8
it t WEATHER FORECAST rtrn lKbrfA X FOR TODAY Lisht t fff1 SUGAR-- 96 CentriT-- X to moderate trades and t uSk 3.695. 85 AnaN IM I Mill III 1 k--f f fa:r w earner. y$is beet 7$ II d. fit 1 f A..A.A.A,AAA,A,.A. A A AAA A t H H H H M VOL 1, NO. 2S. HONOLULU, HAWAII TERRITORY, SUNDAY, JULY 19, 1903. ritl!?? V9; Honolulu. HwH. Second muer Aci ox cottgres. of March S, 1ST 9. OUTLOOK FOR L IN THE SUIT SCANDA THE POPE LESS AGAINST FAXON BISKO KAUAI NOW ON THE HAWAIIAN WIRELESS SYSTEM Signals Were Swapped With Oahu EASSURING The Hilo Tribune Makes Serious Charges Against the Methods Employed to Get A Testimony Are Locals Officials Involved? Magazine Explosion in Parisbun, Virginia, Docs Great Damage. Station Yesterday Ahead of Contract Time. search Wednesday morning and found his man hidden in a bed. He dragged him out. by his collar and ordered him off the plantation. The Korean set up the plea that he TOnc Station on This Island 'Will Connect With Storm Sweeps Over Indiana, Ohio and Wis- consin, Causing Great Loss Cleveland Again a Father. HILO. July 17. The Hilo Tribune charges that there is a conspiracy in the suits brought against E. F. Bishop for alleged illegal importation of Koreans. It claims to have discovered that officials in Honolulu hope to share in any damages recovered rrom Bishop. The revelation Is made in the trial of a Korean who. was arrested for trying to bribe Koreans to testify In the United States court. The Tribune says: The Hilo chapter of the scheme AH the Others Lahaina Sole Relay Between Oahu and Hawaii. was a doctor and drug vendor, where- upon, 11 r. Kennedy preferred charges, resulting In the "detective's" conviction in polio court for selling drugs and practicing medicine without a license. That Ms Honolulu employers would not truet tneir bribe giver with very large sums ojf expense money is shown by the fac that Choy Tong Soon went to Jail. hatched in Honolulu to mulct Faxon Bishop to the tune of $113,000. on ac- count of the 113 Koreans employed on V.'alakea and Walnaku plantations, (ASSOCIATED PKES3 OAELEGRAM3 ) ROME, July IS. The Pope is seriously depressed. His pulse restless and fast and he complains of weakness and the need of rest. Nourishment does not benefit him and his case is less hopeful. o Spanish Cabinet Resigns. MADRID, July IS. Tho cabinet has resigned owing to differ came to an abrupt close in the Hilo "Wireless telegraph communication i. now installed between Oahu and Kauai, and the garden isle connected with the electric system unit- ing all tho imjMH-tan- t island of the group. This virk is accomplished al-- o ten days within the limit prescribed by iho Act of the Legislature, which waa three months from its passage on April 2S. The result was Achieved only by the most untiring and almost sleepless endeavors of Manager Fred. J. Cross. He has been at home but one night in tho past two weeks. Signals were exchanged between Barter's Point and Xawiliwi'ri about noon yesterday. ''First-rate- ; they could not le any nicer," was tho statement of Mr. Cross in this regard last night. Mr. Irish, the At tli. trial in police court, Choy pleaded-guilt- to the charge and stated that he; had been following his calling of dixpensing medicines for four years in Honolulu. Loo Choy," the Chinese sharper, was run out of Hamakua three or four years ago as a tough character, by H. S. Overend, who was then on duty in that listrlct. The suit at Honolulu in which evi- dence is so sorely wanted is an impor- tant one as It Involves the latest Im- migration act passed by Congress last March. While the complainant in the case Is one Berger, it is said that the suit Is being pressed by prominent and well known officials, who hope to share in "divvy" in case they can prove the l:iw t" 1 ave been violated. ences over taxation and the increase of- - the Xavv. " o ; Police Court Wednesday morning. A Korean, giving his name as Chong Tong Soon, and sent over from Hono- lulu to go among the Koreans and give bribes for much needed testimony, was fined $100 by Judge Hapal and sent to Jail In default of payment. Loo Choy. a notorious Chinese sharper, who was acting as coach for the Kon-u- was not locked up. but the fate of his detective partner effectually clipped hif own claws. The case in Honolulu fur which evidence is wanted is a suit brought in the name of one Berger, CHINA DOES NOT -- Si BELIEVE RUSSIA'S PLEDGES ldest male oerator in the company's was at the NawiliwiH Llceybiard, while Mr. Cross operated at Barter's Point. The Oahu st ton had been shifted from Kaena Point, where Mr. Cross consented to alleging that the plantations import Tsave it first erected against his own judgment. The Kauai station is ing Korean labor have violated the Federal Immigration law and are Hub- - Ahout a thousand feet from Nawiliwili lighthouse. Ject to a En or Ji;iuu per neau. PEKIXG, July IS. There is little faith hero in Russia's concerning Manchuria unless tho United States has secured guarantees. . Prince Ching has been commanded to sign the American treaty. o- : Now Favoring the Canal. COLOX, July 18. The members of the Colombian Congress are growing more favorable to tho canal treatv. o . The "Waialae station on this island will be abandoned and it plant removed to Lahaina, Maui, to which messages will bo flashed direct from Barter's Point instead of relaying them through Molokai and Lanai, while from Lahaina direct communication will be held with Mahukona, Hawaii. At the same time the Molokai station will be maintained under the provisions of the subsidy enactment. The Legis- lature appropriated money for connecting the Molokai districts with the wireless telegraph station by telephone. An operator will there- fore be kept on Molokai, however light the business may be. Tho Kauai line will not be open for business for about a week, us a wire has to k- - run from Pearl City to Barter's Point. .There may be a slight interruption to the inter-islan- d system as a whole, while the different operators are being 'detailed to the stations for which their respective capacities are lcst suited. XTtlo Steam Holler Wrecked. The Government steam roller that itr- - used in Olaa for a long time post is n wreck. The Government was moving it in change of Engineers W. J. Dale and Charles Steele from eleven miles, Olaa, to' the Matson warehouse for shipment to Kau where it was to have been put In service by Benton and Anole, the contractors. The men left with the roller last Monday morning and got down to town Thursday night. The roller was left on Volcano street all night and early Friday morning they began what proved to be their last run. As the machine left the Vol- cano road and turned into Church street it made a curve and went di- rectly into the ditch. Both Dale and Steele had narrow escapes from being crusljed, a quick Jumped saved them. For a few minutes a large volume of steam came out through the pipes but A MAGAZINE EXPLODES malte a snowing in courftt Was nec- essary to have evidence. Not having it the next step was to send bribe giv- ers among the Koreans themselves in an attempt to induce some of them to swear that they came to Hawaii un- der contract. Choy Tong Soon, accompanied by the notorious Loo Choy, came to Hilo for that purpose. They first went to Wal- naku. but made little headway In their efforts. They offered the Korean inter- preter $200 as a beginner, if he would assist them in cultivating the good graces of susceptible Koreans. Man- ager John Scott was soon on their trail and Wainaku became uncomfortable for them. They then transferred their operations to Waiakea, where they met their Waterloo. The Korean "detec- tive" went among the" Korean, labor DOING GREAT DAMAGE PARISTJURG, Va., J uly 1 S. A magazine exploded here today, two men being killed and sixteen seriously hurt. One hundred persons were affected by the shock. A passing train was damaged and tho occupants injured. WORK WILL JAIL BIRDS Mr. Dale closed them and Steele pulled ers as a physician and diseeneer of the fire out of the box. Later; the o ; Cleveland a Happy Father. damage to the machine has proven not very great, the principal injury July IS. Another son was born to BE JELAYED BUZZARD'S BAY, Mass., Mrs. Grover Cleveland todav. being the breaking of the flywheel smokestack and house. Hilo Herald. -- - Once n Honolulu Btatlon. FROM HILO Prisoners Arrive From -- o The new Paymaster General of the Pearl Harbor Plans Wait Navy. Rear Admiral Henry T. B. Har drugs. He entered their homes and is known to have offered $1000 to the Korean who would furnish evidence that he came to work under a con- tract. The Koreans on Waiakea are an hon- est and steady lot of worklngmen. When it was learned by them that some of their number were giving ear to the "detective," council was held and the one Korean who showed a dis- position to make an effort for the $1000 was kicked out of camp. C. C. Kennedy, manager of Waiakea, heard of the Interloper and took a hand in the detective business himself. He located the "detective physician" at ris, was on duty at Honolulu in charge There on the Kinau. of naval stores from 1875 to 1877. Hlli '4 Strike Eettl d. For a Five Million Appropriation. Late Friday evening, according to a wireless message, the strike of 'long SEVERAL STATES SWEPT BY A GREAT WIND ST0RA PITTSBURG, July IS. A terrific wind and rain storm swept over Indiana, Ohio and "Wisconsin today doing immense damage. Rivers overflowed rendering hundreds homeless and crop were ruinei. o Cholera in Manila. MAXILA, July 18. The cholera is increasing in this city. There will be no work on the Pearl shoremen at Hilo was settled, the Hilo Five men were brought down from Mercantile Company conceding the Harbor naval station until Congress Hilo on the Kinau yesterday, three of nine-ho- ur day for which the men passes an appropriation which will al them being prisoners, one Porto Rican Camp No. 4. He made a house to house struck. for the Incurable Hospital, and one in low a decent start to be made. It was rruMtl that with the settlement of sane Japanese. The three prisoners are as. follows: Makaio, manslaughter in the third BIG FIRE CLAIM BONDS the Pearl Harbor suits work could be Immediately Inaugurated, but the Navy degree, committed on Muses Hoakimoa Department does not Intend to do the i.h niwcmcal. The dredging of the DEAL IN NEW YORK at Kapoho, District of Puna. Hawaii." Sentenced to two years imprisonment. THE TREASURER Pearl Harbor bar has been practically completed and will be ready within a few weeks to be turned over to the Sato Gengiro, malicious injury com HASN'T THE GIFT mitted at Olaa, Hawaii, on May 17. ococxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Gengiro destroyed fifteen cars ty?lrS'-in- g to the Olaa Sugar Company by re Since talking to an Advertiser rep leasing the brakes. Sentence, eighteen resentative on Friday evening. Treas months. urer Kepoikai has come to the conclu- sion that the appointing of a Com Fedel Torres, burglary first degree. ASSEMBLING THE EXHIBIT Superintendent Cooper stated yester- day that progress had been made in arranging for the St. Louis exhibit. An application for space had gone for- ward. Instead of.putting the work of collection into a single individual's hands, he would apportion it in differ- ent quarters according to classes of ex- hibits. Thus Superintendent Atkinson of the Department of Public Instruc- tion had been assigned the task of as- sembling the education display. An committed on January 25. in the dwel- ling house of Manuel Machado at Kau- - missioner of Immigration belongs to the Governor instead of himself. He government by the contractors. There is at present an appropriation of $30,000 available for the "Naval Sta- tion. Hawaii" a part of which could be used for work at Pearl Harbor. Of this amount, $15,000 is for the com- mandant's house to be erected on IunchbowI, J50.000 is intended for ma- chine shops and 125,000 for a foundry. These Improvements are only inci- dental to those at Pearl Harbor. The machine shops and foundry were to have been erected in Honolulu for the use of vessels needing temporary re- pairs, but in view of the nearness of the construction of the larger shops at Pearl Harbor they are not now deem- ed necessary. was led to this belief by consulting the mana. District of South Hilo. Sentenc- ed to five years' Imprisonment. All the men were sentenced by Judge Gilbert F. Little. Organic Act, where in Section SO the following provision appears: Last night's arrests included three "The manner of appointment and There was a well-define- d rumor on the street vesterdav that a large and very favorable deal in the fire claims four per cent, bonds of the Territory of Hawaii, authorized by Congress, had every promise of being consummated at any moment in Xew York. The price mentioned is 07 1-- 2, which is 7 1-- 2 higher than the figure at which awardees of the Fire Claims Commis-io- n had their bonds locally discounted. It is said that the amount of the lnnds in this transaction is in the neighborhood of .$100,000. The news is eratifvinr in more wavs than one, not. lea-- t in the evidence of the Territorv's credit in the chief monev market of the United States it affords. There is a probability, according to the views of financial men spoken to alout the rumor, that this Xew York deal will lead to further profitable negotiations in fire claim londs. drunks: one for investigation; Xakai removal and the tenure of all other for gambling, and Fred Luning for leaving his horse untied in a rublic officers shall be provided by law; and the governor may appoint or allowance from the iun would be given thoroughfare. Saguma and Machino remove any omcer wnose appoint were arrested by Deputy Sheriff Chil- - for that purpose. Mr. Cooper would lingworth fur assault and battery on a ment or removal i3 not otherwise ask the assistance of a number of peo fellow countryman. Their bail was fix ,1 Captain nue s estimates ior me j" Improvements needed at Pearl Har- - bor to begin with, will require an ap provided for." ed at $j0, Since C. R. Euckland has been found propriation of over $3,000,000. ple for other divisions. Xew commissions were issued to the sanitary inspectors of Honolulu yes- - terlay. The pay la JS3 a month all to be disqualified for the clerkship Th nlanx which accompanied the rirtain Whit for the'shons and foundry, a key wan. tnree of this court, he has again entered the , pat yoar include two large dry docks, wharves, dredging to open tne way to lists as a candidate for the office of round no star list. nine s- - ts of officer's quarters, two store the docks, barracks for men. a rail-house- s, construction shops, machine road and various other improvements. Commissioner of Immigration. CXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXDDCOOOOCCXDCXDO ir

S, 1ST KAUAI SUIT OUTLOOK FOR HAWAIIAN AGAINST THE … · Hlli '4 Strike Eettl d. For a Five Million Appropriation. Late Friday evening, according to a wireless message, the strike

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Page 1: S, 1ST KAUAI SUIT OUTLOOK FOR HAWAIIAN AGAINST THE … · Hlli '4 Strike Eettl d. For a Five Million Appropriation. Late Friday evening, according to a wireless message, the strike

it

t WEATHER FORECAST rtrn lKbrfAX FOR TODAY Lisht t fff1 SUGAR-- 96 CentriT-- X

to moderate trades and t uSk 3.695. 85 AnaNIM I Mill III1

k--f f fa:r w earner. y$is beet 7$ II d.

fit 1f A..A.A.A,AAA,A,.A. A A A A A A

t H H H H M

VOL 1, NO. 2S. HONOLULU, HAWAII TERRITORY, SUNDAY, JULY 19, 1903. ritl!?? V9; Honolulu. HwH. Secondmuer Aci ox cottgres. of March S, 1ST 9.

OUTLOOK FORL IN THE SUITSCANDA

THE POPE LESSAGAINST FAXON BISKO

KAUAI NOW ONTHE HAWAIIAN

WIRELESS SYSTEM

Signals Were Swapped With Oahu

EASSURINGThe Hilo Tribune Makes Serious Charges

Against the Methods Employed to Get ATestimony Are Locals Officials Involved? Magazine Explosion in Parisbun,

Virginia, Docs GreatDamage.

Station Yesterday Ahead ofContract Time. search Wednesday morning and found

his man hidden in a bed. He draggedhim out. by his collar and ordered himoff the plantation.

The Korean set up the plea that heTOnc Station on This Island 'Will Connect With Storm Sweeps Over Indiana, Ohio and Wis-

consin, Causing Great Loss ClevelandAgain a Father.

HILO. July 17. The Hilo Tribunecharges that there is a conspiracy in

the suits brought against E. F. Bishop

for alleged illegal importation of

Koreans. It claims to have discovered

that officials in Honolulu hope to sharein any damages recovered rrom Bishop.

The revelation Is made in the trial of

a Korean who. was arrested for trying

to bribe Koreans to testify In the

United States court.The Tribune says:

The Hilo chapter of the scheme

AH the Others Lahaina Sole Relay

Between Oahu and Hawaii.

was a doctor and drug vendor, where-upon, 11 r. Kennedy preferred charges,resulting In the "detective's" convictionin polio court for selling drugs andpracticing medicine without a license.That Ms Honolulu employers would nottruet tneir bribe giver with very largesums ojf expense money is shown bythe fac that Choy Tong Soon went toJail.

hatched in Honolulu to mulct FaxonBishop to the tune of $113,000. on ac-

count of the 113 Koreans employed on

V.'alakea and Walnaku plantations,

(ASSOCIATED PKES3 OAELEGRAM3 )

ROME, July IS. The Pope is seriously depressed. His pulserestless and fast and he complains of weakness and the need of rest.Nourishment does not benefit him and his case is less hopeful.

o

Spanish Cabinet Resigns.MADRID, July IS. Tho cabinet has resigned owing to differ

came to an abrupt close in the Hilo

"Wireless telegraph communication i. now installed between Oahu

and Kauai, and the garden isle connected with the electric system unit-

ing all tho imjMH-tan- t island of the group. This virk is accomplished

al-- o ten days within the limit prescribed by iho Act of the Legislature,

which waa three months from its passage on April 2S. The result was

Achieved only by the most untiring and almost sleepless endeavors of

Manager Fred. J. Cross. He has been at home but one night in

tho past two weeks.

Signals were exchanged between Barter's Point and Xawiliwi'ri

about noon yesterday. ''First-rate- ; they could not le any nicer," was

tho statement of Mr. Cross in this regard last night. Mr. Irish, the

At tli. trial in police court, Choypleaded-guilt- to the charge and statedthat he; had been following his callingof dixpensing medicines for four yearsin Honolulu.

Loo Choy," the Chinese sharper, wasrun out of Hamakua three or fouryears ago as a tough character, by H.S. Overend, who was then on duty inthat listrlct.

The suit at Honolulu in which evi-

dence is so sorely wanted is an impor-

tant one as It Involves the latest Im-

migration act passed by Congress lastMarch. While the complainant in thecase Is one Berger, it is said that thesuit Is being pressed by prominent andwell known officials, who hope to sharein "divvy" in case they can prove thel:iw t" 1 ave been violated.

ences over taxation and the increase of- - the Xavv."o ;

Police Court Wednesday morning. A

Korean, giving his name as Chong

Tong Soon, and sent over from Hono-

lulu to go among the Koreans and give

bribes for much needed testimony, wasfined $100 by Judge Hapal and sentto Jail In default of payment. Loo

Choy. a notorious Chinese sharper, who

was acting as coach for the Kon-u-

was not locked up. but the fate of his

detective partner effectually clipped hifown claws. The case in Honolulu fur

which evidence is wanted is a suitbrought in the name of one Berger,

CHINA DOES NOT-- Si

BELIEVE RUSSIA'S PLEDGESldest male oerator in the company's was at the NawiliwiHLlceybiard, while Mr. Cross operated at Barter's Point. The Oahu st

ton had been shifted from Kaena Point, where Mr. Cross consented toalleging that the plantations import

Tsave it first erected against his own judgment. The Kauai station ising Korean labor have violated theFederal Immigration law and are Hub--Ahout a thousand feet from Nawiliwili lighthouse.Ject to a En or Ji;iuu per neau.

PEKIXG, July IS. There is little faith hero in Russia'sconcerning Manchuria unless tho United States has securedguarantees.

. Prince Ching has been commanded to sign the American treaty.o- :

Now Favoring the Canal.COLOX, July 18. The members of the Colombian Congress

are growing more favorable to tho canal treatv.o .

The "Waialae station on this island will be abandoned and it plantremoved to Lahaina, Maui, to which messages will bo flashed directfrom Barter's Point instead of relaying them through Molokai and

Lanai, while from Lahaina direct communication will be held with

Mahukona, Hawaii. At the same time the Molokai station will be

maintained under the provisions of the subsidy enactment. The Legis-

lature appropriated money for connecting the Molokai districts with

the wireless telegraph station by telephone. An operator will there-

fore be kept on Molokai, however light the business may be.

Tho Kauai line will not be open for business for about a week, us

a wire has to k-- run from Pearl City to Barter's Point. .There may be

a slight interruption to the inter-islan- d system as a whole, while thedifferent operators are being 'detailed to the stations for which theirrespective capacities are lcst suited.

XTtlo Steam Holler Wrecked.The Government steam roller that

itr- - used in Olaa for a long timepost is n wreck. The Government wasmoving it in change of Engineers W. J.Dale and Charles Steele from elevenmiles, Olaa, to' the Matson warehousefor shipment to Kau where it was tohave been put In service by Benton andAnole, the contractors. The men leftwith the roller last Monday morningand got down to town Thursday night.The roller was left on Volcano streetall night and early Friday morningthey began what proved to be theirlast run. As the machine left the Vol-

cano road and turned into Churchstreet it made a curve and went di-

rectly into the ditch. Both Dale andSteele had narrow escapes from beingcrusljed, a quick Jumped saved them.For a few minutes a large volume ofsteam came out through the pipes but

A MAGAZINE EXPLODES

malte a snowing in courftt Was nec-

essary to have evidence. Not havingit the next step was to send bribe giv-

ers among the Koreans themselves inan attempt to induce some of them toswear that they came to Hawaii un-

der contract.Choy Tong Soon, accompanied by the

notorious Loo Choy, came to Hilo for

that purpose. They first went to Wal-

naku. but made little headway In theirefforts. They offered the Korean inter-

preter $200 as a beginner, if he would

assist them in cultivating the goodgraces of susceptible Koreans. Man-

ager John Scott was soon on their trailand Wainaku became uncomfortablefor them. They then transferred theiroperations to Waiakea, where they mettheir Waterloo. The Korean "detec-

tive" went among the" Korean, labor

DOING GREAT DAMAGE

PARISTJURG, Va., July 1 S. A magazine exploded here today,two men being killed and sixteen seriously hurt. One hundred personswere affected by the shock. A passing train was damaged and thooccupants injured.WORK WILL JAIL BIRDS Mr. Dale closed them and Steele pulled

ers as a physician and diseeneer ofthe fire out of the box. Later; the o ;

Cleveland a Happy Father.damage to the machine has provennot very great, the principal injury

July IS. Another son was born toBE JELAYED BUZZARD'S BAY, Mass.,Mrs. Grover Cleveland todav.

being the breaking of the flywheelsmokestack and house. Hilo Herald.

-- -

Once n Honolulu Btatlon.

FROM HILO

Prisoners Arrive From

--o

The new Paymaster General of thePearl Harbor Plans Wait Navy. Rear Admiral Henry T. B. Har

drugs. He entered their homes and isknown to have offered $1000 to theKorean who would furnish evidence

that he came to work under a con-

tract.The Koreans on Waiakea are an hon-

est and steady lot of worklngmen.When it was learned by them thatsome of their number were giving earto the "detective," council was heldand the one Korean who showed a dis-

position to make an effort for the $1000

was kicked out of camp.C. C. Kennedy, manager of Waiakea,

heard of the Interloper and took a handin the detective business himself. Helocated the "detective physician" at

ris, was on duty at Honolulu in chargeThere on the

Kinau.of naval stores from 1875 to 1877.

Hlli '4 Strike Eettl d.

For a Five Million

Appropriation.Late Friday evening, according to a

wireless message, the strike of 'long

SEVERAL STATES SWEPTBY A GREAT WIND ST0RA

PITTSBURG, July IS. A terrific wind and rain storm swept

over Indiana, Ohio and "Wisconsin today doing immense damage.Rivers overflowed rendering hundreds homeless and crop were ruinei.

o

Cholera in Manila.MAXILA, July 18. The cholera is increasing in this city.

There will be no work on the Pearl shoremen at Hilo was settled, the HiloFive men were brought down fromMercantile Company conceding theHarbor naval station until Congress Hilo on the Kinau yesterday, three ofnine-ho- ur day for which the menpasses an appropriation which will al them being prisoners, one Porto Rican Camp No. 4. He made a house to house struck.for the Incurable Hospital, and one inlow a decent start to be made. It was

rruMtl that with the settlement of sane Japanese.The three prisoners are as. follows:Makaio, manslaughter in the third

BIG FIRE CLAIM BONDSthe Pearl Harbor suits work could beImmediately Inaugurated, but the Navy

degree, committed on Muses HoakimoaDepartment does not Intend to do thei.h niwcmcal. The dredging of the DEAL IN NEW YORKat Kapoho, District of Puna. Hawaii."

Sentenced to two years imprisonment. THE TREASURERPearl Harbor bar has been practicallycompleted and will be ready within afew weeks to be turned over to the

Sato Gengiro, malicious injury comHASN'T THE GIFTmitted at Olaa, Hawaii, on May 17. ococxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

Gengiro destroyed fifteen cars ty?lrS'-in- g

to the Olaa Sugar Company by reSince talking to an Advertiser rep

leasing the brakes. Sentence, eighteenresentative on Friday evening. Treas

months. urer Kepoikai has come to the conclu-

sion that the appointing of a ComFedel Torres, burglary first degree.

ASSEMBLINGTHE EXHIBIT

Superintendent Cooper stated yester-day that progress had been made inarranging for the St. Louis exhibit.An application for space had gone for-ward. Instead of.putting the work ofcollection into a single individual'shands, he would apportion it in differ-ent quarters according to classes of ex-

hibits. Thus Superintendent Atkinsonof the Department of Public Instruc-tion had been assigned the task of as-

sembling the education display. An

committed on January 25. in the dwel-

ling house of Manuel Machado at Kau- - missioner of Immigration belongs tothe Governor instead of himself. He

government by the contractors.There is at present an appropriation

of $30,000 available for the "Naval Sta-

tion. Hawaii" a part of which couldbe used for work at Pearl Harbor.Of this amount, $15,000 is for the com-

mandant's house to be erected onIunchbowI, J50.000 is intended for ma-

chine shops and 125,000 for a foundry.These Improvements are only inci-dental to those at Pearl Harbor. Themachine shops and foundry were tohave been erected in Honolulu for theuse of vessels needing temporary re-

pairs, but in view of the nearness ofthe construction of the larger shops atPearl Harbor they are not now deem-ed necessary.

was led to this belief by consulting themana. District of South Hilo. Sentenc-ed to five years' Imprisonment. All themen were sentenced by Judge GilbertF. Little.

Organic Act, where in Section SO thefollowing provision appears:

Last night's arrests included three "The manner of appointment and

There was a well-define- d rumor on the street vesterdavthat a large and very favorable deal in the fire claims four percent, bonds of the Territory of Hawaii, authorized by Congress,had every promise of being consummated at any moment inXew York. The price mentioned is 07 1-- 2, which is 7 1-- 2 higherthan the figure at which awardees of the Fire Claims Commis-io- n

had their bonds locally discounted. It is said that the amountof the lnnds in this transaction is in the neighborhood of.$100,000.

The news is eratifvinr in more wavs than one, not. lea-- tin the evidence of the Territorv's credit in the chief monevmarket of the United States it affords.

There is a probability, according to the views of financialmen spoken to alout the rumor, that this Xew York deal willlead to further profitable negotiations in fire claim londs.

drunks: one for investigation; Xakai removal and the tenure of all otherfor gambling, and Fred Luning forleaving his horse untied in a rublic officers shall be provided by law;

and the governor may appoint or allowance from the iun would be giventhoroughfare. Saguma and Machinoremove any omcer wnose appointwere arrested by Deputy Sheriff Chil- - for that purpose. Mr. Cooper would

lingworth fur assault and battery on a ment or removal i3 not otherwise ask the assistance of a number of peofellow countryman. Their bail was fix

,1 Captain nue s estimates ior mej" Improvements needed at Pearl Har- -

bor to begin with, will require an ap provided for."ed at $j0,Since C. R. Euckland has been foundpropriation of over $3,000,000.

ple for other divisions.

Xew commissions were issued to thesanitary inspectors of Honolulu yes- -terlay. The pay la JS3 a month all

to be disqualified for the clerkshipTh nlanx which accompanied therirtain Whit for the'shons and foundry, a key wan. tnree of this court, he has again entered the

, pat yoar include two large dry docks, wharves, dredging to open tne way tolists as a candidate for the office of

round no star list.nine s- - ts of officer's quarters, two store the docks, barracks for men. a rail-house- s,

construction shops, machine road and various other improvements. Commissioner of Immigration.CXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXDDCOOOOCCXDCXDO

ir

Page 2: S, 1ST KAUAI SUIT OUTLOOK FOR HAWAIIAN AGAINST THE … · Hlli '4 Strike Eettl d. For a Five Million Appropriation. Late Friday evening, according to a wireless message, the strike

SUNDAY ADVERTISED, JULY 19,- - 1003.2

HEW PUBLICsurvey and cross sections of Honoluluharbor and channel in anticipation ofobtaining funds for dredging: opera-

tions. Borings for the proposed new-slip- s

ha,ve been placed in charge .of ThiIf you want to know what smartly dressed men will wear

this season, ask to see Stein-Bloc- h Smart Clothes."

Examples of Perfect Clothes- -Week'shoppingBUILDINGS mewsJas. T. Taylor, civil engineer.

m

BILL EAQAN.By Sahib Htab.

ifare in onr store awaiting roar ins-lectio- n.

They are hand-tailore- d

frarmnt3, ready-for-wea- r, and the The Roval Schoolonly clothes made that are inevery particular the equal of the

w, s.(20RSETS

ALL THE NEW SHAPES

Given FirstMention.

Bill Eagan was arrestedFor the tramp's most common crime,

For Bill's idea of cleanlinessMeant corporation grime;

And the judge when passing sentenceAroused Bill's trampsome wrath:

"Bill." said he, "I send you upTo interview the BATH."

Bill Eagan. when he heard the judgeSay "BATH." fell in a fit.

J

few xSaiSitPlans Being Prepared

exclusive ccstom-tailor'- s handiwork.

No Better Fabrics,No Better Linings.No Better Findings,

No Better Workmanship

tan be had in apparel made-to-measu- re

at double our price.

for Penitentiary andAsylum.

For Bill's great dread was water,Got dengue looking at it.

They brought Bill to, and then ex-

plained(That's why Bill's etill alive)

That he'd find THE BATH on King St.,At one hundred and sixty-fiv- e.

LYCEUA STOCKNEXT THURSDAY

Superintendent Cooper to Visit

fciiilip .

mm mkis! III!

Islands and InvestigateTheir Needs.

labelstands for allthat is good

Superintendent H. E. Cooper firstProbably the most successful warlearned of the resignation of Marston

Campbell. Assistant Superintendent of drama ever seen in stageland Is thatin clothes-making- . It is sewn un-

der the flap of every coat collar.Krtin-TtW- h Kmart Clothes are great play "Held By The Enemy."

y t4;t

Wj0Public "Works, in the Advertiser yes-

terday morning, having been outside ofm especially tailored to meet the exact--'mm This piece is alive from start to finish

with soul stirring situations and, asidefrom the comedy scenes, depicts the

his office on business throughout Fri- -

aay arternoon. The information washave had their clothesM 1 I ' rf" , high rense of honor of the soldier and0T t so abrupt as almost to compel a post

50c, 75c, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50,$1.75 to $3.00 pair.

BEST VALUE IN THE TRADE.l J his unwavering loyalty to the cause heupholds.ponement of the Superintendent's trip

The plot centers around the lovesand loyalty of an American soldier of

SECOND WEEK OF ODR BISthe Civil "War, and the scenes are laidin the South. Magnificent stage effectshave been consummated which will add I

to Kauai planned for this week. Re-

garding his contemplatea visits to theother islands and other matters pertain-ing to his department Mr. Cooper said:

"My visit to Kauai will take in thewhole island. Landing at Nawiliwili,the seaport of Lihue, I shall go fromLiihue to Kealia, and coming back gothrough Koloa and "Waimea. PossiblyI may take a steamer at "Waimea In

HIS' AMUR liinyyiiia

CTEIN-BLOC- H SMART SUITS AND SPRING OVER-

COATS, $15.00 to $35.00.

M. MclNERNV, Ltd.CLOTHIERS

7ort nnd. aercha,nt Streets

much to the presentation of "Held ByThe Enemy," and as the play progresses the realistic settings cannotfail to impress the onlooker with jthefact that a genuine battle is near at

mm IN DRAWEES

AT50c, worth 75c.60c, worth S5c75c, worth $1.00.$1.25, worth $1.75.$1.50. worth $2.00.

CHSAT

50c, worth 75c.85c, worth $1.25.$1.00, worth $1.50.$1.25, worth $1.75.$1.50, worth $2.00.

NIGHT GOES50c, worth 75c.60c, worth 85c.

75c, worth $1.00.

$1.00, worth $1.50.

$1.50, worth $2.00.

hand.The typical loyalty to his country of

stead of traveling overland to otherparts of the island. My object is toobtain ideas about needed public work the American officer is brought outin every district. ELEGANT VARIETY WHITE SKIRTS, full

trimmed, embroidery or lace, 90 c, $1.00, $1.25, $1.75,handsomely$2.50, $3.00,

cut,$2.25."The Kauai trip will occupy a week

or ten days. After returning I shall $3.50, $4.50.

HEADQUARTERS FOR LA DIES' UNDERWEAR.

most forcibly in the character ofColonel Prescott (W. D. Adams) who,rather than follow the dictates of hisheart, gives up hope of his own hap-piness for the sake of the cause hethinks is right.

George Kunkel sustains the comedyrole of an up-to-d- war correspond

SPRATTS

DOG

BISCUIT

go to Hawaii, probably taking twoweeks on that island. About the endof that time things will be movinghere. In the meantime the preparationof plans and specifications will be go-

ing on In the department."Regardinjg the new Asylum and

Dispensary, those buildings have beenturned over to the Board of Health toget plans, as new school buildings havebeen referred to the Board of Public

L. B. KERR & CO., LTD.TEMPORARY PREMISES

FORT AND QUEEN STREETS

ent, and his ideas regarding the mor-tality list of a single battle wherenothing but the scenery is punctured,is not far off the true scent.

The Lyceum Stock Company deservesPUPPY FOODcredit for fulfilling the promise made

KENNEL SUNDRIES AND SUPPLIES. Instruction. Items for the educationaldepartment include new Royal school

Inbuilding, $40,000; new building fordustrial school, $6000; commercial de

early in the season, of giving standardplays, well presented. A crowded houseshould greet them as Thursday andSaturday are the only days on which"Held By The Enemy" will be given.

Many excellent specialties will be in-

troduced and will be up to the highstandard already set. The box officeopens tomorrow morning at nine andwill be open every day from 9 to 1 and2 to 6.

We receiTe our dog biscuit fresh by every steamer.

Pearson & Potter Co., Ltd.

FORECLOSURE

SUIT ENTERED

Tong Kai Takes Appealto Supreme

Court.

rnONE MAIN 317.

Union and Hotel Streets.

partment, High school, $5000; Kaako-pu- a

school. Vineyard street, $5000; Ha-law- a,

Ewa, school, $4000. These forthis Island. There are a number ofimportant items for the island of Ha-

waii. A large building of brick or con-

crete is Intended for "Wailuku, Maul,and there are some large items forKauai.

"Mr. Traphagen has plans in handfor the new Territorial penitentiary.Col. Jones has in hand the procuringof plans for the armories of the Na-

tional Guard of Hawaii."Mr. Cooper further stated that ar--

Skeet-G- o

Prevents DengueMosquitoes spread dengue. Whydo you let them bother you whenyou can be free from this pest?

Provide yourself with a Skeet-G- o

and rid your rooms of mosqui-

toes. It removes all disagreeablefeatures of ueing powder the oldway; is far more effective; takesabout one-ten- th the powder anddoes not leave the throat parched,eyes sore or clothing saturatedwith smoke fumes. Try it. If notas represented, money back.

Price 1.

On the present visit of the Board ofHealth the fifty-eig- ht doubtful casesat the Leper Settlement will undergofinal examination. Those who evidence no manifestations of the diseasewill be brought to Honolulu to spenda period of probation at the receiving)

S. M. Damon, H. E. "Waity and S. E.rangements were being made for a ' station.

THE LATE CHIEF OF THEPin Money Pickles

They have revolutionized the pickle industry of the UnitedStates. Everybody wants them. "We have thte followingvarieties in half-pin- t, pint, and quart bottles.

Mixed, Cucumbers, Bur Cucumbers, Mango, Bur Mango,Melon Mango, Pepper Mango, Cucumber Mango and "Walnuts.

LOCOMOTIVE BROTHERHOOD

Damon, copartners in the banking firmof Bishop & Co., have brought a billfor foreclosure of mortgage againstMarian R. Austin and Chas. R. He-menw- ay,

trustee . in bankruptcy ofHerbert C. Austin. The suit is on apromissory note for $11,000 at 8 percent Interest, date June 17, 1902,

cured by a mortgage executed bv Ma-rian R. Austin on land containing 12-- 10 acres at Ponahawai, Hilo, also by

HOBRON DRUG GO.

TWO STORESI i Iltd. r - rrri1--4. MAY COM223 TELEPHONE 92 WIRE BASKETS AND MO

an assignment of two insurance pollcies of $5000 each on the life of Her

AT

MRS. TAYLOR'Sbert C. Austin. It is alleged that noth

The Honolulu FloristA UBtrah'an and English Baddies. Pelhem Bits

Harness Makers,

ing has been paid of either principalor Interest on the debt.

An answer mostly of general denialhas been filed by the Volcano Stables& Transportation Co. to the complaintof Alfredo Andrade de Mattos.

Tong Kal by his attorney, J. A. Mat-thewma- n,

has brought a writ of errorIn the Supreme Court to void his con-viction and sentence for bribery at the

P. O. Boat iU. mmmmm, i '

1

Desk Room for RentHIGH GRADE CIGARS

atGOLDEN WEST CIGAR STORE

8o Merchant Street.PelicSws Lemonade )) June term of the First Circuit Court.His charged offense was the offeringof a bribe to Deputy Attorney GeneralEmil C. Peters for the purpose of pro-curing immunity of Chinese gamblersfrom prosecution.

Mrs. Eliza van Giesen has sued off-icer Henry van Giesen of the police)force for divorce nn the prminJ rt om.

To Enjoytho Dayorder a rig from

The Club StablesFort St. Phone Main 190.

You do not know whatIt Is if you have nevermade lemonade with

elty and failure to nrovide mnlnte-- lI Wi'mf Ml' III; ' I nance. She asks for custody of their

two children, costs, attorney's fee andpermanent alimony.

A Very Brutal Wife.'ViifeRocA

Archbishop Ryan, of Philadelphia, isvery fond of a joke and in spite of his

New YorkDental Parlors1AC:7 STREET

FORT

C. Q, Yee Hop & Co,Kahlklnul Meat Markeand Groce ry

FRUITS AND VEOETABLI.Brtii!A Street, cornsr Ai0&Tr--

W&mr.LITHIASIMM multifarious duties finds time for manyamusing quips. When Bishop Spald-ing, of Peoria, visited the archbishoo

1 s U--i j I

some time ago it was arranged that theIIS 'Lemons and; so gar. with waterwhich has the vim and life with-out the bite, make a surprisingcombination.

Bottled at Waukesha, Wis.

eaiern man snould be entertained bya lady prominent in social and chari-table affairs. The archbtehon P

him, giving some details rtrarding hi3prospective hostess, and ended his letFOR SALE HERE BY

All Druggists and First-clas-s Barm. 1 1 i S ter tnus: --The lady who has all ihsevirtues treats her husband like a brute.f. &.--&ne is very fond of brutes, heintrThe Commercial and Official

Record has come to stay. It isfilling a long felt want. t

an officer of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals."

Page 3: S, 1ST KAUAI SUIT OUTLOOK FOR HAWAIIAN AGAINST THE … · Hlli '4 Strike Eettl d. For a Five Million Appropriation. Late Friday evening, according to a wireless message, the strike

SUNDAY ADVERTISER, JULY 19, 1903.

whitney&marsh KftMEHAMEHA CLUB WINS

Varicocele, Impotency and Waste of Manly Power AreTHE LEAGUE LE ADERSH Quickly and Forever Cured by the Grand Product of

"What THEY say about our Nature, Dr. McLauglin's Electric Belt: ....Send for the Free BookAILOR-MAD- E

UUUluu SU ITS.

Gains Unexpected Victory, Defeating H. A. C. in

the Last Inning-E- lks Win From the

LadiesTAILOR-MAD- E

SKIRTS.Mailes in Good Game.

ninth and Mana out on a grounder,shortstop to first.

ELKS.A.B. R- - B.H. P.O. A. E.

TAILOR-MAD- E

JACKETS JiSDCARLOS.

ladies' 4Moore, 2b 5

Knight, cf 2

A. Cunha, c 4

C. Cunha. lb 4

Kaai, If 3

Gorman, ss 4

Meyer, 3b 2

Taylor, rf 4

Perine, p 4

02103003

.is that they are the NEWEST anl

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27 13 613Totalalter all our garments FREE OFThis Electric Suspensory carries the current direct to the weak parts and cures all weakness

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MAILE ILIMAS.CHARGE. A.B. It. B.H. P.O. A. E.

2 j

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105

1

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00131

Everything went by contraries at thebaseball game yesterday afternoon.Although the Elks beat the Mailes 7

to 2, the latter team put up a good

fight especially In the first part of thegame. Their men played well togetherand there was only one weak place in

the team and that was at third base.

In the second game the II. A. C. teamapparently had a little bit of a walkover and the Kamehameha team play-

ed all but the last Inning far from

their usual standard. In fact thecrowd grew tired of watching thegame which, taking out the last Inning,

was not as good as the first game, andmany went home before the end. Those

that did missed the best playing of

the day, and those that stayed saw

Kamehameha take a brace, pull out

from what looked like certain defeatand snatch a victory from the alreadyexulting H. A. C. team.

In regard' to the grand stand andfield there has been some loud com-

ment. . The benches yesterday were

covered with dust which is rather In-

jurious to ladies" dresses, and it was

noticed that numbers of people

brought lap robes and other articles

to spread over the seats. Anotherthing is the large amount of dustwhich blows from the out field and

Anthony, 3b 2

Williams, 3b 2

Fernandez, cf. ...4White, ss 4

Kiley. c 3

Akau. lb 4

Anderson, rf 4

Mana. 2b 4

Wood, If. 4

Honan, p 4

OFFICESr

Office Desks

Office Chairs

Office Book--

24 12 4Total 2

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It cures Rheumatism, Sciatic Pains, Lumbago, Kid-ney Trouble. It banishes pain in a night, never to re-turn.

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CAUTION. Beware of medical concerns offering"Electric Belts Free," and the Professor with his cheapBelt. This offer is only a trick to foist a package ofmedicines upon you C. O. D. Write to me for an ex-

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dr. rvi. c. Mclaughlin,906 MARKET STREET. SAN FRANCISCO. CAL.

Office hours 8 a. m. to 8:30 p. m. Sundays, 10 to 1.

NEVER SOLD BY DRUG STORES OR AGENTS.

Cases

Score by Innings123456789

Maile Ilimas 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 02Elks 0 2 3 0 0 0 2 0 7

Three Base Hits Mana, Honan.Sacrifice Hit Knight.Stolen Bases Knight, Gorman, Per-

ine.Double Play Mana to Akau.Struck Out By Perine 7. by Honan 5.

Bases on Balls Perine 1, Honan 5.

Hit by Pitcher A. Cunha.

H. A. C. KAMEHAMEHA.

Both teams were cheered as theycame onto the field, but the Kams hadthe sympathy of the majority of thespectators.

H. A. C. went to bat and Reuter be-

gan by giving Ensue and Louis baseson balls. Williams started things go-

ing with a two bagger bringing inLouis. Ensue out stealing second. Wil-

liams home on Joy's hit. Aylett gotto first on the pitcher's error but wasout running second. Leslie out on agrounder.

Sheldon started a hot grounder whichGleason stopped but could not get backto first in time to catch him. Lemon

nearlv blinds the spectators. Of coursenext 'year the outfield will be soddedThe von Hamm- -but in the meantime it seems as if Itmight be sprinkled Immediately beforethe game, and also during the prog-

ress of the play outside the lines.Now they begin to water the ground

Young Co., Ltd.ALEXANDERYOUNGBUILDING.

yelling crowd piled onto the field, theKamehameha's - yelled themselveshoarse and after enjoying the leader-ship throughout the game, there wasnothing left for H. A. C. but defeat.The score was nine to eight.

KAMEHAMEHAS.A.B. R. B.H. P.O. A. E.

Sacrifice Hit Leslie.Stolen Bases Sheldon 2, J. Kekuewa,

Koki 2, Richards 2, Louis. Williams,Joy. Leslie Fernandez.

Double Play Gleason (unassisted).Bases on Balls By Joy 6, by Reuter

4.

Hit by Pitcher D. Kekuewa.Struck Out By Joy 9, by Reuter 4.Wild Pitches Reuter 2.

Passed Ball Leslie.

struck out. Vanatta went out on a fly

to left field and Reuter on a grounderto first.

Gleason started the second with aneasy grounder, but Reuter overthrewftrst." Ensue ran for Gleason, Fernan-dez sent a fly to the right fielder whodallied with it until Fernandez wassafe. Louis made a base hit bringingIn Gleason who ran from third as En-

sue had to bat, and Fernandez.Plunkett received a base on balls

reached third and was safe home.

Nothing but

Spectacles 1SD

00

107

0152

300441300

Sheldon, ss 6 0

Lemon, rf 6 1

J. Kekuewa, lb... 4 0

Vanatta, 2b 3 1

Reuter, p 5 1

Plunkett, 3b 4 3

D. Kekuewa, c...3 1KOki, cf 4 1

Richards, If. 5 1

with a small hose after the game is

half over and the spectators coveredwith dust.

MAILE ILIMA-ELK- S.

Maile went to bat and the first manAnthony struck out. Fernandez wentout on a fly to left field. White reach-

ed rst but Kiley went out on a fly'

to center field.Moore opened for the Elks with a

grounder to short stop who threw in

time to first. Knight was hit with theball but was not allowed to take a base.He finally made first In a grounder."Sonny" Cunha sent jl two bagger tothe fence, but Knight was caught atthird. C. Cunha out on a grounder.

Maile went out on fly flies and easygroundery In the second, and then theElks began to score. Kaai receiveda base on balls, got around to thirdwent tut trying to reach home.

Goiman made a base hit and finally

circled the diamond and came home.Akau reached third and home.'. Fer-

ine went out trying to cross the plate,and Taylor struck out.

In --.he third Honan, who pitched forMaile, was the only man to score forhis side. He made the first three-logg- er

of the day and came home on An-

thony's fly to right field. The rightfielder errored and Anthony finally

reached third but went out travelling

home.Knisht for Elks got a base hit.

A. Cunha made a safe hit to left field-

er who threw home putting out Knight.C. Cunha made the same hit, finally

! Gleason made a double play unassisted.27 15Total 9 12

HONOLULUS.

full and D. Kekuewa came to bat withan opportunity to save the team. Be-

fore the crowd realized it. he gave theball a solid whack which sent it flyingto the fence, and the crowd rose totheir feet with a tremendous howl ofdelight as Vanatta, Plunkett and Reu-

ter came tearing across the place andKekuewa fell on the third base. TheH. A. C.'s seemed rather dazed andthe crowd settled down for some fun.It was now or never for the Kams andthey realized it. Koki was safe for abase, and Richards followed with an-

other base hit which brought D. Ke-

kuewa home. Sheldon went out on afly and the finish was in sight. Lemonwas the last hope and he soon had two

strikes called against him. The smileof victory was on Joy's countenance,when Lemon caught the ball fairly andit lit In a corner of the fence far fromany fielder. Pandemonium broke loose,Kokl and Richards only touched thehigh places coming home, and Lemonlanded in a heap on third. There wasno restraining the Kam sympathizersas they realized that the score was tied.

Richards came up to bat but didn'thave a chance to hit. Barney Joy, whowas now the only hope of the H. A.

C.'s lost his head and in a frantic en-

deavor to put out Lemon on third he

overthrew at least six feet, and Lemonromped over the home plate. The

A.B. R. B.H. P.O. A. E.

Eye Glassesbat everything in

SpectaclesEye Glasses

That's good, and plenty of the good

SpectaclesEye Glasses

A. N. SANFORDMANUFACTURINGOPTICIAN

Boston Build ngr. Fort St.Over May & Co.

201121103

11210

10911

121100111

Ensue, 3b 5

Louis, rf 4

Williams. 3b 6

Aylett. If 5

Joy, p 5

Leslie, c 4

Gleason, lb 5

Fernandez, cf. ...5Thompson, 2b. ...4

3o

01

gojfx

He stopped Kokl's grounder, put outLemon, who was running from first forKekuewa, and caught Kokl on first.

No scores were made in the third in-

ning.Thompson opened the fourth with a

grounder which rolled ' between thefirst baseman's legs. He reached third,and Louis made a base hit, reachedsecond, and both men came home onAylett's fly to right field which Lemonmissed.

No one scored until the sixth inningand the playing was rather poor es-

pecially on the part of Kamehameha.The score was six to one in H. A. C.'sfavor and the Kams seemed to play asif all hope was lost and there was no

8 13 26 11j TotalScore by Innings

123456789Honolulus 2 2 0 2 0 1 0 0 1- -8Kamehamehas 0 1000100 79

Three Base Hits D. Kekuewa,Lemon.

Two Base Hits Williams, Aylett,Joy.use playing. Reuter pitched poorly and

MOANA HOTEL . .

WAIKIKIBEACH

reaching the home plate. Gorman hitsafely and reached third on an error by

that baseman and then stole home.

At the beginning of the fourth thescore stood five to one in the Elks

favor. Neither side scored in this but

at the end there was a double play.Knight took a base on balls. A. Cunha

sent a grounder to the second base-

man who put out Knight then doubled

to first catching Cunha.In the fifth inning Maile did nothing.

Tn the last half C. Cunha reached firstwhich William on thirdon an easy fiy

the third baseman and shortstop fellover each other several times in run-

ning for the same ball.In the sixth Aylett of the H. A. C.

team made a two bagger, and camehome on a base hit by Joy.

In the last half of this Inning itlooked as If the Kams were going toscore, but the other side braced andheld them down to one run. Plunkettand D. Kekuewa both hit to left field.Koki made a base hit but went outat second. Richards knocked a ground-er to second and Plunkett crossed theplate. D. Kekuewa was, out trying tocome home, and Lemon was out on afoul fly which Gleason cleverly caughtat the side of the fence.

The seventh was productive of noth-ing and the crowd began to thin outas it looked as if the Kams were beat-en. A goose egg was registered forboth sides in the eighth and then camethe last Inning.

Ensue got started on a grounder, gotto third on base hits, and came homeon Williams's hit. Fernandez was outon a grounder to third, Thompson outon a force out at second, and Louis

RAPID TRANSIT ELECTRICCARS arrive at, and depart from,

the main entrance to the Moanm

Hotel every ten minutes.MOANA HOTEL CO., LTD.

CXBLX ADDRIS8 -H- AUBTIAD-JTLLARD

K. BROWN I Member Hon. 8tM)A. LOVI ( au4 Bond Sxc&aor.

Halstead & Co., LtdLOANS NEGOTIATED.

Investments

missed. He was out on second. Kaaiwent out on a foul fly which Kiley

gathered in and Gorman struck out.

Anderson let drive a hot grounder In

the sixth, reaching first. Mana fol-

lowed with a three base hit bringing

in Anderson. Woods flew out to Taylor

in right field. Taylor made a fine try,

held the ball, but rolled in the dust.Neither side scored again until the

last of the seventh. Knight got a bi.3e

on balls stole second and reached third

but hurt his leg. He managed to runhit by C.basehome though on a

Cunha. who came in on a base hit by

Meyer.In the eighth C. Cunha made a pretty

catch of Akau's foul fly. and White of

the Mailes made the prettiest stop of

the day. He grabbed at a hot grounder

of A. Cunha's. fell on his face but held

the ball and threw to first in time.

Honan and Woods struck out in the

8ufw shares and otaer localeuritlea.

Stock and Bonds listed on taa''ranclsco Stock Exchange.

mek itMMMrfa I ." ii in"it'ji - - g" - - -ZJ&

was out coming home.J. Kekuewa started in the last half

which the spectators though would bequickly ended. He made a base hit butwent out at second. Vanatta was safeon a fly to left field. Reuter hit safelvas did Plunkett. The bases were now

Qlllman HouseBoquet Cigars

BEAVER LUNCH BOOMSHAWAIIAN PRODUCTS IN JULY.

H. J. XOLTM.

Page 4: S, 1ST KAUAI SUIT OUTLOOK FOR HAWAIIAN AGAINST THE … · Hlli '4 Strike Eettl d. For a Five Million Appropriation. Late Friday evening, according to a wireless message, the strike

Sunday Advertiser EMPEROR WILLIAM

i

1

The X v ork World prints a long interview with .Andrew I). White, claimtnrr tilt I. T . . . t. t I' . ' . " 1 ' - -

WALTER G. SMITH : : : : : EDITOR.

: JL'LV IfSUNDAY

ni.s in. i ii m .ui Mjivniciu iur puuncauun ncc n:s return irom uermanv.Dr. A hite talked most about the German Emperor for whom he has great-admiration- .

Some paragraphs from this interview follow:"Emperor William is probably the hardest-workin- g man in Germany. Few-peopl-e

are out of their beds in Berlin when he takes up the day's task. Manyhave gone to bed before he has finished his work. He has a wonderful! v well- -THE WEST AND LUXURY.

The western rn-- t of the I'nitl States despite its wealth amounttrained mind, and he never wastes a moment. That accounts for the vasthe accomplishes.

lxhiixl the East in the apprecia- -

... . 1 Tanl love of creature comfort--- , L

forms of luxurv that are well within its reacn. 11"The Kaier takes himself very serious-- , very seriously indeed. In puMic

he is always the Emperor. He never forgets the pose for a moment. He is agreat stickler for the dignity of his rank. In private life he is a charming and

tion of certainiple, no equivalent of Newport a supreme place of

ha., lorwhere the rich congregate in their own norno. or uifashion,

i.- - . ... - ..... i i -- tof tlinie of Geonre Nan- -it cultivate a. uisie ior j'il-ojuh-

; vcn - -

,Wi,ih. the late Austin Corbin, the IihinelanJers and Norton?, ct

'

, , ; i

lovable man. natural and unahectcd. He has a fine sense of humor and hU laughis particularly infectious. After dinner, over thc cigars, he is a delightful com-panion. He has a vast fund of information and he imparts it most entertain-ingly.

"I remember when Prince Henry was over here he sent his brother a recipefor a Hohenzollern punch that had been invented in honor of the Prince. Itmust have been a deadly concoction, and the Emperor studied it with a fineappreciation of the mixture, laughing about it like a schoolboy when he showedit to me.

"Every one who meets Emperor William is astonished at the wide rangeand accuracy of his information. One of our military attaches told me that hewas amazed at the Emperor's knowledge of his army. He seemed to know it as-wel- l

as a colonel knows his regiment.'I once asked the Emperor how he found time to do so much reading uA-

Underground Politics.

Marston Campbell.

The Dervish of the Bench.The Profession of Law.

Algaroba Beans.

The Emma Spreckels Suit.

The Dog fn the Car.Fearful of Publicity.

Politeness of the Jap.

al. Vast holdings there are in private hand-- , but they are mostly com-

mercial they are made to pay. There are few if any of the multi-

millionaires of the coast who can boast of spacious parks and shoot-

ing preserves, although land is cheap, soil and climate inviting and

game abundant.In no way docs the difference in taste between the East and West

show it&elf more than in the absence, in Pacific coast waters, of

the steam private yacht. At this time of the year costly pleasure cause it seemed to me that every moment of his time must be occupied. He tol.l

craft, under private flags, are running up and down tne Aiiannc

coast between Old Point Comfort and Mount Desert and on the

lakes all the way between Buffalo and Duluth. They are steamers

r , ,nrr osiiirkrwvl anrl fiirnUhed like rich men's homes.

Things are generally doing in politics here but not always on the surface.I am told that the Department of Public Works is figuring largely, thoughperhaps without Superintendent Cooper's knowledge, in pipe-layi- ng for Countynominations. Timmv Bovd. it fm wantc t Pon..Ki;

me he did most of his reading when he was travelling about the country ant!when he was on his hunting trips. He never wastes a moment.

"By the way, two of his favorite authors are Mark Twain and Rudyard!Kipling, and he is thoroughly familiar with the works of both. Kipling's viril-ity, patriotism and aggressiveness appeal to Emperor Williambut I rather thinkhe is fonder of Mark Twain's fun."

Mr. White was asked about the' suggestion that is sometimes made thatEmperor William and President Roosevelt have many characteristics in com- -,

mon. His answer was:

ui ticcj r ivuuu i 1 1 -

One would think that, on the Pacific coast where there is easy steaming - . s . . uunder mild skies every month in the year and foreign shores like those are working for him with the skill of veteran politicians. They have employed

-- r t.;1 lanil, tbiw of Hawaii within reach, the I a l2"ge force of tractable native voters on public works: the natives beine the old iney are alike in many things. There is a certain physical resemblancewi --uciiw auu iiviv' . T. , - - .... . . . A . ... . .

doubt that there I i.., .ivwu iu a man, Portuguese ana otner wnites being ruled out. I lu uegin wiin. uotn are vigorous, strong men, both are fond ofJJut vpocean-goin- g yacht would be a familiar, sight When thc time cQmes these Hawa.ian directed . Jimm and Charlevs. are honest and aggressive, each is patriotic according to his l.Vht. ,1 ,ifV,! ?

Sin. Iiarrn I ..- - - A. . .. . I . .bv ... o our wiae-ope- n prinianes, by the Home Rulers, and tremendous taith m his owrt country and both are what is called strenuousis a single private steamer of respectable tonnage between

and Pueret Sound. tne nrst we know the honored ofname James Ifarbottle Eoyd, sans peur et sansreproche, will stand at the head of the County ticket. Then, men and brethren,we shall have

Ringe and thing s and fine array.In time there will be. As civilization increases in the AVest and

Ihe Kaiser is as much like President Roosevelt as a German could be, andthe President is as much like Emperor William as an American could be. Thedifferences between them are national rather than temperamental, I should say.

"They-tal- about the Kaiser being selfish, thinking of himself at all times.That is true in the sense that he thinks of himself as representing the country.Of course he is for Germany as we are for the United States, and for Germany

the taste for luxury becomes more refined, all that the world offers in

the sphere of .legitimate pleasure will be accepted. But the Western! In the effort to emboyd the Department of Public Works, the removal ofMarston Campbell was much desired. Throughout the session of the Legis an tne time, l do not suppose that he has any great Jove for the United Statesidea is still, as it was in Bret Harte's time

Of specious gifts material lature the nrtarl wac o'tvfn uc cninv nn. WT.. r t. r . I i . , ...o v ..nfjj'c uimc i muic man we nave any great love ior ijermany. we want our country to--

Charley Wilson, fighting night and dav aeainst anotherIf the "West builds a steamer it wants to see it carrying passengers, ben, ard getting no reproof from his chief. Campbell, from the Bovd-Wilso- n sympathy on the other countries

'. i ?i L...u, I ..;. C I i l. t i i m . . .

wheat, wool and hogs; if it needs a private car It nires one; 11 it uuuus as nupeicasiy aisquannea, nrst Decause ne could not be used in "lne Umperor is perfectly friendly toward the United States. He showed.. meanwhile the o(1Vfln(.p of the business section Pc,It,cs: second because he. was white. It was useless to point out that Mr. that during the Spanish war. He did all we asked him to do. I don't thinka home it has an eye on Campbd, was paid tQ Jook after pubJic works not primaries; and that his whitc he cared any more about Spain than he did about ug Re qt Germany

and feels hope of being driven further out by enhanced values; if it skin was a mere accident of birth, a physical deformity which, though hard to is always for Germany, he has a deep sense of his personal responsibility to his'donates a statue to a park it wants the contract to go to local talent SO bear as a blemish in no way hampered his usefulness as an official. It did not empire and of its responsibility to him.

matter. Marston Camobell. 1 .1 . 1 T5..1. : ;n 4l,a fa 4 mo IP 1AT1 11 . . . o e - I j-- ,,v... ,..lv.wi ... wnjuiiug, .mi in i9 ,11, wlc,ui ncuras to Keep tne money at nome. --Lul- . - cessor, no doubt, will be a good dependable politician, "satisfactory to all Ha- - to neglect what he considers his duties. He is amazingly thorough in every--

wanans. thing, eveh in making himself popular."ture shall rise above greed things will be UiHerent...1 o

ON MOnillTOE? I nope ine appointing power is taking due notice ot uavis, whom someDUltUCU (strange mischance has put upon the District bench. Day by day the man is IDENTIFIED JULIAN HAYNEDr Burgess does not believe that the mosquito spreads the germs I making a spectacle of himself and a raree show of justice. One would think

of VtIonoIuI" enough of this sort of thing in higher quarters and mightdengue fever, but the reasons he gives in the Star are not aof uc arcu irs more nuimare exniDition on tne tree commons ot the police court.kind to free the insect from suspicion. Dr. Burgess says: The Hilo Herald has the following ofI. Governor Dole had consulted his friends and supporters instead of some

' "The mosnuito draws blood but I do not think that he infuse raanfjwho P" strengthen himself by placating the Governor's enemies, he reminiscent local interest:

nearly 170 cases of dengue and I have not 0uIf n0tfhave fvenDav,. anything, least of all a place where he could muddy W. T. Rawlins, the Deputy AttorneyotranTS that Uie moto ZlJ fiSaitV. &

. m - . . t r- iwf. na Mia. v .'-- -pssscd by for & whirl I courts and caused his conviction - for iw J7,

living HI mosquito prooi noues were, so iar asi wu.u,, j. ,ng uervish who spends his time not given to questionable law cases in abusing felony Havne was at one time a7 A'jV -- jWfM t .'V II .

LfUUUlO W IUC uistmc o-- 3 liivc " ' . "I . . ..w. w.j ju1Tuiiv.i3 aim n iikj uudsiru iasi rail OI a purpose tO QO I lent nf HnnA nlit u.horo U. . .1 . n 1 j.1 rk-- f nMia if 41,11 . t-- : i . r . .." . . " u auon tms score mat wouia mcuipaw u5 A - " -- .. ic icimuiy hc couiu Dy voting ior wncox, is a thing l can 1 1 anti-governm- magazine called Thepossible that the mosquito may be working the mischief that he IS understand. The only comment .1 hear, save the general one of indignatiou, is Hawaiian. With his wife he disappear-charge- d

with doing but, until the mater has been more positively that the Davis appointment was characteristic of Honolulu where the chief aim ed from Hawaii and on reaching thedemonstrated. I shall continue to be very skeptical regarding tne s i ue 10 saennce your iriends and buy the silence of your ene- - mainland he deserted his wife after

I mies. . I , , ,.,theory. I

. iunn8 an ner weaitn. several years

If the mosquito does not infuse blood, or at least inoculate "The law is a noble profession," as one of its local exploders is never tired frinded a' widown e York ouofhuman beings with such communicable diseases as it may absorb of declaring. It's not the profession but some of the professors that present $l6,ooo by means of a bogus mortgage.

. . an ignoble aspect to the public at large. "Black sheep in every flock." The VWhile drawing blood, tlien the theory that it IS responsible for the law Js a respectable vocation on the principle that the exceptions prove the rule in sornj T way Twas 5StS StSspread of malaria a3 well as dengue must fall. Yet no theory in in estimating the fraternity as a whole mmthe world of science has been more perfectly demonstrated than this When Paul Isenberg gets to be the Bean King of Hawaii and all the horse

Since the tests made by a scientific! I and cow-owne- rs buy home-grow- n feed with money that how goes to enrich theone of malarial inoculation.

was nayne and was wanted by thepolice on other charges. Identificationwas lacking as Hayne had grown a fullbeard. Mr. Rawlins was at that timejn Yale College and he was called uponby a representative of the New Yorkdetective office and shown a picture ofHayne taken in Honolulu. He recog-nized it at once and went to New York

WM'L ha fflwmacmffl. Tnpnr "Rome, few ohvsicians have d- - coast Proaucers' inen 1 sna" twice a day instead of once as I do now and im nw rjjf, r r if

JULIAN D. HAYNE.to be present at the trial. Hayne con- -

luT 1 b ' . . . Saze admiringly at the Catholic Cathedral. Not that I am a Catholic. As aputed it. The medical world accepts it as true. If it IS true, then Swede, with the yellowest of hair and the bluest of eyes, I couldn't be any- -

why not admit that the dengue may be spread by mosquitoes as well thing but a Protestant. Nevertheless I am not bigoted and I always feel like

?thanking the Roman Catholics from the bottom of my heart for bringing hitheras malaria the algaroba bean tree the greatest, the most unmixed and wholly perfect

This paper does not see that the fact of people getting the den-- blessing these islands have received from their religious instructors, be theyhouses counts for much. Such priests or missionaries.gue fever who live in mosquito proof

. J ' Let Coston s,nK f baked beans I sing of the Bean tree. Algaroba notpeople do not stay within doors all the time, nor is any house etl- - ony yieMs the best fodJer n the word fcut .fc gfows go & ew atirely mosquito proof which has people going in and out of it. The of it will keep a family in fuel. Its bark is full of tannic acid and could be used,

dweller behind wire netting sometimes ventures on his porch or irljo " "asi?n'J f cure hdes- - ,No ther tTtee frows and quicVly beau"tifies and the glad. Incidentally its blossoms

the street at night and in that way encounters insects which may yield honey to bees. There are tens of thousands of the algaroba trees in the

uucieams own aeienseand young Rawlins was on the stand for four hours Haynea'nava? P11? and Pve that a photograph he hadL Cer' ,The.WItns said that naval officers

" Lear pajan,a fasten.ngs on their coats. Hayne's - last question wasWhere you see me in Hawaii?" and Mr. Rawlins replied: "When I wasa student at Oahu College you came there and delivered a lecture entitledJSi-n-

"?"SmSS L,fe- - Hane and closed his case. After &to iS years at Sing Sing and before leaving the Tombs he expressed

H.vnc ifwtj4 shaied o-l- - La the late Paul Neumann called atT' --"! who had. sentenced him and after one glance Mr.Neumann Judge, boy was right, the identification is complete "

04have just left a fever patient. islands now, yet the first one ever brought here the patriarch of the enormous

flock still stands in the dooryard of the Catholic Cathedral. Pax vobiscum. PUBLIC OPINIONA CHEERFUL OUXJLOOKOVlXOH.

King Peter is no doubt gratified by the shouts of "Long live the Kintr'"but he is uncomfortably conscious of the fact that it rests with the eentlemen nfhis entourage to say how long he is going to live. Chicago Chronicle

i There are many men well-fitte- d for the position of Immigra-

tion Commissioner from whom the Governor could make a satis-

factory choice, r. Desky, Mr. Buckland, Mr. E. M. Boyd, Mr.

j Qm pratt, Mr. II. P. "Wood, now of the San Diego Chamber of

Commerce and Mr. B. O. Clark have all been mentioned. Any one oithem would do the work that is needed. The effort to elasfc theoffice among political spoils and the other effort to put it into the

hands of some man who is not in sympathy with the immigration

of white settlers, has created alarm which the Governor can easily

allay by making a purely business appointment.o

SAME OUT THIS WAY.' A a : t : t . j 1

T7 rniiicnwii xKisidiures aecnningr asKs a magazine writer.Folk's disclosures it is evident that in Missouri thev are nr.t Av.J. lthat looks like money. Denver Republican

I see that the old Emma Spreckels suit has come up, finally, and that OomGlaus stands a chance of losing his Honolulu business block. How he came totransfer it originally to his daughter Emma makes an interesting tale.

When the Star began publication in 1893 it found the town in a state ofintellectual slavery to Claus Spreckels, the Sugar King. Claus had always beenfeared in Hawaii; his will in business was law. The Star editor, fresh fromCalifornia, where the Sugar King was not precisely revered, did not join thekneeling throng but began poking sharp sticks under His Saccharine Majesty'scuticle and lighting them. Claus winced decidedly and made a scene one dayin front of the Star oftice. Then the Star in an allegory on the fate of Hen-Rothschil- d

von Katzenjammer, a mythical German marplot, strongly intimatedto the Sugar King that if he did not stop interfering with the Provisional Gov-ernment he might get run out of the country. Claus brought suit against theeditor at once for criminal libel and though he won first blood in the RoyalistDistrict Court he was completely floored in the upper court. When this happen-ed the Star editor, more in joke than earnest, threatened to sue Spreckels inheavy damages; but the Sugar King took it seriously enough and at once ridhimself of his attachable property in Honolulu and Maui. He unloaded somemillions on the sons with whom he quarreled soon after and also gave Emmaa fortune, which she afterwards threw back in a pet The sons kept theirs andEmma is suing for recovery. The Star libel suit was a costly investment forClaus.

KANSAS SETS THE PACE.The girls are wearing such large open-wor- k patterns in their waNts that itmay be necessary for them to cover the holes with wire netting before thev cango out in the evening. Atchison Globe.

NOW WILLIAM, SIT DOWN.Bryan insists that Judge Parker has not done anything for his party Healso enioys the distinction of not having done anything to his party Wahinr-tonPost.

NEEDED AT THE HELM.Senator Hanna might quit politics to enter the Salvation Army were it notfor these little Presidential matters recurring every four years. New York

Tt might lo well to consider, in building the Park aquarium,

whether, as in Xew York city, a fish hatchery would not be a proper

adjunct. Nothing is being done to protect our small fishes along

shore, but something might be done to add to their number. Besides

as an exhibit, made part of an aquarium plant, a small hatchery would

also have spectacular value.o

The man who will patent the stimulants used by the Pope and putthem on the market, won't need any other gold mine.

oMr. Cleveland may console himself with the thought that the

hand which rocks the cradle rules the world.o

There will be a whistling service at Central Union Church thisevening to raise the wind.

A Portuguese woman got on an electric car at the fish market yesterdayafternoon. She was accompanied by a little yellow dog of unknown pedigree.Opposite her sat a native woman. Immediately the cur jumped upon the newlylaundried dress of its owner and she sharply ordered it to get down. The dogobeyed. It next made an excursion upon the native woman's white dress, claw-ing it all over with its dirty paws. The Hawaiian ordered the dog to behavein even gentler tones than had its Portuguese owner, but the woman got mad"Don't you talk like that to my dog," she said angrily. "Keep your dog qui,"was the reply, and the two women glared at each other until one alighted atBeretania street

(Continued on Page 7.)

GOT WHAT HE WAS AFTKR.Mr. Schwab, who went to Europe to get his mind off his work is feeling

some better. They have taken the work off his mind. Chicago Tribune.

END ALUOST IN SIGHT.Those who object to the reign of King Peter of Servia should abate theirwrath a while; he has ordered an automobile. Philadelphia Ledger.

Page 5: S, 1ST KAUAI SUIT OUTLOOK FOR HAWAIIAN AGAINST THE … · Hlli '4 Strike Eettl d. For a Five Million Appropriation. Late Friday evening, according to a wireless message, the strike

i I

SUNDAY ADVERTISER, JULY 10,

A CHINESE TRAVELLER OOOOOOOCXXXXXXXXD XXXXXXXXXANCIEWT ROMAN STRUCTURE

I'

DESCRIBES NEW YORK CITY USED AS ENGLISH BARN. ll

any. Kicn Wen Ti Writes a Letter to His Brother Fifty Years Before America Was Discovered Itreat

in Peking About the Civilization of the Was More Than a Thousand Years Old.

an, Foreign Devils. Still Standing in Essex.

Judging by the past records, not oneAmerican tourist in ten thousand ofthose who are now beginning to crowd

To try dear brother, Xord LiangShen. If he is still existing In theshadow of the Dragon Throne at Pek-

ing. h' the condescension of the Em-;.,- es

Dowager, these words, writtenfrom that city of foreign devils namedNew York, which hangs over the south- -

their bodies I have not the divinelight to understand. In full costumethey are an awesome and terriblesight, and on occasions when theymeet in the evening to dance publiclywith men or to the dine with them,they are attired in a manner which Ishall not set to paper, but of which Ishall inform you privately on my

into London for what promises to be an8 -r-YJim- &L- 8unprecedented American season will see

tioned in the niiliiary survey of thoRoman empire.

From the remains of accoutermentsdug up in the course of buil.iing a sea-wall lately it w as proved that the "cas-tru-m"

as the Romans called the fiveacres inclosed in the fortifications hadbeen manned by a band of the Fort-ense- s.

Many coins have been dug outand from these we leam that the cas-tru- m

proper was probably built aboutA. D. 2S9 and occupied by the Fort- -

a relic that is one of the most interest

Wie

a104

n"-n-

Itne

'

bea

May this' return. They have the brazen habitwt corner of the world ing things in England, from an antihis head still upon his tor looking one between tne eyes, are,writing find quarian point at leasit.allowed to gad about at will, an j .

shoulders: If not. may his worthy are acknowledged openly to com In Essex, scare two miles back frommand their husbands. Do not let " HI the North Sea. stands a small stonethis be read to the women of m

burying place be auspicious and comfor table.

Since coming1 with the august reprey o

1

house lest they get pernicious Idea OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO structure now used as a barn. Any onecan enter and chip off to his heart'sON THE BOOK TABLE.sentative 01 me dragon .ie . eovernment of theneoole of

country, in which everything is don this city has been explained to meagain and again, and yet I have noability to understanr any save f.'cts.

enses about 1--0 years.

The structure now standing partly Inand partly out of the castrum wasbuilt by the Saxon missionary. BishopCedd, out of the materials of the cas-

trum walls, and was one of the firstChristian churches in England. Themain body is the only part now stand-ing. Fifty years before America was

The seventy or eighty letters written in 1870-7- 1 by Bismarck to his wifeThe chief mandarin of the city is

content the dull red bricks that ap-pear in the stone work. Only a few-person-s

in the neighborhood know orcare anything about the building be-

yond the local tradition that gold cupsand vases, and piles of ancient coinhave been dug up from the neighbor

backward, I have seen sights so re-

markable that they must appear trueto you, for you will see that my poor

powers of prevarication could nevermuaI th tales I have to tell. If It was

during the Franco-Prussia- n War, and but lately brought to light in Berlin, arechosen because of his ability to eatmany dinners and to promise things being translated into English. They will be published in the United States bvwhich he has no intention of doing-- .

D. Appleton & Co.Here, at least, the manner of ruling willthe object of our venerable parentmay whose income Increase against the be familiar to you. But since the pres Captain Richmond Pearson Hobson is at work on "A History of the United

States Navy." About one-quart- er of the work is done, and a year will probablyent chief mandarin has ruled noting ground, and that somewhere In Itsvicinity a priceless golden calf ishour of hte death to send me to thls.head nag cut orrt It is not be elapse before it is finished. Possibly, however, it will begin to appear ere long buried.cause there are no enemies of hia rut in serial form in some one of the magazines before its publication in book-for- ming, but it is the fashion here for one The bricks that the stray visitor is

discovered, the church, then more thana thousand years old had a chancel,nave and small tower, with two bells.Fire wrought havoc in it later, and Inthe reign of Queen Elizabeth, JamesI. Charles I and Charles II. the chapelbecame a beacon or lighthouse. From

J. Aubrey Tyson, whose first story, "The Stirrup Cup," was published this

land to learn strange things, he shoulddie happy on hearing- these words.Foreign-dev- il civilization being now thestyle in Peking. I have done my best,

official to revile another in safety. at liberty to carry off in his pocketdate back almost to the time of Christ.

Under this chief mandarin are a bodyof lesser mandarins, each one setagainst the other, and boards of offi

spring, is writing a second novel, which will be published in the fall.A new work by Hezekiah Butterworth, the central character of which wi!

be Governor Jonathan Trumbull, of Connecticut, will be published soon. It wilbe called "Brother Jonathan."

It was only a few years ago that the"f in my short sojourn here, to imbibe ascials or no purpose that. I can Imag queer earthworks surrounding the an-- J a beacon the chapel was degraded to aThe Macmillan Company has in preparation a biocrraohv of t!i lat TnUn! Ine. There is actually a mandarin cient building were identified as those common barn, and thus it stands to--Fiske. For certain reasons the name of the author is not vet available bi't he isto see that the streets are clean, anda mandarin to see that the city is of the fortifications of Othona, men- - day. Letteran intimate incno 01 tne risKe lamiiy, ana mucn 01 tneiwo volumes in text and:ii . . : n 1 1 1 r 1 . , - . . . .healthy as though these things were muMr.uiujis win ue compiled irom aocumenis ana pictures lelt by the late his

much of It. as possible. It comes, Ifind, in bottles which explode like fire-

crackers, and leads to strange impres-

sions. I have received many, which Iinscribe here for your benefit.

Tou will know that while the repre-

sentatives of the Dragon Throne pro-

ceeded to the city of Washington, wherethe Emperor with the Awe-inspiri- ng

Teeth administers government, I stay- -

THEATRICAL NOTES.not better left in the hands of heaven

and a host of others holding positionsof similar emptiness. The police of the

torianMrs. Burton Harrison has just finished a novelette which will soon be pub-

lished. It is based on her play, called "The Unwelcome Mrs. Hatch." ;mr1 willalso bear this title.city are giants, who are sometimes re

If. 1 1 it" t " r 1 T 1 t - r ,, . vv.ir. v,iiaiiiucndiu; 1115 i-i- ie ana x uoiic career, oy ii. Jeyes, is 111 A musician named Steindel. who lives at Stuttgart, recently gave two concerts iit .

warded for their deeds by gifts of realestate, but are subject to banishmentto wildernesses. Inhabited only by wild

press.Robert W. Chambers intends to cover the period of the American Revo

coat A.t th nlMiur of their officer lution more fully than he has yet done in his two historical novels, "Cardigan"'and "The Maid-at-Arms- ." His plan is ultimately to comolete four novels

there which astonished the natives. He himself . played the viola; one of hissons, aged twelve, played the piano; while the 'cello and violin were in tlic handsof two other sons of his. aged nine and eight, respectively. The four are saidto have played the most difficult chamber music without a Haw, and to the dc--

ea lor a norx me in ?w irn ai Gambling is unlawful, save in the nameof the great god Business, and opium each separate as to story, but together completely covering the Revolutionarysmoking Is not permitted, cigarettes be period. When he will finish the other two is uncertain, as his next book, upon

" i l- - : 1 ti . c - . . ... lght of the critics and the audiences, which included all the prominent musiing the only form of unhealthy Joy wim n ue is iiow engagca. win treat 01 contemporary iew xork city hie.cians in the citv.

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that a man may breathe Into bis nostrils and be within the pale.

Margaret tuners Love Letters, with an introduction by Mrs. JuliaWard Howe, will be brought out in book form this week. They were writtenin 1S4S-4- 6, and were addressed to James Nathan, a young business man of

The dramatization of the late Frank Norris's "The Pit" will be in four artsAs to the strange customs of thesepeople, they are so many and mar of which the first will be laid in the lobby of the Auditrorium at Chicago during

the performance of a grand opera. There will be 200 people on the stage. ActiorK. reminiscences 01 .Margaret runer. written by iimerson. iloracevelous that I may not dwell on them ureeiey. ana Charles 1. Congdon will also be included in the volume.

No man may have more than one wife

the invitation of a foreign devil gen-

tleman of this city, who was once inPeking. The gods In heaven only knowwhat wonders the rest of our peoplehave seen in Washington, but as forme, in the language of this nation, NewYork will hold me for the present.

In the first place, and In regard tothe religion of these folk, there is agreat god of this city whose name isBusiness, and there are temples raisedto him everywhere, to such a heightthat one might easily recite 120 proverbsof Confucius while dropping from the

A new book by the author of "Elizabeth and Her German Garden" will two will be the rehearsal of amateur theatricals at the home of the Cresslcrs.Act three will disclose an art gallery in the home of ladwin. Act four will havebe published in the fall. It is entitled "A Journey Round Rueen."of his own wedding, but the more chil-

dren he has the greater will be his A new volume by Charles Battell Loomis will include the author's storiesglory before the Emperor with the of "Americans Abroad" which appeared in the Century, and a number of othertwo scenes, first the office of Gretry, Con verse & Co., brokers, and the secondthe "pit," with 500 people on the stage. An English dramatization of the playhas already been attempted, and the publishers of the book have gone into thecourts to restrain the Imperial Theatre...in London , from producing it.

ii X.l 1

Awe-Inspiri- ng Teeth. From morning tales, among the A Man of Putty.. "The Men Who Swapped Languages.'until night the men work for money in When the Automobile Ran Down." and "Veritable Ouidors."ten thousand ways, while their wives A large number of biographical papers bv Grant Duff, which have appeared viga ietiiersoie is on tne warpam because, alter only ten perlormanccs,

Becrbohm Tree withdrew Claude Lowther's new play. "The Gordian Knot" fromHer Majesty's Theatre, London, and substituted "Trilby." It seems that the

move at large devising- - means of spendIng it.

from time to time in English periodicals, will be contained in two volumes, tobe published shortly under the title "Out of the Past." Some of the papers areThe evening is given up to amuse- - cnesterncid as an Lducator, "Walter tfagehot. "Dean Stanlev" ."Matthewtop of them to the bottom. To ascend only person who won any distinction from "The Gordian Knot" was Miss

Nethersole, who, as the adventuress heroine of the play, was generally admittedI ments of every soft, some of whicht'to the top of them one enters a devil I shall describe to you in season to have scored a remarkable success. Miss Nethersole was specially engagedArnold," "The Empress Frederick," and "The Duke of Argyll."

Clara Morris, who is nearly convalescent from her recent severe illness,has finished two-thir- ds of a novel with the striking title, ""Hulda's Brat." Thiswill probably be completed in a few months, and then she will out the finish

!age with a thousand invisible wings, Whatever a man does urlng the day for this production by Mr. Iree at an enormous salary, as in order to accept itshe was obliged to break up her own company, on tour in the provinces, andor night Is printed on papers as numerJ which leaps upward like the wind, so

I that the entrails of the unwary are left ous as tea leaves, and sent out that ing touches on her second volume of. theatrical reminiscences, "Life on the cancel all her engagements. Her part so far outshone Mr. Tree's, however, thatth bottom of the shaft. In these, the city may read of it. Indeed, so stage. he did not like it, and a beautiful row between the actor-manag- er and the actress

- Buildings there are countless shrines magical is this printing of papers, that Many who have read the announcement of Maurice Hewlett's new novel was the result, when he suddenly determined to abandon the play. MissNethersole declares that Mr. Tree knows absolute nothing about stage manageI believe that when you consider doing doubtless have wondered what its title "The Queen's Quair" means. In ato this god. which tick continually and

emit ribbons of sacred writing all day. a thing in this country, and go about ment, and she will never play with him again as long as she lives. So there!prologue the author explains that a quair "is a cashier, a quire, a little book.In one such a certain king wrote fairly the tale of. his love business: and' liere.it. you may: be likely to read about Ittn. lha txr utrrow ofdevoteesvTh.e 0

maln temple of the god Is In a great in this other, I pretend to show you all the traeic error, all the nain. knownbefore it Is accomplished.The evening Is given up to amuse WE ARE NOT MUSIC LOVERS. THE BORE OF BOWING.building-- , full of noise. There the man only

Scotland."to her that moved it. of that child of his children's children, Mary of

rtarlns of the city go dally to fight eachjnients various as the mind of man can"I seriously doubt whether Americaother and shout and tear up bits of devise, women ana men gamer 10-t,an- .r.

The rod. which is invisible, slts.fc-ethe-r and dance, embracing one an- -will ever become a great music loving

"I am tired of this fashion of bowing;to everyone that you have ever met."said the girl who had Just returnedfrom a long walk. "It's a nuisance and

other before the world, to the tune ofabove and. as his servants please him. country," said a well known local mumusic that Is like no civilized music intakes the wealth, of this one and gives sician, "for musical events here are notNEW YORK'S AQUARIUMheaven, earth or hell. In the theatresit to that one.of which there is one street complete- -The streets of this city are very won- - well patronized, except those of which a farce. It means nothing and becomes

some celebrated artist is the feature, fearfully monotonous. Bowing to yourwhich leads me to doubt whether the friends is all right, but constantly Jerk--derful. and. there are. In truth, men ly full, great crowds assemble nightly

to watch astonishing performances inDald to dean them., so that from their public goes to hear music so much as ing your head to the slightest acqualnt- -A special bulletin of the Zoological Society of New York thc'tthatsays Rf and hear a irreat musician. Now. anc is verv tiring Tak tw intcleanness rbey obtain a fearful andforelen. look. For my part, a street Aquarium Building is to be improved in various ways. As the result of a visit I this may come from an over refined the acquaintances with whom you have

to Europe last summer, the Director candidly admits that the ideal aquarium' taste, which prevents enjoyment of not exchanged a word since your prl- -building may not yet have been designed: but he is "inclined to the opinion ;

anytnJn DUt the ery ' wnicn " mry school days. You know it wouldnoticeable in the fact that in social be snobbish and hateful not to givethat a circular building, with an exhibition hall, like that of the New York'11fo wh v OP shp who merelv sings rnm,t,MAquanum, is more satisfactory than one whose collections are arranged along or plays Is tolerated and listened to them; but as they have not the glim- -

narrow corridors, like those of European institutions." Its exhibition hall is patronizingly, there seems to be no mer Qf an interest in you and youreal enjoyment of the effort made. The haven't an atom of an interest in them.

which women appear upon the stageunashamed. Many men spend the eve-nings imbibing that foreign devil civil-ization of which I have spoken. Thesystem of doing so is as intricable asthe Japanese tea ceremony each man,I understand, being under the obliga-tion of being treated, as they say, byevery other man In turn, until the wallsmultiply and the rugs upon the floorfloat about so that one is. forced to re-

cline upon them to keep them in place.At least so I found. The next morn-ing after this process of civilizationone is ready for the grave, and yet aman may risk death for less pleasanthours.

These, then, are the tales of what I

more spacious, and although its exhibition tanks are smaller, and not so attrac-tively installed, as in most European aquariums, they contain a larger collection

without smells Is like: an egg withoutsalt. There is no execution groundwhere one may pass an agreeable aft-ernoon, but machines swooping hereai d there of their own accord. I Judgethat H is from the presence of thesemachines that the people get theirgreat agility.

One may ride here in many mannersin yellow vehicles which rush about

propelled by no horse or man. but bythe breath of the invisible winds. Firebreathing dragons also drag cars fullof men and women about this city, onhigh bridges. These foreign devils are

of fishes. Just as it is, the New York Aquarium is one of the most attractive

German is the genuine music ioer jt seems farcical to give the expectedwho enjoys music fairly rendered, and ' nou--

though no one appreciates more great- - j -- Then there is the . acquaintancely the great artist, he does not demand vvhom you have met once, and withgreatness or nothing. But in his own whom your conversation has been lim-count- ry,

and measurably here in his Ued to tng conVentional words at In--

nstitutions in the country, the proof appearing in the fact that it attracts an at

i

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ir

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tendance of about 5.000 persons daily. It will be still more attractive, however,when it is better lighted. Indeed the liehtintr is so insufficient that it has beenlotina impossible to maintain water o ants in the exhibition tanks, lhe Plans . saengerounas, ne listens to ms muie troduetion. 'Olad t meet vnu.' Yonadopted to remedy this defect provide for fully three times as much light as is, under conditions which permit him to must go on bobbing at him through anow admitted. This improvement will permit the introduction of both fresh anda hardy people, ana wnue mey have learned, so far. In this strangealt water plants, and will make it possible to remove the white tiles with whichpacked in these cars like river fish in cty Truly j am JJke a voyaper ,n

a Yangtze Junk, until one could not In another world, seeing things and peo the tanks are lined and to replace them with rock-wor- k like that which makesthe Aquarium at Naples so remarkably attractive.

enjoy creature comions ai me lifetime if you live in the same towntime. He takes his frau and kinder j w,th hJm He wlshea you would 8topto the music hall or beer garden, where bowlng. and you wJsn you couM.. Touseated around a table, they sip their dare nQt ceage tne jerfoi.mances forbeer, eat German lunches and pater , fear h? wm think you a gmb find hfamilias puffs his pipe, drinking in the of courfse can do notnin& but return

sert the edge of a fan tan card betweenthem, they reach their Journey's endstill living. I may say. in nine cases

yuite as important as the additional light will be a better water supply, lheple which the gods surely made whenthey had run out of reason. I pray thatyour head may endure against the brackish water which is now in use is a poor substitute for pure sea water. With

Strains or music l Hie same lime, ccn.n vrmr Bal,,tfout of ten. It is no wonder that we system of "closed circulation by means of stored sea water clear water andwords which your enemies whisper in a constant temperature will be secured, awere not able to persuade them of the the ear of fhe Kmprese Dowager. Tell "To a certain type of woman, how- -nd the changc will not only admit of, form of enjoyment the complement oflow be kept, but will greatly diminish the others. Of course, this is not possl- -

aU. u : .1 .: r . : ... t.my wives any day may see my return. -- v., "rr" uivi w a. ici min lit--

llcrht V.nnnn. T ! l tl.luiimy oi me si rn""swhich the Empress Dowager has well tVn f t rM.(i:., i- -r. tU- -t v, rtn vvator ble among what we customarily

1 am sending you a box of this for in the """"s. ii " ime a game itv.xj'v ii. v vj iiiniiiuiiauvv. At u siui 111115 1. leoi 1 1 iuik v. v n -

u .rrr Hnlc cn mnrtv our better class, which is not her. She takes as much cleasure in itlorgoiien. , 'elgn devil civilization in twenty-fou- rat times as to be unfit for its purpose, and will reauire the installation of a per-jbab- it of eating and drinking in public

1 1.. r 1 f 1. incident, bearing out partially myine munaer oi w.,tr b,-,,,-, When the bubbles of it tickle as she does In an extensive wardrobe.

She has a haughty bow for the 'freshdragons overhead, and the rattle of theafterward she isAnother interesting feature of the Aquarium which has been an object of theory that it is the great mu. lcian mJnute

great interest to visitors is its fish hatcherv. with a capacity of about 2.000.000 and tne sreat m. 1C bending her neckt , time. Three hundred thousand fish have been successfully manded. occurred ' when vubelik was and for

graciously, all smiles

your honored nose, remember yourbrother In a far country.

KIEN WEN-T- I.

PLAINT OF THE PLUTOCRAT.via i'rn ll one

divinely propelled vehicles and thehorse wagons on the ground, all striv-ing to overturn one another and to de-

fame each other's ancestors, is not all.The very bowels of the earth yawnopen, and from them issue horrible

hatched out here a year or t,o ago On my ayin the waters of the State. Through the

ct" muTcaftLtr but' aa ZuWL--4"

cordiality, one of the 'fine fel-lows.' When she meets a person whohas been employed by her some timeIn some capacity, she bows very pat- -

of the United.ue upewucu '..VJ ; J ,An li v man does not keep in touch with mu- -

ronfzfnlv and eai- - vrv rliot fnn..J t I V t Willi J III ll CAUI C LUC UUHVllU liiai mviv j sical events, ne naa.. a . . . . 1 t i z?-- t- . 1 ti,:.. ' ' """"overlooked tne . ... .vapors and noise. These people or ew j bave bought everything I can buy;York are evidently not satisfied with, j nave tried everything I can try; tne aquarium natcnery snouia not ne a loca scnoo, 10 - rather modest announcement of Kube ueneoieniiy, now ao you do, James?"

nr Grol mnrninp TVKiam :leaving the next world to Itself, but! a xruiy mouern science, uui mere are lew wno miuh iuc ihukic" " ,

been made in its development. It is pleasant to know that our country leads in 114

i concertCome wi'th me.' said I; 'I'm going f a" fr'fnd witn whom.

im uvpannicm en prirc, piauung uiuic i..t. ..me uu,.... .......... . j ... , gQfyd music. '"j cue sitrs a. ijutCK II I lit;jerk of her head and laughs right outIn her greeting. If It Is a man that

nsn in streams ana rivers 01 uie country cci jcdi ims niijmuaiii ....ably seconded by Fish Commissictis appointed by many of the individual Mates.

! she knows only slightly, but hopes to" 'Where?' he asked." At the Columbia,' I replied." 'Who?" 'Oh. a young violinist. said I, and

and it is to be hoped that the Aquarium hatchery may ultimately become a va.uable school in pisciculture. Our Dumb Friends. know much better, there is a ess

in her bow and a sidelongseeing that he was not aware of Ku clans' A trh 1 rrn i r.'i r r f, T .k. - .I concluded not to en- - r, .... ... utibelik's arrivalMYSTERY OF WILD ANIMALS,

lighten him, but to get his unbiased : " " , , , ,judgment.

and ing directly into the person's eye. If itIr. n . . UA 1 A 1 1"A little persuasion succeeded. . la a t . ; 1 11.1 1 1 r.. niif. 1 1 v nprwe were soon seatea ana listening i"The forest has many mysteries." stolen a half-grow- n lamb. I came

said an old Pennsylvania woodman, upon the headless body of the lamb a j iicati curi ruMisnuj, juat ine merethe young artist's marvelous musicmile or so out on the trail, and half a shadow of a nod, which Is infinitely

worse than no bow at all. When shemeets the man she likes best well. Justask him how she bows then.

"Po maybe the fashion of bowing is

I have eaten each eatable.Beaten each beatable;

I have eyed everything I can eye.

I have sold everything I can sell;I have told everything I can tell;

I have seized all the seizable.Squeezed all the squeezable.

Till they've shelled everything theycan shell.

I have ridden each thing I can ride;I have hidden everything I can hide;

I have joked all the jokable,Soaked all the soakable;

I have slid everywhere I can slide.

I have walked everywhere I can walk;I have talked everywhere I could talk;

I have kissed all the kissable.Hissed all the hlssable;

I have balked everything I can balk.I have crushed every one I could crush:I have hushed every one I could hush;

I have drunk every drinkable;Thought every thinkable:

I have rushed, everywhere I could rush.I have been everything I can be.And the" scheme of things will not

agree;T have spent all that's spendableStill it's not endable.

And I mean it's a bother to me.Chicago Tribune.

had purposely neglected to get a pro- -,

gramme, and, remarking my apparentforgetfulness. said I knew the numbers,anyway. My friend listened patiently,not. perhaps, enjoying it to much him- -

must raise sky-brushi- ng towens to beas familiar with heaven as possible,and open the earth to inspect the up-per crust of hell at their leisure.

With the appearance of these foreigndevils you are familiar to a greatextent, but we should remember thatthe gods have probably given themtheir faws and bodies for somepurpose beyond the minds of men,and should not laugh. Tell young SeeTup of Canton, who wagered me a din-ner on the Fat Shan flower boats thatthe foreign devils of this country hadblue and green hair on their faces,that I can already tiste his collationof shark fins and birds' nest soup.While there is every o'.her color ofhair which may be woven in a mandar-in's Jacket, blue and green I have notseen, although I have watched diligent-ly for It. The women of this land aremarvellously made. They walk withthe stride of a man. and as youknow, wear men's skirts, while thmen wear women's troivers. Theirfeet are larger een than the ilanchu-women- 's

feet, and I understand thatIn their early youth their bodies are

vcorrpressed so that their waists are" barbarously like the necks of bottles.

Why In this cruel process the Im-

mortal souls are not squeezed ' from

with enthus- - worth while after all. for if it is a boreelf as sympathizing myto nod to bare acquaintances, it is aand" andiam. after it was over as we

walked down the street, he said: j j to an art ot bowing." NewTork Times." 'He's a pretty fair fiddler not an

"but none deeper than that of wildanimals that die natural deaths.

"The four-foote- d dwellers of thewoods certainly do not live forever.Age and disease must carry them offregularly, as human beings are carriedoff. but what becomes of their bodies?

"I never heard of anyone comingacross a wild bear or deer oror fox that had died from naturalcauses. I found the carcass of a bigfive-prong- ed buck in the woods once,but a rattlesnake, also dead, had buriedits fangs in one of the deer's nostrils.There had evidently been a fight tothe death between the reptile and thebeast.

"Another time I followed the trail ofa bear from a clearing where it had

mile further on. near the edge of aswamp. I was surprised to find thebody of the bear.

"Its jaws were open and its glassyeyes were pushed far out of its head.I held a post-morte- m examination ofthe dead bear and found the lamb'shead lodged in its throat. How or whythe bear ever permitted it to get thereI am unable to explain.

"I have many times found other d?adanimals in the woods, but never onethat did not show unquestionable evi-

dence of having died from violence ofsome kind. Every woodsman will tellyou the same. What becomes of thedead wild animals that die naturaldeaths?' New Tork Sun.

artist, but a pood fiddler scarce-ly Interesting one who has heard OleBull. Vieuxtemps. WilhelmJ. Ttemenyiand Isaye. I suppose you know himand feel interested in him. and he doesplay well for a boy, but he does notmeasure up. Now when Kubelikcomes

" That was Kubelik,' said I."Washington Post.

n

Page 6: S, 1ST KAUAI SUIT OUTLOOK FOR HAWAIIAN AGAINST THE … · Hlli '4 Strike Eettl d. For a Five Million Appropriation. Late Friday evening, according to a wireless message, the strike

1903.6 SUNDAY ADVERTISER, JULY 19,

. Proceed, to Co Into the treasury of tb. H.L . !. J.'" ,..'..'.,'. '.. , "h...,. ...XO --e xo. my res SO"A Maze of

" e W a a JS MT T 1 JUjsE 20TII.

Beauties fj ' in her novel costume and pressed the j?-

3JX59SSSX '" button that turned on the lights, some-

bodyI I ll TTfs--

i remarked that she looked like an I I Ij 1 l IIThe Honolulu Symphony Society is to the I i 1 Mr' JJLS2m.

NEW SUM ME II GOODS

IN HANDSOME PIIOFUSIQN- -

movingEverything th:it is new and up-i- o- HouseholdGoods

most ttrmpt- - a, iiuci vruitri lam jutru i iical iiiuiiiiidate in allurinK variety atwhich will be looked forward to with Sale

club.

When Ethyl Hager made her ap-

pearance at the Greenway assembly

Oakland ferry-bo- at intoslip after dark. Miss Hager certainlydeserves credit for her originality.What would a costume ball be withouther? Her incandescent lights certain-ly created a sensation, and incidental-ly excited much curiosity. Town Talk.

Mrs. R. M. Overend left for Kauaion Tuesday to visit for a month withMrs. Andrew Moore.

.A Laughing Succeaa.

The Opera House was filled to its ut

ing prices.WHITE DIIESS WASH GOODS, fine

sheer goois in corded effects, fancystrides and lace effects at 12Vic, 7

yard for $1.00. and 6 yards for $1.00.

FANCY PRINTED MADRAS forshirt waists and suitings, yard wide,all new designs, 7 yards for $1.00.

MERCERIZED POLKA-DO- T DUCK.Excellent material for skirts. 20c. yard.

FANCY STRIPED PIQUE SKIRT-ING, 6 yards for $1.00.

pleasure by all lovers of good musicand of the picturesque. With the kindpermission of Mr. James B. Castle anopen air concert will be given by theSociety on his spacious lawn at "Wal-ki- ki

on Friday evening, August 7th. Itwill be a moonlight night and the audi-ence can revel in the magic beauty ofthe phosphorescent light on the ocean,the shadowy stretches of the garden.OUR SPECIALS FORand listen to the sweetest of music.

Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday,most capacity last night when thStine-Eva- ns combination repeatedtheir clever performance of "Brown's

which "will add the last touch of feel'Ing and poetry to what is all but perfeet already."

VANTfTY SILKALNES. Our entireline, all new, 15c. and 20c. qualities.Sale price 10c.

THIS WEEK AVE OFFER AT MID-SUMME- R R.DUCTTOX FRICES, OUR COMFLETE LINE OFCOTTOX HOUSEHOLD GOODS.

BED SPREADS, in quality and price to suit, from 90c. upto $10.00.

COTTOX SHEETIXGS, the best quality. Triced accord-

ing to width, 15c. a yard, up to 2 Sc. o yard.

BLAXKETS, in cotton and wool, from $1.00 to $12.00 a pair.

BATH TOWELS, in all sizes and prices, from $1.50 a dozen

up to $5.50 a dozen.

TABLE LIXEX, 72 inches wide, from 50c. a yard up to

An entertainment and dance will bePERCALES, 32 and 36 Inches wide,reeular 12,.ic. and ..5c. qualities. Sale given at Progress Hall on the 24th inst.price 9c. by the Friday Evening Social Club

SUMMER DRESS SILKS, all new, The dress rehearsal will take place onlatest patterns, $1.00 quality. Sale price

0c. Thursday evening, the 23d, at 8 p. m.u&

CHILDREN'S GINGHAM DRESSES,all nicely made, sizes 1 to 5 years all Miss Mary E. Nott entertained a

number of her friends Friday eveningnew. Sale price 50c.by giving a peanut party at her homeon Lunalilo street.

V& a yard.Dr. and Mrs. F. R. Day are nowii. s. n Dor Ms go,

LIMITED.Cor. Fort and Beretanla streets.

domiciled at the new Alexander YoungV

Hotel.1 1 &

LIXEX 'TABLE CLOTEIS, 2 and 2 1-- 2 yards wide, and 2

and 4 yards long, all prices, with napkins to match.

XAPIvIXS, 24 and 27 inches square. Prices range from

$2.10 up to $12.00 a dozen.

Attorney-Gener- al and Mrs. Andrewshave joined the new colony in the Alexander Young lintel.

tThe Volcano House Is entertaining

more summer visitors this season thanfor years past, and guests are sendIng back such excellent reports of thehotel service and of the bracing quail E. W. JORDAN & CO., LTD.

' FORT STREET.ties of the atmosphere, that numbers of Iothers are planning to go before theseason is over. The weather is so coolat the Volcano House that blazing logfires are kindled every night.

Mr. A. Hocking and family are en- -Scott, W. Weight, English, I. Schoen. I in Town," and the piece went with a 'BEERS

Our Best AdTerlraent

Pure Drugsand

Chemicals

TOILET ARTICLES

and the choicestline of

- PERFUMERIES

At Reasonable Prices. Calland Convince Yourself.

Prescriptions a Specialty.

HollisterDrug company.

Fort Street.

Joying Mauna Loa's bracing climate atthe Volcano House. J. D. Kennedy, Jean Clark, Geo. Hapai, rattle from start to finish. If laughter

Castle Ridgway, Haworth, Castendyk,Postmaster and Mrs. Oat are among Famous the World Over Fully MaturedRohrig, Campbell, Lawrence Canario,

Rev. Morgan. Hilo Tribune. t Kit I niiCfnctthe people who are ueing the VolcanoHouse for a season of rest and recu- - ft

Mrs. Henry De Fries returned yespercation.terday from an extended visit on the5 5

Mr. C. J. Day Is spending his rest other side of the island. h GLASS JUGS ABOUT HALFperiod at the Volcano House onVGov: A. S. Cleghorn and Colonel G.

Mrs. Seeley I. Shaw --was one of the PRICE FOR MONDAY ONLYW.Macfarlane are expected home thisweek on the Siberia. They have beentaking in the Exposition at Osaka andhave spent nearly a month in the Ori

few guests at a dinner party given byDr. and Mrs. I. A. Frazer at San Jose

ent.on July 2nd given in honor of Governorand Mrs. Pardee. After dinner a re 4

1-- 4 Gallon GLASS JUGS, always sold at 35c. each. Monday'sprice,St J J

The officers of the cableship Angliaentertained on board the vessel Thurs-day evening with a banquet. Many of

is a criterion of success, then lastnight's performance was a recordbreaker. It is doubtful if ever suchhearty laughter and genuine spontane-ous applause has ever been heard be-

fore within the walls of the theater.The members of the company werequite easy in their work, the resultbeing an almost perfect performance.Tomorrow night "Where is Cobb" willbe staged, the season terminating onTuesday with a repetition of the samecomedy.

Buaseil Sage's Brick:.Russell Sage boarded a Sixth avenue

elevated train at Rector street one daylast week. He carried under one arma sample brick wrapped in a news-paper. It was one that the builder ofthe Emma Willard seminary had takento the financier's office. Repairs toSage hall are to be made, and Mr. Sagewanted to see the brick that is to beused. It was worth perhaps 2 cents.At Twenty-eight- h street a sporty look-ing youth, who evidently knew thegreat man, reached down, seized thebrick, dashed to the door and wasdown stairs and away before Mr. Sage,much annoyed, could get to the doorand breathlessly explain to the guardwhat had happened. "I felt sorry forhim," said he later, when he told ofthe experience. "He looked real sad atlosing that brick, but I'd have given adollar to see the face of the other fel

their friends among the townspeopleft

1-- 2 Gallon GLASS JUGS; just right for Lemonade or IceWater; yery strong. Your choice, Monday only,

were invited. The banquet was follow-ed by a dance for which a quintette

ception was tendered the citizens inwhich Mrs. Shaw assisted in receiving.Following the reception the guests satdown at email tables and played six-hand- ed

euchre. Governor and Mrs.Pardee and Mrs. J. "W. Shaw sat atthe head table during the entire even-ing, so that every one present had thepleasure of meeting the guests of hon-

or personally. The prizes were very

club furnished the music. 'GO TO THE eC

The Klllarney Social Club Is arranging for a big charity ball to take place

handsome Hawaiian souvenirs, brought in Progress Hall on the night of Sat-

urday, August 8, beginning at 8 o'clock.from Honolulu by Mrs. Seeley I. Shaw,who is visiting relatives there.

PACIFIC HARDWARE CO.. LTD.FORT AXD MERCHANT STREETS.

Sole Agents for Garland Stoyes, Eddy Refrigerators and

Members of the club are very enthusi-astic over the coming function and willdo everything 'in their power to make

tCMrs. E. F. Berger writes in a most

5

I

Cleaning and Dyeing Works.. Fort St.. Opposite Star Block.

To have your old SUITS MADE TOLOOK LIKE NEW. Dyeing and press-ing. $L75 to $2.50 per suit.

The renewing of ladles' clothingspecialty. Prices very low.

PHONE WHITE 2362.

it a grand success. Father Valentin ofcomplimentary way of the olcano Willcox & Gibbs Automatic Sewing Machines.House as a summer resort. She isspending a month at the popular moun

the Catholic Mission is greatly inter-ested. The music will be by the Ka-waih- au

Quintet Club. An admissionfee of fifty cents will be charged, the

tain hostelry.low when he cut the string." rrm eraAfter a hard siege of the dengue Mr.

t s

Co.--Qpcxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx:oocxxxxxxxxxxxx) 'acme (i ransferJ. J. Kelly has cone to the VolcanoBARGAINS INHouse for rest and recuperation.

HOUSEHOLD UTENSILS 1Without mosquitoes, and with its puremountain air, the Volcano House Is anIdeal place for the recovery of lost or

WILL CALL FOR YOUR BAGGAGE..We pack, haul and ship your goods and save you money.

Storage in brick warehouse, 126 King Street. Phone Main 58wasted strength.

The Domestic Woman will find Inour big stock of Kitchen and House-hold utensils a vast assortment of ev-ery thing useful for her department.

The goods can be purchased CHEEP-ER than any where else In this city.Tou can find this out to your own sat-isfaction. Only come and see us!

Misses Rhoda and Emeline Green arespending their summer vacation at the

.1I Delicatessen CounterVolcano House.

Miss Laura Green and Miss E. it.

iBicknell have gone to the VolcanoLewis & Gomp'y, Ltd.

THE BIG GROCERS,188 King St. The Lewera A Cooke Bide

House on a vacation visit., tC

Misses Maggie and Clara Mosser, of

n

New Arrivals of Choice GoodsQUEEN, green and ripe, Mexican OLIVES and Pimelo?.FRESH FANCY CREAM CHEESE, Imported Edam,

and N. Y. Pineapple Cheese. All kinds of imported anddomestic cheese.

Pickled and dried Codfish, Tongues and Sounds.Four sizes of Salt Mackerel.The best King and Chimock Salmon and Salmon bellies,

and all kinds of lish.

Honolulu Iron Works Go.STEAM ENGINES

BOILERS, SUGAR MILLS, COOL-ERS, BRASS AND LEAD CASTINGSand machinery of every descriptionmade to order. Particular attentionpaid to ship's blacksmlthlng. Job workexecuted on shortest notice.

ul M$frzl rwW rill

ml ill Wm :

Maui, are taking advantage of vaca-

tion times to spend a few weeks at theVolcano House.

fc

Miss Craig and Miss Fisher, of Ewa,are visiting on the Big Island. Theywill spend some time at the VolcanoHouse.

C

The most pleasant social event of themidsummer season in Hilo was thedance given by' the Bachelors' Clublast Friday evening at Bachelors' hallon Church street. The lanais and hallsof the club were lavishly decoratedwith palm branches, ferns and colored

Oollixxo Metropolitan Meat Co., Ltd.8 PHONE MAIN 45.

1

V

IPOLOSaddles. Bridles,Bits, Spurs, Girths.Stirrups. Bandages,Scrapers, Coolers.Putties. Rubbers,Etc.. Etc.

King near Fort St. TeL Main 144. P. O. Box WJ electric lights. The parlor and dining ORIENTAL BAZAARroom had been cleared for the dancersand excellent music was furnished by

andthe Hawaiian quartette.Refreshments were served to the

Large stock of Grass Linens In various colors. Embroidered Tea

Table Cloths. Also some nice bedspreads.PONGEE In light and heavy weights. Just the thing for this weather.

Waity Building, King Street opposite Advertiser Office.

company at 11 o clock and dancingcontinued until a late hour. The party

f f

Phone White 2748.

Oahu Ice 4V

Electric Co.Ice DellTered to any part of the eUr. T.inrden promptly filled. Tel. Bine tisi.

Hoffman & HarkhamP.O. Box 60Q. Office: Kewalo.

MRS. C. L. DICKERSON,

Received ex S. S. Sierra new braids ofall colors and shades for shirtwaist andtraveling hats. Also a large line offrukts and berries for trimming.

was chaperoned by Mrs. P. Peck.Those rresent were: Misses Stella

Peck. Mabel Peck. Dwight. Mary Ca-narl- o.

Anita Canario, Stephanie Guard.Ruth Guard. Etta Loebenstein, Scott, RATTAN GOODS, CARVED EBONY FURNITURE, PONGEB )

Frane Eaton, Nina Eaton. Lando,Wery, Crow, Buckley, Nella Souza,Cholla Souza, Farquhar.

AND PINEAPPLE SILKS, CHINA WARE, ETC.

WING WO CHAN & CO.Nuuanu, between Merchant and King Street.

ABNER M KINLEVS DAUGHTER, WHO 1$ GOING ON THE STAGE.Messrs. Day, Nichols, Jackson, Bell,Wachs, Schoening, Mellor, Guard, A. OOOCXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXDOOCXXXXXXX)OOOaCX00000000000000

sir

V

: 4.

Page 7: S, 1ST KAUAI SUIT OUTLOOK FOR HAWAIIAN AGAINST THE … · Hlli '4 Strike Eettl d. For a Five Million Appropriation. Late Friday evening, according to a wireless message, the strike

SUNDAY ADVERTISER, JULY 19, 1903.

now it looks as if the natives do notwant any law of that kind."JESSE MOORE

--A. A. WHISKY CHURCH SfcRVICES.J "H -- .V c

BEST ON EARTH1 'r ?i siw--- ' -- t"1

FISH NEED

PROTECTION

Congress May BeAsked to

Act.

Roman Catholic Cathedral, Fort, nearBeretania street: Low masses, 6 and 7;

Children's mass with English sermon,9; high mass with sermon, 10:30; rosa-ry with native Instruction, 2; solemnvespers and benediction, 7; week days,low mass, 6 and 7.

Catholic church of St. John the Bap-tist, Kalihi-waen- a, in charge of Rev.Father Clement: Seventh Sunday af-

ter Pentecost: 8:30 a. m., high masswith sermon and collection. Sundayschool after mass; 4 p. m., rosary.

Catholic church of Our Lady of the

Old Aged I

InPure4

The1.1' JLegislature Failed

To Do Its

Duty.Wood V

Mount, Kalihi-uk- a (Kaiulani). incharge of Rev. Father Clement: Sev-

enth Sunday after Pentecost: 10:30 a.m., mass with sermon, and rosary; 2

p. m., rehearsal.St. Augustine's chapel, R. C, "Wai-ki- kl

road: Mass with sermon. 7 a, m.;Sunday school, rosary, 3 p. m. FatherValentin In charge.

St. Andrew's Cathedral, entrancefrom Emma street: Holy Communion7; Sunday school, 10; Morning prayer,"litany and sermon 11; pule ahiahi 3:30;evening prayer and sermon 7:30. Bish-op Restarick will preach both morn

Pish Inspector Berndt Is Tryingto Get the Fish Commis-

sion Interested.(?)

SISAL FARMING IN HAWAII.& CO,. (b:r.:r.!:i)Falling: to get badly needed legisla-

tion for the protection of fish, from thelegislature, Fish Inspector Louis ing and evening today.

Clement's chepel, ProtestantBerndt has written to Washington to , avenu;Epls-copa-

lWiMer and Maklkl

Interest the United States Fish Com- - street: Holy Communion, 7; Sunday

General Export AjU, Spreckela' Bid j.HodoIqId, II. L

rJesse Moore-Ha- n! Co

tea Vrandsoo, CaJ. and Loulrrttls, Ky.

v school, 10; morning prayer, 11 a. m.;evening prayer, 7:30 p. m. Rev. JohnUsborne, rector.

Central Union church. Congregation-- Jal, Beretania and Richards street: Att

mission in the matter, and there Ispossible some amendment to the Or-

ganic Act by which Congress mavgrant the relief that the native legis-

lators refused.A bill was Introduced by Senator

This will be his last Sunday with us, ashe sails on the Siberia. Subject in themorning will be ""What Lack I Yet?"

Isenbere at the regular session nf the At 7:30 Rev- - E-- s- - Ufford, author of IP EYES WERElegislature to protect fish, through the lng and whlsUe. Sunday schod, 9:50compulsory use of larger mesh nets. a. m.; Y. P. S. C. E., 6:30 p. m.Capadura Methodist Episcopal church, Bereta- -The natives balked at the bill, andthouo-- it i nia and Miller streets:( Sunday school.

,- -- .- - - w- v- in. mnralnir 11. Vnnrrth ORNAMENTAL ONLYLeague 6:30; evening service. 7:30. Rev.G. L. Pearson, pastor, will preachmorning- - and evening.

Christian church, Alakea. near KlnglIs a high grade medium sized

the opposition of the Home Rule sen-

ators It was killed upon its Inceptionin the House. This too after therehad been session after session, atwhich the merits of the law were ex-

plained and accepted by the nativemembers. For there can be no doubt

street: Sunday school. 9:45: morningservice, 11; evening service, 7:30;Young People's meeting. 6:30. E. S.Muckley. Minister, will speak at 11 a.m rn "WalUnir Wi Tn J " ora - ..v.. ..uul ine nauves even more man at 7:30 p. m. on ..Ljfe For a Ij005c CIGAR German Lutheran church, Beretaniathe white population should have am-

ple protection for fish, because they street: Sunday school. 10; morning service. 11. Rev. W. Felmy, pastor.

Reorganized Church of Jesus Christdepend upon that class of food muchmore than do the whites. There was of Latter Day Saints. Mililani hall.

rear of Opera House: Elder G. J. Walalways the fear, however, that the naPacked In pouches always fresh. Will ler in charge. The usual services willtives might be stopped from fishing!be held today. Elder Anderson willby the new law, which was the prin preach at 7:30 p. m.

cipal reason for its failure. Other religious bodies holding services at the usual hour are German"I have written to Washington InLutheran church, Beretania Ave., nearPunchbowl; Chinese church, Fort, a- -regard to securing some protection for

the fish here." said Inspector Berndt. bove Beretania; Honolulu Mission;!Japanese Congregational, Kukui street,I think probably that something- - willJapanese M. E. church, near St. Louis

not break In the pocket.

AT ALL DEALERS.

Cigar Company.Sole Agents, T. H., Cor. Fort and

King Streets, Honolulu.

College; Kaumakapili church. Kingand Achi lane; Kawaiahao church. King

be done in the matter. Both commis-sion which-visited Hawaii since an-

nexation have recommended very-strongl-

the importance of a law forthe better protection of fish. Such a

and Punchbowl; Maklkl chapel, Japanese, Kinau street: Mormon church.Punchbowl street: Portuguese Protest

HOW LITTLE ATTEXTIOX they would require.But, being the most useful members of our bodies, too great carecannot be bestowed upon them.

Our Unequaled Facilities for Accurate Eye Wo kCOUPLED "WITH OUR KNOWLEDGE gained by

many years of experience, our keeping abreast of the times, by adopt-ing the most approved methods of examination, discarding that whichis long obsolete, makes it safe for you to leave the car of your eyesin our hands.

THE FACT THAT our optical business has nearly doubled inthe last six months, speaks volumes for our new methods, our pains-taking care, and OUR SUCCESS in giving ABSOLUTE SATIS-FACTION in our work.'

YOU FIXD HERE a SEPARATE store devoted entirely to thecaro of your eyes, where courteous treatment, the very best of materialand perfect optical service rules, and all at strictly Eastern prices.

ant church. Punchbowl and Miller;Seventh Day Adventists. Printer'slaw is very much needed. At present

only the mullet and the awa are pro lane; Bishop Memorial chapel. Kame- -nameha schools: Buddhist Temde.tected; no fish less than six, Inches Fort lane; Christian Science Association, Alakea street; Peniel Mission, Irlong of these two varieties can be tak-

en out. I can condemn any fish of win block: Salvation Army. King andNuuanu streets: Sloan Mission. Kawai.those kinds that are caught, but I am

powerless when it comes to other vari ahao street and Ward avenue.

BUCKLAND ISeties and it will not be Ions before"Time Will Tell"the food supply is exhausted.

"As a matter of fact but few naDISQUALIFIEDtives are fishing now. The Industry

is almost entirely in the hands of theIS OFi OIB1 Charles R. Buckland. though unani-mously recommended by the Repub

Japanese, with a few Chinese whobring mullet from fish ponds.

lican Central Committee, cannot takeEven now my records show that notthe position of clerk to the Torrensas many fish are being caught as there

H. F. WICHMAN,Optical Department.

"EXCLUSIVELY OPTICS'1048 FORT STREET.

P. O. BOX 342.

Land court. It has been discoveredwere a year ago. Of course there arethat he has not been the requisite fivenot as many people buying them either.

But there must be some protection in years in the Territory next precedingthe time he should take the position.

After twenty years of serrlce, theUonarch line of Wlckless Blue FlameOil Stoves still Justly claims the title of

"MONARCH OF MOiNARCflS"A critical and careful Inspection will

bring-- out the fact that Monarch Stovesare bristling; with

STRIKING ORIGINALITY OF CON-STRUCTION.

MARKED BEAUTY OF DESIGN.UNEQUALLED "WORKMANSHIP

AND FINISH.SIMPLICITY AND EFFICIENCY

OF OPERATION.

as provided in the Act creating theoffice.

Judge Weaver said yesterday after

the way of compelling the use of larg-er meshes, so that the smaller fish arehot taken from the water. The na-

tives will feel the loss of fish morethan other, for they with Japanese,Chinese and Portuguese are the prin-cipal fish eaters in the islands. Ifthe bill as Introduced during the last

. .t - j i

noon that the remaining1 candidateswere Frank L. Winter and W. L. Howard, although others might come forward before an appointment was made."It Is $150 a month," Judge Weaversaid, "and will be a snap for a whilewssiun nau mrvuiut; & taw, i l wqum j

KEROSENE OIL IS USED have done very much to help out, but at least."The beet stove In the world is a dis

mal f-il-ure if the Oven Don't Bake. THE BYSTANDER eeSSBSESHSEEBBIE53BESBaBS3EBSSSaS3EBlHBBaSBlBEBSHaK2BaBSSSESSEESSH3E3EBSa$49"MONARCH" Asbestos-line- d ovens

stand at the head of the class. Theytell their own story by actual demonstratlon. Mechanically perfect. 0 CaselOOO(Continued from Page 4.)

The Merchants Association is probably the most up-to-da- te and aggressiveof the local associations which are organized for the benefit of the islands atlarge, but there are some members who still have moss-crow- n --:h-ic tVi

u

IfMNMIIet11HM

W. V. DIMOHD & CO., LTD. OSmethod of such a bodv. At the meetinc- hfM lnct tv,, t 'H p0 ..i unit ncic it uuinuer;5SOLE AGENTS.

Dealers in Household Necessities.63-- 57 King street. Honolulu. T. H. o. 1

. . . j " ...i x 3 me ui:v.uiun was cnaea, some mem-ber would arise in his seat and remark: "Xow, of course the newspapers wontsay an3thing about this," looking at the press table the while. Of course therewould be no sign from the reporters and then some one would regularly movethat the matter be kept secret. And there was always a second. Then there w asthe matter of taxation complaints, several members objecting to the use of theirnames in connection with the discussion. And what do you think the reasonthey gave for wanting their names suppressed? It was this. ,They vere an aid

!!MHIIMIIIfliItri

MHDaring these Hard Times STILL ON HAND FOR DELIVERY IN HONOLULU.

50 lbs., $2.25; 100 lbs., $4.25.HnMBnH

11II

If you do not want a case, you can get a bar from your grocer. Ask for Hawaiian Soap. f

that next year the tax assessor would be prejudiced against them, and nightraise their valuation and refuse to compromise as a punishment. Nobody be-lieves that Major Pratt is that kind of a man, and if some of the Associationmembers have such a belief, they ought to ask that he be removed before thev Every bar stamped.makt any attempt to get changes made in the taxation system.

0004gggXBBEBEBBBEB&ESS3EESE8BSSBBBEEBBEE8BSBBBEEEE8S8I3EBES8SBEESE3E8BEESBS4

And until further notice the NEWENGLAND BAKERY will sellfrom their store on Hotel street,commencing April ist, 35 tickets,calling for 35 Loaves Bread, forOne Dollar. Guaranteed best qual-ity and full weight. Bread deliv-ered from the wagons will be 28Loaves for One Dollar. The dif-ference is simply the cost of deliv-ery, which benefit we extend to our

The Japanese have a wide reputation for politeness but they are assimilatingseme American ideas as well. Almost any t:me when a bunch of ladies boardsan ck-ctri-c car which is minus empty scat-?- , and there are Japanese men aboard,you will see a scramble among them to vacate their s?n. long before a whiteman has moved. And the ladies will comment audibly upon the excessive polite

customers.

Hall Caine lx-ato- s the scene of the bravest deed with which heis acquainted at the Vatican. "The hero of the incident in question,'he write-- , "was that venerable nonagenarian, Pojk? Leo XIII, who011 the occasion of our first interview, actually confessed that lie hadnever read one of my books."

o

Xot too soon : "This is rather an unusual hour for you to becoiner to lunch. Xot hunerv so earh-- , are vou ?" "Xo, but I will

ness of the Japs as compared with the average man. But then, though the Japshave such a good reputation, they have only earned it since coming to Honolulu.For whvn a lady boards a Rapid Transit car and there isn't a vacant seat hand-- .

you will see the conductor grab the Jap or Chinese nearest him and tell him'toget up. The Jap meekly surrenders his scat to the lady. And now Japs havegot so used to being yanked out of their seats that as soon as they see a lady . 1. , 1 1 t Subscribe Nowget on the car they jump up in a hurry, even though there may be half a dozen! be by the time the waiter condescend to nouice me. 1 nnaaeipniaNew England Bakery

J. Oswald Lutted, Mgr. vacant seats handy. ress.

Page 8: S, 1ST KAUAI SUIT OUTLOOK FOR HAWAIIAN AGAINST THE … · Hlli '4 Strike Eettl d. For a Five Million Appropriation. Late Friday evening, according to a wireless message, the strike

SUNDAY ADVERTISER, JULY 19, 1903.sthat a survey will beit is possible

called.made up his mind that the placeit was really hidden was in the!

PLUMERIA BLOSSOMSIN HONOLULU.

Sundy AdvertiserCEntered at the Postoff.ee In Honolulu,

IL T., .as eeeond class matter.)

Published Every SundayMorning

by theHAWAIIAN GAZETTE CO.. Ltl- -

von Holt Block. 63 South King St.'A. W. Pearson Business Manager

of Protection, disguised as prefereniJ 4tariff. With a loud cry of Tthe Rainbow Chaser has started fhis third and last quest. But thig tlhe will not come back. W. T. Ste4 InReview of Reviews.

.i

'Til string lei,"For the steamer day."

School Song.

'. .;'.rpr?xr,:' iw,'' ., J I

Ii.

ARRIVED.Saturday, July IS.

Stmr. Kinau, Parker, from Hilo andway ports at 2:3u p. m. with headsheep, 24 ho&s, 130 sacks potatoes and262 packages sundries.

Am. bktn. S. G. Wilder, Jackson, 13

days from San Francisco at 1 p. m.Stmr. J. A. Cummins, from Koolau

ports at 3 p. m.Stmr. Lehua, Napala, from Maui.

Lanai and Molokai. with 32 head cat-tle, 16 head calves, 10 bags coffee, 41pkgs. sundries.

Stmr. Niihau, W. Thompson, fromWaimea with llmpty bbls. at 4:25a. m.

Handicapped.'"But if the professor is "o absent- - t

minaea mat ne can t remember h I-

own name, why doesn't he write it K

a slip of paper and carry it with him f

SUBSCRIPTION RATES.

Delivered by carrier In city, permonth $

Vailed to any address for 1 year Inthe United States or Territory

25 AAAAA AAAAAA A A A A A A AAAAAA AAA ir uiru mat, OUI ne lOUnd that f'ildn't read his own writing.,,r?rJ Icou

.ulaL OKLVlTlEy

Bishop Restarick is expected homefrom Kauai this morning.

Bulletin newsboys were made hilari-ous yesterday by a baseball victoryover the Advertiser news merchants.

It is said the attorneys in the dis-

barment case will not trouble to filebriefs. In that case the next thing tolook for will be the decision of theSupreme Court.

Arrangements for the widening ofBethel street are about complete. Theextension through to Queen street,though on the Public Works plan, isnot at present contemplated.

The Koloa Wine Co., Kauai, is aboutto file articles of incorporation. It willbe composed of practically the samestockholders as those of the WaimeaWine Co. but have different officers.

Solomon Peck has been elected presi-dent and a director of E. Peck & Co.,Ltd., draymen, in place of the late ElyPeck, and Wm. J. White secretary andtreasurer instead of C. C. Conradt, re-

signed.

S. Boyd, Commissioner of Lands,

"w4, ilyn Life.Af Hawaii 3 00 NEW SCHOONER

ARRIVES IN HIL0 Am. sch. Honoipu, Shaw, from Ho- - Nothing But Money.noipu in distress at 11 a. m.Stmr. Iwalanl, Mosher, from Puna--

In Honolulu, at this time of the year,one of the commonest flowers used inthe making of leis or wreaths is theblossom of the plumeria or plumieria.From its handsome shape and colorand its delicious scent it has becomequite a favorite flower with the Ha-waiia- ns.

It is of easy growth, a sandyloam where the roots can be kept moistbeing said to suit u best, and it hasbeen planted quite extensively in dif-

ferent parts of Honolulu, a favoritesite being in graveyards such as theMakiki cemetery and the enclosure sur-rounding the Lunalilo tomb at Kawai-aha- o.

The plant is originally a nativeof Mexico, Peru and other parts ofSouth America and is also indigenousto the West India Islands. The genuswas named in honor of Plumier. aFrench traveller and writer on botany.

"Worth half a million, isn'tbut otherwise he'sluu, at 5:30 p. m.

less." Puck.DEPARTED.

C. T. & M. C. S. Anglia, Leach, for ukwk mJ OPERALondon, via Midway and Suez Canal ROBUAH All AllSw. sp. Tbessalus, Lagerkrantz, forSole Proprietor and Dlrporr- -

The Wilbert M. Smith. Captain Ross,

arrived in Hilo Saturday, July 11,

twenty-tw- o days from Fairhaven, with

over a million feet of lumber for the

Hilo Mercantile Co.. and a deck load

of piles for the new dock.The Wilbert L. Smith is in Hilo on

her second voyage having made butune previous trip since leaving the

"Mr- - Grse Stephens S"--

THE LAUGHING BOOM COK.TINUES. STILL ANOTHER XOVElj'TY. THE PRIZE OF A BUNCH OFPRIZES. 1

O --A. T3L XJ

RAILWAY & LAND CO.

TIME TABLEMay 1st, 1903.

OUTWARD.

Vr Waianae, Waialua, Kahuku andWay Station 9;15 a-- m., 3:20 p. m.

for Pearl City. Ewa Mill and WayStations 17:20 a. m., 9:15 a. m.,21:05 a. m., 2:15 p. m., "3:20 p. m..

f:15 p. m.. 5:13 p. m.. $3:30 p. m.,tll:15 p. m.

INWARD.Arrive Honolulu from Kahuku, Wai-alu- a

and Waianae 8:3$ a. m., 5:31p. m.

Arrive Honolulu from Ewa Mill andPearl City 16:50 a. m., t7:46 a, m.,8:36 a. m., 10:38 a. m., 2:05 p. m.,4:11 p. m.. "5:31 p. m.. 7:40 p. m.

Daily.t Sunday Excepted.t Sunday Only.

. P. DENISON. F. C. SMITH.Supt. G. P. & T. A.

who accompanied Governor Dole in theways at Hallard. Wash. She is a trimfour masted registering 846

tons gross. She is 204 feet long, andU. S. S. Iroquois, returned in the Ki-

nau. He favors dividing Lanai publiclands into tracts of 1000 acres each MOXDAY AXD TUESDAY. jrLT ! !

Puget Sound in ballast.Stmr. Lehua, Napala, for Leper Set-

tlement, at 9 p. m.1

DUE TODAY.Sunday, July 19.

Stmr. Claudine, Parker, from Mauiports, due early in morning.

Stmr. Mikahala, Gregory, from Kau-ai ports, due early in morning.

NEXT MAIL FROM THE COAST.Per S. S. Sonoma due Wednesday

morning, July 22.

NEXT MAIL TO THE COAST.Per S. S. Ventura due Tuesday morn-

ing. Probably sail for San Franciscothe same afternoon.

PASSEXGERS.Arrived.

20 AXD 21.for agricultural, pastoral and sisalraising purpoess. Stine and Evans

AMERICAX COMEDY COMPANY

and is sometimes spelt plumieria. butmore frequently, although perhaps notso correctly, the first "i" in the wordis dropped, and it is styled plumeria.Twenty-on- e different varieties arecatalogued by botanists, the colors ofthe flowers being usually either whiteor yellow, but there are a few speciesbearing flowers of a different tint, suchas plumeria purpurea, with purpleblossoms, plumeria rubra, with red andplumeria tricolor, yellow, white andred. None of these kinds are grown inHonolulu, or if so, are very scarce.

Another name for the plant is frangi- -

Mounted Patrolman Fred Wrightcaught a Metropolitan Meat Co. horsewhile running away near ThomasSquare last evening. The animal start Will produce for the first time heft jed near Makiki street and Wilder

40 feet 5 inches beam, with a 15 foothold. She belongs to the Globe Navi-gation Company. Tribune.

. .

Sugar Heady.Sugar on Kauai K. S. M., 200 bags;

V. K.. 300; Mak., 969; G. & 11., 37; McB.22.592; 11. M-- , 240; and L. P., ISO bags;total, 24.61S bags.

Sugar on Hawaii Olaa, 14.245; Waia-ke- a.

6000; Wainaku, 1390; Onomea,14,000; Pepeekeo, none; Hakalau, 16,-00- 0;

Honomu, 7000; Laupahoehoe, none;Humakua, 2000; Paauhau, none; Ho-nok- aa,

6i'00; Kukuihaele, 3500; Puna-lu- u.

7699; Honuapo, 170; Ookala, 600;

the king of all farce comedies.Avenue and the officer began his chase s

near Beretania and Keeaumoku streets WHERE IS COBBWHERE IS COBBWHERE IS COBBBefore opening the Land RegistraFrom Hilo and way ports. per stmr.

METEOROLOGICAL RECORD.By t Government Survey, Published

Every Monday. tion Court, Judge P. L. Weaver will pani, sometimes spelt frangipannl,visit Boston to study the procedure frangipane, or frangipanier, and the

sb tr and forms in vogue in Massachusetts, flowers of plumeria rubra are also callIHI1I. I w ish I was back in my quiet home 5 iBABOM.r , , . ... .. . . . . I . .

BHL irom wnicn me Hawaiian law ot last led in the West Indies, the Red Jasmine in rsew jersey. . -

session to introduce the Torrens sys- - There is an old and illustrious

Kinau, July 18. S. N. Kenton, Mrs.S. X. Kenton, F. J. Amweg, L. M.Whitehouse, Mrs. L. M. Whitehouse,W. H. C. Campbell, A. Humburg. E.H. Paris, G. H. Pecha, A. J. Lignoux,Major W. A. Purdy, W. Thompson,W. T. Rawlins, Dr. A. N. Sinclair,E. Glein, Loo Joe, E. Horner, W. O.Taylor, Geo. C. Beckley Jr., Geo. IiBrown. A. C. Gehr. I E. Shellburg,Carl Widemann, Mrs. L. J. Berkley,Miss G. Renton, C. B. Wells. Mrs. A.

0 ter. here was borrowed. He will be Roman family bearing the patronymicKukaiau, 4000. Total. S2.S07 bags.. .

A Mailing Opportunity.absent six weeks. of Praneinani as fammis in Tralv us the'0 03 63 283ill 10 03 29.98 73

REMEMBER THE "SEASON TER.MINATES OX TUESDAY NIGHT. '

The comedies freely interspersed witi

2--4

2- -33- - 1

64 u 00 W 1l 80 (5 30 Oil 73 Lot Lane has received a favorable I Plantagenets and the Tudors in Enl.S

KBNKNEMCKBMKB

S8MTWTK

H. Hackfeld & Co., announce that8J 0 0f8S-- 0

63 0 08 4

f2 0 OS 76 1- -4

64 0 00 60S63 0 OOtS 3

opinion from the chemistry division of j gland. The origin of the name is trac-th- e

Department of Agriculture, Wash-- J ed to a certain office which an ancestor

II Ml li IU UU (14 30 05 ' VI, "01 80.0 W tSI 7216 SO 0) V!tf 7417 SO 03 29 W, 7i

t I I

s 54- -5

4--2orders mailed per Ventura, sailing! specialties, refined, elegant, brilliant

A. Brnymer. Mrs. W. Henning. Mrs. ington, on samples of suDnosed amber- - ruled in the church, that of supplyingA. X. Sinclair, Miss Mae Giles, FrankMagnificent stage investiture.Prices, $1.00, 75c. and 60c.

from Honolulu, July 21, will arrive inSan Francisco July 27 and connect withS. S. Xevadan sailing from San Fran-- J

gris belonging to him. The lump of the holy Dread or water in one or theBarometer corrected to 32 F. and ses Davey, Y. Hamada, Geo. H. Robert- -

Ievei. and for standard gravity of IaL 45. son. J. Hunter, Tom Stewart. P. Gibb the material from which the samples ceremonials. Another derivation of the Sale of Seats at Wall, Nichols & Co. 4 f

TM correction Is 06 for Honolulu for Honolulu direct. July 31. 1903. and wife. Mrs. T. Black. C M. Cooke, were taken is about 200 pounds in name attributes it to the family's benev- -Jtoot. Horner, .Miss Kay, Miss Hutcn- - weight, and if it is ambergris ought tojolent distribution of bread in time ofTIDES. BUN AND MOON. H. P. Wood and wife. J Finson,

Shipping: Notes.FRED W. DUVAL,

Business Manager.Turner and wife. Miss E. Henning. oe worm aoout iuu,ouo to tne owner.5S famine. Frangipanl literally means"broken bread," and is derived from

e sr. s Rev. Kekipi. Rev. Jas. Mathews, wife lie picked the stuff up off the KoolauThe eableship Anglia sailed for LontO SB

2 I r ,

- 3 h r:

COa ata aW

S rand two children. L. Barkhausen, E. const. i 5don yesterday at noon.5 a h'j. a frangi to break and panus bread.

Hence we have the frangipani pud Orpheum TheatreS. Boyd, H. G. Ramsey.to --j ST;c;The Swedish shin Thessalus sailed trom Maui and .Molokai ports, per

dings, which good housewives in EnBUSINESS LOCALSstmr. Lehua, July IS. Miss Margaretfor the Sound in ballast yesterday1 p.m. Ft. ! a.m.'pn'.l Rise gland make with the broken bread.Amalau. Mrs. Mahoe and child, Mrs. JMan.. 20 1 07, 1 9.m. 5 44 8 24 5. 18 6.44 1.42 The schooner Ka Moi is due to sail F. Dutra. One Mercatis Frangipani or Frangi- -fromBuy your shoesfor Haniakua tomorrow afternoon Departed.Trie 21 1 54 2 0 1 07 8 40 9 08 5.23 6.431 8 37

Wwt. 22 Si 2 2, 2 03 7.82, 9.45 ft.29 8.43! tiSave money

Kerr's. panni, who lived in 1493, was a notedbotanist and traveller, famous as beingPer stmr. Kauai, July 17. for KauaiII III The Lyceum

Stock CompanyThar.2J 3 20 2.2 2.55 8 20 10.22 5 30 6.43 4.S5 The Kinau arrived from Hilo and

way ports with a large passenger list ports C. M. Lousted, H. J. Carls, Mr.K. Xakapaahu. Sussie Aea, A. S. Wil

I one of the Columbus expedition whenHighest prices paid for gentlemen'sclothing, etc., by M. Croter, MetropoleFlld 24 02 2.1 S 42 9 10 10 57 5 30 6 42 Sets 9yesterday at noonI I ! 'P.m they visited the West India Islands.cox and wife. Mrs. Taukea and servant .5

4 80 9 8811 Sit SO 6 41; 7.6223 4 41 2 0 Hotel.Lena Hart and party, Hattie Williams, The sailors as they approached AnThe S. S. Alaskan of the AmericanSna.. 2 i 20 1.9. 5 '20 10 40 a.m 5 Jl fl 41 8.44 K. Kamato. Y. Aduchi and 29 decklfonM'27 ft 69 1.7' 0.12 0.C8 II 4 5 81 6.41' 9 27 Choice ferns and palms at private tigua, discovered a delicious fragrancePer stmr. Lehua, for KalaupapaHawaiian line will sail from Seattlefor Honolulu on Aug. 10. She will loadNew moon on the 24th at 2:15 a. m sale at a bargain. Can be 6een at 1036

. PRESENTINGTHAT IXCOMPARABLE

WAR DRAMA

July IS, 9 p. m. Members Board ofTime tl the tide are taken from tne Health.in the air. This, Mercatis told them,must be derived from sweet smellingflowers. On landing they found vast

sugar here for Delaware BreakwaterUnited States Coast and Geodetic SurGreen street.

Regular 33c. glass jugs for 20c. at PaPer C. T. & M. C. S. Anglia, for Midvey tables. way Island Mrs. Cauley.The steamer Lehua sailed for theLeper Settlement last evening carry quantities of the plumeria alba in fullcific Hardware Co. crockery departThe tides at Kahulul and HIlo occur

About one hour earlier than at Honolulu.Hawaiian standard time Is 10 hours 30

bloom, making the air redolent withment tomorrow.ing the members of the Board ot HeldTBHYEVESSELS IN PORT. EnemyHealth who will make an examinationminutes slower than Greenwich tlme.be' Xew lines of men's Walkovers, $3.50, rich odor. From this plant, which thepresent inhabitants of Antigua call thefrangipannl flower, is distilled that ex

lng that of the meridian of 157 degrees 30 of the Settlement. MERCHANTMEN.(This list does not Include coasters.)minutes. The time whistle blows at 1:30

at Kerr's. ,

Dr. Day's residence telephone numThe American barkentine S. O. Wilp. m.. which la the same as Greenwich, THURSDAYand

SATUKDAY23and25JULYquisite perfume so popular with theCoronado, Am. bktn. Potter, San Frander arrived from San t rancisco yeshours 0 minutes. Sun and moon are tor ber has been changed to Main 442,

fair sex.cisco, July 4.local time for the whole group. terday after u pleasant trip of four Alexander Young Hotel. HOLUALAXI.Dechmont, Br. ep., Hinrichs, Newcasteen days. She brings a general cargo "Arabic" is guaranteed for threetie, July 2.for F. A. Schaefer and Co. Gerard C. Tobey, Am. bk., Scott, Nana Xvearr. and lasts a life time. Just try CHAMBERLAIN ANDHONOLULU STOCK EXCHANGE- -

Honolulu, July IS, 1903.imo, July 5.The steamer Lehua arrived" from Ma it. California Feed Co., agentsEdward May, Hanson, San Francisco, I!

Box office open MONDAY MORX-IN-

JULY 20, at 9. Popular pricefc

ORPHEUM THEATREui, Lanai, and Molokai ports early yes

Julv 15. Ladies' Queen Quality shoes, $2.50: HIS JINGO EMPIREterday morning. ine icpoiia Hawaiian Isles Am. sp., Mallett, New boots, $3.00; nil styles at Kerr's.meeting th Ironuois at Manee, the York. June 10.STaMS or STOCK BidTal.CapitalAll first class passengers for th3 It. is impossible not to be sorry forHonoipu, Am. sch., Shaw, Honoipu, arGay landing on Lanai, at wnicn port

rived in disress, July IS. Ventura sailing July 21st will please seshe stopped last Thursday. Mr. Chamberlain, and also for Mr. Bal-

four. They have dreamed dreams andJ. 11. Lunsman, Am. schr., Johnson,MbbcastilbCFrewerA Co. ..

cure their tickets tomorrow as early asThe schooner Moi Wuhine is due Lnysan Island. July 5.390100

501.000.000

200.000 possible. have seen fantastical visions of a JingoI. B. Kerr Co., Ltd.... Kaiulani. Am. bk., Colly, San Franfrom Kohalalele with a cargo of sugarEmpire, which the British Empire wasH. F. Wichman will guarantee toCisco, July 8.for the bark Kaiulani. The Kaiulani8T0AB

r

Classified Advertisements,

WANTED.HIGHEST prices paid for gentlemen'!

second hand clothing. Also shoes.

Address M. Croter, Metropole Hotel,1150 Alakea street.

SITUATIONS WANTED.

Kilmallie, Br. bk., McKay, Newcastle, not and never can be. The fact that20! finished discharging yesterday and8,000,000 2?give you the right kind or lenses ioryour eyes and set in the right kind ofMary E. Foster, Thompson, Port Gam by paying colonists five or six times1.CMJ.0O0 240Hw. Agricultural Co,

Haw. Com. A Sub. Co will begin loading tomorrow morning ble. July 16.a.fia.750 as much as a British regular they wereframes for your faceHaw. Sugar Co........ "24 Mildred, Am. schr., Kendall, Ballard,She will sail probably on Thursday fori.toa.ooo7SO.000 105 able to secure the services of someJuly 9. Ladies' bathing shoes, 60c. pair, atSan Francisco.

thousands of colonists in the work ofMohican, Kelley, San Francisco, June Kerr's.

tioooma ............HcmokaaHaJknKahoBaKlhel fUn. Oo L'dKlBahnlaKoloa

The steamer Niihau which arrived 29.

2.000,000500.0006O0.OU0

2,500,000160,000500,000

2110 AS stenographer and accountant bydevastating the Boer republics seems to

Another big sale of household goodsEvans, Iquique,from Kauai ports yesterday morning Olympic, Am. bk., have utterly demented them. Mr. Car young man who has $1,000 or $1,500 to ,iinvest. Address "L," this office.beginning tomorrow at Jordan's. Seebroke the record for discharging coal July S.

Mcfiryde Sag. Co. L'd. 1.500.000 negie pointed out that Canada had sentGer. bk., Janssen,faui isenDerg, his announcement in advertisement8.O0,(K at Waimea. She discharged 115 tuns

3010010023

ll20

100M50

10010020

1002024)

20100

50100100100100100100100

many more thousands of her sons toutoo bugar uo.Oaomea ...... .Ookala

Bremen, June 19.

510J

JO10

elsewhere in this parer.in a day some time ago, but last Robt. Lewers, Am. schr.. Underwood, fight in the Xorthern ranks in the great FOR RENT.THAT desirable residence at 1562 Nao-anu- e.

Modern conveniences: eleven

Ola Sugar Co. Ltd.OlowaJn Rarest and fairest. All the latestThursday she unloaded 143 tons in a Port Gamble, June 25. Civil War, and that, too, at the samefaaahao Sugar Plan- - S. T. Alexander, Am. schr., Johnson.day. This is considered good consider in millinery at prices stripped ot ex rate paid to the American regular, H.tauoa co..... Xewcastle, July 8. rooms; bath, etc. Apply to C.

Dickey, 39 King street.

1,000.000500.000

5,OUO,000150,000

5.000,00060,000750,000750,000

2,750,0004.500.000

700.000262400

travagance at Cantor's Xew Aloha Mil- -ng the fact that the coal has to oe inciiioFal.... . . than the handful she had sent to theS. G. Wilder. Am. bkt. Jackson, SanliTcrv store. Fort near Ilote' street.placed in buckets and lowered Into Francisco, July IS. South African war, but his warning

boats and then rowed to the wharf, w. H. Dimond. Am. bktn.. Nilson. San17510950

800Those $20.00 pocket premo cameras

PepeekeoPioneer ..WaUIua AgT. Oo. .WailukaWaimanalo

came too late. iFOR SALE.CHOICE ferns and palms at privatewhich is some distance from where the Francisco, July 5. nre selling very rapidly at Honolulu Mr. Chamberlain imagined that the

6535steamer lays. sale, at 1036 Green street.Photo-Suppl- y Co. It is the neatestStbabshit go's Oen o i ig the Bible.The Hawaiian Transportation Com and latest of the famous Premo series.

Jingo Empire of his dreams was com-

ing into existence, and being resoluteand sincere in his delusions, he boldlyput the matter to the test. His first

The American Bible Society is havingwilder m- - o 115 NOTICE OF REMOVAL.pany recently held tlie)r annual meet- -600.080600,000

100108 Ladies' French kid dress boots, $4.00;more trouole with the uurKish censorng at Hilo and the affairs of the com worth $6.00: Kerr's.of its publications at Constantinople. The Cantor Aloha Millinery Parlori .Upany were found to be in good shape effort was to induce the colonial pre100 young energetic business man withHe objects to the following passage have moved to the premises formerly a

occupied by Lyon's book store on Fort .This company owns the two schooners. miers to assent to a strong scheme of11010180

95

from I Thessalonians, contained in theKti,cno

i'666,000150.000

4,0nn.noo50,008

$1,000 or $1,500 to invest desires a sit-

uation in some lucrative business. For imperial defense in which the wholeC. I Woodbury and Julia E. Whalen. seventh and eighth verses of the first street, opposite Thrum's booke store, j ;10100 90

empire was to be organized as a miliThe Whalen was recently sent on a chapter:17 As this Is the off season for hatswill sell our stock of ready-mad- e batir.n.ei i..,t tVio "So that ye were ensamples to all address see our classified advertise-

ments today. tary and naval unit. The colonial pre

Inter-iilaffo-- Co.kllBCXLLABBOTjr

Haw'n KlectrloCo. .11 . R. T. A L. Co. PMHen. K. T. U Cc.C.Mutual Tel. CoO R ls Co..... ...HiloK. K.Co

itOHM

Haw. Govt. 5 p. e. .Hllo B. R. Co. 6 p. e...Hon. a. T. A L. Co.

p. c ....Iwi Pl'n 6 p. 0O. LL, Co.........Oaha Pl'n 6 p. eOUi Pl'n 6. p. cWalaJaa Ag, Co. p. oKanaka 8 p. cPioneer Mill Co

at great sacrifice.97 that believe in Macedonia and Achaia.For from you sounded out the word miers rejected the scheme root andventure did not prove profitable so it

Infants' shoes, all colors, 40c. pair, atis very likely that the schooner ser- - of tne Lord, not only in Macedonia Kerr's. NOTICE.vice to the leeward side of the big isl-a- nd Achaia, but also in every place100103', your faith to Godvvard is spread a- -

100 broad." Watermelons Are Profitable.

branch. Sir Wilfrid Laurier declaredJingoism was the worst enemy of theempire, and that he would never con-

sent to tie up the colonies with themilitary system of the Old World.

Foiled in this, Mr. Chamberlain nextattempted to induce the colonies to

CHANGE OF TELEPHONE NUM-

BER.Dr. Day's residence telephone number

The London Mail says the censor inA Japanese at Waikamalo has reaped100 sists that the words "the vilayets of

100 Pf

Salonica and Monastir" shall be used a harvest during the past month dis has been changed toinstead of "Macedonia," the fact thai MAIN 442, YOUNG HOTELposing of his product of watermelons.SALES BETWEEN BOARDS.

$10,000 O. R. & L. Co. bonds S104. no vilayets- - existed in Paul's time be A small patch has returned to him $250ing totally ignored by him. Turkey is

and will not be kept up.

The four-mast- ed schooner Honoipuarrived off port yesterday morning.Her appearance caused some surpriseon the waterfront as she was reportedto have sailed from Honoipu last Fri-day for San Francisco with a load ofsugar. It seems that she came herein distress. While lying at Honoipuon Friday a heavy blow came up andafter parting both chains and losingher anchors the vessel was driven a- -

and now all the Japanese lot holders invery tender on anything relating tothat locality are planting watermelonMacedonia these days.seed. Hilo Herald.

Wanted the Job.Madam " began the famished ho

adopt the principle of community ofsacrifice, and to shoulder their propor-tionate share, say 10,000,000 a year,- -of the cost of the imperial army andnavy. Here also his failure was abso-lute. The Jingo Empire did not existas a fighting entity, it did not exist asa taxpaying community, butFaith, fanatic faith, once wedded fastTo some doar falsehood, hugs ii to the

last.

bo. "Well?" snapped thf crustv houseVery Likely.

Romantic Young Lady (spendingwife. Madam, if I learned to harksummer on a farm): Just hear how

WEATHER BUREAU.Honolulu, Alexander Street.

July IS, 10 p. m.Mean Temperature 7S.0.Minimum TemjTature 7f5.

Maximum Tern I era t u re SO.

Barometer at 9 p. m. 30.00; steady.R.'iin'all. 1 hours up to a. m. .01..Mean Dew I. i n t fr the Day 61.M-ar- i e Humidity 05.Wind X. 1.; force, 3.V.' .iihi r Clear.K. nv.i.--i for Ji.ly 13 I.i-- ht to ir.

trades, fair weather.CURTIS J. LYONS.

Territorial

j s.iore. L;:;,-.- s Wf.re run to the buoy andi as was not hard agroiir.d she was

like a dog would you -t me live in deen f-- , ne as high as y- -r do

d.lt dog?" Chi'-ag- Xe S.i those old trees in the orchard moanand groan in the storm, like the cry-ing of a lost soul!'

j l'"il'd i.:Y. and it was !'''::-- . that sheir--l but little dan-- . age to her hull

,n:-.- was 3:,,t How. ver Cap-ti:- n

Shaw took i:.. chances so he

Misunderstood.'Well, I've ju-- t ir.ade Small boy: "WeH. I

make a worse racket iffull of green apples asSmart St.

First Lawyer:a fortune."

Lawyer:Life.

guess you d And so Mr. Chamberlain, having foil-yo- u

were as ed to find his longed-fo- r treasure wherethey are'." the imperial rainbow rested, either in

the field of war or in the treasury,

I ' ' sail. ,j f,,r Ho,.oiwh:. Th ves "Whose w; if.v at the Haukf-.I- J wharf and