spta mxun - university of hawaiʻi

8
spta VOL. XXXIX, NO. 80. REPUBLICANS RALLY THE KtKMKO VOTERS John Gandall Makes An Eloquent Speech In Hawaiian Ed. Towse Defends Carter's Ad- ministration Aylett and Others Talk. At the Republican muss meeting: held last night In Knkanko the orators were numerous and all talked along- the same general lines In the presence ot a large and enthusiastic crowd. In fact, the meeting became to enthusiastic that a Home Itule meeting conducted about a block away was stripped of Its auditors until only the speakers and half a dozen Home Itulers lemaln-d- . The Republican meeting was held In the glare of two great llare-llgh- ts on Queen street near Ward avenue, be- tween the rows of tenement structures. James Qulnn presided and with brief speeches Introduced the varioui speak- ers. , Wm. Aylett said that if the Kakaako voters stood by the Republican party, and therefore by the administration, they would continue to receive benefits as they had since the last session. He pointed to the macadamized streets which i an through Kakaako and the 'electric lights which have replaced the darkness at night. He referred to Lill-Itala- nl as Kuula, the God ot Fishes. With the magic stone of the god, by which the god caught Innumerable fish, Xlllkalanl would go forth In the dis- trict and catch votes. In similar figurative terini he refer- red to the membeis of the Fourth Dis- trict ticket and asked the voters to stand by It from lop to bottom. The chairman referred to Kakaako as now being a pteclnct separate and distinct from the others, a featuie which had been visited upon Kakaako for the first time since the days when Kameha-meh- a I laid the foundations of the city. What the voters should do In le-tu- rn for haIng this honor thrust upon them was to vote a full Republican ticket. The Hawalians, he said, were the inoV.t geneious people the world over, and this being the case, He lelt they would only be adding to their laurels In this lespect by throwing their full strength to the Republican ticket. E. W. Qulnn, the plumber candidate for the lower house spoke briefly and to the point in behalf of his candidacy. He asked for the Kakaako vote, Hist, because he was a Republican, and sec- ond, because he believed that that party could give the Territory the best und most economical government. He was also a working man. He had always been u working man, nnd had begun to earn his own living when only ten yeats of age. If he was elected the Hawalians need not be afraid to come to htm wltli any pioposltlou In reason, and he would take pleasure In listening to one mid nil. He s.ilil he Intended to muke a clean Unlit for olllce and to refrain fiom peifonulltles, CUANOi: KOlt NATIVE HOY. Jim Qulnn piefaced Ml next Intro- - U i ., H I-- .- V ji " mxun ductlon bj' saying that In the United States every peison qualified to vote had the opportunity of "sitting tn the President's chair. "Now you don't krlow," said he, "but that some little Hawaiian boy running about here might some day become President (laughter), nveiy man has a show. It Is his ability nnd not his money that get him there." Sam Knnahele. an Ruler converted to Republicanism, was the next speaker. Following him came Ud. Towse, ho made the first reply to the Democratic attack on fjovernor Caiter and his administration. DEMOCRATIC ATTACK REBUFFED. "On last Saturday night," said he, "It occurred to our Democratic oppon- ents to produce an entirely new Issue In this campaign. They say It Is not whether the Republicans, Home Rulers or Democrats will win, but they say now, practically, 'We shall fight now to determine whether or not George R. Carter shall continue to be Governor.' They challenge us for our support nnd aloha for the Governor, because we be lieve he Is the man for the place, and because he Is a true friend of the Ha- walians. I think you will all agree with me that if this Is the challenge they send forth, that we can not only meet it, but fight It and beat It. "Now they don't undertake to say what Governor Carter has done, or what ho proposes to do, but they say Car- ter has not done this and has not done so and so. I will tell you a few things that Governor Carter, the favored son of Hawaii, has done In these Islands for the benefit of the people at large. "It Is not necessary to go back Into ancient history to discover that Carter Is the kind of man we like, and his ad- ministration the kind that we can sup- port. You all remember the great fire In 1900. I was there and saw a good deal of George Carter and saw the good that he did, but I did not see Iaukea or Notley theie, but I also did see Prince Kuhlo there. "Carter took the homeless people In, nnd went down into his pocket to pro- vide for them, as also did Prince Kuhio. In time he became Secretary of the Territory, and when It came to obtain- ing relief for the sufferers by the great fire of 1S00, he was party to sending u man to Washington to obtain funds fiom Congress to this end, nnd he ob- tained about a million dollars for Ha- waii. "Then It was necessary to send some one East to dispose of the fire claims bonds, a business man, and George R. Carter was sent. Ho disposed ofdhem to the advnntage of the Terrltoiy, und It Is that money which you ure now enjoying. There Is a plan now to ob- tain another million at the next session to spend among you. This Is a Re- publican plan. "The DemnciatH say that Carter Is (Continued on page C) -- - M SENATORIAL OFFER The J)iiiiiiHiiitn Wfio cgimMernlily up n lice ymiuiduy und lli iluy liufoie uh o ulnnii lliuy would put on (ho Pimiliiilul liektil M IC. U I'. Wnllsr, ' let uiil9Ul uui In III iMlunalleii, A uuiiihv f iriiilinnl inwi fu IN jriy Mum Mrtiifln HHtl utturmi Uv " I Nt, iMJl IDtWl ut IIimij 4eJll)MJ. i f J, MMJurtliv, whu U uryaJ4ftJ ft us ut 111 MfMJimM MMMmMiVMf '!" irt) airNM44 Uil to ' ' i 1m U, M M ".' Ur W ' I 8n' urn tm iiiHtm, M iuiM 4.iiiufuJj uu mtoftU. J.'H If Vlt IHMWUt fiUHf i. MJie..,r Iw Slli l. ff M . ,Ufl lul tin, jMHy I .iiu 4g .Mtitl'ilrr H)4 lllit Vint tIi i' -- ' t f n jwj In iim f mi.'i HONOLULU, H. T., TUESDAY OlTOIjlKK 4, 1904 SEMI-WEEKL- " ONE MILLION JAPS IN ARMS J f mBmmmmmmW''HmmmmHKmmm!Mmmm mmmmmmmmmWmmW-mmmmB,tBOKS- l J'immK'ml ! Wll mi ill III ESmBmmmWmmmmMMmm W9f2MmmmWmBmUmfmf WMMMKmwW' jB II l THE FIGHT ON THE REISITELINI. nick and White. vvvvV'VvV'VV'Vvvvvvvvvvvvywvv-vvwvvvyvvvvyvvvvvvvWvvvvv- Reduced to, Donkey Meat at Arthur Prices Are Ruling High. STORY Oct, cruiser token rcftjjje here hoax. QUI Port Oet, smoll fiKljl Qu. mi mm uw 2030. ST. PETERSBURG, 2. The Russian have checked the Japanese advance in the of Yangsungtung and They have burnt seventeen junks in the Hun river, carrying Oct. 2. on both sides. FIRE SEBASTOPOL, Oct. 2. A in the artillery ( associated pbkbb ) will, it is feared, cause loss of life. TOKIO, Oct. 4. The new military regulations increase the bi- - PbTLRSBURG, Oct. 3. The Czar will visit Reval on army to a million men. It has been decided to raise a domestic loan uy. " mil larcwen to tne uaitic bquaruron. of $40,000,000, BAVAN UNTRUE. SHANGHAI, 4. The story that the Russian Hayan lins Ik a 1ST AT MUKDKN. MUKDJIN. 4Wtl the cxecpUejj of ewijipsi mWQQ, liMdJjuK HiuM mw&ily m WHOLK No. Oct. cavalry direction Fengtiapu. also ammunition. NOTHING DOING AT MUKDEN. VMUKDEN, Inactivity continues AMONG AMMUNITION. fire ammunition OAfiXJCtJBAMB magazines considerable Rcval, population over 51,000, i, a port in the province of lixtlm-ri- a and bituatcil on a bay on the houth coast of tlie Gulf of !'inlnii(i. It ih about 200 link' west of St. I'uierhlinri;. Jtikt three vevkn ago lliy lialtlc a(iiH(lrun w.'it, as miiliuif from Croiiatmlt for Hn Far llfikt, biiit'e wliun until now there h:iia liuii no rupurt of ItH whgrcalioiitk. That the nuumlroii nlmiilil have progruinufl only two- - yililnJii of a fair day' uteniniiig in lliat time, willioui any oxpltmaiiri Ldug yivun fur lilt ltluy. it. nnolhur illuutratiuii of tint wnv lliu wo j if lwi( mn in tlm ilnrk by both iilf abuut important iiwvuuium j of t)i war. JJACU SIPK hOSKS A VI5SBI5I,. TOKIO, OpI, 3. It Is icporitil that u Jiipuiivn Runlioot )is Imu mih NOiilli of Malum: ly u miiic, Vai 1 of the yrw viiu rescued h liilfciloH blcumur clcurfug wwiiy ininru ut I'nu Anhur hus hem mfa. HA'H'J AWHAV AIIOUT MUKDKN. iVftttlft. Hal. iJMiutl in u fnni' ilLvtktniiM at Uihknin at Mule 4V mr w jp - f sf c z sjffftrj 'Jzr-!3Z- " tt" tawKKKHMin mimmmmum- - mil, S!tm"&"Allr:, i4B&imMmwmmmwi&'t'

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sptaVOL. XXXIX, NO. 80.

REPUBLICANS RALLY

THE KtKMKO VOTERS

John Gandall Makes An Eloquent Speech In

Hawaiian Ed. Towse Defends Carter's Ad-

ministration Aylett and Others Talk.

At the Republican muss meeting: held

last night In Knkanko the orators were

numerous and all talked along- the same

general lines In the presence ot a large

and enthusiastic crowd. In fact, themeeting became to enthusiastic that aHome Itule meeting conducted about ablock away was stripped of Its auditorsuntil only the speakers and half a dozen

Home Itulers lemaln-d- .

The Republican meeting was held In

the glare of two great llare-llgh- ts on

Queen street near Ward avenue, be-

tween the rows of tenement structures.James Qulnn presided and with briefspeeches Introduced the varioui speak-

ers., Wm. Aylett said that if the Kakaakovoters stood by the Republican party,

and therefore by the administration,they would continue to receive benefits

as they had since the last session. He

pointed to the macadamized streetswhich i an through Kakaako and the

'electric lights which have replaced thedarkness at night. He referred to Lill-Itala- nl

as Kuula, the God ot Fishes.With the magic stone of the god, bywhich the god caught Innumerable fish,Xlllkalanl would go forth In the dis-

trict and catch votes.In similar figurative terini he refer-

red to the membeis of the Fourth Dis-

trict ticket and asked the voters tostand by It from lop to bottom.

The chairman referred to Kakaakoas now being a pteclnct separate anddistinct from the others, a featuie whichhad been visited upon Kakaako for thefirst time since the days when Kameha-meh- a

I laid the foundations of thecity. What the voters should do In le-tu- rn

for haIng this honor thrust upon

them was to vote a full Republicanticket. The Hawalians, he said, werethe inoV.t geneious people the worldover, and this being the case, He leltthey would only be adding to theirlaurels In this lespect by throwing theirfull strength to the Republican ticket.

E. W. Qulnn, the plumber candidatefor the lower house spoke briefly andto the point in behalf of his candidacy.He asked for the Kakaako vote, Hist,because he was a Republican, and sec-

ond, because he believed that that partycould give the Territory the best undmost economical government. He wasalso a working man. He had alwaysbeen u working man, nnd had begunto earn his own living when only tenyeats of age. If he was elected theHawalians need not be afraid to cometo htm wltli any pioposltlou In reason,and he would take pleasure In listeningto one mid nil. He s.ilil he Intendedto muke a clean Unlit for olllce and torefrain fiom peifonulltles,

CUANOi: KOlt NATIVE HOY.

Jim Qulnn piefaced Ml next Intro- -

U i .,

H

I-- .-

V ji"

mxun

ductlon bj' saying that In the UnitedStates every peison qualified to vote

had the opportunity of "sitting tn thePresident's chair. "Now you don'tkrlow," said he, "but that some littleHawaiian boy running about heremight some day become President(laughter), nveiy man has a show. ItIs his ability nnd not his money thatget him there."

Sam Knnahele. an Rulerconverted to Republicanism, was

the next speaker. Following him cameUd. Towse, ho made the first reply tothe Democratic attack on fjovernorCaiter and his administration.

DEMOCRATIC ATTACK REBUFFED.

"On last Saturday night," said he,"It occurred to our Democratic oppon-

ents to produce an entirely new IssueIn this campaign. They say It Is notwhether the Republicans, Home Rulersor Democrats will win, but they saynow, practically, 'We shall fight now todetermine whether or not George R.Carter shall continue to be Governor.'They challenge us for our support nndaloha for the Governor, because we believe he Is the man for the place, andbecause he Is a true friend of the Ha-walians. I think you will all agree withme that if this Is the challenge theysend forth, that we can not only meetit, but fight It and beat It.

"Now they don't undertake to saywhat Governor Carter has done, or whatho proposes to do, but they say Car-

ter has not done this and has not doneso and so. I will tell you a few thingsthat Governor Carter, the favored sonof Hawaii, has done In these Islands forthe benefit of the people at large.

"It Is not necessary to go back Intoancient history to discover that CarterIs the kind of man we like, and his ad-

ministration the kind that we can sup-port. You all remember the great fireIn 1900. I was there and saw a good dealof George Carter and saw the good thathe did, but I did not see Iaukea orNotley theie, but I also did see PrinceKuhlo there.

"Carter took the homeless people In,

nnd went down into his pocket to pro-

vide for them, as also did Prince Kuhio.In time he became Secretary of theTerritory, and when It came to obtain-

ing relief for the sufferers by the greatfire of 1S00, he was party to sendingu man to Washington to obtain fundsfiom Congress to this end, nnd he ob-

tained about a million dollars for Ha-

waii."Then It was necessary to send some

one East to dispose of the fire claimsbonds, a business man, and George R.Carter was sent. Ho disposed ofdhemto the advnntage of the Terrltoiy, undIt Is that money which you ure nowenjoying. There Is a plan now to ob-

tain another million at the next sessionto spend among you. This Is a Re-

publican plan."The DemnciatH say that Carter Is

(Continued on page C)

-- -M

SENATORIAL OFFER

The J)iiiiiiHiiitn Wfio cgimMernlily upn lice ymiuiduy und lli iluy liufoieuh o ulnnii lliuy would put on (hoPimiliiilul liektil M IC. U I'. Wnllsr,' let uiil9Ul uui In III iMlunalleii,

A uuiiihv f iriiilinnl inwi fu INjriy Mum Mrtiifln HHtl utturmi Uv

" I Nt, iMJl IDtWl ut IIimij 4eJll)MJ.i f J, MMJurtliv, whu U uryaJ4ftJ

ft us ut 111 MfMJimM MMMmMiVMf

'!" irt) airNM44 Uil to' ' i 1m U, M M ".' Ur W

' I 8n' urn tm iiiHtm, MiuiM 4.iiiufuJj uu mtoftU.

J.'H If Vlt IHMWUt fiUHfi. MJie..,r Iw Slli l. ff M

. ,Ufl lul tin, jMHy I .iiu 4g.Mtitl'ilrr H)4 lllit Vint tIi i' -- '

t f n jwj In iim f mi.'i

HONOLULU, H. T., TUESDAY OlTOIjlKK 4, 1904 SEMI-WEEKL-

"

ONE MILLION JAPS IN ARMSJ f

mBmmmmmmW''HmmmmHKmmm!Mmmm

mmmmmmmmmWmmW-mmmmB,tBOKS- l J'immK'ml

! Wll mi ill III ESmBmmmWmmmmMMmmW9f2MmmmWmBmUmfmfWMMMKmwW' jB II

l THE FIGHT ON THE REISITELINI. nick and White.vvvvV'VvV'VV'Vvvvvvvvvvvvywvv-vvwvvvyvvvvyvvvvvvvWvvvvv-

Reduced to, Donkey Meat at

Arthur Prices Are

Ruling High.

STORY

Oct, cruiser

token rcftjjje here hoax.

QUI

Port

Oet, smoll fiKljl

Qu. mi mm

uw

2030.

ST. PETERSBURG, 2. The Russian havechecked the Japanese advance in the of Yangsungtung and

They have burnt seventeen junks in the Hunriver, carrying

Oct. 2. on both sides.

FIRE

SEBASTOPOL, Oct. 2. A in the artillery

( associated pbkbb ) will, it is feared, cause loss of life.

TOKIO, Oct. 4. The new military regulations increase the bi- - PbTLRSBURG, Oct. 3. The Czar will visit Reval on

army to a million men. It has been decided to raise a domestic loan uy. " mil larcwen to tne uaitic bquaruron.

of $40,000,000,

BAVAN UNTRUE.

SHANGHAI, 4. The story that the Russian Hayan

lins Ik a

1ST AT MUKDKN.

MUKDJIN. 4Wtl the cxecpUejj of ewijipsi

mWQQ, liMdJjuK HiuM mw&ily m

WHOLK No.

Oct. cavalrydirection

Fengtiapu. alsoammunition.NOTHING DOING AT MUKDEN.

VMUKDEN, Inactivity continues

AMONG AMMUNITION.fire ammunition

OAfiXJCtJBAMB magazines considerable

Rcval, population over 51,000, i, a port in the province of lixtlm-ri- a

and bituatcil on a bay on the houth coast of tlie Gulf of !'inlnii(i.It ih about 200 link' west of St. I'uierhlinri;. Jtikt three vevkn agolliy lialtlc a(iiH(lrun w.'it, as miiliuif from Croiiatmlt for HnFar llfikt, biiit'e wliun until now there h:iia liuii no rupurt of ItH

whgrcalioiitk. That the nuumlroii nlmiilil have progruinufl only two- -

yililnJii of a fair day' uteniniiig in lliat time, willioui any oxpltmaiiriLdug yivun fur lilt ltluy. it. nnolhur illuutratiuii of tint wnv lliu wo

j if lwi( mn in tlm ilnrk by both iilf abuut important iiwvuuiumj of t)i war.

JJACU SIPK hOSKS A VI5SBI5I,.

TOKIO, OpI, 3. It Is icporitil that u Jiipuiivn Runlioot )isImu mih NOiilli of Malum: ly u miiic, Vai 1 of the yrw viiu rescuedh liilfciloH blcumur clcurfug wwiiy ininru ut I'nu Anhur hus hemmfa.

HA'H'J AWHAV AIIOUT MUKDKN.iVftttlft. Hal. iJMiutl in u fnni' ilLvtktniiM at Uihknin at Mule

4V mr w jp - f sf c z sjffftrj 'Jzr-!3Z- " tt"tawKKKHMin mimmmmum- - mil, S!tm"&"Allr:,i4B&imMmwmmmwi&'t'

r

M

OfIn

CONVICTED

Manslaughterthe First

Degree.

(From Saturday's Advertiser)At 9:58 last night, after deliberating

for an hour and eight minutes, the juryfound Hnjashida guilty of manslaughterin the first degree for the killing of another Japanese at Waialua in the latter.. t t.. it... . ..JfUil Ul .11.1 IIII9 JLdli

Ha)asluda was indicted at the Juneterm for murder in the first degree, andhis case was taken up the present termas one of those continued from, the previ-ous term. An error in the indictmentplacing the crime at Waipahu was dis-

covered while a jury was being em-

paneled, when a nolle prosequi was en-

tered and the defendant released only tobe immediately rearrested. The presentgrand jury brought in a new indictmentcharging Havashida with murder in thefirst degree, under which he was triedwith the result aboc noted.,

Mr. Cathcart noted exceptions to theverdict, and gave notice of motion for anew trial.

Hayashida took the witness stand onhis own behalf shortly after 3 o'clock inthe afternoon. His cidcncc mealedthat was his reliance. Hesaid that Sato was advancing towardliini, with a knife in his hand, and thatlie then grasped a stick and struck Satoon the head with it.

Deputy Attorney General Prosser ob-

jected to a question about-previou- s quar-rels between the slayer and the slainman. Mr. Cathcart quoted authoritiesto show an exception to the rule thatquarrels antecedent to a homicide couldnot be introduced in defense. They wereto the effect that where an oert act ofthe ictim was committed or attemptedsubsequent to quarrels between him andthe defendant on other occasions,

of such quarrels was admissible toshow that the defendant had reason tofear great bodily barm or danger to hisJifc While the court was examining theauthorities, Mr Prosser withdrew theobjection.

H

ILL ABOUT

UECOUIIIS

Lee Toma Resists Pay-

ment of a

Fee.

Harry J. Tohnston vs. Lee Toma &Co., Ltd , came up for trial before JudgeRobinson. L. Andrews and W. S. Flem-ing for plaintiff; R. W. lircckons and J.G. Pratt for defendant. The followingjury was found satisfactory as drawn:Patrick Ryan, Lewis C. King, Chas. P.Osborne, Percy Lishman, James Arm-strong, H. C. Carter, J. J. Sullivan,Samuel Nowlcin, Harry A. Wilder,Hiram Kaaha, H. P. llcnsou and Win.F. Ewing.

It is a claim for $595702 with legalinterest from the date of the filing of thecomplaint and for costs. The claim isbased on services of the plaintiff as cus-tom house broker, acting in the nameof Hind, Rolph & Co . Ltd , whereby thedefendant was saved $17,87108 m dutieson importations of Manila cigars. Mr.Johnston made the protest against theassessment of tlw collictor of customs tothe Treasury Department in Washing-ton, which was sustained. In his com-plaint Mr. Johnston sajs that the rea-sonable value of his services, "accord-ing to the standard of compensation insimilar cases prevailing in Honolulu,Washington and New York, was and isone-thir- d of the amount saved to theimporter "

Plaintiff rested at 3 p. m and the jurywas excused until 4 o'clock while Mr.Jlnckons presented a scries of motions,which he said would have a bearing onthe instructions of the court to the jury.

"Were any dividends paid by LieToma h Co. after the cigars werepassed?" Mr Andrews asked this ques-

tion of his last witness, but subject toobjection. It was objtcted to by Mr.llrtckons atiil ilisallouul by the court.

The case was argued to the jury atfi'30, when Judge Robinson excused thejury until Monday at ) a. 111, then torcciive the charge of the court.

SMALLER I10ND ORDHUED,On the motion fur forccloturc nf

mortgage of II Ilackfebl & Co., Ltd,v W C Achi and utliem, Juditc Hull-Inu-

grained llic motion to requirefur iwynieut uf Miami, cacapt

Hut tiler Unit) I to U' $W iliaiead ul?7w 'I lie UjjuI i to U-- fttaj within telliU and I lie talc 11 lajatjioitftl fromOrioUr u 10 KmviuUtr i

COURT MOT KB

Judga (ir tjHJbMttni Prank P1 hiiiiiiwiw an jjiuraUn ad tiirui fur all

( ilt muif in itw ninny urn i JufcuA CuMHtuit ) i lib tf Carter, tru-I-

ami utlir I'lauuif It. AMjulmllif Mi dtimtiui at lu t atlvr tfjllMi.fl M4 'u-- l (her rrtuuidfjHuiwy ww ltii lnuurr4 tu tlw ot

pUinlA liuU"iir in .iiiiitni.r it nird in iu$

f tu M lvi,l Im h Ai aliri A U 1 .

1 yT--

imium- - .

i imp t

-- Ui i uti I illKm ilin II, ill I J. I

t

1

M E M

BANOERLOGS

Home Rulers Put Up a

Ticket In theFourth.

The Home Rulers of the Fourth District met in convention jestcrday morn-ing, and under the guidance, of SenatorKalauokalani, put the following ticket innomination for legislative honors in thelower house:

S. K. Kamakaia, Henry Mehcula,David Notley. S. Paahao, j. K. Kaohiand W. b. iMakckau

I Kaohi is the son of Senator Kaohi ofHawaii.

A district platform was also read andadopted in which arc the, following items.

The bills presented in Congress byR. W, Wilcox, arc to be pushed forwardby Charles Notley,, the Home Ruler, pre-suming that he will be elected as dele-gate;

Cognizance is taken of Delegateallcccd failure to have any

bills passed in Congress.1 he Home Killers intend to make a

special attack during the campaign onPrince Kulnofor presenting Hill No.15,226" pertaining to the adoption of theEnglish language as the official languageof the Hawaiian legislature and all de-

partments of the Territorial government;

They will work above all things forthe enactment of a county law.

CUT HEAD

iVITHJOTTLE

Almost a Deadly RowIn a Sleeping

Room.

A row which started yesterday after-noon m the sleeping apartment of aChinese store in the lane leading to theHotel street Chinese theater, almost hada tragic ending One Chinaman assaulted another using a soda water bottleupon the forehead of his victim. Thebottle tore open the forehead making adeep gash winch extended almost fromthe hair line to the eyebrow. Bloodflowed copiously. After the Chinaminfound he was not dead he ran to thepolice station, was given an officer toarrest Jus assailant, and then ran back tothe store.

Officer Luahiwa found Ah Clio, theman who had made the assault, lying ona matting bed, with an old coat w rappedabout his head. This was covered withblood. The officer thought at first thatAh Cho was dead, but when he saw theofficer he jumped to Ins feet, and thencomplained that the wounded man hadkicked bun in the side.

The soad water bottle with which AhCho had made the assault was found,covered with blood

MORE NOMINATIONS

FOR IKE LEGISLATURE

Since the nominations of E FaonBishop of Oaliuniut J I Coke of Maulfor the Senate, the following nomina-tions hnve been tiled in the otllce otthe Secietmy of the Teirltory

GeoiBe C. Hewitt of AVniohlnu, Hn- -wnll, for the Senate.

J. A. Keliikon, Second Itepresenta-ttv- o

District, Hawaii, for the Houseof Representatives.

J. V. Keklpl, Geo. V. Koulmakaoleund Geoige Kauhl, Third Itepiesentn- -tlve District, Mnul, etc., for the Houbeof ltopresentatlves.

Attention may hero bo called to thenotice which appeared In the Adver-tiser yenteiduy, to be repeated at fu-ture dates, by A. L. C. Atkinson, Pec-letii- ry

ot Hawaii, to candidate forelection to the I.eulsl iture. TIiIb noticestates the qunllllentlons of Senatorsnnd Representatives, also the roijulio-inent-

that nil nnmluutloiiB must bellled not later than October 29, beliiftun day befoiu the day of the elec-tion, and that each nomination must beaccompanied by 11 deposit of (it undslh'nvd by not lens than twenty-liv- e

duly ciunllllnd elector of th dlstilUfor which Die candidal 1 noiuliiHted,

Ulew Up Uouie,l.uplnl Uuiiikk hum liruuylit over from

KoiiJmiiIiw vtrduy and liMkvd up III

tl l"ulU HiHlkui. lU l Uiai-uw-l withhaving, wu tb llth uf ttoiUMtiWr, at- -

iuiiud lu WWw mji lit bitUM in wkktkvn Halau and tola wll war abwtiUi- -

UiaAt aj4r w ) but lallad luKill Um trtiaruM UUnia,

AhUKl'jrwu.WaM'H a l a N a UKHrVUtUi "K A IDtAVY 'I.J

Mr AUmri H- - Ntlaay, Maivrhadr-UaU- k Utamtu v.. n' '1 I I j ., Jl ,1 11 y I )

irt i tit Tiaiwkaal J i44iuiai14 awytn 11114 uinl am pliut.J In aialvlltHl II I'tlilllilil llilu t iiull Mllliril)I li Hi I ('loll, I I nlHl 11, i .(III .in"Hliiitf " I I l I ( I l

m m ' , ..1 ,

a laaa ' . . ,

Ma all

HAWAIIAN' BABBITTS, Tt'nSDAY nfinlHK

Unnotuhi, Sept. .10, H

I.ditor Advertiser: Anvthinn MrDavid L Wellington nny write isworthy nf earnest consideration. There-fore his letter to the Advertiser, uponyour editorial entitled "Collapse of theJury Sytent in Honolulu," should andwill attract general attention.

1 do not agree .11 all noints cither with

LY,

JUDGE HIGIiTON ON THE

HAWAIIAN JURY SYSTEM

the editorial or with Mr. Witlunuton's nothing but the conviction of the guiltyletter. believe the svsteni and of innocent guilt

Territory has collapsed; though I or innocence to be determined throughadmit that it Is linmnfrril. ntul nlinnst existing forms and Oroccscs of the

by a bad law that needs speedy law;, dejibcratcly and coldly andami tnorougu revision, woruo 1 cnuorsc mi, mucuu, 11 is wmim mc jcisstrictures upon the indues, who do notmake the law and whose sworn duty isto declare it, as they find it. 5n this asin many other matters, the rcsiionsibilitymust rest upon the legislature.

It is useless to discuss technicalities inthe columns of n ncwsjiapcr. Massa-chusetts is an ancient, well organizedand polished commonwealth, with apopulation not exceeded in intelligenceor education in the civilized world. Thejury system there, I will not presume todiscuss. Doubtless it is well adapted tothe, conditions of an advanced and anenlightened State. Hut I will not admit,and I distinctly contravcrt. the proposi-tion that the jury system in Californiais a failure. '1 hat State, in this respect,as in others, is abreast of the high-est phases of modern progress. Its legis-lation, not perfect what legislation is?

is nevertheless, the result of thought,labor and experience and substantiallycorresponds to the necessities and thewants of a well-order- and aspiringWestern American community..

There was a time in the, history ofCalifornia, when, in any criminal trialtint excited great public part ofthe examination of a juror was about asfollows:

Counsel to Juror: "Have you read ortalked of this case?"

"I have.""Prom what you have read or heard,

have jon formed and expressed an opin-ion as to its merits?"

"I have.""Is that opinion qualified or unquali

fied.""Unqualified."Would it take testimony to remove

it?""It would."Counsel : "Challenged for cause."The Court: "Challenge allowed."In this way, hundreds of

jurors were excused, hearings, dclacdbejond endurance and justice in manycases defeated Thirty years ago, thestatutory definition of actual bias waschanged so as to read as follows:

"For the existence of a state of mindon the part of the parties, which willprevent him from acting with entire im-

partiality and without prejudice to thesubstantial rights of cither party."

In the same jear, by Section 1076 ofthe Penal Code, ttie foregoing definitionof actual bias protected by this e:

" but no person shall he, disquali-fied as a juror by reason of having form-ed or expressed an opinion upon thematter or cause to be submitted to suchjury, founded upon public rumor, state-ments in public journals, or commonnotoriety; provided it appear to thecourt, noon his declaration, under oathor otherwise, that he can and will, not-withstanding such an opinion, act im-

partially and fairly upon the matters tobe submitted to him "

For the purposes of this letter, it is unnecessary to refer to anj further legislation in California. J he rule there adopt-ed has been on the whole closely applied,and it has worked excellent results.I will venture to say that Californiajuries in criminal trials will compare,not unfavorably, with juries m every partof the United States My own observa-tion docs not correspond with Mr Well-ington's impressions, I think anv of thetwelve Supreme Court Judges In SanFrancisco will state that, instead of onecriminal trial per week, the average isseveral, and that it is not uncommon fortwo or even three cases to he tried in asingle day In the country districts, Ihave frequently seen crimunl trialspushed with rapidity and precision

'I he common law treatment of jurieswas brutal, would be toleratedby the American republic It is also ob-

vious to my mind that, in modern times,the right to examine every juror to de-

velop the existence or of aground of challenge is not only properbut essential, and especially in placeswhere a considerable part of the population is transitorv. Originaly jurieswere, summoned from neighborhoods,were generally known, and indeed weresupposed to have sonic familiarity withthe facts of each particular cisc. Nowmost jurors summoned are unknown tothe part accused or to the louusel bywhom the) arc examined Tn compel achallenge for cause before a juror istested on his voir dire would tend to de-feat justice and might often result ill thecondition described by Shakespeare:

"ihe jury passing on the pris-oner's life,

May in the suorn tnclve have alluef or tuo

Guiltier than him they "

The preliminary examination Jurors,to a great dtaree. i controlled iiv thediamiion 1 ruled 111 cuiiijii'ltfllt Jmlca,who indifferent betuiwn lite nrotccu-tioi- i

and ili defend, and I cannot par-fri-

in 11 the -i analogy to aniiMuiMiin or an) tuh.ntuium uf I rialnf juriif. f..r ihe 1 rial uf the pnauiwr. Inmotf can', nwh laamiiiaiiiiiii tit briefaim taiu in rue t'tte. thry ought 10be eaaei ami full. I be len-l- i oflrial.aeptiut and olwuW depend utuu theiHi. ami rircHMMBfU'v. hi eavll pariteular rate Una irml art aWt I

bate reueatedlc uWmd m Haanlulul ir lli.r iiHwu in a dfj jlj''''' ' ' ' ' ii-- a Mute.

I 1, I try w

Jh) inaii nave lm itxiurbaa1arlMlul I.) artinrar) imilml, , n oWllalUI aim l li. ., mi III dIII, ,

Him. I.I

''in.Hi,,!,

UHf11 ib utlter

lull ih.( w4i i

ull UllI t tl.l

ouglmrM The TichWnc raie I think,was the innt elaborate trial mi recordNo nne, however, disputes thr fact thatpractieil Justice, is rigidly applied inGreat Ilntain.

'I he underlying necssity in crlmlniljurisprudence, is real and not per-functory equality before the law. Thestale or the territory has no legitimateprepossessions It acts without refer-ence to the personal equation and desires

I do not iurv the acquittal thein this

theblocked, applied,

all

interest,

qualified

was

out

ami not

ir)of

art

lativc authority to amend. A prosecutingofficer docs not occupy the position ofordinary counsel. He is the representa-tive of justice, alike to the common-wealth anil to the accused. There is asense in which he represents both sidesand acts, as counsel for the prisonerthat is, in the protection of his legalrights. All cases stand essentially uponan equal footing and there can be nojust discrimination between cases. Everytrial should take its official course, with-out cither undue nrccinitancy or undueprocrastination. In a case of homicide,the station,in life or the personal worthof the victim is not to be consideredexcept, of course, naturally and properly,by the public. The murder of a Presi-dent, in itself, is no worse than the mur-der of a r. In the sanctuaryot the law, there is no room for preference or for vindictivcness or for revenge. Vengeance is .Mine i will re-

pay, said tnc Lord."It is true that the whole subject of

jurors has been twisted out ot allsemblance to its original form." This,social and political advancement, the de-

velopment of free institutions and therising value of individual man, havecompelled. It will be a bad day for theworld when, if ever, this reform is ar-rested. It will be a bad day for theAmerican Union when, if ever, color, ig-

norance, degradation, or anv conceivablephase of humanity, can tibate one jot orone tittle, of the protection ,to which, un-der our institutions, every human beingis equally entitled. It will be a bad dayfor justice when, if ever, a nnn clnrgedwith crime, is deprived of the right, notto select, but to participate in the selection, of the jurors, by whom, under thelaw, as declared by the court, the issueinvolving his life or his liberty, is to bedetermined. HENRY E. HIGHTON.

MORNING STARS MAY

COME IERE FOR GAME

WAILUKU, Sept. 29. From presentIndications, It seems that the MorningStar baseball team will go to Hono-lulu to ploy one or two games with theMnllu Illina nine. Letter? have beenreceived fioin S. A. Crook, captain ofthe Maile Illma Athletic Club, guar-anteeing the expenses of the Maulboys. The offer has been accepted, andthe Stars are now at practice nearlyevery evening. The games will prob-ably be played on October 22 and 24, orpossibly there may be a Sunday game.

This Is the first occasion where aHonolulu nine has taken upon Itself toInvite a team down from the neighbor-ing Isle, and this too from the Malles,who have never been Invited to Maul.Local plaers nppreclate this step, nndIt Is almost a certainty that a returngame will be played at Walluku, If notthis year, surely the first opportunitythat offers next year.

It has not yet been decided definitelyjust what boys will go to Honolulu, butIt will practically be the Morning Starteam, with the Kruger brothers, as thebattery.

An Invitation from the Punahou teamhas been patiently waited for, but It Isbelieved that on account of their poorstanding In the Honolulu league, theyhave not thought it worth while to In-

vite the Mnul boys to Honolulu, andthen probably stand a second defeat.

TAX APPEAL CASES

DECIDED BY CQURT

Nine decisions were filed by the TaxAppeal Court jesterday.

The Commercial Pacific Cnblc Co.'scable out to sea thiee miles, assess-ed at J12.S0O, is declared not liable totaxation. In the absence of statutorylaw governing the case, the courtadopts the rule of law that In ense otdoubt the taxpa)er should receive thebenefit thereof,

Other cubes ore decided ns follows:Theo, II. Davlcs & Co,, leasehold on

Knahuinauu slice!, massed at (11,000,1 educed by agit'eiueut to J7.C0O, re-

turned as of no value. Court lined thaamount at (7000.

Kxtutu of Theo, II, D.ivles, lenguholdat Kiiplolunl Park, unsesaed at f 1000;no latum, AnaiuMor aimtaliud,

i:tnlu nf Kiniiiii Kululvannlaul, laudnt WalMkl; imnoimoil ru ttl.OOO, ru-

tin nml at UQoO, Court lUml umi'jmJliunt u 111,(40.

Allen & JIublniHin, a an enUrprlxofor proilli HttneMwd at IWO.tMW, rturinal at iHUHM. .vir ulained,

II. )', WlfluntiM & tv. aaad u nniueiiil for iiratii, at UUM6, ie

miund ul IMMaftt. Aaaaaatr mm-lalb-

J tf. lUmrmm, Ia4 m Hiwttaverumh, wumhml m iMN, latum) si

Uiff . taaawt iattatwM In iao4 aw IJtfteJHtm, mamiJ tn lim, ramriii) iMM iHaiaw wxttoaa) In uj) HJ

II

irl.t III

i' wiHtMMMt, mi in Ummmi iaea4 aililUlli'll Ml Idm laMMif jfw

J, HOPP & CO,

WipOVEThey Secure Two Large

Stores in the Young

Building.

(From Saturday's Advertiser)Leases were lgned yesterday effect-

ing nn Important change In the retailtrade district of Honolulu. J. Hopp &Co., whose lease of the store, occupiedby them at the corner of King andllethel streets for over a quarter of acentury ran out Inst August, yester-day Ieaed from the Alexander YoungIluildlng Company two large storesnnd two basements In the YoungBuilding for furniture salesrooms andwnrerooms, and also a portion of thelarge warehouse in the rear of theYoung Building, the latter to be usedfor manufacturing purposes. Hopp &Co. will occupy their new stores onthe first of November.

Over twenty-fiv- e years ago the lateJohn Hopp opened up a small businessns a furniture denier and repairer atthe corner of King nnd Bethel. Atthat time King street was a shabylocality. The block now occupied byhe Chambers Drug Co., "Woods &

Sheldon, John Nott, the Union Grill,the Wall, Nichols Co., The Advertiser,Dimond, and other firms was at thattime a row of small shacks. On themnuka side of the street the Metropoli-tan Meat Co. occupied a wooden build-ing, and the coral building recentlyvacated by Castle & Cooke was classedns one of the most conspicuous struc-tures on the street. Hopp's businessprospered. As he needed more roorhhe built additions to the older build-ings so that today the lot is coveredby one wooden building- and a halfdozen additions to the old structure.Mr. Hopp died In 1S99 and his son-in-la-

E. M, Marshall, has carried onan ever Increasing business since thattime. The business has spread to suchan extent that It has outgrown thebuildings.

The two stores In the Young Build-ing will be thrown into one by theconstruction of a large archwaythrough the dividing walls. The firmthus secures floor space for display-ing furniture about three times great-er In extent than their present quar-ters. While some mnnufnctuilng nndlepalrlng will be done in the newpremises nil mattress making will bedone in the warehouse nt the rear ofthe Young Building. The new storesalso provide four large show windows.

Hopp & Co. will carry a largely in-

creased stock, and In the magnificentnew stores will endeavor to be as

nnd faithful to the Inter-ests of furniture buyers as they have-bee-

during their more than twenty-fiv- e

years of successful trade at theold establishment.

This addition to the number of firmsIn the Young Building will leave butone vacant store in the building.

ST,

LFAIR

The annual fair given by the Woman'sGuild of St. Andrew's will take place onSaturday, October 15, from twelve untilsix 111 the Cathedral grounds. Mrs. E.D. Tcnncy, assisted by our best localcharity workers, has the affair in charge,and they arc doing cv erytlung possible tomake the fair this year a success. It willbo an occasion that will interest theyoung people as well as the older ones.Novel anil games will he fea-tures for the children, while the Dazaarwill prove of special interest to thehdies One of the most important feat-

ure-, will be the home made New Eng-land lunch served between twelve andtwo. Every business man in the cityshould make it a point to lunch at theCathedral grounds on this occasion asthi! lunch will be well worth the pricecharged and the cause is a worthy oneto support.

The following ladies will have chargeof the lunch feature Mrs. Noonan,chairman; Mrs, C. Crabbc, Mrs. An-drew Fuller, .Ir Geo. Herbert, Mrs.Percy llciioon, Mrs. Rison Ilishop, Mrs.Carl Hollow a), Mrs. Walter Hoffman,Mrs, James Spencer, Mrs. George Heck-Ic- y,

Mrs. A. G Hawes, Mrs. AlvianClarke. Mrs. 12. V. Jordan, Miss Mar-garet Walker.

he menu comprise: Cold roasti

Mrs,

and cold bliiu . b.ikul pork and beans ala llostnu, with brown bread hot rollsami samlwiclii'.: olivet, pickles, jellies;coffee and doughnuts.

Ihe l'.HU Quiiititte Club will furnishmuiic nml m.iny new inimical munlicrwill he introduced,

tickit. including ndmU.ion inihe ground will be 75 Admiiimiicki'ln mil) j emu I irkc-- are on tileat the UcrgMrnin Mu.ir C't,NVImli 1'11'is, I Mni) Priia Cu'i,Wiflniinii'a JtMuIry "tt

LESLIE WILLSAVEBROKEN FINGER

I4wl Hull) Jli nf tlt MiMjiilad

iUi4, tthu limM imiv uf hiUUa baJjtiMj tlw bi fur Hit IUHM4ta

lJttiltf Umm m ai U Wattuaprm-ju-

t ui nut ii.w ia iwk iiiHatpr fMuiitiiaivij ai . .. ! ni.i r.ijItta Nuavi w 1.1.4., 1, iiirft111. Uilll- - (II (lull I ll.11 Mfll, t II. ,,

t l. tlilt , , .,,,0,,,,, ),,1 a iiu 11 11 g i 11 , ,,, (,,,, ,1,

4i li 1. ltit

LAM UtAL

IS jLL OFF

Purchase Not ExchangeIs the Governor's

Method.

James U. Castle, although one of theGovernor's oldest personal friends, isnot going to receive the Kaipaitpiu landon the Koolau side of this island underthe bargain of exchange for land inHonolulu ncedid for street wideningwhich was arranged before GovernorCarter came into office.

Instead, the Kaipiupati land will beput up at public auction at an unset nrice- -

of $1000. The Hoard of Agriculture andforestry having marked out the upperportion of the land for the forest reserve,the area remaining is 325 acres. Mr.Castle surrenders a lease of 100 acres.

Land in Waikiki, which was to have-bee-

part of the nronertv to be exchanged, will be purchased by the Gov-ernment, as will land needed for the im-

provement of Fort street. The nrice tobe paid for the latter will depend on theamount realized from the Kaipaupauland. If that is secured by Mr. Castleat the, upset price the Fort street prop-erty will go to the Government for whatMr. paid for it, but if the price-o- f

the Kaipaupau land is run up bycompetition full market value will bepaid for the Fort street property.

Governor Carter remarked yesterdaythat, with this old matter out of the way,the questions of the Polipoli springs and"Lahainaluna water on Maui bepretty nearly all of the difficult prob-lems facin" ' - w ' -- n he took office.

j

Irrigation on Maul.The conservation of the waters oE

Mnul by means of big ditches, event-ually supplemented by big reservoirsnnd mountain tunnels will open thous-

ands of acres of what Is now arid land:to cultivation, nnd much of what isnow dry nnd rocky land will one day-tee-

with luxuriant crop. The sounnd cllmnte of Maui is most peculiar-ly adapted to agriculture, and water

one thing needed to make our drynnd barren hillsides blossom like the-rose- .

Mnul News.

Coming Royal Vlaitor.Local Japanese will be happy to dil

honor to Prince Fushlml, who Is coming here on his way to America. Bothas a member of the royal family of

nnd ns a hero of the battle ofNanshan, Prince Fushlml Is one towhom all Japanese pay tributes ofhonor and respect. We hope his stay-i-

Honolulu will be long enough forhim to see the loyalty nnd feel theaffection of the Japanese here. Week-ly Hawaii Shinpo.

A PERIL OF HER SEX,

HOW A KENTUCKY WOMANMET A CRISIS IN

HER LIFE.

Adopts a Resolute Course and Es-

capes from Troubles WhichHad Made Her Wretch-

ed for Two Years.

The experience of Mrs. D. C. Wed-ding, of Hartford, Kentucky, is of valueto every woman, as it will point out acertain means of escape from a distress-ing situation to which time must inev-itably bring her. The most criticalperiod m the life of a woman is that at-

tending the chanire or turn of life. Thesvmptoms attending this period arefainting spells or attacks of faintncss ordizziness, headache, general debility, ex-

haustion, a foiling of melancholy, hys-

teria, pain 111 the loins or limbs, etc.The change is a gradual one for betteror worse; for the former if the patientis wise enough to fortify the systemagainst the ravages of the symptoms at--tiiulmg the change.

Concerning the difficulties which sheencountered at the change of life,chicken, duck, pork, ham; potato snlail

Lunch

Wall,

tiijM

Castle

would

Japan

Wedding says1 "In the spring of 1898,

when I reached the turn of life, ! wasseriously ill and was confined 10 my bedfor .ix or eight months In all during Ihetwo jcurs following. I had chills, fever,rliciuii.itiHii My itoumch ccincd is

too full, my kidneys did not actfreely, my liver was inactive, my heart'bunt' uas very weak ami I Iwd iluzinrior suitiimiihj (11 my head and iirrvotutrouble. I wm under the treatment rfii'Mjrnl prominent phyiciau but linyall foiled tn do ui an yiM'd,

"After iilTrin' fur tuo .ir II m rued frum au ArUiua fitaud shuntilia mini, of I)r William' Pink MIfur I'ata I'nHilc ami 1 dfi'idd ih.it Iwould iri llirm The rry fin' b. x I

luuk tnaut'm fail Ualitr and vuun I luijlUn fnur Urnc inrc I wat Milirtlywall, ahmIuiJ Aflaaii houh4 ni-- i tluij

ww I Wan. iuml mv lnmuli l

dmitl aim! Itava atltaa (Hliiiuad 111 iht)wai w haalin I hat a raoaiwnaiidnl irWiUUNM'oh iLf Uit

I'il.k I'lIU UMi;

ali )rl tmnii.t pi,.' Umiii iuQMHi)i)

lla, lii in (ifftill llgll albut .,1,1 III

Ul w pit' , '. . . Aaid inr iiir.1 n.ii 11. 1

1 I"

it mli 1 'iI aalatM (I

4i I Mi I., Jt illI I It (mrl

.1.1 li, I lllfH I I' t;4 ml

if MM 1 Hjtttilarj J U L, Ua M l ...IIIU) all 4iuitli u, ..,.4 idi 4iJ

,f

.ll

V

THE BLUE

AND WHITE

The New KamehamehaSchool Paper of

Students.

"IJluc nnd White" la the title of avery neat four age paper published bythe students of tlm KamehamehaSchool?. The Initial number wan Issuedyesterday. The staff Is composed of thefollowing:

Abel Ah You, editor-in-chie- f; GeorgeIVells, assistant editor; Charles Lyman,Athletics; David Desha, exchange edi-

tor; Charles Williams, superintendentof printing; nssoclate editors, EnochHussey, Henry Snfffen, David Mahu-kon- a.

The leading editorial Is devoted to asynopxls of an address made before theKamehameha Alumni meeting held onJune 8, 1901, as follows:

And now n serious word about Ka-mehameha. Kamehameha with nil Itmeans Is the Hawaiian herltnge. Ifever an Institution belonged to a people,this belongs to you. It Is yours toguard, to use, to cherish. And to mymind, Kamehameha Is the last hope ofthe Hawaiian people. But it Is enough.

Your great Alh 'was wise, so wisethat every time I think of It I stillwonder at what she did for her people.Had she divided her wealth among herfriends and relatives as so much wealthIs divided, It would have gone ns otherwealth has gone, leaving dissipation,degeneracy nnd poverty; the cominggenerations would be no wiser and no"linppler. Cut leaving It ns phenld, Itwill go on giving strength, building upmanhood and womanhood, enrichingthe Islands by enriching all who seekits benefits. Each generation will bewiser; each generation will be stronger;each generation will be happier. It Isto be perpetual. A thousand years later,men nnd women, viser than we are,will still assemble here to bless hermemory.

There Is only one thing to fear. ThatIs the possibility that the Hawaiianpeople may lose this heritage, that itmay pass into the hands of men andwomen who do not have Hnwalian bloodin their veins. Your blood divides witheach generation. Your customs are dy-ing out. The courts will change. Thetrustees will change. Soon the menwho have known you and are In sympa-thy with you and have done all In theirpower to advance you, these men willbe gone; and men "who knew notJoseph" will be in their places. Then.you will have to stand for yourseves. Icharge you to stand for this last honeof the Hnwalian people with all yourmight, ot by force there Is an easierway; not through the courts, there Isa. more direct way; not throuch thepress, there Is a better way. This bestway of all Is to keep every place herefilled with Hawaiian men nnd women.The will of your A1I1 gives preferenceto Hawaiian blood. No court, and noset of trustees will ever venture tobreak that will so long ns Hnwallansmake use of their own. It your peoplelose this heritage, it Is their own fault.

But there Is hope that each genera-tion will know better than the one be-

fore, the benefits of the training offeredliere; nnd so each generation will guardtnese prevlleges with more zealous caretor their children. Let me give you anew proverb: A privilege abused orneglected is a privilege lost; whether itlie of reputation or of heritage. Be trueto your heritage and worthy of It. Ha-waiian customs will disappear. Hawai-ian names will disappear. But us longas Hawaiian blood can be traced Inthe veins of men and women, so longshould ICnmehnmeha be Kamehameha.

I lie rollowlng "locals" are of. Interest:"We appreciate our new president Sir.

1'erley L. Home. His administrationpromises to be a successful and pleasantone.

Our chapel Is still undergoing repairs.At present the three schools are havingchurch exercises in the assembly roomat Bishop Hall.

The Mandolin Club has received sev-eral new pieces of music from the coast.They are prepared to furnish music forall occasions at reasonable charges.

The present enrollment of the ManualDepartment is about 140, a good recordfor the beginning of the year. A num-ber of students who were here last yearhave not yet returned.

Foot ball has commenced In earnest.and though there were seven places leftvacant by last year's team they havebeen tilled by good players. The ilistgame may start sometime next monthand Kamehameha expects a complete.victory.

The making of butter at our dairy hasJust been started this year. The addition of three new cows makes It possi-ble. The quality of the butter Is saidto compare favorably with that madeby other dairies. The boj-- believe thatthe making of butter at Kaiueliumeliu1h very educational.

-

WAILUKU ITEMSBY LATEST MAIL

W.WM Kl', Oct. l.- -'lt may ha con.ceded, the Miiill Ntv , "Hint lliuuppropi milium for tho WulluluiJiqiiu mi,,) w Kuliulul wharf liuyK'4 II. ..!! UnmnU HIMl II is Ul III Ibull..kil.UtiVlMI flit)!) MttUl 11 MHHIIU u,6,uuu uMMiiif fur Um Waiiuitii

muii'iouw at til mu( imtkm ut Dim

iKiiaiui, w mm it mi mm mmu half nMNijil Ut JUSSi Ilia bUlWUlKIiMmJviJ '

J'SMiiuiut JNtwpi M Jlw 14 ''lw dti'fc Uo. un JtfM, l il ti'at

Iim fini of lb tin.Titer I v if Ulk tt MldhlMilNK "tf

it Kn in U.iMk.i i'il Ihtrodutlwt llir"f'tifr urn r"i Mini

(milx a liti'i V'f "f lruMlrf turn mmHonolulu ar Join liuninrxR till MntilI bin ttrek, and rmrt (lint btiMncM Ifplrkltlg up.

Manager Chnrlen I). I.tifklu of ttifWnlluku National Hunk Iwivm todayon tho Clnudine for a month or fixweeks' vacation dip to tho Manlerli.State.

J. V Marshall of Wnlluku hasthe iNisltlon of malinger of the

Ulupalakua cattle ranch to succeed 1'nulJarrctt, nnd goes up tomorrow to takecharge,

Chns, M. Cooke of Honolulu cameover on Wednesday's boat and Is theguest of Mr. and Mrs. 0. U. Wells,

HILOS SENTIMENTS

ON DAMON'S DEATH

Hllo, Hawaii, Sept, 29, 1904.

The Advertiser, Honolulu: I havethe honor to Inform you thnt the fol-lowing resolutions were passed at aspecial meeting of the Board of Tradeheld this evening:

"Wherens; The entire communityhas heard with profound sorrow anaIndignation of the wanton muraer otMr. S. Edward Damon, of Honolulu,and sees In it nn evidence of the eter-nal warfare between depravity andlawlessness, oil the one side, nnd de-cency and order on the other; nnd

"Whereas, We recognize andthe sterling qualities of the

late Mr. Damon; his ability and Integrity ns a business man, his devotionns n son, husband and fnther. nnd hisworth ns a citizen, nnd that In hitwhole life he was an example ot gooaand true manhood; therefore be It

"Resolved by the Board ot Trade ofHllo that we protest against the fur-ther tolerance in Hawaii of a class orshiftless nnd vicious people, who, re-fusing to work, prey upon the community and make life and property In-

secure; and we recommend morestrictness nnd severity on the part ofthe authorities In dealing with thesepeople,

"Itesolved; That the Board of Tradeof Hllo extend to the stricken family,our heartfelt sympathy and condo-lence; nnd be It further

"Resolved, That these resolutions bespread on the minutes of the Board otTrade of Hllo, and that copies be sentto Hon. S. M. Damon, Mrs. S. EdwardDamon, and the press ot Hllo and Ho-nolulu."

H. VICARS.Secretary Board of Trade ot Hllo.

--HZAMLOCH NOT A .

WIZARD PITCHER

Former pitcher Zamloch of tho ElksIs doing some baseball pitching on Ha-

waii, pitching recently for the Hlloteam In a game with the Walmeas InWnlmea, the score, however, being 27

to 0 In favor of the Walmeas. Theteams played as follows:

Walmeas S. SL Spenc-- r, 2 b.; W.Spencer, 3 b.; W. LIndsey, 1 b.; AV.Notley, c. f.; J. Kokl, c.j T. Kaanaana,r. f.; A. Kokl, 1. f.; A. Kaaua, s. .;

D. Kuwai, s. s.-- p.

Hllo H. Moto, s. s.-- c, Beamer Special; Vannatta, 2 b.. Union Special; Zam-loc- h

p.- -l b., Honolulu Elks; Eienekl,s. s.-- 3 b., Walakea; Simmons, 3 b.-- c,

Laupahoehoe; H. Rickard, 1. f Hono- -kaa; E. Horner, c. f Paaullo; Walker,c.-- r. f., Paaullo; Unauna, 1 ., Walakea,

SCORE BY INNINGS..1 2 3 4 E 6 7 89

Hllo 0 000010 3 2 6Waimea 1 0 C C 1 0 0 10 527

YES OR NO?Honolulu People Are Respect-foll- y

Asked to Answer

These Questions.

Is there anything In the evidence ofone's sensesr

Is there anything In the testimony afone's friends?

Can reliance be placed upon statements from people we know?

Are the opinions of local citizens ofany greater moment than those ofstrangers?

Would you sooner believe neonlo living In some far-awa- y place than resi-dents of your own city?

Wo think not! for home proof caneasily bo Investigated.

Mr. W. J. Maxwell of thin town. Tru-ant oillcer, write thus; "I sueffredwith a horrible pain In tho sinuM ofmy back (an almost Invarulula ymntorn of kidney trouble) for a number ofyears. I wan advlned to take borne ofDean's Ilackachu Kidney J'HIi, and fol-lowing the suggestion, I went to t);siloiimter Drug Co; store, Fort utreet,mid got noma of these. Having takenthem, liter relieved me Mralght uwtty,and ur, I limy nay, the best ami In rantllm only curd for backache, j )IHyvimentioned the virtue of tliln wonderfulremedy to several permm, amongniioni ii my friend, Mr, I'runk lluUuir,win fMUinl leiief, ami he la now u rlrmuilevr In Duan'e Jiuekaiihe KidneyI'IIIk,"

Mhuh' lluiiluuJix Kidney J'lU. urtiwij yy nil mimniu mix) mrukisiMl M Mfll! w Ik. ) 1)m (ML at

m JltMiiir itruH &, MMpf mw ur Uji IJiiiflSii'

DEMOCRATS HAVE

RALLY AT ORPHEUM

Attacks on Carter's Centralizing Policy andthe Republican Machine Cecil BrownSpeaks Several Sensations Are Sprung,

(from Sunday's Advertiser)The Democratic ratification meeting

at the Orpheum Inst night was a scriesot sensations, beginning with the read-ing of a lengthy idldrcss by W. A, Kin-ney, arraigning the executive of theTerritorial government nnd the Repub-lican patty In the Islands, closely fol-lowed by the appearance In the back ofthe theater of Cecil Drown, IndependentIlcpubllcnn candidate for the Senate,who made n speech from the Democra-tic platform, saying he wanted n chancoto do so ngnln, nnd practically urgedevery one within the sound of his voiceto cast his vote against the Republicanparty us a protest ngnlnst the Governornnd the machine. This wns not theend of the climaxes, for the nomineefor the lower house from Ewn read acommission as District Magistratewhich had been forwarded to a man ntEwn by the Governor, together with oneof the Governor's famous blank resignations. He said the executive wns trying to run the courts.

The nudlence went Into raptures overthese several developments and townrdthe end Clarence Ashford arose nndmoved thnt It be tho sense of the meet-ing that Cecil Brown be taken up onhis offer to spenk on the samo plat-form with the Democratic nomineesduring the cnmpnlgn, the motion beingadopted.

Upon the stage were Chalrmnn W. A.Kinney, Curtis P. Inukea, nominee fordelegate to Congress; Senatorial Candi-date Frank Harvey, Representativecandidates from the Fourth and Fifthdistricts and C. A. Gnlbralth.

KINNEY'S ALLEGATIONS.W. A. Kinney opened the meeting

by saying that the government had sentout word to Its employees on the sewerand street departments not to show upat the Democratic meeting, adding thatthis was one way of running the government.

As last night's meeting was the opening of the Democratic campaign Inearnest, Mr. Kinney stated thai lis hadprepared an address which was of con

to of nndportance had decided to put it Inwriting. Mr. Kinney devoted almostthe entire to assailing the Gov-ernor nnd the Republican party.

In the llrst place, however, he deniedIn toto rumors that he was in the cam-paign for personal that he ex-

pected to be rewarded by the gift otsome high ofllce. It was high time theDemocratic party took a leading partIn the,nffalrs of the Islands. The HomeRule party hud accomplished nothingand had left the Republicanundisturbed, and practically withoutprotest, he alleges, to create and developa of coercion, Intimidation andmanipulation of public patronage. Thiswas accomplished through the indif-ference of the Home Rule party whichwas more In getting Into of-

fice and staying there than In safe-guarding their constituents'Mr. Kinney the fundamentalrights ot a free ballot were slippingout of sight. He said the Democraticparty a searching legislativeinquiry into the and meansused by the present executive of theTerritory, men are forced tosupport U e administration whetherthey want to or not.

The demand for undated resignations

from every District Magistrate beforehe received his commission front theOuvernor, he alleged hud no precedentIn the history of Hawaii. He allegedalso that with undated resignationsopened the way for securing the prose-cution of nny particular citizen or In-

fluencing the Judgment ot the court Innny particular case.

A letter from Sheriff Andrews of Ha-waii, which Mr. Kinney said wng pick-ed up ftom the street, wherein theSheriff had requested a police oillcerto get nn endorsement from his districtcommits, as being the desire of theexecutive "to promote the welfare ofthe Ilcpubllcnn party" wii9 read anddiscussed at great length, nsthe basis of another charge againstthe executive. The speaker called forthe support of Cecil Brown, takingpains again, however, to Indicate thatBrown had not been taken Into theDemocratic fold, but a vote for nlmwould mean n vote of againstnn allegedly Interfering executive.

Mr. Kinney said the Republicans hadnominated some vdry good men, but heclaimed they were hopelessly handi-capped by the Issues raised by theDempcratlc party.

Other speakers were Capt. Campbell,who made his maiden speech and Itwas n very brief one; W. K. Apua ofLnle, Joe Aea nnd Frank Harvey.

Jesse P. told how he hadcome to leave the Home Rule party forthe Democratic party. He had spentfour years In unremitting effort In theHome Rule party, nnd and nowsatisfied that there was no room forn Home Rule party. He was now fight-ing centralization which was rapidlybecoming a formidable machine nndhis voice to all Home Rulers was todiscard the old party.

R. H. Trent made a humorous speech.He was a '"Kamaalna Democrat." Henad never' Deen nnytnlng else but aDemocrat. He told a slory and to giveIt a local application that the Demo-crats could go to the highest peaks ofHawaii nnd scratch the heels of Demo-crats In heaven, and could go to the

siderable length1, nnd owing Its lm- - slums Knknako scratchhe

address

Interest,

executive

system

concerned

rights.claimed

proposedmethods

whereby

forming

protest

Makainni

become

bends of Republicans In Hades. Hereferred to the red and blue shtrtcdHawnlians who are now organizing In-

to Republican marching clubs, but saidhe expected them to vote against thoRepublicans as a protest against coer-cion,

C. A. Gnlbralth, who was andelegate to the Democratic Na-

tional convention, spoke ot his experi-ences In the convention, and eulogizedCurtis Inukea at great length. He saidthe Islands should send a delegate toCongress who wns n Democrat, "as ItIs morally certain that the Democratswill elect a large majority of the members of the lower house of Congress.He told how Judge Parker had greetedhim when , assisting tho notificationcommittee, nnd that Parker had ex-pressed a kindly feeling for Hawaii.Later Mr. Galbraith compared Parkerwith Mr. Kinney, causing the latter tocrimson.

"I believe that a public officer Is notthe ruler," said Mr. Gnlbralth, "but theservant of the people. We are opposedto being ruled by any one man orclique of men. We ought to elect everyone of these nominees because theyare honest and capable, and for thefurther reason that It would be a pro- -

REPUBLICANS HAVE A RALLYIN THE FIFTH DISTRICT

(From Sunday's Advertiser)A large and cnthsiastic crowd gathered in Aala park last night to listen

o the program pf speakers that the Republicans had arranged. The crowd wasin a good humor and did not hesitate to show its approval of a speaker's remarks by shouts of "pololei" and generous applause. Solomon Malielona delivered two addresses, one in Hawaiian and one in English. In the English ad-

dress lie poured hot shot into the newspapers that had said "we arc incapabilityof making laws because we cannot speak English." Continulng.'.Mr. Malielonasaid, "Remarks have been passed that wc arc incapability of making laws because we are unintelligent, not speaking the both language. I ask any one thatncars me speak to prove that I can't speak both. I am not in favor of the lot-tery bill for it is a corruption to my race and to the nation. That accusation ishot air from the enemy which is trying to pull down the administration of Gov-ernor Carter. I assure to you that the hula-hul- a ticket will carry the day. I willnot give tin the race. I will fight until the last minute and that is the ballotbox. Don't take any dictation, but remember that Malielona is speaking to youand don't split your ticket. I will lake nil the consequences. I will first take offmy coat nnd fight anyone that is trying to pull down the administration.

A feature of the meeting wns the presence of two women nn the nrwnm- -:Mm. Kekaha ami Mrs, Mapahulclua, both of whom spoke eloquently for thesupport ot me Kqmniican ticket, bolonton Kalelopu spoke of the achievementsof Prince Cupid ami the parly. lie said, "Notwilhutaiuliiig the criticism of localpapers you cannot lest the capabilities of the caudiilaiei by holding back yourvote and your confidence." The speaker praised Governor Carter as conduct-ing the government on n scheme by which every citUcii may have access lo thehead of the government. Tills, he wid, was impossible tinder the monarchicaland Dole administrations,

J. II. Dowselt iiwile a stirring ipcrrli, in which he gave the reatoiii forMiiMiriiiiK Ctipisl. ll was loudly elirl ss was John C. Uncwho spoke doquvnily on llm tiecotnplishmwiu of ihe HMiublkun iwrty, usinwially In the it.unipl lu cure Uttrwy. a worfc in wWstli Mr, Une is utpueially ImurestiaJ, ctu4u' of mvrsl rMt which ajijmtjrJ t have Wn rurwj during rnem txpiri-ihwi-

mkJ 44iJ Ik Imumi ot Hie iwrty w tUi work. Itdkluti utd Km-but- ,

bttUi Immt utMSMcli Jijij JUtlff, tutu mn iogly fur iW ikk of tbmpiMcMs, Myl Out ,h u iuit lm$f mmMlmj miukm mimm mM. Om t iim mIM Um H-- m Ikfcr "mUmg im lt stU,SSL? ?ML-- W, vnnuA ' ',i," ,hr '" wws,!iri tM Mrtmgr tt itUiu. ii. mwn l ub tfcta. IwrAUm ptttMM um mmug wU ma mm tmttmojfi

the

tion,

iMt AM HIMVM'ihf nn lfflilllr tHik miiulillrNri Htlr"

1MOWN MMMt WJMontATAt lhU Jmitltir t hnlritmn )inr.y

nn, MlMih o Hi rid of lh"" "'i out llm tiiwnn of ttnnittti IimliHitly there n tnniii( hi.M nnd n ooit dm .Mr. IlrownHm wti a shout uent tin. Il nn inviinl lo the pUlfotm and rnin0 upon Itniniil ehtrtr, Md spnko Hrt In Ma.uniinn and then In KngllMt.

.Mr. Iltuivn nt once Mmko of the Bill-liid- i)

which he lm mummed since thenepuniiemi convention, Mo said he limlnot emtio to dlKcimn the merlin of thoDemocratic or Itoimbllcnn tickets orparties, but "I nut here tonight ns aprotest against the Governor of thisTerritory In his Interference and smallparty politics. I am nlfco hero to sayto you thnt ho Is driving all the ottl-ce- re

of the government to Interfere Inthe legislative, executive nnd Judicialdepartments of the Territory. I havebeen culled a traitor by tho Governor.Why Is thin abuse heaped upon me?It Is because I linvo taken nn Inde-pendent stand nnd will not be ledaround with a ring In my nose." Mr.Brown said ha would not bow to thelnsh of a dlctntor or of the executiveof this Territory.

When one department of the gov-ernment Interferes with another, gen-tlemen, we nre going to have trouble.We hnd trouble hero In 1SS7 (Mr.Brown's voice rose to n ltinnnrlnirpitch), nnd It wns for tho mine rea-son, nnd we are drifting back to thatsame condition ngnln todnv. Thquicker you put your foot down, thobetter."

Curtis Inukea wns the Inst speakerof the evening. The nddress of Mr.Kinney and those of the other oratorswill appear In tomorrow's Issue of thispaper.

fOF CURRENT INTEREST.

SLOCUM DISASTER STATISTICS.The last of the awful Slocum disast-

er has been heard from when onThursdny n report was made to themayor as to the distribution n't thefunds for the relief of the sufferers.ine lotui contributions amounted to

$121,000, nnd nearly nil of it has beenexpended. The remaining J20.000 hasbeeiiyHCt aside for the future needs ofthose who were mnde to some extentdependent by the disaster. The listof dead In this report has been placednt 938, of which S97 were Identified.One hundred nnd twenty men losttheir entire families. The committeeburled 703 bodies belonging to 3SS fam-ilies, the average cost of each funeralbeing 115. The minimum was $16 andme maximum $331.

FECUNDITY OF FISH.In a chapter on the artificial cultiv-

ation of sea fish, contributed by R. B.Murston to Allnlo's "British Salt Wat-er Fishes." It Is stnted that there needbe no fear that such Important fish asthe cod nnd the herring enn ever be-come extinct or even reduced In num-bers by man, except locally. A codof ten pounds has a million eggs OnJuly 20, 1893, Professor Henson calcu-lated that there must be over 27S.000,-000,0-

of Impregnated cod eggs in eachsquare Norwegian geographical mlloot the surface of the Skagcrrak. Con-sequently the 300,000,000 or 400,000,000eggs nrtlflclnlly hatched and turncd'inannually from a Norweglnn hatcheryare only a drop In the ocean.

ANCIENT MEDICAL ADVICE.aiore than 1,000 years ago, Rhazes,

an Arabian physician, gave this adviceto his patients with reference to thoselection of a physician: "Study care-fully the antecedents' of the man towhose care you propose to confide allyou have most dear In the world, thatIs, your life and the lives ot your wifeand children. If the man Is dissip-ated, Is given to frivolous pleasures,cultivates with too much zeal the artsforeign to his profession, still more soIf he be addicted to wine and debauchery, refrnln from committing into suchnanus fives so precious."

A ItESIAItKABLE ECHO.An ordinary echo is n curious thing,

but according to the statements of aFrenchman at a watering place In thePyrenees, one echo on tho Franco-Prussia- n

frontier is fur from ordin-ary.

"As soon ns you have spoken," saidthe Frenchman, who secured an audience of wide-eye- d tourists, "you heardistinctly the voice lenp from rock torock, from precipice to precipice, nndas soon as it bus passed the frontierit assumes the Spanish tongue!"

A COUNTRY WITHOUT A HEGGAH.Mendicancy has almost vanished In

Switzerland, where It used to be soprevulent. Every effort Is mndo bythe cantons to ilnd work for all whodesire to work. Those who do not de-

sire to work nre foiced to do so In in-

stitutions conducted for that purpose.In the canton of Schwyz a law Imposesa line on "liersonn who. by civlmralms, favor hegulni; from lintmn inhouse or In the street."

A KINO OK MANY TITLES.ilie most betltled monarch In tho

world is Emperor Fruncls Joseph ofAustria, Without his Imperlul crown,which is mo Identical tlnia of Churle-iiiiign- u,

ho h nine times u king, twicon grand duke, unco a grand prince,twlci, a pilncii, four times a margravennd the multitude of hi title nscount inn no fnrii in )at unumeru- -

MISTAKEN DIAONOHI8.There nni many pipln who liuvw

wln lu lh Iwuk Mini liiiuKliio thmlhlr kidneys nre nff'iH, whll llnlronly iiouhu f iluminuilim of Hit muiin", whkh I'm ii lw imivii by rw up.plkuwwi ill UhHinlwilulii' I 'i in juim,ur by iJmiijwiilMtf id' of tluniMl wiibUm I tilii flolMi ml bunting it ww tlmmimlmi wr(, , uin in m i orJM( timUi U Llid lit III Millmmr J jimwM hu1 It md im

(mmt, Vw mi 1 u dmim ami4wm JlMUswi. iuHit) CUt., im,$sSU llU lilUHBtl t,

4

riiTiiTffl'PI ' I llllll Vtunii i luuuii u

JACK'S PAY

Judge Dole Decides theInter-Islan- d Men's

Tax Case.

(From Sunday's Advertiser)Judge finnford II. Dole of tho United

States District Court yesterday rcn-der-

a decision on tho Inter-Islan- d

Htcnm Navigation Company's case. Inwhich the Territorial tax law was subjected to the test of validity as againsttho Federal statute that prohibits thoattachment or arrestment of seamen'swages by any court for nny purpose.

Tho decision is ngnlnst tho Terri-torial law where It was employed ucause mo deduction from the wagesof the employes of tho Inter-Islan-dCo., by the company for tho benefit ofthe Territorial treasury, of the 1901personal taxes of such employes.

Judge Dole, In deciding tho case, alsobrings up n provision of tho Territoriallaw which was broken when tho wageswore drawn upon by the cmnlovor topay the taxes of tho employed. This ispart of tho law of 1903 which providesthat one-ha- lf of tho wages due personsworking for wnges shall bo exemptfrom attachment, execution, distress,etc. Tho court finds that this provis-ion must bo tnken literally, there beingno reservation In favor of claims bythe Government. Besides, "thero beingno showing ns to the wages due thoseveral llbellanta, there Is no basis forn decree ngnlnst them."

Judgment Is given for the llbellantsfor $434.30, or $3,50 each, and tho taxassessor as Intervenor la to pay thecosts.

The Inter-Islan- d Company observedthe Territorial law to protect itself,where the law makes cverv nersnn In.debted to one who neglects to pay histuxes responsible ns fnr as tho debtIn this case wnges due goes for thepayment of such taxes. To test thematter against the Federal law Dro--tectlng seamen's wages from attach-ment, Captain A. C. Slmerson nnd 78other employes of the Inter-Islan- d Co.brought the suit against that companynnd Tax Assessor Holt, as an interested party, fought the suit as Inter-venor.

J. J. Dunne nnd A. S. Humphreyswere proctors for the llbellants; Smith& Lewis representing tho llbellce, andM. F. Prosser, Deputy Attorney Gen-eral, tho intervenor.

LICENSE LAW AGAIN

CALLED IN QUESTION

lUtomoy C. C. Hitting took out nwrit of habeas corpus yesterday directed to High Sheriff Drown for tho re-lease of Ah Voug, who tho same dayhad been fined $10 and costs by District Magistrate Lindsay and, refusingto pay the pennlty, was Imprisoned forkeeping a restnurnnt without the li-

cense provided In the Hoard of Healthregulations. The prisoner was takenbefore Judge Gear, who released himon his own recognizance.

The course taken by Mr. Hitting wasfor the purpose of challenging the con-stitutionality of the license restrictionsn (luestion. In the recent case of Frank

Lucwelko, keeping n lodging housewithout n license, Judge Gear declaredthe law under which the prosecutionwas brought to bo unconstitutional.This decision wuh argued before Judge.umusay, nut lie respectrylly dissentedfrom Circuit Judge Gear.

As the Territory Is without anneal Incriminal cases, the law can hardly betested to .finality until some Judge es

against n defendant under Itsprovisions. Then the question enn butaken to the Supremo Court.

SINKING OF RURIKSOOTHES OLD SORE

Tho sinking of the Hussion crulseiIlurlk, which was caused by tho Ka- -mlmura squadron on August 14, Is notonly regarded by the Jupanese aaavenging the recent Vladivostok ralub,but also ns venting of u 10 years' hur-boro- cl

hatred. Wo rend In a leadingToklo Journal that It Is a lasting re-gret for the Japanese that Japanshould have ceded to tho combined interference by tho three Powers tenyears ago. The Joint Interference wasorganized by Itussln, and her chleiBupport was the Paclllo squadron, theliugHhlp of which wan tho Ilurlk. Itwus this Iturlk that, nrrogutiinr theposition of belilg the strongest ship luuio orient ut tho time, miulu a de-monstration against Japan after thewnr with China. It the Husstiuisquadron was tho agent which can-celed tho honor and object fairly wonand cnnxecriitt'd by tho blood of I hopatrlotlu Jupanese, Its ropreHontiitlvomust havu certainly been tho Iturlk.At that limit the Japanese hud alreadymiidu up their mind to havu this turn- -gnat ship nuiik lo the bottom ulieail ofnil other VeH at the Hist opportun-ity. Moreover, ulliru the opening ofI lm piuHuut war the Ilurlk hu ofTeri'dKin4 vloliioii lo iip.iiiowii MtniunerH,ilUlliigulnhlug heiMvlf In Hint way a.lining ihw VUdlvovtok limit, Now thattill chip. Iiowtivur, lm hn'ii mink, llmImnvy tlubt iiuliiiiiiiIiiUiI uifuliiwt herIn I lm Mti Uu '! in iiililutviI'Uiuth t'hliiH JJuinlim l'ol.

J'Iium tor Hits JHwullii 100,1 n Ifama.lUM kuv Immji MUijiikJal In Hi J)e.miimM ut J'iiUBt tt'iija, ji hjavientgauli will l iliji SjjjTw'o.ijjjjj.i i"'Hfll

L

fawaiian Gazette.aM-- d t Ih I'nlnnif t Itonn.utu,

J I. T,, 7JcondctaM MatterSEMI-WCKKL- V.

mded itmsoim n,ii tmiwb,

WflLTER 0. SMITH, btltor.

BUllflCllIPTION lUTnS.Vr Month ..,.,., .irr Month, Foreign l

ler Year .... 6 00

r Tear, foreign 6 0)

Pitiable Invariably. In Advance.

a. w. PEAnSO.V,Manager.

TUHSDAT OCTOHKU 4

"The most plausible suspicion of thepermanence of the American goi'ernmcntis founded in the belief that parly spiritcannot be restrained. The first object ofconcerted political action is the highestwelfare of the country. Hut the eondi- -

the means are constanllv and easily .ihVstittitcd for the end. The sofhtslrv ijsubtle and seductive. Holding the as -

ccndcncy of his party essential to thenational welfare, the zealous partisanmerges patriotism in party. He insiststhat not to sustain the piirty is to betraythe country; and against all honest doubtand reasonable hesitation and reluctancehe vehemently urges that quibbles ofconscience must be sacrificed to the pub-

lic good; that wise and practical menwill not be squeamish; that every soldierin the army cannot indulge his whims;and that if the majority may justly pre-

vail in determining thc government, itmust not be questioned in the control ofa party. This spirit adds moral coercionto sophistry. It denounces as a traitorhim who protests against party tyranny,and it makes unflinching adherence towlutt is called regular party action, thecondition of the gratification of honor- -'

able Political ambition. Because a manwho sympathizes with the party aimsrefuses to vote (or a tlucf, tins spiritscorns him as a rat and a renegade. Be-

cause he holds to principle and lawagainst parly expediency and dictation,lie is proclaimed as the betrayer of mscountry, justice and humanity. Becausehe tranquilly insists upon deciding forhimself xvhen he must dissent Jt am hisparty, he is reviled as a popinjay andvisionary fool. Seeking with honest pur-pose only the welfare of lus country, thehot air around him hums with the ciy of'the grand old party,' 'the tiadttions ofthe party,' 'loyalty to the party,' futureof the parly,' 'servants of the party,' andhe sees and hears the gorged and portlymoney cliangeis in the temple usurpingthe zery divinity of the God. Younghearts, be not dismayed If ever any oneof you shall be the man so denounced, donot forget that your own individual con-

victions are the whips of small cordswhich God has put into your hands toexpel the blaspheme) s. Peifcct partydiscipline is the most dangerous weaponof parly spirit, for it is the abdication ofindh'idual judgment it is the applicationto political parties of the Jesuit pi mapleof implicit obedience. It is for you tohelp break this withering spell. Whenyou ore angrily told thatl if you erectyour individual judgment against theregular party behest, you make repre-

sentative goicinmcnl impossible by re-

fusing to accept its conditions, hold fastby your conscience and let the party goThe remedy for the constant e.vcess ofparty spirit lies, and lies alone, in thecourageous independence of the indi-

vidual citizen" Gcorne William Curtis.1

THE DEMOCRATIC CAMPAIGN.

The Democrnts hnve no call to make

Governor Carter's administration nn

Jssue at this time. Gov. Carter Is not

ji candidate for anything and hismethod of earning on public businessIs not on trial before the people of thisTerritory. He Is answerable to the3'resldent nlone. Even if the Demo-

crats should win on such an Issue whatmihM thev do? Assuredly they couldnor ,', the Governor removed nnd n

inan of their own appointed, they would i

have merely recorded a protest whichwould pass everywhere as the usualuro forma manifestation of Demociatlcdislike to a Itepubllcan administration,

Theie Is but one Issue here and thatIs the election of law -- makers', the Con-

gressional and legislative tickets."What have the Democrats to offer un-

der this head, now that the Itepub-lican- s

are pulling down their undesir-able men? What legislative policies dothey propose nnd oppose' What aboutthe qualifications of their nominees''"Where is the advantage to the Terri-tory of electing a Democratic legisla-

ture? All these are pressing questions.Jit for discussion, but thu Democracyavoids them and directs Its (lie againsttin Executive who Is not elective andwho can't be hurt If ho Is hit.

,

ENLARGE THE CHAIN GANG.

"We quite ngreu with the Star aboutthe need of a rigid enforcement of thev.igrnncy laws n constant loundlng up

nf thobe who have no visible moans ofsupport. Idlcnee In thu slums Is it

breeder of crime us (.cores of criminalliihtanci-- In our recent hUtoiy Hlttmt.Jt Is imeli'hH to offer the lillet work,fur that Is the hint thing they wantIn a 'Ity where ntatrly every limine 1

Iiikci tirely loekiMl ami uhtir the null-- ia i y tiuvllur on lonely miuU Into not

)it im unturned lilnitwlf to Hojng oniwd.

kIIj limeli), the dwvllel'N In tne MUHIM

1) i),i to live milium labor,Tl 1. intdy for till sort of thti.f la

I Im in a ill utul Mm 'halo tnmII ii i a. .ik lw in I. m limy with noI .Ii . l,r .III i .,li I. , UfrlMi IIll.' ' i ii , i .11 ILfurf ladtliiuH mini Iti tit, lii'Ui it III lunIII llliunl Inl, Ji'li Hi' I In If li .!!"Iii .1 iii ft ii ii in. m,im v ' 4 in

. HUi ultil ).m' ill il lb. iiiittlMtl tu MiId!' It Hllo nib I '

Miaiii' iiw tin4 iai)4 ullilMtlliuM l i r ii m I ifUIHtmlmit"jgi ID tiUMiti i . ii. i i JRrW I

jo.. .. . m44( tiwHimtlj i -

HAWAIIAN 0A2KTTE,

CECIL BROWN,

r . r fr it r In! n for 'heIn jhI it nh iiuiiiiiini "ii n ' Hi'tf tiiih. ltainl nf Oami. I HII lhn vnmn- -

rltMr Cwil llitwii w mt of thrt

. -- ndidalM. lie wiit not wmlimtwl,mm immwnmwy mir i"n"ndjuMnwd. unnammil lit inienllen ufiMi.nlBK anyway.

It ftatd tlWl tilt ("lit Una pMlfl

around for tills tWUfHI WBM t!l theu.lmlntmrnllon Itml llilllllltliilwl dele--

gat, mote jwrtleulnrly ofliewholdlng

an. Into votlnie naiUnst hltn, who

olhrwle would have voted for hltn,nnd therefore th administrationshould be rebuked,

Mr Hrown gave no specifications im

In intimidation mid coercion, nnd theAdeitler therefore cHlled fur names,dnten nnd ipeclllc acta Mr J. L.

Immediately responded thntAttorney General Andrews hud toldhim that Mr. llrown whh onioned tothe ndinlnlBtrtlon, but Unit notwith-standing this Information, he, Knulu-kot- i,

worked nnd voted for Hrown,Several dn have elapsed nnd noth-

ing further has beuii heiird from Mr.Ilrown's elde of the auestlon, fromwhich we conclude that notning morewill te i"'l, ns now Id the time whenvoters are mnklnK up tneir minus, anu

III he had nny facts supporting nisPUPIUUII, ,IC WUV IIIIIUIUO, ,- -

thern.Mr. Knulukou's statement tends to

prove If It tends to prove anything,thnt he Is n high-minde- d and Inde-

pendent citizen, vho cannot be led toviolate his conscience, but it does notprove or tend to prove that anybodywas coerced into voting against CecilIlrow n

Mr. Urown's charge stands, therefore,unproved.

Under these circumstances the Ad-

vertiser does not see nny ground forsupporting Mr. Brown.

Ho went before the convention withMessrs Dnwett, Bishop and Lane,knowing that only three of them couldbe nominated.

He made no objection then, and hemnkes none now, that either Bishop,Dowsett or Lane are unfit or Incap-

able of properly filling the office. Hehad the right to expect that If he werqnominated, whoever of the other threecandidates failed of nomination wouldgracefully withdraw nnd support theticket nominated. The othpr candi-

dates had the right to expect, and didexpect the t,ame treatment nt hishands. What hae they done that heshould now attempt to defeat them?

Mr Brown knew as well befoie theconvention ns he did afteiward thathe was not a supporter of the admin-

istration and that the administrationwas not supporting him; but he tookhis chances and lost.

In other words, Mr. Brown was will-

ing to accept all the advantages of theparty oigunlzatlon nnd support If nom-

inated, but is unwilling to accept theobligation of abiding by Its

decision when It decides against him.This Is bad policy, and bad politics.

If Mr. Brown had stopped to think thematter out, we believe that he wouldhave also realized that it Involves badfaith on his part, which Is not a partof his nature

Mr. Brown cannot afford to endangerthe whole Republican senatorial ticket,which he will certainly do If he con-

tinues his independent candidacy, fornoma imn who vote for him , w 111

scratch one of the Republican candi-dates nnd some another, thereby solowering the average of each that theymay all be defeated, nnd that with-out necessarily electing Sir. Brown.

We believe that in the interests otgood government Mr Brown shouldwaive any personal feeling he maylfave in the mntter, and withdrawhis candidacy.

Land Commissioner Pratt does wellto enforce the homestead law, especial-ly on Hawaii, where Its privileges havebeen abutcd without stint. Some yearsago during the Bojd regime, the iniqui-

ties of which the Advertiser constantlyfollowed up, this paper charged, on theauthority of the Hllo Tribune, that notthree per cent of the honiesteails on Hawall were held by bona-lld- e settlers.Now It appeals that of twenty home- -

steadeis on tlie new una suouivisionWHICH was openeu in aejiiuiiiuei, uvv,not one can prove up. Nothing waseasier awhile back than for a Hllo manto take a tract of land, build a shackon it, visit the place on Sundays andcall It compliance with the law whichdemanded "continuous lesldence." Theiehave aKo been such cubes on this Island.Mr. Pratt will now proceed to cancelthe unearned leases and if lie will gofurther nnd put people on the land whowill cultivate It. his will bo the ciedltof helping to cairy out. In the mosteffective wnv, the Presidents piogiamof development loi lhywill on tradi-tional Ameilcau lines.

Piofessor Henslinw, who conducted asuccessful campaign ngalust mosquitoesIn Hllo, is icported by the Hllo Tribuneto have wiltten from Kniltvale, Califor-nia, vvhcie he has been experimentingwith monqulto luivne and tadpole, orundeveloped frogs. The lesult of hisexpeilmeiits hnve shown that thetadpole does not feed upon tho mos-

quito laivne or pupau, and any beliefto this effect Is erruneoux. lie dis-

covered, however, that In the samepools where he had Introduced

gold lUli ten vwar hefoie, when theplacie was Infeeieil by iiiuhiuIIuw, Ihevjalnlty had not hn tioiihltnl alnce.Uold Mali ale eunlly pim-uitiM- and,fioin 1'MifeMur llenellMH'n exiwiliiivlitn.

U)Mienlal l4 Willi ll lUbmwlw theuwuert iiUhIU deem ) uell to lp uulMl bl'wrdUlS HU- - fur nuMNUlluHi

Tit, re a awiuj itrujiila "f wnl4eibU4vlowi!eni uf email feiminc m Maul

IP tvin n ulKtmay robbery, hurijlaiy aiid'Hm)' tuny lw the mean of Having or--

.in

Ih Im a. euaur vbrntuliuli runuiaiilfaTorn mi U4Wri nre imiM 444WlW n4viit. it 4twtN UV thvtMw ut le Maui ii ulltHW) l'MHMiyin m m alMti tilMTK mMI mm mHH JMHJIWtf Willi Uwcl ttybtfAMKtf ilw

TUESDAY OCTOliKU 4.mmmmmmmimmmmiimmmiimimmmmmammmm

AMERICA'S NlUIT TRADE,

Mm rt a ! '.Bii'a'iyllt(ll III fll(l If , llf ,,, ,U

ltnHit t fnilt In tin it"! "(nlJlnl-iM- n of Ihiimim ronse fein MMWto .0uM bunch wi unmmliy n lhtir

t. Islil rtuwn i itit f Hi inwftK"Ink rottnttlw, mniri fmin li,0"V"e lonjm,m a ytar, tiis nuuif ior mii.miI iimi Aitillticr JillM M. ItMt. wereJCT11.J81 bunches and KUl.TOt vnlu.Of leiiKini! the Import for tho ntnwyenr, Welly lining thi almost iMdlunivtroiiren of supply, weto lM.7?I.SiT,loUtidKvalued nt J,o.2ll. Figure" ni "tcomplete for the corrwipohdlnr yirundlng June SO, 1901, hut tho vulue ofImtiorled liMtmnns was 17,700,818, b se

of I5SI.920 from the previousyenr, uhfle lemon show nn In&renne Inthe Importntlon of 171,t3pMI iwunusvalued at JS,i9,5!5.

L'p to the beginning of the presentcentury, a recent olllclnl reiiort anys,the annual exports of fruit fiotn thoUnited States seldom amounted In valueto one-ha- lf eo much ns the Imports, butsince thnt time they have Increasedsteadily, and In the yjsr ended June 30,

1301, exports of these products, for thellrst time In the history of the trade,actually exceeded the Imports, the valueof the former at ports of export hav-ing been 120.3IS.233. while thnt ofthe latter nt foreign ports whence Im-

ported was $18,964,930. The exports of1503-- 4 were, however, exceptional, owing to a shortage In the apple crop ofsome countries of northern Europe, andto a partial failure of the prune cropIn' sections of southern Europe. Theprobability Is that there will not be areptltlon of these heavy exports, especially of apples and prunes, during thepresent year.

After bananas nnd lemons, alreadymentioned as the chief Imports of fruit,the remaining fruits Imported embracea great variety. Probably the mostimportant, ns measured by the cashstandard, a.e the small raisins, or driedgiapes, Imported principally fromGreece under the name of currants, orZante currants; about $1,000,000 worthof this fruit is consumed annually Inthe United States. There is also an Import trade of almost equal value Infresh grapes, of which the Almerlandistrict In Spain 1b the chief source ofsupply. Olives, green or prepared, areImported In quantities amounting toabout 2,000,000 gallons a year, and rep-

resent nn expendltuie abroad of about$750,000 annually. Imports of orangeshave been undergoing n steady declinefor the past few jears under the In-

fluence of a heavy Incieabe In domesticpioductlon; the total imports of thisfruit for the fiscal jenr, 1903-- amounted In value to only about $300,000, andthis was more than counterbalanced bythe exports of domestic oranges, thevalue of which was upwards of $700,000.

The only other fruits lmpoited Inquantities whose value exceeds or ap- -pioaches the $J00,010 mark sre figs,dates, raisins, and pineapples. For figsand dates Turkey-In-Asl- a is the piln-clp- il

source of supply. Tram 10,000,000to 15,000,000 pounds of figs and about20,000,000 pounds ot dates are lmpoitedeach year, the annual value ot the for-mer being from about $300,000 to $700,000,and of the latter from $330,000 to $430,000.

Italslns twenty jears ago weie lmpoited Into the United. States In quantitiesamounting In value to upwards of $3- ,-

000,000 annually. But for several je.uspast the cultivation of this fruit InCalifornia, notably In the vicinity ofFresno, has been conducted with suchsuccess tliat practically the entire de-

mand of the United Stutes Is now sup-plied fiom that source. Imports, It istrue, are still made to the extent offrom $400,000 to $300,000 worth annually;a growing export trade In domesticraisins, however, coupled with the re-

exports, practically balances the accounts. Pineapples are imported fromtiopical America In considerable quantities; the annual Imports amount invnlue from about $500,000 to $000,000.Other fruits In great variety aie imported, but only in comparatively smallquantity.

The export trade In fiults has Increas-ed enormously within recent years.1'iom a value of J4.S5C517 in 1S94-9- 3 thistrade inci eased to $11,4SC,172 in 1S99-190- 0,

declined to $S,415,103 In 1901-- 2, andagain increased to $20,34S,299 In 1903-- 4.

American fruits are now know n In themaikets of many of the principal countries of the wot Id. The varieties mostabundantly found on foreign maiketsaie npples and prunes. In 1903-- 4 theiewas shipped fiom the United States toforeign countries $S,237,S94 worth ot ap-ples (Including both fresh and driedagainst $fi,7GO,4JG worth In the pievlousJ ear; nnd of pi lines during the respective years $3,410,197 and $3,512,507 worth.In point of value apples constituteover one-thir- and npples and pintles,combined, over one-ha- lf of the fiultsent fiom the United States to foielgncoiiNumci. It Is thus seen that thesetwo ptoducts occupy In value a positionIn the expoit fiult trade correspondingclosely to thnt tilled by bananas andlemons among Imported fruits.

Hawaii has a pint to piny In the fiulttrade ot the countiy nt laige ThisTeriltory ought to hold down, In substantial degiee, the uxpcudltuio ofmainland money upon foielgn bananas

the blggost Item as seen above In thenational trim bill. It has even malted111 to do hi. Peihapa If the secondhuge! Item, li'imms. Is luUi'ii up aiiell- -tllluHlly here wo may also cut It down,Wo are already doing well In clunkingthe outlay of half a million dolliua onpineapple f'tiiu ftnelgu lmmiihiUh, olidaliould aim in iiiHkw It wholly tiniiuclb- -aaiy fur Ihe ItecifU I'fHtat to Mini wnyof IImM money out ot Hie country. Ifthe eMMriiuenle In ahlpplinr fu-ul- i itlll- -

Kfalur prau to K'W York pioie eucviaa- -

IHl. IUuil WW b able tu leduie oneMore Hem of fruit luijaiiin n.alnl.ilhIn drlvd Hint preaerved fiult JI.muiiMount nut uuty iw bi in ii i .1

ivwully purtwu uf i ..i . iiifuii mm! In U tuttuttW blj (Kit the rtniIMItlKMll HHHM U4H. u i i

tnna id frtrtt

Wt iMiMttw Mmhm '") i

H tMMMMM li mm Mtw- -i . i

tlltwtgh lite lriiIMi eHlriMHaee irfjlhe niuilileinl, Nl neat'

aiiiimMiietit'

" Inna IMm mmm lu.u., ., ii

UU "-i- I'JUill'iiiJliiUjeg

THE RICE INDUSTRY.

VWill t Iim dwindled to (heiii.hn x I'M llimalimt xmiM

IHpl' wiinin H lew jenr pusi. wiw

rl'P li)ililtr- - nf th Innlnlnni! lino WnmlmwlnK I ln mhi! limimU. Thei 'ftp lt"tMr. tiblihl by miUHiM)of lh trnry of Asrlrultiirp, In ItsPi'litilnlMT lu ll that rt prellminrv (wtwri to th Chief of the llunmuof (MatliMlp nf tho Department of Agri-

culture chow the total reRe of liceIn the United State thin pennon to hoabout 013,100 aero, ilinrlljuted an fol-

low North CVtrolliin, 1.S00; HouthCarolina, IM0O; Georgia, 9.000;

MM00. ant! Texas. 331. S00 acres.The rlee noree of the country linn

twr cent llhln the Inst liveyear and Ih now four time a Inrge asIt was fifteen years ago. In 199 Louisi-ana and Texas contained 89.9 per centof the total rke acreage of the coun-try. Now these Stntes rolitaln l3.1 percent of the greatly Increased total.

nice cultivation In the Gulf States Isnot the same kind of nn Industry aswe see in Hnvvall. To compare themwould be like comparing the operationsof the great wheat farms of the United.States with the corn-growi- Industryof the time of Moses, who made It n.

misdemeanor to muzzle the ox thatthreshed out the crop with his hoofs.In Louisiana and Texas modern machinery nnd methods are used in everystage of the rice Industry from thepreparing of the ground to the market-ing of the cleaned product. The ques-tion has been raised as to whether ornot the available areas good for rice-gro- w

Ing are large enough and the layof the lands is suitable, In these Islands,to make practicable the cultivation ona large scale with machinery and meth-ods of irrigation such as are employedon the vast marsh level of the Gulf.States. However that problem may bedetermined, it Is to be hoped that thelocal Industry will not utterly pass

I" The '"ge ?Te!,c, TOf8p"?.nul riue, u me pnuuiijui iuuu u inuu-san- ds

of plantation laborers, makes thesaving to the Territory from raising itsown supply something worth an effortto procure. Even with the ancientsystem In vogue here, where the plan-ters are Orientals, the absence of allwinter conditions nnd the

productiveness of the soil,together with the transportation Item,ought to count for much in meetingcompetition of mainland rice. As wasshown In the September number of theHawaiian Forester and Agriculturist,on the authority of the United StatesCensus, both the yield and the aver-age value an acre of rice In Hawaiiwere out of sight, higher, four yearsago, than they were In the SouthernStntes. The only cause that we haveheard stated for the depression In theHawaiian rice industry is a scarcityof labor. If there are no other causes,then, under the Exclusion Act and solong ns the Chinese planters are de-

pendent on, or look only to, their owncountrymen for labor In the rice fields,the condition would seem to be Irre-mediable. It would probably be Idle,during a strong sugar market, to pro-

pose the Interposition ot Ameilcan enterprise and cnpltal for creating a newrice Industry, supposing, what has beenshown to be questioned, that labor- -saving devices could here be successfully applied.

1

The Itepubllcan managers have donewell to get Shaw off the ticket In theFifth and should now pull down Mnhe-lon- a,

who Is scarcely les objectionable.Then if they fill the two vacancies withfirst class men, the Advertiser nowknows of no reason why there shouldnot be harmony in the Fifth. All theconservative vote nsks In the Fifth isthat the ticket shall be clean and rea-sonably competent.

1

Cacoa gi owing, the pineapple areaspi ending, plantations giving land forsisal nnd encouraging people to till It,Edwards' vanilla farm at Napoopoopromising well, the Hllo district raisingmore bananas, alllgntor pears seekingthe New Yoik market who says thatHawaii Is not going to have dlveisilledagriculture?

1

The scheme to enlarge Anla Park Is

a good one. Parks look better In squaliddistricts than they do anywheie els,ebecause of the contiasts and they areuseful, besides, to head off flies.

1

The Busians can't locate Kurokl'sarmy. Have they seal died the un-

derbrush between Mukden and the nextstation north?

Too many people haven't registered.There nre only four days left.

LOCAL BREVITIES.

The Elks of this Island are prejinrlngfor nn outing nt Halelwa next Satur-day and Sunday.

The Heniy'Wnterhouse Trust Co. sold$SO,000 worth of Hawaiian live per centbonds at par yesterday.

Jose Itodiigo, who was serving u termof eighteen months for huiglniy, diedof dropsy nt Oahu 1'iisoii Satuidaynight. He was committed from Maul.

Henry Wnteihouso Tiust Co., Ltd.,received a cabluinui fiom I'ullIU ,V:

Co,, San 1'roneUco, enterdny givingquotntloiih on llitwnilun atooks nn theHun riiiiicUeii Stuck & llomt Exchange,us follow Hawaiian c'nmnniciiil &

Htmar i'o J0.", lloiinltau, $)6'i, ll,

,'',

'ara j aaai aaaa aaai l aar i i

KfntfrtnwtwWT'TwirWiK.yj'Mtilfy if f ' Ty mt.

flBllaJIf 1 in

LOCAL IREVITIE5.

trrotn Wnturday Advrtler)Jmlee Miittlmwinnn of Ihe Thlld Jllill-tl-

Circuit la In limn15.1 wnt d lh Miller la not the Itdwatd

Miller tvliu la now blng sliwl for

The lleptllillenna held a meeting lantnight nt Mollllll, a Irt number otpeople Mug present.

Holla were openwl In Ihe ninth pre-cinct of the Fourth District last nightand eeventy-M- x nntnos were signed

Mr. nnd Mr. Chnrloa llorsuill ofMill, Hawaii, gnvo n t HclitCul

dance nt Pepuekco hntt Inst Fridayevening.

The case of Joe Munlz, chnrceil Willinssnult nnd battery on Motormnn e,

wni nolle prosed In Police Courtyesterday.

The road builders are working on theupper branch of tho new $10,000 Pnloloroad. They nro now visible from theWnlnlnc road, working out thnt wny.

Secritnry George F. Dnvles announcesthat A. W. T. Bottomley hns been ap-pointed trensurcr of the Honolulu Homofor Incurnbles, to fill the vacancy causedby the death of S. E. Damon.

Peter Knlunn, alleged to have beenone of the Incendiaries who llred theNnalehu Mill, Kau, some time ngo, wnsbrought to Honolulu yesterday on theMnuna Loa. He has been committedto the Circuit Court for trial.

.Mrs. Everett, wife of Capt. Everett,commanding the United States BhlpBuffalo, which arrived yesterday morn-ing from nn Alaskan cruise, Is Btaylngat the Itoyal Hawaiian Hotel, whereshe was met by Captain Everett yes-

terday morning.Judge Lindsay yesterday fined James

Spencer $30 for larceny. Spencer plead-ed guilty to the charge of victimizingmembers of the Harrison Mutual Bu-

rial Association by collecting moneyfrom them, although he was discharg-ed as collector by Manager Townsendabout five months ngo.

(From Sunday's Advertiser)The Republican candidates returned

yesterday from their three days' tourof Oahu. They held eight meetings.

The approaching sale of the Kamaloplantation is being awaited with morethan usual Interest by people on Molo-ka- l.

A large quantity of honey was ship-ped September 24 from the MolokalIlanch. Just 920 cases composed theshipment.

C. C. Bhodes and Irvin Spalding, whohnve been passing a hunting vacationof two weeks on Molokal, are expectedhome today.

The residence of W. "W. Chamber-lain, of College street, was robbed byunknown thieves Friday. Considerableclothing was stolen.

"Wm. Akana and Manuel Phillip werearrested jesterday and booked for In-

vestigation. They were released ontheir own recognizance.

Curtis P. Inukea, candidate for Dele-gate to Congress, has returned fromthe Democratic campaign he led onHawaii, expressing good hopes otcarrying the Island In the election.

Charles Vandenberg was locked uplast night for assault and battery on aChinaman by the name of Ah You.Officer Esplnder had a long chase afterhim but got him late last night, a.big batch of gamblers was taken In.

A Japanese servant girl In the employ of Fiank L. "Winter, U. S. DeputyMarshal, was badly burned by the ex-

plosion of an oil stove while preparingpoultices for her employer, who Is ill.She was taken to the Japanese hos-

pital.Judge Lindsay suspended sentence

yesterday In the case of Lepoka, a na-tive woman who hnd pleaded guilty ofselling liquor without a license. Itappears the woman had others dependent upon her, so the court did not in-

flict punishment.Delegate Kuhio, with E. F. Bishop,

J. C. Lane and J. M. Dowsett, Sena-torial candidates, nnd D. Kalauokalani,Ji., Charles Clark and Hul returnedyesterday morning fiom a stumpingtour in vvainiua uisirict. rney re-

ported having been received with en-

thusiasm by the people.Aliens desiring to be nnturallzed in

the Federal Court In time to registerfor the coming election will require togo before Judge Dole tomorrow, thatbeing the last day of the present term.The Territorial couitf of record havejurisdiction of naturalization, but theprocess Is cheaper In the FederalCourt.

Charles Dunwell, the hack driver,says thnt he has lived In Jamaica andthat the bats which It Is suggestedshould be Imported from Poito Itlco,would prove a great detilnient to theHawaiian Islands. They nre of thesame variety that Is found In Jamaicaand In that Island, the bats arc verydestructive.

11. Ilackfeld & Co., Ltd., has tiled Usmotion, previously leported as intend-ed, to dissolve tho temporniy Injunc-tion sued out by I, Itublnstdn & Co.,restraining It from dealing in "LittleJoker" tobacco. An nllldavit la

to allow that the llnekfeldIiiik been given the disputed

agency In n regular way.

(From Monday1 Advertlner)jwh oinr oj9 jiutiunm ii

Hop.o oi JOJ l l iwu'WI H 'ri J"japjnm i jo; m x.wpiiwiiv r

IW) lllAIJ 111' 'U '.v all! HI W4lJe piJJIM 'Y '0 'K IW 'K

'iHVlV umj HtMll.i( uiJ 'f V) 'WIV ( '

4 it Km m rreiil Ui iiifM byIIM JlJIUIU H l kUiMUlBli ia.it utititl4 "Hit lUa llfhl- -

t ih. AftU A

i 11.1J4 !'( dunKliier uf1 Ml J' A M.l.aif.l u4MM4Miful wkaiiilnuiiiii. ! entry U

n JuUrf "II. Iuimwh i hum fiuni Mal

ii ijiattl lh e in Im ton.iijit, i !)'"' !'" ' ' ,( iie4rHaltel (tH M " in i xd litium

iyiui MiLtttfaf jkj ttff Jim W Mi MM Ami Mtutiv i i wmM iV I W LaSP nmufw HI tb i if1 t jfiLZRi MMM4IMI

Hood's Sarsaparllla)Im vnm ttrcf far bfjoinl the etletlof mlrpttUliiif itttlf,

'Ilia rerrt of lit wonderful popttlnr-ll- y

It explained by (tl ttnapiroitcliblMtrit.

lifted upon n preeriptloii whichcured people con tiered Incurable.

Hood's SarsaparlllaUnite the bctuknnwii vi'"tnlIa rem-

edied, by inch a coiiililnntmn, propor-tion nnd proccH nt to have curativepower peculiar to Itself.

IU cure of BCioftiln, ec7Pinn, psori-ntl- s,

nnd every kind of littuiiir, nt wellot catarrh anil lhcuinatituii prove

Hood's Sarsaparlllathe best blood purifier over produced.

Its cures of dyspepsia, los of appe-tite and that, tired feeling make it thot'tenlest stomach tonic and ftrcngtli-rcctor- er

the world has ever known.

Hood's SarsaparlllaIs a thoroiurlilv pood medicine. Beginto take it TODAY. Get HOOD'S.

BUSINESS CAKDS.H. HACKFELD & CO. LTD. General

Commission Agents, Queen St., Hone-lul- u,

H. I.

F. A. SCHAEFEIt CO. Importeraand Commission Merchants, Honolttlu, Hawaiian Islands.

LEWERS & COOICE. (Robert Lewera,P. J. Lowrey, C. M. Cooke.) Importera and dealers In lumber and building materials. Office, 414 Fort St.

HONOLULU IRON "WORKS CO. Ma.ehlnery of every deecrltion made U

order.

HONOLULU STOCK EXCHANSE.

Honolulu, Oct. 3, 1904.

NAME OF STOCK Capital. Val. BU. Alk

Mkecintih.C. Brewer A Co. - l,OOO,0CO 100 305 SW'

BCQAB.wa 5,000,000 20 23K 24)

Haw.Agrlcnltnral.... 1,200,000 100 ... ,.Ilaw.Com.&SugarCo. 2,812,750 100 62 63WHawaiian Sugar Co .. 2.000,000 20 27 28Honomu 750,000 100 ;...Honokaa 2,000,000 20 11 IS.Haiku 600,000 100 125 ..Kahuku MO.OOO 20 17W 20Klbel Flan. Co., Ltd... 2.MO0OO 60 ...." 12JiKlpabulu ' 160,000 100 40Koloa 600,000 100McBryde8ugCo.,Ltd. 8,500,000 JO 3 HiOahu Sugar Co 3.CO0.000 100 .. 98- -

Oiiomea 1,000000 W 27Ookala 600,000 20 . 7Olaa Sugar Co., Ltd... 5,000000 20 ... iiiOlowalu 150,000 100 60Paauhau BugPlanCo. 5,000.000 M . 16'iPaclflc 500,000 100 ....Pala 750,000 100 145Pepeekeo 750 000 100 .. .. ISOPioneer 2,750,000 100 115 120WalaluaAgrl. Co .... 4,500 000 100 50 53Walluku 700 000 100 800Walmanalo 262,000 100 . . 150

STZlHtHIF Cos.

Wilder S 8. Co. . . 500,000 100 10"Inter-Islan- d B. S. Co.. 600,000 100 . . 10$

MlSCKLLAKBOBI.

Haw. Electric Cc ... 500,000 10U 100H. R. l.AL. Co., rifl . 100H. H. T. 4 L. Co., O 1,000.000 100 . 70Mutual lei. Co 150.U00 io i 10O.K. AL.Co 4,000,000 100 . 71HlloB.K.Co l.tOO.OCO So

BOHDI.

Haw. Gov't., 5 p. o ICOUaw.ler.,1 p.c.(Flre

Claims) 90 ....Hllo R. R. Co., 8 p. c , 190Hon. R. T. i, L. Co.,

6P.C 105-

Ewa Plant., 6 p. cO. R. A L. Co., 8 p. c .-.- 1C4Oahu Sugar Co., 6 p. c.. ..Olaa Sugar Co , 8 p. c 100VValaluaAg, Co.,6 p.C UOKabukuBp.c ICOPioneer Mill Co. C p.C 100PalaSp.c 100Ilalkuep e 100Hawaiian Sugar 6 p.C loUHann. Coml.a Sugar

Co. 5 p.C. ...

TIDES, SUN AND MOON.

S S S 82 S S 2 5 2 isS E 5p Fa "S a vSS1? - E o o E s o 9a g a j a x a. --i ju w m j-- go

' a.m. tt p.m. p m, a.xn.t RTFM 3 10.50 l.Sll.tX 5.57 S.47 5.525.4S 0.11- -

T 411.(0 1.6 6 44 5.105.525.45 1.1Lp.m. a.m

W 5 12.46 1.5 0.43 7.2i i.iO 5.82 5.44 2.11T fi 1.35 1.5 1.12 7.5. 7.22 5.13 1.43 3.15K 7 2.2V 1.4 2 14 8.37 8 17 5.i35.42 4 17

am. pin. i

S B 2.51 15 3. 10 9 14 B.C4 5.54 5.41 5 21

B 9 3 34 1 6 3 t0 9 49 9.5 5.54 5.40 Sets.kt 10 4.15 1.7 4 3J 10 2110.41 6.5l 1.40 7 .18

New moon Oct. 8th at G.54 p. m.Times of the tide are taken from

Stntes Coast and Geodetic Sur-vey tables.

The tides nt Kauulut nnd Hllo occurabout one hour earlier than at Hono-

lulu.Hawaiian standard time Is 10 hours

30 minutes slower than Greenwichtime, being that of the meridian of 157degrees thlity minutes. The time whis-

tle blows at 1:20 p. in., which Is thesame ns Greenwich, 0 hours 0 minutes.Sun and moon are for local time forthe whole group.

SIKTCOHOLOOICAL npCOUD.

Isaued by the U. 8. Weather HureauOitlce Kvery Sunday Morning.

tl -T- -s,s$ 'rf.kin I

I ,S U iMr5ji I

i ni ,! i! n t n i

nJJi 3 It .vlii ".w

laadlftua ra (OfiwiiHJ tm IwnjitiramfB, la4niii'H la!

Wm, MM) JBaMll limVUy WiJ ivduadI Mi hwri, Avrng nkmAbm iik4Iii xmls! turn I OhmUrn ul w4it nmwn Almum 4mm ' '""MWil U f J ill VtlWUt ""! I

mmm..

III QUEST

OFJ JURY

First Day's WorkIn Miranda's

Trial.

A beginning was made before JudBeGear estcrdny In the empaneling ofa Jury lo try Joe Miranda, Indictedfor murder In the first decree for thekilling of Samuel Kdvvard Damon aweek ago tonight. Attorney GenernlLorrln Andrews and Deputy AttorneyGeneral M, P. I'rosser appeared for theTerritory, Geo. A. Davis nnd FrankH. Thompson, assigned by the court,for the defendant.

Miranda was closely guarded Incourt, haIng been unmanacled out-

side. He looked more serious than onthe previous days he was brought In,nnd a somewhat wan appearance re-

placed to a certain degree his formerbold demeanor.

Judge Gear's regular panel for theterm has but three or four men tospare when those specially excusednnd those disqualified are counted out.Hence opinions requiring eIdence toremove nnd scruples against capitalpunishment soon exhausted the panel.Three talesmen were called withoutobjection from the defense, but soonthe rigid questioning of Jurors left onlyeleven men on the Jury dais again. Aspecial venire of 49 names was thenordered to Issue, returnable at 10

o'clock this morning.The courtroom was packed with

spectators, including some Porto Rt-ca-

during the proceedings. It wasa close and sultry day and the at-

mosphere of the chamber may betterbe Imagined than described.

HAYASIIIDA SENTENCED.

Hnyashlda, tried for the murder ofShis Japanese countrjman Sato at AVal- -nlua and found guilty Friday night ofmanslaughter, was sentenced jester-da- y

by Judge Gear to the limit of thelaw Imprisonment at haid labor fortwonty years. Addressing the prisonerInf passing sentence, the court told himHe had to thank hlb counsel, J. V.

cbathcart, for having him by the abilityot his defense from coin let Ion of the

(crime that would have called for the'death i sentence. The court could seeno litigating circumstances, nothingin his case that could reduce the cow-

ardly cruelty of his cilme. In thecourt's opinion a verdict of murderIn the first degree could fairly haebeen returned.

"The court considers that you areguilty of a most cruel, brutal andcowardly crime," Judge Gear said."After you had beaten a man with astick until he lay senseless on theground jou deliberately hunted for an-

other stick, having broken the firston your victim's head, and went backto w here he lay prostrate and beat himto death."

THE PARKER CASE.S. M. Ballou, of counsel opposed to

J. S. Low's suits to oust A. W. Carterfrom the guardianship of Annie T. IC.

Parker, a minor, yesterday succeededIn haIng advanced on the SupremeCourt calendar the petition for a writof prohibition to restrain Circuit JudgeGear from taking Jurisdiction In any ofthe proceedings now pending.

In his argument Mr, Ballou objectedto the heading In all of the papers Inthe case, excepting the latest decisionof Judge Gear. The heudlng, "In theCircuit Court of the First JudicialCircuit," he held wus wrong. JudgeGear gave the right caption, "Beforen Judge of the Circuit Court of theFlist Judicial Circuit at Chumbers."

If the case should go up to theCourt of the United Stntes up-

on the etroneously headed papers, thattilbunal would be apt to decline Juris-diction for the reason that no Federalquestion appeared on the face of therecords. The point raised by the writof prohibition Ih a Fedeinl idsue In thatIt questions the authority, under theOrganic Act, of a Circuit Judge to takeJiuisdictlim of equity nnd probate mat-ters at chambers', that ennctment ofCongies omitting to give "CircuitJudges nt Chambers" nny share of"the Judicial power" of tho Territory,such iih the Hawaiian stntuttH gnvotlicin under the inonaichy utiii tho re-

publicMr linllou pleaded the importance

nf Hit Ixsiiu In nuking Ilia court to ra

the ratio, n)n to fjlvu lilm twoweeki in in)iiit brief,

J A Mutfuuii nbjuolml to iklity findillllyd blag llu wn remly. 'J'lio wmnwii ie iiPrilliiK Hit npciiilloii. Jt wntint mi i a forinliluhlo Mini lor to nwwlu lor a I mi for piviMirsllun, Mr, llnNInn ou'ii Id Uv uIiIm In prmwru lilt

m y JiMtfy, in- i'Vii TlnirMiuyI'lXl

fin f Jijti Vrmr hhiiuiiiuM limlIh ubuiii Ij ttdvaiiu! mitl i furIi'iih i, h Ckiiii Mmuky iwxi.

'Jill, JIAdlfV GAH15

'l ' nun i iJiMiiw JUrrittuu v.Mm i ,t h) iim JUjfy mh .

wh ii . i .., urn- - trmwui Md UblUJm ii, . !un ut in Buitum OmU

MK nmm WUmATMMi inlgH' l tmg iJ rwtH?

JIM I' I .111411 i t ll...ll'l.llimI i I I .UK fg - I 11. ul. i.fI ii wi iwjM t ii ii

h ulminl t florin unit hfrlf illIhlB t f YMII fH m hl'f Jtt"

!i- - r mi otmulUti-- n with JtiMIcjlliH II ! Ilnl Ii Hif.itint-- thf ton'' tnmniit Hint tlf r lltmi lt timedliiiH ....nt niHlinit it wiilioiil juru- -

ill. lionI h rniptlniil tllKiul) llif finding

of llu-- mMl lisiwti inmin t arguewhen lh Chief Juillw Informal herthai Hie court had glvfii hur a fullheorliiK ami ulio ttiulil nut be lnwrilfurther.

Jutlr llnriuell, nn llm complainantwent on talking, nald "Mir. flirtThe court linn extended a privilege Idion which II would not allow to nnylawyer ir nny official, from the Gov-ernor down. Voin petition has beencarefully roiut by the court and considered, but we en n llnd nothing lu theliooks Item a writ of niamlntmn hasbeen granted in n case such as yours."

Chief Justice Frear cheeked nn nt- -

tempt of Mr. Oeitz to icply to thocourt b ngnln Informing her that herpetition had been limit il and denied,thoiefore she ought now to sit down,

Jin, Geitz tumid from the bench,reprelng further speech with a visi-

ble eltoit, and gathering her papersand purse from a tnble left the court-room. Before going out, she turnednear the door ns the voices of attorneyswere heard In the next case and seemedabout to give n parting mldrcw to thecourt, but seeing the court's attentionabsorbed with other than her affairs shegave one despairing look toward thebench and disappeared.

KONA CASE REOPENED.The suit for possession of the Kona

Sugar Co.'s mill property Is again open.Judge Edlngg gave Judgment for theKaplolnnI Estate, Ltd., against C. J.Hutchln, trustee, which the SupremeCouit set aside, remanding the case tothe Third Circuit Court. Judge Mat-thew man, Edlngs' successor, has grant-ed' n new trial of the case.

WILLS PROBATED.Judge De Bolt admitted the will of

Maria Faustina Fernandez to probateand nppointed Manuel Fernandez ad-

ministrator under a bond of $6200.Smith & Lewis for petltloer.

Judge De Bolt admitted the will ofHoopli Sllva to probate and appointedW. O. Emlth as executor under a bondof $3300 Smith & Lew Is and L. J. War-ren nppeared for petitioner.

JOHNSTON'S COMPENSATION.In the case of Harry J. Johnston s.

Lee Toma & Co., Ltd., the Jury beforeJudge Robinson found for the plaintiffIn the sum of thirty-fiv- e hundred andseventy-l- e dollars ($3"5). The claimwas for $3337.02, being one-thir- d of du-

ties saved on Manila cigars for defendant by plaintiff as a custom housebroker.

COURT NOTES.John Naauno Makalwa, a minor, has

filed a petition In the Comt of LindRegistration for n title to a lot nt Kaakopua, Honolulu, containing 6140square feet. The petition has been lefeired to J. M. Monsirrat, examinerof titles.

The rirst National Bank of HawaiiIs suing H. A. Heen and the OrientalInsuiance Co on a promissory note byHeen to defendant compay for $1000with Interest ut 9 per cent, from ei

1, 1002, which note was assign-ed to the plnlntlff.

HolTschlaeger & Co., Ltd., vs. S. Koto,defendant, nnd Hnna Plantation Co. Isdiscontinued. It was a suit on a Judg-ment by District Magistrate J. K. Ha-nu-

of Hina, Maul, In faor of plain-tiff for $1S9.

Judge Robinson 'vacated the Judgmentand gi anted the motion of plaintiff fora new trial in the case of H. G,. h,

trustee, vs. J. Kalnnlanaole.Chan AVoot s Wong Kwai et al.

has been discontinued. It was defend-ant's appeal from Judgment for plaintiffIn the sum of $34.73 in the DistrictCourt.

TWO MEN FAIL

OF CITIZENSHIP

Judge S. B. Dole was obliged to denytwo for

of o uay

specific. Llkellke.In

of Portugal and theNineteen their fellow -- country

men weie naturalized.In the Judge Dole

four aliens nnd In the afternoontwenty, holding the second besslon

special lequest Attorney Gen-

eral list follows:Great Biitnln James Cunning, Scot-

land; Clias. A. Cevv, Canada.Germany Eugene Tie', DIen Pohde,

HenryPoitugai Antono Martins, J. Ben-t- o,

John Audrndc Joe Sllva, Johnhoiua, J, lleiunvltz, AntoneMndelios, Jos, Texlelra, Mar-qut- s,

Rawlins, Fiank Simon,Heiaplh liiagii, John Rodilgues, Jr.,I'tauk Oilmen, .Mnnuel A, Goes, JoseCordelio, Some, Joe Garcia,Louis A, Perry,

,.Mrs, Sybil AugiiHtn Carter, widow o.

II. A. I', Carter, fniiiioilymlulmer In and mother of

I

Mr, fli'iiriw Curler, thu preKom govern-or of tli itdiinilv, died nt )iur home

), lifter a long IIIut-i- L'niltir hail ninny friend hIn who will b wry

of lior ilwilli, hliu hn mi In.willil for wivoiwl vMim, In fuelnlii'H lif mturtiM) u Him ImImiiiId HfttrIII.. .l ut llff IllUbttlliJ.Mlr.

.in -- .i .., - ,..

iillnifiil I tiMwiiy iumhI byof k hmum,mi an4 muv

i nri ii Mhm iM"b. rti'lm mr in..... .i.,rubUw Mm "

wttJi U ol mt ifoiij MM. u ii iiiie ..r HutiiwliKlim futH4 unit i'.ii. iiin.M mui 'tli'l to iiici ui i

!. J'tn ... t, iti Mi,4 iimiiirlt nn, ill. t, ' ill..ii i . i ut . ii

HAWAIIAN bHXRTTfi, TUESDAY

applications citizenship jester-PuulI- n

WimhliiKtiii),

Hputeiiiljur

Wellington

Wh)iIhbi

ilmwuiiiMMii

viMMuHrMliluii,

A of

a

MAUI, 1. Governor Carter'sI'uuneno was the greatest

event of his Maul tour, greatest Into numbers and most elaborate

us toLnst Saturday afternoon, Sept. 2Uh,

the whole country round about wasfull of life and movement. Flagswaved from the various mnsta; Japa-nese crowded Into hacks scunledhither and thither: loung Hnvvallanslilled Knhulul depot and plned gultaisnnd stepped the hula-k- ul while wait-ing for the cars; trains full of peoplewent clanging nlong from Wnlluku,Klhel and Palueverj thing for thetime seeming to be centered on thegreat mill at Puunene from whoselofty cupola floated the stars andstripes conspicuous miles around.

At 3 o'clock p. m., at Puunene morethan a thousand people of differentraces sat down to a spreadof dainty viands cooked a la Hawai-ian,

At 4:15 p. m, at the finish of theluau, the Governor made nn addressof nn hour's duration which was ablyInterpreted into Hawaiian by Hon. S.E. Kelllnol.

The subject matter of the speech wasmuch the same as delivered recentlyon similar occasions, out, as nereto- -

fore It made the best ofupon the lnrge audience present.

At 5:30 p m, the trains conveyedmany the guests of H. C. & S.Co., to their homes some whomreturned later to the dancing partygiven In the mill by the 7th PrecinctRepublican Club.

In the evening the Interior of thehuge sugar factory was resplendent InIts adornment of flags, bunting andgreens nnd brilliantly lighted withmany lamps, the attractive decorative feature the occasionbeing the legend "Governor Carter"traced on the wall lights.

8 p. m , during the progress thegrand march, Gov. and Mis Caiterheld a reception, Hon. H. P. Baldwinacting as master of ceremonies.

On the vacuum-pa- n room transform-ed for the moment Into a delight-ful bovver, Caterer Mnyfleld served thechoicest of midnight lunches to all theladles and gentlemen who climbed thelofty stair-cas- e.

The large and select number ofguests present enjoyed dancing themusic of the Walhee stringed bandand times to pieces plajed by ftpianola.

The party broke up at 1 a. m., thetrains at that hour .away tothe various centres.

Sunday, the 20th, was spent by Gov.nnd Mrs. Carter at the Puunene homeof Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Baldwin.

Monday at 10:30 a. m, theGovernor addressed the pupils of thetwo large Walluku schools, the gov-ernment and the Catholic mission,which were assembled In front of Hon.J. W. Knlua's residence In Wnlluku.

In the afternoon, Walluku citizensentertnined the Gov. and Mis Carterat a grand given on the lawnthe rear of ICalua's residence.

In addition to the usual Hawaiiandishes ears of corn was oneof the attractions of the toothsomefeast.

More than 500 people enjoyed thebanquet and listened to the most In-

teresting address by the Governor.xne evening wns spent in uancing

l"e l!mn or tne ivniua nome.

circuit of the Island the only breakbeing that barren stretch of countrybetween nnd Ulupalakua,which ore tltunted the little Milage ofNuu, nnd the cattle ranches Walopalnnd Knhlklnui.

BREAKING NEW LAND.Laborers nnd steam plows of Pala

plantation have been busy all Hummerbieaklng up and planting 750 addition-al acies of Kallua land on the Klhel-slil- e

of the govern-ment rond.

All this land Is virgin toil being apoitlon of the 2,100 ncres purchasedfrom Hnleakula Ranch about fourjenr ngo and adjoining Kallallnul nndthe rest of the 5000 ncros recently ed

from Kiln I

Tho Maul Agilcultural To,, (Pala nndHamuli wipoko) lino now an ucreagnnearly equal to that of the H. f & 8,Co, However thira l no comparisonnt proent betwion the two sugar en- -Into In regard to cultivated aw

bo M)n by comparing tho cropsfur 1MI.-- H. C k B Cii.'h lifting 32,000;T nnd M. A C'o'K unmiillilng lorn than11,090 Kiim, (I'hIh 8,000

lutiv, Mild t),(mi ton.)MAUJ'M

A fatVMH Mtiul imJiIdiii would!lll womlr at th change itutt lu

ika "u "liw iilKhif ' within ihfll ( Wliui foniiaW)'u vmdi i iU illri iNtrrvii ui vflullon in no u4r lniitB lti"4lwilki aiuhva r4 vuvtrud Ui iaill) wui, ((,1,1,

-- i uii n it mi)U pmi en ii.iiiihm ttm mmii &MKir(-fciiiil u MW jib

n4 UV ihn lwu ll4kta t !(ii u.i. r

day afternoon They were subjects i ciock me next uov. anuPortugal nnd the cause of their ieJec-lJIr- s- Carter drove to Lahalna where. In

tlle evening, they departed for Hono-an- dtion was ignorance, in one ense geneialin the other The applicant ,ulu per steamei

of the latter class was unable to tell hls t01,r. tle Chief Magistrate ofthe difference between the envernmnnt "'e Territory made an almost entire

that of UnitedStates. of

moining natuiallz-e- d

atthe of

Andrews. Tho

De

Kaus.V.

Manuel II.Antone

Mnnuel

Manuel

Ilnvvnllnn

InHonolulu

Mm,lo

lienr limlovor

'I'M

Mjl iwumi

mMnil

lil .1.

Oct.nt

for

of theof

electric mostof

In electricAt of

most

to

nt

steaming

morning,

luau In

rosated

Kaupo in

iirennpun

I'lmym

or

of

l. ill, ilii ut li'UHi. I'Wi.t'l,. I U. 4i A Jill. UjJJiinil f'uI... I, ,. . 4J.'MI fWWIW fl'.Hiii ., ,,,..i, i jm

4, ty4Simr.WKttKtV',

ivEloB MelId a

GREAT

Round Social Attentions While There.

Breaking New Land General Development.

The Campaign Lively One.

arrangements.

magnificent

Impressions

Knhulul-Mnkawa- o

approximatelyllaiiinliiiHiiiilcii

UBVHCPl'MWNT.

mr&fimtonM

iitkttflijMwiHd mHUMim

vliiltlui

Jjj5rj.'i

OCTOER

TIME ON m

led on so that within n few jeara thoformer de-e- u plains will bo viultelyobliterated, trnnsfoimed Into the bestlilantntlou lands on the Inland.

THE CAMPAIGN.The Maul Republican cumpalgneia

Including nil the candidates under themanagement of Geo. O. Cooper will le-tu- m

to Wnlluku today, from their EastMaul tout. Their Itlneiniy Includedmeetings at Pen hi, Huelo, Keanae, Na-hlk- u,

Hnna, Puulkl, Klpnhulu, Kaupo,Makena and Keokea (Kula).

At all these places they had well at-

tended rallies ever body, whatevertheir political opinions, coming and lis- -tenlng ns though eager to gain Infor-mation. The former lukewarm feelingseems to have entlrelj disappearedand the prejudice ngaln-- Republicanssimply because they are Republicanseems also to have vanished.

Nnlilku Is so strongly Republican toa man that notices have been postedon the highway warning Home Ruleand Democratic orators to keep away,to pass 'by-

- over the mauka Instead ofthe maknl 10.14 which leads throughtheir village.

While at Makena on Thursday, J. L.Coke nnd all the Home Rule candi-dates, excepting John Richnul"on wereholding a meeting at Ulupalakua, threemiles away. However, the Republi-cans had the better of It for It wascattle-shippin- g day and many of themale Inhabitants were nt Makena.

On Monday, the 3d, the Republicanswill hold a grand rally nnd banner- -lalslng event In Wnlluku. Republicanorators will hold forth and a huge banner will be rnled at Kepolkal's coineibetween his block and Rodrlques'store.

The banner which Is a handsomepiece of woik by Harris the well- -known local painter. Is made of can-vas, twenty-fiv- e feet long by sk feetIn width, with a sti iking portrait ofPilnce Kuhlo on both sides and aWothe names of the Maul Republicancandidates Inscribed theieon

NOTESThe steamer Kauai was at Huelo last

Satuiday loading sugar-mi- ll machtneiyfor Kukulhaele, Hawaii. This steamerhas visited Huelo quite fiequontly oflate on the same errand. All the build-ings at Huelo, belonging to the MaulSugar Co, have been dismantled ex-

cepting Mnnngcr Myers' residencewhich has been purchased by a, Hawai-ian lesldent.

Saturday afternoon, Sept. 24th, nmountnlnvpnrty consisting of Mr. andMrs, D. B. Murdoch, Mr. and Mrs. W.A. Baldwin, Mr. and Mrs J. Myers,and John Guild, nscended Haleakala'sslope as far as Ollndn, spent the nightthere and on Sunday went on up tothe summit nnd down Into the crater.They returned on Monday.

Thuisday moining, September 29th,n pasture Are In upper Mnkawao caus-ed quite a flurry for nn hour or twoIsnnc Shaw, tho care-tak- er of Mrs.Almlra Johnson's premises, nttempteuto bum off some pasture land, but thefire qulcklj got bejond his control,owing to the dry vegetation and thewind swept the flames In the direc-tion of "Mnluhla" the residences ofMessrs.. II. P. and F. F. Baldwin.Manager II. A. Baldwin was uotliledby telephone but before he nrilved onthe spot accompanied by a number ofPortuguese laboieis fiom Kaluanul,the flic had been extinguished thioughthe effoits of T. Aw ana, Edgai Moi-to- n,

Judge Copp and u number ofChinese.

Cashier C. D Lufkln of the Wnllukubank departs today for New York, F.C. Atherton will manage the bank Inhli absence.

F. W. Schultz of Makavvao departstoday

Trlday, Sept. 30th, cnngiatulatlonsweie offeied Mr. and Mrs. V. S. Nlcollof Hamakuapoko upon the bltth of ababy boy.

The beautiful new Wnlluku school-hous- e

Is now wcll-ulg- h complete excepting painting

Englnier S, E, Taj lor of Homakua- -poko accompanied by his son, Joe, wentto San Fianclsco by the last Nevndan,

John Guild of Alexander A: Baldwinlinn been the guest of J, P Cooke ofKula, during the week,

The .Mnkawno Ladles' Aid Societywill give a bazaar In November nt thePuunene ieldi'nco of Mrs ll. P, Bald-win, Its president. Weather very dry.

REPUBLICANS RALLY

the mm VOTERS

(Continued from l'ue I.)

IIIUMlIK l lllllkw ll.'lMIIHM Ilk llUlMMu man t mv lilm liU Miiiiiiiiiii wlimiIim iu nilU-- . Tim l In jiiuwi. C'mi

lr Ml) UlTiird lu Jue IMllMil lit IIIIUki, ilu ui nmk-- or mur lit wl;nlnlii.'iioii."

li' 'I'imwi njMiku fur Vrinm UiitiluluJ ti rMMl ter Ii nhvuid b !

IttmH im i'ttffM, '' Md vMrMMin w.. u4i Im u taMilii lfa ww1i ll

ut iM, hm4 ItttMlJ mtM Mifhr,"A ill Witt UMMiM'lurM

MMMliur W 1' ibl MM llml 111

UMMra urt 1 0111.4 In be num.It U Jf Hl lulu imi lli willKin n Uit arfj nun ., lit ( Wi 'In,II, . lnmjl.ll.0 ,u llUUl.1 lllvl

oilUI link Ih H. h InSfl y 111MM.In ii t Ii II i ik'r snhl WilUliI b.1 .! in ih Ijmiia talp Im

. iii. i.ii miluft Ilim Ihiim. t . t r i . a, . pi u. md fuutl

nn tl K Mii.lInK nil inig III) VOIrlKXII ih lr inn ml imih lit l Mil) llllt l

.1 il I 11 h) the way-i- h1 iimrn ' itr l ii)lttg lo in

r tie HVw. nf IIik "r l

Wliil Ih Horn 1 lift ur )'lll dmni.Dl now nnmniit la nnythliig, to lhe

il not - muni Itreil.What linn lli :tiliMnltrntlmi lien

doing " llulldlriR Itwil liiiiip from mroud of the Win mix In 111 other. WI1.1t

In thm for To iMpU! nil our ynuiiuihhii.Ih. ihn that iixiir. Mftei 11 Timltepuhlliun puiMNl iiroiiiatliiim fortlir rvpnir of iwiIk. ami who Is limpingth linMtH( All or you.

There w $S(l,00 npproprlateil furthe tltxiwulnir of tli ImilMir for tho nd- -

mltHlon of the In run-- 1 tnels that 11 lelilnuuud to call hie. Who will deriveth benollt of this work In time" YouHawaiian. 1 nn th Democrats orHome Rulors say that thore Is nn thingwrong with Unit? ll Is for ou, for uurmaintenance.

"5-- o I sn to you support the administration by voting tile Republican ticket.Carter Is the man to uphold the lawsand enfotce them. Every poor man heiecan go to the Governor and see him personally and lecelve the same treatmentfrom him that he would give to a richman."

Carlos Long made a short speech Infavor of himself nnd the full Represen-tative ticket, nnd then the greatestspeaker of the evening was Introduced.

THE HAWAIIAN GLADSTONE.Chairman Qulnn introduced John

Gandall of Kauai as the Gladstone ofHawaii, and some one added, 'The

oiatorlcal Shakespeare."At the mention of Gandall's name the

Hnvvallans crowded around the speak-ers stand. In beautiful language, withhis expressions teeming of the old Ha-waii, and with eloquent gestures, Gan-

dall had the auditors listening withopen mouths to Ills first words. Fromhumor to pnthos, and fronv seriousnessto facetlousness, the speaker can ledhis audience, until they broke Intothundeious applause. Those who leadl-l- y

undeistand the oidlnary Hawaiianlanguage have to give steady attentionlo the speeches of John Gandall, foi hisstjle nnd expieislons hark back to thedas of the olden kings and chiefs.

The orator began by lelntlng a legendand so Ingeniously worked this Into a.compailson to suit political exigenciesthat the audience foi an Instant failedto giasp bis intention, and then theyapplauded long and heaitlly. In a mag-nificent compailson of the Republican,Demociatlc and Home Rule patties thespeaker used the following Uhisttatlon:In the das of Kamehanieha his wni-tlo- is

used sling shots. An enemy cameup within distance of Kamehanieha losling n stone nt htm, but a chief Intel -

ened. At nnolher time another enemydid tho same thing nnd a chief Inter-vened again. The thltd time when 11

chief spoke to Knmehnmehn of the cir-

cumstance he s ild to the king" "Whydo j 011 stand out and light now? ThisIs a conqueted enemy nnd they nte notwotth lighting." This, he said, wasthe same thing at the present time, fin- -

the Home Rulets were now a vnnquitined patty.

KUHIO AGftlH ROUTS

KUMALAE AND NOTLEY

Delegate Kuhlo had an tmpiomptubattle of woids with Home Rule can-didate Notley and his henchman atWnlalun on Satuiday night the con-lll- ct

lasting until enily Sunday moining. According to the best reports ofthe encounter Pilnce Kuhlo routedKumalae nnd Notley, as he had doneIn his Initial speech at Hllo, at whichtime Kumalae was so thoioughly van-quished that he had to letiie ft 0111 thoci ow d.

Kuhlo remained at Halelwn overSatuiday instead of coming to Hono-lulu to speak at tne Aala Paik meet-ing. He heaid that NotIe, Kumalae,Hie Kahaulellos and others weie toHpeak on Saturday at Wulalua andendeavor to Undo what he had doneby addiesblng the people tlieiu thonight before.

Tlie Homo Rulets saw Kuhlo fn thectowd and kept their meeting goinguntil 1 n m. Sunday. When they tlnal-l- y

finished, Kuhlu came foi ward andoccupied the lostium for two bouts.Notley and the others ichnslied thesame old btory ubout Kuhlo having Introduced a bill In Congress to makeEnglish the olliclal language In thoTerritory ns against the Hawaiian lan-guage. This Is one of the pilnclp.il ar-guments used against Kuhlo by theHomo Rulets.

When Kuhlo took the stand he sail-ed Into thu Home Rulers and put up anexcellent argument In defense of binbill nnd made his meaning so clearthnt Kumnlau Intel posed some denials.Ho intimated In one cnnu that Kuhlowns u. llu

Kuhlo Instantly demunded that heictinct his words and address hint as11 gentleman, Kuinalno ciuno backquickly with tho icjoluder that hodidn't mean It,

When Notley took u hand In thoKiihln qtniHtloiieil iJ tn n h to liU

life. Ho iiNkeil that If fur taking partIn lie DM'i tliinn nf thu Kiilnkiiim

In 7 whether Im liml notJoined llm fniti.M opposing tin. kingNnlley niiHMHieil In tlie iilriwtllV0.Klllllii nulled If llu 11. 1 mil heen

h) hull If glW'ii III e.nt nf fill-lvii- ur

ot Ciniiinm nt Hllo, umi joelv Hmi iilllrniHllVH mni wt.r Kuhlu nakedIf Im liml not !fl lliHt mIIoii buiiiulw lu.il Imwm fiilllel Nliml lu Id ui-iii-

nnd it u iuli hi fllii li.ul4lnbtiiii lilm Nuii nn.je im i.ply lu llm llui limuiiiu.

Juiuimu biuy runlm.tunmtiu rMhw4 t llu- -

jumnmm immim yinm in iliHWi Um f MW WM UHMMMMf UIdiHUHattM uUti JABftAli Imir 'mmm wm m mmi mii.iii. 11 1 m

11.' -- ii n.tfi $ 1 , jiw amr,

immmmmhwsmmjmC

INSPECTORS V(

OF ELECTION

Governor Carter Finds

Present SystemDefective.

"Wo have considerable dllllclllty orthe question ot nppolutmuntH ot In-

spectors of election," Gov ot nor Cartersaid esterdiiy. "letters vvoro sentout to InspecUiiB asking thom If theywere willing to servo again In tho pre-

cincts for which they wero appointed.Some hnvo ansvveted exptesslng theirwillingness to serve without saying Ifthey 1110 living In, the siune precinct orIt they have changed thclt politicalcomplexion.

"Wo believe thnt If n man holds: afour j curs' commission ns Inspector ofelection he holds olllco until his suc-

cessor Is appointed. He cannot trans-fer his commission, however, to an-

other precinct if he has changed hisresidence.

"Mnny hnvo moved out or gono awayand ot those who have answered aastated we do not know whether it Istheir new or their old precincts Inwhich they are willing to aorve,

"Thee appointments are not goingto be entirely Batlsfnctor to nny ottho political parties. Owing to changesfrom Home Rule to Republican poll-tic- s,

In one precinct for Instance, alttlnee of the Inspectors are Republi-cans.

"Another difficulty Is that each partyundertakes to nominate nil three ortho Inspectors lu a precinct. For

the Republicans w'l 1 name theHome Ruler and tho Democrat of theirprofetcnee ns well ns their own chosenrepresontntlve on the board.

'The system Is very poor. Thereought to a reappointment of Inspectorsfor every election "Instead of Issuingcommissions for four years. Thiswould be a protection against the dltll-cultl-

ftom both changes1 of politicalfnltlt nnd changes of residence of hold-

over Inspectors,"Governor Cm tor was reminded of the

system under the Constitution of 1SS7,

where the Government appointed Itsown choice ns Judge1 nnd clerks otelection, while tho putties weio allow-

ed to choose Inspectots or watcherswith the pi Iv liege of challenging vot-ers, entering protests uiul scrutlntz'ngtho count of bnllots, nnd bo remarken,

"That 19 a good sjstcm. One JudgeIn a precinct would mean both economyand efficiency. Undet the present sys-

tem men nte coming In who have pooreyesight or defective hearing, whileothers are defective as wtltris andndders." 4

. '

A joung gi.idunte In law, who hahad pome epei lence In New Yot kCity, wrote to a piomlnent pinctltlnnerIn Aiknnsits to luqulte. what chancethere was In that section for such aone as he desctlbed himself to bo Hewild: "I am n Republican In politics.nnd nn honest oung lnwjer." Theteply tint came seemed encouragingIn Its intetest: "If jott nro a Republi-can the game laws hero will piotecl3oii, and If you are an honest lnwjer

ou will have no competition," Ar- -gonnut. I

THE BRIGHT SIDEof lifo. It ia a fooling commonto tho majority of us that wodo not got quito tho amount ofhappiness wo aro ontitled to.Among tho countless thingswhich toud to mako us moro orloss misornblo ill health takesfirst place Hannah Moro Raidthat sin was gonerally to ho at-

tributed to biliousness. No doubta crippled livor with tho result-ing impuro hlood, is tho causo ofmoro mental gloom than anyothor singlo thing. And whocan rockon up tho fearful aggro-gat- o

of pain, loss and fearfrom tho many discuses

which aro familiar to mankind;liko a vast cloud it hangs ovora multitudo no ono can number.You can boo thoso pooplo ovory-who- re

For thorn lifo can scarce-ly bo Baid to havo any "brightsido" at all. Honco tho oagor-110B- S

witli which thoy search forroliof and euro. Homodies likoWAMPOLE'S PREPARATIONhavo not attained thoir high po-

sition in tho confldonco of thoiiooplo by bald assertions andboasting advortisomonts. Thoyaro obliged to win it by doingactually what is claimed for thom.That ilila remedy doaorvos Its"v.-.- "

is'7 collection, it injialntuulo its Iionoy and containsthn lllltrltivu and mirntivn nrniwortios of I'uro God Llvor Oil,combined with thn OntntiniiiulHyrup of Hynophosiililtou. Kx.trnctH of Malt and Wild Uliorry.Nothing bus such h record ofKiicflosii In Harof tilit, Inlliiuiuit.'I'liroiit mill Lung Trnublun, iim!oiimolnllng (Huiipliilntd uiul m

tlmt tomt to uiiiliinnliiullio oiindiitloim f utruiigtli 11ml

lgonr. Itc uo livlju to nhowilfu'n hrluhiur ulilu, I'rofi'niorHutldy, of 'iiiimlii, layn i "I luaulUUflJ) iiluMnuru In ntuUiig Uiul 1

Ijiiyp uil Jt fn iniiuj rj (JuJjJlJlytoiiwJ it lu Ijou )iry yijii.fMfldX J mU B.

W.Kfl" YOU llUllllfll I ill lIlHlll'MMIiifii bsBT skim'

v

OEMOCRMIC

SPOKEN BY

ft.

a

of in

of

(From Monday's Advertiser)

Chnlrmnn W. A. Kinney's rcmnrkable

attack on the of Gov-

ernor Cnrfr nnd the llepubllcnn partypresented ns a campaign document ntthe mans meeting nt theOrpheum on Saturday evening', refer-

ence to which wns made In

Advertiser, Is complete as follows:

Fellow Citizens: As chnlrmnn of theTerrltorlnl Central Committee of theDemocratic party of Hawaii, I takepleasure In presiding at this meetingcalled to ratify the Legislative ticketof the Democratic party at the comingelection, and In presenting to ou thedifferent candidates selected to run up-

on that ticket.Entering for the first time publicly

upon my dutlis nB chairman this even-

ing, I desire to refer brlelly to a per-

sonal matter. It Is being Bald, I un-

derstand, thnt 1 nm taking nn activepart In Democratic politics having tnmind the securing of some Importantofllce should the Democratic besuccessful In the national elections andthe Territory pass Into Democratlocontrol. Oidlnarlly I would pay no at-

tention to this statement, but ns Itmay impair my usefulness In the dis-

charge of my duties as chairman of theTerritorial Central Committee, and asIt Is not true, I wish to put a quietusto such talk and to deny In toto, asI now do, any such Intention, and tustate without mental reservation thatunder no consideration whatever am Iseeking or will I accept olllce of anyAtnd. The fact that I have never heldofllce heretofore, though having had

that way, should be con-

clusive that In the present Instance Imean what I say nnd say what I mean.

The truth Is any intelligent man whobelieves that party politics must anaa III prevail In this Territory nnd thatthe citizen party or ticket Is

nnd also unwise, can see theImperative necessity for every citizentaking nn active part to the extent othis ability In the dlschaige of civicand political duties. If there are to betwo parties here It Is lmpemtlve thatDoth these pnrtles shall beparties, well orgnnlzed nnd able to cops

with any Issues that mairom time to time confront the peopleof this Territory and to handle themso ns to promote the welfnie of thecitizen, nnd the business and materialInterests of this Territory.

A cltlren's party such as Is oftensuggested noundays slmpl) means malliance of the white race against tncnative raie with all the evil resultsand bad blood of a race struggle. TheHawaiian people, after SO jears offriendly nnd fmteinal lelntlons withthe white race, deseive no such fate,and whateer mny happen, howeverslow the Hnvvallaus 01 .some of themmnj be to fully their

Amerlcnn tltlzens, and to usethese privileges anaTiell, the white race, thoseof that rnce born nnd bred In Hawaii,cannot and will not subscribe to nnyprogram Involving the setting aside otthe Hawaiian. He must go hand In

Jiand with us until In a complete fusionof blood the posterity ot both racesshall foiget, for all ptactleal purposes,that any such dividing line once ex-

isted. . "", l' f 1

TIME roil THETVe claim that the present conditions

In this Territory show that it Is hightime the Democintlc party took a lena-ln- g

part In local politics. Heietoforeit has occupied a waiting position,marking time while the Homo Kuiuparty has Insisted on occupying thestage in an endeavot to show what Itcould do outside of Idle tnlk nnd themaking of still moie Idle ptomlt.es. Itid almost Hteinll) true thnt Hint partyhas nothing Hut theHome Kule pnrty has done worse thnnaccomplish nothing. It has been losingground Meodllj foi Its constituents It.many vital wnvs. It has allowed thellepubllcnn Executive undisturbed, nndpractltnlly without molest, to cientaand develop a system of coeirlon. In-

timidation and corrupting manipulation of public pitronnge that has gonntti such nn extent that the neonle In I

in ii.-b- i wwrty44 Uwl lltms

HUl' lUiiMbri iftUllUUi fQ

uii m$i

MANIFESTO

Draws Parade Between Kalakaua and Carter.

Independence Magistracy Peril Cecil

Brown's Declaration Independence.

administration

Democratic

yesterday's

CHAIRMAN, KINNEY'S ADDRES5.

opportunities

lmpiao-tlcab- le

responsible

Intelligently

appreciate

undeistuiidinglypaitlculnrly

DEMOCHACY.

accomplished

W, A KINNEY

llule lenders who ought to have knownIn taking pnrt In the draw Inn of theCounty thnt they could not et

the election under that net to bofnlrly conducted by the Republlcnnleaders where no provision had beenmade to contest the same. The Ha- -

vvnllan people themselves now realizethis nnd unquestionably have lost con-

fidence In the ability of the Home lluleparty to protect their rights or other-wise to hold their own against thenggresIons of the Republican Exe-cutive.

WHAT DEMOCRACY .STANDS TOH.

Now what does the Democratic partypropose to do; what dots It stnnd for?In the first place It stands for no

of the franchise nnd no set-

ting nslde of the Hnvvallnn nnd Isngnlnst any legislation looking to thatend. It stands for a free, untrnmmclcdvote and a fair count In the elections,first, and all the time. It proposesat nil times, to reRlst Intimidation andcoercion of citizens nnd olllce holders.It proposes to resist domination by theExecutive of the Judiciary or nnybranch of It, and demands n search-ing Legislative Inquiry, this comingsession of the Legislature, Into themethods nnd means used by the pres-ent Executive of this Territory wherebymen, against their conviction nnd bel-

ter Judgment, nre led forced tosupport It, nnd having thus recoveredthe ground lost to the citizens of thisTerritory by Home Ilule Incompetence,the Democratic party proposes to pro-

mote and Bupport Legislative measuresIn keeping with nnd In promotion of theprinciples' of the Democratic party.

Much of the Inellclency of the Homellule pnrty and Its Inability to standagainst the nggresslon of the llepubllcnn pnrty Is due to the fact that It hasno recognition or support on the mainland. This Is not true of the Democratic party. Hawaii Is lepresented Inthe National Committee of the Demo-ci.it- lo

party,. olilclclnl representatives In this Territory have the ear otthe Democratic lenders op the mainland, and the Democrats of this Territory propose to use this right of fellowship with the Democrats on the mainland, In Congress nnd out of It, to leslstnnd combnt nny nttempt to Infringeupon the fundamental lights of thepeople of this Teirltory. What hnsbeen done to the Home llule pnrty withImpunity cannot be done to the Demo-ciat- lc

party of this Territory. Alreadythe open stand of the Democratic pattyagainst the Ilepubl'cnn Executive hasdone much to clear the political ntmosphere. Open criticism of the llepubllcnn Executive was about smotheredwhen the Democratic p.i'ty took theHeld nnd openly dcclaied against It.The Demociatlc paity pioposes tociltlclse the Executive with perfectficedom whenever and wherever theythink the public Interests requlie It,nnd the Territory is better off for thatfnct.

indlvldunl ciltlelsm or leslstnnee tomachine politics counts nothing; ItIs always beaten down or swept asideby the push of the machine; but whenn properly organised party takes astand It presents a dlffeieut issue andthere Is hope that something can bedone. The Executive of this Territoryhas gpne to astounding lengths, and

without the public being consultednnd without nny public demands theie-fo- r.

UNDATED RESIGNATIONS.

The demand of undated leslgnntlonsfiom every District Magistrate bcfoiehe lecelves his commission fiom theGovernoi has no precedent In the hls-toi- y

of Hnwnll Intelligent tltlens ofnil panics have been loath to believethat this Is true, bpt thnt fnct Is nowestablished beyond all question by apoihon.il Inspection of some of the let- -teis from the Executive to tnee Magis-trates culling for these undated resig-nations. The Supiuiiie Couit has amplepower Investigate the conduct ofthese Miglstiates and to lemove for

'Unlllleilness many particular 'JlieGmclm" llet'11 '"" loncein himselfabout that, lly putting the power ofremovm in me nuprtmu court nun uoiIn the Executive the Leglslatuie hullI'uti'd cleat ly Its Intention to removethese Magistrates from Executive confui, ami by commissioning them for

""'"' iwHnmuutm nt mm mmtr w mot wit unmm m & iwvw

u 1A Jbiutui 4 M m( UWM A ll MMtWUUWII Tm

Dnvvall today have no iissuinnce either I1"" u""' Indluited the legislative de--

u free vote or of a fall count In "lr" ''' ""'m " nv,i "ml ""l'lelections, both of which vveie being teliuie of olllce. The will of thu I.egls-nJoe- il

b the people nt the time thn i1"""0 ,IUH expmsniHl has been ,iIim-Jlcii-

Hull? Mii came Into existence jlut"!)' defeated and set aside in bothThin has bt.ui brought "'t by the 1'iirtlciilum b the extiiinullnuiy limo.Incoinpelmte aim Indifference of the VUluil IMumIuumI by the pienellt o

Jiule lwuleis, who Imvo been "! f Hil" Tunltoij.more concerned In gelling Into niltee A Wilis now niuiiiI, If the Kxeeullvi.niul Maying there than In wife-gunn- l- 1'roinh of III (lmimmiii Iiiih nnying Die light of Ihelr roii.iltueiits VMlw or hhm'MI ruiiMiiiK for twiningThe Homo Huh nuity today Is hlplw. piuitlnii of miy iMHUulwr

the nholnMlu liiiliuldMloii, co. ." 'r imluwuJiitr Hi JmUnuuii if ihvwii'lun mul curriJiillon nf miihi now 'urni In miy imrllviilur enim. IhU polli)wlhK prattlem! by I lie Hunuullve of "' IwMlliK llllilmmi liKiIltll fpumhi Trrliui That wrt vldntl-,t,,- MuKMuatM uimiiw i!iw vw fin Ui

l net tn plan fur ourrwllHtf llie iw)uiHlwUnwm of mMi iuimitNi Willirondltton. It dm lurt tn jirto H vwiwwtuni ir Nd uii li, lln ldr r mu I ','MM' ( Mtul MU lutnu mi

tug br hiiWn wlilU lit ruu4uitill ,u " ' '" 'I"wnm miiu.itivUi' ' frt Uallul him! Din rtnlit lH'"' "'" lul'l iloiunb UitrrUM hmuI

f up i i ut'ii uiiiiiMu u4 I'" "" " " 'w uuiiur mumii H'l'i ii.m a,i ititm Ukn totuMf I "" "'"' 'uimmii Mtrt Utui

i m( inM atHiOj) ii .mi IIm

i .n WM tU$i ! '11. ll lb II MM

ib i i (Mki.iun it4

Act

last

It

nnd

Its

foi

this

to

l

'"

w

ri

rtmrlritt mJ MM if lh M- -t -

lrt1. A ASM.IU t.llTTI tt

1 h'li In irtj" hiJ n lnlrtliiK !(Ir frt.m . ,. A ' "Ili.n'l of HiiwmJI, ftildrwi"i tn "hm luo olllrMi lnmlt m lhl MM

Intnl. Til Iftlcr Is wMttn In JlwlInn, trntilled Into linirlloh it tilfollows

The letter commends the oll' oifl-- r

to KO I" the llepubllcnn rommitt' ofhis district lo gel Its endorsement forlb osltlon he holds, the mm to liesrtit to the mnlu coiiitilltlce at llllo."These things are biing done nt the Instance of the Executive of this Territory who desires to promote the welfare of the Republican pnrty In theTerritory."

The vltnl Mgnlflcnncc of this letterIs that under the policy of the pres-

ent Executive men cannot hold officeuntil they hnve secured the recom-mendation of the mnchlne, nnd weknow what thnt meant. It Is notenough that n man should be a Re-

publican; he must be a good Repuo-llcn- n.

In other words he must be nnndmlnlstrntlon llepubllcnn, which In Itsfinal nnnljsls means a man who willforego his own convictions nnd netngnlnst them when ordered to do soby the machine. This menns a dis-

tinct Impnlrment nnd lowering of thestnndnrds of the civil service; It meansless elllclent ofllcers; It menns officialsof lower mornls. It cnlls, for the exclusion of those who will not surrendertheir Independence of thought and ac-tion to the control of others nnd ItInvites In the clnss thnt will.

The filling up of a Republlcnn con- -entlon with ofllce holders under the

personnl lendershlp of the AttorneyGeneral to defeat Mr. Cecil Brownshows the growing tendency of theExecutive to nbsorb all power and tosuppress nnd blnck-ll- st men In publiclife who do not propose to be dlctntedto by the Executive or nny one else.

CASE OF CECIL, BROWN.

The Democratic party has nominatedbut two Senntors for the Island ofOahu, leaving the third position vac-ant because the Democrats desire tovote for Cecil Brown In order to placethemselves on record as protestingngnlnst executive Interference with theconventions of the people. Mr. Brownwns nnd Is a Republlcnn nnd, 'there-fore, the Democrats haxe not nomin-ated him or endorsed him but they"have left the members of the panfree ns citizens to go and registertheir conviction on the Issue thus rais-ed between the Executive nnd CecilBrown. And this they do, not for Mr.Cecil Brown or to help him out individually, but because his light Isnlso the light of the Democratic pnrty,his defent menns our defeat, his 'victory means our lctory; It aids theDemocratic paity In Its plan to resistthe Interference by the Executive withthe Legislative branch ot the Govern-ment.

Coercion woiks ex 11 both to the menwho use It and to those against whomIt Is used. A pirty using coercion hasto keep using It nnd generally has toextend Its ue to hold Its own nnd withcoercion comes Intolerance of publicnnd pilvnte criticism. Men who areuMng coeiclon nnd Intimidation to se-

em e the suppoit of olllce holdeis, whonre using the public patronage tobribe nnd demornllze voteis, nnturnllydislike to have the light tinned on,nnturnlly dislike Investigation, natur-nll- y

dislike open ciltlelsm. How manytimes dining the last ear have wefound Republicans criticising the Exe-cutive In whispers and with the em-phatic Injunction that you are not tomention their names? How manytimes hnve we found them lookingaround to make suie that nobody wnsstanding by to piny the part of a talebearer? The existence of such condi-tions nre offensive to every right mind-ed, citizen, and allshould welcome the ndvent of theDemocratic party which proposes toturn the light on to everything andto decline Its convictions in regard tuExecutive nggreslons In the broaddaylight and before the eves of allmen, which l,s the privilege and dutyof American citizenship.

There Is no cowardice equal to tnecowardice of a political push whenriding down In combination any oneIndividual who dares to differ or object The violent and personnl nbuseof Mr Cecil Brown by the Republlcnnmachine Is the time honored method ofhe machine In nttncklng Independence

ot thought nnd Is In marked contrastto the vvell known complacency of themachine to corruption nnd bad menand bnd cltbens, provided those badmen nnd bad citizens stand pit withthe mnchlne.

Mnn good citizens of Hawaii excusethe coercion and corrupt manipulationof oteis on the plea ot necessity, butthey forget that the machine onceestablished may and likely will bemho1 ngnlnst tho very men who hnvebuilt It up. It will not do to excusubad methods because they nro usedIn join fnvot; tho day wl 1 come whenthey will be used ngnlnst you. In tnlong i tin the machine can bo counteuupon to gravitate townrds bud govern-ment nnd ngnlnst gnod government,nnd It would be n very short-sighte- d

policy for the citizens of this Terri-tory to ucqulesce In tho vvholesnlebribery of nutlvu voteis with oillclnlpiilinnHBrt nnd (he coeiclon nnd In-

timidation of unlive mid foritlgu olllceholder uliuply beiiin thing happenin no going ineir way just nmv, tiimHiifn (inumn In (lie long I mi U lo relmiimn-loi- i mid liillmMnllon, lo revltt liiuMlnifD of nlllelnl iMlrnnngtf mid lomum! itivut), vvivn under midmi lrlnwtlri'iiiiiHiim, fui it fre ami tinlrani-iiihIi-

voih uiu) fui h fun mui huiitMiI'OUIll

Til Ml HilHK (but win dUumlll unaeUmH lmiQtm uutihiui l wUuU.il'rvbulw i lb Ml. riilu Him tliUmmm ntiic iNjrtr ifoi in imii umiiIH MMtwiuitli lk)i Mill H- i- Imhumtijturtr tu imu Muomw f i'omtrw u4

Uk mu Mllufll ''IIUJMWWIMIII''MM t I Ttui i. Mil

la at tka kiad IU b w .. ,,,MV rl fU m ik IiHhpwiiwtwlw mh imnmf- -

IK iiUiLn"

u vfr tr 1 mt but H mintr, a it, it i it (hki h it nfa liiHnre ha' I i p"l His u r ilit

t,r ih Hfii" tlli iny Thoy hnvi1

bfi fiwilfmi I nnd- - lh J.ni f tmr ofti BtwHllv litunrli nt Hi imrli-m- n

thy r hirm itoril withvol iKiuwh! wllh olllelAl ittiiimitand lr l itreln of ollVe lintil!- -

TIip' innnot In Ih nntiir of thingsIf iil. turn tim the mn nmlintlil which rured Ihsin Ihelr rice-th- m

Not so wild the t)mi nitlf(arty. evry enndldnt If elected willb clerteil upon a plntfotm nnd undercondition thnt leave him free midwholly Independent nt the Executive,nnd In a position to demand mid enforcen I.eglslntlve Investigation, providedthe electors return enough DemocratsIn either Houre to enable them to forcethat Issue.

V do not consider thnt Nntlonnlpolitics ilny much pnrt In this election,except to some extent in the matter ofthe selection of our Delegate to Con-gress, hut even ns to Out olllce It Ismore Importnnt to elect nn active. In-

telligent business man thnn It Is to sendone there labelled either Democrat orRepublican; and we feel that amongthe three candidates Curtis V. Iiiukenstands out as the fittestami ablest of the three candidates forthe olllce In question.

THE DEMOCRATIC POSITION.

It Is contended that the Democratsstnnd for free trnde nnd, therefore, forfree sugar. This Is, as we submit, non-sense. As mntter of fnct neitherparty stands for free trade; the Demo-crats desire a moie moderate tariffthan the Republicans, but both stnndpractically for n protective tariff. Itwns the Democratic party under Cleve-land that averted the evils ot the

bill which well nigh wreckedthis Territory In 1S90, lestorlng theduty on sugar nnd abolishing the boun-ty system established by the Republi-can party.

It Is claimed that we must elect aRepublican If we expect to get appro-priations. As a mntter of fact we gotmore In the way of special appropri-ations while Mr. Robert Wilcox was ourdelegate to Congress than during theperiod when we were represnted by allepubllcnn, and It Is a matter of fnctthnt outside of the Tire Claims we havegot little or nothing but what Is givenns a matter of course to any Tenltory.The notion of the National RepublicanConvention In reducing the lepresent.i- -tlon of this Territory In the NationalConvention was a distinctly unfriendlynet and wns, we contend, a significantoutgrowth of the fixed and avowedsentiment In the Republican party thatthis Territory never shall enjoy state-hood. We believe It would be a whole-some evidence ot our sentiments on thesubject and of the spirit of our citizensto return a Democratic candidate.

STATEHOOD.

If we ever get statehood we shall getIt through the Democratic paity. Sena-tor Jones, recent Chairman of the Na-tional Demociatlc party, said to mepeisonally: "The Democrats ot theUnited States were opposed to the an-nexation ot Hawaii but now that ouhave been annexed the Democrats pio-pos- o

thnt you shall be given evetylight nnd privilege, political and othei-wls- e,

enjoyed by your fellow citizenson the mainland."

It would be a fitting response to theplcnjune nttltude ot the Republicanpnrty towards Hawaii In leduclng Itslepresentntlon In the National Conven-tion, to return a wholesome Democia-tlc majority for our Delegate to Con-gic- s,

both as u rebuke to such nauowprejudice nnd as a protest against thesnipping of this Territory tluoughtaxation for the benefit of the NationalTie.isury without any adequite recognition In return In the way of specialnppioprlatlons for public improvements.

With these prellmlnnij remaiks wedeclaie the campaign of the Democraticpaity for this election duly opened.

In addition to his written address,Mr. Kinney added If the Demociatlcparty was not In the field tonight theHome Rule party would this year beswept away entirely by the 'machine'of the Republican pirty."

GALBRAITH MAKES GUESS.C. A. Galbralth, who was on the

committee of notification to officiallyapprise Judge Parker of hU nomina-tion for the Presidency b the Demo-cratic national convention, said,

other things alieady repotted:"The Hnwallun Islands will be safe

under the administration ot JudgePorker."

BROWN JOINS DEMOCRATS.The sensation o the meeting was the

sudden appearance ot Cecil Brown Inthe nudltoilimi As soon ns ChairmanKlnne got sight ot him he pointed toand cnlled hint to the platform. With-out hesitancy, Mr. Brown mounted tothe stage nnd at once swung Into abpeech In Hawaiian, of which the fol-lowing Is a free Interpretation madeby Olllclal Interpreter Fred. Weed:

"Gentlemen, fellow -- citizens nndbiother Hnwnlinus. I am not heio to-

night to discuss with you the meritsof the Democratic or Republican par-ties, but I am heio tonight as a pio--

against tho Governor in his Inter-fcieiie- e-

iii politics and hi small partypolitic, and ill) tu ny to show tu

oii how he I trying lo contiol nit iliaolllcer ot the government, by Intel-fetin- g

In tliu legislative and exwiilhe.n well n tho Judicial dmitiuiit, ofI hi Tuiiltoiy.

"In till ihuti arrAimmnt of theGovernor, lit) lulling tli rlitbt lo ap-point all DUIik'l MuiiUtiuU. am) niiut'itlng liiu lUmibJU-u- uoiiiKiiliim inII iioinliiuiluii of lliv li'tfMiith tuk-e- l,

vtlml linvf yuu (ir ou? pi oulliluk Uwi 111 lw n J j)i rlu U iumuui4 Hi hi Iiu4?

"II Iwn i'llJ ih .tin lur i.u UmI lu PM uf ii m Jul l

tui ili I uiu milrj not iimii, itud111 Will I MJijM I'v liii. I lll

uwliu Why l iii' Uum HviwdUJMU "'' ll 1 SHU I luii' lilfevM

III ilNiMWMiMM MMUl 01 I lIUf ltt' " rlu$ Ih m " Yw

.Mil itJiiwUlmiM Hit. AMu0 PPffw W sF

hv mu hi aim UHtM In in llk.ll.tllUIII ut uflf tllt,Jhi.w i.iwi 4iiiMMtf u(jua 11 n4 In I it tyi4luii' 1' lbww mm&mi " K'n uwii mwL Hi, if lit ii Jufl atJ MJ

0 '! - ll ,1 II,, ,x H l Ut li J I

?HBft!wlicllifr I rvluin in tli HhH onNtniltr t or not '

Mr llmwn j nMiet In :nlih s,li tail n follow

I hn bn rii a iwlior, Imply,Hf would tint Ink In Ih mfty

'lush nor h dlrlntfil to by tli rxulliillnttmeni or the Roirnment of Hn-wnll Ther nr thrp lrwii ttttrnt Inevry ronllltltlonnl Rovernment thexeilllve, IffiMillm, it mt h judlclnl,

but whn one d'piirtitient rouitneticfsIn InKrfno with thu other, then, gen- -tlemen, we nre going to have troublewn hud trouble. hre In 1J, fltul ll wnfor the same reason e nre drifting lotoday, nnd the quicker )ou put yourfoot down, the better, I don't enrowhether ou elect me or not, but nslong n ou vote for me nn a protestto the government, no matter whntCarter si, then I will be thnnkful.if ou put our foot down and electevery member of the Democratic tick-et nnd leave me out, ou will hnvedone your country some good nnd havetold the executive thnt he hnl notdlctnte who shall nnd who shall notbe In the legislature.

"It Is generally supposed thnt a per-son following my occupation lm nfree gift of Inngunge, but I enn iiy to-

night thnt I ennnot express my feel-ings ngnlnst this serious Interferenceof the executive departments n to whoshall represent ou In the legislativedepnitment of the government,

"Hoping to meet you nt pome moremeetings, which I hope I will be nsk-e- d

tn ntetid nnd more publicly expressmy feelings, I ask you to excuse mr,nnd I lenve you to the enunciation ofthe doctrines of the party."

GREAT VOTE-CATC- H Hit.Then Ashford had passed n motion

that Brown be Invited to speak on nilnnd every occnslon possible lu Demo-ciatlc meetings. He snld, thnt, "ItMncaulny, the great mnster of Eng-lish, had been here tonight nnd list-ened to Mr. Kinney's nble address hocould not have expressed It more clear-ly or strongly. It will be a great vote-catch- er

for every Hawaiian and ha-ole- ."

H. T. Moore, legislative nomineefrom the Fifth District, called atten-tion to n paragraph from the Declara-tion of Independence, In which he re-

ferred to the frnmers making a declar-ation against King Geoige, about anfollows: "He has made Judges de-pendent upon his will."

"Need I say more?" he Inquired."Are you nware of the fact that the ex-ecutive today Is doing the same thingthat King, George did? 1 will read acopy of a letter which was sent outby the Governor to a man whom hewould commission as a District Ma-gistrate:

"'Mr. : It gives me pleasureto notify you of my Intentions to ap-point you as District Magistrate forthe term of two years from to .Enclosed you will find a commission,also onth of olllce, which kindly signand return to me.'

"'You will nlso find enclosed n letterof resignation which I must ask youto sign and send to me before yousign your commission. This policy Isdistasteful to me, but hos been rend-ered necessary by the action of certainoffice-holde- rs In past.'

"This mny be good 'mnchlne' poll-tics- ,"

snld the speaker, "but It Is thor-oughly

(

It wns a curious coincidence that,while this letter was being read andnftervvnrds translated by chnlrmnnKinney, James H. Boyd, one of the

oillce-holde- rs through whom the "letterof leslgnatlon" policy wns first maaenecessary, was present in the aisleback of the box tier.

THE PORTUGUESE NOMINEE.L II. Medelros, the Portuguese nom-

inee for the lower House, who "de-seit- ed

the Republican party because otcoercion" as he explained it, was thenext speaker. He said the questionhad been put to him by his country-men, 'Why me you on the Democraticticket, when the rest of jour country-men are In the Republican partyX'

"I have been a Democrat in principlefrom the time I was born. Though Imay have taught Republicanism amongjou two years ago, It was by compul-sion, and by the will of my country-men that I did so. I would not be aRepublican and be a party to Intimid-ation, coercion, or anything of thatkind. I came out to these Islandswhen eight yeais ot age and landedon Maul and was educated In the com-mon schools. I feel that I possess thesentiment of the Hawaiian people Icnnie among here as an Immigrant.Am I going to choose the Republicanpnrty and be dictated to by them anaput under a joke? I pienched Re-publicanism two jears ngo, but votedfor a friend of mine who was runningIndependently, and It was for thatfriend I would not be dictated to."

With the speech of Curtis Iaukea InHawaiian the meeting came to nn end.

John Hind, of Kohnln, arrived y

on the steamer Kluuu on a busi-

ness trip.

A Wonderful DiscoveryThli la tha ars of riaparrh anil mi erlmtnt.

rhen til utiiro, n to 'k, l mimilul ,yIbu 'diMitlnc lor the limit. M mul IiMIihiiiubii oimv H lli'irci tiiaoi? Kipiti inulaUurln Ilia lit iiiitnt;, ami iiiiiiik I lie b) nolnliait lluirlalit dUtuit-nu-- III nirillilnacomra ISal ul lliciapjon I hla n I afallon lliiiiiiiicatliilialili nil ill Hi Mint Krimllie amirilfatdu l'atiif ever Inliuilui ul, amihat, luii'Uralauit, rn uil III thu l. mill.Iiililal lluapllaU )y Itlrnril, Minimi Julert.V.liu,.,, Il.i.na.d !! ill Lamuii f't.mataltr n,', niul linlmfi) ,y all Him hu am ra- -

M aiilliurlllm III Mil h inallfii, mui,fanlml rrlatilalnl l.allriuall'l, all'l Knot, hiho in I) mi aiima im lluir lllllloilnljr aini.I, ml Dial ll l Hurlhy Ilia atlriilluu ill liii.i

. ...,. . .. .. ..ut... m,,I. I. a . in.l. 11, I. .1 .1..uu it'iMiiv ri,v ,v.,f ,,,,.,, ii.biviilii) duubt, Cruui lli ma ul Aliilulli ioii.ri)i, a vwlrnl uttl ill ilia liui ii ul Indtraaa liaa lVa a lam il lililliiaui lirr Ilimivi 111 Ilia Kt'l lr. ll (SI iua iuia,lul. nriuui iiiih If ) ai U 'iiiil ih innMartf II fill ll imil'l - r ia Urn ilium, .ii-- ill llaliiliiUMna' la - r Wiili llilililnuifl lli illiiuiaijrul a inim-l- ) n Uilvni iilfiilualll inlilr aiiil alrl) iii rilwl jftnullld AVallll ll.H iMilkulia . f A.illllfHil . ( l.il.dll,M.IillliaM- ill 11 lllf ll CliJIin, i nut ,1 lulaalr lip(alUlllf li ImIii I it.l H ll.H (.. lain llllflild) Italia, (all II lll.l mi) iiMlnli (iiilaflj4. l mbI Ul ivrira- ul au ul lbillialllui all CUf 1,1 alaiiil a Lli li aiu lllflanl.liiallm ua m In Until ihfMt (MllifMf' , fl" )' "w i' 'lf' 4 Ibtl b

ilM?U"l '.'" ' "' ' WMllliWO Ut. '" , 'Ji'BmMp ttJ ttn uwii Ik ! lIUi

tip HU "" " IHM )

HWMMMMaaMBM MalMMMMMMMBWaMaiMa.

1 1 lJ 1mXXmKtLmimmmMmmmmWlmmmm

VataTaaTBtlTIm 4jjJCultivation of.the Sugar Cane"a trentlio on the fundamental prln.clple of erowlng Bugnr Cane,should be In the hands of everyplanter.

The value nnd use of

Nitrate of Soda(Tim STANDARD AMMONIATE)In Increasing and bettering thegrowth of Sugar Cano is now 10well understood thnt the renl profitIn sugnr growing may bo said todepend upon Its use.

This Uook nnd other valuablenullctlns of value to every one en-gaged In agriculture, are sent en-tirely free to nnjone Interested.Send your nnme nnd complete, ad-dress on Post Cnrd,Win. S. Mcrs, Director, 6 John

St.. New York.

y I "" f fa I ..'4 a.

.. CHAS. BREWER & CO'S.

NEW YORK LINE fHark Nuuanu sailing from

New York lo Honolulu aboutNov. istli. FREIGHT TAKENAT LOWEST RATES.

For Freight Rates npply toCHAS. BREWER & CO.,

27 Ktlby St, Boston,Or C. BREWER & CO., Ltd,

Honolulu.

t't'l' " ! f a I af.

(jitii-ime- n Fife insuronce Co

The undersigned having been ap-

pointed ngents of the above companyare prepared to insure risks againstare on Stone and Brick Buildings andJn Merchandise stored therein on thenost favorable terms. For particularipply at the office of

F. A. SCHAEFER & CO., AgU.

NorthlGerman Marine Insnr'oe Co.OF BERLIN.

Fortuna General Insnranoe Go.OF BEBLIH.

The above Insurance Companies haveestablished a general agency here, andme unaersignea, general ngents, aiauuiorizea to take risun nt adangers of the sea at the most reasonVaoie rates ana on the most favorableterms.

F. A. SCHAEFER & CO..General Agents.

General Insuranoe Co. tor Sea,River and Land Transport

of Dresden.Having established an agency at Ho-

nolulu and the Hawaiian Islands, theundersigned general agents are authori-zed to take risks against the dangersof the sea at the most reasonable rateand on thf most favorable term.

F. A. SCHAEFER & CC.Agents for the Hawaiian Islands.

"TheOverlandLimited"

BLBCTRIC LIQHTBD

CaliforniaTo the BAST via

The Union Pacific

This Train Is really a

First-Cla- ss Modern Hotel

with Handsome Parlors, Drawing!Rooms, Bed Chambers, Boudoirs, LI- -l

frarlea, Smoking and Reading nooms,Barber Shop Bath Rooms (hot andcold water), superbly appointed Dlu-In- if

Room, glltterlnj with Mirrors, CutOlasa, Fragrant Flowers, Electrlo Can.delabra, etc,; Promenades, ObnervatloaItooins, Uleclrlo Lights, Kltctrlo Fans,Telephone, Ulectrlo llmdlng letups,Perfect fU, sic.

RUNS EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR

Cull Information Qhwiutiy rurnUhadmi Al'l'llculluii lo

6,;tr, HOOTHi

I Moiiljfuintry l.i Sim fimiHQ, nil , .

& u mh Q Pt T, A.

Omli, fyb.

CASTLB & COOKB CO., Uitovm.uLU.

Commissiun Merchant!

8U&AU JfAOTOUa.AQENTB FOR

Thit Ewa. Plantation Company.The Walalua Agricultural Co., Ltd.The Kohnla Cugar Company.be Walmea Sugar Mill Company.he Fulton Iron Works. BU Louis. Wo.Th Btardald Oil Company.The George F. Mnke Eteom Pump,Weston's Centrifugals.The New England Mutual Life Insur-

ance Company, of Boston.Tho Aetna Insurance Co., of Hart-for- d,

Conn.The Alliance Assurance Company, of

London.

INSURANCE.

Tbeo. H. Davies & Go.(Limited.)

MENTS FOR FIRE, LIFE AN1MARINE INSURANCE.

lorta Assurance Company,

OF LONDON, FOK FIRE ANDLIFE. Established 1836.

Accumulated Funds :... J.W5.000.

British "d Foreign Marine Ins. C

OF LIVERPOOL, FOR MARINE.Capital 1,000,00

Reduction of Rates.Immediate Payment of Claim.

HE0. H. DAVIES ft. CO, LTfc

AGENTS,

Castle & Cooke,LIMITED.- -

LIFE and FIREINSURANCE

AGENTS. . .

AGENTS FOR

lei EDQland Mutual Lite iDSuraoce Co

OF BOSTON,

En Life Insurance Company

OF HARTFORD.

umI !

The Famous Toarlst Route of theWorld.

In Connection With the Canadian-Australia- n

Steamship LineTickets are Issued

To All Points in the United Statesand Canada, via Victoria and

Vancouver.

MOUNTAIN RESORTS:

Bsnff, Glacier. I mnt Stephen-- ml Fruper Cnnon.

Empress Line of Steamers from Vancouver

Tickets to All Points in Japan, China,India and Around the World.

For tickets and Keneral Informationapply to

1 0:0 n DAVES & CO., LTD.Agentn Cnnnrllnn-v'trnllii- n S. S. TJn

Cann " I' " Hallway

THE NEW FRENCH REMEDY.

THERAPION. 2&J!tnady, u.t ia lue LoiitineuUl llonpital. by IHcurd.IfLMtan, Jobert. Velrx.au, and other., comliUi.a allUm duUtrtU to bo eautftit lu medicine of Uio

oiuitrw empwjnj.an a, ana .urru.ea mcryuuug(THERAPION No. Itvnowned ana well mental l

uainuuna iu wonanuutatlou for denon

inta of Uio kidney., ruin in the back, andkindred allineuU, afloniliii prompt relit I wherebtber well tried ramedlM bate been power)...,THERAPION No 2 forlmpurttjoftLeulood,

curve, pimple., ejute, butlie4.uin and.w.Wjuzat )otnU, gout, rh.uuiatl.ni, a tUilli.no. for wblcbI It haa been too much a faehlon to employ mercury,

areepurllleAc ,tottiedotructionofeuDcrere'loeehand ruin of health. Tbl. prtparttlou purlo.. thowhale ..trn through tb. blood, md thoroughly

Itnilnau-- a all nol.oiouj matter from tb. Uly.THERAPION NO 3 for .ahau.Uoo,

and U uutroailuf coueequeucu ofcUatlpaUcn, worry, orcrwurk, 4c. li imiuurprutnir uwcr lu roiiortog etreng-t- and ujur UUum .uitcrini from tht enervating luAu.uut vilen leiidince in hot, mihoullhy climate..THERAPION mm ly HodiJCticuuU an.1 llcrcliiuil. throughout the woill,frto In ViiiUnd, (a, ml 4a, In ordir,Im ilaU oich fcf If turn number. I. r.ejulrvd, and obMrr libit tin wonl "TufNariuii 'Wan oo the HrltUo Ouitnuoiot euuui (IStiu I.IUire en a rvl ground) affiled w crj

nauiti. pukefe Xit ord.r ft III. lUlot . lion.UuuuuuJjtir., anil wllUuut wliKii It U ferytr ,

REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS.

1 i iirtd for liujnl Hi4 M, mi,IV r Jui Mil Id Milpl i'ubllu

H ii 4r uf lIuHull ,1), t , i.m.iIu l itl lu Muiil I'llbllt

S 'Jr wf llMtswll )t.)ilA t l "iu UwlrnJ Air. 1 imwuu stud f Mi UvA

Al'14111 ., i.iliJ iv it M'u'uvi mihI l it imt J!

i . ii .i , ,,,.,.,MI .,a for ltN m UHH

' "" ' .''' wr7tet2iAWh Wi UmtmmMmi "!

M i: I5all ni wf lo J Alfrnl Mit

BUOlt

t'titorf1 r lter.it.1 fHl I 'Pol

Prank ! Mfllit ntxl vif to ArthurV Nwly Astrmt

It Witterhourp Tr Co Ltd Tr to PlornM Hliiclitlr "rl

.Mlllkmi llolotilnnl ami ( It) T Kl.nlnUpn . . . i'

k'niinliKi niul hub to Mrs Henry Wigulit !

Mrs Amelia Knktpunhl 1" Joint I'lti-L'onil- il

i

I)

It H llliknrd find wf to E W Ilnrnnrd.D

llecordcil Sept. 22, 1W4.

HiKsle P Cnrtw right by Tr to CarlOntnl; D, Int In 260 A of Or 2572, Opl- -

Itnle, H Komi, Hawaii; 1700. 1J 201, p uu.Uiitvil Sent 1. 1901.

Carl Ontnl to Susie P Cnrtuilght byTr! M. "'.ft a of nr 2.m2. Oiillnile, S

Konn, llnwnll; J700. II 262, p 37. DateOSept 1, lt'OI.

.1 K .Mnkln nnd t ct nl to At (Ch);D, Int In Aim 1 nnd 2 of It I 7S7C, Kul10131, Houpulon, 8 Konn, Ilnnnll; $15.

1J 261, p 111. Dated Sept 12, 1904.

L II Dee by ntty nnd mtgee to nihop& Co; D; lotH 1, 2, 3, 4 nnd 8, 131k 47,

nnd loti 11, 13 nnd 14, Ulk 31, KnltnuklTract, Honolulu, Onhu; J100. 11 264, p112. Dated Sept 19, 1904.

Bishop of Zeugma to Hop Sing Coet nls; L; por Kul 28, King St, Hono-lulu, Oahu; 20 yrs 120 per yr. B257, p 4SS. Dated June IB, 1904.

Wing Sing Wo Co toJ.eong Sum; BS;1- Int In Yuen FongiWo Kee Co, Wnl-luk- u,

Maul; $1050. B265, p 193. DatedSept 22, 1904.

P Sllva and v,t to Samuel Savldge;D; pc lnnd, Kukannka, Honolulu, Oahu;pc land. Llllha St, Honolulu, Oahu;$1. B 2C4, p 114 Dated Feb 24, 1901.

Snmuel's.-nldg- e to Caroline K Sllva;D; 2 pes land, Kuknnakn, Honolulu,Oahu; $1. B 264, p 115. Dated Feb 25,

1904.Myrtle E Sturgeon and hsb (G B) to

Trent &. Co; M; pors lots 375 nnd 376

of Patent 4547, Volcano ltd, Puna, Ha-waii; "$350. B 262, p 39. Dated Sept22, 1904.

Christina Hutchison to H V TreenTon; D; S Int In pc land, Knllhl, Ho-

nolulu. Oahu; $1, etc. B 264, p 115. Dat-ed Feb , 1S9S.

Nutotia nnd t to Isaac L Cockett;D, Kul 4182, Knpualel, Moloknl; $44. B264, p 116. Dated Sept 15, 1904.

, Recorded Sept. 23, 1904.

Est of William L Wilcox by Exor toAlbert Waterhouse et nl; D; Int in

lands leasehold, pol factory,bldgs, taro ciops, mulo, tools, etc,Kalihl. Honolulu, Oahu; $11,522. B 261,

p 393. Dated Aug 11, 1904.

Est of William L Wllco by Eor toAlbert Wnterhouse ei al; L: int in porMali Award 50 and por Kul SIS, Ap 1,

King St, Honolulu, Oahu; $433. B 261,

p 39S. Dated Aug 30, (1904.

Est of William L Wilcox by Eor toAlbert Wntei house et al; D; int in porGr 3303, King St, Honolulu, Oihu; $325.

B 261, p 400 Dated Aug 30, 1904.

Albeit Wnterhou'se and wf et nl toEst of W C Lunalllo by Trs; M; IntIn nrious lands, leasehold, pol factory,bldgs, taro crops mules, tools, etc, Ka-

lihl, Honolulu Oihu; JS000. B 26.', p 41.

Dated Aug 1, 1?94.Emnlla K Nul and hsb ( DK) to Ter-rlto- iy

of Hawnjl; D; por Kul Sll, Nuu-nn- u

Aenue, Honolulu, Oahu; $400. B261, p 402. Dated Aug 15, 1904.

R W Holt Tr to Territory of Hawaii;D; lots 6, 7, S, 15, 16 and 17, blk 3, Ka-

lihl, Honolulu, Oahu; $900. B 261, p 403.

Dated May 27, 1904.

Marie A Humphreys and hsb (A S)

to Territory of Hawaii; 696 sq ft land,Nuuanu Ae, Honolulu, Oahu; $733. B261, p 404. Dated Aug 31, 1904.

KamaKI Hlna to Territory of Hawaii;D; por Kul 1S7, Beretanla Ae, Hono-lulu, Oahu, $30. B 261, p 406. DatedSept 12, 1901.

Territory of Hawaii ny supt i--

Woiks to W E Row ell; license; toerect poles, stretch wlies, etc, for electrical purposes across public iouus 111

Hnnnlel, etc, Kauai; 50 yrs $10 perjr. B 263, p 193. Dated Aug 24. 1904

Bank of Hawaii Ltd to Oaliu itanway&. Land Co, Par Rel, easterly por lotA3, of Patent S150, Kul 153, Iw lie! Road,Honolulu, Onhu, $1. B 2GJ, p w. uai- -

ed Sept 22. 1904.

Oahu Railway &. Land Uo to ustateof S G Wilder Ltd, D, easterly porlot A3 of Patent S139, Kul 153, IwlleiRoad, Honolulu, Onhu, $12,000. B 264,

p 117. Dated Sept 22, 1904.

Mele Mnlkal to Wllhelmine Strauchby Tr, D, int in por R P 2CS3, kui iuii,

J

$100. 204, getting

1904.

Marlon D Erdman nnd hsb toP Dillingham, PA. geneinl poueis. B203, 196. Sept 14, l'JOI.

Recotded Sept. 24, 1904.

Trs of Knumnknplli Church to Jen-

nie K Snffery and hsb et nl; Rel; porsH P 1731, Kul Aps 3, nnd 2

etc, Pnnnewn, etc, I.ahalnn ainui; itetc, Honolulu,

$1000. 239, p1904.

Hun Lock Co by High Slieilff toAllen te Jtiibliiron, Ltd. Slier Hale;

IviiHclmlil and It Keknullke StHonolulu Onhu; leasihold, Klklhnle,Honolulu, Oahu; 1100. Jl 205, p 19S. Dated Aug 19, 1901.

Aitliur W Ncly nnd wf ti ClintUmV llootli. M. lilt In r Ap I, It I' 302.

Kul i'i, KiiIiiIhiiI Drhu, Honolulu,Onhu. JtW, II 200, p lit, DJlwl Aug!M, 1WI,

r'ttlvln IS nfwl to Wlirxdh, m. m Ap l, It l tin ami OrMl, I'MllIll) Twiil, lloiwllllll,Onlitl, IJW. II m. V . VMm) Aim II,mi,

tUAMJI(HI.AIK'I I'tJlUJII JIIIMIIUV

fUltllM UiiUMH'l'W vn tm nlur'

ttUtty lb Njijh, timMHO MiMHiumiiwt, uimut Km mmUmt,

imI mW iiiur Ut nmmsHmij Um W'imii lu kmUbif miiHlw HMHMf It tt mtmi a) U ji utUu HMn4 wutU ui twt tH4(iUl ana) 4iMfi HrHHtU tlMtit

r '

.. 4n l(... Jutl. I li '('r .1 141 I' ., I, II. I i0, f

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, TUESDAY 0CT01II K 4, ,

op.O'O'O'O'OO'O'O'CO'O'O'O'O'O'O";

COMMERCIAL NtWbBY DANIEL LOGAN.

O'O'O'O'O'OO'O'O'O'O'O'O'CO'OO'O'OO'OO'O'O'O'O'OLocal conliilcnce in Uanalmn cctirmc i uwnitct m iliffercnt traneactions

of the week. A block of Kantti rranm bond at the hnmlsome fiure of

105, stated last week a being akcd, slto the lnh (liwncial stamliitR of tint

intcrprir. In the part of the week $jMi m Hawaiian Government 5

per cent lioml a rccortleil a clmiiKiiiR Imtul al wr It i that these

Territorial boniU were oUI by a San Krancico bank to a local The

four local bulks under American ownership showeil their couflilcnce in the prom-ie- s

of Treasurer Campbell, on the basis of III pat ilcaliiiR with them, by re-

ducing the rate of dicoiiut on Treasury to be lucd up to the set time

of redemption of all outstanding warrants in November from two per ctm to one

per cent. Hy the wa, the Treasury has the past week redeemed another round

thirty thousand of warrants to be exact. The ttgar Mocks that

lidcly started on the rise have maintatntd increasing strength during the week.

A significant fact is tint small investors on the outside arc beginning to discuss

vhich of the stocks that have not vet responded to the uplifting inlltienccs on

the market would be best to at present rates.

SEPTEMBER SALES

Following is the list of September sales put out by the Honolulu Stock and

Exchange on the last day of the month:

Par.C. Brewer & Co $100

Ewa Plantation Co 20

Hawaiian Commercial & Sugir Co.. 100

Hawaiian Sugar Co 21

Honomu Sugar Co 100

Honokoa Sugar Co 20

Kihei Plantation Co, Ltd 50

McBryde Sugar Co, Ltd 20

Oahu Sugar Co 100

Ookala Sugar Plantation Co 20

Olaa Sugar Co., Ltd . 20

Pioneer Mill Co 100

Walalua Agricultural Co 100

Oahu Railway and Co 100

Hawaiian Government 5 per cent.. .. 100

Hono. It. T. &. Land Co. 6 per cent .. 100

Pioneer Mill Co. 6 per cent 100

No Shares. Low-- .

$300330 23 23270 65 61 '4

51 27 ,2750 116 11625 16 16

360 12; 10276 4 4

S3 9714 97

110 6 6100 44

43 103 105

' 60 GO 471493 70 70

$54 000 100 1005,000 103 105.1,000 100 99

THE WEEK'S TRANSACTIONS.Sales registered by the Honolulu and Bond Exchange for the past week

have been as follows: C. Brewer & Co, Ltd. (par $100), 23 slnrcs at $305;Honolulu Rapid Transit &. Land Co. 6 per cent bond'., $5000 at 103; Kihei Planta-

tion Co. (pir $50), 100 shares at $1275; 50 do, at same; Honomu Sugar Co.

(par ?ioo), 50 slnrcs at $ilC; Hawaiian Government 5 per cent bonds, $50,000 at

ico; Pioneer Mill Co. 6 per cent bonds, ?tcoo at 100; McBrjdc Sugar Co. (pir$20), 76 shares at $4; Oahu Sugar Co. 6 per cent bonds, $3000 at 100; HawaiianCov eminent 5 per cent bonds, $30,000 at 100

SEPTEMBER DIVIDENDS

Following is a list of the dividends announced on the last day of September,

a corrected in yesterdaj's Exchange sheet: C. Brewer & Co , 2 per cent; EwaPlantation, per cent; Wamianalo, I per cent; 1 per cent; I percent; Hawaiian Electric Co, I per cent; Inter-Islan- d S N. Co , r per cent;Honomu, I per cent; Wailuku, 1 per cent; Onomea (S. F. Oct. 5), I per cent;Honokaa, Vs per cent; Pepeekco, lli per cent on Oct. 13; Wilder's S. S. Co.(quarterly), 2 per cent; Hon. R. T. &. L Co. Pfd (cmi-aimuil- ), 3 per cent on

31; Hon. R. T. & L. Co. Com. (quarterly), I per cent.

REAL ESTATE,A sale at auction of four elegant lots on Pacific Heights will be held by W.

E. Fisher on Saturdaj net, under instruction of C. V. Booth They are icox200 feet in size. Electric light and telephone facilities are availiblc. Waterprivileges arc assured, together with a perfect title Dr. J. Wight bought atauction at Morgan's salesrooms the lease of Kawaihae 2nd, Hawaii, 10,600 acresof grazing land, at $2550 a jear for ten jcars. The sale was by ofthe Queen's Hospital Trustees Real estate transactions published during theweek are none of them large. There seems to be little or nothing doing in cityproperties

Jas. F. Morgan will sell at auction net Saturday 46 $1000 first mortgagegold bonds of Oha Sugar Co An event of the week is the announcement that J.Hopp &. Co, furniture, will shortl remove from King and Bethel streets, a standthey have occupied for 25 jcars, to spacious quarters comprising two stores, withbasements and warehouse room added, in the Alexander building Be-

ginning with the first of October, the Mutual Telephone Co. changes from quar-terly to monthly collections The cattlemen m the Third Judicial Circuit, partof the Island of Hawaii, have won their appeals on the rate per headon cattle. A surplus of beef is alleged as the cause prices, and thequestion will be a leading one at the annual meeting of the Live Association on Nov. 14 No decision has jet been filed on the assessment ap-

peals in the First Judicial Circuit, Ishnd of Oahu. Nine other tax appeals havebtcn decided by the Oahu board, most of them sustaining the assessor. Onenotable decision is against the being that of the Commercial Pacific

Co. The board throws out cntirclv the assessment of $42,800 on the cablefor three miles out to sea, on the ground that the statutes give no specific au

for the cable Iherc is something that strikes one almostcomically 111 any attempt to tax the Pacific cable for the benefit of the Hawaiiantieasury, when it is remembered tint for many jears Hawaii had $20,000 subsidy

Oa- - a jcar net for fifty jear, hung up for anvbodv wlVinejaul St, Honolulu,bldgH,

hu,ete,

B i 119. Dated Sept 9, A gratifjing sign of the tunes is the into

falteri Dated

6349, bldgs,

bldKH, Nuuanu,Ouhu: U 10. Dated fcept

21,

W Kxtn,

--'amp wf OlimlM

lllflHlllH

immJk 4,hMm hMj

br

past

litterlearned

inet"r

warrants

buy

Bond

Land

High.144 $303

4Vi

Stock

Haiku, Paia,

Dec.

ETC.

good order

Young

assessedfor lower

Stockcattle

assessor,Cable

thority taxing

ho would bring a cable along.:active operation of an Improve

ment Club for the different new residence tracts out the Waialae road. It isto be hoped tint, at least after the election turmoil has passed, similar clubs willbe formed in all city and suburban districts The Government is enforcing theland laws, with a view to insuring that homestead lands slnll not be grabbedby people vvlio arc not genuine settlers. From a real homesteader on the Islandof Hawaii the writer has heard a plausible reason for either not literally constru-

ing the residence condition in certain cases or, if that be impossible, having someamendnunt to the law to meet such cases. Reference is to men in public orprivate employment in town Honolulu, H1I0 or Wailuku for instance who havea bent for agriculture or horticulture and, apply for homestead hnds undersome of the forms of holding presented in the law. When they get the land theylose 110 time in improving it by labor paid out of their savings. 'I heir intentionis tiltim.ittly to live on the land, but they cannot do so until it is made productive enough to afford client a living. 'J he argument in belnlf of this classof men is that (hey ought 10 be given the opportunity of making the home-steads in every vvy suitable for home before luing compelled nciuull) lo live onthe pmnies. No opinion is here offered 011 this plea for modification of (hei.vv or of its execution. Suffice il lo My that the position taUu b 'J lie Advtr-llu- r

ngsiuat allowing hoiiieutd lands lo become, cither dirwily or imlinrtly,llic ipoil of mere and ipeculaton will iiirdy be approved by all

who le a mmlv u to the true development of the Territory along Antcri-f- n

Unci.0

THIS JEWISH POPULATION,The frtaUwllM ipilitfrwl fur ili "Amnrlcnii Jw.h Ynr U'Klt."

fiovuHiie thf ytrar jYmjii riiUiiiltr a, iaj, u Kuili!i)il;r j, I'M.jilneu i jwrli iwjiiiliuloii of tliit iit j,iy7,'.'6S, hiuI Mtlithi iwjimIwjoh llio Uulitul Siniv rouli tiifn among the ntion0 Uw world in rMjHKi l Ihtt uutinVr uf Juv.' within lu l;i.iiHtti in fr4Uii with a ttjji.i uf IfiflJM, (,iiiiaii with

JttrfMtf' Turkty with &fm, lit MrUWi timbre with ifhAhtm with 1 mm, . J'HMi- - with Voffmm lit tuiuinuu amian m in Ahj.ru mill '1 ui 'J In inniihir ( J. in il w'Hil i

,l ill 111714) t lJMJI0i lii'Hi llittll MM tin tut, iiuioh.r "(u (."In ,11 It i I mil it lnli t till, I i tin i I" i'. 4 J ttt J ( Mil

u I lll f I . . li Jl ill I iii I i ' ' i ,. ii n ' ii r in W irWIfll MH

mi u ..I ,. ., I i Th j I

f pWPw1 IH4 $U tfrHMIIWIlM, Bm9 IW HUM nut 'QMl4t. UU lilt, (tU '

V

Hair 55 Inches LongGrown by Guticura.

MTB8 n , of Ir , lnil. tw Uiroojin onr Brltlnh Ajtento, Mtum. V.Kivrmtnr & Boxs, 57 and 2.1, CbartoiliouM Bqatm, Ixmilnn, E. O., a ttraml atott, gloaiy luvlr out Irarn hr own hiud and mrsuurinc flft-Ar- s IncliM In lonjrth.

iHiaiiiiaKaf""" J'' -- . .

BiiHHkllHHauJ-- V

y vji JS'SsTiBl

of which tun annnist drawlmt Is a plio--,

tographlfl Shn attributes lint' tnaitnlflconttipadnt hair to frerinrnt shampoos with CrncnnA BoAr, follownl hylight dressing of Cuticuha gmtty mlitiod

I Intotlioscalp. l'mvlouitothoiiKnof Utrri- -

cuiu, her hair was dry, thin, nnd llfcleu,and camo out In hand tuU to such nnthat slio feared alio would loso snnn It

I This Is hut ono ot rcmnrkalilacases of tho rresi-rrntlo- nnd retontlonof tho hair In seemingly hopelcii caiivrbywvrm slinmpoos with Cunrpitv SoAr,followed by light dressings of Crnctmt,purest of emollient skin cuns. Thlatmtment at onco falling clearsthe sealp of rrtists, scales, nnd dandruff,soothes Irritated, Itching surfaces, stimu-lates the hair follicles, supplies tin rootswith energy and nourishment, ami mtkostho hair grow on n clean, sweet, whol-e-

healthy scalp, all olio fails.

MI1XION3 OF WOMEN us Cutxctjiia BoAr czclnslTely for prcsorring.purifying, and beantlfytng ths skin, for cleansing tho ncnlp of crusts, ncjloa, ami dan-

druff, and ths stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, uud soothing roLtough, and lore hands, and (or all tho purposes of tho toilet, bath, and nursery.

'Complete External Internal Treatment for F'iry Humour, '

ConMntlnjr ol CirrirunA Suvr, to elean.o tho Un of erupts st-- t c.ilc snd eoit.n thathickened cuticle, CUTietllt V Hutment, to ItnUntH nllny Hi liliu, lull innnitluii, nmt Irrita-tion, and sootlio and livvl, nmt Ci tiiuua Hi sol rNT, lo run) 11ml U 111,0 llio liloml, ASINdLK arr Is often suilklent to euro tho mo.t torturing, ill'llurlu,', nml I111111IH it' ngpcalp, nnd blood humours, with lo'.infh ilr, when nil eNu f ill. in! t tlinmirli 'tit th'.i u .1' 1.Aunt. Depot: It. Towns A Co , Svilnoy, N.S.VV. fio. .frlriin l)i tmf I.inno". T.tii , ( ip

' All about tho SUn, nuil l,ir," free, l'orrm Dnuu ami Chi m. Coicr.,60I0 l'ropH., CUTiri'Ilv )! 'i"s 't,itnn, t'.S A.

DR. J. COLLIS BROWNE'SCHLORODYNE.

ORIOINALAND ONLY OENUINK.OMOtttAL AKD

ONLY OKNU1HB

oztcnt

many

stops hair,

souio, when

and

Town.

Each Jiottlo of tliis well-know- n Ilemctly for

Coughs, Colds, Asthma,

Bronchitis, Neuralgia, Toothache,

Diarrhoea, Spasms, etc,bears ou the Government Stump tho nnmo of tho Inventor

OR. J. COLLIS BROWNE.Numerous Testimonials from Eminent PuyBicinns ac-

company each bottlo.

Sold In Bottles Vi 29, 46, by all Chemists- -

Sole Manufacturers, j t. Davenport. Limited, London

HOST POPULARPUBLICATION

$.

THE SUNDAY

ADVERTISER

WAR NEWS, CHURCH NEWS, SPORTING NEWS,GENERAL NEWS AND ALL THE LATEST WORLD'SNEWS BY CABLE.

MISCELLANEOUS, LITERARY AND HUMOROUSSELECTIONS, AND A CONTINUATION OF THOMASFITCH'S INTERESTING ARTICLES ON HIS FOR-EIG- N

TRAVELS. PUNGENT PARAGRAPHS OF THEBYSTANDER.

INTERESTING READING TO SUIT EVERYTASTE, AND WITHAL, A CLEAN PUBLICATION!

ADMISSABLE TO THE FAMILY CIRCLE.

ff?

Puhlleheil hy, the

Hawaiian GazetteJ.hnliH,

g. KIhk SI.. Iloni;)!))!), Httwuil.

Co.,

I---

t

m

Aitttivr.n.Friday. Sept. 30.

U. S. Critter Buffalo, l'verott, fmmAlnrkn nml Mldwny. nt 7 n. in.

Stmr. Mnutin Um, .Slmerson, fromKali, Konn nml Mnul ports, nt 5 n. in.

Stinr. Mnul, Bennett, from llnwnllports, nt 5 n. in.

.Stmr. Xociu, Pedersen, from Knunlports, at 5:15 n. in.

Saturday, Oct. 1.

Stmr. Llkelllte, Xnopala, from Lanal,Maul and Moloknl ports, nt C n. in., with30 calve, 20 henil cattle, 121 pkgs. sun-dries.

Stinr. Klnnu, Freeman, from Hllo nndtvny ports, nt 10 n. in., with 153 pkgs.sundries, 41 kegs.

Stinr. J. A. Cummins, Searle, fromKoolnu ports, nt noon.

T. K, S. S. America Mnru, Going,from the Orient, nt 12:30 p. in.

Stmr, Xllhau, W. Thompson, fromKnunl port 11:30 p. m.

Sunday, October 1,

Stmr. Clnudlne. Pnrker, from Mnulnnd llnwnll ports, 1:50 a. m.

Stmr. AV. G. Ilnll, S. Thompson, fromKnunl ports, 3:31 a. in.

DEPARTED.Pchr. Knwallnnl, Ulunnhole, for Koo-

lnu ports at 10 u. m.T. K. S. S. America Mnru, Going, for

Snn Finncisco, nt 5 p. m.Monday, October 3.

Stmr, Llkellkc, Xnopnln, for Mauland Moloknl ports, 5 p.m.

Stmr. Xoenu, Pcderson, for Kauaiports, 5 ri. m.

Stmr. Maul, Bennett, for Hawaiiports, 5 p. m.

passexgers.Arrived.

Fiom Knu, Konn nnd Maul ports, perstmr. Milium Lon, Sept. 30. Fiom Knu:E. M. Pcovllle, wife nnd family. MissE. Wilcov, Mls M. Wilcox, from Konn:M. Dunkluise. Judge Mntthoiwnnn, It.F. LnngivMIss Denlzer, John Itoderlck,II. G. IJryaJit, Mrs. Hclcuhl; from Mnul.Mrs. S. K. Alull, Dr. J. II. It.iymond,J. B. Castle, Sinn Kelllnol, Mnry K.Ttose, Mrs. Matthews, Mrs. Geo. Oid-Ava- y,

C. AV. Hudson nnd 55 deck.Arrived.

From the Orient for Snn Francisco,per S. S. Ameilcn Mnru. Oct. 1. Cap-tal- n

It. McG. Duncanson, Dr. JamesRoane, Mr. Juines ltonno, Captain W.Kldston, Mrs. KIdston, Miss Yer.i Kid-Eto- n.

From Lanal, Mnul nnd Moloknl poits,per stmr. Llkellkc, Oct. 1. J. I.. Huns-ma- n,

Albert A. Muyei, Henry Meyer,S. X. Lukun. W. A. Clnrk, Cnpt. T. K.Clark, G. AV. Cnrr.

From Hllo nnd way ports, per stmr.Klnnu, Oct. 1. Col J. MeOleltnn, Col.C. P. Inuken, J. Mannse. Mrs. M. a,

Mls J. Iliuiuna, Miss J. Moiilz,E. C. Brown, It. Cation, Klmo Pake, A.J. Spltzer, E. E. Mnble, Mrs. E. G.Hitchcock, Miss E. Hohrcnberg, J. A.Smith, Mis. L. Plcknid, A. Anderson,AV. P. Fennel. Miss It. Aknnn, Mrs. J.Plko, John Hind, Mrs. Hemy Bell, T.JFrclmnn, A. AV. Cai tcr, J. It. Rorgstrom,T. It. Creenuell, A. F. Undo, F. J. n,

A. r. Tnvnrcs, C. Dudolt nndnlfe.

Per Stmr. AV. G. Hall, Oct 2, fiomKauai ports Mrs. C. M. Cooke, Geo. II.Fahchild nnd wife, J. K. Gandall, E.A. Knud'-en- , L. Marks, Mrs S. Knco,A. Huneberg, A. II. Crook. II. G. Rnm-sn- y,

J. 11. llnnnlke, Sam Kee Jnn, MissElizabeth Knhnnu nnd 47 deck.

Per Stmr. Clitudlne, October 2, fromMaul ports S. AV Schultz, Jno. Guild.C. J. Hutclilns nnd wife, Jno. Thompson, It. II. Anderson, Miss I. Boibn,Jns. Knlnknulln, Thos. Hochfort, It.Gathergood, Miss T. Itledel, Tnknhnshl,Chock See, Mrs. Alencnstre and 2 chil-

dren .Miss A. Querlno, Miss AVlttrock,Master Jns. Knlu.i, Mrs. Xaha Hnkuole,Rev E. S. TImoteo, S. Fukudn and 2

children, C D. I.ufkln, Mis. Geo Coppand 2 children, C. AVnldeyer nnd wife.

MOVEMENT OF

MAIL STEAMERS

The next steamer canlng mall tothe coast will be tho Ocean'c linerVentura which should s.iil for SanFrnndsco thlH afternoon. The tinns-po- rt

I.ogan which left Manila on theiltUenth of Inst month should tut n uptoday or tomonow nml Blie will takethe next mail. After her will come theChina which Is duo on Friday of thisv.eek. Mall from the- coast ai rives onthe Kunoniu tomonow. This will be anine days' mull. Tho xttwuin'ix whouM

be In from the const on Satiudwy, thetraninert Sheridan nnd thu OecldlitHlAnd Qrianlal llnsr fl anile. It In prob-

able Dial that will u but ou malland that en thv tlullc. Tha nwxt IwtMt'!

Mill ba ti Alamada uii Uitobrr II ami'Ju Muutiolla tit lath,

tBwmj)il 111 Channel,

Kaiftabw ami lile Wwihar, ttaiiiu, tmMaaiia, eia uhinmI Iii Mali'

mil in a taiiua off tha UarJjtir pnuam.tmi4ay vnlin( xtion, ttu ta ti

I4H "ii. pi'tni up alMMM tnM

J,iui.m; aatniMMi Uv aalurtf i" tl fIU tWMMjftf l IH

1 li'H n.i ibai tea Mi4bi avalia i i 1. ... I.. i, fur iUMj4Tlx i ' i'" nhhm liiMk ' ' M il

LF ROM

KULA, MAUf

Hand Cleaned Samples

Are of High

Quality.

L. on Tempky, manager of theRanch, has forwarded a unmple

of hnnd-clenn- cilenl fiber grown Inlower Kula, Island of Mnul, on landadjacent to the government land onOmaoplo, which Is being proposed to beturned Into homesteads for sisal cul-

tivation.The liber Is five feet In lngth nnd of

high quality. Specimens hnve been sentki the Tubus Cordage Company of SanFrancisco for nn official test.

The plants from which the fiber Iscleaned are six years old, being some ofthe original plants given out by formerCommissioner of Agriculture JosephMarsden. The fiber Is on exhibition Inthe windows of Pearson & Potter, Fortstreet.

WHEN THE ALAMEDA

DROPS HER PILOT

The Alameda Is pushing her nosethrough the chilly 'Frisco fog headed

for the open sea. Xow and then whenthe damp curtain lifts one may catcha glimpse of the forbidding blufta thatsentinel the Golden Gate Trom some-where out In the mist comes the moan-ing of n whistling buoy mingled withthe tinkling o a bell buoy. On thebridge stands Captain Dow dell and be-bl-

him muflled In a heavy overcoatstands the Autocrat of the Gate thepilot. The passengers are scatteredabout the deck, tome straining theireyes to get a last glimpse of the sloreand others chatting In the lee of thedeck house.

Suddenly Purser Smith appears athis olllce door and remarks, "If anyof jou people want to send lettersashore with the pilot you had betterget them ready." This comes as asurprise to the noslces aboard nndwhen they rush below to the saloonthey find all the pens and ink wellsIn the hands of those who have travel-

ed this way before. It Is not long be-fo- ie

every available place around thewilting table is taken. Here Is nnunromnntlc looking business man dash-ing a few lines to a cletk with the airof a millionaire ordeilng his broker tosell fifty thousand shares of Steel ata handsome profit. Theie Is a partyof globe tiotters finishing the work ofdhectlng a stack of souvenir post cardsthat pioed too much for them onland. At one end of the table Is ahomesick school teacher who Is writingto the home folks and down In the fur-

ther cornei is a youth who is writinga letter to his newly ncqulied fiancee.You know thut because he keeps hisblotter over the top part of tho firstpage.

Then the puiser's warning voicecauses a wild grabbing for envelopeswhile the lovelorn oiith thinks up annppioprinte ending for his epistle andlnscilbes it at the foot of the last pagecarefully glancing aiouud to seewhether an j one Is looking. Then theletters are all glen to the puiser andthe pnssengeis gather at the side tosee the pilot go. As he shakes handswith the captain and bids the otllceiagood-b- e ou see the coiner of yourparticular envelope sticking out of hisovercoat pocket for a moment. Thenhe swings over the side and down thei ope ladder to the tiny boat that leapsup and down nt the big steamer's side.,V moment later he Is In the sternsheets and two husky sailors are pulling the whnleboat over the tossingswells tow aid thu pilot boat a few hundred yards awny. The blnck smokepours out of the steamer's funnel, thesciew begins to churn the wnter ut herstern. You look back. Theie Is thepilot climbing into the big schooner.A few mlmiu later you can just mukuher out in the Iniztt with the big "11"

mi her malum II faint In die dlstunce.You look uhbIii nnd he U gone. Thelam tlti 'lo Uomv lm ben cut.f "

A.-- Schedule,Tim nw fi'liHtlule of tho Aiiiwlcuu-Hawaiia- n

ili lia Jut beM puUIMmhITIm X. U, iiibrakati la mhnduUd loaall from ,' York for tbla im viaIlia 1'ttlAu Coum uii lb tUth tlf tUaHionlU. 'fit Nva4an aatla frum abu-lia an llta (mtrOi aMM1 itum 'Faaowa miUw lih ut ihlt iituMtto. tin kr !

turn ifia aha uMI (tat (Ma wri (JeliUr Iflb a i.4 mmui al from Nan I'raa-il'- u

ui ih mmmii NitvaNibar,

T Haul vl away mi uiflil tinUaaali mi.

Vte. MsmimM MMtlM UmutmUM yaMtwfer

Wm MIilau itiUi "' Mf MUa amJ mM1 Trfl Xaw '7 a?Wf W Pff ffh m

HAWAIIAN OAZUTT& TUESDAY OCTOM R 4,

CARPENTER

REINSTATED!

The Governor Does Not

Permit a Political

Dismissal.

There Is no explanation needed for thefollowing letter dictated by GovernorCarter yesterday, though aft'-- r It wassent the Governor emphatically repeat-

ed Its tenor to nn Advertiser reporter."Klliclency Is the only t"st with mefor nny man In the employ of the Gov-

ernment," Governor Carter raid. Theletter follows:

"Oct. 3, 1901"C. S. Holland, Esq., Superintendent

of Public Works. Territory of ll.

"Dear .sir: I have Just been Informedthat a carpenter named Jnms Llng-nin- n,

under Mr. Howiand, has been re-

moved from olllce becaue he Is a Demo-crat, and this was presumed to be doneunder orders emnnatlng from me.

"Xot only have I never given suchan order ns that during my ndmlnls-trntlo- n,

but I will not tolerate suchnn action, and, If such an order hasbeen glen, I will ak you to counter-mand the Eame and reinstate Mr. Ling-ma- n.

"Very sincerely yours,(Sgd.) "G. It, CAP.TBrt.

"Governor."

SILL FARMING AT

THE VOLCANO HOUSE

Manager Bldgood of the A'olcanoHouse is raising some excellent corn,oats and panlcum grass and will soonput In alfalfa. Before long his essayIn small farming will provide all thefeed his stockjieedo. Already ManagerBldgood produces n good share of whatIs consumed on the A'olcano Housetable.

M'CLELLAN SlLEDAS SECRETARY

Geoige B. McCIellan, who was se-

lected enrly In the campaign to be theecietniy to Delegate Kalanlannole,

entered upon his duties on October 1.Mr MtCellnn was endoised for theposition by the Republican committeesnnd the Chamber of Commeice and

ns nlo the personal choice of thedelegate.

BROWN STRIPS HIMSELF

OF MANY VOTES

The action of Cecil Brown, who announces himself as nn "independentItepubllcan," In iillgnlng himself withthe Democrats on Saturday evening,and agreeing further to speak fromDemocrntlc platfoims throughout thecampaign, took fiom him a numberof voteis who hnd declared themselvesin his faor. If street talk Is to berelied on Blown made a serious political error nnd It Is believed that true- -blue Republicans will now let him se- -etely alone.

THE FIFTH'S TICKET

James Shnw, one of the Fifth Dis-trict Republican candidates for thelower house of the leglslatuie, tendered his resignation to the ExecutiveCommittee jesterday. In his letterMr. Shaw stated that ho had beenicgulaily nominated on the ticket butthut since the iinmlnntlon there hndbeen n good deal of criticism not favor-able to him, and thereforo he felt thathu should leiilgn fiom the ticket forthe benefit of tho Republican party, ItnppiNiiing fiom the criticism that hewiih injuring thu ticket, lie asked theExecutive Committee to tiku actionas soon im posklble to choone his

Chairman Vlda of the Fifth nittrlctt'oiiniilttaii KtHtail yteiJni tluit un- -

lr the iiihM Hum dy' notlou him toba alvnn fur calling w niwtlng of theI'titiillilltaa, ami lliaiafora no nut Ionby tt dUilrlii cimHUla huiiU In)

luktm bfort Va4tUM4lay iilukl, TimKaevMllva iiMllinUlaa will ml ijl DOuiliuauy 1. uaiiataar ir, jnaw a ituar mialiiull..n

'11e rvaiMtattloti of Mr ibaiv wm

abovt .ibiuutfti thv aaftrUi ha irty maitajifrt, ana varittiii ffutit r bIu kaiiu uia4 to HV Mr.aialilia wlH far lb sm tmuummi4 by air. fUuw, -- la, lit. UHiit lit pariy."

t'M4lMM4l.l."KiM' IKW.KIUANM iJUI'HM'lM KKwwtW

ftm mtmw mum ".i. m.iiJump m$4 Um mm i ii.Um to ml ' i

OCCUPY NEW

1LDING

The Experiment Station

Offices Pears

Shipped.

The officers nnd employees of theUnited States Experiment Station nremoving Into their new olllce building ntthe head of Pensneola street. The

Is n commodious nffnlr Inwhich will be housed Jared Smith, thedirector of the station; Prof. Shorey ondProf. Illgglns.

I'rof. Hlgglns sent n large shipmentof nlllgator pears n the Mongolia toa member of the United States Agricul-ture Department in Xew York. ThisIs In the nature of an experiment, nnd Ifsuccessful, will open up a new field forthe distribution of Hawaii's tree deli-cacy.

Cacao trees planted on a large tractof land near Hllo are thriving underthe care of the experiment station ofil-cer- s.

The development of cacao trees,If carried on successfully, will add an-

other Industry to small farming projectsIn the Islnnds.

tU. S. DEPAI1TMEXT OF AGP.ICUL,- -

TUItE, WEATllEP. BUREAU.

MOXTHLY METEOROLOGICAL,SUMMARY.

Station,' Honolulu, T. H., Month, Sep-

tember, 1001.

TemperatureDeg. Fahr'helt Precipi-

tation- Ch'rcter

Date. Mav. Mln. Mean of dayi at Clear2 SI 7S Clear3.A...S4 SO T Clear4 SI SO T Pt. Cldy.5 SI .44 Cloudy0 S4 T Clear7 S2 ClearS S5 SO T Clear9 S4 so T Pt. Cldy.

10 S4 7G so .01 Clear11 S4 74 79 Clear12 SI SO Cloudy13 S2 78 T CloudyII S4 .15 Pt. Cldy.15 ..f..S2 70 76 Pt. Cldy.1C S2 71 7G .CG Pt. Cldy.17 S4 74 79 ClearIS S4 74 79 Pt. Cldy.19 So 73 79 T Pt. Cldy.20 S3 73 79 Clear21 SI 74 78 .03 Pt. Cldy.22 S3 73 79 T Pt. Cldy.23 S3 74 SO T Clear24 .... SI 70 .OS Clear23 S3 T Clear2(1 . ...SI 78 Pt. Cldy.27 .... SI 7S T Pt. Cldy.2S S3 73 75 .01 Pt. Cldy.29 S3 73 7S T Cloudy30 S3 73 7S Pt. Cldy.

.Menn .S3. 7 73.2 7S.5Xote "T" Indicates trace of precipi-

tation.In Inches nnd hundredths.ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE.

(Reduced to sea level; Inches and hun-dredths.)

Menn, 29.91; highest, 30 02; date, 17;lowest, 29.S4, date, 2Sth.

TE.MPERATURE.Highest, S3 deg.; date, 23id; lowest,

70 deg., date, 24th.Greatest dally range, 14; date, 24th.Least dally range, 7; date, 13th.Mean for this month In 1S90, 78 deg.;

IS0I, SO deg.; 1S92, 79 deg., 1S93, 77 de.;1S94, 77 deg.; 1S95, 77 deg.; 1S90, 79 deg.;1S97, 78 deg.; 1S9S, 77 deg.; 1S99, 78 (leg.;1900, 79 deg.; 1901, 7S deg., 1902, 7S deg.;1903. 7S deg.; 1904, 7S deg.

Mean of this month for 15 years, 78deg.

Average dally excess this month nscompaied with mean of 1C years, 0.3.

AVIXD.

Prevailing direction, N.E.; totalmovement, 4,702 miles; maximum velo-city (for five minutes), 20 miles perhour, fiom northeast on 2nd.

PRECIPITATION.

Total this month in 1877, 1.12; 1S7S,0.02, 1S79, 0.C3, 15S0, 1.22; 18S1. l.Dfi. 18S2,1.04. 1SS3, 0.30, 1SS4, 1.03; 18S5, 2.25. 1SSC,

0.09; 1SS7, 1.42, 1SSS, 2.93; 18S9, 1.D2, 1S90,1.20; 1S91, 1.25; ISM, 1.31; 1S9J, 1.73, 1S91,1.47; 1S93, 4.34; 1S90, 0.01; 1897. 3.41; 1S9S,1.2S; 1S99. O.S0. 1900. 1.55; 1901, 0.S5; 1902,2.27: 1903, 5.74, 1904, 1.40.

Avciage of this month for 2S yeais,1.7S.

Deficiency of this month aH compar-ed w I til average of 2S years, 0.3S.

SUXSIIIXE AXD Cl.OUDlXi:.SS.Xo. of clear days, 13; (uutly ilnudy,

13, (iimily, 4, on which .01 Inch, or more,of i.i hi 7.

.Mean dew oliit, C7 dtfg.Minn iWntlw humidity, 70 per owt.(11. ut. at amount of lillllfnll in 21

liouia, CM), on 1'. 111.

AUKS. McP ASIII.KV.Hr. lion IMimtur, WiiuiIht Hiii en ii,

MORTUARY REPORT

FOR SEPTEMBER

li.,iilin iii ii. .. uii r.H (f.'pt, ini.ii.uiiiUu.i . ii w i ,i ,ia H f"l- -

tint i ii.ii i in,, .n in in in. ,i itmtiy U. I'll il V lurhl) Iniliii ; Hunt lu rnii) n fully luMi, II, fin i 'i, mi imiwu- -

l f, nVrl tHl), 1,

! luiiiiiirfiuiM ib nwiUai MraH.iumiui, gf i hiiiraa a rVrluyUM.

Ja It I Jk lu niton I ialit I i - ,

i .Mir, nl i, lli hi. Iliu rviiin.iMii I nit il rfi i t I i nnm .1 l . i. . . I ii, i

I ill i I i , It1,1.1

i T ST4"

A llttlo vanity Is n nol (IiImr.Hvcry woman should try, nt all thnlo look hor very best. Hut It certainlymust bo (llscouraRliii; to lima nnrmirror tell you that your lialr Is Jiraywhen you aro only thirty or HI')'!Gray lulr adds twenty years to tho

Why tint look as Youn-a- s youaro, or oen youiicr?

Ayer's Hair VigorAlways restores color to gray lialr,nlways. Ilrlngs back all tho ileep,itch, beautiful color of early youth.

Perhaps tho color of your lialrsults,but you aro losing the lialr Itself. Youaro threatened with thin hair, roughlialr, scraggly lialr. Your hair seoinsweak, not well nourished. Then giveit Ayer's lialr Vigor,, n. true hair-foo- d.

It stops falling hair, makostho linir grow, and keeps it soft andsilky.Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer Co., Lowtll.Maii., U.S.A.

HOLLISTER DRUG CO.. Agenta.

suicide, 1.

There weie three post mortems, sixdeaths Investigated and three coroner'sInquests.

Marriages reported were 52, nnd birthsCC.

t--The ship Luzon with 2.0S0 tons of

sugar arrived at Delaware BreakwaterSaturday. At $S3.10 per ton her cargowas worth $117,008.

HHackfeld & Co. have received a

cablegram from San Fianclco an-nouncing the departure of the Gaelicfor Honolulu last Saturday. She willprobably arrive Saturday morning.

COURT NOTICES.

IX THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THESECOXD CIRCUIT, TERRITORYOF HAWAII. IX PROBATE ATCHAMBERS.

In the Matter of the Estate of AVilllamKeamo, late of Keoncolo, Honua-ul- a.

Maul, Deceased. Before JudgeA. X. Kepolkal.

Order of notice of petition for allow-ance of final accounts and discharge inthis estate.

On reading and filing the petition andaccounts of J. D. Keamo, Admlnlstia-to-r

of the above entitled estate, where-in he asks to be allowed $256.19 and hecharges himself with $197.44, nnd asksthat the same may be examined andnpproved, and that a final order maybe made of distribution of the piopertyremaining In his hands to the personsthereto entitled, and discharging himand his suieties from all further re-sponsibility as such Admlnlstiator.

It Is ordered, that Tuesday, the 23thday of October, A, D. 1904, at 10 o'clocka. in., before the Judge of said court atthe Couit loom of the said couit atAValluku, Island of Maul, be and thesame hereby is appointed as the timennd place for hearing aid petition andaccounts, and that all peisons Inter-ested may then and there appear andshow cause. If any they have, why thename should not be granted, nnd mnypresent evidence ns to who are entitledto the said property.

Dated nt AVniluku Mnul, this 10thdny of September, 1904.

EDMUXD H. HART,Clerk of the Circuit Couit of the Sec-

ond Circuit.2024 Sept. 13, 20. 27 Oct. 4.

IX THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THESECOXD CIRCUIT. TERRITORYOF HAWAII IN PRORATE ATCHAMBERS.

In the Mntter of the Estnte of LlllllKnha, decensed Befoie Judge A.X. Kepolkal Order of Xotlce ofPetition for Allowance of Tlnal Ac-counts and Dlschaige In this Estate.

On leading and filing the petitionnnd accounts of W. O. Smith, Adminis-trator of the Estate of Llllll Knha (k),Into of Knlnupnpa, Moloknl, decpased,wherein he asks to be nllowed $247.10nnd ho chaises himself with $1039.17,nnd nsks that the sume may be ex-amined and appuned, nnd that a finalorder may be made of Distribution ofthe pioperty remaining In his lunulato the persons thereto entitled, anddischarging him nnd his sureties fiomnil further responsibility ns such AiUmlnlstrntor.

It Is oidered Hint Thursday, the 17thdny of November, A. I). 1901, nt 10

o'clock it. m., befoul tho Judge of saidCourt nt the Court Room of the wildCourt lit Wnlliiku, Island of Maul, bemid the name heieby Is appointed anthe time ami place for hem lug saidIMItlnn and Accounts, nml Hint nilpenmim IntimtHtdd may then nml therenppiiiir nnd hhou iniise, If any tliyhave, why thw winif nhoulil not be

ami limy pitmaiu dvMhiuo nsIn Mho win mitllUil in the Mli )iiowi

Dial initio of tin Oiilm, in thoIJiiKllnh luiigimn, I imullnbail in thlUwnliflii Oaxatle. it aaiiU'WaalUy nati s.imiwr pilitUsI mil iublihd In Jluiiu.lulu, fur lliraa ati caaalva waaka, thelu lUllllloMtttW lu '. Mill 1mm iboJi luuttuak piavlWrf l 'iv llmi-- Ibaialn up.

for alt I unaDalat) al Walii Mnul Hiia iitili

du ut ftatitauilJoi i'. J

III'MI SU U IUHT,I'UrJl Ilia t'lr'Uti mi ..( iu a.-- . m,i

I'UvUUJ. I i ii . t

ik ruts I'Mn'i'ir mr fwUMiH'Kli i'IM' II r TKUtUftiUYujf H4MAH IN HlMl4W.SrHUMhH

In tin M.i'iii i ii i ri i I ltiUI i . , H I j . I. 1 A

roiinu nml I)lchrap In I hi Ktima,rn romllh and nilna: Ihc petit Ion MA

iuiiI bf John T t'tiMi Adtnlnii'i. .i..r iiii uir win AniioxMi nf ihoI .mi of KHiklnn I'nM, lilln rf KnluiilHtii. M.illl hIihiui lidnk lo br iill.,tl lirto.1 and In1llutgaii hlmKelf with H7 Si mil ukn

Unit thi mum. tun be pxiimin a idn.itniMl. nnd Hint n llnnl mi'er miybo mnde of Distribution uf the pmperty rcmnlnlng In Ills hands to thfirriiin Ihercln entitled, nnd dlnchnrg-Iti-g

hltn nnd tilt surptlen from nil fur-ther responsibility ns such Adminis-trator with tho Will Annexed.

It In urdeied, thnt Thursday tile 17thdny of November, A. D. 1901, at 10o'clock n. m., before the Judge of saidCourt at the Court Iloom of the saidCourt nt Wnlluku. Inland of Maul, beutid the "nine hereby Is appointed nnthe time mid place for hearing saidPetition and Accounts, and that nilpersons Interested may then nnd therpnppear and show cause. If any theyhave, why the nnme should not begrunted, anil mny present evidence nHto who nre entitled to the said prop-erty. And that notice or this Order,In the English language, be publishedIn the Hawaiian cinzette, a semi-week- ly

newspaper printed nnd publish-ed In Honolulu, for three successiveweeks, tho lust publication to be notless thnn two weeks previous to thetime theieln appointed for said hearing.

Dated nt AValluku, Mnul, this 2Stlidny of September, 1901.

EDMDXD H. HART,Clerk of the Circuit Court of the Second

Chcuit.030 Oct. 4, 11, 18, 25.

IX THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THESECOXD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,TERRITORY OF HAWAII OC-TOBER TERM, 1904.

II. Hackfeld & Company, Ltd., a Cor-poration, Plaintiff, vs. P. E. Ln- -mar, Defendant, The Pioneer MillCo., Ltd,, a Corpoiatlon, Garnishee.

ORDER OF COURT FOR PUBLICA-TION' OF SUMMOXS.

Upon reading ana riling the affida-vits of L. X. Buldwin, and D. H. Case,and. It appearing to me therefromthat defendunt I. E. Lunar, has re-moved from, and Is now a nt

of the Territory of Hawaii, andthut he Is now living In the city ofSan Francisco, Stute of California;nnd, It also appearing from said afil-dav- lts

thnt a cause of action in as-sumpsit exists between said H. Hack-feld & Company, Ltd., as plaintiff, andfcaid P. E. Lamar, as defendant, andthat said P. E. Lamar Is a necessarypaity thereto; anil, it further appear-ing that a summons has been duly Is-

sued In the ubove entitled case, anddue and diligent Inquiry and searchmade for said P. E. Lamar for thepurpose of making personal servicethereof upon him as defendant, butthat tame was not and could not behad for the reasons hereinabove statedland by said nllldavlts made to appear:

Xow, theiefore, it is ordered thatservice of summons In this action bemade upon the defendnnt, P. E. Lamar, by publication thereof in theHawaiian Gazette, a semi-week- ly

newspaper, published in the Englishlanguage In Honolulu, Oahu, Territoryof Hawaii, and hereby designated asa newspaper suitable for the adver-tisement of notice of judicial proceed-ings; that such publication be had andmade at least once a week for fourconsecutive months; and

It fuither appearing from a readingof said affidavits, that said defendant.P. E. Lamar, is located In and aboutthe city of San Francisco, State ofCalifornia;

It Is further ordered and directedthat a copy of the summons and com-plaint In the above entitled case beforwarded forthwith by being deposit-ed Iii the United States Postolllce atAValluku, Maui, postpaid, directed tosaid P. E. Lamar, at San Francisco,State of California.

Service heieln shall be deemed com-pleted at the expiration of time ed

by the order of this court, thiscause to stand continued to, and betriable at, the legular March term1903 of this couit.

(Sgd.) A. N. KEPOIKAI,Judge uf the Circuit Court, Second

Judicial Clicult.Attest:

(Sgd.)EDMUXD H. HART,

Clerk, Second Circuit Court.(Seal.) 2C2S

The Official and Commercial Recordcontains all meeting notices nnd all

notices of every kind nnd de-scription.

Corns

Bunions?

Seabury & Johnson's

Medicated Corn

amstnd Bunion

pus miswill w limn, Give fhfinI'UI, iiul convlnc tnij filialrufti,

llollN-r-'.Vi- p (Jo.u . in. I.

m 4baakMat WiMi iUaiai klkk tMm UynJj i j ii1 i i i p .t

is I

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