if ttttt hawaiian · 2015. 6. 2. · you can ii nil it in ttttt hawaiian roc into hi o bwt thk...

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v 11 r r -- ! 1 " If yon want to- day's Tho Ilnwnllnn Star 1M News, to-iln- y Is tho paper that you can II nil it In TTTTT HAWAIIAN roc Into Hi o bwt THK ST Alt homes of llonolnh VOL. X. HONOLULU, H. I., TUESDAY, JUNK 17 1902. No. 3197 THE C0L01S REJOICE SONOMA IS E BOAT RACESJfl 4TH BOERS AND BRITISH CONTRACTORS IC CONTESTS THE WILL EXCHANGE CONGRATULATIONS ARRIVES FROM THE SOUTH THIS CREWS AND CONDITIONS IN AN- NUAL BOTH ARE GLAD THE WAR IS REFUSE TO BID AGAINST JAPA- NESE MRS. MAC PHERSON ALLEGED) OVER PEACE. MORNING. CHAMPIONSHIP. OVER. LABOR. LAST TESTAMENT. f i Governor General and Members of the Commonwealth Parliament Attend u Thanksgiving Service. WELLINGTON, June 5. The Actlrtg-.Preml- er has sent the following cable to the King, through tho Governor, on the 2nd Inst: "The Government and people of New Zealand respectfully desire to tender to Your Majesty their humble and hparty congratulations on the occasion dtethe ending of the war In Sotith ' ' rlcu." i The Governor received the following reply, dated June 3:" "Ills Majesty and His Majesty's Government have received with much gratification your telegram of June 2, conveying the congratulations of New Zealand on the termination of the war. Chamberlain.' NEW SOUTH WALES. SYDNEY, Juno 5. The State Parlia- ment has passed a Resolution congratu lating the King on the restoration of peace. VICTORIA. MELBOURNE, June 5. The Gover nor General and members of the Fed- eral and State Parliaments attended a thanksgiving service In the Cathedral. FROM LORD MILNER. Lord MUner has cabled as follows to the Acting-Premie- r, through the Gov ernor, relative to peace: "I rejoice with you at the great re suit to which New Zealand has so largely contributed." FROM KITCHENER. WELLINGTON, June 4. The Gover nor has received the following cable message from Lord Kitchener: "PRETORIA, June 3. Hearty thanks from myself and army to New Zealand for kind congratulation. AWAY TO VOLCANO There was an unusually big crowd to depart on the Klnau today. The ma- jority of the passengers were going to Hilo and the volcano, nlthough a num- ber took passage for Makena and The wharf was crowded with people to see the Klnau depart. George S. McKenzie, the Hilo horse- man, snipped all of his string back on the Klnau. The horses will be taken to the Hilo track and will be piu in train- ing soon, to get them In shape for the Fourth of July races. S. S. Dickinson, the representative of the Mackay Cable waj a passenger on the Klnau for Kilo and the volcano. His visit to Hilo has not, he says, any cable significance, as he Is not looking for a cable site at that place. He is simply on a pleasure' trip and expects to be gone several weeks. He may vis-I- t Colonel Parker's ranch during his absence. Ernest and James Parker were also passengers on the Klnau to Hawaii. Mrs. M. B. Mating, wife of the clerk of the United States District Court, will chaperone the Misses Osborn to the volcano. The Klnau did not sail promptly at rjoon as she was delayed In loading the race horses. The Mauna Loa sailed on her regular run at noon today with a good sized crowd of passengers. She will take 100 Japanese laborers to the Maul planta- tions. The W. G. Hall goes to her usual Ka uai ports tonight at G o'clock and at the same hour the Maul will get away for Maul ports. TROUBLE FEARED BRISBANE, June 5. The Govern ment agent at Guadalcannr, one of the Solomons, reports unrest amongst the natives. Several murders have recently been committed and frlendlles have warned the whites to be on their guard. It is understood tho natives are angry at being excluded from Queensland. SWELL MILLINERY. For choice millinery L. B. Kerr & Co. are In the front rank. The Paris model hats are certainly crea- tions of extreme beauty. Insure your life while you can. To- morrow you may bo Incapacitated,-Th- Oriental Life Insurance Company wants you. Ads under "Situation Wanted" in- - serted free of charge. eeeeettsa68cee8ees 21 , Security and Service In the matter of security and service, the superiority pt the trust company is generally i 023 Fort 8troot muci(iPT)iinKii'mirnd(i)BB(BtiniBiu Carries No Coronation Folk But Has Good Sized Crowd of Through Pas- sengers For San Francisco. The Sonoma. Contain Van Oteren- - dorp, arrived off'the port thfo morning at 6 o'clock from Sydney, Auckland and 'Pago Pago after a very fair trip. The toat was high out of tho water und has but ft small amouni of freight for Ho nolulu and San Francisco. The Impor tations for Honolulu were 100 cases of brandy, 1 crate of fowls, 1 chest of tea and 5 packages of sundries, The vessel left Sydney Juno 3, and j Auckland June 7, leaving the latter port In the afternoon. The vessel brought one days' later news of the outside world, ns the last papers re- ceived here were of June 6, brought by the America Maru last Thursday. The vessel experienced moderate to strong head winds and rough seas to Pago Pago, but had pleasant weather from Pago Pago which was left June 10. The Sonoma will take a good-size- d number of passengers from this port to San Francisco. She will be given u largo amount of sugar cargo at this port. On the down trip of the Sonoma, L. D. Ferguson, an oiler, was killed by be- ing caught In the main shaft and crushed. He was at work about the shaft and his clothes were caught by the shaft. The acldent occurred after leaving Pago Pago and the body was taken to Auckland where It was inter-le- d. Although there are no coronation folk abroad the Sonoma, she has a good sized crowd aboard her for San Fran- cisco, and considerable shifting of peo- ple had to be made to accommodate the big crowd from Honolulu. F. W. Hume Is a prominent Sydney merchant who Is going to America on o business trip. W. F. O'Byrne Is from Auckland where he Is a prominent divine. He Is taking a trip to America on pleasure. N. I'. It. Hume is a sheep dealer In Australia. Dr. Tetens Is going to America on a short trip. Commander Blockllnger, formerly captain of the gunboat Wheeling, boarded the Sonoma at Pago Pago. He passed through here some weeks ago with the Wheeling, but owing to ill health, had to relinquish his command ond return to ihe Mainland. The Sonoma will sail at C o'clock this afternoon for San Francisco. Owln; to the plague having abated consider ably at Sydney, the Sonoma went to the Oceanic wharf. MORE EARTHQUAK E, LONDON. June 5 Borchgrevlnck, the Antartle explorer, claims that he has obtained data at Martinique enab- ling him to foretell volcanic eruptions. Volcanic dust has been seen in Eng- land. LONDON, June 5. A slight earth- quake shock has been felt In Cornwall. LONDON, June 5. A mud volcano at Baku, on the Caspian Sea, erupted sud denly, overwhelming the llocks grazing In tho neighborhood. LONDON, June C The Cunai-.- l com- bine, In order to secure the fastest ser- vices, Include the Beaver, Wilson, Fur-ne- ss and Elder-DenVps(t- er lines and others. ADMIRAL MERRY MAY LEAVE. Admirul Merry, while at his post at the commandant's desk in the Naval Station is still suffering severely with his eyes and expects to shortly take a trip to the mainland where Ills stay may prove permanent. The admiral Is already on tho retired list having com pleted his term ot active service, but remained here at the request of the de- partment nnd to the satisfaction of his many friends In Honolulu. He Is ex pecting mall on tho next steamer that will enable him to leave his post. THE PLAGUE. SYDNEY, June C None of the rats caught during the past fortnight wore Infected with plague. One case ot plague was reported to- day. SEMI-WEEKL- Y STAR. Honolulu people who are going abroad can have the Semi-Week- ly Star mailed to any address for tho small sum of twenty-fiv- e cents a month. The Semi-Week- ly Star contains all the local news of Importance, besides tho dally stock quotations. " Advertise your Wants in the Star. ran Sets of various styles Jiul prices, also extra wooden rackets such ns used by ex- perts. & POTTER CO,, ITO UNION AND HOTEL STREETS - "PHONE 317. Myrtles Have Started at Pearl Harbor and Healanls will Follow this Week. Race In Morning. The annual championship races be- tween the boat clubs of Honolulu will take place this year at Pearl Harbor on the morning of July 4, followed In all likelihood by u. regatta and aquatic sports arranged by tho Hawaii Yacht Club. The annual races up to last year were reguinrly rowed in Septem- - ,l),er month being Anally changed by advice of the coacheJ on account of ness "l,??? ,when d,k any practice by the crews after their arrival from town by the 5:15 train. As It Is the crews have a full hour of daylight for practice. The regatta committee this year con. slsts of S. E. P. Taylor ot the Lellanl noat club, once a nourishing Institution but now practically crewless and boat- - less, as chairman: A. F. Judd. Myrtle Boat and Yacht Club and Merle John son, Healunl Boat nnd Yacht club, the course to be rowed over is the samo as usuul, a mile and a halt straight under the lee of the peninsula, that Is the ma-k- al side. The course will be surveyed and laid out on Saturday ot this week. The distance, one mile and a half, Is a trying one being considered the. limit of full speed endurance and there- fore harder to row than a lengthier race which would be taken more easily with force kept In reserve. Tho conditions at Pearl Harbor, while good, are not favorable to the best possible speed on account of the stiff trades and the con- sequent rough water. The finish of the course Is comparatively smooth but tho land affords but little shelter for the first mile which is rowed nearly in rough water necessitating the high feathering of the crews, often cri ticised by visitors and those who do not realize the conditions. As a further consequence, the time made by the crews Is not record time although fast races nave been rowed under the condi- tions which include the paddling of the shells down to the starting point- - by the crews before the race. The windi, blows nearly athwart the course fbtftj! Is slightly art and consequently the frit? to the start Is somewhat against the wind. While the crews take the paddle down In easy fashion it undoubtedly tukes olf tin- - fine edge of their condi- tion and several seconds off the time. Owing to climatic conditions nnd the business (relationships ot the crews generally, training has to be modified cons! il(.rn 111 V In TJnnnltili, ti'i. t .1... coaches only having control 7jfUielr- - nicn for an hour or so each day und a lew evenings und nights before the ac. tual race. There Is no close surveil- lance by a vigilant captain as In East- ern clubs and a slight but well Judged laxity has been found to produce the best results In these langurous isles. This system does not bring out the best time that the crews could row In under other latitudes but It probably achieves the best results below the Tropic of Cancer. The record time for a mile and a half straightaway was made by the Watkins N. Y. crew at Detroit, Michigan, August ib, ixn in 7 minutes 40 4 seconds, a phenomenal record. On the National Course on the Schuylkill River, Phila- delphia, the Iona crew holds the re- cord, made in '87 of 8 m. 33s. The general time for four oared shells In the past twenty years has ranged from eight minutes and forty seconds to u few seconds over ten minutes. The New York crew In '89, another excep- tional quarter, accomplished the dis- tance In one second over the eight minutes. Any four rowing the mile nnd a half In nine minutes Hat is considered first class. Last year the Healanls won both events, the junior and senior races, win ning me senior anil losing the Junior the year before. The time Inst July was 10.37M, for the seniors, and 11.21 fur the Juniors. Fully 1300 people attend- ed the races, special coaches carrying the crowds along the line with engines nnd cars decorated for the occasion. The mosquito tleet of yachts Is always In attendance with all available launch- es to watch the races from the water while the banks are lined with crowds. This year the Myrtles started training a trllle later than their rivals on ac- count of the moving of their boathouse. They have gone In to redeem their de- feat of last year however and have tho advantage of commencing work at Pearl Harbor a week ahead of the Hea-luni- s. The Myrtles started work on the lochs on Monday having acquired the nouses ot Judge Robinson nnd W. C. King ns their training quarters. The boys go down on the afternoon train anil arter practice and supper, remain there all night on the early to bed and early to rise system of Captain W. W. Harris. The Healanls will start In next Saturday, using Miss Paris' house on .the mauka side of the penin- sula for similar purposes. Several of tho men object to staying all night, but the captains are loath .to lose sight of their crews after dark as a single right's outing or late supper might fat- ally affect the wind of some sturdy oarsman nnd lose the rnco. This year the Healanl senior crew re mains substantially the same only posi tions nnving ueen changed, the better to trim the boat, Fred Damon will stroke this year, changing places at two wltn Paul Jnr-ret- t. Dan Renear retains his original seat at three with Sam Walker In the how. In the Junior only Murray and Tracy remain from last year. Harry Murray will stroke. C. H. Tracy row 3, I). H. Hellbron. 2. How Is not yet final- -' ly decided upon but lies between Eug- ene Allen nnd Stokes. The Myrtle crews, are placed as fol- lows: Seniors: W. Lyle, Stroke: W. Soper, 3; P. Llshman, 2; Sam Johnson, bow, Juniors: George Crozler, stroke; F. Wright, 3; A. M. Simpson, 2; Jim Crozler, bow. Last year only two of theso men, one In each boat, competed against the Healanls. These were W. Lyle who rowed bow In the seniors, and now rows stroke, and Sam Johnson who rowed three for the Juniors, and (Continued on page five.) Chamberlain Toasted at Bloomfonteln Doyle's Pamphlet Progress of Surrender of Commandos. LONDON, June 0. Official messages from Pretoria snow that everytntng Is progressing favorubly m the various uistilcts and the Munition is in every respect satlsiactory. Boers, at a British peace dinner at Blocuitonleln, toasted Mr. Chamocrluln amiust muen cneenng. Tnree coinmunuos near Heidelberg c--ii Monday, and others elsewhere, beg- ged ine rlilsh authorities to give tpem food.. One leader told Mr. Bennet Burleigh, the well known war correspondent, tnat unless peace had been uecnircd they woutd have been compelled to kneel and sue lor peace, as tney were witn-o- ut food, horses or ammunition. LONDON, Juno 6. Tne Times' Preto-jl- a correspondent suys the resolution of the Vereenlglng Conference autnoriz-Ir.- g the signing of ilie terms of surren- der, declared that Britain s insistence not to negotiate further but to uictnte terms ana also the reduced number of Boers in the field, with the Impossibil- ity of getting back the prisoners and tHe necessity for savins the existence of the race, compelled the relinquish- ment of Independence. The Times says the Irreconcllables weira deprived of all justlflllcatlon by the Boer leaders, who lecorded In the clearest terms their recognition that th'e'Ir'defeat was com- plete. LONDON, June 5. A British general accompanies each comundant for the purpose of bringing In the surrender- ing commandos. Commandant Fouche has surrendered- -in Cape Colony. Botha and De Wet, replying to Lord Kitchener's speech at Vereenlglng, ac- knowledged that the conduct of the Lrltlsh had been honorable and gener ous. They promised to serve King Edward as loyally as they would have served Kru'ger or Stevn. Commandant Smit goes alone to the western Cape districts, where persuad- ing the rebels to surrender may be a delicate task. LONDON, June 5. Sir M. Hlchs- - JJeneh, Chancellor of the Exchequer. stated In thenouse of Commons that it was Intended In 1003 to devote the estimated surplus of ten and a half ml'Ilons to the o the I sinking fund and the reduction of the floating debt. Parliament woulu here- - inter De asuefi tc- - guurantee a colonial loan to cover tho cost of resettlement, the conversion of the new colonies' debt and the acquisition of railways. Sir W. V. Harcourt approved of the proposal, and the Loan Bill was redd a third time. LONDON, June 5. The sale of Con-a- n Doyle's pamphlet. In defence of Britain In South Africa, has resulted In n profit sufliclent to found a scholar- ship at the Edlnburg University and assist the movement to encourage civilian riflemen. LONDON, June 5. Lieutenant Suth- erland, of the Seaforth Highlanders, eldest son ot Sir Thomas Sutherland, was killed In action at Frederlckstadt on the 29th ult., two days before peace was signed. LONDON, June 5. Parliament's res- olution of thanks is applied to the olll- - cers and men of the Imperial forces In order to include the colonies. LORD HOPETOUN. MELBOURNE, Juno 6. Lord Hope-tou- n leaves by the Mlowera for Van-couve- V on July 18. FOR THE CORONATION LONDON, June 5. At the Spithead review the warships will lead off sal- voes, which will bo llivd in British ports ull round the world. The Maharajah of Jaipur has brought AUU.UUO worth of Jewels. The Maharajah Sindhia, of Gwallor, inici a wreutn on victoria s tomb. QUEENSLAND F ICES LONDON, June 0. Tho Times an nounces that tho Queensland .Govern ment have converted debentures amounting to 91,300, issued for the purchase of agricultural lands. Into In scribed Block. The London market, It says, objects to these Issues, and any turiner issues win be likely to prove detrimental to Australian unnnces. LAST NIGHT'S SHOWER. There was a heavy shower of rain last night at half-pa- st ten fnllliiK heav lly In the Mnklkl and Walklkl districts and generally over town. Tho shower came from the southwest to westward quarters and deposited 05-1- of an Inch in the standard gauges. Professor Ly ons gives the warning that It may be repeated tonight and Intending out goers should not neglect macintoshes and umbrellas. GUY OWENS COMPANY. Articles of Incorporation of the 5uy Owens Electrical Construction Corn-pun- y were filed this morning with Treasurer Wright, tho incorporators being Guy Owens, W. H. Soper, E. A. Mott-Smlt- h, R. Cation, E. A. Ross ami J. II. Soper. Owing to cettnln errors In the articles they will be returned for correction. WHOOPING COUGH. My little son hud an nttack of whoop- ing cough and was threatened with pneumonia; but for Chamberlain's Cough Remedy we would havo had a serious time ot It. It also saved him from several severe attacks of croup. H; J, Strlckfnden, editor World-Heral- d, Fair Haven, Wash., U. S. A. For sale by all druggists. Benson, Smith & Co., general agents. . Naval Authorities Open Bids From Japanese and American Contractors Withdraw From tho Competition. Five American contractors are dis- satisfied with the decision of Admiral Merry, commandant of tho Naval Sta- tion, to allow the Japanese Ballasting Company to compete In bids for a thou-sand.o- feet of macadamized roadway and curbing which Is to be placed at tho naval station nnd for which the competitive bids are asked. They have Interviewed paymaster Hall who has charge of the contract letting and stale thut their linns will not enter bids for the work against the Hawallnn-Japa-nes- e Ballasting Company ns the latter can work their men at a much lower rate than American citizens can work for or be employed at the rate of. It is the understanding that the lowest bid must be accepted and the reduction of their bids to the Japanese labor basis would bring them out on the wrong side of the proposition, they claim. Vincent and Reiser and Captain S. S. Johnson are timong the firms who will leave the Held to the Japanese. Captain Johnson asked tho paymaster this morning If It was not the law to employ none but American citizens nnd were told that if the men were placed on the naval payrolls as actual employ- es it would be necessary for them to employ American citizens. Where a contractor Intervenes .the naval autho- rities do not take notice of what kind of labor he employs whether It is en- tirely mechanlcnl or of what nationality he laborers may be. QUEEN'S PICTURE, LONDON, June 5. Mr. LongstafC paints a picture ,f the Queen for the Sydney National Gallery as a present fiom the women of Sydney. The pic- ture will be a companion one to that presented ot tho King by Earl Beau-chum- p. VINEYARD STREET BURGLARY A burglar visited the home of W. L. Frazee on Vineyard street early this morning. The burglar's presence was first made known by the shouts of u man stopping In the house, who waked everyone there by Impolite terms at the thief, telling him to get out and np- - nlflnr. vnrhii.a I ,,i t.r1 1 u tni-m- a Ki l.li.i Frazee Jumped out of bed and. made for the scene KaT.m burglar 'got away. The'lnirglar did Tint secure any booty He missed a gold wuitch and a lot of cash that were within his reach. Ills first approach to the house was by means of u ladder, which he placed be tween two open windows. When ho looked In nnd saw two people asleep In the room he lost his nerve, however, and went r 411 nil to the other side of the house, leaving a gold watch and $3..0 in coin that, were within easy reach ot tne open winuow. NEW ARTISTS Manager J. C. Cohen of the Orpheum secured some additional talent today for the present season of valnlcvU.e at the Orpheum. He secured the Wn.'Saw Brothers, Erne nnd Dave, musical com edy sketch nrtlsts, who were on their way by the Sonoma from tho Col'iile.1 to 1111 an engagement on the San Fran Cisco Orpheum circuit. They come with the best testimonials to their ex cellence. They make their first ap 1 earance tonight. LOUISSON'S ESTATE. Ths Inventory In the estate of the late M. Louisson was filed today by Holmes and Stanley, showing the total value of the estate to be $187,815.20, Placing the stocks at par value. In ad dltion to about $55,000 In notei and mortgages, the estate consists of tho lollowlng: 775 shares M. S. Grlnbaum K Co.. $77,500: 70 shares Honolulu Brewing and Malting Co., $7,0"0; shares Metropolitan Meat Co., $400; 1 liana bonds, $14,000; 3 Oahu Sugar bonds, $3,000; 200 shares Ewu, $4,000; 100 shares Hann, $10,000; 23 shares Ho nnlulti Iron Works, $2,500; 85 shares London, Paris and American Bank, $2, 100. Sixteen members of the crew of the abandoned bark Fannie Kerr will sail on the Sonoma this afternoon for San Francisco. Among those who will de- part will be Third Olllcer Archibald Gibbons, a son of tho muster of the vessel. Captain Gibbons will not de part on the Sonoma, however, but will lemain hero for some days. "SING SWEET BIRD." D. G. Camarlnos received a consign ment of fine singing canary birds on the Nippon Maru. They can be pur chased nt his establishment on King street. La Baking Powder Made from pure cream of tartar. Safeguards the food against alum. Alum baking powder are the greatest metucen to health of the present day, oym. muMa wwtmi ea. nr yo. Cecil Brown, Guardian of Her Daughter Charges the Husband with Exercising Under Influence. A contest of the will of tho late Mr. Mary Mac Pherson was heard this morning by Judge Humphreys, W. A. Kinney appearing for tho contestant and de Bolt for Mac Pherson who has. filed a will In which everything In thu estate is left to him unconditionally, with no provision for tho deceased's daughter. Mrs. Mac Pherson died last April. Just after returning hero from Snu Francisco. Soon after Mac Pherson filed a purported last will and testa- ment leaving everylng. "absolutely ami unconditionally," to her beloved hus- band, J. H. Mao Pherson. Her daugh- ter, Alice Porter, was left nothing, thu alleged will declaring that the husband hould look after her, and Cecil Brown guardian of the minor child, made u. ontest of the will, alleging that it hail been obtained by undue lultuencc. Mrs. Mac Pherson, nt the time of her second marriage, was the widow ot for mer Minister of Finance Porter of Hn-wa- ll. Mac Pherson was on the. stand this morning nnd denied that he had in any way lnlluenced his wife In the mak- - ng of the will. He swore that he had never even discussed It with her at all. He went with 'her to the oflloe ot a Valencia street attorney ot San Fratr- - isco, and there she Instructed the law yer and tho lawyer made the will. Two witnesses were called In and they at- tested the slgnnture. In Kinney brought out a long story of financial troubles. Mac Pherson was on tho rack all morn- ing, and he presplred freely before tho lawyers and the Judge got through with him. He Is still testifying. Mac Pherson stated that at the time when he married Mrs. Mac Pherson, whose estate Is vnlued at about J15.000, he had J100 of his own. Up to a few days before, he had been worklnK ns a bartender In the Hoffman saloon. After the marriage he started a commercial agency, but gave It up as unprofitable after two months. From that time on appeared that he had lived on his wife's money. A trip to the coast was carefully in quired Into. Mac Pherson said he hud travelled first class, and he "might have hud" some drinks on the way. Any rhampagne on the boat?" asked Kinney. "Well, perhaps I did have some." re plied the witness. Mrs. Mac Pherson soon followed her husband to the coast. The couple lived nt several different addresses in San Francisco. Including the Grand arid Oc cidental hotels and then Mac Pherson came back to Honolulu "to see what ho could do about the property." He found he' could do nothing, nnd sent for Mrs. Mac Pherson, telling her to come by sailing vessel. Cecil Brown, guar- dian, refused to consent to a $5,000 mortgage. Mrs. Mac Pherson came by steamer and died the day after she landed. CUMMINS DAMAGE SUIT. The suit of the Wnlmannlo Sugar Company, owners of the steamer J. A. Cummins, against the schooner Malolo, for damages alleged to have been sus tained In a collision, was before Jtulgu Estee this morning. The matter ot determining the ownership ot tho schooner was discussed. GETS ANOTHER DAY. M. G. Sllva was before Judge Robin son again this morning on the sum mons for contempt for falling to pay hit) wife s attorney fees nnd alimony, llu was given another day in which to pay up, tlie case being postponed to tomor row morning. ENGLISH TRANSLATIONS. Tho ever popular "Aloha Collection" of Hawal an Songs with English Trans lations are now on sula at Wall, Nichols Co., Ltd. SPECIAL SALE OF SILKS. L. B. Kerr & Co., Ltd., will havo on show on Monday a grand line of Japa- nese washing l'lncapplo and Taffetta Silks. Newest shades, marked from 40 cents a yard. Xiao . Heywood Patrol Shoe The Patrol shoe Is worn by. people who do much walking. It Is al- ways in demand and is as good a shoo as can be mude - $5,00 BUYS A PAIR Positively waterproof sole, calf vamp, rubber heels CALL AND SEE THEM AT COMPANY, LIMITED 1057 FORT BT. L : 1- - i'i,:, 1 If1 Aft' j '

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Page 1: If TTTTT HAWAIIAN · 2015. 6. 2. · you can ii nil it in ttttt hawaiian roc into hi o bwt thk stalt homes of llonolnh vol. x. honolulu, h. i., tuesday, junk 17 1902. no. 3197 the

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-- ! 1 "If yon want to-

day'sTho Ilnwnllnn Star

1M News, to-iln- y Is tho paper thatyou can II nil it In TTTTT HAWAIIAN roc Into Hi o bwt

THK ST Alt homes of llonolnh

VOL. X. HONOLULU, H. I., TUESDAY, JUNK 17 1902. No. 3197

THE C0L01S REJOICE SONOMA IS E BOAT RACESJfl 4TH BOERS AND BRITISH CONTRACTORS IC CONTESTS THE WILL

EXCHANGE CONGRATULATIONS ARRIVES FROM THE SOUTH THIS CREWS AND CONDITIONS IN AN-

NUALBOTH ARE GLAD THE WAR IS REFUSE TO BID AGAINST JAPA-

NESEMRS. MAC PHERSON ALLEGED)

OVER PEACE. MORNING. CHAMPIONSHIP. OVER. LABOR. LAST TESTAMENT.

fi

Governor General and Members of theCommonwealth Parliament Attend uThanksgiving Service.

WELLINGTON, June 5. The Actlrtg-.Preml- er

has sent the following cable tothe King, through tho Governor, on the2nd Inst:

"The Government and people of NewZealand respectfully desire to tenderto Your Majesty their humble andhparty congratulations on the occasiondtethe ending of the war In Sotith

' 'rlcu."i The Governor received the following

reply, dated June 3:""Ills Majesty and His Majesty's

Government have received with muchgratification your telegram of June 2,

conveying the congratulations of NewZealand on the termination of the war.

Chamberlain.'NEW SOUTH WALES.

SYDNEY, Juno 5. The State Parlia-ment has passed a Resolution congratulating the King on the restoration ofpeace.

VICTORIA.MELBOURNE, June 5. The Gover

nor General and members of the Fed-eral and State Parliaments attended athanksgiving service In the Cathedral.

FROM LORD MILNER.Lord MUner has cabled as follows to

the Acting-Premie- r, through the Governor, relative to peace:

"I rejoice with you at the great resuit to which New Zealand has solargely contributed."

FROM KITCHENER.WELLINGTON, June 4. The Gover

nor has received the following cablemessage from Lord Kitchener:

"PRETORIA, June 3. Hearty thanksfrom myself and army to New Zealandfor kind congratulation.

AWAY TO VOLCANO

There was an unusually big crowd todepart on the Klnau today. The ma-jority of the passengers were going toHilo and the volcano, nlthough a num-ber took passage for Makena and

The wharf was crowded withpeople to see the Klnau depart.

George S. McKenzie, the Hilo horse-man, snipped all of his string back onthe Klnau. The horses will be taken tothe Hilo track and will be piu in train-ing soon, to get them In shape for theFourth of July races.

S. S. Dickinson, the representative ofthe Mackay Cable waj a passenger onthe Klnau for Kilo and the volcano.His visit to Hilo has not, he says, anycable significance, as he Is not lookingfor a cable site at that place. He issimply on a pleasure' trip and expectsto be gone several weeks. He may vis-I- t

Colonel Parker's ranch during hisabsence.

Ernest and James Parker were alsopassengers on the Klnau to Hawaii.

Mrs. M. B. Mating, wife of the clerkof the United States District Court,will chaperone the Misses Osborn tothe volcano.

The Klnau did not sail promptly atrjoon as she was delayed In loading therace horses.

The Mauna Loa sailed on her regularrun at noon today with a good sizedcrowd of passengers. She will take 100Japanese laborers to the Maul planta-tions.

The W. G. Hall goes to her usual Kauai ports tonight at G o'clock and atthe same hour the Maul will get awayfor Maul ports.

TROUBLE FEARED

BRISBANE, June 5. The Government agent at Guadalcannr, one of theSolomons, reports unrest amongst thenatives. Several murders have recentlybeen committed and frlendlles havewarned the whites to be on their guard.It is understood tho natives are angryat being excluded from Queensland.

SWELL MILLINERY.For choice millinery L. B.

Kerr & Co. are In the front rank. TheParis model hats are certainly crea-tions of extreme beauty.

Insure your life while you can. To-morrow you may bo Incapacitated,-Th-Oriental Life Insurance Company wantsyou.

Ads under "Situation Wanted" in- -serted free of charge.

eeeeettsa68cee8ees21,

Security andService

In the matter of security andservice, the superiority pt thetrust company is generally

i023 Fort 8troot

muci(iPT)iinKii'mirnd(i)BB(BtiniBiu

Carries No Coronation Folk But HasGood Sized Crowd of Through Pas-

sengers For San Francisco.

The Sonoma. Contain Van Oteren- -dorp, arrived off'the port thfo morningat 6 o'clock from Sydney, Auckland and'Pago Pago after a very fair trip. Thetoat was high out of tho water und hasbut ft small amouni of freight for Honolulu and San Francisco. The Importations for Honolulu were 100 cases ofbrandy, 1 crate of fowls, 1 chest of teaand 5 packages of sundries,

The vessel left Sydney Juno 3, and j

Auckland June 7, leaving the latterport In the afternoon. The vesselbrought one days' later news of theoutside world, ns the last papers re-ceived here were of June 6, brought bythe America Maru last Thursday.

The vessel experienced moderate tostrong head winds and rough seas toPago Pago, but had pleasant weatherfrom Pago Pago which was left June10.

The Sonoma will take a good-size- d

number of passengers from this port toSan Francisco. She will be given ulargo amount of sugar cargo at thisport.

On the down trip of the Sonoma, L.D. Ferguson, an oiler, was killed by be-ing caught In the main shaft andcrushed. He was at work about theshaft and his clothes were caught bythe shaft. The acldent occurred afterleaving Pago Pago and the body wastaken to Auckland where It was inter-le- d.

Although there are no coronation folkabroad the Sonoma, she has a goodsized crowd aboard her for San Fran-cisco, and considerable shifting of peo-ple had to be made to accommodate thebig crowd from Honolulu.

F. W. Hume Is a prominent Sydneymerchant who Is going to America ono business trip.

W. F. O'Byrne Is from Aucklandwhere he Is a prominent divine. He Istaking a trip to America on pleasure.

N. I'. It. Hume is a sheep dealer InAustralia.

Dr. Tetens Is going to America on ashort trip.

Commander Blockllnger, formerlycaptain of the gunboat Wheeling,boarded the Sonoma at Pago Pago. Hepassed through here some weeks agowith the Wheeling, but owing to illhealth, had to relinquish his commandond return to ihe Mainland.

The Sonoma will sail at C o'clock thisafternoon for San Francisco. Owln;to the plague having abated considerably at Sydney, the Sonoma went tothe Oceanic wharf.

MORE EARTHQUAK E,

LONDON. June 5 Borchgrevlnck,the Antartle explorer, claims that hehas obtained data at Martinique enab-ling him to foretell volcanic eruptions.

Volcanic dust has been seen in Eng-land.

LONDON, June 5. A slight earth-quake shock has been felt In Cornwall.

LONDON, June 5. A mud volcano atBaku, on the Caspian Sea, erupted suddenly, overwhelming the llocks grazingIn tho neighborhood.

LONDON, June C The Cunai-.- l com-bine, In order to secure the fastest ser-vices, Include the Beaver, Wilson, Fur-ne- ss

and Elder-DenVps(t- er lines andothers.

ADMIRAL MERRY MAY LEAVE.Admirul Merry, while at his post at

the commandant's desk in the NavalStation is still suffering severely withhis eyes and expects to shortly takea trip to the mainland where Ills staymay prove permanent. The admiral Isalready on tho retired list having completed his term ot active service, butremained here at the request of the de-partment nnd to the satisfaction of hismany friends In Honolulu. He Is expecting mall on tho next steamer thatwill enable him to leave his post.

THE PLAGUE.SYDNEY, June C None of the rats

caught during the past fortnight woreInfected with plague.

One case ot plague was reported to-

day.

SEMI-WEEKL- Y STAR.Honolulu people who are going

abroad can have the Semi-Week- ly Starmailed to any address for tho smallsum of twenty-fiv- e cents a month. TheSemi-Week- ly Star contains all the localnews of Importance, besides tho dallystock quotations.

"

Advertise your Wants in the Star.

ranSets of various styles Jiul

prices, also extra wooden

rackets such ns used by ex-

perts.

& POTTER CO,, ITO

UNION AND HOTEL STREETS- "PHONE 317.

Myrtles Have Started at Pearl Harborand Healanls will Follow this Week.Race In Morning.

The annual championship races be-tween the boat clubs of Honolulu willtake place this year at Pearl Harboron the morning of July 4, followed Inall likelihood by u. regatta and aquaticsports arranged by tho Hawaii YachtClub. The annual races up to lastyear were reguinrly rowed in Septem- -,l),er month being Anally changed by

advice of the coacheJ on account of

ness"l,??? ,when d,kany practiceby the crews after their arrival fromtown by the 5:15 train. As It Is thecrews have a full hour of daylight forpractice.

The regatta committee this year con.slsts of S. E. P. Taylor ot the Lellanlnoat club, once a nourishing Institutionbut now practically crewless and boat- -less, as chairman: A. F. Judd. MyrtleBoat and Yacht Club and Merle Johnson, Healunl Boat nnd Yacht club, thecourse to be rowed over is the samo asusuul, a mile and a halt straight underthe lee of the peninsula, that Is the ma-k- al

side. The course will be surveyedand laid out on Saturday ot thisweek.

The distance, one mile and a half,Is a trying one being considered the.limit of full speed endurance and there-fore harder to row than a lengthier racewhich would be taken more easily withforce kept In reserve. Tho conditionsat Pearl Harbor, while good, are notfavorable to the best possible speed onaccount of the stiff trades and the con-sequent rough water. The finish of thecourse Is comparatively smooth but tholand affords but little shelter for thefirst mile which is rowed nearly

in rough water necessitating thehigh feathering of the crews, often criticised by visitors and those who do notrealize the conditions. As a furtherconsequence, the time made by thecrews Is not record time although fastraces nave been rowed under the condi-tions which include the paddling of theshells down to the starting point- - bythe crews before the race. The windi,blows nearly athwart the course fbtftj!Is slightly art and consequently the frit?to the start Is somewhat against thewind. While the crews take the paddledown In easy fashion it undoubtedlytukes olf tin- - fine edge of their condi-tion and several seconds off the time.Owing to climatic conditions nnd thebusiness (relationships ot the crewsgenerally, training has to be modifiedcons! il(.rn 111 V In TJnnnltili, ti'i. t .1...coaches only having control 7jfUielr- -

nicn for an hour or so each day und alew evenings und nights before the ac.tual race. There Is no close surveil-lance by a vigilant captain as In East-ern clubs and a slight but well Judgedlaxity has been found to produce thebest results In these langurous isles.This system does not bring out the besttime that the crews could row In underother latitudes but It probably achievesthe best results below the Tropic ofCancer.

The record time for a mile and a halfstraightaway was made by the WatkinsN. Y. crew at Detroit, Michigan, Augustib, ixn in 7 minutes 40 4 seconds, aphenomenal record. On the NationalCourse on the Schuylkill River, Phila-delphia, the Iona crew holds the re-cord, made in '87 of 8 m. 33s. Thegeneral time for four oared shells In thepast twenty years has ranged fromeight minutes and forty seconds to ufew seconds over ten minutes. TheNew York crew In '89, another excep-tional quarter, accomplished the dis-tance In one second over the eightminutes. Any four rowing the mile nnda half In nine minutes Hat is consideredfirst class.

Last year the Healanls won bothevents, the junior and senior races, winning me senior anil losing the Juniorthe year before. The time Inst Julywas 10.37M, for the seniors, and 11.21 furthe Juniors. Fully 1300 people attend-ed the races, special coaches carryingthe crowds along the line with enginesnnd cars decorated for the occasion.The mosquito tleet of yachts Is alwaysIn attendance with all available launch-es to watch the races from the waterwhile the banks are lined with crowds.

This year the Myrtles started traininga trllle later than their rivals on ac-count of the moving of their boathouse.They have gone In to redeem their de-feat of last year however and have thoadvantage of commencing work atPearl Harbor a week ahead of the Hea-luni- s.

The Myrtles started work on thelochs on Monday having acquired thenouses ot Judge Robinson nnd W. C.King ns their training quarters. Theboys go down on the afternoon trainanil arter practice and supper,remain there all night on the early tobed and early to rise system of CaptainW. W. Harris. The Healanls will startIn next Saturday, using Miss Paris'house on .the mauka side of the penin-sula for similar purposes. Several oftho men object to staying all night, butthe captains are loath .to lose sight oftheir crews after dark as a singleright's outing or late supper might fat-ally affect the wind of some sturdyoarsman nnd lose the rnco.

This year the Healanl senior crew remains substantially the same only positions nnving ueen changed, the betterto trim the boat,

Fred Damon will stroke this year,changing places at two wltn Paul Jnr-ret- t.

Dan Renear retains his originalseat at three with Sam Walker In thehow. In the Junior only Murray andTracy remain from last year. HarryMurray will stroke. C. H. Tracy row 3,I). H. Hellbron. 2. How Is not yet final- -'ly decided upon but lies between Eug-ene Allen nnd Stokes.

The Myrtle crews, are placed as fol-lows: Seniors: W. Lyle, Stroke: W.Soper, 3; P. Llshman, 2; Sam Johnson,bow, Juniors: George Crozler, stroke;F. Wright, 3; A. M. Simpson, 2; JimCrozler, bow. Last year only two oftheso men, one In each boat, competedagainst the Healanls. These were W.Lyle who rowed bow In the seniors,and now rows stroke, and Sam Johnsonwho rowed three for the Juniors, and

(Continued on page five.)

Chamberlain Toasted at BloomfontelnDoyle's Pamphlet Progress of

Surrender of Commandos.

LONDON, June 0. Official messagesfrom Pretoria snow that everytntng Isprogressing favorubly m the variousuistilcts and the Munition is in everyrespect satlsiactory.

Boers, at a British peace dinner atBlocuitonleln, toasted Mr. Chamocrlulnamiust muen cneenng.

Tnree coinmunuos near Heidelbergc--ii Monday, and others elsewhere, beg-ged ine rlilsh authorities to givetpem food..

One leader told Mr. Bennet Burleigh,the well known war correspondent, tnatunless peace had been uecnircd theywoutd have been compelled to kneeland sue lor peace, as tney were witn-o- ut

food, horses or ammunition.LONDON, Juno 6. Tne Times' Preto-jl- a

correspondent suys the resolution ofthe Vereenlglng Conference autnoriz-Ir.- g

the signing of ilie terms of surren-der, declared that Britain s insistencenot to negotiate further but to uictnteterms ana also the reduced number ofBoers in the field, with the Impossibil-ity of getting back the prisoners andtHe necessity for savins the existenceof the race, compelled the relinquish-ment of Independence. The Times saysthe Irreconcllables weira deprived of alljustlflllcatlon by the Boer leaders, wholecorded In the clearest terms theirrecognition that th'e'Ir'defeat was com-plete.

LONDON, June 5. A British generalaccompanies each comundant for thepurpose of bringing In the surrender-ing commandos.

Commandant Fouche has surrendered--in Cape Colony.

Botha and De Wet, replying to LordKitchener's speech at Vereenlglng, ac-knowledged that the conduct of theLrltlsh had been honorable and generous. They promised to serve KingEdward as loyally as they would haveserved Kru'ger or Stevn.

Commandant Smit goes alone to thewestern Cape districts, where persuad-ing the rebels to surrender may be adelicate task.

LONDON, June 5. Sir M. Hlchs- -JJeneh, Chancellor of the Exchequer.stated In thenouse of Commons thatit was Intended In 1003 to devote theestimated surplus of ten and a halfml'Ilons to the o the I

sinking fund and the reduction of thefloating debt. Parliament woulu here- -inter De asuefi tc-- guurantee a colonialloan to cover tho cost of resettlement,the conversion of the new colonies'debt and the acquisition of railways.

Sir W. V. Harcourt approved of theproposal, and the Loan Bill was redd athird time.

LONDON, June 5. The sale of Con-a- n

Doyle's pamphlet. In defence ofBritain In South Africa, has resultedIn n profit sufliclent to found a scholar-ship at the Edlnburg University andassist the movement to encouragecivilian riflemen.

LONDON, June 5. Lieutenant Suth-erland, of the Seaforth Highlanders,eldest son ot Sir Thomas Sutherland,was killed In action at Frederlckstadton the 29th ult., two days before peacewas signed.

LONDON, June 5. Parliament's res-olution of thanks is applied to the olll- -cers and men of the Imperial forces Inorder to include the colonies.

LORD HOPETOUN.MELBOURNE, Juno 6. Lord Hope-tou- n

leaves by the Mlowera for Van-couve- V

on July 18.

FOR THE CORONATION

LONDON, June 5. At the Spitheadreview the warships will lead off sal-voes, which will bo llivd in Britishports ull round the world.

The Maharajah of Jaipur has broughtAUU.UUO worth of Jewels.

The Maharajah Sindhia, of Gwallor,inici a wreutn on victoria s tomb.

QUEENSLAND FICESLONDON, June 0. Tho Times an

nounces that tho Queensland .Government have converted debenturesamounting to 91,300, issued for thepurchase of agricultural lands. Into Inscribed Block. The London market, Itsays, objects to these Issues, and anyturiner issues win be likely to provedetrimental to Australian unnnces.

LAST NIGHT'S SHOWER.There was a heavy shower of rain

last night at half-pa- st ten fnllliiK heavlly In the Mnklkl and Walklkl districtsand generally over town. Tho showercame from the southwest to westwardquarters and deposited 05-1- of an Inchin the standard gauges. Professor Lyons gives the warning that It may berepeated tonight and Intending outgoers should not neglect macintoshesand umbrellas.

GUY OWENS COMPANY.Articles of Incorporation of the 5uy

Owens Electrical Construction Corn-pun- y

were filed this morning withTreasurer Wright, tho incorporatorsbeing Guy Owens, W. H. Soper, E. A.Mott-Smlt- h, R. Cation, E. A. Ross amiJ. II. Soper. Owing to cettnln errors Inthe articles they will be returned forcorrection.

WHOOPING COUGH.My little son hud an nttack of whoop-

ing cough and was threatened withpneumonia; but for Chamberlain'sCough Remedy we would havo had aserious time ot It. It also saved himfrom several severe attacks of croup.H; J, Strlckfnden, editor World-Heral- d,

Fair Haven, Wash., U. S. A. For saleby all druggists. Benson, Smith & Co.,general agents. .

Naval Authorities Open Bids FromJapanese and American ContractorsWithdraw From tho Competition.

Five American contractors are dis-satisfied with the decision of AdmiralMerry, commandant of tho Naval Sta-tion, to allow the Japanese BallastingCompany to compete In bids for a thou-sand.o-

feet of macadamized roadwayand curbing which Is to be placed attho naval station nnd for which thecompetitive bids are asked. They haveInterviewed paymaster Hall who hascharge of the contract letting and stalethut their linns will not enter bids forthe work against the Hawallnn-Japa-nes- e

Ballasting Company ns the lattercan work their men at a much lowerrate than American citizens can workfor or be employed at the rate of. Itis the understanding that the lowestbid must be accepted and the reductionof their bids to the Japanese laborbasis would bring them out on thewrong side of the proposition, theyclaim.

Vincent and Reiser and Captain S.S. Johnson are timong the firms whowill leave the Held to the Japanese.Captain Johnson asked tho paymasterthis morning If It was not the law toemploy none but American citizens nndwere told that if the men were placedon the naval payrolls as actual employ-es it would be necessary for them toemploy American citizens. Where acontractor Intervenes .the naval autho-rities do not take notice of what kindof labor he employs whether It is en-tirely mechanlcnl or of what nationalityhe laborers may be.

QUEEN'S PICTURE,

LONDON, June 5. Mr. LongstafCpaints a picture ,f the Queen for theSydney National Gallery as a presentfiom the women of Sydney. The pic-ture will be a companion one to thatpresented ot tho King by Earl Beau-chum- p.

VINEYARD STREET BURGLARYA burglar visited the home of W. L.

Frazee on Vineyard street early thismorning. The burglar's presence wasfirst made known by the shouts of uman stopping In the house, who wakedeveryone there by Impolite terms at thethief, telling him to get out and np- -nlflnr. vnrhii.a I ,,i t.r1 1 u tni-m- a Ki l.li.iFrazee Jumped out of bed and. madefor the scene KaT.m burglar 'got away.

The'lnirglar did Tint secure any bootyHe missed a gold wuitch and a lot ofcash that were within his reach. Illsfirst approach to the house was bymeans of u ladder, which he placed between two open windows. When holooked In nnd saw two people asleep Inthe room he lost his nerve, however,and went r 411 nil to the other side of thehouse, leaving a gold watch and $3..0in coin that, were within easy reach ottne open winuow.

NEW ARTISTS

Manager J. C. Cohen of the Orpheumsecured some additional talent todayfor the present season of valnlcvU.e atthe Orpheum. He secured the Wn.'SawBrothers, Erne nnd Dave, musical comedy sketch nrtlsts, who were on theirway by the Sonoma from tho Col'iile.1to 1111 an engagement on the San FranCisco Orpheum circuit. They comewith the best testimonials to their excellence. They make their first ap1 earance tonight.

LOUISSON'S ESTATE.Ths Inventory In the estate of the

late M. Louisson was filed today byHolmes and Stanley, showing the totalvalue of the estate to be $187,815.20,Placing the stocks at par value. In addltion to about $55,000 In notei andmortgages, the estate consists of tholollowlng: 775 shares M. S. GrlnbaumK Co.. $77,500: 70 shares HonoluluBrewing and Malting Co., $7,0"0;shares Metropolitan Meat Co., $400; 1

liana bonds, $14,000; 3 Oahu Sugarbonds, $3,000; 200 shares Ewu, $4,000;100 shares Hann, $10,000; 23 shares Honnlulti Iron Works, $2,500; 85 sharesLondon, Paris and American Bank, $2,

100.

Sixteen members of the crew of theabandoned bark Fannie Kerr will sailon the Sonoma this afternoon for SanFrancisco. Among those who will de-part will be Third Olllcer ArchibaldGibbons, a son of tho muster of thevessel. Captain Gibbons will not depart on the Sonoma, however, but willlemain hero for some days.

"SING SWEET BIRD."D. G. Camarlnos received a consign

ment of fine singing canary birds onthe Nippon Maru. They can be purchased nt his establishment on Kingstreet.

LaBaking Powder

Made from purecream of tartar.

Safeguards the foodagainst alum.

Alum baking powder are the greatestmetucen to health of the present day,

oym. muMa wwtmi ea. nr yo.

Cecil Brown, Guardian of Her DaughterCharges the Husband with ExercisingUnder Influence.

A contest of the will of tho late Mr.Mary Mac Pherson was heard thismorning by Judge Humphreys, W. A.Kinney appearing for tho contestantand de Bolt for Mac Pherson who has.filed a will In which everything In thuestate is left to him unconditionally,with no provision for tho deceased'sdaughter.

Mrs. Mac Pherson died last April.Just after returning hero from SnuFrancisco. Soon after Mac Phersonfiled a purported last will and testa-ment leaving everylng. "absolutely amiunconditionally," to her beloved hus-band, J. H. Mao Pherson. Her daugh-ter, Alice Porter, was left nothing, thualleged will declaring that the husbandhould look after her, and Cecil Brown

guardian of the minor child, made u.ontest of the will, alleging that it hail

been obtained by undue lultuencc.Mrs. Mac Pherson, nt the time of hersecond marriage, was the widow ot former Minister of Finance Porter of Hn-wa- ll.

Mac Pherson was on the. stand thismorning nnd denied that he had inany way lnlluenced his wife In the mak- -ng of the will. He swore that he had

never even discussed It with her at all.He went with 'her to the oflloe ot aValencia street attorney ot San Fratr- -

isco, and there she Instructed the lawyer and tho lawyer made the will. Twowitnesses were called In and they at-tested the slgnnture.

In Kinney broughtout a long story of financial troubles.Mac Pherson was on tho rack all morn-ing, and he presplred freely before tholawyers and the Judge got through withhim. He Is still testifying.

Mac Pherson stated that at the timewhen he married Mrs. Mac Pherson,whose estate Is vnlued at about J15.000,he had J100 of his own. Up to a fewdays before, he had been worklnK ns abartender In the Hoffman saloon. Afterthe marriage he started a commercialagency, but gave It up as unprofitableafter two months. From that time on

appeared that he had lived on hiswife's money.

A trip to the coast was carefully inquired Into. Mac Pherson said he hudtravelled first class, and he "mighthave hud" some drinks on the way.

Any rhampagne on the boat?" askedKinney.

"Well, perhaps I did have some." replied the witness.

Mrs. Mac Pherson soon followed herhusband to the coast. The couple livednt several different addresses in SanFrancisco. Including the Grand arid Occidental hotels and then Mac Phersoncame back to Honolulu "to see what hocould do about the property." Hefound he' could do nothing, nnd sent forMrs. Mac Pherson, telling her to comeby sailing vessel. Cecil Brown, guar-dian, refused to consent to a $5,000mortgage. Mrs. Mac Pherson came bysteamer and died the day after shelanded.

CUMMINS DAMAGE SUIT.The suit of the Wnlmannlo Sugar

Company, owners of the steamer J. A.Cummins, against the schooner Malolo,for damages alleged to have been sustained In a collision, was before JtulguEstee this morning. The matter otdetermining the ownership ot thoschooner was discussed.

GETS ANOTHER DAY.M. G. Sllva was before Judge Robin

son again this morning on the summons for contempt for falling to pay hit)wife s attorney fees nnd alimony, lluwas given another day in which to payup, tlie case being postponed to tomorrow morning.

ENGLISH TRANSLATIONS.Tho ever popular "Aloha Collection"

of Hawal an Songs with English Translations are now on sula at Wall,Nichols Co., Ltd.

SPECIAL SALE OF SILKS.L. B. Kerr & Co., Ltd., will havo on

show on Monday a grand line of Japa-nese washing l'lncapplo and TaffettaSilks. Newest shades, marked from 40cents a yard.

Xiao .

HeywoodPatrolShoe

The Patrol shoe Isworn by. people who domuch walking. It Is al-ways in demand andis as good a shoo ascan be mude -

$5,00BUYS A PAIR

Positively waterproofsole, calf vamp, rubberheels

CALL AND SEETHEM AT

COMPANY, LIMITED

1057 FORT BT.

L :

1- -

i'i,:, 1 If1 Aft' j '

Page 2: If TTTTT HAWAIIAN · 2015. 6. 2. · you can ii nil it in ttttt hawaiian roc into hi o bwt thk stalt homes of llonolnh vol. x. honolulu, h. i., tuesday, junk 17 1902. no. 3197 the

TWO

nadian -- AllSIIJ Royal

STEAMSHIP COMPANY

teamer of the ah ive line, running In connection with the CANADIAN

PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY between Vancouver. B. C, and Sydney, N.

. W., and calling at Victoria B. C, Honolulu and Brisbane, Q. ,

Dae at Honolulu on or nbout tho dates below stated, viz:

Warn Vancouver and Victoria, B. C,Cor Brisbane and Sydney.

HlORANGI JULY 6

and forand Vancouver, C:

Calling at Suva, Fiji, on BothUp and Down Voyages

Ma

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

Pacific Mail Steamship Co.Occidental & Oriental S. S. Co.

and Toyo Kisen Kaisha.

Steamers fthe above Companies will call Honolulu and leave thisport on or about the dates below men tloned:

FOR CHINA AND JAPAN.PEKING JUNE 19GAELIC JUNE 28HONGKONG MARU JULY C

CHINA JULY 15DORIC JULY 23NIPPON MARU JULY 31IPERU AUG. 8COPTIC AUG. 16HONGKONG MARU AUG. 26CHINA SEPT. B

For

The fine this lino will and this

SAN

JUNEJUNE 27JULY 9JULYJULY 30

82029

SEPT. 10SEPT. 19..

Local Boat.

From Brisbane,B.

JULY 2

of at

FOR SANCHINA JUNE 21DORIC JUNE 28

MARU JULY 8PERU JULY 16

JULY 25AMERICA MARU AUG. 2

AUG. 11AUG. 20

DORIC SEPT. 12MARU SEPT. 20

information apply to

H. HACKFEI.D & CO., Ltd. Agts.

Oceanic Steamship Company.

Passengers of afrlve at leave portM hereunder:

FROM FRANCISCO.

SIERRA 18

ALAMEDASONOMAALAMEDA 18

VENTURAALAMEDA AUGUST

SIERRA AUGUSTALAMEDA AUGUST

SONOMAALAMEDA

w

Sydney Vic-toria

FRANCISCO.

NIPPON

COPTIC

PEKING

general

Steamers

FOR SAN FRANCISCO.

SONOMA JUNE 17JULY 2JULY 8JULY 23

SIERRA JULY 29AUG. 13

SONOMA AUG 19

ALAMEDA SEPT. 3

SEPT. 9ALAMEDA SEPT. 21

En connection with the sailing of the above steamers, the Agents are pre-pared to 1 ue, to Intending passengers coupon through tickets by any railroadfrom San Francisco to all points In the United States, and from New York by

line to all European Ports.For further particulars apply to

.

.

:

Irwin & Co.(LIMITED)

(General Agents Oceanic S. S. Company,

Bi-HaiiiSteaiiiGi- .,

Direct Monthly Service BetweenNew York and Honolulu,"Via Pacific Coast

The splendid new steel steamers

"OREGONIAN": to sail about July 15th, 1902,

ALASKAN" TO sail about August 15th, 1902.

Freight received at Company's wharf, 42d Street, South Brooklyn, at alltimes.

From San Francisco :"iNEVADAN," to sail about July 8th., 1902.

Freight received at Company's wharf, Stewart Street, Pier No. 20.

From Seattle and Tacoma :

S. S. "AMERICAN": to sail June 15, 1902.

H. Hackfeld & Co., LtdC P. MORSE, General Freight Agent

MOANA

GAELIC

NIPPON

ALAMEDAVENTURAALAMEDA

ALAMEDA

VENTURA

Steamship

AGENTS.

SHIPPING lUNGE(For additional and later shipping sec

pages 4, 6, or 8.)

ARRIVING.Tuesday, Juno 17.

S. S. Sonoma, Van Oterelidorp, fromSydney, Auckland and Pago Pago, ut6:15 u. m.

Wednesday, Juno 18.S. S. Sierra Houdlette, from San

Francisco, due In morning.

DEPARTING.Tuesday. June 1"

Stmr. Mauna Lon, Slmerson, for La- -luiina, Maalaca, Kona and Kau ports,at noon.

Stmr. Klnau, Freeman, for Hllo undwuy ports, ut noon.

Stmr. V. G. Hall, S. Thompson, forKauai ports, at 5 p. m.

Stmr. Maul, F. Bennett, for Maulports, at 5 p. m.

Stmr. Noeau, Mosher, for Lahalna,Kaanapall, Honokaa and Kukulhaele,ai 5 p. m.

S. S. Sonoma, Van Oterendorp, forSan Francisco, at 5 p. m.

Wednesday, June 18.S. S. Sierra, Houdlette, for Sydney,

Auckland and Pago Pago, probablysail In evening.

PASSENGERS.Arriving.

Per S. S. Sonoma, June 17, from Syd-ney, Auckland' and Pago Pago. ForHonolulu: Air. and Mrs. Crookshankand two children, Miss Murdock, T.Herd, Mr. Muller and Mr. Hyde. ForSan Francisco: Commander Blockllng- -er, mi: and airs. Adkins, Mrs. Adkins'maid, C. S. Adams, D. Abbot, Mrs. Bed-dar- d

and Infant, Mr. and Mrs. JamesRone, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bills, Wal-ter Hills, F. Hercll, Mr. and Mrs. E. M.Crookshank and two children, Mr. andMrs. F. Cole, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Dear-lov- e

and child, P. Duffy, Miss Esse,Mr. Firman, It. Grlce, Miss Allaway,Miss Allaway, Mrs. Brake, Miss Brake,Miss R. Christian, Mrs. Cliampness, 15.A. Cowley, A. Campbell, M. Duhlg,Miss I. Fold!, Miss It. Gibson, Capt.and Mrs. Grant and family. Miss A.Howard, T. Irvine, J. Kllpatrick, MissGeary, George Hoppenstedt, T. F.Hough, J. A. Hamilton, F. W. Hume,N. F. R. Hume, Mrs. AV. R. Menziesand child, V. J. Martin, Rev. W. F.O'Byrne, Mi. And Mrs. W. T. Price, Mr.Pender, AV. C. Poole, Mr. and Mrs. AV.H. Russell, E. Reynolds, Mrs. VessaRlngel, E. A Robinson, Misses Taylor(2), Mr. Thompson, Dr. Tetens, C. P.Vernon, Dr and Mrs. AVolfhagen, Mr.and Mrs. R. H. AVilklns, T. AVIlks, Mr.Younir. Mr. McDonald at.. n.iA'lncent Morgan. Mr. and Mrs. M. U.--uergentneim, jsrnest R. Nash, Mrs. T.O'Brien, Miss A. Parker, Mr. and Mrs.M. Rosenberg and family, L. Rosen-berg, J. IT. Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Rich-mond and two children, Mr. Symonds,Mr. Simpson, Mr. Thompson, AA'. Wil-son, Mrs. Parslow W.illace and child.Air. and Mrs. AV. AVearne, E. AArarsaw,D. AA'arsaw.

Departing.Per. stmr. Maul. .Tnim IT v,.. t .,i.

Ina. Miss B. Ihihl; for Ka'hulul, Mrs.jj. i- iiamwin, .Miss Grace Colburn, ('.H. Smith, ('. H. Dickey, Mrs. K. K. CJ.AA'allaee. 3 children ami wmni m..N. Plenier and son, Rebecca Ponce!uary uutro, Mrs. Grace AVaterhouse.Miss B. Dickey, Mrs. C. H. Dlctsey,Miss .AI. Klrkland.

Per stmr. Klnau, June 17, for Hllo.nil George Russell. A. AV. Fred-cric- k.

Mrs. L. Hart and 2 children.John O'ltoUke. L. K. Pmronn ivlfv. n.wlson, S. S. Dickinson, AV. S. Perkins,George S. McKenzle, C. C'asterdyck,Mrs. Goidon Rusrell, child and servant,C. H. Fox, F. J. Amweg, Rev. J. A.Cruzan, E. L. Newman and wife, MissI.iedert, Mrs. Blxley, J. H. McKenzle,AV. Ragsdale, T. M. Rowland, JackKaston, E. S. Boyd and assistant, J.Michaels; for tho A'olcano, Miss n.

Miss Florence Osborn, Mrs. AA' BMallng, S. N. Hundley, Miss Hundley.F. S. Llpby, Oscar Sellers; for Kawal-ha- e,

A. F. Judd, James Parker, ErnestParker; for Laupahoehoe, W. G. AValk-e- r;

for Lahalna, J. Fujlyoshl, A. AV.Dow; for Makena, H. F. Hayselden,Master Hayselden, Luke Mong AV.i. GAkura, Miss E. K. Knoht, Mrs. Hty-selden- 's

servant; for Maalaea, L. K.Akana, Chow Fat, C. Kaiser; for a,

O. M. Atwood, John Cullen,Edmund Irish Miss Gertrm'e Reutnn,M. A. Johnson, James Renton, Theo-dore AVolff.

Per S. S. Sonoma, June 17, for SanFrancisco. Miss AVoods, AA H. Baugh,Mrs. McCully-Hlggln- s, Miss AVestcott,Mrs. Carr, Mrs. M. B. Hammond, Mrs.B. B. Hammond and daughter, P. S.Schneider Miss- - Tabritt, Mrs. C. Morse,Mrs. L. P. Appleman and child, Mrs.Isaac Moore, Edward Osborn and fam-ily, Mrs. J. J. Geavy, Miss Geavy, MissA. Brady, Miss Powers, It. AVInkle-man- n,

C. N. Spiers, Gordon Usbornc, A.M. AVaicott, I'. JI. Plumb, Miss C. S.Plumb, Mr. and Mrs. Laidlaw, Dr. and.Airs. Tripp, II. K. Duftus, S. T. Alex-ander, L. Honlgsberger. Mrs. Gilchrist,AV. T. A'eltch, AV. AV. Tucker, Mrs. C.St. Allen, R. E. Braden, L. J. Phelps,AV. J. Conroy. J. L. AV. Zarmwalt, wifeand four children, Mrs. Goodwin, MissDoan, Mrs. Samuel Johnson, Mrs. Cam-eron, AV. H. Lelmet, AA S. Porter, Mrs.O. U. Lewis, Frank J. Lewis, Mrs. Al-bert Clare, Mrs. J. A. Porter.

Booked to Arrive.Per S. S. Sierra, June 18, from Sun

Francisco. Col. A. G. Hawes, H. P.Baldwin, R. AV. AVoods, AV. C. Pea-cock and wife, AV. C. Dobbs, C. D. Per-ry and son, Dr. A. A. Dodglns, AV. M.Rogers, Miss F. Lyons, Miss J. Pratt,Miss Desha, Mrs. M. D. Frear, E. B.Clark, F. Ar. Berger, Mrs. Mary Austin,Miss Irma AA'oodward, Mrs. A. Rogersand 2 children, Miss Llla Craig. G. E.AVest, F. AV. Everton, wife and child,G. P. AVllcox, H. AV. Hyers, wife andmaid, J. S. Elston, J. P. Cooke, A. Rob-inson, wife and 2 children, Master C.Spreckels, Miss L. Spreckels, Mrs.Crawford and child, A. S. Robinson, A.F. Robinson, Miss Graff, Miss King. tfV llnhtnsnn Mi-- XX H T7,ihltiann Af

J. S. Gay, Mrs. D. Stoney and child, Dr.j. m, lion, wile ana z cnnuren, . u.Murray, 11. Holmes, Mr. Cartwrlght,Miss Fennane, S. A. Baldwin, Mrs. A.M. Elston, Miss Elston.

SAILORS ARE KICKING.Three Americans who were members

of tho crew of the British bark FannieKerr are loud In their protests againstthe treatment being given them b theBritish Government. Consul . Hoarohas arranged for the transportation ofall of the British sailors to San Fran-cisco today, but yesterday ho notifiedthe shipping commissioner that asthree of the sailors were Americansand thoy wero In an American port,they would have to shift for them-selves. The British Government makesno provisions for the care of seamenunder such circumstances. The three

men were very angry over the discrim-ination and expressed the opinion thatthey should be treated like the othermembers of the crew. Shipping er

Porter Boyd offered to aidthem to get berths on American ves-sels about to depart for San Francisco,but the men did not cure to ship

ENGUSH MA S

POVERTY CAUSES MANY TO AVED

? YOUNG.

'Many Wives and Widows of Fifteen toTwenty Years Custom Impalres theElllcloncy of the Nation.

A. Monteflore Brlce, writing for thoLondon Dally Mall, says that In Lon-don there are 13,000 married personswho are 20 years of age or under. Thelatest report shows that In the metro-pol- ls

there are .10 wives aged 15, 23wives and widows aged 16, 164 wivesand widows of 17 years of age, 971 aged18, 2712 aged 19, and 6672 wives andwidows at 20 years. The husbands arenaturally fewer. Yet there are 787 hus-bands from 16 to 19 years old, and 2022Just 20 years of age.

Mr. Brie? says that the proportion ofthese boy and girl marriages Is Inva-riably greatest where the social stateIs least advanced. "The majority ofsuch marriages are contracted In ab-solute poverty. Not a sovereign no,nor half a sovereign has been saved.The few 'sticks' and sticks, Indeed,they are, are obtained on tho hire sys-temone shilling down. The girl-wlf- o

can neither cook nor sew: to sweep andscrub she is averse as well as unaccus-tomed. Reared In some squalid, two-room- ed

home, she has passed In thostreet the time she could steal fromschool. So, too, with tne d.

The overcrowded home, with Its wantof welcome, throws him on the street.His life, reacting on an unawakenedmind, makes his days deadly dull. Hecraves for excitement society change.As he grows from boyhood to adoles-cence he needs a companion. And so,partly from natural sexual selectionand partly, as his age and wages in-crease, because he associates more withmen, he seeks a wife. For his new es-tate he wants a cook and a washerwo-man, anJ he marries to and ho has gotneither the one nor the other."

The latest census showed that therewere about 2000 husbands under agewho were not living with their wives.Mr. Bribe says that the majority haddeliberately separated. "Distant workhad taken some away; poverty andcrime had divorced others. Among theInmates of London's workhouses arehusbands, wives, widowers and widowsof 13 and 16 years of age! In Londonprisons I llnd that out of a total of 830persons under age, more than 200 a.emarried. And out of 1284 under 23years of age no fewer than 576 are mar-ried."

Taking the country at large, underthe latest census there were in all 56,-3- 98

married persons under aire to befound In England and AVales. "The po-lice courts, the workhouses and tho pri-sons are eloquent of such early mar-riages," says Mr. Brlce. "It seems established beyond controversy that thevstrew our social life with wreckage.Tile philanthropists and reformers rageviolently against them. The doctorsspeak ominously of the new generationtnese cniid-mairiag- es will produce. Ailunite in agreeing that they impair theelliciency of the nation."

HE.AIOA'ING HIS HOUSE.The Maul brought about 12,000 feet of

lumber as cargo Sunday from Hamoa.J. J. Drummond, the storekeeper ofHamoa plantation, decided that hishouse was not worth anything at Ha-moa with the Plantation nan. so h hmithe house torn down and brought toHonolulu. He will rchnllil It In thiucity.

AVON AT BASEBALL.The Knmalo baseball team defeated

the Pukoo team last AA'ednesday atKamalo by the score of 10 to 7.

CHINESE NEAV TESTAMENT.A Chinese New Testament was given

to the Princeton theological seminarylibrary Tuesday. The book, which is afacsimile of the one recently presentedto the empress dowager of China, andwhich Is probably tho only one of Itskind in America, was given by Mrs.John Stranoch of Philadelphia. It waspresented to her by the British andforeign Bible society in recognition ofthe services of her husband, who trans-lated the New Testament Into Chinese.It was published at the university ofOxford.

Advertise your AVants in the Star.

The following are the arrivals anddepartures of foreign steamers:ieave Honolulu for 8. F. or Victoria.Sonoma June 17China June 21Doric June 28

Alameda July 2Nippon Maru July 8

Ventura .' July 8Peru July 16Alameda , July 23Coptic July 25

Sierra July 29America Maru Aug. 2

Peking , Aug. 11Alameda Aug. 13Sonoma Aug. 19Gaelic Aug. 20Hongkong Maru Aug. 26

Alameda Sept. 3China Sept. 5Ventura Sept. 9Doric Sept. 12Nippon Maru Sent. 20

Alameda Sept. 24

Arrive Honolulu from 8. '. or Victoria.America Maru June 11

Sierra June 18Peking , June 19Alameda June 27Gaelic June 28

Aorangl July 5Hongkong Maru July 5

Sonoma July 9China July 15Alameda July 18Doric July 23

Ventura ...July 30Nippon Maru July 31

Alameda , Aug. 8Peru Aug. 8Coptic Aug. 10

Sierra Aug. 20America Maru Aug. 23

Alameda Aug. 29Peking Sept. 2Sonoma Sept. 10Gaelic Sept. 10Hongkong Maru Sept. 18

Alameda , Sept. 19

Carry Mall .only,

Don't Co On Worrying

BRILLIANT,

Telephone 840

I IICAT

er fit i ni

DAHDHAMP.LAtll,

ECONOMICAL

Theo. H. Davies & Co.JLXJMLI'lVEfiD

Hardware Department

GRIBS AND BABIES'

A now Invoice-- Just oponed,Call oarly or you will miss a choice.

It. 11.

In yourIs

It. oC

havo

withlight

givesis and,

burns butlittle

fromand

and putNew

GITY STOREWILLIAMS,

Lore 534

An ImportsntAbout Good Buffer

Keep your In ice chest when on table. letit soft. The best made be so good If allowed to

We deliver our hard and in board cartonswhich keep It contact with other foods In the Ice chest.

To have best, use

.WE HAVE A LARGE ANDWELL STOCK

g

King corner of Smith.Branch Stores in

Now is time buy aof

Excellent flower pots and palmpots of perfect mould, at verylow prices. See them In our win-dow.

FLOAVEIt

4 ., Co eachC " .7 10c "8 " 20c "

10 " 40c "12 " 60o "

PALM

Inoh ,. $2.50 each16 " 3.00 "18 " 4.00 "22 " 5.50 "

Saucers for the llower pots atlow prices also.

LIMITED

Manager

FORT STREET, -

UTILE

ipjyj

With inferior or need-lessly expenslvo Illu-minationhome. There abso-lutely no occasion for

Thousandsthrough-

out the Islandsremoved this annoy-ing problem entirely:by them-selves the idealperfect for thohome. It Is as bril-liant as gas or electri-city, never smokes,smells or anytrouble, lighted

as easilyas gas, and

kerosene oil. Ourcatalogue shows allstyles $1.80 up,

is sent for

BEDS

Furniture KK bb,ntLunpacked'

FURNITURE

and 586 Fort Street

Lesson

butter the not the Don'tget butter will not be-

come soft. butter frozen cardfrom

the

Crystal Spring Butter

Metropolitan Meat Co., LtdTelephone Main 45

. Oriental BazaarSELECTED OF

LINEN CIOTHAND

66-7- 2 StreetHongkong Shanghai and Yokohama.

the to

Terra-Cott- a

Flower Pots

POTS

inch

POTS

14

1 1 IKE.

HONOLULU

housekeepers

acquainting

extinguished

Bnilding,

Olfc

MEW TERRITORY RESTAURAHT,

TAM SING. MANAG 1.

OPEN DAY AND NIGHTMEALS 25 CENTS.

MEAL TICKETS. $4.50.

FO-- .- STREET, Opposite Club Stable,

Screens.Something new In Shades for

the Lanal.AVe are tho sole agents in the

Hawaiian Islands for tho fam-ous

AMERICAN PORCH SHADES.We now have them on sale, andinvite the public to call and In-spect them.

Now Rugs, In light, cool colors.Just the thing for this hotweather.

We are now prepared to showour new line of Dining Tablesand Chairs. Round and SquareDining Tables at tho rightprices.

Hopp & Co.,Loading FurnlturoDoalors . . .

KING & BETHEL STREETSPhone HI Main.

9

I

Ada under "Situations Wanted." in-serted fre of charge In the Star.

Page 3: If TTTTT HAWAIIAN · 2015. 6. 2. · you can ii nil it in ttttt hawaiian roc into hi o bwt thk stalt homes of llonolnh vol. x. honolulu, h. i., tuesday, junk 17 1902. no. 3197 the

DR. J. M. WHITNEY,DENTIST.

Boitoa Building, Fort Street Over II.May & Co.

nouns: 0 6. Tel. Main 277.

DR. A. C, WALL, OR, 0, E, ILL,r e pr tis 1? s.

LOVE) BUILDING, FORT STREET,' 'cphone 434.

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

DR. A. J. DERBY,DENTIST.

Corner Fort and Hotel Sts.

Gaa Administered For Extracting.

Office Hours: 9 a. m. to 4 p. in.

A. 0. LOVEKIN,STOCK AND BONDBROKER. REALESTATE ANDINSURANCE

4031 JticlcV Bvalldiiac:

, BREWER & CO,

QUEEN STREET,HONOLULU, H. T.

AGENTS FOR

Hawaiian Agricultural Company, Ope-

ras. Sugar Company, Honomu Bugartvnnimv. Walluku Sugar Company,Walhee Sugar Company, Makee SugarCompany, Haleakala Ranch companyKap jala Ranch.

--Manr' e and Shipping Co.7 harles Brewer & Co's Line of Boston

Da Mr "

Agents Boston Board of Underwriters.Agents Philadelphia Board of unaer

writers.

LIST OF OFFICERS.

Charles M. Cooke PresidentGeo. H. Robert8on..V-Pre- s. & Man.E. Faxon Bishop Treas. & Sec.

W. F. Allen AuditorP. C. Jones DirectorH. Waterhouse Directora. It. Carter Director

All of the above named constituting

'e Board of Directors.

GERMANIA SALOONC. VESSELS AND A. BECKER

Proprietors.004 Queen Stroot cor South.Headquarters for Honolulu Prlmo

Beer, In bottles and on draught. Al-wo- fs

Ice Cold. We can give you thebest glass of beer In town.

TEN CENTS A SCHOONER

Bemoved.WOMAN'S EXCHANGE

TOHotel St, Arlington Annex.

Next to A. A. Montano's MillineryParlors.

118 Nuuanu Street Ne r Pauahl.

Chairs, Tables, Bedroom Seta, MealSafes, Mattresses, Pillows and Furni-ture made to order at very low price.

P. O. BOX 952.

M. PHILLIPS & CO.,

Wholesale ImporterAnd Jobbers of

AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN DRY GOODS

Corner of F t and Qucej SU

L. KONG FEE,Merolxomt Tailor,

Fort St., opposite Club Stables.Fashionable Suits at Reasonable

Rates a Specialty. A full line of Cassl-mer- es

and Tailoring Goods always InStock. Dyeing, Cleaning and Repair-ing at Short Notice. Satisfactionguaranteed. -

The"YUKON"

Refrigeratoris perfect no other one to equal1U Has movable flues, air-tig- ht

locks, metallic Ice rack, and thelarger ones are lined with ena-mel. Shelves are movable andthe refrigerator Is of the bestkiln-drie- d wood. Great varietyof sizes and at prices from $10.60upward. Made In Grand Rap-Id- s,

Mich.PRESERVES YOURFOOD ANDSAVES ICE.

SOLD ON INSTALLMENTS.

MMCOMPANY. LTD

PROGRESS BLOCK

FORT STREET.

Advert!" your Wasta la the Star.

ysiscomes n3 a climax to over-taxe- d nndrun-dow- n nerves. It Is a breakingdown, a wearing out of tho forceswhich rcgulato and control everyorgan and every tissue, of tho body.Over-taxe- d nerves should bo givenrest and nourishment if you wouldkeep tuotn from wearing out; andthcro is nothing so good for that pur-pose as Dr. Miles' Nervine, it is anervo and brain food as well as med-icine, and nourishes whllo it checkstho irritated nerves; it strengthenswhile it rests the tired brain. Ifyour nerves arc weak; if you are rest-less, irritable, sleepless, worn-ou- t andexhausted, begin at once with

Dr. Miles'

Nervine." I was paralyzed and was so neatly help,

less for nine years that I had to be liftedfrom the bed to my Invalid chair. Duringall that time I was doctoring with variousphysicians and trying different remedies;but all to no purpose, for I seemed to growweaker Instead of stronger. About one yearago I commenced the use of Dr. Miles'Nervine and I seemed to get stronger almostat once. In a few weeks I was so greatlyimproved that I could walk alone, and Ihave since enjoyed better health than I didbefore in many years." E. J. Dknman,

Garden City, Kans,Dr. Miles' Nervine is sold at all drug storf l

on a positive guarantee Write fur lit..'advice And booklet to

Dr. Miles Medloal Co., Elkhart, Ind.

CORPORATION NOTICES.

Olaa Sugar Co., Ltd.ASSESSMENTS.

The twenty-fir- st assessment of 10

or two dollars ($2.00) per share hasbeen called to be due and payable June20, 1902.

The twenty-secon- d assessment of10 or two dollars ($2.00) per share hasbeen called to be due and payable Aug-ust 21, 1902.

The twenty-thir- d assessment of 10

or two dollars ($2.00) per share hasbeen called to be due and payable Oc-

tober 21, 1902.The twenty-fourt-h and final assess-

ment of 10 or two dollars ($2.00) pershare has been called to be due andpayable December 20, 1902.

Interest will be charged on assess-ments unpaid ten days after the sameare due at the rate of one per cent(1) per month from the date upon

which such assessments are due.The above assessments will be pay-

able at the office of The B. F. Dllllng-hamfCo- .,

Ltd., Stangenwald building.(Signed) ELMER E. PAXTON,

Treasurer Olaa Sugar Co.

May 12, 1902.

Notice to Miippers.

On and after this date bills of ladingwill be issued by this Company, Insteadof shipping receipts as heretofore.

Freight will be received unaer tne 01aform of shlnnincr receipt up to October1st 1902, but after that date the bill oflading only will be accepted,WILDER'S STEAMSHIP COMPANY,

C. L. WIGHT, President.Honolulu, June 10th, 1902.

Notice to Shippers.

Shippers of freight by steamers of theInter-Islan- d Steam Navigation Com-pany Ltd., are hereby notified that anew form of Shipping Receipt has beenadopted by the Company to go Into ef-

fect at once.Freight will be accepted, however, on

the old form of receipt up to October1, 1902, after which date, freight will bereceived only on the new form of re-

ceipt, a copy of which can be seen atthe office of the Company, Queen street.

INTER-ISLAN- D S. N. CO., LTD.,JOHN ENA, President.

Hirose Shoten,1079 AALA STREET.

NEW GOODS BY EVERY STEAMER.

TEL. BLUE 392. P. O. BOX 885.

ft. W. McGhesney & Sons.

Wholesale Grocers and Dealers inLeather and Shoe Findings.

agents lonolulu Soap Works Cou-pan- y

and Honolulu Tannery.

FEMININE SILLINESS.Slllv women will do almost anything

In their enthusiasm for a male perform-er, and the fifty who rushed at KubellkIn Brooklyn, after a performance, andendeavored to kiss him, are unfortuna-tely not the only examples of such hys-

terical adulation among their sex. PoorCaptain Hobson was made ridiculousbefore the whole country by Just suchnonsense. Of course the man In sucha case Is taken at a tremendous disad-vantage. He can neither nccedo nor re-

fuse with dignity. It Is said that someof tho Brooklyn women taunted Kube-llk with being a coward. But there aremany otherwise- - brave men who wouldshrink from such an onslaught; andthere are women whom It would re-

quire no small bravery to kiss. Provi-dence Journal.

HORSEMEN, HAVE MERCY!Even In March and April the racing

of young undeveloped Iscarried on In this country to an In-

jurious excess. It ought to be checkedby law. In France the running of thebaby colts and fillies Is not permitteduntil August. In that matter our Galllofriends are wiser and more mercifulthan the Impatient Yankees. New YorkTribune.

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, TUESDAY, JUNE 17, 1002.

FISHING RIGHT SUITS

TIME FOR FILING THEM HAS

PASSED.

Hlx Were Filed Juno 14 Which It la

t'lulmcd Is One Day too Lrtte 72 SuitsIn All.

Unit a dozen fishery rights suits fil-

ed ugulnst the Territory, tiled on nt

of the provision of the OrganicAct requiring them to be filed by June14, 1902, or two yenrs after the not wentInto effect, will be thrown out of court,If the counsel for the government havetheir way, on the ground that theywere filed too late. Robertson & Wild-er have charge of the matter and willcontest the "0 or 80 suits, In behalf ofthe Territory. Six were tiled on June14, nndRobertson says that this Is toolate. "We contend that June 13 wasthe last dny," said Robertson, and' hewill therefore try to have the six suitsthrown out. The men who may thuslose their rights by waiting till thevery last before claiming them are L.L. Mcl'andless, J. M. Monsarrntt, II. P.Baldwin, McPhee. Lyman, W. II. Corn-wel- l.

Their suits were Hied on June 14.

The Organic Act said that such suitsshall be filed within two years aftersuch act went Into effect. It went Intoeffect nt midnight on June 13, 1900, ornt least is supposed to have gone Intoeffect then, and the courts will have tosuy Just when the two yeurs are up.

Some local attorneys are of the opin-ion tlint the time limit Is Illegal, andthut they may still file suits. A claimant now appearing might still II le asuit, It Is argued, and If he was not al-

lowed to prosecute his rights, mightresist such refusal of the courts tohear his claim on the ground that hewns being deprived of property rightswithout due process of law. AttorneyRobertson, on the other hand, thinksthat such claimants will not be in It.The same contention might 1e madewith regard to the limit set in whichclaims may be filed against an estate,or with reference to any statute of lim-

itations, says Robertson.Seventy-on- e separate suits have been

turned over to Robertson & Wilder, anda few more have probably been filed,for which the papers will come In lat-er. Tho 72 represents fishing rights allover the Islands and are In every cir-cuit, most of those In outside circuitshaving been filed here.

The 72 complaints represent possibly144 cases, for in each case In which aright is established the Territory mustbring an action to condemn it. This Isa very uncertain proposition at thepresent time, and there will probablybe some lively contests over values. Infact the titles will be contested by theTerritory throughout, and very longlitigation Is anticipated.

According to the Organic Act, thoTerritory of Hawaii will have to payfor all these fishing rights. This willbe an expense that may loom up In thefuture as another proposition on whichCongress ought to give Hawaii somerelief. If the fishing rights prove to beof much value, when they are assessedfor condemnation purposes, the Territorial treasury will have a hard timepaying then, as the" act provides thatthey shall be paid for out of any money"not otherwise appropriated.' The following are plaintiffs in thesuits already filed: W. G. Irwin, Alex-ander McHryde, et al., James CampbellEstate McBryde Estatej s M- - DamonKanoa Estate, KaplolanI Estate, JohnII Estate. Victoria Ward. HawaiianCommercial & Sugar Co., A. S. AVIlcox,Bishop Estate, Kaneohe Ranch Company, Heeia Agricultural Company,Mary E. Foster et al., Mamie R. nice,Solomon Kauai, Bruce Cartwright,trustee; Henry Smith, trustee; OahuRailway & Land Company, F. Wun-denberg,

trustee; W. H. Shlpman,James Kona, et al.; Lokalia Freeman,H. H. Parker, Anna Perry, et al.: Dom-Itl- la

Palko and J. Paiko, Jr., GulstanF. Ropert, trustee; H. P. Baldwin, etal.; W. H. Corn well, L. L. McCandless,Rufus A. Lyman, Kekuialono (w), MayLucas, McBryde Sugar Company,

Charles A. Buchanan andNamahana Buchanan, John de Fries,Grace Hnhoalll, Emma Al. Nakulna,Catherine Stewart, et al.; Mark P.Robinson, Puna Sugar Company, Rob-ert A. Malfe. J. M. Monsarrat.

BECKY'S TRUST DEED.

Magoon Will Not Allow the Proposl- -

tlnn.

Rebecca Panee's motion to dismissthe appeal of Magoon from the CircuitCourt order terminating her spend-thrift trust, came to grief yesterdayafternoon in tho Supreme Court. TomFitch, her attorney, admitted that thecourt could not take up the matter ex-cept by consent of Magoon. "She hasoffered to make a trust deed, whichwill effectually preserve her property,"said Fitch, "and I understand that Mr.Magoon's object In the matter Is toprevent her from squandering hermoney." "! A I

Magoon, however, said that he wouldrot consent. He wanted a chance toshow up a conspiracy to get hold ofBecky's property, though he admittedthat Fitch was not in that conspiracy,ond he Insisted that the case be heardChief Justice Frear said that the courthad no Jurisdiction to entertain themotion except by consent, nnd that thocaso would have to take Its course onthe calendar. Fitch stnted that Beckywould make the trust deed anyhow,and bring It before the court at thehearing.Judge Humphreys has given John D.

Holt, one of the defendants In tho matter of William L. Austin vs. R. Wil-liam Holt et al., ten days' time Inwhich to nnswer petition. The case Isthat of n bill to declare a trust andenforce a charge on real estate.

The application, of Manoel TavaresFurtado to practice law In the Terri-torial courts has been granted.

The hill of exception In the UnitedStates vs. the Honolulu Plantation Co.has been contlnuod'untll Monday next.

The case of Hans Loronson vs. theInter-Islnn- d Steam Navigation Co. has.tteen set for trial on Juno 30. This isa suit brought by tho plaintiff to re-cover $10,000 for Injuries received whileworking aboard the barkentlnc Irm-gar- d,

alongside the Noeau.

A COAL CAPITOL.Col. Jerre Baxter, president of the

Tennessee Central railroad, has suggested that tho Tennessee building atthe St. Louis world's fair be a repro-duction of the Tennessee capltol build-ing, constructed of sawed block coal.Sufficient coal for the purpose Is offered free of charge by the Cumberlandcoal and coke company.

Advertise your Wants In the Star.

THE

Rank of HawaiiLIMITED.

Incorporated under the Laws of theTerritory of Hawaii.

PAID-U- P CAPITAL --

RESERVE$600,000.00

- - - - 50,000. 00UNDIVIDED PROFITS 163,000.00

OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS.

Charles M. Cooke. PresidentP. C. Jones., ....Vice-Preside- nt

C. II. Cooke CashierF. C. Atherton .... Assistant Cashier

II. Waterhouse, F. W. Macfarlane,E. D. Tenney, J. A. McCandlesa and C.H. Atherton.

COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS DE-

PARTMENTS.

Strict attention given to all br -- chof Banking.

JUDD BUILDING. FORT STREET.

CLAUS SPRECKELS. WM. G. IRWIN.

Clans Spreckels & Go,

HONOLULU, - - - H. I.

San Francisco Agents The Nevada'National Bank of San Francisco,

DRAW EXCHANGE ON

SAN FRANCISCO The Nevada Na-tional Bank of San Francisco.

LONDON The Union Bank of London,Ltd .

NEW YORK American Exchange Na-tional Bank.

CHICAGO Merchants' National Bank.PARIS--Cre-dit Lyonnala.BERLIN Dresdner Bank.HONGKONG AND YOKOHAMA The

Hongkong and Shanghai BankingCornoratlon.

NEW ZEALAND AND AUSTRALIABank of New Zealand.

VICTORIA AND VANCOUVER Bankof British Nc th Amerl

TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKINGAND EXCHANGE BUSINESS.

Deposits Received. Loans Made onAnDroved Security. Commercial anaTravelers' Credits Issued. Bills of Exchange Bought and sold.

COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY AC-

COUNTED FOR.

ESTABLISHED IN 1858.

BISHOP & CO.

BANKEKS

BANKING DEPARTMENT.

Transact business In all departmentsof Banking.

Collections carefully attended to.Exchange bought and sold.Commercial and Travelers' Letters

of Credit Issued on The Bunk of California and N. M. Kotliscliliu ss sons,London.

Correspondents: The Bank of Cali-

fornia, Commercial Banking Co. ofSydney, Ltd., London.

Drafts and cable transfers on Chinaand Japan through the Hongkong &Shanghai Banl-ln- g Corporation andChartered Bank of India, Australiaand China.

Interest allowed on term deposits atthe following rates per annum, viz:

Seven days' notice, at 2 per cent.Three month, at 3 per ent.Six months, at 3 per cent.Twelve months, at 4 per cent.

TRUST DEPARTMENT.Act as Trustees under : lortgages.Manage estates (real and personal).Collect rents and dividends.Valuable Papers. Wills, Bonds, Etc.,

received for safe-keepin- g.

ACCOUNTANT DEPARTMENT.Auditors for Corporations and Pri

vate Firms.Books examined and reported on.

Statements of Affairs prepared.Trustees on Bankrupt or insolvent

Estates.Omce, 921 Bethel Street.

SAVINGS DEPARTMENT.Deposits received and Interest allow

ed at 4 per cent per annum, in accordance with Ituies anu ueguiauons,copies of which may bo obtained onapplication.

INSURANCE DEPARTMENT.AirontH for FIRE. MARINE. LIFE.

ACCIDENT AND EMPLOYERS' LIABILITY INSURANCE COMfAmiiia.

Insurance Ofllce, 824 uetnei street.

THE YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK

LIMITED.

Subscribed Capital Yen 24,000,000

Paid Up Capital Yen 18,000,000

Reserved Fund Ten 8,710,000

HEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.

The Bank buys and receives for collection Bills of Exchange, Issue "...raftJand Letters of Credit, an transacts ageneral bankng business.

INTEREST ALLOVKD:

On fixed deposits for 12 months, 4 percent per annum,

On fixed deposits for 6 months, percent per annum.

On fixed deposits for 3 months, t percent per annum.

Branch of the Yokohama Pprcl Bank.

Hew Republic Banding. Honolulu H i,

BEAVER LUNCH ROOM,Fort Street. Opposite Wilder St Co.

II. J. NOLTE, Prop'r.First-Cla- ss Lunches served with tea,

coffee, soda water, ginger ale or milk.

Smokers Requisites a Specialty.

" ""-r ' i

.:.': t..o.. e; .; ;:, ; :

::..

--

A

.Or.t --..

.:

..

Grand Reduction Sale

FOR THREE WEEKS ONLY, COM-MENCING SATURDAY, JUNE 7,

OUR ENTIRE STOCK WILL BESOLD WITHOUT RESERVE AT RE-MARKABLE LOW PRICES TOMAKE ROOM FOR THE NEW IN-VOICE NOW ON THE WAY FROMNEW YORK.

COME QUICK AND HAVE FIRSTCHOICE.

THE STORE WILL REMAIN OPENUNTIL 8:30 P. M. MONDAY ANDTUESDAY.

Iwakami & Co.Nos. 1G-1- 8 Robinson Block, Hotel St.

P. O. Box 868, Tel. White 421

PV

:?'

ofA

toTHE

The man who says Whew! and mops his face with a large sizedhandkerchief could he comfortable by securing one ft our desk fans.

$15.00 buys one nnd the amount of returns In cool comfort Is Incal-culable. We carry a full line of both desk und ceiling fans.

Co., LtdKINU

MAIN 390

The PrideIS

A ofArt and

USED BY MANY INTO OTHER MAKES OF THE SAMEPRICE. IT ISITS

to Sew

CALL AND INSPECT

ELECTRICFAN

WEATHER

Home

Well and LastDIFFERENT

Hawaiian ElectricSTREET ALAKEA

White Sewing MachineCombination

Utility

PREFERENCE

Built

H. Hackfeld & Co., Ltd.' SOLE FOR THE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS.

NATIVE HATS!NATIVE HATS!!

NATIVE HATS!!!

A A -

Price 81.00. ?a .

.

. T.Main Store No.

the

TELEPHONE

DEMONSTRATING

and Upwards

3MURATA1011 Nuuanu Street.

Branch St'ite No. 1032 Nuumu Street.

Telephone 3311

P. O. Bos 884.

Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii

THREES

STYLES.

NEAR

MERITS:

AGENTS

Blue

!?

'.

::

Page 4: If TTTTT HAWAIIAN · 2015. 6. 2. · you can ii nil it in ttttt hawaiian roc into hi o bwt thk stalt homes of llonolnh vol. x. honolulu, h. i., tuesday, junk 17 1902. no. 3197 the

f -

I- -

1 . ;

u I;n

I aroun.

fHE HAWAIIAN STAR

8AILY AND SEMI-WEEKL-

Published every nfternoon (exceptSunday) by tho Hawaiian Star

Newspaper Association, Ltd.

FRANK L. HOOOS Manager.

TUESDAY, JUNE IT, 1002.

OKQLEH.AO,

The enquiry Ijjtq the okolehno casefor which he schooner .Kawnllaiil hasl)0en seized by the internal Revenueolllclnls, developei). In evidence tho factthat there .was. a' still In Kaharia, 611

tho Koolau side of .'the Island, 'but thewitness, did not know where it was,' ex-

cept that It was far up the valley.From some knowledge of the other sldoof tho Island, il seems flu-- more likelythat there ave half a dozen stills In thevalley rather han"one still.

Kahana Js,a'n Weal spot for the moon-

shiner. Jt Is ' deepi running up some

miles Into t)ie' heart of tho Koolnumountains, i'he path into tho valley isa dilllcult one, and ,there Is much cross-

ing of a depp. stream. A person simplyprospecting would soon find himself In-

volved in'niaVs)iy dtnlculties, and wad-

ing up td the'1' waist In a mixture ofblack slushvtfeeds and water. Then the-

valley opensWnt inco ninny side gulch-es, and away tips some of these, hiddenamong the devil vegetation and trees'Which elotho .their sides will be foundtho stills. .Anyone, approaching can boeasily seen and- the search for the stillis very haidAvork tndeerfi for the dis-

tillers are adepts at concealment.Hut Kalian is by no means tho only

spot where okolohao Is manufacturedon the Koolau sldo df the Island, Kno-

wn Is another favorite location, and themountains" nearer town behind AVala-liol- o

and Waifcane used to have, andprpbably now have their distillingplants... ...

The art of distillation from the tlroot, from which tM original okolehaowas made, is sald-'t- have been taughtto the Havnllahs by escaped convictsfrom the Colonies, who found theirway up here. This may or may not betrue. Thero were plenty of run-awa- y

sailors who could teach how to distil.At Orst the liquor was made from tlroot, but the use of that plant has long

leen given up, and the stuff Is madefrom rotting potatoes, molasses, sweetpotatoes, and lit fact anything that willferment.

It was the okoJehao made from tlroot which gained a medal at theFrench Exposition qf 1SS9. Thp manufacture of the inferior article has increased since then. The cleverness ofthe distillers has often baffled our ownpolice, and It now remains to be seenif the Internal' Revenue oflleers canmake more headway.

PREROGATIVE.

There has b4erj omc considerablecomment by several papers partly ma-

licious and partly inadvertent upon thepardoning of Editor Smith by the Gov-

ernor. A comparison is ma'de with thecase of Volcano, Marshall,. ut of coursethe cases are not parallel. Marshallwas tried for libel' and' convicted by ajury. Smith, wtyj sentenced by a judgewithout trial by jury, he was moreoversentenced for constructive contempt,an offense which had been wiped offthe statute bobk', by the' Legislature.The Circuit Court chose to considerthat constructive contempt' remainedin force, and gaye the' highest' penalty.The Supreme CJpurt did not ,goJnto thelaw of the matter,--excep- t Justice Perry,whose view was that tho Judges ofthe Circuit Court Wi?re in error.

The Organic Act confers upon thoGovernor the pardoning power. It hasbeen given him to use. when In hisjudgment it should be; used. Everygovernor on the Mainland ' uses thisprerogative. It should be specially no-

ticed that the ground of tho 'Governor'spardon was not that the judge had noright to punish for constructive con-

tempt ft right whiph a largo section ofthe bar challenge but that the sen-

tence was excessive and one whichmany people regarded as vindictive.

The Governor was quite within hisprerogative, and was carrying out themanifest Intention of the Organic Actwhich conferred upon him this particu-lar power, when he pardoned bocausolie considered that the sentence wasI'Scessive. At' some future tim the

'J V'lW, .lAnnnnnlnir IVniH lie, .rite na ni-i- r

tho Governor, may bo desirous of sav-ing some person," in whir'm they are in-

terested, from' a manifestly ojicosslvosentence, and Will bo urging 'tho Gov-ernor to use the prerogativo which theOrganic Act provides him with.

As was put forward tn itlieso columnssome time ngoMhe world. will heconvmoro senWIbreilKd' tu'lt not allow theaccuser antf ithoJutfelo whoi pronouncessentence to bo one and tho same per-son. Tho theory, Is of course, that It Isnot tho Judge that is Insulted, but the

'olllce which Is Insulted. How con-structive contempt caninsult tho ufllceis not clear. Judges, as well as others,are open to criticism. They get plentyof criticism on the Mainland, and theymust learn that this commu-nity and Intends to criticize as freelyas on tho Mainland if, tlje Judges ex-

ceed their plain prerogatives and, seekto usurp others, or' to show vindictive.ijgss. This Is (he constitutional right

COMMERCIAL PROSPERITY.

The prosperity under the Republicanparty cannot b,aejr?;st(vjvn.,than-l- n

the recent returns from tho TreasuryBureau of Statistics relating to theIron, coal and l'aclllc coast lumbertrade. These figures cannot bp contro-verted and they tell of a teeming pros-- 1

erlty which Is duo to wlso legislationn nd excellent administration.

Tho Iron trude for thp first fourmonths of this year furnished a ton-nage of C5T,GT0 tons In contrastwith 52SMS1 tons for the correspondingperiod of 1001. The homo demand forpig Iron from this quarter has almostextinguished exports. Out of a totalshipment of 145,261 tons of pig Iron in.April, only 119 tons were credited to ex-

port from Southern Iron territory.On the Pacific const lumber ship-

ments from the red wood regions ofUpper California were in round num-

bers 11 millions of feet ahead of thoseof 1900, and 3 million feet greater than1901. Everett, Washington, shipped

feet of lumber In April alone. Atthe port of Tacoma the outward freighttonnage for the llrst four months of1902 was 345,500 tons, and the Inwardlonnngo 12.4S8 tons. Of the 1,283,551

barrels of flour for the Orient, Portlandcontributed 517,470 barrels, Tacoma450,520 barrels, and Seattle 315,553 bar-

rels.The coal trade since January 1 has

generally exceeded that of tho corres-ponding period of last year. Cincinnatigained 42.5 per cent. St. Louis show'san increase of 13 per cent. Tho Chesapeake and Ohio coal tonnage for ninemonths ending with March was 4,299,-00- 0

tons, compared with 3,918,171! tonslast year. The coal and coko tonnageover tho Pennsylvania lines east ofPittsburg and Erie reached a total of11,S3T,99S tons to April 26 of this year,compared with 10,930,812 tons last year.Connellsvllle coke shipments this yearaveraged 10.74T cars per week, compared with 10,549 cars per week last year.Coal shipments to domestic ports onthe Lakes, mainly from lower Lakeports, were 938,038 tons this April, com-pared with 55,033 tons last April, whilecoastwise and foreign shipments forthe first four months of the yeiamounted to 2,52T,6T3 tons, of whichG93.921 tons were hard coal, and 1,833,- -T52'tons soft coal. The Iron ore shipments of 1.TT4.052 tons bring the tontinge of these two chief articles In Laketrade to a total of 4,302,325 tons for thellrst third of the year. Coal receipts atBoston were 1,T02,TCC tons, comparedwith 1.559,313 tons last year. Coal andcoke traffic over the Norfolk and West-ern Railway to .the end of March In-

creased 13 per cent last year, and theBaltimore and Ohio's trafllc for AprilIncreased 2S.8 per cent above April.1901.

Rapid Transit is reaching out and mayrun a line to the top of Tantalus be-

fore the end of the year. Another Im-

provement which would bo highly popu-

lar is a line to the Pall.

Schools and seminaries are closing upfor the summer vacation. During thisweek the public schools give their clos-ing exercises, and several private insti-

tutions finish up their work.

The precinct clubs of the Republicanparty which failed to meet last Fridaywill be given another opportunity to or-

ganize. In a short time every thingwill be running smoothly.

The heavy showers which have fallenthe last two nights have been mosttnntallzlng. Thero has been a greatrush of water, but In the morning theair is just as heated as ever.

Though a good many people believevery thoroughly in the gasoline schooners, they have not proved a great suc-cess In our trade. This may be due tothe management, and under the man-agement of the present buyers the vessel may do well. Superintendent Boydhowever, was quite justified In not buy-ing the vessel for the Hoard of Health.That board may make experimentsin leprosy cures, but it is not fitted formaking experiments with new fanglodmotors.

Professor Kellogg about rlale-maum-

says there was an Immenseamount of smoke coming from tho pit.Ho did see a glow ,a vory slight glowat the bottom, but It was at least athousand feet down. The masses ofsmoko wore not lighted up with anyglare. That story was duo to tho heat-ed Imagination of writers, not to him-self. Tho professor was Impressed withwhat he saw, but ho saw no masses oflava.

The Maul Grand Jury recommendedtheir secretary be paid $5 a day. Therowere fourteen cases disposed of in fivedays, or say three cases a day to keep arecord of. In Cook county which In-

cludes Chicago, the grand Jury handlessome fifty cases a day, and the secre-tary who has to keep the records, quitea heavy task, receives no pay. Hut then'Maul is much richer than Cook countyand probably threo cases In that Islandare njpro Intricate than fifty cases InChicago, so .1 is both right and properthat the secretary of the Maul grandJury should be paid. At the same ratethe Cook county man ought to pulldown $80 per diem.

And old Rugbelans resident here, whowere at Rugby during Dr. Temple's ad-ministration, will be proud that he willcrown King Edward VII. Dr. Templeon returning from Rugby was madeBishop of Exoter, later he became BIsh- -

irai Hawaiian stau, Tuesday,-- june it,' 1902.

I B

ALL VARIETIES

OF FRESH

VegetableAND

Flower

SEEDALSO

AND

LFALFA

JUST KECEIVED

1 en

FORT STREET

Classified Ads in Star.One Insertion, per line 15 cents.Two Insertions, per line 25 cents.One week, per line 30 cents.Two weeks, per line 40 cents.One Month, per line 60 cents.Ads under " Situations Wanted," Inserted

free until turtber notice.

For Sale

Building lots in College Hills. Favor-able terms to homeseekers. Apply to P.C. Jones or Jonathan Shaw, Judd Build-ing.

Building lot corner Klig annd McCully streets, Pawaa tract. Rapid Tran-sit line will pass the door. Apply atstar omce.

A magnificent building site on thePunchbowl slope, near Thruston ave-nue. Particulars at Star office.

Building lot corner Kin- - and Kame-hame-

road. Falama terminus ofP pid Transit road. Apply at Star of-

fice.

To Kent

Cottage with use of stable on Kulklnlstreet. Rent $25 per moith. Apply ,oJonathan Shaw, 404 Judd Building.

Furnished llooins To LetFllrntsllpil rnnmn In till nnntrn rtnri

of the city. "Arlington," Hotel street.

Furnished House To KentA nicely furnished room. Apply at

318 Beretanla street.

op of London, and finally Arch Bishopof Canterbury, tho highest dignity Inthe Kingdom after tho reigning mon-arch. Tho career of Dr. Temple hasbeen a most brilliant one, and whatever position he has filled, he has wonhonor and praise. The career Is thomoro remarkable in that Dr. Templehad no family Influence, but was ad-

vanced for his blameless character, hisbrilliant attainments and his breadthpf views.

The Rapid Transit 1b pushing mi tothe Walklkl turn and will bo therowhen the Injunction is argued. Pain Islighting the progress of tho city, toothand nail, but he will prove how uselessIt is to stand In the way. The tramcurs are losing money fast, and willlose money still faster. In a short timethere will be nothing to sell. Tho carsmight go for kindling wood, the spavin,ed mules might make excellent catsmeat, but we have no market for It hereand the franchise will be worth nothingbecause tho Rapid Transit has Just asgood alternative routes. Pain couldhave done much better to have com-promised long ago. He is now simplymaking ducks ajid'tlraUes of the moneyof his share holders.

4

I Cold Wave

Wo have just received our newstylo Cold AVave Gurnoy Clean-abl- e

Refrigerators, with beauti-ful white enameled provisionchambers. You can see at aglance whether this refrigeratoris clean or not.

The cost of these new ColdWave Goods Is not ten per centover the regular zinc-line- d Gur-ne- y.

We have them in all sizes andthey are sold on very easyterms.

Garden Hose

A SpecialDrive

5000 feet 94 In. Rubber Hosewill be sold at 7 cents per foot,which Is $3.50 for 60 feet.

This Includes couplings.

ilium.,LIMITED

Hos. 53, 55 and 57, KiDg Street

HONOLULU.

BARGAINS I

1 Pianos--- 1

H We have a big stock BR

H of New and Second-han- d

I PIANOS and are quoting H

B prices that will interest m

(I you if you are in the ijH market for an lnstru- - H

I Bergstrom Music Co., Ltd 1

I PROGRESS BLOCK E

K HONOLULU. I

In Less Than

SanFranclsco &t 10 a. HI.

CHICAGO, UNION PACIFIC

& NORTHWESTERN LINE

Pullman fourteen-soctlo- n Drawing--

Room and Private Compart-ment Observation Sleeping Cars,with Telephone. Electric-readin- g

Lamps in every Berth, Compart-ment and Drawlng-Roo- Buffet,Smoking and Library Cars, withBarber and Bath, Dining Cars-m- eals

a la carte. Electric-lighte- d

throughout.Daily Tourist Car Service at C p.

m. and Personally Conducted Ex-cursions every Wednesday and Fri-day at 8 a. m. from San Francisco.The best of everything.

R. R. Ritchie,Gen. Agent Pacific- Coast

San Francisco.617 Market Street.

Palace Hotel.

Note Heads, BUI Heads, Letter Headsand kinds of Job and CommercialPrinting neatly and promptly executedat the Star Office.

Extra SpecialRIBBONS. For thisWeek We Offer:

WASH TAFFETAS, No. 40 at 15c.

WASH LIBERTY SATIN, No. 40 at 25o

DOUBLE FACE WASH SATIN, No. 40

at 30c .

WASH BABY RIBBON, 15c a piece, 12

yards.CO YARDS spool Baby Ribbon 40c.

We Tie Ribbons Free of Charge.

J M. BRASCH & CO.

The bonderof the Century

Will clear your premises of RatsWithout the use ofDogs or Poison

Self WorkingRat TrapsDr. J. H. Raymond, former presld ent the

HAWAII.

USQUARE

"I too highly of the Self Working Rat Trap I purchas-ed from you a few weeks ago. The single trap has caught between twenty andthirty rats as many four in one night and the pest at my house, from

I have suffered seems to have been eradicated."This trap be generally used In and I unhesitatingly re-

commend it."

The first shipments sold at once and thirdis just at

HARDWARE

AGENTS FOIi THE

SAN FRANCISCO, 215 Front St.HONOLULU, St.NEW YORK, 43 Leonard St.

uiifpaiD.,Importers andCommissionflerchants

Sole Agency....FOR....

Blanche Bates Gigar

AGENTS FORBritish America Assurance Comp'y,

of Ontario.

Philadelphia Underwriters

Special attention given to con-

signments of coffee and rice

Vacation

Clothes

Whether you to spendthe Summer on tho mainland oron tho other islands we can

you with what clothes youwill need. Wo will do It betterand for less money than anyoneelse. Como nnd see our dresssuit cases, they are O. K.

If you Intend to stay In townwe can soil you comfortablesummer suits.

E "H" CILIMITED

TWO STORES.Corner Fort and Hotel Streets.Hotel between Bethel and

Nuuanu.

Note Heads, Bill Heads, Statementsand Fine Commercial Printing at theStar Offlce.

SLOCt

Cats,

Sale of WASH J

t

of Board of Health, says:

COMPANY LIMITED

TERRITORY OF

Before going to the Coast thin-Summe-

look over

and ctjl wSARATO JcA DRESS SUIT CASB3

COAT CASESSTEAMER CABIN BAGSHAT GLADSTONE DAQB

cannot speak which

aswhich severely,

should Honolulu

two were thehand.

SOLE

Queen

Toronto,

Intend

sup-ply

Street

JUST RECEIVED BY

The Yon Hamm-Yonn- g Co,, Ui, t'QUEEN STREET.

Exactly what you need and atpossible prices.

LOO JOE CO.,1111 Nuuatm Avenue,Next to M. Chlya's Store.

..JVTcjx-olritii- xt Tailors..Suits Made to Order In the Latest

Styles and a Good Fit Guaranteed.Clothes Cleaned & Repaired Well Done.

L. J. SUN,Nuuanu Street, - - - Near Fauabl.

DRESSMAKER

All Orders not Called for Within SODays will be Sold at Auction.

Maile Restaurant,LAM ICAU, MANAGER.

-- WILL OPEN ON

SATURDAY, MAY 31ON KING STREET,OPPOSITE LEE TOMA & CO.

Open All NightMEALS - - 25 CENTS

S. SHIMAMOTO,rehant Street - - Honolulu, T, B.

General Herchandise,Dry Goods, Groceries,Japanese Provisions,Etc., etc., etc

f. O. Box 881. Telephone IIS.

FIRE AND MARINE

INSURANCE AGENTS

AGENTS FOR THE

Scottish Union National InsurtnotCompany of Edinburgh,

Wllhelma of Magdeburg General Inauxance Company,

Associated Assurance Co., Ltd., of H.Wnlch and Berlin.

Alliance Marine and Oeneral AsbutwmCo., Ltd., of London,

Royal Insurance Company of LtverooL,Alliance Assurance Company of Lon-

don j

Page 5: If TTTTT HAWAIIAN · 2015. 6. 2. · you can ii nil it in ttttt hawaiian roc into hi o bwt thk stalt homes of llonolnh vol. x. honolulu, h. i., tuesday, junk 17 1902. no. 3197 the

Wage EarnersHave NoExcuse

For living In small hot quar-ters In the city, when lotscontaining 15,000 sq. ft. can130 purchased for $20.00 cashand $10.00 per month In thacoolest suburb of Honolulu.

The remaining lots In KA-IMU-

TRACT are beingsold 'on these terms. Pos-

session immediate.

APPLY TO W

TRUSTEES GEAR, LAHSIHlii & CO,

JUDD BUILDING,FORT STREET.

H

The Popular Restaurant HI

Under New Management.NEW COOKS,NEW WAITERS.

MEALS, - - 25 CENTSThe Best In Town.

HO CHAN, - - - - MANAGER.

Note Heads, Bill Heads, Letter Headsand all kinds of Job ana commercialPrinting neatly and promptly executedat the Star Offlce.

Si. F. Asbahr,

Cottages and.pleasant rooms,American andEuropean Plan.Excellent Cuisinennd Service Spe-cial weekly ormonthly rates.

Best of SurfBathing and ca-noeing

SPECIALall the A FAMILY

year round. Hotand Cold WaterBaths. Bouffet.Livery. Electriclights. L. H. Dec,

ADVERTISEMENTS CH

LOW PRICE SALE OF

Progress Block

White

h

Houses to llent$30.00 a ninn th I't'iisacoln street,

corner of Klnatt. Pottageof W. o. Atwator. Bestsanitary plumbing Justcompleted. Neighborhoodvery desirable.

$30.00 a month Furnished, linem house in good

neighborhood for 3 months.$G0.00 month Superb house on

Keeauniokti Street.

We Want a HouseA furnished house on theplains. Will rent it for aclient at good rental.

GIVE TS A CALL. H

nwuonFort and Merchant Sts. R

Telephone Main 313. B

NOTICEJohn Mattos of, the plumbing firm of

Judge & Mattos has disposed of his in-

terest to John Judge, the remainingpartner.

Judge continues the business and Isprepared to do plumbing in all Itsbranches. Prices reasonable.

ManagerMrs. Mary Sexton, Stewardess

InnON THE BEACH.

RATES FOR TOURISTS.RESORT

proprietor.Ring up Phone Red 71.

ANGED MONDAYS.

SEASONABLE GOODS

Tou cannot duplicate the prices below anywhere In town "for theMme quality of goods. Sale is for this week only.

Percale, per yard 10cFlannelette, white or colored '....a lOo

New Ginghams, best quality ,, ...10cFancy Draperies, upward from v , 10c

"sAwnlng Cloth, fine assortment of colors. and, variety. Of prices, spe-cial ithls week. . -

1 v

u

A. BLOM.Fort Street near Beretania

Telephone

Waikiki

3171

.Syr liigh Urade Oa

rand "A

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, TUESDAY, .JUJJE 7, ,1902.

AT THE OHPHEUM.

Sutton i 'oglll Entertainments Playingto Hood Business.

Despite the regular lethargy that In-

variably succeeds race week, the pres-ence of the Sutton-Cogl- ll combinationat the Orpheuni attracted a good sizedhouse brought out by the good reportsdisseminated since the opening night,Saturday.

The program went through smoothlyand well, the "Gaiety Girls" goingwith a vim and delighting the audi-ence. I'oglll was recalled several timesfor more songs and made a big hitwhile the tramp Juggler, Altro, andDave Caston hnd nn equally hard timesatisfying the ppople In front. WhileHotiolulans seem to thoroughly appreciate what are professionally called'dumb acts" from the fact of the spe

cialty consisting of feats of agility orstrength that require few If any words,comedy seems to strike the keynote oftheir applause. Altro the tramp andRose Aqulnaldo proved exceptions tothis general rule from the unusual bril-liancy nnd originality of their turns.There is, however, not a weak spot Inthe thoroughly enjoyable programwhich the seats have been placed onsale with good anticipatory results foranother big house.

SIERRA EXPECTED TOMORROWThe Sierra is expected tomorrow

morning from San Francisco with sixdays' later mall and news.

The Oahu CollegeDEPARTMENT OF MUSIC.F. A. Ballaseyus, Director.

Open all1 summer for instruction inpiano, organ, voice culture, and har-mony.

Hotel Chamberlain,Old Point Comfort,

Va. Want

iKEET-G- O

May 15, 1902.Hobron Drug Co ,

Honolulu.Gentlemen: We will ask

you to send us 2 dozen Skeet-g- o

and enough powder for 30days' conaumption. We willask you to make prompt ship-ment and remain,

Yours very truly,Geo. A. Keeleu,

Manager Hotel Chambcrlnin.

There must be some merit In this Ha-waiian Invention when orders come50Q0 miles: There Is merit and everyuser of a Skeet-G- o understands it. Ifyou wish to be free of mosqultos, here'the remedy. Uses powder smokeless)!'.No disagreeable odor, no smoke, noparched throat, and best of nil, nomosquitoes In the room where It isused. Don't wait and suffer but get onetoday. Sold on guarantee-mone- y backIf not as represented. Price $1.

To insure best results use the Pele"brand of powder. This Is a very effec-tive powder and Insures best results.Put up only In green label cans. Price2- - cents.

Hobron Drug Co.FORT STREET,EHLERS' BLOCK.

LOOK FOR THE YELLOW STORE,

P. O. Box 484

ne Fertilizer

Soluble. Dry and Fine,Sure, Quick and Reliable

Manufactured from the Best Materials. Few are as Good, NoneBetter on the Market

Pacific Guano and Fertiliz

O. iaAGBKS, Manager

er Co.

DICKINSON WILL STAY

CAIII.K KNGlNICEIt WILL ItKMAINTILL CAULK COMES.

A General Fiesta nnd Ceremonial Pro-

jected for Cable Day President toGet First Message.

An additional assurance of the Mack-a- y

cable reaching Honolulu on time Inthe fall is made by the announcementthat S. S. Dickinson, chief engineer ofthe Mackay Cable company will notreturn to the coast but remain here,completing all arrangements thnt be-come neceBsnry from time to time, uu.til the cable arrives at the end of Oc-tober or the beginning of November.

"I had expected to leave very shortly,according to first Intentions," says Mr.Dickinson, "as 1 have practically com-pleted all the preliminaries having onlyone or two loose ends to tie up. I havethree boys at college, two In Montrealand one In London, and I should haveliked to Join them if possible this va-cation. Our general manager, a per-sonal friend of mine, besides a busi-ness coadjutor for twenty-eig- ht yearshas made a particular request for meto stay here If possible until the cablearrives so I shall remain as a sort ofhostage to fortune until the end ofOctober or the llrst week In Novemberby which time we shall have sent theflrst Aloha over the wires

Mr. Dickinson leaves to day nn theKlnuu for a trip to HHo and the volcanogoing In company with CommissionerE. S. Boyd to be absent about ten days.He states that that he will probably beIn a position t announce the landingplace of the cable shortly after his return If present negotiations ore satisfactorily carried through.

II I lllll(Continued from Page 2.)

PASSENGERS.Departing.

Utevlsed List.)Per stmr. Aiauua Loa. June 17, for

Lahaina, Maaiaea, Kona and KauI orts. Ahlonu Jlanmia, Air. MiC.er-ro-

IP. T. llayselilen, wile, child andservant, Airs. J. Cornwall and 3 chil-dren, J. II. McKenzle, A. W. T. y,

W. D, AlcWayne, Allss AliceArnold, Airs. R. F. Bickerton, SpencerBIckerton, Airs. Jonaishi, Curtis Hus-tac- e,

K. I'nni, Charles AlcWayne, Sis-

ter Bonaventura, C. F. Kckart, AlaryAilau, Airs. Kamonao, A. Lewis, Jr., H.A. Juen ftnd 37 deck.

Booked to Depart.Per S. S. Sonoma, June IT, for San

Francisco. Allss Woods, W. II. IJaugli,Airs. Wescott, maid and child, S. Batesfind wife, Airs. Cnrr, Airs. Al. H. Ham-mond, Airs. B.B. Hammond and daugh-ter, P. S. Schneider, Allss Tnbrltt, Airs.C. Alorse, Airs. L. P. Appleman andchild, Mrs. Isaac Aloore. Edward Os-bo-

and family, Airs. J. J. Geavy, AllssGeavy, Miss A. Brady, Allss .'owers, C.N. Spiers, Gordon Usborne, A. AI. Wal-cott,.- P.

AI. Plumb, Allss C. S. Plumb,Air. and Airs. Laldlaw, Dr. and Airs.Tripp; H. K. Duftus, S. T. Alexander,Airs. Gilchrist,, W. T. Veltcli, W. W.Tucker, Airs. C. St. Allen, It. E. Ura-de- n,

L. J. Phelps, W. J. Conroy, J. L.W. Zanrmwalt, wife and lour children,Airs. Samuel Johnson. Airs. Cameron,W. nTLelmet, Mrs. Albert Clare, Mrs.J. A.fPorter, Airs. J. G. Pratt. .1; D..Hrowji, Airs. ,J. A. Hopper, Airs, AI, L.Hopper, Airs. L.. l'ogue anil z children,C. W. Gray, II. Snow, Hlrazl, JamesOlsen, A Beattle, C. 11. Dailey, D. Vall-mer- t,

John Thompson, W. C. Betton,Air. Arneke, Airs. Jlngstrom and 2 ehll- -dien, Katherlne L. Clark. Airs. S. AI.

Kerns, Airs. J. Hemmlck, Airs. J. D.Long, Airs. Itobert Scott, John Little,Airs. John Farnsworth, Alajor andAirs. Wood, child nnd Allss AIIIIs, AllssVida AlcCnrthy, W. II. Lubecker, wifeand 3 children, B. L. Howe, wife and2 children. Sen Chong, See Chin. EdithCarlson, John Dleller, oJhn Clark. Mr.nnd Airs. Arneke, Mrs. Susan Miller, D.T. Baltnlsky, Airs. It. A. Hadley, Itob-ert Knoz, II. Ohlnan, Airs. Yule, Airs. J.Aloore, Air. and Airs. James Hlley andchild.

PEKING WILL HE LATE.It is regarded as very likely that the

City of Peking will not arrive hereThursday from Snu Francisco as heragents expect her to be late. The ex-n- ct

number of days, if any, they nrenot prepared to state. The Peking wasdelayed In reaching this port on herlast trip from the Orient, on account ofbreakage In the machinery. She did notsail from Honolulu until May 28, threedays behind time. It was announcedwhen she left, that she would probablytake about 9 days to make the trip toSan Francisco, so this additional lossof time will make her live days lategetting into San Francisco. She willhave to undergo repairs as the breakwas quite serious, and It Is thoughtprobable that she will start on the out-ward trip for some days after herschedule time. Advices on the sub- -

Jfet will be received tomorrow morningprobably by the Sierra which is duefrom San Francisco.

BOAT RACES ON 4TH

(Continued from page one.)

now takes bow In the senior shell. Cap-tain "NV. W. Harris has great hopon ofhis trow who are in regular training,every evening and night from now onuntil the races being spent at PearlHarbor under the coach's eye. ThoMyrtle shell is getting Into good shapeand will be also equal to the best ex-pectations. The new shell of tho Hen-lan- l

men should arrive from Englandand be In the water by Saturday.

As soon as tho 9:10 train from townIs whistled on tho morning of theFourth at Pearl City, tho senior crewswill paddle to the start so as to lose notime In getting away by the time thespectators have had time to take upfavorable positions.

OLD CASTSTTTLED

The suit of the Tuck Chew companyagainst the Makee Sugar Company,which has been In the courts here sinceJuno III, 1897, was withdrawn this morn-ing, a compromise having been arrang-ed nfter live years of litigation. Atone time the plaintiffs had a verdict for$29,814.50 In their favor, but It wasknocked out and from that time on thedefendants have been winners.

The suit was an action for damagesIn the'-su- Of $107,848.50 on account ofthe occupation of some lands on Kauai

i Itotffrir in nitons i 'Tinifim

bv the Miiltcc Hlliinr fnnmniiv ltiliprl.son and Crelghton appeared otlglnallyfor the l il it ii 1 n m and Kinney and Ilnl-lo- u

and A. A. Wilder fur the defend.ants. Judge A. W. Cutter beard thecase.

On AlimiMt I'.). tin; Hi,, lii,.,. rftlurm-.- l

Its verdict of nearly $.10,000 for thelilatlltilTH. Dlliinir the trim the .Unlivery was made that the defendants' andpiainuiis' copies or a lease or the landdiffered In an Important particular. In-volving the whole case. Crelghtoncharged that the defendants had alter-ed their copy and much was made ofthe alleged attempted fraud. JudgeCarter ruled out the defendants' copyand allowed the other one to go ter theJury, which ruling practically settledme case.

While a motion for a new trial waspending, a Chinese witness arrived whowas able to tell of how the alterationwas made. 111m evidence was made apart of the grounds for asking for anew trial, but Judge Carter allowed themotion on the other ground of excessivedamages.

The matter went to the Supreme courtand Judge Carter was sustained, anew trial being again ordered. Thenew trial, however, never came tiff. TheMakee Sugar Company brought an ac-tion to restrain the plaintiffs from pin.securing the suit further. The cir-cuit court of Kauai Issued such an In-junction, nnd the matter has remainedquiet ever since.

The attorneys in the case now areKinney, Ballon and McClantihan nndJ. T. De Bolt.

Advertise your Wants In the Star.

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS i

Notice of Stockholders' Meeting

KOHALA Sl'UAlt CO.

By authority of the President, a spe-cial meeting of the shareholders of theKohala Sugar Company will be held inthe assembly room of Castle & Cooke,Limited, on Tuesday, the 2 tilt Inst., nt10 a. m. Object of meeting, ratificationof the charter extension, bonded issue,and any other matters that may bepresented for consideration.

J. B. ATHEIITON,Treasurer, Kohala Sugar Co.

BY AUTHORITYprULIC LANDS NOTICE.

Whereas, It Is made to appear, that itis dcsiraoie in the Public Intereststhat, that portion of the Public Do-main, known as the unie.ised part ufthe Ahupuaa of "Puuanahulu,'' situateIn the District of Xurt h Kntm luhitwiof Hawaii, and more particularly ,te- -scriueu, Hereinafter he reserved and setapart tor the purposes ot encouragingtorest growth, that Is at present grow-ing or may hereafter grow upon tilesaid land.

Now therefore. I, the undersigned,Commissioner of Public Lands, for theTerritory of Hawaii, for reasons abovestated, do hereby give notice, that thehereinafter described land, known asthe unleascd portion ot tne Aiiupuaa of"Puuanahulu," is hereby reserved andset aside for the purpose of forestgrowth.

E. S. BOYD,Commissioner of Public Lands.

Public Lands Olllee, Honolulu, June17th, 1902.

Description of the remuiiilng- - portionof the Ahupuaa of Puuanahulu, InNorth Kona, Hawaii, not under leaseor otherwise disposed of.

Beginning at the ancient monumentknown as on theboundary of Kona and Kohala, aboutIPO teet makal of the Government road,the station point being marked by asteel bolt in rock, whence NohoannohaeTrig. Station Is N. 87' 14' E. true 09170feet and Puuloa Trig. Station Is N 3749 j- true ifiSjJ feet, and running asfollows; all bearings being referred tothe true meridian passing through theInitial point:

70 17' E. true 34027 feet along theboundary of the land Walkoloa to thoKapukalkl Trig. Station marked bvo cut in paboehoe rock about 13 feet

from tho edge of Kapukalkl pit on Itseasterly side. This pit Is 13 feet indiameter and 5 feet deep.

40" 30' E. true 3072S feet alongWalkoloa to a point on the terminaledge of the Keaumuku llu.v 2000 feetS. 40" 30' E. true from Keamuku Trig.btatlon. The boundary correspond-ing to this line is thus given in thelloundary Certillcates of Walkoloa S.473 E. magnetic 84 eh. equals 5514 feetto pile of rocks;S. 53 E. magnetic 130 eh. equals 8970feet to Klkiha;S. 53 magnetic 130 eh. equals S970feet to tho cave of llanalalll;K. 42 E. magnetic 87 cli. equals 5742feet to Wnwaekea;S. 33 E. magnetic 73 ch. equals ISISfeet to a pile of rocks;S. 03 E. magnetic 72 oh. equals 1753feet to Keamuku:

3 S. SG 18' E. true 39001 feet nlongWalkoloa to a copper bolt set in drillhole In rock on tho S. E. side of PuuknPele bill near trail about 100 feet fromthe base of said hill, and St. II" 40' W.true 1CS7 feet from Pun ka Pele Trig.Station. This line of boundary Isgiven thus In the Walkoloa lloundaryCertlllcate:S. TiS" E. magnetic 102 ch. equals 10C92feet to Ilewla.S. S5" E. magnetic 72 eh. equnls 1762feet to a pile ot rocks;S. fi2ifc E. magnetic 1C0 ch. equals 10,..'.CO feet to Kaaawn;S. 58" E. magnetic 191 ch. equals 12504feet to a point on the S. E. side ot Puuka Pole at tho Junction of the districts'of Kohala and Ilamnkua on tho Konaline.

4 8. 43 00' W. truo 47200 feet along thoboundary of the Government land ofKaohe to an ancient point known as"Naohuleelua" on tho frosh "aa" oftho north east side of the lava Howof 1859 and about 30 feet south of u"Klpuka" and whence the Ahu MoaTrig. Station is N. 37 13 E. truo Gt,-0- 00

feet:5 N. OS" 55' W. truo 32270 feet along tho

boundary of Keauhou 2nd. to thesouth peak of the riven crater hill PuHahaha on the upper edge of tho for-est;

0 Thence along the unsurvoyed boun-dary of puu Waawaa to Ko Ana aMaul, a sleeping cave; Thence In anortherly direction along tho sameunsurveyed boundary to a stone wallabout three fourths of a mile abovoPuu Huluhulu;

Thence In a north-easter- ly directionalong said stone wnll dividing thisland from Government Lease 617, toItobert Hind and Eben Low, to thenorthuasterly edge of the lava Howof 1859;

Thence along tho north-easterl- y edgeof said How to a point on the seashore about half mile north of Kea.walkl llsh pond and which bears from

nitm mmimtmiaimmmts

NO CATCHING AT STRAWS.Drowning men, Uiny stay, will

catch nt Htraws. Naturallyenough, because they sec nothinghotter (o catch nt. It. is theprinciple of any port iit n storm.All tlif same tfu straw does notsavo the drowning man, nor istho tempest-tosse- d nmrinor likelyto find a safe harbor every tintsho runs for tho shore. Tho scien-tifically constrnetcd lifo preserveris better than a straw, nnd toknow how to rido out a storm isbetter than to trust to luck infinding a port in tiino of need.Just so it is in discaso aimall manner of sickness. A shiptakes a pilot on. tliOsthcory thathe knows tho right channeland can ..avoid 'tho dangorouiplaces. And whon your' life iithreatened by UiscaHO --yon natur-ally desire a-- mode of treatmentfounded on absoluto knowledge

a treatment that has provedelTcetivo in other cases liko yourown. This is the cominon-sens- o

of tho subject and n ono willdispute it. And it is becausotho woll-know- n cltectivo remedyWAMPOLE'S PREPARATIONnever fails in the complaints forwhich it is recommended, that itenjoys the conlldonco of thopeople and tho medical profes-sion everywhere. Tho doctorwho prescribes and' tho patientwho taken it are not catching atstraws, for it does what it isEnid to do on the samo principlothat water puis out a lire. It i3palatabh honey and containstho nriiritiw i.nd curativo prop-citi- es

of I'tiio Cod Liver Oil,combined with tho- - CompoundSyrup of II ypophosphitcs, Maltand Wild Cherry. It (juiokly ar-

rests tho lows of flesh in wastingdiseases, builds np the body, andexpels from t'.io blood thoso per-nicious gcvniB which causo Fevers,La Crippe, Scrofula, Kowol Com-plaints. T'iroi'i and hung Trou-bles, fie. KITeotivo Xrnni tho firstdose. " Yorif'tHPirJ, bo disappoint-ed in it.' Mold liy all chemists.

Pun Nahabaha N. 23' 47' W. true,distant 77102 feet.Thence along the oast nt high wa-

ter mark In a point opposite the an-cient monument of Illlalia. and up tosaid monument which Is N. 30 45' E.true, SS00 feet from the tnd of thoproceeding course;

S S. fiS" 40' E. true 1719 fe.--t along moboundary of .Anavlujonialu, to-th- e Ini-tial point, and containing an area of74000 acreo jnore, or-- less, exceptingtherefrom any .homesteads whichmay have .been authorized by theGovernment within these limits.

NOTICE.FOritTH DIKTKIUT, THIltD PRE-

CINCT, lthiPH'HLlCAN CLUj3

A meeting of the Fourth District,Third Precinct llepublican Club will beheld at the Government Water Gatehouse Just above tho Second bridge,Nuunuu Avenue, Wednesday evening,June 18, at 7:30 p. nt.. A full attend-ance Is requested, lluslness, nomina-tion of ollicers.' M. P. HOHINSON,

Chri.lr.iimHonolulu. June 17, 1902.

NOTICE.The Fourth Precinct, Fourth District

Club, of. the llepublican Party, willmeet at the St. Antonio Hall, VineyardStreet, on Friday evening, nt 7:3(1

o'clock, for the purpose of nominatingolllcers of the ob'h

WILL C. KING,Chairman.

Day

Thursday,

June 26, 1902

In coiehratlon . of "Col onatlon Day"thero will ho

''jiold on Tliurs,lay, the

2fith Inst: '

At 9:15 n. in., lit St. Androw's Cathe-dral, a Special Service, which will do

a part of tho Historic CoronationService.

At 2,p..in., there will he a Garden 'Party and Cricket ;.Matoh on tlmgrounds of tho Oahu Volli;geo whlek,.the Trustees hnvo.klndjy ?Howod they,use.

At 9 p. in., there will bo a Subscriptlion Hall at tho Mo.um Hotel.

Tickets for tho Hall, pi'leo $2.00 each,may be had of any wf the members of.tho Hall Committee.

Chairmen of Committees:Finance, Mr. W. M. Glffard.Cathedral Sorvleo, Mr. X. C. DavieCricket Match, ate, Mr. U. II. AVode- - .

house.Hall, Mr. V. W. Anderson,

W. 0. S1NGLI3HUU8T,i t Secretary,

' Honolulu, June Htlij'lMfrJ

t3

'

Page 6: If TTTTT HAWAIIAN · 2015. 6. 2. · you can ii nil it in ttttt hawaiian roc into hi o bwt thk stalt homes of llonolnh vol. x. honolulu, h. i., tuesday, junk 17 1902. no. 3197 the

BIX THE HAWAIIAN STAR, TUESDAY, JUNE 17, 1902.

A summerWell, now

Proposition.there's the Slll't Eat FILLING VACANCIES THE GRID-IR-

ON CLUBYou cortaiuly tlou't waut to cat if

ICE ! you nro not hungry. Hut you mustQUESTION cat, and ym. must digest your food, chairman of Tin: republican MEMBERS OF HOUSE HAVE

Ttl know you'll need Ice; you know too. If not, you will bcromo weak, I'OMMITTKK. FUN.If a necessity In hot weather. Wo pale, tliiu. (nmil fund, good uppotlto,V.hrve you arc anxious to got that Ice good digustlou, thuso aro essential.wmch will give you satisfaction, andVo'd like tos mipply you. Order from

lilt Oil IDE 8 EUC CO.,

HOFFMANN AND MARKHAM.

telephone 3161 Blue, PostofHce Box 606

Celebrated

W 6 CorsetsJUST UECEIVED

EX ALAMEDA,.,

Craze Game

Ping; PongJust Received

E. W. JORDAN,10 FORT STREET

W. 6. IRWIN & CO., LTD..

Wra. G. Irwin.. President and ManagerCUus Bpreckels.... First nt

W M. Glftard.... Second Vice-Preside- nt

E M. "Whitney, Jr..Seo'y and Treasurer0o. J. Rons Auditor

Sugar Factors,Commission Agents

AGENTS OF THE

OCEANIC STEAMSHIP COMPANY

OF S AN FRANCISCO. CAL.

The Encore SaloonCorner Nuuanu and Hotel Streets.

VJe Keep on Hand theBoat Brands ofLiquors and Cigars

The Depot Saloon,Opposite the Oahu Railway & Land Co.

We will keep the Honolulu Beer al-w-

on tap and In bottles. Also softirtnks and cigars.

HYAH DRMBWT. Pivnrlefore.

HART & CO., LTDTHE EUTE ICECREAM PARLORS

Chocolates and ConfectionsIce Cream und Water IcesBakery Lunch.

1 FINEST RESORT IN IHE CITY

Oahu Tailoring Company,MERCHANT TAILORS.

Sulta made to Order, cleaning, Re-pairing and !resaing; corner Beretanlaand Emma Bts., Honolulu, T. H.

WON& LOU CO.Hotel Street near Smith.

Baiiltary Plumbers, Tinsmiths, Ulbeet Iron Workers.Water Pipe and Gutter Work Is t

It branches.Orders filled with dispatch.

8. Kojixn8.IMPORTER ANDDEALER IN

.LIQUORS,Japanese Provisions.

General Merchandise,AND PLANTATION. SUPPLIES.

mo. a HOTEL STREET, HONOLULU.Telephone "White 1411.

P. O. Box 906.

OKCTA,Contractor and Builder.

...... ..House Fainter

walo, Sheridan Street, near Xing,Honolulu. H. L

Mr. Kobrrt Vrnus, ot Luinccstnn, Tas-mania, 8cnils us plioUiRrapli ami n:iys:" I Buffered greasy from lois nt appetite,Indigestion, pains in tlio stomach, weakness,and norvoinnrss. Several ilmtiirs tried invain to gle mo roller. A. friend then Inducedme to try Ayer's Saraiiarlll.i, for it had donehim mueh good. The first Iiottle workedwonders for me. Soon my appetite camoliaek, my Indigestion was i iired, and 1 wasstrong and hearty."

SarsaoarillaThere aro many iinit.itlon " Sarsaparillas."

lie sure jou get Ayer's.

Keep your liowels in good condition by usingAyvi's TUN. They cure constipation, coatedtongue, biliousness, sick headache.Prepared by Dr. J. C. AyerS Co., Lowell. Mass., U.S.A.

Wogue jB Says S

'MHTT?TTVIfll'W

"Paper must bo selected In re-ference to the furniture of theroom as well as the architectureand lighting, and It must hoborne In mind that the walltreatment has more to do withthe general aspect of the roomthan any other single Item."

Artistic and Inexpensive

Wall Papers

I CO., LTD.,

New publications, Includingthe most Important books of re-cent literature now on sale. Wohave them.

The Kentons. by W. D. How-ell- s.

A Double-Barrelle- d DetectiveStory, by Mark Twuln.

The Great Boer War, by Doyle.Mistress Brent, by Thurston.The Pagan Cup, by Hume.The Fervents, by Howard.Old Fanner's Allimax, by Josh

Billings.Hester Blair, by Wrn. Henry

Corson.Role of the Conquered, by

Dal ton.Sailor's Log, by Evans.Rock Haven, by Chas. Clurk

Munn.Life on the Stage, by Clara

Morris.Many other now books too nu-

merous to mention here.

LIMITED. IMERCHANT ST. I

S. OZAKI,Grand Opening ofOur New Store

115 N. KING ST.

HARDWARE,

CROCKERY,

GLASSWARE,

PAINTS, ETC.WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.

Dry Goods,'Fancy Goods17 S. HOTEL ST.

I1

Dove Season.. .t'ol. Fisher and J. 1'. Cooke Put For-

wardHow Members ot the Legislature Re-

create:Winston As a Successor to In Tholr Spare Moment At

McCains Stewart. the Club. :v..v..9:. Opens July 1

Republican politicians are discussingthe matter of a successor lo ChulrinanJ. A. Kennedy of the Territorial Cen-tral Committee, whose resignation IsIn the hands of the committee. Col. J.H. Fisher and J. P. Cooke are men-tioned as possible choices of the com-mittee. Cooke Is expected here on theSierra tomorrow from San Francisco.

The outside members have been writ-ten to for their views on the matter ofa choice of chairman, and by the timeof the next meeting It Is expected thatmany of them will have sent Instruc-tions to proxies here. Unless a specialmeeting Is called, there will not bp an-other meeting until the first SaturdayIn July.

Col. Fisher Is now the secretary ofthe committee and If he Is made chair-man another secretary will have to bechosen. Fisher was asked this morn-ing as to his candidacy for chairmanand stated that several members of thecommittee had spoken of naming him.He would not refuse If the party want-ed him. Incidentally, the colonel saidthat the olllce of secretary was begin-ning to pile up an Immense amount ofwork and that the work would Increaseas the voting day approaches.

.1. P. Cooke Is known to be the choiceof some members of the committee, buti' is not known whether he would ac-cept the position, even If It should de-velop that he has a majority of thevotes.

The vacancy caused by the resigna-tion of T. McCants Stewart of the FifthDistrict, will also probably be filled atthe next meeting. This Is a' matter forthe Fifth District men to decide forthemselves, so that there is no need towait for proxies. The nomination Isto come from the remaining membersfrom the Fifth, who are John C. Lane,Dr. George H. Huddy, George F. Ren-tc- n,

W. J. Coelho and Andrew Cox. E.C. Winston is mentioned as likely to bethe choice.

J. L. Holt. Is also talked 'of as theprobable successor to Stewart. Holthas Stwart's proxy, and Is understoodto be his choice, though Stewart sayshe has given up polities and Is takingno Interest in the matter.

IN FRANCE.M. Leon Bourgeois who has been elect-

ed president of the new Chamber ofDeputies, defeating M. Deschanel, whohas held the position for four years, andwhose victory may foreshadow achange In the complexion of the Minis-try, has had a great deal of politicalexperience. He was born in Paris InlSSl and entered politics In 18S7 and be-came a member of the Chnmber of De-puties the following year. Since thenhe has been In various Cabinets and Inthe crisis of 1893 was Premier and Min-ister of Foreign Affairs. He added verymuch to his fame by his conduct ashead of the French delegation at TheHague peace conference.

PAN AND SYRINX.

From "The Pipes of Pan," by BlissCarman In the April Atlantic

Once, ah, once (ye know the story!)When the heart was in her gloryEre man gave his earth to lireedIron hate and heartless creed.Near a meadow by a streamQuiet as a dateless dream.As I watched from the green rimOf a beech grove, cool and dimMusing In the pleasant shadeThe soft leafy sunlight made,What should gleam and move and

quiverDown b,v the clear pebby river.Where the tallest reeds were growingAnd the bluest Iris blowing,Gleam a moment and then pass,(Ah, the dare-to-lo- she was.In her summer-fervi- d dressOf sheer love and loveliness!)Wayward, melting, shy, and fond,Lissome as a bulrush wand,Fresh as meadowsweet new-blow- n,

Sandal lost, and lossened zone,Our own white ArcadianTouched with rose and creamy tan,Eyes the color that might HeckThe red meadow lily's neck,Hair with the soft silky curl "

Of some strayed patrician girl,Beech-brow- n on the sunlit throat,Cheek of tawny apricot,Parted Hps and breast aglow,Who but Syrinx, as ye know!Gone, swift as a darting swallow."What could young Pan do but follow?(Have ye felt the warm blood beat,At an ankle In the street?Known the pulse's hurried throb,And the breathing's catch und sob,When, upon his face with death.Life the runner halts for breath,Taking with a happy cryHis brief draught of ectasy?)Call I did, with only laughterBlown back, as I hurried after;Till I reached the riverside,wnero x last had seen her glideIn among the reeds, and thereLost her. But a breath of airMoved the grass-head- s, going by,And I heard the rushes sigh.So the chase has always proved;And Pan never yet has loved,But the loved one all too soonMerged In music and was gone,Melted like u passing strainVanished like a gust of rainOr a footfall of the wind.Leaving not a trace behind.

Ads under "Situation Wanted" in-serted free of charge.

The fun with members of the Housebegun as soon as the oysters were serv-e- u.

"1 move,'' sulu one uieinoer ot theciub, "that wo resolve ourselves Into acommittee ot thu wnoio on tnc state ofDavid U. Henderson."

"'the motion is out of order," declar-ed 1'iesiuent Wynne.

"Why?" queried a member."The state of David li. Henderson

never Is in oruer," was the answer.There was a report trom the commit-

tee on rules, which mane dummies outot all the other members, wnlie a num-ber of hills and resolutions were re-

ported which were Jokes at ttu; expenseor the congressmen. Then a numberof decrepit veterans came In, and wereannounced as the members of the waysand means committee, who had beenattending a harmony meeting. Theycontinued their deliberations In thepresence of tne guests, and euch sen-tmc- e

of the conversation was punc-tured with a laugh. When some onesuggested that Uen. Corbln might beretired, the answer was immediate."Not on your lite," said a member."He s as sate as Miles."

And then the chorus sang this verse:Be good, bo good, my mother said,

Although your way bo stormy,Some clay you may be President

Or general of the army."Over In the Philippines." said a club

member, "they have a way of extract-ing Information from people who willnot talk by administering the watercure. Wouldn't it be a good thing totry on the statesmen In Washington?"

"Certainly," said President Wynne.Representative William Alden Smith

of, Michigan was selected as the victim.Every correspondent in the club boretestimony to the dilliculty of gettingSmith to talk. "Upon questions con-cerning Cuban reciprocity and the Boerwar," the pale and trembling repre-sentative was Informed "your Hps aroperpetually sealed. For this offenseyou must experience the dismal horrorsot the water cure."

Forthwith a procession of club mem-bers entered the banquet hall. Somebore a huge section of fire hose, witha big brass nozzle as long as yourarm; others wheeled In garden huso onreels, while still others carried lire ex-tinguishers, siphons, hot-wat- er bags,and various Implements of water. Con-fronted by this formidable array, Mr.Smith was asked if he would break hisusual silence. Very promptly and wil-lingly he consented, and his "would-b- e

tormentors thereupon withdrew whilebe made a speech.

Still another feature was the displayof pictures, admirably executed by J.Cunningham, showing a variety of

each machine promi-nently displaying the features of somesupposed presidential aspirant. Therewas the handmade, double-jolnte- c

peripatetic gas bag Bryan, the balloon-shape- d

derelict. Cleveland, the sky-scraper Fairbanks, the broken-dow- u

bubble Hill, the genuine traveling ma-chine Gorman, the aeroplane Hanna,and the rapid-ratti- er Roosevelt. Thepresentation of each picture was ac-complished by appropriate remarks,while the display of a map of thesouthern part of the United States,with a zigzag line showing in a heavyhead steak the path of the Hanna

provoked hearty laughter,in which Mr. Hanna Joined.

The speeches and the music whichinterspersed these features and thecourses of the menu were excellent.Among those who responded were SirHenry Strong, chief justlceof Canada;Senator Piatt of Connecticut; SpeakerHenderson, Gorman, es

Tawney, Cushman, Long,Newlands and Powers. WashingtonPost.

FIGHTING IN ALGERIA.ALGIERS, May 31. A small detach-

ment of Arabs, commanded by aFrench Lieutenant, while returning toAln Salah, an oasis In the Sahara,after punishing a raiding band ofTuaregas, was attacked by 300 Tuaregsin the neighborhood ot Delless. TheTuaregs were routed and left seventy--

one dead on the field. The Frenchforce had three men killed and tenwounded.

TO COMPLETE MACADAMIZING.Tenders will hf called for by Captain

White to complete about 1,000 feet ofmacadamizing of streets In and aroundthe Naval Station. The new bell re-

ceived from the Mare Island NavyYard will shortly be Installed at theNaval Station. The bell will be rungIn the morning ut the hour of going towork, at noon, at 1 p. 111., and at clos-ing time in the afternoon.

BUILDERS AND TRADERS.The Executive Committee of the

Builders' and Traders' Exchange helda meeting last night. It was decidedto take an active interest in the com-ing Merchants' Association Fair andFiesta. The Exchange will apply forspace and allot It to Its members whdwhile making Individual exhibits, willconform them to the general plan ofthe committee. It Is Intended thatthese4plans shall Include specimens ofevery kind of architecture and buildingused in Hawaii. Plans for an exhibitat St. Louis were also discussed.

M PHRSE III

iK

CAHERAThe "Al Vista"' Panoramic Camera glveH a greater pleasure and a

greater scope to amateur photography. The wonderful advantages ofthis camera are too numerous to explain here. Come to us and seethe Instrument and get Illustrated catalogue, or write.

Honolulu Photo Supply Company,FORT STREET

..; E. 0. HALLNew

V.V. Corner Fori;

M The

m and

Hand

H 24,

-

Thethe of 20th In

of His lastbook

Just and on sale

156

AND

andmade

C63, nearFine Rook and

the mar . ,

Are you ready for the sport? Wehave Imported thousands of shot-gu- n

cartridges to your needs. Newstock of Parker and L. Smith gunsand guns also.

Our prices range from $7.00 up to$160.00.

If you don't want to buy a gun we.rent them.

.

.

Ghoice Toilet I

IJ WE SELL THEM

most popular toilet soaps in great profusion at our counter, HM among which are n full and complete line of COLGATE'S FINE PER- - U

FUMED SOAPS, CUTICURA SOAP, PEARS, both scented un- -scented; GLYCERINE SOAP, PACKERS TAR SOAP, BUTTER- - B

H MILK SOAP, HAND SAPOLIA, ITALIAN VIOLET, WHITE ROSE, HB JOCKEY CASHMERE BOQUET, LA FRANCE LILYEl OF THE VALLEY, MOUNTAIN VIOLET, BAY RUM, others too II numerous to mention. H

I Telephones: H. MAY & CO., Ltd Boston IFort St'22, 92 THE POPULAR GROCERY. H

OURGreat Reduction Sale!

CLOSES SATURDAY, JUNE 14.

HAT, HATS, HATSSHIJjfcOfS, SHIRTS, SHIRTSAND MANY OTHER ARTICLES TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION. SOLD

AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES.

K.KING STREET, NEXT TO CASTLE

Large ofAmerican

1120 Nuuanu Street

IK IB.well novelist died suddenly

on morning April Washington D. C, paralysis.

"Kile Bonnet "

received at the

HOTEL STREET,

S. SAIKI,Bamboo Furniture

PICTURE FRAMESNeat HandsomeDesigns, to order.

Beretanla Street, Punchbowl,

Commercial Printing,at utnee.

supplyC.

cheaper

CLUB, ROSE,

.

..

mm .:.

& SON, LTD --..Building

and King Streets

??"ity?'?

ISOSHIflA& COOKE.

9Telephone White 3271

..WHISKEYIB

By the GallonAT

$3.50 or $4.50

WHY PAY HIGHPRICES, WHEN YOU CANBUY THE CHOICESTWHISKEY FOR $1.60 AGALLON.

CAMARA &C0.3S. E. Corner Queen andAlakea Streets.

DEALERS IN WINES,BEERS AND LIQUORS.

P. O. Box C44. Telephone Blue 492.

Flno Book and Commercial Printing,at. the Star,Offlce,

Just ReceivedA Line JapaneseSilks, Curios andDry Goods

B.

known

SUCH

Page 7: If TTTTT HAWAIIAN · 2015. 6. 2. · you can ii nil it in ttttt hawaiian roc into hi o bwt thk stalt homes of llonolnh vol. x. honolulu, h. i., tuesday, junk 17 1902. no. 3197 the

HOn the Polo Grounds,

Balls Hade Harmless.SOCIETY HAS TAKEN TO POLO AND BECOME ENTHUSED"

OVER ITS ATTRACTIONS IN A WAY NOT PREVIOUSLY KNOWNIN THE ANNALS OP OUTDOOR RECREATIONS. THIS SCOT-

TISH OAME HAS BROUGHT WITH IT A KNOWLEDGE OP THEHIGH-BAL- L AND ITS PROPER USE AT THE CLUB HOUSE AFT-ER THE FATIGUES OP THE GAME

PHYSICIANS MAY DIFFER AS TO THE BENEFIT OP ALCO-

HOL WHETHER IT BE A FOOD OR STIMULANT, BUT HOW-EVER MUCH THEY MAY DIFFER IN THIS, THEY ARE ALLAGREED THAT IF LIQUOR MUST BE TAKEN, IT IS ROBBEDOP HARMFUL EFFECTS IP DILUTED WITH WHITE ROCK ORIN THE FORM OP A "HIGH-BALL- ," AS IT IS CALLED. TO BEPERFECT A HIGH-BAL- L SHOULD ALWAYS BE MADE WITH.

White Rock Waterwhite rock makes grape juice. milk. lemonade andstill wines, sparkling, delicious and healthful,

no flat Bottles. w. c. peacock & co., agents.

"Thirsty earth drinks up the rain,Trees from earth drink that again,The ocean drinks the air, the sunDrinks the sea, and him the moon.Any reason can'st thou think,1 should thirst while all these drink?"

There's delight and refreshmentat any time in a bottle of

PrimoTelephone

.You are going to have your housePapered, Painted or Decorated.

Who's going to do it?No one does or can do better work

than we. Investigation proves thatfew do as good.

All we ask for It la a fair price-- not

high, not low. Either extreme Isdangerous.

Anyone who gives us work gets thebest going at the fairest and squarestprices.

STERLING, the;Office: Union Street, opp. Bell Tower.

Jos. P. Morgan PresidentCecil Brown Vice-Preside- nt

F. Hustace .'.SecretaryChas. H. Atherton AuditorW. H. Hoogs Treas. and Mgr.

TELEPHONE MAIN 205.

Husfaoe &'G., LtdQUEEN STREET

Firewood, Stove,Steam and Blacksmith

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL

Special attention given toDRAYING

ALSO, WHITE AND BLACK SAND

Japanese KimonosFOR

Ladies and Girls

TEA SETS, ETC.ALSO.

Goods andCurios at

,m. CHIYATelephone 3311 White.

Corner of Nuutnu and Hotel BtreeU

Nqw Goods ReceivedBy Every SteamerFrom Japan

Ads under "Situations Wanted," ed

tree of charga in the Star.v

Ijustly

High

LagerSparkling1, satisfying, nourishing.Order a case from Brewery.

Main 341

H0I3I0OMINSOR THE SEASIDE

VACATION IS HERE

WE FURNISH GROCERY CAMPINGOUTFITS.

For two persons, camping ten days orFor'three persons camping ten days

orFor four persons camping one week

orFor four persons camping ten days.

SOLEWIS & CO., LTD.

THE GROCERS.

1060 FORT STREET.30 TWO TELEPHONES 210.

ffl. G. IRWIN & GO.(Llmltorl.)

AGENTS FORWestern Susar Refining Companj of

San Francisco, Cal.Baldwin Locomotive Works of

Pa 'lelphla, Penn,Newell Universal Mill Company

(National Cane Shredder)New York, U. S. A.

N. Ohlandt & Coa Chemical FertilizersHigh Grade Fertilizers for Cane and

Coffee.Alex. Cross & Son's High Grade Fer-

tilizers for Cane and Coffee.

Reed's Steam Pipe Cars

Also Offer for SaleParaflne Paint Co.'s P. & B. Paints and

Papers.Lucol and LInse d Oils, raw and bolleu.

Indurlne (a cold water paint) In whiteand colors.

Filter Press Cloths, Cemu L.me andBrick.

C. Q. Yee Hop & Co.

Knliiklnui Mont MarketAnd Grocery

Fruits and Vegetables

BERETANIA ST., COR. ALAIC .

Also at the

Fish Market, Stalls 1 9 and 20Phone Blue 2511.

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, TUESDAY, JUKE 17, 1902

BIG MONEY IN VIOLETS

HOW THE FLOWER OF FASHIONIS GROWN.

A Valley of Violets to be Found on

Floral Farms Big Prices Fetched by

The Blooms.

Violets by the million, perfuming theatmosphere of a whole valley, and

the beauty of 10,000 fair vota-ries of fashion throughout the cold win-ter and spring months, are the artificialproducts of an Industry which adds around million dollars annually to theIncome of professional llorlsts. For 15years now the modest little violet hasbeen the llower of fash-Io- n;

other plants have come and gone,but the little violet retains Its popular-ity, and refuses to be replaced by moregaudy blooms. So continuous has thedemand been for violets that farms devoted exclusively to their culture havebeen established In all parts of thecountry. While the largest and mostsuccessful are located on Long Islandand in Westchester county, New York,there are many in New Jersey and Mas- -sacnuseus, anu now worn-o- ut Virginialarms are being turned over to tnesame use.

So important have the violets becomein the estimation of the public that thodepartment of agriculture has invest!-- ,gated the humble little plant, and.thebest methods of cultivating It havei.o i i iu tot..,i i, ,,nof the experts connected' with the de- -partment that an annual profit of $500

should be made from 100 shares devotedto violet culture. This and more too Ismade by farmers who are favorably located near the large cities.

This Is evident from the prices paidfor violets out of season. In the winterreason $3 must be paid for a good sizedbunch of handsome violets, and If onegoes to a city florist's and orders abunch appropriately tied with purplesatin ribbon he will have to pay $10 to$15. How many violets go Into a bunchIs a matter that one can easily ascertain, but few stop to make tho discov-ery. Fifty violets by artful handlingwill make a bunch two and a half Inch-es In diameter, but no one save a llorlsican expand them to such dimension.One hundred violets make a bunch liveInches across, and 200 of the flowers willeasily expand the circle to 10 Inches.The latter will often bring $10 in win-ter, and the other two $5 and $2.50 res-pectively. That is at the late of fivecents a violet. The grower, of course,does not receive that amount, but afterthe profits of the retailer and cost ofpacking and transportation are'deduet-e- d

he still receives a cent or two foreach humble little llower he raises.

Under artificial methods of cultiva-tion the violets begin their bloomingseason In October, and they are pickedevery day through the winter until af-ter Easter. During the Christmas andEaster holidays the sales of violets areenormous, and thousands of dollars atespent dally for them. The violets aredelicate Mowers under any circum-stances, and they do not retain theirbloom long; but the big double ones ofcommerce are hardier than the modestsingle plants of the woods. Hut eventhese have to be picked in the afternoonand shipped to the market In refrige-rators over night. They are alwayskept at a low temperature until actual-ly sold. Then their period of bloom Israpidly shortened, rarely lasting morethan nn afternoon or evening. Bymorning they look faded and witheredand they are ready for the ash heap.

There are two kinds of violets nowchiefly grown for commercial purposes.They are both hardy and prolific andare the results of years of close studyand culture. They are known In thetrade as the Marie Louise and the LadyHume Campbell. More recently tho fa-mous long-stemm- ed Cullfornla violethas come into popularity, and as thisplant Is rarely attacked by diseaseswhich threaten the other two varietiesIt Is rapidly spreading In culture. Thisplant from the Pacific: coast Is, llkoeverything else Callfornlan, huge In sizeand growth, the (lowers often beingraised as large as a silver half-dolla- r.

They are remarkably sturdy growers,and one plant successfully started willsometimes produce as many as 200 orU00 blooms; but these California violetscannot bo raised so successfully Inwinter In our eastern climate, and theirappearance Is rare before spring. Cal-ifornia growers have reeunlly attempt-ed tho experiment of shipping themEast In mid-wint- er packed in paralllne-pape- r

lined boxes, and Hume success hasbeen attained In this way. On the wholethough, the California violets appear attheir best when raised In local green-houses for the early spring trade, ap-pearing then In all the glory of theirpristine beauty and fragrance.

It costs from $1 SO to $3 for coldframes, according to the size and qual-ity of the timber and glass used. ButIt pays to put up good, substantialframes, for with proper care they

should be made to last for 10 years andmore. Some beginners who have com-paratively few plants to start with,multiply thorn by cutting off the off-shoots In spring after the blooming pe-riod and putting these specially In se-parate places. All through summorthey nre kept growing, well shadedfrom the hot sun, und by fall they areready to bloom. Hy another spring off-shoots from these plants can then beobtained for further additions. In afew seasons a large quantity of violetscan thus be obtained from u small be-ginning. It Is even possible for the be-ginner to almost double his stock ofplants each year, adding a few moreframes to nccotnmodate them. As eachplant will yield at least 50 blossoms,and some 100 or more, like the Califor-nia violet, the pioflts are necessarilylurge.

There nre violet farms near New Yorkwhich annually raise icvural millions ofviolet blooms for market every year.One In Westchester county has somei.000,000 plants on the farm. Thero areover two acres of land devoted to theculture of the little plants, and dally00,000 of the blooms are picked by chll.dren and women for the market. Thefarm In winter Is mostly covered withglass, and under tho sashes the violetslift up their modest heads in the faceof the coldest snowstorm.

BRIEF ly TO L DTANTALUS ROAD: The project of,"

an extension of the Pacific Heights m

Electric line up Tantalus has been re- - .vlved. It Is said that $100,000 would Jimake the extension. It Is said that a ,syndicate of business men has agreed Jto guarantee $30,000 or $40,000 of this ifof the remainder can be raised.

YOUNG PEOPLE'S UNION: Thoannual meeting of the Young People'.Union of Honolulu was held last even-ing In the Portuguese church. M. K.Nakuina presided The address of theevening was made by Rev. O. L. Pear-son on the subject, "Personality." Thefollowing offleers were elected for theyear: President, Richard Trent, Meth-odist church: vice president, J. M. Tag- -

part, Christian church: secretary, MissDuff, Central Union; treasurer, Mr.Freltas, Portuguese church.

FOURTH OF JULY: The followingis the program so far as it has beenarranged, for the literary exercises forthe Fourth of July celebration:Music, Amateur Orchestra; Prayer,Rev. E. S. Muckley; music, DillinghamQuartet: reading of Declaration of In-dependence, David Kamauoha of Kti- -lnehameha School; "Columbia, the Gemof the Ocean," Mrs. Agatha Kelley;address; Baritone Solo, Hugo Herzer,Address: "Star Snancled Banner." Col- -onel A. G. Hawes of California, a sur- -vlvor of John Brown's Ossawatomiccommand. Is expected here liv the Sler- -rn If nnmH i, .m un invito toBt. nti,,.ra .nroi..i,ui nu a.,iu.,.--'for the (, m.e Jm,Re ,.,Ht prnnkThonlpson ani, marles Hopkins,

CORONATION DAI; W. G. Klngle- -m,lst-- secretary of the coronation day

'"" b -nouneenient concerning the exercises,

1,1 celebration of Coronation Daythere will be held on Thursday, the26th Inst.: At !):lo a. in., In St. Andrew'sCathedral, a special service, which willInclude a part of the Historic Coronatlon Service. At 2 p. m. there will be agarden party and cricket match on thegrounds of the Oahu College, of whichthe Trustees have kindly allowed theuse. A a p. m. there will be a sub-scription ball at the Monnn HotelChairman of committees: Finance, W.M. Glffard; Cathedral service, T. C. Da-vie-

Cricket Match, etc., E. W. Wode.house; Ball, D. W. Anderson."

The services In the church will follow very closely one published In England, and suggested by the Archbishopof Canterbury. The choir on this uc- -caslon will be a united one of St. Andrew's . cathedral and St. Clement'schurch, all surpllced, numbering about40 voices, under the direction of WrayTaylor. All the Episcopal clergy of thecity will be present. The services willinclude the anthem "Zadok the Priest"composed by Handel and sung at thecoronation of George II.

RAPID TRANSIT: Sunday morningthe service on the King street line willbe Inaugurated. Through cars will runfrom the fertilizer works to the Walk!kl turn and the Llllha street carsthrough to Alexander street. Tho twocars will meet at Llllha street and atAlapal. It will be a ten minute servlcton both lines.

SILVER WEDDING: The silver wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Edward K, Llllkulanl was celebrated atKawalhao church last evening. Therewere congratulations and congratulatory addresses. There were a numberof presents. Among them was a handsome silver-heade- d cane made of woodstaken from the old lumber used Inbuilding Kawaiahao, surmounted by "aHawaiian half dollar and surroundedby a silver band upon which was engraved, "1S77 E. K. L. l'J02." A purseof $100 In silver was presented to MrsLillknlanl. A very handsome silver tenset consisting of sugar bowl, creamerwater pitcher and tray was also amongthe gifts.

ST. LOUIS COLLEGE: Tho exerclses closing the school year at St. LouisCollege will be held In the college hallat 8 o clock In the evening June 20. Exumlnatlons will begin. at 9 a. in. Juno20.

GRACE-ANGU- S WEDDING.The wedding of Miss Elizabeth Grace

and George Angus will take place thisevening In the Central Unln Churchthe Rev. William .Morris Klncald olllelating. The bridesmaids will be MissLilian Bacon nnd Miss Mollle Gracewith Miss Myra Angus as the maid ohonor. Southard Hoffmann will act nsbest man. The ushers are F. B. AngusC. II. Teaff, G. E. II. Baker, W. F. Dllllngham, E. J. Waterman, nnd J I. A

Wilder. Congratulations will be extended to the bride and groom at the Angusresidence on Kinma street after-th- e

ceremony.

MEXICAN HOSPITALITY

HOW THEY "THROW THE HOUSE

OUT OF DOORS."

Spanish Hosputtnllty as Evidenced in

The House, Roadside and Restaurant.l

Where the Hoat Is Sorvant.

To "throw the Hoiiae out of tho win-dow," which, translated Into our Eng-lish vernacular, Is "to turn things loose"Is the Mexican way of treating a guest.You cun'tdo too much for the friendwithin your gates. You nnd yours areat his disposition. And If you stay aweek, you must he "accompanied" nilthe time you aren't asleep. This IsMoorish andArablan, and tho Spaniardsbrought the custom over here. To bothe "servldor" or servant of a friendmeans real servitude; to bo with himand at his orders. It Is sometimes mostembarrassing; one would like to feelthat one was not giving so much trou-ble. But your host Is smiling, he showsno weurlness, he is delighted to be withyou, to stuff you, to "smoke" you, andto go riding with you, and when you,leavo his home, thu servants all drawnup to salute the departing cabullern asa mark of household respect, your hostis still unwearledly polite.

God bless these splendid hospitablepeople! They are all right, they meanto do the proper thing, and, by our Lord

FamedV"wavw,waw"wav'Wb" --vwuvav.vwmwwy'. vwwv

HAWAIIANEngineering & Construction Co.

Rooms 008, OOO, Oio Stangonwald Building,All classes of Engineering work solicited. Examinations, Surveys

and Reports made for any class of Waterworks, "Stenm nnd ElectricalConstruction. Plans and Specifications and Estimates prepared, nndConstruction Superintended In all branches of Engineering Work. Con-tracts solicited for Railroads, electric and steam: Tunnels, Bridges,Buildings, Highways, Foundations, Piers, Wharves, etc.

SPECIAL ATTENTION rlven to Examinations, Valuations, andReports of properties for Investment purposes.

FREDERICK J. AMWEC, M. Am. Sod. C. E.,Engineer and Manager.

W. R. CASTLE, JR., Socrotary and Troasurer.

Mohammed and tho Koran, they do ItUP In true old Moorish style! I wasreading a book of travels In Moroccothe other day. and the author told ofhow his Moorish host would "accom-pany" him all the livelong day.

The Spaniards here are like the Mexicans. Once they open their doors toyou, look out for a fiesta! They will,even If poor men, throw the house outof the window. Go Into a roadsidefond a on a holiday, and If two or threeyoung Spaniards, clerks In some cityshop, are lunching, they will press youto sit down with them and partake ofwhatever they happen to be eating. Notto Invite your fellow-passeng- er In thedlllgencla, or In the railway car, toshare your lunch Is horribly rude: Itbespeaks low breeding. Of such a person they say: "No tlene education" hehas no breeding. I have dined and supped with poor men, with Indians, thehead men of their hamlets, and alwaysIt Is the same courteous Insistence thatyou have of their best, and eat till youcan eat no more.

WILLIE THE FINANCIER.

To Make Pocket Money He AteWorms.

A New England small boy generallyshows business capabilities at a tenderige, If he Is ever going to have any. Acertain small Boston boy got Into thehabit of teasing his mother for pennies,until at last she said to him: "Now,Willie, I don't like to give you pennies,and If you want money you should goto work to earn It. The boy remainedthoughtful for some time. Then, with-in a few days the mother perceivedthat Willie had plenty of pennies. Shewondered a bit how he got thorn, butdid not question him. But one summerday she noticed that some sort of ahullabaloo was In progress In the baikyard. Looking out she sav Willie sur-rounded by a mob of boys who wen-yellin-

with delight. She went downinto tho yard to see what was goingon; and ns she passed out she saw,stuck up on tho rear wall of the house,

'this sign, quite neatly printed outwith a pencil:

Willie Jones Will Hat1 small green worm for 1 cent1 largo green worm for 2 cents1 small fuzzy worm for :i cents1 large fuzzy worm for i cents1 small green toad for 25 centsWillie was apparently doing u good

inn mwiui-- i iiiiuiiuiucu it hiany rate In her own back yard, but heis still carrying It on somewhere else.

A LOVER'S TRUST.A lover's trust Is reported from Johns

town, Pa. The young men of the place '

iiu.m u. iibl ui ljiu yuuiiK uiuiueus UlJohnstown, and parceled them out, oneto each man regardless of their charmsor of their preferences and without evenconsulting them. It was argued that i

this plan, as In trade combinations.would not only save time nnd labor butmoney. It looked well on paper, butthe trust was short-live- d. Jealousycrept In, and spoiled the plan.

CHOLERA MORBUS A DANGEROUSDISEASE.

In many Instances nttacks of cho-lera morbus terminate fatally beforomedicine can bo procured or a physi-cian summoned. Tho safe way Is tokeep at hand a reliable medicine foruse In such cases. For this purposethere Is nothing so sure as Chamber-lain's Colic, Cholera nnd DiarrhoeaRemedy. AV. E. Bosworth, of LaFay-ett- c,

Ala., U. S. A., says: "In June,1600, I had a serious attack of choleramorbus and one dose of Chamberlain'sColic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedygave me relief in fifteen minutes." Forsale by nil druggists. Benson, Smith &Co., general agents.

Advertise your wants Injthe, Star.

XOTICK.

Persons needing, or knowing of thosewho do need protection from physicalor moral Injury, which they are notable to obtain for themselves, mny con-sult tho Legal Protection Committee ofthe Anti-Saloo- n League, 9 MclntyreBuilding.

W. II. RICE, Supt.

RECEIVED PER ALAMEDA

Ice cream freezers, Alters, ta-ble and hanging lamps, readymixed paints, door mats, paperbags, Manila wrapping paper,etc., etc.

See the dlpslay In our windows.

P. O. Box 609.

39 N. IClng St. Tel. Main 393.

Silent Barber ShopHotel Street.

HOT AND COLD BATHS.BEST BARBER SHOPIN HONOLULU.

CASTLE & COOKE, LIMITED

Commission merchants.

SUGAR FACTORS,

AGENTS FOR

The Ewa Plantation Company.The Walalua Agricultural Co., Ltd.The Kohala Sugar Compnnv,The Walmea Sugar Mill Company.The Fulton Iron Works, St Louis, liftThe Standard Oil Company.

The G rgo P. B ke Steam Pu .Weston's Centrifugals.The New England Mutual Life Iiuna

ance Company of Boston.The Aetna Fire Insurance Company M

Hartford, 1 onn.

The Alliance Assurance Company MLondon.

BALDNESS Is the rcsut of a diseasedscalp. Nine times out a'f ten It is dand-ruff. At llrst the hair 'falla very little.mit gradually continues until ono spotih nnui. men ioiiowh naiuiic.-ts- .

PACHECO'fi DANDRUFF KILLERapplied at the beginning would havesaved the hair, by cleansing tho scalp,removing tho .dandruff, keeping thoscalp In a healthy State, and the hair(Irm at tho r0otB, a few days' use willprove Its VirtUC,

Sol(1 by all druggists, nnd at thov , uarber Shop. Telephone Mainii"

CASTLE & COOKE, LIM1TEI)

Life and Fire

Insurano hgmfe

tSf AGENTS FOR -- AO

NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL

LIFE INSURANCEc CO.

0 B08TOW.

FIRE INSURANCE CO

Or HARTFORD. CONN

SING HOP LEE,FORT STREETCORNER VINEYARD.

BUTCHER SHOPOpen on rionday, April 28

Grocery, Pork, Island Beef, SausagesHam, Liver,. Hatter, Cheese, Mutton,Nuts and Vegetables,

Adsunder. ''BitunUona-JWante- d "..la.

Page 8: If TTTTT HAWAIIAN · 2015. 6. 2. · you can ii nil it in ttttt hawaiian roc into hi o bwt thk stalt homes of llonolnh vol. x. honolulu, h. i., tuesday, junk 17 1902. no. 3197 the

EIGHT.

HOOMftNAMUUII !

EusinesH Is quiet but l( you buy yourJots for leas limn they are actuallyworth nna Know now 10 uunu u num,Udy cottage, some ono Is going to get

bargain.Please don't bother me for a few

days whan I promise you somethinggood,

L 0. ABLES,Real Estate Agent

TELEPHONE P. O. DOXMAIN 148 243

Honolulu Iron Works.

BTEAM ENGINES, SUGAR MILKS

BOILERS, COOLERS. IRON, BRJMM

AND LEAD CASTINC3.

Machinery of' Every Description Mfc'tt Order. Particular attention paid

Blacksmlthing. Job Workbn Short Notice.

OJV HANDTHE

HAWAIIAN AGRICULTURAL CO.,EWA, OAHU, WAIALUA, KAHUKU,PIONEER MILL, HAIKU, PAIA, KO-LO-

McBRYDE.' HAWAIIAN SU-

GAR, KEICAIIA.

lam MmStock andBond Broker

lambar Honolulu Stock and Bond Exchange

Orlioe, Campbell Block,Merchant Street.Honolulu, T. H,

Teleph- no Main, 101

P. O. Box 683

Hi Win 11" " "

is flowing fr.im K'lnneH .unl Inoutfitting for the cr.iter remem-ber that we hnvp

TENT

All Klylri- - : tu M fur irile 83

in .ill m idi-- ' tud

ISweuii-i--

.

("aiiteeir. Leggings, Etc. Cometo us for your supplies.

CIMITED

UNION. AND, HOTEL STREETSTELEPHONE MAIN S17.

HONOLULU T. H.

I

WAV ADVKKTISKiniiNTS.

( 'oriiti itlon Celebration Page 5

Thlid Precinct Club H.) Page 5

Judge Mnttos Page &

Kolmla Meeting Page 5

Honolulu Photo-Suppl- y Co Page C

E. (). Hall & Son Pago 0

Lewers & Cooke Pago 2

Coyne Furniture Co Page 3

The Kash Page 4

Waterhouse & Co Page b

NEWS IN A NUTSHELL

Paragraphs 'i'hat Ulvo CondensedAows r 1 he Day.

A Land Oillce notice appears In thisIssue.

The Fourth Precinct Club will meetmi Friday night.

Flower pots and palm pots at verylow prices. See Lewers & Cooke s au.

Vacation clothes and nil other clothesfoi men at Kash Clothing Co. See nd

The Kohala Sugar Co. will hold aspecial meeting next Monday at 10 a.m.

The celebrated "Yukon" refrigeratorsold on easy payments by Coyne Fur-niture Co.

Dove season opens July 1st. E. O.Hall & Son have a full supply of gunsand cartridges.

The Princess Kawananakoa has dlscontinued until further notice herTuesday receptions.

John Judge will continue the business')of Judge & Mnttos from which JohnMattos has withdrawn,

meeting of the Third Precinct Clublth District (R) Is called for Wednes-day evening Juno IS.

Henry Waterhouse & Co. have rent-ed a large number of houses recentlyand could place a few more. Call onthem.

Order your fertilizer from the PacificGuano and Fertilizer Co. They guaran-tee their preparation to be reliable .and

The "Al Vista" Panoramic1 Camerapresents a new phase In photographywhich you should Investigate. See Ho-

nolulu Photo-Suppl- y Co.About 7,500 tons of coal are en route

from Cardiff to this port for the NavyDepartment. The coal Is being broughtIn four French sailing vessels.

Pant; Chong, the Chinese who erect-ed a building without a permit, it Is al-leged, was lined $100 today by JudgeWilcox for common nuisance on thataccount.

The Woman's Christian TemperanceI'nion at its meeting in Central Unionchurch at 2:30 o'clock this afternoon Isconsidering the subject of "SavingsHanks In Schools."

Lam Chew was charged with em-bezzling $4!.r0 from a Chinese llrm. Hewas before Judgj Wilcox Ibis morning.The case was not made out, so the de-

fendant was discharged.Apuni, a Hawaiian girl 12 years old,

formerly resident In Honolulu, wasdrowned while bathing with some com-panions on the beach at Kulepa, Puna.The body was recovered.

Ex-Jud- Whiting Is sitting on theSupreme bench today in place of ChiefJustice Frear, who if disqualified Inthe Annie T. K. Parker estate matter.Justice Galbraith sits ac chief justice.

'The Associated Charities will holdIts annual meeting tomorrow at Y.M. c. A. hall. The public Is cordiallyinvited to be present and hear reportsfrom Gov. Dole, George It. Carter andMrs. J. M. Whitney.

HOSTESSES ENTERTAINED.The Social Science Club gave a diunei

in ihe hostesses who hae entertainedtile sessions of the club for the twentyyears during which It hns been In exist-ence. Covers were set at the Mounafur forty-si- x, the dinner commencingat seven o'clock. Many floral decora-tions which had been sent in by mem-bers nnd friends were utilized in mak-ing tile table, lit by electric bulbs mask-ed beneath green leaves, more attrac-tive.

Governor Dole was toast master forthe occasion, Mrs. Hyde and Mrs.

who have regularly en-

tertained the first and second annualmeetings of the club, speaking afterdinner as lld Mrs. Whitney, W. O.Smith and Professor Scott. Others whowere invited informally to say a fewwords Included Dr. Sereno Bishop, Jus-tice Frear, Rev. J. A. Cruzan and T.("live Davles.

THE WEATHER.Weather Bureau, Punahou, 1 " m.Wind, light S. W., weather w.oUily.

Heavy shower last night which may b'!lepcated tonight.

Morning minimum temperature, 71;midday maximum temperature, 81;barometer, 9 a. m., 29.91, falling, (cor-lect- ed

for gravity); rainfall, 21 hoursending 9 a. m 55; dew point, 9 a. m.,72; humidity, 9 a. m., S3 por cent.

CURTIS J. LYONS, Observer.

McBRYDE BONDS.The Supreme Court this morning

heard argument in the matter of theestate of Annie T. K. Parker, appeal-ed from Judge Humphreys. This istlie case In which Humphreys disap-proved an Investment In McBryde andother bonds by the trustee of the es-

tate.

Fine Book and Commercial Printingat the Star Office.

THE ORPHEDMFor a Short Season Only

HARRY COGILL ANDJACK STUTTON'SENTERTAINERS INFIRST CLASS

VAUDEVILLE

AIMEE TASMAClever Performances on the High Wire

Introducing Original Aerial WheelAct.

LENA HARVEYIn Serlo-Coml- o Effusions.

DELLA ROSSIn a Series of Clever Dances

ADALINA SARINAArtistic Exhibition on the Trapeze.

HARRY COGILL AND MAIE ARLEA"Tho Booking Agent."

Inimitable Songs, Dances and Bur-lesque,

DAVE CASTONCharacter Comedian and Hungarian

Dancer.LENA HARVEY

Pntrlotlc SongstressALTRO THE TRAMP

Juggler Comedian Extraordinary.AND

ROSE AQUINALDOPositively the Most Wonderful Lady

Contortionist and Balancer of theDay.

Box office opens at the OrpheumThursday at 9 a. m.

Regular Prices.A FIRST CLASS ATTRACTION.

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, TUESDAY, JUNE 17, 1902.

JAS. li MOfiGAN,

Auctioneer and Broker65 Queen Street

1'. 0. Box 5941 Telephone VI

AUCTION SALE'OF, 1

Palms and Ferns.

ON THURSDAY, JUNE 19,

AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M., ,

At the residence of Mrs. Parmenter,230 Ktnau street, near corner of Alapalstreet, I will sell at public auction theentire assortment of very choice palms,ferns and plants, consisting of

Palms, Hawaiian palms, Sago palms,Begonias, Caladlums, ChrySanthe.

mums.Violets, Native ferns,Maidenhair ferns,Hot house plants and many other as-

sorted plants.

JAS. K. MORGAN.AUCTIONEER.

Trustee's Sale !

ON SATURDAY, JUNE 21,AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON.

At my salesroom, C3 Queen street, 1will seel at Public Auction, by orderof Mr. H. T. Marsh, Trustee In reA. E. Nichols, bankrupt.

One Horse,Two cows, two calves,One buggy and harness,One brush and curry comb,One feed cutter,One golfing outfit one seesaw.An order on the Wahiawa Sugar Co.,

Ltd., for 750 shares of Its capital stock,par value $100 per share, or $75,000.

Equity In Manhattan Life InsuranceCo.s policy No. 115,628 on the life ofAlbert E. NicholB, face (death) valueof policy $20,000

JAS. F. MORGAN.AUCTIONEER

Trustee s SaleIn Basskrupfey

ON SATURDAY, JUNE 28,AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON.

At my salesroom, 05 Queen street, Iwill sell at Public Auction, by order of'Mr. Daniel Logan, Trustee for the Aus-tin Publishing Co., Ltd., a bankrupt,the entire plant of the Austin Publish-ing Co. The stock consists of paper,a very large and splendid stock or Jobtype; sufllclent body type for twolarge weekly newspapers. Also a largestock of artistic and te type,some of which has hardly seen ink.

Also all the presses, tools, Instru-ments, shafting, pulleys, belting, ofllcedesks, etc., etc.

The sale will also carry with It thename and good will of the "Paradiseof the Pacific."

In case of the nomdlsposal of thestock as a whole, the sale will betransferred to the premises of theAustin Publishing Co., and will be heldon the same day.

JAS. F. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER.

Cottage for Rent.A mosquito-proo- f, unfurnished two-roo- m

cottage, with use of bath, Is forrent. Rear of Dr. Cooper's ofllce, Ala-ke- a

street. Rent $20 a month.

JAS. F. MORGAN,65 QUEEN STREET.

Furniture For SaleAND

. House For Rent.

I have for sale the absolutely com-plete furnishing of a five room hand-somely furnished cottage and cottagefor rent. Centrally located with rea-sonable rent, Electric lights, mosquitoproof.

JAS. F. MORGAN,'

'65 Qugen Street.

JAS. P. M0EGAN- -

Auctioneer and Broker,

65 Queen Street,P. 0. Box 59 Telephone 72

FRESHTo-Da- y

Havlnir made arrangements with afirst-cla- ss candv maker recently arrived. We are pleased to announce thatIn future we will-mak-

FRESH EVERY DAY'

Cocoanut Taffy ...Peanut Taffy All at 40c. aStrawberry TaffyVanlla Taffy poundMolasses Taffy ...Butter Chips

Trj these candlesl There are nonebetter made.

CONFECTIONERY DEPARTMENT

WALL NICHOLS CO,, LTD,

We Have Them

All patent medicine advertised In the

Honolulu papers are for sale In our

store. Here are some of them:

Halprnncr's Liniment,Doan's llemcdics,Hood's Sarsnpiu'ilia,Chamberlain's RemediesCoke's DandrulF Cure,JVacheco's Dandruff Killer,Hcrpicide,Scott's Emulsion,l'ain Killer,AVamnole's Preparation,Ayor's Narsaparilla,William's i'ink fills

We have these and several thousand

others. You will find here everything

kept in a modern drug store.

"We hope you will feel at home In our

store and will make it your headquar-

ters as often as convenient to you. AVe

have chairs, telephone, and large airy

store at your service.

Hebron Drug Go.,

EHLERS' BLOCK.

FORT STREET,

(COMPANY. LTD.)Esplanade, cor. Allen and Fort Sta.

Manufacturersof Soda Water, Ginger Ale. Sarsaparllla, Root Beer, CreanSoda, Strawberry, etc., etc

y Collegeyvyyy Landyy Have you $1000 saved up? If soyy money into a home for yourself iny and save money by bo doing.yy Cost of a lot 100x150 at Collegey Cost of Cottage and Outbuildingy5y Total Costy Apply money in handyry Negotiate a loan 7 foryy Interest one year on $2500 7yy Taxes on $3,500 0 1

y Insurance on house $2000, 3 years5 - Incidentals

Total annual expense

Making your monthly rental $20'4 Apply your savins in rent in reducingyy you will soon have your homoyyyyy Healthy Location; Rapid? Fine Water Supply;?

Spot for a Happy HomeyyyyV

particulars applyBuliaing

The Price is15 Cents aYard

50110 yds. ofPrin

1 5 a

The Very Latest Ideas in

Patterns andGoing This Week at

MilliDery andHouse

WISHES TO ANNOUNCE ITS SPRING OPENINGLADIES' CHILDEN'SHATS OF THE LATEST DESIGNS, ALSOA FINE ASSORTMENT MUSLINUNDERWEAR FOR LADIES, MISSES ANDINFANTS.

Hills

Arlington Block

Lin Sing Kee,TINSMITH.

Does Sanitary Plumbin?Nuuanu Street, Opposite Emma

Hall.

yyyyyyyyyyy

yyyy?yyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyxvyyyyyyyyyy

the Trustees the Oahu College, yyor Jonathan Shaw.

not Invest In stocks, but put thethe most desirable locality near Ho-

noluluHills $1,200

fiJjOOI'"uu

175

J$30, 1 year 10

20

t 210

instead of $40 you are now paving,your debt and with other sav-

ings free of debt.

Transit by Your Door;

Altogether a Delightful

For at office

404 Judd to C. Jones

ted Swisses

Cents Yard

Colorings

Dressmaking

AND

IN

For Sale v

of of

do

P.

4 f

Hotel Street

NEW STORE. NEW GOODS.

JAPANESE AND

AMERICAN

Dry CoodsMERCHANT

TAILOR.

K. FUKURODA,Robinson Block. 14 Hotel Street

TELEPHONE WHITE 2421.

, Ltd.

OFFICERS.

H. P. BALDWIN PresidentJ. B. CASTLE. ...First Vice-Preside-

W. M. ALEXANDER. ...2d VIca-Pre- s't

J. P. COOKE TreasurerW. O. SMITH SecrefaryGEOROE R. CARTER iAuiptoifli,

Sugar Factors andCommissionflerchants

AGENTS FORHawaiian Commercial and Sugar Com-

pany,Haiku Sugar Company,Pala Plantation Company, ,

Nahlku Sugar Company, fICIhel Plantation Company,Hawaiian Sugar Company, T

Kahulul Rail oad Company,

AND

ThoCnllfornla and OrientalStBtrmohlp Company

Advertise your Wants in the Star.