iff ' the hawaiian ar...trived to get up as much fuss about.the style of precedence as that...

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I .1) ft r. 1 r 1 AN 'i I, to II you want to-da- y'i Newi to- day you can find It In THE STAR. THE HAWAIIAN I VOL. VII. II DDI PI TROUBLE OVEH WILHELMINA'S CONSORT. The Queen Wants the Country to Put Money In Ills Purse The Country .Won't Have It. LONDON, January 3. A special dls-.pat- from Berlin reports that Duke Henry of Mecklenburg-Schwcrl- n, whose marriage to Queen Wlllielmlna of Hol- land has been announced for Febru- ary 7, has left The Hague, Indignant at the tone of the parliamentary discus- sion on the subject of his future posi- tion. Whether this Is true or not, there Js no doubt that there has been endless trouble connected with the projected marriage. Queen Wlllielmlna has con- trived to get up as much fuss about .the style of precedence as that experi- enced In England In 1840, when Queen .Victoria was married to Prince Albert of Suxe-Cobur- g. Queen Wlllielmlna wished Duke Henry to be created a Prince Consort and to have precedence over her mother, but she was over- ruled on both points. On the other .hand, her solicitude for her future hus- band's pecuniary comfort has by no means been equal to her solicitude for his dignity. She has given up her ori- ginal proposition to settle a large sum on him out of her private fortune, and now proposes that Parliament settle 16,000 a year on him, payable If he survives her. While the Queen is alive Duke Henry will get nothing, accord- ing to this plan. There Is a very strong feeling In Holland that no allowance .for the Duke should be asked from the country, considering the vast property at the disposal of Queen Wlllielmlna. Duke Henry's private fortune Is Inade- quate for his position as Prince Consort and he will practically be dependent on the Queen's generosity. A special from The Hague says: The second clmrmber today adopted with-- " out amendment various articles ap- proving the Queen's marriage to Duke Henry of Mecklenburg-Schweri- n by 70 to 10 votes. The socialists objected to the 10,000 grant to Duke Henry. Others regretted that an annual allowance was not made. THE THOMSON RETURNS. Seattle Packet Gets Back With Meats and Beer. The EUhu Thompson arrived this morning on her second trip In the Seattle-Honolul- u line. Her cold storage was all taken up, although she could have brought a little more other freight. The reason of the failure to bring a full cargo was the uncertainty about her .setting back, the deal respecting her not having been completed at the time she sailed from Honolulu. As before, she comes consigned to the Metropoli- tan Meat Company. Her principal cold storage consisted of meats and beer. About sixty tons of beef, mutton and pork came for the Metropolitan Meat Company. This will be enough to last until the next big steamer from San Francisco. A big lot of draught and bottled beer ar- rived for Col. McCarthy, Lovejoy & Company and L. H. Dee. The cargo Is being discharged this afternoon. It Is still the intention to keep up the Seattle line. For the present the Thompson will be utilized, but will be changed as soon as possible for some- thing larger. ' DIED. BUSING In New York, December 29, 1900, Prof. F. Busing, brother-in-la- w of Mrs. Louis Berndt of Honolulu. THE WEATHER. Weather Bureau, Punahou, 1 p. m. Wind light northeast, weather very clear; will be clear tonight with pros- pect's of change within a day or two. Morning minimum temperature, 70; midday maximum temperature, 79; ba- rometer, 9 a. m., 30.10 falling (corrected for gravity); rainfall, 24 hours ending 9 a. m., .05; dew point, 9 a. m., 63; humi- dity, 9 a. m., CO per cent. CURTIS J. LYONS, Observer. LEFT AHEAD OF TIME. The Hong Kong Maru cleared half an hour earlier than was expected this afternoon and left at 1:30 o'clock. The vessel had been scheduled to sail at 2 p. m. .but by 1:30 It was found she could clear so Captain Fllmer lost no time In getting under way. The change of sailing caused considerable disap- pointment to late letter posters and fully a dozen people with letters In their hands gazed disconsolately at the disappearing boat. When you want to write a letter stop In at the Remington Typwrlter Offlce, Fort street. There are machines for practice and letter writing free of charge. MAY NOW BE OBTAINED IN THE BOSTON BUILDING On Fort Street Between King and Hotel This Office Building is Modern and Complete In Every Respect ""or further particulars apply to the HAWAIIAN 181 ID INVESTMENT COMPANY, LTD 400 Port Street. Iff ' SYSTEM IS NOW .ASSURED MEETING OP THE WIRELESS TELEGRAPHY YESTERDAY. Encouraging Statement by Expert Gray Ample Money Supplied Sta- tion for Lahalna and Kauai Line. At the annual meeting of the wire- less telegraphy compuny yesterday afternoon, ollicers for the coming year were elected and the matter of finances satisfactorily settled. After the failure of the lirst Marconi men sent out from New York to properly lnstnl the sys- tem, confidence In It was lost nnd the assessable stockholders could not see the wisdom of what they considered to be sending good money after bad. The company here made no effort to collect, claiming that p Mtfrconl had guaran- teed to properly lnstal the system It was up to him to do so and turn It over In good order. 'The result of this claim was that Expert Gray was sent out. The result Is well known. At yester- day's meeting over 1400 shnres out of 2,000, were represented. Most of these shares were assessable stock. The hold- ers stated that If they could be assur- ed that the syBtem was In working or- der and that there was nothing In the way of giving perfect service, they would pay up. Expert Gray arose and stated that the system between Hono- lulu and Muhukona, Hawaii, was In perfect order save for the changing of the stutlon at Makena, Maul, which would very soon be effected. When this change Is completed Molokai, La-na- l, Maul and Hawaii will be In per- fect communication with Honolulu. Mr. Gray went on to state that there was no possble doubt of the perfect-nes- s of the system nnd the satisfaction It would give. He hail tested the sys- tem In every possible way and made corrections of such defects as appeared. With these explanations the holders of assessable shares agreed to pay up at once. Nearly all of them are men of wealth of the city. The payment of these uaclt assessments will give an me money required for operating expenses until such time as the company be comes a paying institution. It was practically decided to estab- lish a branch station at Lahalna, to be reached from Lanal. This will be at the door of the most populous section of Maul and It was thought that Jt would greatly facilitate the service on that Island. There Is already a llag pole at Lahalna. If this can be secur- ed, and assurance was given that It could, it can be wired and connected In a very few days. Lanai will be main- tained. Mr. Gray urged the Lahalna station as a matter of convenience, and also recommended the retention of the Lanal station as a matter of conveni- ence. There was some objection to putting-I- a' Kauai line for the present on ac- count of Uie additional expense and the possibility that it would not pay. Mr. Gray urged that the station be estab lished saying that he wanted to sec the system complete before leaving the Islands. The Marconi company was taking special Interest In the Hawai- ian system and did not wish to turn It over to the Honolulu owners until It was perfect In every particular. Most of It was now perfect, but the expert did not wish to let go until Kauai was also connected with the system. Tne mntter was left to the directors, but the recommendation will likely be fol- lowed. The Kauai line will require two stations one on the north end of this Island and one on Kauai. The estab lishment of these will not defer the operation of the system to the soutn. Renorts of the secretary anu tne treasurer were read and approved. Election of officers was proceeded with and resulted as follows: W. R. Castle, president; F. J. cross, vice- - president; James F. Morgan, treasurer; W. R. Farrlngton, secretary: E. O. White, auditor. Additional directors: Judge R. D. Sllllman, C. L. Wight, O. G. Traphaegen and J. A. Magoon. SUGAR. NEW YORK. January 2. Raw, bare ly steady; refining, 3c; centrifugal, 9G test, 4e; molasses sugar, ac. itenneu market Irregular. RED MEN. The Redmen will install ofllcer to night. After the Installation there will be a jolly spread served at tne uriu room. There will be plenty of good fellowship and an enjoyable time. LAWYER CAYPLESS RETURNS. Edgar Caypless, who appeared In the noted City of Columbia cases and was subsequently Robert Wilcox's attorney at Washington In the Crown Land claims, returned to Honolulu by the Alameda today. He had been In very poor health for a long time, but has now about recovered. This afternoon he stated that he would Reopen an office for the practice or law in wonoiuiu. n Is not his Intention to return to Wash ington unless Bent for by Mr. Wilcox. Mclnerny's shoes are right In It. They are made by the leading factories of America, and consequently have no equal, M'INERNY SHOE STORE Fine Book and Commercial Printing at the Star Office. Gas Engines Repaired Every job guaranteed and our guarantees are JJlived up to. S POTTER CO,, LTD, 4.V.,&li.i'i .312 Fort Street' 'Telephone BOD. 4IONOLULU, H. I., THURSDAY, JANUARY 10. 1901. i ROBERTS 1 El MAGNIFICENT RECEPTION I1Y THE QUEEN. Welcomed at Osborne House, Isle of Wight An Arch of Laurel Made a Knight of the Garter. COWES (Isle of Wight), January 2. The steamer Cunado, having Field Mar- shal Lord Roberts on board, anchored off Osborne at 11:45 a. m. today. The ships in the roadi were gayly decorat- ed with bunting, nnd Venetian masts with festoons adorned the route of Osborne House, at the entrance of which was erected a unique tribute of the Queen's appreciation of the Field Marshal's work In the shape of an nrch of laurel. This was the lirst time such an arch had ever appeared there In honor of any subject of her majesty. When Lord Roberta reached Osborne House he found that the Queen "was out driving, and ho conversed with sev- eral of the Princesses while waiting for her to return. The audience lasted a quarter of an hour. The Queen bestow- ed an Earldom on Lord Roberts, with a special remainder for his duughters. He was also made a Knight of the Gar- ter. Lord Roberts was then taken to Southampton by the royal yacht Al- berta and went on board the Canada, where he will spend the night. "Remainder," us referred to in the dispatch from Cowes, Is "a provision for the passage of patent of nobility to a special successor, - line of succes- sion, in default of male Issue on the death of a present holder." The only son of Lord Roberts, Lieutenant F. S. H. Roberts, died December 17, 1889, of a wound received in the engagement tit the Tugela river. For gallantry In attempting to rescue the British guns abandoned on that occasion he was re- commended for the Victoria Cross, and the Queen, as a mark of appreciation of the young man's valor and the ser vices rendered by Lord Roberts to his country previous to his departure for l" t1L?Ci;slonvh.c,n Lady Roberts Castle n few days before she sailed for the Cape to ' hand her a small parcel, say- - ing: "Here Is something I have tied up with my own hands and that I beg you will not open until you get home." ximy iiooerts iounu mat tne parcel contained the Victoria Cross won by her dead son. LONDON, Jan. 3. Crowds flocked to points of vantace along the route to be followed by Lord Roberts from Pnd- - dington Station to Buckingham Palace during the early hours of the morning. out tne numuers m no way compared with those that athered at the in honor of the return of the City Volunteers from South Africa. Fears " the riotous behavior and dis asters on that occasion deterred many persons from Joining in the 'public wel come, warned by the occurrences ut the time of the volunteers' return, the authorities today furnished barriers to prevent crushlt and 15,000 regular troons In addition to thousands of police lined the route, blocked the side streets and were concentrated in the wide spaces to guard against danger ous rushes. Lord Roberts reached Paddlngton station only twenty minutes behind the schedule time. As he descended from his saloon carrluge to the platform of the elaborately decorated railroad sta- tion he was greeted by the Prince of Wales, the Princess of Wales, the Duke and Duchess of York, the Duke of Con- - naught and the Duke of Cambridge. The members of the royal family shook nanus neartny wun the Held marshal. while the bands played the national airs. The Princess of Wales engaged Lord Roberts in a conversation of some length. Ihe scene was altogether brilliant. Everywhere were masses of bunting, troops, ladles In bright costumes, Cab- inet Ministers and staff ollicers. The people on the stand opposite the carpeted platform could see little but cocked hats and ladles bonnets. Tho First Captain of the Empire," 5 feet 2 Inches high, was invisible but from In front of tlie circle After poncratiilntlons lintl been . changed Lord Roberts walked with the Prlnco of Wales, the Duke of York and tho adjutant general, Sir Evelyn Wood, and reviewed the guard of honor. The party proceeded to Buckingham Palace by way of Hyde Park and Pic cadilly. Deafening cheers greeted the field marshal and now commander In chief of the forces nlong the route. The roar of welcome rolled on in creasing until the veteran comman der entered the gates of the palace, A few distinguished people were waiting wearily within the soipber quadrangle, in which the gaslamps vnlnly tried to disperse the foggy gloom. The Foot Guards on duty, wearing their over coats, were drawn up within, while without some 60,000 persons were pnek-e- d together In an effort to get a view of the hero of the hour. When the Inspection was over Lord Roberts, the members of the royal fam- ily and the generals went into tho pal- ace and had a private luncheon, where upon the crowds dispersed. There were only two toasts one to the Queen and the other to Lord Rob- erts. The Prince of Wales, proposing tne health or the Held marshal. Lord Roberts wont from Buckingham Palace to the War Office, whero ho formally took over tho work of com- mander In chief of the forces. Ho will begin attending the War Office at regr ular hours tomorrow. FRANCIS MURPHY HERE. Francis Murphy, the world fnmous temperance orator arrived by tho Ala- meda on his wny to Australia, and will remain hero at least two weeks. MISS KIRKLAND DEAD. Word was received by tho little schooner Moklhnna of the death nt Ka-hul- ul last Sunday morning of Miss Susan Klrkland of that place. Miss KIrkland Is one of three sisters, rela- tives of J. A. Kennedy, who are well known and popular here. FOOTNOTES. The only time a pessimist enjoys life Is when ho Is telling other people that he docsn t enjoy It. HAS FEW EQUALS. For light running, easy adjustments, anu good work the Singer Sewing Ma chine has few equals and no superiors. u. Bergerson, agent, Bethel Street. ARRIVAL Of I UN MADE SPLENDID PASSAGE DOWN FROM SAN FRANCISCO. Delaed eral Days in Starting by Failure of English Mall to Arrive, And Rough Weather. After a splendid run from San Francisco the Alameda came Into port early this morning with a good sized passenger list for Honolulu. The ves- sel was delayed several days on ac- count of the failure of the English mull for the Colonies to reach the coast on time. After getting the mall J aboard the vessel had to anchor In the stream off San Francisco on uccount of the heavy southeast gale which was blowing outside the harbor. The ves- sel got the English mail at 10:3(hp. m. on the 3rd, but waited until the 4th be- fore starting. The pilot wns dropped at 8:45 a. m., and fair weather was gen- erally experienced on the entire run. The time from pilot to pilot was 5 duys 22 hours and 25 minutes. Considerable Interest was attached to the record that the boat would make as a new master had charge of her. Ho Is C. F. Herrlman and recenly brought the Sonoma from Philadelphia to San Francisco. The Alameda Is expected to get away promptly this afternoon nnd It is thought that the good record can be kept up. Among the passengers for Honolulu were Mr. und Mrs. S. G. Wilder and child. She has been visiting her sister Mrs. Commander Gibbons In England. Mr. and Mrs. Wilder visited Paris while abroad and also stopped a week In Ca- lifornia. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Bonny of San Francisco will remain here for a visit. He Is a partner In Shrove and Company of that city. Mrs. Eleanor W. Davies who was- - for merly accountant- - for Kinney, Ballou & McClannhan returns from a visit to her daughter In San Francisco. Percy M. Pond of McClellan, Pond & A,nnieil!- - He was acompanled by his bride Mrs. T. C. Smith the wife of the very eiiiclent purser of the Alameda came ,inwn , m, it ,t .m .i here until her husband's return trip from the Colonies. c. A. Mackintosh n son nf tho t?bv Alexander Mackintosh has returned from a long visit abroad. The vessel brought three days mall, including a large quantity which had been Intended for the transport Han- cock; Thirty eight carloads of rail- road: material for Chrlstchurch, New Zealand Is aboard the vessel. 1! mm ALL WILL GO TO OLA A BY NEXT MAIL. Close of Noted Public Lands Incident. Eighty-Si- x Agreements, Involving About 4,200 Acres. All of the agreements of sale of the homestead lots In the Olaa tract will go forward by the next mall. They will be delivered to the purchasers of last August, and the holders will bo able to call in the police to eject any squatters that may hold out. By the last of next week the whole Incident will likely be closed. There are eighty-si- x of these agree- ments, involving about 4,200 acre3 of land. The land is in the rich rain belt. It Is very valuable, although not im- proved. All of the purchasers calcul- ate to get rich on their holdings. The land was squatted upon by vari- ous parties shortly nfter annexation, despite the fact that the Annexation Resolution expressly provided that United States land laws should never apply to the land of the Hawaiian Isl ands, and despite the fact that the Olaa lands were surveyed and only unsur- - veyed lands may be squatted upon uny- - where, Following the application of tho En- abling Act last June the Territorial government went ahead and sold these lots under Hawaiian laws, which were continued in force by the Organic law. Exception to this action was taken by the Attorney-Gener- al of the United States, alhough the details of his ob- jection were never made known here, if anywhere ut all. A week ago came the ruling of the Interior Department sus- taining tho position tnken by the Terri- torial government all along nnd sup porting the view that the local officials are the legal custodians of public prop erty of the Hawaiian Islnnds. It was found Impossible to get the agreements ready for the last mall to HIlo, but the entire batch will go for- ward by the next mall. WILL TEST THE SHAMROCK. LONDON, January 2 British ynchts- - men are preparing to give Sir Thomas LIpton every assistance In thoroughly testing the Shamrock II. Kenneth M. Clark of Paisley has purchased C. D. Rose s Distant Shore, principally for the purpose of using her for trial pur poses with the new challenger. Captain Hogarth will bo the skipper of this cut ter designed by Wntson and built In 1900, put not launched. James Coates with a similar Intent has practically completed negotiations for tho purchase of tho Valkyrie III With these two and with tho Sybarite and the Meteor the new cup challenger will be tested with a class of yachts such as no previous British competitor ever met. THAT MEANS RHEUMATISM. Sore nnd swollen Joints, sharp, shoot- ing pains, torturing muscles, no rest, no sleep. That means rheumatism. It Is a stubborn disease to fight but Cham- berlain's Pain Balm has conquered It thousands 6f times. It will do so when- ever the opportunity Is offered. Try it. One application relieves tho pain. For sale by all dealers, Benson, Smith & Co., general agents Hawaiian Islands. The Golden Rule Baznnr has Just re- ceived the Hawaiian Scenlo Calendar for 1901, and as usual it Is the best Scenic Calendar published Price COc. Fine Book and Commercial Printing; at the Star Office. ST AR illSl.l.llSlflRS(llOflluE(!I THE DASHING COMMODORE IN HONOLULU. Is a Through Passenger on the Ala- meda Going once more to the Samoan Islands His Career. On the passenger list of the Alameda bound for Pago Pago appears the names of "N. M. Weaver and valet." Ilert Peterson states however, that this Weaver is none other than his erst- while friend the fnmous Commodore Nicholas .1. Weaver. Who the vnlet In Peterson docs not attempt to state, This visit of the Commodore, brief as it is. recalls the rather stirring times attemung ins last call at the nnrt or Honolulu. Some time In September of 1S99 Weaver came hero In the yacht Norma. He was accompanied by a handsome woman, whom he Introduced as his sister-in-la- In any even Wea- ver had not been here for very long before the hoodoo which seems to have pursued him on that trip made Its ap- pearance In the form of a bottomry attachment against the Norna. Some body In Singapore had Instituted the suit nnd claiming that Weaver was In- debted to them for a good sized amount. Weaver protested that the matter had been settled long before nnd the attachment was the result of a mistake. Whether that was the truth has never been positively proved to many but In any event Weaver left the boat and went to San Francisco. What he did there or who he saw are merely Incidents of the man's career. His rlp proved successful though for he returned after a brief absence, with sulllclent money with which to settle the claim against him. or at least with some sort of authority by which the suit was dismissed and the yacht re- leased. Bert Peterson barkened unto tne voice of the tempter and seeing vast opportunities for making money In the romantic South Sea Islands, decld- - eu to join forces and alas, finances with tli" Commodore. So they sailed nwnv one day, Peterson, the Commodore and tho slster-ln-ln- and dropped anchor in Apia. There the men .secured op- tions on some Samoan land for the pur- pose of starting a cocoa plantation on a large scale. Peterson evidently learned something of the real character of the Commodore at Apia. At Honolulu there had been various rumors of the high life and ad- venturous career of the Commodore In Asiatic ports but as Weaver always denied them, there was more or less doubt as to their truth. This knowledge of Weaver must have been far from satisfactory to Peterson for he left the Commodore nnd went to Auckland and Sydney, finally returning hero last year. Weaver got along fairly well however until h'e" reached Auckland. There filnds rrtrt low. Weaver managed to raise the wind through a loan made to him by a woman. The woman loved the Commodore much but she loved her "dough" more Tor when she heard that Weaver had departed to Sydney, she pursued him. At Sydney the yacht was nttaclfcd and Its owner finally abandoned her and returned to States. According to last ac- counts Weaver was possessed of plenty of money nnd intended going to the South Sens and making more. Bert Peterson consulted with an at- torney today regarding the advisability of instituting attachment proceedings against Weaver. It was flnnlly decided to make a formal demand upon the Commodore for $500 the amount which Peterson claims Is due him. Should this fall of response Peterson will probably institute action aealnst AVoaver In the Pago Paro courts. Peterson Insisted the Alameda this afternoon to Inter- view Weaver. INDEPENDENT CONVENTION. Table Motions Giving Executive Com mittee Too Much Power. The Independent party convention met nt Foster Hall this morning and added to its executive committee. This notion wns taken on the motion of J. K. Kaulla who wanted the motion passed at the previous meeting appoint ing tj.i memners to tne executive com mittee, amended in order that tho nlll cers elected by the convention might be admitted also. After some discussion this wns dor" Additional amendments to tho constl tutlon anil by-la- were offered by J. Knnui. Ho wanted tho oxecutlev com- mittee to have tho power to pass upon all complaints made against any mom bers of the iy nnd, secondly to first consider any bill or petition which nny Independent was to present before the Legislature. Much discussion ensued over these amendments but both were flnnlly tabled. Some minor mntters were discussed nnd previous to adjournment to the afternoon tho president read a letter from Representative Wilcox. The trip to and visit or Mr. Wilcox In Washing ton were described. He also stated that every bill which Secretary Cooper hnd forwarded to Washington hnd been subsequently handed over to him, Mr. Wilcox, for his recommendation. An adjournment was taken until 2 p. m THE GOLD OUTPUT. HELENA. (.Mont.), Junuary 2. E. II Bradcn, United States Assayer in this city estimates the production of gold In Montana In 1900 to have been $4,900,000, an Increase of $300,000 as compared with the previous year; silver, $10,720,000, a decrease or $64,000. Utah's output Is estimated nt $4,100, 000 In gold and $C,OSO,000 In silver nn Increase of $717,380 in gold and $1,492, 812 in silver. PORTLAND. (Or.), January 2. The gold production of Oregon for the year 1900 amounted to 13.770,000. The lumber output of the State for tho year amounted to S9S.1CO.000 feet BIG CHRISTMAS TRADE. Owing to tho tremendous Christmas rush nt L. B. Kerr & Compar.v. they wore unable to present all their latest te goods. Today they draw your attention to Muslin Underwear tho value of which cannot bo equaled Ladles' capes, the finest ever seen. New goods In every depart-ntnt- . ICE HOUSE DELICACIES. Camarlnos California Fruit Market Is tho nlaco for Ice house delicacies Everything the California market af- fords at this season nf the year can be found at Camarlnos. Tim llinwilluti Slur Is Hid jmpcr tli p.t goes Into (lie, liont lioincs of Honolulu 9 No. 2753 SUPREME COURT ORDERS A NEW TRIAL. Award Against Kllauea Sugar Com- pany Was Excessive Smith's Land To be Sold Knmalo Case. In the matter of Joseph Schnarsch vs. the Kllauea Sugar Company, dam- ages In the sum or $7500, the Supreme Court filed a decision, sustaining, in part, the appeal of defendant corpora- tion und ordering a new trlul. In this case two separate claims were Joined. One was for $5,530 fur the wrongful diversion of certain water; the other $2000 us damages for the alleged wrong- ful discharge of defendant by plaintiff from Its employ. The Circuit court found damages In the total sum of $3108 The Supreme Court holds: "In an action for damages for of a water right, tho Jury rendered a verdict for tho plaintiff for $3100. Held, upon the facts stated In the opinion, that the evidence did not support a verdict for that sum, in other words, that the verdict was excessive. "The owner of a dominant estatfe may not substantially alter the location of a ditch or watercourse maintained, un- der a right acquired by preemption on the land of another, without the con- sent express or implied, of the owner of the servient estate." The opinion Is by Justice Perry nnd Is concurred in by Chief Justice Frcar and Justice Galbralth. Judge Humphreys today signed an order appointing George Lucas a com- missioner to sell the lunds of Geotge Washington Smith, et nl.. to jmtlsfy mortgage claims of S. C. Allen and Ida E. Lamb. The former is to receive $20S0, costs and interest, nnd the latter $1520, costs and Interest. The land is situated In Ewn, In Nuuauu valley and on School street. When suits for fore- closure were brought, defendants con- sented to the sale of the property ut public auction. 15. L. Marx, administrator, has filed an inventory of the estate of the late John W. Winter, showing assets to be. $7,730 and debts $12,50G.1C. The 110 shares of Hollister Drug Company's stock proved to be deposited as secu- rity for certain of the claims. Mr. Marx stated that to settle the estate It will be necessary to sell this stock, and he petitions to be allowed so to do. The tltion will be heard on the 17th Instant. In the matter of Allan vs. J. A. Ma- goon, accounting. Judge Humphreys this morning overruled defendant's de- murrer, which denied that the facts stated were sufficient to constitute a ause of action. Two weeks Is allowed In which to answer. In the Kamalo case. Frank Foster today filed his answer to tho amended complaint. He states that he received $00,000 of the paid up stock of the com- pany, but that his options ond services were worth that amount. He asked to beallnwed to retain the stock, or, else. o prove the value of his services and options and to be pnld for the same. START I RUMOR PARIS. January 4. Le Journal re- - nrts under reserve the death of Count von Waldersce, the rumor being that no wns Killed uy an ollleer or the allied troops, the circumstances not being re- - ited. It Is said tlmt tne rumor Is cur rent In Berlin, where It Is not confirm- ed. SUES FOR HIS CASH. Apana, the store keeper at the Pala- - ma terminus of the tram line, has brought suit agnlnst D. Kui, a native who owns the property back of the store, for $645.65. It seems that Kui has used the Chinaman as his banker. or rather as the man from whom ho borrowed when In need of cash. Al most the whole nccount Is for cash loaned In nmounts rnnglng from $1 to $5. The case will come before the Cir- cuit court at the next term. RECOMMENDS THE PROVIDENT. 'After a vtsry careful consideration of the leading life Insurance companies and their policies, I come to the con- clusion that the very best Is Provident Savings. I am entirely satisfied with my policy In your excellent company nnd I unreservedly commend tho Com pany to any person desiring reliable nnd economical Insurance. Geo. L. Webb." Resident manner, I. R. uurns; omce in isow Magoon iiuiioine. Somth&ng Nw FOR . MBN The Warner Ventilating Cushion Shoe These shoes arc Just to hand having only been placed on our shelves a few days ago. They are Just tho shoe for "the man who does a good deal of walk- ing each shoe has ventilators which allows the air to pass In nnd out of the shoe. Gall and See Them KSffi

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Page 1: Iff ' THE HAWAIIAN AR...trived to get up as much fuss about.the style of precedence as that experi-enced In England In 1840, when Queen.Victoria was married to Prince Albert of Suxe-Cobur-

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VOL. VII.

II DDI PI

TROUBLE OVEH WILHELMINA'SCONSORT.

The Queen Wants the Country to PutMoney In Ills Purse The Country.Won't Have It.

LONDON, January 3. A special dls-.pat-

from Berlin reports that DukeHenry of Mecklenburg-Schwcrl- n, whosemarriage to Queen Wlllielmlna of Hol-land has been announced for Febru-ary 7, has left The Hague, Indignant atthe tone of the parliamentary discus-sion on the subject of his future posi-tion. Whether this Is true or not, thereJs no doubt that there has been endlesstrouble connected with the projectedmarriage. Queen Wlllielmlna has con-trived to get up as much fuss about.the style of precedence as that experi-enced In England In 1840, when Queen.Victoria was married to Prince Albertof Suxe-Cobur- g. Queen Wlllielmlnawished Duke Henry to be created aPrince Consort and to have precedenceover her mother, but she was over-ruled on both points. On the other.hand, her solicitude for her future hus-band's pecuniary comfort has by nomeans been equal to her solicitude forhis dignity. She has given up her ori-ginal proposition to settle a large sumon him out of her private fortune, andnow proposes that Parliament settle

16,000 a year on him, payable If hesurvives her. While the Queen is aliveDuke Henry will get nothing, accord-ing to this plan. There Is a very strongfeeling In Holland that no allowance.for the Duke should be asked from thecountry, considering the vast propertyat the disposal of Queen Wlllielmlna.Duke Henry's private fortune Is Inade-quate for his position as Prince Consortand he will practically be dependent onthe Queen's generosity.

A special from The Hague says: Thesecond clmrmber today adopted with-- "out amendment various articles ap-proving the Queen's marriage to DukeHenry of Mecklenburg-Schweri- n by 70

to 10 votes.The socialists objected to the 10,000

grant to Duke Henry. Others regrettedthat an annual allowance was notmade.

THE THOMSON RETURNS.

Seattle Packet Gets Back With Meatsand Beer.

The EUhu Thompson arrived thismorning on her second trip In the

Seattle-Honolul- u line. Her cold storagewas all taken up, although she couldhave brought a little more other freight.The reason of the failure to bring a fullcargo was the uncertainty about her.setting back, the deal respecting hernot having been completed at the timeshe sailed from Honolulu. As before,she comes consigned to the Metropoli-tan Meat Company.

Her principal cold storage consistedof meats and beer. About sixty tonsof beef, mutton and pork came for theMetropolitan Meat Company. This willbe enough to last until the next bigsteamer from San Francisco. A biglot of draught and bottled beer ar-rived for Col. McCarthy, Lovejoy &Company and L. H. Dee. The cargo Isbeing discharged this afternoon.

It Is still the intention to keep upthe Seattle line. For the present theThompson will be utilized, but will bechanged as soon as possible for some-thing larger.

' DIED.BUSING In New York, December 29,

1900, Prof. F. Busing, brother-in-la- w

of Mrs. Louis Berndt of Honolulu.

THE WEATHER.Weather Bureau, Punahou, 1 p. m.Wind light northeast, weather very

clear; will be clear tonight with pros-pect's of change within a day or two.

Morning minimum temperature, 70;midday maximum temperature, 79; ba-rometer, 9 a. m., 30.10 falling (correctedfor gravity); rainfall, 24 hours ending9 a. m., .05; dew point, 9 a. m., 63; humi-dity, 9 a. m., CO per cent.

CURTIS J. LYONS, Observer.

LEFT AHEAD OF TIME.The Hong Kong Maru cleared half

an hour earlier than was expected thisafternoon and left at 1:30 o'clock. Thevessel had been scheduled to sail at2 p. m. .but by 1:30 It was found shecould clear so Captain Fllmer lost notime In getting under way. The changeof sailing caused considerable disap-pointment to late letter posters andfully a dozen people with letters Intheir hands gazed disconsolately atthe disappearing boat.

When you want to write a letter stopIn at the Remington Typwrlter Offlce,Fort street. There are machines forpractice and letter writing free ofcharge.

MAY NOW BEOBTAINED IN THE

BOSTON BUILDINGOn Fort Street Between King and Hotel

This Office Building is

Modern and CompleteIn Every Respect

""or further particulars apply to the

HAWAIIAN

181 ID INVESTMENT

COMPANY, LTD

400 Port Street.

Iff '

SYSTEM IS NOW .ASSURED

MEETING OP THE WIRELESSTELEGRAPHY YESTERDAY.

Encouraging Statement by ExpertGray Ample Money Supplied Sta-

tion for Lahalna and Kauai Line.

At the annual meeting of the wire-less telegraphy compuny yesterdayafternoon, ollicers for the coming yearwere elected and the matter of financessatisfactorily settled. After the failureof the lirst Marconi men sent out fromNew York to properly lnstnl the sys-tem, confidence In It was lost nnd theassessable stockholders could not seethe wisdom of what they considered tobe sending good money after bad. Thecompany here made no effort to collect,claiming that p Mtfrconl had guaran-teed to properly lnstal the system Itwas up to him to do so and turn It overIn good order. 'The result of this claimwas that Expert Gray was sent out.

The result Is well known. At yester-day's meeting over 1400 shnres out of2,000, were represented. Most of theseshares were assessable stock. The hold-ers stated that If they could be assur-ed that the syBtem was In working or-der and that there was nothing In theway of giving perfect service, theywould pay up. Expert Gray arose andstated that the system between Hono-lulu and Muhukona, Hawaii, was Inperfect order save for the changing ofthe stutlon at Makena, Maul, whichwould very soon be effected. Whenthis change Is completed Molokai, La-na- l,

Maul and Hawaii will be In per-fect communication with Honolulu.Mr. Gray went on to state that therewas no possble doubt of the perfect-nes- s

of the system nnd the satisfactionIt would give. He hail tested the sys-tem In every possible way and madecorrections of such defects as appeared.

With these explanations the holdersof assessable shares agreed to pay upat once. Nearly all of them are menof wealth of the city. The payment ofthese uaclt assessments will give an memoney required for operating expensesuntil such time as the company becomes a paying institution.

It was practically decided to estab-lish a branch station at Lahalna, tobe reached from Lanal. This will be atthe door of the most populous sectionof Maul and It was thought that Jtwould greatly facilitate the service onthat Island. There Is already a llagpole at Lahalna. If this can be secur-ed, and assurance was given that Itcould, it can be wired and connected Ina very few days. Lanai will be main-tained. Mr. Gray urged the Lahalnastation as a matter of convenience, andalso recommended the retention of theLanal station as a matter of conveni-ence.

There was some objection to putting-I-a' Kauai line for the present on ac-

count of Uie additional expense and thepossibility that it would not pay. Mr.Gray urged that the station be established saying that he wanted to secthe system complete before leaving theIslands. The Marconi company wastaking special Interest In the Hawai-ian system and did not wish to turnIt over to the Honolulu owners untilIt was perfect In every particular. Mostof It was now perfect, but the expertdid not wish to let go until Kauai wasalso connected with the system. Tnemntter was left to the directors, butthe recommendation will likely be fol-

lowed. The Kauai line will require twostations one on the north end of thisIsland and one on Kauai. The establishment of these will not defer theoperation of the system to the soutn.

Renorts of the secretary anu tnetreasurer were read and approved.

Election of officers was proceededwith and resulted as follows: W. R.Castle, president; F. J. cross, vice- -president; James F. Morgan, treasurer;W. R. Farrlngton, secretary: E. O.White, auditor. Additional directors:Judge R. D. Sllllman, C. L. Wight, O.G. Traphaegen and J. A. Magoon.

SUGAR.NEW YORK. January 2. Raw, bare

ly steady; refining, 3c; centrifugal, 9G

test, 4e; molasses sugar, ac. itenneumarket Irregular.

RED MEN.The Redmen will install ofllcer to

night. After the Installation there willbe a jolly spread served at tne uriuroom. There will be plenty of goodfellowship and an enjoyable time.

LAWYER CAYPLESS RETURNS.Edgar Caypless, who appeared In the

noted City of Columbia cases and wassubsequently Robert Wilcox's attorneyat Washington In the Crown Landclaims, returned to Honolulu by theAlameda today. He had been In verypoor health for a long time, but hasnow about recovered. This afternoonhe stated that he would Reopen an officefor the practice or law in wonoiuiu. nIs not his Intention to return to Washington unless Bent for by Mr. Wilcox.

Mclnerny's shoes are right In It. Theyare made by the leading factories ofAmerica, and consequently have noequal,

M'INERNY SHOE STORE

Fine Book and Commercial Printingat the Star Office.

GasEnginesRepaired

Every job guaranteed and

our guarantees are JJlived upto.

S POTTER CO,, LTD,

4.V.,&li.i'i

.312 Fort Street''Telephone BOD.

4IONOLULU, H. I., THURSDAY, JANUARY 10. 1901.

i ROBERTS 1 ElMAGNIFICENT RECEPTION I1Y

THE QUEEN.

Welcomed at Osborne House, Isle ofWight An Arch of Laurel Made aKnight of the Garter.

COWES (Isle of Wight), January 2.The steamer Cunado, having Field Mar-shal Lord Roberts on board, anchoredoff Osborne at 11:45 a. m. today. Theships in the roadi were gayly decorat-ed with bunting, nnd Venetianmasts with festoons adorned the routeof Osborne House, at the entrance ofwhich was erected a unique tribute ofthe Queen's appreciation of the FieldMarshal's work In the shape of annrch of laurel. This was the lirst timesuch an arch had ever appeared thereIn honor of any subject of her majesty.

When Lord Roberta reached OsborneHouse he found that the Queen "wasout driving, and ho conversed with sev-eral of the Princesses while waiting forher to return. The audience lasted aquarter of an hour. The Queen bestow-ed an Earldom on Lord Roberts, witha special remainder for his duughters.He was also made a Knight of the Gar-ter. Lord Roberts was then taken toSouthampton by the royal yacht Al-berta and went on board the Canada,where he will spend the night.

"Remainder," us referred to in thedispatch from Cowes, Is "a provisionfor the passage of patent of nobility toa special successor, - line of succes-sion, in default of male Issue on thedeath of a present holder." The onlyson of Lord Roberts, Lieutenant F. S.H. Roberts, died December 17, 1889, ofa wound received in the engagementtit the Tugela river. For gallantry Inattempting to rescue the British gunsabandoned on that occasion he was re-commended for the Victoria Cross, andthe Queen, as a mark of appreciationof the young man's valor and the services rendered by Lord Roberts to hiscountry previous to his departure for

l" t1L?Ci;slonvh.c,nLady Roberts Castlen few days before she sailed for theCape to ' hand her a small parcel, say- -ing: "Here Is something I have tiedup with my own hands and that I begyou will not open until you get home."ximy iiooerts iounu mat tne parcelcontained the Victoria Cross won byher dead son.

LONDON, Jan. 3. Crowds flocked topoints of vantace along the route to befollowed by Lord Roberts from Pnd- -dington Station to Buckingham Palaceduring the early hours of the morning.out tne numuers m no way comparedwith those that athered at the

in honor of the return ofthe City Volunteers from South Africa.Fears " the riotous behavior and disasters on that occasion deterred manypersons from Joining in the 'public welcome, warned by the occurrences utthe time of the volunteers' return, theauthorities today furnished barriers toprevent crushlt and 15,000 regulartroons In addition to thousands ofpolice lined the route, blocked the sidestreets and were concentrated in thewide spaces to guard against dangerous rushes.

Lord Roberts reached Paddlngtonstation only twenty minutes behind theschedule time. As he descended fromhis saloon carrluge to the platform ofthe elaborately decorated railroad sta-tion he was greeted by the Prince ofWales, the Princess of Wales, the Dukeand Duchess of York, the Duke of Con- -naught and the Duke of Cambridge.The members of the royal family shooknanus neartny wun the Held marshal.while the bands played the nationalairs. The Princess of Wales engagedLord Roberts in a conversation of somelength.

Ihe scene was altogether brilliant.Everywhere were masses of bunting,troops, ladles In bright costumes, Cab-inet Ministers and staff ollicers.

The people on the stand opposite thecarpeted platform could see little butcocked hats and ladles bonnets. ThoFirst Captain of the Empire," 5 feet 2

Inches high, was invisible but from Infront of tlie circle

After poncratiilntlons lintl been .changed Lord Roberts walked with thePrlnco of Wales, the Duke of York andtho adjutant general, Sir Evelyn Wood,and reviewed the guard of honor.

The party proceeded to BuckinghamPalace by way of Hyde Park and Piccadilly. Deafening cheers greeted thefield marshal and now commander Inchief of the forces nlong the route.

The roar of welcome rolled on increasing until the veteran commander entered the gates of the palace, Afew distinguished people were waitingwearily within the soipber quadrangle,in which the gaslamps vnlnly tried todisperse the foggy gloom. The FootGuards on duty, wearing their overcoats, were drawn up within, whilewithout some 60,000 persons were pnek-e- d

together In an effort to get a viewof the hero of the hour.

When the Inspection was over LordRoberts, the members of the royal fam-ily and the generals went into tho pal-ace and had a private luncheon, whereupon the crowds dispersed.

There were only two toasts one tothe Queen and the other to Lord Rob-erts. The Prince of Wales, proposingtne health or the Held marshal.

Lord Roberts wont from BuckinghamPalace to the War Office, whero hoformally took over tho work of com-mander In chief of the forces. Ho willbegin attending the War Office at regrular hours tomorrow.

FRANCIS MURPHY HERE.Francis Murphy, the world fnmous

temperance orator arrived by tho Ala-meda on his wny to Australia, andwill remain hero at least two weeks.

MISS KIRKLAND DEAD.Word was received by tho little

schooner Moklhnna of the death nt Ka-hul- ul

last Sunday morning of MissSusan Klrkland of that place. MissKIrkland Is one of three sisters, rela-tives of J. A. Kennedy, who are wellknown and popular here.

FOOTNOTES.The only time a pessimist enjoys life

Is when ho Is telling other people thathe docsn t enjoy It.

HAS FEW EQUALS.For light running, easy adjustments,

anu good work the Singer Sewing Machine has few equals and no superiors.

u. Bergerson, agent, Bethel Street.

ARRIVAL Of I UNMADE SPLENDID PASSAGE DOWN

FROM SAN FRANCISCO.

Delaed eral Days in Starting byFailure of English Mall to Arrive,And Rough Weather.

After a splendid run from SanFrancisco the Alameda came Into portearly this morning with a good sizedpassenger list for Honolulu. The ves-sel was delayed several days on ac-count of the failure of the Englishmull for the Colonies to reach thecoast on time. After getting the mall J

aboard the vessel had to anchor In thestream off San Francisco on uccount ofthe heavy southeast gale which wasblowing outside the harbor. The ves-sel got the English mail at 10:3(hp. m.on the 3rd, but waited until the 4th be-fore starting. The pilot wns dropped at8:45 a. m., and fair weather was gen-erally experienced on the entire run.The time from pilot to pilot was 5 duys22 hours and 25 minutes.

Considerable Interest was attached tothe record that the boat would make asa new master had charge of her. Ho IsC. F. Herrlman and recenly broughtthe Sonoma from Philadelphia to SanFrancisco. The Alameda Is expectedto get away promptly this afternoonnnd It is thought that the good recordcan be kept up.

Among the passengers for Honoluluwere Mr. und Mrs. S. G. Wilder andchild. She has been visiting her sisterMrs. Commander Gibbons In England.Mr. and Mrs. Wilder visited Paris whileabroad and also stopped a week In Ca-lifornia.

Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Bonny of SanFrancisco will remain here for a visit.He Is a partner In Shrove and Companyof that city.

Mrs. Eleanor W. Davies who was- - formerly accountant- - for Kinney, Ballou& McClannhan returns from a visit toher daughter In San Francisco.

Percy M. Pond of McClellan, Pond &

A,nnieil!- - He was acompanled by hisbride

Mrs. T. C. Smith the wife of the veryeiiiclent purser of the Alameda came,inwn , m, it ,t .m .ihere until her husband's return tripfrom the Colonies.

c. A. Mackintosh n son nf tho t?bvAlexander Mackintosh has returnedfrom a long visit abroad.

The vessel brought three days mall,including a large quantity which hadbeen Intended for the transport Han-cock; Thirty eight carloads of rail-road: material for Chrlstchurch, NewZealand Is aboard the vessel.

1! mmALL WILL GO TO OLA A BY NEXT

MAIL.

Close of Noted Public Lands Incident.Eighty-Si- x Agreements, InvolvingAbout 4,200 Acres.

All of the agreements of sale of thehomestead lots In the Olaa tract willgo forward by the next mall. They willbe delivered to the purchasers of lastAugust, and the holders will bo able tocall in the police to eject any squattersthat may hold out. By the last of nextweek the whole Incident will likely beclosed.

There are eighty-si- x of these agree-ments, involving about 4,200 acre3 ofland. The land is in the rich rain belt.It Is very valuable, although not im-proved. All of the purchasers calcul-ate to get rich on their holdings.

The land was squatted upon by vari-ous parties shortly nfter annexation,despite the fact that the AnnexationResolution expressly provided thatUnited States land laws should neverapply to the land of the Hawaiian Islands, and despite the fact that the Olaalands were surveyed and only unsur- -veyed lands may be squatted upon uny- -where,

Following the application of tho En-abling Act last June the Territorialgovernment went ahead and sold theselots under Hawaiian laws, which werecontinued in force by the Organic law.Exception to this action was taken bythe Attorney-Gener- al of the UnitedStates, alhough the details of his ob-jection were never made known here, ifanywhere ut all. A week ago came theruling of the Interior Department sus-taining tho position tnken by the Terri-torial government all along nnd supporting the view that the local officialsare the legal custodians of public property of the Hawaiian Islnnds.

It was found Impossible to get theagreements ready for the last mall toHIlo, but the entire batch will go for-ward by the next mall.

WILL TEST THE SHAMROCK.LONDON, January 2 British ynchts- -

men are preparing to give Sir ThomasLIpton every assistance In thoroughlytesting the Shamrock II. Kenneth M.Clark of Paisley has purchased C. D.Rose s Distant Shore, principally forthe purpose of using her for trial purposes with the new challenger. CaptainHogarth will bo the skipper of this cutter designed by Wntson and built In1900, put not launched.

James Coates with a similar Intenthas practically completed negotiationsfor tho purchase of tho Valkyrie IIIWith these two and with tho Sybariteand the Meteor the new cup challengerwill be tested with a class of yachtssuch as no previous British competitorever met.

THAT MEANS RHEUMATISM.Sore nnd swollen Joints, sharp, shoot-

ing pains, torturing muscles, no rest,no sleep. That means rheumatism. ItIs a stubborn disease to fight but Cham-berlain's Pain Balm has conquered Itthousands 6f times. It will do so when-ever the opportunity Is offered. Try it.One application relieves tho pain. Forsale by all dealers, Benson, Smith & Co.,general agents Hawaiian Islands.

The Golden Rule Baznnr has Just re-ceived the Hawaiian Scenlo Calendarfor 1901, and as usual it Is the bestScenic Calendar published Price COc.

Fine Book and Commercial Printing;at the Star Office.

STARillSl.l.llSlflRS(llOflluE(!ITHE DASHING COMMODORE IN

HONOLULU.

Is a Through Passenger on the Ala-

meda Going once more to the SamoanIslands His Career.

On the passenger list of the Alamedabound for Pago Pago appears thenames of "N. M. Weaver and valet."Ilert Peterson states however, that thisWeaver is none other than his erst-while friend the fnmous CommodoreNicholas .1. Weaver. Who the vnlet InPeterson docs not attempt to state,

This visit of the Commodore, brief asit is. recalls the rather stirring timesattemung ins last call at the nnrt orHonolulu. Some time In September of1S99 Weaver came hero In the yachtNorma. He was accompanied by ahandsome woman, whom he Introducedas his sister-in-la- In any even Wea-ver had not been here for very longbefore the hoodoo which seems to havepursued him on that trip made Its ap-pearance In the form of a bottomryattachment against the Norna. Somebody In Singapore had Instituted thesuit nnd claiming that Weaver was In-debted to them for a good sizedamount. Weaver protested that thematter had been settled long beforennd the attachment was the result ofa mistake. Whether that was thetruth has never been positively provedto many but In any event Weaver leftthe boat and went to San Francisco.

What he did there or who he saw aremerely Incidents of the man's career.His rlp proved successful though forhe returned after a brief absence, withsulllclent money with which to settlethe claim against him. or at least withsome sort of authority by which thesuit was dismissed and the yacht re-leased. Bert Peterson barkened untotne voice of the tempter and seeingvast opportunities for making money Inthe romantic South Sea Islands, decld- -eu to join forces and alas, finances withtli" Commodore. So they sailed nwnvone day, Peterson, the Commodore andtho slster-ln-ln- and dropped anchorin Apia. There the men .secured op-tions on some Samoan land for the pur-pose of starting a cocoa plantation ona large scale.

Peterson evidently learned somethingof the real character of the Commodoreat Apia. At Honolulu there had beenvarious rumors of the high life and ad-venturous career of the Commodore InAsiatic ports but as Weaver alwaysdenied them, there was more or lessdoubt as to their truth. This knowledgeof Weaver must have been far fromsatisfactory to Peterson for he left theCommodore nnd went to Auckland andSydney, finally returning hero lastyear.

Weaver got along fairly well howeveruntil h'e" reached Auckland. Therefilnds rrtrt low. Weaver managed toraise the wind through a loan made tohim by a woman. The woman lovedthe Commodore much but she loved her"dough" more Tor when she heard thatWeaver had departed to Sydney, shepursued him. At Sydney the yachtwas nttaclfcd and Its owner finallyabandoned her and returned to

States. According to last ac-counts Weaver was possessed of plentyof money nnd intended going to theSouth Sens and making more.

Bert Peterson consulted with an at-torney today regarding the advisabilityof instituting attachment proceedingsagainst Weaver. It was flnnlly decidedto make a formal demand upon theCommodore for $500 the amount whichPeterson claims Is due him. Should thisfall of response Peterson will probablyinstitute action aealnst AVoaver In thePago Paro courts. Peterson Insistedthe Alameda this afternoon to Inter-view Weaver.

INDEPENDENT CONVENTION.

Table Motions Giving Executive Committee Too Much Power.

The Independent party conventionmet nt Foster Hall this morning andadded to its executive committee. Thisnotion wns taken on the motion of J.K. Kaulla who wanted the motionpassed at the previous meeting appointing tj.i memners to tne executive committee, amended in order that tho nlllcers elected by the convention might beadmitted also. After some discussionthis wns dor"

Additional amendments to tho constltutlon anil by-la- were offered by J.Knnui. Ho wanted tho oxecutlev com-mittee to have tho power to pass uponall complaints made against any mombers of the iy nnd, secondly to firstconsider any bill or petition which nnyIndependent was to present before theLegislature. Much discussion ensuedover these amendments but both wereflnnlly tabled.

Some minor mntters were discussednnd previous to adjournment to theafternoon tho president read a letterfrom Representative Wilcox. The tripto and visit or Mr. Wilcox In Washington were described. He also statedthat every bill which Secretary Cooperhnd forwarded to Washington hnd beensubsequently handed over to him, Mr.Wilcox, for his recommendation. Anadjournment was taken until 2 p. m

THE GOLD OUTPUT.HELENA. (.Mont.), Junuary 2. E. II

Bradcn, United States Assayer in thiscity estimates the production of gold InMontana In 1900 to have been $4,900,000,an Increase of $300,000 as compared withthe previous year; silver, $10,720,000, adecrease or $64,000.

Utah's output Is estimated nt $4,100,000 In gold and $C,OSO,000 In silver nnIncrease of $717,380 in gold and $1,492,812 in silver.

PORTLAND. (Or.), January 2. Thegold production of Oregon for the year1900 amounted to 13.770,000.

The lumber output of the State fortho year amounted to S9S.1CO.000 feet

BIG CHRISTMAS TRADE.Owing to tho tremendous Christmas

rush nt L. B. Kerr & Compar.v. theywore unable to present all their latest

te goods. Today they drawyour attention to Muslin Underweartho value of which cannot bo equaledLadles' capes, the finest ever seen. Newgoods In every depart-ntnt- .

ICE HOUSE DELICACIES.Camarlnos California Fruit Market Is

tho nlaco for Ice house delicaciesEverything the California market af-fords at this season nf the year can befound at Camarlnos.

Tim llinwilluti SlurIs Hid jmpcr tli p.t

goes Into (lie, liontlioincs of Honolulu9

No. 2753

SUPREME COURT ORDERS A NEWTRIAL.

Award Against Kllauea Sugar Com-pany Was Excessive Smith's LandTo be Sold Knmalo Case.

In the matter of Joseph Schnarschvs. the Kllauea Sugar Company, dam-ages In the sum or $7500, the SupremeCourt filed a decision, sustaining, inpart, the appeal of defendant corpora-tion und ordering a new trlul. In thiscase two separate claims were Joined.One was for $5,530 fur the wrongfuldiversion of certain water; the other$2000 us damages for the alleged wrong-ful discharge of defendant by plaintifffrom Its employ. The Circuit courtfound damages In the total sum of$3108 The Supreme Court holds:

"In an action for damages forof a water right, tho Jury

rendered a verdict for tho plaintiff for$3100. Held, upon the facts stated Inthe opinion, that the evidence did notsupport a verdict for that sum, in otherwords, that the verdict was excessive.

"The owner of a dominant estatfe maynot substantially alter the location ofa ditch or watercourse maintained, un-der a right acquired by preemption onthe land of another, without the con-sent express or implied, of the ownerof the servient estate."

The opinion Is by Justice Perry nndIs concurred in by Chief Justice Frcarand Justice Galbralth.

Judge Humphreys today signed anorder appointing George Lucas a com-missioner to sell the lunds of GeotgeWashington Smith, et nl.. to jmtlsfymortgage claims of S. C. Allen and IdaE. Lamb. The former is to receive$20S0, costs and interest, nnd the latter$1520, costs and Interest. The land issituated In Ewn, In Nuuauu valley andon School street. When suits for fore-closure were brought, defendants con-sented to the sale of the property utpublic auction.

15. L. Marx, administrator, has filedan inventory of the estate of the lateJohn W. Winter, showing assets to be.$7,730 and debts $12,50G.1C. The 110shares of Hollister Drug Company'sstock proved to be deposited as secu-rity for certain of the claims. Mr.Marx stated that to settle the estateIt will be necessary to sell this stock,and he petitions to be allowed so to do.The tltion will be heard on the 17thInstant.

In the matter of Allan vs. J. A. Ma-goon, accounting. Judge Humphreysthis morning overruled defendant's de-murrer, which denied that the factsstated were sufficient to constitute aause of action. Two weeks Is allowed

In which to answer.In the Kamalo case. Frank Foster

today filed his answer to tho amendedcomplaint. He states that he received$00,000 of the paid up stock of the com-pany, but that his options ond serviceswere worth that amount. He asked tobeallnwed to retain the stock, or, else.o prove the value of his services and

options and to be pnld for the same.

START I RUMOR

PARIS. January 4. Le Journal re- -nrts under reserve the death of Count

von Waldersce, the rumor being thatno wns Killed uy an ollleer or the alliedtroops, the circumstances not being re--

ited. It Is said tlmt tne rumor Is current In Berlin, where It Is not confirm-ed.

SUES FOR HIS CASH.Apana, the store keeper at the Pala- -

ma terminus of the tram line, hasbrought suit agnlnst D. Kui, a nativewho owns the property back of thestore, for $645.65. It seems that Kuihas used the Chinaman as his banker.or rather as the man from whom hoborrowed when In need of cash. Almost the whole nccount Is for cashloaned In nmounts rnnglng from $1 to$5. The case will come before the Cir-cuit court at the next term.

RECOMMENDS THE PROVIDENT.'After a vtsry careful consideration

of the leading life Insurance companiesand their policies, I come to the con-clusion that the very best Is ProvidentSavings. I am entirely satisfied withmy policy In your excellent companynnd I unreservedly commend tho Company to any person desiring reliablennd economical Insurance. Geo. L.Webb." Resident manner, I. R.uurns; omce in isow Magoon iiuiioine.

Somth&ng NwFOR

. MBN

The Warner VentilatingCushion Shoe

These shoes arc Just to hand havingonly been placed on our shelves a fewdays ago. They are Just tho shoe for"the man who does a good deal of walk-ing each shoe has ventilators whichallows the air to pass In nnd out of theshoe.

Gall and See Them

KSffi

Page 2: Iff ' THE HAWAIIAN AR...trived to get up as much fuss about.the style of precedence as that experi-enced In England In 1840, when Queen.Victoria was married to Prince Albert of Suxe-Cobur-

In T1IK HAWAIIAN BTAH, Til U 118 DAY, JANUAHY 10, 1901.

Completely Furnished House For Sale !

"Ve offer the well loruteri and finely furnished home of W. L. Howard,for sale as follows-Klne l'arlor Hedroom net . Dining Hoom Furniturellavlland China, Stove, KefrlKPrator. Y nrd ImiileinentH etc t 1,050.00Chickerlng Baby Grand PIhho 900.00Horse, HarnenB, l'lmetoti. etc C7G.00

KIclU room Modern house, moRqulto jit- - oof with line plumllng. Largelot 10x390 with shrubbery, fruit trees a nl Royal palms 0,000.00

Total $11,525.00The above line home and equipment 1 olTered complete for $10,000,00 or a

reduction of $1,525,00 from Its market v alue. The lot runs throuKh from Bere-lan- la

to Young street and can be subd lvlded If desired.

McClellan, Pond & Co.(Telephone Main C9. Judd Building.

Canadian -- Australian Royal Mail

STEAMSHIP COMPANY

Steamers of the abo line, runnln g In connection with the CANADIANBStCIFIC B 1 L,WAY COMPANY between Vancouver, B. C, and Sydney, N.BL W., and calling at torla, B, C, Honolulu and Brisbane, Q., are

Duo at Honolulu on or aliout tbo dates below slated, viz:

?rem Vancouver and Victoria, 1). C,for lirisbauo and Sjdnoy:

WOWERA JAN. 19'ACRANGI FEB. 16!WARRI-- u O MARCH 16

SOWEHA , APRIL, 13litANGI MAY 11

STARRIMOO JUNE 8

From fortorla Vancouver, 1!. C:

AORANGI JAFEB.

MIOWJRAORANGI

JUNE

(.. ffh magnificent new the "Imperial Limited" ! now running dally

BETWEEN VANCOUVER AMD MONTREAL

Making the run 100 hours without change. The finest Railway service InSSa world.

Sirough tickets Issued from Honolu lu to Canada, United States and Europe.

'" frelg " and passage and all eneral lnf matlon, apply to

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

Pacific Mail Steamship Co.

Occidental & Oriental S. S, Co.

and Toyo Kisen Kaisha.

Btenners the ab call at Honolulu and leave this portSB r i.iout the dates below mentioned:

FOR JAPAN AND CHir'!:TAKING JAN. 150AELIC JAN. 23HONGKONG MARU JAN. 31CHINA FEB. 8DORIC FEB. 16NIPPON MARU FEB. 26RIO DE JANEIRO MAR I 6

For general Information apply to

2329

9

SIERRA 19MARCH 2MARCH 12

nml Yic- -

andT. 18

13MARCH 13

APRIL. 108

MIOWERA 6

service

iJfttr .b g

of will

MARU JAN. 10CHINA JAN. 18DORIC JAN. 20NIPPON MARU 2RIO DE FEB. 12COPTIC 19AMERICA MARU MARCH 1

HACKFELD CO., Ltd. Agts.

Oceanic Steamship Company.

TIME) TABMThe fine Passenger Steamers of this line will arrive at and leave this port

as hereunder:FROM SAN FRANCISCO:

1901.

ZEALANDIA JAN.SONOMA JAN.

FEB.FEB.

ZEALANDIAYENTURA

Sydney Urisbnnc,

WARRIMOO

WARHIMOO MAY

Companies

MARIPOSA

FOR SAN FRANCISCO:HONGKONG

FEB.JANEIRO

FEB.

I.

FOR SAN

1901.

JAN. 26SIERRA JAN. 29MARIPOSA FEB. 13

ALAMEDA FEB. 18MARCH 6

In connection with the sailing of th e above steamers, the Agents are pre-pared to Issue, to Intending passengers coupon through tickets by any railroadfrom San Francisco, to all points In the United States, and from New York bysteamship line to all European ports.

For further apply to

Irwin

FRANCISCO:

ZEALANDIA

ZEALANDIA

particulars

at Co(LIMITED)

General Agents Oceanic S. S. Compan,

AMERICAN-HAWAIIA- N STEAMSHIP CO.Direct Service Between

NEW YORK, PACIFIC COAST AND HAWAIIAN ISLANDS.

S. S. "HAWAIIAN" will be dispatched from New York on or before Jan-uary 115th for San Francisco, en route t o Honolulu. To be followed by S. S.

"OREGONIAN," March loading. i

Freight received at Company's wha rf, 42nd Street, South Brooklyn, at alltimes.

For further particulars apply to

H. HACKFELD & CO., LTD ,

C. P, MORSE, General Freight Agent. AGENTS, HONOLULU.

IP G IIIIIGEMEAlUUVHU.WVdnoHdny, January !)

Jap. S. 8. Hong Kong Maru, W. J4.Kilmer, from llimg Kong December 19,

Shanghai, December 22, Nagamikl De-cember 21, Kobe December 26, and Yo-

kohama .! miliary 1; run from Yokoha-ma 9 days, 2 hours; cargo for HonoluluC62 tons, fur San 3773 tons.

Hark Alden ltessc, Potter, from SanFrancisco, 29 days out at 2 p. m.

Thursdny, January 10.S. S. Ellhu Thompson, Whitney, from

Seattle at 7:30 a. m.Oceanic S. Alameda, C. F. Herrl-ma- n,

from San Kranclsco January 4;run made In 5 days, 22 hours and 23minutes, average dally speed 337 knots.

Gas. schr. Eclipse, Townsond, fromLahnlna and way ports, at 4 a. m.

Hktn. Jane L. Stanford, Mollestead,from Newcastle with coal at 7 a. m.

DEPARTING.Thursday, January 10.

S. S. Hongkong Maru, Fllmer, forSan Francisco, this afternoon.

S. S. Alameda, llerrlman for Colo-nies at 4 p. m.

Stmr. Mlkahala, for Makawell, Wal-me- a

and Kekaha, at C p. m.Stmr. James Mnkee, tor Kapaa, at 4

p. m.Schr. Malolo, for Koolau ports, at G

p. m.Schr. Alice Cooke, PcnlmlloAv, for San

Francisco at 2 p. m.Friday, January 11.

Gas. schr. Eclipse, Townsend, for La-linl- f-

Kihel, Mnkena and Komi at G

p. m.

PASSENGERS.Arrived.

Per S. S. Hong Kong Maru, January9. Dr. Ten Kabe, Joseph Dowson, Vla-dimir Mlohunko, wife and 3 chlklien,Mrs. C. Shlozowa, 3 children and 2servants.

Per S. S. Alameda, from San Francis-co, January 10. Miss E. Adams, F.Andrade, Mrs. II. C. Austin, II. Z. Aus-tin and wife, C. P. Baughman, Mrs. Q.II. Berrey, Bruce Bonney and wife,Edgar Caypless, Mrs. E. W. Davles, E.A. Eraser and wife, Mrs. L. D. Frasher,Captain E. S. Grogan and wife, W. C.Hare, Mrs. M. Hayes, Miss Holland, J.Houtz, A. W. Howe, T. E. Hudson, C.E. Innls, J. Jenkins, C. Jensen, Miss E.J. Johnson, B. Lathrop, Miss E. Leary,C. B. Lommon, W. Lougher, J. R.Lougher, C. A. Mackintosh , WilliamNeustadt, E. A. P. Newcomb, Mrs. S.L. Newcomb, G. D. O'Nell, Mrs. M. B.Owen, P. M. Pond and wife, J. W.Relghley, Miss M. A. Russell, C. F.Scholl and wife, Mrs. T. C. Smith, B.Solomon and wife, M. J. Stevens, II. P.Walton, E. J. Watt. S. G. Wilder, wifeand child, Paxton Wright.

MEMORANDA.The ship George Curtis, Calhoun, ar-

rived In San Francisco January 2, 27days from Honolulu.

The City of Peking arrived in SanFrancisco New Year's day, 6 days, 13hours and 52 minutes from Honolulu.

THE VENTURA.SAN FRANCISCO, January 3. The

steamer Ventura, third of the OceanicCompany's new vessels built by theCramps at Phllldelphla, sailed fromthat port on December 30th, and willbe due here about February 6th.

SAW CEVEltA DESTROYED.

Busy Career of the New Commander ofAlameda.

Although the career of Captain C. F.llerrlman the new commander of theAlameda has been brief with the Oceanic Company, he has a splendid recordas a seaman before coming to theSpreckels line and by one of his firstacts Ingratiated himself with his newemployer.

Captain Herriman served for manyyears with the Canadian Shipping Company in the north Atlantic, which operates vessels between Boston and Liverpool. He was also a visitor here somesix years ago with the steamer Roslna.The captain was sent to Philadelnhla tobring the Sonoma around The Horn toban Francisco. He made a splendidrecord with that vessel beating all previous records by several days, thesteaming time of the Sierra beingbeaten fully four days. He thinks thatthe Sonoma is likely to prove the re-cord holder for many years to come.

During the Spanish war Captain Her-riman was the first officer of the trans-port Seneca which carried the Sth Infantry and 2nd Massachusetts to Cuba.He saw the battle off Santiago harborand watched the destruction of Cever-a'- s

lleet. It Is the opinion of Captainiiernmantnat nau uevera turned to theeast Instead of the west, he would havedone much damage. The transportswere lying In that quarter while prac-tically only the New York was on handto have intercepted the Spanish vessels.

Picks

HONG KONG MARU.

up Shipwrecked CrewJapanese Coast.

off

The Hong Kong Maru arrivedafternoon shortly before 6 o'clock

from the Orient. The vessel was delayed three days In Yokohama on accountof government dispatches bur. made uptne lost time, reaching here a little overnine days, which Is a fine record. Cap-tain Fllmer has orders to shove herthrough to San Francisco in order tomake the Coast on schedule time. Towill leave today a little behind timebut expects to make the schedule allright.

On January 2nd, in lat, 34 degrees, 57minutes, north, long. 14S degrees. 14minutes, east, about a day out fromYokohama, the vessel sighted a dlsmasted schooner Hying signals of dlstress. The dismantled vessel proved tobe the two masted schooner "SelshoMaru of Wakayamaken. The vesselloft Magnml on December 7 loaded withlumber and charcoal for Tokio but wasdriven out to sea. On the 11th she wasdismasted and from then until January2nd, the vessel was tossed about attne mercy of the waves. Captain Y,Adsuma and seven Japanese were rescued. They were brought to this portand unless the Japanese consul will seethat they are returned to Janan. willbe taken on to San Francisco by theHong Kong and ultimately returned tojapan.

The Hong Kong Maru discharged 600tons or freight for this port.

Among her passengers Is Captain A.Campbell a British army officers whosaw service in the Boxer campaign.

THE AUSTRALIA.SAN FRANCISCO, January 3. Early

yesterday morning the steamer AustraHa reached port from Tahiti, havingbeen twelve days on the trip. Papeetewas left a day later than schedule time.and another day was lost on accountor the strong head winds nnd roughsea which tho Australia encounteredafter crossing the equator. The cabinpassengers arriving on tho stenmerwere J. Lamb Doty. G. T. Wright. O,E. Benjamin and J. Nlebuhr. Doty Istho American Consul at Papeete wherelie has Deen stationed for several years,tie win return to Papeete after a few

(Continued to page seven.)

For ChristmasPRESENTS

I AM NOW SHOWING in my lowerwindow, for the first time, a splendidassortment of

HMD S

CONSISTING OF

LAD I. EMBROIDEDED LINEN,ranging from 25c to $5.00 each.

LADIES' AND GENTS' PLAIN HEM-STICHE-

from one-four- th toone-ha- lf inch hem, In all qualities.

LADIES' REAL LACE In Honlton,Duchess, Brussels' Point, Maltese(In silk), and Embroidered Chiffon.

The above were all personally select-ed by me when In England, and beingImported under the old duties andmarked accordingly, I believe the pub-lic will say they are the cheapest andhandsomest goods eve- - offered here.

EL10 FORT STREET

Here are a fewTimely SayingsSuitable for theSeason . . .

A bargain In time Is doubly a bargain.A man's wardrobe Is never too full of

ties.Don't take our word for It. Come

and see.The Kash that name stands for

progress.Everything man or boy wears from

hose to hats.Keep your eye on our windows.

You'll not go astray.You need not go any farther than

right here for the best.We're taking other folk's valuation

and quoting our price for it.Just as natural for us to lead in va-

riety and value as It Is for others tofollow.

Some clothing is made to sell; someto wear. Some clothing Is made forboth. That is our kind.

Don't Imagine that Kash shirts willnever wear out. They will, but theywill last longer and fit better thanother makes.

Our NeckwearFor the Holidays

IS UNSURPASSED INQUANTITY, QUALITYAND PRICE.

The "KASH"TWO . TORES, TWO STOCKS.

P. O. Box 55S.

TWO TELEPHONES.96 and 676.

and 11 Hotel Street, and Corner otFort and Hotel Streets.

A Special Bit ofBiscuit Goodness

A revelation of daintiness

crisp and delicious

especially suitable for all

social functions

not cheap, but worth what they cost,

A hundred varletleei

serve them at your next tea.

FROM

FOOD SPECIALISTS,

Telephone 240. Ill Fort Street

Metropolitan Meat Co.

81 KING STBEET.

ASD NAVY CONTRACTORS.

O. J. WALLER.

IMPORTERSDEALERS IN

Manager.

AND

Chinese Silks, Handker-chiefs, Grass Cloth, Matting,Fine Teas, Manila Cigars.

General Merchandise16 HOTEL STREET AND922 NUUANU STREET,HONOLULU, T. H.

Honolulu Tobacco Go., LtdHOTEL AND

STREETS,

Importing Tobacconists and Wholesale and Retail Dealers

Ex S. S. Zea'andia wo received a large stock of tho HighGrade HELIOTROPO LA AFRICANA, HAVANA andtho Famous LA ESTRELLA, Key West Cigars,for holiday gifts to gentlemen

Also a full line of Owl Brunswick, Principe do Gales andAlexander Humboldt Cigars.

THE "MONITOR"

Plumbing, Tin, Copper and Sneet Iron WorlDIMOND BLOCK

AT THE .

CORNERFORT

suitableyour friends.

T ""V IT

75-- 70 STREET.

Beretania

"9

JL 9 9 JLtfG- - Street

Great Clearance Saleof New Furniture

Ice Boxes, Refrigerators, Rugs, Meat Safes,Bedroom Sets, Bed Lounges, Baby Carriages,Chairs, Rockers, Tables, Pictures, Flags.,Chiffoniers, Sideboards, Bureaus, Macneal& Urban Safes, Etc., at

SAN FRANCISCO PRICESJS. W. Ivl5II5KI3r, Propr.

DAY BLOCKBE1.ETANIA STREET NEAR FIRE STATION.

Due to Arrive "John Currier"Ten Thousand Barrels Roche Harbor, Lime

alsoOne Million Red Bricks.

Theo. H. Davies & Co., Ltd.IT x--tlw i"

ej?artmexxt

Agentsfor Sterling Lubricating Oils, Clariphos, Alsen Cement, Portlan3Cement, Giant Powder Co., Angle Lamp Co., Dicks Balata Belting, Roche Har-bor Lime, New Home Sewing Machines and Hand-Sewin- g Ma-chines.

Dealers in Agateware, Glassware, Crockery, Ham ; .'laddie and Lea-thers, Rugs, Brass Bedsteads, Trunks, Valises, Matting, Safes, Linoleum, Rl-li- es

and Shotguns, Powder and Caps, general hardware and Plantation

A now Involco JustCall early or you will miss a choice.

New Furniture K -p- -. - p-- cc

GITY FORMITOREa STOREJI. 11. WILLIAMS, Manager

Telephone 81(5

S. SHIMAMOTO,erchant Street - - Honolulu, T. H.

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

O. Box 886.

cx tiID

Telephone 211.

KING

oponocl,

Lore HiilIriiiiK, bill nml 080 Fort Street

SAM WO HOP KEE,DEALERS IN

Mai tresses and Dry Goods,Groceries, Cigars and Tobacco- -

CORNER PORT AND KUKUI STS.

I

Page 3: Iff ' THE HAWAIIAN AR...trived to get up as much fuss about.the style of precedence as that experi-enced In England In 1840, when Queen.Victoria was married to Prince Albert of Suxe-Cobur-

BR. A. E. NICHOLS,DENTIST.

Office, Alakea Street with Dr. Andor-no- n.

OlPce hours: 8.30 a. m. to 4 p. m.

DR. C. J3. HIGH,DENTIST

Philadelphia Dental College, 1892.

Office: Maaonlo Temple.Telephone, Main 318.

DR. I. MORIJL86 Beretanla St., bet. -- mtua und Fort

Telephone 877; 1. 0. Box 843

Office hours: 0 to 13 a. m. nnd 7 to 8

p. m.; Sundays, 9 to 12 a. m.

OR, A. C, ILL, DR. 0, E, WALL,

DENTISTS.np4OVH BUILDING, FORT STREET ,

Telephone ill,OFFICE HOURS. 8 a. m. to 4 p. m.

DR. A. J. DERBY,DENTIST.

Mott-Sml- th Building.Cor. Fort and Hotel Sts. Honolulu, H. I.

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

Dr. Archibald N. Sinclair, i

Offices: Booms 20S-20- 9, Boston Building,Fort Street.

Telephones: Office, Main, 3S5, Resi-dence, White, 2861.

Hours 11 a. m. to 1 p. m.; 3 to 5 p.ni.j 7 to 8 p. m. Sundays 12-- 2 p. m.

P. O. Box 801.

M. S. GRINBAUM & CO.Limited.

HONOLULU.H. I.

Commission Merchants and Importersof General Merchandise.

San Francisco Office, 215 Front Street.

T. R. MOSSMAN,Kciil Estnte Afrent,

I Abstractor and Searclmr ol'Titlcs,Loans Negotiated,llcnts Collected.

Campbell Building. Merchant St.

J I 'Jfif embers of Honolulu Stock 'Exchange

Stock andBond Brokers

411 Fort Street.Advance Made on Approved Security.

BEAVER LUNCH ROOM.Fort Street Opposite Wilder & Co.

H. J. NOLTE, Prop'r.First-cla- ss Lunches served with tea,

coffee, soda water, ginger ale or milk.

Smokers' Requisites a Specialty.

Y. YUEN TAI,No. 710 Fort St. near Kukul.

Dressmakor, Ladles' Underwear,Skirts, Chemises, Etc.

'A large line at ready-mad- e MosquitoNets always on hand.

.Telephone Main 82 P. O. Box 866

Y.SUGASHOTEN,IMPORTER IN

Japanese ProvisionsAND

Dry Goods

QUEEN AND ALAKEA STREETS.

M. PHILLIPS & CO.Wholesale Importers and Jobbers of

AMERICAN & EUROPEAN DRY GOODS,

Corner of Fort and Queen Sts.

Y. LUM SING & CO.,621 Fort Street.

Keep constantly on hand FRESHISLAND BUTTER, FRUITS and VE-GETABLES. Ice house goods by everysteamer.

BamilyGroceriesTelephone 628.

HI. AKAGI,FORT STREET, STAR BLOCK.

SHIRT JVXiVKliJR,Men's Shirts, Pajama Suits, Collars

and Cuffs made to order, Crepe and SilkShirts always on hand.

STAR ICE CREAM PARLOR,FORT STREET,STAR BLOCIC

ICE CREAM, CANDIES, MILKSHAKES AND COLD DRINKS.

KWONGr CHAN,Hotel Street oppos'te S. Osakl.

lAdies underwear,chemisees. skirts. etc.,

made to order.

ftIS M fillWANTS TO BUILD A BATTLE

SHIP.

Believes Now Thnt Moran BrothersWill Get The Contract For One ofThe New Ones.

WASHINGTON, December 27. Anunexpected turn of uffulrs ut the navydepartment makes It virtually eertulnthat one of the new battleships will bobuilt on l'ugot sound. Secretary Longndvlsed the board on construction, to-

day, to hold that under the law of con-gress one of the three sheathed battle-ships must be constructed on the l'u-cll- le

coast.The board acted Immediately, In ac-

cordance with this suggestion, althoughthe members annouued severul daysago their belief that the law did notrequire that one of the battleshipsshould go to a Pacific coast bidder. Theboard's reversal of Its own ruling, atthe suggestion of the secretary, how-ove- r,

gives the contract for one of thesheathed ships to the Moran BrothersCompany of Seattle.

The board will now enter into nego-tiations with the Mnrnns to obtain amodification of the firm's bid. The Mo-rons' bid on battleships Is, the lowestof those submitted by Pacific coastbuilders, but It still exceeds the amountappropriated by congress for each ofthse vessels.

The naval board will require that theMorans scale their bid so ns to bring Itwithin the appropriation, and that cer-tain details of equipment omitted fromthe Moran's first proposition be inclu-ded In the contract price.

Robert Moran, of the firm, who is stillin Washington, Is confident that he willbo able to comply with the board's re-quirements to the satisfaction of thenavy department.

MUST ifflH USIS

COLLECTOR STACKABLE TO BEAIDED BY NAVY.

In Enforcing the Exclusion Act CloseTab Must be Kept on Chinese SailorsAboard Naval Vessels.

Last November tho navy and treas-ury departments clashed at this port.Collector of thu Port Stacknblc andCommander Wlnslow of the naval boatSolace had u disagreement regardingthe Chinese aboard tliat vessel beinggranted shore leave. Commander Win-slo- w

with characteristic choler took theground that the enlisted Chinese onhis boats could land on shore leave.Mr. Stuckable contended that the menwho were not American citizens couldnot.

The two department representativeshad rather an animated controversy Inwhich the marines of the ship present-ed their bayonets to the representa-tives of the customs house. The mat-ter was referred to the departments atWashington. Mr. StaCkable asked thatthe Commander furnish him with a listof all Chinese and keep tab on themwhile they were In port us the collectordesired to enforce the provisions of theExclusion Law.

Recently an order was received bythe commandant of the local navalstation directing him that In futurecommanders of all naval vessels touch-ing here must furnish to tho collector alist of Chinese nembers of the crewenlisted In ports other than the UnitedStates. In addition, two musters dallymust be held of the Chinese and incalie of any of them being missing, de-scriptions must be furnished to thoCollector. This order Is signed by thesecretary of the navy.

Apparently this sustains Mr. Stack-abl- e.

He asked that lists be furnishedhim and In case of there being anymissing Chinese that he be suppliedwith descriptions of them, his evidentIntention being to keep tab on the menand see that they did not land unlaw-fully.

No reference Is made however to theChinese who were shipped In Americanports or who may be American citi-zens, tho department evidently not con-sidering this a matter at Issue or elsewishing to dodge tho case. Regard-ing the section directing tho comman-ders to hold two daily musters this Ismerely calling attention to the regula-tions of the navy which require twomusters a day.

IPEGIIfi QUEEN

HAWAIIAN DELEGATES CALL ON

LILIUOKALANI.

Declare Themselves American CitizensBound In Allegiance of Love to TheirAlii The Queen's Reply.

At 1 o'clock yesterday afternoon, themembers of the joint convention Of theAloha AIna and the Kulalulna Socle-tie- s

called on the Lllluoka-lan- lIn a body. They were received at

her Washington Place residence. Thopresidents of the two societies, JamesK. Kaulla nnd David Kaluuokalanlwere received first and presented thodelegates. On behalf of the delegatesJames K. Kaulla made the followingaddress:

"Our Beloved Queen: We come be-fore you today as representatives fromHawaii to Nlihau to express to youo,ur wishes for your welfare and hap-piness.

"We come as American citizens now,for by the act of that great country,

.Hawaii has become a part of thoUnion. We come as a people withouta sovereign, without a Queen. Oursovereign, our Queen, have passedaway forever In tho eye of the lawthat hn Instituted a new order ofthings In our midst.

"Yet, beloved Queen, our watchfulmother, we would have you believethat you are to us, still our Queen. Inour hearts we feel our allegiance toyou. We love you still ns our Queen,nnd we shall always revere you assuch.

"Wo are delegates from the Islandsof this group, from Hawaii to Nlihau,and wo come In the name of tho peopleto do with nil our might what ourhands find to do. We have united thoAloha AIna and the Knlulnlnn societiesand hereafter this union will bo knownas the Independent Home Rule party,a party that means to work for thowelfare of the people.

"Wo have been a people cast aboutIn the sea with no hopeful outlook,Our country has been taken from usand our Queen has been removed fromwhere she belonged. But now wo haveunited In one strong party that willlive to the end, and that will see to It

THIS HAWAIIAN STAR, THURSDAY. JANUARY 10. 1001.

that Hawnll's best Interests are d,

"We recognize you ns our mothernnd on your head we call down theblessliiKs of Ood for your faithfulnessto us, and for your strife In our behalfIn lint great country America. Withone heart we opposed annexation tothe end. but now It bus come, let usdo the best we know how. We assureyou of our love, beloved Queen, and If.In the future there Is ever anythingwe ran do for you, rest assured wewill do It with a willing heart nnuband. And now, we give you our nlo-h-

one and nil, and pledge to you ourundying allegiance to the end."

In replying Lllluoknlanl said:"My Children: I thank you for the

expressions of love you give me. Frommy heart, I thank you. Love Is a groutthing. Between you my people, andmyself. It will abide forever.

"You have been chosen ns represen-tatives of the people, as American citi-zens, to wntch over Iluwall's welfareand Hawaiian's welfare. As I look utyou, I feel sure you will do that workwell. Stand firm, my people. Be notled nstray by what might come to youfrom tho tempter.

"Mr. Wilcox, our delegate at Wash-ington, has been received and, nccord-In- g

to nil reports, has been well re-ceived. Ho Is the man you hnve chosenand he will do what you direct him.Watch and pray, my people. Conductyourselves in tho manner of good citi-zens and you will surely win In theend.

"I do nlways preserve for you nnundying love. Your Interests will bomy Interests, ns they have always beenand I shall ever stand by you ns a lov-ing mother. Be assured, my people, ofmy aloha, for It Is real and lasting.And now, In wishing you success Inyour conduct of the affairs of thiscountry, I also nsk that God's blessingbe on you forever."

BAND CONCERT.Tho band will play nt the Hawaiian

hotel tlhs evenlg nt 7:30 o'clock. Thefollowing Is the program:

PART I.March "The Ameer" HerbertOverture The Rivals" PcttoeSelection "The Pirates o Penzance"

SullivanSongs (by request)

(a) "Ke Aloha Ihlkl Mnl."(b) "Na Moloknma."

Miss J. Kelliaa. .

(c) ''He Inoa no Wuiplo."(d) "Nanl Halll Po 1 ku Lehua."

Mrs. N. Alapal.PART II.

E Flat Clarinet Solo "Scenes ThatAre Brightest" (by request)... Round

Charles Palikapu.Dance "Tho Aborigines" ThlcreWaltz "Vienna Bon Hons" StraussMarch "The Mosquito Parade"

Whitney"Star Spangled Banner."

A SMALL FIRE.A fire In the roof of a small cook

house back of the Orpheum block at 1o'clock took the fire department to theplace. There was no difficulty In ex-tinguishing the blaze, although If It hadgotten a start the result may have beenquite serious, as the cook house Is ina nest of small wooden buildings anda large building in front.

HAS CHANGED.Some Harvard explorers have found

a cold mountain a mile high up In La-brador and named it after PresidentEliot. Very well; but Dr. Eliot haswarmed very noticeably In the lasttwenty years. Life.

CORUOIIATION NOTICES.

ELECTION OF OFFICERS.

At the annual meeting of the Stockholders of the Bank of Hawaii, Ltd.,held January 9, 1901, the following of-ficers weie elected to serve for the en-suing year:

President C. M. Cooke.Vice-Preside- nt P. C. Jones.Cashier C. H. Cooke.Asst. Cashier. ...F. C. Atherton.

Directors: T. May, H. Waterhouso,E. D. Tenney. F. W. Mncfarlane, J. A.McCnndless, nnd tho above officers.

Auditor Geo. R. Carter.F. C. ATHERTON,

Secretary.Honolulu, January 9, 1901.

ELECTION' OF OFFICERS.

Notice is hereby given that the fol-lowing board of ofllcers were electedat the adjourned annual meeting ofthe Onomea Sugar Co. held this day,viz:P. C. Jones, Esqr PresidentC. M. Cooke, Esqr Vice-Preside- nt

O. M. Vesper. Esqr. .2nd Vice-Preside- nt

Gcr 11. Robertson TreasurerA. P. Welch Assistant TreasurerE. F. Bishop SecretoryT. R. Robinson Auditor

Geo. R. Carter and Edward Pollltz,Directors.

E. F. BISHOP, Secretary.Dated Honolulu, December 12, 1900.

Kihei Assessment Notices.

THE 10TH ASSESSMENT of 5 percent or $2.50 per share became due Oc-tober 1, 1900 bears penalty from Novem-ber 1. 1900 and Is now delinquent fromDecember 1, 1900.

THE 11TH ASSESSMENT of 5 percent or $2.60 per share became due onNovember 15, 1900, bears penalty fromDecember 15, 1900 and delinquent Janu-ary 15, 1901.

THE 12TH ASSESSMENT of C percent or $2.50 per share has beenMevIed tobecome duo and payable on the-2n- dayof January 1901.

All of tne above are payable at thoofficers of Alexander & Baldwin, Ltd,Judd Building.

J. P. COOKE,Treasurer Kihei Plantation Co.

Honolulu, Dec. 1, 1900.

ASSESSMENT NOTICE.

WAIALUA AGRICULTURAL CO.,

LIMITED.

The ninth and final assessment of 10per cent ($10.00 per share), has beencalled on the assessable stock of thiscompany ns to become duo and payableat the office of Castle & Cooke, Ltd., onOctober 30th, 1900, delinquent November30th, 1900.

E. D. TENNEY,Teasurer Walalua Agricultural Co., Ltd.

LOST.

A lady's hand sachel containing pa-

pers and a purse. Return to StarOffice.

THE

BankofJJawaiiLIMITED.

Incorporated under the Laws of theTerritory of Hawaii.

PAID-U- P CAPITAL - . $600,000E 5o,ooo

UNDIVIDED PROPITS - 121,561

OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS.Charles M. Cooke PresidentP. C. Jones Vice-Preside- nt

C. H. Cooke CashierF. C. Atherton Asslstnnt Cashier

Henry Wntorhouse. Tom Mny, F. W.Maofnrlane, E. D. Tennoy, J. A.

Solicits the Accounts of Firms, Cor-porations, Trusts, Individuals, and willpromptly and carefully attend to nilbusiness connected with banking en-trusted to It. Sell nnd Purchnso For-eign Exchange, Issue Letters of Credit.

SAVINGS DEPARTMENT.Ordlnnry and Term Deposits received

and Interest allowed In accordance withrules nnd conditions printed In pass-books, copies of which may be had onapplication.

Judd Building, Fort Street.

ESTABLISHED. 1858.

BISHOP & Co.,Hanlcers

TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKINGAND EXCHANGE BUSINESS.

COMMERCIAL AND TRAVELERS'LETTERS OF CREDIT ISSUED,

AVAILABLE IN ALL THEPRINCIPAL CITIES OF

THE WORLD.

Interest allowed after July 1st, 1900on fixed deposits; 7 day notice 2 percent, (this form will not boar Interestunless It remains undisturbed for onemonth) 3 month 3 per cpnt; 6 months 3V412 months, 4 per cent.

CLAUS SPRECKELS. WM. G. IRWIN.

Clans Spreckels & Go.

BANKERISIHONOLULU, H. I.

San Francisco Agents The NevadaNational Bank of San Francisco.

DRAW EXCHANGE ONSAN FRANCISCO The Navada Na

tional Bank 01 San Francisco.LONDON The Union Bank of London,

Ltd.NEW YORK American Exchange Na-

tional Bank.CHICAGO Merchants' National Bank.PARIS Credit Lyonnals.BERLIN Dresdner Bank.HONGKONG AND YOKOHAMA The

Hongkong and Shanghai BankingCorporation.

NEW ZEALAND AND AUSTRALIABank of New Zealand.

VICTORIA AND VANCOUVER Bankof British North America.

TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKINGAND EXCHANGE BUSINESS.

Deposits Received. Loans Made onApproved Security. Commercial andTravelers' Credits Issued. Bills of Ex-change Bought and Sold.

COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY AC-COUNTED FOR.

BISHOP & CO.

Savings BankUntil further nottce, Savings Depos-

its will be received and Interest allow-

ed b. this Bank at four and one-ha- lf

per cent per annuPrinted copies of the Rules and Reg-

ulations may be obtained on applica-

tion.Office atBank building on Merchant

street.BISHOP & CO.

THE YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK

LIMITED.

Subscribed Capital...- - Yen 24,000,000

Paid Up Capital Yen 18,000,000Reserve Fund Yen 8,130,000

HEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.

The Bank buys and receives for col-

lection Bills of Exchange, Issues Draftsand Letters of Credit, an transacts ageneral ba king business.

INTEREST ALLOWED:

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

On fixed deposits for 6 months, 3V4 percent per annum.

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

Branch of the Yokohama Specie Bank.

Hew Rernlilic Bnilfling. Honolulu H I

OAHU . RESTAURANT

Servos Healthy andGood Monis

NEW BLOCK . HOTEL STREET

2 Doors AboveNew England Bakery

OYSTER M11S OP 10 DATE,

HART & CO.,

HONOLULU

(HIE ICE CREAM PARLORS

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

The White House,420 Xox--t Street.

Just received a new and complete line ofGents' Furnishing Goods:

NECKTIES, COLLARS, CUFFS,SHIRTS, PAJAMAS, BATH ROBES

NEW STYLES EOll

Tlie"VTlxite

OOOCCOOOCKXXXCQCCX)0

HolidaySilk Embroidered PianoCovers, Tydies, TableCovers, Center Pieces,Initial Silk Handkerchiefs,Ladies' Jackets, Gent'sSmoking Jackets, DressingGowns, Etc., Etc., Etc.

Are the Things for ChristmasPresents

HOTEL

CXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXiCOOCXJOO CX30GOOCOOGOCX300QOOCu

" IMxe Only Way 99

TO LIGHT A HOME, SToRE, OFFICE, FACTORY, OR SHOP IS BT

No Odor

No Smoke

SPECIALTo those wishing to change from

and OH to Electric Light.

THE HAWAIIAN ELECTRICP. O. Box 144. ALAKEA ST. MAKAI OF MERCHANT ST. "Phone" U.

Genuine HarzerS

Jixst Received

CASTLE & COOKE, LIMITED

Commission Merchants.

SUGAR - FACTORS.

AGENTS FOR

The Ewa Plantalon Company.The Wnlalua Agricultural Co., Ltd.The Kohala Sugar Company.The Walmea Sugar Mill Company.The Koloa Company.The Fulton Iron Works, St. Louis, Mo.The Standard Oil Company.The George F. Blake Steam Pumps.Weston's Centrifugals.The New England Mutual Life Insur-

ance Company of Boston.The Aetna Fire Insurance Company of

Hartford, Conn.The Alliance Assurance Company of

London.

THE NEW YEAR

House

CO., LTD.,

STREET

I&leotrioitsr

No Dirt;

5 No Trouble

INDUCEMENTSold methods of lighting, such aa CandlM

auerbrunnen

Per J. O. Olaxle

C. BREWER & CO., LTD,

Queen St,, Honolulu, H, I.

AGENTS FORBftwallnn Agricultural Company, Ono-mea Sugar Company, Honomu SugarCompany, Walluku Sugar CimranyWalheo Sugar Company, Mnkee fugarCompany, Hnleakala Ranch Company,Kapapala Ranch.

Planters' Line San Francisco Packets.Charles Brewer & Co's L. .e of Boston

Packets.Agents Boston Board of Underwriters.Agents Philadelphia Board of Under-Trlter- s.

LIST OF OFFICERS.P. C. JONES PresidentGEORGE H. ROBERTSON. ...ManagerE. F. BISHOP Treasurer nnd Sec'yriOL. W. F. ALLEN Auditor

Directors,C. M. COOKE. II. WATERHOUSH,

GEORGE R. CARTER.

OF THE OHLY

(KOENIGSQUELLE)

H. Hackfeld & Co., Ltd.,Sole A.gterxts

Agricultural

Page 4: Iff ' THE HAWAIIAN AR...trived to get up as much fuss about.the style of precedence as that experi-enced In England In 1840, when Queen.Victoria was married to Prince Albert of Suxe-Cobur-

norm

THE HAWAIIAN STARDAILY AND SEMI-WBBKL-

Published every afternoon (exceptSunday) by The Hawaiian Blur

Newspaper Association, I til.

FRANK L. HOOGS .Manager

SUBSCRII'TION RATES:Per Year (In advance) 8.00Throe Months (In advance) 2.00Per Month (In advance) 75Foreign (per year, In advance).... 12.00

SEMI-WEEKL- Y SUBSCRIPTION.Local Subscribers, per annum $2.00Porelgn Subscribers, per annum... 3.00

(Strictly In Advance.)

THURSDAY. JANUARY 10. 1901.

'.LIKE THEIR OWN CLIMATE."

"There was u great scare a while sinceabout the tropical nationalities swarm-ing Into the United States. Hordes ofHawallans, I'orto Rlcans, Cubans and

OMllplnos were to rush In and upset the.labor markets. A recent nrtlcle inllriidstreota shows the folly of thisreasoning. The Immigration Is care-

fully watched and the facts are Inter-

esting.Nearly a half million people from

' other parts of the world huvo comointo the United States during the year1900 seeking permanent homes. Thedetails of the immigration during theten months ending with October,gathered by the Immigration Bureauand published by the Bureau of Statis-tics, Indicate that the immigration forthe cnlendar year will reach about 460,-00- 0.

Of tills number more than 100,000

como from Austria-Hungar- y, another100,000 from Italy, and nearly another300,000 from Russia, while the UnitedKingdom furnishes more than C0.000, ofwhich number 40,000 are from Ireland.Of the 460,000 immigrants, fully 450,000

come from Europe, while but about4,000 or less than 1 per cent, come fromthe tropics.

The indisposition of man In his migrations to select a colder country thanthat to which he has been accustomedla distinctly perceptible in the historyo our immigration, says Bradstreets.In all the years in which detailed re-

cords of the country of origin of themillions of Immigrants who have comeInto the United States have been carefully kept, the tropics have seldomsent nn average of more than 1 percent of the people seeking permanentlioincs in the United States.

This fact Is especially emphasized,however, by the record of the year justended, since It offers the first oppo-rtunity to observe whether or not the

' citizens of the islands now controlledby the United States indicate a disposi-tion to transfer their reJldenc f themainland. The fact that during thatyear the Immigration from Oceania, In-

dia, Arabia, Africa, South America,Central America and the West Indiescombined, the entire tropical territoryof the world, amounted to less than4,000 people, or less than 1 per cent ofthe total Immigration Indicate the un-willingness of the average cltlgcn of thetropical lands to transfer his residenceto even so mild a climate as that whichthe southern part of the United Statesoffers.

A CRITIC.

William Dean Howells lias taken upthe role of literary critic and lias givenhis views, upon Dickens and Thack-eray. It Is perhaps somewhat invidiousfor a writer of fiction to criticise theslants of fiction who have' very thor-oughly stood the test of time. Mr. How-ells himself has not stood the test oftime, In fact, outside of a certain cultJt is very doubtful if Mr. Howellswork will stand the test oftime. He Is finicky in the ex-

treme. He has written some-charmi-

descriptions, and has drawn one or twogood characters, but nothing that heling ever written or thought has pene-

trated Info the depths of human nature.Dickens, Mr. Howells considers be-

longs to the nrt of a by-go- age.Thackeray he classes as a man whohad a false idea of fiction nnd belong-ing to the "romanttcistic" period, what-ever "romantlcistic" may mean,

That either Dickens or Thackeray, orIn fact any one in this world Is per-fect or has been perfect would be ab-

surd, but the value of a writer eitherof poetry or fiction depends upon hislniluence upon the minds of his fellow-men- ,

and more especially upon the men"Who succeed him. Now both Dickensand Thackeray distinctly have hadthis poiver. Not only did they touch'the men of their own time, but theirwritings are alive today, are read to-

day and more widely read than any-thing that William Dean Howells hasever penned.

To take Dickens one may read himfor tho enthralling story. Take "TheTale of Two Cities," how full of drama-tl- o

Interest, what wonderful plcturaof the period. How grim it is, and yettouched here and there with the veriesthumor. Certainly there must bo muchvitality In the "Tale of Two Cities"when It has but recently held Its posi-tion on tho boards of tho principaltheatres of both the United States andGreat Britain. Dickens wrote innum-erable enthralling stories. But it isnot only the enthrallment of the storythat ho is valued for. Plenty of writerscan write enthralling stories, but thereIs something more that Is needed. It istho depth of thought, the insight intohumanity.

This true insight into humanity ispossessed by few, nnd Is the touchstoneof true genius. The French as a rulehave It not. Zola's realism certainlydoes not reach it. Dumas, delightful(is he' is, barely approaches it In theTiir.efl Musketeers, and never doesagain. Victor Hugo Is ever grotesque,however great his genius may havebeen. The Italian writers fall In the

name direction. They try to be realistic and fall to be human. Tolstoy errson the wane Hide, great nn his powerIn. Even the Scandinavian does notreHch the Knl though ho Htrlves afterIt.

There reninln the Anglo-Saxo- n andthe Teutonic wmools. There have doneIn the past, and will again In the fu-

ture the grand work of human litera-ture, the uplifting nnd the ennobling.Much that Is worthless will of coursecome from our printing presses, but theworthless Is soon cast Into oblivion,while the true thought lasts.

Both Dickens and Thackeray had thisinsight Into humanity. Dlckns wasthe prose poet of humble life. Hismagic touch made the sordid home Intoa palace of love. What could be poor-

er than the Christinas dinner at whichTing Tim took part and that couldbe more gorgeous In lmglnatlon. Whywas la so brilliant? because of the spiritof love and homo lnlluonce. The hum-

ble becomes gilded, the commonplaceIs beautllled. If Dickens' nrt did this,It did far more than ever any of Mr.Howells' dllletante works have everdone.

Thackeray with his big heart andtrue love of humanity, often tried toconceal It under an aspect of cynicism.But he has drawn for us some of themost loveable and most admirable ofcharacters. There Is not In the rangeof fiction a truer gentlemen In everysense of the word than Colonel New-com- e.

To any one who does not knowthat chivalrous, erring, simple manthere must be a distinct loss. He wasone of the greatest of creations and toread a man of Mr. Howells' calibre,

the writer of such a conceptioncalls forth atagonism at once.

It may be safe to say that Dickensand Thackeray will bo read by futuregenerations which will know not eventhe titles of the books written by Wil-liam Dean Howells.

Stocks appear to bo very firm, andthough the wild speculation of eighteenmonths ago is a thing of the past, thepresent attitude of our investments isa very solid one. High priced stockshold a very enviable position, there hasbeen no tumble for months. In pointof fact with most of them there hasbeen a quiet advance.

The West Point matter does not trou-ble any one here. A man who wantsa career can do a great deal better,financially, In the Territory, than hecan by becoming an army officer. Ouryoung men of brains have their workcut out to develop the country thatthey are In. Nominations to West Pointhave never been very popular In theWest. Hawaii belongs to the West, andtha means It belongs to the statebuilders.

The single tax men are coming to thefront, and no doubt Henry George'sbook will bo much In demand in theTerritory. Henry George got hold ofa good Idea, but like many a good manbefore him he just missed it practi-cally. However If we are to have aslngletax argument, It will employ thebrains of the Territory to some pur-pose. It will require considerable skillto prove the single tax men in thewrong, and there will be lots of funahead.

The land question will be settled oneway or another during this session.What earthly good is It to throw mudwhile the question is hanging In thenails. This land question always looksas if it was the last resort of any onewho had nothing hard to say. "Noth-ing to say!" says the head of the com-bine, and the words end in a deepgrowl. Forthwith appears any amountof cursing on the land question. Theprobability is that when there is any-thing to bo said upon the question oflands, it will bo very authoritative in-

deed and very different from what Issupposed by some.

The kahuna, in spite of all lawagainst his or her practice Is still withus, and is every now and again creditedwith n death. The curious thing Is thatthere are Americans and Europeanshere who fully believe In the kahuna.It Is an odd typo of mind, but one quiteunderstandable. Witches are still be-

lieved in by many people, and the samelow type of intellect believes in the ka-

huna. This belief or seml-bell- ef is notby any means confined to the uneducat-ed. There are reversions to low ancestral type which in spite of all educationhave a very thorough belief in bothwitchcraft and kahunaism. It Is veryodd, but it is very true.

In tHe estimates of the Russian NavalBudget for 1901 are several Items thatwill, in all probability, involve largeimports of manufactures. Four largeironclads are to bo built at St. Peters-burg, the Borodino, the Orel, tho Em-per-

Alexander III, and the PrinceSuvaroff, of 13,516 tons each. Tho nr- -mor plate for tho ilrst and third ofthese has already been ordered in thoUnited States, and contracts for otherportions of their equipment may even-tually be placed In this country. Othervessels to bo built at St. Petersburgare an Ironclad for coast defense, of5,000 tons; a cruiser for the Pacific of3,000 tons: a coal transport of 7,200 tons,and a small Imperial yacht and twolarge torpedo boats. At Nikolaleff, onthe Black Sea, one-firs- t class cruiserof 6,250 tons Is to bo constructed, andsix torpedo boats of 350 tons each. AtSebastopol another cruiser, of the samesize, is to be built und twelve torpedoboats. Tho armament of these vesselswill consist of nine guns of 12.40 In.,two guns of 8.4D In., 41 quick-fir- e gunsof 6 In., nine qulck-Hr- o guns of 120 mm.,80 quick-flr- e gunB. of ,75 mm., 103 guns of47 mm., 23 guns of 37 mm., and ten gunsof 2'4 In. of the Baranofsky system.

mn ' HAWAIIAN BTAR,- - VTHWIIBDAT, JANUARY 10, 1M1.

Fresh

Flower

SeedJUST RECEIVED

A Large Variety of the

Choicest Garden Seeds, guar-

anteed FRESH.

Asters, PansyMarigold,Verbena,Petunia,Nasturtium,Etc., Etc.,

ALSO FRESH

Vegetable Seeds

Fort Street,Honolulu

At

ward earlierDATE

be

u iLIMITED

Will conmmonco tho NewYear with a series of Specialsales, one each week.

The First Sale, beginning

January 2nd,

Will be

At Half Price.

Now Is tho time to purchase

a beautiful Parlor Lamp, with

a fancy globe, at the price of

an ordinary Lamp.

All the prices, new and old

are marked in plain figures.

Come early and make your

choice.

ftDINDM,LIMITED

IMPORTERS OF

Crockery,GIjisn aiaci

t HouseGoods

Nos. 53, 65 and 67, King Street

M EW

SPECIAL FOR

WEEK

LaceZ long, 5C inches wide

A $1.00 I

IM. &

PHONE 157 $

Something New Sun

A substitute for the whole egg. Contains both white and yolk, and

omelettes, scrambled eggs, waffles, pancakes, and tho Yery bealfancy pies, cakes, puddings, etc. 'vi&2?s" .:.&.hZil

JUST THE ARTICLE TO USE AS A FOP. EGGS.

TEMPLE

in

i

L. B. &

to weof

slX

CO.

ASkirts,

FOR SALE AT

MKT

Boston Block,

Fort Street

MainMASONIC

PURCHASES

Kerr Co., Ltd., QueenvStreet

Owing tremendous Christmas rush weresome

GOODS.

"We

OUR LATEST

THIS

yards

JPaii--

Under the

makec-deliciou- s

SUBSTITUTE

199

the

byetc.

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

HOLLISTER & CO., AGENTS.

unable to bringUP

We are now Showing; New LinesinEvery Department of the House

Under Clothing

Curtains!

Baker's Egg

NOVELTIES

9

for--TO--

4. .

have some very Choice Muslin Underwear, the cannotequaled any other house. full

Covers, Chemises, etc.,

Ladies' Capes

&

BIOCC

BRASCH

valueof Corset A

The very, latest ideas in black Ottoman Silk Capes" andSteamer Capes. Call and See the Goods

we you the Prices

KBRR & COOUEENE3STREET

CO11 LTD,

fashionable

assortment

Then will tell

LTD

Page 5: Iff ' THE HAWAIIAN AR...trived to get up as much fuss about.the style of precedence as that experi-enced In England In 1840, when Queen.Victoria was married to Prince Albert of Suxe-Cobur-

mmmwmmLines of Trench-Chin- a at Cut Hates,Fine Cut Glass at a discount of 25 per cent

from marked prices.

Just OpeiaedYases in Great Variety,

Bohemian Glass and Metal Bric-a-Bra- c atbargain prices.

Bethel Street Household Department,

PACIFIC HARDWARE COMPMY, LTD.,

Call and Sec Copies of the Old MastersAt the Fort Street ArtDepartment

NATIVE! NATIVE!! NATIVE!!!

2

T.118 NUUANU STREET

ARRIVEDEX

Seattle

For Sale by

BESTManilaIlovfma

Porto RloanaA.T

HAWAIIAN TOBACCO CO., LTDMerchant and Nuuanu Also

Hotel Next the New England BBkery

NOTICE.

Notice Is hereby given that the PearlCity Cemetery will be open for Inter-ments on and after Monday, NovemberBth, 1900. A special train leavethe railroad station at 2:15 p. m., dally,remaining at the cemetery until afterall Interments.

The rates for transportation are onedollar for the corpse, and fifty centsfor the round trip for mourners.

Plats are now on sale at the office ofthe company, ranging In price from .$10up, according to location and size. Noother charges of any nature.

HAWAIIAN CEMETERY ASSO-CIATION, LTD.Room 3, Love Building, Fort St.

BMLEY'SIKE

MURATA,

ELIHUETHOMSOH,

Rainier

AH Dealers

CIGARSthe;

NOTICE.

Pianos, Organs, Phonographs andMusic Boxes tuned repaired andPolished by Prof. W. E. Sharp.

WALL NICHOLS COMPANYMusic Department.

NOTICE.

Dr. J. II. Raymond has resumed prac-tice at the residence now occupied byDr. W. J. Galbraith. Office hours, 10 to12 only. Office telephone, 201; residencetelephone, Bl-- e 394.

Telephone 398

P. O. Box 441

Corner Stroots,Street to

funeral

Children's Bicycles for Christmas gifts. We arc making to order theFINEST LITTLE BICYCLE In the neatest, daintiest stylo for little people.Price J25.00 wltn the best equipment. Nothing slighted, plain, lustrous,black Enamels, guaranteed. ICEStKVi

We offer for $25.00 a Bicycle that we will guarantee, cannot be duplicatedIn this city. Made in our own workshop. Forged connections. SeamlessTubing, Double Tube Tires or single, Single piece cranks, FULLY GUAR-ANTEED. Free wheels, $30.00.

The Beblke is ont a last year's wheel bought at bankrupt sales, butmade especially for Honolulu trade In Honolulu.

Headquarters for Repairs andPuncture Proof Tires

BAILEY'S HONOLULU CYCLERY CO.,j MMITBD.

227.B220IIAND 231 KINCB3TREET.

- .t

THE HAWAIIAN STAIl, THUnBDAY, JANUARY JO, 1901.

To Attorneys,And to whom it niny concern :

I beg to call your attention to mycapabilities as an auctioneer, and re-spectfully solicit such business asmight be at your disposal. I act as ref-eree; conduct such sales ns are formal-ly demanded In the transaction of legal affairs; make appraisements andact as administrator of estates. Ihave all the facilities necessary for thesuccessful conduct of this especial classof business, I am a licensed auctioneer,thoroughly familiar with nil the re-quirements demanded in the office assuch, and PERSONALLY CONDUCTall sales. In short, I will take full andcomplete charge of all affairs apper-taining to real estate.

Real Estate Owners.

My Real Estate Department Is devoted to the listing and sale of Realty,ana is most thoroughly equipped. Mymethods are peculiarly my own andare uniformlly of satisfaction to allwith whom I have business relations,as In all the departments the utmostcourtesy Is extended to all. Special attention given to the subdivisions ofoutlying tracts. Twenty-fiv- e and moioyears experience justifies this state-ment.

House RentingAND

Collecting of RentsIn no department of the real estate

business should greater caution be ex-ercised than In these departments. EX-PERIENCE, TRUSTWORTHINESS,AND AFFABILITY are absolutelynecessary. Good Judgment, businessforesight and a devotion to the inter-ests of my clients, while being guidedby their personal preferences Is my as-surance I give to those placing theirbusiness in my hands.

WILL E. FISHERREAL ESTATE AGENT AND

AUCTIONEER.

Corner Merchant and Alakea Streets.

JBfeb. LTjgr

ai lit '.AGENTS

,SALE Or REAL ESTATE.;F. J. LOWERY, President.C. D. CHASE, VIce-Pre- s. and Manager,ARTHUR B. WOOD, Treasurer.J. A. uILMAN, Secretary.E. P. DOLE, Auditor.

FOR SALE !

Lot or Vineyard Street, 1 07feet front. Three cottages,bu.lt in 1899, well rented todesirable tenants. "Will besold at a very low price.

ISLAND REALTY CO.C. D. Chase, Manager,

Office 204 Judd Building, Tdophone, Main 310.

NOTICE.I respectfully notify the public that

I have opened a general business agen-cy at the corner of King and Bethelstreets, Honolulu.

I am prepared to undertake trusts,buy and sell real estate, collect rents,Invest funds, etc., etc.

All business Instrustcd to me willreceive prompt and careful attention.

v C. II. DICKEY.

NOTICE

Is hereby given to all concerned, thatn administrator of the Estate C. n,

I do not hold myself responsi-ble for nti" sale or mortgago taken onproperty, lands or income of said es-tate.

FATHER SYLVESTER,Administrator.

llOONIifFont HUNDRED ARRIVE AT NEW

ORLEANS.

To be Met There by C. Welters Repre-senting the Hawallnn Planters WhnlHo Says of the Matter.

NEW ORLEANS (La.), January 1.On January 4th the Hteamshlp Arkadlaof the New Orleans-Port- o Rlcnn linowill arrive here with 400 Porto Rlcnnsbound for the Hawaiian Islands. Ofthat number 200 will be men, 100 womenand 100 children of different ages. C.Wolters, nn agent of the Hawaiian su-gar planters, arrived In this city fromSan Francisco tonight. Ho will meetthe Arkudla and her passengers at thisport and accompany them to the Pa-cific. He explained his presence by say-ing that some of the San Franciscopapers had done all In their power tokill the business and to crente dissat-isfaction and rebellion among the firstlot of Porto Rlcans:

He said: "They told those poor Ig-

norant people that they were beingtaken to Hawaii, where they would besold Into slavery to Chinese, to be ruledand governed by them. I came on toNew Orleans to accompany the peopleto San Francisco and to see that theynre all right."

"You consider the chango a goodone?"

"I do. Indeed. In Porto Rico thesenatives receive only 3S cents a day, andthey must furnish everything theirhomes, their food, medical attendanceana everything. In Hawaii they willreceive $15, $10 and $17 per month, respectively, for the first three years, atthe expiration of which time they willreceive a bonus."

"How do the two countries com-pare?"

"I have been In both, and I know theconditions. These Porto Rlcans shouldthank their lucky stars that they canget to a country like Hawaii. PortoRico Is crowded, and In many of thedistricts gaunt famine stalks abroadWhat they need Is a thinning out andmaking room for those to live whoare left behind. It Is a Godsend thatsome can get away, and to a countrylike Hawaii, where labor Is needed andIn great demand."

Nflllfl'S HI IIPERMITS LEPERS TO RIDE IN

Pl'IJLIC HACKS.

Public indignation, and Official Action.Statement of Agent Pratt OffenderMay be Discharged.

David Nahoolewa, officer In charge otthe iruusier oi lepers uoiween Meaiiictsand tne leeeiving station at liaiuii,win be uiseiplined uy tne liouul otiieulln tomoiiuw afteinuou tor u us

inuuciluii of mies. last ulgiit nepei milled nie iranster of eignt luperouspeisons Hum uie bcnooner Lenpse luivaiun lu public nacKu. inure was lo

iiuilgnaiion in lown over tileuliuir, and Dr. i'rait, executive officerof Hie 'Uoard, has uiKen up tile inutierin lis most seilous aspects, lie saidtills morning:

"The nrsi step taken in the mattertoday by me was 10 burnt lor the twoiiaeKH tmit letnoved the lepers to Kull-li- l,

and to have botli tnoiougiily disin-iecte- d

inside and out. i took tile state-ments of tne drivers both of wnom arereliable men, trom all accounts, anathey state that tliey have not nuu any-one in trie liaciis except niuiiisuivussince leaving Kallhl fast night. Itseems mat wnile tne transier us tail-ing place the police discovered mat amistake had been maUe unit Deputyyherilt Chiltlngworlh oideieu the iiaewsnot to go out again until the matterwas settled.

"i caretully questioned Nahoolewa Inthe matter. He acknowledged to metint lie violated tny very strict oldergiven to him a month ago. He said,nowever. that the hacks were not or-dered by him but by the clerk at mestation house. That is the only cir-cumstance i know of in his defense.1 told him that 1 considered his actionIn such direct disobdience of ordersgiven him that I would have to bringthe matter before the Board of Healtufor action, determination of whetherhe may be allowed to continue in thedepartment or be discharged.

"As an additional precaution for thefuture 1 have requested the police au-thorities to notify mo at the same timethey notify the Kallhl officer of the ar-rival of lepers. I have also InstructedNahoolawe that upon receipt of noticeof the urrival of lepers he shall hitchup the Board of Health's wagon an 1drive to the wharf or police station, usthe case ncy be, and wait for me. Heis not to turn a hand until I arrive, andI will personally see that the rules arestrictly adhered to. It seems to methat that will be an adequate sait-guar- d

for the future. '

The eight lepers arrived late lastevening. Naholewa c'alms that lie wentto the Hoard of Health's stables butthat the wagon was gone. While hewas away tile clerk at the stationhouse telephoned for the hacks. Af-ter that, however, Nuhoolewa permittedthe transportation of the diseased per-sons to Kallhl In the public vehicles.

Nahoolewa lias been connected withthe Board of Health a number of yearsand hus ben considered a competentand careful officer. The men over himregret Ills error for that reason, as wellas tho serious Infraction of the rules,but are not disposed to uphold him onthat account.

BISHOP NINDE DEAD.DETROIT, January 3. Bishop W. X.

Nlnde, aged OS years, of the MethodistEpiscopal church, was found dead Inbed at his home hero today. It Isthought tho cause of death was hearttrouble. He attended a funeral yester-day and caught a cold.

Deceased had been a Bishop of theMethodist Episcopal church since 1884.Ho wns at one time a missionary InIndia. He leaves a wife, three sons andone daughter. ,

ANOTHER STORM IN 'FRISCO.SAN FRANCISCO. January 4. The

storm King took possession of SanFrancisco yesterday and from earlymorn till midnight tho elements heldundisputed sway, resulting In much In-

convenience to the citizens and a limit-ed amount of damage within the city'slimits and on the bay.

The gale seems to bo raging not onlyon the southern coast hut all nlong theline ns far as Flattery. The Gipsy re-or- ts

a gale blowing at Santa Cruz andthe schooner J. Epplnger went ashoreat Fort Ross and becamo a total loss.

Second Hand Typewriters all makes,at Pacific Cycle Company, Fort street.

Fine Book nnd Commercial Printingat the Star Office.

MAKItllSD. IK ItJCItKlCUtY.HHHKHhi.1 Jununiy 1. Mini Mills

Klrtnil. diumhter of Rev. Allen M. Em-to- n

of thf Flint I'liHMIiin (."hutch, wasmurii d at t o'clock tonight to Dr. Ij. F.Snndow .if Kauai. The ceremony lookplace at the Klston home, at 202 Chall-nlli-

way, and was performed by thefather of the btlde. The bridesmaidsfere Miss Ruth lliititiln and Miss .Ma

bel W'HItllck anil the KliiotriMinen wereJ. Arthur Ulstoti anil Sidney Klston,Dlotlicis or the bride. After a shortwedding ttip, Mr. and Mrs. Sandow willgo to the Islands to reside. Dr. SnndowIs the Government physician of the Isl-and of Kauai.

FUNERAL OF LAN'GFELDT.Loills Langfeldt, the Ice wagon driver

who was nccidently run over vestenla.- -

and met an almost Instant death, wuahurled In the new cemctcrv at PmrlCity early this afternoon. The funetulwas in charge of Oahu Lodge, IC. of P.The procession left the Castle hull nt 1

o'clock and proceeded to the Onhu railway depot. There some of the mem-bers dropped out, not being able tomake the trip, but a mmdlv numbercontinued to the cemetery and parti- -ciiiuivu in tne nnai ceremonies.

NEW AHVEKTISKJUJVr

AUCTION SALEOF

Delinquent Stock

IN THE

Kihei Plantation Co.,LIMITED.

ON SATURDAY, JAN. 2G,AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON,

At my salesroom, Co Oueen Street,Honolulu, I will sell at Public Auctionby order of the Treasurer, Mn. J. P.Cooke, the following certificates ofstock In the Kihei Plantation Co., Ltd.,vnlcss the 10th assessment due October1st, 1900, delinquent November 30th,1900, witli interest and advertising ex-penses is paid on or before the day andhour of sale at tho office of Alexander

Baldwin, Judd Building, Honolulu.No. Certf. No. Shares.

rl J. C. Biggins ... 10M. Swahn 50:

71, 149, 450, 494, 537, 1193, 1429, 1575,W. C. Achl 11501

S F. B. Angus .... 10108 S. Hookano 10222, 320, HOC, 17SS.S. Lesser 120229 P. M. Lvdlir .... 200280, 281, 432, 511, S17, 848. 849, 850,

1388 Wong Leong ... 2C0311 Lee Chu 50334 Chip Cluing 5352, 394, ICS! E. R. Stackable.. 40353 Chlng Lum 25417, 1052, 1081 A. L. Young 30429 H. A. Bunsen... 10431 W. J. Robertson 3543G Nancy Archer .. 5101 N. G. Chock 10550 11. G. Gallagher. 105C1 D. II. Lewis .... 40C21 Lam Yip 10C30. C31, G5, 815 .11. B. Schrotke. 125C79, CS0, 1091, 1102,. C. H. Laage.... CO

711, 15CC D. J. Fisher.... 15718 W. S. Hyman.... 23733 G. G. Kinney ... 257C9 W. Gassett 33775 E. S. Taylor 10803 G. A. Howard, Jr 10900 Chas Wilcox, Tr 259C9 F. Hustace, Tr.. 5992 M. Bowers 20

1008 Mrs. S. Collins.. 401037 Chip Chong 10105S How Chong 51059 Young Chong.... 51001, 1183, 1293, 1414, 1423, 1420, 1427,

ir.fi.1, 1574, 16(51, 1CI5, 1C79, 18C8.Hawaii Land Co.

, Ltd 5101073 J. McQueen .... 501132, 1133 T. A. Burning-ha- m

' 401139,1730 Geo. Martin .... 251199,1200,1380 A. M. Brown.... 2251208 H. E. Walty .... 501271 A. B. Lindsay... 501317 Chlng See Lin.... 51318 Chlng Man Kar. 151320 Chas. Phillips ... 1013S9, 1390 Geo. Manson ... 301415 Miss K. Kelley.. 101425 J. C. Denny 101110 C. II. Clapp 251455 H. p. Itoth 1001505 B. J. Fisher 51529 Chas. Wilcox.... 201532, 1534 1549, 1572, 1CI0, 1033

J. H. Fisher 2001558 , .Tas. Lennon ....15S1..V. J. Makalnal ....lfi.r.i?, 1C78, 1089 W. C. Achl, Jr.. 311071 G. Schuman .... 501080 Joe Andrade .... 1910SC Law Tang 151090 D. H. Lewis, Tr 31701 Yee Chin 71720 Dr. J. S. McGrew 1001802 L. E. Plnkhnm.. 141SC3 C. J. Falk 3

Surplus of Sale 9th Asst.1S9 S. P. French .... 5237 E. F. Monarratt 11315 Bow Hoy (i

522 ; Joo Stcetz 11937 Lee Chu 2,r990 J. H. Boyd 1

1077 A. B. Ingnlls .... 51212 W. F. Jocher.... 21783.: W. E. Rowell.... 7

J. P. COOKE, Treasurer.Honolulu, January 10, 1901,

JAS. F. MOBfiAN,AUCTIONEER.

CHU srN,Nuuanu Street near Kukui Street.

HAS OPENED A

Grocery StoreAND IS NOW READYFOR BUSINESS.

Extra Fine Groceries. Fresh KonaCoffee, California and Island Butter,Fruits and Vegetables.

DIVIDES!) NOTICE.

The seventh (7) monthly dividend ofone (1) per cent Is now duo and payableat the ofllco of Bailey's Honolulu Cy-cle- ry

Co.', Ltd., 103-10- 7 Klni' Street.J. S. BAILEY. Treasurer.

DEUTSCHE! GOTTESDIENST.

Ilerr Pastor Isenberg wlrd am Sonn-ta- g

den 13ten Januar um 11 Uhr mor-ge-

deutschen Gottesdlenst in der Y.M. C. A. Halle abhalten.

DER GEMEINDEVORSTAND.

vrvm

THAT TIRED FEELINO.What constitutes a load depends etf

tho strength of tho man or twist witbos to carry It and tho conditionsunder which ho carries It. Wo hoarpeoplocontlnunlly talk of lwlng tlreiSwho havo not dotio enough work tomakothumso. Tills sensation isjiopu-larl- y

spoken of as ' that tired feoling." People who havo it often takestimulants to drivo itaway . A relapsefollows and they feel more weary nxrfidepressed than before For tho trouMuIs nntin the muscles but in tho blood.Certain humors or iwlsons arising:from indigestion or otiierwl.so deprtvotho blood of Its sustaining life-givin-

powor, producing a result similar towhat would follow from loo muchoxortlou and too litllo rest. Rutwhereas In tho caso of a healtiiy per-son tho tired feeling would paas awayunder tho inlltienco of sleep and ro-po-

it Is not so in this instance. Thosleep is broken anil the sufferer risesIn the morning unrelreshed and fool-ing as heavy find dull iis when hewent to bod. An effective remedy liko

WAMPOLE'S PREPARATIONis needed to purge tho blood of th im-purities which prostrate the tierrorand sap the sources of physical vigorIt Is palatable its liniiwy and containtho nutritive find curatlvo proportiosof PuroCod Liver Oil, extracted by usfrom fresh cod livers, combined withtho Compound Syrup of Uypophos-phite- s

and tho Extracts of Malt an8Wild Cherry. In all exsos of Wasting;Disease, Rheumatism, Bowel Com-plaints, Fevers, Poverty of Brood,Weakness and lack of Nervous Tone,it cotno.4 more nearly to being a speci-fic than any other known retueJy.You may trust it on its merits. Onobottlo convinces. Genuine is effectivefrom tho first doso. " You cannot tdi6ppoiuted in it." Sold by all chemists.

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THISFirst Circuit, Territory ot Hawaii.At Chambers In Piobate.

In the matter of the Estate of X. A,Dolron, late of Honolulu, Oahu, de-ceased.

The Last Will and Testament of sniadeceased, having been presented tosaid Court, tcether with a petition forthe Probate thereof, and for th" tssu-nn- ce

of Letters of Administration withwill annexed to David Day tor '..ivlnicbeen filed; notice Is hereby gt-- i thatFRIDAY, the Sth day of Febi ui. y, A.D. 1901 at 10 o'clock a in., of t.iiu dayat the Court Room of said C art. atHonolulu, Onhu. be and the same he.3-b- y

is appointed the time and place forproving said will and hearing said npplication, when nnd wheie any perc-?- r

Interested may annear and show co";If any they have, whv the prayer olsaid petition should not be granted.

Honolulu, January 2, 1901.By the Court:

P. D. KELLETT, JR.,Clerk.

P. Neumann, Eso,.. Attorney forAgatha Nott, petitioner.

4ts Jan. 3, 10, 17 nnd 24.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, FIRSTCircuit of the Territory of Hawaii.In Probate At Chambers.

In the matter of the Estate of JamesA. Hopper, late ot Honolulu, Oahu,deceased, testate.

The Last Will and Testament ot saiddeceased, having been presented tosaid Court, together with a petition forthe probate thereof, and for the Issu-ance of Letters Testamentary to EllenL. Hopper, William Ij. Hopper and JS.Wells Peterson having been filed.

Notice Is hereby given that FRIDAY".February 1st. A. D. 1901 at 10 o'clocka. m. In the Judiciary Building, Hono-lulu, Oahu, is appointed the time nndplace for proving snld will and hear-ing said application, when nnd whereany person interested may appear nnclshow cause, if any they have why thejprayer of said petition should not bogranted.

Honolulu, Onhu, December 27, A. D.1900.

By the Court:J. jk. THOMPSON",

Clerk-- .

Kinney, Ballou & McClanahan forpetitioners. ,

4ts-De- c. 27, Jan. 3, 10, 17.

.NOTICE.

Concrete sidewalks and concrete worlsof any kind done according to specifi-cations, cheap and In a substantialmechanic-lik- e manner, satisfactionguaranteed. JOE CORREIA.

Inquire at tho office of J. H. Schnack.

BYAUTHORITYSEALED TENDERS.

Will bo received nt tho ofllco of thSuperintendent of Public AVorks till ISo'clock noon of Friday, January 11th,for the construction of a Storm WaterDrain on Alakea Street.

Plans and specifications at the ofllcq;of Assistant Superintendent of Public- -

Works.Tho Superintendent of Public Worka

does not bind 'himself to accept tlmlowest or any bid.

J. A. McCANDLESS,Superintendent of Public Works.

January 9, 1901.

NOTJCE

CATHOLIC CEMETERY.

All privilege holders nt tho CnilinlifCemetery on King street nre requestedto pay a contribution of $(5.00) dollarsat tho office of the Catholic Missionduring this month of January, 1901.Any one failing to nav the nmnimtshall loose nil rights or privileges. Intho future the Catholic Mission willtake charge of claiming all lots.

By order,F. H. VALENTIN.

IN THE WAY.One tlilntr which

way of tho plan to made Grover Cleve-land Honntnr frnm Mnur i . -republican majority In the legislature.

Page 6: Iff ' THE HAWAIIAN AR...trived to get up as much fuss about.the style of precedence as that experi-enced In England In 1840, when Queen.Victoria was married to Prince Albert of Suxe-Cobur-

if.

NUUANU STREET.

Merchant TailorClothing made to order,

ultd Guaranteed toFit and In latest Styles.Cothen Cleaned and Repaired,Dyed at Reasonable Hates,Spectat Uniform.

iry Goods, Cigars, Tobacco

FOR SALE!A large down town Wnre-- n

uao.A. central lv located Lotte-nt- f

House with Cottage.lousiness Property in the

heart of City.Residenco Property.

FOE SALE OR RENT.

A. 3 acre lot in NuuanuValley with large house andseveral cottages.

HENRY WATKRIIOUSE & CO.

A Summer Proposition.Well, now there's the

ICE QUESTION!Tou know you'll need Ice; you know

afs a necessity In hot weather. WeaKeve you are anxious to get that Ice

will give you satisfaction, and'd like to supply you. Order from

HOFFMANN AND MARKHAM.

Telephone 3151 Blue, Postofflce Box 606.

We Don't SellEarthquakes

But we have the largest assortmentof Hardware, Stoves, Ranges, Cut-.ler- y,

Glassware and China, there Is

tin the Islands. By recent arrivalswe have added largely to our stockflf

HAVILAND CHINA,'SILVERWARE ANDCUTLERY.

So that it Is today the best In thecity. Manila and Sisal Rope, allsizes; celebrated Pansy Stoves andGolden Anvil Steel Ranges.

The AermotorThe only Windmill made of steel,and that will run in a dead calm.Buffalo Scales, Victor Fireproof

ffSafes, Gate City Filters, Paints, OilswJJjd Varnishes,

Builder's HardwareCarpenters' and Machinists' Tools,which we sell at prices lower thanever before.

IllFORT STREET.OPPPOSITE SPRECKELS BANK

Oriental GoodsNEW IMPORTATION OF Silk

rioods, in the piece; Silk Handkerchiefs;-- 4!k Shawls; Decorated riower Pots;szw Porcelain Cups and Saucers; Teauad Dinner Sets; Carved Ivory; RattanTi.airs; Carved Sandalwood Boxes.

Those Coods are the HandsomestIn all Honolulu

WING WO CHAN & CO.210-21- 2 Nuuanu Street.

?. G. IRWIN & CO.. LTD.,

WTm. G. Irwin. .President and Manager"laus Spreckels. ..First Vice-Preside- nt

(X-- M. Glffard Second Vice-Preside- nt

3 M. Whitney, Jr..Sec'y and TreasurerJ. Ros3 Auditor

Sugar Factors,Commission Agents

AGENTS OF THE

mkm STEAMSHIP COMPANY

OF SAN FRANCISCO. CAL.

CHAS. HUSTACE.12 KING STREET. TEL. MAIN 119

Beiween Fort and Alakoa Sts.DEALER IN

;R0CKRIES and PROVISIONS,

Fresh California Roll gutter andIsland Butter always on hand.

wresh goods received by every steamerfrom San Francisco.

SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.

Lin. Sing Kee,TINSMITH.

oes Sanitary PlumbingNuuanu Street, Opposite Emma

Fine Book and Commercial Printingtit the Star OiUce.

A Bad SkinBoils. Pimples, Impure Blood.

Hoils nre simply very largo pimples.Tho trouble is not in thu skin, Hutdown deep In tho Mood, You cannotliavo n pood, smooth skin unless It isnourished by jmro blond; nntl tho onlyway to mnko your Mood pure Is to taken strong blond-purifyin- g medicine.

Mr. 1 Klllau, of 370 Hau Street,North Fitzroy, Victoria, scuds us thisletter aud his photograph;

"I had a most frljrhtfnl nttnok of bolls andClmplos liroaknitf etit ull over my body. I had

luueli about

Sarsaparillathot-pli- t I would giro it a trial. It took only

four buttles to drho nil tho impurities out ofmy pstcm and luako my blood rliii. I havoen-joje- d

tho Lest of health ccr felneo I took It."

If your toiHjuo Is coated, If your food dis-tresses you, if you arc constipated or bilious,take. Ajer's rills.Trcparcd by Dr. J. C. Acr Co., Lowell, Mass., V. S. A.

THE)

Greatest Invention

OF THE

IN THE

Typewriter LineIS THE

Ca'l and Inspect the

Machine at the

1 H(LIMITED.)

MERCHANT STHEET

o iday Goods

ROBINSON BLOCK,

HOTEL STREET.

DACK SANG,'Ir" St , opposite Kawaiahao Church.

GROCERIES, CIGARS,TOBACCO, CALIFORNIAAND ISLAND FRUIT.

KWONQ FAT CHAN,

Opening, Saturday, May 19th. Dryand gents' furnishing goods; boots andshoes. Corner Nuuanu and Kingstreets.

Wm.e,.r&rin&So.,Lfd,FIRE AND MARINEINSURANCE AGENTS

AGENTS FOR THERoyal Insurance Company of Liverpool,Alliance Assurance Company of Lon

don.Alliance Marine and General Assuranc

Co.. Ltd.. of London.Scottish Union National Insurance

Comoany of Eulnburgh.Wllhelma of Magdeburg General Insur

ance ComDanv.Associated Assurance Co., Ltd., of Mu

nlch and Berlin.

iTHE HAWAIIAN STAR, THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 1001.

iiARMY UK iiliOAVIATinN AND

SHIP SIIISIIUKH.

The Reapportionment Men mire In theHouse River and Harbor JJI11 to tho

Front Other Matters.

WASHINGTON, January 2. ThoHouse will probably dispose of tho re-apportionment bill this week, althoughChairman Burton of the Rivers andHarbors Committee Is Inclined to eon-te- st

thelight of wiiy of the Census com-mitto- e.

The reapportionment bill, car-rying out as it does, a constitutional re-quirement, Is n matter of higher privi-lege than an appropriation bill, and IfChairman Hopkins Insists It probablywill be given priority. Hopkins, how-evt- r,

may yield If he Unas that anylarge proportion of the members willnot return from their holiday vacationIn time to vote upon the measures thisweek. A determined fight will be madeoganst his bill by members from stateswhich would lose representatives underIt, and Hopkins desires a full Housewhen the vote Is taken. He Is eonlldentthat his measure will carry witli a fullatlenda lice.

The general expectation among Sen-ators is that the ilrst few days of thetime of the Senate after the reconven-ing tomorrow will be devoted to con-sideration of the army reorganizationbill, but there Is some disposition tomnke an arrangement for a division oftime that will permit of the' continued

of the ship subsidy billilurlng a part of each day. When theCommittee on Order of Business, ropreimiinf inn ifniin 111 inn 11 h o i i tnra s n.

nte made the subsldv bill tho leirnlnrorder of business at the beginning ofthe nrespnt session there was an under- -standing that when the Army billshould be presented for considerationthe other measures should be laid asidetemporarily If considered necessary Inorder to secure the prompt passage ofthe Army bill. There is apparently adisposition on the part of 'some Sen-ators partially to disregard this agree-ment, and the friends of the subsidy billmost of whom are also supporters ofthe Army bill, are trying to secure anunderstanding for confinement of thediscussion of the Army bill to themorning hour of the Senate's daily pro-ceedings, giving the time each day af-ter 2 o'clock to the subsidy bill.

There has been a general surmise thatSenator Coekrell would offer a substi-tute for the Army bill, but he statedtoday that he hud no such intention,at the same time expressing his convic-tion that the bill should be pressed toearlv disposition because of tho condi-tions In the Philippines.

CONSUL-GENERA- WILDMAN.WASHINGTON, January 2. United

States Consul-Gener- al Wlldman atHong Kong has been granted leave ofabsence and will return to the UnitedStates Immediately.

SECRETARY HAY INDISPOSED.WASHINGTON, January 2. Secre-

tary Hay is again Indisposed and wasconfined to his home today.

QUEEN TO VISIT FRANCE.OSBORNE lisle of Wight,) January

2. It is olllelally announced that QueenVictoria has decided unless somethingunforseen happens, to visit Clmlez, inthe south of France, in March or April.

LEGISLATION FOR HAWAII.WASHINGTON, January 2 Another

bill well be offered to amend statutesregulating Immediate transportation ofdutiable goods to Include the ports ofHonolulu and Hilo allowing vessels tocarry goods in bond to those ports.

OLD STYLES IN BOOTS.On the other side of Canal street, in

the local Latin uuarter, says the NowOrleans Times-Democra- t, there Is a lit-tle cobbler's shop that looks like anetching by Durer. The tools, stuck inleather loops, have an air of seriousantiquity, like decayed gentlefolk, andover the threshold is an empty wickerbird cage, canted at just the right an-gle to make what the artists call "agood composition." The cobbler him-self Is a smallish, stoop-shoulder- manwith a perfectly bald head and ironspectacles half way down his nose. Theother day he told a friend how the an-cient and honorable craft of boot-ma- k

ing had gone into decline. "I wasworking for myself two years beforethe California excitement began in 40

said. "Those were grand days. Allgentlemen wore boots then made outof the finest calfskin, with tops abouttwelve Inches high. The Wellingtonboots were fashionable just about mytime, but I've made a few pair, mostlyfor foreign gentlemen, and they lookedvery elegant outside or tight pantaloonsThe top was generally morocco. Ithugged the calf of the leg close andcnine to a point In front, finished witha small red or purple tassel. But theboot that everybody wanted was aplain, line-grain- calf-ski- n, and ithad to fit like a glove or it wouldn'tdo at all. Do you see those lasts up onshelf? Well, tho men they were madefor are dead now, the whole crowd;but I'll bet you there Isn't one last Inthe lot that hasn't been patched oraltered at least forty times. Feet willchange more from year to year thanyou have any Idea of, nnd we had tojeep track of such changes so ns tomake the boot set perfectly snug. Inthose days a gentleman, especially ayoung gentleman who went into society, wouldn t have a boot that hecould wear without cursing for the ilrstweek or so. They wanted them tighttight ns wax and every young buckhad his collection of boothooks nndbootjacks to get them on or off. Thosetools were common birthday andChristmas presents back In the 40s andnos, and some of them were gotten upvery fine. I've seen boothooks withsilver mounts nnd mahogany handlesthat cost $100 a pair."

NOT HIS FAULT."There Is one tiling I like about you,"

said the Intimate friend, "and that isyour lack of vanity. You don't pretendto be the greatest actor the worm nnsever seen."

"No," answered Mr. StormlngtonBarnes, thoughtfully, "but I would be,if the world would only come to seeme." Washington Star.

A PROMINENT CHICAGO WOMANSPEAKS.

Prof. Roxa Tylor, of Chicago, Vice-Preside- nt

Illinois Woman's Alliance,In speaking of Chamberlain's Coiij;hRemedy, says: "I suffered with asevere cold this winter which threaten-ed to run Into pneumonia. I tried diffe-rent remedies but I seemed to growworse and the medicine upset mystomach. A friend advised me to tryChamberlain's Cough Remedy and Ifound it was pleasant to take and Itrelieved me at once. I am now entirelyrecovered, saved a doctor s bill, timeand suffering, nnd I will never be without this splendid medicine again." Forsale by all dealers, Benson, Smith &Company, general agents HawaiianIslands,

I fifllSltl'.I'iiUT ON IT FOR THIS STATE

OF COLORADO.

Chairman of the Colorado Tax Commis-

sion Strong in His Praises of a Sys-

tem Operating In the Colonies.

In n recent article discussing the re-port of the Colorado Tux Commissionwhich Iiub just been published, JosephLeggclt writes ns follows;

The chairman of the Colorado TaxCommission, Senator James W. Btlck-lli- i.

of Grunil Junction, has made hisreport to the Commission, nnd his re-port, with that of the Commission, hnsbeen printed for presentation to thoLegislatuie. The members of the Com-mission, by the resolution providing fortheir appointment, were "Instructed toInvestigate tho tax laws of New Zea-land and the Australian colonies andthe effect of such laws."

Mr. Bucklin was deputed by his col-leagues to visit the Australasian colo-nies, and did so during the winter of

0. lie sailed from San FranciscoNovember 20, 18D9, and arrivedthere on his return in the early partof the following March. Since thattime he has been busily engaged In thepreparation of his report. It makes adocument of forty-eig- pages, and Isthe most valuable contribution to theliterature of practical taxation yetmade.

In his preface to tho report, Mr.Bucklin says: "All that I claim forthis report Is strict accuracy In detall- -

itn. unit ifitib tjii; vjii-- i uoiuuadrawn therefrom are conservative. Myhope Is that the American States, and

st of lny own State of Colorado,"uy nisew ise mm renei irom imoierable fiscal and economic conditions byadopting tile rational system of tuxa.-tlo- n

which has been so successful inthe pro ressive colonies of Australasia."

In tho collection of his facts, hetraveled more than twenty thousandmiles, nnd of the manner In which liewas received at the antipodes lie says:"I cannot speak too highly of the greatcourtesy and kindness with which I,ns a representative of Colorado, waseverywhere treated by the people andolllcials of Australasia."

In four of tho seven colonies of Aus-tralasia Mr. Bucklin found in practi-cal operation a "tax law, differentfrom any In America, which, owing toits extensive adoption, prospective ex-tension, and radical departure fromother methods, may properly be calledthe Australasian land value tax. It isa law taxing land according to Itsvalue, excluding all personal propertyand improvements." In New Zealandthere was enacted, in 1S0G. a law whichpermits municipal bodies to determineby popular vote whether or not theywill exempt personal property and Im-provements from taxation, and raisenil local revenues from a tax on landvalues. South Australia has recentlyenacted a similar law, and the Ministryof New South Wales has just Introduc-ed a bill to adopt the same principle.Queensland passed a law in 1S0O whichmakes it compulsory upon local gov-ernment bodies to raise all their localrevenues by a tax on land values. SouthAustralia adopted the principle of landvalue taxation in 18S4, Queensland in1890, New Zealand In 1801, and New-Sout- h

Wales In 1893.As to the practical working of the

system of land value taxation, Mr.Bucklin reports: "The operation of theAustralasian land value tax has al-ways been satisfactory after its effectswere once known, as is shown by thefollowing facts: There has been no ef-fort to repeal It, but, on the contrary,it has been extended nnd improved; nssoon as it has come into operation Inany degree, in. any colony or locality,all opposition to it ceases, and it isthen accepted even by the conserva-tive parties, as a permanent institu-tion; the people of the colonies nevervote against it nor against those whoare identified with the principle estab-lished; it has extended from colony tocolony, and from state to municipalalfalrs, after the trial of numerous oth-er revenue schemes." And he adds:"My conclusions are, after careful ob-servation and the most minute andpainstaking examination of all datawhich I could procure, that the Austra-lasian land value tax Is the best fiscalmeasure, and the greatest fiscal suc-cess, ever adopted by any country orcommunity."' '

Some of Mr. Bucklin s facts are verystriking. He says: "The execss ofarrivals over departures for the threeyears since the passage of the land taxbill were, In New South Wales, 5,159,while In the adjoiuing colony of Vic-toria, which had about equal popula-tion and resources, but did not have,,the Australasian system of taxation,the emigration exceeded the immigra-tion by 50,403." Of New South Wales,he further says: "There has been anincrease of cultivated lands of 905,SG7acres in the three years Immediatelyfollowing the adoption of the land tax,being an increase of more than fiftyper cent over tho entire amount pre-viously in cultivation in the colony.Crime of all kinds has also largely de-creased since the adoption of the law."

The numbers of registered unemploy-ed for the four years preceding thoadoption of the tax were 18,000, 12,145,13,575, and 14.0G2; for the three years fol-lowing Its adoption the numbers were0,427, 1.167, and 3,843. And this not-withstanding the fact that the lastthree years of unprecedented droughtthe colony.

In New Zealand, for the four yearspreceding the adoption of the tax, theexcess of emigration over Immigrationwas 17,789; for the two years imme-diately following its adoption the ex-cess of Immigration over emigrationwas 15,370.

From 1891 to 1898, tho cultivatedlands of New Zealand Increased 3,522,- -091 acres; sown grass lands Increased3,278,501 acres; and tho value of imnrovements Increased S30.000.00U.

The groat Danlt panic or lsua, wnicuclosed thirteen Australian banks, withliabilities of 51G,57G,070. did not closea single bank in New Zealand or SouthAustralia. In which the land tax wasIn operation.

Mr. Bucklin incorporates in his reportletters from tho Premiers of New Zealand and South Austrnlla, from theLabor Secretary of New Zealand, fromHon. George Fowids, M. P., of Auckland, nnd from the Town Clerks of Palmerston North, Now Zealand, nnd ofBrisbane nnd Townsvllle, Queenslandnil of which strongly confirm tho can.elusions ronched by him ns to the efficacy and populnrlty of tho land valuetax in those colonies. Tho report Is amine of the most vnlunblo Informationfor the American people.

SINGLE TAXERS.At tho meeting to bo held next Thurs

day evening the single taxers will dlscuss the matter of forming a club, theobject of which will bo to study anddesslmlnato tho principles Inauguratedby Henry George. It is expected thatthere will be a largo turnout.

Fine Job Printing, Star Ofllce.

NeverBefore

COLUMBIA, high grade chain

wheel at $45.00, with or withoutcoaster brake, 1900 MODELS

Call and See Them at

HALL BUILDING,CORNER KING AND

Bicycle Department,

1 I D

COMPANY

Freight andPassengers forIsland Ports

WHO SHAVES YOU?Why pay more when you can get a

first-cla- ss shave for 15 cents at theClub Barber Shop? White barbers.

H. JEFFS, Prop.No. 43 King Street, corner Bethel.

WILDER COMPANY

Established in 1872.

Estate S, G, Wilder W, C, Wilder

IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN

LUMBER AND COAL

Building MaterialsSUCH AS

DOORS, SASH, BLINDS,

Builders' HardwarePaints, Oils, Glass,

Wall Paper, Etc.Cor. Fort and Queen Streets

HONOLULU. H. L

flovvOLiitirx CuriosKapa, Calabashes, Leis, Native Hats,Hula Skirts, Nilhau Mats, Fans,Shells, Seeds, etc. Home-mad- e Polconstantly on hand. Mending doneneatly, and Cut Flowers furnished by

THE WOMAN'S EXCHANGE,Cor. Hotel and Union Streets, Honolulu.

Telephone GSS.

SacrificeSaleAfter our enormous sales of the past

Holidays, we have a line of brokensizes which must sacrifice In orderto make room for our coming freshlino of clothing. Gents' FurnishingsHats, Caps, Shoes, Trunks and Valises.We quote a few prices on our clothingline which you will do well to Investigate.$15 Suits cut to .$9.00$12.50 Suits cut to . 7.50$10 Suits cut to . 6.50

Etc., Etc., Etc.

DON'T FORGET THE PLACE.

lUHlNfflFortOpposite Club Stablos

Contractors nnd lluildcrsL'nlnUug nnd l'npor Hanging

All Orders Promptly Attended to.

King Street, Op" lte Oahu Lumber Co,

IT AGAIN I

Will be pleased to haye my customertall.

MERCHANT TAILOR.(02 King Street with T. A, Boon

Next to W. W. Dlmond & Co.

Fine Job Printing, Star Ofllce.

.

a

n,Ltd,FORT STREETS

Upstairs

S. HIROKAWA,Beretanla near Punchbowl Street,

Honolulu, H. I.

NEAT AND HANDSOME.MADE TO ORDER.

P. O. Box 885. TeL E62.

HIR0SE SH0TEN,

Aala, cor. Beretanla St,

f2

ISLAND POTATOES.

ALWAYS ON HAND.

8. W. Mhesney & Sons.

Wholesales Grocers nnd Dcnlcrs inLeather and Shoo Findings.

Agents Honolulu Soap Works Companyand Honolulu Tannery.

WING LUNG,King Street, corner Alakea Street.

Fresh Salmon, Grapes, Pears, Apples,Oranges and Lemons.

Received by Australia,

FOR RENT

Cottages,Rooms,

Stores

On the premises of the SanitarySteam Laundry Co., Ltd., betweenSouth and Queen streets.

The buildings are supplied with hotand cold water and electric lights.Artesian water. Perfect sanitation.

For particulars, apply to

J. Lightfoot,On the premises, or at the office of J.A. Magoon.

FOR.A CLEAN SHAVE,

'AN ELEGANT BATHgo to the

PANTHEON SHAVINGPARLORSHotel Street, near Fort.

OAHU RAILWAY AND LAND CD'S

TIME TABLE

From Hiul After Jauuary 1st, 1800.

TBAIN&

STATIONS. Daily Daily(Outward) ex.Suu, D.ly ox.Sun D'ly D'ly

A.M. A,M. r,M, F.M.Honolulu 7:10 0;15 11:05 3:15 5:10,Pearl Olty .8;CU 0:48 11:40 3:47 6:50Kwa Mill ... ..8:33 lO.Ob 12:00 45 0:10,Vala.naa 10:50 . 4:45

Walalua lhffi .... 5:40 Y.'lKuliuku 1 'l ti 0;15 rSTATIONS, Dally

(inward) ex. Sua. D'ly D'ly DlyA.M. A.U. V.M, jr.M

Kilmku.. 5.35 2:08Walalua 0:10 1200wuiauae... .... v:.u .... ,f:ojEwa Mill 6:60 74 1.05 4:33I'earl City 0:15 ft 1:80' 4:53Honolulu 0:10 Sft) 2:0J 6:28

G. P, Denison, f. O. Sunn,Superintendent. Gen, Pass. iTkt.Aet

i1

iI. i w.

i

i

. y

:

Page 7: Iff ' THE HAWAIIAN AR...trived to get up as much fuss about.the style of precedence as that experi-enced In England In 1840, when Queen.Victoria was married to Prince Albert of Suxe-Cobur-

"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,I SHOULD THIRST WHILE ALL THESE DRINKS?"

No reason at all for one to go thirsty as there is a large

supply of PABST BEER on hand.

W. C. PEACOCK CO., LTD.,Sole Agents, Hawaii Territory

Who will do if?Tou are going to have your house

Papered, Painted or Decorated.Who's going to do It?No one does or can do better work

than we. Investigation proves thatfew do aa irnod.

All we ask fur It Is a fair price--not

high, not low. Either extreme Isdangerous.

Any one who gives us work gets thebest going at the fairest and squarestprice.

STERLING, PAIKTBROffice: Union Street, opp. Bell Tower.

Jas. F. Morgan PresidentCecil Brown Vice-Preside- nt

F. Hustacc SecretaryChas. H. Atherton AuditorW. H. Hoogs....Treas. and Mgr.

TELEPHONE MAIN 293.

Hustace&Go.,LidQUEEN STREET

Firewood, Stove,Steam and Blacksmith

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.

Special attention given toDRAYIN O

ALSO, WHITE AND BLACK SAND

Grass Cloths,

Table Covers,

Silk Kimonosand Crepe

Shirts.

Goods for Ladles and GentlemenCall and be Convinced,Holiday Goods now on the. Way

WAVERLEY BLOCK, HOT. L ST.

Do You KnowWhere the BestBread is to heFound?

If not, we will tell you thatthe best bread is to be obtainedat the

German Bakery,PHONE WHITE 3851.

UPPER FORT STREET.

Xcix-XTLltt-tx--o Dealer,BAMBOO FURNITURENEAT AND HANDSOMEMADE TO ORDER.

Also Repairing Renovating, Etc.Star Building, Fort Street.

K; MIYAMOTO,KING STREET NEAR ALAPAI.

Umbrellas, Sun Shades, Etc.MADE AND REPAIRED.

8. Kojima.IMPORTER OF

Japanese Provisions.General Merchandise.AND PLANTATION SUPPLIES.

No. 9 Hotel Street, Honolulu,

ephone 674. P. O, Box 906.

H. & CO.- - --J. H. & CO- .-

Tho Best at tho LowestPrice at Hopp's

The Secret ofBuying RightThe Haiti Factor inSelling Riight

OUR PRICES ARE ALWAYS RIGHT

Upholstering andRepairing,Tentsm ade to Ordej

J. HOPP & CO. tTHE LEADINGFURNITUREDEALERS

KING Sc BETHEL STREETS--J. H. & CO. J. H. & CO.

Holiday Goods

Holiday Goods

m. CHIYATelephone 3311 White.

Corner of Nuuanu and Hotel Streets,

HAS A FULL LINE OF

Japanese Silks,TOYS AND CURIOS,

Always make suitable presents. Wehave also added to our establishment a

Dyeing and CleaningDepartment

All kinds of ladles' and gents' cloth-ing cleaned and pressed at reasonablerates. Old clothing made to look likenew . Goods will be called for and deUvered when finished.

The Yon Hamm-Youn- g Co., Ltd.,

Importers andCommissionMerchants

(Juccn Street, Honolulu

A.GENTS FORThe Lancashire Insurance Co.The Balolse Insurance Co.Union Gas Engine Co.Domestic Sewing Machine. Etc.

ff. 6. IRWIN & CO.(Limited.)

AGENTS FOHWestern Sugar Refining Company of

San Francisco, Cal

Baldwin Locomotive Works ofPhlladelhpia, Pcnn.

Newell Nnlversal Mill Company(National Cane Shredder).

New York, U. S. A.N. Ohlandt &. Co.'S Chemical FertilizersHigh Grade Fertilizers for Cane and

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

tilizer for Cane and Coffee.

Heed's Stoam Pipe Cars.

Also Offer for SaleParalne Taint Co.'s P. &. B. Paints and

Paper3.Lucol and Linseed Oils, raw and boiledndurine (a cold water paint) In white

and colors,niter Press Cloths, Cement, Lime and

Brick.

Note Heads. Bill Heads, Letter Headsprinting neatly and promptly executedend all klnrtp nf Job and Commercialat tt.es Star Office.

ii

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, THUHSDAY, JANUARY 10, 1D01.

REM TI)

Double Barrel

Hammcrless Ejector

SHOT GUNSElegant Finish,

Exact Balance,

Close Shooting,

Simple Construction

AND

Lots of AmmunitionAT THE

FORT STREET

Announcement !

The existing betweenRobert Lowers, Chas. M. Cooke and F.J. Lowrey, under the firm name ofLowers & Cooke, Is this day dissolvedby mutual consent, and tho businesstransferred to a corporation under thename of Lowers & Cooke, Limited.

All obligations of the firm are assum-ed by the corporation, and all amountsduo the firm are made payable to thecorporation.

Thanks are extended to those whohave given patronage to the firm whichis now llssolved, and a continuance Isrequested on behalf of the new corpora-tion.

LEWERS & COOKE.

LEWERS & COOKE, LIMITED.President F. J. Lowrey.Vice-Preside- nt W. W. Harris.Sec'y and Treas. W.A. Hadden..' udttor C. H. Cooke. ,Director- - Robert Levers.Director Chas. M. Cooke.

Honolulu, December 31, 1800.

Refrigerated PoultryAND

XTeslx SalmonCONSTANTLY ON HAND.

isfiropolifian Meal Co.

TELEPHONE NO. 41.

NEW BOOK BULLETIN.

1 GOLDEN RULE 1131 FORT STREET.

"In Circling Lamps" by Attsheler.'Resurrection" by Count Tolstoi"The Road to Paris" by Stephens"The Banker and the Bear" by Web

ster."Unto the Heights of Simplicity" by

ueimers."A Man's Undoing" by Mrs. Lovett

Cameron."Our Presidents and How We Make

Them" by McClure."The Sledge" by Rlsley."Bob, Son of Battle" by OHIvant."The Black Terror A Russian Rom-ance" by Leys."Boy" by Marie Corel!!."The Waters of Edera" by Otnda."Red Blood and Blue" by Harrison

Robertson."The Touchstone" by Edith Wharton.

and scores of others just as good, andsomething to suit the taste of allclasses of readers.

J. M. WEBB.

ing Chew Lung Co,

212 NUUANU STREET

Importers and Dealers In General Mer-

chandise.

CHINESE AND JAPANESE CURIOSGRASS CLOTHS IN ALL COLORS.

Teas, Cigars, Rattan Chairs, Backets,Trunks, Flower Pots, Vases, Etc., Etc

Telephone White 431. P. O. BOX 087.

W. H. BARTHH. W. BARTH

Honolulu Sheet Metal Works

Galvanized Iron Skylights and Ven-tilators Metal Roofing. Conductor Pipeand Gutter Work Jobbing Promptlyattended to.

Richard Street, between Queen andMerchant, Honolulu.

iliYlEIfllSECRETARY OF WAR QOINO TO

THE PHILIPPINES.

Will Come Went With tho Presidentnnu uo Tiioiice on a Tour or Inspe-ctionIlls Plans.

NEW YORK, Junuary 2. A specialto the World from Washington says:President MeKln'oy is seriously considering the proposition of sending Secretary or war Root to the Philippinesto make a tour of examination similarto the one recently made In Cuba. Thishas not been definitely decided on, butit Is known thnt the matter bus beenunder discussion and that next May,when the President Intends to visittho Puclflc coast, has boon llxed uponas a good time for Root to start. Hecould accompany the Presidential partyto San Francisco und go on from there,stopping at Hawaii for a look around.

By that time Auditor Lawshe, wholeft last week for the Philippines, willhave made a thorough examination in-to affairs in the archipelago, and Rootcan take observations in the light oftlio facts Lawshe has gathered. ThePresident is bound, of course, to depend to a degree upon the Taft Commission, but he has great faith In thenullity or Root and would have thorough confidence in the result of Ills Investigatlon.

In the meantime the ntlestion of currency for the Philippines is worryingoverypony, Koot and the President ineluded. To put the Islands on the samefinancial basis as tills country and tosend our currency there would be to nd-m- lt

that the fonstitulon does follow theling, and that is further than the Ad-ministration now desires to go.

FUNERAL OF DONNELLY.ST. PAUL (Minn.). January" 2. The

funeral of Ignatius Donnelly will beheld at 10 o'clock Saturday morningfrom the residence of his son, VanJ. Donnelly, of this city. This datewas fixed in order to allow Donnelly'sson. Dr. Iguutius Donnelly of Butte,Monte., who has started for St. Paul,time to reach here. Donnelly's sister,Eleanor C. Donnelly of Philadelphia, Is111 and will be unable to attend the fu-neral.

PRESIDENT'S ITINERARY..

His Plans for Ills Trip to theWest.

WASHINGTON. January 2 Survey-

or-General J. M. Gleaves of Califor-nia was among President McKlnley'scallers todav being Introduced byRepresentative Barhnm. Gleaves toldtho President that he had mode tho tripfrom California for tho Bole purpose ofinviting him to attend a banquet to begiven in his honor by the Ohio Societyof California, of which Gleaves Is thepresident. This banquet will be givenon May ISth, during the President'sstay In San Francisco.

Tiie President replied that he wouldbe delighted to attend tho banquet, butpreferred not to give any definite ac-ceptance, leaving the matter entirelyin the hands of the committee that willhp In charge of all the arrangements.He added, however, that his stay inSan Francisco would probably extendover four or five days, and that nodoubt the banquet would bo Includedin the program.

On his way homo Gleaveswill call at Columbus, and invite Gov-ernor Nash and his staff to attend thebanquet. Tonight Gleaves dined withLand Commissioner Hermann.

QUEEN OF BELGIUM TLL.BRUSSELS. January 2. The Etolle

Beige announces that tho health ofQueen .Marie Henrietta has been im-paired and thot she suffers constantlyfrom bronchitis. The Queen Is quiteweak and she does not leave her bedfor more than a couple of hours eachday.

MYSTICS HAVE BANQUET.

Installation of Officers nnd a FeastLast Night.

Msytic Lodge, K. of P., had Installa-tion of olllcers and a banquet last even-ing. Tho banquet was held In the Ewalanal of the Hawaiian hotel and vas,an elaborate nnd most enjoyable affair.The new olllcers installed were: C. C,H. J. Gallagher; V. C, A. L. Morris;Prelate, J. B. Gorman; Master of Work,Thos O. Bilen. P. C; Master of Ex-chequer. F. C. Betters; Master of Fin-ance, H. T. Wuity; K. of R. and S.,A. E. Murphy, P. C; Master-at-Arm- s,

J. H. McKeague; Inner Guard, T. W.Carroll: Outer Guard, Chas. Murgrave.

The banquet was presided over by Dr.A. J. Derby. The following toasts wereproposed and responded - 'The electedolllcers, H. J. Gallagher; prosperity ofMystic Lodge No. 2, A. L. Morris; re-tiring olllcers, C. J. Salter, P. C; bene-fits of the order, Thomas F. MeTlghe;the supreme lodge, H. E. Waity, D. S.C; visiting brothers, H. G. Middle-ditc- h;

sister lodges In tho Islands, A. S.Sinclair, P. C; the ladles, A. E. Mur-phy, I'. C; good of tho order, J. F. Eek-hard- t;

endowment rank, A. V. Gear;absent brothers, E. P. Dole.

AN EARLY' VISITOR.

Death of An Early Visitor to the s.

NEW BEDFORD, Mass., December27. Robert Tuckerman, who died athis home In this city last week, hadquite an eventful career. He was theson of Captain import nnd BetseyTuckerman and was born in New Bed-ford, Mass., In 1831. At the ago of 13years ho went to sea, shipping as cabinboy. At the ago of 16 he hnd circledthe globe. He spent 10 years in whal-ing and another decade in the mer-chant service during which time hevisited huh"-'- every port in the world,lie spent considerable time in the Ha-waiian Island (luring Ills career.

Soon after his marriage to HarrietW. Bowman of New Bedford In 1S65 heforsook the sea and removed to Led-yar- d

In this county were he engagedin farming successfully for 11 years,coming to Auburn in 1S78 where hohad since resided with tho exception offive years which ho spent with hisfather In his beloved New Bedford. Hewas a member of the North Congrega-tional church of New Ilcdford and formany years he attended the CentralPresbyterian church in this city. Howas upright and straightforward andhis reminiscences of life before themast were nlways interesting. He Issurvived by a widow and one daugh-ter, Mrs. Jesse H. Stanton.

PROMPT COMPLIANCE."Does your wife heed your Instruc-

tions?" asked the domestic disciplina-rian.

"Of course slio does," answered Mr.Meekton. "Only this morning I said.'Henrietta, plense pass tho butter,' andshe did so without n moment's hesita-tion." Washington Star,

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

AppreciatedThe greatly increasing demand

for tho "Hanan & Sons' Shoes,"shows the popularity of this line.

Every steamer brings us a freshnew stock.

Our customers are learning toask for these goods, and acceptingno other.

You don't know what comfort,and satisfaction means, until youhave tried a pair.

ctnerny s onoeSole Agents

We figure that every pnir of "Shoes we sell, bring three new

a HI II SH(Continued from Page Two.)

weeks. The cargo Included 49,650 cocoa-nut- s,

017 bunches of bananas, 11 bunch-es of plantains, S2'J" sacks of copra, Ulcases of limes, 15 cases of vanilla and2 sacks of Chilean coin valued at $2300.

The Australia arrived at Papeete fromSan Francisco on December 16th, andsailed on December 20th. On the nightof December ISth the city olllcials ofPapeete tendered a ball to the olllcersof the ship, the affair taking place Intho Town Hall. A unique feature wasthe dancing of the Islanders in the na-tive costumes.

Captain Lawless reports thnt thebarkentine City of Papeete, which ranupon the reef near the entrance of Pa-peete harbor last July, was scheduledto sail for this port on December 22d.The French bark Grand Duchess Olgawas still at Papeete, but repairs hadbeen made to the vessel, and she wasscheduled to sail for Queenstown onJanuary 1st or 2d. The French cruiserProtet was also In the harbor.

Two Tahltian iods came on the Aus-tralia as stowaways and were denieda landing by the Immigration olllcials.

The Australia is scheduled to sailnext Sunday afternoon on her thirdvoyage to Tahiti. Among the passen-gers will be M. Gamier, M.'Hetille, M.Lavrain, M. Baudoin and M. Hamlin,sous-olllce- rs of France, who have justarrived from Paris, via New York.

THE ARMY" TRANSPORTS.SAN FRANCISCO. January 3. The

freight transport Thyra sailed fromPoitland for Manila, via Honolulu, onDecember 31st. The Sherman left Ma-nila for this port on December 15th,with thirty general prisoners, six In-sane and 631 sick soldiers. The Warrensailed from Manila on December 30thwill 161 sick soldiers and tho bodies of101 dead on board.

Tiie steamer Strathgyle has beento the Government to load

supplies at Seattle for Manila.The next of the transport to sail for

Manll'i will be the Grant, scheduled toleave on January 16th. The vessel willbe extensively overhauled before thatdate.

THE CUP DEFENDER.

Broader Beam nnd Greater LengthThan Former Boats.

PROVIDENCE (It. I.), January 2.The Evening Telegram today printedillustrated plans of the new Herreslioffcup defender and says in regard tothem that the length und beam of thenew boat will be greater than the Co-lumbia's or the Defender's, while thedraught will be Jess, the form easier,the power largely Incrensed and thespeed pstimated fully eight minutes bet-ter over a thirty-mil- e course ns com-pared with the Columbia.

Experimenting with the broader beamIn tho seventy-footer- s last June De-signer HerresholT found that It provedeminently satisfactory; In fact theycovered the cup course In less time thanthe Columbia or tho Shamrock In anyof their trials.

Tills convinced Captain Nat that thoday of the wide-bea- m yacht had notgone forever, nnd In the new defend-er, while sticking to the llxed center-boar- d

type, ho l placlmr even morereliance upon the beam and relocationof tho bulb fin than upon any otherfeature of tho yacht's original lines.

The keel Is not so deep by half a foot,und not so thick ns the Columbia's attho widest part. Just abaft the fore-foot. With a diameter of about thirty-fou- r

Indies at the shoulder It sweepsback In easy linos to where the stern-po- st

will bo fixed a width of sixInches. Its greatest diameter shouldbe lower than tho Columbia's nndplaced fully two feet forward of thopoint where tho Columbia's keel showsthe greatest weight. The change issupposed to give oven more sail car-rying power than quickness In stays,which Is Its principal object. From thetop of the keel forwnrd the bronze steinwill rise generally outward to a bob-sta- y

and then turn upward at a sharp-er angle than the Columbia's bowshows.

A GOOD THING.There's one good thing wh-- n they feel

dry.That business men cannot pass by.For far and wide It's fame you hear,Thev stort to drink of "Rainier" beerOn draught or In bottle at Criterion.

Fine Job Printing. Star Office.

OFFICE TO LET.

One office in Brew"r Building, QueenStreet. Apply

C. BREWER & CO.. LTD.

o ii rr j ,Contractor nnd Hullricr,

House Fnlntcr

Kewalo, Sheridan Street, near KlnirHonolulu. H. L

Till.

Store,

Hanan "customers.

A GREAT PHYSICIAN SAYS: "71

per cent of all diseases and sickness ucaus I by the pores becoming clogjt-- sthus shrUIng up In the blood the jxtons nnd Impu- ties wl :ch Nature mtended they should eliminate." Porti-co's Dandruff Killer "Dens the por.and exp Is all the po!3ons In the mileaving It clean nnd healthy.PACIIECO'S DANDRUFF KT1.LER

Sold by nil Druggists and it uk-- ion Barber Shop, Telephoiu- - 606.

P. O Box 912 Tel. Main

H. HAMANO,IMPORTER OF

Japanese Provisions

General KterchantifcPLANTATION SUPPLIES

King Street, - - - - Corner Sm

KATSEY BLOCK

Honolulu Iron WorU

STEAM ENGINES, SUGAR MILLbBOILERS, COOLERS, IRON. BRASt-AN- D

LEAD CASTINGS.

Machinery of Every Description Maoto Order. Particular attention paid tcShip's Blacksmlthlng. Job Work Exe-

cuted on Short Notice.

AntisepticSolution.

A law is in Tcgue in Farlothat this shall be used lsall barber shops.

In use atTHE SILEHTBARBER SHOP

Joseph. Fernandez,Proprietor.

Arlington Block. Hotel Strrrt

CASTLE & COOKE, LIM1T1 1

Life and Fire

Insurance Agents

ZW AGENTS FOIl JJNEW ENGLAND MUTUAL

LIFE INSURANCE CO,

OF BOSTON.

FIRE INSURANCE CO,

OF HARTFORD. CONN

LEE TIE,Emma fUreot near Beretanla.

JVIer-olickia- t lLAf l Iloi',Washing nnd Cleaning Suit si. 09Dyeing Suit jj.goCleaning Ladles' SklrtB, each .7G- -

Dyeing Ladles' Shirts, each J1.G0

Finn Job Prlntlstr, Star Office.

Page 8: Iff ' THE HAWAIIAN AR...trived to get up as much fuss about.the style of precedence as that experi-enced In England In 1840, when Queen.Victoria was married to Prince Albert of Suxe-Cobur-

raocrc THE HAWAIIAN STAR, THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 1901.

. i... .vim i;ii'riM;.m.vi.FOR SALE JAS. P. M0KGAN

DIVIDEND NOTICE, t t v t fUalley'a Hon. Cyclery PuRe 5

DELT'm'HEIt HOTTHHD1 WNST. Auctioneer and BrokerUtoin? on Kfmumnkii street. Lot 100X-S- llerr 1'antor liwiilmnc Vaxe 5

Hear Electric car line on Wilder OHOCEItY. 65 Street Queen Li-?- .

rnvmrnup. Chun Shin Pas? 5 WHITNEY & MARSH, LTD ..Comni xllou nnd well built cottage DELINQUENT STOCK SALE. P. 0. Uox 5U4 Tolophono 72i(vun and bath. Conveniently Klhel Plantation Page 5

Also ervanta tinuae and ata-M- MISCELLANEOUS.(lroutnle nicely laid out and liolllHter Drug Co Page 4

planted with trult and ornamental treesMaqulre o. NEWS IS A NUTSHELL.

L. C. Ladies' Neckwear,Abies, lilts of l'nmi'aplis Unit Ulw Con-tlcusc-

Everything Now, Dainty and ::IteRl Estate and Financial Agent. Notes )!' the Dny.

Telephone 1M. P. O. Box 312.

FORT STREET.

Pacific TransferCOM PA.W

J AS. II. LOVE.

.Handles UAUGACJE,PUIiNITURE,HVNOS,SAFIIS, ETC.

IBelophoiie MAJW 58

locks....AND

Ffc 1

Donas

Bought ai d Sold.

Careful attentionall business intrust-

ed

CAJPBELL CLOCK. MERCHANT ST

15 CU.

I

!1 Special SaleGot One '

Tlu- - v a reAlt G

FootBalls,BasketBalis

Fencingr.i Goods and

Genera!fcthleSic

and

M Sporting Goods

ih LIMITED

312 FORT ST.,TEL. 5G5.

A"s".J

Judge Estee's court has adjourned tonext Monday morning.

There will be music by ho band atthe Hnualtnn hotel this evening.

Meetings of the charter committeeswill ugaln be held tomorrow evening.

Miss Stella Love arrived In San FruitelKco January 2 by the ship GeorgeCurtis.

K. Mahu. a native womnn, aged 23,died at the Insane asylum today ofpneumonia.

Ilerr Pastor isenberg wlrd am Sonn-ta- g

den 13ten dieses. In der Y. St. C. A.Halle predlgen.

Chu Slim on Nuuanu street near Ku-ku- i,

keeps a complete line of groceriesand vegetables.

Captain Charles Wilcox and Lieute-nant Ous Rose were by Com-pany G last evening.

Educational clarwen of the Y. M. C.A. will reopen this evening for the wln-t- i

r and spring term.Fresh clover and vegetable seeds nt

The Holllster Drug Company. Makeyour selections now.

Dlvldent No. 7 Is due and payable attheir olllco to the stockholders of Dal-ley- 's

Honolulu Cyclery.John Poepoe. Ah Hal and Makita

were lined $." by Judge Wilcox thismorning for gambling.

Mr. nnd Mrs. E. A. Fraser of Mahu-koi- ui

returned by the Alameda from ashort islt to the coast.

Mrs. .1. McLaln will entertain theLadies' Catholic Benevolent society at" oViock tomorrow afternoon.

Horry Klemine has sold the Starlunch room In the Pantheon building toDMt Davis, of the Claudlnc.

A meeting of the organization com-mittee of the Fisheries Association willbe held nt 3:30 this afternoon.

A meeting of the Board of Health tofinish old business will be held at theusual hour tomorrow afternoon.

A meeting is called for tomorrowmorning nt 10 o'clock at Dr. Sloncott'sofllee. of all Interested In plans for anentertainment for the benellt of theii,yp -- i t- - infirmary.

Tlu ' v t crowd at any band engagement in years attended the soloconcert In Thomas sounre Tuesdayevening. Soldiers and marines fromthe transport Hancock helped to swellthe audience.

The First National nank has electedthe following board of directors for theyear, Cecil Brown, Bruce Cartwrlght,James F. Morgan, Mark P. Robinsonand O. J. Waller.

On January 2Cth at 12 o'clock noon,Jas. F. Morgan will sell the delinquentstock in the Klhel Plantation, uponwhich the 10th assessment is duo, un-less same Is settled with interest nndadvertising expense before the hour ofsale.

Dr. W. Hoffman, lately bacteriologistof tile Hoard of Health, was yesterdaypresented with a handsome cane bytlic inmntps of Kallhi receiving stationIn onpreciation of his work amongthem.

Allen Dunn was somewhat Inluredvesterdny by falling Into the watergate at the corner of Fort and Kingstreets. The covering was Insecure andwhen he stepped on It he was preclpi- -tated into the water gate.

HONOLULU STOCK EXCHANGE.' Morning Session Sales: Betweenboard, 3,000 O. 11. & L. Co.'s Bonds,101.50.

Sales: On the board, B Walalua,115.50; 10 Ewa, 27.75; B Walalua, 11C.50;5 Olaa, paid up, 1B.123; 23 HawaiianSuirnr. 40: 25 Ookala, 17.B0; B Klhel,paid up, 17; 10 Olaa, paid up, 15; B Kl-hel. paid up, 10.S75; 7 Olna, paid up,l&.Io.

Quotations. Bid. Asked.Ewa $ 27.7B $ 28.00Hawaiian Sugar 39. B0 41.00Hunomu 1G2.50Houokaa 31.00 32.00Haiku 240.00,

Klhel, paid up i 1C.75 16.S75Kipahulu 110.00Koloa 180.00Kona 100.00JIcBryde, assessable 10.. 00McBryde, paid up 14.00 14.25Oahu 152.50 1B5.00Ookala 17.50 17.75Olaa, assessable 4.00Olaa, paid up 15.00 15.25Olowalu 150.00Paia 240.00Pepeekeo 190.00Pioneer 140.00Walalua 115.50 115.023Waimanalo 143.00Waimea 100.00Wilder Steamship 103.00Inter-Islan- d 120.00Mutual Telephone 11.00 14.00Oahu R. & L. Co 192.50People's Ice 70.00Hawaiian Govt. C's 99.75 100.00Hilo Rnllroad C's 100.00Hono. Rapid Transit C's 101.00Oahu Hallway Bond ... 101.00Ewa 102.00Oahu Plantation C's 101.00

Typewriting tnught Free of chargeat Remington Typewriter Olllce, Fortstreet.

Fine Job Printing, Star Ofllco.

HENRY I CO

OUEENESTREET

Stock nnd lioml llrokors,Firo Insurance Agents,

Commission Merchants

Careful Attention Given to

Business Trusts

BOOK-CASE- S

AND

OFFICE FURNITURE

In Stock or Orderedjgfrom

. Manufacturers.:

AUCTION SALEOF

Valuable Heal EstateON MERCHANT STREET

Off SATURDAY, JAN. 12,AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON,

At my salesroom, 03 Queen street, Iwill sell at Public Auction, a valuablepiece of Business Property, MerchantStreet.on the Waiklki side of Lewers &Cooke's Lumber yard and opposite theStore of G. Schuman, Esq.

The property has n frontage of 91feet on Merchant Street, 134 feet onEwa Boundary, 78 feet at rear and 117feet on Y.'alkikl Boundary.

The property contains an area of10.165.FO-10- 0 square feet. Of the abovearea 2,323 square feet Is a leaseholdhaving 20 years to run at a monthlyrental or $10. The balance of $7840.8square feet Is In fee simple.

This property Is situated adjacent tothe Judd nnd Stangenwald Buildings,and Is directly opposite an extensionof the proposed new street In front ofthe new Young Building.

Part of the purchase price can re-main on mortgage. Maps of land atmy office.

JAS. F. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER.

FOR EENT.Two Warehouses on Kawalahao

Street, Kewalo. 1 Building 50x100.Building, 00x40 with Stables.

Buildings near to South Street.For particulars, apply to

JAS. F. MORGAN,03 Queen Street.

JAS. E. M0BGAN,

Auctioneer .and Broker

65 Queen Street1 0. Uox 5M Tclophono 7

OLIV i Id 1

The only machinethat absolutely

WKITJ3N I2C SIGHTSIMPLELIGHTDURABLERAPID.

TYPEWRITER SUPPLIES for allmake of machines.BEST COODS LOWEST PRICES

Our make of Ribbons will outlast allothers.

WALL, NICHOLS CO,, LTD,

Allen's

ii S

Is Healthful

It Is a pleasant nnd coolingsaline aperient, composed ofthe nclld of the grape, theorange, the lemon and the lime,combined with the mildest formsof saline correctives.

Healthful because of the fruits.

Cooling because of the saline correc- -

tives

Pleasant because agreeable to the

taste.

It drives off effete and uselessmatter from the system andshould be regularly taken byresidents of the Hawaiian Isl-

ands. Price, $1.00.

Hobron Drug Go.

FORT AND KING.

T. HAYASKI,

BERETANIA STREETOpposite Queen's Hospital.

Merchant TailorDYEING, CT ANDREPAIRING ALLKINDS OF CLOTHES.

Skillful Workmanship The best InTown

A Trial Will Convince You.

I, Ltd.

OrFICERS.H; P. BALDWIN PresidentJ. B. CASTLE First Vice PresidentW. M. ALEXANDER.... 2d Vice Pres'tJ. P. COOKE TreasurerW. O. SMITH. ...Secretary and Auditor

Sugar Factors andCommissionflerchants

AGENTS FORHawaiian Commercial and Sugar Com'

pany,Olaa Sugar Company,Haiku Sugar Company,Pala Plantation Company,Nahlku Sugar Company,Klhel Plantation Company,Hawaiian Sugar Company,Kahulul Railroad Company,

ANDThe, California and OrientalStonmshlp Company

AHXRiver Between Kultul and Vineyard

Streets.WHOLESALE AND RETAIL

FURNITURE STORE.Matting, Mattresses, Pillows, Rattan

cnaira ana uomns.

Beau-tiful

Handkerchiefs,Thousands of Them from 5 cents to

5.00 Each.

Sterling Silver Novelties,From 25 cents Each, Most Accepta-ble drifts.

Silk Waists,Swell Garments from the Most Pop-ular Maker in New York, from $7.50to $15.00

Silk Petti'-oats- ,

The Latest Modes, All Colors, $7.00to $18.00.

Men's Neckwear,The Seventy five cent and One FiftyKind, Our Price 25 cents and 50 cents.

Umbrellas,The Windsor is the Best UmbrellaMade in America, Great Variety,Steel Rods, Sterling and Pearl Mount-ings and Fine Plain Sticks.

Belts, Pans, Purses,Fancy Garters, Shopping Bags, SilkGloves, Kid Gloves, Combs, HairOrnaments, Ribbons, Silk Under-wear, Golf Capes, Separate Skirts,Hosiery and a Thousand Novelties atModerate Prices.

..

.. :

WHITNEY k

, lots are on theface on now

.

0.

..

MARSH LTD I

side of Heights.widened and macadam

PACIFICHEIGHTS

Magnificent Yiew,

Refreshing Breezes,

Easy of Access,

An Unsurpassed Residence Site

TheseThey Pauoa Road,

Pauoa Pacificbeing

ized, and adjoin the Pacific Heights Electic "Railway.

A Chance for Investors :

Any one with money to invest lookingfor something that will bring goodreturns on sums invested, has here afine opportunity. Houses ''built. .onthese lots will find ready rental atstrong rates by good tenants.

Attractions Offerediin this Site to Homeseekers:

LOCATION. They are located on high ground at an elevation of from &00 toBOO feet, affording unsurpased scenic and marine views.

ELECTRIC RAILWAY AND LIGHTING. The Electric Railway makes ac-cess most easy, and power for lights may be had at most reasonable rates.

WATER. Water will be sup d at the rate of $15 per year for each lot,from out Pacific Heights Water System. This Is less than city rates.

SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS TO BUILDERS. To all who will b jln the erec-tion of houses within CO days, we will make special inducements in the matterof transportation of building material over our railway

LOW PRICES, GOOD TERMS. Prices of lots range from 1100 to $760 each,according to size and location. One-four- th cash only is asked. Balance Ininstallments at terms to suit purchasers. "I

HEALTHFUL AND COOL. The air Is always cool and bracing. We tan rfcommend this property ns being especially desirable and attractive to j,sons seeking a choice location for a homo at a moderate cost.

For Further Particulars Apyly to

BRUCE WARlftIC & CO.Progress Block, Fort Stree