i- mmri a tr to 1mse conssiohs am km hastens its baby … · 2015. 6. 2. · and exam!nainn rooms...

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From San MAILS Franclaoer 2:30 Mataonla, April 25. For San Francltoe Manoa, April 25. From Vancouver: ! Niagara, May 17. Edition For Vancouvor: Niagara, Apr. 28. n!n Bulletin. Est. 1882. No. C- I- 16 PAGES HONOLULU, TERRITORY OF HAWAII, MONDAY, ATIUL 24, 19in.l( PAGES TRICE FIVE CENTS Hawaiian SUr. Vol. XXIII. No. 7438 mm ri a Tr TO 1MSE conssiOHs TO AM KM HASTENS !RVCI!ARTE(1 FUIH OF RAPID TWSIT Utilities Commission and Street R a i I w a y Representatives Confer on Preliminaries; Reach Stage of Drafting Bill CITY REPRESENTED BUT ; v NOTJN OFFICIAL WAY Mayor and Ti sasurer Present to Keep Tab on What's Do- ing, But Not as Part Of Con- ference: Provision for Two Zand One-Ha- lf Per Cent of Gross Receipts Appears Sat- isfactory v Rapid action characterized, the con- ference of the Public Utilities -- Commission this morning with Rapid Tran- sit officials. As a result definite draft- ing of the proposed new charter la a atep already, reached. It Is hoped and nthar TnAtd that hv thft end of ....... .kT .Li. ..ki.. ,ni be ready, for Joint consideration. The meeting today came as a result of the commission's proposal last week that the former franchise extension plan, blocked In Congress by the gov- ernor's' opposition, be abandoned en- tirely; that a new scheme be worked out. and that the litigation in the courts either be dropped or else al- lowed to take Its course without fur- ther delaying a new franchise and much . needed development work by the 'street railway company. , This moraine's meeting began at 8 :30 o'clock In the commission's of- fice, , K ulkeolanl building. It was over &bout 10. The territorial offl- - clala and the company representatives had no difficulty- - agreeing upon gen- eral principles and plan of procedure, and, in coctraet to the heated contro- versy of the past few years on this self -- same subject, today's discussion was markedly harmonious. , "Acllcn" waa the keynote sounded thronbautlhe meetings and special- ly fy Chariest, Forbear superinten- - the corrinlf ?!on, who stated that It 1$ the idea el all latemted to get the' new' charter before Congress at the earliest possible fcc&ent , . " . Present at the meeting today were ( nalrman Forbes, Commissioners A. J. Gigncux and J. N 8. Williams, Secretary Henry P. O'Sullivan, L. Ten-ne- y Peck, Rapid Transit president; Richard Ivers, director, and C G. Bal-lentyn- e. manager of the Rapid Transit, these three being members of the spe- cial committee appointed to represent the company In the charter discus- sion; Secretary A. L. Castle, D. L. Wlthlngtcn of Castle ft Wlthington, attorneys for the company; J. L. Coke, attorney tor the commission; Mayor Jchn C. Lane and D. L. Conkllng, city treasurer, Sam Kauhane, chairman cf. the Hawaii board of supervisors. also waa present Ready to Draw Bill. -- '':" At the .conclusion of the meeting the matter cf framing a new charter fn tia Poty44 TftTt ff wn ri1nat In the 'hands of the attorneys for thei company and the commission. It is expected that by the end of. this week a draft of the charter will be ready for final consideration. This morning's meeting ' consisted largely or discussion on a series of ruestiens propounded to the Rapid Transit Company by Chairman Forbes. (Continued on. page four) V.', Llcui Is Favored By Capt. Llatson a. T: f. nr. jus L.UIST s iname Letter to E. D. Tenney Says He Likes This Title for New Matsonia Now Building . That v the name of the new Matson 1 Iron Works, San, Francisco, will v be the Maui Is considered : quite likely. In view of the fact that Capt. Wil liam Matson, president of the Matscn .Navigation Company, favors this name. .; , ; . Capt Matson wrote jne a few days ige that he favored naming the new stealer, the Maul ssd E. D. Tenney, this morning. "Of course, the name has not been def.nl tely decided, but l:e reems to think Maul suits him bet- - ' Two other steamers of the Matson fleet . bear Hawaiian names. The Hi Ionian was named after-Hil- and the Manoa after Manoa Valley in this c ty. .The Inter-Islan- d has a small eteemer also named Maui. Tha new Itndr ilnntlMtlna1 Iia t sen la, altiiough slightly larger, will be ready for use In January, 1917. Pre virus reports were that she would lie named Maklki, but Capt. Matron's letter ind cates otherwise. : : -- 4 I Additional and overnight tela- - I I graph news oh Page 9. , , - J ' NEW YORK STOCK MARKET TODAY Following are the closing prices of stocks on the New York market to-tia- y, sent by the Associated Press over the Federal Wireless: Today, day AiasKa uoia .. . i: 4 ! American Smelter V. 91?4 83' 2 I American Sugar Rfg. . . . 107! 2 106 American Tel. Tel.... 1Z7 1Z7? American Copper 81 774 Atchison 1C2 10O'a Baldwin Loco. 87 '8 86 Baltimore dL Ohio...... 84 83' Bethlehem Steel ...... . 429 420 Calif. Petroleum ....... 21 i 21', Canadian Pacific ...... 164' 2 163 CM.A St. P. (St. Paul) 92 91', Colo. Fuel t Iron...... 41'4 392 Crucible Steel . . . ,. . ; . 7B 75 Erie Common 33 32 General Electric ....... 161'2 159 General Motors ........ 405 Great Northern Pfd.... 119 118',, Inter. Harv N. J.. V ... 110V '2 110 Keonecott Copper . .... 53 52 Lehigh R. R. ...... .. 75 75 New York Central 1014 100i Pennsylvania .......... W2 56 Ray Conail 222 228 Southern Pacific . ; . . .. 95' 84'.-- Studebakei .. . ..... ... . 124'2 121 2 Tennessee Copper 46J2 44 Union Pacific ......... 130!4 129 U. 8. Steel ............ 82'2 80a U. 8. Steel Pfd..., J16'2 116'i Utah 79V 77s4 l.f A I I f - AA MAI ninem union ........ o Westlnghouse ......... 56', .54 Bid. fEx-dlviden- d. tUnquoted. villa o;:ce ,;ore ELIKG PURSUIT? AnocUtea Prra fey Ftdaral WlrmlMil SAN ANTONIO, Tex, April 24. uen. vuia. snahtlv wound ed, Is reported to have been seen near the little Mexican villaoe of Nomoava. en route to the mountains northwest of Parra!. Gen. Funaton believea that the information la authentic, and if so, the outlaw leader has placed a considerable distance between himself and the head pf Gen. Pershing's col- umn, which le south of ParraL -- .w," m mm ? ' lose r.i'cor.iBs IN PARTY JOB National Chairman Will Quit Active Leadership After i ; St. Louis Convention r j AaseeUUd rrwa fey rdral Wlrelastl f WASHINGTON, D. C. April 24 William F. McCombs, chairman of the Democratic national committee and manager of Woodrow Wilson's cam- paign -- for president, has notified the president that he will be unable to continue In his party office after the St. Louis convention. The president, in his reply, expresses much regret that the party is to lose McComb's active leadership. Fred Lynch, nation- al committeeman for Minnesota, is ex- pected to succeed McCombs, who will enter a law partnership. : AID HURTS Mil iMoeUUd tttu fey ratrl wiralcul : LOS ANGELES, CaU April 24. Three persons were killed today and four very badly burned by an explo- sion in the Pacific Reduction Com- pany 'a plant for burning the city gar- bage. '.- ; NO DAT.1AGE DONE (AModaUd TTu fer YMaral Wtrlwa1 SAN DOMINGO. April 24 An earth- quake occurred here today ' but did no damage. ' ": WASHINGTON, D. April 24. The jumping of needles today on the seismograph recording drum here In- dicated an earthquake shock. Gen. Cecil A. Lyon, progressive na- tional committeeman, died at Sher- man, Texas, after an illness of several weeks. - ;;. The navy collier Sterling, carrying supplies to the gunboat Des Moines and supplies for the relief of the Jews la Palestine, arrived at Naples. ITS BABY WEEK IN HONOLULU AND HERE'S A FUTURE "BETTER CITIZEN ' O : - -- - "Better Babies, Better Citizens' is the slogan of the public-spirite- d men and women who have worked for weeks arranging the detailsof Baby Week. Herewith is shown a bright-eye- d and chubby American i . youngster who should grow op into a mighty fine citbzen. STRIKING EXHIBITS ID BOOTHS Paiama Settlement Transform- -' ed in "Station"; Mothers : Bring Infants Galore Baby Week in Honolulu ia on. The Time Aprli 24-3- 0. The Place Paiama Settlement. The Baby Hundreda of 'em. At'l. o'clock this afternoon. Baby Week opened at "Baby Headquarters" at Paiama Settlement, corner of King and Lilifia streets. Babies of aU sizes and colors with their fond mothers w.ere waiting 1 to be examined. Some of them are being entered In the con test and some come' merely, for the benefits to be derived from the exam- ination irrespective of the contests or prizes...;'; The three large downstairs ciud rcoms and game rooms of the Settle- ment have been converted Into rest rooms, dressing room, measurement and exam!naiNn rooms Each baby goes through the following routine: Dental examination before undress ing; mental examination! eye, ear, nose, and throat; and then1 Is disrobed to have its measurements taken and the general physical examination made. Each baby perhaps will re-- qulre only about 20 minutes. Elfcht Principal Booths. Upstairs the entire gymnasium nas been turned into an exhibition room. There are eight principal booths, as follows: Play, Dairy, Eye and Ear, Dental, Anti-Tuberculos- Feeding and Cleaning, Clothing, and Home-Mad- e Furniture. The ulav booth contains many draw ings, picture mats, Toys and oy store made by cnildren of rhe Free Kinder- garten clatses in drawing, cutting, pasting and constructive work. In the . dairy section displays are made to show improper, unclean dairy and milk conditions, and - in direct, forceful contrast, what has been done in improving dairy conditions and in- suring pure milk supply, at all times a' most important if not tne cnier prob lem of the whole baty welfare pro-- gTaml The largest number of graphic charts are to be seen in the Eye and Ear booth. These illustrate many of the diabases of these 'two Important sense organs. The lettering and illus trating of these pleasing and instruct- ive chaita was done by the pupils of the Normal School under the direction of Mrs. Marshall. How to Save Eyes. The Maternity Home has a chart In which It states that of 138 babies born there during one 3ear, every one was treafei at birth with a solution of ar-gyr- ol or nitrate of silver for the eyes, and not ope of the babies so treated suffered with any soreness of the eyes. The Children's Hospital chart- - an- nounces that its service to babies is free. ind that no child is ever refused admittance. There are two attractive little sick beds, natural size, with large dolls for occupants, showing all the proper fix- ings, nnd loaned to the committee by the Misses Muriel, Margery and Ethel Wakefield of Pacific Heights. A pret- - (Continued on pge two) CHILD WELFARE PROGRAM FDR TODAY, TOMORROW, BABY WEEK TODAY. ; 1:20 p. m. Cars leave Emma street for Paiama Settlement. ' 430 p. m. Cars leave Paiama Set- tlement for Emma street. 1 to 5 p. m Examination of Ba- bies'. "'- - .';. 1 to 5:30 p. mr-Exhi-bita. 2 to 2:30 p. :m Demonstration: Infant Feeding," by Mrs. V; Genoves. 2:30 to 3:30 p. nv -- Lecture and conference, conducted by Dr. Li, in Chinese. ' . ' , ' 3 to 3:30 p. m. Translations of lec- tures in Settlement' House. . 4 to 4:30 p. m. Demonstration: "Bathing the Baby," by Miss Sillito of the Maternity Home. ' 4 p. m. "Prenatal Care," lecture by Dr. A. G. Hodgina. ': 7 to 9 p. m. Exhibits, 7:15 to 7:30 p. nv Music in charge of Mr. French of Punahou School. 7:30 to 8:15 Lecture in English, and slides under the direction of the Anti-Tuberculo- Bureau. TOMORROW. 1:20 p. m. Cars leave Kamehameha IV road for Paiama.' 4:30 p. m. Crs leave Paiama for Kamehameha IV road. 1-- 5 p. m. Examination of babies. 1- - 5:30 p. m Exhibits. 2- - 2:30 p. "Feed- ing of Older Children," by Miss Janet Dewar of Kauikeolanl Children's Hos- pital. . :. ' ... ' .. 2:30 p. m. Lecture, "Care of Child at Firth and After," by Miss Jesse Rae of Pacific Sanitarium. 3- - 3:30 p. m. Translation of lectures in Settlement House. 4- - 4:30 p. "First Aid to the Baby,", by Miss Janet De-wa- r. '...'....-.;'.- : 4 p. m. Lecture, MCa re of Child at Birth and After," by Dr.' Mori. 7-- 9 p. m Exhibits 7:157:30 p. mr-Mus- Ic by Arthur Hudson of Mills school. 7:30-8:1- 5 p. mT-Lectuf- in Japa- nese and slides under direction of Anti-Tuberculo- sis Bureau. CHARTER INFORMATION, IS SUPPLIED BY CLERK - Information relative to the charter convention held last, fall will be fur- nished to Interested persons by W. J. Coelho, clerk of the convention, be de- clared today. A number of inquiries have come to the Star-Bulleti- n regard- ing the transactions of the conven- tion and the form of charter drafted. Mr. Coelho has heard of these and to- day asked that it be. announced that he is willing; to furnish any informa- tion wanted. He can be reached at the office of the land commissioner, Capitol build- ing, telephone number 1211. ' A bill was introduced In the house directing Secretary Lane to operate oil lands still held by the government, and sell the - product in the open market. 99 YUAK'S FUTURE New Premier Willing He Should Remain President But As- semblymen Say No Associate Press by Federal WlrelMi PEKING, China, April 24. Tuan Chi Jul, the new premier of China and former minister of war, gave out a statement today in which he declar- ed that the first task of the cabinet will be to restore tranquility t the troubled republic, harmonize the war- ring factions and unite for Industrial and social progress. Referring to the stand taken by the rebel factions, he said, that the de- mands of Tsai Ao, the rebel leader, are "very reasonable." It has already been stated that Tsai Ao declared that Yuan could remain president but must have a new cabinet and one more thoroughly representative of republi- can principles than the present. Full power is to be given the cab- inet under the new regime, it is em- phasized. .Only questions of the great- est importance will be ; referred to Yuan. The military matters will be handled largely by' the under minister for war. The state co'uncii is dissolved un- der the new plan and the cabinet Is to direct a parliamentary election within three months. The new parlia- ment Is to promulgate the new Chi- nese constitntion. The cabinet was completed today with the following additions: Minister of finance Sun Pao ChL Education Chang Ku Khan. Commerce Ching Pang Ping. Justice Chang Tsung ljsiang. Tbe chief of the army general staff Is Gen. Wang Shih Chen. rAsioclAted ss tj FMaral Wlrelattl SHANGHAI, phfna, April 24. Two hundred and sixteen members of the National Assembly today adopted a resolution denouncing President Yuan's mandate to the cabinet, and refuse to accept any solution of the situation with Yuan as president. COMMITTEE T() PROBE ELECTION SQUABBLE Investigation of the so-call- "fraud" in connection with the Democratic di- rect primary elections held on Maul a week ago . last . Saturday probably will be begun tomorrow, according to John H. Wilson, national committee- man. Mr. Wilson says that Attorney Eugene Murphy of Wailuku and tae members of tho Maui county commit- tee intend to leave for Hana tomor- row to probe the squabble in lhat dis- trict and at Paia. A report on the in- vestigation probably will not reach Honolulu on til the end of this week, he adds. Major Robert W. Hunter, a prom- inent Confederate veteran, jonrnallst and lawyer, died in Washington, aged 73. ": .:.:' ,'-:- ;M wHETEIElI BEEILirJ WILL YIELD cid JTMniiPHTn .MrcT mrnnnrt I fill LIvUUUII I U OF nOlPROBLEfJATICflL WASHINGTON OVER INTIMATION THAT WILL GO TO GREAT TO PRESERVE RE LATIONS COMPARATIVE IliLLI U. S. HOPEFUL GER- MANY LENGTHS rnuiMi iuumi ; f Associated Press Service by Federal Wireless. WASHINGTON,-1- ( April 24. Vague but unmistakable indi- cations that Berlin is preparing to make certain concessions to the i 11 1 1 1 u t.'iauo ut'vii iitv iiuunioi situation more hopeful in offieial the Ainpripflii note, virtnnllv an German government. Confidentially, Ambassador Gerard has cabled from Berlin guard- ed hiuts that these eoneessions have been indicated to him, but is 'Uncertain, it is understood, whether they go Tar enough to. meet the peremptory requisites set forth by the Ignited States. V Officials here are, however, plainly hopeful. It is intimated among those in authority that Germany will go great lengths to pre- - on uiiiiiaiij niruun inauuii.i vviiii iiic uuiiru oiaiva., : l lie iinj rial government is anxious to avoid a break at tins time, and may auaiiuuu some 01 ine oojeciionaoie ieaiures 01 us unuer-se- a campaign. Ambassador Gerard got this impression of a spirit of concession! from his conference with Dr. von Jagow, the German secretary for foreign affairs. German Press Would Not Yield to U.S. BERLIN. Germany, April 24. The lateness, with which the text of the note was received by the German press precluded extended ,ommeut, but one leading paper, the Zeitung Mittag (Midday News), immediately announced the German intention hot to agree to the American terms. 4 "The German nation is thoroughly united in a firm resolve not to let the submarines, the weapons of necessity, be wrenched from our hands," says this paper. "We will continue to use them as we have, according to the principle of justice and of humanity. "Wo will continue to use them h the, future as in the past, because tho yeryexistence of the state and the future of our wives and children are at stake and compel us to strike where we are able." . Jhe Zeitung M it tag acknowledges with xpressions of.regret that tlie "politicians' of the United States have abandoned their neutrality. Lul in VesI; French Trying Grenades PARIS, France, April 24. There is a comparative 1 nil today in1 the fighting cn the west front,and particularly around the torn trenches and battered earthworks is the slackening of the fierce artillery fire and bloody infantry charges noticeable. The French, by a series of hand grenade attacks, have made some progress northwest of Caurettes. - ! BERLIN, Germany, April 24. Several attacks were made today on the German positions in tlie Verdun sector, but all were renulsed. Hostile 'Plane Over above opened in it, machine CABLEGRAMS FRIDAY'S SITUATION. GERMAN April 21. Meuse Violent engage- ments m connection strong of sides. West of river strong French forces attacked Morthomme and attack generally heavy losses to enemy. French entered small trench in dis- trict of Forest Les for continues. On right of Meuse endeavors to take back lost quarry farm Haudremont were completely without success. South of Douacmont hand to band which started during night, on some French trenches, has not yet finished 4 Germany's strong concentrated fire broke at its beginning a renewed hostile attack against German lines. At Verdun as heretofore there was lively artillery aeroplane fell into Fumin forest southwest of Vaux. East front: Near northwest Duenaburg, In unsuccessful attack of about one regiment suffered considerable losses. General Bothmer'a German air squadrons shelled profusely railroad construction work at with bombs. Balkan front: German ; at- tacked Varadar valley and west of the were there were French troops, i SATURDAY. GERMAN April 22. British , positions by our troops on Ypres noad. British reconquered about a third part. Both sides of the canal we sprang successfully several mines. Enemy's fire against and Roye caused further victims among population. At Roye shells killed two women and one child was In Argcnnes French posts on , the of ; Lafille Morte was destroy- ed, by blasting. ' Our troops one large crater before our front. West of Mease ' the French repeated their ULIIIIUIU j he LULL RECORDED ON WEST nit u in ac iku ic it 1111 1 st n v today than at time since ultimatum, was desnatchiMl'to the Dover, Driven efforts against Morthomme. Two at-- tain fire from both banks. The third attack broke down with, heavy losses before our front. There is bitter hand, grenade fighting about a piece of. trench near Caurettes forest At even- ing a trench occupied by ns ' during the night the French reconquered It. East of Meuse during nlgljt active In combat near quarry south of .' Haudremont and south of duel Is going on night and day Interruption and with extraordinary force. In northwest dis- trict ' of Fresnes In Woevre, French troops belonging to 154th division were captured. Thla proves that ene- my in sector between Fresnes and a vocourt engaged 38 Infantry divis- ions, of whom after long rest and being replenished by fresh troops, principally the have been in combat and beat- en. On east front Russian attacks broke "down again with bloody losses oefore our southeast of Brabunowka. ' ' SUNDAY. ."" :' 23. -- The trenches which Germans had conquered along to Ypres was evacuated because of un- derground water which made con- struction impossible. About morning-tim- e, south of St Eloi. an' . patrols were repulsed . which preparing fire waa night time against lines on sides Bapasme road in Aioert. xsear Tracyievai an enemy 6 laiicu. a uc g3 Liuuu I lii li ed back into the French position. Left of Mecse and. south of Hancourt and frermana tocAc - piipttiv' tronrhoo .. . Piwht . .Q.. . river and Woevre and on Com- - ous very, lively artillery eagagenents. East front South of Varocz a weak Russian attack of about one battalMon ended, on our ..barricades, n losses were heavy.' Otherv, : i cly local, of artlllrrr f.'rp nl LONDON, Eng.; April 24. A hostile aeroplane appeared Dover today,, causing ome concern. It dropped no bombs, and after theanti-aircraf- t guns had fire and British fliers were going up the air to attack the hostile turned and flew out fecross the channel. . .. GERMAN OFFICIAL HEADQUARTERS, district: with artil- lery developments both west repulsed with Caurettes which fighting enemy's south Fort fighting, artillery down In- fantry very activity-Hostil- e burning Cradunovoka, Russians re- peated Tarnopol flyers town HEADQUARTERS, attacked con- quered Labas-se- e . Lens wounded. heights occupied circles any Off Infantry close artillery wlthou! four divisions 1916 recruits, engaged obstacles road Langemarick English English after stronger ad- vanced German both elan increasinz scne patrcrca?aseraents.. . ...

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Page 1: I- mmri a Tr TO 1MSE conssiOHs AM KM HASTENS ITS BABY … · 2015. 6. 2. · and exam!naiNn rooms Each baby goes through the following routine: Dental examination before undress ing;

From SanMAILS

Franclaoer 2:30Mataonla, April 25.For San Francltoe

Manoa, April 25.From Vancouver: !

Niagara, May 17. EditionFor Vancouvor:Niagara, Apr. 28.

n!n Bulletin. Est. 1882. No. C- I- 16 PAGES HONOLULU, TERRITORY OF HAWAII, MONDAY, ATIUL 24, 19in.l( PAGES TRICE FIVE CENTSHawaiian SUr. Vol. XXIII. No. 7438

mmri a Tr TO 1MSE conssiOHs TO AM

KM HASTENS

!RVCI!ARTE(1 FUIH

OF RAPID TWSITUtilities Commission and Street

R a i I w a y RepresentativesConfer on Preliminaries;Reach Stage of Drafting Bill

CITY REPRESENTED BUT; v NOTJN OFFICIAL WAY

Mayor and Ti sasurer Presentto Keep Tab on What's Do-

ing, But Not as Part Of Con-

ference: Provision for TwoZand One-Ha- lf Per Cent of

Gross Receipts Appears Sat-

isfactory v

Rapid action characterized, the con-

ference of the Public Utilities --Commission

this morning with Rapid Tran-sit officials. As a result definite draft-ing of the proposed new charter la aatep already, reached. It Is hoped andnthar TnAtd that hv thft end of....... .kT.Li. ..ki.. ,nibe ready, for Joint consideration.

The meeting today came as a resultof the commission's proposal last weekthat the former franchise extensionplan, blocked In Congress by the gov-

ernor's' opposition, be abandoned en-

tirely; that a new scheme be workedout. and that the litigation in thecourts either be dropped or else al-

lowed to take Its course without fur-

ther delaying a new franchise andmuch . needed development work bythe 'street railway company.

, This moraine's meeting began at8 :30 o'clock In the commission's of-

fice, , K ulkeolanl building. It wasover &bout 10. The territorial offl--

clala and the company representativeshad no difficulty- - agreeing upon gen-

eral principles and plan of procedure,and, in coctraet to the heated contro-versy of the past few years on thisself --same subject, today's discussionwas markedly harmonious. ,

"Acllcn" waa the keynote soundedthronbautlhe meetings and special-ly fy Chariest, Forbear superinten- -

the corrinlf ?!on, who stated that It 1$

the idea el all latemted to get the'new' charter before Congress at theearliest possible fcc&ent , .

" .Present at the meeting today were

( nalrman Forbes, Commissioners A.J. Gigncux and J. N 8. Williams,Secretary Henry P. O'Sullivan, L. Ten-ne- y

Peck, Rapid Transit president;Richard Ivers, director, and C G. Bal-lentyn- e.

manager of the Rapid Transit,these three being members of the spe-cial committee appointed to representthe company In the charter discus-sion; Secretary A. L. Castle, D. L.Wlthlngtcn of Castle ft Wlthington,attorneys for the company; J. L. Coke,attorney tor the commission; MayorJchn C. Lane and D. L. Conkllng, citytreasurer, Sam Kauhane, chairmancf. the Hawaii board of supervisors.also waa presentReady to Draw Bill. -- '':"

At the .conclusion of the meetingthe matter cf framing a new charterfn tia Poty44 TftTt ff wn ri1nat Inthe 'hands of the attorneys for theicompany and the commission. It isexpected that by the end of. this weeka draft of the charter will be readyfor final consideration.

This morning's meeting ' consistedlargely or discussion on a series ofruestiens propounded to the RapidTransit Company by Chairman Forbes.

(Continued on. page four) V.',

Llcui Is FavoredBy Capt. Llatsona. T: f. nr.jus L.UIST s iname

Letter to E. D. Tenney Says HeLikes This Title for New

Matsonia Now Building

. Thatvthe name of the new Matson

1

Iron Works, San, Francisco, will v bethe Maui Is considered : quite likely.In view of the fact that Capt. William Matson, president of the Matscn.Navigation Company, favors thisname. .; , ; .

Capt Matson wrote jne a few daysige that he favored naming the newstealer,the Maul ssd E. D. Tenney,this morning. "Of course, the namehas not been def.nl tely decided, butl:e reems to think Maul suits him bet--

' Two other steamers of the Matsonfleet . bear Hawaiian names. TheHi Ionian was named after-Hil- andthe Manoa after Manoa Valley in thisc ty. .The Inter-Islan- d has a smalleteemer also named Maui.

Tha new Itndr ilnntlMtlna1 Iia tsen la, altiiough slightly larger, will beready for use In January, 1917. Previrus reports were that she wouldlie named Maklki, but Capt. Matron'sletter ind cates otherwise.

: : --4I Additional and overnight tela-- I

I graph news oh Page 9. , , - J

'

NEW YORK STOCKMARKET TODAY

Following are the closing prices ofstocks on the New York market to-tia- y,

sent by the Associated Press overthe Federal Wireless:

Today, dayAiasKa uoia . . . i: 4

! American Smelter V. 91?4 83' 2I American Sugar Rfg. . . . 107! 2 106American Tel. Tel.... 1Z7 1Z7?American Copper 81 774Atchison 1C2 10O'aBaldwin Loco. 87 '8 86Baltimore dL Ohio...... 84 83'Bethlehem Steel ...... . 429 420Calif. Petroleum ....... 21 i 21',Canadian Pacific ...... 164' 2 163

CM.A St. P. (St. Paul) 92 91',Colo. Fuel t Iron...... 41'4 392Crucible Steel . . . , . . ; . 7B 75Erie Common 33 32General Electric ....... 161'2 159General Motors ........ 405Great Northern Pfd.... 119 118',,Inter. Harv N. J..V ... 110V '2 110Keonecott Copper . .... 53 52Lehigh R. R. ...... . . 75 75New York Central 1014 100iPennsylvania .......... W2 56Ray Conail 222 228Southern Pacific . ; . . . . 95' 84'.--

Studebakei . . . ..... . . . . 124'2 121 2Tennessee Copper 46J2 44Union Pacific ......... 130!4 129U. 8. Steel ............ 82'2 80aU. 8. Steel Pfd..., J16'2 116'iUtah 79V 77s4l.f A I I f - A A MAIninem union ........ oWestlnghouse ......... 56', .54

Bid. fEx-dlviden- d. tUnquoted.

villa o;:ce ,;ore

ELIKG PURSUIT?

AnocUtea Prra fey Ftdaral WlrmlMilSAN ANTONIO, Tex, April 24.

uen. vuia. snahtlv wounded, Is reported to have been seen nearthe little Mexican villaoe of Nomoava.en route to the mountains northwestof Parra!. Gen. Funaton believea thatthe information la authentic, and ifso, the outlaw leader has placed aconsiderable distance between himselfand the head pf Gen. Pershing's col-umn, which le south of ParraL-- .w," m mm ? '

lose r.i'cor.iBs

IN PARTY JOB

National Chairman Will QuitActive Leadership After i

; St. Louis Convention r j

AaseeUUd rrwa fey rdral Wlrelastl fWASHINGTON, D. C. April 24

William F. McCombs, chairman of theDemocratic national committee andmanager of Woodrow Wilson's cam-paign -- for president, has notified thepresident that he will be unable tocontinue In his party office after theSt. Louis convention. The president,in his reply, expresses much regretthat the party is to lose McComb'sactive leadership. Fred Lynch, nation-al committeeman for Minnesota, is ex-pected to succeed McCombs, who willenter a law partnership. :

AID HURTS MiliMoeUUd tttu fey ratrl wiralcul :

LOS ANGELES, CaU April 24.Three persons were killed today andfour very badly burned by an explo-sion in the Pacific Reduction Com-pany 'a plant for burning the city gar-bage. '.- ;

NO DAT.1AGE DONE

(AModaUd TTu fer YMaral Wtrlwa1SAN DOMINGO. April 24 An earth-

quake occurred here today ' but didno damage. ' ":

WASHINGTON, D. April 24.The jumping of needles today on theseismograph recording drum here In-

dicated an earthquake shock.

Gen. Cecil A. Lyon, progressive na-tional committeeman, died at Sher-man, Texas, after an illness of severalweeks. - ;;.

The navy collier Sterling, carryingsupplies to the gunboat Des Moinesand supplies for the relief of the Jewsla Palestine, arrived at Naples.

ITS BABY WEEK IN HONOLULU ANDHERE'S A FUTURE "BETTER CITIZEN

'

O : - ---"Better Babies, Better Citizens' is the slogan of the public-spirite- d men and women who have worked

for weeks arranging the detailsof Baby Week. Herewith is shown a bright-eye- d and chubby Americani . youngster who should grow op into a mighty fine citbzen.

STRIKING EXHIBITS ID BOOTHS

Paiama Settlement Transform- -'

ed in "Station"; Mothers: Bring Infants Galore

Baby Week in Honolulu ia on.The Time Aprli 24-3- 0.

The Place Paiama Settlement.The Baby Hundreda of 'em.

At'l. o'clock this afternoon. BabyWeek opened at "Baby Headquarters"at Paiama Settlement, corner of Kingand Lilifia streets. Babies of aU sizesand colors with their fond mothersw.ere waiting 1 to be examined. Someof them are being entered In the contest and some come' merely, for thebenefits to be derived from the exam-ination irrespective of the contests orprizes...;';

The three large downstairs ciudrcoms and game rooms of the Settle-ment have been converted Into restrooms, dressing room, measurementand exam!naiNn rooms Each babygoes through the following routine:

Dental examination before undressing; mental examination! eye, ear,nose, and throat; and then1 Is disrobedto have its measurements taken andthe general physical examinationmade. Each baby perhaps will re--

qulre only about 20 minutes.Elfcht Principal Booths.

Upstairs the entire gymnasium nasbeen turned into an exhibition room.There are eight principal booths, asfollows: Play, Dairy, Eye and Ear,Dental, Anti-Tuberculos- Feeding andCleaning, Clothing, and Home-Mad- e

Furniture.The ulav booth contains many draw

ings, picture mats, Toys and oy storemade by cnildren of rhe Free Kinder-garten clatses in drawing, cutting,pasting and constructive work.

In the . dairy section displays aremade to show improper, unclean dairyand milk conditions, and - in direct,forceful contrast, what has been donein improving dairy conditions and in-

suring pure milk supply, at all times a'most important if not tne cnier problem of the whole baty welfare pro--gTaml The largest number of graphiccharts are to be seen in the Eye andEar booth. These illustrate many ofthe diabases of these 'two Importantsense organs. The lettering and illustrating of these pleasing and instruct-ive chaita was done by the pupils ofthe Normal School under the directionof Mrs. Marshall.How to Save Eyes.

The Maternity Home has a chart Inwhich It states that of 138 babies bornthere during one 3ear, every one wastreafei at birth with a solution of ar-gyr- ol

or nitrate of silver for the eyes,and not ope of the babies so treatedsuffered with any soreness of the eyes.

The Children's Hospital chart- - an-nounces that its service to babies isfree. ind that no child is ever refusedadmittance.

There are two attractive little sickbeds, natural size, with large dolls foroccupants, showing all the proper fix-

ings, nnd loaned to the committee bythe Misses Muriel, Margery and EthelWakefield of Pacific Heights. A pret- -

(Continued on pge two)

CHILD WELFARE

PROGRAM FDR TODAY,TOMORROW, BABY WEEK

TODAY. ;

1:20 p. m. Cars leave Emma streetfor Paiama Settlement. '

430 p. m. Cars leave Paiama Set-tlement for Emma street.

1 to 5 p. m Examination of Ba-

bies'. "'- - .';.1 to 5:30 p. mr-Exhi-bita.

2 to 2:30 p. :m Demonstration:Infant Feeding," by Mrs. V; Genoves.

2:30 to 3:30 p. nv --Lecture andconference, conducted by Dr. Li, inChinese. '

.' , '

3 to 3:30 p. m. Translations of lec-

tures in Settlement' House. .

4 to 4:30 p. m. Demonstration:"Bathing the Baby," by Miss Sillito ofthe Maternity Home.' 4 p. m. "Prenatal Care," lectureby Dr. A. G. Hodgina. ':

7 to 9 p. m. Exhibits,7:15 to 7:30 p. nv Music in charge

of Mr. French of Punahou School.7:30 to 8:15 Lecture in English,

and slides under the direction of theAnti-Tuberculo- Bureau.

TOMORROW.1:20 p. m. Cars leave Kamehameha

IV road for Paiama.'4:30 p. m. Crs leave Paiama for

Kamehameha IV road.1-- 5 p. m. Examination of babies.1- -5:30 p. m Exhibits.2--2:30 p. "Feed-

ing of Older Children," by Miss JanetDewar of Kauikeolanl Children's Hos-pital. . :. ' ...

'

..

2:30 p. m. Lecture, "Care of Childat Firth and After," by Miss Jesse Raeof Pacific Sanitarium.

3--3:30 p. m. Translation of lecturesin Settlement House.

4--4:30 p. "FirstAid to the Baby,", by Miss Janet De-wa- r.

'...'....-.;'.- :

4 p. m. Lecture, MCa re of Child atBirth and After," by Dr.' Mori.

7-- 9 p. m Exhibits7:157:30 p. mr-Mus- Ic by Arthur

Hudson of Mills school.7:30-8:1- 5 p. mT-Lectuf- in Japa-

nese and slides under direction ofAnti-Tuberculo- sis Bureau.

CHARTER INFORMATION,

IS SUPPLIED BY CLERK

- Information relative to the charterconvention held last, fall will be fur-nished to Interested persons by W. J.Coelho, clerk of the convention, be de-

clared today. A number of inquirieshave come to the Star-Bulleti- n regard-ing the transactions of the conven-tion and the form of charter drafted.Mr. Coelho has heard of these and to-

day asked that it be. announced thathe is willing; to furnish any informa-tion wanted.

He can be reached at the office ofthe land commissioner, Capitol build-ing, telephone number 1211. '

A bill was introduced In the housedirecting Secretary Lane to operateoil lands still held by the government,and sell the - product in the openmarket.

99

YUAK'S FUTURE

New Premier Willing He ShouldRemain President But As-

semblymen Say No

Associate Press by Federal WlrelMiPEKING, China, April 24. Tuan

Chi Jul, the new premier of Chinaand former minister of war, gave outa statement today in which he declar-ed that the first task of the cabinetwill be to restore tranquility t thetroubled republic, harmonize the war-ring factions and unite for Industrialand social progress.

Referring to the stand taken by therebel factions, he said, that the de-

mands of Tsai Ao, the rebel leader,are "very reasonable." It has alreadybeen stated that Tsai Ao declared thatYuan could remain president but musthave a new cabinet and one morethoroughly representative of republi-can principles than the present.

Full power is to be given the cab-inet under the new regime, it is em-phasized. .Only questions of the great-est importance will be ; referred toYuan. The military matters will behandled largely by' the under ministerfor war.

The state co'uncii is dissolved un-

der the new plan and the cabinet Isto direct a parliamentary electionwithin three months. The new parlia-ment Is to promulgate the new Chi-nese constitntion.

The cabinet was completed todaywith the following additions:

Minister of finance Sun Pao ChLEducation Chang Ku Khan.Commerce Ching Pang Ping.Justice Chang Tsung ljsiang.Tbe chief of the army general staff

Is Gen. Wang Shih Chen.

rAsioclAted ss tj FMaral WlrelattlSHANGHAI, phfna, April 24. Two

hundred and sixteen members of theNational Assembly today adopted aresolution denouncing PresidentYuan's mandate to the cabinet, andrefuse to accept any solution of thesituation with Yuan as president.

COMMITTEE T() PROBEELECTION SQUABBLE

Investigation of the so-call- "fraud"in connection with the Democratic di-rect primary elections held on Maula week ago . last . Saturday probablywill be begun tomorrow, according toJohn H. Wilson, national committee-man. Mr. Wilson says that AttorneyEugene Murphy of Wailuku and taemembers of tho Maui county commit-tee intend to leave for Hana tomor-row to probe the squabble in lhat dis-trict and at Paia. A report on the in-vestigation probably will not reachHonolulu on til the end of this week,he adds.

Major Robert W. Hunter, a prom-inent Confederate veteran, jonrnallstand lawyer, died in Washington,aged 73. ": .:.:' ,'-:- ;M

wHETEIElI BEEILirJ WILL YIELD

cid JTMniiPHTn .MrcTmrnnnrtI fill LIvUUUII I U

OF nOlPROBLEfJATICflL

WASHINGTON OVER INTIMATION THATWILL GO TO GREAT TO PRESERVE RE

LATIONS COMPARATIVE

IliLLI

U. S.

HOPEFUL GER-

MANY LENGTHS

rnuiMi iuumi ;

fAssociated Press Service by Federal Wireless.WASHINGTON,-1- ( April 24. Vague but unmistakable indi-

cations that Berlin is preparing to make certain concessions to thei 11 1 1 1 u t.'iauo ut'vii iitv iiuunioisituation more hopeful in offieialthe Ainpripflii note, virtnnllv anGerman government.

Confidentially, Ambassador Gerard has cabled from Berlin guard-ed hiuts that these eoneessions have been indicated to him, but is'Uncertain, it is understood, whether they go Tar enough to. meet theperemptory requisites set forth by the Ignited States. V

Officials here are, however, plainly hopeful. It is intimatedamong those in authority that Germany will go great lengths to pre- -

on uiiiiiaiij niruun inauuii.i vviiii iiic uuiiru oiaiva., : l lie iinjrial government is anxious to avoid a break at tins time, and mayauaiiuuu some 01 ine oojeciionaoie ieaiures 01 us unuer-se- a campaign.

Ambassador Gerard got this impression of a spirit of concession!from his conference with Dr. von Jagow, the German secretary forforeign affairs.

German Press Would Not Yield to U.S.BERLIN. Germany, April 24. The lateness, with which the text

of the note was received by the German press precluded extended,ommeut, but one leading paper, the Zeitung Mittag (Midday News),immediately announced the German intention hot to agree to theAmerican terms.

4

"The German nation is thoroughly united in a firm resolve notto let the submarines, the weapons of necessity, be wrenched fromour hands," says this paper. "We will continue to use them as wehave, according to the principle of justice and of humanity. "Wowill continue to use them h the, future as in the past, because thoyeryexistence of the state and the future of our wives and childrenare at stake and compel us to strike where we are able."

. Jhe Zeitung M it tag acknowledges with xpressions of.regret thattlie "politicians' of the United States have abandoned their neutrality.

Lul in VesI; French Trying GrenadesPARIS, France, April 24. There is a comparative 1 nil today in1

the fighting cn the west front,and particularly around the torntrenches and battered earthworks is the slackening of thefierce artillery fire and bloody infantry charges noticeable.

The French, by a series of hand grenade attacks, have made someprogress northwest of Caurettes.

- ! BERLIN, Germany, April 24. Several attacks were made todayon the German positions in tlie Verdun sector, but all were renulsed.

Hostile 'Plane Overabove

openedin it, machine

CABLEGRAMS

FRIDAY'S SITUATION.GERMAN April

21. Meuse Violent engage-ments m connection strong

of sides. Westof river strong French forces attackedMorthomme and attack generally

heavy losses to enemy.French entered small trench in dis-trict of Forest Les for

continues. On right ofMeuse endeavors to take backlost quarry farm Haudremontwere completely without success.South of Douacmont hand toband which started duringnight, on some French trenches, hasnot yet finished 4 Germany's strongconcentrated fire brokeat its beginning a renewed hostile

attack against German lines.At Verdun as heretofore there was

lively artilleryaeroplane fell into

Fumin forest southwest of Vaux.East front: Near

northwest Duenaburg, Inunsuccessful attack of about

one regiment suffered considerablelosses. General Bothmer'a German airsquadrons shelled profusely railroadconstruction work at withbombs.

Balkan front: German ; at-tacked Varadar valley and west of the

were there were French troops,i SATURDAY.

GERMAN April22. British , positions

by our troops on Ypres noad.British reconquered about a thirdpart. Both sides of the canal

we sprang successfully severalmines. Enemy's fire against andRoye caused further victims amongpopulation. At Roye shells killed twowomen and one child wasIn Argcnnes French posts on , the

of ; Lafille Morte was destroy-ed, by blasting. ' Our troopsone large crater before our front. Westof Mease ' the French repeated their

ULIIIIUIU j

he

LULL RECORDED ON WEST

nit u in ac iku ic it 1111 1 st n v

today than at time sinceultimatum, was desnatchiMl'to the

Dover, Driven

efforts against Morthomme. Two at--

tain fire from both banks. The thirdattack broke down with, heavy lossesbefore our front. There is bitter hand,grenade fighting about a piece of.trench near Caurettes forest At even-ing a trench occupied by ns ' duringthe night the French reconquered It.East of Meuse during nlgljtactive In combat near quarrysouth of .' Haudremont and south of

duel Is going on night andday Interruption and withextraordinary force. In northwest dis-trict 'of Fresnes In Woevre, Frenchtroops belonging to 154th divisionwere captured. Thla proves that ene-my in sector between Fresnes anda vocourt engaged 38 Infantry divis-ions, of whom after longrest and being replenished by freshtroops, principally thehave been in combat and beat-en. On east front Russian attacksbroke "down again with bloody lossesoefore our southeast ofBrabunowka. ' '

SUNDAY. ."" :'

23. --The trenches which Germans hadconquered along toYpres was evacuated because of un-derground water which made con-struction impossible. About morning-tim- e,

south of St Eloi. an'

. patrols were repulsed .

which preparing fire waanight time against

lines on sides Bapasme road inAioert. xsear Tracyievai an enemy6 laiicu. a uc g3 Liuuu I lii lied back into the French position. Leftof Mecse and. south of Hancourt and

frermana tocAc- piipttiv' tronrhoo .. .Piwht. .Q.. .river and Woevre and on Com--

ous very, lively artillery eagagenents.East front South of Varocz a weakRussian attack of about one battalMonended, on our ..barricades, n

losses were heavy.' Otherv, : i clylocal, of artlllrrr f.'rp nl

LONDON, Eng.; April 24. A hostile aeroplane appearedDover today,, causing ome concern. It dropped no bombs, and aftertheanti-aircraf- t guns had fire and British fliers were goingup the air to attack the hostile turned and flew outfecross the channel. . ..

GERMAN OFFICIAL

HEADQUARTERS,district:

with artil-lery developments both

westrepulsed with

Cauretteswhich fighting

enemy'ssouth

Fortfighting,

artillery downIn-

fantry

very activity-Hostil- e

burning

Cradunovoka,Russians re-

peated

Tarnopol

flyers

town

HEADQUARTERS,attacked con-

quered

Labas-se- e

.

Lens

wounded.

heightsoccupied

circles any

Off

Infantryclose

artillerywlthou!

four divisions

1916 recruits,engaged

obstacles

road Langemarick

English

English afterstronger ad-

vanced Germanboth

elan

increasinzscne patrcrca?aseraents.. . ...

Page 2: I- mmri a Tr TO 1MSE conssiOHs AM KM HASTENS ITS BABY … · 2015. 6. 2. · and exam!naiNn rooms Each baby goes through the following routine: Dental examination before undress ing;

BUSIES MiXM- -

PUBLICITY VIA SUGAR ROUTE.The liakersfleld Echo publishes the

following:Kditor Echo. Dakersfield, Cal.; Do

ytu know that the Hawaiian islands.Uncle Sam's baby territory, and yourtown are now linked by the sweetestthins In the world sugar and above

. U31. sugar grown under sunny skiesIn the Hawaiian islands?

. . The war In Europe, the unfortunate: rlcsing up of the Panama Canal and

The demand for huge icargo changes,liave resulted in a change of route forHawaiian sugar going ito Philadelphiaund NVw York, and listead of being

'arrJed all the way around in shipsOiO.OOO tons a year lll be sent tothese Atlantic porta by way of the:?anta Fe railway;

Each big ship which leaves Hono-lulu and other Hawaii ports carriesnbout 13,000 ton's of sllgar. Can you

'imagine how many freight cars Ittakes to carry a 13,000-tor- i cargo otr,ugar. each bag of sugar containing125 pounds? . It will take about 300

'freight cars and practically every onetf these freight cars will pass through?our town. Y-"- '

So that is how these beautiful Havrvaiian islands, the all-- y ear-roun- d tour-ist playground, where mid-summ- andmidwinter are much alike;, where thewireless and cable, paved streets, up-to-da- te

newspapers, dally ocean swim-ming and unsurpassed climate, makeua the first stopping place la the "SeeAmerica First" movement '

With best aloha," we remain, verytruly yours,HAWAII PROMOTION COMMITTEE,

A. P. Taylor, secretary.Honolulu, Hawaii, U. S. Av March

20, 191C.'

HONOLULANS FINANCE ARIZONAJAINE.

The'Tlpperary at: Oatman Is get-read- y

to start work on its shaft andwill soon have it goln toward the700-fo- ot point. Morel & France, whoare heavily interested In the company,received a wire yesterday from theirSan Francisco agents stating that ablock of 100.000 shares of the stockhad been taken over by Honolulu peo-

ple. The selling of this and other' large blocks of the stock oT the cora- -

pany will furnish ample money forextensive work. Kingman (Ariz.)

'Miner. '. :

, PINEAPPLES SCARCE.' SANTA MONICA, Cal. There is ascarcity of pineapples in this marketand the price baa been advanced to 8

cents a pound.The scarcity or pineapples is due tc

the inadequate' shipping facilities and1 ilecrcarnd. enthusiasm of the Southern; wb are not sending in their

juodut-- t as heavily as they have been.Jjast year about this time the Pa-iCiX- ic

Coast was flooded with plne-- v

apples due to the efforts-- of the ter-ritorial government of Hawaii, wn!ch

v undeitcok to " market the pines for' tire growers of that Country. At firstthe woveircnt was good, but the de- -

and gradually fell off. Another rea2 n for the decreased receipts of pine-'

':, apples beie is that a great many ot' ii.e steamers which were chartered

to carry foodstuffs from the HawaiianIplands have been withdrawn fromthe Pacific and are now carrying

'munitions in the Atlantic ;

The territorial government's effortswere , centered on the Pacific Coastbecause this Js the logical, markej fotthe Hawaiian pineapples. The Mid--

- d.e West and East are supplied byi Florida mostly. .

According to local dealers, the grow

: KtiNXETH ALEXANDER- r -y :

PortraitsSittings by appointment 4682.

- 424 Beretanla St -

Kssfs offinest

l

Metropolitan

ers of Hawaii can make more mdneyby canning their pineapples on theisland than they can by shipping tiofresh fruit to this : market, becausethere is a great loss of the fresh pine-apple in transit Santa Monica Out-look. "

PROGRESS OF OAHU, ;

John McCandless, a director of thePacific Gas and Electric Company ac 1

a governing force in the Oahu Planta-tion' Company, said yesterday; thatthe production of the plantationwould be increased from 30.000 tonsto 45,000 tons in the next two years.The company has a cash surplus of$2,000,000, with only $5,000,000 ofstock outstanding. McCandless saidthat an extra dividend disbursementwas merely a matter of a relativelyshort time. San Francisco Examiner.

: The good business Judgment asm

shown by the large Hawaii .cannedpineapple packer ;jot opening the sea-son's pack at Ww prices is witnessedin the fact that this stock held nowis far less than several seasons atthe corresponding time. The stocksIn first and second bands are not only-ligh- t

but the incoming pack will heless than last year, which places thegeneral condition on a sound basis.San Francisco Commercial News.'

COLD MilIN MOUNTAINS

HILO REPORTS

Special Star-Bulleti- n Corresnondence.HILO, Aprfl 21.-R- . T. Guard hav--n- g

gone to Honolulu for a few daysgave W. H. Shipman the opportunityof bringing Dr. Shutte, the managerof the famou Puu"Oo ranch, to townfor a few days in order to relieve Mr.Guard. Dr. Shuttee was warmly wel-comed by his many friends and hehad some stories to tell of the extremecold weather that has been . experi-enced at the ranch during the past fewmonths. ' '

"The glass went down to freelinglast week, and even at 6 in the morn-ing it has been registering around 3or so," said the ranch manager theother day. It was really cold earlyin 'the mornings and there was a snarto everything that made one. feelalive." --..'''' r-:! : , ':

The manager brings down theri-po- r

.that Mokuaweoweo was "smck-ing-'last' week and that the vapcr

from the crater was plainly seen fromthe ranch house, which is directlyacross the uiountiin side frJrti thehugrf pit No sign of activity has beenobserved frpnx Hilo, but then the PuuOo ranch headquarters Is' much closerto the crater. ?

. '.According to the rancir manager the

cattle are looking well on his runand there is plenty of grass. Waterdoes not trouble him much, as thou-sands of head of cattio never, toucha drop' of water. They live on cacti,which has moisture in it and alsoobtain enough water to keep them ingood health from the heavy dews thatfall on the mountain.

? There 'was some excitement at tha'ranch house last week when a partyor iaas attempted to scale MaunaLoa They got up most of the waybut the snow then Dlocked themi Asthey did not return to the ranch be1tare, dirk' It was thought that I theywould'Jbi cAit all night, but at 8:30 orso" th e hoys made ; their way to thd.ftOUsCaftdj: all was well. Revolverahots gave them an ldsa of which di-rection to travel for..- -

" 'j' '

STAR-BULLETI- N GIVES YOUTODAY'S NEWS TODAY. ;

to

Hlarket

Tender, fine-flavor-ed Patker Ranch beef, lamb,

hjutton, veal and pork of the choicest cuts, thatalways give the utmost satisfaction, are amongthe good things that we have to offer; also a

'

consignment of' Lehua' Butter California 7Clieese and delici6ua fresh Salmon and Halibut; --

Phone orders (3445) receive prompt attention.Deliveries to all parts o'f the city. . f

at

Don't Leave the Iclando! r: . Cntn In Hin Sen ' : ,' ; " :

. KAUAtf .

'

'. ;,THE GARDEN I8LAND." I

Special parties made np fo r four-da- y trip at rery reasonable rates

; '3 ;; : ASK- nHALKUimmediately. , . ;

Alexander Young Hotel Phone 1234

HONOLULU STAB BULLETIN, MONDAY; APRIL 24, 1910.

t The members of the federal grandjury have been notified to be in courtat 10 o'clock next Monday morning.

A meeting of the members of St.Andrew's guild auxiliary will be heldat 3 o'clock" tomorrow afternoon atthe residence of Mrs. A. A. Young,Victoria and King btreets.

The direct examination of KimHong,- .plaintiff in a $21,500 damagesuit against th'; Inter Island steamerClaudine, was taken in federal courtSaturday.

Building permits, all under $4000but one, totaling $31 .203 in estimatedvalue of the buildings to be erected,were Issued last week. The $400 per-

mit was for alterations to the Schu-mann Carriage Company's garage.

Waking to find a prowler in hisroom at midnight last Friday, Dr. E.P. Varvel, acting dental surgeon atSchofield Barracks, fired three shotsat the intruder. The man escaped,however, running up a gulch nearthe house.

Transcript of the evidence at theHilo hearing of the public .utilitiescommission oh the Hilo Traction Com-pany's amendments to its franchisedid not arrive on the Mauna Kea Sat-urday morning as expected and con-sequently there was no meeting ofthe commission that afternoon.

The president and members of theboard of directors cf the HawaiianBoard of Missions have consented toilluminate the new Mission Memorialbuilding on King street tomorrowevening for the lecture to be givenby Prof. Vaughan MacCaughey underthe auspices of the Outdoor Circle.The lecture will deal with the beiiu-tlflcatio-

of American cities. On thesame evening the building will beopen for Inspection by the public. ,

WILL TEST GERMANS IN

v AMERICA, SAYS JAPANESE

Stating that the German-American- s

in the United States should stand byUncle Sam in case of trouble withthe fatherland, M. Kakehi, editor ofthe Friendta Japanese Journal, In aninterview appearing in the NIppi JijIpoints out what he believes is a differ-ence between loyalty among the Ger-mans and Japanese.

On this point the Japanese says: "itis right for them to seek to check hos-tilities between the United States indtheir fatherland. But when this failsthey' must fulfil their sworn alle-giance to the nation of their adoption,regardless of consequences. WoJapanese people are proud to be thedescendants of patriotic ancestors.Let us see whether the Germans willbe like us. The pride of the knightsin ancient Japan was to fight whennecessary, even against parents,brothers or sons, as they believed thattheir ; lives belonged to the lord towhom they had -- sworn fealty. '

"Some Americans fear the Japanesepeople simply because we are too pa-

triotic, but if they understood the trunature of Japanese patriotism theywould welcome us. Yet a Japanesowho had struggled for 20 years to be-

come a good American citizen recentlywas denied the right of, naturaliza-tion," he concluded. .

I DAILY REMINDERS

Round the Island In auto, 14.00Lewis Stables. Pbone.2141.Ad.! Exclusive corset shop, "The Good-win," rms. 21-2- 2, Pantheon bids. Adv.

Don't forget the big clearing saleat Canton Dry Goods Co Haltel street,near Fort. Big bargains In women'sshoes and msn's furnishing. Adv'

"Btta of Verse from Hawaii,." adainty book' of Terse collected andpublished by C D. Wrieht, Is on saleat all leading book stores and curiostores. It makes an interesting souve-nir of the Islands. Adv. -

Fishermen in the Pocono Mountainssay that conditions have, seldom been

better for. the spring trout season.

Hotel St.Ewa ofFort

BETTER ROADS

FOR IIMI WILL

DRAW TOURISTS

Promotion Committee ReturnsFrom Garden Island Trip

Enthusiastic

"We can tell them how to get therv.We can also tell them what to seenow," s2 id Albert P. Taylor, secre-tary of the Hawaii Promotion Com-mittee, today in talking on the trip .

t to-- Kauai made by the committee lastweek. "The committee now has anidea of ail of the beauties of theIslands and the island visits havebeen a great help to the members inhandling the work.

' Kauai has the good roads fever inevery respect and the citizens of theGaidcn Island are. to be congratulatedfor their stand in boosting for Im-

proved road conditions. Instead ofthe rutty roads we found "many of thehighways that would rival the best or.the mainland. The roads to Waimea.Hanalei and Lihue are unsurpassedand the people of Kauai are planningon extending the road to the Barkingstands.

"The beach at Haena Is one thatwill some day be better known to thetourists. With a long, sandy beach,clear water and not' a suspicion ofccral, it is certain to take Itsplace with tiie iamous bathing beachesof the world. This is an ideal placefor a summer outing.

"Everyone was Impressed with thebeautiful "gardens at Kukuilono whichhave teen-- developed by Walter Mc-Bryd- e.

Joseph du Frenes describedthe garden as a marvel of landscap-ing. There are many beautiful spotson the island, among them being theSpouting Horn of Koloa, the WallvaFalls and the Waimea Canyon.

"Members of the Hawaii PromotionCommittee urged the Kauai Chamberof Commerce to be active in workingTor the tourist trade to Kauai, and asthe members on the Garden Island. ireall boosters, it is certain that Kauaiwill , become a great tourist center.Altogethr the work in building up isprogressing, and whence once thesteamship landings are complete theKauai people will be satisfied.

"Chairman Emil Berndt made'oiieof the best promotion : talks beforethe Kauia Chamber of Commerce thfcthas ever been presented in Hawaii.He explained the. idea of promotionand stated how the people could workto give the tourists satisfaction. Hisaddress was made in an enlighten ii gand forecful manner.

"When any point comes up duringthe" meetings in regard to one of tteislands the members will not have ahazy idea, as before, but can Handlethe subject in an intelligent manner.Now that we have made a trip to allcf the islands, the work in promotionwill surely be ..improved," he con-cluded.

- MORNING ON 'CHANGE

Hcnokaa was the special featurein the tradingat todayV session of theHonolulu Exhangeysales of thatstock aggreaitlngyftlmost one-hal- f ofthe total tramsnpflons at the session.All of these Wfe at the uniform priceof 512.50. Reports from the mainlandwere, to the effect that there were anumber of transactions in Honokaa atSan Francisco. ,

Trading was generally of consider-able 'volume and prices remainedsteady and firin with few advances.

Sales at the session and betweenboards 'aggregated In excess of 6600

'shares. '

.

purehased the Baltimore Sheet & Tin !

Plate Company, a 13,000,000 enter-prise.:',;.;:.'

Fire Commissioner Adamson report-ed 419 fewer fires In New York eitv

I during March last than in March,-1915.

Don'tThereGen

D C

ALOHA!What To See

(For the benefit of tourists and ar-rivals from the mainland, the Star-Bulleti- n

publishes a brief directory ofa few of the scenic and historical at-tractions of Hawaii. Additional de-

tails will be given on inquiry at therooms of the Hawaii Promotion Com-mittee in the Alexander Young hotelbunding.)Take Waikikl Car.

Aquarium.Surfing and bathing at WalkikL

Take Kalihi Car.Bishop Museum, cally except Wed-

nesday.Fort Shatter.Moanalua Gardens.

Ten Minutes' Walkfrom Business Center.

Old Royal Palace.Old Throne Room.Old Ccral Church.Old Mission House.King Lunalilo's Tomb.Washington Place.

Outside the City. -

Walks In Tantalus Hills.The Pall, by motor.Coral Gardens, 12 miles by auto,

daily.Ha lei wa Hotel, by motor or railWahiawa Hotel, by motor or raitPearl Harbor, naval station.

On Other Islands.Volcano via Hilo, by steamers

Wednesday and Saturday.Haleakala on Maul, by steamer,

Wednesday, Saturday, Mondayand Friday.

Waimea Canyon, Kauai, by steam-er. Monday. Tuesday. Thursday.

INVESTIGATION INTO

MAUI GROUNDING IS--

'DELAYED ONCE MORE

further delay in the federal investi-gation Into the grounding of the Inter-Islan- d

steamer Maui as she was leav-

ing the harbor last week has resultedbecause of an indisposition sufferedby Capt, William Howe, U. S. inspect-or of hulls, who has, not been able tocome to his office since last Wednes-day. .

"We will begin the Investigation assoon as Capt. Howe is able to returnto his duties," said Thomas J. Heeney,U. S. inspector of boilers, this morn-- ,

ing. The Maui is now at Hilo, plyingbetween that port and other Hawaiiports, working with the Kalulani intransporting sugar from ' Big Islandports to Hilo. - !

EVERYTHINGss- -

0App

is one of your greatest as- - :

sets in every department

of life. Don't mar it with

,old fashioned glasses. The

new models of glasses add ;

a charm to everv face.

s 'Sniii t nntirnTDTV

Vvv Optical Department Kt'J

,i 'J ' :

you can

, Standing in the sKtlight of puLlic interest, the Bahywill occupy the center of Honolulu's Mage all this week.

Nothing is so vital to the interests of a as thegood health of its babies. Nothing will aid so quickly"

in bringing aluuit that general good health 'as the ureHaby Foods, the Bath Accessories and Toilet Articles

-- now on display in our big store.

BABY WEEK

Our regular 15c a cake Castile Soap,' allthis 3 for 25c

&The Eexall Store "Sen-ic- e Every Sooond"Fort and Hotel Streets . Phone 1297

Open Until 11:15 P.M.

BsihyWeek

our

fir fi f ? -

Fort Street

Is

Pay Any MoreAre

J.

M I

: ; ' the coming function let us suggest to you' some of our fancy .ice in or, let us

out your v

- -- Callin at the 1542person factory or or

Better- -

uine Labelled

community

No

Benson, Smith Co., Ltd.

Note windowdisplay

Jap

IE

misuggestion.'

Honolulu Dairymen's Association

in

week cakes

C

Tox socialcreams brick form

workring 4676.

I! J U3

Opp. Church

. " r

of

;

. ... .,

andEaster

Just in, via S.-S- . Wllhelmlna, a large, personally selected rarietof Easter Novelties, such as chicks, rabbits, etc.; also a wonderfulassortment of low pottery bowls, which are so popular at presentfor table centers, and a large variety of colored birds that may beattached to any bowl or 'rase. "

Bowls are priced from. $1.00 to $10XO eachBirds are priced from 5 to 2X0 eachChicks and Rabbits from .............. 10 to 5 each

.

and StripedThe material and tailoring to any

SPECIAL

.. 'i . J " . ' ' ' ,

Ice

aura

MeMm

BazaarCatholic

House" Popular

Prices

FLOWER HOLDERSother

Novelties;

Plainequal

'm noUJtorHousEVAfiis",i'53;65j0fiS STREET.KOm'OLULU

7

i. '

--A

Page 3: I- mmri a Tr TO 1MSE conssiOHs AM KM HASTENS ITS BABY … · 2015. 6. 2. · and exam!naiNn rooms Each baby goes through the following routine: Dental examination before undress ing;

FOUTi

RILEY H. ALLEN

f i

4. HU'l. 'xrlv' ru-l- bavr vntd

LAYING THE POWDER-TRAIN- S.

" ".: i

.All ll(HJu! I in- - I' J.llrii;m (' the M'!iat''V1'lIMiailJUMU

Al'IJIL

1 fur tin final pa-a- i- of tho; Kiti li m

iitinr to'iM-a- J l.ill ou Saturday, they haveflit, nhud the foundation for a viM'v met

pu

lift Wk tlfrbton t!i administration next' fall, wluiijtlu' Jk-litir- nl

c;ajift;iisi "i at it 1 1 u 1 1 j - i1 1 i f v i i i

b'Sl.1. l. tl, .. I?,',,. nl, 1 T ... w 1im it imi iliA ' 1 ' I H I 111 11,1 inv. hi jMi.ni' iui-- i MM ' I ..

lJxiiinM iiit on' KM-ou- l a- - saying that while aduty f l..'U 1 1 1 a pound on sugar is iniqiii-i- .

. ..:.. ..r 1 note t.tr'trfor ivvenuo onlv. In other words, a reductionof one quarter, has made the. difference-betwee-

Kejuibliean mid Deinoernjie dot-trine- . The fig- -

Uies alMr are. oi euiirse, mose ior, i nnausugars, the Cuh.-i-s narticiilnrlv affecting the do- --mestir market. ...'.:'

II was during the MMiatc debates that Demo

crats went on rceoid as standing by the rent -- alw'intiil r?it it tnrifT fur rivnnm milv The IN- -1 '7 .

publicans also laid powder-train- s of .troublefor the Democratic, organizations in a numberof states bv iiiakmir it necessary lor the I'our- -

bons to turn down .proposals for protection ofcommodities in these states. Senator l.ixlgiolTennl an amendment to the sugar bill restorin?: the duties on all dyestulTs. His amendmentwould place on foreign dyestuffs the duty ratespioposed nome yea is ago by Kepresentative Hillof Connecticut, who was a member of the waysand means committee ami drafted 'a complete.tariff bill, based largely on. the Payne-Aldrie- h

act. 1 1 was tsiij ij orted by the Republicans butrejected by me democrats.

Lodge's action was in line with that ofWorks, who has precipitated a merry contru-vers- v

over the citrus tariff legislation of theWilson reirime. Several other Kepublican members have made proposals for restoration ofuuui' linn UMiinviiiiii; I'limn mii i nw

knew they had lo pa.ss the siiar, bill speedilyr.nd without trimmings, aain to 44 throw downstate, industries. These powder-train- s will betouched off .when the campaign gets fairly un-der'wa- y.

All effortwill bemade to piiti'tlie'na-th)XmV'4)6lVatic!,iraH- hn

the'ulefeWvo, andi:sTthe JJepiiblicans Uave thus far shown" them-

selves mlisters of the Democrats at tfiis kind ofpolitical htatwraft, theeffort will probably besuccessful. r

The Wilson administration has been ham-mered from the start oirthe score that it wasinimical to business even, to legitimate busi-ness. Tlie cry .will be redoubled in- the cam-p- a

ij?i, and the parliamentary ski nnishes whichpreceded last Saturday's vote on the sugar bill

J'epublicans will burl into the opposite trenchesabout next September.1 :

'- :

'GLASS HOUSES AND STONES.

If Francisco Mollina, the Spanish murdererif Hawaii has1 the sense .'of. jiumor, wMtlF vnich

he lias been ertnlited, he must have been laugh-ing for months- - at the fruitless attempts of theHig "Island police to catch! him. Twice jfin.eelie hot, and, killed a Portuguese watchman: at

, Xa a le 1 1 u a n & m ad e hi s esca pe h a s )! ol 1 i na beenarrested for minor offenses and neither' timedid the police recognize in him the desperadoto capture whom there had been talk of yailiugout the national guard." v;

4 .""'''J

Mollina is iiow foiind in Hookena jail, wherehe has leen for three inonths of a sentence; pitassault: Previously he' was arrested at Wal-me- a

for carrying a concealed weapon, fined $15and allowed to go. At the same time, placardswere tip' in WaimeaJ.describing the man andoffering a. reward for his arrest. Kitheti thedescription was so badly off as to leworthless,or the police authorities were in a state ofcoiya. .

'"'--;'-v-''.';- V".'.:,

Honolulu should not, however, indulge inany large, ainount of ridicule at the shortcom-ings of police elsewhere. We have sufficientclumsiness of 'our own. The chances are allagainst the murderer ever being rccbgnizedhad he Ihcii in a.local lock-up- . X '"sample oflack of gi-a-

y matter here is the bringing ofchargesagainst four .police- officers l)efore tlieciviPservice commission .as. aJesuit of appar-ently conflicting testimony fin police court.Followed a confusionof incidents, which shouldhave been straightened out either by the sheriffas the head )f the department,, or by the prose-cuting attorney after the conflict of witnessesin jolice court became apparent. Instead, thematter went to the civil service commission andafter some aimless - discussion was referredback to the sheriff for investigation. Thewhole occurrence was needless- - and half an

r!inr' lnMiir brought at all.

Hit'

M )X I )A Y. APHTL 24, 1016.

tiie

TIk Hawaii case serve again to direet attnto mif growing evil in .the territory tin

rallying roneeald weapon.

EOXOTrcr STAR-BULLETI- N,

etir-litMi- tt

EDITORjicrjtiry

a

n

a

a

a

NEW RAPID TRANSIT CHARTER PLAN

one orl) Ah- -

ofwmlil no

to tiDiit if tri

slituld le dne in the way of -- ternly repressive;; r.(.pil;ls".';h,.id." lht. J,r).,ls.M' ,.w

meas1ire airailist thi- - practice. Spanish ; charter t.e raiiful b (Vuur nr- -

. . I the iis ussi n on this i i'tionmurderer va tmed !) ami allwel tojgo. in i;ijmrrlijfs! vin;iIp.s su.ueted!verv cae where a inaii is with deadU ' hat this Mjim-n- t to the ,nd

' ect;nt !e used tor ro;iii-- w;rk. it wasWeapon lurking about ihim, I pulice nilgliti

) aso ir.tinitH! hy the lUiml TransitI. i.i..tio-!- i in ofir:it inn iii i) 1 1 il hi t ( mv. i ttt e t tia t in ease new

. ..

whether he i.

a deperado or a ot some Transit wrnid tohafanAO ' '

. ;Wi;ntr per cent of. inss fr the r 1 ',!'.

or

ths tlie Star Bulletin said before, sooner : nti(:n ciwi'irinan

ye;

later Hawaii has ;ot t take awav tliesei there is litJe donia that the new. ... . tliarter win ie pi'-se- m t oncress

weapons Irom irresponsible liand, ami,long .,...;

ag) ordinar intelligence in police affairs ; Based on utility Buine.lwv- - .i,.,.Ki,t tho van...... .,M.i,.y

jnents to li the indiscriminate of knive gn s reeeipts the utility

and firearms.' How manv murders mut teachthe lesson.'

MAKING OFFICERS IN UNIVERSITIES.

(From the Mir heapolis Journal. t

Tlie awakening of the demand for the mili-

tary training of young is emphasized bythe action of the Fnivcrsitv ot' Michigan, whichhas...never before emulated

-tin

'militarv

.ex- -

ample of her .younger sisters aiming the statejuniversities.

" While the training undertaken at Ann Arboris" to be voluntary, instead of compulsory Mshere, emphasis is to be laid on the fitting. ofyoung tnen to become officers. As nearly aspossible; course at West Point is to be dup-licated. Already the curricula of the variousdepartments jnffcr most. of the studies at theacademy, and 'with the establishment of acourse in military science and the appointmentof an army officer as professor, it is expectedthat young may train himself for a com-mission at Ann Arbor almost as well as at WestPoint.

Michigan, however, ought to put the jinrperf( ni da t i o n u n d er. t h e sc h en 1 e by retpi i r i n g , se r-v-

in the cadet corps from all who enter tliecollegiate departments, f This, indeed, was therecommendation of the universitv senate; butitnviuiluaitHl down) by. ibe regents. ; v f i

On the Other Minnesota. may well con-

sider the establishment of a complete militarycourse? for training officers on the Michiganplan by coordinating the various courses val-

uable for that purpose alreadv offered in thescientific and technical-colleges.- Minneapolishas a large ami well-organiz-

ed cadet ' .corpswhich would furnish practical training inmand for those taking the higher militarycourse. .'",

Plans like these illustrate how much may,'and doubtless will, be done br our universitiesto supply the lack of officer material which ishow serious obstacle in the path to nationalpreparedness. ; ,

WILL THEY SWAP?

Xow that the senate has yielded albeit withnone much grace to the house in the niat-te- r

of free suar repeal, what will the house doin the conference, over the armv reorganizationbill!

By "jll odds the ('Uamperlniu bill for that isvirtually what tbe senate passed is preferableto theHay nieasure of the house. The Haymeasure was largely straw and much of it washalt. '"The Chamberlain bill provides for an

adequate army; it has good ideas on the reserve; it deals forcefully with the militia problem. Perhaps the house will take programfrom the senate, especially .since the interna-tional situation is darker now than it was whenthe Hay bill put through. '

.Judging by the inquiries local newspapersrvceive these days Jionolulu is more interestedin the sugar tariff than in a'lwissible war withGermany.;;'' And what chiefly seems to concernthose who ask about the German situation isthat the transportation of Hawaiian sugarmight be disorganized in cae of a break inrelations. Is it pocket patriotism or merelycomfortable belief that somehow i'nele Samwill get past the crisis safely!

Inventions of European scientists for extracting things out of the air. should be inval-

uable to the official announcers.

I Those who talk of China as uncivilizedshould watch how they're working the recallon Yuan.

Carranza seems to regard ours as onlvhour s plumbing 'of . the. facts by an intelligent jitney army, --anyway.

(Continue! from page one)

Viih Lut two vtttions th4Usti 'pt-r- f aiiswerfil in

! It was the opinion t!i- - rxnnniUt'ethat the iialiid Transit !iae

Slliethimr objection (ainR th' it and' 'umti- - li. i .ii-- u!imi:li

Theins

,mraa

thethe ehar- -

ter ..is ratified this vear, tneman '&-' the it y andits

r'lin.ha- - F.ri.es stated that

v

sale tmsi

men

the'.

man

com

too

was

uapiu

gross earn-i- n

fromf iiiJC-t- f thai l?niriil Trunvit i n ! i i n v

the carrying of passengers and freight.Incomes from tlie h.teehall park, aqua-rium and rents .ire not included.

There was orisideralde discussionover a questi m asked hy ChairmanPorbes w hether the Kapid Transitwculd he willinK to give an indemnityhond to the city and county lor theprotection of its streets. ManagerBallentyne wanted to know tlie pur-pose of giving hond. Chairman Forbesanswered that its purpose would heso that the city mipht feel protectedin ease it came to the necessity ofhaving to repair some of the com-pany's work."That is all provided for in our

present franchise' Attorney Welling-ton remarked.Details Talked Over.

Chairman. Forbes asked whether thecompany, in the event of the passnjeeof the franchise, would carry a depre-ciation fund, no part of which shouldbe taken from other funds.

"You mean that the'year's deprecia-tion he put in a cash fund by itself,and that :t apply to" renewals? ' Mi.Feck inquired.

'Rxactly," answered ChairmanForbes., "Tint this fund would notcover repairs. It would be merely areplacement fund. In other words., thefund would .be of a size so that theccmpany would handicapped get

ready FnrhP timents."In the; matter of an

Kiaust: in ine I'nrpusea irancuise uthe. of those territory

clause iaintiff RnM Trninecessary.: There little will taken con- -on this point

Reverting to th. depreciation fund.Chairman stated jtbat all pro-lcse- d

extensions. by; , the companywould be made out Us capital, andnot from its earnings. added thathe not opposed to a depreciationfund sufficient to take care of TO percent of the com anys entire installa-tion.

Regarding the indeterminate clausethe charter might be re-

vised or. entirely asideForbes wanted to

knew if this was favored by the com-pany- 'i

Asked for his opinions. MayorLane declined to .make a statement,saying Jhat he was at the meeting asa citizen, and not as a representative

the board of suiervisors or city,ravors Principle, 6ay3 Peck.

"As to the principle involved, wehave never voiced any disapproval,"

d Mr. Peck. rI am in favor of thetrlnciple of it.''- - .

LctD Chairman Forbes and Mr. Peckthat they did not believe Con-S- i

ess would consider a franchise notcontaining an indeterminate clause.

Chairman Forbes asked whether theccmpany would immediately be?npreparations for proiosed extensionsand improvements' should the new-chart-

er

be fully approved here andsent to Congress.

'Personally," said Mr. Ivers, "I be-liev- e

that the company would bewarranted spending any large sumsof money until it knows h,ow. itstands."

."We had one franchise which wasapproved but which did not gothrough Congress," declared AttorneyWlthington. "It blocked by agentleman who went: before Con-gress." .

Chairman Forbes said that thefeels that the proposed exten-

sions by the company are very ma-

terial, and that it believes they shouldbegin as soon as the new charter goes

before Congress. ,He spoke of sev-era- l

extensions which have been "de-manded" by the publi:.

"What extensions have been de-

manded?" inquiied Manager Ballen-tyne. ;''

"Fort Shafter extension. Liliha ex-

tension, and Kaimuki extension,Chairman Forb?3 replied.Want Assurance for Bill.

Mr. Castle stated that he, felt thedirectors of the tompnny would fa- -

vor any extensions until they knei ofj the action of Congress chi the pro--;

rosed charter, in view of past esjxTi-- jnrics "

j Mr. hers was the opinion that,,j if the coin r any was to carry oit aft

n;-e- extenicns. it would mean anontia or about $"500.fnOr adding thathe did not think the company wouldote to expend that amount until it

"iad some assurance that tlie .franchiseVII would pass Congress.

If riie hill parsed the house, wouldmi thn be willing to :o ahead?"

queried Chairman Forl.es.Improvements Planned.

Manager Uallentyne stated that thecompany p.rohal ly would be willing tonave all projects surveyed, and haveall materials on hand in order to beginimmediate work on proposed exten-sions as soon d.i the bill passed.He add d that such proposed improvemen-

ts-would mean the double-trackin- g

of King street, the Kalihi valleyextension and purchase of about 15new cars. He stated that' the Vaiala extension also has been talkedover

In the matter of paving, it appearedbe the consensus of opinion thu

tiiere would be no trouble in the nat-ter of the transit eempany laying thesame vpe- of pavement on theirtracks as that laid on the respectivestreets.

"We have to do that in conformitywith the law," said Attorney Withing- -

ton' Hut. in some instances it hasn't

been done," parried Chairman Forbes.'1 ttr'nk the company would do it.

if the type of pavement required suited conditions," said Manager Dallen-- t

;. lie.Gfs Power Suggested.

The suggestion was made by Mr.Peck that the proposed new franchiseshould ( on tain tome provision for theuse by the Kapid Transit Company ofgasoline as a motive power. Mr. Peckstated that. In case the plant of thecompany should be destroyed, somesort of a passenger service might bemaintained by the use of gasoline mo-tors. Cars equipped with such motors,lie added, might be used at night forthe transportation of ft eight.

As soon as the first draft of the newcharter is drawn it is the plan of thepublic utilities commission to call ameeting with the committee of theRapid Transit, the supervisors and thepublic to thoroughly go over the newfranchiser Vn ilofinlto fr.- - tl.io

not be j nieetm nas bceQfor money to make any replace-- 1 rhairmnn th,.

following the completion of the new

litiratinn nnw In Ihi an.appeared to be opinion 'preme in the ispresent tht such a be r and th AatanA.

was argument ant probably be up for

Forbes

ofHe

was

set by

of

sa

notin

here,

was

com-mission

up

not

of

was

in

data

tinilinr thpcourt, whIch

would

stated

sideration. One attorney for the RaiId Transit said that he has received noinformation of any- - puriorted actionwhich the. territory may take in thematter. .

;

M. C. PACHECO: I believe thatall this Democratic election pilikia onMaui could be settled by the use oflittle diplomacy.

GEORGE S. 1JVYMOND, school in-

spector: It was a fine program McKin-le- y

high school gave us last week atthe flag' raising exercises.

HORACE W. V AUG HAN: 1

would not be surprised If Judge C. F.demons or myself were transferredto the mainland to "fill In" in Bornefederal circuit during the trial of theDavis case.

KAWAMURA, city editor, NIppuJiji: With Kojl Yamada and WasedUniversity in Honolulu, the Japanefcewill certainly flock to see the Japancse billiardist as he has proven hisworth time and again.

K C. WEBSTER: They wereboys from other-island- s than Oahuwho carried off honors in the militaryprize drill that we held at Kameha-nieh- a

schools. Zoller is from Koloa,Kaiiai, while VIerra is from Hilo, Ha-waii.

C A PT. VI I J.IAM R. FOSTER,harbormaster: Taking care of theships in port isn't the only thine thatkeeps me busy. One day I had to6ee that a lot of rotten cabbage washauled away from Pier 15, where itwas perfuming the waterfront toostrongly.

WILLIAM LARSEN, supervisor:Wlien I start anything I stick to it. Ibelieve a conference between the de-

partment heads and the supervisorswould result in a saving. for the city.Many means of retrenchment wouldbe discovered. 1 am going to keep-hammerin-

at this idea tin. til a confer-ence is held.

A. UICI11.EY, inspector of public

If You ShouldInspect

the handsome Bungalow which we are offering for sale,situate on Wilhelmina IJi.se near Waialae Koad yonwould admit that it offers ood value for the price asked

$3400.00

Guardian Trust Co., Ltd.Stangenwald Building

Telephone 3688.Llerchint Slrest

Leather Noveltiesof Refinement

Essential Articles inLeather

Such a thing as a Card Case,for instance, one simply can-

not get on without. Our CardVes. Bill Folds and Hand

Bags are expressive of the ele-

gance discriminating ladiesami 'gentlemen always seek. ;

Also Trawlers'Kits. .Manicure Sets.Ltter Portfolios,

Htc; J:

.

H.K WichmancS: Co.Jewelers and Platinumsmiths.

works department: I learned the archi-tect's trade before the days of tech-nical schools, when you had to studybuilding by doing the work' yourself,not through books. They used to giveus six months on each of the eightbranches of the subject, and the workwas by hand, every blessed bit of it.

D. I CONKLING, city treasurer;There ar two bills now before Con-gress that will have much the sameeffect as the bill for a new charterproposed for tbe Honolulu RapidTransit & Land Company. There isthe bill making all the taxes payableby utility corporations to the terri-tory payable to the counties in wtaicuthey operate and the bill bringing allof them now under the Jurisdictionof the superintendent of public worksunder the jurisdiction of the utilitiescommission. - '

allride

Deach Walk.i:44 Palolo (5th Ave).150 Palolo (5th

Royal Groce.

1339 Wilder Ave. ...1714 Anapuni

Road (bet. 7th8th Aves.)

1317 Makikl1877 Kalakaua Ave. ...........1675 Ave. ......1266

9th Ave. (partly fur-.-.'

v.. .........

;toc! r-.d- s, Real an-ce- .

BEACH WALK CLUB TO MEET

AT SUPERVISORS' HALL

AND BACK PAVING PLAN

Tomorrow night Is the regularmynthly meeting night of the Beach-- ,

walk Improvement Club. It is bIhonight at which the supervisors are

to have a final hearing on Beachwalk paving project Hence PresidentLyle of club has called an" infor--

mal meeting In the haP of supervisora.that is, he is asking all the club members to gather there and show the cityfathers that Heachwalk is anxious to

its new paving under way. Inasmuch as this section is paying the en-

tire cost of the improvement no bitchla otnopt o.l fVinrrnt ta tr h 11

Inexpensive Summer Homeat the Beach; Furnishedfor $1200

Furnished 5-ro- house on a large lotnear the 'Coral Gardens' at Kaneohe.Short distance from the water's edge.A comfortable home for the summerat the beach, ready to step into andenjoy. One hour from city bymotor via Pali. Price $1200. . Tele-

phone 3477. ''' -- :::,

will buy a A newjust

CO., 113

Waikiki . . . .

RoadRoad Ave.)..

Waikiki . .

. . .

St .. . . . . . ..... .

Waialae and

St.. . .

Kalakaua . . . . . . . .MaUock Ave.

nished) ..

thethe

the

get

nod

Serving, Protecting, Enduring.

oSSO.QO15-jew-

el, Bracelet Watch. as-Fortm-

arrived.

VIEIRA JEWELRY Hotel Street

Furnished

Estate, losur

2 Bedrooms3

Unfurnished

1

2.'2

2

.2

.$ 6.".0tr. 40.b.

3i.4...M)

. Ift0.0r.... 3f.... 2).)o..... ...

li.OH

ry Vaterhouse Trust Co., LtdJ

Phone 12M

1

Page 4: I- mmri a Tr TO 1MSE conssiOHs AM KM HASTENS ITS BABY … · 2015. 6. 2. · and exam!naiNn rooms Each baby goes through the following routine: Dental examination before undress ing;

r

THE von HAMM-YOUN- CO,LTD, Honolulu

Agent

Phont 148FRANK W. HUSTACE

Automobile and Motorcycle" Repaired

427 Queen St, near JudiciaryBuilding. ,

'

BEEF SUPREMEfrom

PARKER RANCH

Metropolitan Meat MarketPhone 3445

FOR ICE COLD DRINKS AND14 PER CENT ICE CREAM

V TRY THE i

HAWAIIAN DRUG CO.Hotel and Bethel Streets

HONOLULU PHOTO

r ; SUPPLY CO. r

KODAK HEADQUARTERS. : 1059 Fort Street , V.

Tall 2339 for fresh flowersof any variety.

; HRS.E. M. TAYLOR,Tlorist, Opp. Young Cafe

HANAN'S BEST SHOES

M'INERNY SHOE STORE,,Fort above King SL

LORD-YOUN- ;Engineering Co., Ltd.Engineers and Contractors

Pantheon Brbck. Honolulu, T. HTelephones 2610 and 5487

An UN-Comm- Sotp -

;magic soapFor every household use.

f '.At your grocers.

f.VCHESNEY COFFEE CO.COFFEE ROASTERS

Dealers In Old Kona Coffee

Merchant St. Honolu'u-

y CURIOS.'JEWELRY ANDV.. . NOVELTIES, .

JEWELRY.'NOVELTY CO. f ;

':" King and Bethel 8treets

SEE

FOR FURNITUREv,

t i Young Building -

A- I1- -

Now is the Time to Boyv Easter Neckwe.ar '..

We; have it- J THE,-CLARIO- N 5

Table Silver in a new and;very handsome pattern--

the Sulgrave y "

. H. Cnlman Co., Ltc

chop u v

- -- tT North "King Street"(Between Maunakea and. Smrw .

Call end set our brand new CHOP,tUI Wouse Everything Neat

' i nd Clean. : .

Tables may t. reserved by phoneNo. 1713

IF YOU WISH TO ADVERTISE INNEWSPAPERS .;'

Aiywbere at Any Time. Cail on o

WritsTHE pAKE ADVERTISING AGENCYIt SauBume Street. Sui Ftand set

AVe satisfy- - because we give the' best service inPrivate Detective Work; or

',' Police Protection. - r. BPWERS' MERCHANT

PATROL 2515.

; mi Mir M

.i

PAINS IH SIDE

A D BACK

How Mrs, Kelly Suffered andHovr She was Cured.

dar, and had pains in my side and back,bat after takingLydia . Pinkham s

I 1 VegetableTablets

Com-Dou- nd

andusin? two bottles ofthA Rantiv WMhI aiAfuliy convincedkM that I am entirelycured of these trou-bles,mm and feel betterall over. I knowyour remedies havedone i me worlds of

good and I hope every suffering womanwill giv them a trial. Mrs. AnnaKelly 710 Chestnut Street, Burling-ton, Wis.;);;

The-tnan- y convincing testimonials constan tly . published in the newspapersought to be proof enough to women whosuffer from those distressing ills pecu-

liar to their sex that Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound is the medicinethey need. .

This good old root and herb remedyhas proved unequalled for these dread-ful ills; it contains what is needed torestore woman's health and strength. :

If there is any peculiarity in

ylce iti .f-F- nP

JLjnn, SXass for tree advice

Honolulu Music Co.Everything Uusical

TorV-Bftz- t to the Clarion

W; W. AHANA CO.Tailors.

Kinsr St: between Fort, V and Bethel

: PURE ISLAND MILK ANt)

..' J i- '7 H J- -' ", : 'Meo4wiu Oatrymen's Assw

'rz::. Phone 1542 Hv.. --i. ;

jrciro inh m co.j .'tZzUques and Chinews X. ; Ilerchandise ;

! ' above Pauahl

"EASTER CARDS

if.A R LEIGH'S

FURNISH YOUR HOME RIGHT

Ey' fitting It throughout with-u- r

dependable electric fixture.ELECTRIC SHOP V

Phone 1135 Fort St.

FORIOD LlEilLS

The Palace of Sweets

Carnation Milk; Makes Better Babl-- s.

HENRY MAY A CO,I i Hi ; ltd.;; :,.Phone

Rcinoval Notice. The' Tbvn send Undertaking Co..

Ltd.. hASBiojsid to 54 Chaplain laneI. H. Townenj and William Botnwick.funersl. djrctors OfHce nhone 1S.

Av Nr 3AN FORDr BostonOPTICIAN

Building

: Fort --.Street r(Over May A' Co.) '

V"' EXPECT GUARD ROSTER.Orders have been placed with the

yrtnter for copies of the new-roste- r i

of ctficers and directory of troops tolie .issued by the National Guard. It j

is expected that the pamphlets will be !

cut' in shcrt time. They are --to befaI3cued after the manner of rosters'in tTiCtVited States army.v, .' i ;y-- '

Zlta Tear Cyea rtecd Cere-- V. Try nurtsrv Eye Ututdf

HONOLULU.- STA TI X, MONDAY, APRIL 24, 1010.

'I AM INNOCENT,'

GRAY TESTIFIES

IN OWN BEHALF

fWltneSSeS TOf Defense 111 unefdGraft Charges Hurt Its

Case

Officer Jense Gray says he Is inno- -

cent. At the hearing of the bribery,8es against thini- - held Saturday by

city hall, be told, in a series of longramhlint: statements, of having con-sulted with Arthur chief ofdetectives, resarding the character ofevidence needed for a conviction ofthe keepers o? the chefa games, ofwhom he is accused of accepting pro-tection money. He declared, and re-

peated at the request of attorneys forthe prosecution, that he knew nothingof chefa before February 1. that hewent to Sheriff Rose and asked howhe could set convictions of the keei-er- s

of several games running in Wu-biaw- a

and was referred to .McDuffie.McDufSe told him how the game wasrun and what he must do to clean upthe bank, he testified. He denied sep-arately each statement in the affida-vits filed against him on which thecharges are based, and then each bitof evidence tending to incriminate himmade by the witnesses, for the prose-cution. He swore that he had not ac-

cepted money, directly or indirectly.from Ahina, that he had never seenAh Tone before he came on the wit- -

ness stand and testified that he hadpaid him (Gray I money, that he wasnot Introduced to Ah Tdng by Akana;in fact, that everything testified tothat would tend to incriminate himwas not so.

' Whea corroborating witnesses, in- -

traduced by the defense, directly con-tradicted him and gave a mass of tes-timony that made it look bad for him.there was a gasp of surprise from thelisteners.

Sheriff Rose, who has been sittingat Gray's side and actively aiding inthe defense, told of Chang Chau,whose name has been introduced intothe case several times by the defense,coming to him some five or six monthsago and charging, that Gray was ac-

cepting protection money. He sldthat he bad told Chang to bring hiswitnesses, that' Chang had failed to,do so and witness had taken no fur-ther action in the matter. Changreturned about two months later andrepeated the charges, and he repeatedhis request that Chang produceproofwhich Chang again promised to do.After the making of charges the sed-on- d

time he told Gray, and Gray toldhim to make an investigation if hewanted to, that he was noUtaklng anymoney from anyone. The sheriff tookn$ further action until A. M. Brown,cfty "attorney,- - bronghf the affidavitsor which the charges now filed arebased to him and asked what to da.Hose declares that Brown told him,that Chang Chau hid brought the affi-

davits to him; and be was afraid' thatunless something was ; done Changwould run to Judge Ashford and maketrouble, that inasmuch as there wasop session of the grand jury he did notsee what could be done with them andthat he (Rose) had suggested thatthey be filed with the civil servicecommission.

Arthur McDutfie, chief of detectives,hurt Gray's case worst. He told ofInstructing Gray in the intricacies ofchefa last September or October, andwas as confident of the time as Grayhad been of last January or February.

William Asam was the surprise ofthe dav. A witness for the defense,he gave telling evidence for Gray un-

til he was taken over by the prosecution. He first told of Gray giving him$1.75 to buy tickets and his inabilityto do so because be was known as afriend and helper of Gray. On cross-examinati-

Mr. Chlllingworth askedabout his work and learned, he hadworked for a soda water concern dur-ing the Carnival. It was a little whilebefore this that he had tried to buytickets for Gray. . --

Continuing. Asam said that he knewtickets were being sold, everybody atWahiawa knew it He had seen menselling them. In the barber shop,' thebottling works , and on v the streets.Lots of men sold them, and he couldnot remember the names of all butcould point them out. Asam knewthey were selling tickets because hesaw them. Some only bought occa-sionally, and others were regular cus-tomers and bought as often as twice aday. Runners went everywhere twicea day and it was generally Knownwhen and where they could be found.He said Gray told him Yuen Hick wasselling tickets, and that Gray, like ev-

eryone else, knew runners were sell-ing tickets.

Dr. H. Wood, a government physi-cian at Waialua. testified that abouta year ago he inspected the slaughter-house of Chan?-Cha- u at Wahiawa atGray's request and found that it wasnot complying with regulations, andthat Chang . Ciau in a conversationheld over the.. telephone at the timehad threatened to --get Gray."

Akana, a tailor at Castner, refutedthe testimony given at a previoushearing by Ah Tong, that he had beenintroduced to Gray by Akana, and thathe had paid A'-ian-

a $5 a week to bepaid to Gray for protection. He de-nied knowing Ah Tong, said that hehad nut introduced Gray to anyonelast fall, as he did not know him then.

Several residents of Wahiawa whoGray declares have acted as spies forhim in bis endeavors to suppresschefa, will be the last witnesses forthe defense at a hearing to be heldin the supervisors chambers tonight

John Sarrav aged . 24. arrested as awhite shiver, was shot and killedwhen he attempted to esca from De-

tective Patton in Williamsburs.Albert Kennedy 1 years old, of the

BronC died of a fracture of the skullreceived when atrucV wi the head bya baseball while watching practise.

POLICE PERJURY

FOOLISH CHAI

CITIZEN THINKS

Confusion of Incidents in AutoAccident Case Causes Civil

Service Probe

As the civil service ccnMiiissioners-refuse to entertain a complaint against i

four police off.cer3 made by District !

Magistrate .1. M. Monsarrat. unless thesheriff i refer claries; and as Deputy 1

Sheriff Asch asserts that all fenr were ;

tellin? the tnith. the matter will very jlikely be droi'ied. liiTt for the infor- - I

mat ion of and in justice to all partiesconcerned, the Star linlietin publishes I

the following .ptatenir r.t of a citizen ;j

who wis present in police court dur-- 1

in the" alleged conflict of testimony,and was an attentive liste"r j

itie auegeu or lesiimonyon the part of the four officers merelyseemed to be conflicting and wasn'tactually so, for the reason that Chil- - j

ton and Wright didn't know Knrishtand HirShui had already been theie,and Enrisat and Hiiihui didn't knowChilton and Wrieht had visited thescene of the automobile accident inwhich the testimony was introduced, j

To make the matter worse, the de-- jfendant Gasrar was said to be so :

ui miicv mat. iicr tuinu uui iriuriiiuci me:details of the night.

"Here are the facts as I gatheredI them at the police court hearing: The; accident involving John Caspar

at Falania: Serjeant Knright'happened to be riding on a street car(that was

'passing; he got off. and

(stayed a few minutes until Bike Cop

Huihui sent for the patrol wagon. Butfor some unknown reason, neither En-rig-

or Ilnihui placed a chargeagainst Caspar. The evidence didn'tshow whether Gaspar was Immediate-ly locked tip for the night, and verylikely he was not, as there was thenno charge against him. i Gaspar thenleft the police station and returned tothe scene of the accident. Here Chil-ton and Wright ft und "him a half-hou-r

or more after the accident occurred,and made a careful examination of thescene and the defendant. Chilton thenplaced a chargo against Gaspar at thepolice station, but the evidence failedto show how Gaspar was returned tothe . police station, although it doesshow that Caspar was then locked upfor the night -

"In my opinion, the testimony of thedesk sergeant on duty at that hour isessential to clearing np the seemingdiscrepancies in the testimony.

"Was Gaspar locked up immediate-ly when -- the patrol wagon broughthim?

"At what hour did the patrol wagonbring Gaspar to the station?' "Why didn't Enright or Huihui placea charge against Gaspar?

"Just how did Chilton get Gaspari from the scene of the accident to the

Km thstation

.h: Kln'Ur i

; tne snerm and by the commissioners.The public Is interested, in seeing thepolice absolutely cleared or elsecharges preferred."

DEAN H. LAKE

TO TELL STATES

flF HAWAII NEI

Sailing tomorrow on the . Manoa,Dean H. Lake, for two years secretaryto Dr. W. T. Brlgham and photograph-er of the Bishop Museum and formerlyan instructor at the Honolulu Schoolfor Boys, goes jto the mainland wherehe will show a number of beautifulslides he has , taken of life and scen-ery in the islands. Mr. Lake will tourthe New England states .for the nexttwo months, lecturing on the pictur-esque tropical beauty of Hawaii and itspeople, illustrated with the many col- -

hored slides which he has been carefully collecting during the part threeyears. At the end of his lecture tour,Mr. Lake: intends to spend a year withthe Clarence H. White School of Pho-toeraph- ic

Art in New York City, afterwhich he may return to Honolulu tolo Tate permanently.

FUND FOR BOYs' HOMEGROWS FOR FATHER LOUIS

HH.O. April 21. Pather Louis be-comes rrore cheerful everv day a

reaches Hilo and on Sunday lasthe was even more delisted tbn

Mo reetye-- i "nd ni' roTnHoncJu'u and also bad recefw.1 twoHt rtr'ntiors of wnev fo-- h's bovsh(n;f""i retent of this i'ff .T T. tyr ftTrii ft hV f'i

Tho ttii pmniit rw n n Ifc-- bp Ws Vnw to

--JXVrZ V'T?"''.lybsrvfV h- - o'tw ,

trn rf donon'n'nnoi bettf, The I

iil rfo i"t of rr.r nrwr ,

hOr-nin- ! r,f rni?(fp of allcreeds and nt'ons'itia.

KA NE NPW CAPtAIN.

r-n- n pi-rtn- r .'iup1 from Nationalrtti't a - o rto ,

nirt tijis errnfp' nt bf own rponpt.'rft t- - ittnT a rommissinnedservice of 16 years.

PEACE

mm1

HART SOLOIST

AND

MALE QUARTET

AdvanceStyles m Hats

Wee

R. ISOS'PEACE PALACE'

FOR EVANGELST

The Opera House was well filledwith an appreciative audience lastnight as Evangelist McCord spoke, histopic being: "The Millenium, or TheDevil's Vacation He said in part:

"The word millenium' means athousand years, and refers to that pe-

riod when Christ will reign with thesaints in the New, Jerusalem. Thisglad time of jubilee will begin at thefirst resurrection, when the dead InChrist shall rise first Referring tothe fate of the wicked dead, the proph-et John in Rev, 20:5, wrote: 'But therest of. the dead lived not again tillthe thousand years were finished.' Thesecond coming of Christ will be her.aided by the sounding of the trumpetof God. at which the righteous deadof all the .ages will rise from theirdusty beds, clad in immortal life, andwith ; the attending angels sent togreet them, the saints will meet Jesusin the air and with Him in their midstthey will ascend to the home of thesaved, past sun and star and world,through . the gates of pearl into theNew Jerusalem.

"When the millennial reign Is fin-

ished, Christ, His saints, and the HolyCity will descend to this world. Thewicked will then be raised Out of theirthousand years of sleep, and withtheirf leader, Satan, at their head, willlay seige to New Jerusalem, but justas Satan is arranging his forces forthe final attack, fire comes down outof heaven and devours them. SeeRev. 20:9.

"From this chaos '.of ruin. and deathwill rise the new earth, clothed inmorethan pristine beauty. This willbe-- thei long-loo- k ed-- f or home of thes"vpff , tnd the undisturbed peace ofeternity will be theirs to enjoy,- itie '"Peace ' PaJace" is the new

home of the visiting evangelist, andis the name given to the large pavil-ion erected next the Opera House. Thewell-attende- d meetings of the Opera j

House will be continued in the "PeacesPalace" tonight at the usual hour of.7 :30.-- ' the subject being an illustrated ,

lecture, "Ten Women and the End ofthe World." The musicians will fol-- .low the evangelist. Seats always free t

to all.

Ynim nnn::nniAi tiirfsWhen a cold settlesin the-bronchi- j

tubes, with that weakening, ticklingcough, immediate treatment is veryimportant.. Thetreath seems shortefbecause of mucous obstructions; usu--

ally fever is present, your head jars witlievery cough and your chest may ache.This is no time for experimenting ordelay you must get Scott's Emulsionat once to drive out the cold whichstarted the trouble, and it will checkthe cough by aiding the healing pro-cess of the enfeebled membranes.

If you have any symptoms of bron-chitis,'- or

even a stubborn cold, alwaysremember that Scott's ; Emulsion hasbeen relieving this trouble for fortyyears. It is free from alcohol or drugs.Refuse substitutes.

ScwUft Bowne.BlootnBld.N. J. 13-- 13

3C

PA

"Illustrated

.AGETONIGHT

"Ten Women an dlhe

End of the World

EVANGELIST McCORD

PEACE PALACE NEXT TO OPERA HOUSE; NOW BETTER THAN EVER l

Seats

or

feet

We have lasts and styles;of nature's own

Boots and builtfor baby feet. Bring yourbaby. We will do the ; rest.

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

Fort

AH. the

thosea

Co.

F T3

Lecture

King StreetNear Bethel

invite your inspection

HIMa

designing:.

slippers

McliiernyStreet

TEL

7:30

Free Come

Easter

Today's care is yourchild's futu re happi-ness. Start baby w ee kright by fitting the baby's

right, . ;

Shoe tbre' ; Phone 1S29

GO

Delighted with

who have heeu tber..day, a week --

:

Auto ru ,

niiln. . n.o.

Up-to-the-mi-nute service to the Mainland

and steamers Sierra, Sonoma- and Ventura at sea.

The Federal Company has been awarded U. S. Gov-

ernment contract equip all battleships and three of thelargest radio stations in the world (including Pearl Har-

bor) with Poxilsen apparatus.

THERE'S A REASON. ;

828 Fort Street - Telephone 4085

Tourists are

AskRates, $3.50

Tickets via O. II. H.WVIIm Ph rtn

By

$21(t.

fHr

to

Page 5: I- mmri a Tr TO 1MSE conssiOHs AM KM HASTENS ITS BABY … · 2015. 6. 2. · and exam!naiNn rooms Each baby goes through the following routine: Dental examination before undress ing;

BIX

PJm1

LUMBER M ARE

AT MERCY OF

SHIPOWNERS

Crarier Rates Have Risen From$5.50 to $16 Per Thousand

In Year's Time

At j.rrent chartc-- r rates for lumberBf hm p"x if lit n lulu lumber firma notowning vessels are losing moneyrhm they f,1I Douglas f.r at $32.50 alho.iaid fert.

This condition, it was learned today,has resulted from the scarcity of bct-.tcn- .s

for lumber froni the Northwestto tills Hft, At this time last yearcharter rates were .$5.50 a thousandfeet. They are now between $15 and

Last month the retail jirice of Doug-las fir was raised from $3 to $32.50by the City Mill tfompany. one of thelargest of the local lumber firms notowning lumber bottoms. This varietycf lurnbor had been selling at $30 forthe last year or two.

"The only reason we can keep ontelling at $32.10 and not. lose mcneyis that we received a large amount ofDouglas fir in January, before charterrates soared uj to their present

figure," said C. K. ALtreasurer and manager of the CityMill Company, Ltd., today. 'Tf ourlumber now on hand bad cost us $15and $16 a thousand to ship here, thejiresent charter rate, we woufd be sell-ing at a loss if we ket our retail priceat $32.50 per M."

Get Own Price.Mr. AI said that lumber vessels

which formerly supplied the City MillCom .any and other firms here, havenow been chartered to take lumberfrom tbe Northwest to Australia, at.fc5g charter rates. These include theFred J Wood, the Dauntless and theA. F. Coats. The last time these ves-sels brought lumber here, their char-ter rates were $9 and $9.50 a thousandfeet.' Now $15 and $lt Is asked andU glvea. :t" ;' "Wt-- are simply at the mercy of . theEhi;.owutr8," added Mr. AL v"YVe 6lm-p.- y

canoot set sailingessebj to bringlumber; heie. fiven the small boats,wiih ou'y lialf a million feet capacity,a getting $35 a thousand as a char

ter rate to Australia."Te City Mill Company expects to

La iter a Etean,er next month to bring V

Dearly a million feet of Douglas firbere,.irom Grays Harbor, if a sailingtsstl cannot in the mean-- "

. . , ' , . j

!

P4SSEfiERS IIOOKKII

IVr l.-- l. str. Claud ne for Maui.f.fru 24 H. Fassoth, Sam Pupuhl. T.j

:Ufiul. William Thompsf.n, T. J. Fla-- 'v.n, )T. J. J. Carey, Yen Clm, Mrs.and il!s33 Murphy. . j

- " " mm m -

The Canadian-Pacifi- c liner Empresscf Russia arrived at Vancouver AprilK, with 21 cars of silk and 537 passen-gers from the. Orient The steamer isftfll painted admiralty gray. She-sa-

strenuous war service prior to her re-

turn to her old run.

The Inter-Islan- d steamer Mikahalabrought 11 cabin and 23 deck passen-gers from MauVMolokal and Lanalyesterday morning.

r

ft, i n iiii iifii iiiyii fit l . iii I i

IIAIiBDII NOTES

A Lis Kail from .San Francisco. TS4

'ack. ecu t& in the Matson liner' ..!atscnia tomorrow morning.

iue to Rteam Trom joiohama v

f- -r Ilonc'ulu is the China Mail,n-- r CLir.a.- - HdieduJed to arrive atll.in p.it May 6.

late Saturday niht the Inter-Islan-

; steadier CI. udine arrived from Mauiwith- - 23 cabin passengers Inw ardfreight wasfmainly 17 tons cf . scrap!rtn. -

The Verse bark GJenshee is toJayJisrbarglng 1 4 00 tons of rock phos-pla- t

'.which she broyht yesterdaym rn'ng fr n Uakatea. after a voyagejf 23 days. '

Next Mail fcr Manila, Japan andfritia .will go Friday afternoon, prob-ably at 5 o'clock in the T. K. K. linerShinyo Maru, due that morning from&n Francisco.

The Matson steamer Manoa, steam-ing at noon tomorrow from Pier IS,will take the next mail to San Fran-risc- o.

malls closing at the postofficeat 10:30 tomorrow morning.

At 8 o'clock this morning the Mat-son

j

steamer Manoa, Capt F.M. Kd-ward- s,

returned from Kahului. whereshe loaded canned pines and sugar.She tewed the barge Bennington backfrom the Maui port.

Pn his return from Fanning islandand the Gilberts, Capt E. L. Tindall.master of the British steamer Kestrel,will open a garage and machine shophere.The Kestrel is expected to leaveFanning in a few days. '

:;

Due Friday morning from San Fran- -

cfsco is tbe. T. K. K. turbiner ShinyoMaru. She will bring mail from theconst and take a full despatch for theOrient. The Shinyo left San Fran- -

Cisco at 2 p. m., Saturday.

The Inter-Islan- d steamer Maunailxw reiwrts the following sugar await- -

ing shipment cn Kauai: Kekaha.27'0; Gnv & Robinson, 1S.2C5; Hawal- - of room in Matsonlstmers for shipten. 17.SVf; McBryde, 13.131; Koloa, ping food . necesiits , to Hawaii12,SS5; Kealia,- - 47,000; Lihue. 3000. , Northwest shippei4f the clas3es ot

-"

.I freight barred out will, probably r- -

Du? bcre Fvldv orrn? fmm Aus- - nev; their efforts to have one of thetralia. New Zealand and Fiji is the two.ll;U. luers put on the Seattle-I'an- a

die n-- u at 1 a s?s n .liner Niagara, Honolulu run.Trom Suva FrUay. cn time, with 300 ;. Kvca before the" Matson Line

abcjrd, '.The ?CJasara will nounced its refusal of these classestake 400 barre's; of 'fuel oil here and of ireight, Seattla shipping and busl- -

abr.ut 1 "0 tf na ; of freight, To date"0 cabin passnpre have been booked,

- y - ..f-- : . . :; 't' Te T5rtih rt3sf tiurehtfc; which .

stopped the Ch!na Mail liner China off'SbnnchPl and removed 38 : Germanspnd Autrians. has returned to Hong- -

kone, te, wcrk of patrolling Chinesewaters hftving been entrusted entirelyto Japanese war vessels.

Crh'n 5'onperK tnc r.urbr of40 jnd 47 rlfok pa"?fnee arrived' yes- -

terdpy morning from Kauai on the if one of the vessels is sw.l to Seat-Maun- a

Lea. Inward; cargo included tie. It U also; planned to guarantee200 bags of V. K. sugar, 3000 of Ke--

knha N 100 bags of coconuts, 100 oftaro, 27 barrels of honey and otherIsland products. r ; ;

Pound for San Francisco via PrtAllen. Kaanapalt Kahului and Ililo,the American-Hawaiia- n steamer Geor-gian steamed last night from thisuort,taking sugar.- - On reaching San Fran-cisco with a full sugar cargo she willload general cargo for the Orient, andwill net call here again scn. M -

SANTA FE STOPOVER f i tIS NOW DISC0NT NUED

account cf the California expositions,has been discontinued and ' notCe resumed year. arrange- -

I

ment allowed purchasers of andone-wa- y eastbound tick' ,

ets to a in SanFrancisco or Los Angeles,

"It's not only a dollar saved butadded manhood when

you have Savings Account andadd to it systematically and regular-ly. START ONE TODAY.

Bishop Company,Say i ngs Department.

HONOLULU STAR-BULLETI- N, MONDAY, APRIL 191G.

IDEH1ARU GOES

INTO DRYDOCK

EOR REPAIRS

At ::3- morning the Japanesefreight, steamer Ide Mafru went on UrnInter-Islan- d drydock and had herstern tipped up so that a new center

j'gudgecn can be put on her 9t?rn.post, the old gudgeon having b:-e- a

bi cken when the middle portion of herrudder carried away at sea March 6

on the Great Circle route.Capt. T. Ucbiyama said thi3

l Ing he expects the new gudgeon willbe made and put in place by Wednes-day and th.nks the repaired ruddercan be shipped Friday or Saturday.

rudder, is now being repaired bythe Honolulu Iron works Company.

After the rudder has been shippedCr.rt cr 700 tons of bunker coal willbe taken aboardt and if all goes w ellthe big freighter will resume her voy-ag- e

to Vladivostok May,3 or 4, a weekfioir next Wednesday or Thursday."

Part of the Jde's Japanese crew wasset to work this morning cleaningship's sides. A diver worked benttfththe steamer, putting the keel block3in place as her stern was lifted.

SEATTLE" OFFERS

BIG BONUS FOR

HILL LINER

w

Now that the Matson KavigatlcnCompany has announced It. must decline further shipnfents of lumbermillwork and furniture rom Seattleand Tacima to Htnolilu. until fur- -

ther notice, owing jo te urgent need

ners Intei ests bad,- - on April 3, s'.ypealed to liesideut L. W; Hill of the

NoUhein Railway Company andPresident L; C. Gilman of the GreatNoithesn Paeific Steamship Companyin an effort to have either the GreatNorthern or the Northern- - Pacificopciated fxoaa port to Hawaii.

"Honolulu," says a Seattle nenpatch,, "has oi feed $5000 a trip forilve trips ; cr $2",)o0, . tor one of the

a5ers,-an- d it 'is planned to offer at''tCtst this aaiount and a cash subsidy

a full cargo lor six tr.ps. : r :

"It was expected by snipping mentoday that approximately 15,00) tonof gcueral freight, . worth $300,000, isoffering in Seattle every six weeksfor -

.. in the Hawaiian Islands,with only two steamers, the Hyadesand the Hilonian of the Matson

Company, with a total ; argocapacity of 11,000 tons, plying intrade." ';;-- :;..---

Commenting on this move, the SanFrancisco' Journal v of Commercethinks it will not amount to much.

sa v

deavcr to obtain. one of the Hill liners

and brought to the Pacific, CoasL: "It is said shipments from

Seattle and nearby to thsialAnria of lha nroscnt timn ofornpln Vaiue approximately amonth- AM thia froicht is tranaaortP.ito Hawaii on two steamers, thoHyades and Hilonian of the MatsonNav'gallon fleet" -

.

: rASSEXGEKS ABIUTED 1... r

Per- - IA, Btr. Mikahala. from Maui,Mclokal and Lanai, April 22 T. Ka-wan- o

an wife, M. V. de mdwife, Miss D, McCorriston. H. AicCor

and E. Dunn, Y. VanMiss Olga de Coita, Miss E. McCorrist-on;- .

.: Per I.--I. str. Mauna Loa, from Kauai,April 23 R. Nakayama, Koyame,Mrs. Koyame, Ko3usume, M. T.

Dr. K. Seifert, A, V. Peters, A.S. Downey, Qeorge Rustard,3Irs. C. ILDickey Mis, T. Emhorst M. Ozak;i, T.J. Fitipatrick 1 H, Johnscjjt A. M.McBryde, IU H. Rohd, C, Lund. E. Buft,A. Ah Lo, D. L. AusUn. Mrs, W. D.:Ldaros," Maister Adams.TJ. F. Hopkins,Mrs. D. F Hopkins,- - Mrs. L."

Mrs. Cass, Mrs. Schroeder, P.Spalding, J. K: lopa, W". D. Adams, J.D. Mclnerny, George Vickers; J. ; deFrances, E. A. Berndt George Angus,A, P. Taylor, W. O. Aiken, A, HornerJr.. Hans Gittle. 'C .

Per 1.-- 1 str. Cland'ne, from Mavf,April 23 W. 6. Smith, Mrs. WV O.Smith, 'J.' G. Pratt S. Ozaki, Ikehara,Mrs. .Ikehara, K. Fujinaka, Miss Au

Souza, Look Tong, Tam Hoy, W.DInkie; W.'J. Moore, Miss Bryant, MksH. Ishlda, Miss Tallant. E. J. Lord. W.A: Wadsworth, S. Pupuhi, T. Odo, E. J.Nell, E. Gay and son, F. O. Krauss.

Per I.-I-.' str. Kinaii, from Kauai,April 23 A. Gartley. W. H. Friedly. S.P. Kind. A. Nielson. . "" ;'' "-

STAR-BULLETI- N GIVES VOU;;v TODAY'S NEWS TODAY.

.. - ; j for the Puget Sound-Honolul- u run isAgent H. E. Vernon of the expected to prove. futile, as the Gre--

Santa Fe'a local office has received1 Northern Pacific Company seemsi termined vessels on

nctlce that the 10-da- y stopover privl-- j FTaScisco.F;aveithe SaQ run. forlege which was. in-eff- last year on - vh.ch ourbose they constructed

willthis The

firstsecond-clas- s

make 10-da- y stopover

some made"a

&

24,

this

morn- -

The

the

Great

this

ports

Navi-gation

this

thatports

$300,000

Coita

r.ston wife, Hing.

Rod-rigue- s.

Moldert-hause- r,

.General

were

58,000 TONS OF

SUGAR LEAVING'

EACH MONTH

With the American-Hawaiia- n mov-ing 2S.hh tans of island susar to SanFraucisco every month for tranship-ment by rah to the aud th'Mat-aj- u

lin taking 3..,:t ti ns a u.onth toCrockett llef;nery, no trouble iu ;et-tln- e

t ii w island .iii?.ir orou to. market

by loval shH pins men.Fell i ving th pubh'-atio-a Saturday

i by the Star Bulletin of the first ofi ficial annoo.ncemer.t by the Susar Fac- -

eastern refineries would continue toe ua:istt!pped east by rail until

1. ienoial i - i A -- eiit CP. Morse of the American Hawaiian'slocal office made th. foil. wins state-ment today:

"We do net anticipate any troublemoving island sugar within the timethat the Sugar Factors want it moved

the end of Se;temitv. We are28.000 ions a month to

the coast To date, including theMexican, whicfi steamed from'Hib at7 o'clock yesieiday morning with13,726 tons, we have carried duringthe present season 1 01 ,5u tons, ofwhich 27,000 hi. ve gone via Magellan,and the rest to San Francisco andoverland by rail."

Mr. Morse adtied that there are only1500 tons of sugar on hand in Hono-

lulu now, and that the Texan willclean it up when she returns from theCO"St

There will be no trouble what-ever," said Manager John H. Drew ofthe shipping department of Castle &Cooke, local Matson line agents. "Oursteamers are now taking out about30,000 tons of island sugar a monthto the. Crockett, California, refinery ofthe Sugar Factors. We can handle itall without difficulty. I don't think,the American-Hawaiia- n will have anytrouble taking care of its end, either."

j VITAL STATISTICS

BORN. .'VASCONCELLOS-7- ln Hcnolulu, April

16, 1916, to Mr, and Mrs. John Va.-concell-

of Iolani avenue and Ma-

gellan street, Auwaiolimu, a sonWalter. ... ,

'"'

TOM ITA In Honolulu. April 16. 1916to Mr. and Mrs. Kumajiro Tom ta otAala lane a' daughter Yoshiko. I

KVDO ln Honolulu. April .5, 1916. U,Mr. and Mrs. Koiesbige Kudo of j

Anld l?ne, Pa!ait:a; a son Takeo. .

BOTELHO In Ookala, North Hit-)- ,

Hawaii, April 3, 1916, to Mr. andMrs. Jchn Botelho a son.

TSUNEMATSU In Honolulu, April 3.1916, to Mr., and Mrs. Sukeki Tsune- -

u of Desha lane, l'alaaia. a ;

daughter Tatsuye. .

JARRLTT In Honolulu. March 2.1916. to Mr. and Mrs. Paal Ja.neJarrett of 56 Vineyard street, a son

Rcbert Gordon' Lapaula.SAKAI In Honolulu. February 2".

1916. to Mr. and Mrs, J rokichi Sa-ka- i

of Kamanuwal lane, off Bere-- ,

taoia streetfc.a son Kenichi.

, MARRIED.REGO-OLIVEIR- A n Honolulu. April

22, 1916,' Jcseph P. Rego add MissSarah C. OHveii a, Ret. Father II.Valentn, pastor of the CatholicChurch 'of St Augustine-by-the-Ser- .;

Waikiki, -- officiating; witnesse-Fel- ix

Rodrigues and Miss HenriettaCOliveira.

DUNG-LU- M In Wailuku, Maui, April: 15, 1916, Dung Chong. of Wailukn

and Miss Rebecca Lum of KahuluiRev. Lincoln . B. Kaumeheiwa, pap-to- r

of the Kaahumanu Hawaiianchurch of Wailuku, Maui, officiating.

CARTER-JOHNSO- N In Pap&aloa."

North Hilo, Hawaii, April 9, 19to,George. Carter, railroad staticuagent at Papaaloa; and Miss EstherJohnson of Ockala.

DIED.KANAKA In the Queen's Ilospllal,

Honolulu, April 21, 1916, Mrs. AnnieKanaka of Kaimuki, a native of Ha-waii. 40 years" old.

CHU In Honolulu, April 21. 19'6Kam Yet daughter of Mr. and Mrs.Chu Chip of Kamanuwai lane, effBeretania street a native of tlisc'ty, 1 year and 29 days old.

MURAOKA In Honolulu, April 21,1916, Hinae, daughter of Mr. andMi b. Ichisaburo Muracka of Bere-tania street, a native of this city.2 years, 9 months and 26 days old.

SMITH In San Francisco, March V.,1916, David; Smith, married, teiephone and telegraph, lineman. 4.1years old, brother of E. J. Smith cfHilo. Hawaii. ..

PEREIRA In Springfield. 111., MarchS, 1916, Antonio F. Pereira a nativeof Funchal, Madeira, Portugal, uncleof Mrs. A. V. 6oares bf Honolulu.

AGUIAR In Honolulu, April 23, 1916v Sylvania Aguiar, 617 Capt. Cock

avenue, a native d Funchal, Ma-

deira Island., aged 71 years. Funeralthis afternoon at 4 o'clock from resi-denc- e.

;

4--

MARRIAGE LICENSES

Mateo Peratta. Filipino ...22Maria Aeya, Filipino ... ...,18Joseph Sylvester, Portuguese ..... .23Alvina Hosmann, German ....... . .17

Joseph Rodrigues, Portuguese ... . . , .22Virginia Gasper. Portuguese .......17David K. Robinson, part-Hawaiia- n. .22Rose Cardoza, Portuguese . ... . . . . . 19

Samuel L Zeidner, American ....... 22Mary L. Hammon, American....... 23

Reider Wr. Olsen, American...'. ....29Cedele M. Heeney, American. '. . ..22

Two men were killed and seriousdamage was caused by fire when aGrand Trunk, train crashed .into anIntercolonial train- - taking on water atLevis, Ont. "'

Honolulu Stock Exchange

Monday, April 21,

MERCANTILE. Bid. AskedAlexander & Baldwin. Ltd. 2so . . ...

C brwwtrii Co...... ... . .. '. . . .

SUGAR.wa; PLiutat'.on Co. .1, , . 2 Z"xi

..ia.kii Su,sar Cc 1 2t- ... . .

Hawaiian Agricu'ltutai C. . . .

'tiaw a. :iu V,. A: S. Co . . . , To'- - " -

Huwaiian SagarXc-- : ..... . . . 4

'iioaokaa ugar-t'c.;- . . , i3li. noava Susar Co. ...... l' .

Mutchinsvn'. S, Plant. Co.Kaulai Plant. Co...

a iiifc.ar v o. . ... ... .... :.'.!."

ii loa Siigar.--- Co. .' !i ...Mttirj de .Sugar Co.-- . Ltd. U' 1J ;v :;

Ualiu Migar Co...,..Olaa Sugar Co., Lt l . . . . il l- -S

m;:r a 'siuar io. . . . . . . 'U '

Paauhau S. Pluut. Co. . ......taiiic aii,ia Mil! . .... v 1 1 7 1 2..Paia Plant Co........PepeeKeo Suar Co..Pioneer Mill Co.San Car Us M.iL Co, Ltd. I"1 12WaSalaa Agricultural Ca.w'ailuku Sugar Co l M

MISCELLANtlOLS.Haiku F. & P; Co. .......1 iaiku F. & p; Co.. Com . .Hawaiian Electric CoHawaiiaa rine'appie Co. . 4(-

Hon. B. & M. Co., Ltd. ...Hon. Gas Co., Ltd. ...... . 12Hono. R, T. & L. Co. . . ,Inter-Islan- d S. N. C. .

Mutual Telephone Co. . . . 2

Oahu R. & L. Co. i;Pa hang Rubber CoSelma- - Dindings Planta-

tion, Ltd. Pd .. . ... ... 12Selma - Dindings Planta-

tion, Ltd. (424, Pd. . . . .

Tanjcng Olok RuLbtr C. 41

BONDS.I lamakua Ditch Co. 6s . . .Hawaiian Irr.,Co. 6s.Haw. Ter. 4 Rrd. 19u5Haw. Ter. Pub. Imp. 4s . .Haw. Ter. 48Haw. Ter. 3......-.- .

Houokaa Sugar Co. 6', ..Hon. Gas Go., Ltd., 5s . . . 104Hon. R. T. & L. Co. 6 .V. .Katlai Ry. Co. 6s. . . . ....McBryde Sugar Co. 0s.T .

Mutual Telephone 5s. . . . . luGOahu R. & L. Co. l; 6Oahu S. Co. 6s (redem-abl- e

at 103 at maturity) I0S l)9Olaa Sugar Co. 6.. ....103 ....Pacific G. & F. Co. 6s. . . ...Pacific Sugar Mill Co, 6s ....Sap Carlos Mill Ca 67. . . .... ....

Between Boards: Sales: 31, 1 .".",

70. 30, 100, 100, 100, 50, 50. 5 1, i.

250, 45, 25, 200, 150, 2 Qiaa, lUr250,; 50. .200, : 30, 100, 100 Olaa,19;: 30, 105 Olaa. 19V4; Ho Ew?.35; 50, 50, 50, i;0: 20. 30, 30. 25. 2fcwa, 35: 50 Pioneer, 50; 250.250, 100, 25, 50, 50,- - 20, SO,; 150. 15Picneer, 50Vi; 200 McBryde, 14;36, 22. 35, 35 Oahu Sugar Co.,Oahu Sugat Co.-3- 8; 175 Hour B. & MCo., 19; 100, 25 Kahuku, 2C; lHonokaa. 12; 25 Honokaa, 12',; VntH. C, & S. Co.. 50Vs ; 10 Waialvia,365.' ;

.V -' .r'

Session Sales: 50. SO, 100. 100, 1025, 150, 110, 25 Henokaa, 12; l ,

10, 100, 10', 50 Olaa 19; 10 Ha-

waiian Sugar Co.. 47,2; 5, 50, 50, 50,H'0, lwu. xOO, i50 uahu Sugar CO.,

Ml. SOcMcBrydo. li1; TO Olaa,19; 10,15 H. C. & S. Co.. 50'.

Xr, NOTICE,v Honolulu, T. IL. April 20, 191C.v Cablf siavi froul San Fianclsco tais

ate: ." .

'Hutchinstn and Paauhau today doclared extra d.vidend of 2 s pershares, making total dividend payable.May, 5 50 cents pqx siiare."

Latest sugar quotation: 96 degreestest 6.15 cents, or $123 per ton.

Sugar 615cts.Henry Waterhouse Trust Co

Msmbsrt Honolulu Stovlr and tontf., Exehangsw

Fort end Merchant trtTnleoXonfl 1201

BUILDING PERMITS

A. A. Young, owner. Location, Hau-ula- ,'

Oahu. Dwelling. A. A. Young,builder. Estimated cost, $2000. :

I. Takano, owner.: location, Wahl-aw- a,

Oahu. Store and kitchen. S.Nakao, biilder. Estimated cost, $"o.

Moses Aalona, owner. location.Hauula,Oahu. Dwelling. N. Yokata,builder and architect : Estimated

Territorial Hotel Co., Ltd., owner.Location, Moana Hotel grounds. Wai-kik- l.

Dwelling. Territorial Hotel Co.,builders. Estimated cost, $300.

Josephine J. Namole, owner. Loca-tion, makai-Waiki- kl corner of Youngstreet; and Canton lane. Dwelling.Chong Chan, architect. River Mill Co.,builders. Estimated cost, $855..cost $7800. :

TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY

WATCH MAKER.

N. Osata, watches. River St.. nr. Hotel.-

' 6457 3m

FOR SAL

Overland- mi! ::

F'

oil Are Planning a TripLwiu tlter a lriff vacation or an t'Xt'nU'tl ttmr, a fevk

; tvtits a tlay will onabie you to travel with a tatt fret; Riinl, ' -.-

.-- :

Let u explain to you in full the advantages of anAKTXA 'rpitristts' Iat'a iK)liey ainl its slight cost

It ii:leiimifus you against loss from fire, theft, t to.,in (iit(uiy of Uailroail, Kxpress Comnany, Ste:'iiiishi,Hotel or Cluhhou-e- , anywhere in the world.

Castle & Cooke, Ltd.. General Insuranct Agents

Alexander

BaldwinVitnlUct

Sugar FactorsCommission Merchantiand Insurance Agents

', 9ntr for ,

Uawaliaa Cmmwrct A baCO ';;':.; .;; '-

Haiku Scgar' Company. '

Paia Plantation:Maul Agricultural 'CompanyHawaiian Sugar Company.Kahuku Plantation ComyanyMcBryde Sugar Ca. Ltd.Kahului Railroad CompanyKauai Railway Company.Kauai Fruit Land Co, LUHooolua Ranch

J. FN MORGAN CO., LTD.- STOCK BROKER

Information FurnlihM ma Im-- ;:; Made

Merchant Streat itr y!iirPjMne 1572

FOR RENT j

F.lectiicit). gas. screens in all housesNeat house; U .New furnished cottage; $30 ,

hou.se; fine kx-ation- : f25house; fine location; $35. I

J. H. SCHNACK ;

J42 Kaa'u.m.Tnu St. Teifpehone 3631

MEAT MARKED CI'PHONF 3451C. Q VEE HO 4 CO

X

79 Merchint .StMl J H

ami

CITY MIL! COMPANY, LTDooporters f best lumber and buildlntateri.ils Prices low. . and we glour order prompt ettention whetheaarge or small.: Wo bnve built bun4reds of hcueses fn this city with perect satisfaction. It 70a want to bull'on suit ns.

Agents WantedHOMf INSURANCE CO. CF HAWAII.:' LTD.

KiHn STUFET. CORNFH ORT

Repairing Engraving- 8 GOLUB

Manufacturing Jeweler andDiamond Setter :

307 Boston Btdg- - ;

I BeautifulBASKEARY

South Sea Baakets just received. HA-

WAII & SOUTH SEASCURIO CO, Young Bldg."Buy on Bishop Street":

STEINW AY' Bargains In Other Piano

PLAYER PIANOSTHAYER PIANO CO, LTD.

156 Hotel St. Phone 2313

FOR SALE$2000 house on Matloci

ave nr. Piikoi; 50xS5; modern conveniences. This property has to b

at a sacrifice to close an estate' -- ;e owner refused $3500 for it tbref

: 3 a?o. ' ' :) - v, -

v--

'

The beautiful residence acorner of Walalae and lltb

::.iuki, with a com; d .veiling; grounds are 200

outhouses, fine naanieni. trees, etc. y

".1. STRAUCHTIC. King St

Household

Bills .

can host iKVpniil by rhock-- .

intr aciMnmt. ;

An at'count here will helpyou to economize, wiltgive you athlitional resvtii;t will prevent loss ofcash, and protect you fromman v errors. .

AVe have a special roomfor our holy patron. u

Bank of Hawaii, Ltd.Cor, Fort and Merchant

Bank ofHoholul u

LIMITED

CrMfl1 and Trvler- - Cc

Gable Transfer!at Lowest Rates I

L. Brewer & Cn(Llm'ted)

SUGAR FACTORSCOMMISSION MERCHANT

SHIPPING AND INSUR-ANCE AGENTS V

FORT tT HONOLULU, T. H

Ust of Officer! and Directors:E. F BISHOP. ...... Presidemt

Q. H. ROBERTSON. ........ i.Vice-Preside- nt and Manager

r. IVER9 Secretary

1. A. R. ROSS TreasurerO. B. CARTER. . . . . . .Director,

C H. COOKE.. Director

J. a OALT.........-.Itrtt- tr. A. COOKE......... DlrecUrA GARTLEY .... .. . . .DirectorD O- - MAY...........VAHdnoF f

FIRE INSURANCE

THE . .... ...

B. F. Dillingham Co.LIMITED.

General Agent for Hawaii:

Atlaa Assurance Compsny of

London. New York. Underwriters' Agency; Providence WaeivIngton Insurance Co..,4th floor SUnjenwald tulldlni

BISHOP & CO.BANKERS

! Pay 7e yearly on Savinie bej peitf compounded twU

Annui".

THE YOKOHAMA SPECIEBANK,. LIMITED....... ; yen. .

Capital subscribed, . . .43.000.000

Capital paid up....... 30.000.000

lieserve fund ........ 20.400.0.0S. awQKI. Local Manager.

HAWAIIAN TRUST, 'CO, LTD.

Carries cn .TrustBusiness . In all x

branches. . ; ...

Page 6: I- mmri a Tr TO 1MSE conssiOHs AM KM HASTENS ITS BABY … · 2015. 6. 2. · and exam!naiNn rooms Each baby goes through the following routine: Dental examination before undress ing;

A

HONOLULU STAR-BULLETI- N, MOXDAY, APKIL 24, WW. SEVEN

bMtTIONAk Theater Sj -Ltr.- - B. N T fV A

HONOLULU'S HOME OF HAPLESS r,.. i

Direction I - : Phil J. Byrne IN BERNE LETTER THEATERI .V. v'

Charlie Chaplin in VMasqaerades' "The Man TrairEndeavor to Maintain Neutral-- 7

Ungf ord' AT THE MATINEE TODAY AT 2:30. Prices 10, 20, 30 Cents. mm HTity Shown in Treatmentof Wounded

: :

Toniffht

' . V- : . - .. 4

i

nmig,

THE MOLOKAI TROUBADOURS.G.-R.-- Q. Series in Lord Southpangh ; . . . . ; . . . .v.

: AND "'1. . . THE "BIO FILM (V. L. S. E.)"

30

PutPlace.

--What Would

You Do

11 li

I I I II i 31 II '1 I II I ' 'I I ) 1 V V J J J VV

r 4

AT 8:5

AT 8:30

115 IVilCDiii llEVENING PRICES 10, 20, CENTS.

Yourself

.In His

U

'!H

'':'icu-wer- a v ;

J : "f 'Starvlnr vo.inffI

,;; Author and !

""1 -- a wealthy 'i

; --FOR THE ANSWER-SE- 7!

I V

7:45Ghdrlcs Gliaplin

Daiiiic

i;

Woman, bought you 2

As a husband for1 , Her Daughter :,f

: GREAT PROBLEM FEATURE '2V 2j222ALSO M'--p-.r:Tn.i- -

" ;T '

WHO PAYS? "." "

THE SEVENTH "EXCELLENT EPISODE"Show Commences 7:15; Feature at 8:15 (

MATINEE DAILY . . . . ..V(. r. tw2sl5f

t ' 1

f,

Coya 1 - H ian O per a House

if ." '

' present, in celebration of the - I

HAKESPEARE TERCENTENARY:

HIL' MI!

at

Wallingford

avai

in of the ShrewSplendid Hew Costumes Large- - Orchestra

vf - WEDNESDAY , EVENING, APRIL 26FRIDAY EVENING, APRIL 28

v a r 8:30 o'clockMATINEE, SATURDAY, APRIL 29

? - v - 2:30 o'Clock ..."

V' Evening Prices $1.50, $1 and 50c. -- Matinee $1,75c, 50c

"

All seats in Balcony for Matinee, 50c. - '

r Seats now on sale at Territorial Messenger Service,. Union Street. ,

' " ; " -i u .

'

Just come iii and see our

PHONE 2235 REACHES

Novelties

ndotace-PecIi-Co- ., I-t-d.

ALL KIN" OF ROCK AND 8AND FOR CONCRETE WORK.

Tyinreil'S

" FIREWOOD AND COAL,IS CUCEN STREET - P. Q. BOX 211

STAfl-OULLE- TI 75 CiTS PERHOiH

Trail"

AT 8:15AT 7:45

RESERVED 50 CENTS

T?fl ATTORNEYS

DEBATE IN COURT

UPON PROPRIETV

Attorney J. A. Magoon and Prose-- .

cutingAttorcey Charles F. qhilling-wcrthluid- ,'

a Ung debate; in. policecpuf "att!r3ay ln which Judge J.Ml .Monarrat .frequently tnteriKsedf

i over Sfopcoty 01 pir. aiagoou: having. a 'infn tried In police court, Avith.. the adiiiitted purpose cf; forcinghim to make a weakly contributionto "sijpport,, while at the same, .timepressing a, uuei sun tor unww mhigJheDCttvPfayttg;

The county attorney's office holdsthat, though" technically and legallypermissible,', such procedure is a de-

cided injustice to the defendant andlibellee. This view is. concurred inby the. district magistrate, Jose P.Sanrhos is the unlucky man in thecase. Mr. Magoon maintains that hispurpose is chiefly to make sure thatwhen the divorce case comes up thisweek his man will be present, andthis again is objected to by the prose-cutor, who is averse, he 'says, toha vine: the Dolice court v used as ameans of retaining parties in a suitIn higher court. . ;

This is the same case in which Attorney Magoon caused Judge T: B.Stuart to issue erroneously a writ ofne exeat, a form of writ which, was

abolished in the territory more thana year, ago. ' - 'rr;" :.

POLICE NOTES

" James Green, a discharged coloredsoldier ot the 25th Infantry, was ar-

rested for driving without a license,and for not having his motorcycle reg-istered. Guilty, 5 and costs.

G. Okamoto, held on the charge ofassisting and maintaining a chefabank, demanded trial by grand jury,and was remanded to the circuit court.Bend .was fixed at $300. Less thantwo weeks ago- - this man was fined$150 for, selling chefa tickets. . ;

,, ' .''v'! A 1 . - ' v '

B..'Fortunato was sentenced to lodays in jail for assaulting a Chinamanin his Btore, and two months furtherimprisonment for stealing a shirt fromthe store. .

; F. Keck," who resides in the coun-try, thinks the automobile laws arepretty- - severe and too rigidly enforc-ed. For several months he has beenhaving JhJs machine repaired, and wasbringing it down to get it registeredand purchase new numbers when ar-

rested. ; He was released and thecase stricken. i'

8TAR-B- U LLETI N GIVES YOU' - TODAY'S NEWS TODAY.

Program beginning 1 :30 p. until

Evening (two shows), 6:30 and 8:30.SPECIAL PROGRAM FOR TODAY; AND EVENING. .... v

"The Desert Breed" (two-pa- rt drama),: Rex. ,

--A Sprig of Shamrock" (drama), Edl-- 'son.- -. '? : 'I v .' ,:

"Heart Trouble (drama), Blograph."Mr. Jarr and the Society Circus"

(cunedy), Vita graph. .

- From a friend in Derne, itzerland.a Honolulu family lias recently re-ceiv-

the foUow'.n le'ter, whichgives ylterestm sldt-hght- 'on the warin Erore:" "It is with great admiration that wehear Of the charity with which heroicSwitzerland is treating the woundedsoldiers and officers of all the belli?erent countries, without shewing anypartiality AO either nationality. Although .Switzerland is in a dangerousposition and has many very serioushardships' to free, &be has neverceased to extend the most untiringcharity to foreign countries."Seen after the beginning of the war,

the Swiss Hotel Association tried tofind means to 6ien their ramoushealth resorts to the badly wounded.Unfortunately for a long time thismatter seemed incapable of beingsolved, as all foreign nations thoughtit too risky to send their officers andsoldiers to Switzerland for the purpose

' pf regaining their much shatteredhealth in that glorious climate. Hut

I the never tiring efforts of the Swiss' . ; t a I . . :government, coinuinea wnu iub asiv-anc- e

of the pope, have finally suc-

ceeded."French prisoners in Germany and

German prisoners in France are nowsent, to famous Swiss health resorts.For the purpose of transiMrtation theSwiss government has offered its un-

surpassed ambulance-cars- .

"The first ambulance train broughtover 2000 very badly wounded men.

till were heartily welcomeeveryoae a hero everyone a martyr.'The French war prisoners from Ger-many are sent. to Leysin, a tillage3000 ; feet above Lake Geneva. TheGerman prisoners from France aresent to Davas, 5000 tfiet above sea, cnthe eastern side of Switzerland.

' It has been found unnecessary "tawatch all these prisoners, as theyknow too well that if they should es-

cape, they would be sent into thehardest fighting lines of their owncountries, it is ,vcry thetic to seehow English, French, Russians, Ger- -

mans, etc., do' not tee an enemy ineach other under tiipse circnmstsnces,but they all aaa each aie ea&er tohelp one another.

"it is heai t ui caking, to see strong,hcalthv' men turntd inta hclpie's-- j cri;

I es for life, soine'. bing .blind, dea!.or paitly mentally "ura-ied- .

"Of ccurse. none H these invaliUs araallowed to . yisU tiij; cities, nor to gjnear, the frontier. .' . ; ; - v

"TlL3 Swiss Hotel Af.sociatin.Ja'ss'st-e- d

by the. government, .has dene it3utmost to jkeep; hotel prices, so lowthat this 'work should, net be regard-ed as a' commercial enterprise, b itsimply a noble, beautiful work of ohar--

: itv" . ' ..A.-u- . u

AFTERCAREIS

GREAT NEED OF

FORMER PATIENTS

Superintendent of Insane Asyt-u- s

Points Out Opportunity.. for Social Work

""If proper provision could be made

for after-car- e, many of .our patientscould be released. Many of thosewho are released and return after afew months would never come backif therewas soma one to watch overthem when they are dismissed.

In these two statements, Dr. W. A.Schwallie, superintendent of the In-

sane Asylum, summed up a situationto which he has given a much thoughtlately. In most mainland institutionsof a similar character there are socialworkers employed to watch over re-

cently released patients and gatherthe history of those committed. Thereis no provision in the appropriationof the territorial asylum "for the sal-ary of such workers and Dr.' Schwallie has recently secured the aid ofthe Associated Charities workers, andafter; several conferences with E. E.Brooks, manager of the charities or-

ganization, he turned over to him thenames of a half dozen of the most re-

cently released patients; c

Workers of 'the organization visitthese "cured or "improved" patientsand 'watch over their environment Asin most cases they are laborers, thefirst thing to do is to get worjk forthem. "Any cause for .worry 'must beremoved. "Worry Is a one greatcause of return," says Dr. Schwallie."Cleanliness, proper food f! and occa-cion-

care must be secured for them.The importance of all these thingsmust be impressed upon the. relativesor' friends with whom the releasedpatient is living --for they are not re-

leased : unless there is a relative orfriend to look after them.

"A beginning has been made on thework," declares , the superintendent,"but there is so much than can bedone I dislike to start it for fear Iwill overcrowd the charities organi-ratio- n.

We nave Close to 400 patientshere. : Much work could be done ingathering a history of their cases. I

haven't even been able to get the lastnames of some of them.

"Last year we released 49 patients.30 as Vecovered, 19 as Improved. Weekly visits to all of these would take upmuch time. I do not feel that it wouldbe falr to ask the Associated Chari-ties to "care for all of them yet they

Bert Lytei!AND

Evelyn Vaughan

and their company who .havt.

just finished a 40 weeks' en-

gagement at the Alcazax. Thea-

ter in San Francisco, present- -

in? Wilhrd Mark's Startling

Drama

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I LS tf II II II 1 1 l ii I f J i I bfmJ ((ill sJ ' If V R . )i

AMERICA'S GREATEST EMOTIONAL STAR IN

EVELYN VAUGHAN

CHARLES

A drama of Egyptton Harem-life- ; full'of rare.fasci- -! ;

nation power 'and j; alluring passion anil treachery-- : c

A;;Frolimanmasterpiece.--

FIRST GREAT CHAPTER OF THE NEW SERIAL '

Tie lei

Tonight 7:4m

A tense drama, based upon the scientific struggl

viie out hereditary crime. :

PRICES 10, 30, 30 CENTS. --

BOX SEATS 50 CENTS'. PHONE 5060.'.'.I"..-- J , .........

BOX OFFICE OPENS 6:30 P. ,M.

should be looked after and the chari-ties organization is the only one thathas offered to do the work." ,

, Dr. Schwallie pointed out durinpthe course of a long talk with a re-

porter, that with the insurance of proper after-car- e more patients could bereleased and the territory would be "atleas, expense, and the patients in theasylum could have better care. Muchvaluable . data pointing to the causeand cures of insanity would be gaihrered by such a worker, he said.

"

Biah

ft:'

to.;.:

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A Four-A- ct Play

with ateriffic Pdnc!

PoMcrrul Dramatic4

Situations

Intense Scenes

Amusing Comedy .

Prices 25c,. 50c, 75cand $1.00

- MFROHMAN PRESENTS

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v Authorize f to act as Executor Trustee, ; AdmlnistratoiofcGuardian. Tfanact3 a General .Trust' Buiir -- 3.

(

Page 7: I- mmri a Tr TO 1MSE conssiOHs AM KM HASTENS ITS BABY … · 2015. 6. 2. · and exam!naiNn rooms Each baby goes through the following routine: Dental examination before undress ing;

EIGHT,

HIGHER PRICES

FOR SUGAR IVEXPERT BELIEF

.Old Law of Supply and Demandat Work, Says Truman

- G. Palmer

KAN - fllAXClSCO. Cal The fol-

lowing communication isand seta forth the real reason

, why sugar continues to advance: .

"The ijr"8s of the country Is pub-lishing numerous puessfa yrhlch areassigned as reasons for the present

; increase in the jiriee of sugar. Thefollowing article from the New Yorktieraia 01 .iarcn z. pivea me reaeocnornic reason : and if your localpress has not correctly Informed theirreaders this might he used to advant-age. The Herald's sub-hea- d tells thewhole story.- ."The old law of supply and demandUnresponsible for far more than isattributed to IL Respectfully, "

, 'TPIMiV n MFD. No Limit in Sight for Sugar Prices.

Tn tthnt rxrira mirar Tn a v ria finone would make a guess yesterday inthe ruear district. The world situa-tion affecting that food staple is un-

precedented. In general terms, theworld, outside of fJcrmany, Austriaend their allies, .wants 4.000,000 tonsof augar. The sugar in sight amountsto only about 3.000,000 tons. The sugar crop of Cuba is the largest inIts history. Planting of cane wasStimulated by the high prices and theweather has made this a favorablegrowing season. With all these condi-tions the total Cuban crop cannot ex-

ceed 3,000,000 tons.'In ordinary .conditions a crop of

that size in Cuba would mean reiineasurar at 3Hc a pound wholesale inthis country. The price of sugar yes-

terday at wholesale was 7c a pound.This rerers to fine granulated sugar,the basis of price for refined sugarsand the staple of that commodity assold for consumption.

Price will take Its usual part incontrolling the equalisation of supply

i-Is- Ten cents a pound is freely pre-

dicted, especially in the western partf this country, where wholesalers

tiave been expecting that increase for.some weeks. If sugar goes to 10c Itsexcessive cost to the consumer willResult In greater economy in its use.In the sugar market district here this

v natural equalization wag the subjectof discussion as a principal check on acontinued rise In price.

That sugar is likely to go higherwai a general impression near thefort of Wall street, where are collect-ed the offices of. the great refineries,the brokers and the experts of allkinds in the sugar trade. J

The war Is the ause of the prices.'Kr gland in J913 consumed 1.900.000tons cf 6us3r. The campaign ror re-

duction of consumption of luxuriesthere is expected to reduce thatamount . to 1,500,000 tons tills" year.Engnd has bought 400,000 tons ofraw tugsr in Ccba, and about 100,000tons of refined sugar here. Expertscalculate that England will want l.230,000 tons more, which must comecut of the current crop of Cuba, cal-culated at 3.000,000 tons. She will'supply her allies.

, German and Austria supplied thegreater, part of the sugar consumedtn England, Switzerland and otherEuropean countries before the war.Ttiov An. nit tiinnlt anv.nf it AAV.and that means-withdrawa- l from theworld s supply, outside of the Teu-

tonic countries, of more than alion tons a year.Cuba Cane Sugar CorporationRefuses to Sell Su?ar.

New York Commercial, March 28:With half of Its 19J6 production disposed cf the Cuba Cane Sugar Corpo--

- ration yesterday declined an offer forthe remainder of the out-tur- n of thepresent campaign, according . to re-

ports in sugar circles, althoueh theoffer carried with "it oayroent for theentire 1,700.000 to 2.000,000 bags atthe current price of raw sugar, whichis 4c a pound. As the sugar aver-'age- s

about seven baps to the ton thetransaction would bring $30,000,000" toIhCuba Cane Sugar Corporation, butwould require a heavier outlay on the

4c a pound Includes only costs, andfreights to New York. Duty and oth-er expenses would bring the total tot.S9c a pound.

FOUR HUNDRED "dANCE

,AT ARMORY MASK BALL

Four hundred persons, half of whom- were in masquerade costume, Attend-

ed the; I Is dance held at the NationalGuard . armory last Saturday night

.Music furnished by the Royal Hawaii-an Glee Club was much enjoyed, andthe floor was In good shape for danc-ing. Receipts from the dance wenttoward the furnishing of the enlistedmen's club rooms at the artnory.

As a part in the movement of peo-ple of the United States to erect a$2,000,000 memorial for the late Book-er T. Washington. boys of the 25thInfantry, Schofleld Barracks, have

.i r&Ued $125, and are planning to fur-ther increase the fund next pay day.

Chaplain O. J. W. Scott has chargecf the Contributions for the memorial,which wiir.be In the form of a beaut-

iful building rather than a mere monu-ment of f tone. Booker T. Washingtondied November 14, 1915.

r--v Cnri!;:;d ErtPi 3,

t ,., i urttoCza.CsdandLlclm - f --s yxklJyrtlWedby Karfet

' J L", ) tjiZzssij.Ho&xBvtkt,Just Era Comfort. Af

7our Drczzuf 50c per Bottle, tlartts tyfC --nhTUKiSe. For Cask likcCrcfrmtiAk9tn jwtfssanforar tica.

'SIGNAL COMPANY

OF GUARD GIVEN

DRILL QUARTERS

Room in Old Armory Fitted OutFor Capt. Noggle's Men

to Use

With the tissignment today of one-- ;

half of the' eld armory as permanent 1

headquarters, the signal company ofthe Naticnal Guard, under command;of Capt. R. L. Noggle, takes a distinctstep in its work.' Since January 17, .when the organi-zation wag effected, the signal com-uan- y

has been hampered by lack ofQuarters in which to carry on its workand store its apparatus. Despite thisfact the men have drilled faithfullyat Infantry work and elementary sig-nalling. '

Within the new quarters will beplaced, os . it arrives from time totime, 511 the heavy equipment thatgoes along with the signal service.This equipment ' includes reel carts,flash lanterns, wire, wagons and wire-less and telegraph apparatus.

Though the regular drilj will be heldtonight in the armory as usual, com-pany electricians are to be put to workIn the new quarters rewiring them forsignal work.

Among the company's list of mem-bers are names of some of the bestelectricians and wireless operators inthe city, according to Capt Noggle.1st Lieut R. R. Carlisle holds thehighest rated license cf any operatorin the West, says the captain.

The company will have a part inthe big military tournament, which isto be held here on June 11, and willput through some work to show whatthey have accomplished so far In sig-naling. It la probable that Brig.-ge- n.

Samuel I. Johnson will be asked towrite out a message, which will besent out, relayed, and returned to thegeneral by a messenger on'ja motor-cycle. j

MAJBR LENIHAN

I'ILLSPEAIiAT

AD CLUB I H

MaJ. M. Lenihan, 2nd Infantry, willbe a speaker at the Ad Club onWednesday, hla subject being ''Na-- J

tiopal Guard Needs." MaJ. Lenihan 1p i

a staunch friend of the National i

Guard and thoroughly Informed on the j

local situation. He will speak with S

especial reference to the completionof Punchbowl rifle range and campsite, emphasizing the fact that with'this alte finished, not only the guardbut a citizen training-bo- dy could bogiven ideal accommodations. . Punchbowl .has splendid possibilities for acamp of the Plattsburg type.

The Ad Club committee on . "Whatvo Do for the Soldier" Is expected toreport. The plans - of the SunsetMagazine for a special number devoted principally to Hawaii will hediscussed and the Kamehameha MaleQuartet will disseminate music.

F0RT SHAFTER NOTES

IBvcitl SUr-Bnttt- ia CorrMpon4aa -

FORT SHAFTER, April 22. Theregular dance given by the LadlesAuxiliary of the Spanish War Veteransat Mansfield was postponed this weekas the date falls on r Good Friday.These dances are becoming very popu-lar and are particularly well attend-ed both from the post and from Ho-nolulu, so it was decided to postponethe eTent until Easter week. i

.

Upon the recommendations of theirrespective company commanders thefollowing .appointments and promo-tions have been made at the fort inthe 2nd Infantry:

Company C Lance Corporal ArthurDavidson to be corporal, vice Biles,furloughed and transferred to thearmy reserve.

C6mpany E To be corporals. LanceCorporal Walter Brown, vice Fraenklepromoted, and Lance Corporal LewisHoffman, vice Long, promoted.

To be sergeants. Corporal Henry J.Fraenkle, vice Harris, furloughed,and transferred to the army reserve.

Corporal Benjamin T. Long, viceSchultz. furloughed, and transferred toj.he army reserve.

Corporal . Elmer F. Rough, vice St.Jonns, furloughed, and transferred. tothe army reserve. - : :

Company G To be corporal. LanceCorporal James H. McDonald, viceMontgomery, furloughed, and trans-ferred to the army reserve.

Company K To be sergeant. Corporal Hugh B. GendaIl, vice Carlton,furloughed, and transferred to thearmy reserve. ry 3sr. ;v-3

Sergeant Harry Brown, Company G,2nd Infantry, was ordered to Scho-field Barracks on Thursday to appearas a witness before a summary courtwhich convened at the 1st Field Ar-tillery headquarters. '. f

... "a i .'

. MANSFIELD CAMP DANCE.Mansfield Camp. U. S. W. V. No. 2.

will give a dance tonight at Its hallon Notley street A bus will meet carsat. Kamehameha IV road between 7:30end 8:?1 for the convenience of uessfrom Honolulu. This being EasterMonday, special music w-j- n be provid- -

ef for the occasion. Corae and bringyour friends.

GUARD TROOPS

BIG MILLION

OF WATER A

Consistent drill is now heing carriedon by companies of the 1st Infantry.Naticnal Guard, in anticipation of thetig military contest to be held on May14. and preliminary to the final con-test on Kumehameha Day, June 11.

Three battalions are hard workon the various stunts for the contest,such as wall scaling, blanket rolling,bayonet drill, setting-u- exercises,shoe races and close order drill.

Prizes will be awarded the two tetcompanies in each battalion, and thesesix companies will then go into, drillfor Kamehameha Day. The prizesconsist of loving cups with the namescf the winners engraved upon them.The cups are now on display in Wich-ma- n

& Company's jewelry store. Mostof the drill on .May 14 will be held in-

side the armory, and it is probablethat admission will be charged. Thereis a bare iossibility that some of thework may have to be done on May 13,but this is not known definitely asyet. :

MeivtioiCUSHM AN CARTER, who is visit-

ing on the mainland, was in SierraMadre, California, when last heardfrom. -

CONSUL-GENERA- L HON. ROKURO MOROI, who has finished an in-

spection of the Japanese schools,newspaper offices, sake breweriesand factories of the city, will visitseveral public schools of Honoluluthis week.

MISS DULCIE FOSTER, a niece ofCapt William "R. Foster, the harbo-rmaster,' has left for her home inNewcastle, New South Wales. Herfather Is American consul there. IissFoster has been living. with relativeshere and on the mainland.

HON. THOMAS B. STUART, thirdJudge of the local circuit court, willleave next Wednesday morning for atour of Hawaii and MauL Judge Stu

Baseball and Tennis t

Supplies in the

Sporting Goods Dept.

For the auto-own- er who keepsdown expenses by cleaning Idsown machine, we have

A fine new lot ofSponges and

Chamois SkinsLarge j size a ut omo bile

sponges from 50c to $2.50.Beautiful, soft chamois skins

50c upward.Bleached Bath Sponges . . . .50c each

THE BEST REFRIGERATOR

is the one in which the ventila-tion is so perfect that the odorsof the kept therein do notcontaminate the foods; one"which conserve every bit ofice without rapid melting andone that is easy to keep sweet

clean. . ;

" All the.--e features preent

.in the refrigerators shown

on our second floor.

Honolulu Gonstructibn & Draying Co.j Ltd.

Service First

DRILL FOR GALLONS

MILITARY DAY DAY

SAVED FOR CITY

More than a million gallons of watera .day is bein;; saved for use by thecity this summer by the closing ofleaks in the outlet U No. 4 reservoir.Another million gallons may be savedif it is found j oesible to repair all ofthe leaks.

investigation of the condition of thereservoir, made as a result of the agi-

tation to divert the waters of Hille-bran- d

Glen into it. revealed the lossof more than 2,000,000 gallons a day,through leaks in the outlet. Work onthe repairs started this week, and anumber of leaks have been closed up.The work is still going on and it ishoped by Harry Murray, head of thewater department, that they will allbe closed by the end of this week.

Water that leaks from the pipe lineruns into the lower reservoirs, butthese are not of sufficient capacity toretain- it. They overflow and thewater is lost. Now the flow from No.4 can be regulated and there will beno loss, providing all of the leaks canbe fixed.

The discovery that the reservoirleaks can be repaired combats effect-ually one argument of the foes of theHillebran'd project that the water tobe diverted from the glen, at an esti-mated cost of $30,000, would not be asaving to the city, for it would all belost through leaks in the outlet.

Doyle, ccurt interpreter.

CPU , . JOSEPH W1RASNIK, Bat-tery A, 1st Field Artillery, is now ly-

ing seriously injured in the hospitalat Schofield Parracks as the result ofan explosion ; which took .place whenhe tried to file jnto a detonating fusew hich he. had picked up In the vicin-ity of the target practise headquarters.Metal from the fuse pierced the cor-poral's arm and abdomen.

PEACOCK &'c0MPANY ARE

TO CLOSE LfflE HILO STORE

Special Star-Bulleti- n Correspondence.)HILO, April 21. In future there will

only be one business house of Pea-cock & Co. In Hilo. The "Front street

art will be accompanied by Chester branch, which .was established after

frorn

foods

andare

; . .. .'.

Wh

1

PRACTICAL FURNITURE AND PIANO MOVERS

the Honolulu Brewing and MattingCompany . was boughtout. has beenabandoned by Peacock & Co. and thewhole cf the Hilo businesswili be rudfrom the Bridge... street

i ..'.office...

;.

Out at Honokaa there have beenchanges made also and John' Payne,who was manager of thebranch of thePeacock buainess here, iras reslenedand gone into business on his own be- -

PHONE 1 9 8 V, General Offices, 65 S. Queen St

J rji ,c ..

Vhalf. Fprmer Manager Conradt of the Frank Moran as arrested and finedFront street branch of the. f.rra yz: at inc islanj Cit for sjeedins

to take charge.tojlonoka. liVhi racing auto with .Peart White.The reason for closing the Fi ent : ,

street branch is given out to be tic;tmMe htir sa- - ;

Tery evident fact that there w a hani-- 1 'ly any necessity to run two establish-- !

, Cknhjni? manufacturers in Glasgowraents In Hilo. which had to pay to have been asked to snbmlt bids onlicenses, two rents and two clerical i iKv.H'O yards of army khaki cloth for aand other forces. .central government

V7BCTl

The Second Instalment of Spring's MostImportant Merchandising Event

Twice year comes "Sewing Week," ami although both the Spring and the Falloccasions are practically of equal importance we can almost liear general applause

favor of thev Spring campaign. The only mi.sioh of "Sewing Week" help

you whether you are dressmaker, like make things yourself, engage some,

one sew for you. In each instance the goods you need and want are here for you

in the finest assortments we could get and at the most economical prrees.

Hotel Street

SEWING WEEK" IS NOW ON COME!

Specials torWide Net Laces at 75c per yard.Embroidery Flouncings from 50c per. yard.

White Trimming Brajd, in various widths,; at ilOc per dozen.

Near Fort SAGHS'

Monday and Tuesday Special

ite enameled Bread or Cake Box

A finishing touch to the sanitary, fAjl Aftcleanly kitchen; Tinned inside. $1.85 V vuregularly. Special at .....

raise in A ll A O A QHTf IVT ICthe price of lL.tUJ--U a ill M i-l-

From communication from the factory, quote the following:

V 'The standardized, advertised prices on Alabastine have beenfixed in- - the minds of the public, that to disturb them would be a mostradical change in our policy. While everybody knows the great addi-

tional expense that we are having to absorb because of war-tim- e price-increase- s,

we will work mighty close to the line of 'no profits' tem-

porarily, rather than raise our prices.We are not in business for the possible gain of today, but want to

build for the future. We can promise nothing definitely about themaintenance of the present prices except to say that a raise in pricewill be made only when is absolutely imperative.

The lasting excellence andeasje of application are addedreasons for using Alabastinefor interior;decorating

luesday

This is the season that touch ing up and redecorating the housein order. A change here or there does much toward making things

look like new.Alabastine, the beautiful wall coating for interior decorating, is

sold and recommended by us.Come in and look over the new Alabastine wall and ceiling de-

signs. 'If- X.

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Hotel StreetNean Fort

We are the Island ;.

distributor for

Fisk Red Top Tirs

Golden StarAuto Polish

A liquid preparation that is,a surprise to the automobileowner the first time he has itapplied. Leaves a smooth,glossy surface that will notcatch the dust nor stain withwater or mud. Easy to apply.

A atisf?ctory and lasting polish. Incne-qua- rt tins, price $1;C0.

The Best Auto Polish on the Market.

' V Z'm.

Tronhlo vinderRegardless of thecircamstancea nomatter what theconditions if youneed a light you'll setit instantly with an

FLASHLIGHT

The Eteready neverfails. A genuineMazda lamp and aTunfitca bttery that'sf u a ran teed to give thrmuunum errice are yourlwarranty of MtiafactionA real flashlight at a pricethat is conaistent that'swhat we offer you. ComaJa sad 1st us prova it.

Page 8: I- mmri a Tr TO 1MSE conssiOHs AM KM HASTENS ITS BABY … · 2015. 6. 2. · and exam!naiNn rooms Each baby goes through the following routine: Dental examination before undress ing;

TWO,

3TRIH EXHIBITS

ARE LESSONS IN

(Continued from page one)

ty baby screen loaned by the Japan-ese Baaar is shown it this booth.Oental booth.

la the dental booth fa a large pic-

ture of school class receiving in-

struction in the proper method of us-

ing a tooth brush. Also there are anumber of charts reminding everyoneof the Importance of caring for thebaby's teeth. Parents are advised toclean the month of the baby with boll-- d

water or a boric acid solution ev-ery day; to begin to use a soft tooth-brush at the age of two years; andthat If first teth are properly caredfor the second teeth will be good teeth., Pictures are the strongest in theanti tuberculosis exhibit., which seeksin ttortrav the common conditions under which tuberculosis is permittedto thrive, contrasted with picturesof similar surroundings intelligentlyImproved so as to prevent tuberculo-sis, whifh is now known as a "preventable" disease. ' '

A miniature sleeping room over a' grocery store and near a stable is a

two reproductions of dark, dirty tene-ment bedrooms.

A model quarters suitable for a con-sumptive is also shown in miniatureto teach its lesson as graphically aspossiDie. - ;

The Feeding and Cleaning Boothcontains among other things a cabi-net with two large sections, one dis-playing things that are "bad for thebaby," and the other, "good for baby."The articles included are such as bot-tles, nipples, etc. The appliances areloaned by Dlmond & Co.

There is a chart in this boothwhich points the hour of the clock to6 a. m., 9 a. m, noon, 3 to 3:30 p. m.,and C p. m. as the times to feed thebaby. "Feed regularly" is frequentadmonition around baby headquarters,and mothers and nurses are stronglyurged to stick to the hours scheduled.

There Is a miniature kitchen, todemonstrate the proper preparation offood and six girls from Kawalahaoseminary will be on duty Tuesday atA nVlftrlr in trn t)irnn?h a sort nf bfth'v's"tflrst aid" with their dolls ah subjects,showing the motions for the, proper

of ofmerce Draws Attention to

fJnmhop nf Slav KiririiPS

; One of the most enthusiastic Indors- -

ers or Baby Week among Honolulu'spublic-spirite- d businessmen is GeorgeW. Smith cf Bensan, Smith & Co.,' andpresident of the Chamber of Com-

merce. .. , .

Mr. Smith says, tnai a number ofweeks ago he was making an inspec-tion of the" Russian colony here Incompany with Bishop Restarick and aRussian priest, and was astonishedto find that there are more than 400children under 10 years of age in thatcolony, the largest part of whom aresix or under.

"Baby Week ought to take notice ofthem," said Mr. Smith, ' for it hasbeen proved time and time again foryears on the mainland that the secondgeneration of Russians make goodcitizens; and here are these 400 grow,lag up to be citizens of Honolulu. Un-doubtedly most of them will stay hereand grow to manhood and womanhood,and In the natural course of eventsmany others of that nationality willcome to join them. While we're doingso much for the Oriental races, let'snot overlook these Russians who arepliable. Here's work, too, for the citi-zenship educational committee."

IS

t After a fall in the 'Alexander Younglobby, which he received in a momentof dizziness late Saturday afternoon,O. A. - Steven, former auctioneer,charged in four cases with having vio-lated the emigration laws under ille-gal recruiting of labor, was taken toQueen's hospital, and is now under thecare of a physician.

Steven's condition was said todayat noon to be quite serious, but it Isalso stated that he hopes to hestrong enough to appear in Judge Stu-

art's court tomorrow , morning to an-

swer to the four charges broughtagainst him.

When persons in the lobby of theYoung hotel rushed to Steven as helay on the marble floor Saturday after-noon after his fall, they found bloodspurting freely from a long cut overhis left eye. The wound seemed torelieve the blood pressure that hadcome with the spell of dizziness andto revive him.

He refused aid. though apparentlyIn a dazed condition. A telephonemessage however, brought a physi-cian who ordered him sent to the hos-

pital Immediately. 4

Steven was taken In custody bySheriff Rose Saturday afternoon,shortly after, the habeas corpus writthat he had petitioned for in supremecourt was discharged by the chief jus

CHILD

cleaning of the baby, dressing It andattending to its eyes, ears, nose andthroat, and other ailments ot a minornature:Home-Ma- d Furniture.

One of the most striking exhibitsis that showing box furniture madefrom small packing cases or boxeseasily obtainable from any grocer'sThis booth is in etire charge of Mrs.Malcolm Maclntyre. Most of the samples' of this simple home-mad- e ruralture she made with her own hands.showing how easy it is to do. In themaking of the child's bed from suchmaterial, Mrs. Maclntyre was assistedby Clifton Tracy. ,

There is besides the bed, a child'swash stand, cupboard, clothes box,table with baby and toy furnitures,flreless cooker, ice box. On the wallscan be seen simple drawings, designs,dimensions and directions for themanufacture of these and other piecesout of this crude material. Mrs. Maclntyre states that in many homes ofthe poor, unless some such means asthis is used the babies go withoutadequate furniture necessary for itsIndividual welfare.

There is an amusing series of"Scenes in the life of the new-bor- n

child taken from life" in the clothingexhibit in which a complete assortment of baby clothing is shown ofall qualities and kinds. Whitney &Marsh furnished a good deal of theclothing, and a model layette madeby ladies of Central Union church,distributed by the Associated Chari-ties, is also shown) together with amodel cradle with mosquito net.

Here are some of the terse, triteepigrams that cover the walls of theexhibits room:

, "Clean Up, Screen Up Give theBaby a Chance." r

Dirt Means Danger.""Boil Baby's Bottle." ?

"Much Candy, Poor Teeth.""Smile at Your Baby.""Cover the Garbage Can.""Flies Kill Babies." i

"Don't Use Pacifiers.""Clean the House for Baby." (;"eKep the Baby Comfortable","Nothing Sold by the. Bottle Has

Ever Cured Tuberculosis.""Keep Baby'a Food Covered."

RUSSIAilSilED ;fHSAREBADY vtEIlALSU, iMtlttilNw

HE PUTS OUT SPECIAL DISPLAY

President Chamber

STEVi SUFFERS

FPiOr.1 DIZZINESS,

IN HOSPITAL

WELFARE

That Honolulu babies are well pro-vided for by Honolulu , merchant Isevidenced In many of the'dlsplay win-

dows around town today. Lewers &.

Cooke stand ready to contribute theirshare in making the baby? "environ-ment" as wholesome as cm be theirwindow' shows a number of nurserypapers that cause cvnr passerby tostop and smile as he tries to lecslLjthe days of his own cmMaood, . Twostorks in the window one proudlybending over a 10 A pound baby be-ing weighed on , the scales and thesecond standing back with a . secondbaby In his beak waiting to be weigh-ed next '

Coyne's is showing a line of chil-dren's furniture; the Hawaiian Newshas a .quantity of child books in itswindow; Perkins' photo shop has awindow .full of frolicky, smiling babies

Honolulu's finest-Benso- n, Smith &Co., has a huge Kewpie superintendinga display of talcum powder, nipples,bottles, etc., for baby; Whitney &Marsh show a complete line of baby'sunder and outer garments; May & Co.have a baby carriage with a doll in It,and a large framed photo of a Hono-lulu boy, advertising malted milk; Mc-Inern- y's

has a large assortment ofbaby shoes, and practically all of V.W. Dimond's Co.8 windows are devoted to baby, showing china ware, slKlver, cooking- - utensils,' baths, milk ref-rigerators and other appliances forbaby only.

EO LOCALlDS"

Full REHiBONDS

- . -

RECEIVED. ' ; -

Bids for the purchase of fl.750,000in refunding bonds of the territorywill be opened at the office of the ter-ritorial treasurer at 2 o'clock tomor-row afternoon, snd In New York byCharles J. McCarthy, the treasurer.No bids have been received at thetreasurer's office up to noon today.Word will be received by cable fromthe treasurer, who is in New York,regarding the bids he has received assoon as he has heard from his deputyhere, H. C. HapaL :

The bonds are in denominations of$500 and $1000 and will be issued MayIS. Principal and interest are pay-able either at the office of the treasurrer or at the United States Mortgageand Trust company In New York. Thesale Is for the whoJeor part of thebonds. ;'"'.;tice. Rose did not hold Steven long,however, the; accused man being re-leased on bond of $630. The accidentoccurred shortly1 after the bond hadbeen secured.'-;- .

Olean Harvey Dodworth, cne-tta- e

manager of, the famous. c!i rr:r?ctlorganization knovn as Dciv. crt 'sBand, died at h!3 hc In New Yc:;at the age of 72 yc-r- :.

HONOLULU STAB-BULLETI- N, IkjXDAY. APRIL 24. 1916.

WHAT ABOUT NUT RAISING?

Honolulu, .Hawaii. April 19. 191C.Editor Honolulu Star-Bulleti-

Sir: As it pans out that gardeningand farming on a small scale is nota successful issue to, the extent toencourage the natives of these islesto put forth their best efforts totackle it, I would like to ask the ex-periment station if the soil on theseislands is adaptable to nut raising.The U. 8. government, I understand,has placed an order for salted nutsfor use in the navy department. Thisis said to give the nut industry anew impetus, according to C. B. Irvinein the U. S. paper Comfort. It is be-ing estimated that nut food will bemore in demand as the years go on.

Government bulletins prove thatthe food values of the edible nuts areso great that their use in future asa food product is certain to becomemore general every year. And theculture of this, food is yet in Its in-fancy. The demand for nuts Is con-stantly growing, it is reported. Nowperhaps many farms here on theseIslands If set out to nut growingwould pay better than anything else.The maintenance of such is In sign in- -

csm't-- compared with . fruit orchards.Their cultivation Is simplicity "Itself, requiring only ordinary labor andmue expense; .Dealers in nurserystock have theof several and the planter whoseis relieved any anxiety, feeling cer-tain that the tree recommended forthe climate will flourish and ripenIts, edible food product.

It is now fully demonstrated theproduction of nuts of certain kinds isno longer confined to the southernstates. It is prophesied that thosewho go ahead in this nut productionwill reap substantial profits andpleasure in the cultivation.

The butter nut might be one tropical specimen, and is a very fine tree,I understand: for Its tropicalappearance and fine wood. This treegrows rapidly and yields large re-

turns of oily, nutritious food. Thechestnut is declared the hardiest andmost successful of all nut trees.

have a sort of friendly sympathyfor the small landowners, and wouldlike to see them make a success ofthe nut culture, and hope it will betried for their welfare. The cultureof these trees would suit their na-tures and the nut culture to be solely controlled by the native race, as

protection against poverty, andlarge numbers of them would earntheir livelihood Instead of falling ongovernment support This culture tobe a separate and. distinct process toaid the native race and help to sustain life in this noble; race of man-kind a large-hearte- d peopleadapted to this sort of culture, andgiven a chance to keep" up theirstatus other races where nowstraitened circumstances in many in--'

stances one can see will eventuallythrow many on government aid, ifsomething is not done to" 'help themto relieve conditions .: in many in-

stances, besides large numbers ofyouths will soon be out ofall that are possible to setout for their benefit and keep themon the footing of the more forcefulor aggressive races is really an itemof most earnest sympathy and cpnslderation. ."

I have also thought an' industry tomanufacture perfumes of the blooms

X

News

and balsams of these tropical ver-

dures might be another plan' to aidyoung girls of the native race. Thereare really: some of the most delight-ful perfumes from vines, etc., I donot know the names of, grown onthese islands. An expert on Such ma':ters rom France or mainland citiescould soon fathom out conditions andany industry that will produce any-

thing to home consumption or exportwill be a great help to keep nativeson their feet on a social and fi-

nancial basis with other races, aswork under certain conditions,as sugar-an- pine-culture- they are

'not adapted to. more's the pity.but it's owing to their build and gen-

erations of unstinted hospitality can-

not harden them to It In one genera-tion. :

The Orientals have for generationsunknown realized the stint of povertyin the humbler classes, and have thestamina to "live on themselves," figu-

ratively speaking, to accomplish atask. Not so the Hawaiian he'd getsick or headachy, and although will;ing may be, would faint on an emptystomach or. dwaddle on bis time. Itis therefore harder on this race to"stem the tide" of race competition,and generation of economy is need-ed to instill into them the staminatoT: the progress of mankind, devel-- ;

onment at least that Is the way Iproduced hardy specimens t look at their condition among

. varieties, ' race conditions are- - growingof

-

-

valued

I

'

.

'

and

with

:

-

school andindustries

and

such

and

.

a

straitened, as anyone can see, : anaother dark races over-reachin- g them,on account of this hardened stamina.

Yours, truly,MRS. JOSEPHINE CAMERON YEO.

A FREE-TRADER'- S .ARGUMENT,.

; Honolulu, April 16, 1916.Editor Honolulu Star-Bulleti- n.

Sir: In Friday's issue of the Star-Bulleti- n

G. O. P. writes that In 19 13people In the United States ,received$2,750,000 worth of grain and flour$12,440,000 worth in 1914, and thatthey received $3,100,000 worth moreof leather and wool from farmers InCanada In 1914 than 1913. GO. P.does not feel favorably toward thesetransactions as he conveys the ideathat the money paid for these goodswas a "net gain'" to te farmers, andthat the purchasers and consumers inthe United States lost all. Is it pos-sible G. O. P. does not take into ac-

count that the U. S. people receivedgTain, flour, leather and wool? Didthe bread and cake made from thegrain and flour starve those who atethe bread and cake, even thoughAmerican labor was employed to dothe baking? Did the American madewoolen clothes fail to keep the wear-ers warm, and how about the Ameri-can made shoes from this Canadianleather. Did the leather cut ofT thepoor American feet? If all Americanmoney paid' for Canadian goods is a"net gain," and the goods received are,a dead loss, is it not too bad that the'Americans do not know enough to goto Canada and get this net gain andprosper like Canadians? Americansstay where they are because facts arenot as G. 0. P. thinks.; If It were true that we paid rjeal

money for our imports from Canadaand the Canadians did not purchaseany of our goods, there would be noloss to Americans,' since there wouldbe no purchaseswhatever if they werenot profitable to the receivers of thegoods. - Canadians also purchase from

From1 tEof tfee

those who can give them the most forwhat they have to offer, and G.- - O. Piin his search, "for problems' mighthare found out that goods are export-ed from the United States to Canada.American labor is employed to makeAmerican goods, and, of course,: themore foreign goods that are pur-chased means that more Americangoods have to be produced to y forthe purchases, and making trad absorlutely free would practically mean un-

limited purchases of foreign goodsand practically unlimited productionof American goods to ay for them.We don't get anything for nothing, andrestricting trade is bad business. - Toprotect any commodity;, by a tariffprivilege hurts every other commoditythat would have been produced to payfor the products of the privileged In-

dustry had trade been tree. If we im-port hundreds of millions of dollars'worth of foreign-mad- e goods we willhave to pay for them with hundredsof millions of dollars worth of American made prodjets. There is nothing"dumped" on us that we don't pay forwith the products of American labor.

If there was no labor in the UnitedStates there would be no imports. Temore we import the more we produceto pay for what we get .and the morewe export. In protecting one Industrywe Injure all otters. When weshutImports out we are shutting exportsin; and we are the worse, off in bothways. If we could possibly protect aDindustry alike there would be no protection whatever and there would thenbe no need of a .tariff. If protectionIs better .for the people than- - freetrade, people would not purchase foreign made goods, since local purchaseswould be better, and there would beno need of a tariff.' It Is really surprising after all these years of, tarifffailures' there arc as jet people whobelieve that' there ore prosperoustimes when tariff privileges hurt most.

, FREE TRADE.

I VESSELS TO AfJDI

j jv" f

24.HILO Apr. 23, 7 a. m.:"J3. S.

.for SanSAN Apr. 24:

Hoinnie

FROM THE JSLAFiDS

(Special WlrileaaTy MirchantyExchangt,)

Monday,Sailed,

Mexican Francisc'aFRANCISCO Arrived,

S. S Belridge from Pearl ' Harbor,Apr.14. : :

PORT SAN LUIS--r Arrived Apr. ,24 :

S. S. Santa Maria hence Apr. 14.SAN FRANCISCO Sailed Apr.,24: S.

S. Atlas," for Honolulii. V 1

v.!' Radio Measagea.'.i,,,

S. S. Hyades arrives' from Seattle,Wednesday evening. Cargoes: Ho-nolulu, 3779 tons; Port Allen, 255 tops;Kahulul, ?08 tons; Kaanapall, 70 tons;Hilo, 401 tons, y ., .. ,

MOLASSES TANKS WILL .

V, EXPEDITE SHIPMENTS

JSiMdalSUr-BsSet-ui CorrtiBoaAtol k

April 21. Down at KuhioWharf work on the two big tanks thatare contain molasses which jwiileventually be shipped to th mainlandIs being rushed as rapidly a3 possib.'-i- .

One tank is one "course" up, and thatmeans, for the benefit of the iaynian,that the first rounds of iron are inposition from the bottom upwards.There are six "courses" in all to boconstructed before' the tank will raisoits head up and be able to accommo-date about 800,000 gallons of molasst s.,v m -- ,::

STAR-BUJLLETI- N GIVES YOUy TODAY'S NEWS TODAY. - '

e

Mr. Frank G. Carpenter, noted correspondent, writing from Santos, Brazil, saidto be the chief coffee port of the world, in an article in the Los Angeles Times ofOct; 30th, 1915, says: ;

"The people here belifive in coffee. They talk nothingelse and as they talk they drink. They drink so much ofthis beverage that they grow sallow, and the muscles oftheir faces twitch continuously. When --one of them sitsin a chair, resting his toes on the floor, his knees bob upand down with nervousness, and the whole system seemsafflicted with St. Vitus' Dance.' '

April

Very interesting!And what, pray, is there in coffee that makes people sallow and nervous? The

drug, caffeine about 2. grains to the average cup a powerful irritant of thenerves and delicate tissues of the bod v. - -

Of course not everybody is affected so severely. But caffeine is a cumulativepoison, and sooner or later it gets in its work with many users slowly with some,

Is it wise to tamper with such a menIs it wiser to tamper with such a menace to health ? By far the better way is to

leave coffee. alone, and for a pleasant, delicious table beverage use

.feST-&O-T POSTUM

'K33'":' the pure food-drin- k.

f ";Potom is made from prime wheat, roasted with a small portion of wholesomemolasses, and contains no drug or harmful substance whatever only the goodnessof the grain,

There are two kinds of Postum. The original Postum Cereal, which requiresboiling;: and Instant' Postum, the soluble form, which is made in the cup with hotwater instantlyK They are equally delicious, cost about the same per cup, and bothare good for the nerves, good for the general health.

Reason

oeasr

HEALTHY EAT

LOVE'S RMSIN BEPhone 1431 v Made By Phone "1431- LOVE'S BISCUIT AND BREAD CO.

jr. ;WK STORE CVERYTHINa

JAMES H. LOVE

BE

CITY TRANSFER COUPANVPHONE 12J1

BEAUTIFUL OEIEHTAL GOODS

FONG INN z CO.Nuuanu St.; near Pauahi St.

T5X7H I LE extensiveand improvements are being

made at our old location, we wiH.serve our patrons next aoor,.-- :

Wi?:: ilk 908 Fort ' l

McINERNY'S"Where Quality Reigns"

' ' 'r' ' " NC; 7 T THE' HOST AeTISTZC DISPLAY OF J

D.riignial' Goods; " .' ; - " ' '

Fort Street- -

Always at

AND ORIENTAL NOVELTIES

Phone 1522 1 ; ' Nuuanu, near Hotel

Dodge BrilllilOTOR. CAR

f i--

Concentrating on one car simplifiesthe problem of production andleaves the Dodge Brothers free todevote ' themselves to a continuousprocess of Improvement.

Not pnlj to conform to the establishedDodge Brothers' standard, but to ex- -

; eel It If possible that Is the ruleand the order of every working dayIn every department

The gasoline consumption Is unusually low. ;

"

The tire mileage Is unusually high.

The price of the Touring Car or Road

tter complete It $785 (f. o. b. Detroit)

DODGE BROTHERS, DETROIT.

The von Ilamm-You- m Co.-- :' r:A LTD. '

Agents' ;,;.,;.,':

v'4- - ;

MB

renovations

Cor. Panahi

3