iwvv hawaiian star. · adld are promised on december 1 as an inducement for intending purchasers to...

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I I 'iWVV day's jeH New, TTRHt tlHy THE The SHur TN OHM Hhi) It HAWAIIAN STAR. THIS STAR gww into (he tort hmttm r HeHelklt I VOL. X. HONOLULU, H. I., WttDNRSDAY, APRIL 30 1902. KONA RAILROAD PROM MUCH VICE PRESIDENT J. COERPER MAKES LIBERAL OFFER TO INVESTORS. S'IRST COMERS TO QET BIO DIVI-- , DENDS. Those Locally Interested Expect Road To Start Within Sixty Days South Kona Brunch First. The following display advertisement SB It appeared In the San Francisco hronlole" gives golden promises of speedy and big dividends from share- holding in the Kona and Kau R. R. Company, Limited. Ten per cent divi- dends on the llrst ten thousand shares adld are promised on December 1 as an inducement for intending purchasers to paid from the profits from hauling freight In October of this year: BETTER THAN A SAVINGS BANK. Now is the time to Invest in preferred stock of the Kona and Kau R. R. Co., Limited, at the par value of $10 per share. Franchise to the company from the Hawaiian Government granted. Surveys made. Rights of way from nil private parties obtained. This railroad will open over two-thir- of the rich- est lands In the Island of Hawaii, the largest in the group. Hawaii is 300 miles nearer to San Francisco than Honolulu.' As soon as 10 miles of the railroad are completed shares will dou- ble In value. A dividend of 10 per cent on the first 10,000 shares sold will be paid on the 31st day of December, 1902, accruing from freight contracts njeady made for hauling during October, 1902. Blocks of stock sold from 2o shares up to 1000 shares. Stocks from Hawaiian 'railroads have advanced to $190 per Share on a par value of $100 after being watered 100 per cent. Call at our office, room 714-7- Emma Spreckels Bulldlng, No. 927 Market .street, and get free book. "Facts About Hawaii." Correspondence solicited. J. COERPER, Vice President and General Manager K. and K. R. R. Co., Ltd. JOHNSON & RICHARDS, General Agents. When shown to those locally Interest- ed In the railroad, the advertisement evidently came as a surprise. It had been expected that J. Coerper was In Chicago instead of San Francisco and the advertisement Itself had not been noticed. It was stated by those locally Interested this morning that the sense of the advertisement was all right, the dividend promise had been made by Mr. Coerper who was the vice president of the road and was no doubt acting ad- visedly. "You can say that much of the equip- ment of rails and rolling stock Is now on its way from New York and that the road will be started sixty days from now," said Gardner K. Wilder this morning. There Is no doubt as to the road going through. A consldera We amount of the stock has been a- - ready floated. Twenty miles through the South Kona district will be com pleted first to take out the cane that will be ready for shipment. The whole 120 miles of the road will be completed before long." There Is not very much of the stock assumed by Honolulu Investors gener ally .although a little group of business men and stock brokers were among the original promoters of the road. GOOD FO RRHEUMATISM. Last fall I was taken with a very severe attack of muscular rheumatism which caused me great pain and an noyance. After trying several preserlp tfons and rheumatic cures, I decided to use Chamberlain's Pain Balm, which I had seen advertised In the South After two applications of this Remedy I was much better, and after using one bottle, was completely cured Sallie Harris, Salem, N. X, U. S. A. For sale by all dealers, Benson, Smith & Co., general agents, Hawawllan Isl ands; W. B. CORSETS. L. B. Kerr & Co., Ltd., have secured for the future the sole right for Hono lulu for the celebrated W. B. Corset, this Is the most perfect fitting Corset known to the trade and at popular prices from DOc. upwards. THE LATEST FAD. Evening parties at the "Tea House" oi. the Heights is the latest fad. Fine Book and Commercial Printing, nt the Star Office. UNLIKE 1 INDIVIDUAL. A TRUST COMPANY NEVER DIES, IS NEVER OUT OF TOWN. AND STICKS TO ITS CHOSEN BUSINESS. uirarojD U23 Fort Street JflKI iff II JJJT. If IIhwhIIiih lH be "' M E RULE POLITICS PLANS TO REORGANIZE THK PARTY. Executive Committee to be Smaller. Working on a City and County Gov. crnont Act. The Home Rule exeoutive commit- tee will hold an Important meeting tm Thursday evening, at which a general reorganization of the party will be dis- cussed, also the election of a successor to the late J. K. Kaulla as chairman of the committee. It Is proposed to make the committee smaller and to make ar- rangements for direct election of mem- bers by the voters of the various dis- tricts, and the Home Rulers are also considering a "non partisan" move- ment which Involves fusion with the Democrats' and a' general party policy based wholly on local Issues. Senator KalauokalanI Is said to be In line for the position of chairman, made vacant by the death of Kaulla. The Senator Is not a member of the executive committee, but Is an active party worker and as president of Kalal Alha, he was one of the founders of the Homo Rule party, with the de- ceased president of Aloha Aina. The Home Rulers are already at work on a county government act which they propose to press In the next le- gislature. They are also discussing candidates for the house and senate. The Home Rulers seem never to take any vacations from politics, nnd they are mapping out a programme by which they hope to carry out their pet scheme of making Honolulu a municipal cor- poration, and giving other communities local self government.' The county gov. ernment act which Is now being dis- cussed by members of the committee in based on the works of municipal lea gues on tne mainland, it Is the inten- tion this time to have it all ready, far In advance of the meeting oS the legis- lature. This was. the Intention last time, but It was not oulte carried out. and the act was Introduced In the house and senate was calculated to make cities In Nebraska and other places. The Home Rulers say they will avoid that kind of thing this time. The scheme for party reorganization Involves the change of the executive committee from a body of 60 men to one of 30, to be elected at the party prima- ries. It also involves a breaking away from party politics and a general bid for votes of all parties on local issues. Another thing said to be Involved, is a heavy throwdown for some of tne "statesmen" who made the party ridi- culous In the last legislature. Representative Emmeluth says that the party will declare for absolutely open primaries. This Is a necessary feature of the non-partis- programme. "We don't care who votes in our prima- ries," said iSmmelutli, "as long as we get the choice of the electors generally for candidates. Republicans, Demo- crats and all others ure welcome to take part In the Home Rule primaries without any pledges at all." 'lne Home uuieis propose to fix up their city and county government act, adopt It as the policy of the party and then have all their candidates pledg-j- to work for It If elected to the legis- lature. In the discussslon of candidates so far there has been a disposition to break away from the "Banderlogs" of the last session, says those in the coun- cils of the party, and the men who made the famous records of the first territorial legislature of Hawaii will probably be left in the cold. WILL SIT IN LOGES. The finance committee for Honolulu of the McKlnley Memorial fund have taken the two loges for the May-da- y performance nt the Opera House to- morrow night. KAISER ACCEPTS RHODES' GIFT. BERLIN, April 21. It is announced that Emperor William has notified the executors of the will of Cecil Rhodes of his country's acceptance of the trust relative to the German scholarships at Oxford. PLAGUE IN CAPE COLONY. PORT ELIZABETH, (Capo Colony), April 21. There Is a recrudescence of the plague here. Ten cases have been reported, five of which have proved fatal. RUSSIAN SOLDIERS KILL- - 0. PEKING. April 20. A post on the outskirts of Newchwang, garrisoned by forty Russians hus been attacked by bandits. One Ruslan officer nnd four privates were killed. GLEANER'S LAWN PARTY. The lawn party of the Missionary Gleaner's will be held at the residence of F. J. Lowrey on Saturday May 3rd Grounds are open from 2:30 to 5 o'clock, saie commences at 3 o clock. Admls slon 23 cents. Children 10 cents. A GOOD APPETIZER. A ride up Pacific Heights 1 a good appetizer. Fine Book nnd Commercial Printing, at the Star Office. FRESH DOG CAKES, SUNDRIES AND MEDICINES, BY LAST STEAMER. PEARSON k POTTER CO,, LTD AGENTS ONE COURT IN FIRST CIRCUIT JUDGES THINK THEY HAVE NOT THE RIGHT TO HOLD COURT SEPARATELY. ACT PROVIDING FOR THREE JUDGES USELESS. Smith Case Raises a Point That May Reduce the Circuit to Praetleally One Judge. The Judges of the First Circuit Court, ay a result of questions raised ih the Walter G. Smith case, have about come to the conclusion that they have the right to sit en banc, or separately one at n time, but have not the right. to hold court any other way. It Is likely, therefore, that Judge Robinson will bo the only judge to sit In term matters during the May term beginning next week. Neither Judge Gear nor Humph- reys have Issued any venire for jurors, and it Is .understood that their pres-tn- t view is that they cannot sit If Judge Robinson sits, except with him, a.; one court. The legislature provided that the First Circuit Court "shall consist of three Judges." but there is nothing In the law to provide for the three sitting separately. In his argument beforo the supreme rourt, George A. Davis con- tended that the right to sit en bane as plain In the statute, but that what lequlred an express provision was the right to sit separately. This was In an- swer to the contention that the pro- ceedings In the Smith case were Illegal necause me tnreo judges sat together. The question Is now b3fore the Su- preme Court. In his brief filed in the Smith case Dav's sets forth the views that have resulted in the decision of the first and second Judges to refrain from holding court while the third Judge Is sitting. The result reduces the First Circuit to only one judge, as far as term matters are concerned. There Is only one court, according to this view, and the three Judges are no better than one Judge. The act of the legislature on the sub- ject Is as follows: "The Circuit Court of the First Cir- cuit shill consist of three judges, who shall be styled first, second and third Judges respectively of the Circuit Court of the First Circuit, either of whom may hold the court." Davis' brief contains the following on the subject of the Interpretation of this law : "i'lie contention Is that the .words 'either of whom may hold ttioooiirt,' J leairiuis me nouung to one judge, and ff more than one sit then any Judgment delivered Is void and of no effect. The utter fallacy of such an argument Is apparent to anyone giving the matter a tnougnt. in fact the very opposite conclusion must be reached to that contended, for here, as it Is evident that the court 'shall consist of three judges.' This is the language of the Act. If one 'may hold the court,' It does not prohibit all from doing like- wise. A part cannot be greater than the whole. One judge cannot have more power than three, the whole court. The court 'shall consist of three Judges,' but there Is but one court of this Circuit. The fact of the matter Is, that counsel have opened up a matter now of great Importance, and one which the 'amicus curiae' did not wish to go Into for he believes that a correct construction of this Act will result in but one session of the court being eld hereafter, Instead of three as hereto- fore. One of the reasons given by Judge Gear for calling In the other judges was that a proper construction of the statute would not allow each and all of the Judges to hold different ses- sions of the court at the same time, but that there was only one. court, and wherever that was held, and whenever, no other Circuit Court could be held at the same time. "When the statute was enacted in 1832 there were but two judge, and the statute allowed 'either of whom' to hold 'the court.' 'The court Is but one court, the definite article 'the' so lim- iting the word court. "The court" con- sisted of two Judges, but the legislature evidently did not want to make It necessary for bot;i Judtws to sil rill ihe time, so It provided 'either of whom may hold the court.' That Is of tho two ilther on- - or tho jthar could hoid the court. This does nor mean that both of them could hold court separ- ately, that Is to have two sessions of t - c urt held at n Inn only what It says 'either of whom,' ei- ther one or the other. If It meant that both could hold 'the court' at the nanu time In different rooms, with Jlfferent jurors and differently constituted, It would have said so, or would have at least said 'each of them.' As tho Act stands now It is not even grammatical for the amendment and the sole amendment to It was the substitution of the word 'three' for 'two.' 'The court' now 'shall consist of three Jud- ges' 'either of whom may hold the court.' This Is ungrammatical for the reason that 'either' refers to one of two. "It will be readily seen that 'either of whom' does not and cannot mean 'each of three' although It would be embrac- ed In 'all of three.' If one holds 'the court' then the permissive language of the Act that either 'may hold the court" Is carried out. The court being held by that one is the same court which 'shall consist of three judges.' If It consist of less than the three It Is still 'the Circuit Court of the First Circuit.' und as 'the court' Is In session, no oth- er Judge could then hold 'the court' without special power. The first sen- tence states what the court nronerly consists of, for 'it shall consist of three Judges.' Here are the direct words, stating that the three judges constitute the court, and yet petitioner's counsel contend that It was error for the three Judges to lt together. A mere state ment or tne words of the Act shows how absurd such a contention is. The fact that the Act also contains a pro- - (Continued on five.')' A MASONIC JUBILEE HAWAIIAN LODGE TO HOLD A CELEBRATION. Musical Program and Addresses Will Kill Out the Evening of May G at the Temple. The Jubilee celebration of the Ha- waiian Lodge, No. 21, of Free and Ac- cepted Masons will be held on Monday, May 8, in the lodge room at the Mason- ic Temple at 8 o'clock. The program has not been entirely arranged, but an attempt Is being made to get a musi- cal program with which to Intersperse me speech making. The opening smcii win oe made by W. F. Allen and after some musical numbers an MtorIrl address will be given by John A. Hassinftar. The address by Mr. Hasslnger is be- lli looked forward to with a great deal of lntrst and will be preserved among the archives of the lodge, as a record of the progress of Masonry on these Isl- ands since Its Inclplency In 1S43, to the present time. After this address and the remainder of the musical program refreshments will be served to those present, consisting of Masons and their families. The address of Mr. Hasslnger, while! u win take only forty minutes to de- liver, has taken a great deal of re- search In Its preparation. Much has been left out perforce that might prove Interesting. In the early days of mas-onr- yt according to the duta unearthed by Mr. Hasslnger, the Initiative in- - the introduction of the order to these isl- ands was taken by the captain of a French whaling vessel, the AJax, ten months out from France. The captain was named Letellier and bore with him a dispensation to create lodges granted him in 1842. The whaler came to Ho- nolulu In March, 1843. The name of the ship was obtained through David Day- ton who furnished a copy of the "Tem- perance Advocate and daman's Friend," afterwards merged into the "Friend," of that year. Lettellier, with H. Sea, once Hawaiian marshal, Cap- tain Meek and others formed a lodce according to the Scottish Rites, Uel original lodge of Le Progres. Trouble was experienced In getting the charter from Europe, the original and even the second one being lost en route. When the gold fever struck California the members of the lodge, who had been holding meetings In an Informal and desultory sort of a way, scattered and not enough members were left to form a lodge which dropped Into desuetude. In 1851 the desire for masonry being active In the original .members and others, a dispensation was gained from the Grand Lodge of California, then just started, and a second' and this timn permaiuiiu -- attempt to found tho orde"r "made In Haffalf.' In 1862, fifty years ago, the first celebration was held on the hundredth anniversary, cu- riously enough, of the Initiation of George Wushlngton Into the order. A procession was formed with a brass band and paraded the then few streets of the town, finally stopping on the corner of Bethel and King streets where the Rev. Lorrln Andrews deliv- ered an inaugural address. Some four years later, the Le Pro- gres lodge finally received their char- ter and were recognized as a masonic order by the Hawaiian Lodge. Mnny of the original members who had be- come affiliated with the Hawaiian Lodge demltted and returned to the ledge which they had helped to form These with many Interesting features of names, dates and -- episodes of tho half cycle surrounding Hawaiian mas- onry will be brought out In Mr. Hassln-ger- 's address. Banquets and speeches of by-go- celebrations through days of royalty, republicanism and territor- ial progress will be brought to light, refreshing dormant memories of the older masons and enlightening the younger members. MUST BE SANITAR! The sanitary olllcluls are hot after violators of the sanltnry ordinances. Officer Tracy has passed the last two mornings In Judge Wilcox's court giv- ing testimony against various offenders. Sanitary Inspector Francis was also present In court yesterday, as a witness in a case. In every instance, convic- tions were secured. The most warmly defended case oc- curred this morning when Yee Hop was charged with common nuisance. Judgo Stanley appeared for the defence and Deputy High Sheriff Chllllngworth for tho prosecution. Mr. Tracy testified that the cesspool on tho defendants property was overflowing and running into Pauoa stream. There seemed to be some thing radically wrong with the condition of the cesspool. It had not been pumped out for about a year un- til recently but the other day when It was pumped out, within twenty-fou- r hours It had filled up again and was overflowing. Tracy was subjected to a very severe cross examination by Judge Stanley but he stood the ordeal well, and the testimony wan not materially weakened by the examination. Several lively tilts occurred between the attorneys but the case ended by the uetenaant being found guilty and lined $2G. Notice of an appeal was given. Yesterday, two Chinese defendants charged with similar offences were fined $10 and costs each. The Chinese appear to be the people who are causing th sanitary otllclalu the greatest amount of trouble and In every case whV 1 has come up recently, the defenlanls ln,e employed attorneys mid fought ilie cases. THE 1902 WALL PAPER. This year has been an epogU making one In the wall paper business. The very highest art has been Incorporated In wall paper designs. See at Reals. SEMI-WEEKL- Y STAR. Honolulu people who are going ibroad can have the Semi-Week- ly Star .nailed to any address for the small sum of twenty-fiv- e cents a month. The Semi. Weekly Star contains all the local news of Impfutanoe, besides the daily stock quotations 4 Advertise yoUr "wants in the Star. TRE CASE OF OSA MORE ABOUT THE TRANSITION APPEAL. United States Solicitor General Rich ards Reports Proceedings In the Court at Washington. United States Solicitor General Rich- ards has sent to Attorney General Dole the following account of the proceed- ings in the United States Supreme Court in the Osakl Manklchl case: "On Monday last, the 14th Instant, the day set for the hearing of the case of the Territory of Hawaii vs. Osakl Manklchl, I sumbltted the case to the full bench, upon .the printed arguments on file, vlthnut Oral argument. In ad- dition to the briefs and arguments filed by Mr. Davis and yourself, I prepared and filed a brief on behalf of the Gov- ernment of the United StateB, a dosen copies of which I have sent you. Please hand Mr. Davis two copies. I submit- ted the case without oral argument, not only because of the absence of both Mr. Davis and yourself, but because I desired to secure the consideration and decision of all tlrts justices, and Mr. Justice Gray, who was one of the five iltiembers who held for the Government in the Downes case, has been absent 011 account of sickness from the bench for sometime, and could not hear an oral argument. I deemed It preferable t submit the case without oral argu- ment to the nine Justices, rather than submit It with oral argument to the eighf Justices who were evenly divided on the vital Constitutional question passed upon In the Insular Tariff cases, "Very respectfully, "J. K. RICHARDS, "Solicitor General." MONEY IS IN SIGHT CASH FOR CHINATOWN FIRE CLAIMANTS. Attorney General Dole Approves a Plan By Which Negotiable Warrants Will be Issued. The Courl an hlnatown fire commls- - sloners Is ' g near the end of Its labors now,' "Sn d a plan has been ndopt- - ed whereby warrants based upon Its judgments will become Immediately ne- gotiable, In spite of the fact that the Territorial treasury has not the money to pay them. In reply to an Inquiry from Auditor Austin, Attorn'. General Dole has written the follounur opinion with regard to the !ssunnflPovi'-- , rants: "In response to your request for nn opinion, I have to say that I see no ob- jection to tho Issuing of warrants pay- able severally, pursuant to the provi- sions of Act XV of the Session Laws of 1001, based upon certificates for the amounts of the Judgments found by the 'Fire Claims Coimritsslon. Very res- pectfully yours, "E. P. DOLE, "Attorney-General.- '! It Is proposed to Issue three warrants for each claim, drawn on the treasury one, two and three years ahead, as pro- vided for by the act that created tho commission. The warrants will be ne- gotiable paper at once and claimants will therefore have Immediate relief, when the commission gets ready to hand down Its decisions, which will be very soon now. The act of the legisla- ture contemplated paying the money out of the treasury this year, next year and the year following. There is said to be some question about the negotiability of the warrants tor the third payment. The legal point bus been made that the legislature had no right to make appropriations beyond uie uaeiu punuu ui iwu years, tor wnicu it was supposedly legislating, nnd on this ground one third of the appro- priation of $1,500,000, at tho rate of $300,000 per year, may bo knocked out. JALISCO ABOLISHES BULLFIGHTS. MEXICO CITY, April 19. The Le- gislature of tho State of Jalisco has passed a bill abolishing bull lights nnd cock lights. KANGAROOS HAVE THE PLAGUE. SYDNEY, (N. S. W.). April 21. Bu- bonic plague has' appeared among the wallaby (smaller kangaroos) In the zo- ological gardens here, which have been closed to the public. "SING SWEET BIRD." D. G. Camarlnos received a consign- ment of line singing canary birds on the Nippon Mnru. They can bo pur- chased at his establishment on King street. SWELL MILLINERY. For choice millinery L. B. Kerr & Co. are In the front rank. The Paris model hats are certainly crea- tions of extreme beauty. RoVal Baking Powder Made from pure cream of tartar. Safeguards the food against alum Alum baking powefert are the greatest mcaacen to health of the present day. S9YM. Am CO.. Htm TW. C MONEY IN DKOLEHAO CHANCE FOR AN EXPMRT DRINK-MIXE- A Legalised Distilling of the et Drink Might Be a ProiltaH I mitt, try. "There is a chance for a iweStW Industry In the making of ehotelwe said one of those Interested in the Castanha case, "if the retrtriettfffts Im- posed by the Hawaiian Statu tees mta done away with. Good okolehao, I urt. demand, Is as good as many other that are allowed by atMle aw better than some, and It Is somethlltK unknown on the Mainland that might soeh be quite In demand if It were In. troduced. "Under the federal statute there hi nothing to stop a man making all the okolehao he wants, If he complies with the law. He n.ust register the still, give a bond, nnd make certain report, besides complying with other rules laid. down In the revised statutes. Then the United States has nothing to do with any law the Territory may have on th subject of okolehao, though Its license win not protect a man from prosecu- tion under the 'territorial law. While the federal law contains In on- mo- tion a list of things from which alco- holic liquors may be distilled, there la another section providing in a general way for other things, so that the law" Is broad enough to Include ti root." It Is suggested that some enterprising, expert In drlnk-mlxln- g might make a. new mixture from okolehao that would get a name In the clubs and hotels of the mainland. An okolehao cocktail Is a poslblllty. It might be made hot. enough to suit the toughest palate, or mild and sweet and tropical. Once pro- perly Introduced, If rightly mixed up It might make a place for Itself In the fashionable clubs where something new is always looked for, and Hawaii, fa- mous now only for political rumpussee, sugar production and hulas, might win distinction as the manufacturing placu of a new drink. The Hawaiian law as It now stands contains a simple prohibition of the manufacture of any liquors of any kind in the Territory, the following, section 424, covering the case of okolehao and all other liquors. "Whoever shall manufacture for sale nny Intoxicating drink or substance In the Territory of Hawaii, shall be liable to a fine not exceeding $500, rind In de- fault of payment of such fine shall be Imprisoned at hard labor for a term not exceeding two years." This law Is the cause of much Illicit distilling, It Is claimed. In the Stales It has been noted many times that a. fctrct law against distilling, or an es- pecially high license, always Increases the number ot secret stills and makes work for the Internal revenue officers. If okolehao licenses were legalized the Territory would get the benefit of li- censes, whereas under the present laws, Uncle Sam gets it all In fines. AUCTION ATTRACTS CROWD. The lot In front of the police station was thronged with a crowd this morn Ing and afternoon, attending tho auc tlon sale of goods from the store of It. Kawate. The goods were seized under foreclosure proceedings. X BANQUET TO JUDGE LITTLE. Chester Dovle is arrantrlnc- - tn clva Judge Little a congratulatory banquet upon uie return 01 tno Hawaii Jurist from Washington. Williams will prob- - ouiy lay the covore ADDITIONAL BOOKINGS Per S. S. Alameda, April 20,. for Sail i' raucisco .Mrs. uonisnn nn twn oiiii dren, nnd Mrs. Carrie Mendall.' KINYOUN'S NEW JOB. . - Dr. A. J. Klnvnun. thn fnrmni- - rtiini. pritiue olllcer at Sari Francisco, has left the marine service to accept the'dl- - l'LCtOrshltl of the lln1nirlnl Inhmlnrtuu 01 tne it. 14. .MUirord company at uienoiuen, I'enn. "In tho midst of life, wo nrn In death." Don't let the Inevitable find you without a policy In Tho Oriental Life Insurance Company. THE SEARCHLIGHT. Look out for the searchlight on the Heights. i.P.REED&CO.'S ladies; SHOES Best product of the celebrated Ro. Chester and New York ihoe makers St ' price quoted below: LADIES' VICI KID LAPP UOOT&$2.fO Good wearing. neatj fttUnf atjd OOQlXort-- bl LADIES' OXFORD ;$J9 A swell shoe, latest styl, rope stitched extension sole, of the best Viol kid. IDEAL KID OXFORDS $l. Stylish, perfect fitting, good wearing-an- comfortable. IWKIHDff IE K LIMITED. 1057 FORT STBEET

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Page 1: iWVV HAWAIIAN STAR. · adld are promised on December 1 as an inducement for intending purchasers to paid from the profits from hauling freight In October of this year: BETTER THAN

I I 'iWVV

day'sjeH

New,TTRHt

tlHy THE The SHur

TN OHM Hhi) It HAWAIIAN STAR.THIS STAR gww into (he torthmttm r HeHelklt

I

VOL. X. HONOLULU, H. I., WttDNRSDAY, APRIL 30 1902.

KONA RAILROAD

PROM MUCH

VICE PRESIDENT J. COERPERMAKES LIBERAL OFFER

TO INVESTORS.

S'IRST COMERS TO QET BIO DIVI--,DENDS.

Those Locally Interested Expect RoadTo Start Within Sixty Days SouthKona Brunch First.

The following display advertisementSB It appeared In the San Francisco

hronlole" gives golden promises ofspeedy and big dividends from share-holding in the Kona and Kau R. R.Company, Limited. Ten per cent divi-dends on the llrst ten thousand sharesadld are promised on December 1 as aninducement for intending purchasers to

paid from the profits from haulingfreight In October of this year:BETTER THAN A

SAVINGS BANK.Now is the time to Invest in preferred

stock of the Kona and Kau R. R. Co.,Limited, at the par value of $10 pershare. Franchise to the company fromthe Hawaiian Government granted.Surveys made. Rights of way from nilprivate parties obtained. This railroadwill open over two-thir- of the rich-est lands In the Island of Hawaii, thelargest in the group. Hawaii is 300miles nearer to San Francisco thanHonolulu.' As soon as 10 miles of therailroad are completed shares will dou-ble In value.

A dividend of 10 per cent on the first10,000 shares sold will be paid on the31st day of December, 1902, accruingfrom freight contracts njeady made forhauling during October, 1902.

Blocks of stock sold from 2o shares upto 1000 shares. Stocks from Hawaiian

'railroads have advanced to $190 perShare on a par value of $100 after beingwatered 100 per cent.

Call at our office, room 714-7- EmmaSpreckels Bulldlng, No. 927 Market.street, and get free book. "Facts AboutHawaii." Correspondence solicited.

J. COERPER,Vice President and General ManagerK. and K. R. R. Co., Ltd.

JOHNSON & RICHARDS,General Agents.

When shown to those locally Interest-ed In the railroad, the advertisementevidently came as a surprise. It hadbeen expected that J. Coerper was InChicago instead of San Francisco andthe advertisement Itself had not beennoticed. It was stated by those locallyInterested this morning that the senseof the advertisement was all right, thedividend promise had been made by Mr.Coerper who was the vice president ofthe road and was no doubt acting ad-visedly.

"You can say that much of the equip-ment of rails and rolling stock Is nowon its way from New York and thatthe road will be started sixty daysfrom now," said Gardner K. Wilderthis morning. There Is no doubt as tothe road going through. A conslderaWe amount of the stock has been a- -ready floated. Twenty miles throughthe South Kona district will be completed first to take out the cane thatwill be ready for shipment. The whole120 miles of the road will be completedbefore long."

There Is not very much of the stockassumed by Honolulu Investors generally .although a little group of businessmen and stock brokers were among theoriginal promoters of the road.

GOOD FO RRHEUMATISM.Last fall I was taken with a very

severe attack of muscular rheumatismwhich caused me great pain and annoyance. After trying several preserlptfons and rheumatic cures, I decided touse Chamberlain's Pain Balm, which Ihad seen advertised In the South

After two applications of thisRemedy I was much better, and afterusing one bottle, was completely cured

Sallie Harris, Salem, N. X, U. S. A.For sale by all dealers, Benson, Smith& Co., general agents, Hawawllan Islands;

W. B. CORSETS.L. B. Kerr & Co., Ltd., have secured

for the future the sole right for Honolulu for the celebrated W. B. Corset,this Is the most perfect fitting Corsetknown to the trade and at popularprices from DOc. upwards.

THE LATEST FAD.Evening parties at the "Tea House"

oi. the Heights is the latest fad.

Fine Book and Commercial Printing,nt the Star Office.

UNLIKE 1 INDIVIDUAL.

A TRUST COMPANY NEVERDIES, IS NEVER OUT OFTOWN. AND STICKS TO ITSCHOSEN BUSINESS.

uirarojDU23 Fort Street

JflKI iff IIJJJT.

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be

"'

M E RULE POLITICS

PLANS TO REORGANIZE THKPARTY.

Executive Committee to be Smaller.Working on a City and County Gov.crnont Act.

The Home Rule exeoutive commit-tee will hold an Important meeting tmThursday evening, at which a generalreorganization of the party will be dis-cussed, also the election of a successorto the late J. K. Kaulla as chairman ofthe committee. It Is proposed to makethe committee smaller and to make ar-rangements for direct election of mem-bers by the voters of the various dis-tricts, and the Home Rulers are alsoconsidering a "non partisan" move-ment which Involves fusion with theDemocrats' and a' general party policybased wholly on local Issues.

Senator KalauokalanI Is said to beIn line for the position of chairman,made vacant by the death of Kaulla.The Senator Is not a member of theexecutive committee, but Is an activeparty worker and as president of KalalAlha, he was one of the founders ofthe Homo Rule party, with the de-ceased president of Aloha Aina.

The Home Rulers are already at workon a county government act whichthey propose to press In the next le-gislature. They are also discussingcandidates for the house and senate.The Home Rulers seem never to takeany vacations from politics, nnd theyare mapping out a programme by whichthey hope to carry out their pet schemeof making Honolulu a municipal cor-poration, and giving other communitieslocal self government.' The county gov.ernment act which Is now being dis-cussed by members of the committee inbased on the works of municipal leagues on tne mainland, it Is the inten-tion this time to have it all ready, farIn advance of the meeting oS the legis-lature. This was. the Intention lasttime, but It was not oulte carried out.and the act was Introduced In the houseand senate was calculated to makecities In Nebraska and other places.The Home Rulers say they will avoidthat kind of thing this time.

The scheme for party reorganizationInvolves the change of the executivecommittee from a body of 60 men to oneof 30, to be elected at the party prima-ries. It also involves a breaking awayfrom party politics and a general bidfor votes of all parties on local issues.Another thing said to be Involved, is aheavy throwdown for some of tne"statesmen" who made the party ridi-culous In the last legislature.

Representative Emmeluth says thatthe party will declare for absolutelyopen primaries. This Is a necessaryfeature of the non-partis- programme."We don't care who votes in our prima-ries," said iSmmelutli, "as long as weget the choice of the electors generallyfor candidates. Republicans, Demo-crats and all others ure welcome totake part In the Home Rule primarieswithout any pledges at all."

'lne Home uuieis propose to fix uptheir city and county government act,adopt It as the policy of the party andthen have all their candidates pledg-j-to work for It If elected to the legis-lature. In the discussslon of candidatesso far there has been a disposition tobreak away from the "Banderlogs" ofthe last session, says those in the coun-cils of the party, and the men whomade the famous records of the firstterritorial legislature of Hawaii willprobably be left in the cold.

WILL SIT IN LOGES.The finance committee for Honolulu

of the McKlnley Memorial fund havetaken the two loges for the May-da- y

performance nt the Opera House to-morrow night.

KAISER ACCEPTS RHODES' GIFT.BERLIN, April 21. It is announced

that Emperor William has notified theexecutors of the will of Cecil Rhodesof his country's acceptance of the trustrelative to the German scholarships atOxford.

PLAGUE IN CAPE COLONY.PORT ELIZABETH, (Capo Colony),

April 21. There Is a recrudescence ofthe plague here. Ten cases have beenreported, five of which have provedfatal.

RUSSIAN SOLDIERS KILL- - 0.PEKING. April 20. A post on the

outskirts of Newchwang, garrisoned byforty Russians hus been attacked bybandits. One Ruslan officer nnd fourprivates were killed.

GLEANER'S LAWN PARTY.The lawn party of the Missionary

Gleaner's will be held at the residenceof F. J. Lowrey on Saturday May 3rdGrounds are open from 2:30 to 5 o'clock,saie commences at 3 o clock. Admlsslon 23 cents. Children 10 cents.

A GOOD APPETIZER.A ride up Pacific Heights 1 a good

appetizer.

Fine Book nnd Commercial Printing,at the Star Office.

FRESH DOG CAKES,SUNDRIES ANDMEDICINES, BYLAST STEAMER.

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AGENTS

ONE COURT IN

FIRST CIRCUIT

JUDGES THINK THEY HAVE NOTTHE RIGHT TO HOLD COURT

SEPARATELY.

ACT PROVIDING FOR THREEJUDGES USELESS.

Smith Case Raises a Point That MayReduce the Circuit to PraetleallyOne Judge.

The Judges of the First Circuit Court,ay a result of questions raised ih theWalter G. Smith case, have about cometo the conclusion that they have theright to sit en banc, or separately oneat n time, but have not the right. tohold court any other way. It Is likely,therefore, that Judge Robinson will bothe only judge to sit In term mattersduring the May term beginning nextweek. Neither Judge Gear nor Humph-reys have Issued any venire for jurors,and it Is .understood that their pres-tn- t

view is that they cannot sit IfJudge Robinson sits, except with him,a.; one court.

The legislature provided that theFirst Circuit Court "shall consist ofthree Judges." but there is nothing Inthe law to provide for the three sittingseparately. In his argument beforo thesupreme rourt, George A. Davis con-tended that the right to sit en bane

as plain In the statute, but that whatlequlred an express provision was theright to sit separately. This was In an-swer to the contention that the pro-ceedings In the Smith case were Illegalnecause me tnreo judges sat together.The question Is now b3fore the Su-preme Court.

In his brief filed in the Smith caseDav's sets forth the views that haveresulted in the decision of the first andsecond Judges to refrain from holdingcourt while the third Judge Is sitting.The result reduces the First Circuit toonly one judge, as far as term mattersare concerned. There Is only one court,according to this view, and the threeJudges are no better than one Judge.

The act of the legislature on the sub-ject Is as follows:

"The Circuit Court of the First Cir-cuit shill consist of three judges, whoshall be styled first, second and thirdJudges respectively of the CircuitCourt of the First Circuit, either ofwhom may hold the court."

Davis' brief contains the following onthe subject of the Interpretation of thislaw :

"i'lie contention Is that the .words'either of whom may hold ttioooiirt,' J

leairiuis me nouung to one judge, andff more than one sit then any Judgmentdelivered Is void and of no effect. Theutter fallacy of such an argument Isapparent to anyone giving the mattera tnougnt. in fact the very oppositeconclusion must be reached to thatcontended, for here, as it Is evidentthat the court 'shall consist of threejudges.' This is the language of theAct. If one 'may hold the court,' Itdoes not prohibit all from doing like-wise. A part cannot be greater thanthe whole. One judge cannot havemore power than three, the wholecourt. The court 'shall consist of threeJudges,' but there Is but one court ofthis Circuit. The fact of the matter Is,that counsel have opened up a matternow of great Importance, and onewhich the 'amicus curiae' did not wishto go Into for he believes that a correctconstruction of this Act will result inbut one session of the court being eldhereafter, Instead of three as hereto-fore. One of the reasons given byJudge Gear for calling In the otherjudges was that a proper constructionof the statute would not allow each andall of the Judges to hold different ses-sions of the court at the same time, butthat there was only one. court, andwherever that was held, and whenever,no other Circuit Court could be held atthe same time.

"When the statute was enacted in1832 there were but two judge, and thestatute allowed 'either of whom' tohold 'the court.' 'The court Is but onecourt, the definite article 'the' so lim-iting the word court. "The court" con-sisted of two Judges, but the legislatureevidently did not want to make Itnecessary for bot;i Judtws to sil rill ihetime, so It provided 'either of whommay hold the court.' That Is of thotwo ilther on- - or tho jthar could hoidthe court. This does nor mean thatboth of them could hold court separ-ately, that Is to have two sessions oft - c urt held at n Innonly what It says 'either of whom,' ei-

ther one or the other. If It meant thatboth could hold 'the court' at the nanutime In different rooms, with Jlfferentjurors and differently constituted, Itwould have said so, or would have atleast said 'each of them.' As tho Actstands now It is not even grammaticalfor the amendment and the soleamendment to It was the substitutionof the word 'three' for 'two.' 'Thecourt' now 'shall consist of three Jud-ges' 'either of whom may hold thecourt.' This Is ungrammatical for thereason that 'either' refers to one oftwo.

"It will be readily seen that 'either ofwhom' does not and cannot mean 'eachof three' although It would be embrac-ed In 'all of three.' If one holds 'thecourt' then the permissive language ofthe Act that either 'may hold the court"Is carried out. The court being heldby that one is the same court which'shall consist of three judges.' If Itconsist of less than the three It Is still'the Circuit Court of the First Circuit.'und as 'the court' Is In session, no oth-er Judge could then hold 'the court'without special power. The first sen-tence states what the court nronerlyconsists of, for 'it shall consist of threeJudges.' Here are the direct words,stating that the three judges constitutethe court, and yet petitioner's counselcontend that It was error for the threeJudges to lt together. A mere statement or tne words of the Act showshow absurd such a contention is. Thefact that the Act also contains a pro- -

(Continued on five.')'

A MASONIC JUBILEE

HAWAIIAN LODGE TO HOLD A

CELEBRATION.

Musical Program and Addresses WillKill Out the Evening of May G atthe Temple.

The Jubilee celebration of the Ha-waiian Lodge, No. 21, of Free and Ac-cepted Masons will be held on Monday,May 8, in the lodge room at the Mason-ic Temple at 8 o'clock. The programhas not been entirely arranged, but anattempt Is being made to get a musi-cal program with which to Intersperseme speech making. The openingsmcii win oe made by W. F. Allenand after some musical numbers anMtorIrl address will be given byJohn A. Hassinftar.

The address by Mr. Hasslnger is be-lli looked forward to with a great dealof lntrst and will be preserved amongthe archives of the lodge, as a recordof the progress of Masonry on these Isl-ands since Its Inclplency In 1S43, to thepresent time. After this address andthe remainder of the musical programrefreshments will be served to thosepresent, consisting of Masons andtheir families.

The address of Mr. Hasslnger, while!u win take only forty minutes to de-liver, has taken a great deal of re-search In Its preparation. Much hasbeen left out perforce that might proveInteresting. In the early days of mas-onr- yt

according to the duta unearthedby Mr. Hasslnger, the Initiative in- - theintroduction of the order to these isl-ands was taken by the captain of aFrench whaling vessel, the AJax, tenmonths out from France. The captainwas named Letellier and bore with hima dispensation to create lodges grantedhim in 1842. The whaler came to Ho-nolulu In March, 1843. The name of theship was obtained through David Day-ton who furnished a copy of the "Tem-perance Advocate and daman'sFriend," afterwards merged into the"Friend," of that year. Lettellier, withH. Sea, once Hawaiian marshal, Cap-tain Meek and others formed a lodceaccording to the Scottish Rites, Ueloriginal lodge of Le Progres. Troublewas experienced In getting the charterfrom Europe, the original and even thesecond one being lost en route. Whenthe gold fever struck California themembers of the lodge, who had beenholding meetings In an Informal anddesultory sort of a way, scattered andnot enough members were left to forma lodge which dropped Into desuetude.

In 1851 the desire for masonry beingactive In the original .members andothers, a dispensation was gained fromthe Grand Lodge of California, thenjust started, and a second' and thistimn permaiuiiu --attempt to found thoorde"r "made In Haffalf.' In 1862, fiftyyears ago, the first celebration washeld on the hundredth anniversary, cu-riously enough, of the Initiation ofGeorge Wushlngton Into the order. Aprocession was formed with a brassband and paraded the then few streetsof the town, finally stopping on thecorner of Bethel and King streetswhere the Rev. Lorrln Andrews deliv-ered an inaugural address.

Some four years later, the Le Pro-gres lodge finally received their char-ter and were recognized as a masonicorder by the Hawaiian Lodge. Mnnyof the original members who had be-come affiliated with the HawaiianLodge demltted and returned to theledge which they had helped to form

These with many Interesting featuresof names, dates and -- episodes of thohalf cycle surrounding Hawaiian mas-onry will be brought out In Mr. Hassln-ger- 's

address. Banquets and speechesof by-go- celebrations through daysof royalty, republicanism and territor-ial progress will be brought to light,refreshing dormant memories of theolder masons and enlightening theyounger members.

MUST BE SANITAR!

The sanitary olllcluls are hot afterviolators of the sanltnry ordinances.Officer Tracy has passed the last twomornings In Judge Wilcox's court giv-ing testimony against various offenders.Sanitary Inspector Francis was alsopresent In court yesterday, as a witnessin a case. In every instance, convic-tions were secured.

The most warmly defended case oc-curred this morning when Yee Hop wascharged with common nuisance. JudgoStanley appeared for the defence andDeputy High Sheriff Chllllngworth fortho prosecution. Mr. Tracy testifiedthat the cesspool on tho defendantsproperty was overflowing and runninginto Pauoa stream. There seemed tobe some thing radically wrong with thecondition of the cesspool. It had notbeen pumped out for about a year un-til recently but the other day when Itwas pumped out, within twenty-fou- rhours It had filled up again and wasoverflowing. Tracy was subjected to avery severe cross examination by JudgeStanley but he stood the ordeal well,and the testimony wan not materiallyweakened by the examination.

Several lively tilts occurred betweenthe attorneys but the case ended by theuetenaant being found guilty and lined$2G. Notice of an appeal was given.

Yesterday, two Chinese defendantscharged with similar offences were fined$10 and costs each. The Chinese appearto be the people who are causing thsanitary otllclalu the greatest amountof trouble and In every case whV 1 hascome up recently, the defenlanls ln,eemployed attorneys mid fought iliecases.

THE 1902 WALL PAPER.This year has been an epogU making

one In the wall paper business. Thevery highest art has been IncorporatedIn wall paper designs. See at Reals.

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

ibroad can have the Semi-Week- ly Star.nailed to any address for the smallsum of twenty-fiv- e cents a month. TheSemi.Weekly Star contains all the localnews of Impfutanoe, besides the dailystock quotations

4Advertise yoUr "wants in the Star.

TRE CASE OF OSA

MORE ABOUT THE TRANSITIONAPPEAL.

United States Solicitor General Richards Reports Proceedings In theCourt at Washington.

United States Solicitor General Rich-ards has sent to Attorney General Dolethe following account of the proceed-ings in the United States SupremeCourt in the Osakl Manklchl case:

"On Monday last, the 14th Instant,the day set for the hearing of the caseof the Territory of Hawaii vs. OsaklManklchl, I sumbltted the case to thefull bench, upon .the printed argumentson file, vlthnut Oral argument. In ad-dition to the briefs and arguments filedby Mr. Davis and yourself, I preparedand filed a brief on behalf of the Gov-ernment of the United StateB, a dosencopies of which I have sent you. Pleasehand Mr. Davis two copies. I submit-ted the case without oral argument,not only because of the absence of bothMr. Davis and yourself, but because Idesired to secure the consideration anddecision of all tlrts justices, and Mr.Justice Gray, who was one of the fiveiltiembers who held for the Governmentin the Downes case, has been absent011 account of sickness from the benchfor sometime, and could not hear anoral argument. I deemed It preferablet submit the case without oral argu-ment to the nine Justices, rather thansubmit It with oral argument to theeighf Justices who were evenly dividedon the vital Constitutional questionpassed upon In the Insular Tariff cases,

"Very respectfully,"J. K. RICHARDS,

"Solicitor General."

MONEY IS IN SIGHT

CASH FOR CHINATOWN FIRECLAIMANTS.

Attorney General Dole Approves aPlan By Which Negotiable WarrantsWill be Issued.

The Courlanhlnatown fire commls- -sloners Is ' g near the end of Itslabors now,' "Sn d a plan has been ndopt- -ed whereby warrants based upon Itsjudgments will become Immediately ne-gotiable, In spite of the fact that theTerritorial treasury has not the moneyto pay them. In reply to an Inquiryfrom Auditor Austin, Attorn'. GeneralDole has written the follounur opinionwith regard to the !ssunnflPovi'-- ,rants:

"In response to your request for nnopinion, I have to say that I see no ob-jection to tho Issuing of warrants pay-able severally, pursuant to the provi-sions of Act XV of the Session Lawsof 1001, based upon certificates for theamounts of the Judgments found by the'Fire Claims Coimritsslon. Very res-pectfully yours,

"E. P. DOLE,"Attorney-General.- '!

It Is proposed to Issue three warrantsfor each claim, drawn on the treasuryone, two and three years ahead, as pro-vided for by the act that created thocommission. The warrants will be ne-gotiable paper at once and claimantswill therefore have Immediate relief,when the commission gets ready tohand down Its decisions, which will bevery soon now. The act of the legisla-ture contemplated paying the moneyout of the treasury this year, next yearand the year following.

There is said to be some questionabout the negotiability of the warrantstor the third payment. The legal pointbus been made that the legislature hadno right to make appropriations beyonduie uaeiu punuu ui iwu years, tor wnicuit was supposedly legislating, nnd onthis ground one third of the appro-priation of $1,500,000, at tho rate of$300,000 per year, may bo knocked out.

JALISCO ABOLISHES BULLFIGHTS.MEXICO CITY, April 19. The Le-

gislature of tho State of Jalisco haspassed a bill abolishing bull lights nndcock lights.

KANGAROOS HAVE THE PLAGUE.SYDNEY, (N. S. W.). April 21. Bu-

bonic plague has' appeared among thewallaby (smaller kangaroos) In the zo-ological gardens here, which have beenclosed to the public.

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

ment of line singing canary birds onthe Nippon Mnru. They can bo pur-chased at his establishment on Kingstreet.

SWELL MILLINERY.For choice millinery L. B.

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

RoValBaking Powder

Made from purecream of tartar.

Safeguards the foodagainst alum

Alum baking powefert are the greatestmcaacen to health of the present day.

S9YM. Am CO.. Htm TW. C

MONEY IN DKOLEHAO

CHANCE FOR AN EXPMRTDRINK-MIXE-

A Legalised Distilling of the et

Drink Might Be a ProiltaH I mitt,try.

"There is a chance for a iweStWIndustry In the making of ehotelwesaid one of those Interested in theCastanha case, "if the retrtriettfffts Im-posed by the Hawaiian Statu tees mtadone away with. Good okolehao, I urt.demand, Is as good as many other

that are allowed by atMle awbetter than some, and It Is somethlltKunknown on the Mainland that mightsoeh be quite In demand if It were In.troduced.

"Under the federal statute there hinothing to stop a man making all theokolehao he wants, If he complies withthe law. He n.ust register the still,give a bond, nnd make certain report,besides complying with other rules laid.down In the revised statutes. Then theUnited States has nothing to do withany law the Territory may have on thsubject of okolehao, though Its licensewin not protect a man from prosecu-tion under the 'territorial law. Whilethe federal law contains In on- mo-tion a list of things from which alco-holic liquors may be distilled, there laanother section providing in a generalway for other things, so that the law"Is broad enough to Include ti root."

It Is suggested that some enterprising,expert In drlnk-mlxln- g might make a.new mixture from okolehao that wouldget a name In the clubs and hotels ofthe mainland. An okolehao cocktail Is aposlblllty. It might be made hot.enough to suit the toughest palate, ormild and sweet and tropical. Once pro-perly Introduced, If rightly mixed upIt might make a place for Itself In thefashionable clubs where something newis always looked for, and Hawaii, fa-mous now only for political rumpussee,sugar production and hulas, might windistinction as the manufacturing placuof a new drink.

The Hawaiian law as It now standscontains a simple prohibition of themanufacture of any liquors of any kindin the Territory, the following, section424, covering the case of okolehao andall other liquors.

"Whoever shall manufacture for salenny Intoxicating drink or substance Inthe Territory of Hawaii, shall be liableto a fine not exceeding $500, rind In de-fault of payment of such fine shall beImprisoned at hard labor for a term notexceeding two years."

This law Is the cause of much Illicitdistilling, It Is claimed. In the StalesIt has been noted many times that a.fctrct law against distilling, or an es-pecially high license, always Increasesthe number ot secret stills and makeswork for the Internal revenue officers.If okolehao licenses were legalized theTerritory would get the benefit of li-censes, whereas under the present laws,Uncle Sam gets it all In fines.

AUCTION ATTRACTS CROWD.The lot In front of the police station

was thronged with a crowd this mornIng and afternoon, attending tho auctlon sale of goods from the store of It.Kawate. The goods were seized underforeclosure proceedings.

X BANQUET TO JUDGE LITTLE.Chester Dovle is arrantrlnc- - tn clva

Judge Little a congratulatory banquetupon uie return 01 tno Hawaii Juristfrom Washington. Williams will prob- -ouiy lay the covore

ADDITIONAL BOOKINGSPer S. S. Alameda, April 20,. for Sail

i' raucisco .Mrs. uonisnn nn twn oiiiidren, nnd Mrs. Carrie Mendall.'

KINYOUN'S NEW JOB. . -

Dr. A. J. Klnvnun. thn fnrmni- - rtiini.pritiue olllcer at Sari Francisco, has leftthe marine service to accept the'dl- -l'LCtOrshltl of the lln1nirlnl Inhmlnrtuu01 tne it. 14. .MUirord company atuienoiuen, I'enn.

"In tho midst of life, wo nrn Indeath." Don't let the Inevitable findyou without a policy In Tho OrientalLife Insurance Company.

THE SEARCHLIGHT.Look out for the searchlight on the

Heights.

i.P.REED&CO.'S

ladies;SHOES

Best product of the celebrated Ro.Chester and New York ihoe makers St '

price quoted below:

LADIES' VICI KID LAPP UOOT&$2.fOGood wearing. neatj fttUnf atjd OOQlXort-- bl

LADIES' OXFORD ;$J9A swell shoe, latest styl, rope stitched

extension sole, of the best Viol kid.

IDEAL KID OXFORDS $l.Stylish, perfect fitting, good wearing-an-

comfortable.

IWKIHDff IE KLIMITED.

1057 FORT STBEET

Page 2: iWVV HAWAIIAN STAR. · adld are promised on December 1 as an inducement for intending purchasers to paid from the profits from hauling freight In October of this year: BETTER THAN

TWO

PsinQniQn-ftiiolrarm-n Royal

STEAMSHIP COMPANY

Steamer of the above line, running In connection with the CANADIAN

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

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

One at llonolulu on or about tlio dates below stated, viz:

"rem Vaneouver and Victoria, B. CiFrom Sydney and Brisbane, fop Victor Brisbane ana Sydney. toria ana Vancouver, is. u.:

lAORANGI APRIL 12MOAN.4 MAY 10MIOWBRA JUNE 71AORANGI JULY 5

Calling Suva, Fiji, on BothUp and Down Voyages

Mai

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

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

and Toyo Kisen Kaisha.

Pi

Steamers of fthe above Companies will call at Honolulu and thisort on about the below men tloned:

FOR CHINA JAPAN.CHINA 30

DORIC 8NIPPON MARU MAY 10

MAY 24

COPTIC JUNE 3AMERICA MARU JUNE 11

PEKING JUNE 19

GAELIC JUNE 2S

HONGKONG MARU JULY 5

CHINA JULY 15DORIC JULY 23

NIPPON MARU JULY Ul

PERU 8COPTIC AUG. 10

HONGKONG AUG. 20CHINA SEPT. 5

For general information apply to

HACKFEI.D CO., Ltd. Agts.

leanic Steamship Company.

TIME TABIE)The fine of this line will at and this

la

SAN FRANCISCO.

ALAMEDASONOMA . .ALAMEDA

VENTURA .ALAMEDAIERRA . ..

ONOMA . ..

(VENTURA .

1G

61827

18

MIOWERA 7AORANGI 4

MCwiA 2

at

PERU

MARU

FROM

Local

..MAY

..MAY.JUNE

.JUNE.JULY.JULY.JULY

MAYJUNEJULY

....

leaveor dates

ANDAPR.MAY

AUG.

FOP. SAN FRANCISCO.PERU MAY 3COPTIC MAY 10

AMERICA MARU MAY 20PEKING MAY 28

GAELIC : JUNE 7HONGKONG MARU JUNE 13

CHINA JUNE 21DORIC JUNE 2S

NIPPON MARU 8

PERU JULY 10COPTIC 23

AMERICA MARU AUG. 2

PEKING AUG.GAELIC . AUG. 20DORIC SEPT. 12

NIPPON MARU SEPT. 20

H.

Passengers Steamers arrive leave porthereunder:

Boat.

FOR SAN FRANCISCO.

..APR. 23 ALAMEDA APR. 30

..MAY 7 VENTURA MAY 0

28

JUNE

9

30

JULY

JULY

11

ALAMEDA .SIERRAALAMEDA .

SONOMA . ...ALAMEDA .

VENTURA .ALAMEDA .

SIERRA

..MAY 21

..MAY 27.JUNE 11.JUNE 17.JULY 2.JULY 8..JULY 23.JULY 29

Ia connection with the sailing of the above steamers, the Agents are prefared to 1 ue, to Intending passengers coupon through tickets by any railroadfrom San Francisco to all points In the United States, and from New York bytteamshlp line to all European Ports.

For further particulars apply to

W. G. Irwin & Co.(LIMITED)

Seneral Agents Oceanic S. S. Company.

OR can-Hawai-ian SteaiasliiB Go

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

SCjie splendid new steel steamers

"NEVADAN": to sail April SO Hi, 1003.

"HAWAIIAN": to sail May 20th, 1001

Freight received at Company's wharf, 43d Street, South Brooklyn, at alltlmm

From San Francisco :S. S. "IIYADES": to sail May I7th, 1902.

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

From Seattle and Tacoma :

S. S. "CALIFORNIA": to s.ill April 15, 1902.

S. S. "AMERICAN": to sail June 13, 1902.

H. Hackfeld& Co., Ltd,C, P M0R4JC, General Freight Agent. AGBNT8.

THfc! HAWAIIAN BTAR. WMtMVJMfUY, AMUI N 1MM.

SHIPPING IMEIlifiEHBE

(For additional and later shipping seepaged 4, 8, or S.)

ARRIVING.Tuesday, April 20.

Uchr. Malolo, from Koolau porta at 6p. in..

S. S. China, Frlele, from San Fran-cisco at 4 p. in.

Wednesday, April SO.

Sttur. Mlkahala, Gregory, from Ko-lo- a,

Ifileele, Makawell, Walinea atid Ke-hal- ta

at RMS p. in. with WOO bags sugar38 packages sundries.

Am. schr. Transit, Paulsen, 85 daysfrom Newcastle at 7:80 a. m.

schr. LMdy, Mokl, from Koolau portsat 2 a. tn.

Stmr. Wahxleale, Plltz. from Anahola,at 5:25 a. tn. with 3100 bags sugar, 5packages sundries.

DEPARTING.Wednesday, April 90.

Schr. Lady, Mokl, for Koolau ports atC p. in.

Schr. Malolo, for Koolau ports at 0p. in.

S. S. China, Frlele, for the Orient at2 p. tn.

S. S. Alameda, Herrlman, for SanFrancisco at 4 p. m.

U. S. A. T. Crook, Walcott, for Ma-nila about S p. in.

Thursday, May 1.Stmr. Mlkahala, Gregory, for Koloa,

Eleele, Makawell, Walmea and Kekahaat G p. m.

Stmr. Kauai, Bruhn, for Punaluu at 5p. m.

PASSENGERS.Arriving.

Per stmr. Mlkahala, April 30, fromKauai ports Bishop of Panopolls, J. i.Silva, Mrs. Ham See, Dr. Wilkinson,Tarn Kal, Miss Anna Blackslad, A. E.Todd and 20 deck.

Per S. S. China, April 29, from SanFrancisco For Honolulu: John Barrett,A. Blom, E. L. Collins, W. R. Davis, H.S. Godfrey, Mrs. II. S. Godfrey, Miss E.A. Halstead, Theodore Hardee, Mrs. W.F. Herrin, son and maid. Miss K. Her-rl- n.

Miss A. Herrin, E. P. O'Brlan, J. A.Palmer, Mrs. J. A. Palmer, Mrs. H.Peters, M. F. ProBser, Mrs. M. F. Pros-se- r,

F. J. Settelee, F. W. Taylor, Mrs.P. Van CHef, Captain M. R. Walters, G.P. Wilder, Mrs. C. A. Hamilton, Miss A.Luetchford, Louis Tartas

For Yokohama Mrs. Livingston Huntson and governess, A. W. Mosselman,K. Okura, S. Otsuka, E. Yoshitakc.

For Nagasaki Jerome AlexandreFor Shanghai Rev. C. C. MeDaiilcl

and wife, Mrs. A. P. Lowrle.For Hong Kong P. W, Brundsit, Ed-

gar Cockell, M. H. Coggeshall, J. M.Doherty, Miss M. F. Durphy, H. Lon-doner, II. II. Robinson, Rev. W. A.Sharp, Mrs. W. A. Sharp and two chil-dren, T. A. Shaw, Mrs. T. A. Shaw.

Departing.Per S. S. Alameda, April 30, for San

Francisco. F. W. Carter and wife, C.P. Grimwood and wife, Mr. and Mrs. S.W. Wilcox, J. H. Love, Mrs. F. Loveand 2 Hoogs' children, Miss Peacock,Miss Buckly, W. C. Peacock and wife,Capt, Jenson, Mrs. Dr. Nichols andchild, Mrs. C. J. Hutchins and daugh-ter, W. F. Hunt and wife, Miss Elm'oraSturgeon, Mrs. H. Waterhouse, MissesCheek, Mrs. Check, Miss McLean, MissG. Cooke, Miss Mary Alexander, M. S.Grlnbaum and wife. Miss Ilarlesch,Mrs. Randall, Col. Chamberlain andwife, Mrs. Moore, Miss Landegow, J.F. Hackfeld, Mrs. II. Eyans and child,W. Alfs, P. W. Wolber, Col. Spaulding,M. C. Pacheco, A. Weill, James Hutch-inson, G. E. Moore, I. Munroe, Mr. andMrs. F. O. Maitland, E. R. Dart, A.Waterhouse, Misses Scrlpps, Mrs'. J. J.Noit and daughter, II-- . A. Allen, wifeand child, Mrs. E. Field, Miss Hawliv,A. Turner, H. A. Wideman, W. Pers-on, W. S. Woodsworth, Sol. Brown, J.R. Schroder, Miss Hawley, Mrs. E.Field, Dr. Walters, A. M. Scott, II. J.Craft, E. J. Cotton, Harry Evans andson, Miss E. M. Berry, Miss M. Merry,A. W. S. Cockrane, Miss Sargent, Ed-win Goodale and wife, A. F. Brown, G.Schuman, Robert A. Scott, John Bur-gess, Capt. M. Ott, N. Nudeham, J. L.Kosten.

Per stmr. W. G. Hall, April 29, forKauai ports J. Hogg and friends, G.F. Winter, Mrs. A. Perrelra, Mrs. H. K.Amalu, W. A. Brown, J. J. Sullivan,Mrs. Mary Rice, Dr. Goodhue and 40deck.

HENCE AND HITHER.The schr. II. C. Wright sailed from

San Francisco for Mahukona, April 19.The schooner Mary E. Foster arrivedat Port Gamble April 19 from Hono-lulu. The schooner King Cyrus arriv-ed at Port Blakeley from HonoluluApril 19. The barkentlne Amelia sail-ed from Eureka for Honolulu April 19.The ship I. F. Chapman cleared fromNew York for Honolulu April 19. ThoFrench bark Anne de Bretagne was inport at Sharpness April 12 for Cardiffand Honolulu. The bark Kalulanl andthe barkentlne Coronado sailed Irom :

Kan Francisco for llonolulu April 20.

AFRAID OF STOWAGE.SA NFRANCISCO, April 22. Much of

the anxiety felt for the German ship II.F. Glade, homeward bound from thisport with grain and on the overdue listat CO per cent, Is occasioned by the factthat her cargo was stowed during thelate strike and that green hands wereemployed at the work. She took awaya great deal of barley, and ut the bestthis Is a most dlillcult thing to put in aship in proper shape.

FROM ISLAND PORTS.The bark Annie Johnson arrived In

San Francisco April 20 from Hllo; thebaric Gerard C. Tobey and the barkentlne Archer from Honolulu April 21, andthe ship Emily F. Whitney from

April 21.

The schooner W. H. Marston, Curtis,sailed from San Francisco for Hono-lulu April 22. The steamer Hawaiianarrived in Philadelphia April 21, fromllonolulu.

LOOKING FOR CONSIGNEE.The schooner Transit arrived this

morning from Newcastle after an un-

eventful passage lasting 65 days. Cap-tain Poulsen is unable to locate hisconsignees. He has 890 tons of coal buthe was given no information regardingthe indentlty of the people to whomthe coal was consigned, and thus far,no one has put In an appearance toclaim the cargo. The vessel hauled in-

to the coal slip this morning.

ALAMEDA FOR SAN FRANCISCO.The Alameda will sail at 4 p. in. today

for San Francisco. She will have avery large list of passengers departingon her.

CHINA AHEAD OF TIME.The China arrived yesterday after-

noon about 4 o'clock from San Fran-cisco .considerably ahead of time. Infact, It was the first time that she hadarrived here bo early from San Fran-cisco for a long time. She had an un-usually small list of passengers, bothfor Honolulu as well as Oriental ports.Among those for Honoulu was JohnBarrett, the St. Louis World's Fair

commissioner, who Is to visit the orientand Alistralln In the Intercut of thel,oullnna Purchase Mpnsltlon. Mrs. W.F. llrrrln and family lo isme to Ho.n.iltilti. Shr Is thf wife of W. K. Herrin.the head of the law depnrtinent of tlioHoiithpil Pacific railroad. (I. P. Wilderreturned to Honolulu after sn extend-ed absence. The China sailed nl SI p.tn. today for the Orient.

PYRKNNMKS AGAIN AFLOAT.SAN FRANCISCO, April 20. The

ship Pyrenees, which went ashore overa year ago at Manga Revs, while on avoyage from Tacoma to London withgrain has been successfully Hosted andon April 1 was towed Into Pntveete har-bor, where she will be placed In com-mission for a voyage to this port. Thewreck was bought at auction by Cap-tain I E. Thayer of this city and It hasbeen under his direction that she wasrepaired and hauled In ' Into deep wa-

ter. She will be brought here as quick-ly as possible and given a thorough overhauling.

THE MARY 15. FOSTER.The schooner Mary E. Foster loads

lumber nt Gamble for Honolulu, char-tered prior to arrival.

THE ALERT.SAN DIEGO, April 19. The United

States steamer Alert arrived this even-ing from a cruise down the coast. Shewill probably remain here for a fort-night and then go north.

ALONG THE WATER FRONTThe tug Leslie Baldwin, was on the

Marine Railway yesterday.The Wheeling will have target prac-

tice after leaving this port.The saluting guns at the Naval Re-

servation, which were formerly locatedon Naval Wharf No. 2, have been mov-ed Inside the reservation, Walklkl ofAdmiral Merry's oihee.

There are three or four vacancies Inthe crew of the Wheeling and an open-ing Is accordingly offered some ablobodied Hawaiian youths to enlist.

The bark Haydn Brown made a verylong passage from Newcastle, arrivingyesterday afternoon in 82 days.

KAWAILANI IN COMMISSION.The schooner Kawailanl will resume

her regular trips to Koolau ports thisnfternoon. She has been given a thor-ough overhauling by Captain Mosesand will bo able to make faster tripsthan usual. She sails at 4 p. m.

CHOLERA IN PHILIPPINES.MANILA, April 21. The cholera to-

tal to date Is: Manila 411 cases and319 deaths; provinces, SSS cases and 029

deaths.The United States Transport Buford,

which sailed from here yesterday forFan Francisco, after having been de-tained in quarantine for Ave days, putback to this port with a suspiciouscase of sickness on board. Should itprove to be cholera the transport willbe held.

PEKING WATER WORKS.VICTORIA (B. C), April 22. Dr.

Denby, an American, has been com-missioned by Prince Ching to buildwater works at Peking and Denby willturn over the work to Wood & Co. ofPhiladelphia.

UP AND LOADING.SAN FRANCISCO. April 22. Vessels

up and loading for Hawaiian ports are:For Honolulu, S. G. Wilder; Olympic;Irmgard; Rosamond; Mohican and W.II. Dlmond; For Hllo, St. Katherlno,Annie Johnson and Roderick Dhu.

WILL USE OIL ON COUNTY ROADS.NAPA, April 21. The Supervisors of

this country today awarded a contractfor sprinkling the main roads In thecounty with oil. The contract calls forthe use of C000 barrels, the work to bobegun within fifteen days. The experi-ments which were made last year prov-ed so universally satisfactory that theSupervisors decided to replace waterwith oil.

A GOOD THING.There's one good thing when they feel

dry.That buslnc men cannot pass by.For far and wide it' Same you hear,They stop to drink of "Rainier" beerOn draught or In bottle at Criterion.

CORRECTSTYLES

FEDORA HATS$2 50

REDUCED FROM $3.50

Just a small stock sent to us onapproval. Fine goods but wehave our regular line so willclose these out at the abovefigure; have them on display inour window. Complete line ofsizes and we give our assuranceof full value. If you don't thinkthese hats swell enough, try oneof tho celebrated.

Knox HatsAlways a complete stock of thesegoods.

E IlSi" I,LIMIT. D

TWO STORES.

Corner Fort and Hotel Streets,Hotel Street between Bethel and

Nuuanu.

Always on Hand

FANCY CUTLERY. CUT GLASS,AGATEWARE. ANDEVERYTHING IN THELINE OF HARDWARE.

P. O. Box 606.

39 N. King St. Tel. Main 9M.

Great Bargains in New and

Second Hand Furniture

More reductit ns in Bod Sate, Tables, Chairs, Rockers

loa Boxos, Refrigerators, Huge, all sizes, Pictures, Mirrors

Malting, Bod Lounges, Bureaus, Wardrobes, Sideboards ate

THE

BERETANIA STREET, NEAR FIRE STATION. 3

. W. LEDEJRER, Propr.

Polo and Australian Saddles

WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED

A SHIPMENT OF CHOICE

Polo and Australian SaddlesALSO

Polo Sticks and Balls

Theo. H. Davies & Co.,

till iiud

Telephone 840

Hardware andSaddlery Department

AND BABIES' EE

A now Invoice Just openod,Call early or you will miss a choice.

New Furniture sZ SInRunp'otod' p

CITY FURNITURE STOREII. 11. WILLIAMS, Manager

DS

Love Fort Street

Our Delicacy CounterYOU ARE EVER DOUBT WHAT TO HAVE ON THE

TABLE JUST VISIT OUR COUNTER. THIS WEEK YOUWILL FIND GERMAN DILL PICKLES, MIXED PICKLES,SWEET PICKLES, ALL KINDS OF CREAM AND FANCYCHEESE, EASTERN CODFISH. SMOKED SALMON, HOL-

LAND HERRING, SMOKED BEEF. TONGUE, OLIVES. ETC.

YOU WANT THE BEST BUTTER, ASK FOR

Crystal Spring Butter

Metropolitan Meat CompanyTELEPHONE MAIN 45.

. Oriental Bazaar .WE HAVE A LARGE ANDWELL SELECTED STOCK OF

AND 4

HEAVY PONGEE) SXIKS60-7- 2 King Street corner of Smith.

Branch Stores In Hongkong Shanghai and Yokohama.

GERMAN IA SALOONC. VESSELS AND A. BECKER

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

Beer, In bottles and on draught. Al-

ways lee Cold. We can give you thebeet glass of beer In town.

TEN CENTS A SCHOONER.

Ads under "Situations Wanted,"serted free of oharge in the Star.

HOUSE

Building, 534 and 580

In- -

on

IF IN

IF

MEW TERRITORY RESTAURANT,

TAM SING. MANAQ U.

OPEN DAY AND NIGHTMEALS 86 CENTS.

MEAL TICKETS. $4.50.

FO- -- STREET, Opposite Club Stables.

Ads under "Situations Wanted," In-

serted free of charge in the Star.

Page 3: iWVV HAWAIIAN STAR. · adld are promised on December 1 as an inducement for intending purchasers to paid from the profits from hauling freight In October of this year: BETTER THAN

- ' " v" " ,, - ,1 "u iM am n in r- - i"" II 'ill1'1 tT"- ""IIM 'WP"1

DR. J.M. WHITNEY,DSNTIIT.

BmIm building, Ptort tret Orer H.Mar & Co.

Iwil Tel. Main JT7.

DR. A. E. NICHOLS,DBNTI8T.

Office Hours: 9 to 4.

UM Atakea Street, nzt Masonictemple, Honolulu.

IR, A, C. WALL, OR, 0, E, WALL

D 1$ N T I S T 8.LOVB BUILDING, FORT STREET,

' 'ephone 434.

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

DR. A. J. DERBY,DENTIST.

Corner Fort and Hotel Sts.

Gas Administered For Extracting.

Offlee Hours: 0 a. m. to 4 p. ni.

A. 0. LOVEKIN,STOCK AND BONDBROKER. REAL.ESTATE ANDINSURANCE

403' Jetdel 15 11 cairn a:

C, BREWER .& CO., LIMITED

QUEEN STREET,HONOLULU, H. T.

AGENTS FOK

Hawaiian Agricultural Company, Ono-re- a

Sugar Company, Honomu SugarCompany, Walluku Sugar Company,IWalhee Sugar Company, Makes SugarCompany, Hateakala Ranch Company,Kap tala Ranch.

"Planters' T '"e and Shipping Co.f harles Brewer & Co's Line of Boston

PackAgents Boston Board of Underwriters.Agents Philadelphia Board of Under-

writers.

LIST OF OFFICERS.

Charles M. Cooke President. Geo. H. Robertson.. & Man.

E. Faxon Bishop Treas. & Sec.TV. F. Allen AuditorP. C. Jones DirectorH. Waterhouse DirectorG. R. Carter Director

AH of the above named constitutingri.e Board o Directors.

Telephone Blue 933.

WING SING CO.46 Hotel Street, next door to Iwakami

IMPORTERS INGROC- - RIES .CALIFORNIA FRUITS

BUTTER.Note Heads, BUI Heads, Statements

and Fine Commercial Printing at theStar OCce.

MusicCabinets

Perhaps you haven't amusic cabinet or If you haveIt doesn't suit.

Some people have MUSICRACKS and stand their mu,sic on edge which soon has Itin a delapldated state.

Our cabinets are the bestfor keeping music orderlyand preserving It.

In Oak or Mahogany fromfrom $7.50 upward to matchyour piano or other furni-ture.

I E ICOMPANY,! LTD

PROGRESS BLOCKFORT STREET.

M. PHILLIPS & CO.,

Wholesale ImportersAnd Jobbers of

AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN DRY GOODS

Corner of F t and Qut-e- i Sts

M. W. McChisnty & Sons.

'Wholesale Grooers and Dealers InLeather and Shoe Findings.

Vcents tonolulu Soap Works Com-pany and Honolulu Tannery.

Silent Barber ShopHotel Street.

HOT AND COLD BATHS.BEST BARBER SHOPIN HONOLULU.

Advertise your wonts in the Star,

DOCTOR JB

MILES!nervine:

m-- mTne Brain and Nerve Foodand Medicine, Quiets Irri-

tated Nerves, Soothes thetired Brain, Builds up tneVital Powers of tne Body

and

OvercomesDisease

It Contains no Opiates notother harmful drugs.

Sold at all drug itores on a positive r gr-

antee. Write for free advice and booklet taOr. Miles Medical Co. Elkhart Ind.

COIU'OKATION NOTICES.

SPECIAL STOUKHOLDEKS' MEKT1MJ

A special Stockholders' meeting ofHonolulu Rapid Transit & Land Com-pany will be held In Assembly Hall,over the ofllco of Castle & Cooke, Ltd.,corner of Bethel and King streets, Ho-nolulu, on Wednesday, May 7, 1902, at9:30 o'clock a. m.

At such meeting It Is Intended to pro-pose alterations and amendments tothe by-la- nnd an Increase in thecapital stock of he- - company.

By order of the Vice-Preside-

J. A. OILMAN,Secretary Honolulu Rapid . Transit &

Land Company.Honolulu, April 28, 1902.

NOTICE OF STUCKHOLUEHV JUEET-1- U

of Honolulu Rapid Transit & LandCompany, a corporation organized un-der the laws of the Republic of Hawaii,now Territory of Hawaii:

Whereas, the Vice-Preside- nt of saidcorporation did on the twenty-eight- h

day of April, 1902, call a special meet-ing of the stockholders of said corpora-tion to be held at the time and placeand for the purpose hereinafter setforth, and directed the Secretary ofsaid corporation to give to the stock-holders thereof notice of said specialmeeting, yhlch said order of said nt

Is In writing and on flle withthe Secretary of said corporation;

Now, therefore, notice is hereby giv-en to the stockholders of said corpora-tion' that at 9:30 o'clock a. m., on theSth day of May, A. D. 1902, a specialmeeting of the stockholders of Hono-lulu Rapid Transit & Land Companywill be held at Assembly Hall, overCastle & Cooke, Ltd., ollices, In the cityof Honolulu, Island of Oahu, Territoryof Hawaii, for the purpose of consid-ering the proposition to create a bond-ed indebtedness of said Honolulu Rap-I- d

Transit & Land Company to theamount of one million dollars ($1,000,-000- ),

In gold coin of the United Statesof America, and that if said bondedIndebtedness Is authorized to be creat-ed that It be represented by the bondsof said corporation, to bear such dateas the Board of Directors may deter-mine, to be payable twenty-fiv- e yearsafter date, with Interest at the rate ofsix per cent per annum, payable half-yearl- y,

said bonds to be executed andIssued In such denomination or denom-inations as may be determined by theBoard of Directors of said corporation,and If so created said bonded indebted-ness to be secured by a mortgage ordeed of trust upon all of the corporateproperty and franchises now belongingto said corporation or which it mayhereafter acquire.

By order of theJ. A. OILMAN.

Secretary. Honolulu' Rapid Transit &Land Company.

Honolulu, April 28, 1902.

MEETISU NOTICE.

There will be a meeting of the stock-holders of the "Star Soda Works, Ltd."at Waverley Hall, on Tuesday, MayCth, at 10 o'clock a. m.

C. J. MCCARTHY,President.

MORTGAGEE'S NOTICE OF FORE-CLOSURE AND SALE.

In accordance with the provlsjons ofa certain mortgage made by Helen B.King and William C. King, her hus-band, both of Honolulu In the Islandof Oahu, Territory of Hawaii, to L. C.Abies, also of said Honolulu, dated the1st day of March, A. D. 1901, and re-

corded In tho Hawaiian Registry ofConveyances In Honolulu In Liber 220on pages SI to G3;

Notice Is hereby given, that the saidL. C. Abies, mortgagee, intends to fore-close the said mortgage, for conditionbroken, to wit: nt of princi-pal and Interest when due,

And also that after tho expiration ofthree weeks from the date of this no-tice, the property covered by saidmortgage and more particularly de-

scribed hereafter, will be sold at publicauction at the auction rooms of JamesF. Morgan, Auctioneer, in suid Hono-lulu, on Saturday, the 21th day of May,1902, at 12 o'clock noon of said day.

L. C. ABLES,Mortgagee.

Dated, Honolulu, April 21, 1902.

The premises covered by said mort-gage consist of all that piece or parcelof land situate In Pearl City at Ma-nan- a,

District of Ewa, said Island ofOahu, and designated as Lot No. 4,

Block 30, upon a map or diagram ofsaid Pearl City duly authorized andadopted by the Oahu Railway andLand Company, Limited, and recordedin the Hawaiian Registry of Convey-ances In Liber 130, pages 417 to 420 in-clusive, said parcel of land having afrontage of fifty (50) feet on LanlwalAvenue and an area of 13,825 squarefeet.

For further particulars, apply toMortgagee or to his attorneys, Atkin-son & Judd,

TUB HAWAIIAN ITAH, WB0HM0AT, AMM. M, )MI. TXMM

A CANNIBAL STORY

NAT I V KH (IP TANNA 11AVR A

HOIUUHLK FEAST.

stoitmihip Mound Pintle Xatlm Hmtai--i(i ami Hating l'riottr Cwht in ft

llHlll.

VICTORIA. H. C. April 16. Thesteampr Moan, wlich reached jwrt to-

day from Hydney via the South Seaports of call, brought details of tribalwars, cannibalism, earthquakes, tidalwaves, plague and other affaire In theSouth Seas. The utenmer Mum bare ImdJust returned to Sydney, from the NewHebrides, Just prior to the departure ofthe Monna, and according to the reportfurnished by her purser, the tseamer'gcompany found on their arrival at Tan-n- a

that a big cannibalistic feat was be-ing held by the natives.

The natives had secured a number ofprisoners In a raid on the villages oftheir enemies and when the steamerreached port, some distance from thenative village, they were eating some ofthe unfortunates who liRd been captur-ed or killed In the tribal engagement.

Some of the prisoners were broughtto the fire alive, and after they hadseen some of their unfortunate fellowbeings roaBted for the feast they wereslaughtered before the assembled com.pany. During the feast one of the na-tives who had been burle 1 alive and hadbeen beneath the ground for twelvedays wbb exhumed and cooked and eat-en with the rest. The passengers andolllcers of the Inter-Islan-d steamer didnot go to the scene of the cannibal feastwhich was still In progress when theyleft.

CIRCUIT COURT BUSINESS.Judge Gear yesterday morning grant-

ed a petition to appoint a commissionto take the testimony of J. B. Reln-stel- n

and W. P. Johnston, witnesses tothe will of the late A. L. Loulsson, InSan Francisco.

Mrs. Ellse S. V. Neumann has filedan answer to the bill of revivor filed Inthe matter of W. F. C. Hasson vs. PaulNeumann. She pleads the statute Inbar nnd asks that the bill be dismissed.

David Dayton has been nppolntedadministrator of the estate of the lateA. B. Scrlmgeour. under bonds of 0.

An exception and notice of appeal hasbeen filed In the case of Albert Nawahlvs. Hakalau plantation.

In the divorce action brought by Em-ma Wanana Vlda vs. Henry CornwallVlda, stipulation has been filed in l.,eCircuit Court In which the libelee isgiven five days from and after April 28

in which to answer, demur or other-wise plead to the libel for divorce nowon file.

Makenuc Aseu of Walluku, Maul,aged 24 years, has petitioned the Cir-cuit Court that letters of admlnlstra-to- n

be issued to Albert F. Judd ofHonolulu as administrator of the es-tate of her brother, D. H. Lahllahl, de-ceased, who died on February 3. Theproperty Is alleged to be a deposit ofmoney In bank of Bishop & Co., andsome shares in sugar corporations, thevalue of which Is unknown to her.

Holmes & Stanley, attorneys for theEnterprise Mill Company, Ltd, In Itssuit against Lee Kim, defendant, andKunewa, garnishee, filed a motion yes-terday for an order declaring the de-

fendant In default, asking the court toauthorize one of the clerks of the courtto assess the amount of plaintiffs'claim, principal, damages nnd interestand to enter up judgment therefor.Judge Gear signed an order to that ef-fect.

KATE CORNWELL'S NAME.The San Francisco Call publishes a

number of samples of the handwritingof C. B. Hadley, the latest suspect Inthe Nora Fuller murder case.Among the writings declared to be theknown handwriting of Hadley Is thename "Kate Cornwell."

SENATORS AND BEEF TRUST.WASHINGTON, April 19. An ad-

vance In the price of roast beef sand-wiches In the Senate restaurant hasgiven rise to Indignant and vigorous op-position to the beef trust In the SenateSenators who have been In the habit ofmaking their midday luncheon on.sandwich with a glass of milk havebeen used to paying 10 cents for thesandwich.

Today the bill of fare In the Senatecafe shows the price of the same qual-ity of beef sandwiches has been markedup to 15 cents. Among the principalpatrons of the beef sandwich diet areSenators Depew of New York, Hannaof Ohio, Kean of New Jersey, McMillanof Michigan, Clark of Montana andother Senators who are Included In themllonatre class.

The Iniquities of the beef trust beingthus brought homo to the Senators,there Is a disposition to light againstthe trust to the bitter end. SenatorDepew has declared his Independence ofthe beef trust by boycotting the Senatecafe for the present and going home tohis luncheon. Other Senators in sym-pathy with him who find It Inconvenientto. jump on a street car and go homo atmidday have "cut ouf'the beef sand-wich from their menu nnd taken to pieat 10 cents, a cup of custard at 15cents and other articles on the bill offare not under the lntlucnce of the beeftrust.

FUNSTON STILL TALKING.DENVER, April 19. General Frede-

rick Funston was tho principal speakerat the banquest of the Colorado SocietySons of the Revolution. Ills referenceto the Philippine war was on the linesof his previous speeches. The prolon-gation of the war, ho declared, was duemore to outside Influences than to thedesire of the Filipinos for IndependenceGeneral Funston said: "I have onlysympathy for tho senior Senator fromMassachusetts, who Is suffering froman overheated consclenco." Ho, how-ever, exireiwed great contempt formen who, he declared at the beginningof the war would have had us take,everything Spain had. but are now"Playing at peanut politics and gam-bling In the blood of their countrymen."

OLD MINESParticulars have reached Phoenix,

Arizona of the discovery near Tubti-tam- a,

in the Altar district. Sonora Stateof a wonderful group of ancient silvermines, presumably Toltec.

A party of American prospectors Incharge of Con O'Keefe, expert mineralengineer, several days ago, came upon amine dump of great size coverod overand hidden by a dense growth of tim-ber. Near by they discovered the

to the mines, sealed with a greatstone. Breaking through they foundthousands of feet of underground work-ings, all in rich silver ore. Near oneentrance was piled a heap of silver In-

gots and stone tools and scores ofskeletons of very large size. The toolscorrespond with those found In oldToltec ruins In Arizona and New

Ttta

BankofJJawauLIMtTJOD.

IaMfiWftt4 nsr ih Lftwi of theTHrritery & Hawaii.

PAID-U- P CAPITAL - - $600,000.00KHSQKVB 5o.ooo.ooUNOIVIDBD PR0PIT5 - 163,000.00

OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS.

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

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

H. Waterhouse, F. W. Maofarlane,E. D. Tenney, J. A. MeCandless and C.II. Atherton.

COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS DE-

PARTMENTS.

Strict attention given to all br .ichof Banking.

JUDD BUILDING. FORT STREET.

CLAUS SPRECKELS. WM. G. IRWIN.

Clans SprerMs & Go

B A IV KC B JRE s. .'HONOLULU, --

' H. I.

San Francisco Agents The NevadaNational Bank of San Francisco.

DRAW EXCHANGE ONSAN FRANCISCO The Nevada Na-

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

Ltd .NEW YORK American Exchange Na-

tional Bank.CHICAGO Merchants' National Bank.PARIS 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 No'th Ameri -

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.

ESTABLISHED IN 1858.

BISHOP & CO.

BANKEKS

BANKING DEPARTMENT.

Transact business In all departmentsof Banking.

Collections carefully attended to.Exchange bought and sold.

Commercial and Travelers' Lettersor Credit issued on The Hunk or Cali-

fornia nnd X. 31. ICothschlld & Sons,London.

Correspondents: The Bunk or Cal-ifornia, Commercial llunkiug Co. orSydney, Ltd., London.

Drafts and cable transfers on Chinannd Japan through the Hongkong &Shanghai Banking Corporation andChartered Bank of India, Australiaand China.

Interest allowed on term deposits atthe following rate3 per annum, viz:

Seven days' notice, at 2 per cent.Three month, at 3 per -- ent.Six months, at 3V4 per cent.Twelve months, at 4 per cent.

TRUST DEPARTMENT.Act as Trustees under 1 lortgages.Manage estates (real and personal).Collect rents and dividends.Valuable Papers, Wills, Bonds, Etc.,

received for safe-keepin- g.

ACCOUNTANT DEPARTMENT.Auditors for Corporations and Pri-

vate Firms.Books examined and reported on.

Statements of Affairs prepared.Trustees on Bankrupt or Insolvent

Estates.Ofllce, 921 Bethel Street.

SAVINGS DEPARTMENT.Deposits received and Interest allow-

ed at 4 per cent per annum, In accord-ance with Rules and Regulations,copies of which may be obtained onapplication.

INSURANCE DEPARTMENT.Agents for FIRE. MARINE, LIFE,

ACCIDENT AND EMPLOYERS' LIA-BILITY INSURANCE COMPANIES.

Insurance Ofllce, 924 Bethel Street.

THE YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK

LIMITED.

Subscribed Capital. ...Yen 24,000.000

Paid Up Capital..., ...Yen 18,000,000

Reserved Fund ....Yen 8,710,000

HEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.

The Bank buys and receives for col-

lection Bills of Exchange, Issues jiaftiand Letters of Credit, an transacts ageneral bankng business.

INTEREST ALLOW LD:

On fixed deposits for' 12 months, 4 perrent per annum.

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

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

Branch of the Yokohama Specie Bank.

Nbw Republic BiiilfliE Honololn H I.

HONOLULU SALOON,A. LUDLOFF, Proprietor.

Corner Llllha and School Street

Has opened a resort where refresh-ments of all kinds are served.

PRIMO BEER N TAP.

H Fancy Silk Shirt if

a.

.:

I BBH UU

WE HAVE JUST ALAHGM ASSORTMENT OP SHIRTSWHIOII WILL BB WORN BXTJBN-STVaii- Y

DURING TUB WARMWMATlIMIt A8 TIIBT ARB COOLAND COMFORTABLE.

the Display

AKAMI & CO.Noa. 1G-1- 8 Robinson Block, St.

P. O. Box 8G8, Tel. 421

v: . i".;v: ;7..v:

INCANDESCENT LAMPS

For Home LightingIt's the same old story with oil lamps. Constant attention: Bmoklns

chimneys one minute and out of oil the next, always needing new globes,filling and cleaning. There is no other light for the house so convenient as

ELECTRICITYNo disagreeable features but always ready for use with steady light.A valuable addition to any home.

Call or telephone for estimate on wiring.

Hawaiian Electric Co., LtdKINU STREET NEAR ALAKEATELEPHONE MAIN 390

corner

''..?

.- -.

,?'

Any.:...::Blue

P. 0.f iv....

!;::.:..fiii,:?i

RECEIVED

See

HotelWhite

.!21. k-

::in Our Window ..

.

"'?'S.;

Co., Ltd.,AGENTS

:w..v

:::

;:?;:

Made to Order5

CREM0 CIGARS

The Cream ofThe Islands

Strictly Hand-Mad- e from Choice GuSjJand Sumatra Tobacco.

The Best Nickel Cigar in the Market.

H. HackfeldSELLING

T. MURATA,Store, No. 1044,

Nimanu StreetIstJBranoh, King and Boretania Sta.

'2nd No. 1032, Nuuanu St.

:::

Styles

Telephone 3311

Honolulu,

&'

Main

Branch,

Telephone Blue 2781

Box 884,

Territory of Hawaii.

i,0..0..'..,i?i',,..Tv,0.'..lSf&:fi;::fi- -

Page 4: iWVV HAWAIIAN STAR. · adld are promised on December 1 as an inducement for intending purchasers to paid from the profits from hauling freight In October of this year: BETTER THAN

iHB HAWAIIAN STAR

AILY AND WCMt-WEKKL-

-- TtiWtaitod every afternoon (exceptIwwkir) by tht HawftUitn Bttr

Mwprt- - Amoclnlton, Ltd.

FXAXK L. HOOaB . . . Manntr.

J'

WHDNHSOAY, APRIL 30. 1802.

THE OOVKItNon.

tTlw more oe hr from Washingtontile more the aritl-Dol- e faction I get-

ting it In the neck, to use a vulgarismr may hap, a. better word would be a

tionoqutallam. The- Governor who wasS&lng to be fired out by a triumphantmajority ol Home Rulers because histwain had given way, and he was in-

capable of carrying on the affairs elthe Territory. All this nonsense hasbeen swept away by the appearand ofGovernor Dole in Washington. Tothose who had btelleved' his traduoers ItWas a revelation', to the traducers Itwaa a cataclysm.

A man of pure- life, such as GovernorlOle Is, a man who is kindly and yetOtu be determined, Is a man who willcarry his point In the end. GovernorSole's perd6Wai ' enemies' arc not norever have bWn his equals. He has hada high Idell'.'Ws foes have had a lowIdeal. Hence pie fight against Gover-nor Dole, and hence his success InWashington.

The Governor Will come back with3ilfl policy strengthened and the knowledge that he has the undoubted suplwrt of the,M executive of the UnitedStates. To have that support is oneof the highest tributes that a man canhave. It is1 a far greater tribute thanthe Star jfi("tHe Legldn of Honor, theGarter, the Black Eagle and so forth.It Is the approbation of the representa-tive of a people;' a free people, who sayWhat they wlh'arid whose opinion Is

worth the, highest estimation of theworld. ,

THE EXCLUSION BILL.

The Chinese exclusion has had and Isstill having a hard fight. Representa-tive Kahn lias striven to make It hisrecord, but It is doubtful whether hewill make a complete success of his ef-

fort. At one time it looked as If hewere going to wreck his political careercompletely, but more sense came toliim and he began to give and take,matter which must always be consider-ed In politics, nod he now has somechance of going back to his districtwith somo kind of a bill, even if It is sounlike the original bill that its ownfather would not know it.

There have be'efl inany points debat- -

od during, the passage of this bill butnone more earnestly than the question.Of Indefinite prohibition. The Kahncontingent believes or says it believesIn indefinite prohibition. That Is pro-

hibition of Chinese for all time. Theconservative contingent has an Ideathat prohibition of Chinese should belimited to the length of time that thepresent treaty lasts, say a couple ofyears or so.

and beamcrence or oplplpn, altogether upart

party 'principles. The active po-

litician t$hp. Is looking for scatteringvotes and .wants-- , a war cry seesone side of the shield. His object la to

iiake his supporters think that he hasut out 1. (lie Chipese, competition for

ever. The student- of history and thethinker ,seH, Hevmatter in a differentlight. knows, that "for ever" Is nota word known In history, or In the lifeof the world, and presumably ofthe finite universe.

It seems iniposlble for two such op-

posing, forces: to, coma to any agree- -ment, blit by a I'ltfln giving and takingthey will, What .we qro Interested In

are the "Insular l:?ws," andthese should be thoroughly understood,because though 'aimed at Philippines Ittnay hh'o Important legal effect here.It Is true there Is a proviso' In the pro-

posed .amendment which leaves outHawaii' , but with the skill of our law-

yers and our circuit Judges any provisomight easily be overridden In the fuiture as it has been In the whichever way It suited them for law andJustice are qot, synonymous terms.

The. compromise bill which will prob-

ably be- - passed the followihginsular provisions according to thenewspaper report:

"Said laws sholl apply to all Imm-igration of Chineso laborers, not citi-zens of tlTe United States, from the Isl-

and to the mainland territory of theUnited States, whether such were Inthe Island territory at the tlmo of ces-

sion or not, or from portion of theisland territory of the United Statesto another portion of said territory."

"Section & and 0 of the Senate bill,the first reading relating to certificatesof Chinese residents In the insular territory- of the United States, and the

long

'tho two sections: .t . -

"That it shall be the duty of everyChinese laborer, other than a cUlaen,

loli I r In n rt1 on f I In1 ti PAITin Jtl In

as nereinvlded lie from such

the Philippine

niajce all regulations and provisionsnecesary for the of thissection in the" Islands, In- -

shall clealy.nd ltr,'!dn.iuy l"K i'wium- -

, i'u win.

of the mime: provided, however, thai Ifi aid Philippine CotnmiMlon shall firmIt Is Impomilble to complete tho renin-(ratio- n

herein provided for within nm-yea- r

from the Damage of this net, nldCommlMloir Is hereby au(horlt-- i mi I

empowered to extend the time for nw m

registration for a further period n"--.

exceeding one year."The original Senate provision vested

(his power here given to the Phlllpi'ln-CommlMlo-

In the United StatesCourts and the corresponding Insularcourts.

THE AMERICAN MARK TAPLEY.

In a recent interview the reduction of6'J inlllona In exports and an Increaseof 79 millions In imports does not seemto discourage the Chief of the Bureauof Statistics with reference to the con-

dition of the foreign commerce of theUnited States.

"I do see that there Is the slight-est cause for anxiety," said Mr. Austin."It is true that the value of our ex-

ports in the nine months ending witltMarch is 69 millions less than In thecorresponding months of last year. Yetthe causes of the reduction In the ex-

port figures are so clearly due tonormal and temporary conditions thatthe falling off does not Indicate a decrease in the popularity of Americanproducts abroad or a reduction in thedemand for them. On the contrary, Ithink we may consider ourselves veryfortunate that our export ilgures heldup as well as they did.

"The chief reduction In our exports,"continued Mr. Austin, "can be .tracedto the destruction of our torn crop' bythe drouth of last year. Corn has become so Important a factor In our export trade, both in Its natural state andIn the condensed of beef andpork, that a loss of or onetnird or tho enormous crop means a

In tlie surplus, in thepresent year it win not amountto one-lltt- h of tnat quantity. In tnenine montns enaing witn March, lata,the exportation ot corn amounted toonly 24 minion bushels, against Ha mll- -ion bushels in the corresponalngmonth of last year. These are tne prellmlnary Ilgures, but they do not alitormuch from the completed ltgures whichwc shall have a fortnight hence. Tliovalue of the corn and corn meal ex-

ported in the nine months was but15 million dollars, against Git millions Inthe corresponding months of preceding year.

"But that is not all of the effect ofthe loss the corn crop. The short-age of corn at home has compelled

farmers to use a largeroats In the feed of their live stock, andas a result the value of the exportationof oats and oat meal In tho 9 monthsJust ended was but 4V millions, against91 millions In tho same months of lastyear. In these two items of corn andoats, In which tho reduction Is wholly

to tho drouth of last year, the ex- -

portations have fallen 5" million dol-

lars, while the total reduction in thevalue all exports Is but 59 mlillons.

"Another item which shows a mate-rial reduction In value of exports Iscotton, yet this is wholly due to a fallin price abroad and not to a reduction

ly in quantity, the value hasfallen. total exportation of eo.tonin the 9 months ending with Marchwas 3,07-1- , ECS.421 pounds, against

pounds In the same months oflast year. This is an increase of 331

million pounds; yet, owing to the re- -

duction in price, the value Is actually'

14 million dollars less than In the samemonths of last year, the figures for the9 months Just ended being 251 milliondollars, against 2G1 millions in the same .

months of last year."Thus, In corn and oats, In which the

is wholly duo to the drouthof last year, and In cotton, In whichthe'reductlon Is due to a fall In pricesabroad and not to a reduction in quan--

tlty exported, the in value ofexports amounts to 70 million dollars,while the grand total of exports showsa reduction of but G9 millions.

"Regarding the largo increase ofI see no cause for anxiety,

but rather the reverse. Wo havenot received tho details of the MarchImport figures; but Judging from thoseof the preceding months, the IncreaseIs chiefly in manufacturers' raw

In tho months ending withFebruary the increase in manufactur-ers' materials Imported was 67 milliondollars, whle the total Increase of Im-

ports was but 71 million dollars, and Itis that the details of theMarch figures when received will notmaterially change this condition in ourImport trade.

j "At the risk of being considered astatistical Mary Tapley," concludedMr. Austin, "I venture the asserttonthat Is nothing discouragingabout the on cither sldo of

icmeuy in unifies wnicu we cannot pro-

duce at homo atid indicates a growth in'.,..,,, ti,B inl.rM9l TOm hn

favorable balance trade.ot between400 and BOO millions of dollars."

The decrease of the pressure In thenatural urb belt In Indiana continues. '

" companies insist that the supply'WJ " exhausted unlew titty are

, . . . , -- , . .mhihiuu iu imi in mir anu onarge

.Of course upon a question of this ,n the quantlty exported. On the con-kin- d

there can must a strong trary cxports Uave increase! materUl- -

from

.wlio,

He

finite

past

contains

one

great

many share

there

second pertaining to. Judicial proceed- - our foreign commerce account. So:Xto,ZZXrr the ,ncrettS0 n -P- ortations is

any of the Insular territory of the wolcomed by all; and so long as theStales (Hawaii excepted) at the duction In expectations Is wholly

time of the passage of this act, to ob- - to abnormal conditions, which may oo

llSAaMdSSWi'uS ooked u n a8 onlyInsular territory wherein he resides, need fool no serious anxloty on thatwhich certificate shall entitle him to score, especially as we ore still to have,residence therein, and upon failure to oven tn this apparently adverse year, aobtain sucii certuicato pro.

shall be deportedinsular .territory, andCom.mlsson Is authorized and requiredto

enforcementPhilippine

tSUSlUl,ilrC,lMhMfUflienTr... wiw" (uM!

not

ab

formone-four- th

reductionnscal

past

the

of

of

due

of

althoughThe

2,740,-608,1-

reduction

reduction

mate-rials.

probable

conditions

of

due

yu tr!kSJ gvJHgund tpaUjiwnun)

TXn XAWAHAM WAR, WMDMMtAT, APRIL W. JIM.

Newbro s

Herpicideis the

-B-est-AND ONLY

REME DYKNOWN. THAT POSITIVELY STOPS

THE HAIR FALLING OUT.

ITIS THE ONLY DISCOVERY

WHICH CURES DANDRUFF, BALD

NESS AND ALL DISEASES OF THE

SCALP BY DESTROYING THE MI

CROBE OR 'PARASITE TO WHICH

ALL SCALP DISEASES ARE DUE.

UNEQUALLED AS A

Hair Dressing

TRY IT

lira co.

SOLE AGENTS

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

free until lurther notice.

For Sale

One power motor. Star office.

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

.CuB1lsdrneBetiVaaetract:aapiS Tranlsit line will pass the door. Apply atotar oillce,

A magnificent building site on theslope, near Thruston ave-

nue. Particulars" at Star office.

A choice house corner of Wildernnn Kewalo street at a bargain.

Easy ierms. come and take a ride onthe trolley and see for yourself. L. C.

Abies, Real Estate Agent.

To Lease

Store on Fort Street also warehouseon Queen street. L. C. Abies, Real Estate igcnt.

To Let

Anv one desiring rooms either furnished or unfurnished or for light housekeeping, please Inquire at 1105 Fort St.corner Vineyard.,

lfurnlshetl lioi.ins To Let

Furnished rooms in the central partof the city. "Arlington," Hotel street.

A nicely furnished room. Apply at343 Bcretania street.

Tuilors

ALBERT BERNDT Tailoring andrepairing; Elks bldg.. 010 Miller St.

Lost

On Tuesday evening on walk fromIT," ," i Tf.r Vn

'm' '

A lady's umbrella was taken from thoCentral Union Church on April 13. Ifreturned to the Janitor an exchangecan be effected and each proprietor re-

ceive hla rightful possession.

Wnnlcd'

ny a young lady, situation as steno- -grapher and typewriter. References.Address. E. M. Star oltlce.

HItllllt iOIIS WlllltCtl

Wanted by experienced man of 28occupation as bookkeeper, store olerk,n ght watohman. luna, or any othar no- -B.tion. -

I

500 DozenBest QualityThin Blown

..TUMBLERS..9 OZ. SIZE.

WILL HE SOLD AT

t SOcentsjPER DOZEN.

" SAMPLES ARE DISPLAYED

IN ONE- - OF OUR, FRONT

o SHOW WINDOWS.o

o

o wiionLIMITED

o

uo

DEALERS IN

Croolcery,Glass orxclHouseItatsrjoulesla.ija eGoods

Hos. 53, 65 and 57, King Streeto

HONOLULU. Oo

o

rate Island references. Apply P.Box 28.

Stocn ci ik, now employed In SanFrancisco wh lesale house, desires aposition In Honolulu. Can furnishsatisfactory references. Addres.. "StockClerk", Box ' Star Office, (setters wulbe forwarde'' to advertiser.)

BARGAINSibPIANOS

PRICES:

$153 00

$53.00CALL, IN ANDSEE THESEINSTRUMENTS

Bergstrom Music Co,, Ltd

PROGRESS BLOCKHONOLULU.

ChicagoIn Less Than

3 Daysl&'lrWlsco at 10 a. m.

.CHICAGO, UNION PACIFIC

& NORTHWESTERN LINE

Double' Drawing-Roo- m Sleep-Car- s,

Buffet, Smoking and LibraryCars, with barber. Dining Cars-me- als

a la carte. Dally Tourist CarService at 6 p. m. and Personal-ly Conducted Excursions everyWednesday and Friday at 8 a. m.from San Francisco. The best ofeverything.

R. ft. Ritchie,Gen. Agent Pacific Coast

San Francisco.617 Market Street.

Palace Hotel.OR S. P. COMPANY'S AGENT.

I wtno ttnok and Commercial Printing..iWumjatlon requlrtd ?G0 up, Flrstt the Star Oflloe,

EXTRAON

SPECIAL

WE WILL CLOSE OUTOUR ENTIRE STOCK OF

LADIES' and CHILDREN'S

UNDERWEAR i

Ladies' aid Cliiren's Hosiery i;

These all have been reduced once but I

are MARKED STILL, LOWER now as ' J

we MUST CLOSE them out. C

M. BRASCH & CO.

'. Collection of Paintings ofLife and Scenes in Samoa,

Hawaii and Japan by Theo-

dore Wores, is now on ex-

hibition at the Art Eoomsof the Pacific Hardware Co.,

Ltd., daily from 9 a., m. till5 p. m.

MORE LIGHT,LESS EXPENSE,

Can be obtainedby using our oldreliable M. & M.Arc PortableLamps Tor Stores,Street Lighting,Chur-iiies- , Halls,and In fact, anyplace where you

IK wantCandle-powe- r.

light of 600

II KT IOne M. & M.

Arc Lamp givesmore light thanone electric ArcLight at cost ofonly one-ha- lf centper hour.

This !....., Is sold on trial subject toperfect satisfaction; Is fully guaran-teed for one year; over 30,000 In actualcommercial use In the U. S. today.

If vou want MORE LIGHT, do alittle figuring. Note how many hoursyour burn your uas, or .Electric ijigms,then figure cost of our Gasoline ArcLamps. which are ABSOLUTELY

They meet In everyway the requirements 01 tne nauoimiI)nn . f Tin f OrWfl fPTH. YOll Willbe astonished at the CUT IN YOURLIGHT BILLS, and you will bo MOREastonished at the INCREASE of yourngnt.

had some other lamp that did not worksatisfactorily, but GIVE US A TRIAL;if not perfectly satisractory n uuoioYOTI NOTHING TO FIND IT OUT.Write for particulars. Agents wantedfor all unoccupieu territory.

Aoom Brass VVorlcs,CHICAGO, ILL.

Dept. 3.

v; ''o ' ,svmr v

AGENTS

SAL C OP RPAL ESTATE

Fine Building Sites,Puupueo Tract,Manoa

F. J. LOWREY, President.A. B. WOOD, Vice-Preside- .J. A. OILMAN, Secretary and Treas-

urer.F. J. AMWEG, Auditor.CIIAS, H. OILMAN, Manager.

Ads under "Situations Wanted." In- -

serted free of charge In the Star.f

I

i

TheStandard

More of this grand old makeIs now In use than that of anyother firm In the world. Thehistory of plana making in theUnited States for two genera-tions cannot be old withoutdrawing largely on the career

xof the grand house of F. & C.Fischer. Wherever a Fischerpiano is found it has proved tobe a good one always and every-where. The name tells the grade

A LITTLE

HONEY DOWN

and small monthly paymentsbuys from us.

MinnI LIMITED. IMERCHANT ST. I

.N FRANCISCO 215' Front Bt,iONOLULU, Queen St.flHW YORK, 43 Leonard St.

M. 8. ..LTD.,

Importers andCommissionflerchants

Solo J.ftxoyFOR

Sltnchi Bates Cigar

AGENTS FORBritish America Assuranco Comp'y,

of Toronto, Ontarla.

Philadelphia Underwriters

Special attention given to con-

signments of coffee and rice

Note Heads, Bill Heads, Letterand all kinds of Job and CommercialPrinting neatly and promptly executedat the Star Office.

Page 5: iWVV HAWAIIAN STAR. · adld are promised on December 1 as an inducement for intending purchasers to paid from the profits from hauling freight In October of this year: BETTER THAN

V

J. K

Thin's a TimaFOR

Everything

And new 1 the tlm te ik',theheme more pleasant to live In by

selecting new

Wall Paperfrom our superb stock.

Our prices you will find to be

the lowest.

BEALSBerctanla Street.

NEXT TO COR. EMMA,

'.Plantation Prnnp.rtv For Sale

tf HAMOA, MAUI.

Ifill machinery-- , complete or part,consisting pf one 30"x60" 5 Rol' Mill,H. I. Wks. make, Putnam Er e, VaqPan, Double Effects, Clarin:rs, Cen-trifugals, Vac Pumps, etc., etc.

Parcels of land, Interest In Hul lands,Houses, Work Animals, Carts, Har-ness, Plows, Tools of all sorts.

For particulars, apply to Mr. J. It.Myers, Manager, at Hamoa, Maul, orto C. BREWER & COMPANY, LTD.,Honolulu.

Dated Honolulu, March 4th, 1902.

Block

For

ON

We offer for Mle at a. verylow price the fine new five-be- d

room house on the corner of

WlLDEf AVHNUHAND KHWALO T.

The lot 1ms frontages of 1M and142 feet.

LKT US lt.K WITHYOU ON THISPROPOSITION.

We offer ifOH RRNT thehouse of John Walker No. 1020

l'llkol St. This house has threebedrooms, etc., etc. Servants'House, Laundry, etc. Very com-plete.

Fort and Merchant Sts.

Telephone Main 313.

THE ENTIRE STOCK OFCOFFEES, EXTRACTS, ETC.OF THE KONA ORPHANAGEMUST BE CLOSED OUT BYTHE END OF THE PRESENTMONTH. OFFICE FIXTURESIN WHOLE OR IN PART CANBB BOUGHT AT; A BARGAIN.

REASON: MANAGER MUSTDEVOTE ENTIRE TIME TOTHE ORPHANAGE OWINGTO INCREASE OF INMATES.

G. R.LAWYER.

Officer Room 406 Judd Building.

TELEPHONE 314 MAIN.

WOMAN'S EXCHANGETO

Hotel St., Arlington Annex.

Next to A. A. Montano'a MillineryParlors.

Advertisement Changed Mondays.

LADIES'MUSLIN UNDERWEAR

Some special prices this week and an excellent opportunity tomake purchases on an economical basis. Material Is of the bestand goods all well made.

upwardHandsomely trimmed with Lace and Embroidery.

85cLace and Embroldedy trimming.

85c upwardLace and embroidery trimming.

50cof fine Muslin. , '

60cLace and Embroidery trimming. Compare, our prices with others.

Telephone White

11 TRANSIT LI

HEMENWAY,

Removed.

Underskirts $1.00(Might Gowns upward

ChemiseCorset Covers upward

Drawers upward

ProgressA. BLOM.

Fort Street near Beretania

3171

Sale in Quantities to Suit

IIFIRST CIRCUIT

(Continued from pane one.)

vlso that either of them 'may' hold theroilVt does not render It obligatory thatbut one of them should hold It. In factthe only true construction of the ActIs that three or a less number of Judgesmay hold 'the court,' but If It Is belliheld by any one of shIiI Judges, no oth-er can at the name time hold anothersession of 'the court." The Act In ques-tion never was intended to allow thepractice which has grown up of morethan one session of the court beingheld at the same time. It would havebeen easy for the legislature or consti-tution to so have provided if It was

I deemed necessary. . There Is only onecourt, 'the court' of the FJrst Circuit,and in order to allow different sessionsto he held at the same time legislationwas and Is necessary. Look at theStates where a court has .different ses-sions or departments and a provisionwill always be found for the holding ofthem.

KILL 160 SOLDIERS.NEW YORK, April 19. A dispatch

to the Herald from Managua, Nica-ragua says: Some members of the Con-

servative party caused an explosion Inthe military barracks here on Wednes-day night.

Nearly 150 lives, were lost fn the ex-plosion and me barracks were destroyed

"There has been considerable bitter-ness shown by the Conservativesagainst the Liberal party, which Is Inpower and of which President ZelayHis the leader.

Advertise your wants In the Star.

What You Ought to Know

G a S a r a easily ranks firstas a laxative medicine, the only ob

jection to It has been a disagreeabletaste. Used first by the Indians' of

California, It has been In constant usefor hundreds of years, and with' uni-

formly good results. Now that mod-

ern pharmacy has succeeded In elim-

inating the disagreeable bitter portionfrom this sovereign laxative barkwithout In any way Impairing Its valueas a laxative It has been strongly ad-

vocated by the leading members of themedical profession throughout theworld. C 3, S a T a an elixirmanufactured from this bark, is madefrom bark at least three years old,

which has been properly cured In or-

der that all the activity of the barkmight be developed. This bark com-

bined with vegetable aromatlcs andstimulants produces the wonderfulremedy known asCaSaraa'positive cure for constipation, torpidliver, weak bowels or deranged stomtach, and will give immediate relief inall troubles due to these causes, suchas headache, sick headache, pricklyheat, vertigo, etc.

This is not a cathartic of the old

stylo which leaves the, user in worsecondition than before, it Is a true toniclaxative, which not only removes thecause of the trouble, but tones up thebowels and liver, giving new life andvigor to the whole system.

Be sure that you get C 3. 8 3.

T a notice the spelling of the word

C a S a T a there are thou-

sands of preparations of Cascara, butonly one genuine C a S Si t cL

the best laxative medicine known.Price 50c. Samples free.

HOBRON DRUG CO.,

Fort and King Streets

P. O. Box 484

by the

Special Rice Fertilizer,Special Sorghum Fertilizer,

Tl

Special Vegetable Fertilizer,Special Lawn Fertilizer,

Special Tree Fertilizer,

Pacific Guano and Fertilizer Co.

WORKS, KALI HI, OAHU '

Goods are Strictly Up-to-d- ate

IIT MAY BE DEFEATED'

THAN HILL MAt PALL BKTWKKNTWO BTOOL.

The Differential on Refined Rugmr Mare the mumbling Block Uetween the

Two llftttsea.

WASHINGTON. April St.-- The situ-ntlo- n

In Coiikiw relative to Cubanrelief is full of iKsrplexItle to the lie.publican leaders, and skillful mwtilpu-lati- n

will have to be done to av 'Iddragging the whole question of tariffrevision Into the agitation. There aietwo classes of Republicans among thosewho voted with the Democrats to ad-minister the recent humiliating rebuketo tlie House lender. One class honest-ly desires tariff reduction, and voted forremoving the differential on refined su-gar because it was a step In that di-

rection. The other clans wants notariff tinkering, and voted to Impose anobnoxious amendment on the Cubanbill In order to defeat the whole project.Now the question comes up In the Sen-ate, Shall the amendment removingthe differential on refined sugar belopped off.and the Cuban relief measurebe passed?

The immediate result of the House'saction It Is believed by more than one

Senator on the Repub-lican side, will be disappointment to theCubans. The House cannot well recedefrom its position as to the differentialon refined sugar and the Senate Is notllkfely to agree to such action. If theHouse put on the differential amend-ment In order to prevent the Senatefrom Increasing the reduction of thetariff In favor of Cuba It was a shrewdand probably successful .ruse. But if .twas expected that the Senate wouldagree to take oft the. protection to tnesugar trust it is liable to be disappoint-ed. The result Is that Cuba will gowithout the plum that seemed withinher grasp.

COFFEE.Williams, Dimond & Co., report the

coffee market as follows: Stock of ns

In first hands 1039 bags. Thecoffee markets of the world are general-ly dower and still tend downward; tthlsIs ' caused by the enormous stock onhand and continued heavy output InBrazil. We quote for good current 8V4to 9Uc; fancy washed, 12U to He; primewashed 1U to 12c; good washed 9 to10',ic; good to prime beaberry 9 to Wic

A'OLCANO MARSHALL.MANILA, April 22. The editor of the

Volcano was sentenced today to oneday'a,imprlsonment and to pay a fine or$100 for demanding the removal of tneJudge who recently tried Senor Valdez,editor of "the Mlau, who was fined torlibeling Filipino members of the UnitedStates Commission, which was tryingthe editor of Freedom under the sedl-- .Hon law.

THE ORPIIEUM.The patrons of the drami are cer-

tainly- getting a treat at the Orpheum.Tne i erformances now be'og given bythe popular Elleford uompu-- are luilyun.to 'he high class standard of anystock house in the metropolis.

? as f Truce' c;c3l Its run Ian;ntirHf. If ivrrn rlfwrl v nrnajn 1 rPrr f Jnight a favorite play of The Elleford"The American Girl" will be given,Baby Lilian as "Prince Roy," LittloEvelyn as the "Little Lady," and Com- -edlan Watson ns "Rosa Bolter." actor,manager and promoter; new songs,dailies and a will be give,,Friday and Saturday Oliver Dond By- -ron's famous comedy melodrama "TIio

lUIIV--i t ft. (,IUIII1 XIIIIIIJ .t. Vjf llt'llmatinee will bo given Saturday, whenini- l.lti stai;v it ? i.l i

Ihe children of Honolulu nft-- r the per-formance with a brief story of ihtlrlives.

GOES TO HIS ISLAND

CAPTAIN ROSEHILL OFF FORMARCUS.

Is1 to Depart Today on Alameda to At-

tend to Preparing Expedition to theGuano Land.

Captain A. A. Rosehlll, the "King" ofMarcus Island will leave on the Ala-meda this afternoon, to take possessionof, this new realm. Captain Rosehlll Isto superintend outfitting the expedKtion at either San Francisco or. on Pu-g- ot

Sound. W. C .Peacock who is thefinancial backer of the proposition, willalso accompany Captain Rosehlll andremain with him assisting In outfittingthe expedition. Mr. Peacock will nothowever, go to Maraus Island.

Captain Rosehlll and Mr. Peacockhave not yet determined exactly wherethey will secure the vessel. They willbe governed principally by the cost ofsecuring the boat. It Is expected that agood sized schooner can be charteredin San Francisco, at a reasonable figureand the cost of outfitting the expedl- -tion will not be'vory great. The expe.illtlon will not be very great. Tho expedition will have to start to MarcusJgland without any unnecessary delay,as the Island can be approached onlybetween May nnd September 15. Dur-ing the balance of tho year, the weatherIn 1 . .. I .. . nn.. .

EihrSTto rrty-

The work of gathering guano willalso be accomplished undo? consider- -able difficulty. There are no cars onmborers'wm hive to

to the WaV toaccomplish any thing during the guanoseason. If the guano deposits prove allthat is expected, the place will ba equip- -ped in proper style. The expedition willprobably call at Honolulu on the returnvoyage and perhaps on the way ovei.

SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE

(Continued from Page ?,.)

ARRIVING.S. S. Alaskan, Iianlleld, from San

Francisco at 1 p. m.Per S. S. China, April 30, for the

Orient: J. Kelly Brown, Jr., R. C.Brown, Mrs. Jane L. Stanford, DrSteadman, B. A. Gould, James Plnnock,Miss Annie Hates, and 75 Chinese alul178 Japanese.

ST. PETERSBURG, April vere

earthquake shocks occurred at Shnma-k- a,

Trans-Caucasi- a, during the nightof April 17, causing a panic among theinhabitants who escaped the recent visi-tations. Earthquake shocks were alsofelt In the district of Ferghana, Turkes-tan, early yesterday morning.

HAWAII AT 'ST, L DU S

COMMIHRIONKIt RAKIIRTT DIH.

rt'BHEB t'H RXH1HIT.

Will Look to Business Men for ChletSupport Outline Its Imperative in-tef-

to Community.

John Oftrrett, World's Fair Commis-sioner General to Asia, Australia, thePhilippines and Hawaii waa a pas-senger on the China yesterday and Isat present a attest of the Hawaiian Hole. Mr. Barrett will make but a briefstay in this territory, leaving for thefarther Orient on May 8. In the shorttime that Is here he will talk with "awau s tuture will grow steadilythe most interested In public pro. brighter. It een adverse thegress facilities for the best administration H,woti have

of an Hawaiian exhloit clpltated a nferloHi of asrpel-baggln- g.

the St. Louis Exposition or or as It hunting,' ifautitHHUbtm and intrl-loo- ks

at present. 1901. Se. retarding. HnWaHftn progress andThe visit Hawaii and a here prosperity mail' jnr - Washing- -

was not at first included in the missionof Mr. Barrett which is purely of adiplomatic and largely of a confirmatory nature with regard to the Invita-tions issued the countries of the Pa- -cltlc ocean by the United States. tsat the special request of PresidentHoosevelt and President Francis of tneexposition that the stop over In Hawaiila made.

"It Is principally the business menana tneir efforts that I look,' said Mr.Barrett this morning. "Of course It isexpected that the legislature will uosomething and after conversation withthe President, the territorial committee

a.m.e.1P," lT.r.eithat whatever of Hawall proposes do with regard to localexploitation at the Exposition will becordially endorsed by the government.

is the business community howeverthat Is taking the grip in this matterin many other of the states and aug-menting the State appropriations.

"This Is it should be. All politi-cal ends are thus eliminated and thewishes of the business community, putting the affair on a practical basis,showing up the best resources andKeeping out exhibits, barometer, 9 . m., 30.01, rising (correct-cure- d.

For Instance with Hawaii, tne ed gravity); rainfall, liours ond- -proneness oi tne American populace 10look upon the Islands as a place pro-ducl-

a race of hula-hul- a dancers canbe rectified.

"If for example the business commu-nity Hawnll contributed $50,000

and the legislature only $15,000 $20,- -000 perhaps the end would be served.

"There Is no question but that a com-prehensive exhibit of Hawaiian pro- -

1 II -- II.... ...... 1.1 v.KiL'sa mm liatvitliuu icattuiuiro uirof Incalculable benefit these Islands.You cannot afford be left out withCuba, Porto Rico and the Philippinesnil coming in. Each of these exhibitswill have a special building, that of thePhilippines alone costing $150,000. TnePhilippines have raised first ap- -propriatlon half a million dollars of

resources, they will appoint their owncommission and have established theoutline of their exhibit on a plan thatpromises a showing that will as theyguarantee astonish America and thevisiting world. Hawnll, while it is aterritory, is an outlying possession andIs classed In the general mind withPorto Blco the Philippines and Cuba

i. i i . 1 1."""!" " ou"V, ""e" ""icommerce of the Pacific will equal andmore tha e,c'ual that of the Atlantic.Senators ami Congressmen are alwayswilling now to listen w th Interest to

of "'I11 aliliough they possessbut sparse Information nt present. TheulbI,?,t?ye"

thather

W,,L,V u InIV ,?l,Ull!fa,1

the fair will reach every pnper largeand small In the country will alone boa great advertisement. exhibit Ismade the feeling of the legislators fromthe Western Central Stales will Infal-libly be lessened in their Interest ofHawaiian affairs by the lack of enter-prise and competitive energy shownwhich will tell In the legislaturewhen they are asked Hawaiian ap--

town.secretary (20) rooms,

Barrett

whichthe thoI r v n

Chamber will probably convenedwhich will take thp shape acussion. Mr. Barrett visited GovernorCooper morning nt ten thirty hold-ing with him on exposition

SUSTAINING OF

GOVERNOR OOLE

The friends of peace, progress andprosperity In Hawaii, the first theAmerican Insular possessions, rejoice

President's thatGovernor Dole to remain at the head

territory with the Indorse- -

"7"lH.,.,Vn ,Vi , .T'"'f,1'"11' !at,, Immediate effect InHawaii for the betterment conditionsIt should the clamors the carpe-

t-bag hunters and the disappointed royalist natives of spoils.seeking legislature who havehounding for many months; itH1JUUIU HUKgUHl IU lUUUOUB

tho Rvernment Washington

-xtrandt sifcU'V!,farn Jr?J V"!.u ?JhBnt hfo,1 ,Jh,?tney h for their

Sf'0"??tV?,.?r..J?Ba'' ,no'.1U?a!. and

" weano"I'JjVA :"','tSLU10' DOl maJ'

'Governor Dole's visit to Washingtonws jinjiiiny cuuceiveu. u urougm into

close contact two men stand as toHawaii, for precisely the same propo-sltio-

the working out the problemsgovernment against difficulties for

which neither is today responsible.greater part the friction whichdeveloped Hawaii during past

admitting ti natives unllniltedthan that

which prevailed under thegovernment the Hawaiian

which that government protest- -ed and which was committed beforePresident Roosevelt entered nfllcm. II

the belief the the headthe territory if the insularadministration Is stanchly supported

a years by the federal adminis-tration Hawaii can out owndestiny even against the handicapthe unwisely liberal TheIslands may mark for a few

while the natives are learning theirlesson and the and his assist.

nviuni it r restraining them from crip-pling the islands with foolish foetal.Hon. Hut that la far better than tnaretro reunion anre to follow an Indorse.nv-n- t or m nurngement the reaction.nry lenit-nt- which have beset Hover- -nor Hole Hnil to ut him and hisJmily from power.

The President has now u rati redgovernor that he be auatained

hemen Had to

Do'ein

1903, Place

to stay for

toIt

to

to

It

us

undesirable se- -

for 2i

of sayor

uuuiuto

to

theirto

iimu.

ews

If no

for

dis

the

UU'BU

republic,

for

ills count. Thai means that furtherattention will paid to the Irreconclla.blea, masquerading royalists whoaeek to pnlaon the executive mind

against the Inaular attmmkttratlo.removes the moat oomwtattoucauses which have contributed Ma-wal- l's

unrest or many months, thethe nut-Da- le elements that

they represented the Wanhngton authorities. On this capital they have beencommoting tneir campaign against tneInsular administration

The President's decision means that

lon Bl'MltS. STANFORD DEPARTING.

Mm. Jane Stanford, who beenvisiting In Honolulu for some weeks,left the China this afernoon forYokohama. She will visit Jaiianthe return the China when she

return to Han Francisco. She wasI bidden aloha by a targe numberfriends the Wharf.

COHONMR'S VERDICT.The eororifer's Jury empanelled to look

into the death rend- -"'"Z7, wi :"""7E:"lcted,wltH suicidal intent. The mem- -bership the Jury was composedW. H. Goelz, II. Walty, J. A. M.Johnson, ltawisay, A. Moore and

E. Richardson. The funeral willtake place Sunday.

THE WBATHEH.Weather Bureau, PunahOU, 1 p.

Wind, moderate, N. E.; weather,I Morning minimum temperature, 08:midday maximum temperature. 79;

inf? 9 n. m n; point, 9 a. m., 62;humidity. 9 a. m.. C4 per cent.

CUItTIS J. LYONS, Observer.

Fine and Printing,the Office.

NKW ADVKKTISl.MrJTS

BYAUTHORFTYgeneral invitation is herrby extend- -

to the buslnes community meetHtm. John Barrett, Commissioner Oenem, th(? LoulHiana Purchase Exposltlon at the Capitol Building Thursday

1 at 3 p. m.

HENRY E.' COOPER,Acting Governor.

CARD QP THANKS

The family of tho.la.te, John Cushlng-ha- m

take, thts-juesvn- a of, thanking themany kind friends who tendered helpand consolation during their late be-

reavement.

For '8ale IThe ArluigtonHotel Annex

Situated Hotel near Fort;

seen nnd any additional informationwill bo furnished by applying to

FRANK HOOGS,Administrator Estate E. ICrouse,

deceased. '

HAWAIIAN OPERAHOUSE.

Hay 8 to 26, i9o2

A brief Season performancesonly and first appearances In Hono-lulu the eminent actor Mr.

FredericklUfARDE

and his distinguished organization.w"o will present the following c1jk.sIunl Shakespearean ropertoirer

propnations. jn tho very heart The hotelJames Gordon Spencer, of contains Twenty all

tho Chamber of Commerce called upon furnished: a lease for five years, fromCommislonor this morning. Thecall will be returned tomorrow morning September 1, 1001, goes with the prop-aft- er

Mr. Barrett will with erty.Spencer representative men of A ,nventory furniture may hetho r A Rnnn mol tip-- nf thr

beof

thisconversation

affairs.

of

over the announcementIs

of the full

cy toof

quiet ofplace

beenMr. Dole

IUIUIUI,lmt at is

1!

bU81"

w

ofof

Theof has

in the

of e to

provisionalof

agulnst

Is of men attoday

fewwork Its

offranchise.

time sea-sons

governor

of

tried

thewill In

nobe

the

Itof theto

as-sumption of

L. has

onuntil

trip ofwill

ofat

of F. B.

of ofE.

C. C.F.

on

in.

dew

Book Commercialat Star

Aed to

of

May

on street,

L.T.

of 12

of

ofwell

meetMr. of

J

who

ofthat

TI".Vi:Nirht VidimusThtMounUbinl

Vir Julius CaesarTuZ?SM King Uar

rW" Othalli

IbV'ff Merchant of Venice

W BichelituPrograms for other performances

w ' hu S.""0""0,;CNIO PRODUC- -

TION8' A"MU' COSTUMHS, ETC..SOCIALLY BROUGHT FOR KACU

.SCAV, J. U V. i. '. H,.l'Jl? --owerZ1?- - SM- - '""y Clrc,e' , 0: Loges.

SEASON SAJ(W NOW OPEN ATWALL, NICHOLS CO. KHGULAK8A LIS OF SKATS MAY 1ST.

Seats Ordered by Mall or Telephonowill be laid aside In the order received,but none will bo held after May 1.

Ads under "Situation Wanted"sorted free of charge.

Page 6: iWVV HAWAIIAN STAR. · adld are promised on December 1 as an inducement for intending purchasers to paid from the profits from hauling freight In October of this year: BETTER THAN

mx.

A 5utmir Proposition.Well, now there's the

1CK QUESTION !

Tea kr.w you'll nnJ Ice; you knowK' lcaslty In hot weather. Wek&iiHs Mn atA nrlnlll In thflt leftiwfctfc Witt give you satisfaction, and

ti line vu miuf fu. vine, ,v.,

TIE 01 ICE 5 ELEGTRIC CO..

HOFFMANN AND MARKHAM.

kione JIM Blue, Postofflce Box m

Curtain Sale

AT

M. W. JO&BAN,1,8 FORT STREET

m PAIRS OF

CURTAINS FROM

60 CENTS A

PAIR UP.

The Largest and Best

Assortment inTown

. &. IRWIN & CO., LTD.,

KVm. G. r.rwln.. President and ManagerClaua Spreckela.... First nt

IW. M. CHffard.... Second Vice-Preside- nt

H. M. Whitney, Jr..Sec'y and TreasurerGeo. J. Rosa Auditor

Sugar Factors,Commission Agents

AGENTS OF THE

.OCEANIC STEAMSHIP COMPANY

OF BAN FRANCISCO, CAL.

The Encore Saloon. Corcer Nuuanu and Hotel Street.

We Keep on Hapd theHost Brands ofLiquors and Cigars

The Depot Saloon,Dppoe lte tlie Oahu Railway & Land Co,

"We wtil fceep the Honolulu Beer al.ways on tap and in bottles. Also softdrlnkn am! cigars.

RT A J DRM RNT. Prfnrletnra.

HART & CO., LTDTHE ELITE ICECREAM PARLORS

Chocolates and ConfectionsIce Cream and Water IcesBakery Lunch.

TIE FINEST RESORT III THE CUT

Oahu Tailoring Company,MERCHANT TAILORS.

Suits mxde to Order, cleaning, Re-

pairing tuid pressing; corner Beretantaand Bnuru tits., Honolulu, T. H.

WON & LOUI CO.Hotel Street near Smith.

Saiiltary Plumbers, Tinsmiths, aSheet Iron Workers.

Water Pipe and Gutter Work laIts branches.

Orders filled with dispatch.

S. Kojima.IMPORTER ANDDEALER IN -

LIQUORS,Japanese Provisions.

General Merchandise.AND PLANTATION SUPPLIES.

TO. 45 HOTEL STREET, HONOLULU.Telephone White 2411.

P. O. Box m.

OHTA,Cmtrater and Builder,

HoHse Painter

Xewmle, Sheridan Street near Kin,Honolulu, H. L

There U thistoi'iillnr thing

nl out nir HairVigor . It's a. lmlr-foo-d,

tint it dye.It doesn't lura

you r hair a ttdd ( n I y Mack awltnuke it luok deadand tireless. Hutariiriually the oldcolor comes Imok,all tlio rich color Itused to have. AndIt also stops fallingof the hair.

Kven it your hairIsn't coining out,isn't turning gray,isn't too short,yet you . cortainlywant a fine dress-

ing for It, and hereIt Is.

Ayer's Hair VigorIt keeps the seal) clean and healthy,

removes all dandruff, makes the hairgrow rapidly, prevents it from fallingout, and does not allow a single grayhair to appear.

Do not bo deceived by cheap imita-tions which will only disappoint you,Mako sure that you get tho genulnoAyer's Hair Vigor.

PraMraHyDr.J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell. Mist., U.S.A.

DoYouBuy I

LUMBER,DOORS,SASH,BLINDS,GLASS.WALL PAPER.PAINTS.OILS.COAL.

SEI

MR Hi., LTD.,

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

Manufacturersof Soda Water, Ginger Ale, Sarsaparflla, Root Beer, CreamSoda, Strawberry, etc., etc.

3. OZiLKXGrand Opening ofOur New Store

115 N. KING ST,

HARDWARE.CROCKERY,

GLASSWARE,

PAINTS, ETC.

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.

Dry Goods,!Fancy Goods17 S. HOTEL ST.

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

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

f. O. Box 881. Telephon J1I

Wm.8Jrwin&Go..Ud,FIRE AND MARINE

INSURANCE AGENTS

AGENTS FOR THE

Scottish Union National InsuranceCompany of Edinburgh,

Wllhelma of Magdeburg General Insur.ance Company,

Associated Assurance Co., Ltd., of Mu-nich and Berlin.

Alliance Marine and General AssuranqCo., Ltd., of London,

Royal Insurance Company of LiverpoolAlliance Assurance Company of Lon-

don,

AHI1153 Nuuanu Street Ner Pauabl.

Chairs, Tables, Bedroom Sets, MeatSafes, Mattresses, Pillows and Furni-ture made to order at very low prices.

P. O. BOX 952.

Fine Book and Commercial Printing,at the Star Office.

TUP! HAWAIIAN STAR, WMiKMtUY, AMMh M. M.

WAR TAXES STOPPED

ItRPKAL. ACT PASSED IIY COH-GRSS-

A Uw That Will Considerably Reducethe Amount Collector ChamberlainSends to Washington.

Internal Revenue Collector Chamber-lain has received from the Treasuryocpariiiieiu a circular or Instructionsunder the new law Just passed by Con-gress and approved by the President,repealing war revenue taxes. The epeal

goes Into effect on July 1 next. Itsoperation will reduce by several hun-dred dollars a month the amount ofrevenue the United States will takeaway irom Hawaii In the form of in-

ternal revenue taxes. The circular con-

tains uie luuowmg liuormatlon as totaxes repealed:

"The following changes are made Inthe law now In force: Taxes repealedon and after July 1, 1902: Special Tax-o- n

of Bankers, Brokers, Dealers InUrain, Securities (under par. 3, Sec. 8.Act March 2, lHtfci). (tirokers class 2).Pawn Brokers, Custom House Brokers.Proprietors Theaters, Proprietors Cir-cus, Proprietors of Public Exhibitions,nnd all shows for money. Proprietors ofHowilng Alleys or milliard Rooms,Dealers In Leaf Tobacco, Dealers InTouacco, Manufacturing of Tobacco,Manufacturing of Cigars.

"Stamp Taxes on instruments, Pa-pers or Documents; Deliveries orTransfers of Stock and Sale and Agree-ments of Sales or Agreements to SellStocks, Products or Merchandise(Schedule A.) Wines Scheduled U.Seats In Parlor or Palace Cars andBerths In Sleeping Cars: Taxes on Le-gacies and Distributive Shares of Per-sonal Property; Excise Taxes on Per-sons, Firms, Companies and Corpora-tion enguged in Ucnnlng Petroleum orSugar.

"Taxes reduced: Fermented Liquorsreduced to Jl.UO per barrel, Snuff andTobacco reduced to C cents per pound;Cigarettes weighing more than threepounds to the thousand, $3.00 per thou-san- u.

"A drawback or rebate Is allowed onall original and unbroken factory pack-ages of smoking and manufactured to-bacco and snuff, held by manufacturersor dealers on July 1, 1902, to the amountof difference between the higher ratepaid and the tax Imposed by this act.

"No discount Is allowed on sale ofstamps for fermented liquors or for

or snuff."The provisions of the present law

relative to mixed Hour remalh- - un-changed except a slight change madeIn the definition of mixed flour.

"Rights accrued or liabilities incur-red prior to the repeal are not affected.

"The estates of nil persons dyingprior to July 1, 1902, will be subject tothe legacy tax even If the distribution1 not made until after that date.

"J. W. YEUKES, Commissioner."

I

Williams, Dlmond & Co.. under dateof San Francisco, April 22, reviewingthe sugar market for the period begin-ning March 20. say:

No changes have since occurred in thelocal market or for export, prices es-

tablished March oth still being in force.Basis. March 20th "to arrive" sale

200 tons at 3 21st, "to arrive" sale200 tons at 3 and on same datecost and freight sale 2000 tons at 3.31c.and ngain cost and freight sale S00 tonsat 3.50c; 22nd and 24th. no sales: 25th,"to arrive" sale 1000 tons at 3 c.

26th "to arrive" sale 2000 tons at 3and on same date cost and freight sale2000 tons at 3.603c, and again "to ar-rive" sale 3200 tons at 3c; 27th, spotsale 800 tons at 3c: 2Sth and 29th,holiday; 31st, no sales; April 1st, nosales; 2nd, spot sale 1500 tons at 3c,3rd, "to urrive" sale 2000 tons at 3c,and on same date "to arrive" sale 1000tons at 3.60c; 4th, no sales; 5th "to ar-rive" sale 750 tons at 3.56c; 7th, "to ar-rive" sale 1000 tons at 3Ac; Sth, no sales9th, cost and freight sale 750 tons at 8

10th, "to arrive" sale 2000 tons at3c, and on same date cost and freightsale 1600 tons at 3.37c, since which nosales, establishing basis for 96 centri-fugals In New York on 10th Inst 3.3723c.San Francisco 2.9975c.

Sugar telegram Just nt hand datedNew York April 22, 1902, reads: "Sales"to arrive" GOO tons Cuba Centrlfuguls963 test at 3c. Granulated unchanged.Beets unehnged, consequently basis for96 centrifugals In New York on thatdate Is 3.375c San Francisco 3c.

London cable, April 17th quotes Ja-va No. 15 D. S. 8 shillings, 3 pence.Fair refining 7 shillings 3 pence, samedate last year 11 shillings C pence and10 shillings 9 pence respectively.

Stock. Wlllett & Gray report April10th, U. S. four ports In all hands es-

timated April Oth, 109,643 tons against197.533 tons same date last year. Sixprincipal ports of Cuba estimated April8th, 3S4.000 tons against 220,828 tons cor-responding period last year. Totalstock in all principal countries by cableApril Kith at latest uneven dates, 3,396,-G1- 3

tons against 2,632,853 tons; Increaseover last year 703,79a tons. Sugar cropsof the world estlmatod April 10th grundtotal cane and beet sugar 10,762,750 tonsagunst 9,653,451 tons corresponding pe- -i

iod lust year; estimated increase In theworld s production 1,109,305 tons.

Eastern and Foreign markets:Throughout the earlier portion of theperiod under review steadiness andstrength were observable In the rawsugar market, while prices were wellmaintained. These features ' howeverwere shortly dissipated under the

of less favorable conditions anda return to the depressed prices touch-ed for u period In January and InMarch, was occasioned largely doubt-less by the complete withdrawal fromthe market of the principal buyer coup-led with a disinclination of other re-finers to swell stocks ample for imme-diate requirements. Tho reaction hasset In however, tho policy of buyershaving naturally evoked resistance ontho part of holders who prefer to stororather than accept current prices, andlate mail advices from New York un-der date of 17th inst., whllo revealing aquiet but firm tone to the market, In-

dicate the probabilities of an Improve-ment in the near future. Beet sugarprices advanced' for a time, but latter-ly have steadily declined and the de-pression Is doubtless accentuated by theabsence of buyers for U. K. account inconsequence of the fact that In theBritish Budget Introduced 14th inst. nochange was made In the English dutyon sugar, thereby rendering quite un-necessary the accumulation of suppliesIn anticipation of Legislative actioncontrary to the above. Refined sugarli'n ii In viir.lt ni.t ,1anml n.tn.. . I. ,.i, a ii vAvBiivii, usiimtiu lu IllsI,, of the Introduction of revised sell- -

Inn term but buyers now show lessInterest and new business Is light.

Cuba crop estimate: The yield olthe canes Is disappointing, receipts arefalling off and estimates of the outturnof the crop are being reduced I" NOO.oon

tons.Legislation: The Cuban Reciprocity

Bill under the provisions of which atwenty per cent reduction In the dutyon Cuban sugar Is allowed, after n vi-

gorous debate Anally passed the uof Representatives by a large majorityIRth Inst., and will now be given con-

sideration In the Senate. One Importantamendment removing the refined sugardifferential was added thereto througha combination of Democrats nnd Re-publicans favoring the beet sugar Inter-ests. It Is held In some quartern thatthe divergence of opinion likely to de-velop between the Senate and the H iusover the advisability of this amend-ment may endanger the ultimate pas-sage or the Cuban Reciprocity bill.

The rigid Chinese Exclusion bill pass-ed previously by the House met defeatIn the Senate ICth Inst., while In Itsplace was substituted a measure offeredby Senator Piatt extending the provi-sions of the present exclusion law andalBo applying that exclusion to all Insu-lar Territory under the Jurisdiction ofthe United States. The bill now goesto conference.

BIUTISH HORSE CORRALWASHINGTON. April 20. Colonel E

H. Crowder of the Army, who has beenInvestigating the charges that the Bri-tish Government was maintaining asupply station In Loulsana for horsesfor the use of tliq British in the fightwith the Boers, saw Acting SecretarySanger at the War Department today,to whom he outlined the nature of theinvestigation he had made, and sub-mitted a report. Mr Sanger declined totalk concerning the report. To-nig- ht

Colonel Crowder and Mr Sanger sawthe President, nnd the lntter was In-

formed of the nature of the report Co-lonel would make.

HER SON'S LIFE SAVED BY CHAM-BERLAIN'S COLIC, CHOLERA

AND DIARRHOEA REMEDY."A neighbor ran In with a bottle of

Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar-rhoea Remedy when my son was suf-fering with severe cramps and was giv-en up as beyond hope by my regularphysician, who stands high In his pro-fession. After administering threedoses of it, my son regained conscious-ness and recovered entirely withintwenty-fou- r hours," says Mrs. MaryHaller, of Mt. Crawford, Vo., U. R. A.This remedy Is for sale by all dealers,Penson, Smith & Co., general agents,Hawaiian Islands.

Ads under "Situation Wanted" in-

serted free of charge.

JUDGE & MATTOS,Territory Stables Building.King Street.

Plumbing, Tinning, Sewering andSheet Iron Works. First-clas- s workdone at Lowest Prices.

Notice to Hunters.

A handsome litter of puppies, whelp-ed April 25th, part pointer and partsetter. From personal experience Ihave found that this cross makes thebest hunting dog for this country.They are strong nnd make good re-

trievers on land or water. They havethe advantage over the setter, In hav-ing short hair, so they need not beclipped when working on pheasants. I,myself; have hunted over this breed ofdogs, for the last six years and wouldhave no other. In color, they are solidliver. Have four dogs left, three hav-ing been sold'. Price, $15.00 per dog.

For further particulars. Inquire ofW. M. CUNNINGHAM,

Favorite Saloon.

SING HOP LEE,FORT STREETCORNER VINEYARD.

BUTCHER SHOPOpen on flonday, April 28

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

S. SAIKB,Bamboo Furniture

ANDPICTURE FRAMESNeat and HandsomeDesigns, made to order.

563, Beretanla Street, near Punchbowl.

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

II. J. NOLTE, Prop'r.

First-Cla- ss Lunches served with tea,coffee, soda water, ginger ale or milk.

Smoker's Requisites a Specialty.

L. KONO FEE,rvior-ola- o n't lailox,

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

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

and Tailoring Goods always InStock. Dyeing, Cleaning and Repairing at Short Notice, satisfactionguaranteed.

AMERICAN SALOONWllhelm Schilling Proprietor.

PRIMO BEER ON TAP AND IN BOTTLES

TEN CENTS A SCHOONER.Also Cigars, Tobacco and Cold Drlnkn.

LUIha Stmt Near vineyard.

Hirose Shoten,1079 AALA STREET.

NEW GOODS BY EVERT STEAMER'.

TEL. BLUE 32. P. 9. BX H6.

. . .. . . . .. . ..V. . . . . . . . ,).t!.m What if ths Best Bicycle? ft

Years ago this was a debatable ques-

tion; now the answer Is simple and uni-

versally the same. It consists of the one

COLUMBIAThere Is no wheel to equal the Colum-

bia Chalnless In durability, ease andlooks. Fitted with coaster brake, cush-ion frame, choice of tires, pedals andgear, the wheel Is perfect.

$85.00 BUYS (ME

.

i

....

.:!..

.......".;

E. 0. HALLEHLERS BLOCK,FORT STREET

Do You LikeGood Cheese?

We are looking for a few people who do. We know they will enjoyeating a new kind we have Just received called

NUTflEQ CHEESEEveryone who has tried It pronounces It excellent. Sold ly the

pound at 25 cents.Here are some of the regular brands of cheese" we carry In stock

nt all times.

EDAM. PINEAPPLE, ROYAL LUNCH, AND MC-

LAREN'S IMPERIAL CHEESE, SAP-SAG- O GREEN.MCLAREN'S IMPERIAL CHEESE, SAP-SAG- O GREENCHEESE, NEW ZEALAND, NEW YORK AND CAL-IFORNIA CHEESE, AND PARMASAN CHEESE INBOTTLES.

Telephones :

22, 24, 92

H.MAY&CO.,LtdTHE POPULAR GROCERY.

JUST OPENED SEVERAL LINES OF

Nice Spr ng ShirtsPROM 50 CENTS TO $1.50

,

& LTD

BostonBlock,

ISOSHIflA

Hotel Street

J

K.

Millinery and DressmakingHouse

"WISHES TO ANNOUNCE ITS SPRING OPENINGLADIES' AND CHILDEN'SHATS OF THE LATEST DESIGNS, ALSOA FINE ASSORTMENT IN MUSLIN M

UNDERWEAR FOR LADIES, MISSES ANDINFANTS. !

Arlington Block

SON,

Classified Ads in Star

One Insertion, per line 10 cents.

Two Insertions, per line 25

Ons Week, per lino 30 cents.

Two Weeks, per line 40 cents.

One Month, per line 00 cents.

Ads under "Situations Wanted," insertedfree until further notice.

Ads under "Situation Wanted"serted free of charge.

Fort St.

cents

lu - Ads under "Situations Wanted," lotserted free at akarte In the Star.

Page 7: iWVV HAWAIIAN STAR. · adld are promised on December 1 as an inducement for intending purchasers to paid from the profits from hauling freight In October of this year: BETTER THAN

On the Polo Grounds,High Balls Hade Harmless.

SOCIETY HAS TAKEN TO POLO AND BHCOME JWTIIUHHIDOVJBR ITS ATTRACTIONS IN A WAT NOT PREVIOUSLY KNOWNIN TUB ANNALS OK OUTDOOR RECREATIONS. THIS SCOT-TISH (JAMB HAS BROUGHT WITH IT A KNOWLEDGE OF THKHIGH-BAL- L AND ITS PROPBIt UBE AT THK CLUB HOUSB AFT-ER THIS FATIGUES OF TUB GAME

PHYSICIANS MAY DIFFER AS lo THE BENEFIT OF ALCO-HOL WHETHER IT BE A FOOD OR STIMULANT, BUT HOW-EVER MUCH THEY MAY DIFFER IN THIS, THEY ARE ALLAGREED THAT IF LIQUOR MUST BE TAKEN, IT 18 ROBBEDOF HARMFUL EFFECTS IF DILUTED WITH WHITE ROCK ORIN THE FORM OF A "HIGH-BALL- ," AS IT IS CALLED. TO BEPERFECT A HIGH-BAL- L SHOULD ALWAYS BE MADE WITH.

White Rock WaterWHITE ROCK MAXES GRAPE JUICE, MILK. LEMONADE ANDSTILL WINES, SPARKLING, DELICIOUS AND HEALTHFUL.

NO FLAT BOTTLES.W. C. PEACOCK & CO., AGENTS.

FOR ATONIC

Primo Bock' BeerOur brew of "BOCK BEER" Is near-

ly exhausted and those desiring Itshould send their order to the breweryImmediately. ,.

Delivered In bottles by the case.

TELEPHONE

Who will do itPYou 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 as good.

All we ask for It Is a fair price-- nohigh, not low. Either extreme Is

dangerous.Any one who gives us work gets the

best going at the fairest and squarestprice.

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

J aj. F. Morgan PresidentCecil Brown Vice-Preside-

T. Hustace SecretaryChan. H. Atherton AuditorW. H. Hoogs....Treajs. and I' r.

TELEPHONE MAIN 295.

Hustace & Go., LtdQUEEN STREET

Firewood, Stove,Steam and Blacksmith

CoalWHOLESALE AND RETAIL.

Sptcial attention given toDRAYING

ALSO. WHITE AND BLACK SAND

C. Q. Yee Hop & Co,

Knhikinni Heat MarketAnd Grocery

Fruits and Vfgetables

BERETANIA ST., COR. ALAK

Also at the

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

RAILWAY AND LAND CD'S

TIME TABLB

FROM AND AFTER JANUARY 1, 1001

TRAINS

Stations. Daily Daily(Outward) ex. Sun, D,ly ex.Ban D'ly D'ly

A.M. A.M. A.M. P.M. P.M.

Honolulu 7:10 9:18 11:06 3:15 6:101'earlOity 8 0S f:48 11:40 3:47 6:60Kwa Mill 8:33 10;0s 18:00 6:10Walanae. 100 . :45

WaUlna H:M .... B:40

Kahuku 1?:3U .... 6:15

STATIONS Dally(Inward) ex. Sun. D'ly D'ly D'ly

A.M. A.M. P.M. P.M

Kahuku. 5:8f .... 2:08Walalua 0:10 .... 2MWalanae 7:10 3:66Ewa Mill B:S0 7:4.1 1.05 4:.

Pearl Olty :lf 8:08 1:80 4 .88Henololu....i 6:10 8:86 2:00 6:36

O. P, DENIBON, F. 0. Smith.Superintendent. Oen. Pass, it Tkt. Ant

Advertf.se your Wants In the Star.

SPRINGTRY

MAIN 341.

GROCERS.. ..

CATERERS TO THE BEST FAMI-LIES.

IMPORTERS OF TABLE LUXU-RIES.

PURVEYORS TO FINE HOTELS.IMPORTERS OF CIGARS.IMPORTERS OF FRENCH AND

GERMAN FOOD DELICACIES.ROASTERS OF FINE COFFEES.

LEWIS &G0.,LTD,LEADING GROCERS

1060 FORT STREET.210 TWO TELEPHONES 240.

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

AGENTS FORWestern Sus-a- Refining Comp&cy of

San Francisco, Cal.Baldwin Locomotive Works of

Ph Jelphla, Penn.Newell Universal Mill Company

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

N. Ohlandt & Co.'s Chemical FertilizersHigh GroJe Fertilizers for Cane and

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

tilizers for Cane and Coffee.

Reed'u Steam Pipe Cars.

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

Papers.Lucol and Llnse d Oils, raw and bolluw.

Indurlne (a cold water paint) in whiteand colois.

Filter Press Cloths. Cemc Lime andBrick.

New Books

Cheap BooksWe have received on the S. S. "Sierra"

OVER1,200 paps NOVELS

PRICES FROM

20c. to 50c.EACH!

156 HOTEL STREET,

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

TMB HAWAUAM fTAM. Wa0M0AT, AWUU M, MM.

MAY DAY FESTIVAL

:jn IM'IMLH HEIIBARBK THK PMci-ORA-

Tomorrow Night's Entertainment Pro-mi-

To Be Moat Interesting andHurressful Feature of the Program.

The full rehearmil of the May-da- y en-

tertainment In Hid of the AIcKlhleyMemorial Fund proved highly nail-facto-

yesterday afternoon. Every-thing went off smoothly with the pro-mi-

of a highly entertaining eveningtomorrow. The May-pol- e dance willundoubtedly be one ot the features ofthe program, the girls from St. An-

drew's l'rlory proving to he not onlywell drilled but possessed of no smallamount of grace. The May-pol- e willbe decorated by the ladles of the Y. W.C. A. and, with the light dresses or thedancers, the gay ribbons and the wood-land background, will present a verycnarming picture.

Governor Cooper and several of theofficials visited the rehearsal later Inthe afternon and expressed their pleas-ure by vigorous applause. The chorus-es all showed careful training of natu-ra.'.- y

good voices. "The Old KentuckyHome" Is going to be one of the hits,with the pleanlnnles sitting aroundpicking cotton as they sing by the sideof the old bayou and the cantatahandled by Miss Cartwrlght provedwonderfully effective, local Ideas beingskilfully introduced. The cantata con-tains a great deal of clever posturingwith wreaths and some effectivemarching. The wand drill by the Aalaschool boys will be rehearsed thismorning and Mrs. Gunn's dainty danc-ers are already perfect. The scenerygenerally has been arranged to furnishwoodland backgrounds setting oft thecostumes of the performers and fallingIn with the character of the songs.

Some Idea of the scope of the pro-gram may be gathered by the an-nouncement that there will be threehundred and sixty children taking partIn the program. The entire galleryhas been reserved for their use and ofcourse the performers will not be re-

quired to pay for their seats. The pu-

pils will all be kept In their places bytheir teachers until their call comesand will then quietly march to theback of the stage In readiness to carryout their share of the program withoutwasting a moment. Professional as-

sistance behind the scenes ensures theprogram going through without hitchesor waits and a really delightful eveningawaits the audience.

The tickets sold already promise afilled house which should realize nearly$300 for the McKinley fund. The seatsare on sale and exchange at Wall,Nichols & Co.

WARDE'S "VIRGINIUS."As the late Edwin Booth was to

"Hamlet," as Joseph Jefferson Is to"Rip Van Winkle," so Is FrederickWarde to the great play of "Vlrglnlus"on the American stage. By nature,temperament.tralning and environment,the part has become peculiarly his own.and as If that were not sulllcient, byheredity also, for as Forrest Inheritedthe part from the original repcesenta-tiv- e

of this country, Thomas AbthorpeCooper, so John McCullough succeededto It from Forrest, and In the line otdirect succession Frederick Warde In-

herits the role from his distinguishedmaster, McCullough. Gifted by naturewith a superb physique, a voice ofgreat volume and power, under perfectcommand, a mind well stored by expe-

rience and study, Mr. Warde In theprime of his manhood, stands beforethe world as one of the foremost fig-

ures on the American stage, not alonefor what he has achieved, and we areindebted to him for much that is grandorrl noble in his career as an actor, butfor the possibilities of the future. Neg-

lecting and Ignoring the temptations sofre tly offered him to acquirewealth by presenting plays of a worth-es- s

and sensational character, he hasbeen true to Ills Ideals, ever upholdingthe best and noDlest torm oc uie ura-m- a,

and presenting It to the publicwith a liberality and accuracy that haswon for him the admiration and esteemof the entire world of art and letters.Mr. Warde and his talented company.Including iUsses May Warde, Antoin-ette Ashton, Virginia Drew Trescott,Messrs. Charles D. Herman, BarryJohnstone sni others will present this.grand play here on Thursday, May 8.

The regular sale of seats opens at WallNichols Co. tomorrow morning, and ItIs announoed that on account ot thelarge advance demand It would be ad-

visable to .get In line early.

PRESIDENT INSTALLED.NEW YORK, April 19. Professor

Nicholas Murray Butler was Installedas president of Columbia Universitywith Imposing ceremonies today.These ceremonies were attended by thePresident of the United States and theheads of the principal Institutions oflearning In the country.

STORY TELLER DEAD.WASHINGTON, April 20. Frank It.

Stockton, the well-know- n novelist, diedsuddenly here this morning from par-alysis Immediately resulting from ahemorrhage of the brain. He was aguest at lie banquet held Wednesdaynight of the National Academy of Sci-

ences, when he was taken suddenlyand mysteriously ill. The ailment didnot at that time appear to be serious,and for a while the sufferer seemed tobe Improving, but a change for theworse came this morning and death oc-

curred at 11 o'clock. By his bedsidewhen tho end came were his wife, whowas a Miss Tuttle of Virginia, and hersister. He was 68 years of age. Thebody will be taken to Philadelphia forInterment. No further funeral arrange-ments have been made as yet. Mr.Stockton had spent the past winter inNew Y.ork and had done very llttlo lit-erary work. After ft visit of nearly amonth at Atlantic City he came toWashington so that he might attendthe banquet of the scientists, intendingthen to go to his beatitirul home InCharleston, W. Va.

DISCOVERED A COMET.GENEVA (N. Y.), April 16. Dr. Wil-

liam R. Brooks, director of Smith Ob-servatory and professor of astronomyat Hobart College, announces the dis-covery of a new comet. It Is In con-stellation Pegasus, and an observationsecured today made Its position rightascension 28 hours, 28 minutes and 10

seconds, declination north 27 degrees,25 minutes. This comet has a dallymotion of about three degrees south-easterly and toward the sun. This Isthe twenty-thir- d comet dUcovored byDr. Brooks.

R TOURNAMENT.' There was fair attendance at the tug-an- d

was well rewarded by witnessingj and was wel rewarded by witnessing

two excellent eoNMiti, The Portntutaetoon ninny admirers by the plucky anddetermined way In which they minedthlr live feet of rope from the

team. The haole were consid-erably the heavier and poaaeased oneot two good men. They were no matchfor the plucky Utile l'ottURUeae how-ever who put every ounce they had In-to the tug.

The Works team, remnant ofthe famous Weln Ka Hao, walkedaway with the lumbermen to the callof their old war cry. Tomorrow nightthe Longshoremen and Lumbermen winpull, also the Kan I Ke Au against thePacific Hardware boys. Kanl Ke A us,for the benefit or he haole umllhtnl, Itmay be explained, means that the teamwill pull like a awirt current, Irresisti-ble, perhaps to be arrested for thewhile but In the end overcoming all

STANFORD DEBATE.STANl'OltlJ LNiVEltSlTV, April 19.The fourth annual freshman-sophu-mor- e

debate, held In the. chapel lastnight, was won by the second-yea- rmen In a conteet that surpassed In In-

terest all previous interulass debates atStanford. The question was: "Re-solved, That the United States shouldresist, by force If need be, any furthercolonization or South America by Eu-rope." The negative was upheld byHoward M. Lewis of Great Falls,Mont., and Augustine Jones of CollegePark for the sophomores, and the af-firmative by the freshman trio, Alex-anu- er

Slierltfs or San Jose, Arthur Dib-ble of Portland and Benjamin Dey ofPortland. The judges were ProfessorsR. L. Green, Max Farrand and C. B.Whlttler.

BISHOP BRENT.

New Philippine Bishop a School Mateof A. C. Lovekln.

The lit. Rev. Charles H. Brent, thenew Protestant Episcopal Bishop ofthe missionary diocese of the Philip-pines was a school mate, when a boy,oi' A. C. Lovekln of Honolulu. He wasborn In Newcastle, Ontario, not quiteforty years ago. His father was Can-on Brent. The present bishop graduat-ed from Oxford University, and for thepast ten years has been rector of St.Stephen's church, Boston, lie is nowin ban Francisco where he will be forabout two weeks when he will go toNew York and sail from there to thePhilippines with Governor Taft.

REAGAN DYING.The report comes from Palestine,

Tex., that John H. Reagan- Is rapidlyHearing the end of his life at his homenear Palestine. Mr. Reagan Is the lastsurvivor of Jefferson Davis' cabinet.He was postmaster-gener- al of the con-federacy for four years, and was for atime acting ns secretary of the treas-ury of the confederacy. Mr. ReaganIs now 84 years old and Is said to bepoor. He was congressman from Tex-a- c

from 1S5 to ISol and from 1875 to1S87. He was aftervvnrd a state sena-tor, and Is now chairman of the rail-road commission.

LEO'S SUCCESSOR.ROME, April 19. Cardinal Giuseppe

Sarto, Patriarch of Venice, Is regardedas Pope Leo's personal choice for suc-cession to the chair of St. Peter. Hisname has suddenly sprung Into prom-inence In connection with the names ofRampolla, Vannutelll and Gottl as theCardinals most apt to win the highplace. Rampolla and Vannutelll arobitterly hostile to each other and leadthe "principal factions In the SacredCollege, but Sarto is not known as anadherent of either faction, and his per-sonal aloofness from the struggle, com-bined with the wny Inwhich he has spent his life ns a parishpriest In the north of Italy, give himme sympathy of large numbers of thooniookers at the contest.

Pope Leo's choice of Cardinal Sartowas rreely made known by him In a ik

to valuer Lorenzo Perosl, theItalian composer. Arter asking for newsot tils frleiia, cardinal Sarto, the Popesaid to Father Perosl: "Hold him verydear, Perosl, as In future he will beable to do much for you. We firmly be-

lieve he will be our successor."Cardinal Sarto was born In 1835, and

made Patriarch in 1S91, being proclaim-ed Cardinal two years later. He Is agreat preacher, and well known as awriter, and he has the reputation or ac-

complishing all the works that he hasundertaken. The recent weukness orLeo bus only served to accentuate thebitterness or the rivalry between Ram-polla and Vannutelll. Rampolla wouldprerer Gottl to Vannutelll, but there Isno other member or tho Sacred Collegewhom he would not prefer to Gottl.Rampolla Is 58, and the other two aroten years older. There is no chancewhatever that the next Pope will beother than an Italian.

LEE'S SECRETARY.BALTIMORE, (Md.), April 20 Colo-

nel Charles Marshall, military secreta-ry to General Robert E. Lee during theCivil War and for many years one of

lnrwlnta nf tlia UnlMmnl'. lmr. diedof apoplexy at his home here late last,aged 12. lie was mo oniy meinuer uiLee's stafr who accompanied him atthe surrender ot Appomattox and theterms or the surrender were drafted byhim.

STOLE COPPER BOLTS.

Native Boys Sell Railroad ConnectionsCheaply.

Four native Inds were brought Intopolico headquarters yesterday byDavid Kaapa and locked up pending In-

vestigation into their case. The boysnre charged with pilfering, valuablecopper connections belonging to thoRapid Transit Company, the ' theftamounting to the value or nearly onehundred dollars. Tho stolen propertywas taken from the warehouse of thetrolley company on Alnpal street andconsists of a hundred or more copperbolts and joinings used In securing per-

fect connection between adjoiningi alls. They are perfectly new and un-

used and cogt at manufacturers' ratesii cents apiece. The boys are said tohave sold thoe to a scrap metal con-cern on Alakea street receiving sixcents a pound Is an equivalent. Theboys do not seem to appreciate thatthey have seriously transgressed thelaw.

.MOTHERS AND TEACHERS.The Mothers' and Teachers' Club will

hold Its regular monthly meeting InPunahou Preparatory School Friday at3 p. m. Tho subject, "Value and Useof Money," will be presented by Mrs.Charles Bartlett Dyke. All nre cordial-ly Invited to attend.

SETTLERS FOR THE NORTHWEST.Carefully prepared estimates show

that 11,000 settlers have gone Into theState of Washington alone this spring.Accurate figures as to the settlement InNorth Minnesota, North Dakota andMontana are not yet available, but It Ikthought that the statistics will show atleast 20 per cent more Immigration than

SWW.W.W.W.WAW. .'.V.V.VAW.V.VAWM VWWII HAWAIIAN p

I Engineering & Construction Co. fReams SOS, BOB, SIO Stangenwald Building,

' All classes of Engineering work solicited. Examination, tHTy, and Reports made for any class of Waterworks, Steam and Hlewh-tea- J

Construction. Plans and gpeclrl. itlons and Estimates preprsi, aftda Construction Superintended In ell branches of Engineering Work, Oe- -

tracts solicited for Railroads, electric and steam: Tunnels, BfWg-ea- ,

Buildings, Highways, Foundations, Piers, Wharves, etc.SPECIAL ATTENTION riven to Examinations, Valuation,

J Reports of properties for Investment purposes.FREDERICK J. AMWEC, M. Am. See. C. E.,

Engineer and Mtmagr.JJ W. R. CASTLE, JR., Secretary and Treasurer.W.V,WWVWMmV.VAVAWWMVAWAVW.V.V.

the figures for Washington. On thisbasis the settlement of the Statee fromMinnesota west to the Pacific thisspring ha already reached a total of97,000 people. This Is 31,000 more thanthe estimates of the movement duringthe spring or 1901.

Note Heads, Bill Heads, Letter Headsand all kinds of Job and Commercialprinting neatly and primptly executedat the Star Office.

Waikiki Inn

For a quiet rest and a pleasantSunday the attractions at theInn are unsurpassed. Finestsurf bathing and canoeing on theIsland.

Excellent cu. e and the bestof service.

L H. DEE - Prop.W. Beswlck, anager.Edmond Johnston, Steward.Miss Mary Smith, Stewardess.

TAKE THE CAR TO WAI-KIKI.

LATEST IDEAS

ranThe only way to know how

beautiful are the 1902. wall pa-pers Is to see them. Wo cor-dially Invito you to Inspect ourstock and assure you that thotime will bo well spent.

Never before has there beensuch a display of papers such aswe now have.

The new Ideas include emboss-ed gilt

PARLOR PAPERS.

These aro exceptionally prettynnd tho prices are low.

New applique border papersand every shade of ingrain pa-pers on hand.

IB I ill.LIMITED

FORT STREET. - HONOLULU

Oak Chiffoniers.

There Is no other place In thoworld where a chiffonier Isneeded so much as In Honolulu.In this climate, where ladles re-quire so many changes of cloth-ing, extra space Is In demand tokeep them, and no other pieceof furniture Is quite so conveni-ent and beautiful as a chiffonier.Our present stock Is very hand-some and tho prices are low.

DON'T FORGET

that when you want couches,pillows filled, furniture repairedand polishing done that ourUPHOLSTERY, AND REPAIRDEPARTMENT Is

Hopp & CompanyLeading FurnitureDealers . . .

KING BETHEL STREETSPhone 111 Mala.

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

Importers andCommissionMerchants

Queen Street, Honolulu

4.0ENTS FOR

The Lancashire Insurance Co.The Balolse Insurance CUnion Gas Engine Co.Domestic Sewing Machine, Etc

CASTLE & COOKE, LIMITED

Commission ilerchanta.SUGAR - FACTORH.

AGENTS FOR

The Ewa Plantation Compasy. I

The Walalua Agricultural Co., Lt,The Kohala Sugar CompanvThe Walmea Sugar Mill Company.The Fulton Iron Works, St. LouJa, Mm,

The Standard Oil Company.The G rge F. B ke Steam PaWeston's Centrifugals.The New England Mutual Life limits

ance Company of Boston.The Aetna Fire Insurance Compaay at

Hartford, onn.

The Alliance Assurance Conapany Mi

London.

Dandruff Is a diseas. Not a naturyjjcondition of the scalp. The Itching, thaIrritation, tho white flakes on theclothes, the rapid loss of hair each In-

dicate tho disorder and lis end bald-

ness. No matter what caused yourdandruff, how long you have had It, orhow severe It is, Pachcco's DandruffKiller Is a posltlvo cure.PACHECO'S DANDRUFF KILLER.

Sold by all druggists and al the UnionBarber Shop, Telephone Main 232.

CASTLE & COOKE. LIMITED

Life and Fire

Insurance Agent

AGENTS FOR JJ.NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL

LIFE INSURANCE CO,

OV B08TO.

FIRE ENSURANCE CO

Or HARTFORD. CONN

Japanese KimonosFOR

Ladies and Girls

TEA SETS, ETC.ALSO.

AmericanGoods andCurios at

Telephone 3311 White.Corner ot Nuuanu and Hole Streets.

Now Goods RecoivedBy Evory SteamerFroui Jaan

Page 8: iWVV HAWAIIAN STAR. · adld are promised on December 1 as an inducement for intending purchasers to paid from the profits from hauling freight In October of this year: BETTER THAN

f

TOR SALE !

MtE I.WAHK AND FURNITURE OPA CENTllAlJl.Y LOCATED ROOMINGavfsi. or so rooms, price urn.A BARGAIN

imioos imfio,

0. ABLES,1 Estate Agent

TELEPHONE P. O. BOXMAIN Ut) 243

Honolulu ' Iron Works,

BTEAM fiNOINBS, SUGAR MILL!

BOILBRB, COOLERS, IRON, BRA

AND LEAD CASTINGS.

Machinery of Kvery Description VUto Order. Particular attention palaShip's Blacksmtthlng. Job Work Ikxt

cuted on Short Notice.

OIST 11 A.IV 13THE

IAII

HAWAIIAN AGRICULTURAL CO..KWA, OAIIU, WAIALUA, KAHUKU,PIONEER MILL, HAIKU. PAIA, KO-LO-

MoBRYDE, HAWAIIAN SU-

GAR, KEICAHA.

Iff MtapStock andBond Broker

amber Honolnl a Stock and Bond Exchange

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

Teleph ne Main, 101P. O. Box (183

'I he (ihil)c-'"- i ni. ke Elas-tl- i' Hook af if h symem of

Un.l.. It U always eomplotebut never fin!, l.v, enoughfor ten or lurgc enough for tenthousand books never too largoo! too small, but always Justr'.sht. It can be enlarged or d,

movjeJ and rearrangedto suit an almost endless varietyof books, spa' ed, tahtes and con-

ditions.Each Unit ha a dust-pro-

plans door, edged with felt. Inoperation It ewlngs upwards andretiree Into a spaco over thebooks where" It Is out of the way.These doors act on roller bear-ings, and contain our celebratednon-bindi- and noiseless cush-

ion cloning features, making adoor simple and easy to operate.It the only one that docs notweaken the Unit or encroach upon ln book space. A strong and

hl cli'Hirable point of advan-tage to he considared by purchaset-- Is the ease with whichthe door can be removed and re-

placed for the purpose of clean-ing, without requiring delicateand Intricate mechanical readjusttaK-nt- s or necessitating theuhf of tools.

LIMITED

GENERAL AGENTS,

.CORNER I'NIONAND HOTELSTREETS

U W A I) VMUTIHI? H HXT

Card of Thanks Page jThe L Hou . .. ..1'nge 8

.las. If. Morgan rage S

Hergstrom Music to Page 5

K. O. Hall (ten Page 6

By Authority Page 5

NMWS IN A NUTSHJ5LL

I'lirasTanlu llial Btvo ComlenseilSows or llio lhty.

A sale of games at Jas. F. Morgan onThursday at 10 a. tn.

New stock of Columbia bicycles re-

ceived at E. o. Hall & Son. See ad.Ilergstrom Music Company advertise

bargains In pianos. See ad on page 7.The family1 of the late John CUBhlng-hat- n

has a card of thanks In this Issue.Queen Wtlhcltnlna, who is sick with

typhoid fever, Is said to be getting bet-ter.

No home Is complete without electriclighting. See Ilewallan Electric Com-pany ad.

President Gartley has called a meet-ing of directors of the Builders' andTraders' Exchange for Friday evening.

Miss Margaret Copeland of Watson- -vllle California will arrive by the nextAlnmeda to visit Mrs. Helen WilderCraft.

A meeting of the Hawaii Yacht Clubwill be held at the olllce of the secre-tary, P. L. Weaver, Jr. Alterations InI will be discussed.

Gov. Cooper gl es notice of a generalInvitation to the business communitytt meet Commissioner Barrett at the( npltol on Thursday, May 1, at 3 p.m.

The Elks local lodge has acceptedthe offer of W. W. Randall, businessmanager for Frederick Warde, for an' Elk" night. . Thursday, May 22, willbe the date and "The Lion's Mouth"the play.

James Ray Whipple has been elect-ed head football coach for the Univer-sity of California and "Jack" McCaug-her- n

captain of the Stanford Univer-sity track team holding the position fora consecutive term.

Special prices on ladles and chlldrens'underwear and holsery at M. Brasch& Co., beginning tomorrow morningand continuing for the next two daysonly. These lines must be closed out,hence prices so tempting.

The McKlnley Memorial May-da- y en-

tertainment takes place tomorrow ev-ening at the Opera House. Threo bun-dled and sixty children from the gov-ernment school!1 will take part. Seatsare on sale at Wall,. Nichols & Co.

SUGAR.NEW YORK, April 22. Haw. steady;

fair refining, 2 Centrifugal, 00test, 3 c; Molasses sugar, 2Refined, steady.

SECRETARY ROOT AT HAVANA.HAVANA, April 21. Ellhu Root, the

Secretary of War, and his family, ar-rived here today.

ALASKAN FROM THE COAST.The big freighter Alaskan from San

Francisco was sighted off Koko Headshortly after U o'clock this morning.The big vessel was about nine dayscoming from San Francisco. She is thelargest craft that has ever visited thisport. She loads sugar for New York.Her dead weight carrying capacity isJ 3.000 tons.

WANTS GOVERNMENT AID.WASHINGTON. April 22. Lorin A.

Thruston, from Hawaii,who Is here with Governor Dole, con-tinues to urge that Congress should af-

ford the islands pome relief to offsetthe expenses Incurred in the suppressionof the plague at Honolulu, while theGovernment was In a transition state.Of the $3,000,000 thus expended $1,000,000has been paid by Hawaii and now itasks that Congress pay the rest out ofthe customs receipts of the Islands.Thurston says that the withdrawal ofcustoms receipts from the Insular trea-sury has left It very short of funds andthat the $100,000 remitted each monthto Washington eonfiUtittes a heavydrain on the finances of Hawaii.

CROOK MAY SAIL.The transport Crook may get away

late this afternoon --for Manila. It ispossible however, that she may not beready to go to sea until early tomorrowmorning.

SAID HE HAD MONEY.. John Mlrand a Porto RIcan, was be-

fore Judge Wilcox this morning to answer to a charge of vagrancy. Althoughthe defendant looked the part, ho claim-ed to have $25. This money had, he

lulmed, been entrusted by him to aChinese, living down by the railway de-pot. It had been earned by working atthe rate of $3 a week, for a native manwho was now In jail. The case wasuontniied tn order to ennblo the authorities to locate the Chinese and ascertainwhether the Porto Rlcan was really avagrant or n capitalist.

REAR A DM I It A L COGHLAN.WASHINGTON, April 21. Captain

Joseph B. Coghlun was today appointed Reur-Admlr- al by President Koose- -

velt.

ORPHEUM

Every EveningAND

Saturday Matinee

Elleford'sBig Company

TO-NIGH-T

THE SUCCESSFUL COMEDY

THE AMERICAN GIRLFRIDAY AND SATURDAY,

THE PLUNGERSPECIAL SCENERYAND EFFECTS.

ORPHEUM POPULAR PRICES.25, 50 AND 75 CT3.

Box office open from 9 a. tn. lo 9 p. m.

STJSUMAGO,PHOTOGRAPHER,

Good Work Guaranteed,

Corner King and Maunakea Street,

TMJC HAWAIIAN UTAH, WDHIIDAY. APRIL , 1M.

JAS, T. MOKGAN,

Auctioneer and Broker65 Queen Street

INO.Uox BJMl Telephone ?2

AUCTION SALEOF

ON .THURSDAY, MAY 1,

At 10 o'clock a. in., at my salesroom,05 Queen street, I will sell at PublicAuction, the following guns, all In goodcondition:

1 22 cal. Winchester,1 30-4- 0 cal. Winchester,1 32-4- 0 cal. Winchester,I 45-7- 0 cal. Winchester,1 32 S. & W. Revolver,1 3S S. & W. Revolver.1 Guitar.

JAS, F. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER.

GRAND AUGTION SALE

OF

SHO 0ER1E'

ON THURSDAY, MAY 1,

AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M.,

At my salesroom C5 Queen street, Iwill sell nt Public Auction, a very largequantity of fresh canned groceries, Inthe very best of good order, consistingof

Canned Corned ReefLunch Tongue,Vienna Sausnce.Frankfurter Sausage, Deviled Ham,Salmon In tins, Pork Sausage.Corn Starch, Laundry Starch,Dried Green Peas, Sugar Peas.Laundry Soap, Canned Oysters,Condensed Milk, Worcestershire

Sauce.Jams, Jellies Table Pears,Table Peaches, Table ApricotB,Table Grapes, Table Pineapples,, andNew Potatoes.We guarantee these goods and' the

sale should be attended.

JAS, F. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER.

Beautiful

OIL PAINTINGSAT

Public Auction

ON THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND

SATURDAY, MAY 1ST.', 2ND AND

3RD, AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M., AND 2

O'CLOCK P. M., ON EACH DAY AT

THE

Art KoomsOF THE

Pacific Hardware Co.cnmor Mnrnhant and Fort streets,

the entire assortment of the works ofart of,

MR. THEODORE WORES

Will be dlsnosed of at Public SUle,All rcserveo prices have been removed

except on a very few of the larger andrarer pictures on which the limits havebeen lowered.

Mr Wores has an established reputation in these Islands as an artistof rare skill, and the sale should there-fore have a lahre attendance.

Pictures on view on threee days proceeding Thursday.

JAS. F. MORGAN.C3 Queen Stcent.

I

FOR SALE !

t Fine Rooming Hotel contains 29Inrca Rooms. Rental $150 per month,Centrally located and shows a goodpaying business.

Apply toJAS. F. MORGAN,

06 QUEEN STREET,

For RentCattnee on Emma Sauare. 3 bedrooms

parlor, dining room, pantry, kitchen andnatn. .Rent par momn. appix toJas. F. Morgan, 65 Queen street.

JAS. F. MORGAN,

For RentTwo story house In the McCarthy

tract, Beretanla street, between Pllkoland KeeaumoKU streets.

JAS. F. MORGAN,

TRANSLATED I

TRAN8LATKD!TRANSLATED!

ill COLLECT ON

OF

43 HAWAIIAN SOBNow published in book form

withENGLISH TRANSLATIONSA work of many months now

accomplished, making the onlybook of Its kind to be had con-taining the choicest

SONGS OF HAWAII NEI.Everybody will want a copy.

Come early before the supply Isexhausted.

ILL, NICHOLS CO,, LTD,

LIMITED.PUBLISHERS.

ONE DAY COLD CURE.

Probably there are few remedies

that give bettor satisfaction than

our well-know- n A 11 1 i G T i'p p 6

Tablets. In cases of colds,

when you feel that you "have it all

over your body," these tablets take

right hold and expel the cold germs,

and nip at the start an illness thatmight bo long protracted.

People would not send C000 miles for

Anti-Gripp- e Tabletsunless they had found them better thananything else they had used. But this

.a just what they do. Hero's the proof.

171C N. Pehn St., Indianapolis,

Indiana, October 13.

Hobron Drug Co.

Dear Sirs:While in Honolulu last February 1

purchased a bottle of your A n t i -

Grippe Tablets and And

them tho very best thing I ever tried

for a cold and grippe. Would like you

to send me two bottles for which I en

close stamps (60c) and greatly oblige,

MRS. H. F. WOOD..

If you are subject to colds you cannot

fford to be without them. They cure

cold In one day. Insist on having

our's because "Just the same lsn tAnti-Gripp- e Tablets.

PRICE 25c.

HOBRON DRUG CO.

MAEBUCHIDYI5K

Clothes dyed In allColors desired alsoCleaned and Repaired.

Men's Suit a SpecialtyOnly experiencedHelp employed

GIVE Uri A CALL308 Queen Street, near Richard.

::xwxx::xK"M"X"X :--

W.&fl.,LTD

REMNANTS

FifthAnnualSale of

iii

THIS WEEK

April 28 toMay 3

Whitney k

A of

1120 Nuuanu Street : - -

TINSMITH.

Nuuanu Street, Emma

rvYVVTYYYYYYY

Y

Y

Y

Y

YYTYYYXYYYYY?

Y

of the Trustees of the Oahu College,x

or Jonathan Shaw,

Have you $1000 saved up? If so not Invest In stocks, but put themoney Into a home for yourself In the most desirable locality near Ho-

nolulu and save money by so doing.

Cost of a lot 100x150 at College Hills $1,200Cost of Cottage and Outbuilding 2.300

Total Cost 3.600Apply money in hand 1.00

NegoUate a loan 7 for.. 2,500

Interest one year on $Z500 7..... 175Taxes on $3,500 1 35Insurance on house $2000, 3 years $80, 1 year 10Incidentals v. 20

Total annual expense , $ 210

Making your monthly rental $20 Instead of $40 you are now paying.Apply your saving In rent In reducing your debt and with other sav-

ings you will soon have your home free of debt, .

Healthy Location; Rapid Transit by Your Door;.

Fine Water Supply; a DelightfulSpot for a Happy Home

For particulars apply at office

404 Judd Building to P. C. Jones

LinDoes

Opposite

Hall.

t

do

NEVER BEFORE SO

MANY REMNANTS.

NEVER BEFORE SUCH

LOW PRICES.

I

SILKS.

RIBBONS,

LACES, AllEMBROIDERIES, MarkedCALICOES, In PlainGINGHAMS.

LINENS, You CanWait onLININGS,

WHITE GOODS,

WOOLEN GOODS,

White 3271

JAPANESE SILKS ANDCOTTON KIMONOS, SILKFANS WITH HAWAIIANVIEWS. SILK HAND BAGS,SILK HANDKERCHIEFSAND AMERICAN ANDJAPANESE GENTS FUR-NISHING GOODS.

K.1274 STAR BLOCK.FORT STREET.

OFFICERS.

ReceivedLarge Line Japanese

Silks, Curios and AmericanGoods

College HillsLand For Sale

Sing Kee,

Sanitary Plumbing

xxk-xxxxxxxx- xx

W.&n.,LTD

figures,

Yourself

Marsh, Ltd

Telephone

New Goods!

FUKURODA,

JustDry

Altogether

H. P. BALDWIN PresidentJ. B. CASTLE. ...First t

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

J. P. COOKE TreasurerW. O. SMITH SecretaryGEORGE R. CARTER Auditor

Sugar Factors andCommissionflerchants

AGENTS FORHawaiian Commercial 'and Sugar Com-

pany,Haiku Sugar Company,Pala Plantation Company,Nahlku Sugar Company,Klfiel Plantation Company,Hawaiian Supar Company,Kahulul Rail oad Company, t

AND

The California and OrientalSteamship Company

Note Heads, Bill Heads, BUUaMataand Fine Commercial PrinUng at tMSt. r OHlee.