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THE HONOLULU. REPUBLICAN. v.
VOLUME IT, NO. 217 aoNOLUixj, h. tl, "Wednesday, jsebruaxy 20, 1901 PRTTE YIVE CENTS
rUJ
s
V
1
"THE LAMPS MM O'ER FUR
WOffi Ail BRAVE MEN"
There Was a Sound of Revelry byNigM, and Hawaii's Chivalry
and Beauty Contributed.
Amid Scenes of Gorgeous Coloring and Rich-
ness the Society People of the CapitalMake Very Merry for Sweet
Charity's Sake.
'The Charity Ball wan a Bticcess.It was a success In every possible way,artistically, financially and from thestandpoint of enjoyment There werecrowds present both "en ma6que" andns spectators, but the ladies had madesuch perfect preparations and usedsuch commendable judgment In hand-ling the Jam that the people whodanced and the spectators in the boxesand the galleries nardly seemed to re-
alize that almost the entire strength" pf society was present as well as many
strangers and some hundreds of thosewho only occasionally lend themselvesto tU functions of the upper set.
The hall was magnificent In its gor-
geous coloring, the boxes with theirdecorations of brilliant bunting andthe lines of flags and greenery aboutthe galleries all added to the generaloffoct and made a picture that willtake many days to efface from the re-
collection of those who witnessed ItA little after nine o'clock a blare of
trumpets signalled the commencementof the revel and as the last notes diedawav the full strength of the HawaiianBanil took up the strain and after car-
rying it for a moment broke into thecrashing music of the Carnival March.
The attention of the crowd was atouco fnstened upon the entrance atone side of the stage and in a fewseconds the head of the column ofjnasqueraders started out upon thestage, swung to the right and descend-ing n short fileht of steps startedaround the hall for the Grand March.
The effect of the beautiful costumesof the masqueraders as the march
jav&oritim In "connection with thebrilliant decorations of the hall was.lfke a poop into fairyland.Tho Roval couple reviewed the march
from their throne which was situatedon tho south side of the ouildlng. Thethrone itself was a beautiful creation.It was raised about two feet from thefiobr and was surmounted with a can-
opy of some royal red materinl whichsupported a gilded crown. The wallbehind tho throne was covered withthe same material and ornamentedwith streamers of soft white tulle andin tho center a groat pendant of shim-mering taffeta. Tho chairs used by thePrince nnd Princess were obtainedfrom the dining room of the old royalestablishment and were of heavy oaknnd carried the representation of thecrown of the ancient dynasty.
On either side of the dais werestretched great flags. Tho one on theright being the German tri-col- andtho bunting on the other side consist-
ed of the largest Hawaiian emblemIn existence. The flags were looped upand caught back with tufts of bambooand palms. The platform from whichthe procession came was fitted withITS chairs for spectator's and on allsides it was generously and tastefullyhung with the national colors of vari-
ous nations. There were the flags ofGroat Britain and the United Statesat tho other end of the hnll and thebanners of nearly every other peopleof the earth from tho dragon of Chinato the colors of Mexico, decorated andlont their aid to the occasion. Thehand was placed under the westernbalcony and occupied a poslUon whereits music was heard to tho best ad-
vantage.At the opposite end of the hall from
the musicians was located the royalbox. and across in the otner cornerof tho. room was the box of the off-
icials of tho Territorial Government., Prince David's box was decoratedwith several costly silken banners. Ontho front of It was a panel of silk
--"with the coat of arms of the monar-
chy, ami on the side facing the daisof the Prince of the Carnival, was afine Hawaiian flag. The Territorialbox was less profusely decorated, butmade a fine appearance nevertheless.
Tho boxes along the side of thehall in the first tier, were occupied as
Her Majesty Llliuokalanl Blacktulle over black taffeta, diamonds.
Mrs, J. O. Carter Black satin.
Mrs. P-- Isenbcrg Colonial costume.Miss Gran Pink accordeon pleatei
silk.Mrs.-Hof- cr Gray silk.Miss Isenberg Dutch p easant's cos-
tume.Mr. Alexander Isenberg.Mrs. Alexander Isenberg Renais-
sance gown, by Worth.Dr. tGarmichael.Mrs! Carmichael Colonial costume,
pink satin.The Misses Paty White tulle over
white satin point lace. .
Mr. F. A. Schaefer.. Mrs. F. A. Schaefer Louis U cos-
tume. . fXiM.rs. Dr. Herbert Gainsboroughcostume.,3Irs. Kunst Pink and gray silk.
J Mr. E. Suhr. ,
Mrs, E. Suhr Rcdfern costume."Miss .,'ouniann White tulle.31r. Wolters.Miss Frank Pink and white silk.High Sheriff A. M. Brown.Mrs. A. M. Brown. Mrs. Atkinson")
Mrs. S.jG. Wilder Ladles arrayed In. Louis I gowns.
'Mrs, Jaraes Castle WhRe satinjwlth white point d'esprit lace andWek gainsborough hat
. Mrs. Allan White Blue satis.
Mrs. Goodale White and yellowsilk.
Mrs. Swanzy Pompadour gown.Mr. F. M. Hatch:Mrs. F. M. Hatch Pink satin and
renaissance.Mrs. M. C. WIddifield Colonial
Dame.Miss WIddifield Blue chiffon over
satin.Mrs. C. D. Warren Black satin.Miss Jessie Kaurman Chiffon over
old rose satin. jMr .S. M. Damon.Mrs. S. M. Damon Colonial gown
with pink satin.Mr. E. W. Jordan.Mrs. E. W. Jordan Heliotrope sat-
in.Miss Grace Cooke White satin and
point d'esprlt lace and coral.Mrs. Lees Black satin.Miss Helen Kaina Pompadour
gown, and pink suk.Mrs. John Brown Old rose renais-
sance, gown.Mrs. Noonan.Mrs. Irene Browji.Mfe. Walker.Mr. Whitley.Mr. Holloway.
Mr. Samuel Parker.Mrs. Samuel Parker Parisian gown
light blue.Mr. KnightMrs. Knight Parisian creation of
rose colored silk.Mr. Ernest Parker.The boxes of the upper tier contain-
ed among others:Judge and Mrs: ..Morris-Estee- , Major
Ennis, Mrs. Vid MrsfPaul Neumann,Mr. and Mrs. Georgeavtes,, Mn andMrs. A. G. Hawes. Mrs. George Carter,Mr. E. Tenney, Mrs. Tenney, Mr. andMrs. Gllman, Charles Atherton, Dr.and Mrs. Cooper, Mr. and Mrs. Chas.Booth and party, Mr. and Mrs. Chas.Macfarlane. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Mac-farlan- e.
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Magoon,Capt and Mrs. Pond4
Following are the names anu char-acters of the maskers:
J. F. Humburg, A. Stadtiander, ItA. R. Ross, Sam Woods, Harry Mist.W. G. Singlehurst Chinese Boxers.
Miss E. Li. Andrew NightD. W. Anderson Highland costume.W. D. Adams Claude Melnotte,Miss Victoria Allen Mainstay of
Hawaii.R. J. Berger Honolulu lady.R. C. Brown Monk.Charles Borstadt Haole King.H. W. Bolster Native, n
Fred Bergerr-Na- val officer.A. A. Benson Domino.L. G. Ulackman Monk. vMiss L. N. Bradshaw Fancy domi-
no.A. W. Bottomly Clown.J: L. Cockburn Japanese lady.H. C. Carter CadetMessrs. Harry Cobb and R. B. KiddMamma Ita and Papa Ita.W. R. Castle. Jr Tasso.A. B. Clark John Bull.W. Costello Clown.A. R. Gurrey Ambassador.Mrs. F. J. Hart Domino.P. R. Hejem Domino.Mrs. Hacfer Swiss costume.Dr. Hutchinson Visar of Hydraboa.H. A. Isenberg Domino.Mrs. Isenberg Germania.Miss Lillie Jordan Witch.Samuel Johnson Arames.J. A. Johnson Monk.Miss Julia Jordan Summer.Miss M. Jordan Pack of Cards.George Jones Domino.W. M. Langdon Monk.L Levingston Monk.Miss Luce Elaine.Fred Lowell Domino.Tom Lloyd Domino. ,Horace J. Craft Clown.Miss Campbell Princess.C. W. Dickey, Monk.W. A. Dixon Monk.W. Dulsenberg Domino. tJ. A. Durant Satanic majesty. 'Miss Tessle De Vine Domino.A. L. De Fries Monk.F. D. Damon ConvictF. Frangius Domino.J. S. Fox Domino. 'S. L. Kaulnkou Domino.W. E. Miller Naval officer.W. I. Madeira Domino.Mrs. Dr. McDonald Daughter of
the Revolution.G. A. Martin and wife Domlnos. .Miss Martin Domino.Mr. and Mrs. Moore Dominos.E. A. Mudgett Prisoner.Wm. Mlnton Domino.Miss Angela Morrison Domino.Tarn McGrew Prince.W .IL McLean Dusty Willie-Maj-
or
George Potter Florentinegentleman.
J. F. Sopei? ConvictWra. Smith Domino.Mrs. T. A. Simpson AnnexationH. H. Smith Domino.Philip Seltan Turk.A, H. Smith Justice.Mrs. A. L. Sole Doralno.W. H. Soper --Highland costume.F. p. StaitVr-Moak- . . .Miss J. M. Sopec Gaiasfeorotogk.,F., E. ThoBspeoa-Cosr- t" jester.Miss ,jH&BRa,Tomlitt Doiino.Mrs IT. A. Wkar too Ternntatioe.Miss Walter Faacy 18th
" Ceaturyjcostume. ,
Arthur Wall Spanish chevalier.Mrs. E-- O. White Monk.Mr. G. Wilder Red niDlseus.F. W. West Domino.J. K. Wilder and wife Dominos.Miss May Weir Court lady.B. F. VIckers Samoan chief.At midnight the Royal couple had
made up their minds as to who ,aAiongtheir subjects were deserving, of thebeautiful prizes which had been pro--1
vided. The prize for the most beantl-fu- lladies' costume was awarded to
Mrs. E. D. Tenney, who wore" a be-
wildering creation of rose and green,representing Frou-Fro- u. The prizewas a costly Dresden loving cup. Thefirst prize for the best man's costume,a pair of silver mounted hair brushes,was taken by W. D. Adams. His dresswas that of a French gentleman ofthe period of the Empire.
The prize for the most originalladies costume, a boudoir clock, wasawarded to Mrs. Gunn who wore acostume representing the French na-tion. " The corresponding prize for"men was captured by Dr. Hutchins fora fine imitation of the dress of anEast Indian. His reward was a val-uable cork-scre-
The most comical costumes wornby a lady and gentleman were decidedto be those of Miss McLain, who rep-
resented ' Spoons" and a man whocaused more laughter than anyoneelse in the hall but whose name wasnot learned. He wore the disrepui-able-lookin- g
dress of a bum in the laststages and had procured a small electric battery with which he llluminat--
ed the end of his nose, much to themerriment of his audience. The prizeswere a cut-glas- s rose bowl and a cane.
The awarding of the prizes to thelucky recipients seemed to meet withthe approval of those present
To sum up the whole affair briefly,it can be said that there were abouttwelve hundred in attendance. Fif-teen hundred tickets sold. Four thous-and five hunared dollarsrealized.Five hundred dancers in masque. Fivehundred spectators witnessed the mer
from the galleries. The,total outlay for costumes, flowers, car-riages, etc., was in the neighborhoodof $15,000.
The committees to whom the suc-cess of me ball Is accountable are:
Mrs. S. M. Damon (chairman), andMesdames P. Isenberg. Sr., E. K. Wil-der. G. P. Wilder. J. B. Castle, AllanWhite, A. M. Turner, M. WIddifield. F.A. Schaefer, T. R. Walker, F. M. Swan-zy, W. F. Allen B: F. Dillingham, F.M. Hatch, M. M. Estee. Capt Slaker,P. Neumann. W. O. Wilder, Jas. Camp-bell, C. F. Pond, M. Phillips, W. Hoff-mann. R. Lewers, H: E. Cooper, E. W.Jordan, M. M. Scott. T .May. A. T. At-kinson, A. M. Erown.'J.T. McDonald,A. G. Hawes, J. S. Walker, H. Mott--SmltH, H. F. Wichman, Harry, Lewis,G. "Herbert. T--. W. Hobron, WvF.' ErearLJ. 31. "Dowsett, J. G. Spehcer,"DrTMey--ers, S. G. Allen and S. Parker.
Following Is the make-u-p of the va-rious committees:
Executive Mrs. W. M. Graham(chairman), and Mesdames C. B. Coop-er, G. P. Wilder, S. E. Damon, C. A.Elston, H. A. Isenberg, E. D. Tenney,A G. Hawes, M. WIddifield, S. M. Da-mon, A. Fuller and J. S. Walker.
Judges to award prizes Mrs. H A.Isenberg (chairman); Messrs. D. H.Hitchcock, F. M. Swanzy, J. mucker,J. R. Gait and S. M. Damon.
Refreshments Mrs. Andrew Fuller(chairman), and esdames C. B. Coop-er, S. E. Damon, T. J. King, J. H Sop-e- r,
A. M. Turner, E. Halstead, A. B.Wood, J. Rothwell and Carl Du Roy.
Tickets Mrs. A. G. Hawes (chair-man). Miss Jessie Kaufman and Mes-dames F. M. Hatch, S. .i. Damon, M.Widdifield. G. P. Wilder. Capt Slaker,E. D. Tenney, J. S. Walker, J. T. Mc-
Donald, F. M. Swanzy, H. A. Isenberg,L. Freeth, Mary Gunn, M. Phillips, S.Parker and E. W. Jordan.
Decoration Mrs. C. A. Elstonvchairman), Misses Scott Paty, Rob-ertson, and Mesdames J. W. Robertson and M. Vanimon, Messrs. E. Par-ker and R. Mist
Finance S. Edward Damon.To Secure Prizes Mrs. M. WIddi-
field (chairman), and Mrs. M. M. ScottDance Hall-Mr- s. E. D. Tenney
(chairman), and airs. J. S. Walker.Music Mrs. J. T. McDonald (chair-
man), and Mrs. W. M .Graham.Floor Manager Dr. M. H. Grossman.Floor Frank H. Armstrong (chair-
man), and Messrs. S. A. Walker, Geo.Fuller, W W. Harris, Fred. Angus andL. R. A. Hart
- The Prince of the Carnival wore asplendid dress, tights, slashed doub-
let and a yellow wig. He carried outhis part with becoming dignity. Hehonored Miss Marion Scott Dy dancingthe opening number with her. PrinceDavid danced in the same set with theCarnival Princess, ss Abigail Camp-bell, as his partner. The Princesswore royal robes of white satin trim-med with gold lace and studded withreal pearls, the major-portio- n of whichwere purchased in Europe by Mrs.Campbell, the young lady's mother.To complete this make-u-p was a longred velvet train flowing from the neck,gathered in close at the waist and ar-ranged as a whole in what is known asthe princess style.
R. R. B. Kidd and Harry Cobb cre-ated a lot of fun by the ridiculouscostumes thew wore. They camedressed like a pair of old' South SeaIslanders, with faces blacked and la-beled respectively Papa Ita and MamaIta.
The supper served early this morn-ing was not one of the. least of thetriumphs of the entertainment.
The music rendered was as follows:Grand March ..Carnival1. Lancers Masburado2. Walts Vienna Blood3. Two StepThe Fortune Teller..4. Waltz Sobra Las Olasr.5. Two Step The Man caind tho
Gun. ,6. Waltz Morning Papers ,-
7. Two Step The Belle ot HonoluluS. Waltz Thousand and One
Kigats. ...... .9. Waltx-L-el Ilima .
10. Waltz Paradise oCithe Pacific...XL TTro'Step Ike Runaway Girl. ..12. 'Waltz XardlGras .IS. Two Ste The Moeouito ParadeJ4.. Meaiey Aloha Oe, Ma Tiger LilyISLMedley Aloha Oe, M Tiger Lay"Hawaii Pondi," "Stars aaV Stripes."
- "The Blue Dejaabel""The, Star Spuled Banaer."
PLEA IK 1IE1KT
IN THE Gill USE
s
Arguments on Plea 'toBe Heard This ; :
Morning.
LEGAL QUESTIONS ARE INYtLTEl
JUDGE HUMPHREYS WILL 'NOT
PRESIDE AT TRIAL OF !
CASE.
4'- -
Informs Counsel For the Prosecution
That Court Will Discharged ItsDuty Under Its Oath of Office Re-
gardless of Criticism.
Edwin S. Gill, charged with assaultwith a deadly weapon upon MortimerL Stevens, appeared in the CircuitCourt yesterday with his attorneyFrederick W. Hankey to plead to theindictment The case was called, upby Deputy Attorney-Genera- l Cathcart,who said:"
"If your Honor please, this morningwas set for taking the plea in the caseof Territory of Hawaii vs. Edwin, S.GilL"
By Mr. Hankey. "In this case, IfIt please the courL. the defendant,while reserving his plea to the IsSueof guilty tenders now a plea- - In abate-ment"
By the Court "The plea in abate-ment maytie filed." '
S rBy the Deputy Attorney-Genera- l.
"We would ask, until tomorrow morn-ing in order to determine what actionto take with reference to the plea inabatemcnt"
By the Court "Certainly yon mayhave until tomorrow morning. I willsay I am disinclined to hear argumentIn this matter. The plea In abatementis vitaL The moment the defendantwas Indicted the jurisdiction of thecourt attached. Defendant had,.a rightto have the Circuit Court fix his bond.There was no other judge, save tnenow presiding judge of this couttjje-for- e
whom the matter could be hefcrd,and the reauest of aie defendant-ma- t
his bond be fixed imposed upon . tbis.--
court a duty that it could mot shirk.I have made an. exanjinatt&u thelawD'earlng u'pbVmy" qaliffcaticis tosit in tnis jcase, ana i am sausueuthere is no legal and no technical disqualification to my hearing the caseor any part of tne case that may arise.There is. however, a question of deli-cacy, and considerations of that sortare such that a judge always has theright to determine them for himself,and he is not accountable to anyoneexcept his own sense of propriety andthe fitness of imngs.
"If personal friendshipa judge from trying his personalfriend, then his enemies would havean equal right to argue that personalenmity should keep a juage from try-ing them, and the result would be thata judge could only try such personsas were strangers to him. In a com-munity of this sort that would be im-
practicable."I do not intend, out of deference to
public sentiment, or out of deferenceto any element in this community, toshirk any duty imposed upon me bymy oath of office, and, if it becomesnecessary. I will try this case. Thatnecessity has not yet presented it-
self, and until it does I shall not hearthe case;
"Under the Constitution of, theUnited States the defendant in acriminal case has the right to a speedytrial. A man cannot be kept with, anindictment hanging over him, cloud-ing his good name, affecting his credit,and standing, and position in the com-munity and in society. He has theright to be tried; a right to have thecharge determined by a jury of thecountry. This is an absolute constitu-tional right that every man chargedwith a crime has. While the right to a.speedy trial is accorded "by the consti-tution, yet that does no. necessarilymean an immediate trial. It meansa trial with,such speed as may be con-sistent with the highest public good,and with the necessities and require-ments of the particular case.
"I do not believe the defendant in"this case will be affected in his con-stitutional rights and privileges ifthis case is not heard at this termof court There will be another termof this court in three months, andtne probabilities are that by that timethere will be appointed a second cir-cuit judge who will not be affectedby any considerations such as presentthemselves to the mind of this courtUnless some good reason is shown byeither the prosecution or defendantwhy the case should be heard at thisterm of court the court will, at somelater day.order ule case continued forthe term."
Lorrin Andrews, attorney for theAdvertiser, who is engaged in assist-ing the prosecution, asked that thecourt hear the arguments pn the pleain abatement this morning. Mr. An-
drews held that argument on this pleawould be soley npon the legal phasesof the case and whatever criticismmight be made of the court if he wereto hear the trial of the cause, couldnot be made for hearing arguments-upo- n
tho purely legal questions in-volved, in the presentaUoa of thisplea.
Deputy Attorney-Gener- al Cathcartsaid that he would like the court tohear arguments uixm the plea inabatement. It .sustained it roald af-fect .every Indictment that had beeareturned by the erasa jary aad feebelieved that It was.for the'est interests f alljthat the. coart hear argu-ments ool the plea.'thls moraiBRr --
Upon this . presentation of the mat-ter by ttje Brosecatioa thej coart said i"In view- - of thV request Made by tSrDewtr AttoirTOKGeaeraLaad privatecofiHsel aesteCms e praecauoa, tats.i
court will take up the plea in abate-ment tomorrow morning. In his rermarks counsel made some referenceto criticism. The coart wishes it un
derstood that it is not condacting thiscourt to avoid public or private criti-cism. It is here to discharge its dutytinder its oath of office, and if, in do-
ing that it invokes cxiaclsra. it willvery gladly bear it. if public criti-cism is to control the court then itmight just as well adjourn sine die,and that it does not Intend to do. Thiscourt will transact the business of thefeourt without reference to public sen-
timent or criticism. It will not haveIts proceedings Influenced, dictated,warped or controlled by cliques ormobs or rings, or oy that invisibleand protean quantity called 'publicsentiment' "
Plea In AbatementFollowing is the plea in abatement
presented by and on behalf of Mr.Gill by Mr. Hankey:To the Hon. A. S. Humphreys. Judge
of said Court:Now comes the above named de-
fendant in his own proper person andby Frederick W. Hankey. his attor-ney, and for plea in abatement to andof the indictment found and preferredin the above entitled case, says:
1st That the Grand Jury empanel-ed and sworn at the said February,1901, term of the above entitled court,and which grand jury found and pre-
sented this said indictment uponwhich defendant was arraigned towit, February 15th, 1901, was illegallydrawn in among other things this towit: that said grand jury was summoned upon open venire by the HighSheriff of the Territory of Hawaii, whowas. when he so summoned saidgrand jury, disqualified from servingand incompetent to serve the writ ofthis court in that behalf, and fromsummoning said grand jury by reasonof bias in this, to wic: said High Sher-iff was at said time and during thotime he so officiated and when heserved such writ acting 'as a prose-cuting attorney in criminal cases Inthe courts of the Territory of Hawaii,and at that time and for a longtimetheretofore was and now is directlyconcerned In behatt of the Territoryin the prosecution and conviction ofall persons charged with crime in saidTerritory. That complaints for crimeare usually subscribed and sworn toby said High Sheriff or his deputy,and that the duties of said High Sher-iff under his superior the honorableAttorney General of the Territory,have at two times mentioned herein,comprised the prosecutionof crime asa prosecuting attorney, and in thiscase said High Sheriif swore o thecomplaint in the District Court
That the said High Sheriff did notwhen he summoned theabove namederand jury, stand indifferent betweenthe Territory ami- - the defendant chargeed or to be charged with crime. Hewas by his duties and practice com-mitted to bias against defendant andto select jurors likely in hisopinion to favor indictment, and pre-judiced against persons investigatedon criminal charges.,
2nd That the order of this courtfor the summoning of the urand jurywhich found and presented the indict-ment against the defendant directedthe High Sheriff to summon saidgrand jury from the body of the judi-cial circuit; that every grand jurorsummoned was summoned from whatis known as Honolulu, and no grandjuror w'as" summoned from the circuitor country at large, or from any lo-
cality outside of Honolulu. That thereare about twenty thousand people resi-dent in said judicial circuit and inthe Island of Oahu, outside of Hono-lulu of whom as large a proportionare and were qualified for grand juryduty as the residents of Honolulu,and no one was summoned but thegrand, jury aforesaid.
3rd That the High Sheriff summon-ed for the said February, 1901, termof said court, twenty-fou- r grand jur-ors, all of whom appeared except oneMacfarlane. and were on the fourthday of said month called into the jury.box in said court and examined by thecourt and from their number was thenand there selected, empaneled andsworn by the court, the body whichfound and presented the indictmentherein. That at said time the courtupon its own motion excused from thegrand jury one A. B. Wood, a qualifiedgrand juror, and. one S. Spencer Ma-nuka, a qualified grand juror, for thestated reason that they were membersof the same firm in business-bot- h be-ing qualified unless the grounds stat-ed constituted disqualification. Thatat the same time in empaneling thesaid grand jury E. D. Tenney, Ed.Towse,, James F. Morgan and Mannlefhillips for the stated reason that thecourt did not desire to subject thegovernment to having an unnecessari-ly large, number serve on the grandjury, and that that was tne only rea-son given by the court for excusingsaid grand jurors, and no reason giv-en for excusing these men rather thanothers of those summoned. That allof said grand jurors were qualifiedgrand jurors and summoned and ap-pearing in court, and none of themasked to be excused. That by saidaction of the court said defendant wasdeprived of the deliberation, counseland influence of those who would haveotherwise been fellow grand jurors,in the consideration of the charge up-on which defendant was afterwardsindicted as aioresaid of six qualifiedgrand jurors, and the grand jurywhich found said indictment was re-duced to the number of thirteen.
4th That all the matters andthings alleged in ttfe aforesaid pleahappened and occurred, except thefinding'of said indictment hefore thedefendant was charged with rfny'crime. That the alleged crime forwhich said indictment was found, isalleged to have been committed onFebruary 7th, 138L and that the mat-ters- upon which .said indictment wasfound had actually happened apqnthat date. That the. defendant hashad no opportunity to, challeaitt saidgrand jury, either tke array; or theiwrwjiuiei, ascjat' lsis ue sees3 to.present as .herein preseateu, aad atthe-- earliest possible time the afore-said matters by this appropriate, plea.'
The. defendant- - for awre particular-ity as to the. matters setrjferth, referato the court's order to the High Sfcer- -- - -
iff to summon the grand jury, to thesummons of the said srasc jury aadthe High Sheriffs- - return the recordsof s&id court and the ofictal courtstenographer's notes of the proceed-ings had upon the empaneling andswearing- - in of the said grand jury:aad asks that the same be made a partof this plea, and that they may beavailable as such.
Wherefore defendnt prays that saidindictment be quashed and this actionabate.
OUTDOOR SPORTS.
Two Organizations Hold Annual Elec-tions of Officers.
Officers of the Myrtle Boat Club justelected for the ensuing year are:President, A. G. M. Robertson; vice--president, A. Perry; secretary, John F.Soper; treasurer, Charles S. Crane;auditor, George S. Harris; captain,Albert Judd; trustees, A. A. Wilder.W. W. Harris, W. H. Soper. The aboveconstitute the board of'directors. AGiles, S. Johnson and H. A. Wilderare the house committee. CaptainJudd will appoint a vice-captai- n to as-sist in organizing crews. A four-oare- d
sliding seat scull is on the way outfrom Germany for the club.
The Hawaiian Tennis Associationhas elected the following officers at itsannual meeting: E. A. R. Ross, presi-dent; D. Howard Hitchcock, vice-presiden-t;
G. P. Wilder, secretary-treasure- r.
It was decided to have but onetournament this year beginning onMay 5 abandoning the Idea to havetne singles in the spring and the dou-bles in the fall. G. P. Wilder was ap-pointed chairman of the tournamentcommittee, he to name the other twomembers of that committee. The as-sociation will offer cups for all of thedifferent events.
HAWAIIANS' FIRE CLAIMS
DISCUSSED AT THE ORPREUM
The Interests of the Sufferers In thePlague Fire Will .Be Watched by
Legislators.
The plague fire claims of Hawaiianresidents of the infected district, wholost their property through the de-
structive blaze of a year ago. werethoroughly discussed before a largenumber of people at tho Orpheumyesterday evening. A goodly sprink-ling of legislators was present
J. Kj Kaulia presided and in a briefmanner made known the object of thegathering. The approach of the leg-islative session made it imperativethat something must be done andfight speedily at that, if the peopleof the burned district expected to
sts properly. presented uerore tne Legislature.
Whle no formal action was takenin the premises, a number of pertinentand valuable suggestions were offeredby various speakers.
R. NvBoyd, being called upon, clear-ly traced the history of the claimsand detailed the progress made to-
ward effecting a settlement with theGovernmentGovernment The attempts and effortsmade by the Chinese and Japanesewere noted, and the Hawaiian assured that their interests in the matterwould secure due attention. In nowisewould they be lost sight of. in therush of claimants of other nationali-ties. If a settlement was effected, allwould be treated alike. No preferenceswould be shown by the United StatesGovernment
The words of Senator D. Kalauoka-lan- i,
the recognized leader of the In-dependent Home Rule Party, addedmuch to the budding hope which hadbegun to develop itself among thosepresent Mr. Kalauokalani spoke mostassuringly to the Hawaiians, statingthat their losses in the plague fires,by which so many were renderedhomeless, would receive careful consideration at the hands of the legisia-- !ture. He urged that the amounts oflosses be carefully approximated inorder that correct and intelligibleschedules could be su omitted to theproper officials. The speaker kept hisauditors in hearty good humorthroughout his address.
After a word from one or two oth-ers in the, auditorium of the theater,the meeting adjourned.
SNOW STORM IN CHICAGO.
Street Traffic Greatly Interfered WithBy the Heavy Fall.
CHICAGO, Feb. 9. Seven inches ofsnow fell In Chicago during the stormwhich started yesterday afternoonand which raged until this morningresulting In an almost complete tie upof many of the cross-tow- n car-line- s
and seriously interrupting the subur-ban train service on all roads. Soblinding was the fine snow driven bythe Northeast winu which at timesreached a velocity of over forty milesan hour that many accidents resulted.Andrew J. Switzer, a railway switch-man, was instantly killed by a GrandTrunk engine. Switzer was facing thestorm and did not hear the bell. AlvlnCarson was also run down and badlymangled while inspecting air brakeson a Lake Shore passenger train.
On the South Side elevated railwaya collision occurred on a curve at Sixty-T-
hird street which derailed twocars and caused a panic among thepassengers, but no one was seriouslyinjured.
Trains on all roads centering In Chi-cago were from la minutes to twohours late. Reports early today show-ed heavy snow extending from Duluthdown the Mississippi valley to StLouis and eastward the storm wascovering Ohio with snow. South ofSt Louis it was raining bard.
In. Chicago the new snow coming ontop of the foot that fell last Sundayformed drifts in. the suburbs thatmade street travel there almost im-possible. The total fall of saow wagthe heaviest here for several years.
Proceedings, are being iastitatedagalaet Albert Cartwright, editor dlae South African .News, for crhai&aland seditious' libel, contained ia a letter-
-over a, aom de plume "British.Offlcer," walch. said that Geseral.Klt-chene-r
had secretly Instructed histroops to. take.no prisoners..
- V , c-- - 71. ia T
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a or. A.&,. rX A '".' - : '"$&? .
X'..?"1-- . '. fc v ' r.ftf fJ PSLV fk.? ' ' . Sv-f- uAH&. 33S ii '.'-- ' Jv a ;k
MM FIGHT
REQUIRES COURAGE
Dr. Chapman Says Sen-timent Against Sa-
loon Is Growing,
A PRAYER TO ABOLISH IWlLEi
PERFECT - MANHOOD IS THEGREAT HOPE OF THE t
NATION.
The Relation of the Man to th& Salbotv
Ably Presented United Action
Alone Required The InartisticCartoonist Noted.
The saloons and Iwllel-eac- h receiv-ed attention at the temperance meet-ing at Central Union church yesterdayevening. A large audience gatheredand again heard Dr. E. S. Chapman,the noted California temperance andanti-saloo- n worker, arraign tha liquortraffic. In the opening prayer offeredby Rev. A. E. Cory the divine express-ed the earnest hope that the other evil.as well as plague spot on the fairname of Honolulu, would soon boobliterated and cast out from ( themidst of the city, where it3 blighting:Influence is most keenly felt
"Manhood and Its Relation to thoSaloon," was the tueme upon .whichDr. Chapman brought out a forcio.epresentation of his. pronounced senti-ments In regard to the legalizing ofthe saloon.
The speaker singled out a numberof matters pertaining to the temper-ance question upon which he deliver-ed scauiing denunciation. Althoughthe temperance movement might boconsidered in some quarters unpopu-lar, he had lived to see the" day whenso-call- unpopular movements be-came elevated to the topmost pinnacleof popularity. He believed It a goodtime to clamber Into the anti-saloo- n
band wagon, as the sentiment in thiscity was growing at n rapid rate. Tnespeaker was of the opinion that thohope of a nation was in Its makeup.The manhood of a community, bothfrom a Dhyslcal and a moral stand-point was a very essential element.Meir h. strength andmcrve-ar- e
now needed to grapple with the-worid'- s
greatest problems. Magnifi-cent intellects which are the qualifi-cations of the student, scholar, inven-tor and statesman are also of greatvalue.
Dr. Chapman Is also a great admirerof manly courage in tho work of car-rying on the agitation against thodrink evil, If a strong fight Is to bomade.
Before the meeting came to a closetho announcement was made that thoservice at the church this eveningwould ue tne last In the series. Itwas hoped that the ediflco would bepacked to the doors. The speaker be-lieved that the saloon today was mak-ing it a difficult matter for the boysto become upright men endowed withthe powers of citizenship. He wasconfident that the agitation now beingwaged In this city would redound togreat good and at no distant date.
Dr. Chapman took occasion to paya kindly tribute to the press, althoughhe was of the opinion that some of thoamateurish attempts of the newspaperartists in depicting his likeness irf thopublic prints were somewhat crudeand very Inartistic.
The usual service of song precededthe address of the evening. This por-tion of the exercises was under thodirection of Miss Yarrow. "The Enor-mity and Scope of the Liqupr Traffic"will furnish the theme for olscusslonthis evening.
Ah Chin Pays His Debts.Ah Chin is a Chinese fruit dealer
who conducts his place of businessnear the corner of Nuuanu and- - King:streets. As the joyous New Year'scelebration began to wane. Ah Chinresolved that something must be donoto liven up matters. David Kawaho.a Hawaiian, happened to pass atongabout the time the Oriental who, filledup with a quantity of exhilaratingbererage3 and a spirit of revenge oversome fancied wrongs done his coun-trymen In the recent "Boxer troubles,?'believed a time for retribution had ar-rived. The- - sequence was fast and fu-rious for a time The ikllce were calledto the scene. Arrests followed. Dr.Emerson was summoned to take a fewstitches In Kawaho's scalp and peaceonce more settled down over that vi-cinity.
An Unfair Exchange.Some miscreant entered the homo
of J. S. Emerson residing near Hack-fel-dand Spencer streets late last eve-
ning, and making his way to thoToom of a Japanese servant, spiritedaway a box containing twenty-fiv- e dol-lars. The only clue to the thief 13 asmall briar pipe which was droppedIn the hasty exit from the premises.The police were notified of the rob-bery by phone. Upon investigationthey learned that a number of suspici-ous characters had been hovering lathe vicinity during the early eveninghours. The pipe will be gladly re-turned to Its owner upon receipt ofthe coin.
The Death Record.Kehlo, a Hawaiian, aged 72 yeara,
died at Paakea aear Moillili church.Feb. 18. of debility. Burial at MoiUilicharch.
Kalaalhana, a Hawaiian woman,aged SS years. &e at Kalihi. FebSlg.oft cerebral hemorrhage, BarialfjitHanohaleaiano. x ? -
Kallko Nakapaahu, a Hawaiian wo-man, aged 60 years, died at aer.ltimeon Punchbowl street. Feb. 18. .of can-cer of the stomach. Burial at Kawai,ahao.
V. -,
A ... 5, if. f 3-- , r3&-- t
THE HONOLULU REPUBLICAN WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 20. 1901.TWO -
. - ftides,
r 3T1sttjt
? 7
axd--4 --iKjuei
jcoobt.
Oceanic Steamship Oo.lHCNRT n. wiLUins.?4 x via h 1 1 1 r m 1 1
DAT--1 Ef -- ' s 3hj --s- s I af ?.? TIME TABLE. im mpessm imnuer it mwiii
' WXTK XXX- - l(Etc 'njra--- - S StL i - sr Xi 1 ! The steamers of bus Hse wifl arrive leave tats port as fcereaa ver:i :n lraj ( lit CEEY FURNITURE STORETees. FROM SAN FRANCISCO. FOR SAN FRANCISCO.
if --j tsii.KM J r. s--
ot veatora 15 Atemed . ...tFefc. IS.-- FeK ,...-?-.
1 LOTE BUILDING, 1146-11-48 PORT ST.jfL ..jesMar.STburJ -- .i.;.ra, r .. Mariposa 3ar. 2. "MariposaI PCXQ. 4 Sierra . .f-- - Mar. 12 Sonoma . .................. ....Mar. 12
Mariposa. Mar-- 23 3fariposa - .......!.... ....3Iar. 27 1ItSat. s.or j.s 6.34f Sonoma. . ........ .........Apr. 2 Ventura. . ........ctt.. Apr. 2
"Mariposa . .Apr. 13 3iariposa. . .Apr. 1fcna..5r 9.H I.' 2. X.tT.2iS..aja. Ventura. Apr. 2 ...Apr. 2S ffici ttHt, Mi M. l!3ifcKtft,Ittl3l.,.
A UlLrrfVall AVJ3P "
4the arrival of the Ventura
WITH people of Honolulu willthe third and last of the
new liners specially built forthe Oceanic Steamship Company'sAastralian mail contract. John. D.Spreckete. the managing director ofthe company, is expocteo among thepassengers in the Ventura. Surelythe mercantile community will takesome concerted action for signalizingtha completion of th new fleet thathas so much to do with the commerceand life of Honolulu.
Formidable Squid Killed.Had it not for the assistance of sev-
eral fellow-workme-n, a native laborerwould have been drowned by a hugesquid at the sewer fall yesterday.The man. who is known by the nameof Kimo. saw the huge creature crawl-ing among soma rocks, several yardsaway, and taking a hatchet swam towhore the animal was. At first, thesquid was not disposed to be aggres-sive, but when the man began to at-
tack it, it made a determined 'and analmost successful attempt to save itslife. As soon as it could, the squidroached the opn water and immedi-ately daruonod the water in the man-
ner characteristic of animals of thisclass. At the-sam- e time it reached oneof Its slimy tentacles out of the waterand twisted It about the arm that wasdoing such deadly work witu thehatchet Then another and anothertook hold of Kimo. It was now hlsturn to fight for uis life. He calledloudly for help and struggled to keephis feet Several of his comradescame to his help and after much diff-iculty dispatched the formidable mon-sto- r.
When taken ashore, the armswore found to be nearly four feet Inlength, and the distance from thetips of opposite tentacles was nearlyseven feet Kimo was covered withwaits and blisters.
Pacific Mail Matters.Oriental trade will shortly be great-
ly facilitated at Yokohama, says pur-
ser Itennie of the Coptic, by the com-pletion of immense wharves In SanFrancisco for the use of the Pacific31all and China steamships. TheSouthorn Pacific nas made formal an-
nouncement that it would be readyto handle freight direct to and fromsteamships in two or three weeks.This will enable the handling offralght for the East much more rapid-ly, and save at lea3t a full day. Thenew docks are 'he most Important improvement the Southern Paclnc ac-
complished during the past yearThe Pacific Mail Steamship Com-
pany, in response to petitions fromthe San. Francisco Board of Trade torun its ships direct to Manila, has sug-gosto- d
as an alternative a direct linefrom Hongkong to Manila by whichfreight destined to Manila could belinndicd promptly. Manila merchantshavo complained frequentiv in the pastof the delay cnused by the storing ofthoir merchandise in Hongkong. TheSan Francisco merchants point outthat with direct communication "be-
tween New York and Manila it Is ne-
cessary to facilitate tho shipping toManila in order to save the trade ofthat city for San Francisco.
New Ship Railway.SAN JOSE. Fob. S. A ship railway
that may possibly take tho place of acanal across the Panama Isthmus,transporting great ships from oceanto ocoan and cutting off the lohg jour-ney around tho Horn, nas been invent-ed by Barton W. Scott an engineerand inventor of this city. The round-ing of curves and undulations in trackwhlch have proved a stumbling blockin tho successful working in the Eadsand other systems of snip railwayshave been overcome, and the cost andtime required for the building of acanal practically wiped out
Tho inventor claims great thingsfor his road, and its constructionacross the Isthmus would render acanal unnecessary
Scott hfcs been at work on his rail-way scheme for about four years. Hisplans call for a four track railway,with an aggregate width" of about SO
feet! On these run a gigantic car, son!ccl$ balanced and arranged thnt Itcan traverse any curve and gradeTcnown in modern railway building,'this car will take a ship of 700 feetIn length and round any curve ormake a copiplete circle In diameter700 feet from inside rail to inside raiLFor the 700-fo- ships a speed of twenty--
two miles an hour can be made,but for tugs and light craft smallercars can be used and the vessels takenacross the Isthmus almost as rapidlyasa freight train.
The cost of building and equippingsuch a road across the Isthmus Scottestimates would not be over $10,000,-00- 0.
while the cost of a canal wouldbe between 5200.000,000 and $300,000.-00- 0.
Besides it could be rushedthrough to completion In one-fourt- h
the time that woulu be required to digthe canal This would save the Government about $200,000,000.
On December 17 last Scott wrote toPresident McKlnlcy, outlining- - his planlor a ship railway across the Itshtnusto take the place of a canal. SecretaryCortelyou acknowledged the recclotor the letter, stating t.3 matter wouldbe referred to the Secretary" of "War.His plans have been favorably considered.
Licenses Granted.Licenses havo heen1 granted to the
followlnir seamen: James T Leach,chief engineer on vessels oLSOO tons;C A. Thompson, chief engineer onvessels of 500 tons; G. T. Porter, chiefengineer on vessels of 30Q tons; Daniel Bellcw, chief engineer --on Inter-islan- d
vessels of ?00 tons; B. H. Nonton, chief engineer on vessels of 1006tons; J. P. Lynch, third assistant onocean steamers or second assistant onInter-Islan- d steamers; A. T. Aa'der-eo- a,
third assistant oh ocean aadfirst assistant or later-islan- d steamersotS8 tons; F. O. Carlson, masteraad pilot of Hawaiian vessels of 6gato8;-JE.- Parker, master a4 pilotof eceaa. ateaaers; Peter OIhsb, bm- -
vm& Em mm iter and pilot on any ocean steamer of1500 tons, master and pilot of sailingvessels of 700 tons, on anjoceaii; R.F. Bennett, master and pilot on anyocean vessel of 1500 tons; WilliamMitchell, master of inter-islan- d vessels of 1000 tons William Wersbarth.master and pilot of steamers on anyocean vessel of 1500 tons; SamuelThompson, master of inter-islan- d ves-
sels of 750 tons; Lui self, chief mateof inter-islan- d vessels of 1000 tons;Carl V..uert, chief mate of Inter-islan- d
vessels of 1000 ions; JamesGregory, master and pilot of vessels of1000 tons.
The hull and boiler inspectors willleave for the ilainiand en March fi.
'Consequently, all those who wish totry the examinations should make-thel- r
arrangements to at effect atthe earliest possible notice. It willbe a year or more before the examin-ers return to the Hawaiian Islands.
DEPARTURES.
Monday, Feb. IS.Stmr. Lehua, Bennett, for Molokal
ports.Stmr. James Makee, Tullett. for Ka-pa- a.
Tuesday, Feb. 19.
Stmr. Kinau, Freeman, for Hilo andway ports.
O. & O. S. S. Coptic, Hinder, forSan Francisco. ,
Stmr. Claudlne, Parker, for Mauiports.
Stmr. Iwalani, Gregory, for Hama-ku- a
and Kukuihaeie.Stmr. Noeaur Wyman, for Anahbla
and Kilauea.Stmr. W. G. Hall. Thompson, for
Nawillwlli; Hanamaulu andAhukini.Stmr. Niihau, Thompson, for Koloa,
Eleele, Makaweii, Waimea and iKe- -kaha.
Gas. schr. Surprise, Nystrom, forKauai ports.
Stmr. Mikahaia, Pederson, for Ma- -
kawelL
PASStNGERS DEPARTED.
For Hilo and way ports, per stmr.Kinau. Feb 19. Dr. J. race. J. W.Clark, E. E. Lyman, E. H. Lyman, S.M. Ballou, Geo. H. Robertson, W. E.Edmonds, Miss Birch, Miss, B. A. Mey-er, Mrs. O. W. Rose. E.Osborn. J.Lichtig. A. W. Carter. J. G. Pratt. HP. Meyers, J. S. Ralston, Wm Fer-nandez, S. Decker, R. Lalng. T. Tobri-ne- r,
E. Kauffinann, T. R. Robinson,Miss E. Howard. Miss E. G. Leggett,Mrs. Peck. Miss Peck.. Rev. A. Wey-mouth, C P Wormier, Miss A. Winter,G. C. Munro, Rev. J. . Lydgate, Chas.Williams, Gardner Huura. Dr. . S.Knudsen, A. B. Weil. C. H. Couison.Wm. McKay, E. W. Dickerman C. H.Johnson, Mrs. L. 31" lUtcat, J. T. Moir.J. Gibbs, H. J. Lyman, G. L. Pearson,Wm. Mixer, J. nopidns. Sam Peck, T.R. Cook.
For 3laui ports, per stmr. Claudine,1 eb. 19. A. b. Hart well. G. ftl. Han-cock, Alfred S. Douse, wife and child,3Iiss B. 3Iossman, 3Ioses Bipi. J Car-mod- y,
J. J. Drummond, Andrew Gray.F. J. Cross. 3Iiss Bennett, D.
E. Osborn, 3Iiss Annie Wode-hous- e,
3Iiss E. Scoby.
SHIPPING NOTES.
The Oopack leaves this afternoonfor Manila with ner cargo of mulesand horses'.
W. F. Goad a San Francisco cap-italist, was a passenger for this portin the Coptic.
Tho J. A. Cummins and C. F. Crock-er were examined yesterdav andgranted freight certificates.
Tho Passepartout lies in the streamladen with coal, bhe was just sixtydays in coming from Newcastle.
Tho Coptic is the last steamer totake mall to the --Mainland this monthunless a transport happens along.
As soon as the Twilight Is madeseaworthy again, she will in all like-lihood be put under tne control ofCaptain Johnson, formerlv master ofthe 3IcN"ear.
The many friends of Captain E. H.Parker are congratulating him uponthe good showing ne maue in his ex-amination before the Inspectors. Hispapers, it Is said, were considerablyabove the average.
The Coptic experienced consider-able difficulty in discharging her car-go yesterday. Most of tho stevedores,who are natives, had joined in withthe Chinese in celebrating New Year.
Among the passengers who left inthe Coptic was Coionel H. S. OleottA large party of friends were at thewharf to see him away, me Homeric-lo-oking old man was almost cov-ered with --owers as the vessel drop-ped her moorings.
The Hanalci, the Inter-Islan- d Com-pany's new vessel, will probably ar-rive ' here today or tomorrow from,San Francisco. She is a tpsspI f
j 666 tons gross, will carry bassof sugar, and is the tourth largest Inter-
-island vessel. uheJias ample ac-commodations, for jHtssengers. CaptainGreen, formerly of the Walaleale, willmaster, her.
1
MOVEMENTS OF STEAMERS.
Steamers due aad to sail for ihenext two months are as follows:
DEPART.Steamers For Depart.
NIPPON 3IARU Yokohama.. Feb. ttA31SR1CA MARU Saa Frasf.Marcfi 1MARIPOSA-Sa- a Fran Har. 6RIO DE JANEIRO Yokohama. Mar. 6CITY OF PEKING Sas Fran.3ar. SSIERRA Sydney Mar. 12SONOMA Saa Fraa Mar. 12MIOWERA Victoria Mar. ISCOPTIO-Yokoha- sa Mar. 14GAELIC Saa Fra . Mar. 18WARRIMOO Sydaey Mar. 16JAMBJUCA MAHU Yokoiama-Ma- r. 22J
Hon y10.3) 1 3 S- - IJU 2. 60 &.ta 0 ItXct Moot, on the XfUi at ( ,15 p. a.
OIHU RAILWAY AND UNO GO.
Hse3gg fw
TIME TABLEFrom and After January 1, 1901
OCTWABD
Dally Dallr Dally Dallr DaU;Stations. ex ex
San Senam am am pm pin
Honolulu 9:10 9JI 1135 ja? S 10
PtniiClty SJJ3 ll:tO 3:17 5:50Eva Mill eta 103 12 S 4:05 6:10W.txuiae 10 SO 4:15Walalua 11:53 5:40.Sabukn li:32 5
IXWJ1RD
Dally Dallj Dally Daily DaUyitotloa. ex ex
Sun Suna m. am am am
Eabutcu 5: 2:03Waialua 6:10 2:50Walauae 7:10EwaMIll 3.30 , 7:13 3 4:32Pearl Cltr n ' 8.03 1:30 4:56Honolulu 5:50 8:35 2:05 2
G. P.DEXISON. F. a SMITH.Superintendent. P. SrT.A.
HONGKONG 3IARU San F...Mar. 233IARIPOSA San Fran Mar. 27
ARRIVE.Steamers. From. Due.
NIPPON 3IARU San Fran.... Feb. 2G
A3IERICA 31ARU Yokohama.. 3Iar. 13IARIPOSA San Fran Mar. 2RIO DE JANEIRO San Fran.. Mar. 6CITY OF PEKING Yokohama. 3Iar. 8SIERRA San Fran 3Iar. 12SON03IA Sydney 3Iar. 123HOWERA Sydney ... 3Iar. 13COPTK3 San Fran 3Iar. 14GAELIC Yokohama 3Iar. 16WARRI3IOO Victoria Mar. 1G
A3IER1CA 3IARU San Fran. .3Iar. 22HONGKONG 3IARU Yoko...3Iar. 23
3IARIPOSA San Fran, 3Iar. 23
i A government transport from SanFrancisco, carrying mail, is c- l- au.the Sth and 23d of each month.
i tm i
Honolulu Stock and Bond Exchange.
Tuesday, Feb. Iff, 1901.Stock. Bid. Asked.SUGAR.
Ewa Plan. Co . $ 27 27"Haw. Agricul. Co. J 317Haw. Sugar Co .". 40 41Honomu Sugar Co 160 165Honokaa Sugar Co.... 30Haiku Sugar- - Co 240Kahuku Plan.. Co...." 27Kihei Plan. Co, as ,13Kipahulu Sugar Co... r. 105Koloa Sugar Co ,.. .. 175Kona Sugar Co . .rt.. 70McBryde Sugar Co.. as. S S
3IcBryde Sugar Co., pd. 13 13Oahu Sugar Co? 157 15SOokala Sugar Co 'IS 1UOlaa Sugar Co., as 3 1
Olaa Sugar Co., pd 13 14' fOlowalu Company 150
Pepeekeo Sugar Co 190Pioneer 31ill Co '. 'ISWaialua Agricul. Co. 122 123Waimanalo Sugar Co.. 160 .. ..Waimea 31111 Co 105
3IISCELLANEOUS.Wilder S. Si Co
" ..105Inter-Islan- d S. Nr Co. 112 v. 115
R. T. & L. Co 4.. :i0Hono Steam Laundry 11Mutual Telephone Co 11
Oahu Rail. & Land Co 195People's I. & R. Co - S5 .,...
BANKS. ,
First National Bank 10FIrsL Am. S. B. & T. Co 105
BONDS.Haw. Govt. 6 per cdnt. . 100 1004Haw. Gov. 5 per cent 97Hilo. Rail. Co. G pec c. 101Ewa Plan. Co. G per c. . 101Oahu R. & L. Co. 6 p. c. 101Oahu Plan. 6 per cent 101
SALES.Fifteen Waia.ua, 5123; 75 Waialua,
$123; 20 Ewa, ?27.75; 5 Ewa, 27.71,5 Waialua. $123; 15 Oahu, $157; 6,000O. R. & L. Co.'s bonds, $101.50; 35Oahu, $157; 5 Ookala', $18; 5 ilcBrj'de,$13; 5 Waialua, $123; 5 Waialua, $123.
litCamarinos Refrigerator.
Arrived by the steamer and con-tained a fine lot of tne season's deli-cacies. Game of all kinds, frufts andoysters. To get the best the marketaffords leave orders at his King streetdepot
i
We make new blank books for theyar 1901.
SiiOTGDSS!RiBes, Pistols, Cut-lers . Cartridges, Boxing Gloves, Baseball Goods, Hunters'and Miners Cloth'ng, Boots, Leggings,Camp Stoves, Gets and Tents at Lowest Prices. CflT'Catalogne mailed freeon application.
GEO. W. SHEEVE,MiTkel Slreet. Sas FraRcteco, C&luomla. C S. A
PACIFIC SURETY CO.
ACTS AS
on all classes of
GDSrOK HOUSE JBOSDS
GEAE, mTSLyG k CO.,
OXMTS
J44BiMir1 v
Local Boat.In connection, with the sailing .if Uie above iteaners tne agents are pre-
pared to Issue, to intending passengers COUPON THROUCHTICKETS .y
anj-- railroau from San Francisco to all p)nts in the United States, and from
XewYorsby any steamship line to all European ports.FOR FURTHER PAt. 1 CLASS APPLY TO
WM. G. LBWLN & CO.LnnrsD
GENERAL AGENTS
Canadian AustralianRoyal Mail Line.
Steamers the above line, running connection with the CANADINAN
PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY between Vancouver, B. a. and Sydney, N.
S. T-V- and calling Victoria, 3. C, and Honolulu, and Brisbane, Q., are
DUE AT'HONOLULU"On. or about the dates below stated, ;vlz.:
From Vancouver and Victoria, B. u.,tor Brisbane, Q., and Sydney.
aORaNuI Feb. 16WARRI3IOO 3Iarch 16MIOWERA April 13AORANGI 3Iay UWAKRIMOO June S
3IIOWERA July 6AORANGI Auc. 3WARRI3IOO . . i Aug. 31
THROUGH TICKETS issued from Honolulu to Canada, United States
and Europe.
For Freight and Passage, and all general Information, apply to
THEO. H. DAVIES & CO.,Limited."
GENERAL AGENTS,
Pacific Mail S. S. Co.v
Qdeidental and Oriental S. S. Go. and Toyo Kisen Kaisiia
It Steamers of the above Companies
"oioa or about the dates below mentioned:
For JAPAN and CHINA.
NL.-PO-N MARU . . . Feb. 26
X
FOR' GENERAL INFOR3IATION APPLY TO
H. Hackfeld & Co., Xtd.Agents.
S. will be edfor San en route To be br S.
at wharf, Southall
wharf, Southall
C.
V t Jt . Jl JJ . J Jl Jt V . Jl
:I haTe the tact that waknese3men, the irult carlr later
surli Drains, iaciefto, will not yield a
Back,
This accounts the fact that drusnever cure. The glTea for these trou-
ble, onlystimulate. Continuous Simulation must result
harm. Thouacls baTe said: " Doctor, when I tool: this that
I Mt better hour, but after tnontlt ibty returaed, and I was worso off thaa
means a powerfuljy stimulant means a wrecled
? Iswaat,
three, resultsBelt;
efforts TVornnisht sleep.
Gksd parts.
Tre Treewriteseat
yfe-ke- t St and
J Ji
S. S.
of in
at
From Q.,Victoria and Vancouver, C.
MIOWERA 3Iarch 1330
May 83UOWERA June 5AORANGI July 3WAixiw.iiOO July
.MIOWERA Aug. 2S
at and J save thii
For CO.
'COPTIC Feb. 39A3IERICA 3Iarch 1
J J! Jl V JJ J J J V J 0
Weak Men ;
'A
for free a Health inplitn, seeled envelope. .
SANDEN;San Ftaackco, Cat
American-Hawaiia- n
S. S. Co.I
S. HAWAIIAN dispatch from New York on or before Jan.loth Francisco, to Honolulu. followed S.OREGONIAN, April x
Freight received the Company 's Forty-secon- d street,at times.
"
Freight received at Company's Forty-secon- d Street,Brooklyn, at times.
Further Particulars to
H: Hackfeld & Co., Ltd.P. MORSE, General Agent. AGENTS, HONOLULU.
Nerves ofof or or
as linpotency,Varicocele, to sUiauIatlng
lndtre-Uo- n,
treatment. lor
essentially poisonous, are Intended to
In ot patients tome or metftciue
In anweaknessever." "Eetterlnaahour"
oaftstltntloo.
FJftrfriritv Strmiirtli!
OCEANIC
Sydney,
April
31
Honolulu
:.
-
loading.
Freight
demonstrated
i OThafs whatoa streagtli. not stuRuktion. Electricity --jrlll sever
cure in ady; it does jotcare in a week. It takes two months, icmay take but the are there to stay. I aa the Investor
5 introducer of the faaoBS Dr. Sanden Ekctric with attachmsat for $,men. the best of my SO years as a at ,
? it strengthens job when yon Ca treats act upon the liver,- Kidneys, Bladder, Prostrate asd all weakened Itn weisha but re ousces. Carreats i astantly felL-- s - -91 Seolc aad. Consxiltatioa.
Consult se tree ot-okar- orwhich explains alL In
DFR. A.,' Cor. Grant
iSeazs 9to6;.5-- -,
. L .s j Mi Ajrji jr ji
CO.
Brisbane,for B.
AORANGIWARRIMOO
will call
3IARU
V
book; Xatore,'
Are,
Brooklyn,
For Apply
medicines
Tia.liiarit.S
and
Xtemboaies specialist.
Stomach,
X.SeHdeTs-lOto- L
',-- ,. .k.. . .
Jt jt ji-j- i J ji-j- t Jiji S Ji S
sj,asy Vs Rolling of aLoi.. B? YOU JUST KNOW HOW THAT IS THE SECRET
Come to us and we will show you how to maket
a perfect picture, how to develope the film orhow to print the picture.
oooooooo J ooooIt will cost you It will cost yoii
XX0XXXXXC000 bOOOCKCpC)OOC0X000"We add to your pleasurWe save your pocket.
Honolulu Photo Supply Co.426 FORT STREET.
W. E. BIVENS,Office, Corner of Broker. I King and Bethel Sts.
....FOR SALE....36,000 Square Feet, situate on King Street, near Thomas
Square, for 25 cents, per square foot. This Propertyis very desirable and is offered at a bargain.
' SIX-ROO- M HOUSEriODERN,iSice Yard, Up-To-Da- te size
Punahou, Price, $4,250.Cosy Home, and
FOR SALJE:t Bargains in Lots andn
in Ail Parts of the City,or ring up
W. E. BIVEiMSCor. King & Bethel Sts.
WeGLMi&Co--LIMITED-
REEKED SUGARS.
Cubo and Graunlated.
PARAFFINE JADIT CO.'S
Faints, Compounds and BuildfctrPapers.
PALXT TLS,
Lucol Raw and Boiled.Linseed Baw and Boiled
INDUKIM,Water-proo- f cold-wat- er Paint, in-
side and. outside; in white andcolors.
FEE nxiZEBSA!ox. Cross & Sons' Ligh-grad- e
Scotch fertilizers, adapted for su-gar cane and coffee, s.N. Ohlandt &. Co.'s cheiflval rertil-izer- s
and finely ground lonemeal.
STEAM PIPE C0YERING,
Eeed's patent elastic sectional pipeCovering. -
FLyTER, PRESS CL0T.US,
Linen and Jute.
SE31ENT. IIME 4-- BI'JCKS
Agents ForWESTBIIN SUGAB vrTN1I.GCO,
Sai Francisco. Cal
BALDWIN LOCOMOt! WORKS,Phdadelph Pa, U.S. A
NEWELL UNIVERSAL JilLL CO,(ilanf. National Cano'Shredder"
w k, U.S. A
OHLANDT & CO.,San FranciscoMOei
tUSPONIRON AND LOCOMOTIVEWOBKS." San Franeisco. Cal
Pantbeon Sbaiingatrs. D-- "W. Bosch.Parlor
HeI Street? Se&r Tort.
RE.OPENEDHOT --BATHS- COLD
t?- -, t 4tTr-- f " '
of lot, 75x120. Situate atThis is a Beautiful,
Very Cheap.
Houses, and LotsCall for a List
Tel. Main, 312
HAWAIUH BALLASTING GO.
"NO. tie QUEEN" 8T.
1. L EUIS. manager.
Foundation Stone.Curbing. ,
Black and White Sand.
AXD ?
Soil of ZveryDescription; for Sale.
l&S Drays for Hire. gT
Purdy & BaronSHIP CARPENTERS
Caulking; Smithing and GeneralRepair Shop. Ships Ways forsmall schoonersl Scows built, re-paired and rented.SHOP: Sumner's Ls.and. Honolulu.
TeL SOS. p. o. Box 2C2.
T. HAYASHI537 Beretanla Street.
Opposite Queen's HospItaL--
DYEING, CLEANING and REPAIR- -ING.
Skillful Workmanship Best In Town.up the Name and Try Him.
FIRE A580EIATI0N
OP
ffflliADEbPfflA
ASSETS $6JS0t868.38
Ji-H- . PISHEEi
Asent Hawaiian Islands.
kstern mm 0.
CAPITAL $2,000,000.00
J. H. PISHEK,Agent Hawaiian Islands.Only Hrst-claS- S work. aaH at nrTroa
I that wilU In satisfactory. RobertGrteve PublishlBg Cd, Ltd.
V
Y
'V t.-- 6
.3- 2.2 --"
.efW Ma J -- its. -L.( A -
i vj" 5:" : is s. -r."i jsz -" n ,Jt i v " O - i
--J-' f
X,?
-
tA THE HOX0LJJL.tr 8EPUBLICAX", WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1901. V
THREES
Y
7
1
G. SCHUMANMERCHANTBetween Port and Alakea
IN THE
S 5
m
It all otheris
THI
IS THE MOST SUCCESSFUL
VEHICLETIRE
outshinescomparisonandBER TIRE which ives universal satisfac-tion. We can fit this celebrated tire toany size wheel.
G. SGHUMflN,
SOMETHING NEW !
BAKER'S EGG!Put up in 1 lb. cans. For salo by all First-cla- ss Groceries.
Used for making Omelettes, Cakes, Custards, Etc.
PETGOODS
WALLREADY STAINS
all kinds of
GENERAL
632 Fort Street
'miWw
))
INVINCIBLE
Hf are the bestand are sold
h ofwish, youhere,
band
UNITED
AND
327 MofttowKry
rrweace,
0ito
Hawaiian
Sole -:- -
-- -
Kelly-Springfie- ld
Tire
WORLD.
tires everythe ONLY RUB
flgenl
THY IT!
AGENTS
Love
to9
9m99S9
!9
999999
99
Niws Go., Ltd. 99
Hawaiian Islands. 9
HIGHLAND. AND CREAMSCALIFORNIA CANNERIES CO.'S CANNED
ALPINE CEMENT,ROCK ROOFING,
And
-- &-
mwnirn wimm eo., ul
i
SUPPLIES
prices.variety
sterlingliability,
TYPEWRITER
San
r-- - V.
i
0
SOLID
k
Building
.
T -
'' ' --
MORTARBuilding Supplies
economy.
point
PLASTER
TYPEWRITER
obtainable,at most mod-
erate Whateversupplies you"ill find it
embodying thequalities of re--
convenience .:
SUPPLIES CO.
StreetCaL
They. Agents
V.'.l
at of
' '0 5'00 't0 355 557L
' MaK
BM. '33 itF
WERT mJLSJEJScientifically to relieve strain, andimprove the sight.
' Nothing too much, trouble if ithelps to make accurate work.
Promptly and to last.
FACTORY ON THE PREMISES
A. N. 5ANF0RDGraduate Optician
Boston Building: Port Street
THE VERT HNiSTWATCH REPAIRING
POSSIBLE TO SECURE YOU'RE
ASSURED OF IF YOUR TIME
PIECE IS SENT HERE TO BE RE
PAIRED.
EXPERT WORK ONLY.
"We manufacture all kinds of Jewel-
ry to order at the shortest possible
notice.
M. R. COUNTERLove Building. 532 Fort Street,
CHEAP CHEAPAT THE
HOSEST BAZAAR!
HARDWARENOTIONS
TOYS andJEWELRY
at the
HOfliST BAZAAR !
M. DOLLINGER
Opposite Union Grill, 88 Sing St
II. G. imn CO., LTO.
"Win. G. Irwin. .President & ManagerLlaus Spreckels.. First Tice President"U". M. Giffard.. Second Vice-Preside- nt
H. M. Whitney, Jr...Treas. and Sec'y
Sugar FactorsAND
Commission Agents.
AGENTS FOE THE
Oceanic S. S. Co.Of San Francisco, Cal.
HENRY WATERHOUSE & CO.,
Corner Fort and Merchant Sts.
t
Stock and Bond Broken
Fire Insurance Agents
2ows5ion Terel?ar;t8
Careful attention giTen to husinesstrusts.
GLOBE-WERNICK- E BOOKCASESand
OtTICE FURNITUREIn ctock, or ordered from Manufac-turers.
HEAYERLUNCH ROOIS
H. J. Xolte has just received a new, lot of celebrated
FIVE CENT CIGARS;"Xew York Capadura's, Washing-
ton Allston, Union de Cuba,Grau3, Bepublic, Figaro Jack-
son Square Besown's, Etc.
Alsot- -
Key TTest Cigars; La Deliciosa
--H.J. JiOLTE.'. "
UFIOUII MTEillT! --
HIE MKlfEISiRY
PERPETUATION OF THE HAWAI
IAN RACE NOBLY SUBSERVED
BY A SOCIETY.
The Institution Has Another Prosper---
ous Year Proposed Gynecologi-
cal Hospital Photographing theChildren Born in the Home.
Anniversary day was observed ap-propriately at Kapiolani Maternityhome These ranged from ten yearsing performance was that of photo-graphing the children born in thehome These ranged from ten yearsto two days old. Edward Markhamwas the Nestor of the infants, havingbeen the first to greet sunlight in theinstitution. The "Bye Baby Bunting"of two sunrises was the cnild of Mrs.F. J. Wallace.
Part of the day's program was theannual meeting of the Hooulu andHoola Lahui Society, which finds itsmotive of existence in supporting thehome. Prince David, senior heir ofQueen Kapiolani, the lamented founder, was in the chair as president ofthe organization. He is its benefactoras well as chieL After prayer Mrs.Eugenia K. Reis, secretary, presentedher report. It showed tnat the feesfrom patients in the home tor the pastyear amounted to $1183.55. The so-
ciety had no expenditures to report.Reference was made to the proposal,broached a fe- - weeks ago. to add agynecological department to the in-
stitution. There had been sixty-fiv- e
births for the year and 452 from thestarting of the institution.
Mrs. Pierre Jones, treasurer, re-ported the receipts for the year as$9434.30 and expenditures as 559S5.22.Part of the receipts, however, was$5000 capital returned upon which theC. R. Bishop Trust had been payinginterest The problem was how to Invest most advantageously an accumulated fund of over $6500. There Is$2000 of the money paid by the Kapiolani Estate in monthly Instalments ot$100 drawing 4 1-- 2 per cent interest inBishop's bank. Mrs. Jones urged ac-
tion toward building a gynecologicalhospital to cost $10,000.
Mrs. E. R. Wilson's services as ma- -
tronwere eulogized. She is faithfullyassisted by Mrs. Annie Aylett Poole.The matron's report showed that 42
out of the R5 births for the year wereof males. There had been two deathsand one stillborn. Seventeen caseswere critical.
Officer", directors and trustees wereelected. -- 7.:
Prince David Kawananakoa, presi-dent; Mrs. James Campbell, first vice-preside-
Princess Kalanianaole, sec-
ond vice-presiden- t; Mrs. Eugenia K.Reis, secretary; Mrs. Pierre Jones,treasurer.
Directors Miss Mclntyre, presi-dent; Miss Peabody, Mrs. Jas. Camp-
bell, Mrs. E. S. Cunha, Mrs. J. F. Bow-
ler, Mrs. Irene Ii Brown, Mrs. W. Lu-
ther Wilcox, Mrs. oarl Widemann andMrs. Pierre Jones, treasurer.
Trustees Prince and Princess Ka-
lanianaole, Mrs. T. R. Foster, MissPeabody, Mrs. F. W. Macfarlane, Mrs.E. S. Cunha and Mrs. A. Mackintosh.
Lunch was served in the yard afterthe meeting. Those in attendance dis-
cussed with animation the fair andluau to be held on March 16 for thebenefit of the gynecological hospital.
A QUIET WEDDING.
A. F. Marx and Miss Margaret More-Hous- e
Made Husband and Wife.A week ago yesterday, A. F. Marx,
foreman of the railroad wharf, andMiss Margaret Morehouse were mar-ried at the Cthedral. The weddingwas a very private affair, only themost intimate friends of the youngpeople knowing anything about it
Thp crnnm came here as first officeron the James Nesmith. He left thatposition to enter the employ of therailroad and has held resposible posi-
tions therein ever-sinc- e. Mrs. Nesmithis a native of Des Moines, Iowa, andsince coming here has formed a largepirHo nf fripnris and acauaintances.all of whom wish her unbounded success and happiness in her new rela-tion.
Bob Laing HurtRobert Laing, dispenser of light
wine and beer in Kohala, has beenin town during the Kinau's stay hav-
ing injuries from a recent accidenttreated. He was thrown from a horseand, besides having the drum of hisright ear ruptured, received seriousriATnntrp tn the eve on the same side."While in the city he was in thehands of Dr. Sloggett and otner pny-sicia-ns
in consultation, leaving forhome with special directions to DrBond. Dr. Sloggett hoped that thetreatment given and prescribe!, to-
gether with care on the pare of thepatient would save the sight of theInjured eye.
i
The Hiio Railroad.The Hilo railroad is now laid to
Kapoho, Puna, a distance of 30 milesfrom Hilo. Although the track is notyet all ballasted, a freight train is op-
erated over the line once a week. Su-
perintendent Lambert on Sunday be-
fore last ran an excursion train to Ka-poho, with a large number of passen-gers from Hilo. The ride through theforest and plantations was greatly en-
joyed. N
To Railroad Tax Law.D. Kalauokalani said yesterday that
the new taxation hill would pass theLegislature in three daysAs he isleader of the dominant party in boththe Senate and the country he oughtto know a little about the majority in-
tention.r Their Claims Set at Rest
The claim of other cough medicinesto be as goot as Ccaaherlain's areeffectually set at rest in the followingtestimonial of Mr. C.-- D. Glass, aa em-ploye of Bartlett & Dennis Co., Gardla-e- r,
Me. He says: "raa$ kept addingto a cold and cough in the winter of1S97. trying everr cough medicine Iheard of withost permaneat help, untilone day 1 was ia the'drus store of Mr.Houlehan and he ndnsed aeto tryChamberlain's Cough Reaeaj" aad of-
fered to pay pack, my moaey If I irasnot cured." My lungs aad "bronchialtubes were Tery sore at is time,bat r was completely cared by thisremedy, ant;aTe ce always tamedto it waea-I.getracQ- spoa findrelief. 'I alm'?recooiaad It "to myfriends and am. glad to aay iris the"beat of all eorga medkiaea.-'F- or saleby. BwftsoB. --mita Jfcv Co? rQaaerai
for M Tommy oc ttawwu. Ternary
oodboMcobckiooooC50co
o vFir22&L0o08
it isn'tO
o
0o0 every day
That we are privileged to offer
? yoa a select line ofO
PARLOR SETS IN AN- -,
0 TIQUE OAK,a0 MAHOGANY CHIFFON- -
o J
0 IERS, 8o0 COMBINATION CHINA go
CLOSETS AND SIDE-- $80 BOARDS.
0 HANDSOME FURNITURE 0o O0 COVERINGS 08 O
AND TRIMMINGS. 08 O
0O "While our stock of these goods O0 0o is not , "vge as we generally o0 - .. .. .. oo carry, tney are unusually pretty0o in design' and durable as too0 0o wearing qualities. oo 00o
oA special reduction for a lim-- 0
Ited time will be given in a large Q
assortment of.... )
LARGE AND SMALL )
MIRRORS.OThey are worth your Inspec- - a
tion. a
J. HOPP & CO.
KING AND BETHEL STS.
0 0
v ODOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQO X)
QRIPPE!
A GREAT MANY PEOPLE ARE
DOWN WITH THE GRIP. IT'S IN
THE AIR. THERE IS NO OCCASION
FOR ALARM, HOWEVER, WHEN
YOU HAVE OUR WELL-KNOW-
REMEDY,
Anii-Grip- pe Tablets.THEY ARE BOTH A PREVENTA-
TIVE AND A CURE. THEY ARE
SAFE TO TAKE; WILL NOT CAUSE
RINGING IN THE EARS OR NER-
VOUSNESS. THEY ARE A SCIEN-
TIFIC COMBINATION, PREPARED
FROM THE FORMULA OF A DIS-
TINGUISHED PHYSICIAN. THERE
IS NO GUESSWORK ABOUTTHEM.
THEY WILL oURE THE GRIPPE
QUICKER THAN ANY OTHER
KNOWN REMEDY. REMEMBER
THE OLD ADAGE "AN OUNCE OF
PREVENTION IS WORTH A POUND
OF CURE" AND TAKE THE ANTI-GRIPP- E
TABLETS AT THE FIRST
SYMPTOM. THEN ITS EASY. NIP
THE DISEASE AT THE START AND
PREVENT A SIEGE OF ILLNESS.
Price. 25 Gtnts.
Hobron Drug Co.KING AND FORT.
The Union Express Co.,Office with Evtfiig lilJttii.
l0 Street 86.Sing -:- - -:- - Telephone
We move safes, pianos and furniture.We haul freight and lumber."We sell black and white sand.We meet all Incoming coast steamers,
we check baggage on all outgoingsteamers.
W. LAESEN,Manager.
lUtke tt Prtfcrty gwwrs
Iaave ia my employ Four first-cla-ss
Plamhers from the Ceast I amsow ready to Igare on your work atthe lowest prices. .My men are UnionMea. Give me a trial,.! '
-- 'C. Hv-BEOWir-frr
M. . BY MARIPOSA . .
COLUMBIA CHAINLESS
5sf5f."5biid1901
JVIodels
Bicycles.STANDARD OF THE WORLD. CAlX AND
SEE THEM AT
E. 0. HULLS i"..Bicycle Department,
"UP STAIRSIfc
Jas. F. "Moroak, Pres. Cecil Browx, Vice-Pre-s. P. Hcstacx, SecChas, H, Athkbtox, Auditor. W. H. Hooos, Treas. and Mgr.
HUSTACE & CO ltd.Sealers in FIREWOOD: STOVE, STEM and BLACKSMITH G01L
"W HOLES ALLS AND HETAIL
pecial Attention Given to Draying. "White and Black Sand
Telephone Main 295 QUEEN STREET
ft New Une of Goodsr
has just arrived, consisting of
CHINA, LACaUER AND ANTIMONY WARENEW DESIGNS IN SEASONABLE SILK
The latest patterns in Silks and Silk Goods, Kimonos,Grass Cloth Center Pieces, Doilies, Etc.
ASADA & CO., Hotel St.
American Power and Water Co., Ltd,
FEANZ FAXON
ole Agents for the ,
MORTON COMPOUND ROTARY PUMPNow on Exhibition at 532 Fort Street
Bear of if. IL Counters Jewelry Store,
Specially Adapted for Irrigation Purposes on Rico and
Banana Plantations,
LaaaaaaaaaaaaaalaaBMaHlil
aaaaH I.aamP' taaaaaaVTDaRfflSv:5!v?fc&.oil. ,v'V-v- " v.-.rr.- "
.v - . m . .1... . -- . m . ...aav.alaTi . aV1 -- m. ! m aaaal
lKW
FIFTH ANNUAL
Clearance Sale
coancENcrttG
Monday, Feb. II.hFOB ONE WEEX
WE BTTAT.T. OFFElt
Ladles Black Hose (HermsdorfDye) Lace Ankle, former price
13.00 a Dozen, now. . 6.00
Ladle3 Black Hose (HermsdorfDye) Plain, former price $25ca pair, now 6 pairs for $1.00
Ladles' Black Hose (HermdorfDye) Plain, former price $7JQa Dozen, now $4X0
Ladies' Black Hose (HermsdorfDye) Drop-Stitch- ,, forme price25 cents a pair, now 6 pairs for 1.00
Men's Hose in Black and Colors atproportionately low prices.
E.W.J0RDAN.V VT
Hall Building", JFORT it XINQ 5.XS.
J
-, MANAGES:
To it I owe myHeaitti
Grittedfleet- -is a TmIc awl has iweHMrisliIiif qialities tbanMy Twiic er kverase ia
tke MarketBva
ForlSale By
ALL DEALERS
FOR RENT.
LARGE, MM. KOOMS
Single or En Suite, at
Oppheum HotelFOBT STBEET
NEW MANAGEMENT'
Strictly FIRST-CLAS- S
HART & CO.(TilmlcedQ
TIE ELITE ICE GIE1KPHLUSV
Fsne Cboeolates .and
-Jt ;
i- v -- ! VY X -
VFOUR THE HONOLULU REPUBLICAN. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2a 1901 f
THE HONOLULU KlTUBLICAX.
FaWished JCvexy Morning Except Moa-i- sr
b ae HoDt- - Grieve Pnblisa--g
Compear. Limited.
Myvns s. gill - EDITOR
VELCPHONES.
tesiness Cfficv Main 218
Editorial Roc."nt Main 123
Washington Bureau Post Building
Entered at the Post Office at Hono-lsl- u,
H. T.. as Eecond-c'a?- r malL
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
Per Month, by Carrier ."5
One Year, by Mall 8.00
Six Moui. by Mail 4.00
Three iiunths, by Mail or Carrier 2.00
HONOLULU, H. TM FEB. 20, 1901.
WEATHER YESTERDAY.V .
Mnan Tfwit-- w.MUdraam Tumfwumv-- K Jcrra.Minimum Trtnvmiar' leirrws.BiiwaMfcr- -9 Kip-a- . biMsc.
Moan Dew Putot tor tb Br- -Uuu XetnUTe HmmMttF- --
WINDS.
HffM. wH 10 north, a 10 ; weaUr, ckwtlr to
Foiinusr reu Xdt.llpe
THE FIRST LEGISLATURE.
Today witnesses the beginning oflan epoclumarKing penoa in uie ui&-tor- y
of Hawaii. It wUi witness the as-
sembling of the first Territorial legis-
lature It will witness the assembling
of the first legislative body evergathered together in Hawaii of which
tho members wertf chosen by the en-tir- o
electorate of the Island. It will
witness tho gathering of a legislaturethe members of which were chosenupon the basis "of manhoou suffrage.
There are no horeditary nobles In thepresont legislature ana no memberselected from Islands on which they
danot reside.There are many important meas-
ures to come before the body whichassembles today; more Important thanhave come before any former legislatfve bodv in the history of these- -
Islands. As has been said, populargovernment is on trial in Hawaii.Popular government has been un-
known horo. not only under tne mon-
archy, but especially under the oli-
garchy. Tho present legislature willhave entrusted to It the framing cfcounty government, the framing ofmunicipal government for this city,the framing of equitable tax laws.tho framing of new penal laws, theJframing of a now homostend law andhomustoad exemption taw; me frani-"in- g
of liquor laws and in short almosjt
a complete revision1 of the presentlegal code of tne Territory.
It also has within its power a redistricting of tho Territory for legis-
lative purposes; a wiping out orchanging of tho present appointees ofthe Governor. One of the chief sub-
jects will be the cutting down of the.present oxponsivo system of govern-
ment so that the Territorial expenseswill come wuhin the limits of the ex-
penses of the Stntes and Territoriesof nonrly the same population. Altogcthor it will be a most important ses-
sion and one fraught wltn much In-
terest to nil tho people.
Tho Republican prints this morninga communication from Mrs. Helen M.Gougar upon the evils of the degrad-ing pen at Iwilol. Mrs. Gougar doesnot wrlto of this awful spot of pollu-tion in Honolulu from hearsay butfrom tho point of an eye-witn- ess tothe horrors of the place. Like manyother visitors she visited the placeunder propor escort to see with herown eyes and also like many othersshe could hardly believe that it waspossible for Mich a slave pen to .existin anyv place on earth, and much lessin a Territory over which the Starsand. xStripos floaL As Mrs. Gougarsays it is high time the Christian sen-
timent of this community was arousedto the terrible evil it is allowing torun in ..s midst. It is debasing anddebauching, and a sore spot on thobody politic that will affect the moralsof the entire populauon in a few yearsif It is not stamped ouL It is indeedopportune that a few brave womenlike Miss Murcutt and Mrs. Gougarhave come here who are not afraidto speak out about the evils of theIwllel den.
The man who writes what he callsan open letter" and then falls to sign
his name Is beneath the notice of anyrespectable person? No one but acowardly poltroon would address a so-call-
open letter to any one, andmuch less to a woman, and then fail tosign his name. The writer of a cer-?- ;tain anonymous communication in.the Evening Echo who cans himselfa "man of family, a property ownerand a Christian gentleman jjjust beono of that sort of Christians we aretold of in the Orient who made merryin Jbpting tne Chinese when tho allied
--forces reached .the iroat Ho showsa wonderful Christian training in be- -
Ibs afraid to sign his name. Christ,the leader of Ghrietiaaity, wag sever
J afraid to acknowledge himself at any' 'time or unaer any circumstances.
VlcJoas rumors of radical action to' be taken by the legislature will proveto be roorbacks. Tb members of thelegistetHre recogHlw that ther have- -
very important duties to perform andMC'little time ia which to accom -
pliEb all tie work desired. "Wiat willbe done will'be torthe best laterestsjof the people at large aas ail rssaors I
of this or that unwise act can be set leading; Wasaingtoa's farewelr ad-do-
as false froei the start. Taej dress. The eastern was InaBgtzratedleaders of the Jadepeadeat party saynot hare had aiacfa experience is? of Massachusetts who sored that theAmerican or Hawaiian politics but address beread asd that the Senatethey are sensible men who know what J ask Mr. Daniel of Virginia, one cfcan be done and what cannot. They J the most polished and courtly gentle-d- o
not propose to kill the goose that, man in that body, .o read jthe address,laid the golden egg In the first flush In 1S9S it was read by Senator Fora-o-f
finding the egg? Not they-- Seven ! ker of Ohio and last year by Senatoryears of trarafl have tanght themmany things, chief of which is pa--itience.
STATE REGULATION OF VICE.
The Republican has receired fromMr. Theodore Richards a number ofpapers on State Regulation of Vice,among them being a report of theBrussels Conference of 1899. Fromone of these papers, a report by Arch-
deacon Wilson of the District Associa-tio- n
for the Abolition of State Regula-
tion of Vice, held at Manchester, Eng-
land, Oct. 11th. 1S99, we take the fol-
lowing:"That system (State Regulation)
was for a time introduced Into certaingarrison towns in England, in whichthose who were known as Queenjwomen were practically licensed fora life of vice In the supposed interestof the health of profligate soldiersand sailors.
"It is not a matter of dispute thatdisease steadily increased while theseActs were In operation. After a pro- -
i... t i,ii, mv n,.tiDrwtM:j7x??..ott Glassov, and the White-Pro-f.
Stuart, and many others, includ degraded conditions of humanity, buting myself took part, these Acts wererepealed in 1SS6. It is not a matterof dispute that the disease has dimin-ished nearly 50 per cent since 1SS6.and that the English Home Army ismore moral and more healthy than ltpeople of Honolulu cannot plead ig--waB at any period during those Acts.
"That system was also introducedinto our Indian Cantonments. It is notdisputed that the results were so un-favorable that year by year the ArmySanitary Committee reported againstIt. It was abolished in 1S89, but thepractices were illegitimately carriedon, and still the results grew worse.In 1S97 that repeal was cancelled, andwith slight modification, the principleof these Acts is now the law In In-
dian Cantonments."Our Association is formed to pro-
test against this wrong, to watch andmake public its results, and to pre-vent the secret Introduction of suchActs Into England, or into the colo-nies over which we have control.
"We protest because we hoid allsuch State .recognition, and State pro-vision, and State licensing of prosti-tutes to be utterly immoral. It is anawful crime against women, and itbreaks down In men the one check ofconscience and self-restrain- t. Wepronounce this wrong, and we declareour conviction that nothing whicn Iswrong can be in the interest of thenation. And we declare that experi-ence in other countries, as in ourown, proves that this crime Is mostinjurious to the nation.
we win not impute unwortny motives to any supporters of the Acts.but we 'may fairly say that no onoof them attempts to 'prove that theyare right in principle, or that theyhave been as successful as they hop-ed In practice. The medical world,concentrating its attention on thephysical disease alone, forgets that theprovocative case is moral "not physi-cal. It cannot be put on a level withsmall-pox- . In- - a word, we protestagainst the continentalization of Eng-lish morality.
"If you ask how opinion is goingon, I would reply that in England theInfluence of our society has distinctlyaffected the army authorities, andthat they have awoke to the fact thatthe soldier needs moral care, audmuch is done for aim with excellenteffect. Less is. done in India, andwhat Is done is neutralized by theregulations. On the Continent thereis great hesitation and discontentamong the Regulationists. All coun.tries are awaking to the failure of thesystem. The dawn is approaching."
There are so many strong argu-ments against stateigulatIon of vicein the papers sent us by Mr. Richardsthat they will be treated at somelength in a few days. Prominent med-ical men in France and those In off-icial control of the regulated vice andattendant hospitals in that countrvtestify to the great damage done byState Regulation and the growing ofthe social evil in France. All concurthat regulation in nowise lessens ricewhile its attendant e.nls are wreck-ing the State and the people.
The leaven which Tne Republicanset last summer, in its, fight upon theevils of Iwilei, is working, and weare confident of seeing that foul blotupon the city stamped out Decencyand morality have hard struggles of--
times,but persistency-wil- l accomplishwonders and we expect to live to seethe day when decency and moralitywill be supreme In this city.
The poor little Krenins Echo pro-poses now to out-Hero- d Herod in itsefforts at falsehood and misrepresentation. If it can ,notT misrepresentJudge Humphreys any other way itdeliberately lies about him and hisactions as it did yesterday. It willfind later on that falsehoods, likechickens, come home to roost, sometimes.
The vicioss Influence, of tho Iwileistockade is being felt at Hilo wheremVn anxioes.to make money are will-la- g
to traSc- - ia human souls. A petrait has beea asked for bat --the de-
cent people of the city are protestingvigeKtrasly.--
SoraetHlgg rie fees been discoveredia Honolulu; it is "an open letter' Inwhkh the writer is not opea enoughto make his name kaown tmt seeksto hide, like all cowards, behind caInitial.
Vice sever grows less by licease ortoiaratioa. If Iwilei is 'permittedseoresof other M&k aktces will sprtag
iHp.
Fer svend years past it aas beeaa'caeiem ia the Uaited States Seaateto observe Wasblagtoa's birthday by
fa 1SS7 apoa motion, of Senator Hoarj
Lodge of Massachusetts. It would bemost fitting for the two houses of theHawaiian legislature to meet In jointsession Friday afternoon and listento the reaoing of Washington's farewell address either oy some memberof one or the other of the two housesorby some Invited guest. . And bythe way we believe it would be a goodidea for tne twohouses to have theDeclaration of Independence read injoint session today. There are manypeople outside the legislature in Ha-
waii to whom a reaaing of the declaration that "all men are created , freeand equal and possessed of certaininalienable rights." would be mostopportune just at this time.
A DISGRACE TO CHRISTImNITY.
To the Editor of The Republican:That I might be perfectly informedbefore entering into the discussionof the subject, I visited the Iwileistockade with proper escort last Sat- -" uiguu 1 nave seen me sail
your beautiful city is guilty of present--
lag the most degraded spectacle pos-sible to human eyes. Thanks to theitwo brave missionaries, Miss MurcuttjOTfl "Tlcc iptapmon tTi PhrlcttnTvf
norance of this moral pesthouse, for asingle moment, 'ihey Know of it. Thatany part of the press or people canbe found to apologize for the existenceof such brazen sin is indeed deplor-able. As I saw the little heathen wo-
men sitting at tneir windows bargain-ing away their souls I wondered wherethe Home Missionaries of Honoluluwere spending their efforts to reclaimthe lost. Where are the women ofthis" city, who have been educated InChristian institutions and who believein the purity of the Christian homethat they "sit at ease in Zion" and en-
ter no protest against the existenceof such .a place? Shall mothers seechildren reared' under so baneful aninfluence and be too timid to cry aloudand spare not?
To the claim-mad- e by some, thatthis place "is a necessity, that no vir-tuous women would be safe if it werenot for this den because there are fivemen to one woman on tis island," Ihave to reply, that the dovjl never putIt Into the mouths of the men or wo-
men to make a more shameless ex-cuse. If it be. soMhen 'take tuese childwomen out of this stockade and putthem in the most palatial surround-ings and clothe them in purple andfine linen and worship them as thsaviors of decept womanhood. There
4 is no other consistent way out of suchdefense for this stockade. Little lesswicked are these ignorant women, intheir povertv and slaverv, than are the
good women who permit thisfoul excuse to pass their lips thatoften rene.it "Our Father."
V No surer destruction of the homelife of the nation could be devised thanto tolerate so loose morals in thestate, as these apologists would incul-cate. Far better would it be for thesevile men and women to skulk in hid-ing from public gaze, to carry on theirdeadly traffic than to have it so brazenas it Is at Iwilei.
There is no greater comment onthe depraved public sentiment thatthis place has alreadv created, thanthat men "high in social and businesslife" are deriving revenue from it, as
! is asserted, and that the "government"is in league with this iniquity, andthat both men and women are afraidto speak ont against this wickednesslet thev lose .business and social"cate! I doubt if such a sentimentcould be found in anoiner city on theglobe, "with a population so limitea asthat of Honolulu.
Who is Responsible?
Every man and woman, who, know-ing of this Iniquity, makes any apolo-gy for it or wljo fails to cry outagainst it Where are the pulpiteersof Honolulu? Have these ministersof the gospel so little influence as notto be able to arouse their people tosome united effort to close this stock-ade?
I have been told, by men of influ-ence that if the pastorof Central Union church alone, wouldpreach two sermons as he knows howto preach, the walls of this stock-ade would fall "before public opinion.
The churches of Honolulu betterclose this stockade or.else close theirown doors and Jet ns send some moremissionaries to' these shores to con-vert the converted (?).
The Law.Upon .investigation I find that this
tstockade is in direct violation of thelaw of this Territory. In the face ofthis fact, 1 find men in the garb ofpolicemen pacing inside of this den"to keep order." This' is arrant anar-chy and should subject the High Sher-iff of "Honolulu to impeachment andremoval from oflce. He is condoningviolation of law. X find that this off-icer is appointed by Governor Doleand subject to removal by the sameauthority. Now let this communitydemand that the Governor do his dutyand command the enforcement of thelaw according tohis official oatht Letthe responsibility rest where It be-loag-s,
with the government that per-mits this shameless violation of law.Now that these Islands have becomea. part of tne National household letIt be understood that heathen cus-toms must give place to Christianpractices and this mast and will bethe demand of American womanhood.Better that fie Stars and Stripesshould never have been raised overthese Islands than tnat such institu-tions as that of Iwilei should be pro-tected by them. Surely the govern-ment of. theTJnked States will nottolerate sach conditions when onceadvised .of them. J shall Join the ef-forts of The Republican and theyoa.lftdy missionaries in protesting,far and wide, agaiset the tolerationof'sack "rice under the Sag. This pro-test shall go ap,evea to the Presidentof the UaHed Stntes, ifJt Tee necessary,aad the stockade of Iwilei mast fallno matter who ms$t fall with it.
, BBLEN3C. GOUGAR.BMQtahi, Hawiii, Feb. 19. 199.
liT IAmm
!
uerpde I
is a strictly scientific
preparitim fir tke eyre
of the jeri which
causes failing syt of
hair and
DANDRUFF!
It is also a most ele-
gant hair dressing forconstant toilet.
Try it and he convinced. It Is
(
absolutely harmless.
PRICE...
si.00PER BOTTLE
HOLLISTfiR
mm co.FORT STREET.
Ever offered
GALL AND OUR
"We
Puritan
FOR A YEAR'S SUBSCRIPTION,
advantage offergood atagaxhte price
4fliw
AttraK.
ox,-- .
2f
BISHOPBANKERS.
TRANSACT A GENERAL BASK- -TNG AND EXCHANGE
Commercial and Travelers' LettersCredit issued, available ia she
Princiuel Cities of the World
INTEREST allowed oa QeposltH:SEVEN days notice 2 per cent- - This
form will not bear interest unless itremains undisturbed for month.)
TUKEE MONTHS per cent, per an-num.
Six Months per cent, pemnnumTwelve Months per cent. po
annum.
BISHOP & CO.,SAVINGS BANK
Office at banking' buildinj: on Merchant street.
Savings Deposits will be receivedand interest allowed this Bank at4j per cent, per annum.
Printed copies of the Ku es and Emulations maybe obtained on appliestion.
BISHOP 8c CO,
Claus Spreckels Wm. G. Irwin
Spreckels & Co.,
Bankers.HONOLULU. B.1
San Francisco Agents The NevadaNational Bank San Francisco- -
DEAW EXCHANGE o5f
SAN FRANCISCO The Nevada Na-
tional Bank of San Francisco.LONDON The Union Bank of Lon
Ltd.NEW VOKK At-Tica- n Exchange
National Bank.CHICAGO Mer.-nuot- National
Bank.PARIS Credit Lyouuais.BERLIN Dresdner !$ak.HONGKONG AND YOKOHAMA
The .Hongkong and Si angnai Banking-Corporation- .
NEW ZEALAND ND ATJSTBALIA Bank of New Zeahir.d.
VICTORIA AND VANCOUVElt-Ba- nk
of British North America.TRANSACT A GENERAL BANEXNG
AND EXCHANGE BUSINESS.Deposits Received. Loans Made on
Approved Security. Commercial andTravelers' Credit Issued. Bills of Exchange Bought and Sold.
COLLECTIONS PBOBCPTIiT ACCOUNTED FOB.
in Honolulu.
STOCK OR WRITE FOR PRICES,
ij.tfj$fe ? 4.
desire to increase' the circulation of
Ladies' Home Journal
Jfye paeifk tyarduare ?o., Ctd.
Have received additions to their Stockof Goods, making the
Most Complete in flrll Lihfes f
KGRICULTURKL IMPLEMENTSof the MOST APPKOYED PATTERNS
SHELF HHRDMHRE in Great Variety IPaints, Oils, Varnishes, Turpentine
Magnite"
and'Petrol. - x
Cold Water Paints (Something......new)
Plantation Supplies in quantities to suit
EXAMINE
Our Assortment of Mechanics' Tools is Unsurpassed
This Is WorthReading
f :
T HE HONOLULU REPUBLICAN
and for short time make this very liberal inducement to 'aU new sub-scribers:
For a Three Months' Subscription fo The Honolulu Repub-lican a year's subscription will be gfVen Free to any one of the followingwell-kno- magazines:
Munsey'sHcClure's
.
V
Clans
Argosy
above Magazines will be given FREE for year.
The regular, price of JTHE HONOLULU REPUBLICAN Is 12.90 perQuarter or S.Q.per Tear..
By taking ot tiiis'a for tie of tke
tawn w,(7, tkk olter
o: v
oall
fixed
one3
34
bv
1
of
don,
- ,
it
a
'a. -
"
r
-
'
- - -
-
!
Cosmopolitanr
paid in advance any TWO ot the.
ytra obtiiaa food dally payer sad'pap?r alose.
wiU only last'M "ya?
J4QNOLUUL H. T.
TOE REPUBLICAN
f Niw Shipment--or
I HK1QO
IGoodform
I- - Closet Sets& JUST RECEIVED!
M Ittf s fair GIsita w titf Skip.J Sans Tiitiri hj.I-pacT-
fic-
7SGvcieu4irfeCt..LttL-- j a , ,
?i POST STREET EKLBRS BIiK:
H. ti.Wi t
I
rGPOCERS
5 BOSTON
orto.u
A "GUNN" Alwaj-- s Means Yofr Money's Worth I
The Gunn Furniture Co. rManufacturers of
DESKS, BOOK-OASE- S, DESKS"""
Just Received TWO CARLOADS Just Received
: : THE 60NS SEGT10NAL BOOK-- JSE : :
Eoll Top, Flat Top, Typewriter, Office and Library Defeks.
SOLE AGENTS
THE COYNE FURNITURE CO., LTD.P. O. Box C21 Progress
4I MS
LiF&
BP4 Vt WWk&Lc i" 7
.i it - ',r - a$
&. 'i H mMJ
TV J--'
I
Sole Agents: THEt
v- jr
MR. WILL THIS
Interest
? 9 ?T. Leslie DeCew
, The UnionOFFICE:-6- U North Jung St,
TELEPHONE
SOSO ososaxesasososxsosixosoII Manufacturing
s
E9Hv
HUE iOGK IMF ?1CKIHS
Uilbur's Seed TeallYir. nff Jn?w ftuwl w ("" " '-- .last days, if
HARNESS OF KINSS on
COLLARS,GOODS In
fKepaixirLg:FORT
f: O. Ik t
x.v V fr
)o Mt
& 00. m
I
BLOCK
Street- -
JK -
&y
BJock. 'Phone'' 971
Gasoline Engines
akd HOISTS'
For afl Kinds of Work(LAND IttABINS)
Running Pumps,
Dynamos, and Machinery
YON KAMI HHJNG. CO LTD.
"i
' We are doing all kinds of electricalwork at very priceswould like to do some for 70.
J. H. Thomnson''
Electric Co.'&
Hounlu, T. H. P. O. BOX 65.
WHITE 1323.
Harness Co,SOLE AGENTS TOB
WILBURJSHorse Remedies
.mMw ....ttn..a.,ywi, mm ujuuiuuu. uae.pouna.fed according to directions. "
hand and. made to order.CHAINS, HORSE. AND STABLE
a, Specialty--
KING STREETS
Tthphm Na,
It wilt give your horses great rest and . comfort, after a harddays' work, to have their feet packed with a 'natural rock that willabsorb five times its own weight of water, and oocome a soft jelly,cold as Ice.
fcnroAa "-"
wui a norse sixteeaALL
HAMES AND TRACEgreat variety.
CORNER 4L
ffa. 3tt
AND
moderatp andwork
lt
228
9l9O9OSOSOSO&D9C90mifOmySO909QSOSOSOSOSOSO
4
f-Vgi--i -- JK i. N. sd--4
ft t
i
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y
4
f T
I
1
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H
1901
HONOLULU REPUBLICAN, joor.
DIFFERENT ARTICLES TO CHOOSE FR01T LOOKINGFOR SOMETHING
GOOD BAT.We have just received gome fine lines .
TABLE ERUPTS, VEGETABLES,Also full line
MEATS, EISH, Etasuitable for lunches.
Salter AWaity 1
z Tel. 6S0. OrpHeum Black. Grocers.'
CLOTHING REDUCTIONS
:.1Kr"Pw! -- '-
!$ dOW- -.
11
. t
YOU WILL NEVER HAVE A BET-
TER CHANCE TO MAKE MONEYEASIER THAN BY INVESTING ASUIT WHILE THE PRICES ARE.DOWN LOW. THE PRICES AREDECIDEDLY "OFF."
FINE CASHMERE, FINE CHEVIOTAND FINE WORSTED SUITS, FINEBECAUSE THEY ARE MADE OF.DURABLE MATERIAL SKILLEDWORKMEN, AND THERE IS NOT ASUIT THE LOT UNDER
$12.50 Value.Choice for $8.50 and $10.00
Also an Excellent AssortmentBoys' and Children's Suits at VeryLow Pric33.
THE HUB CLOTHING HOUSE,Hotel Street, near Fort.
HND FURNISHING GOODS
":ZSHSc3B525H52SZ5e25H52S25e3H5Z5HSZH5SSB5S5H5e
rvri';'idv'
-- - -
IT
ACCORDING THE REPORT OF
i..E NEW YORK HEALTH JOUR
NALTHE OLYMPIA BEER IS WITH-
OUT ANY FOREIGN MATTER.
IS SIMPLY A PURE AND HEALTH-
FUL BEVERAGE.
WE HAVE OUR REGULAR IN-
VOICE EVERY MONTH BOT-
TLES OR ON DRAUGHT.
V.'E SET A HOT LUNCH FROM
11:30 VO 1 O'CLOCK AND INVITE
THE
L. fi.
CfillNER & flUUANU STS.
io
... ...i.i.. (. -
&
.... Business Agency. ....
All rdnds Laborjers' Supplies.
CUHB STONEShand, Tdy to supply.
PoetoSce Box S7S.
Manag".Xag, sear Llliha (Eva side).
Book Wb4Ibe troa. its is always
them "with
- -- g ;
THE 20. F
WHEN
TOof
a of
-'
4
u
a
IN
SO
BY
IN
in Your
of
,
IT
IN
PUBUC
H"TEL
General
of
Oa
Street,
Ai? - wCa' Mw ISC
(7
&i
Sole
Stone and
tiiand
'The !
IRON
mi CI.
St.atATK S67.
Uimi fimiXrerytkiB Tilt
MilSc.
VTHEX TOU WANT A
MICE lit m A 1EUAILE IIITEE
Call upon the
ClflfiliGE
Fmht Inure if 31S.
Telephone SCain 368
mm I0TEL AMI UIIIN SHEETS
Up-to-D- Hacks ResponsibleDrivers at all hoars.
All Orders by telephone promptlyattended to.
EABBY POPSO, Jfgr.
. v an
1
ft Cure for ttot iron Roofs,;
Reduces the fiom 15 to 20 "
CALLNI) SEE PRACTICALLY DEMONSTRATED
FEED CO.,
PgssasassasaffgsHsasssHSHsasaszsaasasssHgss EPigis?5?.FJZ
OXSTJUEJAOFEMAN SALOP N
TO
GENERALLY.
DEfrPnprietor.
Fred Harrison
Contractor andBuilder.
Jobbing Promptly Attended
FSO 00.Contractors Builders
T.HAYASHI,
''sat-Wacter- y.
Paintr
HETWlWEDNESDAY; FEBRUARY
GAHE
HflTS, CHPS
"temperature degrees.;..
SOLE AGENTS
IS
tCSSlttA.
CHOCOLATE1BON BONS
LEWIS CO.,Grocers, Agents
Three Telephones-241-240-2- 40
Metal
Hosier's Alpine
Iron FencesBEST
miM fEMCE
iONUlEKTIL
176-18- 0 King
OEPHEUM CAFE
Ota
TiMilMritSWMa -
and
r
t
HfBIP9c'
PACIFIC CO.,
k C353jSo18
Arabic
gAafet
Hawaiian
Cggj islands.
CALIFORNIA
jpvimEysjh
MONUMENTS
szsasasagssasasaszsaszsHsagsasg
- 1
ifloderiKLivervAND- -
FIRST CUSS BOARDING
THE
; Territorial
Sf.ihb fa
i .
I
t
T
1rW99rmr w
Kill St. Ifp., Kiwaithu Chirch
MAIN
GAS
LOYEJOY
TELEPHONE
r.
ELECTRIC CO LK
HAGOOK BUILDDKJ; Cera Me
dkMNM.
mmmiGnu isidii
Boy Who Ran Off WithDrt Cooper's Big
Convicted.
ALLE6EQ EHiEZZLER ACJIinEO:-
- lESTATE OF THE LATE THEO. H.
DAVIES WORTH OVER
TWO MILLION.
Pleas of Defendants to Indictments
The Lishman-Advertis- er Libel
Suit Hollister Stock of the Lats
J. W. Winter Cook vs. Hobron.
Defendants were arraigned on is?dictments before Judge' Humphreysat Circuit Court term yesterday withthe following results:
Charles Heffernan, on two chaifiesof passing forged writing and one ofassault with a weapon, was allowedto reserve his pleas" until today on account of the absence of his counsel.Lum Sung, malicious injury. Pei ofnot guilty; Kaga, assault and batterywith weapon, plea reserved until to-
day; E. a. Gill, plea tiledas elsewhere reported.
The trial of Wahineaukai for em-bezzlement was. resumed from theprevious day, resulting in a verdict ofnot. guilty.
Joseph King was then placed ontrial for malicious injur- - in runilngoff with Dr. Cooper's horse and buggylast October, ilr. Cathcart prosecut-ed and Mr. Correa defended th? pris-oner. The jury was composed of J.H. Wise, John Crowell, A. A. Monta-no- ,
P. M. Lucas, J. H. Mackenzie, D.L. Conkling, T. F. McTighe," C. it. Col-
lins, D. T. Bailey, W. T. Scbmlcit, R.C Lydecker and A. Barnes.. A verdictof guilty with recommendation of le-
niency was returned. Exceptions werenoted and notice of motion for a newtrial was gven.
Two-Millio- n Estate.A corrected inventory of the estate
of the late TheorH: Davies has beenfiled by Thos. Rain Walker. The'realestate Is thus given:Land and residence in
Juuanu Valley, Hono-lulu' . ,.J ... 25,000 00
Land and residence at"WalkikL Beach, Hono-lulu :... 4.000 00
Land on Lunalilo street,with houses thereon,-Honolul-u
.... 5,500 00Land on Green street,
with nouses thereon,Honolulu 9,000 00
Land on Thurston tave-
nue, Honolulu, withhouse thereon....7'.... 4,000 00
Land on Thurston ave-nue, Honolulu, purchas.-e- d
fromHawaiian Government, May, 1898... 2,270 00
Half interest, undivided.-i- n
piece of land at u,
Kohala, Hawaii 4,500 00
54,270 00The personal property is listed as
below:Furniture in residence at
Waikiki ....$ 150 00Lease .from Haw. Govt.
of land (.4 lots) in Ka--
piolani Park, Walkikl,unimproved; lease has21 years to run; value 'lease ....' . 320 00
250 shares in KahukuPlan. Co., at $90 22,500 00
1500 shares in HamakuaMill Co., at $100 1 150,000 00
2500 shares in WaiakeaMill Co., at S100 250,000 00
5000 shares in Laupahoe--hoe Sugar Co., at $40. . 200,000 00
"250 shares in Union MillCo.. at SS0 20,000 00
30 shares in Oahu SugarCo.. $85 paid 2,550 00
Half interest in BeecroftPlantation 5,000 00
Half interest in Kukalau- -
Mill 60,000 00520 shares in Honolulu
Iron Works Co., Ltd.,at $100 ." 52,000 00
6060 shares of stock inTheo. H. Davies & Co.,Ltd., at $100 60C.000 00
60 debenture bonds (Theo.Hi Davies & Co., Ltd..)at $5,000 300,000 00
20 shares in Mutual Telephone Co.. at $10...... 200 00
2 shares in British' (nowPacific Club, $50 nom. 100 00'
Loan to Jas. Prank Woods ' 'securedby mortgage onhalf Kahua Ranch 20,000 00
Cash in the hands ofTheo. H. Davies & Co.,Ltd l 34.064 10
Loan to Westbrook.. - 3,000 00Loan to T. R. Walker... 5,000 00
Total i.... $1,730,884 10, Value reai estate 54,270 H)
Grand total $1,785,154 10As several of the stocks and bonds
most largely held by the estate :of a market value far beyond par, tnereal valuation of the estate must bemuch above $2,000,000. The inventoryincludes only property in this Terri-tory. Mr. Davies left property InEngland, where his will was probatedbefore ancillary administration wassought jhere..
Papers on File.Lily J. Manson. administratrix of
her deceased hnsband. George Man-so- n,
has filed an Inventory showinga valuation of $4,500.
High Sheritf Brown makes, retnrnofexecntion on judgment of $233L10and costs in the suit of NeUte L.Sectt vs. W. C. Achl. saying he hascollected .5267 coverihr the Sheriff'sfee of $11J0.
The Hawaiian Gazette Co. by itsattorney, Lorrin AndrewK. asswerswitlya general deaial the coaplaiBt oflibel made by Robert Ltefcm&B.
E. Coit Hehroa, by his attoraey, J.T. De Bolt., de ars to the asanfpaftsart of John Cook: heswes, mneralgnwads allesi that the copteltdoes aot. iBctede cy of :thc en-tra- ct
acos which the cilai taenia ispredicate.' , . s. ""
actisV h Jft th fc--
prenie Ccmrt. 1b the case 'of B. L.Marx, adadalstrator of . tbe estate. o
I J. IV. TVier. deas, fs. S. at Da--
&OS, H. K. waily and s. K jjksoh..copartners doiag bssiaess cader taefirm sase of Bishop & Coapaay. Itis to ascertain the legal title to cer- -
ftiScates C Hellister Drag Co. stock'Eaabered 44. 45 aad 45. srhich J. "TV.IWintsr ceposited la Bishop & CcOsbank as colIatenusecKrity for a loan Jof 13403 that regains anpald. Upcafthis question depends that of whetherplaintiff has the right to sell thestock for the benefit of all the creditors, the estate being: iasolrent. or arethe defendants eatitfed o be regard-ed as secured creditors with the rightto sell said collateral security for thesatisfaction of their own claim. Thecontention of plaintiff is that defend-- lant caring failed to record the trans-- 1 1ler of stock on the books of the Hol-list- er
Dreg Co.. in accordance withsection 2015 Civil Laws, have herclaim as secured creditors defeated.
A Convincing Answer."I bobbed into Mr. Blackman's drntr
store one evening." says Wesley Nelson, of Hailton, Ga "and he askedme to try Chamberlain's Pain Balmfor rheumatism with which I had suf-fered for a long time. I told him Ihad no faith in any medicine as theyall failed. He said: "Well, it Chamber-Iain'- s
Pain Balm does not help yon,you need not pay for it" I took abottle of it home and usedit according to .indications. In a monthI was cured, and have notSold by Benson, Smith &. Co., GeneralAgents for the Territorv of HawaiL
. .,AIR
AND
to
all of city.
.
3151, BhM.
PO. Box tOO
This a. Xe&s as well as a Wo a's Bter,aad wiy, Isdi&L shoaSdat 3Cea coarslt their Pocket Eflis well as"Wcsaes?Dollars (si His PHI for a year to ccae. This wise:
WehaTe placed ea oar coasters aad la car ELikai " window oarEatire Shirt Stock, aad they're solar, Oeatle&ea. vols?, . .
75w iticit Scsc: :o:a-s- -
Sow these Shirts are aot " old plues " or relics cf the viataee of 'S3.,Ther arUp-To-Dsi-te SMrtsjast such Shirts as racular fUraii:e.-- s charge31.50 aad $2.00 for. We are selUag- - taea in a luasp, so vt caa aferd totake less than therx. "
THE UlKGE SIZES predoaiicate, stoat Oantlenen. who some-times ad It hard to pet suitable patterns ia 16 or 17, wtll
have great ran a re ring- - this stock.In. conclusion if yoa cant coase in yourself, let your wife cose andpick out a few for you. Shirts are not like cigars, and this Is too goodan opportunity to he s&issed.
&No. 1045 Fort Street,
WHITMAN CO.
Auto-Bicyc- le in Honolulu....The public is invited to call at our. store and see in....operation the first Auto-Bicycl- e ever introduced.
HARDWARE BICYCLES.
CUSTOMERS PROMPTLY WAITED UPON !
NOW OPEN FOR WITH A CHOICELINE OF THE :
TRIBUNE BICYCLES,ORIENT BICYCLES,SUNDRIES BICYCLES,REPAIRING BICYCLES,RENTING BICYCLES,ANGLE LAMPS,GUNS,REVOLVERS,
RIFLES,
SHOT,
OFnCE;
Ordkas Solicithd.
For HenWHO WANT SKIRTS
Siore.isbtcessiae
EVERY flrT
HARSH, Ltd.Honolulu.
The
FOLLOWING ARTICLESTVADS AND CAPS,WHIPS,BIRD CAGES,FISniNG TWINE,-GARDE-
HOSE,PAINTS AND OILS,CARVING SETS,
"
RAZORS, .
KNIVES,SCISSORS,LAMPS,
HOME AHO HIND--
MACHINES.
,vWHLTlVflH & CO..,9i KINQ JTREET, NEAR
LOTS SALE82 Pine IiOte, Laid out in Blocks, in
GuIIblf cm Kauki
FACING KING STREET
PWCES Y0V 00 MIT) VSP '
Slap and particulars can be had by calling on
MRS. S.A. GULICKResidence on thepremiset
Oahu Ice &
Electric Co.ICE delivered bow
parts the
.KEWALO.Your
HOEFXAK t SAKKHAM
DressyCPRSKCT
Store
Tw'ekwe&resoiaS'tosiTeeverrXaaach&acetocrreasasTShirt
SHIRT CENTS
hence
WHITNEY
&
EBKftlaaHp9MKaSEl
First
AND
BUSINESS,
PUERIC1N
FORtue
Tract
BT THE
i)..
FreshMfLK
IWKE DAILY
Star DairyTZLSHTOHE, BEWB 3171.
CITY OXFICX, TIL., MAOT 381.
A. Bl DOA, -- Manager
TRUNKS,VALISES,WATER COOLERS,ICE CKExlM FREEZERS,TYPE WRITERS,AGATE WARE,TIN WARE,ENAMELED WARE, .
RUGS,LINOLEUM,MATTING.
HEW
FORT."
IEUYEHEB
FOR RENT.
COTTAGESSTORESEOOMS
On the premises of THE SAXITARZSTEAM iiiJNDRY; cO LTD, be-
tween South and Queen Streets. .
The bnildiags will be supplied withhot and cold water and electric lights.Artesian water. Perfect sanitation.Rents reasonable.
For particulars apply to
J. LIGHTFOOT,
Qn the premises, or at .he office ofJ. A. ilagoon.
Metropolitan Msat Co.
-- -
108 KIMG STREET.5. Jm "WAJtttMkMt, - - - Manager.
Wholesale aadRetail
BUTCHERS andNAVY CONTRACTORS
." - ..r ..ft r.- vwr s Vi':'
'W- - .i-- - cJ-
- V J-. ft "8&V f.v,x fc' lT'-- ' ' l"'j1- - Sir - y
3fe-- .
4.-
V- -
-- 4
''IAr
7'
i
i
Mi
w
i, - J --JV,TTEr-- f ' f",t ,"ih .j .. XS K":fc- -i .'. - r " - V -- -..
X T." "r "? "S3""1'',H" Y
V
SIX THE HONOLULU REPUBLICAN WEDXESDAT, FEBRUARY 20. ioor.--0"
F1UFIHQ FEIBMUST5
E6liHE FOB PEACE
Absolute Application of the American
Constitution Desired Philippines
Should Be Part of the Federation
and a Sovereign State.
(Correspondence of the Associated" Press.)
MANILA, Janu. 25. The receritlyformed Federal party, whose platformwas promulgated on December 31. hasIssued the following announcement:
"It soon will be two years that thisInsurrection has gone on in the Isl-
ands, and every day that passes con-rlnc-
the Filipinos that the time forpeace has arrived and everyone knowshe beautiful words of the celebratedstatesman: 'Xo war is good, no peaceIs bad.' The Filipinos, in a commonbody. In a decided and firm movement,have proposed by all possible means,to have peace, and to work for thevearly establishment of a civil govern-ment that will be conducive to an eraof liberty, order and tranquillity,
--The Philippine people are more In-
terested than anyone m the world intheir own happiness, and the people,.wishing to get peace, In the most ap-
propriate way, may organize the newconstitution of our country by indus-try, agriculture and commerce, bywhich they may enter into the trueora of liberty and prosperity to which,cortaTnly, we shall soon come.
"For this we have the dear wish topropagate the idea of peace. We donot wish an egotistical grouping ofpoliticians, but we desire a reunionof all Filipinos who honestly wish forpoace and are disposed to work forit.
"Our aspirations appear clear andare practically enunciated in our plat-
form, and we will endeavor to sustainit as Filipinos who have for our hap- -
ptaoss and. consequently, for our cou-ntrythe greatest liberty and for the fu-tur- o
the absolute application of theAmerican constitution, with all therights that are enjoyed by each city ofthe groat republican federation.
"For this, we call ourselves Federal,because, under American sovereignty,the most just and unanimous aspira-tion of the Filipinos will be to form apart of the federation and be consti-tuted a coverelgn. free state in thesame form as exists in the UnitedStates.
"C"onsequently with these principlesto guide us, only to all our brothers,to all Filipinos, we open our arms soas to be victorious, now that peacewill be established.
May Become Civil Governor.MANILA, Feb. 9. Tayabas, the first
Southorn province pacified, will prob-ably bo the fourth in which a provin-gIb- I
government will be established.Col. Gnrdnor, of the Thirtieth regi-ment, which is at Manila on Its wayhome from Tayabas, will be governorot the province. The United Statescommissioner desires Col. Gardner toaccopt and Gonoral MncArthur has In- -
tlmnted that the Colonel might berolonsed for that purpose. When thecommission is on Its way southwardIt is likely to touch at Lucenac andostablish the Tayabas government
Commissioner Ide is completing thedraft of the civil law code. It abolish-o- s
all distinction in the law of equity.Tho court practice will be modeledsomewhat' on tho New Zealand plan.All suits will bo begun by a complaintand defendants will be required to an-
swer. Tho various forms or commence-ment of law suits in the United Stateswill bo dispensed with. There will beno Jury trials, but CommissionerWright, who is preparing the criminalcqde, Is arranging so that the judgeor justice will summon advisers Incriminal trials at his discretion. Therehas boon a vast amount of criticism oftho native judgos of the Manila firstinstance courts. Tho new code willrecreate the courts and the commis-sion will appoint new judges. Theseunquestionably will be Americans.
DR. LYM1H IBBQTT TALKS
OH NEGRO AND INDI1H
Civilization Must Respect Barbarian, Rights, But Barbarism' Has No
Rights In a Civilized Community,
BOSTON, Feb. 9. The Rev. Dr. Ly-man Abbott made srnio startling state-ments on the right of the negro Inthe south during his eighth lecture on"A study in the problems of demo-cracy" last night He said he applaud-e- d
the attempt in recent years to havethe best elements govern In the south.His lecture opened with a discussionof the Indian question, in which he
, said:"Barbarians have rights which civi-
lization must respect; but barbarismhas no rights in a civilized community.The wall which, has been erectedaround barbarism in toe form of In-dian reservations should be takendown and the Indians thrown out Intothe activities of civilized life to takecare of themselves. The negro prob-lem, he said, is more dltficutt, but canbe solved by the same law by a reversal on the one hand of the supremeand ' unreasonable confidence in theignorant negro and on the other ofthe supreme and unreasonable dis-trust of the slaveholder. It Is a mis-take to believe every people can vote.I do not wish to justify the methods,but I do applaud the attempt in re-cent years to have the best elementsgovern in the south. There should ".
characterjM. ,! "SLE iit.?!f""&"Should SOI b rffllrxl n hallnf Wane.his face Is black, when an ignorant,incompetent drunken white aa Is al-lowed the right of suffrage. Maahoodmust come first, suffrage afterwards.I regret the recrudescence of barbarism In the operation of lynch law,but with lynching In Ohio, with a ofTopeka aad another womaa demolish-la- g
I
drug stores in Chicago, we ustrealise that this evil is sot dtetiactlrsouthern."
ELECTION OF OFFICERS.
At the adosrned aasaal seetlng ofthe Bergstroa .MbsIc Coeay, Limit-ed, held this day, the following oQcerwere elected for the ensuing year:
J. "W. BergstnM. Presideat.C S. Desky, YIce-Presidea- L
C J. Hctchlns, Treasurer.W. O. Atwater, Secretary.A-- F. Cooke, AuditorThe above constitute the Board of
Directors.VT. O. ATWATER,
Secretary.Honolulu, Feb. 16. 1S0L
. 215-3- t
THEROBERT GRIEVE PUBLISHING CO,
LIMITED.
Notice of Special Stockholders Meet-
ing.
A special meeting of the stockhold-ers of the Robert Grieve PublishingCompany, Utnlted, will be held at theoffice of Magoon &. Thompson in theMagoon Building, corner 01 Aiaueaand Merchant street, on Saturday, the2.1rd dav of February. A. D. 1901, at 3
o'clock p. m. The purpose of saidmeetlnz is to amend the By-La- ofthe Company, with reference to thenumber of Directors, to conform wunthe Charter of the CoroDany"rand toelect a Board of Directors In conformity with such amendment
FRANK a THOMPSON.President of the Robert Grieve Pub-
lishing Co-- Ltd.By EDWIN S. GILL,
Secretary.
Auction Sale!OF- -
DELINQUENT 8TDEK
IN THE TERRITORY STABLLS CO.,
Limited.
ON WEDNESDAY, FEBY 27th, 1901,
AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON.
At my salesroom, Co Queen Street,Honolulu, I will sell at Public Auction,by order of he Treasurer, G. Schaman,the following certificates 01 stock inthe Territory Stables Co., Ltd., unlessthe amount due, with interest and ad-
vertising expenses, is paid on or be-
fore the day and hour of sale, at officeof G. Schuman, Merchant streetCert No. Shares. Amt Due.
8 150 ?75014 i.U 4 023 10 5031 5 5042 5 25
9 10 140
J. F. MORGAN, Auctioneer.
The Hawaiian
Hardware Co., Ltd.
(Importers and Dealers in
Hardware; Crockery,
and Glassware
2, 3 and 4 Light Chandeliers and Electroliers, Metal auu Ulass Lamps,Lamp Fixtures
Paints, Oils and Varnishes,
Lard oil. Cylinder oil, Dynamo oils, etc.Powder, Shot and Caps, Agricul-tural Implements, etc.
House Furnishing Goods, Etc.
Silver Plated Ware of all descriptionsTabio Cutlery-et-
c.
Plantation Supplies o!
Every Description.
Hart's Patent " Duplex" Die Stock forPipe and Bolt Cutting; RubberHose, plain or wire bound, etc.
Agents for
The lermotot- -
Made of steel and will last longer andgive better satisfaction than anyother manufactured.
Oriers from tho other Islands soli-cited and promptly filled
tor House RestaurantComer K; &, Alafe ja Streets.
MeUs served at all hours.First class in every detail
AH CHUCK,Proprietor.
IllM llll) Nl illlli'SLBTTEED.
D. P. R. ISENBERQ, Prudent .
CHAS. BELLINA, Manager.
518 Fort Street.
First class rigs at fair prices.
Notice.xvouce is Hereby gives mat tee rearl
City cemetery ope tor. Inter.ments oa and after Hoaday. Novem- -ber 5, 19Kt. A special funeral traiawill leave the railroad statkm at 2:15p. hk dally, remaining at the ceme-tery until after, all iateraeHts.
The rates for transportation are oaedOt.ar for $he corpse and tfty ceatsfor the round trip for mourners.
Lots arc now on sale at the officethe company. rangiBs.ia price from
$& P. accosting to tocaUo.anil ske.!No other charges of any natHre.HAWAIIAN CEMETERY ASSOCIA-
TION, LTD.,Room 3 Love Bnildicr, Fort SL
The Olhite House430 lt Street.
GENTSFURNISHING GOODS
COLORED SHIRTS 50c, 75c, A$1.00
WHITE SHIRTS 75c, $1.00, $1.25
UNDERSHIRTS 35c; 50c, 65c
UNDER DRAWERS , 50c, 65c, 75c
SWEATERS '. . ." 75c, 1.50
SOCKS 15c, --20c, 25c pair
COLLARS 12Ac, 15c, 20c
CUFFS. 20c, 25c, 30c pair' SUSPENDERS .1 .?. .f. . . . ..'. . . ! 35c, 50c, 75c
The CQhite House- 420 FORT STREET,
Best MANILAHAVANA
MEXICANAMERICANPORTORICA
AT
11 mi If 1U Tfimnnn fin IT!1nAnailAn IUDAUUU UU. LIU.,
Jl ,t Jt JJ ,J Jt . V .j: J t ,!
'Phone 390.
HOUSE-WIRIN- G
That will stand Underwriters' InsuranceInspecti-- n is the only quality of viringwe do. : : : : :
BETTER GET OUR FIGURES.
IE ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEE OUR WORK!
All the Latest Styles in Fixturesand Reading Lamps in Stock,
The Hawaiian Electric Co.. Ltd.ALAKEA
jt dt dt js jit jt & & v & ot o
I -
x
'-- ISiTHE
Pioneer -
Tnniscoiiiiiiciilal
Railway
OR THE
MlteSTiTES
AMERICA
CigarsTHE
tJor. Xanana and Merchant Sts .andHotel St.opp,Bethel. P.O. Box 979
tf &V V V
"Works 'Phone, 389.
: : i
t jt jj j & & te dt
THE ONLY THROUGH
OCEAN TO OCEAN LINE
ACROSS THE UNITED STATES
UNDER ONE X1XACEMENT
8,000 Milesof Railway irf3,500 Miles of Steamship Lines
OPERATED BETWEEN
SAX FEMGISC0 -
the Amertvtn Gateway of the Pacific,
M TORE GITTthe Atlantic Gateway and th
SULF OF MEXIfil III C.I.R PUTS
THE MOST MODERIN AND COM-
PLETE EQUIPMENT
The Southern Pacific Company andits allied lines, the Pacific Mail andOccidental and Oriental Steamshipo mpanies, link together in firm com-mercial relatians the United Statesor Air erica. rxwaUan Islands, Japan.China And U s Philippine Islands, andafford th
MOS" DIRECT,COMPLETE and EFFICIENTTRAFFIC FACILITIES
to and from all parts of the world.Four Thousand Mile of Road are
operated on. the Pacific Coast of theUnited States, and it is the only Lineby which all the great attraction efCalifornia are reached.
Its attractive and Instructive liter-ature abouf CcSfornia aad'other placesoa its Uxixj is re to alL Sei for IL
For inforsBztkm of aay Jdad coacera-in- g
travel' atd traffic oa this Com-pany's lii.es, rfly to cr address aayof the IeI!olB aeatsr
SAN P RANCISCO, CAL, U. . A.. O. McCoiStlik. ?ae: Trac.'Maa- -
ger; T. EC Goodaaa, Geral
HQHQUJLV, H. I."'H. HsckfeK 4 O. kM.
zoo :. mLOTS
HTKAPIOI.ANI TRACT
For Sale!
THE' KAPIOLANI TRACT extendsfrom Kins street to the beach. A roadof 60 feet tridtb. will be opened on theeast side of the property adjoining theKamehamehi Girls School; saM roadvr.J extend to the sea.
CROSS ROADS will be opened, be-
tween blocks. ETerr lot will have afrontage on a road. The deration va-
ries from 40 feet high 10 10 feet highabove sea leveL
THERE IS AN OFFER io bnr a partof the property by a great manufactur-ing company. The chances are the of-
fer may be accepted. There is everyreason to believe the prices of lots u-il- l
increase In a short time. The ownerof the property will give all chancesto purchasers to make money on thelrinvestments.
THE GROUND IS SUPERIOR toany tract In the market
THE PREMISES are situated withinone mile and a half from the post-offic- e.
THE GOVERNMENT water pipesare laid along the upper portion of theproperty.
THE PRICES are ..he cheapest ofany tract within two miles from thecenter of the city.
THE TERMS which will be given topurchasers will be the best ever givenby any Real Estate Dealer or Brokerduring the last twenty years in Hono-lulu.
FOR TERMS or more particulars,apply to '
S. M. Kanakanui,Surveyor and Manager of
1
Kapiolani Tract Co.,
OR TO- -
W. C. Achi & Go.,Real Estate Dealersand Brokers.
February 8, 1901.
SEATTLE BEEROn "Draught or in Bottles
at the"CRITERION"
sMVSAsAAAM
m- ,?"--
. I
$ t
PRSOES
A,
ON
TO
5ft
IFWE
Start the
manHave system. saratine, worry
Letter Files
Car. Ixiei Files
BKHient Files
and many other labor-savin- g devices
Wall, NiGhols Co. Ltd.
Theo. H. Oayfes & Co.. Ltd.
SCGAR FACTORS.IMPORTERS OF
GENERAL MERC ANDISE.
COMMISSION
"agents forCanadian-Australia- n Steamship Line
Lloyds, British & Foreign Marine Insurance Go.
Northern Assurance Co. (Fire and Lifo).
Canadian Pacific Railway Co.
Pioneer Lino of Packets Liverpoo
j MOTICE !
&ad
WHEN WANT fGREEN RIVER
Do not accept goods bearing a similar name.
IS ONLY ONE
It is distilled by J. W.
"GBEEN BXVEB" the official whiskey of the D. S. Navy Dopt. J"GKEEN" RIVER" whiskey was the Gold Medal nfr tho Parss J
Exposition, 1900.
For Sale in AH and by
W. C. & CO., Ltd., Sole Agts. JTAKE NO SNBSTITUTES.
GOING RAPIDLY!
Eacific HeightsThose who delay purchasing now will regret the
chance they have missed.
LOTS
' 1
SUDT ALL
$300 to $3
T M 1 I k "TTTTT " VTIT
W A-- K--
wn r
T--
-
k
.
W
JlrftlES.
mew raxa
ex-pna- e.
MERCHANTS.
from
YOTJ
THERE
is isawarded
Saloons
WKISSBffySTcCalloch, Owenaboro, Ky.
z
P
AJ 5
FI$QM
-- f
-- ?"
DISTRICT
- s
H" fL s""
VI I --r 11 --ft
Every Lot-i- s reached by a delightful ride upon HawaiiFirst Electric Railway
1ST INYESTMEKT EVER OFFEHONOLULU'S CHOICEST RESIDENCE
1
i
i?or fturther Particular s aifdTerms,rsee
PBQGEESS BLOCK.
and
Sitatt
WHISKEY
PEACOCK
11 4k tr
4- - J4. -- J -- A:J? v"
aai r- " r'i.fe- - JUS '--'
t"
T
y
Y
y
'!mgf "wr-v- ae
V
1
ft
XK
fJl
; I
fi tf.liM-- gt. 1F" "
v "n'" W'- - "Tr '"wtj-- !
m ONOiXTXr3lOT3LIcixJ TKB!$KESDaf FEBRUARY jcyH;xooooooooiS6ooooocoooooo&xyx
OURNEW DANCING SLIPPERS
An Immense Jiew StockTHE SWELLEST STYLES IN
DANCING SLIPPERS EVER SHOWN:
White Sir P rs, in kids and canvas; Ideal Patent Kids,, nnn ixm nnrl tli rp-slrar- r. natent leather "Dora1 It vu. . u.. 1-
- x- - -
Delsarte" ana "LTetite" Sandals gems" of
beauty; sll new creations. t
AHICOI TOTJ :D0N'T sn,w' "WHAT STYLES) W AE u1 3"oa ' ave inspected oar stock X
- - . - "
nGinerny7s noe otore j
A GRAND SWEEPING
25 PER CENTREDUCTION SALE!
ALL OUR PRESENT STOOK OF"
MILLINERY GOODS, BELTS, CORSETS, ETC.
' TRIMMED BBS, SILK SHIRT WAISTS,
F0OR-1H-HAK- D AND LACE TIES,
Will be sacrificed at this 25 per cent reduction in order tomake room for a handsome new stock of Spring Goods.
"The stocks offered are all genuine bargains. An in- -
vestigation will prove it.
ftie M. E. Killean Co., Ltd.Arlington Dlock. ' Hotel Street.
iSSwra"?
weeping Reductions
I-N-
LADIES'
TAILOR
SKIRTS
MADE
IN BLACK AND NAVY BLUE SERGE,
LADIES' CLOTH, CAMEL HAIR. .
Ladies' Fast BlackLisle Hose..- -
:?laac Lace .aaad. ZDropqtitcl--..t 50c a ZFaix.
' ,
,
Fine German Rugs. x 27s55,'.at $4SO.
Wo are Solo Araiits of the famous 8
: Royal "Worcester Qprset!All the leading numbers in stock.
i5$$$tttfttttttrS$Stt" " '
ai " " r.C aVSlaaaaJaTaaaaaaaaaamaaaBBBBBaaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaMkHBBBBMBBlVBHi'
1
WWJfrVM aaiiaMM-ti-a,
W"wwwvfTvwwa (? N 5
e1
--
JJ
w - ?r ex--. - - "- -. - sr
Parlors.c
Bn 4, Efite BMiMfef, HeteTHE DENTAL SFECrAlJSTS.
More Crearf Dental Chair.
Teeth extracted axd filled absetateiywkissaat pain by asr late scieatLfeisetbods. No sleep jirodaciag agestsor cocaine. These are the oaly dentalparlors in Hosotela that have the patent appliances asd fngreSients to extract, fill and apply gold crowns andponcelaia crowns, uade&ectable froa.natural teeth, and warranted for tenyears. without the least particle ofpain. Gold crowns and teeth withoutplates, gold fillings and all other den-tal work done painlessly and by spe-
cialists.
..Gold crowns, $5; full. set teeth, $5;bridge work. 55; gold filling, $1 up; sil-
ver fillings, 50c
NOVATES Fall
Any work that sh 'lid not prove satisfactory will be at nded to free ofcharge any time with i 5 years.
"We are making a specialty of gold, crowns and bridge workj the mostbeautiful, painless and durable of alldenial work known to the profession.
I Our name alone will be a guaranteethat your work will be of the best. "We
have a specialist in each department.Best operators, best gold workmenand extractors of teeth; in fact all thestaff are inventors of modern dentis- -
try. ue will tell you In advance exactly what your worK will cost by freeexamination. Give us a call and youwill find we do exactly as we adver-tise.
-- -
innLPAWRoom 4 Elite Building, Hotel St
LADIES IN ATTENDANCE.
Send AwayTo Your Friends
illohn
from
HawaiiCalendar
For Sale hy
HAWAIIAN NEWS CO.Limited:
FISH MARKETBOOTlH
F. W. KliEIN, Manager.
Has Constantly ok Hand a ChoiceLine of
Imported andDomestic Meats:Fish; Live andUefrigerated PoultryButter, Eggs, Cheese, Potatoes,Fruits and Vegetables.
Two deliveries daily to any placewithin city limits at 9 ajn. and 3 pan.
Customers desiring to have their or-ders delivered are respectfully request-ed to call and leave the same prior tothe hours a"bove named.
Arrangements are being made to in-
stall a telephone.
I HOHOLULU
STEM IK CO.
WE BEG to inform our patronsand the general public that we
have just installed Xew Machineryid have, also succeeded in securing
more Tirst Class Workmen fromthe Coast. Oar work in the futurewill give better satisfaction than be-
fore. We wash
rLJiiCL5ind guarantee not to shrink them
Mo Chinamen Employed.-- -
3FFKE SMHkM StrNt-P- IHE SIS.
cyurdeb mm mA CIUSDER PRESS, S goodcondition Jest the pros for. aweilv paper. "Will be sold at abarman, s t . & -- -
- ' jLV&JkWi&siaomxl
New'stftteTdem:.. .
Dc Grace it JBHo retaraeayestscday.
JL SL HartveH was aa ostgoiag' pas--sesger ia tfce Claaaiae.
, Droj ia aad jseet jmar friea4 attke St. Cermaaia BilHard Parlors.
J-C-L Pratt, t Brace TTarias ft Cct
left, for Silo oa bssiaesa is the Klaaa.F. J-- Cross, the eleetridaa aad wire-- 1
wes tetegrapk pro&oter, left la theCkiBdlae "
Ctareace SC White, okkeeper ofthe 0. 3L :! Co, Is aboat asaia aftera short Ulaeae.
S. M. Ballot, A. TT. Carter asd GeeH. Robertson were aaos; the pas-sengers for wiadward ttorts In theUiaan.
A meetlag of the" Associated CharitU" nu sre UC1U uiis KiierBOOSL Annmber of business matters will beooasidered.
All who haTe patronized the Ter-ritory Stables pronounce their turn-out satisfactory in. every way. Onetrial makes a steady customer.
William McKay, superintendent of"Wilders Steamship Co. at Hilo, re-turned to that town In, the Kinauafter spending a few days in Hono-lulu.
J. A. Brady Is an architect returninghome In the Coptic from Japan, wherehe has been superintending an earthqu-
ake-proof palace for the CrownPrince.' A break in the machinery of theHawaiian Electric Company's plantyesterday morning caused a shuttingdown of power and lights for about ahalf hour.
The First National Bank and theFirst American Savings Bank & TrustCo. have been listed on 'change. Theformer stands at a premium of 10 andthe latter 5 per cent.
Unless a United States transportpasses along this way, the mail sentto the Coast yesterday aboard theCoptic is the last for the Mainlandfor the month of February.
Mrs. Kinney will lecture on Ibsenbefore the i . "W. C. A. in the associa-tion hall, Progress block, Thursdayevening, at S o'clock. The Travel Clubhas made all arrangements for thelecture.' "
C. S. Desky made the trip from thepower house to the summit of PacificHeights, in an ejectric car the otherday. in eight minutes. The ballastingof the track being now about perfect-ed, the cars are making greater andeasier speed.
The Literary Circle of the KilohanaArt League will hoil its fourth enter-tainment on Saturday afternoon,March 2, at theleague rooms. Taelecturer will be Mrs. H. M. Mott-Smlt- h,
who will take as her subject"A Little Trip Through the Nether-lands."
Mr. Isle, representing the greatpacking houses of Swift & Co. andLibby. McNeill & Libby, Chicago, ar-rived in the Doric and will leave inthe Nippon Maru, pursuing a routeleading round the-wor-ld. F. L. Wald-ro- n,
manager of the grocery depart-ment of Theo. H. Davies & Co., Ltd.,has introduced the visitor to manytownsmen.
Mrs. T. May has invited the Y. W.C. A. to her home on Kinau street nextMonday evening at S to hear MissAckerman and Miss Murcutt speak.As they leave for Japan the next daythe evening will be a farewell meet-ing to them. It is hopeu tue memberswill see that women who do not be-long to the association have an in-vitation to this pleasant evening.
WATER SYSTEM INSPECTED.
Independent Legislators Visit Pump-ing Plants and Reservoir.
A delegation of about a score of In-dependent legislators made a thor-ough inspection of the water systemof Honolulu yesterday under thechaperonage of Superintendent An-drew Brown. The visitors were con-veyed to the Nuuanu reservoir; andafterward were shown the pumpingplants at Palama and Beretania street.
Superintendent Brown was calledupon to explain many points aboutthe water supply of the city. ex-pedition proved a profitable one, asmuch information was imparted bythe officials, who were in turn "thank-ed by the lawmakers for the specialefforts made in their behalf.
Road Improvements.Kalihi read is soon to be plared in
presentable shape by the Road De-partment Road Superintendent Mars-to- n
Campbell has had a force of. menat work on the thoroughfare for thepast few days, scattering macadamand rolling it Into the, surface. Kingstreet in the vicinity of .Palama is alsobeing similarly treated. The rockcrushing plant is consuming largequantities of road making substance,and converting it into macadam.- -
i
Reports of a very rich find in the At-H- n
district near Discovery., on Pinecreek, owned by Fritz Miller, havebeen received. Gravel going $3.50 tothe shovel has been found on bedrock.
"COLLEGE HILLS"
Toiisirafiinisstittil-r- p
mbir if ipplicuts, the
first ckiict of Ills ii this
Sftaii. sibirk will ki
sa!i
itklioiiSATJBDAY,MABdH23.
k tar ifsit prici is fixtiHihWs;..tis,ttrf
vnRAffl fWM &B
. Apply ta tlM ala IfHta,XOVB CO., aiwt
w..tw CAWiJt, jm?j- -
jm:"FrxoRcriafr
Auctioneer aitf Broker6SQTTEEK
v VSK v
"23k $ --x!V
Tikpim 72
iMDJSMI
VflliUflBliE
City
PropertyUnder instructions from the attorneys
r of COLONEL C. C. KOOKE, Iwill sell at Public Auctioavat mysalesroom, 65 Queen St, Honolulu,
O-S-
s
K.
SflTUHBflY
l 1901....
At 12 O'clock Noon
the following valuable prop-erty, situated in the busi-ness portion of Honolulu :
LOT A Property between Hotel andBeretania streets, having a frontageof 10S feet on Fort street, 171 feetrunning through to Union street and1S4.3 feet on Union street Contains28,621 square feeL This property isnow occupied by the Wright Car-riage Co. and severa stores.
LOT B Adjoins Lot A on Unionstreet, having a full frontage of S9.8feet on Union street, 14.6 feet onHotel street, 82 feet rear boundaryand a depth of 70.2 feet. Propertyadjoins King Bros.' store on Hotelstreet and contains 3,284 square feet.
LOT C Property on the corner ofNuuanu and Beretania streets,known as Queen Emma Hall prop-erty. Frontage of 196 feet on Bere-tania street, 205.5 icet on Nuuanustreet, 203.7 feet on Chaplain street,217.2 feet on rear boundary. Con-tains 41,993 square feeL,Attention of investors is called to
this offering of the finest store andbusiness property offered for sale inthis city. For further particulars ap-ply to
J1S. F. MORGAN, Auctioneer
65 QUEEN STREET
--AX- .
Private Sale!The lease on a first class
rooming house, centrally located anddoing a profitable business. House con-tains 28 bed rooms, parlor, diningroom, kitchen, etc. Excellent reasonsgiven for selling, and prospectusshowing the income and expenses of'the business can be seen by calling atmy office.
JAS. F. MORGAN",65 QUEEN STREET.
onoiiii evisThe Tri -- Weekly Leading Newspaper.
Best Job Printing at Lawest Prices.
Proprietor, --
Editor, - - -
Office: Kukui Lane.
DR. T. --OTAJrrjBA- - - r.
P. O. BOX 822.132.
DR. W. J eiLBUITI.
Office 4d Residence:
CORXER BeBETAICA AND Ar.Aintu 8TS.
OFFICE xiOUBS--9 to 10-- a. m 2 to, 4p.Mand7to8p.lt.
SUNDAY&--9 to 10 a. jl, 7 to 8. p. m
TELEPHONE 204.
CUSSFIED IQVEIITiSEIEITS.
be vutrted at 10 call a laejtnt bacrticn: 5caU a Hue stand mtcrtixi; 25 ptr hxpa vrrk35 eoiilj? bae fctw rcxeia, and SO eaix jxrhne ft.wunih.
YOUNG man board and lodg-ing with private family.terms. W. P. C Republican onice.
CONTRACTORS to getfrom Pacific Mill Co-- Ltd, Alakcanear Queen Streets.
POB SAXX.
DOORS, Sashes, blinds and mouldings.Pacific Mill Co., Ltd., Alatea nearQueen StreeL
X0S -U--RT.
TELv, WHITE
State
FORRENT --Five-room famishedwith bath, electric lights, etc.
Taralt-f-e for sale." Apply to S. ORejahllcaa , CMBce.
TO LET --CoveaIet'6-reoHi cottage.Healthy locatioK., IaMae Asylumroad. 1S per aoata. FaanyStraaekr
THE
xmcrrsA
WANTED.
requires
estimates
cot-.tag-e,
FOR. RENT Liht, airy a- -i nicelyfarmlhi. roe;fat the --Wte, haM-I- a.
Mrs: Ho4o,Jh-r- d Seer.'
! v -
..
'V
I , I
f I. S. SacHs Dnr Goods Co. !M ' JL"vs
6 X2XXX3EB.
nr coirJtFHcnoir with ourSAT.K OF
Plain and Fancy Taffeta Sis t
WE STTATT. OFFER.
FOR THIS WEEK ONLYThe Whole of Our Immense Stock of
LADIES' MUSLIN UNDERWEARAT BABGAIN PBICES
WE SHALL SELLLADIES' NIGHT GOWNS for 75 Cents; Regular Price $1.00
c " " " $1?00 " 1.25125
" " " .1.50LADLES' TUCKED SKXRTS, 75 Cents,LADIES' TRIM-CE- D SKIRTS, $1.00
ii (i 125" 1.50
LADIES' CORSET COVERS, CentsCents
LADIES' DRAWERS for Centst4 " 75 Cents
1.501.75
Regular Price $1.001.251.502.25
85c.
Cents$1.00
"We want you to bear in mind that no valueshave ever been offered in Honolulu before. It doesnot pay to make underwear at home when the ready-to-we- ar
article can be bought for so little money.
I JS. S. Saclis Dry fioods Co., Ltd. I
? JnBBFFR r i
I
RETAILERS--TOEBT STIBEBT.
O0000000WE WANTTO DO YOUR
r
- .!
K BPKa
I !? V
,? ?s-- Jl If
,?
G" 7V- -'rf
SPICIAI.
. ..
i
,
i50
' 6530
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-- fvl
44 44
44 44
41 4J
44 $2.00 &&$1.00
44
such
00
0
2
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S
LAUNDRY WORKAND WE KNOW THAT
WE CANSATISFY YOU
BECAUSE
P.
We have pure laundry sovf., specially manufactured by.the Troy Laundry Machinery Co. for laundry This will
not injure the finest fabric, and good washed with It aroentirely free from odor.
We use Pure Artesian Water from ourjwn well on thopremises.
We do not use chemicals (which will Injure" fabrics) !n
the washing machines.
Soiled linen never comes In contact wood in theprocess of washing. Our working machines are all polished
brass and cannot become permeate"-- 1 with disease germs. Ourother machines are all of the very latest "Invention and aro
guaranteed not,to tear or Injure fabrics.
Our employes have long experience In the various
branches of the work In which they are employed, and thor-
oughly undersand the treatment that each particular fabricrequires. They reside In our own cottages, which are keptscrupulously clean and sanitary.
We do plain mending and icw on buttons free of charge.
We call for and deliver all wdrk promptly.
Our charges are reasonable.
If you telephone MAIN 73 wearound to your home.
--&-
90c.
45
use.
with
will sen4 our wagons
The SanitarfSeam LaUqdry GoSOUTH AND QUEEN STREETS.
Up-To- Office, 116 Hoterstreet (Old Elite Building).
Honolulu Dairvmen's Association,LIMITED
FnslGreii, Hilt ami Butter Dailv
SBT
, OFFICE ATD3ClXXDIPOT-Sherid- an Street, TelepLn White 41
XZUC DZ70T eiidan Street. Telephone White 241.". - -
9-- 9
l J)
-
-
6 -i s
Jl
7
.
0
00
0
.
-- -
t
44
44
44
V
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EIGHT
BANKRUPT STOCK SALE !!
Tor the Ladies:a new of
in
ers,in the
in all
on of in
14 ! !
Jt fffKg
..
i 4 "tr AT" rW
I- -
3y4
'
PREDICTS CHANGES IN
MAP OF THE WORLD
Bishop Thoburn of the Methodist
Church Makes an Interesting
Forecast of European Politics.
CHICAGO. February S. "The ver-
dict of God seems to be, 'Either civi-
lize or move off the earth!"' This"was an uttorance of Governor Shawof, Iowa at a missionary meeting herotoday, which was attended by leadingdivines in theIt furnished the keynote for an ad-dro-
by Bishop J. I. Thobaun, theecho of winch is,, likely to sounddro6S by Bishop J? M. Thoburn, therules the destinies of thousands ofMethodists in Southern Asia. His ac-
quaintance with European and Asiaticitjilit lr (e Vt i r ntiil tt -- frtn ltr"r
this b.fe f" .?audience that gave welgut to his
momentous statements.The prelate predicted that astonish-
ing changes the tnnp of the worldwore impending. New empires, hosaid, would arise, and there would besuch alterations of old lines that thegeographies today will bo laughedat a few years hence. Especially sig-nificant were his remarks about Eng-land, Germany and the United States.
two former, in tho Bishop's esti-mation, are to be world powers. Heboldly predicted that within a shorttimo Germany would bo supreme overthat part of Austria bordering on theAdriatic; would probably procure AsiaMinor; would oust Russia In Turkes-tan districts, and, with England,would finally rule all Southern Asiafrom the Mediterranean to the Yellowsea.
The prelate had no hesitation in ad-vocating American rule In the Philip-pines, Insisting that our system ofgovernment woula suppress crime nmyriad form. Said he, tersely: "Tho"United States would bring In light andshut out darkness."
He also declared that the Admin-istration should bo more emphatic inIts culnese pocy. at tho same timegiving his audience to understandthat ho is ngatnst partition. TheBishop was most positive in declar-ing that when peaco Is restored inChina an overwhelming wave of Chris-tianity will sweep over that vast em-Tir- e.
WALES AND OUR LIBERTY BELL
It Was Rescued From a Dirt Heap at'" ' His Suggestion.
Prom the Philadelphia Press.Tho Prince of Wales, during his
visit io Philadelphia In 1SG0. rescaedthe Liberty Bell from a dirt heap andraised it to that position which Ithow occupies in the American people'shearts.
Some ironical cltiren conceived thoIdea of taking the priaco to I&dejwBd-enc- o
hall to view the treasures whichare the most forcible reminder ofAteerica'6 ""defi" to her mother coaa-tr- y.
The prince saw the portraits of thoea w)k stirred nth lae-'molgtl-
.. x.
$
- imntfr irTmjm l,L ? Jr ; sa.r
fc i n;m .mm .'i m"i nwirrf i Wii fcJEdW-- '" "7" - " -- , fs 7 i5 -- s? 'rf- - . - . t c. V
; . .
upon them. He looked with Intereston the manuscript of the Declarationof Independence, and he did not flinchwhen he had placed in his hands thoswords of men who hewed down thellower of his royal progenitor's army.
Finally he came to a garret Thiswas where the bell was rung when thodeclaration was read, he was told.1 hen ho wanted to know what had be-come of the bell. They found forhim with the aid of their canes. Itwas hidden away beneath a mass ofpeanut shells, orange peels, waste pa-per and other debris.
No one seemed to mind what hadbeen discovered except the Prince ofWales. He was apparently appalled.For the moment he forgot he was aBriton; ho fiazed upon tno poor crack-ed bell that had rung at a nation'sbirth, and then he spoke the wordsthat made the American people seethat they were neglectful.
"This old bell," he said, "Is thegreatest relic this republic has today.Instead of being here, covered withthis accumulated dirt, it should oc--
and it was knowledge of fact ? ll?
bis
in
of
The
it
...... muii;uucui.v. 11 IS lu UUwhat the Magna Charta is to England.It is cracked, but It Is an Inspiration.Believe me, my friends, it affects memore than anything I have beenshown."
That was the renaissance of theLiberty BelL No more uirt wasthrown upon it During tho civil warits name was used to stir the Unionsoldiery, and then when the Chicago"World's fair began it was taken thereso that men and women from all partsof the world might see it Todaythe Liberty Bell is America's greatestrelic, and the Prirce of Wales, nowKing Edward tho Seventh, made it so.
The war in South Africa began ontho 11th of October, l.j, when CapeColony and Natal were invaded by theBoer armies. It has thus been In pro-gress for 453 days, and the prospect ofa restoration of peace is still remote.
Danger of Colds and La Grippe.The greatest danger from colds and
la grippe is their resulting in pneumo-nia. If reasonable care js used, how-ever, and Chamberlain's Cough Reme-dy taken ,all danger will be avoided.Among the tens of thousands whohave used this remedy for these diseases wo have yet to learn of a singlecase having resulted in pneumonia,which shows conclusively that it is acertain preventive of that dangerous,luajsuy. it win cure a cold or anattack of la grippe in less time thanany otner treatment It is pleasantand safe to take. For sale by Benson,Smith & Co., General Agents for theTerritory of HawaiL
Pfcetefraj fee laky.Hare you bad a photo takes of babyj
rhat's the qjiestion every mother isin. Baby is babv oalr once in
lifetime asd what parent dees not cherishthe acaaflry of his happy, care-fre-e ways?
Tfeea perhaps Hakiad fate has soae-tlrin- p
sinister In store for htm, w&okaowx?
Have a pliete of feaby by all aeaasatwl don't pet it off.
Kia? Bros. nake a specialty of chMpkotoerjuky at tbeir oew studio, U0Hotel sfwi.
aa tie aid sot gase listlessly Rt them. Book Wndlag.tnm ua is always sat-M-tmade colIsBeatary coaraeats Isfsttcry. ' - -
$.":4
. -
-THE- -HONOLULU JPUBUGAX, EDKESDAYX JEBRUART
The entire stock of L. T THOMPSON" & CO 898 nd 90 bboadway: NEWtYQBK
We must clear out DURING THE NEXT 14 DAYS the balance of the above stockJust received ex "Helene" and "Zealandia."
We have and well assorted collectionDRESS GOODS Dimities, Organdies, Lawns,Percalos, Ohalies, Ginghams, Chambrays, Zeph--
etc., etc.UNDERWEAR Newest Styles.BATHING SUITS shapes, materials and
sizes.
now the
first
J. H. FISHER & CO.
Members of Honolulu Exchange
and Bond
411 FORT STREET.
Advances Made on Approved Security
NEW
EINGS, PINS
WATCHES
Sterling Silverware, Etc.
Jewelry 404, Fort Street
iron Go
...STEAM ENGINES...
BOILERS, SUGAR MILLS, COOL-ER- S,
BRASS and LEAD CASTINGS,
and Machinery of every descriptionmade to order. Particular attentionpaid to ship's blacksmithing. Johwork executed on shortest notice.
Compmy
FREIGHT andfor
POBTS
E.
Istimataa farniahed Tirst-da- M
TkePiteeam4-.
P. O. Bx iea
- --
-
. igof. -
'
a
jrf Owaers, Arcai- -Muextat:
,$- - " -- - a
115 TJmiem It. j
ROLL
TYPEWRITERS'
BOOKKEEPERS'
Tor the Gentlemen:A and complete stock of HABERDASH-
ERY.Shirts Collars, Pajamas, Socks,
Handkerchiefs, Bathing Suits.PANAMA HATS in the very latest New
shapes; also a great of Felt andHats at reasonable figure.
Householders!!We have hand largest stock DOMESTICS the City. SHEETINGS and PIL-
LOW CASINGS, BEST QUALIT F,TABLE LINENS NAPKINS,TOWELS, BLANKETS, QXTCLTS.
Remember this Sale lasts ONLY DAYS Call early and secure choice
McthodisUorganization.
Iv. B. KBRR & CO, Ivtd.QUERN STREET
Stock Brokers
GOODSBRACELETS
BROOCHES
BIART'S
Honoiuiu Works
WILDER'S
Steamship
PASSENGERS
ISLAND
W. QUINNPLUMBER
NeckwearUnderwear,
Yorkassortment
Straw
and
Received per Bktne. "WRESTLER"
A CARLOAD 0E-- THE CELEBRATED
"MAifcEY DESKSManufactured by theFJRED. MACEY DESK CO Grand Eapids,
Michigan, consisting of
FLHT TOP
TOP -
..
full
omceDESKS
t
LHDIES'
Sectional Bookcases, Cabinets, Etc.
FOR SALE AT SAN FRANCISCO PRICES BY
H. HACKFELD. 5 CO,LIMITED
EXCLUSIVE DEALERS HAWAII TERRITORY
McOLURE'S MAGAZINE, Strong Features for 1901 1 ' .
Kin 99
....Riidyard Kipling's New'Novel....The most important and longest piece of work Kipling hasyet undertaken. It is a story of life in India.
NEW "DOLLY DIALOGUES," lay Anthony HopeShort Stories by each Authors as
JOEL CHANDLER ROBERT BARR,'SARAH ORNE JEWETT and HAMLIN GARLAND.
Special Articles on Subjects in
Science, Biography, Nature Studies, Newrlnreh- -
f - ,3-".''- ' tinne QTrl PI let it- - i - "
&.- - ?.
.
-uuuo uuu. uuiuir -,-- .
, . , by those most competeat to write Ihesu -- k
" --v . TT.T.TTSTKAXICars XT TWR BSST ARTISTS, i f V ,
VV' - ?.- -- .Q cjrJSTS A COFT
i --&& t & tl.OOAIIAK
TH: SJ S?-TlleGUX- Jf?E
, "141-lJEae- t" i5th Strcct&cw York; N. 1J
HOME
DESKS
Chairs,
HARRIS,
Popular
V A
"- s- - .
--"V
a
The Century foMAGAZINE- -
Leading Periodical tho World"
Will Make 1901
"A Year of Romance"BESIDES great program of illus-
trated articles, superb panoramaof the Rhine, John Bach McMaster'sgroup of-- articles Oanlel Webster,color-picture- s, etc., The Centurypresent
Sbort Novels aid Complete Stories liy:Anstey,
Mrs. Burnett,Winston Churchill,Edwlu Ysa DIx,Hamlin Garland,David Gray.Joel Chandler Harris,Brel Harte,
Howells.Henry James,Sarah Ome Jewctt,
,v
- -
V t
"The of
aa
onwill
E.
W.D.
Rudyanl KipUnff,Ian Maclarcn.Thomas Xelon Pago,Bertba Kunkle.Flora Annie Steel,Frank K. Stockton.Ruth SIcEnery Stuart,Gen. Lew Wallace,Charter Dudley Warner,E Stewart Phelp Ward,MaryEWUklns.
"THE HELMET OF MYIRRE,"A great novel, full of life, adven-
ture, and action, the scene laid inFrance three hundred years ago, be-gan in the August, 1900, Century, andwill continue for several months in1901. Critics everywhere are enthu-siastic over the opening chapters ofthis remarkable stop. "Ine author'sfame Is apparently established withthis, her maiden effort," says the Bos-ton Transcript The Critic calls It'iA remarkable performance."
FREENew Subscribers to The Century
Magazine who begin with the, numberfor November, 1900, will receive freeof charge the three previous numbers, August, September anTl October,containing the first chapters of "TheHelmet of Navarre," or. If these num-bers are entirely exhausted at thetime of-- subscribing, they will receivea pamphlet containing all of ue chap-ters of "The Helmet of Navarre" con-tained in the three numbers.
Ask for the free numbers when sub-scribing. $4.00 a year.
the Genlupy Go,mill si.,ew mi
STAR DAIRY CO.
Boob 1, Jiagoon Bnild- -Ing, Corner and Alakea Sta.
C. O. LOMBA,(Badse Star.)
Telephone MAIN 391. , 'Dairy Telephone SLTJX 3171.
. Manager.
Thi OrphNm BarHAS X TVSZ USE OP
mBa.LiNnlHiiii,Eri.nrSlebTtte
LIMITED.
OFFICEMerchant
Collector.
J. K. MXSSSBEBG
t
e J
T
the Public
WE WISH TO THANK THE
people of Honolulu for "the
large patronage they have
bestowed on us. We are now
offering:
MEAT,POULTEY,PRODUCE, Etc.at Reduced Market Prices
with sn Improved Delivery
System.
P. O. BOX 219.
MARKET 00., Lid.
Bethel Street
The GalifotpiaIS THE BEKTEEL RESORT
OF'IONOLOLtf ,,ic -
Its appointments are cleanlyaudthe service, under the masterlyhands of Harry Knell, the well-kno- wn
mixologist of Saa Francisco,who is a past-mast- er in his art, andBob 31cCord, who knows what willtouch the Hawaiian heart, are soperfect that one has to accept theiaw as ma aown by Solomon:"lt him drink and forget his pov-erty, and remember his misery nomore."
Alter you have had your "drink,tarn to the home-li- ke lunch table'aad you will walk away murmuring:A "Volcano" lunch and a "Califor-nia" punch, is a very, very hot touch.
Mr. Vida and his staff are everready to greet you on Xuunanu,sear Xing Street.
Silent Bate Sbop
Axllactoa Slock,
Jorax mUTAXDix, re.r
5 "
J- - . K
- '' M e --- J"e - C. LZL$'. VfT- "pf'-r-- eifn.'mimaii"- - fw" m,jsLttHA . . -- w.
: Hotel St
--
Y
V
--v