-no- t retain whatfood she did cat. Hho. also had suroropains in lier.lKvjd. 8ho Buffered so- muchthat she became but oi her-self, Onodny I hnpjxsuod'to rend n

about Hood's BAraaparlUa. ItSounded So Tnithfur'

r persuaded her to try thin medicineBefore flnlHhine tho first bottle there wman improvement in her condition. She nolonger threw op her food and her head-ache was not ns severe. She took In aUfour bottles of Hood's.Barsaparilta andseveral boxes of Hood's Pills and regainedher weight. She fa now enjoying thu beakof health. Her dlgcstiqn is good and Rhacan eat almost any thing alio wishes. ShaIs 12 years old and says nho feels as wctjas when she was 10. Hood's SareaptriUamade a complete euro in her case."Miss Mary Maboaiub, Iron ton, Ohio.

Hood's SarsaparillaIs the best In fact the One True Wooa rurtnnr.Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Iwell, M.vta.

Hood's PiHl:irtlnHUHHON DKUG COMJ'AfJV

WHOLESALE AGENTS

HAWAIIAN OI'KKA IIOIMScls Lesrocs3IISS M.W.'UIK MOOlti: umlMlt. II. II. HO 111, IMS

The Unparalleled Success That HasAlways Followed the World's

Oreutest Actress,

Miss Rflaggie tVSooreWAS ABUNDANTLY MANIFESTEDon Saturday Night, When One of theLargest Audiences Ever EntertainedWithin the Walls of the HawaiianOpera House Accorded Her an OVER-WHELMING OVATION ON 111CUFII ST AUPEAItAlsCE IN THISCITY, In Conjunction with the BrilliantAustralian Actor,

Mr. H. R. RobertsAndThclr POWERFUL AUSTRALIAN

ORGANI.ATJ0.4.

ARRANGEMENTS FOR THIS WEEK:

V

Will be Presented for the FIRSTTIME HERE the Excruciatingly Fun-ny Farcical Comedy in Three Acts byGlen Macdonotigb t'bc American

''A PRODIGAL II"Stanley Dodge. . ...Mil. H. R. ROBERTSDolly Hondo (late of Ailamless- Eden)

MAGGIE MOORESupported by Full Strength of the

Company, i

IuVUGHTEU- -LAUGUTER- -

THH FUNNIEST COMEDY EVERWRITTEN.

FUNNY ENOUGH TO jt !3 '

AIAKE,A CAT liA UGH t- ;;

ThurMlny Nt'xi, iAHust 24thThe Famous Romantto Colnedy

Drama,

"Fo ty Nine"Illustrative of the Early Life, StlrrlnjrIncidents and Experience, of Ihe Cali-fornia tlitt'Tear 1SI!.

Saturday N-x- August HMTWO PERFORMANCES.

Tliat Delightful Musical Comedy- -

''HAAS. TH BufllMAh"Tickets for all Parts of the House on

Sale at Wall, Nichols Ik Co.Doors Open, 7:3ur eurtnln 8:ir sharp.

SPECIAL NOTICE.The management earnestly desire

that all patrons will be In their sealsat 8:15, ns the Interest In the play sturtKat tho rise of the curtain.

JOSEPH -- FYNNEY,. " Rouresentutlve.

AKTESIAN' WELLSL. E. riXKII.m, Conlraclur

OfTlce with the Pacific Hardware Co.Honolulu, II. I.

Estimates given ahd contracts madefor wells on any of the Islands.MX NEW PLANTS

For hpflVV Worlf nniir'ntn.! 1. t. L

skillful highest clasadrlllerB.

MEETING NOTICE.

A special meeting of the sharchobt.ers of the Kohala Sugar Company willoe neia ni tne otnee or Castle & Cooke,Limited, on Wednesday, August 23.1S99, at 9 o'clock a. m.

Business of Importance.W. A. BOWEN.

Secretary Kohala Sugar Company

Fine Job Printing, Btar Offlds.

'4

"V

3

Page 6: L THE H STj?5lI J?$lSRT - University of Hawaii · 2015-06-02 · thc Zambesi. The Japanese steamship Toyo Mom now In port was formerly the British steamship Zambesi, built in 1874

All Bushmen 111 111 MhiiI Hfi

FLAG

inn tit

RAUMNG

Tnk- - the I.Mit

DAY.

In Cel-ebration.

REDUCTION SALEFUR 1WJ W&EKS

Use itFor Cleansing the Blood

it has no Equal.We plvi I'olow the ' rtrnlt nnil Ifdllinoiiliit

of Mr. (JratiKvrVrJutllri.iliHiip,(juitiilHiiil

D.

by

"Some years npo ttliltoln America I hadlever ami Actio. It left 1110 In a icry weakstato ami qiillo ilono up. 1 took soino of Dr. crOyer's 8.'Li'Hiii:ulla ami It soon put mo toM ints anil my s rciiRtli rcuiiiu-il- . I canlately rccoiuiticii.l

SarsapHaIn others. While in the hush of thli country1 lin '. .ill attack of scurvj i:t I soon gut f.eeof this t'ornplnitil by using the same lemeily.For cleaning the liloo nuil lor eruptions ofthe .sklu I ilo not lliluk iicau ho I.eat. Allthe hiishincn use 1 ."

For Conntlinlton tkc Dr. Ayer'j Plll. Thefpromptly relieve nnil aurpiv onto. Take themuitli I)r. Avcr's Sam.i purll l.i: ouo aids ttio other.

JJOIUSTKU DKUG C ).

SVHOLESALK AGENTS.

Olympia to

he

Beer be

if

Brings Good Cheer

For Sale on Draught or iu Bottles at

THE 1L0FIMANCor. Hotel and Nutianu Streets.

Also a select stock of

Fine WinesLiquors

and Cicrars

II.

Have you heard the

"New"

Hawaiian

Hy

"Words and mus'c by

Valentino Stewart and

E. W. P. Newcomb.

Price, 25c. por copy.

For sale by

Hi B GO

(LIMITED.)

-- iKIUIANT STREET.

at Goo Kim's210 Nuuanu Street, above Hotel.

The clearance sale Is over and thenew stock opened up. Here are someof the latest:

Chinese Orass Cloth, In white, brownand light blue.

Embroidered Silk Handkerchiefs.Vnnnv Carved nd Scented Wood

Fiirwell Cotton, 30-l- n. wide, 16 yards,

Ulnglmms, 20 yards. $1.00.

Fast Color Calicoes, 20 yards, U.00.New Tailoring Ooods.Silk Crepe Shawls (black, white ana

colored). .vinrin Tjiwn. 7Bc the piece of 10

""bom" v,'-"- 1' and CreatnVHato, Cups, dEMMau V

!

MAC I Xtu'lKTY HAS AlitKNTICIITAINMUNT.S.

mmm mw Rritt(hnii ot ImsbI Chnntc h

tec Kraut the Time Of OoptHln Conkto

to the I'in!tit.

MAKAWAO, AtiKiisl in. On Thins-- i H.ay pVi'iiniK infi. Hit 1 7 1 11. tice AiiKHKtmeeting of Hit' Mnkawno Literary ty

took place at the reRiilencn t 0.l.oveiimu, linitinkuapoko. A benutl-fil- l

Millet tiioonllhlit nltjht made thejointly In anil fro a pletlsTtre In Itfeif.ami tin1 program, purely Ilawiinitn,was most thoroughly apjiiTLMited. Theevening wim right. y called "An llawal-In- n

as the following willrIiow. The progtam was opened by apiano solo "Hawaiian Lnncers by MissWntFon. Mir. Ii. '. Itahlw n next rend"Captain Cook's Visit to the HawaiianIslands;" a quartette Bang "Like no aI.Ike;" mid Miss Schwelzer recited "ACoeoanut Tree." Next followed u song"The Hunting of Maunaolu Seminary"

a chorus of seminary girls, whichwas heartily encored. This Is an originalcomposition by tome of the older pu-pils of the S'i'-ai- y an " reserves lV'h

d t. MIfs Fm'th th?n read "TheNight Hlooming Cereus" by Mrs. W. P.Prear. and Prnnktln Tarty followedwith a vocal solo "Sly Honolulu Lady,"and being encored gave Hen Holt. ShortS'torles by W. N. Armstrong were rendby V. E. Heckwlth and Mrs. W. S. Nl- -cii'l sang "Aloha to Hawaii, and wasobliged to respon ' to an encore. Theurogram, ended with "Mai Polna BUtigby a Extet. After the program the usu-al refreshments were served. The par-lors were gay with American and Hawaiian flags, flowers and greens. A goodattendance was present among whomwere many visitors.

Oft. AVEDDICK'S INJURIES.

re More Severe Tlinn Was at FirstReported, 4

WAILPKU. August 19. Dr. Wed- -dirk's injuries are more severe thanwns at first reported.

Thursday afternoon last as be wasstarting for Klhc, behind his youngteam, the horses became frightened.broke away, and threw him violently

tho ground. The ace'dent occurrednear home, whither the doctor was im- -nedlately borne, and it was found that

had sustained a compound fractureone leg:, und had broken Ills collar

bone and two ribs. He is now doingvery well, and resting easily, but wilt

laid up for several months.

IN JAIL FOR MURDER.WAILUKU, August 19. Nock Tee

barged with the murder of tho Chineseiermit, Lee See, August 10th, at Keo-'te- a,

Kula, is now In jail here. He wasaptured the evening of August 12th atulchii. Kula, by Sheriff Raldwin and

Deputy Sheriff King. His heal andace were bruised, showing signs oflaving been in a tight. AVhen the bodyif Lee See was found there was evl-len-

ot a severe struggle.

SAIL BY THE LURLINE.KAHULUI. August 19. The brig Lur-In- e,

Captain McLeod, sailed Wednes-la- y

with a full list ot passengers,.'hose departing are Mr. and Mrs.3ean, Mrs. Cox and two children, whoiav been visiting Mrs. Cox of Wailu-:- u

for a couple of months past; Mlbsgnes Fleming and Miss Irene Crook ol

v.!;., s . l; u.Ui- Mhool onlie Coast: nnd John Rotba of Wulluku,m a pleasure trip.

MAUI SOCIAL HAPPENINGS.KAHULUI, August 19. On Tuesday

ast at Omuopio, Kula, T. Goml gave auau in honor of his bride, just fromfapan. A large concourse of Japanese'.nd Inany otliers were present to Coonor to the occasion, and congratulatedr. Goml.

Rev. and Mrs. O. H. Gullck and Misslary Green, after a month's sojournt the Green homestead, Makawao, de- -

)art tonight for Honolulu.Tonight at Kahulul. In the Knights of

"vthlas ball, the young people of thatuimlet, give a social dance.

On Monday last, W. H. Cornwell en-

tertained Senator Clarke, Commlsslon-- v

Ray, Samuel Parker and party at ailcnle up Iuo valley. An enjoyable days reported.

WHOOPING COUGH EPIDEMIC.HAMAKUAPOKO, August 19.

Whooping cough Is becoming epidemicIn the Hamakuapoko camp.

LODGE OF FORESTERS.HILO. August 18. A lodge of th An

cient Order of Foresters is to lie Install-ed here next Thursday.

JAP SOLDIERS.The minimum height In the Japanese

army Is a fraction of an Inch over fivefeet, that In the Italian army five feet,one Inch. As the height of IndividualsIn Japan does not often exceed five feetfour Inches for males, It follows thatthere Is wonderful uniformity observ-able In the physique of the Japanesetroops, and this this fact operateu bene-ficially in long marches, very few falling out of the ranks. What one can doall can do.

THE BEST TREATMENT FORCHOLERA INFANTUM.

Our baby has been continually troubled with colic and cnoiera infantumsince his birth, and all that we could dofor him did not seem to give more titantemporary relief, until we tried Chamberlaln's Colic, Cholera and DiarrhoeaRemedy. Since giving that remedy hehas not been troubled. We want to giveyou this testimonial as an evidence ofour gratitude, not that you need It toadvertise your meritorious remedy,G. M. LAW, Keokuk, Iowa. For saleby all dealers and druggists. Benson.Smith & Company, general agents, Hawaiian Islands.

G. DOIII223 King Street, Honolulu.

STRAW HATS MADE TO ORDER

Good ready made stock on hand andfor sale ut low prices.

w . g. iron & co iti.Win, Q. Irwin - President and ManagerOlaus Spreckels, - - Vice Presidentw M. Oiffard. Rocretfiry and Treasure)H. M. Whitney, Jr. Audifni

SUGAR FACTORS.Commission Agents,

jloents or sniOCEAMO STEAMSHIP COMPANY

OF AN KRXNriSCO. OAL.

TltK HAWAIIAN STAR, MONDAY, AUGUST Jl. M.

MAl'I. AtiKtlst 1ft. At llntin the lllhwhs ohxervtd by a HUtuptuntm lliuil Inst- - i

fim 1 to 4 In the afternoon, and higrand ilance from 1 to 7. MnniiKPf K.

OJmlrtiin wns the host, and ns usualmost Kenlal one, and mime SOO odd

people were piesenl to partlike of andenjoy his liospltallty. And litis thoy did

the fullest extent.Resides the races, Wnlltlku district

celebrated by a b'g c'nnee In tho CourtHouse, Wiilluku, on the ovonlng of the

A good Moor, large nttendnncu, andexcellent music rendered the, affair veryenjoyable.

PUIU,IC CONCERT.The band will present the following

selections at Emma Square this oven-In- g:

PART I.Overture Masanlello AllberPlnnle Hlvounc PetrellaGrand Selection The Lombardlnns.. A

VerdiSongs

(a) Ka Ilnl, The Magic Lantern (byrequest)

(b) Palatini, The Venetian Regatta(by request)The Misses Kelllaa and Aiapal.

PAUT II.Medley Tito Craekcrjack MackleSerenade Love In Idleness (by re-

quest) MncbethVult7. Oolden Shower Waldtcufol V

Murcli Hands Across the Sea....SousaThe Star Spangled Banner.

Fine Job Printing. Star Ofllce.

BY AUTHORITYIRRIGATION NOTICE.

Holders of water privileges, or thosepaying water rates, are hereby notifiedthat the hours for Irrigation purposes-ar-

from 6 to 8 o'clock a. m. and fromto 6 o'clock p. m.

ANDREW BROWN,Superintendent of Water Works.

Approved:J. A. KING.

Minister of the InteriorHonolulu. Juno 14. 1899.

NOTICE.

The Bureau ot Agriculture of the Ha-

waiian Islands makes the request to

the public that If nil those persons who

have seeds of fruit or ornamental trees,

and are willing to donate these for the

benefit of the public, will kindly notify

David Haughs, Secretary and Commis-

sioner, by telephone, he will be pleased

to call for the same.Telephone 337 or 210.

(COMPANY, LTD.)

tgsplanade, cor. Allen and Fort Bt

ROLLISTER CO.. AGENTS.

YOU MAY AS WELL TRY TO OPENA CAN OF SALMON WITH ATOOTHPICK.

No mechanic or carpenter can workwithout good tools.

We are the people for the best toolsat the lowest prices.

OUR SPECIALTYNOTIONS AND HARDWARE.

s710 Fort Street and King Street.

CASTLE & COOKE, LIMITE1

Life and Fire

Insurance Agents

(3f AGENTS FOR SJNEW ENGLAND MUTUAL.

LIFE INSURANCE CO

OF BOSTON.

yqETRA

E NSURANCE CO

OF HARTFORD. CONN.

I SEE WO

1()."W HOTKh STKEHT

1 Cievs, Tobacco, Bold

I Drinks and KoiionsMeals, 23 cents. Per Week, $1.50. ft

I TO DY AND 11IGHT

WING T()TrSING&CU.IS SMITH STREET.

CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS.Also Dealer In

ALL. KINDS OF FURNITURE.

Just Open on August 8, 1S99.

OKADA & CO.,CONTRACTORS,

Builders and House Painters205 Queen St., Honolulu, H. I.

CommencingMONDAY

August 21, 18!

Owing 'o (ilinii'jo in tlio firmall goo la in stuck will bit solil

during ,tho coining two wuuks

ut gicnbly ruducuii prices.

Rara Chanca for Bargai s

CHIYA & CO.SUCCESSORS TO M UKAT A & CO.

Hotel Street, corner Nuuanu Street.

:x:H"K':'-x:"M:"M:- x:

Telephone P. O. Box 885.

IHIH03E SHOTEN

IMPORTER ANDDEALER IN

iJapmese Provisions andi

General Merchandise

Beretanla Street

NEW GOODS BY EVERYSTEAMER. I

n'm'n'n.h''

M'

KINAU, CLAUDINE, HELENE,HAWAII, LEHUA, MOKOLII,

KILAUEA HOU.

TIME TABLES. S KINAU,

FREEMAN, Master.MOLOKAI, MAUI, HAWAII.

Will leave Honolulu every Tuesdajit 12 o'clock M touching at Kauna-Kaka- l,

Lahalna, Maalaea Bay, Klhel,Makena, Mahukona, Kawalhae andLaupahoehoe, arriving at Hllo WedneS'lay evenings.

Returning will sail from Hllo evenFriday at 6 P. M touching at abovi-tame-

ports, arriving at HonoluluSaturday nights.

Will call at Poholki, Puna, once eachmonth.

The ponular roulo to tho Ynl-cnii- o

is via llilo. $40 for thepound trip, including all ex-

penses.

S. S.CLAUDINE,CAMERON, Master.

MAUI.Will leave Honolulu every Tuesdaj

.it B P. M., touching at L,ahaina, Ka-hulul, Nahlku, Hana, Hamoa and Klpa- -

iitlu, Maul. Returning touches at.lana, Kahulul and Lahalna, arrivingit Honolulu Sunday mornings.

Will call at Nuu, Kaupo, once eachmonth.

S. S. LEHUABENNETT, Master.

MOLOKAI, MAUI, LANAI.Sails every Monday for Kaunakakal,

Kamalo, Maunalel, iiaiaupapa, banana. Honoiua, uiowaiu. iteturntng ar- -

ives at Honolulu Saturday mornings.

Consignees must be at the landingto receive their freight. This companywill not hold itself responsinie rorfreight after It has been landed.

Live stock, fragile articles, plants andliquids, received only at owner's risk.

This company will noi De responsiu-.-tor money or valuable of passengersunless placed In the care of the pursers.

Passengers are requested to purchasetickets .before embarking. Those fall-in- ir

to do so will be BUbJect to an additional charge of twenty-fiv- e per cent.

The company will not oe name torloss of, nor Injury to, nor delay In, theJellvery or baggage or personal eneciajf the passenger beyond the amount of

100.00, unless the value of the samebe declared, at or before the Issue ofthe ticket, and freight Is paid thereon.

All emnloves of the company are forbidden to receive freight without deliv-ering a shipping receipt therefor In theform prescribed by tne uompany, anawhich may be seen by shippers uponimplication to tho pursers of the Com-pany's steamers.

Shlnners are notified that If freights shipped without such receipt It will

hp solely at tho risk of the shipper.This comnanv reserves the right to

nnko rhnnsros In the time of departurevnd arrival of Its steamers WITHOUTNOTICE, and It will not be responstmefor any consequences arising therefrom,

C. L. WIGHT, President.S. It. ROSE, Secretary.CAPT. T. K. CLARKE. Port Supt.

We all have energy to do the thingswe want to do.

C. A. GROTEMerclin ut TV iloi

CLOTHES CLEANED. REPAIREDAND DYED.

Flrst-ClaB- s Work Guaranteed.P. O. Box 280.

Union Street. : : Honolulu, H. I.

STOCK FOR SJFALE

Island Urctl Horses,

Jlafclicd Pairs, and

Saddle Horses.

The Animals ara Thoroughbred ani"

tandard Hred. and some of the besttook In the Islands are among themApply to w, nr. Rioo.

HiThe ColumbiaBevel-Ge- ar Ghainless'

Iswomen.

There Is nothing to catch or soilthe skirt: no unslgnhtly chain guardto work loose and rattle: no sprock-ets to entangle guard lacings.

There Is no good reason why awoman as well as a man should nothave a bicycle of the highest eff-

iciency no good reason why awomen should not have a ColumbiaChalnless when we sell the verylatest and finestfor your Honolulu

E. O. HALL &(Limited.)

Comer Fort and Kin? Stt.

Palama Planing Mill,Near King Street Bridge.

KWOXG ViNG FAT & GO.

Contractors and BuildersSofas, Bureaus, Meat Safes, Chairs.

Tables, Mattresses, Bedsteads, Etc,Furniture of All Kinds Made and Re-

paired.Manufacturer of Doors, Sashes and

Frames, Blinds, Mouldings and Brack,ets.

Lumber of All Kinds Turned andPlaned at Very Reasonable Rates.

Honolulu Iron Works

STEAM ENGINES, SUOAK MTLLS.10ILERS, COOLERS, IRON, BRASS.

AND LEAD CASTINGS.

Machinery of Every Description Madeto Order. Particular attention paid tc

Chip's Blaeksmithing. Job Work Exe-

cuted on Short Notice.

CHAS. HUSTACE.J12 KING STREET. TEL. 119

Between Fort and Alakea Sts.DEALER IN

GROCERIES and PROVISIONS.

Fresh California Roll Butter andIsland Butter always on hand.

Fresh goods received by every steameifrom San Francisco.

SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.

NEW SHIPMENT.

Silk GoodsALSO

Grass Cloth,Handkerchiefs,Doylies,Table Covers.

.ETC.

HANDSOME CARPETS FOIt HALLS

AND STAIRS.

JAPANESE BUGS-VE- RY PRETTYI'ATTTERNS.

A large stock on hand to select from,

at prices that will surprise you!

WAVERLEY BLOCK, HOT L ST.

II. W. FOSTER & GO.

Gold and SilversmithsP. O. Box 834 209 Hotel Street

Souvenir JewelryA Specialty

DIAMOND WORK

Manufacturing and Repairing, Engravlng and Fine Watchwork

Y. MAN SINGHas Removed From Fort Street to the

Store Next to Orpheum Block.

LADIES UNDERWEAR

DRESSES MADE TO ORDER

OPEN ALL NIGHT.COMMENCING MAY 1,

Masonic Temple. Tele. 444

Fine Job Printing. Star Office.

Iho wheel

for JS5.Lady.

SONlil

WLDER COMPANY

Established in 1872.

Estate S, G, Wilder W, C, Wilder

IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN

LUHBEJR AND COAL

Building MaterialsSUCH AS

DOORS, SASH, BLINDS,

Builders' HardwarePaints, Oils, Glass,

Wall Paper, Etc.Cor. Fort and Queen Streets

HONOLULU, H. I.

Refrigerated PoultryAND

ElVesli. SalmonCONSTANTLY ON HAND.

ifropolilmi Meat Go.

TELEPHONE NO. 45.

Who will do it?You are going to hav your house

Capered, Tainted or Decorated.Wlio's going to do it?No one does or can do better work

hau we. Investigation proves thatfew do as good.

All we ask for it is a fair price-- nothigh, not low. Either extreme li

dangerous.Any one who gives us work gets tho

best going at the fairest and squarewtprice.

STERLING, rATiTB5ROffice : Union Square, opp. Bell Tower.

A GOOD THING4 U 2 C.

Firewood, Goal, Sand.Ohio, Alagaroba and Pine Firewood,

cuf and split ready for the store;Stove, Steam and Blacksmith's Coal,White and Black Sand at lowestprices delivered to any part of the city,

Hustace & Co.QUEEN STREET. Telephone 414.

II CLUB STABLES. LTD.

Fort Street, Near Hotel. Tel. 4T.Livery Itoavdingand

Sales Stftbles.Prompt Service. Styllsn Turnouts

Safe Drivers.We are especially equipped to cater

to your trade. Fair dealing and goodservice is what we depend upon toget it.

Hack stand Bell Tower. UnionStreet, Telephone No. 310. Hacks No..'12, 05, 81, 135, and 180.

C. H. BELLINA. Manager.

WW CfliK 16 CO. LID

CARRIAGE AND WAGON BUILDERS

BUBBER TIRES AND ROLLERBEARING AXELS.

WILSON & WHITE HOUSE,121 Queen Street

Sole Licensees Hawaiian Tslsn'''

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r

GREEN RIVERThe Whisky Without a Headache

"Tired Nature's Sweet Restorer" pure old

whiskey. No headache in its wake, no lassitudein its use, and whether to make mirth at the ban-

quet board or give comfort in the hushed cham-

ber of the sick, it is always safe to use that whichis known to register 100 per cent in purity.

FOR GENTLEMENEMMA STREET, NEAR EMMA SQUARE.

NEWLY FURNISHED ROOMSElectric Lights, Mosquito Proof,Cool and Lofty.

Baby Carriages and PicturesA now Invoice Just cponod, and they aro selling fast.Call early or you will miss a choice

New FurnitureGITY STORE

IT. IT. WILLIAMS, Malinger TVI.

J. S. WALKERUe.ue.rul liriiuf lor Hawaiian Islands:

Royal Insurance Company.Alliance Assurance Company.Alliance Murine and General Assur-

ance Company.Wilhel'nu of Mndgeburg Insurance

Company.hrm Msh Union and National Insur

Company.

BOOM 12 SPRECKELS' BLOCK,HONOLULU. U. I.

OHILDIUN'S FI88TQSAre the hardest of all to make welluntil you become accustomed to thetank. Mothers tell use we are at ourbest when making photos of the littleones. Our qua. nt, unhides posesfnithtul likeness and dainty styleof finishing the photus find favor inuvery mother's eyes.

Preserve baby's pretty face in oneof Williams' photos.

I'

FOUT STREET. HONOLULU.

IMS

1EIEvery-m- who haft ever

done uny work in Photog-raphy will appreciate themuny advantagt s obtained byusing a Camera made by theReicln-nbach- , Morey & WillCo. The Alta Camera hasno equal for simplicity, dura-bility and cheapness. Weguarantee them. Prices runfrom 315 upward.

1 1We are agents for the East-

man Kodak Co. and carry acomplete lino of goods manu-factured by them.

Our developing and print-ing department is in charge ofa first clas operator, who willexplain to our patrons how tohandle any article used inphoto raphy.

Wo can save you annoyanceand money if you will cometo us for any informationwanted in connection with theArt of Photography.

All goods will be found asrepresented.

iiiini a

SriUTT' an

FURNITURE

d will bo on

84G Loyc Utiilding, Fort Street

M. PHILLIPS & CO.Wholesale Importers and Jobbers of

1 1ERICAN & EUROPEAN QRV GOODS,

Corner of Fort and Queen Sts.

H. MAY & CO.WHOLESALE AND RETAIL

8 FOUT STREET, HONOLULU.

Both Telephones 22. P. 0. Box 4?

W. G. IRWIN & CO.

(Limited.)

AGENTS FORvVestern Sugar Refining Co. of

Son Francisco, Cal

'laid win Locomotive Works ofPhiladelphia, Penn.

s'ewell Universal Mill Co..(National Cane Shredder.)

New York. U. S. A.

V. Ohlaudt fc Co.'sChemical Fertilizers.

Vlex. Cross & Ron's High OrndeFertilizers for Cane and Coifee.

Reed's Steam Pipe Cars.

Also Offer for SaleI'arafine Point Co.'s

P. & U. Paints and Papers.Lucol and Linseed Oils

Raw and Boiled.Indurine (a cold water paint) in

White and Colors.Filter Press Cloths, Cement,

Limes and Bricks.

E. SUMINO.Walcv maker. Gold and Silver? rciin

Kukui Nuts Polished. Wntuhrn andJewelry Repaired. All kinds of Gold

Plated Work.

No. 318 King Street near the Bridire..

Transport Tartar

Officers and Men of the Army and Navy

Who have Kodaks or Cameras of anydescription, will do well to give us acall.

We have ELECTRIC DRYERS andwill GUARANTEE to turn out BET-TER and QUICKER WORK than anyother concern In Honolulu.

DEVELOPINGPRINTING

ISLAND VIEWS

The Le Munyon PhotoSupply Company.

426 FORT STREET.

T1IH HAWAIIAN HTAIt, MONDAY, AUGUST II, ltttl. 'SBVEN

"I got

HlflNSK

my Blurt

AND

In

NONSENSE.

life through plek-Iii- k mi mm sim. THE BEST MEALtip n pin on the Hired, I had hrenrwfllMltfl litlllllflVtllulif tiv ft lirtnliir nlltlon my way out I saw a pin and" "Oh,thunder! What u chestnut. I've hoard THE PREY OF MEN 8 WANTO. IN THE CITYof that boy so often. The banker wasImpressed with your carefulness, und AMBITION.culled you back und made you head ofuie nrm,

"Mn T ante (tin lilt, niifl t.t.tb.i.t l(and sold It for K.00. It wns a diamond,"

A leading teacher of cycling In Chl- -Pfltrn lina Itantl n Itwlu'd nml n irnHtla.mini's Storllnir tlurtiitr the entire unnuniiof 18!"S. During this time he gave 700lessons on the gcntlcmun'H ami 2602 ontllO Inilv'fl Wlinol unit (tin tnhil nnot .ifrepairs for both machines wns less thann rn

An advertisement was Inserted In aweekly newspaper for an organist andmusic teacher. Among the replies wnsthe following: "Sir, I notice your ad-vertisement for nn organist and musicteacher, lady or gentleman. Havingbeen both for several years, I offer youmy services."

If you are going to choose n wheelyou must know something about thedetails that bo up to make n good bicy-cle. Call upon the P. C. & M. Com-pany, on Fort street, and get honestInformation.

"Can you paint mo a sign at once?""Yes; what kind of a sign do youwant?" "A sign of rain." A cloud low-ered on the painter's brow, and, fear-ing an Immediate storm, the humoristleft.

The Pacific Cycle & ManufacturingCompany will sell you a high-grad- e

Sterling bicycle for $60 on small weeklyor monthly Installments.

Moderate in Price.

Elejrant in Effect

Parquetry

Floors.

LEWERS & COOKE.Fort Stroot.

KOBT. LEWERS. F. J. LOWREY.C. M. COOKE.

LEWEHS & COOKE,

lumber and Builders' Hardware.

OOOKS, SASH. BLINDS,

PAINTS. OILS. GLASS,

WALL PAPER, MATTING.

CORRUGATED IRON,

LIME. CEMENT, ETC.

Lemon PiesTwice a Week

Wcdnesdnys und SaturdaysOrder Night Before

BEST BREADIN THE CITY

GERMAN' HAKE It YHeadquarters for genuine Ginger

Snaps, Sugar Cookies, etc.TELEPHONE G77. 833 FORT ST.

CASTLE & COuKK, LIMITED

Commission flerchants.

SUGAR - FACTORS.AGENTS FOR

The Ewa Plantation Co.The Waialua Agricultural Co., LtdThe Kohala Sugar Co.The Waimea Sugar Mill Co.The Koloa Agricultural Co.The Fulton Iron Works, St. Louit

Missouri.The Standard Oil Co.The Oeorge F. Blake Steam Pumps.Weston's Centrifugals.The New England Mutual Life In-

surance Co., of Boston.The Aetna Fire Insurance Co., of

Hartford, Conn.The Alliance Assurance Co., of Lon-

don.

BEAVER 1.1'iNCU liUluU.Fort Street. Opposite Wilder & Co

U. J. NOLl'E, Prop'r.

First Class Lunches served with te'coifee, soda water, ginger ale or mJH

Smokers' Requisites it Sppelnltr

Metropolitan Meat Go

81 KINO STREET.

Wholesale & Retail Butchers

AND NAVY CONTRACTOR

O. ,T. WALLF.R. Mnnr

Merchant Tailor.Suits to order. Fit guaranteed. FineDuck Suits. $5 up; Fine Tweed Pants.M.sn up: Fine Suits. 18 up.

Clothes Clenned and Repaired.110 KING STREET. P. O. Box 144

Views of the London Times SpocluCorrespondent Real Source of Trou-

ble Nut Reached by the Commission.

"Though the plan of government foiSamoa proposed by the Sanionn Commission Is probably an good as any fom.of tripartite government can be, then,s the same inherent source of weak-ness In It that there wns In the oltform, unless the three members of tinlegislative council can be divorced fronthe lnlluence and control of their res-pective foreign olllces."

Such Is the way John George Leigh,special correspondent of the Londoi.Times, who returned from Samoa U

the Alameda, summarizes the outlookthere.

"The administrator Is to be appointedfrom some other country than one otthe three treaty powers, an.i that Is tobe commended. Hut the three membersof the legislative council are to be nom-Inate- d

each respectively by a treatypower. The legislative council Is a bodyof considerable power. It Is an execu.tlve as well as a legislative council.Each of Its members is appointed by theforeign office of his country and willlook to that foreign office for prefer-ment and promotion. There will be ex-actly the same temptation for him thatthere was under the old government forthe consuls, to seek to dominate, toseek to run things, to create a state oftrouble, In order that he may Increasehis own importance in his own country,and at his own foreign olllce and be ubleso say: 'See what a stern man I am;see how I have upheld the dignity andlnlluence of our Hag.'

"The only way to avoid this, If thereIs any way, Is to divorce these men fromtheir own foreign olllces.

"The truth has not been told aboutthe recent trouble in Samoa. I havebeen' in every part of the group. I d'dnot slnip'y remain in Apia where onlythe official view prevails. The decisionof Chief Justice Chambers, In the flrstplace, was Intolerable, und though thecommission felt called on to sustain itto get out of one awkward dellmma, itplunge-- Itself Into another from whichIt did Its bst to extricate itself, butwithout touching the real source of dif-ficulty.

"The position taken by the Germanswas certainly a logical one. They werebound by the treaty to support the deci-sions of the supreme court made 'In ac-cordance with the laws und customs ofSamoa.' This cecislon was so open toquestion ns coming within that rulethat they refused to help enforce it un-til they had referred it to their govern-ment. The provisional government un-d- er

Mataafu ws recognized pendingthis reference. Why It should have beendisturbed until the home governmentshad been heard from cannot be explain-ed on any basis of humanity or reason.Without any reason war was begunwithout being declared. Houses and vil-lages were destroyed In wantonness.Lives were sacrlllel without any mo-tive or purpose except the determina-tion of Consul Maxsc to make himself'mportant at his own foreign olllce.Martial law was not declared In Ap'u,but the citizens of Ap'u could not passalong their own struts without n pass.

"Admiral Kautz d'd not take part Inthe destruction of the?' villages. Theheory of Imperfect ammunition gave

him a good excuse not to."The excuse that was seized on for

waking war on the Mutn-if- omvis'onalgovernment ns soon as the l'hiladlihlaarrived, but before the powers had beenheard from, was Mutrnifu's aet'on in'mposlng tuxes In the form of lines nboatmen belonging to the Jlnlletou fac-tion. Poni of Vv8"' werefined and Hie trouble begun.

"TIim whole trouble nrose from Max-se- 's

determination to dominate andmake a record. He was aided In this bythe weak character of Osborne whongrees with the last man who speaks,nml by Chnmbers, whoso character isshown by the fact that he left withoutresigning so that he cun draw the sal-ary until u successor roaches Ap'a,tbotieh the revenues of fiimoa are

und the tuxes heavy."

GILBEUTIANA.W. S. Gilbert, who wrote so muny

operu librettos to Sullivan's music, wasonce at a social gathering In the houseof a rich hut Ignorant woman whoposed as a patron of music. The host-ess asked the cynical Scotchman "andwhat is Bach doing now? Is he com-posing anything?" "No, madam," wasthe grave reply, -- he Is just now decom-posing."

SHIPPING 111(Continued from Page 2).

Knllhlwal and back. She sails againWednesday.

The steamer Mnul reports thnt Justas It wus leaving Kuhulul the Americanbark Gleaner arrived with her foretapgallant mast and main topmast gone, asthough she had been through some sev-ere wenther. A Jury mast had been rig-ged up on the foremast so that the ves-sel could spread her square sail.

The Gleaner Is n vessel of 332 tons,Sprugue master und Is from nltrnteports.

TWORooms!!

To RentWith Boardsnrll Bathing

FACING THE OCEAN

HIGH TIDE THIS WEEK.Tuesday 4:45 P. M.Wednesday-5:- 14 P. M.Thursday 5:41 P. M.

THOMAS LINDSAYJEWELER.

DIAMONDS, WATCHES. CLOCKSAND FINE JEWELRY.

Fine Watch and Jewelry RepairingA Specialty.

531 Fort street, Honolulu, H. I.P. O. Box E44.

;

A LA ORTETABLE d'HOTE

1)1

FORT STREET

OPEN AT . LL HOURS

DINNER PA It TIESTO ANY xUHIIHK(IF C0YEHS

SERVED ON SIIORTNOTICE

THE ORPHEUM-.- : FAHILY TH EATER.

J. F. POST - - . MANAGERW. E. SHARP, MUSICAL DIRECTOR

Tonight! Tonight!AL H4Z4RD

Ventriloquist, Music and Musical Arllsi

E " HEL LYNWOODFirst Appearance of the World's Great-

est Contortionist.

LILIAN LESLIEThe Handsome Descriptive and Comic

Vocalist.

COMIC SKETCH"THE NEW JUDGE."

POST &. wiAkiON

The Charming Contralto ArocallstETHEL D'XJN

BOC"S & "Ae-WOO-

In Sidney Ilrnekett's Dramatic Idyle,"A WINTER'S NIGHT."

POST & MARIONIN A SCENE"YOU CAN'T LOOSE ME, CHARLIE."

General Admission, 23 c and 50c.Last s'x rows for children under 32

years, 10c.Reserved chairs, 50c.Penis can be booked by ringing up

telephone 540.

Alexander & Baldwin,

SugarFactors

AND -CommissionMerchants

AGENTS FOR THE CALIFORNIA &

ORIENTAL STEAMSHIP CO

FORT STREET, HONOLULU.

Ill SolidMahogany

We have Just opened up the mostelegant line of Parlor Furniture seenhere. Everything In Solid Mahogany.

Cabinetsand Whatnots

That are Just the articles you havewaited so long for to complete the ar-tistic effect of your parlors.

Chairs and TablesDainty and elegant, yet withal,

strong and serviceable.Tills is no everyday selection and

wo anticipate a speed clearance.

A Few NiceChild's Swings

HOPP & CO..Lending Furniture DonlorR.

King and Rethel Streets. Honolulu.

LEONG KEEMERCHANT TAILOR

Has removed further up NuuanuStreet on the Ewa side to the storeoccupied by Chock Look.

No. 48 NUUANU STREET.

With new goodB he Is prepared toguarantee good work and

the latest styles.

CLOTHING CLEANEDAND REPAIRED.

CLEVELAND FIUJIT STOREKING STREET.

Next to Occidental HotcL

Fresh California Fruits Always onHand. Dealer In Tobacco's, Ci-

gars, Bu" nd Konaii Coffe ' Sill

PAWA A

LOTS!

A few lota in the Pawaa Tncfcwill be sold at very reason-

able prices and oh very easyterms.

Apply to

W.C.M&CLReal EstateBrokers

10 HIT OK HIT

NEW HOOKS!

LATEST BOOKS!UP-TO-DA- TE BOOKS!

BOOKS ON HAWAII.HAWAIIAN HISTORY, by Alexander.PICTURESQUE II AA VAILHAWAIIAN SCENIC CALENDAR.HAAVATIAN ANNUAL.GUIDE TO HAWAII.

Long list or the latest and best Bookspublished.

Books sold at publisher's prices.Two now books by II. Rider Haggard.New hook by Beatrice Ilarraden, and

hundreds of otlter new books.

FINE STATIONERY at COMMONSTATIONERY PRICES. AllH'RICESRIGHT.

GOLDEN RULE BAZAAR

310 FORT STREET, HONOLULU.

FURNiTURE CHEAPLR THAN EER!

If you want to save money, give us acall; you will save 25 per cent on ev-erything you buy.

Do you want a prety Buby Carriage?Come at once, as they are going fastand will not Inst at the low prices wenro asking. er Cheffonlcres.

10; Bureaus from $10; Wire-sprin- g

Matti esses, $3; Double-wo- ol Mattresses,S3; Extension Dining T.'ibles, $.1.50;Strong Hammocks, $2; Wheeler & Wil-son Sewing Machjne, slightly lined,$17.50, cost W0; an excellent assortmentof pictures, all subjects, 60 cents.Cntii'i--y nt Prices Unheard 01'!

Plated Teaspoons, warranted, CO

cents per dozen; Tablespoons und forks$1 per dozen; Ivery-hiuidle- d Knives undForks. 25 cents per dozen,

Everything at .similarly reducedorlces to he had only at

L. S. MATHEWS & SONFurniture Dealers

120 Heretiinia St. Opp. Progress Hlock

Choice Beef,

Veal, Mutton,and Pork

ALWAYS ON TTANTJ.

Sansnprcs Liver, II end Chcefio,and HreiiklttRt Ilolneno.

CENTRAL MARKET,214 Nuuanu at. Tftl. IH.

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CO)

n

PANAMA

HATS

a A frosh, now inv ice just 't

" t lmrid, inclucliuu sumo .

B siuailsizoi for lndicd' wour.

B9

aEH

vWhile am Fancy Duck

S ailMMy Suits ;

Vimr famine Warsam .'. 9

a'fl&aJSmart Up-to-D- a'e Goods

; I. Mclnerny. !

" "HAHEHDASILEU

'3 .Fort md Merchant Streets.

Sn H B BSH l i

5B.ifw-iitxi- a CurioCalabashes, Leis, Native Half

Bui SkirtB, N'iihau Mats. Fans. Sheiibr-d- etc. Hone-Mad- e I'oi constantlyon hand. Mending done Neatly awCut Flowers furnished by the

Woman's Kxi'hanfje.MS MERCHANT ST.. HONOLULU.

Teleohone 659.

Hire'slondensed Milk

THEY RIDE

Imperial WheelsTHE Ga$IIGHLY KIND"

mn'KniAL. wheels,Hun the easiest,.Itide the longest.Have the fewest repairs,And are the highest grado

OF ANY WHEELS MADE.

TStvery Imperial Wheel sold a Testimo-sala- l

as Imperial Riders neverChange Their Mount.

XiARGE LINE OF SUNDRIES.LAMPS,BELLS,CYCLOMEUS,TOP CLIPS,PANTS GUARDS.

STOP THIEF" BICYCLE STANDS,ETC., ETC., ETC.

NEWTENNISBALLS

S'RESII STOCK JUST RECEIVED.ATHLETIC ANDSPORTINO GOODS.

STUB ONLY COMPLETE LINE INTHE CITY.

aifflllCILlM:

3STIS FORT 8T1CKKT.

ST"j??l.! . Telephone 503.

M,i AIM Ml I lrr..hr..VI?. Kejral mk th lood pun,WANTED. I wholtMm and dtllclMit. Isthis Genuine ClosingOut Sale?Twenty PrettyAUCTION.

Children Pane 1

Office Supplies !

Jmh. V. Morgan Page 8

MISCELLANICOUH.1. F. lShlniM & Co Page 8lie Orplieum Page 7 Yes, Decidedly Yes!

ippni IIotiHp Pngo 6'nclllt; Cycle & Mfg. Co Pago 7

j. H. Kerr I'ago I

. K. iMtiipiiy i Co Page S M This businoBS will bo ol sod out before two monthsNEWS IN A NUTSHELL. V'M "' ' ' passed.

Sits of I'nriitri-iiiili- s that (Jive, Coiltleiisi'tl .Soles of Hie Day.

An excellent new program nt thejtpheum tonight.

1'iiiiiK WouuB and bride, nee Evauiker, are Visiting the city.W. A. Baldwin lias been appointed

lanager of Keltaha. plantation.A mall will arrive fiom the Coast by

.10 Hongkong Mum Wednesday aftcr- -oou.jui excellent program has baen

for the concert in Emma Square... v tiling.Iho Summer School players defeated. u. nan As Son team at baseball bat-idu- y

al'tei noon.iMtcanultBS Bros, completed Satur-a- y

the new ten Inch well at Lale plan-a- tIon, tins Isiana.

uiuKer Ld. 1'olntz returned yesterdayu.n .Main ami mis li.-e-n "laikmg bus.- -

wSS about town today.Hiekmorc returned yesterday

oin kuuiu. lie will sail by tlie next.tamer for the Mainland.Dr. C. A. Peterson, immigration In-

jector, returned yesterday from ujur of the island of Hawaii.The Pac.tlc Cycle & Mfg. Co. will sell

. high grade Sterling bicycle for JCU

n small weekly Installments.Nearly all the yachts in commission

rere out yesterday. Several of themere on the Pearl Harbor route.Tuesday night the Maggie Moore

.ompany will present the funny fur-- i

cat comedy "A Prodigal Father."J. Opfergelt of Makawell arrived on

no Satuiday on urgent busl-.cs- s

matteis. lie win return today.Twenty pretty children nre wanted

or "Hans, the Bontmnn." Apply atjpera House at 4 o'clock, this day.

N. K. Smythe und Miss Saruh Kaoo,vere married at the residence of thtiridegroom in Pulama Saturday night.Honolulu beat the Egerla's cricket?um, on Satuiday by 6S runs. There.as some good pmyiiig on both sides.Another Unlvers.ty Extension lecture

vill be given by Dr. Jolin Dewey at theilgh School building tomorrow even-n- g.

The Jap cut in u row at Kahaluu a.'ew nights ago is Improving and will30011 go to Kaneohe to appear against.lis assailant.

Tomorrow, at 12 o'clock noon, Jas. F.Moigan will sell at auction twentydiares of Kipahulu Sugar Co. stock,.vith divldeno.

There were more people at Walklkibeach yesterday afternoon than on anyiay since June 11. The start for a mile.'airly teamed with bathers.

The Pearson-Potte- r Company has se- -ured the services of Andrew Nelson,

in expert tent and awning maker ofan Fianclsco, In Its Fort street estab-..shmen- t.

A motley gang of white, native andPortuguese men and native women ap-peared In Police Court this morning onJie charge of disturbing the quiet ofnst night.

L. B. Kerr ordered extensive altera-tions to his Queen street store before.paving for the East, nnd a sale of;oods at very low prices to make roomfor the workmen.

By order of H. Hackfeld & Co., Jas.F. Morgan will hold a credit auctionjnle of staple goods at his salesroom,on Wednesday and Thuisday of thisweek. Goods now on view.

A. E. Murphy & Co. are holding ajenuine closing out sale, and not stm-jl- y

making an advertising talk. Layn a year's stock, as there is no thoughtof profit on shoes at his Hotel streetitore.

Grand clearance sale at B. F. Ehlers& Co., Fort street, of all the lateststyles In French trimmed hats, belowost, to make room for our new stock,

which will arrive about the middle ofSeptember.

Mrs. R. F. Bickerton gave a pleasing

Olce Furniture

The lamest" importation ofOCice Desks and Chairs evermade to these Islands, onboard the "Fort Geore,"now discharging. Theentire consignment will bepluced on sale in our Mer-chiin- c

y reet vvai chouse atS n Franci-c- o piit s, plusfreight, etc. It' you ate innee I of a handsome officefixture of any kind, callon us.

ei go:

AGENTS.

Good GoodsALWAYS HOLD CUSTOMRIiS.Particularly is this true of Flourfor your family and Hay andGrain for your stables.,

If good Flout flrtd Feed costs atrifle more it is cheaper In tho end.

We are not sure but our prices arens low us some may ask for uu In-

ferior grade.

IE GUN ONLY I BEST

When you want the Uett Hay,Feed or drain, ut tho rightprice, order from

CALIFORNIA FEED CO.Telephone 12L

TIIK HAWAIIAN 8TAH, MONDAY, AUGUHT 21, HM.

a

liavo

Mikaham,

POWDERAbsolutely Puro

JovM. Mtcrnn powdtii eo .. New vol

muslcale and social gathering at herWalklki residence last evening. Theguests were Mr. and Mrs. K. J. Imanl-3h- l,

C. S. Desky, Miss Winn, Miss.Malon and G. K. Frukawn.

The band will play tomorrow after-loo-n

at the Queen's hospital. On Wed-lesdu- y

night a concert will be givenit Thomas Square by special requestjf Plains people. There will be musicat the Hawaiian hotel Friday evening.

THEY APPROVED.In a valley near Balalava, In the

llvlnlty stu ent In a North Carolinanlsslonary college uttered this earnestirayer "Give us all pure hearts; give.s all clean hearts: give us all sweetlearts!" To which the congregations

sponded "Amen!" New York Trib-une.

FOE SALE.

A. FINEResidence Property

REAR OF DR. ALVAREZ.NEAR CHINESE Y. M. C. A.

House contains two bedrooms, parlor,dining room, kitchen, and bath, andthere is all necessary outbuildings.

For further partlclars apply to

HARRY ARMITAGECAMPBELL BLACK, MERCHANT ST

Telephone 889.

AUCTIOiX SALEOF

Stocks!ON TUESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1899,"

AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON,

At my salesroom, 33 Queen Street, Iwill sell at

PUBLIC AUCTION20 SHARES OF KIPAHULU SUGAR

CO. WITH DIVIDEND.

Jas. I?. MorganAUCTION LIEU.

JAS. E. MORGAN

Auctioneer and Broker

33 Queen StreetP. 0. Box 5J4 Telephone 72

CREDITAUCTION SALE

By order of H. Hackfeld & Co., Iwill hold a Clearance Credit Sale ofStaple Goods at my salesroom, 33 QueenStreet, on WEDNESDAY and THURS-DAY, AUGUST 23rd and 21th. Com-mencing each day nt 10 o'clock a. m.

There will bo soldTAILORS' GOODS,PRINTS, DENIMS,WHITE AND DROWN COTTONS,DRESS GOODS.

ETC., ETC.

Goods now on View.

Liberal terms to the trade.

AUCTIONEER. Ji l.tl. v uv u "i c.i v

LETTER FILESDOCUMENT FILES

LECAL BLANK CABINETS

Business Men, Lawyers ,and othersshould Investigate our system!

Wall, Nichols Co(LIMITED.)

wEATHERWe especially cater to your needs In

cooling and refreshing drinks.Our soda, has the reputation of being

the best.The true reasons are that we have

learned from years of experience whatthe public wishes and tho most perfectway of preparing them.

There Is a natural flavor und aromat- -

lcness to the'PURE FIIUITJ.UICKS

That cannot be imitated In extracts.

THE ICE CREAM

Used at the fountain Is made by usof the best materials and gives uni-

versal satisfaction on account of asoftness and lack of grain, not tobe found elsewhere.

IIOBRON DRUG CO.Cor. King and Fort Sts.

PURE PUREMILK CREAM

Sweet Mlllc

RECEIVED FRESH DAILY

THE DAIRYMEN'S ASSOCIATION

v 532 Fort Street I

EOE SALE.

CORNER LOT AND COTTAGEAt Kallhl; $200 cash, balance 25 per

month.

A FEW LOTS AT KALIHI.EOxlOO each. Terms to suit purchas

ers. Several cottages to let.

Apply toWILLI AH SAYIDGE

. aiO Fort Street

C. FARIA

BERET ANIA STREET.

Clearing and RepairingNeatly Done.

M. W McChesney & Sons.Wholesale (Jrocers and Dealers In

Leather nnd Shoo Findings.

Agents Honolulu Soap Worko Company and Honolulu Tannery.

3. HIROK&.WA,.SO NUUANU STREET, HONOLULU.

CciTbinet IVIctlcox',BAMBOO FURNITURE MADE TO

. ... ORDER.REPAIRING OF ALL KINDS.

rfavo you peon any,hero a btttor collection ofhigh gralo and up-to-da- te stock of shoes? und t.11

goes f.r loss than cost.Lny in y.iur stuck for the balance of the yoar.

Our prices givo ynu two paiiis for kvkry one boughtin tho regular manner.

There is no thought of profit now only to closoout as soon ns p ss ble. No excuse 'or y.tnr nutwearing the besb shoes made uhilo our stock lusts.

I E. MURPHY

TR13UNE, Model 4I$50.00

liluo or Blnck

CO., Hotel St.

Our Grandmothers It!

THE WHEELER- - & WILSONSEWING MACHINE

BUT, OH HOW DtFFEKrXST THEN FkOM NOW.The old one wus good,All who used it will say,Hut better, far better.The machine of to-da-

liOCK AND CHAIN STITCH, HALL liEAIU.HU. Swift, Silent nnd Durable.Sold on monthly installments

ly. 3B PREJSOOTT, Agent.Fort Street, near Hotel.

Grand Clearance Sale!

TRIMMED HATS

40

or

and

Hats at

Our entire stock of "ats to be closed out at cost

$ toto

"See Window Display." Sailor

&

& 205

Used

TRIBUNE, Model

ltltiek Itluo

Kentiug Repairing.

greatly reduced prices"

Trimmed

Price 10.00 $15.00On sale now $5.00 $8.00

SETSAND BOTTLESDirect from the Makers.

LUNDBORG'S,

ROGER

MAILE

$50.00

GALLET'SRICKSECKERS

COLOGNE

formerly

PERFUME

BENSON, SMITH & CO;Fort Street, Honolulu, '

45

r

."" v.

i