8
MAILS From Sari Francisco Sierra. Auc. 21. For 6a n Francisco Ventura, Aug. 17. vFrom Vancouver: Niagara Sept 6. For Vancouver: Niagara; Aug. 18. o Kvtnlnp Hawaiian Tlullctirj. Star, Vol L'st. XXIV. 1KS2. No No. 7.VI7 .C 12 PAGES-HONOL- ULU, TERRITORY OF HAWAII, THt'KSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1010.-- 12 PAGES. PRICE FIVE CENTfl ran ma la MOT o o o O BULBARS SAY ALLIES ATTACK IS REPULSED Heavy Allied Infantry Attacks Break Against Strong Front Line FIERCE FIGHTRAGES AT LAKE DORIAN British and German Despatches Differ on Results of Western Battle (Amociated Pri by Federal Tirelei) UX1H)X, Kng., Aug. 17 Ac- cording to llulgariau official re- ports, heavy fighting Is in .pro- gress along the Balkan front, with the Allies taking the initiative. The despatch tells of strong infan- try attacks lieing thrown hark after fierce fighting, hut that the ..hat Me is still. raging at Lake Hoi-ran- , with the decision . still in doubt. ITALIANS STRAIGHTEN LINES; ADVANCE HALTS HOME, Italy, Aug. 17. The advance of the victorious Italians along the lower Isonzo is being held hack awaiting the straighten ing out of the line by the capture of the mountain range in San ia- - brielle, Sal Marino and other po-si- t ions bet veen Talmino and (iori-zia- . The capture of these strate- gic positions seems imminent. There will be, no advance on Tri-- . eKteintil.tbe positions' art; tak- en and'ilie'Une straightened out.' Austrians are being slowly driven from" Carso' plateau, the enemy fighting desperately in their re- treat. BRITISH MAKE GAINS ON SOMME r"R0NT LONDON, Eng., Aug. 17. Fierce fighting is still going on along the Somrne front. British troops have made substantial gains wesVflQd southwest of (Juil-lemeujJaj- vl in conjunction with thaFtncji'are advancing on Mau-- . repasj aloig a front of several miles. West o High wood a sec- tion of German trenches 300 yards wide and ."100 yards deep were captured after fierce hand-to-- . hand fighting, the enemy-contestin- every trencli stubbornly. COUNTER ATTACKS ON , SLAV LINES REPULSED KTKOGRAI, Russia. Aug. 17. The Teu ton i c a rmies along the whole front are sending terrific counter attacks on the Slav lines, Ij the hope of stemming the m-- . rush of the victorious Russians. and for the time being the advance has been checked. The whole eastern battle front is ablaze with violent' artillery and rifle duels. Counter attacks by the' enemy have all been repulsed. BERLIN SAYsTaLLIES : REPULSED IN WEST HERLIN, (lermany. Aug. 17. IJeavy Freuch and lint ish infau-try- - attacks along the s entire Somme frxnt have? leeii iepulsed. ARTILLERY AT MAUREPAS PARIS, France, Aug 17 A . violent artillery duel is in pro- gress north of Maurepas, evident- ly ireparatory to launching infan- try attacks against the battered trenches) f BASEBALL RESULTS I TODAY I -- 4 NATIONAL LEAGUE. At Chicago Chicago 1, New York 0. At Pittsburg Brooklyn 5, Pittsburg J. AMERICAN LEAGUE. At New York New York 5, Cleve- land 4. At Boston Bostcn 7, Chicago 0. At Philadelphia Philadelphia 4. St. 4 Louis 3. SL Louis 3 Philadelphia 2. At Washington Detroit 11, Wash- ington 6 (first game).; NEW YORK STOCK MARKET TODAY Following are the closing prices of stocks on the New York market to day, sent by the Associated Press over, the Federal Wireless: Yester Today, day. Alaska Gold 15 17U American Smelter 984 American Sugar Rfg... 109 110 American Tel. & Tel.... 132' 4 1304 Anaconda. Copper 8534 84'48 Atchison 103 1037, Baldwin Loco 76 A 76 Baltimore & Ohio...... 87 87! Bethlehem Steel 469'2 4684 Calif. Petroleum ...... 19'2 1912 Canadian Pacific 178'2 179'2 CM. A St. P. (St Paul) 5'2 96 Colo. Fuel 6V Iron 468 Crucible Steel ....... .. 724 73 Erie Common 37 37h Generzl Electric 169?. 1707a General Motors ..... t Great Northern Pfd. 4 I 4 IO2 A I '11 8 'A, Inter. Harv., N. J. . . 1152 116 Kennecott Coper . . 49 49 Lehigh R. R 79'8 New Yo:v Central. . 104'4 Pennsylvania ....... 55J8 Ray Consol. ........ 25 Southern Pacific .. . 98'4 99 i Studebsker .. .. . 1314 Tennessee Copper . 25'2 251.4 Union Pacific 139?8 4 iwr4 M ' U. S. Steel.......... 928 9034 U. S. Steel Pfd 118 118 Utah 82'4 at' Western L'n'nr. ?f 94'2 Westinghouse 59 VZ 59 Bid. f d. JUnquoted. JAPAN PRESENTS ITS PROTEST ON GAION.AnACK After Conference of Officials ! Action is Taken; Prominent ; Lawyer Urges for War (Special Cablegram to Hawaii Shinno) TOKIO, August 17. Under instruc- tion from his government. Minister Hayashi at Peking has begun nego- tiations with the Chinese government today on the question of the Chinese soldiers at Cheng-chia-tu- h, who at- tacked the Japanese garrison. Minis- ter Hayashi officially informed the Chinese government that Japan will be compelled to , reinforce her garri- son on account of want of confidence in Chinese soldiers. Upon careful examination the cas- ualties are found to be: 7 soldiers, 2 corporals and 1 policeman killed and 4 soldiers and 1 corporal wounded. Lieut Matsuo, : who commanded the garrison, was not killed as reported, but is fatally wounded. (Special Cable to Hawaii Hochi) TOKIO, Japan, Aug. 16. Baron K. Ishii, the Minister of foreign affairs, has been to Nikko and called upon Emperor Yoshihitd at his summer pal- ace and reported the attack by Chin nese soldiers at Cheng-cnia-tu- n against the Japanese garrison there.- - Imme- diately after the minister's return to the capitol a cabinet ministers' con- ference was held in which the ques- tion was discussed and Japan's atti- tude toward China determined. After a conference between the min- ister of war, Gen. Oshima, and all heads of departments of the war of fice It was deckled to despatch two di visions of soldiers to China. Wants War Declared. When news of the attack at Cheng chia-tu- n reached this city Kanjin To-miz-u, a w:ell known doctor of law and cne of the the professors in the To-ki- o inJperial University, gave it as his public opinion that the Japanese na- tion cannot depend upon only the dip- lomatic ability of the present foreign office, that the country's honor is suf ficiently smirched by the action of the Chmese soldiers against the Japanese garrison, and the're is no other way C. to settle the question except by a dec-laratfc- n of war on China. ATTORNEY WITHINGT0N LEAVES FOR CO AST TO ATTEND BIG MEETING Niagara tomorrow and will be absent for five six weeks. He be ac- companied by Lothrop nd wife. Mrs. Paul and son nd David Withington, Jr., the lat- - ter to enter Harvard this fall. While; away Attorney will at- tend the annual meeting of the American Bar Association in Chicago, and, with Circuit Judge will attend a conference of the bar asso- ciations cf the various states and ter- ritories as delegate from Hawaii. At the request of the supreme court he will reprssent the justices at a con- ference of the judicial section to be held on August 29. Additional j pubHshed on Page 9. J '. ,v . .r .. - Kt km UN Mainland Despatch Says Big Merger is Being Engineered By Canning Houses HAWAIIAN PINEAPPLE COMPANY MENTIONED James D. Dole Will Neither Af- firm nor Deny But Classes It as ?. SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 17.- - J. K. Armsby, the Alaska Packers' Associ ation, the California Fruit Canners' Association, the Central California Canneries- - Balfour, Guthrie & Com-104- 4 pany, shipping agents, and the Hawai-5- 6 ian Pineapple Company are negotiat-24'- 2 ing a great merger involving many millions cf capital, and the consolida-13- 1 tion of some of the most powerful commercial and industrial interests west- - of the Rockies. For seme time past the concerned have been feeling the pres- sure of the competition which necessi- tated the upkeep of duplicate distrib- uting plants in various sections of the country. This was felt to be a burden entirely unnecessary could it be avoided, and the project of a gigantic merger which would take in all of the interests con- cerned and enable a of the distributing plants, was taken up for consideration. Officials of the various companies concerned were last night but flatly refused to make any state- ment regarding the plans for a mer- ger. They admitted that such have been making progress, but declined to give details.. Dole Maintains Silence. In regard to the ruport of the con- templated merger of mainland con- cerns With local interests a Star-Bulleti- n representative talked with James D Dole, president and manager of the Hawaiian Pineapple Company, said to be interested in the big combineand William U Gifford, manager of the Hawaiian Preserving Company, Ltd. Dole would not commit himself. So far as conversation relative to the merger was concerted ha-r- as as si- lent as the sphinx although in frank (Continued jn page two) FT. KA EHA EHA 12-INC- H RIFLES ARE FIRED AGAIN Night Practise at Fort Ruger Is Scheduled for August 24; Will Use Searchlights More target practise, this time with the battery of 12-inc- h rifles and 3- - 'nch guns, was held today at Fort Kamehameha, concludihg the War practise at that fort, which held mortar battery practice Monday. Today's practise concludes the regu- lation practise required annually by War of coast defense forts equipped with big guns. Tomorrow Fort Armstrong will hold its target practise, but as this is a mine fort, having no heavy guns, prac tise will consist of exploding mines be- neath a target towed past the mine fields to the Waikiki side of the har- bor entrance here. This morning tlere were three trial and seven record shots fired by the battery of 12-inc- L rifles at Fort Ka- mehameha, while the small guns fired 40 shots. According to Co:. Alfred M. Hunter, A. C, commaniing the Coast De- fenses of Oahu, and also commanding officer of Fort Kamehameha, addition- al practise of coast defense forts on this island will begin next Tuesday, August 22, continuing through Tues- day, Wednesday, Thursday and Fri- - The only n ht-firi- target practise r i i a. rv J l.Li Harbor) ana next Thursday night August 24, tt Fort Ruger (Diamond Head) when the mortar batteries wili fire at toweit tat gets out at sea, illu minated by nys from the t0f the fort GERMAN FARMERS ARE GETTING RICH SELLING RABBITS. LONDON, Eng. An Exchange tele- gram dispatch from The Hague says. "The price of horses in Germany haa doubled. Farmers 'are making for tunes selling rabbits at 25 marks each. The bad weather is spoiling the crops." The Mining & Refining Co. at Dover, Del., has been incorpor- ated with a capital of $1,500,000, . Attorney D. U Withington will neia next luaay mgni, us-leav- e for the mainland on the steamer st .22vat tprA.ahamJe.ha or will Withington Withington Withington Whitney, Telegraph despatches Rumor companies consolidation questioned negotia- tions De- partment Department regulations searchlights Consolidated llilSI'IP IDEA QUICilLY WINS TOMDINATWilMUSUPPORT Efforts of Princess to Have Vessel Name Hawaii Are to Be Indorsed MAYOR LAnFwILL DRAW RESOLUTION Civic Organizations, Officials and Individual Citizens Will' Lend Their Influence Honolulu is today re"llziug for Abi- gail Princess Jfetid Kawananakoa the hope that she expressed in her letter to the Star-Bulleti- n that the people ofr Hawaii would support ner errorts to f0r tHe ap pointment, or reinstatement, secure the naming of a warship for I of the delegate as guardian ad litem Hawaii. This evening a resolution .in-- 1 of the queenf ls tne opinion of attor-dorsin- g the petition of the princess j neyg ln ciC8e touch with the now fa-wi- Jl be presented by Mayor Lane to mcus ntigntion which, on Wednesday, the supervisors for passage by them wag remancfe(j back to circuit court and forwarding te the secretary of the b virtue cf a decision by the supreme navy. Civic organizations are als COUrt falling into IiimC and individuals cf Ait'h011gh the supreme court is of prominence and influence will support the opinion that Kuhio has no con-he- r proposal. '! necticn with the case as a Party plain- - Although it develops that In accord ance with present customs a battle- ship could hardly be named Hawaii, the modern fast and formidable battle-cruise- rs are eligible for the honor. The ruling ha3 been that battleships are to be named' after states. It is claimed that ' Hawaii not having at- tained statehood h not in line for the naming of such Vessel but is eligible for vessels of the cruiser type and classes. This point was raised by Raymond C. Brown and by Charles R. Fcrbes. Neither of them opposed the proposal of the .'princess but on the contrary offered ihe amendment that Hawaii seek the best obtainable. Mayor Lane received the advices of what Princess David Kawananakoa has done in Wurfngtnn with enthusi- asm and said that he would do all in his nower to bring about the end she desires and would use his personal and official influence to do so. He then promised to have drafted resolu- tions an the subject for presentation to the oupervisors at their meeting to- night and to bo sent to the secretary of the navy following adoption. Raymond C Brown said that this was not the first time the matter had been considered but that he was con- fident the chamber of commerce would support it and would have its representative in Washington call per- sonally on the secretary of the navy and urge the naming of a cruiser of the most modern type Hawaii. President W. R. Farrington of the Ad Club said that the present proposal is the first one to be placed in con crete form. It was a crystauzauon oi (Continued oi page two) REPORTED SALE LANAI ISL AND Trip Declared to Have ' Been One of Pleasure Only and Not Business "The results of our trip to Lanai?" repeated R. W. Shingle of the Henry Waterhouse Trust Co. "Oh, we had a fine time went fishing, visited Mo-Ickin- i; went swimming every day; had the best vacation in years?" 'Was the island sold? Where did you get that Idea? No one has asked us to sell them the island. It was a. purely pleasure trip. I wasn't trying to sell anything. There are no nego- tiations on that I know of." Thus he disposed of rue rumor printed when the party left that H. J. Lcrentzen has an option on the prop- erty for $1,000,000. Lorentzen was one of the party and the fact that he made an offer for A. M. Brown's inter- est in the Cornwell ranch before it was sold lent color to the rumor. W. B. Pittm'an, a brother of Senator Key Pittman of Nevada, was also one cf the party. It was rumored that the Nevada senator, having made a great deal of money in tungsten since the war began, was looking for a place to invest it when hearing of the op- portunities for i vesting it in Lanai ranch property he sent his brother to investigate. But Shingle denied this. . Asked abcut the statement of James Woods, representative f the St. Fran cis Hotel interests, who visited here. that the Beckley property, has been selected as the site for a hotel to be erected by local capitalists, of whom Shingle was named as one, he refused to reply aefinitely. "I am not ready to say yet." he declared. "We have not bought the Beckley property, nor have we an option on it." .Asked to deny Woods' statement that the Beckley site had been select-ed- , he refused. PRINCE WILL ASK TO BE NAMED GUARDIAN His Counsel Intimates This May Be Next Move in Fight to Break Queen's Trust LILIUOKALANPS SANITY - MUST BE DECIDED FIRST If Hefd She is Competent, Suit is at End, is Contention of Her Attorney That the next development in the suit brought by Prince Kuhio to break the trust in which the property of Llliuokalani is held will be a petition tiff. yet. in the decision, it leaves the way open for someone to petition for the appointment of a guardian ad litem for the queen, and then for the filing of a petition to reinstate the queen as a party plaintiff. "But," declares Judge Antonio Per ry, the queen's attorney, "they can not make Llliuokalani a party plain tiff until It Is proved that she is men ially weak and. as alleged in the com plaint, under the undue Influence of Col. Curtfs P. Iaukea and John A. Dominls, and also that she is not a free agent." u a move is made toward the ap- pointment of a guardian and the queen's reinstatement as plaintiff, a hearing must immediately be had to determine finally,, the. question. ot the queen's mental competenTy7Jttdge "Then, If the court finds, that the queen Is mentally competent, not un der the undue Influence of Dominis and Iaukea, and therefore capable of managing her own affairs as a free agent, the whole .case Is settled," he concludes. . Judge Perry interviewed the queen (Continued on page two) WALL STREET AS NOT SAY STRIKE Visiting Railroad Man Points to Fact Railway Stocks Hold Up Well While endless conjecture Is circ.v la ted concerning the threatened rail- way strike, Chaftes H. Loucks, a Pennsylvania man, who arrived on the Matsonla, points to the stock market as a good indication of whether the strike will or will net be averted. "If capital were fearful of a gen- eral strike as disastrous as the pend- ing one might be," he said, "I do not believe the stock market wouM be as firm as it now is. Louck is cashier of the First Na- tional Bank of Stottsdal, Pa., and is connected with tne Pennsylvania Railway, ono of "the greatest carrior systems in-th- e world. He is accom- panied here by Mrs. Loucks. They are staying at the Young Hotel. Loucks was here for two days IS years ago on his way to the Philip- pines as a privat in the militia in- fantry of Pennsylvania. On account of his connection with the Pennsylvania system, Louck? said he was not at liberty to speak in de- tail upon the strike situation. He said, however, that wbfA ae left home the people generally did not believe It would tke place and were not par- ticularly concerned about it. SCHAEFER SHOOTS PICTURE OF KAISER AND IS MOBBED. NEW YQRK, N Y. George Schae-fe- r of Hoboken, N. Y., entered the saloon of B. H. Muttrag the other morning. Several persons in the place Vere singing German songs. Schaefer objected and demanded American songs. The singers did not oblige him and he whipped out a re- volver and fired three shots into a large portrait of Kaiser Wilhelm. Several Germans in the saloon started at Schaefer and when they had finlshe.d he w-e- to Dr. Spath, who treated him for several lacera- tions of his head and bruises about his body. Schaefer was arrested as disorderly . , CO E IS TERMED INELIGIBLE IN RECENT LETTER Writer Objects to Consideration for Judgeship Because of His Senatorship EVIDENTLY WRITTEN BEFORE RESIGNATION Question of Right of Governor to Accept His Retirement Now Important (Special by Commercial Cable) WASHINGTON. D. C, Aug. 17. In a letter from Honolulu which has iust been received by the department of justice, declar- - ing; Coke to be Ineligible to the 4- - f appointfaent as Stuart's success- - or because he holds senatorship, f says statute prevents the selec- - tion for - that reason, makes no protest against the qualification. 4- - Statutory Incapacity was the only 4- - 4- - point raised. The attorney-gen- - 4 eral will construe the law. 4- - 4- - ' i 4- - 4- - 4- - 4- - 4- - 4- - 4- - 4- - 4- - 4- - 4- - 4- - At the time the letter referred to in the cable was written, James L. Coke was a senator as the letter states Later he presented hisres!gnation to the governor and it was accepted. He considered ' that this was final and ended his being a public officeholder. On the other hand there are lawyers who contend that under the organic act the governor has not the power to accept the resignation of a member of the legislature and that hence the resignation was inoperative and inef fective. This phase of the matter is the point that it may be necessary for the United States attorney-genera- l to rteAermineJLnaftt at coke should be determined upon by the president ' ,. ' Sitting Also Asoires. That Attorney C. C. Bitting, form er assistant U. S. attorney, also is a candidate as successor to T. B. Stu art, whose resignation as third judge of the local circuit court recently was sent to the White House, is informa tion which has reached the Star-Bull- e tin from a reliable authority. Bit- ting could not be reached today to confirm or deny the report. It is understood that Bitting has re- ceived considerable local indorsement for the judgesnip, and that he In formed a local attorney recently that he had written to the attorney-genera- l td the effect that James L. Coke was hot qualified for the position on the ground that the, latter was a senator and that senators could not resign under the territorial statute. Attorney Coke says that he will ac- cept the judgeship if it is offered him. He recently tendered to the governor his resignation as senator, and the resignation was accepted He has the indorsement of the Hawaiian Bar As- sociation 'for the appointment to suc- ceed Stuart. : i CHARGES DISMISSED BUT Grand Jury May Investigate as to Death of Woman in Insane Ward ; Although the charge of first degree nurdcr against John Gomes was dis- missed in police court this morning and he is now a free man, it i9 be- lieved the case will be investigated by the grand jury. Mrs. John Gomes died in the insane asylum following an alleged assault by her husband. Upon a report made by Dr. L. L. Patterson, assistant su- - j erintendent of the asylum, and read in court by Prosecuting Attorney Chil- - lingworth. the dismissal is based. The report ln part is as follows: "Augusta Gomes was very noisy. singing and waving her hands and feet; we had to put her in restraint on entrance persisted in tearing her clothing off : was well nour- ished on the left- - hand were bruises: her right hand? was also bruised legs had scratches an open wound on ribs was found. Patient continually threshed her arms and legs . until death ate only few bites by herself. Patient gradually weakened through the inces- sant physical exertion and refusal to eat, dying July 28. I gave as the cause of death exhaustion from chronic mania." Police Surgeon R. GV Ayer, who has been interested in the case, says the intention of the charge made against Gomes was not that the wife had died as a direct result of the wounds, but rather as a direct result of the alleged assault The doctor believes the as- - i t Ss ! 2:30 BE IS BELIEVE MURDER EiAILlMIIEADS ASKED TO MEET WITH IVILSOf Financial Interests May Be Asked to Help End ' Controversy ' - WILSON TO DEAL WITH "ULTIMATE AUTHORITY" Rumored That Railroads Re- jected Plan to Grant Eight-Ho- ur Day (AmoctaUd Prf ay Fadaral WirlM '' WASIIINUTOX.'I). C. Aujr. t7. I'rv!i(lent Wilwiiv; todav vent in- vitations to the presidents of the ; (iriucial railrtuulsLfor a voufer euce on the lalnn situation. It is ' said here that if heJlnds the rail- road ehiefs ;.it unable to fullr enter into negotiations for a set- tlement of the dispute jndiuj;, . the financial interestsVontrolling the-variou- s lines will le asked to joiu in an endeavor to find a basis of settlement. The chief executive has let it be . ; knou-n- . that he wants to deal only-wit- h those in "ultimate authority" on both sides, This act ioD Is interireted here to mean that the conference com- mittee representing the manager has refused to agree to the presi- dent's proposal, that they concede the eight hour day dema nded by the r UrotherUoods, leaving . the, question of (iayment of overtime 7 to a board of arbitration to be ap- pointed,, lute rA Vs :. ri :jj c . l'ending the nrriral of the pre- sidents 'there will be no Voufer- - ences with the managers, many of whom are now en route to the ' ' "' ' capital. :'' .';- - This afternoon President Wil- son will present his plan for to the C40 menders of the Jlrotherhoods general commit- tee, after which any decision which may be -- arrived' at will be laid before the railroad presidents. puoEisiiis CHOSEN FOR BIG BUILDI NG YARD IAsaociat Pratt by Tadaral Wiralaaa) WASHINGTON, D. C., Aug. 17. Under the provisions of the njj--v- al bill as finally perfected, I'uget Sound is the site chosen on the Fa.-cifi- c Coast for a big battleship construction yard. The proposal to establish a submarine and tor- pedo base on Columbia river, how- ever, was Voted down. All dis- puted items have been cleared up, and the greatest naval building program in the nation's history now awaits the president's signa- ture. CONFEREES APPOINTED WITHIN THREE DAYS (AMOciated Preaa br F4aral Wit1m) MEXICO CITY31exico. Aug. 17 It is reported here that For- eign Minister Agnitaf of the de facto government has received as snrances from the state depart- ment at Washington that the com- missioners to represent the United States in the conference with Mex ican envoys to adjust the differ-en-e- s letween the two countries will be chosen within the next .three- - days. The refusal of Supreme Justice Brandeis and one other commis- sioner whose name, has not trans- pired to serve has Iieen therause of delay in getting the conference underway: mm a The Canadian Gasoline Corporation, Ltd of Ottawa has been Incorporated with a capital of $3,000,000. The? : Mutual Trust Company of Orange, N. Jwas closed by an order of State Banking and Insurance Com- missioner Lamonte. - ' sault brought on the- - Insanity and the latter resulted in death, accorlizi to Dr. Patterson's report

PAGES-HONOL- ULU, ma BE › bitstream › ...SELLING RABBITS. LONDON, Eng. An Exchange tele-gram dispatch from The Hague says. "The price of horses in Germany haa doubled. Farmers

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Page 1: PAGES-HONOL- ULU, ma BE › bitstream › ...SELLING RABBITS. LONDON, Eng. An Exchange tele-gram dispatch from The Hague says. "The price of horses in Germany haa doubled. Farmers

MAILSFrom Sari Francisco

Sierra. Auc. 21.For 6a n Francisco

Ventura, Aug. 17.vFrom Vancouver:

Niagara Sept 6.For Vancouver:

Niagara; Aug. 18.

oKvtnlnpHawaiian

Tlullctirj.Star, Vol

L'st.XXIV.

1KS2. NoNo. 7.VI7

.C 12 PAGES-HONOL- ULU, TERRITORY OF HAWAII, THt'KSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1010.-- 12 PAGES. PRICE FIVE CENTfl

ran mala MOT

o

o

o

O

BULBARS SAY

ALLIES ATTACK

IS REPULSED

Heavy Allied Infantry AttacksBreak Against Strong

Front Line

FIERCE FIGHTRAGES

AT LAKE DORIAN

British and German DespatchesDiffer on Results of

Western Battle(Amociated Pri by Federal Tirelei)UX1H)X, Kng., Aug. 17 Ac-

cording to llulgariau official re-

ports, heavy fighting Is in .pro-gress along the Balkan front, withthe Allies taking the initiative.The despatch tells of strong infan-try attacks lieing thrown harkafter fierce fighting, hut that the

..hat Me is still. raging at Lake Hoi-ran- ,

with the decision . still indoubt.

ITALIANS STRAIGHTEN

LINES; ADVANCE HALTS

HOME, Italy, Aug. 17. Theadvance of the victorious Italiansalong the lower Isonzo is beingheld hack awaiting the straightening out of the line by the captureof the mountain range in San ia- -

brielle, Sal Marino and other po-si- t

ions bet veen Talmino and (iori-zia- .

The capture of these strate-gic positions seems imminent.There will be, no advance on Tri-- .

eKteintil.tbe positions' art; tak-en and'ilie'Une straightened out.'Austrians are being slowly drivenfrom" Carso' plateau, the enemyfighting desperately in their re-

treat.

BRITISH MAKE GAINSON SOMME r"R0NT

LONDON, Eng., Aug. 17.Fierce fighting is still going onalong the Somrne front. Britishtroops have made substantialgains wesVflQd southwest of (Juil-lemeujJaj- vl

in conjunction withthaFtncji'are advancing on Mau-- .

repasj aloig a front of severalmiles. West o High wood a sec-

tion of German trenches 300yards wide and ."100 yards deepwere captured after fierce hand-to-- .

hand fighting, the enemy-contestin-

every trencli stubbornly.

COUNTER ATTACKS ON

, SLAV LINES REPULSED

KTKOGRAI, Russia. Aug. 17.The Teu ton i c a rmies along the

whole front are sending terrificcounter attacks on the Slav lines,Ij the hope of stemming the m-- .

rush of the victorious Russians.and for the time being the advancehas been checked. The wholeeastern battle front is ablaze withviolent' artillery and rifle duels.Counter attacks by the' enemy haveall been repulsed.

BERLIN SAYsTaLLIES: REPULSED IN WEST

HERLIN, (lermany. Aug. 17.IJeavy Freuch and lint ish infau-try- -

attacks along the s entireSomme frxnt have? leeii iepulsed.

ARTILLERY AT MAUREPAS

PARIS, France, Aug 17 A

. violent artillery duel is in pro-gress north of Maurepas, evident-ly ireparatory to launching infan-try attacks against the batteredtrenches)

f

BASEBALL RESULTS I

TODAY I

--4NATIONAL LEAGUE.

At Chicago Chicago 1, New York 0.At Pittsburg Brooklyn 5, Pittsburg

J.

AMERICAN LEAGUE.At New York New York 5, Cleve-

land 4.At Boston Bostcn 7, Chicago 0.At Philadelphia Philadelphia 4. St. 4

Louis 3. SL Louis 3 Philadelphia 2.At Washington Detroit 11, Wash-

ington 6 (first game).;

NEW YORK STOCKMARKET TODAY

Following are the closing prices ofstocks on the New York market today, sent by the Associated Press over,the Federal Wireless:

YesterToday, day.

Alaska Gold 15 17UAmerican Smelter 984American Sugar Rfg... 109 110American Tel. & Tel.... 132' 4 1304Anaconda. Copper 8534 84'48Atchison 103 1037,Baldwin Loco 76 A 76Baltimore & Ohio...... 87 87!Bethlehem Steel 469'2 4684Calif. Petroleum ...... 19'2 1912Canadian Pacific 178'2 179'2CM. A St. P. (St Paul) 5'2 96Colo. Fuel 6V Iron 468Crucible Steel ....... .. 724 73Erie Common 37 37hGenerzl Electric 169?. 1707aGeneral Motors ..... tGreat Northern Pfd. 4I 4

IO2A I '11 8 'A,

Inter. Harv., N. J. . . 1152 116Kennecott Coper . . 49 49Lehigh R. R 79'8New Yo:v Central. . 104'4Pennsylvania ....... 55J8Ray Consol. ........ 25Southern Pacific . . . 98'4 99 i

Studebsker . . .. . 1314Tennessee Copper . 25'2 251.4Union Pacific 139?8 4iwr4

M '

U. S. Steel.......... 928 9034U. S. Steel Pfd 118 118Utah 82'4 at'Western L'n'nr. ?f 94'2Westinghouse 59 VZ 59

Bid. f d. JUnquoted.

JAPAN PRESENTS

ITS PROTEST ON

GAION.AnACK

After Conference of Officials !

Action is Taken; Prominent; Lawyer Urges for War

(Special Cablegram to Hawaii Shinno)TOKIO, August 17. Under instruc-

tion from his government. MinisterHayashi at Peking has begun nego-tiations with the Chinese governmenttoday on the question of the Chinesesoldiers at Cheng-chia-tu- h, who at-

tacked the Japanese garrison. Minis-ter Hayashi officially informed theChinese government that Japan willbe compelled to , reinforce her garri-son on account of want of confidencein Chinese soldiers.

Upon careful examination the cas-

ualties are found to be: 7 soldiers, 2

corporals and 1 policeman killed and4 soldiers and 1 corporal wounded.Lieut Matsuo, : who commanded thegarrison, was not killed as reported,but is fatally wounded.

(Special Cable to Hawaii Hochi)TOKIO, Japan, Aug. 16. Baron K.

Ishii, the Minister of foreign affairs,has been to Nikko and called uponEmperor Yoshihitd at his summer pal-

ace and reported the attack by Chinnese soldiers at Cheng-cnia-tu- n againstthe Japanese garrison there.- - Imme-diately after the minister's return tothe capitol a cabinet ministers' con-

ference was held in which the ques-tion was discussed and Japan's atti-tude toward China determined.

After a conference between the min-

ister of war, Gen. Oshima, and allheads of departments of the war office It was deckled to despatch two divisions of soldiers to China.Wants War Declared.

When news of the attack at Chengchia-tu- n reached this city Kanjin To-miz-u,

a w:ell known doctor of law andcne of the the professors in the To-ki-o

inJperial University, gave it as hispublic opinion that the Japanese na-tion cannot depend upon only the dip-

lomatic ability of the present foreignoffice, that the country's honor is sufficiently smirched by the action of theChmese soldiers against the Japanesegarrison, and the're is no other way C.to settle the question except by a dec-laratfc- n

of war on China.

ATTORNEY WITHINGT0NLEAVES FOR CO AST TO

ATTEND BIG MEETING

Niagara tomorrow and will be absentfor five six weeks. He be ac-

companied by Lothropnd wife. Mrs. Paul and

son nd David Withington, Jr., the lat- -

ter to enter Harvard this fall. While;away Attorney will at-

tend the annual meeting of theAmerican Bar Association in Chicago,and, with Circuit Judge willattend a conference of the bar asso-ciations cf the various states and ter-ritories as delegate from Hawaii. Atthe request of the supreme court hewill reprssent the justices at a con-ference of the judicial section to beheld on August 29.

Additional j

pubHshed on Page 9. J

'. ,v. .r ..

-

Kt km UN

Mainland Despatch Says BigMerger is Being Engineered

By Canning Houses

HAWAIIAN PINEAPPLECOMPANY MENTIONED

James D. Dole Will Neither Af-

firm nor Deny But ClassesIt as ?.

SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 17.- - J. K.Armsby, the Alaska Packers' Association, the California Fruit Canners'Association, the Central CaliforniaCanneries- - Balfour, Guthrie & Com-104- 4

pany, shipping agents, and the Hawai-5- 6

ian Pineapple Company are negotiat-24'-2

ing a great merger involving manymillions cf capital, and the consolida-13- 1

tion of some of the most powerfulcommercial and industrial interestswest- - of the Rockies.

For seme time past theconcerned have been feeling the pres-sure of the competition which necessi-tated the upkeep of duplicate distrib-uting plants in various sections of thecountry.

This was felt to be a burden entirelyunnecessary could it be avoided, andthe project of a gigantic merger whichwould take in all of the interests con-cerned and enable a ofthe distributing plants, was taken upfor consideration.

Officials of the various companiesconcerned were last nightbut flatly refused to make any state-ment regarding the plans for a mer-ger. They admitted that such

have been making progress, butdeclined to give details..Dole Maintains Silence.

In regard to the ruport of the con-templated merger of mainland con-cerns With local interests a Star-Bulleti- n

representative talked with JamesD Dole, president and manager of theHawaiian Pineapple Company, said tobe interested in the big combineandWilliam U Gifford, manager of theHawaiian Preserving Company, Ltd.

Dole would not commit himself. Sofar as conversation relative to themerger was concerted ha-r- as as si-

lent as the sphinx although in frank

(Continued jn page two)

FT. KA EHA EHA

12-INC- H RIFLES

ARE FIRED AGAIN

Night Practise at Fort RugerIs Scheduled for August 24;

Will Use Searchlights

More target practise, this time withthe battery of 12-inc- h rifles and 3--

'nch guns, was held today at FortKamehameha, concludihg the War

practise at that fort, whichheld mortar battery practice Monday.

Today's practise concludes the regu-lation practise required annually byWar of coastdefense forts equipped with big guns.

Tomorrow Fort Armstrong will holdits target practise, but as this is amine fort, having no heavy guns, practise will consist of exploding mines be-

neath a target towed past the minefields to the Waikiki side of the har-bor entrance here.

This morning tlere were three trialand seven record shots fired by thebattery of 12-inc- L rifles at Fort Ka-mehameha, while the smallguns fired 40 shots.

According to Co:. Alfred M. Hunter,A. C, commaniing the Coast De-

fenses of Oahu, and also commandingofficer of Fort Kamehameha, addition-al practise of coast defense forts onthis island will begin next Tuesday,August 22, continuing through Tues-day, Wednesday, Thursday and Fri- -

The only n ht-firi- target practiser i i a. rv J l.Li

Harbor) ana next Thursday nightAugust 24, tt Fort Ruger (DiamondHead) when the mortar batteries wilifire at toweit tat gets out at sea, illuminated by nys from the

t0f the fort

GERMAN FARMERSARE GETTING RICH

SELLING RABBITS.

LONDON, Eng. An Exchange tele-gram dispatch from The Hague says."The price of horses in Germany haadoubled. Farmers 'are making fortunes selling rabbits at 25 markseach. The bad weather is spoilingthe crops."

The Mining & RefiningCo. at Dover, Del., has been incorpor-ated with a capital of $1,500,000, .

Attorney D. U Withington will neia next luaay mgni, us-leav- e

for the mainland on the steamer st .22vat tprA.ahamJe.ha

or willWithington

Withington

Withington

Whitney,

Telegraph despatches

Rumor

companies

consolidation

questioned

negotia-tions

De-partment

Department regulations

searchlights

Consolidated

llilSI'IP IDEA

QUICilLY WINS

TOMDINATWilMUSUPPORT

Efforts of Princess to HaveVessel Name Hawaii Are

to Be Indorsed

MAYOR LAnFwILLDRAW RESOLUTION

Civic Organizations, Officialsand Individual Citizens Will'

Lend Their Influence

Honolulu is today re"llziug for Abi-

gail Princess Jfetid Kawananakoa thehope that she expressed in her letterto the Star-Bulleti- n that the people ofrHawaii would support ner errorts to f0r tHe ap pointment, or reinstatement,secure the naming of a warship for I of the delegate as guardian ad litemHawaii. This evening a resolution .in-- 1 of the queenf ls tne opinion of attor-dorsin- g

the petition of the princess j neyg ln ciC8e touch with the now fa-wi- Jl

be presented by Mayor Lane to mcus ntigntion which, on Wednesday,the supervisors for passage by them wag remancfe(j back to circuit courtand forwarding te the secretary of the b virtue cf a decision by the supremenavy. Civic organizations are als COUrtfalling into IiimC and individuals cf Ait'h011gh the supreme court is ofprominence and influence will support the opinion that Kuhio has no con-he- r

proposal. '! necticn with the case as a Party plain- -

Although it develops that In accordance with present customs a battle-ship could hardly be named Hawaii,the modern fast and formidable battle-cruise- rs

are eligible for the honor.The ruling ha3 been that battleshipsare to be named' after states. It isclaimed that ' Hawaii not having at-

tained statehood h not in line for thenaming of such Vessel but is eligiblefor vessels of the cruiser type andclasses. This point was raised byRaymond C. Brown and by Charles R.Fcrbes. Neither of them opposed theproposal of the .'princess but on thecontrary offered ihe amendment thatHawaii seek the best obtainable.

Mayor Lane received the advices ofwhat Princess David Kawananakoahas done in Wurfngtnn with enthusi-asm and said that he would do all inhis nower to bring about the end shedesires and would use his personaland official influence to do so. Hethen promised to have drafted resolu-tions an the subject for presentationto the oupervisors at their meeting to-

night and to bo sent to the secretaryof the navy following adoption.

Raymond C Brown said that thiswas not the first time the matter hadbeen considered but that he was con-

fident the chamber of commercewould support it and would have itsrepresentative in Washington call per-

sonally on the secretary of the navyand urge the naming of a cruiser ofthe most modern type Hawaii.

President W. R. Farrington of theAd Club said that the present proposalis the first one to be placed in concrete form. It was a crystauzauon oi

(Continued oi page two)

REPORTED SALE

LANAI ISLAND

Trip Declared to Have ' BeenOne of Pleasure Only and

Not Business

"The results of our trip to Lanai?"repeated R. W. Shingle of the HenryWaterhouse Trust Co. "Oh, we hada fine time went fishing, visited Mo-Ickin- i;

went swimming every day;had the best vacation in years?"

'Was the island sold? Where didyou get that Idea? No one has askedus to sell them the island. It was a.

purely pleasure trip. I wasn't tryingto sell anything. There are no nego-

tiations on that I know of."Thus he disposed of rue rumor

printed when the party left that H. J.Lcrentzen has an option on the prop-erty for $1,000,000. Lorentzen was oneof the party and the fact that hemade an offer for A. M. Brown's inter-est in the Cornwell ranch before itwas sold lent color to the rumor.

W. B. Pittm'an, a brother of SenatorKey Pittman of Nevada, was also onecf the party. It was rumored that theNevada senator, having made a greatdeal of money in tungsten since thewar began, was looking for a placeto invest it when hearing of the op-

portunities for i vesting it in Lanairanch property he sent his brother toinvestigate.

But Shingle denied this.. Asked abcut the statement of JamesWoods, representative f the St. Francis Hotel interests, who visited here.that the Beckley property, has beenselected as the site for a hotel to beerected by local capitalists, of whomShingle was named as one, he refusedto reply aefinitely. "I am not readyto say yet." he declared. "We havenot bought the Beckley property, norhave we an option on it."

.Asked to deny Woods' statementthat the Beckley site had been select-ed- ,

he refused.

PRINCE

WILL ASK TO BE

NAMED GUARDIAN

His Counsel Intimates This MayBe Next Move in Fight to

Break Queen's Trust

LILIUOKALANPS SANITY- MUST BE DECIDED FIRST

If Hefd She is Competent, Suitis at End, is Contention

of Her Attorney

That the next development in thesuit brought by Prince Kuhio to breakthe trust in which the property ofLlliuokalani is held will be a petition

tiff. yet. in the decision, it leaves theway open for someone to petition forthe appointment of a guardian adlitem for the queen, and then for thefiling of a petition to reinstate thequeen as a party plaintiff.

"But," declares Judge Antonio Perry, the queen's attorney, "they cannot make Llliuokalani a party plaintiff until It Is proved that she is menially weak and. as alleged in the complaint, under the undue Influence ofCol. Curtfs P. Iaukea and John A.Dominls, and also that she is not afree agent."

u a move is made toward the ap-pointment of a guardian and thequeen's reinstatement as plaintiff, ahearing must immediately be had todetermine finally,, the. question. ot thequeen's mental competenTy7Jttdge

"Then, If the court finds, that thequeen Is mentally competent, not under the undue Influence of Dominisand Iaukea, and therefore capable ofmanaging her own affairs as a freeagent, the whole .case Is settled," heconcludes.

. Judge Perry interviewed the queen

(Continued on page two)

WALL STREET AS

NOT SAY STRIKE

Visiting Railroad Man Pointsto Fact Railway Stocks

Hold Up Well

While endless conjecture Is circ.vla ted concerning the threatened rail-way strike, Chaftes H. Loucks, aPennsylvania man, who arrived on theMatsonla, points to the stock marketas a good indication of whether thestrike will or will net be averted.

"If capital were fearful of a gen-eral strike as disastrous as the pend-ing one might be," he said, "I do notbelieve the stock market wouM beas firm as it now is.

Louck is cashier of the First Na-

tional Bank of Stottsdal, Pa., andis connected with tne PennsylvaniaRailway, ono of "the greatest carriorsystems in-th- e world. He is accom-panied here by Mrs. Loucks. Theyare staying at the Young Hotel.Loucks was here for two days ISyears ago on his way to the Philip-pines as a privat in the militia in-

fantry of Pennsylvania.On account of his connection with

the Pennsylvania system, Louck? saidhe was not at liberty to speak in de-

tail upon the strike situation. Hesaid, however, that wbfA ae left homethe people generally did not believeIt would tke place and were not par-ticularly concerned about it.

SCHAEFER SHOOTS PICTUREOF KAISER AND IS MOBBED.

NEW YQRK, N Y. George Schae-fe- r

of Hoboken, N. Y., entered thesaloon of B. H. Muttrag the othermorning. Several persons in theplace Vere singing German songs.

Schaefer objected and demandedAmerican songs. The singers did notoblige him and he whipped out a re-

volver and fired three shots into alarge portrait of Kaiser Wilhelm.

Several Germans in the saloonstarted at Schaefer and when theyhad finlshe.d he w-e- to Dr. Spath,who treated him for several lacera-tions of his head and bruises abouthis body. Schaefer was arrested asdisorderly . ,

CO E IS TERMED

INELIGIBLE IN

RECENT LETTER

Writer Objects to Considerationfor Judgeship Because of

His Senatorship

EVIDENTLY WRITTENBEFORE RESIGNATION

Question of Right of Governorto Accept His Retirement

Now Important

(Special by Commercial Cable)WASHINGTON. D. C, Aug. 17.In a letter from Honolulu

which has iust been received bythe department of justice, declar--ing; Coke to be Ineligible to the 4--

f appointfaent as Stuart's success--or because he holds senatorship, fsays statute prevents the selec- -

tion for - that reason, makes noprotest against the qualification.

4- - Statutory Incapacity was the only 4--

4- - point raised. The attorney-gen- -

4 eral will construe the law. 4--

4--'

i 4--

4-- 4-- 4-- 4-- 4-- 4-- 4-- 4- - 4- - 4-- 4--

At the time the letter referred to inthe cable was written, James L. Cokewas a senator as the letter statesLater he presented hisres!gnation tothe governor and it was accepted. Heconsidered ' that this was final andended his being a public officeholder.

On the other hand there are lawyerswho contend that under the organicact the governor has not the power toaccept the resignation of a memberof the legislature and that hence theresignation was inoperative and ineffective. This phase of the matter isthe point that it may be necessary forthe United States attorney-genera- l torteAermineJLnaftt atcoke should be determined upon bythe president '

,. '

Sitting Also Asoires.That Attorney C. C. Bitting, form

er assistant U. S. attorney, also is acandidate as successor to T. B. Stuart, whose resignation as third judgeof the local circuit court recently wassent to the White House, is information which has reached the Star-Bull- e

tin from a reliable authority. Bit-ting could not be reached today toconfirm or deny the report.

It is understood that Bitting has re-

ceived considerable local indorsementfor the judgesnip, and that he Informed a local attorney recently thathe had written to the attorney-genera- l

td the effect that James L. Coke washot qualified for the position on theground that the, latter was a senatorand that senators could not resignunder the territorial statute.

Attorney Coke says that he will ac-cept the judgeship if it is offered him.He recently tendered to the governorhis resignation as senator, and theresignation was accepted He has theindorsement of the Hawaiian Bar As-

sociation 'for the appointment to suc-ceed Stuart. : i

CHARGES

DISMISSED BUT

Grand Jury May Investigate asto Death of Woman in

Insane Ward ;

Although the charge of first degreenurdcr against John Gomes was dis-missed in police court this morningand he is now a free man, it i9 be-

lieved the case will be investigated bythe grand jury.

Mrs. John Gomes died in the insaneasylum following an alleged assaultby her husband. Upon a report madeby Dr. L. L. Patterson, assistant su- -

j erintendent of the asylum, and readin court by Prosecuting Attorney Chil- -

lingworth. the dismissal is based.The report ln part is as follows:"Augusta Gomes was very noisy.

singing and waving her hands andfeet; we had to put her in restrainton entrance persisted in tearingher clothing off : was well nour-ished on the left- - hand werebruises: her right hand? was alsobruised legs had scratchesan open wound on ribs was found.

Patient continually threshed herarms and legs . until death ateonly few bites by herself. Patientgradually weakened through the inces-sant physical exertion and refusal toeat, dying July 28. I gave as the causeof death exhaustion from chronicmania."

Police Surgeon R. GV Ayer, who hasbeen interested in the case, says theintention of the charge made againstGomes was not that the wife had diedas a direct result of the wounds, butrather as a direct result of the allegedassault The doctor believes the as- -

i t

Ss ! 2:30

BE ISBELIEVE

MURDER

EiAILlMIIEADS

ASKED TO MEET

WITH IVILSOf

Financial Interests May BeAsked to Help End

'

Controversy ' -

WILSON TO DEAL WITH"ULTIMATE AUTHORITY"

Rumored That Railroads Re-

jected Plan to GrantEight-Ho- ur Day

(AmoctaUd Prf ay Fadaral WirlM ''WASIIINUTOX.'I). C. Aujr. t7.I'rv!i(lent Wilwiiv; todav vent in-

vitations to the presidents of the ;

(iriucial railrtuulsLfor a voufereuce on the lalnn situation. It is 'said here that if heJlnds the rail-road ehiefs ;.it unable to fullrenter into negotiations for a set-

tlement of the dispute jndiuj;, .

the financial interestsVontrollingthe-variou- s lines will le asked tojoiu in an endeavor to find a basisof settlement.

The chief executive has let it be . ;

knou-n- . that he wants to deal only-wit- h

those in "ultimate authority"on both sides,

This act ioD Is interireted hereto mean that the conference com-

mittee representing the managerhas refused to agree to the presi-dent's proposal, that they concedethe eight hour day dema nded bythe r UrotherUoods, leaving . the,question of (iayment of overtime 7

to a board of arbitration to be ap-

pointed,, lute rA Vs :. ri :jj c. l'ending the nrriral of the pre-sidents 'there will be no Voufer- -

ences with the managers, many ofwhom are now en route to the

' ' "' 'capital. :'' .';- -

This afternoon President Wil-

son will present his plan forto the C40 menders of

the Jlrotherhoods general commit-tee, after which any decisionwhich may be -- arrived' at will belaid before the railroad presidents.

puoEisiiisCHOSEN FOR BIG

BUILDI NG YARD

IAsaociat Pratt by Tadaral Wiralaaa)

WASHINGTON, D. C., Aug. 17.

Under the provisions of the njj--v- al

bill as finally perfected, I'ugetSound is the site chosen on the Fa.-cifi- c

Coast for a big battleshipconstruction yard. The proposalto establish a submarine and tor-

pedo base on Columbia river, how-

ever,was Voted down. All dis-

puted items have been cleared up,and the greatest naval buildingprogram in the nation's historynow awaits the president's signa-ture.

CONFEREES APPOINTEDWITHIN THREE DAYS

(AMOciated Preaa br F4aral Wit1m)MEXICO CITY31exico. Aug.

17 It is reported here that For-eign Minister Agnitaf of the defacto government has received assnrances from the state depart-ment at Washington that the com-

missioners to represent the UnitedStates in the conference with Mexican envoys to adjust the differ-en-e- s

letween the two countrieswill be chosen within the next.three- - days.

The refusal of Supreme JusticeBrandeis and one other commis-sioner whose name, has not trans-pired to serve has Iieen therauseof delay in getting the conferenceunderway:

mm a

The Canadian Gasoline Corporation,Ltd of Ottawa has been Incorporatedwith a capital of $3,000,000.

The? : Mutual Trust Company ofOrange, N. Jwas closed by an orderof State Banking and Insurance Com-missioner Lamonte. - '

sault brought on the-- Insanity and thelatter resulted in death, accorlizi toDr. Patterson's report

Page 2: PAGES-HONOL- ULU, ma BE › bitstream › ...SELLING RABBITS. LONDON, Eng. An Exchange tele-gram dispatch from The Hague says. "The price of horses in Germany haa doubled. Farmers

l ;

itU

ii

if

I--.

i.ua

;

V--

i fU

If

f

TWO HONOLULU STAR-BULLETI- N; 'THURSDAY;' AUGUST 17, 1916. v

BIDW IS

ARRESTED, GIVEN

BICKTOWYEscaped military prisoner.-.- 'aiid

ould-b- o deserter is what the policecall Cpl. JcJ Goettel. Landman !athe 4th Cavalry at Schofield Bar-

racks, vho iras arretted in the AhLeong bolek On Aala street Wedn'f

Vay evening by Detectives ItudolVli''Stein and David Ho of . McDuf fie'fl de

rartment nd turned over to the FortShafter yrovojt sruard this morninpJfe was In civi':in clothing.

McDuffie'a department wen consid-erable commendation for the sate!- - asGoettel mas a rnuch wanted man atSchofbfd and had his arreets.'.been

.delayed two days or had the Canadian-A-

ustralasian steamer Niagara arrived two days sooner he might havetafely escaped to Canada. Whoafound by thy officers the soldier alraitted a plot between himself and inemploye on the Niagara whereby iewas toleave Honolulu and go North.

Goettel Is well known to the policefrom his arrest on Decoration Day on

4a .cliarre of riding a motorcyclewhile tender" the; Influence of liquorend tbe many continuances of a trialwhich finally ended In a suspendedsentence. He broke arrest July 31

from Schofield, where he was cou-fine-

to bis quarters under a chargepf larceny I and at the same time amotorcycle belonging to Sgt. EarlWebster disappeared. The machinewas found the next day In Moanaluaby Motorcycle Policemen Ferry andMorse. .

Detective Stein found the corporal'scomplete uniform hidden In ax Japanes-

e-basket In the room : where thearrest, wa; made. :." . ,

'' '

LONDON'S STORY

IS CONFIRMED BY

ni ncn IFDIT neeULULlt t ill nrtI uu

."; If Jack London made any mistakes"in his story of Kalakaua's attempt to

'Inarr'y Princess Kaiulanl to a son ofthe Mikado, published in the Septem-ber Cosmopolitan,: It Is not his fault'bet'' that ofiVVW-'I- "Armstrong, . amember of the,"king's cabinet and au'

;thor of "Around the World With aKing," according to J. F. Haley, col-

lector of internal revenue. He point-ed to the beginning of Chapter VIII ofthe book, headed nThe King Proposesa Matrimonial Alliance Ueetween theRoyal Families of Japan and Hawaii

The Plan Fails," when a visitortailed this morning and read the firstpage. It tells . the story as Londonhas told it. but in simpler language.- Thls.was only published 12 yearsago," said Haley, glancing at the Im-

print "I don't see how the keeper ofthe archives of the" territory couldhave overlooked It, yet overlooked ithe. must, for he says that the factshe presehtshave never been publish-ed before.1 His story Is that the kingtvrota to Japaa In the middle 80s proposing the alliance. Armstrong .was" !iY Kalakaini In Japan In 18$1 andteHs the: story as London has told ItJV-- king 'suddenly and rather mytericusly left out palace hi company

-- v. Uh the emperor's chamberlain,' Arm-trcr.- rj

says. ,He recites 'that he after-- a

rds learned. Kalakaua proposed anfl'iance of the royal houses to thec r.peror, that he asked for time toconsider it as It involved a startlingdeparture from Japanese traditions.

' On the return of the king to Ha-- -: !i the Imperial chamberlain' of the

rcr appeared in Honolulu on at mission. V Ke carried a letter

1 the emperor declining the.-alU-'-

He would not aid in any;c which "impaired ihe sphere

.'. ;.:ericaa Influence over Hawaii. "

. ;t Is where London got his 1n-utlc- n.

The book is In the public

SMALL' BOY BIG ASSET '

nO.Mn,-lUlyf-Th- e small boy Is he-re mina; rapidly one of the most pris- -

t J labor assets in Italy, according toa Yecent report of the Ministry of La-bors Therein 6mall""uoy famine Inall business oftJces; and the ages oftlie boy from 12 to 15 years old haveincreased Irom board and lodging and$2 or Z a month to J15 to $20. -

' Majrio Tiricolo, ': 4, '; was Instantlykilled by an electric car at. Atwellsavenue and America - street, ' Provi-dence, R. I.

i: iI;::jrc::!irioii3 class

Leads For Warship Hawaii

f'V- -

ABIGAIL PRINCESS DAVID KAWANANAKOA.Loal residents of Hawaii gladly promise her their aid to secure

action upon her petition to th e secretary of the navy.

(Continued from page one!

the idea, and he was confident that theAd Club would indorse the petitionwhen it was 'properly presented to itsattention and believed other civic

would also do so.Promotion. Committee Pleased.

'"It was one gfiplonutlc. stroke. TheGordlaa knot has. been cut," taid Albert P. Taylor, secretary of the Ha-waii Promotion Committee, todaywhen asked regarding; the move madeby Abigail Princess David Kawanana-ko- a

in furthering; the plan to name abattleship after Hawaii.

"In her womHn'a way she has donemore than' any state organization,commercial body orxther organlza-tiCn"No- f

interests that" have.' wcrkodon the j lan, ' It w 'quite likely' that sheis the first woman to visit the navydepartment on such a mission. Every-one should- - assist in every way pos-

sible to make the movement a success.For years this subject has been takenup fro.ii ' time to time but never insuch a manner. Never in a waj thatIs so bound to produce results.

; "From a puolicity standpoint it isobvious that a .'warship carrying thename of Hawaii around the world Isworth- much to the islands. It provesconclusively that ! Hawaii will morethan ever be recognized a's a real unitof the sreat Atuerican republic.Suggests Concerted Action:

"Certainly l would be wining to co-

operate with the Ad Club, Chamberof Commerce and Promotion Commit-tee In concerted effort to have a

WOLGAST IS TRAININGHIS HARNESS HORSES

Ad Wclgast says it's been too hot totrain and fight so he has canceledbtth bouts he-- had scheduled for thismonth at SairLake City and ColoradoSprings, and won't tackle anybody befere . Labor Day,, when he fights atIdaho Falls Idaho, opponent not yetselected. ' ,.

' Ad ' is busy. "these 'days assistingHerbert; Teachbut in training his tworacing horses, Elmford, 2:08, andShamrock Belle, a young unmarked,trotter. ; v;i v:-. -

Ad '. expects his horses to .win anumber of races during the summerand fall.

Barney Fuhry, Ad's negro trainer, isalso assisting in ctraininc Wolgast'sstable. . , w

Waters within 3.000 feet of AnnetteIsland and several small adjacentislands in southeast Alaska have beenset apart as a fishery e?erve for theexclusive benefit' cf certain Alaskanatives by the terms of a presidentialproclamation. Action in regard tothese - waters is taken for the benefitof Metlakahlans and such other Alas-kan natives, as have joined them ormay join them in residence on theseIslands... the '.reserve to-b- e used bythem under the genetal fisheries lawsand regulations of the United Statesas admmistered by , the Secretary, ofCommerca .; ::

"

The war department has Instructedarmy commanders on the; border tosubmit weekly reports showing theactual physical condition of their com-

mands- ' '';.

Ulysses. Aubrey of Tacoma, drivercf an automobile in a pursuit race atPortland, and Frank Piatt were killedwhen his car left the track and torethrough a fence. v

;' ' One man is known to havo bee:i-kille- d

and several are rafssins ir. afire that destroyed a hotel and severalresidences at Duryca. Pa.

The world's sugar, production. laabout equally divided between , beetend cane origin.. ' ; C ;

Granulated EyclidvjQDIrtrS Eyes inflamed by expo--

sure to Sua, Dost and WlaiFZr- - rvV" quickly relieved by Marina

It . V (TT C tyt Bemedy. No Smarting.a at iust .ve comfort. ft

Your Druggin's 50c per Bottle; Martoc EytSslvtiaTubet2Sc ForCsokalibeEycfreeatkDnureisu or Msriae lie Cemedj Cs.. Caicaga

I,

United States war-vess- el named afterthe territory of' Hawaii," said CharlesR. Forbes, superintendent of publicvxrks,. chairman' of the board of har.bor commissioners and public utilitiescommission., this morning.

"I think Princess Kawananakoa de-

serves a great deal of credit for bring-ing the proposition before Secretaryof the Navy DanieJs. as printed bythe Star-Bulleti- n yesterday." he. ad-ded. "I do not think Horiolulu organ-izations would have much success In,getting a battleship named Hawaii, asis has not ben the navy department'spolicy, as I understand it, to-na-

me thebig war-vesse- ls after territories. Itwould be more practicable, as I seeIt. to request the navy departmentand Secretary Daniels to name a newcruiser after this territory:"

The following statement. waSi madeby Governor Plnkham this morning:

"Coincident with the general senti-ment and desire of all states and ter-ritories that their names shall behonorabJy carried on the seas-o- f theworld under the flag of the UnitedStates of America, and in a mannersignifying the dignity and power ctour country, Hawaii may well requestshe be accorded recognition.

"On land or sea no division of theUnited States has a superior claim. , todistinction, for our very existence ialinked to the navy of the UnitedStates.. v: )

"We may; well thank Princess Ka-

wananakoa for her presentation of'Hawaiia's claims."' ; '

neli'.'f totaling $2,000,000 for cloth-- i

ing and feeding, destitute Mexicans isprovided in a bill offered, the Houseby Representative Randall o; California.

Chess players from all parts of theUnited States met recently at Buffalotor the opening of the New York StateAssociation's annual meeting and tour-nament '

.'

v'

What aStar Bulletin

Want AdWill Do !

BELIEVE PRINCE

r.

WILL ASK TO BE

NAMED GUARDIAN

(Con tinned from rage cue)

Wedncsdav afternoon, sliortlv afterthe filing of the decision. He saysthat she is very much pleased withthe progress that has been, made, andrelteMtei her former declarations thatshe Is entirely satisfied with the trustIn which her property is now held.

Attorney D. L. Withlngton, one ofcounsel for Kuhio, says that if anyvictory was gained as a result of thedecision of the supreme court, it isa victory which appears to be sati&tac.tory to both sides.

"The result of the decision is to putthe case back exactly where it waswhen Circuit Judge Stuart removedKuhio as "next friend' of the queenon the objection of the trustees," Attorney Withlngton adds.

He went on to say that, althoughbe has received no definite informa-tion as yet. It is possible a netrtionwill be filed asking that "kuhio be atpointed guardian ad litem of thequeen. x

Just who will hear further proceed-ings in the suit is now a matter ofconjecture Circuit Judge Ashford isof the opinion that he would be dis-qualified for the reason that he mightbe called a 9 a witness. Circuit JudgeWhitney Is on the coast, but certainobjections to his hearing the matterhave been made by Kuhio.

.The opinion prevails that whoeverla appointed to succeed Circuit JudgeStuart will be called upon to hear fur-tJi- er

proceedings. , j: .i ? . ?

CONCILIATION TO

BE JAPANESE.

POLICY, REPORT

PEKING,. Cbina.-sBar- on Hayashi'sdesignation as Japanese minister toPeking; succeeding Ekl Hioki, the re-

tiring minister, has pfovoked widecomment, because of Baron Hayashi'shigh rank' in v the' diplomatic service.He will bex accredited : here as minis-ter. Hdwever, he Is.: an ambassadorin the Japanese foreign service, andwill retain' that rank; and the salaryof an ambassador. - y

.'Japanese - newspapers have gener-ally1 indicated that 'Baron Hayashi willadopt a conciliatory.;; policy-- i towardChina, and le- - being-sen- t here tor Chepurpose the relationsbetween. :tHevtwovneighboriBg coun-- ;

tries. "This view Is not generallyshared by : the Chinese press, whichipredicts that' Baron Hayashi will even-tually be much firmer in his dealingswith Chlnaf thanr his. predecessor: was.

Warring' factions in- - China- - havebeen - adtised rathef generally by thepress to reconcile "'their differencesand present an undivided front to anypossible foreign aggression. - Politicalleaders' are warned that- - a continu-ance of the present Internal strifewill reduce ' the young republic yo"complete political 1 and economicaltutelage of Japan."'-- ' The published digest of the newRusso-Japanes- e 'treaty has throwngloom over the Chinese foreign of-fice. The new treaty is regarded asa distinct recognition by Russia ofJapan's special position In the FarEast :-

- : ". - v ,. .

James Whartenby; of Philadelphia,a summer resident of Spring Lake, N.J., presented the town with a lot upon--

which a $42,000 hospital will beerected.' '

appreciatioTL ofwhat a ClassifiedAd will do?

Look through the Star-Bulleti- n Classi-fied Ads and; you will find thenr used forpurposes whicli tnay seein unusual to you.Kxperience has taught advertisers, how-ever, that Star-Bulleti- n Want Ads may beused successfully to; : . :' -

Restore found articlesFind lost valuables

Procure hotel guestsRent houses and rooms

Sell Real EstateSell new and old cars

, Fill arid find positions

These are but a few of the many accom-- 1

)Iishmenf s of the ' versatile StarBnlletiiiAVant Ads. Adapt its wonderful results 1oyour needs.

,

t r rfCANNERY HEADS

RETICENT ON

(Continued from page one)

ness and congeniality he bore no resemblaace to the worU wonder. Toany number of question he wouMneither say Taye' not ''no," 'yes"nor "maybe."'

"I would class the report as a 'a-mb- r.

" Further than that I care 10 saynothing.' was the most direct stat111 en t Dole made

The non-commit- tal president re-

turned in the Matsonla from a lourweeks' - business, visit in Californiaand would undoubtedly know whetherthere were any truth in the story, butdeclines to say whether anything ofthat nature is contemplated. Whenasked if he would either affirm ordeny the statement he said he wouldrather not say.

Dole did telr; that J. K. Armsby isinterested In dried fruit and Is sellingagent Tor the Alaska Packers' Associ-ation, the - largest canners of salmonIn theworld; that the California Can-ners' Association ' Is the largest concera of its kind in existence; the Cen-

tral CaUfornia. Canneries, one of thelargest, and Balfcar, Guthrie & Co., animmense Hrltlsb concern interestedin agriculture, cil, land reclamationand thought to be connected with iheAlaska Packers' 'Association, bur hewould not venture to say whether sucha combination would be desirable ornot - r

Offfoid, whose concern Is a brart hof the California Fruit Canners' Assoelation, said he knew nothing aboutthe - reported merger In whtclr hiscompany is said to be Interested;

"That business would be transactedin California,' he said, "and I wouldprobably know nothing of it if itwere so. However; I doubt it iHhoasiain this modern age 'of combinations-i- t

might be altogether possible.' '

ARE YOU A MAM MOTH REPT?

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. "You imp-i-den- t

Maramothrept."That's : what ' a Southern girl called

Jack Donovan, an amateur photo-grapher, who had bet he could snapsix of the prettiest young women Inthe Harvard summer , school within72 hours.

The picture man's first victim wasa pretty blonde from Albany. Hesighted his lens and fired. The beautysighted her flashing orbs and returnedthe fire doublefold. '

"You Impudent mammothrept," shecried. Disabled : but with exposureNo.. 1 in his possession the photogra-pher retreated not knowing what hehad been tailed but' fearing the worst.

Whereupon he consulted numerousAuthorities and finally found In a dlitionary this: ''Mammothrept a childreared by its grandmother; a spoiledchild. :: "'- - ."-- . .

. Japan's foreign trade last year waunprecedented, as it showed a big bal-ance in favor of exports. "

use

Fireproof -

f'

WE STORE EVERYTHINGJAMES H. LOVE

TED

John Dough 1

will be on display at J. M. Levy & Co. 'sstore on Saturday, August 19th,

Be sure and see them !

JapaneseAND ORIENTAL NOVELTIES

Phone 1522

.MBfeeir

Stampsare great time savers to

every business concern.

We make them of thebest rubber. Ready fordelivery every ; Monday

A.M.

Hawaiian News Co., Ltd.: ' '-

-.0 rStreet".; . :

'FRESH SANTA. ROSA f '

Delivery Every Way Every Day

CHUN HOON : t

Kekaunke, Nr. Queen Phone 3992

STAR-BULLETI- N GIVES YOU "

: TODAY'S NEWS , TODAY

is type firmswho

'..ir : ... .

AGFamily

I

XITY TRANSFER COMPANY. PHONE 12SI

Silk

Nuuanu; near HiDttl

HQNOmttl ;:DAIRYMEN'S. "

iOCIATIONTelephones 1542 and 4676

Manufacturers of theN

VELVETBrand High Grade- -

ICE CREAMSand Distributors of

; Pasteurized Island

MILK AND

CREAM

KENNETH ALEXANDER

.Sittings' by appointment 4682:424 Beretanla 8L

irieri

NE of the most interestingeatures in the printing situa

tion the. of

Portraits

andStar-Bulletin Printing.

The list of Star-Bullet- in Printing usersshows an exceptional average as to substan-tial rating and strong position in affairs.

: The typical User' is'a .successful uian who Hiiiik.s for himself, andwho owes his place in the world to his habit of getting the facts andusing-- ' his' own judgment. His whole habit, of life has taught him toseek efficiency.

Phone'4911 we will see that your catalogue or letter-hea- d re-

flects the beauty and good taste you would have it.

Y

?2?

Page 3: PAGES-HONOL- ULU, ma BE › bitstream › ...SELLING RABBITS. LONDON, Eng. An Exchange tele-gram dispatch from The Hague says. "The price of horses in Germany haa doubled. Farmers

gpi MODERWVm

yoirdont haveto,do much,. guessing

.4- -

ITSCartwright

HOTELSAN FRANCISCO ;

Sutter Street I West of PowellOmm Mt oh mt , r

EVER V R O OMM.50 A DAYEither cit or two persons

, ' NO IIICHLR

Ail tunny outside rooms, with'private bath and large

dressing closet.m " " -- TummM (..an N.. l,lJHtm. '

Bellevue HotelCorner of Geary and Taylor Sts.

SAN FRANCISCO4 Absolutely fireproof.. In the

heart of pie downtown sectionwith access to all the principal

: stores and .theater. ''.Three hundred rooms. Every,room with private bath.,, : .'."';

RATES: "

European Plan $1.50 per day up.American Plan, $3.50 per day

:'V- - 'up.--" :t ":"

;

Take taxi from depot or ferryto hotel at-ou- r expense,

reservations and other In-

formation " ''see; WILLIAM L. WARREN,

Phone 2273 x ,1059 Fort StIn the evening at the Pleasarv

lon Hotel. Hortoldlu, T. H,

I II I IV 7 -- l I I .! l

Manufacturers Shoe Co. Ljtd

Bearers in Shoes of .Quality

1051 Fort St. Phone 1782

SPECIAL SALE

Grass Linen and Pongee WalatPatterns

YEE CHAN A CO,Corner King and Bethel Streets

Island M e a t s'

; - and Vegetables " '' V'

V Retail and WholesaleTerritorial Marketina Division 1

Maunakea. Nr. Queen ' Phone 1840

Coral Gardens Hotel- Daily passencer auto service leavesHawaii Tours Company 9:30 a. m.Leaves Gardens 3 p. m. for Honolulu.Reservations Hawaii Tour Company,phone 1923; our phone. Blue 912.

Motor Apparel

Women's Sea IslandCrepe Suits, $4.50

Duplicates of models thathave been, selling at , $7.50.Well tailored and trimmedwith pearl buttons.

New Bedford, Once Center of- Industry, Now Sends Only

?. Few Steamers, Whate fish !ng has almost ceased tobe an American industry. Yet, a verylarge revenue ia derived from this ry

uy the large Norwegian com-panies engaged in it and it seems thathere also we have an example of fail-ure to move with the times being resensible for the extinction of anAmerican enterprise, in the same wayas our wooden windjammers werewithdrawn from the world's shippingtrade without being replaced by moremodern tonnage. According tp theannual renort of the New York chamber of commerce there were last yearonly II or 1 " vessels cruising fromNew Bedford to the North and SouthAtlantic, bringing from 14.0Q0 to 14.500barrels of oil. This year the fleet iseven smaller. The registered ton-nage in w hale fishing under the Unit-ed States flag has decreased from1 8.633 tons in 2890, to 8829 tons In1913. However, the operations ofAmerican whalers have been extended, and while it was formerly chieflya New Bedford enterprise, now someof Its chief zones of exploitation liein the Pacific. Tne majority or tnewhales caueht in the Pacific are suedes of the genus, namely the ;"Humpback. "Finback ana

j--Sulphur bottOJi" whales (the latter

! running as high as 86 feet In length)producing ordint.ry commercial .whaleoil. The price of this oil since thewar started,' chiefly owing'to Us gly-

cerine content and broader uses,' hasIncreased &0" ir cent, making thebusiness somewhat more attractive.

However, the industry has dwindledto snch; small proportions that ' it. nolonger euBtaln3 a considerable section of the maritime population or thiscountry.; It is, therefore, particularlyapposite to in luire wnat oiner eountries are doing. .

'

Whale huntinz is a verr ancient industry and the utilization of whale oildates from the year 14&0, when sev-

eral expeditions were sent out fromBordeaux.

The I modern form of whaling,marked by its enormous and rapid

ratAft nnlv frnm about thef i yitvvv WM w

year 1906, when the great whalingcrrrmn i-- i were rllRrOVPTfed In the Ant--

' arctic and off the shores of Africa andAustralia. These new fields were exploited by the establishment of largeland stations but more particularlyhv, mAing of floating stations' fittedout by Norwegian whaling companies.These so-call- floating factories con-

sist of steamships of: from about $000tn- - sf.on tons. Durine the present century the development of the Industryhas resulted in tne : estaoasnment oicnrh .anrioui plants that. whereas

j the sperm-whale- r of did could be content with a total eaten or iu to lawhales on an expedition lasting sixto nine months, cuch a number is nowconsidered the necessary; dally supplythroughout the eeason for one of themost un-to-da- lc stations. The prlmt

! tlve tackle employed In early days,confuting of,.i harpoon tnrown iroma small rowing boat, haa been super-seded Ly ' the gun-harpoo- n, fired bymeans of a percussion shell from pow-

erful steamers of about 150 tons. Buthand in hand with the development ofwhaling . methods, the extraction process1 has also undergone , great im-

provements, la former days the, blub-ber, was melted in large pans over anopen fire; now the melting is done ingreat vats to which steam is conducted. - The world's total production olwhale oil in 1914 was about 118,006tons, of which r bout 92.000 tons, orabout 78 per cent of the total producUoo, was turned oat by . Norwegianfactories. The Norwegian whaling in-

dustry has formed an organizationcalled - the - Association of NorwegianWhaling Cbrapanles, having Its officeat Sandefjord, Ncrway. Most of theseuhaHair comDaties have tank ships,'and the oil turned out ty them can besuuDlied in tanks and .

pumpea directIfrom the ship in the, event of whole

Uli wjo wniwb "-- -- - -

lotii the oil is uDDlied ! in casks ordrums. - Besides whale oil, large quantitles of guano, concentrated ; cattlefoods and bone, meal are also nowproduced. These products are (madefrom the bone and flesh of the whale.

As stated above; the production of

, oil is noir a Nor

SAC

STAR-BULLETI- N 17, 1916.

whale almost whollywegian industry but. there is also asmall whaling company . in British Co-

lumbia, two in Alaska and anothercn the coast of ' Washington. Thecatches In these areas varies great-ly as shales have decreased in num-bers. The Chilean whaling industryhas risen to prominence with centersof operations on the lower coast andon the Falkland Islands.

On the Oriental side of the Pacificwhaling is largely in the hands ofthe Japanese. A single combination,with headquarters at Osaka. hasa

t l.aiJ-Uj- ) capital exceeding a . millionI dollars and maintains a 12 per cent; dividend per a?,num. There are atpresent eight leading whaling companies in Japan. In the Soutb Atlan-tic the industry finds a large develop-ment along the Brazilian coast fromiahia to Santo3. In Argentine a singlecompany has i.rodnced annually sev-eral thousand tuns of whale oil. TheFrench Oorso roast Is Enother produc-tive area. Th'; South African indus-try has its main headquarters at Dur-

ban. n Natal, where five companiesoperate. One o' the most productivefields ;ie8 alonsr the west coast ofAfrica, Much of this, as well as ofother South Atlsatic whaling products,goes to the English market

WARNS TEUTONS

ALLIES SEEK TO PUNISHTonU&t ladies at tne

ITnANNILAL ILtAUtnOKaimuki Improvement Club. The reg--

monthly meeting will inPARIS, France. Second Lieutenant Lilluokalani school o'clock.

Marchal, recentlyBerlin, proclama and Kewiki Kumano

before the war united marriage weonesaayhen emnloved bv German firms at the home of Mr.

and had made frequent : trips be- -

Berlin and Cologne, he waswell acquainted the country overwhich he flew.

He was in Germany when the warbroke out, but managed, to get bockto France. Some of relatives stilare in Germany. He is 33 years oldHe received decoration of the legion of Honor 21 for prowessin the air and devotion to his country,

proclamation thrown on Berlinis described by French authorities asconsisting of an "impartial statementon the causes of the war and . theprincipal reasons why allies arebound to win." concluding the3ewords: ... ;'...

the wholesale massacre of innocent women and children and byher brutal methods of warfare Germany has alienated the sympathiesof neutrals "and number of herenemies grows daily.

!The allies are firmly resolved togo on until the utmost limit, Vou arefighting fc,r steel kings, squirearj

your . iana graoDers. we arefighting for the liberty of all againstthe tryanny. of military caste.

."We desire to punish the guilty. Wewish to make a repetition of the present carnage impossible andobject will be attained if in Germanythe people possess the to decidequestions of war and peace for themselves." .: .

JAPANESE AND POLICEM ENDIE IN REVOLVER DUEL

AFTER LIQUOR RAID

SEATTLE, Wash. Police SergtJohn Weedin Hiro. Japaneseporter in a drug store owned by LoganBillingsley, who has been - arrestedseveral times for violating the prohtbition were Killed and RobertWiley, police chauffeur, was dangerously, wounded in a pistol battlebetween the policemen and Hiro.

The shooting occurred in front ofBilllng3ley8 , warehoise, had

of-- a liquor raid.Hiro, shortly; before he died, told

Chief Police Beckingham Billingsley had given him the pistol andtold him to keep watch on the ware-house. He.said they believed the policemen jobbers. -

John Weedin.' the dead policeman, 46years old, was the father of children. : - - y

Twenty ))ersonsfwere drowned in acollision between' two ferry boats opthe. River Spree in Copenhagen. .

Women '$ Palm BeachMotor

The smartest motor coat shown this sea-

son, with, hrge collar, and new pockets.Made of genuine Palm Beach cloth, innatural tan color. Serviceable and willwash like linen. Xo starching necessary.

Women's Linen Dusters, $2.75An extraordinary value, made possible

as' result of a special purchase. Made ofnatural linen.

Hotel, near Fort

HONOLULU THURSDAY, AUGUST

AVIATOR

;: .

REGULAR, PROMPT , OELIV- -

ERY 18 WHAT IS DUE YOU.'

t- . At Ja what we want.to youeMry evening the paper is

'

fished. : --f- If you do not your paper

promptly and regularly, . callf phone 49 sk for the Circu- -

latlon Department and make thecomplaint. Serving so manythousands of homes every after--

coon occasional . lapsesposslbje.

f The .Star-Bulleti- n maintains,unUl m. each day, - a spe- -

clal service for any cus--- toiner the carrier may have

missed.

Kill3wing an operation at the hbs-jiit- al

yesterday, 3Jrs. Charles F.is reported recovering.

baLy girl has boehnaniedMary was born Tuer.day to Mr. and

Martin KaiaauKahl of Factoryroad. Kali hi.

The 1. T. Warren place, at Kewaloand ly.inalilo streets has Leen takentemporarily by Lient.-Co- l and Mrs.Frank il. Keefer.

1 wUl be nlght

nlar be heldthe at 7:30

Anselm flewover throwing out Mrs.-Walakln- a

as he nassed. werehad ;Hibt

tween sowith

his

theDec.

The

thewith

"By

the;

yourcny,

that

right

"

and I.

law,

here

whichbeen the. scene

of that

were

nine

a

4--

givepub- -

get

1

makes

6:30 p.

city

A who

Mrs.

who

tlons mMrs.

Samuel Kanahele, 1812 Luso street,by. Rev. Samuel K. Kamaiopili.

and

The members of the : territoriagrand jury will meet at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon in the judiciarybuilding. Several cases are to be --presented hy 'Deputy City Attorney WilT. Carden.-- ' ' ;

Funeral services are at 3 o'clock thisafternoon '.Jin Williams' undertakingparlors for Alexander Kohoalii, a Ha-waiian chief, who died Wednesday athis home, 1731 TJliha street Kohoaliiwas 43 years old and a nephew of thelate High Chief ess Grace Kohoalii.

' Circuit Judge Ashford has appointed K. Wada as temporary admlnistrator of the estate of Hiroki Emoto,the Japanese chauffeur who was murdered last week at the home of JamesB. Castle," JVaikikL Wada is, underbond In the sum of 31700, said to 1ethe value of Emoto's estate. On September, 25 ajpetitioaiior the appointment of- - a- - permanent administratorwill be heard, t .r ' v

I ; DAILY REMINDERS I

Expert manicurist, Union barber shop.Adv. " -

Round the island in auto, 34.00,

Lewis Stables, Phone 2141. Adv.To . ask for what' you want is the

"mode" nowadays. See the Want

Don't forget to stop at Levy's grocery store Saturday and see the wholeDough family on display. V

1 For Distilled Water, Hire's RootBeer : and ? all other Popular Drinkstry the Con. Soda Water Works Co

Adv:

I

, If placard advertising has failed tomake' you a prosperous landlord, whynot try the -

tenant-findin- g kindStar-Bulleti- n Want Ads.

POLICE NOTES

.Mrs. Ah.Kiu, accused otprofanlty.was discharged.

Y, Kokubun, charged with heedlessdriving will be tried August 21. .

Dan Kalale, accused at stealing apair of shoes, has been discharged.

John Akalaka was. discharged froma charge of assault or his wife whenthe latter declined to prosecute. ; 1

Eight Chinese, said to have beenpresent at a gambling game at theMaunakea street stand, paid 35. eachin police court.

The case of"

L. Slgekane, said tohave received brass fittings stolen byboys from the Libsy, McNeill k. Libbycannery,, has heen called in policecourt and will be tried August 21. .

BUILDING PERMITS

Sandwich Islands Honey Co., owners. Location, waianae, uanu.Dwelling. K. Matsumoto, builder. Estimated cost, 3925.

Mrs. V. A. Markham. owner. Location, Punchbowl, mauka-Waiki- kl cor-ner of lolani and Pele streets. Repairdwelling. Yuen Yip, builder. Estimated cost, 3175.

Annie Kaahanui. owner. Location.Mclnerny tract, mauka-Waiki- ki cor-ner of Alewa and Alanl streets. Dwelling. K. Nakatani, builder, intimated cost, 3H50.

.Tnhn H. Xakpa ownpr ideation.WaikikL southeast corner of Lilluokalani and Hamohamo roads. Dwelling. K. Nakatani, builder and architect. Estimated cost, 3107.

Mrs. Theodore Richards, owner.Location, boys' field, mauka side ofVfneyard street, 500 feet Walkiki fromLiliba .street. Storeroom and toilets.Acetylene Light and Agency Co.,builder d. Estimated cost, 3250.

V1IIT0FACE

HER CHARGES

CASTRO IS DEAD

Alejandro Castro, the Fiiipino whoaus shot , Tuesday at Waipabu byElene Rojas. died at 1 o'clock thismorning.

Deputy Sheriff Julvis Asch wasimmediately notified and will go toWaipahu Friday, afternoon to conductthe Inquest.

The woman, who admits the shoot-ing, claiming defense from an assault,will be held pending the verdict of thecoroner's jury.

Castro made a dying statement toCaptain McDuffie of the detective de-partment, declaring the woman luredhim to her room and then shot him.

Only one shot was fired, accordingto the police. It punctured the vic-tim's intestines five times.

AUSTRALIANS NOTIFIEDOF CORRECT POSTAGE ON: LETTERS TO HONOLULU

Word has been received at the Ha-waii Promotion Committee as well asat a number of the business housesaround the city that many Australiansin writing to Hawaii have failed toplace the correct postage on lettersto Hawaii. A movement Is on footto remedy this trouble.

Fred Q Gowers in writing to theHawaii Promotion Committafl ; aavs:M have to inform you that the. attention i or : tne postmaster-gener- al hasbeen drawn to your statement that alarge proportion of letters received byyou rrom Australia are lacking in pos-tage. 1 am now in receipt of a replyfrom that official intimatine that ne.cial instructions have been Issued topostmasters and public attention hasbeen drawn to the matter through theSydney dally newsnaners. oointine outthat the correct amount of postagepayable on letters to Hawaii is 2dper half ounce. Special Informationhas also been paintefl on the postersat the general postoffice regardingthe rate of postage to foreign coun-tries. , ." :.: .

BALDNESS INHERITED TRAITJUST LIKE HORNS ON SHEEP

WASHINGTON, D. C Accordingto Miss Dorothy Osborne of the Ohiostate university, baldness in men isinherited just as much as horns iiisheep. The results of her researchesin the matter are published In theJournal of. Heredity of the AmericanGenetic association for . this city.' Family v histories which she hasgathered , show that neither typhoidfever nor tight hats cause baldnessbut if your father was bald then youare doomed.

"Baldness in women is more fre-quent than is generally known," shedeclares.. She finds" that woman isbald only when she inherits it fromboth parents. If one of her parentswas bald she may transmit baldnessto one-ha- lf her sons.

If a mother la bald all her sons willbe bald, no matter whether the fatheris or not Her daughters will not bobald unless, the father was bald.- -

. President Wilson haa been asked byrepresentatives of the New York StaleFair Association to make an addressat the fair in Syracuse the week ofSeptember 11. .

' Mrs. Niblo, clctcr of George M. Co-br,- n,

died at her home in New Yorkof heart trouble, superinduced bymany years of stage-- dancing.

1

ono

Lots Are Never Taken When There's

"Nothing to Advertice"

Nature Abhors aV a cuum and the manexpecting to do businessis approaching a perfectvaeuum vrhen he believeshe has "Nothing toAdvertise."

; That Means the hourhas struck for That Manto qu it, because he mustbe reachinvr the vacant lot

MUCHA&VLRTISK.

stae and the lot will never more be occupied.

Paid Publicity abhors vacant Jots it fills themand lias nothing in common with vacuum.

Special Sale Aluminum WareSaucepan and Cover.

2 Vi --quart Lipped Saucepan .... .

1 -quart Stewpan2- -quart Double Boiler ..........6H-qua- rt Tea Kettles. . ........ .

WHlMCrTo

each.75 each.23 each

1.50 each...... i 2.71 eachKitchen Set . . f.0O. each

' ' 'CONSISTING OF.

1 only Jelly Cake Pan. r. 1 jonly Flat Skimmer.'1 only Cake Turner, 1 only Solid Ladle. :

1 only Measuring Cup. 1 only Soup Strainer. .

1 only Pie Plate. 1 (only - Pudding Ten.

WWDiKotd8c(9LmII ; i

53-6- 5 KING STRlET. HONOLULU1 i

buyer just, returned from Japan, bringingwith him one of greatest and most-beautifu- l stocks ofOriental Goods ever shown in Honolulu. These unusuallyfine productions are now on display in our show-room- sl

Inspect them at once.

THE CHERRY' "

1137 Fort Street Opposite Panahi

STAR-BULLETI- N 75 CENTS PER JBH

NG'SOP

ONLY AT

BOOK

MELODIESON SALE

lulu Mus1107 FORT, MAUKA HOTEL

TrTRTTTi

$1X0

................

Our hasthe

ic Go.

Page 4: PAGES-HONOL- ULU, ma BE › bitstream › ...SELLING RABBITS. LONDON, Eng. An Exchange tele-gram dispatch from The Hague says. "The price of horses in Germany haa doubled. Farmers

POUB

RILEY H. ALLEN

THURSDAY. .AUGUST 17, li'lG.. . . . .... . . .

POLITICAL EDUCATION OK FLIMFLAM.'

One falwe note was t ruck at the Chamber of Coin-Bie- n

Wednemlaj' 'afternoon that rails for a momentof undivided attention from the citizens of this townwho believe1hej have intelligence hut are not hosure of how much is jxjweHNeo. lv the other fellow.

SjeakerM. in the enthuniasiu of advancing theircause,1 remarkei th.it" the electorate of this citv andcount v tvill not MiiiHtort jhiv incisure in which thev, ... .. . . . - ., .,

do not ee Nome .immediate return for their imme-

diate selves. That is. the electorate will not votein favor of Intnds for water and sewers and parks ifthe item for roads is not 'included.' The' reason forthis, it was asserted, is that the hoijolloi of the elec-

torate will not KUjjort any. measure unless they see''something in it for them'' in the shae of work,day labor, on the roads.

Assuming this to he true, the Chamler of Coinineree should tie the last organization within thiscitjr.tabe influenced by 'such un argument, inttuencexl to , the extent of running to cover and acceptingit.'', ' ;';.''' Electorates do not go wrong unless they are neglected and allowed to fie. misled.

' Mernliers of the Chamber of Comment whatevertheir record has been. in the jiast should lie the last

. men of this city to lay down 'liefore a threat that theelectorate can lie handled only by throwing a sopto selfish interest and cannot.-lie.- , influenced '.by', anappeal to intelligence and what businessmen believeto be the best method for securing the best resultsfor the rich, tjbe poor and the average man. '

Year after year we have had the wretchedtion in this city and territory of certain brands ofpoliticians coming liefore the people and cryingdown progressive, businesslike measures with thehowl "Oh, you ran t get the ignorant electorate toaccept that." '

;v; ..v.-;- i.'

, The worst of It is that men who ought to knowbetter have accepted this as tinal. -

. Not yet haa there been a considerable body of mencome forward to' answer this miserable cowardlywhine with the reply that they will test the intelli-gence of the electorate,' that in the first place theydo not, believe- - the statements to lie true, and evenif true they intend to go forward with'the fight toeducate the electorate-t- o apjieal to 'intelligence bymeans'of an intelligent appeal.

liver since the territory ,r was organized, politicalbattle. have beeii f6ught on the basis of petty pertonalities and all night stump speeches that turn onthe superiority of a man because he does or does notwear his shirt outside. his pants.

(Certain people, with selfish axes to grind havepreached the doctrine, in committees and confer-ences, and out, that the only way to reach the elect-

orate-is. to "give 'em something' through runnersand promises all of which is; pure, unadulteratedflimflam and-waste.-- - Men of supposed and believedintelligence; have fallen for it. and into it. The; re-

sult is a species of degradation which does not im-

prove he electorate's attitude of. mind and makesthe alleged intelligent man ashamed of himself event hough' he winita majority of the votes. ,

Not in the brief hiRtory of .this territory, has anyconsiderable body' of men conducted a campaign oneducational lines, that is, through carefully prepar-e- d

arguments lhatJeave out personalities and leadpublic ; attention to the real fundamental issues thatare pressing on every side. f

If. the' electorate is now in the maudlin conditionwhich the Star-Bulleti- n does not admit suggest-

ed, it is tecause the men of this .city who ought toknow better liave. not had courage , of conviction tofight a battle turfacts and principles as opposed tothe ancient and dishonorable- - method of appeal toIiersonalities and prejudice. u' ;';;"'

In this present juncture men of the Chamber ofCommerce should not be the. first to knuckle underto the cry "You cant do it." V

Men!of:y

the Chamber of...Commerce..

should be thefirst to willingly and aggressively to go to the frontto mak a fight with facts as the weapon and intelli-gent presentation through carefully prepared litera-ture and speeches as the ammunition of the cam-paign.?;" ,.; '.

:

The inspiration, the initiative, the aggressiveforce and the working force' for a campaign of thischaracter should, come from the Chamber of Com-merce-- if

that organization plans to be a force inthe cbnjiHunitj; 1 i f " v

Speaking of the electorate, it should be borne incxind that children born on annexation day are al-

most o the age to yoe. , Our electorate is no longerdominated by tlie plug hat brigade. The men in theranks are products of , our schools. Thev read.They write. They can add and substract. Theyhave been taught to think for themselves. They areestablishing families and building homes. When, onestops to study the record and the material offered,it is a question whether the electorate or the menwho assume to handle it on the old flimflam basisare the more deserving of criticism. .

The immediate issue before city administratorsand taxpayers is whether Kalakaua avenue will befree from bumps when the tourist season of the win-te-r

starts in. ..';

If the Manoa bond case is decided on the law andthe evidence, there, is ample evidence regardless of5rhat the' law may be- : . S t :- - -. ,

HONOLULU STAB-BUIXETI- N, THURSDAYAUGUST 17, 191G.

EDITORYOTIX'i ON I Ml IM ) V M V. N TS.

Action by the Chaiuir of Com mem on the bond-

ing issue puts the 'organization which includes thelargest taxpayers of the city squarely on record.

These men after studying the situation carefullyvoluntarily mpiest that their taxes lie raised in theimmediate futuiv in ird( r to secure the funds de-

manded not merely . needed for public improve-ments.

That fettles it so far as the large taxpaying inter-ests are-concerned-

IJut this organization d4s not include in its mem- -

lieihip the man paying for hi. home on the instal-ment plan; the man wnose lalior is his capital; theman who is building himself up in the so-calle- d

Final I. way.This small man has not Iteen heard. Perhaps he

has not begun .to think of the subject very hard. Hedoes. not have the leisure some of his fellows enjoy.

It seems reasonable therefore that the city admin-istration should accept the opfKirtunity of placingthe question Ijefore the small man as well as thetaxpayer at the coining election. The exjiense of do-

ing this would lie nil. livery man would have anopportunity to express his opinion, if he is interest-ed. We would know how many ure interested.

The danger of the issue lieeoming fogged by thelartizan play of the campaign is also nil. The chiefissue will be the partisan issue. The vote on pul-li- c

improvements will lie tast on the merits of thequestion, and not influenced by a man's opinion ofwho should lie delegate to Congress or what menfrom among his fellows should go ro the legislature.

Less fogging of the issue on the public improve-ment question will be exieriencetl by taking thisvote in Novemlier when members of the legislatureare elected than would occur it the vote were takencoincident with the municipal election in the spring.

THOSE UNPRINCIPLED NEWSPAPERMEN.

Senator Stone of ilissouri wants to lie shown howthe newspapermen got hold of the fact that UncleSam was. negotiating for the purchase of the Westindies. The,chanv are that Koine senator, a dozenof them terhap8, talked about the "confldential"treaty which Secretary Uinsing and (CounsellorPolk have been drawing up. , The executive sessionsof the senate have.long lieen the subjei't of amused criticism. After sitting . into one of thesesessions, tbe senators invariably canie out and talk?ed and only a little '.bit of talking was necessary.

Frequently the layman expresses wpiider as tohow some "inside" informal ion, supposedly "tiedup,' came to i lie ears oi tne newspapermen, i snarly those who have agreed to "tie it up" let the catout of 'the bag without knowing it. One busi nesssensation in Honolulu awhile back got out becausea certain businessman talked to another while hisrhauffeur was 'driving them homeward. In anotherinstance an alert reporter saw a number of bankofficials downtown together at an hour of the nightwhen bank directors, and cashiers are not usuallyi'ound at work. ; His instant guess that there was a''story" in it proved corrects

Sen.tors know that' if the Washington correspondents pledge confidence, it will be scrupulously re-- J

spected, It is an easy guess that the newspapermen who dug up the Danish West Indies story either were not pledged to confidence or else, havingsecured the news without giving: their word,. declinred to promise that it would not be used,i Nearly every ' newspaperman ' has run across men

who seek to secure suppression of news by giving itunder pledge of 'onfiden,e. For that reason thenews:writer is chary about making any such pledgeunless there is an obviously good reason for it.r : There may be a great buss and hhbbuli in thesenate over .'the publication of the Danish West In-

dies treaty, but newspaper readers may bank on itthat the story came out through some senator orgovernment official who "leaked," consciously or not

Even the Democrats could not bring themselvesto naminqr the day and date when the Philippinesshould be granted their independence. The promisenow given is almost identical with that which. Mr.

Taft gave the Filipinos. And it "expresses the gen-

eral American sentiment on the question.

1'erhapB it is the prospect of the strike that kee8the priee of stocks down. IK)kiug at it from thisangle, the price of sugar seems to have more. to dowith it esjiecially as a large share of the Hawaiiancrop is marketed.

yir. Kos Harris of.

Wichita told4J-- -

the Ad Club thatWichita voted bonds to three times the propertyvaluation of the citv, and certainlv Wichita hasgrown. 'Live communities decide to do a thing andthen get out and just simply coni)el results.

An amusement pier along the waterfront shouldgo a long way towards solving the problem of whatto do for the soldier and the permanent resident aswell.

It is always gratifying when some leader of thecommunity monies forward and refused to allow astruggling new industry die.

Don't forget that a clean-u- p day would be appro-priate as a preparation for the visiting throngs of.the ,winter.'-.- ? w - i:.v .?

LOST SOLDIERS

REPORTED DEAD

BY ARMY BOARD

I Mystery of Five Enlisted Men "Minted .v the city t astm?porary clerk his office.t i r o ii ,

un

dauing '.u oea in onidii days.

Boat Stiit Unsolved

Another mystery of the remains Pointed' by Governor Pinkham as advance? some declinessolved, the names of the five '""airman 01 tne icurui judicial ais--

(in?

solclrs r;f Comrianv 1. 3d BattalionEngineers, who started out July l-- i Ina 15-fo- ot whaiebcat equipped withauxiliary enii e and sail from Puuiki.Walalua district. Oahu. with permis-sion to sail around Kaena Point andcome into Pearl Harbor, and whohave never ben heard of since, havebeen droDped from the rolls. It waslearned tofiay.

The board ot army officers appoint-ed to lnauire into the enlisted men'sstrange disappearance has completeditn findings, sent them to Washing-ton and decided that the soldiersdied in line of dutv. and thai theirparents or nearest relatives shall re-

ceive six months' pay, usual com-pensation for family or dependents ofsoldiers meeting death in service.

The men have apparently beenswallowed up by the ocean. Everyeffort has been made to locate themor to find traces of theh-- boat, wreckage or anything throwing any light !

on their disappeamnce. The other I

islands of the group have also beensearcned, as well as th windward andieeward aides of Oahu. I

On the . board which has renderedits rf'ndines have been fal. William I

R. P'sMell an1 Capt. Edward S. Hart-- jshorn. 2d Tnfantry. and Lieut. R. CHolliday of the department headauaf- -

ters

CUM MING

court.

editor

visit

O'Xeil

TheyIsland.

blood home

clefkcourt,

after weeks spenthome

McK.

leavethere about

local

courts West Joseph where tand Ebersole. pointedOahu tlie about receive action would

Island, when arrive securePAULpoint

under leaving hedirection Sheriff Julius territorial saned Germany

arriverther traces be withm three

Tames soldiers,reported dead, board

stated SAMUFLundeterminable Guard

are William'Wiaei C'rV. Thomas W. Murphy.

Silas P. Birdsall RaymondRinkler.

VITAL STATISTICS

PORNKALAATTKAHI TU Honolulu, August

1916. Mr. and Mrs. MartinKalaaukahl, Factoryaroad.a daughter Mary.

street, Asylum,

MARRIED

WalaklnaK. Kamaiopill,

FARLEY-PEPPE- R

2,1K. Farley of Koloa,

Honolulu.

DIED

LJiina cniei,

In

V

Heights

1625

Metvtiotv.VALFORH H. DRl'MMOVD. de' utj

bank eyiminer hs return-- .ed from an cfflcial of K.iuai.

THOMAS P. 3 hag been

la

of

T. pf has been ap-- J sornewhatKrme and be--sea

It,

trict tax-apie-

EDITOR M. G. SANTOS, S.H.'.O. J19..V. ed resignations Dr DoremusO Luso. the

Portuguese weetcly re-

turned from a to Maui.

SF:NATOR EDWARD W. QUINNGeorge of W. C Peacock &

Company left for Maui Wednesday inthe Mauna Kea will do somehunting on Valley

K. KAMANOUUT of thedepartment

bees seriously ill withpoisoning at his at Wai

kiki.

JAMES THOMPSON, ofsupreme back at his desk !

a twoat his country Hauula,Windward

GEORGE McCLELLAN, rep-

resentative of Chamber of Com-merce at Washington, is to

23, according (oRaymond C. Brown, secretary.

SUTTON and Paul Bartlett,attorneys, left for Hawaii on

business before tax' left New York, It

of ieeward "w111 10 Information as Immediate bet Goodspeed.to I ,

SHERIFF ih was vui.she willextreme ofwere searched thoroughly left In Kea stated Bremen

Deputy Hawaii prison had a littleNo WTecksfe the boat Keeaumoku 10 day and 8he

or were will , next oror lost v

officially thehavlnir that thev n n- - BRIG.-GE- 1 JOHNSOV.rer a time by commanding the National of

Cpl. O'Reilly,

W...

' I

v :

15. to' Kaliht.

- '. f

Francisco,

KAHOALII

Honolulu,

Hilo

Commercial ofo'

mechanical Star-Bullet- in

Hawaii, leave Saturday tbeIsland, where he will look over

National Guard activities on Hawaiigenerally,

JOE ANDRADE,' heartyand,, refreshed after a from

and worries of the roostbusy years local stock market has

known, Is bacic from a vacationspent at Volcano. , ,

MRS. MICHTON, wife of F, P.Mlhfnn (hlrnnrtnp In tTio

H?"7?n Hooo u u' Au8t building, with her two children, leave19T6. to Mr. --andMrs. Friday on Niagara for Portland,

Archuletta of Kingy street near Oregon, thev; will spendKaill street, KallhL ,ia. son Rav- - visiting relatives,mond. j : ; .

FERNANDES In Makawellr """'H. PRINCESS DAVID KA--

August 8. 1916, to tMr. and Mrs. V NANAKOA, sponsor for new. .... . . .-- 1 r J lr - 1 A.t 1 Jm.ni'nci v, reruauuKH, a sou. moreuieni iu utiiiie a umuesiup

CAMACHO In .'Honolulu, 1, Hawaii, is expected to arrive In Honb--J

Mr. and Mrs, John Cam- - 'ulu about September 1, for. a two ;

acho of Walakamilo road, Palami, months . with relatives; She. Isa Julia. ft sister of Mrs. Robert Shingle and

JONE3 In Honolulu, August 16r 1916 Mrs. George Beckley, and althoughto Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Jones of "nf ls her own home here, may visit

relatives during her stay.San Antonla avenue, a sonClyde. I

SAYA In Honolulu, August 1916. ICHIRO MOTOKAWA, formerly at and Mra John of School Monoiuiu Doy. nas oDtamea a position

opposite Insane ason.

W.

in WestinghouseCompany, of

manufacturing companies

tin k...KUMANO.KAAIHUE - I Hono.u.n. M iAnrilQt Ik IQIk Kanflkl k ' . .

2 King street methodlstand Mrs. Kaaihue, Rev.Samuel . assistant

territorial

lone

manager

near

absent

western

Hied

Big

'10,

visit

Pittsburg withone

electricalapparatus world. The

nmonrt

Motokawa graduated InJune mechanical engineering

., pastor of, Kaumakapill college at Corn-il- l and is a graduate ofofficiating; witnesses and the McKinley high schoolMrs. Kanahele. I

. .... ,

In ' StewartHotel, August

Joseph ' iniiiNiUJViiwqand Miss Gertrude M. Pep- -

. of Waterloo, C. D. Mi'e S. iFURUKAWA: The. trip ' tolikin, ormerly of Walmea, Japan by the St. team year

" officiating; wltnesses-D- r A. . will mean much to baseball both Inand Mrs. Giffard of and Japan. At Dase- -

f. v

la Honolulu, . 6

effort8street, Hawaiian a na-

tive this years old.AKANA August

1624 Dole

tour

spotted

JOHN

vacation

Oahu.

August

lookingvacation

ever ,

'

August

Electric largest

Young

Samuel

Kauai,

Kauai. Louis"

Hawaii present

August

ball here is practically dead,- - but Ar- -

cla's plan of sending a team to theOrient may be a big help to the

pastime. The St. Louis man- -

ager is to congraiuiaiea on - nisAlexander Kahoalii of 173119t6, t0 do something game

of city, 43

R.

of

A.

of

E.

on

rf

ofin

RAYMOND C. BROWN: I do13 not think that the action of chan

1916, Michael Kalwaihuula Inuwa, ber of means that is op-so- n

, of Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester posed to Issuance of municipalAEana of 1504 LeilanI street, bonds. To me means only that It9 months and 11 days old. I is opposed to proposal submitted

HONOLULU In Honolulu, August to it by supervisors. I believe1916, Peter K. Honolulu, married, if another proposal, for the Issu-nati- ve

of Maui, 72 years, of tor sewers, water mainsBody cremated. "

j and parks is submitted to It,m

' : it might be willing to pass on as aAn order for 100,000 etecl bllleU, to proposition.

cost $700,000, reported to been :

awarded Canadian Car & Foundry John D. Rockefeller's fortune hasCo., Imperial Munition passed dollar mark.

Dwellings For Rent Furnished";' Nuuanu Valley

Tantalus .i Pearl City (Peninsula)

Waikiltist. '.

Makiki st

publication,

is

Wednesday

In

V. U

it

it

I it

is j

..5 Bedrooms

..3 "

..3 " -

.12

UNFURNISHEDand Maunaloa., ..3 Bedrooms

13th and Claudiae st 2 " .........McKinley Mano i. 4 -

1640 st. 4

. Vineyard st 4 .........1633 Anapuni st 4 2 V .........

The Guardian Trust Co., Ltd.Tel.

church.

1

na-

tional

Kallhl,

Seventh

Kevfalo

3688

Informa- -

.$150.00

. 45 0r

. 30.0(1, 100.00. 65.00.

.$ 30.00

. 18.00

. 75.00

. 65.00. 35.00. 40.00

Stangenwald Bldg.

NEW ACTIVITY IN

LOCAL STOCKS IS

SEEN I

Sa'es In excesa of 2000 shares wereretorted by the exchange toJay.There was., more selling than 61 late

GUARD and tbe ttas

tnd sncn

the

the

Honolulu

church,

commerce

Olaa wan t.esfeck, all sales at SI

in

N MARKET

FortStreet

RES

ARE

CommitteeSelect Successors

Scudder

Expressing.to necessary

r.

oiner a nieftini Wednesdav evening accent.m-f- theand

has

and

the

thehas

the

the

the

Hawauau an Carlos stUdder. .and Rev'Amo--Oahu 31.;.rj. 42, Mc-- Kbersoie. minister, of itPryde fan Carlos Jl.ST1 and church.

SO. i i,e. accepted a call toIn ;Cf0 Pro- - pastorate of a church In To--

ducts sold at 93 cents. 250 Oil at S3.40nd ."0o Tipperary at 9 cents.

to this last stock a cablefrom San Francisco by a

known brokerage bouse that Bos-trv- n

are . negotiating for asale rf the and to securestevk around 14 cents.

bride atport.

wordsexpect

sole anH

regret havingtake action,

dealt in nr rni.oi rnn ,.,.. .tprices

Ewafcugar minister

$1. Pioneer associate$12.

Waialiia Scudderunlisted Mineral

Rela-tive receiv-ed well

sa!dinterests

nropertr

expects

Willof

Ja;.an. recent-ly mainland to

whereV. M. C. A. among prisoncamis tt Aiiies.

Lowrey presided meet-ing. The matter of appointmentof successors ministerswas referred a joint of

FIANCEE ABOARD BREMEN, lh ouara trustees ana tne standingSAYS WEST MAN of Frank CooSe, standing

was authorixed toCHARLESTON, W. a. No one is of church for vain-awaiti- ng

arrival country done by both ministers, andBremen, sister of to express sincere regret tbe

Deutschland. with more anxiety than termination of relations which haveis Frame Henze of this city. On most cordial. .

board Henze is' Auotuer resisnation ; tendered and

his fiancee, whom he to marrvas soon as she is safely landed onAmerican soil. begunpreparations to ro East and meet his

on arrival Atlantic

andamh Ha- - for

will and Mr. thethe

the for that thethe to ovtrWrsch. on ag0

and He gone nere theThe the now

and at,

and

the caresthe

the

thethe

theaiucr

213

thethe

the

thethe

Mr.

per

Defor the

ance

.......

for

the

the

15, the

age

the"by the the

..2

..2

ave.st.,

2)

t?.Z hasthe

the

His last leaving were:"I seetext

CentralEber- -'

r.it

kui. Rev. Mr. Ebersolelett fur his way

lndon. England, he will dowork

F. J. at the

to the retiringto committee

qtVIRGINIA the

theapproval

the in this aue workof ship the

betnthe submarine. savs.

has

her

to

at

on

at

accepted was that of Tracy,treasurer. Stanley Livingston appointed to succeed him.Lowrey announced that Rev. P. L.

peed Oakland, Cal., has ex-

pressed a willingness to serve theas minister until

Yesterday Henze his brother appointment of successors to ScudderAfter wa. .nd appeal of East and they out that

windward side ""aH- - Thev be to to necesstrjof from Haleiwa Kaena the Bremen Rev. and

Pvt.

HIGH WILLIAM what port enter. Before ' umunu wliraftsOahu JARRETT Mauna

of visit the fromcamps the road, wouia

found. others. about fouraays.

Andrewwhere

winter

KauaJ, 4

1

1916, to

daughter Nafcoana.

14,Saya

,7, Japanese

theSan

1916,

will

Rnaton'

:..vV---

from

la., Rev.this

Derbv ofLihue

the

thatHana, bonds

perhaps,m

have

Borad. billion

80 00

stock

too:.n

some

my sweetheart

I

0

Union

the

large

the

thethe

the

mltteethe the

the the

Henze

days.before

earlyweek."

sincere

express

Cliftonwas

Chalrmaa

Goods of

church supply the

thArnnph wasexpect

themee

Kona,

new

mm immeaiateiy.Lr. Scudder will return to Honolulu

cn September 16 and will remainhere about two months before pro-

ceeding to Japan. He will be accom-panied by Mrs. Scudder. Prior to thearrival of Rev. Mr. Goodspeed the put-p-it

of Central Union will be filled bylocal ministers. .

B-vo- om OoageFalama

The house is thoroughly modern and almost ;

new. Has electric lights, gas, etc; Lot located

riot far from King Street

(t O AA Cash and $15.00 per month until the$iUU small price of $1400 is paid.1

G1

BICHAED H. t&XHT, PEES. : .:'.t. H. BEADLE, SECT 'CJIAS. O. HX1SEB, TESAE.

can never be any too nice. The patterns, we carry In Silver aswell as Heavy Plate will appeal to your good taste.

CO. m Houi st

FurnishedWalklkl . ... ........ ... ... . .. .... . .3 BedroomsCor. Sixth ave. and Hobron st. 2 "

Unfurnished

GNATIONS

ISTERS

1675 Kalakaua ave. ........... ......2 Bedrooms774 Kinau st. ................ ......4 .

"

Cor. Alexander and Dole.....; 3 "12th ......21028 Piikoi st. ..3

(Detached cottage, 1 room.)Dewey; Beach .. . .2 "Cor, Kalmukl and 7th ave 6

Dayton lane .21704 King st. 2 V7

Pahca ave, bet. 6th and '7th. . 21625 Makiki st. ............. .......6 "

(4 cottages In yard.)3338 7th, and Maunaloa.. 3

ACCEPTED

Phono3477

Your Table Silver

VIEIRA JEWELRY

FOR RENT

ave..KaImuki............

......... 35.00

.......$ 25.00......... 35.00...... 15.30

30.00

20.0045.00

...... 16.00, , 30.00

'...... 25.00...... 80.00

30.00

Henry Waterhouse Trust Co., Ltd.Sole Agents

Fort and Merchant

........$125.00

'37.50

V

3

Page 5: PAGES-HONOL- ULU, ma BE › bitstream › ...SELLING RABBITS. LONDON, Eng. An Exchange tele-gram dispatch from The Hague says. "The price of horses in Germany haa doubled. Farmers

n. - MAanirlB (Re. 1). S. Pit. Office) i ft tirftnt thftt tb ttotto--

BfrttrTkltff r'Tlify'Ut la taeac UblcU iaof the rcliM Bayer manufacturO

"t

4Y i

back

Along your Santa Fe way through theStates many places of beauty, historyand tradition make your; trip continu-ously interesting. -

VISITGrand Canyon of Arizona,,Petrified Forest,

i Colorado PqintsSanta Fe, New Mexico, built over

, - three centuries ago.

Reduced round trip fares toChicago ..... .$.72.50 Minneapolis . . .$78.95New York .... 110.70 New Orleana 70.00

and many other points East or South..

; These tickets are first class and are onsale for departure from San Franciscotjertain days in August and on Sep-

tember 7. 8, 12 and 13.

- H. K VERNON, General Agent,926 Fort St. ;

' Honolulu, T. H.V Telephone 4023 ; ' '

Yfio Knows

Yea HaveA RoomTo: Rent ?

"EastExcursions

Waiting for -- the passerbyto, answer Ithe t: sign in the :

rooms very fast.

5 Your advertisement ' needscirculation. ' - ;

j

f Every day 'JbiTr Want Ad in the:'StafBulletiri is ' f

read by those wanting rooirs but do not have timey'Ho canvass the town looking for placards in win- -

;dows. vV;-- ; .i-r-- ;

if -:-'

." ; ' ' " " '" '

I I Every day of idleness means a loss of revenueI f to you. ' "

v ".''

Better insure against empty rooms by keepingan' advertisement standing in the Classified Col- -

:.umns of; the Star-Bulleti- n. Phone 4911.

COFT HOTEL San FranciscoPositively Fireproof. .

- XAtaerlcaa

tand European Flaus Every Room wttn Batb

, Bates: Room with Bath ore person from $2.00 per day.Room witb Bath two pet sons from 13.50 per day

. '.' American Plan. ...

Os person from $4.SO a day. .Two persons from $7.00 a day.: . W. E. ZANDER. Manager

For Booklets and Information please address. HONOLULU CONSTRUCTION A DRAYING CO, LTD,

a A C O "1 ' Ha waian Islands RepresentativesGeneral Offices, 65 Queen Street

STOCKS and BONDSREAL ESTATE v SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES""-

- v.' ..

'

"'";:;:" "-- '' :Authorized to act as Executor, Trustee, Administrator

. or Guardian. Transacts a General Trust Business.

VICTORY

HONOLULU STAR-BULLETI- N, THURSDAY, AUGUST FIVE

IS ONLY QUESTION OF ANTLERED HERD

Til DECLARES HOST AT DANCE

British Commander of Troops 'VJ1!,France SayS Initiative IS year and a ha!f !n building hav

NOW With Allies j lought under field conditions, dlggi;)

With the Dritifh Arm!c? in the FieldJoly" 31 Via London At the close

of the two years of the war and ofthe first month of the year. Gen. SirDouglas Haig. commander-in-chie- f ofthe group of Br.tish armies in France,In speaking of the situation laid par- - '

ticular emphasis on the fact that thebeginning of the third year of the warsaw the. initiative entirely with theAllies cn all fronts, while England forthe fir it time was exerting somethinglike a ower worthy of her numerousresources on land. .

"The tide has turned," he said."Time has been with the Allies fromthe first. It is only a Question of moret.nie till we win a decisive victorywhich is the one sure way to bringpeace in this, us in other wars. Untilthis victory is won it ill becomes aBritish soidier in France to think ofi.eace.....,- - .u- - , ..i. the "rltlsh army as revealed

j u i L L i c j" uueo iut mat iuui nccrva uau' glimpses of the youthful and scholar

ly features of S'r Douglas Haig In apassing automobile on dusty roads.

i , with troops Ing for himself, recognized the stub- -. - a , : .. . . t u : .. u t : rl n 4..1. v. . lim 1 1uui uiiu iigaiii ui auueLiu nguie win lusa. uui lllealighting from his car at the headquar- -

i ters f one of the army commandersfor a conference. But mostly histime is spent in a quiet room in a

' small chateau, which is his personalj headquarters. In the center of this

room, here he talked with the Asso-- :elated Press correspondent Monday,

. was raised a map of the region of theoffensive with every detail, 'roads,woods, villages, trenches, ridges andvalleys, and all the contours revealedat, a glance. The only other visiblemachinery of command were littlesheets of reports which come from thefiring line through the curtains ofshell fire, givin? the situation at in-

tervals in every sector of the front.."The problem of. the first summer's

campaign and tne second for the Al-

lies,"! he said, "was to hold the Ger-

mans! from forcing a decision with, their ready numbers of men, guns and; shells. Whether was the able gen- -'

eralship and heroism of the French onthe Marne, the aoggea retreat 01 melittle' British expeditionary forcesMons, the stubborn resistance of theFrench and Eriiish to the German effort for the channel ports, the Russianretreat Belgium'sfice or, Italy's stonewalling againstAustria s offensive or tTance s

defense of Verdun, the purposewas always to gain time for prepara-tions necessary to take the offensiveaway Xrom the enemy.

Ha mentioned the davs of YDres inthe fill of 1914, when the British; hadionly where , they nave aivi-sion- a-

now and lOughl with flesh .' andagainst superior gun fire.

"Our unpreparedness at startof the war, due to its unexpectedness,is no. secret," be continued, , "whilestance, which had a great nationalarmy and universal service, was giv?ing all her strength, we had to beginfrom the bottom. The majority of ourbest regulars had been- - killed orwounded in the early fighting. Withthe remainder as a nucleus drilland organize the volunteers wereraw, but had the spirit that quicken?eth, we undertook to create an armyof millions which must be officeredlargely by men of no military experience to fight the German army witnits 40 years of preparations.

; "We had to make uniforms beforethe men who had enlisted could betaken' out of civilian garb; to bullaplants before we could begin the man-

ufacture of our clothes, before wecould arm our recruits and to buildguns munition plants before we

"had artillery." - ': "However well trained an array,he continued,, "however able its gen-

erals, however ample its artillery andmunitions, the supreme test in a warof this kind is its capacity, unit byunit, for bearing heavy losses un-

flinchingly. Wherever sacrifice oflife was , necessary to the end , thesenew array men have borne it with-

out' murmuring and in a . mannerworthy of the best traditions of theAnglo-Saxo- n race when it has had tofight for principles associated withits history the world over.

"When her navy held England safefrom Invasion, was principle whichled men all volunteers tofight on soil which is not their own,they realized that the preparedness,discipline and autocratic organizationof the enemy which stood for militar-ism were abhorrent to them."

Turning to the map he put hisfinger first on Pozieres and then onDelvllle wood, where the British in-

cessant struggle has gained preciousground, and said:

"Here our men, after they had, con- -

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mass, of trench fortifica-- '

J; wnat cover tney could, withstandingcounter attacks with all the stubborn-ness of the regular at Ypres. continu-ing their advance. Trifling their skill,courage and resources against thoseof an army with 40 years of prepara-tion. Their confidence that a iranto man, with equally good artillerysupport, they were the superior of theGerman, has been Justified by tieevent.

"If we had gained les ground, ifwe had not. in conjunct'on with theFrench, inflicted heavier losses on thenemy than our own and had notEfv,en a vital blow to his morale, ouroffensive would have been worthwhile for its benefft to our moral-'- .

Our men ask only to keep on attack-ing. They feel that they have takenthe measure of the Germans."

Then Sir Douglas referred to thecaptures of the German army and of

i, by thefighting of the last four weeks, say-ing:

"The British soidier. used to 'think- -

thick moving and trans- -1

lsj! uia uciure lain, uer--

j

it

from

the

"and

it

J

man. docile in his obedience and taking his superiors without question;was led to believe the offensive of ournew army, which was not met withtheir kind ofdiscipline and was there-fore inefficient, could not be formid-able. When we followed the breachin their first line with a breachin second, the shock of our suc-cess was accordingly the greater to

minds. For the first time Ger-man officers who were taken ad-mitted that Germany was beaten.One of them, who was on his wayto England and had glimpses of o irteserve camps in France, said that behad been told that the British hadonly a fringo of troops on the frontl;ne and that once our attack was repulsed they could go through to thecoast and end the war."

Finally, in explaining-th- situation.Sir Douglas Indulged in the Scotchphrase: "Facts are chiels that winnading," and continued:

"The third year of the war' will bethe Allies' year.. No less than France,row that we' are. ready,.-w- shall give

last summer, sacri- -' all the strength there is in us to drive

immor-tal

battalions

blood

towho

these

high

white

In

their

their

the invader from her soil and that -- fPeVeiiiTi. Fnr'nid w'M not pqhievtler full strength on land, however,until next summer--

"All those that believe our cause isthe. cause of civilization, may restassured this army-ha- s no thought ex-cept to gooa delivering blow afterMow until we have .won that victoryby force of arms, which will insure anenduring peace."

MARKHAM-STEWAR- T

WEDDING CEREMONIES

William J. Markham and Miss NoraK. Stewart were married on Thursdayevening, August 10,:by Rev, FatherStephen J. Alencastre, pastor of theCatholic Church of the Sacred Hearts,Funahou. The witnesses were AugustS. Dreler. uncle of the- - groom, andMiss Anna C. Markham. The brideis a teacher at the' Kalulani school.After the marriage ceremony a din-ner was served at the Union Grill.Those present besides Mr. and MrsVV. J. Markham were Mr. and Mrs. A.S Dreier, Mr. J. Markham, Miss A.C. Maikham, Mr. and Mrs. T. D.

Cockett. fr. and Mrs. U Akana, MissJ. K. Stewart, Mr. J. Gilllland, Mr.and Mrs. J. Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. W.E. Heine, Mrs. G. F. Henshall, Mr. C.Reynolds and Mr. and Mrs. ArchieMarkham.

' Mr. and Mrs. William J. Markhamwill occupy their home here.

MUCH APPENDICITISIN HONOLULU

There are many cases of appendici-tis In Honolulu hospitals. Much ofthis can be prevented with simplebuckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., asmixed In Adler-l-k- a. This simple rem-edy acts on BOTH. lower and upperbowel, removing such surprising foulmatter that ONE SPOONFUL relievesalmost ANY CASE constipation, sourstomach or gas. A short treatmenthelps chronic stomach trouble. Adler-i-k- a

has easiest and most thorough aciion of anything we ever sold. TheHolli8ter Drug Company. Adv.

GERMANY'S CATTLE DECREASEIN TWO YEARS 2,000,000

THE HAGUE. Netherlands. Diplo-matic representatives in Berlin of theneutral powers . have been taken bythe German of icials on a trip to thecountry and shown the harvest situ-ation. A paragraph in the Germannewspapers dealing with this tour ofinspection says:

"It is assumed they gained the con-viction that the plan of our 'enemiesto starve us cut will fail again thisyear. Some representatives wereeven surprised at the remarkablyfavorable outlook."

Touching the scarcity of butter, theHamburger Nachrlchten says the lastcattle census, compared with that of j

December, 1914, showed a decreaseof 2KJ0.000 head, of which.. 800,000 .

were milk cows. It will be years, the j

rewspaper says, before the grazingfields again are normal.

According to the Campus,. a German '

technical newspaper of Dresden, po-

tatoes planted cn .he roof of the tech-nical high school in the city produc-ed an excellent crop, i

TO 300 FRIENDS

Honolulu Elks were hosts and theymade good ones at a delightfuldance and vauieville entertainment atthe Seaside Hotel Wednesday even-ing, about .1.50. couples attending. Thisbread stretch of lawn between thehotel and th beach was hung withflags and bunting, while in the trettwinkled myriads of colored electriclights. The guests found comfortabl;feats at tables on the lawn and be-

tween dances a delicious punch wasserved ch the lanai.

Music for the dancing was fur-nished by a trio of musicians, with"Sonny" Cunha at the piano. Theaudeville skits included several se-

lections by an Elk quartet, a vocaVsolo by V. H. Hutton, a violin soloand some rvstify ing card tricks tyI'rof. Brooks, who recently appeared,at the Bijou theater. As a conclu-sion to his act Brooks allowed a com-:- ',

mittee to lock him in a steel trunk.iut the trunk in a canvas sack andtruss up the whole with ropes. Thenhe proceeded to get out, which feat heaccomplished in less than a minute, i

The dancing continued until after 1

o'clock. The: affair was an unusualsuccess and was heartily enjoyed byth hfe rrnwd ' N

DINNER DANCE

AT HEINIE S

"On the Beach at Waikiki" (thatmeans Heinle's of course)there will be an especially enjoyabledance this evening, to which all visit-ers in Honolulu as well as town folkare most cordially invited. An excel-lent and extensive menu has been pre-pared for dinner, the cabaret featuresare better than ever and the dance tofollow promises to be a delightful oc-

casion. "A cordial welcome will be ex-

tended to. everyone by the manage-ment Adv.

LIDLESS BARREL IS

APPLIED TO BATHER

LOS ! ANGELES. Campaisnihgagainst scanty bathins suits, policeofficers of Santa Monica today ap-

peared on the beach armed with emp-ty barels, sans heads.

Officer D. C: Hathaway spied' Miss"Lottie Smalley garbed in less thanthe law allows, in a "one piece," Inother words. The barrel was drapedaround her anJ she was escorted toher home and ordered to comply withthe law.

About the same time John. Stepley.and his wife of New York appearedbefore Police Judge King in SantaMonica. ;

; "Officers say your one-piec- e bath-ing suits did not contain enoughcloth," said the Judge.' "We wore them at Coney Island,Atlantic City and all the Easternbeaches," replied Stepley.

"They won't do here," replied thejudge, and, after warning the coupleto obtain other bathing suits thanthe abbreviated ones they possess, hedismissed the case.' The barrel cops will be kept on theirh dur-n- August.

Accredited to College East and West-Grammar-,

and Primary Departments.: Send for illustrated catalogue. r.

Principal: Mary I. Lockey, A. B,

PALO ALTO, CAUF.

--when you bought the shoes- -

Fort Street

You'll

p Undoubtedly

:;j' .

''

be gladto have us show

voir our mw

importations of

Shantung Pongee

Tlioy make up into the snappiest all-sil- k cool suits,

and fit like you were born in them, ami grew up with

von.

We do more than talk quality we deliver it.

W. W. Ahana & Co,Kin Street, west of Fort

WMt tapTalcum Powder

Extiuisiteljj scented, and; so.fine,as to soqtli ikrt

tenderest skin, this dainty talcum powder shouldbe on every dressing table. It comes in eitherflesh tint or white and will prove itself a favoriteto all who give it a trial

Benson, Sm i th & Co.,THE REXALL STORE 'Service Every Second

Fort and Hotel SU. Phone 1237!

OPEN UNTIL 11:15 P.M.

BEAUTIFUL ORIENTAL 0001)3

FONG INN & CO.Nunanu St., near Pauahi St

The neat straightlines

mm.

Genuine

admired

Ltd

may always be retainedi he use of prop-

er shoe trees. Placed inyo ur shoes after remov-ing (hem trees re shapethem along their originallines.

Slioe trees for both men's and women 's shoes.Metal Trees, 25o pair.Ventilated wood adjustable trees,-- a pair, $1.25.

Mclnerny Sh(je StorePhone 1529

I'ill

: f

'i r

v?ft

x

Page 6: PAGES-HONOL- ULU, ma BE › bitstream › ...SELLING RABBITS. LONDON, Eng. An Exchange tele-gram dispatch from The Hague says. "The price of horses in Germany haa doubled. Farmers

WlWIPT WAIf WFf u !M TROOPS SUfFER

irrnnrwn niiii t1 r'r'ii iiraii bii-- i in n ii nil nil mil" t i - - .

inQQ bv lrMiir f pa niu u sLUuu LI I It! UUL U1V

"SEPT. 3 VENTURA

........ - .. - ." -

Robert Dollar, wealthy shipowner .

of the Northwest and president of theDollar line, declare, in the Ustsue of the racmc Marine KeTiev.r u riaMV,BW "l rtUUDt

. that the tonnage afloat at the end r -

when?! ber 3 --for Japan, China and the Phillp-- Zwillih I Jf?ii" ii-m- I.. ! pinefcformerly if was announced

-- the war m. i--The general Impression la that ;theordinary marine louses and destructon by the war Is leaving the world'stonnage very short and when the waris over there will be a great scarcity

7, of silps. I have carefully gone overthe figures and find the following to

,be a ∥ right as can be got butat the present time. This shows

? that the public opinion. U Incorrect Inthinking that there Is going to be agreat shortage of ships at the close

: of tho war..1

"The approximate figures are si follows: "' t"'

"The average "production of nierchant hips of the shipyards of tho

. .worI4 for the past. 15 years has beeu2,t00,00pton8i and the average losses

: ty shipwreck, fire and other marinecasualties , and scrapping is 1,350,000tons,: leaving a normal increase, peranoum of. 1,150,000 'tons. Now, the

"I tnerchantB ships that have beenbuil' during the second half of 1914

; ere -- 1,426,325 .tons; ' building 1915,V 1,670,251 tons; contracted for to be

' Luilt in 19; 6. 3,449,300 tons; contractsV have been, let for delivery first half

of 1917, 1,750,000 tons. Total, 8,295,- -

880 tonau'; V - :

. "Actual ships sunk by" the war up:' to June 1,. 2.5S5.3C2 tons." Assumingk

that,tli0 tme ratio of lo&a will cou-- .

tlnue for m year mere, or until July,1917, J' US2.G81 tons; Total,1 3,878,- -'

C43 tons. ;; y;I ' "Then during the approximate

- duration of the war, say three years' the ordinary normal loss from shin

'. Wrecks' etc-- - will be 4,050,000 tons' Total, 7,958,043 tons. . . ? ;

': "o that . at the end of three earsJl ht thft war there 'will be an apparenti gain of S37,M7 tons. ' r - - --

I "If normal conditions had existedt lie average increase of the world's

' tonnage of 1,150,000 .tons Pr annamshould be added to this, but as oilthe commerce of , Germany , and her

" Allies has beta stoppe4 .and about,;i talf of the Allies .merchant ships are

, engaged , in , ths ' military service oftheir countries, therefore it is safe tofigure on jio increase so, figuring tin

round numbers there will be as manychips at the end of the war" as whenif started.". , .; ,:.', ?v a .;

: 4 ' ' 'I P0ST0FFICE TIME '

j r TABLE FOR MONTH

, Following Is' ths postoffl tlm' table for the last half of August' and' the first half of September it is sub-

ject to thanse if sudden arrangsments". are made tor unexpected mall service:

' UNITED' $TATE8 MAIL 6TEAMER9)Stsamera to arrive tromz- -' ''

Acfiust ' ;' :.- - ' '

1 N lagara ; . . . . i . t . , . , . . .'. . SydneyZ 2V-:-SIe-rra .San Francisco

22 Lurllne ........... San Francisco25 Nippon Maru .. ...... ..Hongkong25 Ecuador ... San Francisco

t FranciscoSeptember '

:' ..'..' . - .". ' ' .

'.

Z 1 Tenyo Maru ......San Francisco. S Sonoma ... ., . , . ,i . . . ; . I . Sydneyi 5 U. S. A. T. Sheridan ... .. . Manila. 5 Shlnyo Maru ..........Hongkong' 5 Manoa San Francisco

$ Niagara .. . vy. i . Vancouver1 i Ventura . . . . . .... .-

- San FranciscoI 12-Mat- San Francisco

Sherman. '.San Francisco-- 15 Makura . . . . ..... . . . . Sydney

6teamers to depart for1 August '";' .;v:j'

18 Niagara ........Vancouver21 Sierra . .'. .... ... . .Sydney23 Matsonia .........San Francisco25 N ippon Maru . .. . . San Francisco

. dor ..... . . ; . . . . . Yokohama29 Lurlins ...... ..'...San Francisco

; September '''3' . .

"- - .."'.- - '. 'V

1 Tenyo Waru .......... Hongkong5 Sonoma . y.i ...... San Francisco

: 5 U.S.A.T. Sheridan.. San Franciscov 5 Shlnyo Maru ......San Francisco: &WlIhelmlna ...... San Francisco

6 Niagara Sydney11 Ventura ..1 .... Sydney12 Manoa San Francisco

, 15 U.S.A.T.X Sherman.... . ...Manila: 15 Makura . k ....... i i Vanoouvtr ,

I

' Edward Carlson ; of Brooklyn wasdrowned while swimming at Beach j

Lake, Pa. , ' ; ;.'- -; '' j

T'

River and Sts.

Acocrdinn to a radio received thismorning at H. Hackfeld & Co.. the

Mall steamer fw J" n

AugUfitRl9t arrIvIng. here. AugU8t &h rMBO

for the df lay, but as the Ecuador onlyrecently ai rived at San Francisco itis probably to give her more time tooutrit for the long voyage. V

According to officers on the Matso-ni- a

the booking on the Ecuador isnow practically full. The report thatthe Manchuria and Mongolia are com-ing hack on this run. was also confirm-ed today.

It Is now evident that the Ecuador,Colombia and Venezuela are to be theemail fleet of the Pacific Mail takingthe place or the Nile, China and Per-sia. vrhUe the' Manchuria. Mongoliaand three other large steamers whichare about, to be constructed on theAtlantic coast will be the major fleet.

HMOS NOTES

"

The Claudine reported sugar wait-ing shipment on the following plan-tations:. Honuapo 450 bags and Pun-aJu- u

6400 bags. ' ' 1 :.

The Inter-Islan- d steamer Helene ar-rived Wednesday afternoon with 7666bags of sugar" and 77 head of cattlefrom Hawaii and Maui ports.

The next mail fee San Franciscoafter the Ventura leaves this eveningat 7 o'clockwill be the Matson steamer Matsonia, sailing Wednesday, August 23. ; ' - ' '

; ': :.

'

The .American-Hawaiia- n steamerMexican will sail - for Port . Allen, Ka--

anapali and Hilo Friday evening. Shewill not call at Kah,ului and is expect-ed to sail from Hilo for San FranciscoAugust 25. ;'- - -;r: r

The Matson steamer Matsonia sailsfor 'Hilo this afternoon at 5 oclockfrom Pie? 19. returning Sunday morning, and , will sail for San Francisco .

weonesaay morning", at 10. ocjockfrom Plor 1 S . .

' , -- -.-.

i The Intersland steamer Claudinearrived from Maui this morning with14 cabin and 43 deck passengers. Hercsrgo consisted, of 61 bags taro. 27bags corn, 20 bags potatoes. 15 bagsbeans, rne crates-chicke- ns, 18 hogs'and J47. packages of sundries. Out-ward she met strong winds and chop-py "seas, but Inward the wind waslight and the sea smooth. .

.The Briiish stekmer- - Kestrel willleave for. Fanning : island i Saturdayafternoon or Sunday. The Niagara,wh0?b arrives Friday morning, has 75tons of freight for her and as soon aBit can be loaded she will sail. Peoplewho have signed on, for. the trip toFanning Island are as follows: Mrs.Langford and - two ; children, pr,Treusch and Mr. and Mrs. Gibbons.

PASSEKflTCRS EXPECTED

Per Matson - steamer Lurllne, duehere August 22: : Miss Kate M. Ath-erto- n,

Mrs. Dtnald McLennan, Mr. andMrs: Prlday, Dr. and Mrs. WH- -

lard. Mountain. W. I.. Howard, ErnestOhye. J. O. Yapp, TV. H. Freed,'-J- .

McCnUes, Earl L. Corson, Mr. andM rs. IL W. Havercamp, Miss . AnnaTong, Miss A. Harte, Dr. M, E Grossman, J. Howard King. Miss FrancesLycan, 'Mr. Davis, MJss , Gertrude B.Judd, Miss Eliza Cramer, Mrs. J. M.O'Connor, Miss N. Hatch. Sister Bene-dict- a.

Sister Lid wins a," Sister Falvia-na- .John. Lain, rr. nughes, J. Kenny,

Miss McDermolt, Miss Mary Bayllssand narty. J, W. Holland, Mr. and Mrs.r. W.a Merrltt. Mr. : and ' Mrs. G.A. Andrus. ;

"

MANUFACTURE REBELLION"'; : ;';- - RELICS

DITBLIN, Ireland. A Dublin Indus-try of considerable Importance at pre-sent is. the manufacture of rebellionsouvenirs. Irish Republican stampsare being turned out in large quanti-ties; volunteer buttons and Sinn Feinbadges, are also important items 01the new-busines- s. Bullets fired bySinn Fein leaders may be had singlyor in quantities at reduced prices tothe trade. .

inn n

Do not have the idea' that now is not the time to buildbecause lumber is highly We can offer you lowest prices

in this market for Lumber, Windows and Doors.

BUILD NOW WHILE WF-- ATHEE IS GOOD

PauahiTel. 3618

:::::rJ.'.-':. P. O. Box 367

ITOXOLTJLU STAlVBULLEm, THURSDAY,' AUGUST 1 7, 1916.

a

mini wnit) vimrLyUnL UU.lf LLrtllllU

MTwo days late because of a delay

al Sydney, where sue was put on thej rydccJt for ,n overhauling, the'Oceanic Sfoamcr V'enhira. Capt. J. II.llawKcn, arrived here this morning

ard decked at Pier 10. She will sillthis evening at 7 o ciock. taking mail.Mall will close at 5 :3Ti for regularnr.d 4 :30 for. registered.

For Honolulu the Ventura had onlyttvo first cabin, on second cabin and.ne steerage rasenger and 15 baps

of mall. Freight for here was 78 tons,consisting mostly of fertilizer.

Through passengers numbered 35first cabin, 46 second cabin and 15?eerae and the principal throughfreight was 60,000 feet of hardwoodluir.'er, sanaage casings and manganese orp. ' -

From here Ihe Ventura wiU take,h3latest pasacnger list and the bigfest amount of freight ever recordedon a through Oceanic, steamer;. Pas-sengers total 130 first cabin, 15 sec-en- d

cabin and 13 steerage. The onlytime that this has been exceeded was

the Sierra was running betweenhere "and San Francisco only and carried 220. first cabin. . Freight i or SanFrancisco Is 1350 tons and consistsof 92 0o cases of canned pines, 500ldei of - hldf8, .500 cases honey, 400bunches bananas and 150 bags of rice.

Passengers who got off the Venturahere are Capt. Otto Bruger, Mrs.Lucia Falke, Jlrs. Martha Blrley anIHarry Bath;','; 'v;';:'; 'Xr.

THE HAGUE, Netherlands, July 31.The elections for the provincial

state councils of Holland, half of. themembers of which retire every threeyears, have just been' held, and theitsults mr interesting' as" giving ' anindication of the composition of theiext first 'chamber of the Dutch parrliament, , the members of which, arenominated, by these provincial bodies.; The parties on the left made several

gains, but the parties of the ' rightmaintain" the upper with an aggregateof 312 seats against the 270 held bytLeir;, opponents, which means thatthey are assured Of maintaining theirmajority, in the first chamber. Thisis the exact reverse, of the positionin . the second chamber,, where thegeneral election, of 1913 gave the par-ties of the left the majority uponwhich' the present extra-parliamenta- ry

cabinet of Cort van def Linden leansfor its support : ;

The f fact that the position of theprovincial councils are made practi-cally stationary is a disappointing oneto the government, for the. continuedpredominant position of the right inthe first chamber la a check on theirimportant lgislatlve program for revi-sion of the constitution, including uni-

versal manhood suffrage, the questionof woman suffrage, compromise on theeducational' question and old age pen- -

Sicn8. J 'V- r v ':-- v'- .:) '.':-'-

'

One markedy feature of the provin-cial elections has been the progressof the Socialist party, which won 23seats from the Liberals cf the leftand fonr from the parties of the right.The Socialists already hold the bal-

ance In the second chamber of parlia-ment with 15 seats out of 100, andfurther substantial progress at nextyear's . general lection would makethem a very strong political force.

TROOPS ON BORDER TO.GUARD COUNTRY,. PRESIDENT

Vy RITES ANXIOUS MOTHER

WASHINGTON, D. C In reply tocomplaints' from Mrs. Henry Smith,of .Winamac, lad., who has a son inthe National Guard, President Wilsonwrote today 'as follows: '

"Your, letter of July 23 distressesme a good deal because it shows thatyou have-no- t been, correctly informed,as to the purpose of having the Nat-

ional Guard at the border. It is ; notfor the purpose of drill, but for ' thepurpose, of protecting the country.The service the men are performingthere is an honor to them and a ne-

cessity to the United States. I cannotbelieve that the men in the NationalGuard would wish to be excused fromit. or would lose heart because of thediscomforts and inconveniences of theservice. ' " ' r. y';-.- '

"The WaT Department has thecamps on the" border under the mostcarefur inspection and is using everymesns to make them . sanitary andsafe against disease. The .health re-

cord of the men on the. border, boththe regulars and the National Guards-men, is exceptionally good.

"I would net have you think thatI do not sympathize with your dis-

tress in the absence of your son, butI beg that you take these larger mat-ter- s

Into consideration."

When Your Eyes UttC CareTry Murine Eye nezntdy

V

POTAMIA

Intense Heat, Blistering Sandand Myriads of Flies Make

Life Miserable -

BRITISH HCDQUARTEIIS IXMESOPOTAMIA. Flies, heat anddust, the three principal plagues ofMesopotamia, are hat have stoppeathe fighting for the past severalmonths in this theater of the greatwar.

Flies are so thick that soldiers sayit Lj almost impossible to keep themout of their food. A squadron of cav-

alry coming down a road looked as ifthey were wearing chain armor. Whenthey came close enough it was foundthat what looked like mail was thesteely blue metallic mesh of flies.

At night the flics disappear andthe mosquitoes and sand-flie- s relievethem. ?Inny species bite or sting.

The thermometer runs up to I3degrees In a tent. All the men weara sun guard over their helmet and aspine pad. for u person ran get sun-

stroke here through the small of theback.

The persistent hot wind is betterthaa , fciuplete Jillness, though itflings Rand and dust iu the faces oftbe men, wh fat sand, breathe sand,lie in saud. have sand , in their ears,eyes and clothes.'There are uifferent kinds of heat

the moist and tropical heat ' of theswamps of the Euphrates and theShat-at-Afa- the. paxched and deaertheat of the Tigris ' and the Karnn.Each variety has its attendant Insectsand 'peculiar bailments' which oftentake the form of boils and eruptions.Disease has Incapacitated moretroops than bullets,

EXECUTION OF

DEATH PENALTY

ROUSES VRATH

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina. It hasctvelooed that the attempt made toassassinate President de la Plaza,while ne was reviewing the centenarycelebration from . the balcony of gov-ernment house on July 9, as reportedby cable, had root-i- n tre president' 3recent refusal ,,tef commute the sen-tence of two mea condemned to deatlifor murder.' . The assassin,' Juan Man- -drini, wno is believed to be of unsoundmind, declares tout - he believed theexecution of the two men was ."a .legalcrime," which ho felt called upon toavenge.; They Were the first execu-tions in the Argentine for more than15 . years, and with, this exceptionPresident de la Plaza had himself al-ways refused to sign death sentences,but he refused to interfere in thesetwo cases because he deemed the mur-der a wilfulcne, y

The execution, has already promptedopponents of capital punishment to in-

troduce in congress a bill to abolishcapital punishment, altogether.- The attempt to kill the president.

on the eve of his retirement in,Iavorof the newly elected radical candidate,Dr. Irigoyer,' created a great sensationin the capital, i A great military pa-rade, which was one of the culminat-ing features of- the week's celebration,was just concluding in front of govern-ment house, where stands had beenerected . for the accommodation ofspectators. On & balcony overlookingthese stands appeared the' presidentwith the Brazilian ambassador, -- Dr.Harbosa, on his right and the Bolivianambassador. Dr. Villazon, on his left,with various ..ministers of state , alsoin the party.; Suddenly a man stand-ing on' the pavement-.- - below drew arevolver and fired,' shouting, "Downwith the autocrat! The bullet strucKthe wall just behind the president

He paled for a, moment, then calmlyremarked:, "The man has only, fireda blank cartridge." In the meantimepeople in the streets fell upon theassassin and tried to lynch him, bnt.soldiers rescued him and carried himoff to prison. c

.

CAPTURED BRITISHGENERAL IS TREATED

HOSPITABLY BY TURKS'"'

LONDON.. Jul v 31. Oeneral Town- -

shend. the British defender of Kut-el- -

Amara, which .was captured by theTurks after a siege of several montns,is. according to unofficial advices re-

ceived, being treated very generously by his captors. He lives in a well-appoint- ed

' house on the Island orHalki but spends much of- - his timeit, Constantinople, a naval steamlaunch and a military motor car be-

ing entirely at his disposal for visitsto the city,-- - :,

' ' '.'';''.;.';:On, these trips to. the Turkish cap-Ua- L'

Genexal-'Townshen- d .is accompan-ied by his aides and a guard. He issaid. to be a familiar figure in themain streets of Pera and Stambul andthe principal restaurants and gar-

dens.

Herman Bernstein, new editor oL

the Americcn Hebrew, in a recent is-

sueof the Jewish national weeklypleads for unity upon the part of theHebrew race for the alleviation of suf-

fering in the belligerent countries. :

The Republic woris of the NationalTube Co., at Pittsburg, have resumedcperations.

Mrs. William S. Sharp, wife of theAmerican ambassador to France, sail-

ed recently on the steamer Rocharo-bea- u

for New York.

Honolulu Stock Exchange

Thursday, August IT.

MJiRCANTJLE BId.AkdAlexander BaldWln . .. . .... 300C Brewer & Co. . . . 400 ....

SUGARa Plantation Co

Haiku Sugar Co... ......Hawaiian Agr. Co, . .

j "11a waiian C!- - & Co . .". .I Hawaiian Sugaf Co. . y i . '4 4.-

-.

Koackaa Sugar Co. . . . . .

21 22.... 22'.....11 1232 3217 17

rr.4 r, -

Ilcnomu Sugar Co..... .,Hutchinson S. Plant. Co. .Kahuku Plantation CoKekaha Sugar Co. ......Kclca Sugar Co..McBryde Sugar Co., Ltd.Oahu Sugar Co.Olaa Sugar Co., LtdOnomea Sugar Co......Paauhau S. Plant Co. . . .

Pacific Sugar Mill.I'aia Plantation Co 23.V 2:.0pepeekeo Sugar Co. ... .

Pioneer Mill Co......... 41 Vi 42

San Carlos Mill. Co., Ltd. 1. 16

Walalua Agr. Co. . ...... 354 36Wailuku Sugar Co . ,

MlSCl-LANKOU- S

Endau Devlpt. Co.. Ltd . .

1st Issue assessable,uO'r Pd ..2nd Issue assessable,

Pd. .............Haiku P & P. CovPtd..Haiku F. & P. Co., Cora.Hwaiian Electric Co....Hawaiian Pineapple Co.. 47 48Hon. B. & M. Co.; Ltd.. 20 2VyHon' Gas Co., Ltd.. 120

Hon. R. T. & it. Co......Inter-Islan- d S. N. Co. .

Siutual Telephone Co. . . . 20Oalm R. & L. Co... .....Pahang Rubber Co. . . .

Selma - Dindings Planta-tio- n,

Ltd., Pd. ...... ..'Felma - Dindings Planta-

tion. Ltd. (49 Pd.)... 9 . i

Tan Jong Olok Rubber Co.BONDS

Hamakua Ditch Co. s .'. . . ..,,' Hawaiian Irr. Co. s . . . . . . . . . .

Haw Ter. i refund. 1W5 . . . .

Haw. Ter, 4 Pub, Imps.Haw.: Ter. Pub. Imp.,

series 1912-191- 5 .....Haw. Ter. 4.. .... . . .

Haw. Ter. I'.. ....... .

Haw. Ter. 3 ... . .

Honokaa Sugar Co. 6.. 97Hon. Gas Cq, Ltd , 5s. .

Hon. R. T. & L. Co. 5. . 101

Kauai Ry. Sugar Co. 6s.. 101

McBryde Sugar Co., 5sMutual Telephone 5s. ..105Qahu R. & L. Co. 5....Oahn' S. Co. 6 (redeem-- '.

able at 103 at maturity) 109Olaa Sugar Co. 6 ft . . . . . .. 102

Pacific G. & Fert. Co., 6sPacific Sugar Mill Co 6s ...100San Carlos Mill Co. 6. .

Between boards: Sales: 15, 9060, 10, 50. 200, 115 Olaa, 17; 5. 175,80, 10, 45, 45. 45 Ewa, 34; 70, 30, 10h: cr & s. Co.. 49 : so, ioo h.' c. hS. Co., 49; 50, 25, 25, 75 HawaiianSugar Co.; 44; 20 San Carlos, 16;' 14Walalua, 34; 20, 20, 25 Waialua,23 ; 100, 5 Mutual Telephone Co., 20 ;50. 50, 10 25 McBryde, 12; 5 .0. R. &L. Co.; 160; 100 Oahu Sugar Co., 31;1C0 Onomea, 54. .

Session Sales : 5, Onomea, 54; 5

Onomea; 55; 5, 5, 5 Waialua, 35 ; 5,45H. C. & S. Co , 50 ; 20, 5 San Carlos,15 Ti; 50, 5 Pioneer, 42; 5 ETwa, 34;20 McBryde, 12; 12 Oahu SugarCo., 32.

Latest sugar quotation: 96 deg. testS.64 cts., or $112.80 per ton; .

Sugar 5.64ctsHenry Waterhouse Trust Co.

Members Honolulu) Stock and BondExchange

v Fort and .Merchant StreetsTelephone 1208

GERMAN SQUADRON STRONGER.

AMSTERDAM, Holland. The Ger-man naval squadron ' at the Belgian

rt at Bruges has been considerablystrengthei.ic- - n recent weeks, acroid-i- n

? to the y.rasterdam Telegra !. andnow comprises at least 22 torpedo1 oats and torpedo destroyers, iacluding many of a new type with three fun-rel- s.

Torpedo boats have frequentlyjassed through the canals of Be.'glrim.vhlle dismounted boats are ?5.idhave been transported from Gennscyby that route.

TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY

WANTED

Rifle, medium caliber. Address Box408, Star-Bulelti- n.

- ' 0556 3t

FOR RENT

FURNISHED ROOMS yLarge, nicely furnished room wih

board for couple, $70 per raontb.Phone 1432. 6556 St

IS-'- ,-

A FEW.... , GE. .

a day will enable you to protect your home

against loss by fire. See

CASTLE & COOKE, LTD.INSURANCE AOENTS ' r

Pay by CheckIt is mere convenient than to carry about a quantity of cash:st all times. It is also rruch safer from the standpoint ofhealth as well as possible theft. ' ;? iStable checking accounts are respectfully solicited on the basisof good service. ';

' ."

Bank of Hawaii, LimitedCor. Fort and Merchant

Alexander!Baldwin

Limited. j

Sugar FactorsCommission Merchantsand Insurance Agents

Agents for

Hawaiian Commercial & SugarCompany.

Haiku Sugar Company.

Paia Plantation.Maui Agricultural Company.

Hawaiian Sugar Company.

Kahuku Plantation Company.McBryde Sugar Company, yKahulul Railroad Company.Kauai Railway Company.

' Kauai Fruit & Land Co. Ltd.Honolua Ranch. .

N. W. Haisey & Co. ,

New York, San Francisco, Chicago

INVESTMENTBONDSH. A. Bruce K

200 Bank of Hawaii Bldg. Tel. 1819

MEAT MARKET & GROCERY

PHONE 3451C. Q. YEE HOP A CO.

J. F. MORGAN CO., LTD.STOCK BROKERS

Information Furnished and Loan' , Mada

Merchant Street SUr Building; Phone 1572 '

FOR RENTElectricity, gas, screens in all houses.Neat house; f 14 .

. house; fine location ; 20,

house; fine location; 3a.Large house; $30. V

j J. H. SCHNACKE42 Kaahumanu SU Opp. Bishop Bank

CITY MILL COMPANY, LTOImporters of best lumber and buildingmaterials. . Prices low, and we giveyour order prompt attention" whetherlarge or amall. We have built hun-dreds of houses In this city with per-fect satisfaction. If you want to bcildconsnlt ns.1

FOR GOOD MEALS

The Palace of Sweets

MXHESNEY COFFEE CO.COFFEE ROASTERS

Dealers in Old Kona Coffee

Merchant St. Honolulu

STEIN WAY, . HALL

Thayer Piano Co., Ltd.148-15- 0 Hotel St Phone 2313

Gaso-Ton- ic

Acetylene tight & Agency Co Ltd.

NTS 8

- V

Bank ofLimited

issues-E- . N. & K. Lettersof Credit and Travelers'Checks available through-

out the world. a

CABLE TRANSFERSAT LOWEST RATES

CBtiam !.nnwM a

- (LIMITED)

SUGAR FACTORS

COMMISSION MERCHANTS

SHIPPPING AND INSURANCEAGENTS ; :-

-

;FORT ST HONOLULU, T; H.

"; i . - J

List of Offlcira and Directors:

E. F. BISHOP........ PresidentG. H. ROBERTSON . v. . .T. .

Vice-Preside- nt and Manager: Ry IVERS.

Vice-Preside- nt and Secretary

A. GARTLEY. . .Vice-Preside- nt

E. A. R. ROSS.... . . .TreasurerGEO. R. CARTER..... DirectorC. H. COOKE..-.,- . . . . .DirectorJ. R. CALT.. .' ..... DirectorR. A. COOKE. ........ DIractprp. G.? MAY. . ..........Auditor

9

BISHOP fi: CO.j' : BANKERS

Pay 4 yearly on Savings De-

posits, Compounded Twicey - . - Annually , y

THE YOKOHAMASPECIfcy BANK, LIMITED.'

. Ten; s; y.. :.,.Capital subscribed.... 48,000.000

Capital paid up....... 30,000,000

Reserve fund .20,400,008. AWOKI. MM8'

Insuirarcce"B. F DILLINGHAM CO LTD. ;

PHONE 4915 IFire, Life, Accident, Compensation

SURETY BONDS

FOR SALE:$160 Lou 50x100 10th are Palola

$10 down, $3 per ma --

$500 Lota 75x200ri4ta ar nearcar. -- """

.

$1800 Lot In" Perry Tract, nr.School and Emma, 9886 sq. feet

P. E. R. STRAUCHWanty Bldg. j 74 8. King St

HAWAIIAN TRUSTCO-- LTD.

Carries on a TrustBusiness in all " itabranches.- -

SILKS AND CURIOSLargest Pacific Souvenir

Store In the WorldHAWAII & SOUTH SEAS

CURIO CO.Young Building

And at All Hotel News' Stands '

Agents WantedHOME INSURANCE CO. OF HAWAII,

LTD.FORT STREET,

ft

i

o

S3

o

o

0

Page 7: PAGES-HONOL- ULU, ma BE › bitstream › ...SELLING RABBITS. LONDON, Eng. An Exchange tele-gram dispatch from The Hague says. "The price of horses in Germany haa doubled. Farmers

V

,0;

Q

v.

3.1

.. i

r

HONOLULU STAR-BULLETI- N, TlilJK8UAYtUau7, m6. :SEVES

J.' fOillBIITIrpllllGHTsO 1 1

uf can qoiqer any- -

mmmrm ' '

thing made of metalwith

withouta

is not n cement but a puresolder'' with a that

it soft until out with a flame.It takes but a to do it.

. You can use it solder is used.Mofet for '

wire, etc"

Pirt 4 Of

Etc ":

i ...... .

Lumber- - and ' BuUemg- - Materials

me- r . .,

.

olderall.any tool other than

matchSolderall

combined preparationkeeps burned

moment

whereverconvenient mending household

utensils, electric contacts,

iipMpecial dpllapsible infej.

chanics, Electricians, Motorists,

Tub

...r.i;;,.

Steamer Matsonia r

v. juciiiiiirpE-Eii- a

IK!

1 '"-

Freoii

WhUe, mealjan delicious.

CTl ri Tv Per

88 St.

hundred'pounds

' i.

Applec at $1.75 the box

(tQaIifornia Feed Go.,Ltd.

PHONE 2205 REACHES

King

H ALL KINDS OF ROCK AND SAND FOR CONCREYE" WORK.

Tit - W "T

i Ai little money, in a strong savings-ban-k is an encour-- -

ajementjio the young. man that cannot be-overest- i-

- v. - mated: It gives him that feeling of security in hisbusiness and home affairs that helps to make a successout of his undertakings. Hd:knows,. conid What may,there is something laid aside for the emergency.

We pay 4Jo on time deposi ts.

bishop & Company .Saving rtment

J

Hugh: Ward," Theatrical Mag-nate of Australia, Says ;

People Arc ODtrmisre

Hugh J Wrd, managing directoror J. C. Williawon, Ltd.t who, con-trols all of the theaters in Australia,New Zealand and South Africa, is apassenger on the Ventara today, oathe way to London, where his com-pany is putting on "High Jinks," anAmerican ' comedy. . This is: the firsttime fr history that an Australiancompany has pv.t on an American playin London. Traveling with Ward ishis wife and two sorts, Hugh F. andMelbourne.- - ' ,- : V';.' Wand said that the war has natur-ally affected the patronage of thetheaters- - in the colonies, btit only insofar as it has lakea away to' tirefront approximately S6 0,000' men; forthe ; people who remain at-- home refuse to be pessimistic and demandamusement and g6 to the theatersregularly. vr -' --These - 300,000 men that have

kon declared Ward; "are the finestrn the world and ft Is all due to thepolicy inaugurated 10s years ago f yLord Kftchener. ' At that time a lawwas passed in "Australia, backed byKitceher,' making ' it compulsory forall boys oyer 14 years or age to havemilitary training. Of cburse, Tee havethe Boy Scouts, but that is only .forthe yotmg boys, and when they reach1 years' they start4 rtgnlar"trainbs.They like it; toov forlt makes realmen of' them, and it was because ofthis policy that Australia was readywhen the; war started. -

"I have beard a great deal aboutpreparedness ia the : United States;continued Ward, "but if Americawants real preparedness it musttrain the boys,1 for It Is upon themthat' the United States must dependif it f drawnl Into a war Inthe yearsto come. ' in Australia I have seen'25,000': boys between . the ages of -- 14end 15 swing along like old 'soldiers.Mjr two boys are hi it and enjoy everynjomeht of their training. . The trainfug camps in the United States areail right, but. it takes years to makea fioldfer and the discipline they getwhen young is. the. best thing in theworld for them." ; ;

; Many ? reports.-- have been . receivedtere concerning the feeling in Aus-

tralia against - the. United States andwhen asked - about it this raorntngWard gave what seems to be the realreason for It. " V

'TThe people of Australia areiwork- -

ta up to a high pitch over the war"lie said.V'iThey are' Intensely democratic and; cannot understand how an-

other country .'with the same beliefsin, freedom, can stand by and not enter into the. conflict to crush a peoplewhose standards or civilization arethe exact Opposite. When the war isover, "however, and the minds of thopeople again become readjusted,. I believe that this, feeling will disappear!but the United States has helped theAllies to a . great extent both inmoney and supplies," .

Ward.was in Flonolulu 17 years agoand 'was greatly surprised over theChanges ithlch . have takear place.When I was hercPbeTb'fe there seemeilto be so much romance ":le saidy "batnow it Is a modern' city. Tt is not theHonolulu that 1 know and I am sorry,but,"- - and he sighed, "I suppose it uall fer the best" - ;

Several weeks ago Ward met

who is traveling with Melba, "l foundher a very charming young lady, andwhile I did not hear her sing, I understand that she Is making excellentprogress .mider ifadame Melba." . ;

ST. LOUIS. NEWSlyAERDROPS PENNY PRICE

v. ST.. LOUIS, M. The Globe Demo-crat" recently announced an advanceia the price of the paper from l td 2cents. It is the first SL Louis paperto change from the penny basis initiated some' years ago. It attributes theadvance to the rise - in . the cost ofprint paper since, the European warstarted- - " ' ' --

President Wilsjn nominated Edward T Scul. to be postmaster atPittsfield, Mass. -

motmfind rest, coolness,

refinement and-- cleanliness at

Hotel near

ers

Fort

Tomorrow's Specials

Pink Lady SundaeCheery Mint CoolerRaspb&ry, Ptinck . .

i.; jz V.: "..-- I( , ; ;

At 7:40 o'clock

& uJfSSE'L: LASKY'CO.' PKESITTS

uJMH mmA NEW PARAMOUNT STAR IN?:

5

'?Tp HAVE AWD TO HOLD'V" Mary Johustdii's Great Novel- - '

WALLACE REID and TOM F0RMAN in the cast'; 9th Chapter of " ' ':

MUp-tothe-MinuteM- -v

THE BROKEN COIN" ;i "PATHE WEEKLY"COMING SUNDAY'

lsFOR THE DEFENSE"BEST PICTURES ' ' BEST MUSIC " BEST PEOPLE

h ALWAYS AT THE LIBERTY 7f ' -

PRICES 10, 20, 30 Cents. BOX SEATS 50 CentsPHONE 5060 -

iHOTCALifFERINGS,1 MURRAY KE? fflTOSM',' ,

'OUEi OF FILM INTO FUTURE

Mae Murray, heralded a one ot the"queens of the films" makes her .'lo-

cal debut as a";! Paramount Picturestar at the Liberty tbeatec tonightIn a quaint drama; of --early Jife In theAmerican colonies, "To . Have and toHoW," a ptcturiiatjon of. Mary John-nirm'-n

iioy1 of the ' same title. MaeMurray;;: has beMf popatf on thespeaKing scage ior several years auuonly recently turned to the sileniiframa, which is slowly but surely attracting', the-- , leading lights of thestage- - for the reason that . the worktng heurs 15 the newer art afe normalBefore the camera, the artiste wortfurlnr daylight hours and their evenlngs"are their cwnv On the stsge theymust, work while Others play.

'To .Jiave. ' and i& Hold': . ahouVdprove a reiresnjng. utuel arama, as uis said to be a faithful reproductiouof the peciod vit i represents. : Twoships that are used In Hbe offering.the po Return and the Santa Teresa,are said to be actual duplicates of twoof the most famous boats plying between the mother country and theVirginia 'jcolonles In the early yearsOf th$ seventeenth' century. They aresaid to be' mdre nearly accurate thanthe three replicas -- of the fleet" otCelumbue whlctt was reproduced fortire Chicago exposition In 1893.

OX-0- 'I ARE

' Ever since his. advent into the motion picture business ' William Fpxhas . specialized on sensatloaaV andhighly dramatic offerings andas aconsequence the Hawaii theater vtoasbuilt up a large ' clientele i that isstrong in its support of the numerousstage stars who are booked at tllatbouse. Not the least of these star isNance 0Neil, one of the . big 'attractions over the Fox circuit In i herpresent offering at the Hawaii,! "AWoman's Past,' ' Miss O'Nelf- - aptedrsIn one, of those, plays referred;above and one ' which is adding manyfriends to the string already claimedby Fox and O'Neil. : ' , VI. .

As a dramatic-emotiona- l actresstliere are fw appearing, either beforethe camera or on the stage, who cancqtzY Nace O'Neil and it Is safe tosay there are none" who excel vhrIn "A Woman's Past" she hascneiofher best, opportunities of demonstrat-ing this ability and does so ' in largemeasure. The cast 13 typical1 of theFox offerings and includes the besttalent in the stock organization thatIs maintained at the Fox studios, v

"The Master ' Key" is graduillyBearing the climax for whichjne fol-

lowers of. a serial are always on thelook out and the finale gives promiseof great strength

GERMAN SOLDIERS DESERTTO ESCAPE WAR INSANITY

': : i :.; '.iLONDON, Eng. Telegraphing frem

The Hague, the correspondent of 'theExchange Telegraph Company says hehas received the following messagefrom Maestricht, a Dutch town !Gmiles east of Brussels: . '

Tifteen German deserters,-- , inclftd-ir- g

a . officer," arriyed here (Maestricht) yesterday.They all came from the Somme re-

gion. They said ot was its possibleto- - live thv-ug- b the' Anglo-Fre0c- h artillcry fire without gains mad andthey pcrferrcd desertienv to- - ii:itytattauHKl lijr epix-:-u- r U nft, Uiwt-Mn- d Wiml

or-- hy muni, fto i loule. Jor Buuk V tbrKft free, wk MurlX '"fe iimiIy rv. Cbicaitt.

UViZA U

Charlie Chaplin, Marle Dressierand Mabel Normand, supported by agood cast, are .conspiring at the Bijoutheater during the present - week j tomake people laugh. Tillie's Pune-ture-d

- Romance" is the vehicle em-

ployed and Its . popularity has - grownby leaps and bounds doling the. yearthis comedy has . : been ; away fromHonolulu, bringing, tears of laughterto the eyes of. millions; across themainland. When this comedy wasfirst produced . by Mack: Sennett, theproducer was one o$ the very fewmen who realized ? the future ofCharlie Chaplm, He saw Into thefutuje and realized that . Chaplin wasdestined to be the leading comedianof the films, i : .. ;,. .

5finnetti 'capitaltzed. Chaplin sa a.deal In futures and .the results - murthave proved most gratifying. ; Sfncthis film was made Chaplin has com;manded the highest salary ever paidto any individual who pretended ; towork for a living o far as ia on rec-

ord. t . .'

- y - ;; - -- Marie Dressier, in feminine ranks,

is-- Close behind Chaplin aat an attrac-- 1

tlon She has long been a big favorfte on the American stage and isequally popular onr the screen.

FEET HURT?

If you are troubled with . sore,. feet,- - coras, bunions, Ingrown

nails, etc;r don't put - off seeing Dr.Ryan, Chiropodist, Mclnerny's ShodStore. Adv. .

pA charter --was granted to the Mon-itor 'Motor . Co-- at Albany with capi-tal stock of $300,000. v - :

'The steamer Comus of the SouthernPacific Company collided with a bargeof the Consofldated Coal Company offSea Oirt. Seven members of thebarge's crew were! taken, aboard theComus. . .:' ' V

; - -

.:: COLDS. CAUSE HEADACHES

LAXATIVE BROMO QUIKlJfE re-

move the cause, Used the. woi Id overto cure a cold in ot dayi The signa-ture of E. W. GROV is on each box.:Manufactured by; tne PARTS MEDI-CINE CO., J3t lui9.r II. S- - A.

ar- - gate r I

Program Beginning- - at 1:30.' p. mUntil 4 p. m. -

Evening (Two Shews), &; 30 and 8'3CSPECIAL PROGRAM FOR TODAV

r- - - AND EVENING"The Devil In Chleft (three-par-t

drama) Selig. :

"The Canimated. . News Pictorial(csmedy), Essanay.

TThe. Pafnted Lady"; (drama), Bio- -

:;RIASK DANCE y

National Guard ArmoryHawaiian Musio--;- "

Saturday Aug 19th -

;" :); at 8 p.' m.

' Prizes will be given for Jbestcostumes: V

First Prize Lady, DiamondRing.

First Prize Gentleman,Traveling Set, "'.;.

The music alone . vIJI beworth- - the admission- - ,

The dances are given, forbenefit .of Enlisted Men's Club- -

' 'x :- -rooms;' .

HAS MU&JLAI

TO WkTM km TO IOID (LMk

o$0I'

1

l(DHTIUIIfiMt.NTn'A?iOt7:40 o'clock

.ONLY A LIMITED ENGAGEMENT

Charlie AnaolMARIE ORESSLER' and, MABELNORMAND, the Suprenne ' nu

fo re mo st Funmakers, In '

'Tillie's PuncturedRoman ce,'

Repeated for the benefit of thepatrons Who were,. hot acquaintedwith Charlie' Chaplin a year ago.

A comedy photo-pla- y master-piece in ' six reels . that madeChart is Chaplin famous.

The world's greatest comedysensation.PRICES 10, 20, 30 CENTS

At 2:15

I 7

I' i

PHONE-393- 7

RESERVED SEATS50

CHILDREN iATTENTION SPECIAL MATINEES ATLIBERTY THEATER TODAY AND FRIDAY AFTER-NOONS AT O'CLOCK OF VTILUE'S FUNCTURED ROMANCE' 4

' ' I

MiTiurr.

o'clock'WILLIAM

7i '- - . .

POX

?Mt;(!II

CENTS

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PRESENTS7:40

A;WO M atJ'S' PAST"Supreme and Thrilling Photo-pla- y MasterpieceNever Before Upon

the Screen has Such an and Thrilling- - Cfbnax Been Depicted.Also the Tenth Chapter of "THE MASTER the Topnotch

and the Universal Weekly (Current Events).

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Page 8: PAGES-HONOL- ULU, ma BE › bitstream › ...SELLING RABBITS. LONDON, Eng. An Exchange tele-gram dispatch from The Hague says. "The price of horses in Germany haa doubled. Farmers

EIGHT

HAWAII

SALESAGENCY

Selling AgentsManufacturersJobbersWholesalers

P, a Box 395

Room 12, First Bank BIdg.

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MRS. ETHEL M. TAYLOR' Florist :

FOR ALL PURPOSES PPaper. Bast, Cups, Plates,Napkins and Towels, etc.. A

PANL-HA- PAPER CO, Ltd.Phone 1410 E

J. Ashman Beaven, Mgr.- - R

D. J. CASHMANTENTS AND AWNINGS

Luau Tents & Canopies for Rent-- Thirty Years' Experience

Fort St, near Allen, upstairs

BAILEYv Furniture Co.

- Love Bldg, 1144-114- 6 Fort St

SALEClosing out all Crockery, Dishes

Glassware, etc.- SANG YUEN KEE

163 S. King Opp V. H.-- Co.

;: HANAN'S BEST SHOES

M'INERNY SHOE STOREFort, above King St

TE-oeEKliiol-b)

Cop C! oft HiesIF YOU WISH TO ADVERTISE IN

NEWSPAPERSAnrwhere at Any Time, Call on o?

Write '..i.--

THE DAKE ADVERTISING AGENCY.24 Sansome Street San Francisco

PACIFIC ENGINEERING ,

COMPANY, LIMITEDConsulting, Designing and Con-

structing EngineersBridges, Buildings, Concrete Srtuc-ture- s.

Steel Structures. Sanitary Sys-

tems, Reports and Estimates on Proj-

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CHOP SUI ;,v S3 North King Street(Between iwaunsKca nu wimn

Call and see our brand new CHOP

SUIT HOUSE Everything Neatand Clean

Tables may be reserved by phone,No. 1713

MUTUAL Phone157

Night Letters to other islandscf. this territory.. ' Low rates.

WIRELESS

ibl n ma

ENLISTED MEN'S

EXAMS; WILL BE

HELD AUGUST 21

SpeoliI orders to be issued late today or tomorrow by the Hawaiian de- -

partmcnt give the names of a board oft ermy officers appointed to meet next

Vonday, A;ust 21, at Fort Shafter.for the competitive examination of on-liste-

men for promotion to the gradeof. second lieutenant in the cavalry,field artillery or infantry.

On the board are named Maj. Eu-ren- e

11. Hartnett. Medical Corps;Capt. Otho R. Rosenbaum, 2nd Infan-try: Capt. John Randolph, 2nd In-fntr-

1st Lieut. Raymond W. Bliss.Medical Corps; 1st Lieut. Alfred 11.

Hobley, 2nd Infantry. The juniormember of the board will act as re-

corder.On the samo date at Schcrield Bar-

racks a similar board will meet toexamine enlisted men for the samepromotions. On the Schofield boardare Lieut-Col- . Richard C. Croxton,1st Infantry; Capt. Gordon N. Kim-

ball, 4th Cava.ry; Capt. Lauren i?.

Eckles, Medical Corps; Capt. LeopoldMitchell. Medical Corps; 1st Lieu.Frederick W Stewart, 1st Field Artil-lery. Tlie junior member of th,board will act as recorder.

The order directs the followingqualified enlisted men to report tothe Fort Shafter examining board :

Sgt. Eugene M. Landrum, Company G.

S2nd Infantry, and Bugler Corday W.

Cutchin, Company H, 2nd Infantry.The enlisted men vwho have quali-

fied in the preliminary examinationsat Schofield Barracks and will be ex-

amined there Monday for promotionto second lieutenant, mobile army, In-

clude the following: Pvt Lewis A.

Weiss, Troop E; Sgt Oscar M. Mas-se- y

and Cpl. Casaway E. Edwards.Troon I. 4th Cavalry: Cpl. Herman A.

Brodl. Battery C, 1st Field Artillery; .

Cpl. Charles M, Crooks, Company a;Sgt Owen TL Rhoads, Company G;Sgt. Otto E. Pentz, Company E, andSgt Jarne L. "Ballard; Company I, 1stInfantry, and Pvt First Class WillistonL. Warren, Quartermaster Corps.

RAILWAY STRIKE

NOT SO SERIOUS

f Although the threatening strike ofthe railway employes throughout thestates would be the greatest calamitythe country has experienced In manyyears, its effect upon Hawaii ship-

ments would not be as serious as onewould expect v--

While the shipments of ; certaingoods and merchandise would be heldup indefinitely, yet the big Matsonliners would continue to bring In reg-

ular shipments of that famous and de--;

licious Orange Blossom , Chocolatesand candles which are always for saleand fresh at the Honolulu Drug Com-

pany's stcre. Adv.

SOLDIER SENTENCEDBY MILITARY COURT

TO FIVE YEARS' TERM

Convicted by a military court-ma- n

tial on four charges, attempted rob-

bery, shooting a provosj. guard, resist-ing arrest and carrying a . concealedweapon, on July 16, Pvt 1st ClassCharles A. Campbell, Q. M. C, ofSchofield Barracks, has been sentenc-ed to serve five years in the federalpenitentiary at Fort Leavenworth,Kansas. His case, was tried by mili-tary authorities of Oahu.

RECEPTION 'WILL BEGIVEN FOR THE 32ND

Officers and ladies of the 1st Infan-try, U. S. A, will be hosts at a re-

ception to be given Saturday eveningat 9 o'clock at Castner, honoring of-

ficers and ladies of the new 32d In-

fantry, formed this week at SchofieldBarracks. The affair will be held inthe enlarged pavilion of the 1st In-

fantry.

The Girard Trust Co. of Philadel-phia, has been incorporated in Illi-

nois with a caoital of $2 500.000.

Carelessness andIgnorance

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GUARD DID DAS

NEW LEADER; NEW

PIECES COMING

On account of inability to attend toLis military duties, Band LeaderAlois A. Feiereisel of the 1st Infan-try band has been granted a dis-

charge by the adjutant-general- , aftermere than a year of active and faith-ful service, and his place is to befilled by a new man. says a communi-cation from the 1st Infantry, N. G. H.

Cpl. Robert A. Brewer of the 4thCavalry led the band last Tuesdayevening and the National Guard au-

thorities are so well pleased with hiiwork that he has been asked to lendhis services again next Tuesday. IfLe shows that he can keep up thework a request will go to the depart-ment commander for his permanentservices.

There are now 27 men in the bandand interest is so keen that a. full at-

tendance is expected for next Tues-uay'- s

rehearsal.Two sets of band instruments were

requisitioned .about two months ago,

and when these arrive, with a newleader and new enthusiasm among

the members, the organization shouldfcbow great improvement within a few

months. 'The old instruments now in ue

have gone the survey route and will

be sent back to Washington upon thearrival of a new set

Forf ShaferNotM(Special Star-Bulleti- n Correspondence)

FORT SHAFTER, Aug. 16. Among

the officers detailed to enter the nextclass at the Army War College, whichwill begin its sessions about Septem-ber 1"), are Lieut.-Co- l. Michael J. Len-iha- n,

formerly with the 2d Infantry,now assigned to the 32d Infantry butacting as chief of staff at Depart-

ment Headquarters; Maj. Paul B. Ma-lon- e,

30th" Infantry, but formerly sta-

tioned at-Fo- rt Shafter, and Maj. Jas.F. Howell, brother of Col. Daniel Ho-

well, commanding officer at Fort Shat-

ter.3BT "XT

While many officers of the medicalcorps, owing to a decision of the sec-

retary of war based on an opinion ofthe judge ' advocate general of thearmy, will not receive their expectedpromotions this year, Capt Robert M.

Culler, formerly post surgeon at Shat-

ter and at Schofield in the early daysof the army here, will become majoron the first increment which will.bepleasant news to his numerousfriends. Lieut-Co- l. Frank R. Keefer,in command at the department hos-

pital at Shafter, and Lieut-Co- l. Wm.B. Banister, who reached here on thelast transport from San Francisco,will likewise become colonels. .

SET 3ETV v

For those who enjoy a beautifulmilitary function of old historic cus-

tom and Standing a visit to Fort Shat-

ter at 11:20 any morning, will enablethem to enjoy guard mounting. Ac-

cording to new orders two companiesgo on guard each day, and the reviewand Inspection of the troops, with thebeautiful music of the 2d Infantryband and the picturesque surround-ings of this military function on themain parade will well repay a visitThe traction company's bus will con-

vey visitors to the scene of the cere-mony.

35T 35PClose and open order battalion drills

are in progress in the earlier hours ofthe day, while the dally rifje drillsgive revelations of real preparednessin the post which will enthuse thepatriotism of all spectators.

'

35T 35"The chaplains of the regular army

and National Guard on duty at Doug-las, Ariz., request that all who sendpresents to men on the border ad-

dress the same in care of the chaplain cf the organization to which theirfriends are attached, inasmuch as ithas been found that tons of suppliessent to men through misdirection orcarelessness of address have failed toreach the men and have been placedIn warehouses already over-taxe- d. Itwould be wise for all correspondentsto follow this advice while everythingis so uncertain on the border.

38T '

The report of 1st Lieut. J. T. Ken-nedy, 6th Cavalry, regarding the newsaddles for officers, such report be-ing presented after actual service teston the border, is very favorable andrecommends the adoption of .the sad-dle which, the report goes on to say,is more comfortable than the presentMcClellan field saddle and causesmuch less fatigue after the longestrides. As this recommendation willprobably mean an early adoption ofthe proposed saddle all of the offi-cers of Fort Shatter and vicinity willbe please'd to hear of its many: superior merits.

3BT 55-T-h

e report cf Sir Ian Hamilton ofthe British forces upon the use of themachine gun in the Gallipoli cam-paign, makes the following importantstatements, that the visibility of amachine gun and its operators is, onlyequal to the front occupied by twomen. and that its vulnerability is un-

affected even by 50 per cent losses;that the modern machine gun. espe-cially the German and Lewis types, iseasily controlled, concentrated, direct-ed and concealed. All of which showsthe increasing importance of this newweapon of defense and offense espe-cially for the infantry. There is anincreasing necessity for greaterknowledge and experience of the wea

LIB

SERVICE FIRSl

pon and its constructinn and uso; the'necessity for the formation of largerunits for the handling of the machinegun has been demonstrated by bcththe Teutonic nnd Allied forces. Thecreation and formation as well of neworganiaztions acconvanying the in-

fantry for the repair and reconstruc-tion rf damaged guns must be --dvenimmediate consi Oration also, and asthe infantry branches of tne "army aremost vitally concerned Fort Shafterorganizations will soon hear and seeand know much more of this weaponof war. which Gn. Hamilton calls''the invention of the devil."

A letter received from t Englandconcerning the death of Capt. StanleyW. Wood of the 16th Canadian Scot-tish, until his resignation December22. 1914. secend lieutenant in the 7th

! Infantry, V. S. A., and well known tomany of the Infantry orncers at bart-er, says that in his gallent end atYpres. Belgium. June 13, he main-ta!ne- d

the highest standard of the U.S. army traditions. As the letterstates: "Capt. Wood died the deathof a brave soldier in the heat of thecharge, being killed by machine gunfire after having gone through theGerman first line, and on his way tothe second line."

Two items of general interest to allthe army-ar- now being discussed inWashington; first, the amendment tothe army appropriation bill providingfor the relief of families of the enlist-ed men of the regulars as well as theNational Guard; and second, the agi-

tation for a renewal of "foreign ser-

vice pay" for the troops in the CanalZone, Hawaii and Porto Rico as wellas the Philippines and the border.

35" 3S"Lieut-Col- . William Weigel, 2d In-

fantry, has been acting as lieutenant-colone- lof the regiment ad therefore

has been relieved as commanding of-

ficer of the 3d Battalion, but will con-tinue as summary court officer.

38T SB-C-ap

t William B. Cochran has beentransferred from the command of ECompany to take charge of K Compa-ny and act as 3d Battalion command-er, while Capt Otho B. Rosenbaum,commanding F Company, will assumecommand of the 2d Battalion.

3BT 3WThe following members of B Com-

pany have been made sergeants: Geo.J. Taylor, Richard Johnson and GuyM. Bartlett: and the following menwere made corporals in the same or-

ganization: Eugene Laflamme, VestaT. Hfggins and Frank Amolowski.

35T:'3BT2d Lieut EdwardjF. Witsell, 2d

has been kppointed athleticofficer at Fort Shifter and as suchwill arrange all the future games ofbaseball still unplayed in the series,and will superintend the grounds andappoint umpires and select dates onwhich post and battalion teams willplay. - ,.'

30";35PThe following enlisted men have

completed the course of instructionat the school for 'ctooks and bakers,stationed at P orttShafter, and willnow return to their respective posts:Pvt. Harry J. Bets. Troop F, 4th Cavairy; Pvt. Carl E, Morris, Troop K,4th Cavalry; Pvt Peter A. Sagglo,Battery C. 1st Field Artillery; Pvt

FurnitureHONOLULU C0N5TKUUTIUN & JJKAxlXiu UU., LIU.

PHONE 4981 J. J. BELSER, Manager.STORAGE 65 TO 71 SOUTH QUEEN ST.

Mads M. Madsen. Co. A, lst-lnfan- try.

The above are stationed at SchofieldBarracks. Pvt. C. Nellsen. 1st Com-pany. Coast Artillery Corps, at FortPe Russy; Pvt." Sol Silver, Telegraphand Telephone Platoon. Company M.Signal Corps; Pvt. Richard E- - Wood.Medical Department. Department Hos-pital.

"SUNNY JIM""wAKEFIELD

WILL TALK 0M "MESSAGEFROM MARS" AT Y. M. C. A.

One of the most interring of lec-

tures will be held at the Y. M. C. A.tonight at 8 o'clock, when James A.

Wakefield, known widely as "SunnyJim" Wakefield, will tell his experi-ences in France and Germany at t lieoutbreak of the European war. IIUtalk is entitled "A Message fromMars."

Mr. Wakefield is from Pittsburgand has lectured many times in thestates on his various trips to the foreign ports of the world. At the open-ing of the war he was in Europe,visiting his daughter, who had . beenattending school. He had the oppor-tunity of visiting the mobilization ofthe Swiss army, the grand review ofthe imperial navy at Kiel by theKaiser and thea escaped Into France,attempting to get out of the countryby that route. While there Mr. Wake-field joined a party, and armed withpasses from one of the high Frenchgenerals, they went within a shortdistance of the front at the battle ofMons. It is this view of the Europeanwar that he will talk about tonight.Mr. Wakefield is a well-know- n East-ern lawyer and has been prominentin public circles throughout the coun-

try. ;: r -

RAPID TRANSIT COMPANY

DIRECTORS MEET TODAY

Extension of the lines of the RapidTransit Company, double-trackin- g andother improvements which have beentalked of since the decision of the su-

preme court allowing it to IncreaseIts capital stock will probably be con-

sidered at a meeting of the directorsof the company to be held this after-noon.

It is not known whether or not anyaction will be taken by the board.

Mrs. James Fischer was instantlykilled by falling four stories from awindow of her home at 450 East 147thstreet More than a score of childrenplaying in the vacant lot adjoiningwitnessed the accident

The Hughes' Democratic Voters'League of New York, a non-stoc- k cor-poration, filed articles at Albany. His formed to persuade voters withDemocatic leanings in the Bronx"and elsewhere" to vote for Hughes.

PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 OAYS

PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed tocure blind, bleeding, itchi or pro-

truding PILES in 6 to It days ormoney refunded. ' Manufactured bythe PARIS MEDICINE CO., St'. Louia.U. S. A. ; - "::

and Piano

Spendthe

4000 FEET ELEVATION

Leave Honolulu

Return ;". ......

Inter-islan- d SteamPhone 4941

"Lies

is

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McINERNY

toil weir's

VolcanoINVIGORATING

Saturday, 3 P. M.

Tuesday, 7 A. M.

Navigation Co., Ltd.Queen Street

All Expenses

$30o00

Comes out a ribbon,flat on the Brush.'

Children use Ribbon Creameagerly and faithfullybecause of its deliciousflavour. It disproves thetheory that a druggy " taste

necessary to efficiency.

Home1Take the Tube

Haleiwa for VacationsWhere else can you have .such comforts, fine- - swim-

ming, golf, tennis, good meals served on the cool lanaisall this for $3.50 per day or $21 per week. Take advan-tage of the Beautiful Ialeiwa,,, right near home.

GLASS-BOTTO- M BOAT

Isn H it stylish, fashionably dressed figure in the Palm Beach

suit swinging jauntily along the street radiating ease andcomfort? V;

Be just as stylishly and comfortably clothed yourself by

wearing aMclnerny Palm Beach S

We have just received a splendid shipment from New York Citycompletely representative of the newest staples and fabrics. All thelatest shades ofpearl grey, light blue and pongee. You'll find heresuits that for fit, workmanship, quality and style cannot be surpassed

The House of Courtesy

COOL

Fort and Merchant Streets

m