to build cutter - university of...

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i I ) V J r ; TO BUILD CUTTER DELAYED Bf ACCIDENT BUSH AND WISE NOW. HOME RULERS PEOPLE GET THINK CONTRACT. HAWAII SHOULD TO BREAK OUT COMMUNICATION ESTABLISHED. SAID TO BE IS OBSERVED PEKING MEETS DOWN. WITH BAD BREAIC v Speaker Aklna Said to Have Ileen Turned Down Judge Kaulukou a Candidate tor the "Legislature. J. A. Aklna, Speaker oC the House of Representatives, says he Is "out of pol- itics" and will not run for the legisla- ture In tho coming campaign. Rumor had It that Aklna had deserted the Home Rule camp and would look for u nomination from the Republicans, but when asked about It Aklna said rtiat "he didnt thinkho would. rati, at aiir i y " - M Aklna was supposed to have his trlet In his pocket, as far as votes went, and he made a record last time for shrewdness nnd ability that out- shone that of most of the members of his party. The Home Rulers, accord- ing to one report, "turned him down," In recent discussions of candidates, and Aklna himself says he has decided to keep out. He Is said, however, to have Senatorial aspirations, and the next lew months may see him develop into a candidate for the Senate. Aklnas district Is on Kauai. Among the candidates talked of in Home Rule circles are John Wise and John E. Bush, once members of the Democracy, but now both In the runks of tho Home Rule party. Wise was a delegate to the Democratic Na lional Convention, and will live In his- tory as the man who cast a deciding vote for 16 to 1 In the deliberations of tho Democratic commlttea on platform. He Is a Home Ruler now, and the party will probably pu; him up for the legls-lutur- e. John E. Bush was a Democrat, and he made speeches for the Democrats during the last campaign. He was in- terpreter In the Senate as was Wise in the House. Now he declares himself a Home Ruler. He proposes to stick to that party, and though he has not an- nounced himself ns a candidate for the legislature, he does not deny that he has been approached on the subject, and may run. Another well known native who will almost certainly run Is Judge Kaulu- kou. He Is a Republican and proposes to remain such. It was reported re- cently that Kaulukou" was going over to the Home Rulers, but he emphatical- ly denies that such Is the case. "I Iiave become a Republican and I belles e in the party and shall. stick to it," said thejudge, admitting that It was not unlikely that he would bo a candidate for the., legislature. . ... WITNESSES JAILED. JudgeRobinson made an order yes terday for the detention of Alfred Krohn and Daniel Smith, who are want- ed as witnesses In tho George Ferris murder case. The witnesses are sailors and It Is feared that they will leave the Territory. They will therefore be kept In Oahu jail until the case comes up for trial next August. HAD ROUGH WEATHER. The steamer Kauai arrived this morning from Punaluu and other west- ern ports of Hawaii. She had very rough weather last week. On Friday she dragged her anchors at Punaluu and had to seek shelter at Hookena, vhe,re she remained until Sunday. Tho weather was so bad that she could not land all of her freight at Punaluu. Her foresail was ripped to pieces on the way home last night. INTO BY-WA- AND HEDGES. The young men who feel that there are other places more attractive than Association hall on Sunday afternoons In the summer are to be hunted up In some of their favorite resorts the next few ounday afternoons at four oclock The hall will be closed and the speaker nnd a number of workers nnd singers will be found next Sunday In tho shade of Makeo Island, Kaplolanl park. Dr. A. M. Smith, president of Oahu College will be the speaker, with a talk prepar- ed especially to Interest the soldier boys who are coming from Camp McKlnley. Prof. Richards will be there with his organ and the secretary Is hunting the city for a cornetlst. Such people ns happen to be In that end of the town at four o clock nre cordially Invited to spend the hour there. ENGLISH TRANSLATIONS. The ever popular "Aloha Collection" of Hawaiian Songs with Engljsh Trans- lations are how on sale .at Wall, Nichols Co., Ltd. , ! SWELL MILLINERY. For choice millinery L.B. Kerr & Co. are In the front rank. The Paris model hats are certainly crea tlons of extreme beauty. Sf8g8Mg S 999 Can be Depended Upon A responsible trust company can be depended upon at all times. lira,! 8 023 Fort Streot 9 a Movement dn Foot to Have Contract Awarded to Local Bidders Already $200,000 Una Been Appropriated. A movement Is on foot to try and have the revenue cutter which Is In- tended for the Hawaiian Islands, con- structed nt Honolulu. The Idea Is that Inasmuch as the boat Is Intended ex- clusively for work down here she should be constructed here. , Other sections of the union receive their pro rata of ship building and It Is argued that as- - thla Is the llrst beat t)V the kind for Ha- waii, this territory .should be given the contract. , Already $200,000 has-bee- n appropriat- ed for the construction of the cutter. This will enable the government to have an elegant little boa,t built, one which will bo a credit to both the nation and the builders. There nre now no shipbuilding com- panies hero but there nre concerns which certainly can do the work nnd certainly who are capable of putting such a boat together. There are numbers of places along the Water Front where, the boat could be built. The hull is to be of steel. Tho plans and specifications for the boat have not been received here, so com- paratively little Js yet known of the requirements. Applications are to be sent by the City of Peking mall for the specifica- tions, and- - when they are received It Is more than probable that effective steps will be taken by the parties interested to secure the contract for the construc- tion of the new boat. There are certainly firms which could construct all the machinery required for such a vessel, and with the tiilerit.here, there is no reason why the boat could not be constructed. Ope other fact to be taken Into consideration Is that the government makes a special allowance to the constructors of boats Intended for service on the Pacific, when the boats are built by Pacificship yards. The argument might be made that no such boat had ever been built here be- fore but, on the other hand, It may be nnswered that the Union Iron Works did not build a warship until they turn- ed oUt the cruiser Charleston which proved to be one of the finest of her class In the American navy. PLftGUOr LOSS MORE LITIGATION OVER THK POLICIES. Claims That Condemned Property Was Valueless and Attacks on the Board of Health Authority. Though several insurance cuses in- volving the question of paying damages for the big fire of January 20, 1900, have been decided by the Supreme Court, there are more sIU in the lower courts, depending upon legal Issues yet unde- cided, and yesterday Judge Humphreys heard and took under advisement sev- eral such cases. The Supreme Court has already held that the Insurance companies aro not bound to pay on pol- icies which the clause, used by most companies now, protecting the companies from losses cuused by any order of a civil authority. In the cases submitted yesterday, against the Royal Insurance Company, the New Zealand Insurance Company and tho North German Insurance Company, tho poli- cies did not contain any such clause. One of the principal contentions In these cases Is that no loss was the property destroyed having oeen condemned by the Board ol Health and thus made valueless. The con- demnation of course took place before the lire, and it Is claimed In behalf of the defendants that the property, be- ing thus condemned as Infected with bubonic plague, was of no value, hence the fire did not cause the loss claimed. Another contention Is as to the author- ity of the Board of Health to condeinn the property and ordered It burned. Judge Humphreys has the three cases, In which tho plaintiffs are D. L. Ak-wa- i, Wong Chow nnd the Hop Hlng Company, under consideration. PLAGUE IN NAGASAKI. NAGASAKI, May 13. A Japanese d:ed here this morning from plague. It Is believed the Infection was Imported from Formosa. SEMI-WEEKL- Y STAR. Honolulu people who are going abroad can have the Semi-Week- ly Star mailed to any address for the small sum of twenty-fiv- e cents a month. The Sml-Veek- ly Star contains all the local news of lmp tance, besides the dally stock quotation Fine Job Printing, Star Oftlce. BUSINESS MEN recognize tho value of time. The Un- derwood saves from 20 to SO per cent of tho tlmo of tho old style machine. Compare It with other machines and have Its superiority determined. & POTTER CO,, LTD UNION AND HOTEL STREETS SMOKE POURING FORTH DENSE VOLUMES YESTERDAY, IN , KAUAI BRINGS vVEItY STARTLING nsWS. Learned Nothing of Outbreak of Mo-J- J states that ho has succeeded in making ,tithe needed coherers locally and that kuaweoweo butjredliellectlon on, tnfcy ,lave proved cnllnenUy 8aUalao. Nights of ReporteSigrjlpUon . 4tory. As soon ns an operator can be 81Kr (MEent to Hawaii, It Is stated that com- - - munlcatlon will be established with The steamer Kauai, Captain Bruhn, that Island on a stable basis, arrived this morning from Punaluu and Asked in connection with the rcport-Kallu- a with the news that Ktlauea had cd outbreak In the crater of Mokuaweo-begu- n to emit smoke ot a furious rate weo whether his company intended to artd that the prospects for some vol- - cntabllsh cable fines radiating from canlc action from that crater were Honolulu to tho other islands, Mr. threatening. Dickinson stated this morning that It The column of smoke was noticed WM not tne,r i,Uent0n to do BO t the last Friday by Purser Clark, and tne . w,releB3 syatem proved satisfactory, various people aboard the vessel It ; ,.Mr CrosjJ lnfornla me that communl-iicrease- d In volume until on Tuesday,, h b permanently establlsh-i- t was pour ng out In such quantity , and , be tQ US t0 ? ?nn?ThJ ""wall. He invited me to look over in Tsmik! Teased steadUyand vest"! the apparatus yesterday, but I was daymorn to ilnd time. If that system Is from Hawaii ,the smoke was denser working we shall make no attempt to than it had been at any other time. Tho. compete with It. I understand that smoke was very black In color and was there Is a good deal of local money to be seen early In the morplng tcrested In tho system and It Is not our than nt any other time of the day, ns policy, to hinder Its successful opera- - the winds disperse the smoke clouds Inter In the day, Advices from the Volcano house re- ceived at Kau were to the effect thai the fire, which had been discovered at Kllnuca last week, had disappeared but thnt the lava had begun to boll. No advices were received concerning the Increasing volume of smoke but this condition was too apparent to require corroboration. So far as the outbreak of Mokuaweo-we- o reported yesterday from Hookena by Captain Townserid of the gasoline schooner Eclipse Is concerned, neither Captain Bruhn nor Purser Clark of the Kauai heard of any such volcanic ac- tion. The clouds were so dense about Punnluu and Hookena however that the mountain could not be seen. The statements Of Captain Bruhn tend however, to corroborate the story of some manner of outbreak, . for on hist Friday and Saturday nights, the some nights mentioned by Captain Tuwnsend, Captain Bruhn saw the skies red with the reflection of some light. He saw the reflection or whatever It was, as late as 11 oclock. The red glow seemed to Captain Bruhn, to extend all n round the compass. This conditio) dicates that. It-- , was perhaps the"nftTSF glow which has been in the heavens for some days past. On the other, hand, the after glow Is not as a rule, observ- able so late, generally disappearing about 8 p. m. This reflection was more noticeable on Friday and Saturday nights. No news of the reported outbreak of Mokuaweoweo was learned from any of the nntlves at any of the ports where the Kauai touched. It is possible that the volcano might simply have flared up during the two nights and then subsided temporarily. The fact that the light was not seen from the Volcano House Is easily ex- plained by the fact that Mokuaweoweols over 13,000 feet In lielght while Kllauea and the Volcano House are about 2,500 feet and are about twenty miles from the other olcano. The clouds have been very heavy nnd thick about Ha- waii for some weeks past nnd it is very probable that they obscured the view of Manager Waldron and others and prevented them from seeing tho reflec-,tlo- n of the reported eruption of Mokua- weoweo on Fridny and Saturday nights. Diamond Head Charlie the local look- out saw the light on last Friday night. 1 seemed to him to be In an east by Miuth easterly direction. The sky was very led. He does not think thnt It was the after glow nt all, but was In all probability, the reflection, from a volcano. He says he has not seen the sky so red for a long time. He nu tlced the reflection as late as 2 a. m. of Saturday. The clouds finally shut it off from view. It was thought that when the Knunl arrived today she might bring news, either of a confirmatory character or else disproving the report of the erup- tion of Mokuaweoweo but unfortunate- ly the matter still remains unsettled with seeral features added as corru. boratlon. Not until the Klnnu nrrlve.s tomorrow can the matter be settled. If the volcano did spring Into fiery activity on the two nights of last week, the peo- ple of HUo would certainly have heard of It by this time and the news will probably be sent on the steamer. The unusually hazy condition of Ha- waii, caused by the numerous clouds and heavy mists have prevented the people on the western coast from learn- ing positively about the reported out- break and thero is, ns a result, notning surprising In the fact that so little de- finite news has been brought by the vessels which have arrived from that part of Hawaii. rJVARDKaLEAPlN,G LADY. tS$ "DijsJflr.-akpfllcla- l orstn of(theijpfC33.tQriVln nVleeue of May 17 firesentii a falt"pageenKraving of Hiss Antoinette Ashton on Its cov- er page and states that Miss Ashton after closing her season with Frederick Warde shortly after returning from Honolulu will probably play tho lead- ing part in a new production next au- tumn. THE WEATHER. Weather Bureau, Punahou, 1 p. m. Wind fresh northeast; weather fair. Morning minimum temperature, M; midday maximum tempernture, SI; ba- rometer. 9 a. m 30.00 falling (corrected for gravity); rainfall, 24 hours ending 0 a. in., .18; dew point, 9 a. in., 61; hu- midity, 9 u. m., C5 pore ent. CURTIS J. LYONS, Observer. W. B. CORSETS. L. B. Kerr & Co., Ltd., have secured for the future the sole right for Hono- lulu for tho celebrated W. B. Corset, this Is the most porfect fitting Corset known to the trado and at popular prices from 60c, upwards. S. S. Dickinson Savs Cahlo Oomnanv Will Not Compete If Wireless Ser-vlc- o Is Satisfactory. The wireless system is said to be again in full force between this lulnnil ynnd Maul the operation being more flsuccessiul than before. Mkniicor Cross tlon in any way. Indeed as far as our company is concerned, we woum ipui sure have encouraged Marconliiief-fort- B on the Atlantic rather than have discouraged them as our competitors did. Marconi will need a land syatem for transmission, even If he gets his messages acoss the ocean which I very much doubt. We have kept In close touch with his experiments nil the time. It Is doubtful to my mind whe- ther the wireless telegraphy will ever be available over long distances for Anything more than social messages Where no code is useu ana ine itusuiku Of a word or so may be corrected by the context. For shorter distances though the sys- tem seems to work perfectly and I think that Hawaii should prove an Ideal Held for ltg rpperatlon. The dis- tances are Just rlglxt and there seems to be no liability pt disturbing Influ- ences. We had of course thought of an lnter-islan- d system, but If the wire- less supplies .the necessary want there Is no necessity for our attempting to fill It. BE WANTED 20,000 YEN BUT FAILING THAT HE WOULD TAKE 300. A Japanese Peasant Who Wanted the Empress to Help Him Make His For- tune Probably Insane. YOKOHAMA, May II. A startling In- cident occurred yesterday In Tokyo as the Empress was returning to the Pa- lace from the PeeressSchool In Koilmnchl-ku- , Tokyo, wheie she had been listening to a selection ot songs sung by the pupils. When the Imperial carriage was approaching the ofllcial residence ot the Minister of Finance at 5:30 i). m.. an old man sud denly stepped forward from among the at the road side and at- tempted to present to the Empress a letter which he had fastened to one end of a lone bamboo stick. A policeman, standing near Immediately arrested the man, ana the Empress passed on witn-o- ut the Incident having occasioned any alarm. The old man was taken to the Kojlmachlkn Police Station, where on examination, he was ascertained to be n peasant named Sugahnra Kumuno suke. 01 venrs old. living In Knmidate Karuyoke mura. Kuneyegorl, in tho prefecture ot Iwnte-ke- n. He was dress. ed In ordinary Japanese clothes, and wore the old fashioned top-Kn- ot on nis head. He came to the capital last month, leaving his home tin the 2iith ult. As the result of the pollee exnml- - i.ntlon It would nppear that the man Is suffering from some mental derange- ment. His object in endeavoring to present tho letter to the Empress was to get a loan of Y20.000 from Her Majes ty for the purpose of maKlng nis for- tune. In a duplicate letter, however, the amount he wanted was put at Y300. He was examined by a doctor In the Metropolian Police Board yestorday evening. Inquiries will bo made of his relatives and the old man placed In their charge. WILL NOT FORTIFY. Major R. P. Lee Is a, passenger on the Peking for -- an Francisco. Foitthe past three years, he has been stationed nt el by the British engineer corps, of which he Is a member. It has about been decided by the British not to build fortifications nt that lort. It will be used as a coaling station nnd will also servo as a summer resort for the army but will not, Major Lee thinks, be utilized for fortlflcntlons. Ho Is accompanied by his wife. THE MOST COMMON AILMENT. More people suffer from rheumatism than from any other ailment. This Is wholly unnecessary too, for a euro may be affected at a very smnll cost. G. W. Wescott, ot Meadowdale. N. Y., U.S.A., says: "I have been afflicted with rheumatism for some time nnd It has caused mo much suffering. I con- cluded to try Chamberlains Pain Balm and am pleased to say that It has cur- ed me." For sale by all druggists. Benson, Smith & Co., general agents. N "RING SWEET BIRD." D. G. Camarlnos recolved a consign- ment of fine singing canary birds on tho Nippon Mnru. They can be pur- chased at his establishment on King street. Life at best Is uncertain. Proto : your family against that uncertainty nnd buy a policy In The Oriental Life Insurance Company, GENERAL CESSATION OF BUSI NESS THROUGHOUT THE CITY TODAY. EXERCISES IN MANY OF THE SCHOOLS. Veternns of tho Oram! Army Hold Memorial Services at Nuuanu Cem- eteryJudge M.VM. Eatee the Orator. Decoration Day in Hawaii has al- ways been made prominent beyond tho memorial observances of the G. A. R. over their dead, nnd early this morning the first cars were filled with people laden with frngrant blossoms In wreaths and bunches with which to decorate the graves and revive tne memories of their dead. While tb . cus- tom Is universal. It prevails to a larg- er extent among the natives and Por- tuguese and for days beforehand flow- ers aro tended and preserved for mem- orial day. . Shortly after daybrfiR this morning the cemeteries wei- - redolent with the perfumed flowers strewn by loving hands and busy figures could be seen bestowing the blooms to the greatest advantage. Mary of the wreaths and flowers this year atfo sikllfully mad,-fro- colored paper, the better to with- stand the hot sun ami keep the mound.-- ed monuments, gai landed cannon and several days. Throughout the city the Stars and Stripes lloitt at half-mas- t, whin: en- signs in the harbor all do reverence to Memorial Day. As usual the stores liave made allusion to the day In their windows, those ot May & Company and Thrums being especially appropriate and artistically arranged with wreath- ed monuments, garlanded cannon and stacked rifles. At Nuuanu cemetery early I his morn- ing, where the local post of the Grand Army of tl.e Republic, dwindling yenr by year, but still devoted In the loving memory of the comrades who fought fide by tide with them on bloody Holds nearly forty years ago,, have laid aside a green turfed plot for their com- panions, the turf was cleared with scrupulous care, the halyards of the flagstaf hauled until the folds of the flag that those lying beneath tho linger o; Its circling shadow had fought for, dropped at"!inlf-ma- st in the still morn- ing. Seats have been plnred for tnose tnklug part In the exercises, the ora- tors, readers and staff ofllcers of the executive. Arrangements have been made for seating the members of the De Long Post on the border of the grassy plot that will one day prove their own last sleeping place and over which today their chaplain will read the burial service and the ritual of the G. A. R. The cemetery this afternoon will be crowded with those who have yearly Miown their respect of the present gen- eration for the srlrit of the day. There is always a most cosmopolitan crowd lr attendance. Uniformed, tho vete- ran In their dlstlngulFhlng hats with the badge of honor, the llrst regiment of the National Gurd, the Knights of Pythias, the Mounted Police, the Ca- dets from tho Kamehameha school, and the representatives of tho present regu- lar army, the Sixth United States Ar- tillery. The Territorial Band and the Kamehameha School band will be In attendance to set the tlmo with the solemn nlrs of dirges during the long walk to the cemetery. .MUny Invited guests have beenespecially asked and the government ofllelals, including tho staff of the governor will be present. The dwelling place of tho dead will be alive with humanity this afternoon representing nil nations. To the Ori- entals Memorial Day is a holiday of the American nation not quite fully under- stood, perhaps, and the brightest of buttelly kimonos are brought out for the children an army of whom are brought to the cemeteries. English, German. French nnd Portuguese, na- tives nnd Orientals nil dress according to their Interpretation of tho day nnd Its. meaning nnd Join with the Ameri- cans In honoring their dead. At the store of Quartermaster Deltz this morning floral tributes of green mallo and brilliant, fragrant blossoms vere brought in all this morning for the decoration of the graves of the George W. De Lohg Post and were sent out at noon to Nuuanu cemetery. The members of the Post will meet at 2 o clock in Vineyard street and will form h. parade lino on Alnkea, right resting op Beretanla street. Judge Morris M. Estee will deliver the funeral oration, while Lincolns Gettysburg address will be read by (Mrs. W. W. Hall. A salute across the graves will be fired by the (Continued on page five.) Baking Powder Made from pure cream, of tartar. Safeguards the food against alum Alum baklnp powders are the greatest menacers to health of the present day. row owiNOfoacrncn.. new vork. Forward Crank Pin was Cracked and Had To Be Disconnected Vessel Brings Much Honolulu Freight. The S. S. City of Peking arrived ofC the port last night shortly after mid- night from the Orient. She was near- ly two days late. The delay was dde to a damaged crttn pin of the forward cylinder. On May 19, two days out of Yokohama. Chief Engineer Wllllnm McCluro noticed that tho engine was throbbng nn unuBunl amount nnd nn Investigation disclosed the fan that the crank pin was cracked nnd every mometit threatened to endanger this safety of the vessel. In fact, hndithe damage not been dis- covered when It Wns, and, theCTnnk gotten loose. It might have done serious damage. The vessel had to be stopped so that Chief McChire could disconnect "the shaft. After this damage had been repaired, the vessel resumed her voynge to Honolulu with only three as the forwnrd one had to "be put out oC commission. The vessel brought 900 tons of freight for this port and three cabin passengers She has a fair sized number of passen- gers for San Frnnclsco. The vessel docked nt the Pacific Mntl wharf. Shi will not sail for San Francisco until tomorrow about 7 oclock. She will take a fair sized list of passengers from. Honolulu. General A. E. Bates who Is aboard Isj tHu paymaster general of the army. .He has been In the Philippines on a tour of inspection. He is accompanied by his tWo daughters, i Colonel James Allen is nn officer, ot the signal Service. He has been In tho Philippines for some time. Mr. and Mrs. F. Adler nnd son are prominent Dutch people of Java. They are going to England to attend the coro nation. T. Aizawn is a Japanese student who is going to nttend Harvard. Colonel ( Kitchener is a brothpr of Lord Herbert Kitchener. Colonel Kit chener Is the commander ot the British lorces nt Jamalra. He passed through here several months nun on tho nni- - lle, on a vacation to the Orient. He went to vjslt his son who is an officer on one of the British war ships In Asiatic waters. Major Martin Magginnls Is a woalthv Montana man who lias been onlovlrnr life In tho Orient forsome months. .Mrs. Holdsworth who stops off at Honolulu is well known here. Her siiu ter Is the wife of the French consul at Shanghai. Owing to tho machinery belnu-o- ut of order and considerable steam being wnsted, in .consequence, the vessel will take from 8 to 9 days to reach Snn Francisco. TIENTSIN ADMINISTRATION. TIENTSIN. May 13. Tho forelcn Hepresentatlves in Peklnir met for thn first time today to discuss the proposal, consisting of 29 articles, with respect to the question of the transference of the administration of Tientsin. It appears unit the .Ministers were unanimous on these conditions. RISING IN CHILI. SHANGHAI, May 13. The Insurgent In Chill have been entirely routed as the result of two daysfighting., (TheIr ringleader was captured, nnd a loss of 1300 persons killed! Tho above reached hero as nn olliclal re port. EMPOUNDED STRAY DOGS. rM. .. .1 , ... ...... i. . . . .. , . jj t tne huh iui;uct an til tvuiji jiirtL thing this morning nnd annexed manycollarless curs bofore they were Ihor-- 3 oughly awakened from their nlghtu ? Jlf- -Hifep. tsix were garnered in wnama.- - few minutes on the corner of Bethgl i mm jviiik niicii. .flilUtt writ- - tuny ...... I... .1. ,.ntn. h .. ,u. ,!..... dumped Into a big wooden cage mount- - i!) ed on a wagon. Several of the bow wows thus impounded nave seen Dct-t- er days apparently and may yetbo7j . 1 1... . I .... nn.l ...In I ITl III. II Itlll lull IIHH iiiHoicin iiiiu im.a-- 4 . tresses before thc-l- fnto Is sealed. The.sj Ililueky ones that boast neither owner,. license or tag, will be kept and roil ror a few days and then sncrlllced for the enrichment of their countrys soltby. being turned Into phosphates. , Heywood Patrol Shoes Thero Isnt a better shoo made for walking thun this, Possesses oxtremo durability and comfort. is muilo of heavy calf, with waterproof sole, rubber heels and In Illueher style. $5.00 BUYS A PAIR. We recommend It to all walk- ers. COMPANY, LIMITED 1057 FORT ST.

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TO BUILD CUTTER DELAYED Bf ACCIDENT

BUSH AND WISE

NOW.

HOME RULERS PEOPLEGETTHINK

CONTRACT.HAWAII SHOULD TO BREAK OUT COMMUNICATION

ESTABLISHED.SAID TO BE IS OBSERVED PEKING MEETS

DOWN.

WITH BAD BREAIC

v Speaker Aklna Said to Have Ileen' Turned Down Judge Kaulukou a

Candidate tor the "Legislature.

J. A. Aklna, Speaker oC the House ofRepresentatives, says he Is "out of pol-

itics" and will not run for the legisla-ture In tho coming campaign. Rumorhad It that Aklna had deserted theHome Rule camp and would look foru nomination from the Republicans,but when asked about It Aklna saidrtiat "he didn't think' ho would. rati, ataiir i y " - M

Aklna was supposed to have histrlet In his pocket, as far as voteswent, and he made a record last timefor shrewdness nnd ability that out-shone that of most of the members ofhis party. The Home Rulers, accord-ing to one report, "turned him down,"In recent discussions of candidates, andAklna himself says he has decided tokeep out. He Is said, however, to haveSenatorial aspirations, and the nextlew months may see him develop intoa candidate for the Senate. Aklna'sdistrict Is on Kauai.

Among the candidates talked of inHome Rule circles are John Wise andJohn E. Bush, once members of theDemocracy, but now both In therunks of tho Home Rule party. Wisewas a delegate to the Democratic Nalional Convention, and will live In his-tory as the man who cast a decidingvote for 16 to 1 In the deliberations oftho Democratic commlttea on platform.He Is a Home Ruler now, and the partywill probably pu; him up for the legls-lutur- e.

John E. Bush was a Democrat, andhe made speeches for the Democratsduring the last campaign. He was in-terpreter In the Senate as was Wise inthe House. Now he declares himselfa Home Ruler. He proposes to stick tothat party, and though he has not an-nounced himself ns a candidate for thelegislature, he does not deny that hehas been approached on the subject,and may run.

Another well known native who willalmost certainly run Is Judge Kaulu-kou. He Is a Republican and proposesto remain such. It was reported re-cently that Kaulukou" was going overto the Home Rulers, but he emphatical-ly denies that such Is the case. "I Iiavebecome a Republican and I belles e inthe party and shall. stick to it," saidthe' judge, admitting that It was notunlikely that he would bo a candidatefor the., legislature. . ...

' WITNESSES JAILED.Judge' Robinson made an order yes

terday for the detention of AlfredKrohn and Daniel Smith, who are want-ed as witnesses In tho George Ferrismurder case. The witnesses are sailorsand It Is feared that they will leavethe Territory. They will therefore bekept In Oahu jail until the case comesup for trial next August.

HAD ROUGH WEATHER.The steamer Kauai arrived this

morning from Punaluu and other west-ern ports of Hawaii. She had veryrough weather last week. On Fridayshe dragged her anchors at Punaluuan'd had to seek shelter at Hookena,vhe,re she remained until Sunday. Thoweather was so bad that she could notland all of her freight at Punaluu. Herforesail was ripped to pieces on theway home last night.

INTO BY-WA- AND HEDGES.The young men who feel that there

are other places more attractive thanAssociation hall on Sunday afternoonsIn the summer are to be hunted up Insome of their favorite resorts the nextfew ounday afternoons at four o'clockThe hall will be closed and the speakernnd a number of workers nnd singerswill be found next Sunday In tho shadeof Makeo Island, Kaplolanl park. Dr.A. M. Smith, president of Oahu Collegewill be the speaker, with a talk prepar-ed especially to Interest the soldier boyswho are coming from Camp McKlnley.Prof. Richards will be there with hisorgan and the secretary Is hunting thecity for a cornetlst. Such people nshappen to be In that end of the town atfour o clock nre cordially Invited tospend the hour there.

ENGLISH TRANSLATIONS.The ever popular "Aloha Collection"

of Hawaiian Songs with Engljsh Trans-lations are how on sale .at Wall,Nichols Co., Ltd., !

SWELL MILLINERY.For choice millinery L.B.

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

Sf8g8Mg S 999

Can be DependedUpon

A responsible trust companycan be depended upon at alltimes.

lira,!8 023 Fort Streot 9a

Movement dn Foot to Have ContractAwarded to Local Bidders Already$200,000 Una Been Appropriated.

A movement Is on foot to try andhave the revenue cutter which Is In-tended for the Hawaiian Islands, con-

structed nt Honolulu. The Idea Is thatInasmuch as the boat Is Intended ex-clusively for work down here she shouldbe constructed here. , Other sections ofthe union receive their pro rata of shipbuilding and It Is argued that as- - thlaIs the llrst beat t)V the kind for Ha-waii, this territory .should be given thecontract. ,

Already $200,000 has-bee- n appropriat-ed for the construction of the cutter.This will enable the government to havean elegant little boa,t built, one whichwill bo a credit to both the nation andthe builders.

There nre now no shipbuilding com-panies hero but there nre concernswhich certainly can do the work nndcertainly who are capable of puttingsuch a boat together.

There are numbers of places alongthe Water Front where, the boat couldbe built. The hull is to be of steel. Thoplans and specifications for the boathave not been received here, so com-paratively little Js yet known of therequirements.

Applications are to be sent by theCity of Peking mall for the specifica-tions, and- - when they are received It Ismore than probable that effective stepswill be taken by the parties interestedto secure the contract for the construc-tion of the new boat.

There are certainly firms which couldconstruct all the machinery required forsuch a vessel, and with the tiilerit.here,there is no reason why the boat couldnot be constructed. Ope other fact tobe taken Into consideration Is that thegovernment makes a special allowanceto the constructors of boats Intendedfor service on the Pacific, when theboats are built by Pacific' ship yards.The argument might be made that nosuch boat had ever been built here be-fore but, on the other hand, It may bennswered that the Union Iron Worksdid not build a warship until they turn-ed oUt the cruiser Charleston whichproved to be one of the finest of herclass In the American navy.

PLftGUOr LOSS

MORE LITIGATION OVER THK' POLICIES.

Claims That Condemned Property WasValueless and Attacks on the Boardof Health Authority.

Though several insurance cuses in-

volving the question of paying damagesfor the big fire of January 20, 1900, havebeen decided by the Supreme Court,there are more sIU in the lower courts,depending upon legal Issues yet unde-cided, and yesterday Judge Humphreysheard and took under advisement sev-eral such cases. The 'Supreme Courthas already held that the Insurancecompanies aro not bound to pay on pol-icies which the clause, used bymost companies now, protecting thecompanies from losses cuused by anyorder of a civil authority. In the casessubmitted yesterday, against the RoyalInsurance Company, the New ZealandInsurance Company and tho NorthGerman Insurance Company, tho poli-cies did not contain any such clause.

One of the principal contentions Inthese cases Is that no loss wasthe property destroyed having oeencondemned by the Board ol Healthand thus made valueless. The con-demnation of course took place beforethe lire, and it Is claimed In behalf ofthe defendants that the property, be-

ing thus condemned as Infected withbubonic plague, was of no value, hencethe fire did not cause the loss claimed.Another contention Is as to the author-ity of the Board of Health to con'deinnthe property and ordered It burned.Judge Humphreys has the three cases,In which tho plaintiffs are D. L. Ak-wa- i,

Wong Chow nnd the Hop HlngCompany, under consideration.

PLAGUE IN NAGASAKI.NAGASAKI, May 13. A Japanese

d:ed here this morning from plague. ItIs believed the Infection was Importedfrom Formosa.

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

abroad can have the Semi-Week- ly Starmailed to any address for the smallsum of twenty-fiv- e cents a month. TheSml-Veek- ly Star contains all the localnews of lmp tance, besides the dallystock quotation

Fine Job Printing, Star Oftlce.

BUSINESS MENrecognize tho value of time. The Un-derwood saves from 20 to SO per centof tho tlmo of tho old style machine.

Compare It with other machinesand have Its superiority determined.

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UNION AND HOTEL STREETS

SMOKE 'POURING FORTHDENSE VOLUMES

YESTERDAY,

IN ,

KAUAI BRINGS vVEItY STARTLING'nsWS.

Learned Nothing of Outbreak of Mo-J- J states that ho has succeeded in making,' tithe needed coherers locally and thatkuaweoweo butjredliellectlon on, tnfcy ,lave proved cnllnenUy 8aUalao.Nights of ReporteSigrjlpUon . 4tory. As soon ns an operator can be'81Kr (MEent to Hawaii, It Is stated that com- -

- munlcatlon will be established withThe steamer Kauai, Captain Bruhn, that Island on a stable basis,

arrived this morning from Punaluu and Asked in connection with the rcport-Kallu- awith the news that Ktlauea had cd outbreak In the crater of Mokuaweo-begu- nto emit smoke ot a 'furious rate weo whether his company intended to

artd that the prospects for some vol- - cntabllsh cable fines radiating fromcanlc action from that crater were Honolulu to tho other islands, Mr.threatening. Dickinson stated this morning that It

The column of smoke was noticed WM not tne,r i,Uent0n to do BO t thelast Friday by Purser Clark, and tne . w,releB3 syatem proved satisfactory,various people aboard the vessel It ; ,.Mr CrosjJ lnfornla me that communl-iicrease- d

In volume until on Tuesday,' , h b permanently establlsh-i- twas pour ng out In such quantity , and , be tQUS t0 ? ?nn?ThJ ""wall. He invited me to look overinTsmik! Teased steadUy' and vest"! the apparatus yesterday, but I wasday'morn to ilnd time. If that system Is

from Hawaii ,the smoke was denser working we shall make no attempt tothan it had been at any other time. Tho. compete with It. I understand thatsmoke was very black In color and was there Is a good deal of local money

to be seen early In the morplng tcrested In tho system and It Is not ourthan nt any other time of the day, ns policy, to hinder Its successful opera- -

the winds disperse the smoke cloudsInter In the day,

Advices from the Volcano house re-

ceived at Kau were to the effect thaithe fire, which had been discovered atKllnuca last week, had disappeared butthnt the lava had begun to boll. Noadvices were received concerning theIncreasing volume of smoke but thiscondition was too apparent to requirecorroboration.

So far as the outbreak of Mokuaweo-we- o

reported yesterday from Hookenaby Captain Townserid of the gasolineschooner Eclipse Is concerned, neitherCaptain Bruhn nor Purser Clark of theKauai heard of any such volcanic ac-

tion. The clouds were so dense aboutPunnluu and Hookena however that themountain could not be seen.

The statements Of Captain Bruhntend however, to corroborate the storyof some manner of outbreak, . for onhist Friday and Saturday nights, thesome nights mentioned by CaptainTuwnsend, Captain Bruhn saw the skiesred with the reflection of some light.He saw the reflection or whatever Itwas, as late as 11 o'clock. The red glowseemed to Captain Bruhn, to extend alln round the compass. This conditio)dicates that. It-- , was perhaps the"'nftTSFglow which has been in the heavens forsome days past. On the other, hand,the after glow Is not as a rule, observ-able so late, generally disappearingabout 8 p. m. This reflection was morenoticeable on Friday and Saturdaynights.

No news of the reported outbreak ofMokuaweoweo was learned from any ofthe nntlves at any of the ports wherethe Kauai touched.

It is possible that the volcano mightsimply have flared up during the twonights and then subsided temporarily.The fact that the light was not seenfrom the Volcano House Is easily ex-

plained by the fact that Mokuaweoweolsover 13,000 feet In lielght while Kllaueaand the Volcano House are about 2,500feet and are about twenty miles fromthe other olcano. The clouds havebeen very heavy nnd thick about Ha-waii for some weeks past nnd it is veryprobable that they obscured the viewof Manager Waldron and others andprevented them from seeing tho reflec-,tlo- n

of the reported eruption of Mokua-weoweo on Fridny and Saturday nights.

Diamond Head Charlie the local look-out saw the light on last Friday night.

1 seemed to him to be In an east byMiuth easterly direction. The sky wasvery led. He does not think thnt Itwas the after glow nt all, but was Inall probability, the reflection, from avolcano. He says he has not seen thesky so red for a long time. He nutlced the reflection as late as 2 a. m. ofSaturday. The clouds finally shut itoff from view.

It was thought that when the Knunlarrived today she might bring news,either of a confirmatory character orelse disproving the report of the erup-tion of Mokuaweoweo but unfortunate-ly the matter still remains unsettledwith seeral features added as corru.boratlon. Not until the Klnnu nrrlve.stomorrow can the matter be settled. Ifthe volcano did spring Into fiery activityon the two nights of last week, the peo-ple of HUo would certainly have heardof It by this time and the news willprobably be sent on the steamer.

The unusually hazy condition of Ha-waii, caused by the numerous cloudsand heavy mists have prevented thepeople on the western coast from learn-ing positively about the reported out-break and thero is, ns a result, notningsurprising In the fact that so little de-

finite news has been brought by thevessels which have arrived from thatpart of Hawaii.

rJVARDKaLEAPlN,G LADY.tS$ "DijsJflr.-akpfllcla- l

orstn of(theijpfC33.tQriVln nVleeue ofMay 17 firesentii a falt"pageenKravingof Hiss Antoinette Ashton on Its cov-er page and states that Miss Ashtonafter closing her season with FrederickWarde shortly after returning fromHonolulu will probably play tho lead-ing part in a new production next au-

tumn.

THE WEATHER.Weather Bureau, Punahou, 1 p. m.Wind fresh northeast; weather fair.Morning minimum temperature, M;

midday maximum tempernture, SI; ba-

rometer. 9 a. m 30.00 falling (correctedfor gravity); rainfall, 24 hours ending 0

a. in., .18; dew point, 9 a. in., 61; hu-midity, 9 u. m., C5 pore ent.

CURTIS J. LYONS, Observer.

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

for the future the sole right for Hono-lulu for tho celebrated W. B. Corset,this Is the most porfect fitting Corsetknown to the trado and at popularprices from 60c, upwards.

S. S. Dickinson Savs Cahlo OomnanvWill Not Compete If Wireless Ser-vlc- o

Is Satisfactory. '

The wireless system is said to beagain in full force between this lulnnil

ynnd Maul the operation being morefl'successiul than before. Mkniicor Cross

tlon in any way. Indeed as far as ourcompany is concerned, we woum ipuisure have encouraged Marconl'iiief-fort- B

on the Atlantic rather than havediscouraged them as our competitorsdid. Marconi will need a land syatemfor transmission, even If he gets hismessages acoss the ocean which Ivery much doubt. We have kept Inclose touch with his experiments nil thetime. It Is doubtful to my mind whe-

ther the wireless telegraphy will everbe available over long distances forAnything more than social messagesWhere no code is useu ana ine itusuikuOf a word or so may be corrected bythe context.

For shorter distances though the sys-

tem seems to work perfectly and Ithink that Hawaii should prove anIdeal Held for ltg rpperatlon. The dis-

tances are Just rlglxt and there seemsto be no liability pt disturbing Influ-ences. We had of course thought of anlnter-islan- d system, but If the wire-less supplies .the necessary want thereIs no necessity for our attempting tofill It.

BE WANTED 20,000 YEN

BUT FAILING THAT HE WOULDTAKE 300.

A Japanese Peasant Who Wanted theEmpress to Help Him Make His For-

tune Probably Insane.

YOKOHAMA, May II. A startling In-

cident occurred yesterday In Tokyo asthe Empress was returning to the Pa-lace from the Peeress' School In

Koilmnchl-ku- , Tokyo, wheieshe had been listening to a selection otsongs sung by the pupils. When theImperial carriage was approaching theofllcial residence ot the Minister ofFinance at 5:30 i). m.. an old man suddenly stepped forward from among the

at the road side and at-tempted to present to the Empress aletter which he had fastened to one endof a lone bamboo stick. A policeman,standing near Immediately arrested theman, ana the Empress passed on witn-o- ut

the Incident having occasioned anyalarm. The old man was taken to theKojlmachlkn Police Station, where onexamination, he was ascertained to ben peasant named Sugahnra Kumunos'uke. 01 venrs old. living In KnmidateKaruyoke mura. Kuneyegorl, in thoprefecture ot Iwnte-ke- n. He was dress.ed In ordinary Japanese clothes, andwore the old fashioned top-Kn- ot on nishead. He came to the capital lastmonth, leaving his home tin the 2iithult. As the result of the pollee exnml- -i.ntlon It would nppear that the man Issuffering from some mental derange-ment. His object in endeavoring topresent tho letter to the Empress wasto get a loan of Y20.000 from Her Majesty for the purpose of maKlng nis for-tune. In a duplicate letter, however,the amount he wanted was put at Y300.He was examined by a doctor In theMetropolian Police Board yestordayevening. Inquiries will bo made of hisrelatives and the old man placed Intheir charge.

WILL NOT FORTIFY.Major R. P. Lee Is a, passenger on the

Peking for -- an Francisco. Foitthe pastthree years, he has been stationed nt

el by the British engineercorps, of which he Is a member. It hasabout been decided by the British notto build fortifications nt that lort. Itwill be used as a coaling station nndwill also servo as a summer resort forthe army but will not, Major Leethinks, be utilized for fortlflcntlons. HoIs accompanied by his wife.

THE MOST COMMON AILMENT.More people suffer from rheumatism

than from any other ailment. This Iswholly unnecessary too, for a euromay be affected at a very smnll cost.G. W. Wescott, ot Meadowdale. N. Y.,U.S.A., says: "I have been afflictedwith rheumatism for some time nnd Ithas caused mo much suffering. I con-

cluded to try Chamberlain's Pain Balmand am pleased to say that It has cur-ed me." For sale by all druggists.Benson, Smith & Co., general agents.

N "RING SWEET BIRD."D. G. Camarlnos recolved a consign-

ment of fine singing canary birds ontho Nippon Mnru. They can be pur-chased at his establishment on Kingstreet.

Life at best Is uncertain. Proto :your family against that uncertaintynnd buy a policy In The Oriental LifeInsurance Company,

GENERAL CESSATION OF BUSI

NESS THROUGHOUT THECITY TODAY.

EXERCISES IN MANY OF THESCHOOLS.

Veternns of tho Oram! Army HoldMemorial Services at Nuuanu Cem-eteryJudge M.VM. Eatee the Orator.

Decoration Day in Hawaii has al-

ways been made prominent beyond thomemorial observances of the G. A. R.over their dead, nnd early this morningthe first cars were filled with peopleladen with frngrant blossoms Inwreaths and bunches with which todecorate the graves and revive tnememories of their dead. While tb . cus-tom Is universal. It prevails to a larg-er extent among the natives and Por-tuguese and for days beforehand flow-ers aro tended and preserved for mem-orial day. .

Shortly after daybrfiR this morningthe cemeteries wei- - redolent with theperfumed flowers strewn by lovinghands and busy figures could be seenbestowing the blooms to the greatestadvantage. Mary of the wreaths andflowers this year atfo sikllfully mad,-fro-

colored paper, the better to with-stand the hot sun ami keep the mound.--ed monuments, gai landed cannon andseveral days.

Throughout the city the Stars andStripes lloitt at half-mas- t, whin: en-signs in the harbor all do reverenceto Memorial Day. As usual the storesliave made allusion to the day In theirwindows, those ot May & Company andThrum's being especially appropriateand artistically arranged with wreath-ed monuments, garlanded cannon andstacked rifles.

At Nuuanu cemetery early I his morn-ing, where the local post of the GrandArmy of tl.e Republic, dwindling yenrby year, but still devoted In the lovingmemory of the comrades who foughtfide by tide with them on bloody Holdsnearly forty years ago,, have laid asidea green turfed plot for their com-panions, the turf was cleared withscrupulous care, the halyards of theflagstaf hauled until the folds of theflag that those lying beneath tho lingero; Its circling shadow had fought for,dropped at"!inlf-ma- st in the still morn-ing. Seats have been plnred for tnosetnklug part In the exercises, the ora-tors, readers and staff ofllcers of theexecutive. Arrangements have beenmade for seating the members of theDe Long Post on the border of thegrassy plot that will one day provetheir own last sleeping place and overwhich today their chaplain will readthe burial service and the ritual of theG. A. R.

The cemetery this afternoon will becrowded with those who have yearlyMiown their respect of the present gen-eration for the srlrit of the day. Thereis always a most cosmopolitan crowdlr attendance. Uniformed, tho vete-ran In their dlstlngulFhlng hats withthe badge of honor, the llrst regimentof the National Gurd, the Knights ofPythias, the Mounted Police, the Ca-

dets from tho Kamehameha school, andthe representatives of tho present regu-lar army, the Sixth United States Ar-tillery. The Territorial Band and theKamehameha School band will be Inattendance to set the tlmo with thesolemn nlrs of dirges during the longwalk to the cemetery. .MUny Invitedguests have been' especially asked andthe government ofllelals, including thostaff of the governor will be present.

The dwelling place of tho dead willbe alive with humanity this afternoonrepresenting nil nations. To the Ori-

entals Memorial Day is a holiday of theAmerican nation not quite fully under-stood, perhaps, and the brightest ofbutte'lly kimonos are brought out forthe children an army of whom arebrought to the cemeteries. English,German. French nnd Portuguese, na-

tives nnd Orientals nil dress accordingto their Interpretation of tho day nndIts. meaning nnd Join with the Ameri-cans In honoring their dead.

At the store of Quartermaster Deltzthis morning floral tributes of greenmallo and brilliant, fragrant blossomsvere brought in all this morning forthe decoration of the graves of theGeorge W. De Lohg Post and were sentout at noon to Nuuanu cemetery. Themembers of the Post will meet at 2

o clock in Vineyard street and will formh. parade lino on Alnkea, right restingop Beretanla street. Judge Morris M.Estee will deliver the funeral oration,while Lincoln's Gettysburg address willbe read by (Mrs. W. W. Hall. A saluteacross the graves will be fired by the

(Continued on page five.)

Baking PowderMade from purecream, of tartar.

Safeguards the foodagainst alum

Alum baklnp powders are the greatestmenacers to health of the present day.

row owiNOfoacrncn.. new vork.

Forward Crank Pin was Cracked andHad To Be Disconnected VesselBrings Much Honolulu Freight.

The S. S. City of Peking arrived ofCthe port last night shortly after mid-night from the Orient. She was near-ly two days late. The delay was ddeto a damaged crttn pin of the forwardcylinder. On May 19, two days out ofYokohama. Chief Engineer WllllnmMcCluro noticed that tho engine wasthrobb'ng nn unuBunl amount nnd nnInvestigation disclosed the fan thatthe crank pin was cracked nnd everymometit threatened to endanger thissafety of the vessel.

In fact, hndithe damage not been dis-covered when It Wns, and, theCTnnkgotten loose. It might have done seriousdamage. The vessel had to be stoppedso that Chief McChire could disconnect

"the shaft. After this damage had beenrepaired, the vessel resumed her voyngeto Honolulu with only threeas the forwnrd one had to "be put out oCcommission.

The vessel brought 900 tons of freightfor this port and three cabin passengersShe has a fair sized number of passen-gers for San Frnnclsco. The vesseldocked nt the Pacific Mntl wharf. Shiwill not sail for San Francisco untiltomorrow about 7 o'clock. She willtake a fair sized list of passengers from.Honolulu.

General A. E. Bates who Is aboardIsj tHu paymaster general of the army. .'

He has been In the Philippines on a tourof inspection. He is accompanied byhis tWo daughters, i

Colonel James Allen is nn officer, otthe signal Service. He has been In thoPhilippines for some time.

Mr. and Mrs. F. Adler nnd son areprominent Dutch people of Java. Theyare going to England to attend the coronation.

T. Aizawn is a Japanese student whois going to nttend Harvard.

Colonel ( Kitchener is a brothpr ofLord Herbert Kitchener. Colonel Kitchener Is the commander ot the Britishlorces nt Jamalra. He passed throughhere several months nun on tho nni- -lle, on a vacation to the Orient. Hewent to vjslt his son who is an officeron one of the British war ships InAsiatic waters.

Major Martin Magginnls Is a woalthvMontana man who lias been onlovlrnrlife In tho Orient forsome months.

.Mrs. Holdsworth who stops off atHonolulu is well known here. Her siiuter Is the wife of the French consul atShanghai.

Owing to tho machinery belnu-o- ut of '

order and considerable steam beingwnsted, in .consequence, the vessel willtake from 8 to 9 days to reach SnnFrancisco.

TIENTSIN ADMINISTRATION.TIENTSIN. May 13. Tho forelcn

Hepresentatlves in Peklnir met for thnfirst time today to discuss the proposal,consisting of 29 articles, with respect tothe question of the transference of theadministration of Tientsin. It appearsunit the .Ministers were unanimous onthese conditions.

RISING IN CHILI.SHANGHAI, May 13. The Insurgent

In Chill have been entirely routed asthe result of two days' fighting., (TheIrringleader was captured, nnd

a loss of 1300 persons killed! Thoabove reached hero as nn olliclal report.

EMPOUNDED STRAY DOGS.rM. .. .1 , ... ...... i. . . . .. , . jj ttne huh iui;uct an til tvuiji jiirtL

thing this morning nnd 'annexed many'collarless curs bofore they were Ihor-'- 3oughly awakened from their nlght'u ? Jlf--'

Hifep. tsix were garnered in wnama.'- -

few minutes on the corner of Bethgl imm jviiik niicii. .fli'l'Utt writ-- tuny...... I... .1. ,.ntn. h .. ,u. ,!.....dumped Into a big wooden cage mount- - i!)ed on a wagon. Several of the bowwows thus impounded nave seen Dct-t- er

days apparently and may yetbo7j. 1 1... . I .... nn.l ...InI ITl III. II Itlll lull IIHH iiiHoicin iiiiu im.a-- 4 .

tresses before thc-l- fnto Is sealed. The.sjI'lilueky ones that boast neither owner,'.license or tag, will be kept and roil rora few days and then sncrlllced for theenrichment of their country's solt'by.being turned Into phosphates. ,

HeywoodPatrol Shoes

Thero Isn't a better shoo madefor walking thun this,

Possesses oxtremo durabilityand comfort.

is muilo of heavy calf, withwaterproof sole, rubber heels andIn Illueher style.

$5.00BUYS A PAIR.

We recommend It to all walk-ers.

COMPANY, LIMITED

1057 FORT ST.

k.

TWO.

Canadian Australian

STEAMSHIP

Royal

teamer of the an we line, running In connection with the CANADIAN

PACIFIC RAILWAY COMP7.NY between Vancouver. B. C, and Sydney, N.B. W., and calling at Victoria B. C, Honolulu and Brisbane, Q. ,

Dae at Honolulu on or about tho dates bolow stated, viz:

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

UIOWERA JUNE 7U.ORANQI JULY 5

Calling at Suva, Fiji, on BothUp and Down Voyages

. H. DAVIES &

Steamers of fthe aboveport on or about the dates below men

FOR CHINA AND JAPAN.PERU MAY 24COPTIC JUNE 3

MARU JUNE 11PEKING JUNE 19GAELIC JUNE 28

MARU JULY 5CHINA JULY 15BORIC JULY 23NIPPON MARU JULY 31PERU AUG. 8COPTIC AUG. 16

MARU AUG. 2G

CHINA SEPT. 5

For general apply to

4.

The fine Steamers of thisas

FROM SAN

MAY 28JUNE 6

SIERRA JUNE 18JUNE 27

BONOMA JULY 9JULY 18JULY 30

AUGUST 8

SIERRA AUGUST 20AUGUST 29

SONOMA SEPT. 10SEPT. 19..

Local Boat.

Mai

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

and Toyo Kisen Kaisha.

Companies

AMERICA

HONGKONG

HONGKONG

Information

HACKFEI.D

Passengershereunder:

FRANCISCO.

VENTURAALAMEDA

ALAMEDA

ALAMEDAVENTURAALAMEDA

ALAMEDA

ALAMEDA

From Sydney and Brisbane, for Vic-toria and Vancouver. B. C:

JUNE 4MCWiA JULY 2

CO., Ltd., Gen'l Agts.

will call at Honolulu and leave thistloned:

FOR SAN FRANCISCO.PEKING MAY 28GAELIC JUNE 7HONGKONG MARU JUNE 13CHINA .JUNE 21DORIC .JUNE 28NIPPON MARU JULY 8PERU JULY 1G

COPTIC JULY 25MARU AUG. O

PEKING AUG. "1GAELIC AUG. 20DORIC SEPT. 12NIPPON MARU SEPT. 20

CO., Ltd.

line will arrive at and leave this port

FOR SAN FRANCISCO.

SIERRA MAY 27

ALAMEDA JUNE 11

SONOMA JUNE 17

ALAMEDA JULY 2VENTURA JULY 8

ALAMEDA JULY 23

SIERRA JULY 29ALAMEDA AUG. 13

SONOMA AUa 19

ALAMEDA SEPT. 3VENTURA SEPT. 9

ALAMEDA SEPT. 24

QOh

AGENTS.

leanic Steamship Company.

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

For further particulars apply to

w. G. I

COMPANY

Agts.

(LIMITED)

General Agents Oceanic S. S. Company.

MnriHMwiiGoDirect Monthly Service BetweenNew York and Honolulu,Yia Pacific Coast

The splendid new steel steamers

"HAWAIIAN" : to sail about May 20th, 1902,

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

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

From San Francisco :S. S. "HYADES": to sail May 17th, 1902.

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

From Seattle and Tacoma :

i S. S. "AMERICAN": to sail June 15, 1002.

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

AORANGI

AMERICA

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, FRIDAY, MAY SO, 1002.

SHIPPING HUKEIft(For additional and later shipping see

pages 4, 6, or 8.)

passengers.Departing.

1'er S. S. City of Peking, May 28, forSan Francisco. W. F. Mitchell, W. K.Hems, J. Humphreys, Charles Hall, E.W. Mitchell, Mrs. U. R. 1J. Hayes, Mrs.S. M. Flack, H. 11. White and wife.Miss WatlB, Miss M. U. Lewis, J. C.Byrne, J. R. Hlgby, Oerald Holllster,XV. T. Kllpatrlck, F. D. Greany, H.Garllch.

FAVOR SAILING CRAFT.GOTHENBURG, May 18. Wealthy

shippers and merchants have combln-e- dto construct a tleet of first-cla- ss Bal-

ling ships that will lly the Swedish Hag.This action is the result of a reportmade by the Nautlcul union, after longInvestigation, to the effect that theprevailing Idea that sails must yieldthe sea to sleam is based on misinfor-mation.

The union declares that sailing shipson long, Irregular routes are better in-vestments thun steamers. It explainsthat steamers have acquired a morefavorable reputation than ships be-cause the sailing vessels have beencarelessly constructed,-whil- e steamershave been built In accordance with,the most modern Ideas.

EMINENT EDITOR DEAD.NEW YORK, May 21. Edwin Law-

rence Godkin, editor emeritus of theEvening Post, died in lirixham, SouthDevonshire, Inst night. The Immediatecause of his death was a hemorrhageof the brain, which occurred on Sundaylast. Mr. Godkin suffered a similarstroke two years ago, but recoveredsulllclently to go to England In 1901.He spent last winter at Torquay, andmoved to Brlxham on the 2d of May.

Mr. Godkin was In his seventy-llr- st

year. He was twice married. His firstwife was .Miss Foote of New Haven,Conn., by whom he had one son andone daughter, tho latter dying In In-

fancy. His second wife, Miss Kathe-rln- c

Sands of New York, survives him.His son, Lawrence Godkin, is a well-kno-

member of the New York bar.At the time of his retirement from

active duties on the New York Post inthe latter part of 1899, Godkin was thedean of New York journalism and oneof the most respected and feared editorial writers In the country. At thetime of receiving the degree of D. C. L.from Oxford, In 1S97, a leading Englishwriter declared him to be perhaps themost distinguished of living journalists.

Godkin was an Irishman, and aftergraduating from Queen's College, Belfast, In ISal went upon the stall of theLondon News. It was as correspon-dent of that paper that he came to theUnited States. In 1865 he founded theNation In New York, and when thatpaper was merged In the Post ns theweekly edition in 1S82, he became editoro.' both. His vigorous attacks on Tam-many possess now an Interest that maybe called historical. Up to the death ofCharles A. Dana of the Sun, Godkinwas his steadfast political and journal-istic opponent, and no editorial battlehas ever waged with greater determin-ation or skill than theirs.

"KISSING" DICK.NEW YORK, May 18. Naval Con-

structor Richmond P. Hobson Is report-ed to have been appointed superintend-ing contsructor in the shipyard of Le-wis Nixon at Elizabeth, N. J. Fourgovernment vessels are now in courseof construction at the yards.

Mil. AND MRS. PROSSER.M. F. Prossed, the popular attorney

of Llhue, returned from the Coast ac-companied by his bride. Mr. and Mrs.Prosser were "at home" after May 15thand many called to wish the new couplemuch happiness. Garden Isle.

KAWAIAHAO TO MOVE.Kawalahao seminary, the Pacific

Theological Institute and the Mills In-

stitute will probably be moved In thenear future from their present site toa new site at Kalmukl. The membersof the Hawaiian Boaad are consideringthis and other sites and will make achoice very soon.

CONSUL'S BODY FOUND.NEW YORK, May 19. A cable to

the Sun from Fort de France says:American and English officers whohave been searching the ruins of St.Pierre for the bodies of the UnitedStates and British consuls and theirfamilies, have found the remains otPrentls, the American representative,and the members of the family, as wellas those of the British Consul andfamily. They will be brought to Fortde France, where Prentls will beburled with military honors.

The British cruiser Indefatigable lefthere this morning after having landed120 tons of supplies for the sufferers.

The American collier Sterling startedfor St. Vincent, where she will landprovisions and medical supplies.

Tho United States cruiser Cincinnatiand the United States Government tugPotomuc will be stationed here Indefi-nitely. The Potomac will shortly goto the Island of Guadaloupe to bringto this place the furniture, books, etc.,of the office of tho United States Con-sul there, Louis H. Ayme.

WILL HAVE ANOTHER CHANCE.WASHINGTON, May 19. The Paclflo

Mall Steamship Company has put In an-other plea for the of theChinese Immigrants now in tho dtten-'tlo- n

pen, at San Francisco, whero theywere committed by the Collncto-- . Inview of this latest appeal Assistant Se.cretary Taylor has given the Collectorpermission to take ten of those remain-ing at random and them asspecial cases. Whether any more willbe will depend upon thepercentage of this haphazard ten whosucceed In making out a case for them-selves.

TAMPICO FROM SEATTLE.The freight steamer Tamplco arriv-

ed yesterday morning from Seattle. Sheencountered rough weather for tho firsttwo days after leaving port, the cab-In- s,

mess rooms and alleyways beingHooded. Her steam stearlng gear brokedown during the storm but was repaired.

UPSET IN HARBOR.While three of the Lylo boys wer

sailing In the yacht Mnllhlnl yesterdayafternoon tho craft capsized. One ofthe Young boys went to the rescue andtho Mullhlnl was righted.

SEARCHING FOR BAGGAGE.

Significant Orders Issued By theTreasury Department.

The following circular relative to thesearching of baggage has been Issuedby the Treasury Department, for the

direction of tho various collectors andInsgpectors:

"The Department Is in receipt of anumber of letters which indicate animpression, on tho part of some persens at least, that It Is proposed to examine personal baggage only whensuspicion Is aroused.

"This Is erroneous. There must bo norelaxation !n the protection of tile publie revenues, and tho smuggler musthave no easier road to travel than priorto the Issuance of the recent circulars.The solo object of tho modifications ofthe rules was to avoid petty annoyances and to give a somewhat moreliberal construction to the statutoryprovisions for the admission of personal effects. Neither tho declaration noractual personal Inspection will be waived, nor will the courtesy of the port beextended to any persons (other thanthose specified In Department CircularNo. 20 of Mnrch 5. 1901), In such manner as to exempt from declaration andInspection.

"Let the law be enforced kindly butfirmly, and let no favoritism be shownIn tho administration of the customslaws."

TERRITORIES MUST WAIT.WASHINGTON. MLay 19. There Is

little chance, from the present outlook,of nnv statehood bill passing the Senate at this session. Inquiry nmong theSenators both the Eastern and West-ern, and Including members of theCommittee on Territories, In charge ofthe statehood bills Indicates that thehones of Arizona. Oklahoma and NewMexico must be deferred. A Senatorclose to the center of things who didnot want to be personally entangled Inthe matter said: "Nothing will be donethis season. Arizona and New Mexicoare not ready for statehood. Wheneverthey ure spoken of for statehood thehistory of Nevada and Utah Is hroughtup. I know the Senate will not admitArizona and New Mexico yet. Oklaho-ma Is perhaps entitled to statehoodand, If alone, she would stand a goodshow. But It would not be pleasant toadmit her and shut out the other two,after the House has voted to admit all,so all three will have to wait."

BRITISH ARMY.NEW YORK, May 20. A cable to the

Tribune from London says: The DallyMall understands that the system underwhich British officers nre educated andtrained Is condemned In the most emnhatlc and sweeping terms In theunanimous report of the commission appointed over a year ago to Inquire Intothe entire subject. The report is bellev.ed to bo an amazing document. Amongother things, the committee asserts thatonce an officer has gained the rank ofcaptain his subsequent advancementdepends upon anything but knowledge.

notici:.During my absence of about two

months Dr. C. L. Garvin .will attend tomy practice-- .

In all business matters the HawaiianTrust Company will act for me underfull power of attorney.

C. B. WOOD.

..WHISKEY..

By the GallonAT

$3.50 or $4.50

"WHY PAY SUCH HIGHPRICES, WHEN YOU CANBUY THE CHOICESTWHISKEY FOR $1.50 AGALLON.

CAMARA1&C0.,S. E. Corner Queen andAlakca Streets.

DEAXiERS IN WINES,BEERS AND LIQUORS.

P. O. Box 644. Telephone Blue 492.

New SummerSuits for Men

The summer weather promisesto be warm, but much can bedone toward being comfortableby wearing a light suit.

Ours nre the celebrated makeof Alfred Benjamin & Co.

"MONARCH" BRANDGOLF SHIRTS

31.23Why pay fancy prices elsewherefor shirts when you can get thelatest style, best material andstrongly made shirts at $1.25.

"KNOX" CRUSHERFELT HATS

82. 5USee the display In our window

of these hats, extra value, colorsBlack, Pearl and Hazel.

FINE DRESSMJIT CASES

Handsomest cases ever shownIn town, variety of leathers.

urn.LIMITf D

TWO STORES.

Corner Fort and Hotel Streets.Hotel Street between Bethel and

Nuuanu.

Advertise your wants In the Star.

Don't Co On WorryingTOitiial.NcverMs,

IITTLE

a

u-j-f.-

f.-

ECONOMICAL

Jlie. Alible UmpouinyA good siockof iununcv

tfO Alffl IIAMD LUirV

Theo. H. Davies & Co.,Hardware Department

CRIBS AND

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

H. 11.

Lore

applybuy-

ing

elas-tic,

proof,

Hardens

Dealersglass,

paints,

Willi need-lessly expenslvo

no

Islands havathis

problem

Idealperfect light

It

smellslighted

easilyand

Vew Furniture bby,ntnVnpaoked' and

CITY FOKMTDHE STOREWILLIAMS, Malinger

Telephone 840

Butter Suit You ?WHY DON'T

Crystal Spring ButterIs to the Pure, sweet fresh

and guarantee It. WHITE CLOVER BUTTERCLEAR BROOK at 35c, MRS. VON TEMPSKY'S ISL-

AND BUTTER.Telephone order and will deliver

out In cardboard cartons which keep It contact otherin Ice chest.

butter will spoil If you allow It to become

MetropolitanTelephone

. OrientalI

SELECTED'

I

King

Floor

Whether you going tothe varnish yourself or

It for some one else to applyyou ought to great care toget good value for money

get something will as-sure satisfaction.

SUPREMISDOES THIS

It Is a wonderful wood pre-server, extremely yet

not show tho annoyingwhite scratches made byheels and by furniture. It isperfectly water excludes

moisture preserves thefloor. rivals the waxfinish In surpasses it Indurability and no

age and

ns i tilLIMITED

in lumber, builder's

etc.

STREET, - HONOLULU

MEAT

Call

Inferior orIllu-

mination Inhome. There Is abso-lutely occasion forIt. Thousands othousekeepers through-out theremoved annoy-ing entirelyby acquainting them-selves with the

for thohome. Is as bril-liant as gas or electri-city, smokes,

or gives anytrouble, Is andextinguished asas gas, burns butUttlo kerosene oil. Ourcatalogue shows all

from $1.80 up,and Is for theasking.

SXZ put

IF NOT YOU USE

it everywhere conceded be best. andwe We also have at

33c, BUTTER andyour we promptly. We send butter

neat from withfood the

The best soft.

areare

take

and

hard

all

costswith never

BABIES' BEDS

Building, and Fort Street

Meat Go LtdMain 45

Bazaar .

HEW TERRITORY REST&URAHT,

TAM SING. MANAG

OPEN DAY AND NIGHTMEALS 25 CENTS.

MEAL TICKETS. 14.50.

FC.- - Opposite Club Stable.

Screens.

Something new In Shades for,the Lanal.

AVe are the sole a.gents In thoHawaiian Islands for the fam- -

AMERICAN PORCH SHADES.

now have them on sale, andInvite the public to call' and In-spect them.

Nev. Rugs, In light, cool colors.the thing for this hot

weather.Wo are now prepared to show

our new lino of Diningand Chairs. Round and SquaroDining at the rightprices.

Hopp & CompanyLeading FurnlturoDealers...

KING BETHEL STREETS'Phone 111 Main.

Ads under "Situations Wanted," In-serted free ot charge In the Star.

WE HAVE A LARGE ANDWELL STOCK OFors irreErc OIOTH

AND

HEAVY 3POJXt3EE SJIIS:6G-- Street corner of Smith.

Branch Stores In Hongkong. Shanghai and Yokohama.

SupremisVarnish

yourthat

doesboot

andIt best

beauty,more.

cracks.

hnrdware, wall papers,

FORT

your

never

stylessent

534 680

STREET,

"Ve

Just

Tables

Tables

41

DK. J.M. WHITNEY,DENTIST.

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

Hours: 9 5. Tel. Main 277.

09, A, C, ILL, OIL 0, E, ILL,

DENTISTS.LOVE BUILDING, FORT STREET,

' 'ephono 434.

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

DR. A. J. DERBY,DENTIST.

Corner Fort and Hotel Sta.

Gas Administered For Extracting.

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

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

403 Jtxclcl BttilcJlwc:

c, mm & CO,, LIMITED

QUEEN STREET,HONOLULU, H. T.

AGENTS FOH

Hawaiian Agricultural Company, Ono-re- a

Sugar Company, Honomu SugarCompany, Walluku Sugar Company,Walhee Sugar Company, Makee SugarCompany. Haleakala Ranch Company,Kap iala Ranch,

-- lanters' e and Shipping Co.; harles Brewer & Co's Line of Boston

PackAgents Boston Board of Underwriters,Agents Philadelphia Board of Under-Writer-

LIST OF OFFICERS:

Charles M. Cooke PresidentGeo. H. Robertson.. Sc. Man.Q. Faxon Bishop Treas. & Sec.W. F. Allen AuditorP. C. Jones ....DirectorH. Waterhouse DirectorO. R. Carter Director

All of the above named constitutinge Board of Directors.

GERMAN IA SALOONC. VESSELS AND A. BECKER

Proprietors.604 Queon Street cor South.Headquarters for Honolulu Prlmo

Beer, In bottles and on draught. Al-ways Ice Cold. We can give you thebest glass of beer In town.

TEN CENTS A SCHOONER

Removed.WOMAN'S EXCHANGE

TOHotel St., Arlington Annex.

Next to A. A. Montano's MillineryParlors.

AHI1153 Nuuanu Street Nfi r Pauahl.

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

P. O. BOX 952.

M. 'PHILLIPS & CO.,

Wholesale ImportersAnd Jobbers of

IERICAN AND EUROPEAN DRY GOODS

Corner of F t and Quce) Sti

L. KONG FEE,Meroliant Tailor,

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

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

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

FOR THE BESTWINDOWSHADES

We have a stock of oddsand ends we want to sell outso are willing to lose moneyon them.

Many different colors andall on Hartshorn rollers.Hartshorn roller alone sellsfor fifty cents, therefore youget the shade for nothing.An excellent chance to savemoney.

111COMPANY,! LTD

PROGRESS BLOCKFORT STREET.

Advertise your Wants in the Star.

HeaftDisease

weakens tho stomach, derangesdigestion, pollutes tho blood,destroys tho nervous forces andsaps tho vitality of tho wholsystem. It causes pain in tholeft side, palpitation, shortnessof breath, sinking spells, andfrequently ends all sufforing ineuddon death. Dr. Miles' HeartCure is tho only successful rem-edy for diseased hearts that hasever been offered to tho public.

"It iru Impossible for me to lie down todeep for smothering sensations. The pulsa-tions of my heart were very Irregular, some-times seeming to stop beating and at othertimes palpitating so hard It could be heardin the room. One bottle of Dr. Miles' HeartCure brought relief and after using It for afew months the heart trouble was all gone."

E. M. Insley, Hillsboro, O.If your heart Is affected do not fail to try

D. Miles'

Heart Cute.Sold at all druggists on a positive guar-

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

CORPORATION NOTICES.

WAILUKU SUOAK CO.

Notice is hereby given that the stock-boo- ks

of the above company will beclosed to transfers from Thursday, the29th 'May, to Monday, the 2nd June.

GEORGE H. ROBERTSON.Treasurer.

WAlMANtLO SUUAlt CO.

The stock ledger of the WalmanaloSugar Company will be closed to trans-fers from May 29 to May 31, both datesInclusive.

H. M. WHITNEY, JR.,Secretary Walmanalo Sugar Co.

OLOWALU SUUAK CO.

The stock ledger of the OlowaluCompany will be closed to transfersfrom May 29 to May 31, both dates In-

clusive.RICHARD IVERS,

Secretary Olowalu Sugar Co.

MEETING KOTICE.

At the direction of the President,there will be a special meeting of thestockholders of the Hawaiian Automo-bile Co., Limited, at the offlce of Cas-tle & Cooke, Limited, corner King andBethel streets, Honolulu, Hawaii, onThursday, June Bth. 1S02, at 10 o'clocka m., for the purpose of consideringthe indebtedness of the Company toCastle & Cooke, Limited, the ways andmeans to pay the same, the sale ol Itsproperty, and such other business asmay be brought before the meeting,necessary or Incident to the final wind-ing up of the business of the Company,and disincorporating same.

W. H. HOOGS,Secretary Hawaiian Automobile Co.,

Limited.Honolulu, May 10, 1902.

Olaa Sugar Co , Ltd.ASSESSMENTS.

The twenty-fir- st assessment of 10or two dollars ($2.00) per share hasbeen called to be due and payable June20, 1902.

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

The twenty-thir- d, assessment of 10or two dollars ($2,00) fier share hasbeen called to be due and payable Oc-

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

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

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

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

able at tho office of The B. F. Dilling-ham Co., Ltd., Stangenwald building.(Signed) ELMER E. PAXTON,

Treasurer Olaa Sugar Co.May 12, 1902.

NOTICE.

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

W. H. RICE, Supt.

WILDER'S STEAMSHIP COMPANY.

Notice to Shippers.

Sulphuric, Nitric or other chemicalacids, will be received for transporta-tion by all of our steamers on arid af-ter this date until further notice

C. L. WIGHT.President.

Honolulu, May 19th, 1902.

To horn It Jlny Concern :

Notice Is hereby given that ChunJun, alias Akana, has hypothecated tothe undersigned his one-quart- er Inter-cut In a taro plantation known as SunHop Sing Co., situate nt Maknhu,Oahu. All persons are warned againstnegotiating for or purchasing the saidInterest of the said Chun Jun, aliasAkana, without first consulting us.

SUN HOP SING CO.Honolulu, May 19, 1902.

LATIN IN MANILA.In aqua Veritas Is the modification of

a Latin proverb which teems to havebeen adopted by many officers In thePhilippines. Baltimore Herald.

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, FRIDAY, MAT 30, 1902.

ARE SHORT LIVED

SOUTH PAWS NOT STAYERS LIKERIVALS.

Wiley Piatt of Chicago Team Soys theLeft Hpnders Give Out Sooner ThanRight Hand Twlrlers.

"I vo been pitching boll (V.r rc'eny jir.v Mr years of that time pnjf..-s- l

mul .an.'. I never was In n-- t gc d ton-Ut.o- nps I am this yeu" says Wiley

Putt, the only southpaw on CVm.ske-y'- s

club. "If I don't make good now It'sbecause I'm pitched out, and I'll quitthe business for good and all.

"If I can go the pace two years moreI'll have done all that is expected of a

r. Nine years Is as good asthe best of them go In fast company.Why? Well. I hardly know unless It Isthat our pitching arm Is nearer theheart than on a right-hand- er and wearsus nut quicker. I know more left-han- d

pitchers die of heart failure than right-handers, and my only wonder Is thnt allbaseball men don't die of henrt failure

they have so many games of that na-ture.

"I have all the curves and shoots andas much speed as I ever had, but I Andthat it Is harder every year to get con- -iroi 01 1110 unit. Tiiat is my only rnuitright now. Try ns hard ns I'm a mindto, I can't get that first boll pitched tothe batter over the plate, and that's theone of all that ought to be a strike..Practice with the home team doesn'tget a pitcher anything In the way ofcontrol, for he can't pitch to his teammates. The only way I can gain con-trol' Is to go In the box and work forall I'm worth against tho opposing team

"It's a peculiar thing that no left-han- d

batter likes a left-han- d twlrler.Take Burkett and Heldrlck of the St.Louis team which plays here (theycan't hit me. I've got them fated. Andget those two out of the way and theBrowns are easy. Wallace Is a goodst cker but he alone enn't win thegame nnd ho never did hit me any- -way.

"In all the time I've been pitchingmajor league ball I've never lost agame In St. Louis. For some reasonthe teams In that city have never beennble to get next to me. Now take WinMercer, of the Detroit club. He pitch- -ed for four years against the Washing- -ton team before he won a game off ofthem and then for three years theycouldn't beat him.

"Only once that I know of have Ibeen badly beaten and that was byPittsburg In '99. Jess Tannehill did thework for the Pirates and beat out thePhillies 18 to 4. The Phillies had fourteen errors chalked up against themtnat day, so It wasn't all bad pitching.

"There's one thing I can't understandabout pitching, and it's truer aboutsouthpaws than right handers. ThatIs when a fellow feels line ns silk, hasgood speed and control and all the bend,ers and slants you can think of, andthen gets pounded all over the lot. An-other day he'll feel rotten, has no speedcontrol Is poor and the benders won'tbreak, and then he'll go In, because It'shis turn, and will shut out his oppo-nents with, perhaps two or three hits.I've done that very thing time aftertime and I can't figure It out." Chica-go Dally News.

HAD A CHRISTENING.Mr. and Mrs. Christian of Hanamau-l- u

entertained many friends at their1u me on the occasion of their grand- -child's baptism on May 25. The babywas named Henry Christian wedemey-er-.

W. II. BALDWIN IS ENGAGED.The engagement of W. H. Baldwin,

manager of Makawell plantation, toMiss Prime, of Denver, has been an-nounced.

WILL RETURN TO WED.W. H. Scott of the firm of Miller, Sloss

& Scott, of San Francisco, spent a fewdays with the Rices at Llhue. He willmake a business tour of the Islands andwill return there In June, when hiswedding with Miss Mary Rice will takeplace on the 25th of that month.

DISCORD IN THE STEEL TRUST.NEW YORK, May 19. A special meet-

ing of the stockholders of tho lT: ltedStates Steel Corporation was held InHoboken today to consider resolutionsadopted by the directors providluir forthe retirement of $200,000,000 prefe'redstock and the Issuing of $200,000,000 nnvbonds. Resolutions nutho.'h'.'ns thechunges were adopted and t'le secretaryof the meeting announced that SO porcent of tho preferred and 7(J pe- - cent ofthe common shares were announced Infavor of the plan.

Before the resolutions were alopU'dSamuel B. Strong of Providence pro-tested ugainst the plan. He said m be-lieved that a good many siockholdcwho had sent proxies to th meotlnghad never had an opportunity to see 'nocontract between the corporation andJ. P. Morgan & Co. relative to the un-derwriting of the new bond Issu. Hemoved that the meeting adjourn for amonth so nil could learn about the plan.The motion was lost. C. H. Venaer cfBoston entered a formal protest agilnstthe carrying out of the plan for ex-changing preferred stock for bon is. Heobjected on the ground that there wasno authority of law for the corporationto change Its stock for bonds . nd fur-ther, that the net of the Now Jersey Le-gislature permitting the company tomake this exchange was unooiistltiulon.al and void. The protest was placed o.file.

George Rlghter Jr., who jiald heholders of 7000 shares of

stock, protested against tho proposedpayment of 4 per cent comm'sfiloa tothe under writers of the Issues of

bonds.

BEEF TRUST ENJOINED.-CHICAGO-,

May 10. The temporaryinjunction asked for by the Govern-ment against the members of the

packers' combine Is now inforce. It was Issued this evening byJudge Peter S. Grosscup after theclose of arguments In the UnitedStates Circuit courtroom. The trdergives the relief prayed for In thi billIlled by District Attorney Bethea 011

May 10th. It Is so wide In its scopethat. If the packers or their agentscontinue with their present nllegeduniform arrangements they will betaken Into court on contempt pro-ceedings and the burden of proof willbe on them to show that they have notviolated the order In any particular.

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

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

Ads under "Situation Wanted" ed

free of charge.

THE

Bank of JJawaiiLIMITED.

Incorporated under the Laws of theTerritory of Hawaii.

PAID-U- P CAPITAL --

RHSERVE$600,000.00

- - - --

UNDIVIDED50,000.00

PROFITS 163,000.00

OFFICERS ANr DIRECTORS.

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

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

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

COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS DE-

PARTMENTS.

Strict attention given to all br --chof Banking.JU'DD BUILDING. FORT STREET.

CLAUS SPRECICELS. WM. G. IRWIN.

Clans Spreokels & Co.

B A N K E R (S .HONOLULU, H. I.

San Francisco Agents The NevadaNational Bank of San Francisco.

DRAW EXCHANGE ONSAN FRANCISCO The Nevada Na--

tlonal Bank of San Francisco.London 'lhe union lanK or L,onaon,

aNEW YORK American Exchange Na- -uonai uant,

uhxuauo Aiercnants- - national uans.I'AKia ureait L,yonnais.BERLIN Dresdner Bank.HONGKONG AND YOKOHAMA The

Hongkong and Shanghai BankingCorporation.

NEW ZEALAND AND AUSlKAilABank of New eaiana.

VICTORIA AND VANCOUVER Bankof British No-t- h Ameri

TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKINGAND EXCHANGE BUSINESS.

Deposit! Received. Loans Made onADDroved Security. Commercial and

" . -Travelers Credits Issued. Bills of Ex- -

t"tt"c UUU6U1 ""uCOLLECTIONS PROMPTLY AC- -

COUNTED FOR.

ESTABLISHED IN 1858.

BISHOP & CO.

BANKERS

BANKING DEPARTMENT.

Transact business In all departmentsof Banking.

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

of Credit Usueil 011 Tho Hunk of Cali-fornia nnd N. M. Kotlrncliild & Sons,London.

Correspondents: The llnnk of Callforniii, (ommcrciiil Hanking Co. ofSydney, Ltd., Loudon.

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

Interest allowed on term deposits atthe following ratc3 per annum, viz:

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

TRUST DEPARTMENT.Act as Trustees under ; iortgages.Manage estates (teal and personal).Collect rents and dividends.Valuable Papers, Wills, Bonds, Etc.,

received for safe-keepin- g.

ACCOUNTANT DEPARTMENT.Auditors for Corporations and Pri-

vate Firms.Books examined and reported on.

Statements of Affairs prepared.Trustees on Bankrupt or Insolvent

Estates.Offlce. 924 Bethel Street.

SAVINGS DEPARTMENT.Deposits received and Interest allow-

ed at 4V4 per cent per annum, In accord-ance with Rules and Regulations,copies of which may be obtained onapplication.

INSURANCE DEPARTMENT.Agents for FIRE. MARINE. LIFE,

ACCIDENT AND EMPLOYERS' LIABILITY INSURANCE COMrANlifio,

Insurance Office, 924 Bethel Street.

THE YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK

LIMITED.

Subscribed Capital Yen 24,000,000

Paid Up Capital Yen 18,000,000

Reserved Fund Yen 8,710,000

HEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.

The Bank buys and receive for col-

lection Bills of Exchange, Issues ' ,raf taand Letters of Credit, an transact ageneral bankng business.

INTEREST ALLOWED:

On fixed deposits for 13 months, 4 percent per annum.

On fixed deposits for it months, S percent per annum.

On Axed deposits for 8 months, I percent per annum.

Branch of the Yokohama Specie Bank,

Hew RcDuMioBuililiiiir, Honolulu B i,

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

II. J. NOLTE, Prop'r.

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

Smokers Requisites a Specialty.

,?,.v,.i",.-v,.- , v. it teat? v rt.."rio''-':.-.'-.

!? t. ,; o:t; :, 0:t. t.".r "t;

Fancy.

WE HAVELARGEWHICH WILL

:?i"tt. :, WEATHER .e

in

RECEIVED AOF SHIRTS

BE WORNDURING THE WARM

AS THEY ARE COOLAND

?l't... See the Display".':?: HOm iMi

Silk Shirt

Our Window

ASSORTMENTEXTEN-

SIVELY

COMFORTABLE.

AKAMI & GO.Nos. 16-1- 8 Robinson Block, St,

Box 808, Tel. White 421

it :)Vt'et.O'tV"':

. ; . .. ;: e:t .: . ; . ; ... .",

Electricity forMachineDriving

The advantages of electricity as motive power for all kinds ofmachinery Is being demonstrated dally at tho Railway wharf wheremuch and money is being saved In loading sugar by Its use, andat tho Young Building In hoisting the heavy masonry and mixing con-crete for fire proofing.

We can save money and make money for you by operating anymachinery.

US WITH

Hawaiian Electric Co., LtdKINU STREET NEAR ALAKEA

TELEPHONE MAIN 390

EniNENT PHYSICIANSHave Carefully

. Analysed

SauerbrunnenBOTTLED FROM THE FAMOUS "KQENIGSQUELLE" IN THEHARZ-MOUNTAI- AND HAVE UNANIMOUSLY PRONOUNC-ED IT THE PUREST AND ON ACCOUNT OF ITS AGREEABLETASTE, THE MOST REFRESHING OF ALL MIN-ERAL WATERS.

.V t;a v ... --v

t'.o:itv;.it

.

t..?.

Main Stops No..t. Branch Stoic No.

.

..::...

t. :

':?:m:-::?-:..iitti;li'.'i

JUST

Hotel

FIGURE YOU.

NATURAL

The Ideal Drink DuringThe Summer Months

H. HackfeldSOLE

?itPrice S1.00

:.?

:?

Nuuanu Street.Nuuanu Street.

Blue 3311

P. Box 884.

ZHRBO. 1

,.,,.,

-

P. O.

.v.v;

time

LET

& Co., Ltd.,AGENTS

t ;t .' .:::.e.v?:j..:?....:f

NATIVE HATS!NATIVE HATS!!

NATIVE HATS!!!

t

tt.'B'.t

m T.

and Upwards

MURATA,1011

1032

Tolophone

O.

Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii.

v:V:t:iitt

.'J

it.".

t'.:

tt

Wg""'

TOUR. THE! ILVWAIlAN STAR, FRIDAY, MAY '30, 1902.

fHE HAWAlfAN STAR

DAILY AND SEMI-WEEKL-

Published every afternoon (exceptSunday) by the Hawaiian Star

Newspaper Association, Ltd,

FitA NIC L. HO0GS. .Mnnngcr.

Fill DAY, MAY 30, VMS.

MATJNlijUK.,' "

According to the Information Issuedby the Bureau of Statistics tlie successof Martinique asi a colony Is not great.Thls Is at varlutlfe with thfct generally

preconceived lcletC that Martlrikiiie wasImmensely rich',, Of' course jtpuu sucha subject the Treasury Bureau of Sta-

tistics must be thoroughly Informed orIt would not Issue' Information whichwilt be taken all over the world as

While many of the FrenchColonies huve been successful and pros,jterous, those of the West Indies byreason of their small area have proved,flays the Bureau, not 6nly a burdenilnanclally, but have been unsatisfac-tory In the demands which their repre-sentatives have made and continue tomake upon the mother country.

The The French colonics In Americaare not of large extent. They consistof Guedelaupe and Martinique togetherwith adjacent Islets, which form partof the chain of the lesser Antilles. Atthe extreme end of the chain, on themainland of South America, Is FrenchGuiana, with its '111' omened. convict, sta-llo- n

of Cayenne, 'while some little dis-tance from the 'toast" Is the still more111 omened Devil's Island, re.idrpj Infa-mous by the miseries of Dreyfus. Theother French Colonial possessions areaway up north of the' Southern Coastof Newfoundland, and are composed ofthe Islands of St. Pierre and Mlguelon.

Martlniquei'hns" ah area of 3S1' squaremiles and a population of about 190,000

of which nunlbef about 5,000 Are labor-ers brought from India nnd over 5,000

laborers from Africa; also about 500

Chinese Immigrants. The remainder otthe population Is largely native negroesthe white' population numbering In allabout 40,000. A large share of theInterior of the island has never beenbrought under cultivation, although ithas been occup,Ud by. the French almostconstantly since 1G3G. a period of 2G7

years, the only interruption In Frenchcontrol being the period from 1791 to1S02, when the Island was held by theBritish. Slavery existed until 1S48, whenIt was abolished In this as Wfcll as otherFrench colonies. Notwithstanding thefact that a large part of Its Interiorlias never been brought under cultiva-tion, the Island Is described by Reclusas "one of the most densely populatedspots on the globe; on the aralile landspeople are packed as closely as In suchIndustrial centers as Lancashire, Flan-ders, or Saxony."

The government of Martinique of

a local legislative Tiod,y compos,ed of natives which bus the power topass laws applicable to the exercise ofpolitical rights, the regulation of con- -tracts, matters relating to wills, lega- -

ules ahd successions, the Institution ofjuries, criminal procedure, recruitingfor naval and military forces, and themethods of electng'lbcaT officers In fhecities and towns. The governor nndother olllcers are appointed by theFrench Government,' which' also makesthe tariff laws Of the Island, as Is thecase with reference, to Its othe,r colonies.This and the other American colonies ofFrance have aVmuch- larger share of

nt thai!' any'other of hercolonies, and .are each .represented .bya senator and two deputies. )ir theFrench legislative body correspondingto the Congress of the United Stated.

These large powers ofand of partiVfyfitlon fn natiAial

legislation are the, jfiubjegt' of. open- cri-

ticism by French" wnomle writers.Leroy Beaulleu, pe'rliaps' Che most cTis.tingulshed of French, writers of the pre-sent day upon $i'onomlq subjects, In his"Colonization qhez les Peuples .MQder-nes- ,"

says: . i .'

"As regards polities, w;e have introdu-e- dFrench liberty Into our colonies; we

give them cIvIl'Bovernors, admit theirrepresentatives 'Into our Parliament,and while all these reforms are excel-lent In themselves, it Is unfortunatelyto be feared that they will In practiceresult In nbuses. and 'that unless themother country is very watchful thosevery powers which she has granted toher colonies will become powers of op-pression. The deputies' whom Martini-que send to our parliament orvcnnlyto represent the malice, prejudice andIgnorance of the blacks.- - Tim weakiexe-cutiv- e

power In. France.. allows Itself tobe Intimidated' by these-dooutio- andsends out to the coloulos cowardly andincapable governors whoso indecision ofcharacter feeds the more or Isss bar- -barous hopes of, the native populationot the island." ,

In dealing with the condltl6'rts broughtnltmit It,. Mir. i.1rvt,tf,t' .llDna(n.. nt cs.' '

Pierre and probably over the wholenorth end of Martinique there will bepolitical troubles- when the final settlingdown takes place.,' Its population Is ter-ribly crowded. jaii,d a cr6wjrtp4 popula-tion Is apt to be a.turbulontiiiopulatlon.

The population 'of the 'Hawaiian Isl-

ands was, aecliraingtojtlit: tial Census151,000, "spread over a.i-ji- ,ofsquare miles. The population', Mar.Unique is 190.000 erammed Inio an area

il ptwntage of Indige-nous work on 'the

India, There are serious economic pro-

blems In the West In lies wnlch willhave to be faced after the forces of

have ceased warring.

CUBAN CONGRESS.

The new Cuban Congress which ismow in session consists ot course oftwo houses, the Senate and the- Houseof Representatives. The Senate con-

sists of twenty-fou- r members of whomhalf go out at the end of foiir years andthe half at, the end of eight years.If there has been no designation beforeelection as to which senators will re-

main for the long term, and which t(frthu term, these are makingsot quite a little disturbance In Cu-

ban Senate and majority will havea picnic.

But this Is' not the only possiblechance for a strong political strugglefor mastery by some dominant party.There are sixty-thre- e representatives,nnd as Representatives hold tenure of

for four years, half of the mem-bers of the House are to go out at theend of two years. But how are you go-

ing to get at the half of sixty-thre- e.

No patriotic Representative wouldwish to be the sixty-thir- d member andhave to bo cut In half. Again If it. Isnot decided before election who is togo out, there are the elements of jollylittle row In the House of Representa-tives, and It will come before the Sen-atorial row.

There will be an Immense amount ofwork for the Cuban : Congress to getthrough. There are finances to regu-

late and taxation to be settled. Thestatus of with the rest of theworld will have to bo settled by treaty.Provision will have to be for diplomatic and consular establishments.There will be the appointment andratification of olllclals which will con-

sume time. The various salaries willhave to be adjusted. If the Cub.n re

settles Its work It will do well.If It wastes Its time In party strugglesand recrimination, It will do as badlyas the first legislature of the Territjryof Hawaii did, which would result insetting back the country for a couple ofyears, and accomplishing nothing.There will probably be enough conservative men In the Cuban legislatureto prevent such conduct as we had ticomplain of. Cuba Is on probation andevery one wishes her Veil.

KImura, who murdered a Japanesewoman at Walalua, has made a confesslon of his for doing thedeed. Even If the confession be a gen-

uine statement of fact, which may bereasonably doubted, It goes to showhow utterly careless of life some classes of Japanese are.

If Bennet Burleigh's telegram contuinlng the single word "returning" Isreally meant as a slgnul to his paperthat peace has been agreed to, it willB (lown 1,1 th0 anllnls of Journalism asone of the cleverest evaslous of thecensorship that has ever been carriedout. There certainly seems no othersolution of the telegram, because Bur-leigh would certainly not return If

there was stillwork to do.

The anarchists have been having amild In Europe within the lastfew days. There has been an attemptto blow up the old Kmperor of Austria,who might be left In peace for tpe fewremaining years of his life, and thereapparently was a plot to linlsh up theKing of Spain at the very outset of hiscareer. He would have thought thateven an anarchist have held hishand over the Emperor of Austria, forif ever a human being has had dismaltragedies In life it Is Francis Joseph ofHapsburgh. Murder, suicide and mili-

tary execution havo carried off mem-

bers of his family, and these areenough horrors to supply the motif ofone of the gloomiest and most heart-lacerati-

ot Greek plays such as Sop-

hocles or Euripides wrote. But the an-

archist has only a sea of beforehis eyes, and strikes aimlessly, no mat-ter who the person may be.

The study of Mokuaweoweo has b'-e-

carried out with considerable zeal, fromthe time W. W. Hall made his descentInto the crater between thirty anil forty years ago to Dr. Guppy's visit atillengthened stay In IMC or 1897. Everysavant Interested In volcanlo phenom- -

ena has visited the summit crater, butit is no holiday trip. The atmosphereIs extremely 'rarltled, wood, water andprovisions have to bo carried up formiles over the rough lava stone whichform the summit, and the wind fre-

quently blows a hurricane, hl,!e thereare heavy fogs. Dan Logan was of aparty which )yent 'to the summit fromthe Kapapala side In quite recent years.Ills account of the trip was publishedin the Bulletin. Two German savtntspreceded the I.ogan party In the earlynlnetlea uml somo wonderful

the flow. Charles L. Rhodes of the Startraced the whole flow on foot ond

of 381 square rrilles. This 'n,r'en s less Photographs. Dr. Guppy stayed a fort-tha- n

that of ifuii, 728 pjiuare.'' j "'slit on the crater edge and publishedOahu GOO square .mllpsc or, kaual, 511 somo account of his experience In thesquare miles. As was ikointW out in an Advertiser and the Star. When thearticle in these columns 'yesterday the crater of Mokuaweoweo spouts and

' bulk of thoso people Hyp (r?tn hand to lllls. the lava does uot run over themouth and their distress will bo serious

' crater's rim, but breaks through the'unless small holdings can Ho found for weak sides, as It did In 1S9.I when go

them somo where.-- ' 'If Is evident that! many peoplo travelled to Hawaii to seeonly small the

negroes plantations,

na-

ture

other

short thethe

the1

oilico

Cuba

made

reasons

picnic

would

blood

miles,

and none of them steadily.' This Is wrote an historic account oi it Mo-sho-

by the fact Unit laborers have kuaweoweo is very far from an extincthad to be brought from Arica.'pn'd from crater.

.SEEDS..

ALL VARIETIES,

OF FRESH"

VegetableAND

Flower

'' 4'

ADSO' -'ft .1! Jf 01 .

AND

ALFALFA

SEE

JUST RECEIVED

i o

FORT STREET

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

free until further notice.

For Sale

Building lots In College Hills. Favor-abl- e

terms to homeseekers. Apply to P,C. Jones or Jonathan Shaw, JuUd Build-ing.

Building lot corner Kl-- g annd McCully streets. Pawaa tract. Rapid Transit line will pass the door. Apply atStar olllce.

A magnificent building site on theslope, near Thruston ave

niie. Particulars at Star olllce. '

Building lot corner 'jln- - and Kamehameha road. Palama terminus ofP pld Transit road. Apply at Star office.

For Kent' FurnishedIn a very desirable location, House of

six rooms and bath, will make rentreasonable to desirable tenant. En-quire of Hawaiian Trust Co., Ltd., 923

Fort Street.

To KentCottage wltlfuse of stable on Kulklnl

street. Rent $25 per moat'i. Apply ,iJonathan Shaw, 404 Judd Building.

Furnished ltooms To LetFurnished rooms In the central part

of the city. "Arlington," Hotel street.

Furnished House To Kent

A nicely furnished room. Apply at318 Beretanla street.

SituiitioiiB Y tinted

Young man seeks position as steno-grapher. Best experience. Can usethree different machines. Address H.S., Star office.

By a young man position as book-keeper, stenographer, or any clericalwork. Experience and best of referenceAddress Box G. L. this olllce. i

j j yuuiiB iiiuu uesirea u yuaiuun asuooKicccper or stenograpner. Referencesgiven. Experienced. Box W. this olllce

A PATRIARCH DIES.Major Seward Dill died May 20 at

Soquel, California. He was a native ofMaine, aged 94 years. Dill was amongthe founders of the Republican partyit- --Maine. lie was a delegato to theRepublican Convention that selectedLincoln the first time. He wos an

friend of Blaine. HannibalHamlin and Senator Frye. For manyyears ne was rosimasier at 1'hlHlpsburg, Me. Ho had been a resident of

. Santa Cruz County for over twenty.! years. , ;

lot WeatMr

J

Necessities

Gurney Refrigerators,

Gurney Ice Boxes,

Lightning Ice Cream Freezers,

Water Coolers,

Ice Shaves,'

Puritan Blue Flame Wlckless

Oil Stoves.

Water Hose.

We have a splendid assort-

ment at the very lowest prices.

tillLIMITED

Xfifl,j

Hos. 53, 65 and 57, King Street IHONOLULU.

BAHGAINSIN

..PianosWe have a big stock

of New and Second-han- d

PIANOS and are quoting

prices that will Interest

you If you are In the

market for an Instru-

ment.

Bergstrom Music Co,, Ltd

PROGRESS b'lOCKHONOLULU.

ChicagoIn Less Than

3 DaysSanFrom

Francisco at tO a. m.

CHICAGO, UNION PACIFIC

k NORTHWESTERN LINE

Pullman fourteen-sectlo- n Drawing--

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

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

a la carte. Electric-lighte- d

throughout.Dally Tourist Car Service at 0 p.

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

R. R. Ritchie,Gen. Agent Pacific Coast

San Francisco.617 Market Street.

Palace Hotel.

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

Wl67HVj

BARGAINSIN

Infants and Children's GoodsInfant's Slips, Dresses, Sacques,Rootles, Shoes, Caps, Etc., .at

GREATLY REDUCED PRICES

See Our Window Display ICARLSM CURRIER SPOOL SILK, ALL SHADES, 3 FORiJ

25 CI7NTS. JCARLSM CURRIER BUTTON HOLE TWIST, 2 FOR 5 5

CENTS.

Great Sale of Remnants on Monday nextJune 2

M. BRASCH & CO.

IMPROVED NATURAL STONE

PACIFIC UMfMERCHANT

STREETS.

LTD"? Jor n& Ir

AGENTStor

SALE OF REAL ESTATE

Pine Building Sites,. Puupuea;Tract, ,

Manoa

F. J. LOWREY, President.A. B. WOOD, .J. A. GILMAN, Secretary and Treas-

urer.F. J. AMWEG, Auditor.CHAS. H. GILMAN, Manager.

Silent Barber ShopHotel Street.

HOT AND COLD" BATHS.BEST BARBER SHOPIN HONOLULU.

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

Manufacturersof Soda Water, Gin-ger Ale, Sarsaparllla, Root Beer, CreasSoda, Strawberry, etc., etc.

W. McChesney & Sons.

tVhelesnlo Grocers and Dealers Inl eather and Shoe Findings.

Urenta tonolulu Soap Works Cou-pan- y

and Honolulu Tannery.

SLOCC

Mvzimi st; as mot xui

gerhpro6fWATER (

FILTER V.

EVERY FILTER IS THOROUGHLY

TESTED BEFORE IT LEAVES THEJ

FACTORY, AND IS WARRANTED

TO BE ABSOLUTELY GERM-PROO- F.

ALL PARTS ARE INTERCHANGH- -. ABLE.

THERE IS NO GREATER BLESS- -'

ING Tr N GOOD WATER. IT IB ASOURCE OF HEALTH. AND VIGOR.BAD WATER IS A PROLIFICSOURCE OF DISEASE AND DEATH,

COMPANY, LIMITED.

FORT, ANDBETHEfj

Reliable agents wanted withsufficient capital to carry stockand introduce the PerfectionSoda Fountains, operated by airpressure. Producing delicioussoda at cost of c per glass.Entirely new on the market, anda first class seller.

Ranging In price from $15.00 to$75.00. To the right party wecan offer exclusive agency foran exceptionally attractive line.

ACORN BRASS WORKS,Chicago, 111., U. S. A.

SAN FRANCISCO, 215 Front StHONOLULU, Queen St.

. NEW YORK, 43 Leonard St.

lURIiiKOilD.,Importers andCommissionflerchants

(Sole Aetiixojj....FOR....

Blanche Bates Cigar

AGENTS FOR

British America Assurance Comp'y,

of Toronto, Ontario.

Philadelphia Underwriters

Special attention given to con-.signnie-

of coffee and rice

Do you

Use

GoalP

YOU WILL FIND OUR COALTHE MOST ECONOMICALFUEL.

WE DELIVER COAL FORFAMILY USE.

I Ctt., LID.,

Fine Book and Commercial Printing,at the Star Odlce.

1

K

Wage EarnersHave NoExcuse

For living In small hot quar- -

'ters In the city, when lotscontaining 15,000 sq. ft. canbe purchased for $20.00 cashand $10.00 per month In thecoolest suburb of Honolulu.

The remaining lots In KA- -IMUKI TRACT ara being'sold on these terms. Pos-

session Immediate.

APPLY TO

TRUSTEES GEAR, LANSING & CO.

JUDD BUILDING,FORT STREET,

The Popular RestaurantUnder New Management.

NEW COOKS,; NEW WAITERS.

MpALS, - - 25 CENTS& . 'I rfie Best in Town. '

HO '.CHAN, - - MANAGER.

;Note Heads, Bill Heads, Letter HeadBand all kinds of Job and CommercialPrinting neatly and promptly executed

'

L. F. Aibahr,

Cottages andpleasant rooms,American .andEuropean ' Plan.Excellent Cuisineand Service Spe-cial weekly ormonthly rates.f ' ..

Best of SurfBathing and ca-noeing

SPECIALall the A FAMILY

year round. Hotand Cold WaterBaths. Bouffet.Livery. ElectricLights.

L. H. Dee,

ADVERTISEMENTS CH

t

b

For

$60.00 VineyardStreet near Engllndc. Par-lor, Dining Room, ThreeRed Rooms, Etc.

$00.00 a month. Sufcrb resi-dence and grounds. Worth$20,000. Fine four bed roomhouse with all modern

$50.00 a month. Residence of G.B. McClollnn, Punahou.Three bed rooms, parlor,dining room, study, lanal,etc., etc.

$36.25 a mouth. Residence of J.W. Pratt, Magazlno andSpencer St. Two bedrooms.

$35.00 a month. College Hills.Resldenco of Philip Savary.Two bed rooms etc.

$30.00 a month. Young Street.AND OTHERS.

Fort and Merchant Sts.

Telephone Main 313.

&Territory Stables Building,King Street.

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

ManagerMrs. Mary Stewardess

ON THE BEACH.

RATES FOR TOURISTS. .

RESORT.

BLOITS OFFERINGS!Fqr this week we have gathered together many choice articles

about the store at special prices pricesthat must appeal to the eco-

nomical buyer. See the goods in our window.'

INFANTS' BONNETSDainty and bright and choice materials; prices ranging up-

ward from 26c

INFANTS' SOXBlack or White, per pair 25c.

CHILDREN'S HOSEIn all colors, upward from . 10c.

CHILDREN'S DRESSESPrices ranging from ' . 50c.

FANCY RIBBONS at. . 5c, YARD

. ' ? ' i f25 Doz. Dainty Corset Covers, Extra Fine Goods for the money,

E0c., 75c, and SOc. each ' '

.; f.J

r- -

, Ring up Phone Red 71.

near

BLOM.Pro stress Block

Telephone White

Th6Our High

Soluble,Sure,

Pacific

Houses' Rent

FURNISHED.

UNFURNISHED.

con-veniences.

JUDGE MATTOS,

Sexton,

Waikiki Intv

proprietor.

ANGED MONDAYS.

Fort Street Beyetania

3171

iiinfsr

A.

Grade Gene

BrandDry and Fine,

Quick and

THE. JLYWAIIAN STAR, FRIDAY, MAY 30. 1902.

EXPRESS THANKS.EDITOR STAR: At a meeting ot the

Educational Branch of the McKlnloyMemorial Committee held in the parlorsot the Y. W. C. A. today at 3 p. m. avote of thanks was tendered the "Star"for local notices and articles pertainingto the entertainment held In the Ha- -wnlian opera house May first.

very truly yours,ALL1E M. FELKER,

Chairman.Honolulu, May 28.

KAUHUA ISLAND QUARANTINE.

United States. Allowed to Occupy the.,' Island.

By the terms of an agreement and thetween the Navy Department and theBishop Estate, the Marine Hospital Ser- -vice Is to take possession of KauhuaIsland In Pearl Harbor, with power touse It as a quarantine station In caseof necessity. Kauhua Island Is a partof the land Involved In the case ot theuniteil states against tne Bishop estate, now on appeal from Judge Estee'scourt. The agreement allows the government to take possession of the Islands, without prejudice to the suit.The Island Is wanted by Dr. Cofer otthe quarantine service in view of theprevalence ot cholera, plague and smallpox In the Orient. Transports fromManila are coming this way now. and Itone should arrive with a case of somebui-- uieue on uuuni, ivauouu imumiwould be used as a quarantine camp. ItIs an Island of 2G acres, and Is well lo-

cated for a quarantine camp.

DR. BISHOP'S GOLDEN 'WEDDING!All friends are invited to the golden

wedding of Dr. and Mrs. Sereno E.Bishop, to be held at their residence onSchool street tomorrow afternoon between the hours' of three and six. Nor,.,i,J , , ,r.r.,.,1., V.nn liut. In I. I a !,

welcome being extended to all friendswho wish to congratulate the coupleon the attainment of their marriagejubilee.

Baby sLife

SAVED

Improper feeding kills more babiesthan all the contagious diseases. Im-proper food sets the Infant's dlgestlvporgans nil awry Puts the whole sys-

tem in disorder.

THRO EN A

Today commands Oflarger sale In thiscity than all other prepared foods com-

bined. Why? Because It contains realmerit. It does all that Is claimed forIt. It Is a perfect food supplying allthe needs of the body.

A great many children have beenraised on It. Taroena-fe- d babies arestrong, robust, happy little beings witha good start In life. It isa food for this climate.

Dr. De Evelyn of St. Luke's HospitalSan Francisco, says: "I And Taroena anexcellent food for children sufferingfronxjvarious gastric and stomach trou-

bles. . I also use It successfully In ty-

phoid and consumption."

Hobron Drug Co.

KING AND FORT.

P. O. Box 484

FfiHWftilHH WS

Fertilizer4 A

Manufactured from the Best Materials. Few are as Good, None! Better on the Market

Guano and Fertilizer Co.

MEMORIAL

(Contlnued from page one.) .

volunteers of the National Guard. Theparade will bo formed ns follows:

Squud Mounted Police.Sixth IT. S. Artillery.Hawaiian Band.First Regiment, N. G. II.Uniform Rank 1C. of P.Knmehameha School Band.Kaniehameha School Cadets.George W. De Long Post.Carriage containing orator and read-

er.Carriage containing invited guests.The general public.Lino of March Alakea to Emma, to

Vineyard, to Nuuanu, to cemetery. Returning, column will halt at Vineyard,open order. The Post will pass throughto ' Vineyard, where It will dismountand salute column as It passes. Mar- -ehal, Harry Wilder; aide, H. C. En.ton.

Special trains this afternoon willcarry many to decorate the graves oftheir beloved ones at Pearl City whilemany more went down this mprnlng.

The day Is not altogether given overto mourning. The celebration to manyift one of glorious victory lived overagain in the memory of departed coni- -tirwlAr. n...t .. ft 1....,,.itiucc, nun tiLici iuL unci) iiu,c ,tt:;i ivmembered and craves honored, there Is. ln-rnil ,u,l i

to by the athletes of the town whohave arranged a varied program ofsports for the day, summarized as fol-

lows:Bisebnll Custom House vs. Hono-lulu- s,

at 1:30 p. tn.; Malle Illmas vs.PUrtahous, at 3 p. m. Both games atPunahou.

Cricket Scotland vs. The World, Ma- -- 4"

Athletics Boys' Brigade field day,KaDlolanl Park, at 10:45 a. m.

Tennis Hawaiian Tennis Associationtournament, semi-final- s, mixed doubles,Pacific Courts, at 4 p. m.

Decoration 'Day was generally .ob-

served tn the public schools,- - the teach-ers giving their classes appropriateexercises for the day. In a number ofschools there were programmes of reci-tations the selections having referenceto the memories called up by the na-

tional day of mourning for the dealsoldiers of nearly" half a century ogo.

The following is the program of De-

coration Day exercises nt Knnhumnnuschool at 10 a. m. this morning.Piano Solo "Morning Prayers"

x.. Catherine MagoonRecitation "Decoration Day".".. Room 6Song "Tenting on the Old Comp

Ground" RoomsRet-Ratlo- "Memory Day" Room 1

Song "Break the News to Mother"Rooms 11 and 12.

Recitation "In Memoriam" Room 3

"The Children's Offering" Room 3

Piano Solo Ethel Ludwlgson"The West Wind's Offering".. ..Room 7

Recitation "For My Country".. Room 2

"Love of Country" (Scott) Room 11

Recitation "Whose Boy?"Chalmers Graham

Hawaiian Song "Ke Aloha I HlklMai" Rooms 9 and 10

Recitation "Let Little Hands". Room 5

Recitation "Soldier Rest" Room 12Song "He Glveth Ills Beloved sleep"

Mrs. Hcnpy and Miss McLalnRecitation "The Soldier's Dream"

Itoom 12

Recitation "For Grandpa's Sake'.' Room 4

'Song "Gently Rest".. .Rooms 11 and 12

"Our Heroes Shnll Live" Room in"Hawaii Ponol" School"America" school

Numbers of the vessels In the harborwere decorated today, out of honor tothe occasion. The Naval station hadHags Hying, while the Iroquois wasdecorated with flags. The schooner Co-

lumbia at the Naval slip, was also de-corated, as was the tug Fearless. Theschooner Rosamond was decorated withHags, as weie vessels at the Hallwaywharf.

SCOTLAND VS. WOULD.

Thistle Wearers Challenge the Globe ntCricket.

A big game of cricket w'V. be playedthis afternoon at Makril, when everyplayer In Honolulu will be on the fieldto either participate or play the role ofImpassioned spectator.. Scotland willplay . the World. The Thistles havechosen ten men for their eleven andpublished lists of the World show theireleven to consist of fifteen. It Is gen-erally understood that the elevens maybe augmented on the field, certain mem-bers of the cricket club being uncertainquantities . when It comes to playing.Stumps will be pitched at two. Lightrefreshments will be served betweenInnings. The following are the twoelevens as picked: D. W. Anderson, R.Anderson, (Capt.). A. W. T. Bottomley,J. L. Cockburn, A. Garvle, D. Glass, A.S. Guild, M. R. Jamleson, D. Ross, J.C. McGill.

The World team will be selected fromthe following playprs: A. Ahlo, S.

Beardmore, L. G. Illackman, Brett, A.R. Hatfield. II. E. Picker, J. W. Har-vey, Captain Kelly, II. L. Herbert,Harrison, Von der Hyde, R. A. Jordan,A. J. Miles, Mnyahl, B. H. "Wright,Irish, Pllanaia, I'rince Cupid.

BRIGADE FIELD. DAY.

Boys to Compote for u Silk Banner andMenials.

The members of the Boys' Br'gadeare holding n Held day at KaplolanlPark with a long list of athletic eventsIn the evening for which sum' sixtymembers have entered their rames.Thirty live of the young aUi''"8 willrcniesent the Knkaako club who aremaking special efforts to securo the silkbunrer which has been neld i'V thePalamas for two years. The loy.i lefttiw n on special tram cars for Kaplo-lanl Park about nine o'clock this mom.Ing the sports being scheduled to com-mence at ten when the events wero tohave been run off In the following man-ner two at a time.

100 yards. 12 pound shot, CO yards(boys), high Jump, SS0 yards, broadJump, 110 yards (boys), pole vault, 120yardes hurdles, 1 mile bicycle race, Re-lay nice for prlzo points on banner.

After dinner there will be an obsta-cle race, a three-legge- d raco and a base-ball game.

Tomorrow night at 7:45 at tho clubroom, on King street the banner andmedals won In today's rvonts wlil bepresented. Speeches, stereoptlcou viewsand a musical program will round outthe evening.

BASEBALL TODAY.

Two League Games Will be Played atPunahou.

Two games of baseball are scheduledfr today and will be played at Puna-hou. Both should provo interfHIng.Tho II. A. C.'a will meet and shouldwin from tho Customs nt 1:30. Thiswilt bo the second time tho teams havemet this season the Smugglers winning

the first time. The II. A C.'s havemuch the stronger battery however andare not far behind In fielding. TheSmugglers should go down to defeat.Following this .gnme the Malles willplnys against the Punahous. A leaguemeeting was held yesterday ii'urnoonat which It was determined to adoptstrict measures to allow no ono Ina'dethe ropes except managers of in; teamsrepresentatives of the pr'is and theregular officials of the ,nni?. Theteams Will line up as follows.

Customs, Gorinnn, c, Tucker, p.,Scanlon, lb. No well, 2b, Elston 3b.,Moore ss., Gay, If., Bower of., Klwa, if.

Ilonoltiltts, Cunha c, Joy p., Cleasonlb , Louis 2b., Price, 3b., J. Williams s.,Hansman If.. Aylett cf Aylett or Leh-n- er

rf.Malles, Klley c, Clurk, p., Davis lb.,

Mana, 2b., Aknu, 3b., Jones ss.. Bush, orII. Williams rf., Taylor, of, Luahhvi, If.

Punahous, Hemenw'ay c, Babb'ti, p.,J. Soper lb., Loucks 2b., Meyers JuSpeere ss.. Cooke rf.. Wllllamnon . A.Marcalllno If.

SHIPPING llllll(Continued from Page 2.)

ARRIVING.Thursday, May 29.

S. S. City ot Peking, Nichols, fromthe Orient, off port nt midnight.

Stmr. Wnlaleale, Plltz, from Punuluunt 5:40 p. m. with 2S91 bags sugar.

Friday, May 30.Stmr. Knual, Bruhn, from Knilua,

Punaluu, Kapua, Hookena, at 9:5.", a.ni., with 6230 bags sugar, 2 pkgs. sun-dries.

Stmr. Niihau, W. Thompson, fromAnahola at 8 a. m. with 7,000 bags su-gar.

Saturday, May 31.Stmr. Klnau, Freeman, from Hllo and

way ports, due about 1 p. m.Stmr. Lehua, Napala. from Molokal

and Maul ports, due In afternoon.Sunday, June 1.

Stmr. W. G. Hall, S. Thompson, fromKauai ports, duo early In morning.

Stmr. Maui, F. Bennett, from Maulports, due early In morning.

DEPARTING.FridajvMny 30.

Am. bark Mauna Loa, W. Smith, forSan Francisco at 1 p. m.

'Saturday, 'May 31.S. S. City of Peking, Hoblnson, for

San Francisco at 7 a. m.

PASSENGERS.Arriving.

Per-stm- Nlhnu, May 30, from Ana-hola I. II. Kahillna nnd 1 deck.

Per S. S. City of Peking, May 30. fromthe Orient, for Honolulu Mrs. Holds-wort- h.

Miss Holdsworth, L- - l Sal Hill.Through for San Francisco F. Ader,

.Mrs. F. Ader, Master W. Ader, GeneralJames Allen, U. S. A., Ad. Andrne, T.Aizawn, S. Antoldl, Dr. Knilly, GeneralA. E. Hates and valet. Miss Bates, MissE. M. Bates, E. Beniuet, H. 11. Blgelow.Mrs. O .Brown, Hermann ' Caesar, J.Carroll, Mrs. J. Carroll and child, A.Chennells, I5. B. Cohen. J. W. Dedmun,Carl Erley, S. Godard. Miss Godard, E.B. Godden, F. E. Hammond, H. E. AlersHankey, J. Hern, W. C. Koithols, Coi.C. Kitchener. Major 15. I'. Lee. Mrs. R.P. Lee, M. Levy, Major Martin Mouln- -nis, Douglas MdDougnll, E. C. Mitchell,E. P. Oldfleld, Mr. 11. 1. Pcarse, MissRelph, 1. Sarda. J. Hovt smith. E.Viogelmunn, II. C. Wnlrond, T. Yoshlda.

MPORTAN T DEC

TRANSITION MUDDLE DISPOSEDOF.

Supreme Court Reallirms DecreeAgainst Wilder S. S. Co. PresidentDole's Judiciary Appointments.

The Supremo Court yesterday gaven decision In tho old case of John U.Hind et ul vs. the Wilder SteamshipCompany, settling a number of highlyImportant questions connected withcourt procedure nnd judiciary appoint-ments hero during tho "transition per-iod." Kinney. Ballon & McClanahan,attorneys for the defendants, after twoyears ot litigation, made a final appealto the Supreme Court here on theground that President Dole, of the Re-public of Hawaii, had no authority toappoint Judges Sllllman or Davies, whodecided the case, to the Circuit bench.The Issue Involved a general attack up-on m.-n- of the olllcial acts of the Gov-ernor between the date of the passageof the Newlands resolution of annexa-tion, and the application of tile OrganicAct. Another question raised whs tothe validity of a decree signed by aJt'dge In conformity with an opinion ofanother Judge of tho same circuit." Onevery point the court sustains theplaintiffs, giving full effect to the actsof Dole that were attacked, and reaf-firming the decision against the WilderSteamship Company. Gnlbralth, in a'concurring opinion, takes the view thatthe court should not have consideredtho questions raised at all, as liveterms have passed since the decree wasHied, and "public policy and the inter-ests of Justice demand that thereshould be an end tn litigation."

Tho opinion of the courP Is by ChiefJustico Frear, and the syllabus is asfollows:

"Semble, that ono Circuit Judge maysign a decree In conformity with anopinion filed by another Judge of thesame circuit who has gone out of of-fice.

"Semble, that a void decree is ap-

pealable."If tho Supremo Court entertains

without objection an appeal from a de-

cree signed without objection by onoCircuit Judge upon the decision of an-other, its decree cannot afterwards boset aside on motion ns void, assumingthat tha decree appealed from wus Im-

properly signed by a different Judgefrom tho one who heard the case.

"A statute is not repealed though ex-

pressed to be repealed by a later stat-ute, If the latter Is void.

"There cannot ho a do facto ofllceru'nlests there Is a de Jure olllce.

'If there is a do Jure oHlee, there maybe a de facto olllcer, however invalidhis appointment.

"There may be a de facto ollicor eventhough the olllce is already filled by ad Jure olllcer. If the latter is not Inpossession of the olllce.

"There are not two olllces In tho caseof each Circuit Judge that ot CircuitCourt and that of Circuit Judgo InChambers. There Is but one olllce, thatof Circuit Judge, though certain of hispowers are exercised In Circuit Courtand others In chambers.

"Acts 23 and 07 of tho laws ot 1S08,

the latter purporting to repeal tho for-mer, each provided for the uppolntmontby the President of the Republic, wlth- -

FIVE,

out the consent of the Senate, of a fier-so- nto perlorin the duties of a Circuit

Judge (lining the lalter'n temporarydisability or absence. The Presidentappointed certain persons to act In theplaces of the First nnd Second CircuitJudges of the First circuit during theIn Iter's Illness. The special Judges per-- f

ruled the duties or the olllces withthe ncquleseoiu'O of all concerned dur-ing the Illness of tin- - regular judges.One of the special Judged heard a casein admiralty and filed libi'declslon. Theother signed a decree in conformity .with that decision. The casewas ap-pealed and a decree entered In the Su-preme Court slightly modifying thatoi the lower court. Five terms aftei'- - '

wards a motion was made to set asidethe decree of the Supreme Cuurt im theground that the decision and decree ofthe special judges were vojd. Held,

"Assuming that Arts 23 and C7 wereunconstitutional because the appoint-ments theieln provided for wort; notto be mudu.wJth .the approval of thaSenate, that .decrees absolutely voidmay be set 'aside at terms subsequentto those at whlh they are rendered,and that the . consent of the partiescannot Invest persons with Judicialpower, still the special Judges werojudges de facto and their decrees cannot be thus attackeil 'collaterally.

"The result would be the same if, as-

suming those Acts to have been validbefore the annexation of these Islandsto the United States, they were ren-dtr- ed

Invalid by the Joint resolution ofannexation fatter which the appoint-ments were trtade and decrees ren-dered), and IF such power Of appoint-ment as the' 'President of Hawaii hadbefore anno'xatlojl wrtti not continued Inhim nfterwurds either by. the joint res-olution or by the direction of the. Pres-ident of the United 'States, although Inour opinion such power was so contin-ued In him.

"Semble, thiit noloriof Uppolntmont oro authority to appoint is hot neces-sary to, constitute one a de facto of-

ficer."The plaintiffs n the case were the

owners of the barkentlne William Car-eo- n,

which was sunk by the WilderPteamshlp claudlne off Diamond Head,anil the suit was an action to recoverdamages for the loss ot the vessel.

PLAGUE IN CANTON.HONGKONG. May 8. The plaguo

epidemic at Canton is bccomlijg seri-ous; especially the Tartar city andwesttrn district are suffeiing heavily.

Fine .lob Printing. Star Olllce.

NE W A 1) V KU'ri K.l RNTS

Maile Restaurant,LA'M KAU, MANACKU.

WILL OPEN ON"

SATURDAY, MAY 31ON KING STItEUT,OPPOSITE LEE TOM A & CO.

Open All RSight

MEALS - - 25 CENTS

NOTICE OF OTOdK'llOLDEItS'MEETING OK THE HONOLULURAPID TRANSIT AND LAND COM-PANY BY ORDER OF' L. A.THURSTON, PRESIDENT OF THEHONOLULU RAPID TRANSITAND LAND COMPANY.

Notice Is hereby given t'll the Stock-holders of the Honolulu Hapld Trun-s- lt

and Land Company that at nlnio'clock a. m., on the 6th day of June,A. D. 1302, a special meetlr.g of thustockholders of said corporation will boheld nt the Assembly Hall of Castle &Cooke, Limited, corner of ' King andBethel Streets, In the City of Honolulu,Island of Oahu, Territory ot Hawaii,for the purpose of considering the dis-position ot certain shares of tho Cap-ital Stock of the said corporation,theretofore authorized to be Issued, andmiipIi other lniMlnpHR nn iiinv hn hrouullL .

before the said meeting. iJ. A. OILMAN,

fcicretary Honolulu Rapid Transit andLand company.

NOTICE OF STOCKHOLDERS'MEETING OF THE HONOLULURAPID:, TRANSIT AND LAND COM-PANY BY OIlDEtt OF L. A.thurston. president of theHonolulu Rapid transitand ja'kd company.

Notice of Stockholders' Meeting ofHonolulu Rapid TranBlt and LnndCompany, a Corporation OrganizedUnder the Laws of tho Republic ofIlawnli, Now Territory of Hawaii.

WHEREAS, tho President of saidcorporation did on the 29th day of May,lt'02, call a special meeting of the stock-holders of surd corporation to be heldat Ultimo and place and for the pur-pose hereinafter set forth, and directedtho Secretary' of said corporation togive to the stockholders thereof notlcoof said special meeting, which said or-der of said President is in writing andon file with of said cor-poration;

NOW, THEREFORE notice is here-by given to the' stockholders ot saidcorporation that at three o'clock p. m.,on the 6th day of June, A. D. 102. itSpecial meeting of th" stockholdei s ofHonolulu Rapid Transit and LandCompany will Me held at tho AssemblyHall of Castle & Cooke, Ltd., corner ofKing nnd Bethel streets, In the City ofHonolulu, Island of Oahu,'rerrltory ofHawaii, for the purposo o consideringtho proposition to create a bonded In-

debtedness ot said Honolulu RapidTransit and Land Company to theamount of one million dollars (J1.0O0,-0G0- ),

In gold coin ot the United Stateof America, and that it said bonded In-

debtedness Is authorized to be createdthat It bo represented tiy the bondw ofsaid corporation, to bear Hiich date asthe Board of Director's may determine,to bo payable twenty-fiv- e (25) yearnafter date, with Interest at the rate of.six per rent per annum, payable hnlfyearly, said bonds to be executed andissued in such denomination or denom-inations as may he determined by theBoard ot Directors of said corporation,nnd If so created said bonded intebted-nos- s

to bo secured by a mortgage ofdeed of trust upon all of the corporateproperty and franchises now bolonulngto said corporation or . which it mayhereafter acquire.

By order of the President:J. A. OILMAN,

Secretary Honolulu Rapid Transit nndLand Company.

I A. THURSTON,President Honolulu Rapid Transit and

Land Company.

nix. niia Hawaiian star, Friday, may 30, 1002.

A Summer Proposition.Well, now there's the

ICE QUESTION !

Vet know you'll need Ice; you knowir a necessity In hot weather. Webt)rve you are anxious to set that Icewhich will give you satisfaction, anilVe'd llk (o supply you. Order from

1 011 ice i an co.,

HOFFMANN. AND MARKIIAM.

telephone J151 Blue, Fostofllce Box G06

lurtain Sale

AT

E. W. JORDAN,tO FORT STREET

300'PAIRS OF

CURTAINS FROM

) CENTS A

PAIR UP.

The Largest and Best

Assortment in

Town

W. S. IRWIN & CO., LTD.,

Win. G. Irwin.. President and ManagerCi&ua Spreckels.... First nt

W M. GHffard.... Second, nt

B M. Whitney. Jr..Seo'y and TreasurerBoo. X. Ross Auditor

Sugar Factors,Commission Agents

"AGENTS OF THE

DCEMIS STEAMSHIP COMPANY

OP SAN FRANCISCO, CAIi.

The Encore SaloonComer Nuuanu and Hotel Street.

Ws Keep on Hand theBcRt ttrnmls ofliiqtiors and Cigars

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

We will Ueep the Honolulu Beersn tap and (n bottles. Also eofl

4rtn! and clgani.' K MJWT. Pro-rW-

KAHT & CO., LTDTHE ELITP ICECREAM PARLORS

Chocolates and ConfectionsTee Occam and Water IcesBakry Lunch.

ii m m in i gity

Oahu Tailoring Company,MERCHANT TAILORS.

Suits made to Order, cleaning, ns

and pressing; corner Beretanlaand Emma Sts., Honolulu, T. H.

WON & LOUI CO.Hotel Street near Smith.

Sauuttary Plumbers, Tinsmiths, ulbeet Iron Workers.Water Pipe and Gutter Work la B9

Ita branches.Orrjera filled with dispatch.

8. Kojima.IMPORTER AND'DEALER IN

LIQUORS,Japanese Provisions.

General Merchandise,AND PLANTATION SUPPLIES.

SPSS. 5 HOTEL STREET, HONOLULU.IMlephc-n-e White 2411.

P. O. Box 906.

OHTA,Ceatir&ctor nnd Builder,

House Painter

KwwsJo. Sheridan Street, near King,Honolulu. H. L

Danger nhoad I

T U 0 ousjlucordoesn't sco thebroken rail. '

Thero is suroto bo a torri-bl- o

wroek.Thoro s aw rookalio ul for SEBC2SSr

you If you pay no attention to yourweak throat and lungs.

Ayer'sCherry Pectoral

Weak throats and weak lungs easilygive way. Some extra strain, as afresh cold, and you are down withIt run cli it is or pneumonia. Hotterstrengthen these weak places beforo itis loo late. Ayer's Cherry Pectoralheals these irritable throats, gives touoto the relaxed membranes, and impartsstrength to the lungs.

Thoro aro many substitutes and imi-

tations. Ilowaro of thorn! Ho suroyou get Ayer's Cherry Pectoral.

Two sizes. Largo and small bottles.hv Dr. J. C. A.vcr & Co., Lowell, Mils., U.S.A.

IfflD D

TheStandard

More of this grand old makeis now In use than that of anyother firm in the world. Thehistory of piano making in theUnited States for two genera-tions cannot be old withoutdrawing largely on the careerof the grand house of F. & C.Fischer. Wherever a Fischerpiano Is found It has proved tobe a good one always and every-where. The name tells the grade

A LITTLE

HONEY DOWN

and small monthly paymentsbuys from us.

Ml.LIMITED.MERCHANT ST.

Grand Opening ofOur New Store

115 N. KING ST.

HARDWARE,

CROCKERY,

GLASSWARE,

PAINTS, ETC.

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.

Dry Goods;Fancy Goods17 S. HOTEL ST.

Wm.G.lrmn&Go.jUd,FIRE AND MARINE

INSURANCE AQENTS

AGENTS FOR THE

Scottish Union National InsuranceCompany of Edinburgh,

VPllhelma of Magdeburg General Iniur--ance Company,

JUtoclated Assurance Co., Ltd., of lt- -nlch and Berlin.

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

Royal Insurance Company of Liverpool,alliance Assurance Company of Xon- -

doa.

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

Importers andCommissionMerchants

Queen Street,' Honolulu

4.GENTS FOR

The Lancashire Insurance Co.The Balolse Insurance OUnloi, Gaa Engine Co.Domestic Sewing Machine. Ftp.

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

TENNIS TOURNAMENTThe. seinl-flnn- ls of the mlK"d doubPs

will bo played this nficmoo'i on c

courts In the folio. vinar ordir.Mrs. Gunn nnd A. T. Hrock againstMiss I,. Ward nnd A. R. Cunha at fouro'clock followed by Mrs. Ivors nnd E.It. Adams ngalnst Miss Horner and C.

MI'S I. WardA It C'uiiliii .

MrS U Wilder..V OlllliiKlmm- -

MlMNAdiims...I) II Hitchcock...Mr i (limuA T IlrockMUi Kilcliun"W l Kill li.Mifw I, Wnrd.A It Ciitilni

C--

Mrs It IvorsK It Ailiuns. ......Ml Cutiliu.1 T IrvineMm A M HrownH V AtliertnnMlnB . IlorntrC A Klstou

THE NEW

M (luimA T Ilrock

Mlsal "'nAA It Cunha ..

HK It

Ml.sE Horner...C A Elston

THE HOUSE iVAL BILL

GOVERNMENT TO BUILD HALFSHIPS.

Pacific Coast Loses Its Four PerCent DilTorentlal Hut May Bid on

More Than One Vessel,

WASHINGTON. May 19. The 'Housebulls and bears gored and mangled thenaval bill today so that the chair-man could barely recognize .it. Tne1'aclilc Coast was Interested Inthe proceedings, and its memberswatched the mauling process, occa-sionally jumping Into the arena them-selves.

The net result of the day's activitywas a decided change of policy In war-ship construction. Half of the newvessels are to be built In the Govern-ment yards. Tlie 4 per cent differentiallong enjoyed practically as a monopolyby the Union Iron Works was loppedoff, and hereafter, if the bill goesthrough the Senate as It stands, Paci-fic Coast builders will be forced to com-pete with Eastern yards on an evenbasis, without any allowance for thehigher price of materials or labor.

There Is one consolation In the situ-ation for the Paclllc Coast contractors,however. They are not restricted toone vessel, as the bill originally stood.This provision was stricken out. Now,If any contractor bids low enough, hemay got all the ships except those or-

dered built in the Government yards,and, if he happens to be a Pacific Coastcontractor, all these ships might beconstructed on the Coast. In brief, thePacific and Atlantic Coasts are treatedexactly alike.

Roberts of Massachusetts offered anamendment, drafted by 'Metcalf, pro-viding for the construction of one battle--

ship, one cruiser and one gunboatIr. the Government yards. Ittated a long debate, but finallytriumphed, though the chairman of thecommittee of the whole, Sherman ofNew York, had to be overruled. Hesustained the point of order againstRoberts' amendment and Robertsappealed. The chair was defeat- -eo, 1U8 to "a. as counted by the tell-er- s.

Then the amendment was adoptedby a viva voce vote, and the bill re-

ported to the House, which speedilyadopted the amendments and passedthe bill. The California members stoodsolid on the amendment for the construction in Government yards.

Metcalf declared that the striking outthe differential would paralyze war-

ship, construction on the Pacific Coastund tend to destroy private shipbuild-ing enterprises.

Representative 'Coombs found It un-necessary to offer the amendments hehad prepared, as sti iking out of theprovisions Included In Mudd's point oforder eliminated also the restrictionagainst the construction of more thanone of each class of vessels on the Pa-cific Coast.

THE ARTjyUlESSCREATIVE IMAGINATION INVOLV-

ED IN AMERICAN BUSINESS.

American Genius Finds ExcitementCharm and Color in the Plain Walksof Business Life.

"The Idea of business In a countrythat has readied the bight of its devel-opment Is a dry-as-du- st affair. It Isthe miserable system of keeping whatone has, a system In which the temper-ament nnd the Imagination do not playa part. The American, however, putsImagination Into business. Business Isthe art of this country. To the Ameri-can of affairs there Is In his work ex-

citement, charm and color. To himI: Is not a matter of mathematics, butot the creative Imagination. Great pro-cesses, great inventions, great corporationsthe organization of such thingsrequires genius. Nobody is stupider,more avaricious and more economicalIn a small way than a French peasant or a German hausfrau. Nobody Ismore economical, "less avaricious andmore economical In a big way, than agreat American Inventor, financier orbusiness man. Through his Drains, pro-duction becomes cheaper, and conse-quently more abundant; and more goodto the common people thereby accruesthan by all the small savings ever sav-ed since civilization began. It Is betterto be able to make than to save, andto make such a large outlay In money,energy nnd brains Is necessary. Tosave pennies Is a sign of commercialIncompetence and national decline.When nn Individual or a nation beginsa system of housekeeping on a smallscale, It la a sign that the life-bloo- d Isebbing. Old people, drier and less re-

sourceful than young people, are no-

toriously more economical. They, likeold nations, want to hang on to whatthey have, rather than strive for more.The wisdom of the French peasantconsists In keeping down his expendi-ture and the size of his fumlly to npoint where the nation as a whole Isweakened. As Bacon said, 'He thathath a state to repair may not despisesmall things," and perhaps the decayof the country Is the cause, rather thanthe effect, of French economy. Any-wa- y,

the two things hang closely to-

gether."American economy is the economy

that consists In doing things on a largoscale, In producing much, rather thanIn saving little. The old system of eco- -

A. Elston. It still somewhat earlyto positively pick winners but the

combination looks thesirongesi unu suouui ue piayuig usumsiMiss Ward nnd Cunhn In the llnals.These will, be played on the Pacificcourts tomorrow afternoon.

Mm .....

Mrs IversAihitim..-- .

keenly

01

is

nomy consists In picayune retrench-ment. 'Take caxe of the pennies, andthe dollars will take care of themselves,' is, from a modern point of view,as false as It Is true. That 100 Frenchfamilies can live on what one Americanfamily throws away Is an exaggeration,but were It not, It would Indicate thesoundness of American economy, notthe lack of it. Whence comes the tre-mendous energy of our nation In busi-ness, In production, in growth general-ly, in practical improvements and ln- -.entions it comes from a high standard of living. To do much work nourished ns Americans? What nation consumes so much good food, in what oth-e- d

country do the people demand somany luxuries? Where do they demand so much from life generally, Insocial equality, in full opportunity forwork, pleasure and education? Hut- -chins Hapgood in AInslee's.

BIG AND LITTLE BOB.Big and Little Bob Fltzslmmons are

becoming fnmlliar figures on the streetsof San Francisco, says tb-- San Fran-cisco Chronicle. The I'reckle-fnce- d

, good natured prize-fight- er andhis seven-yeai'-o- ld son, with handsgripped together, are ambling abouteverywhere these days. The father hasnothing to do save wait for an opportu-nity to meet James J. Jelllrles, and theson has nothing to do at nil. So, withthe leisure this gives them, they aremaking an Inspection of tne city morecomplete in character than touristsusually Indulge in.

The two Bobs walked through China-town the other day, took a stroll aboutthe Mission, saw everything on Murketstreet from the ferry to Tlui'd & eet,and looked long and hard at the widestretch of scenery visible frorn thetower of the Chronicle building. Laterthey stood In front of the ladle3' en-trance to the Palace Hotel whll theelder Bob consulted a city guide.

"Where do you want to go next, son?"he asked.

"To bed," solemnly replied young Bob"I'm tired."

This was a contingency the fatherhad overlooked, but he accepted thesituation as any parent should and tookthe Voungster to his room, tucked himIn bed, and went down to the big cen-tral court to rejoin his friends.

"I forget that boy is only 7 years old"he said. "I guess I walked him about'twenty miles this morning withoutthinking what I was doing. 1 just grabhim when I start out for a stroll and Idon't turn him In until it occurs to himto kick. It's lucky for me his motheidon't know that."

Bob was asked if he was keeping him-self in good physical condition and hereplied with emphasis:

"You bet I am. I could go In the ringtomorrow and make a good showingIf I had to. If these people who thinkI'm too old to fight would put In oneday with me they'd change their minds.I was never In better shape In mylife."

Then Bob Indulged In a brief doubleshuffle on the tiled pavement and said:

"I'm going to walk out to the CliffHouse now. Do any or you fellowswant to come along?"

Two volunteers offered and the tripwas made. On the way back Bob issaid to have remarked:

"This climb .up Mourit Tamalpalslooks good to me. What do you sayabout making the trip in the morning."

There was nothing at all said In

THE SUGAR QUESTION.WASHINGTON, May 19? George R.

Mosle, a sugar broker, testified beforethe Committee on Relations With Cubatoday that Havemeyer was not Inter-ested in certain plantations In Cuba ashud been alleged. He said there wasabout 450,000 tons of sugar stored InCuba now. The Cubans, he said, be-lieved concessions would be made andaccepted the Piatt amendment on thataccount.

When he asserted that the Cubanshad discontinued work because manyof the people did not have the moneywith which to go on, Senator Tellerasked: "Will you tell me any firm InCuba that has suspended operationsand has not ground Its crop?"

"I cannot.""No, nor anybody else," remarked

Teller.John Farr, a sugar dealer, contradict-

ed statements made by Leavltt as tothe countervailing duty, saying Cubagot all the benefit of it, as did othercane sugar producing countries. Hesaid if the present low prices of sugarcontinued the production In Cubawould be much less. In Jamaica, hesaid, forty-seve- n estates had failed lastweek; in San Domingo the growers arein the throes of possible bankruptcy,while In Demarara the estates probablywill last a year or two.

BURNED THE CHURCH.The destruction by fire of the Metho-

dist Episcopal Church South, at Fres-no, California, followed at short Inter-vals by two more tires In the parson-age, pointed strongly to arson. Nowthe mystery has been solved. Rev.George Miller, the pastor of the

church, had adopted a ld

"boy from the Children's" Home So-

ciety of California at Los Angeles, andthis youngster, whose name Is WalterKernehan, had on various occasionsmanifested his dislike for preachers.He repeatedly asked Mr. Miller why hedid not do something else besidespreaching, nnd, after the church Are,was known to hove said: "Now you'llhave to do something besides preach-ing." This nnd similar remarks ledChief of Police Morgan to make an In-

vestigation, which produced conclusiveevidence ot the boy's guilt as an Incen-diary.

IF HE CAN.Andrew Carnegie says wealth does

not bring happiness or satisfaction.There's nothing left for Andrew to trybut heaven. Chicago Record-Heral- d,

m

.........'.a.

..a.

?!::.:

.... o.

.'.a:..

"r- ftyr.

Bicycle vs.Electric Cars.

First cost of Cleveland BicycleAdd Jntercst4 per cent .three yearsAdd $3 per year for possible repairs

Total CostValue of Bicycle at end of three years

Net cost for three years

Paving In street car fa'res nt 20 cents per day, orper month, eight months each year, three years.

Interest nt per cent for one-ha- lf this period

10.00

..$33.20

$5

Here Is profit of nearly one hundred per cent per an-num on an Investment of $38.20 to say of guaranteedextra dividends payable dally in robust health, and keenpleasure.

E. 0. HALL & SON, LTDJNew 15 uncling

Corner Fort and King Streets

ft

S.&W. PreservesIf you to feel assured that are getting the best, ask for

S. W. goods. They are positively delicious and we vouch forthe quality and purity.

Which do you prefer of the following:

Strawberry,aspbe rx'srPineapple,Blackberry orTelephone your order If you wish. We deliver promptly.

Don't Forget Oar Fresh Candies

Telephones :

22, 24, 92

H. MAY & CO., LtdTHE POPULAR GROCERY.

Great Reduction Sale!COMMENCING ON THE24 DAY OF MAY . . .

FOR THREE WEEKS ONLYCOME AND SEE OUR. NICE CHEAP HATS .. . AND SHIRTS. . .

K.KING STREET, NEXT TO CASTLE & COOKE.

Just ReceivA Large Line JapaneseSilks, Curios and AmericanDry Goods

Nuuanu Street Telephone White

mm n

5 ;. r

4

IS05HIHA

Ads in Star

One Insertion, per lino 15 cents.

Two Insertions, per line 25 cents

One Week, per lino 30 cents.

Two Weeks, por line 40 cents.

One Month, per lino OO cents.

!

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anothing

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Ads under "Situation Wanted" Ju- - Ads under "Situations Wanted," laeerted free of charge. serted free of charge In the Star.

' . THE HAWAIIAN STAR, F1UDAY, MAY SO, 1002.

On the Polo Grounds,High Balls Hade Harmless.

SOCIETY HAS TAKEN TO POLO AND BECOME ENTHUSEDOVER ITS ATTRACTIONS IN A WAY NOT PREVIOUSLY KNOWNIN THE ANNALS OF OUTDOOR RECREATIONS. THIS SCOT-TISH GAME HAS BROUGHT WITH IT A KNOWLEDGE OF THEHIGH-BAL- L AND ITS PROPER USE AT THE CLUB HOUSE AFT-ER THE FATIGUES OF THE GAME

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

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

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

PrimoALL THAT THE

. Order From the Brewery.

Who will do it?You are going to have your house

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

than we. Investigation proves thatfew do as good.

All wo ask for It Is a fair pricenot high, not low. Either extreme Isdangerous.

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

Office: Union Street, opp. Bell Tower.

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

F. Hustace SecretaryChas. H. Atherton ..AuditorJiV. H. Hoogs Treas. and Mgr.

TELEPHONE MAIN 295.

Ikstaee IbS., LtdQUEEN STREET

DBALBRS INFirewood, Stove,Steam and Blacksmith

CoalWHOLESALE AND RETAIL

Special attention given toDRAYING

ALSO, WHITE AND BLACK SAND

C. Q. Yee Hop & Co.

Kahiklnul Meat 3InrketAnd Grocery

Fruits and Vegetables

BERETANIA ST., COR. ALAK

Also at the

risharket, Stalls I9and20Phone' Blue 2511.

RAILWAY AND LAND CO'S

-- 7iarw

151

TIrvIE TABLE

FROM AND AFTER JANUARY 1, 1901

TRAINS

STATIONS. Dally Dally(Outward) ox. Sun. D,ly ex.8nn D'ly D'ly

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

Honoluln 7:10 0:15 11:08 3:15 5:10Pearl Olty 8 03 9:18 11:10 S:47 5:50Ewa Mill 8:33 10;ft 12:00 0:10Wal&nae. .... 10:50 . 4:45

AVaUlutt 11:85 .... 5:40Kfthuku i .... l'i:33 .... 0;15

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

A.U. A.M. P.M. P.MKrtliuku - . 5:35 .... 2:08Walalua 6:10 2:1VVutanan 7:10 fl:55Ewa Mill 6:80 7:45 1.0S 4:32Pear) City 8:15 8:03 1:80 4:82Honolulu 6:10 8:35 2:05

G. P, Denison, F. O. SMrrn,Superintendent. Gen. Pass, it Tkt. Ant

Advertf.se your Wants In the Star.

LagerNAME IMPLIES.

Telephone Main 341.

WAILUKU, Maui, May 1, 1002.

Dear Sirs: In my innocence I pur-chased in Honolulu a jar of your

Pin Money PicklesIt brought me great trouble, and one

of three things must occur:1. You must stop making them or2. I must get them at less expense,

or3. I am a ruined man.Since my first venture I've had many

"jars." My family from early morncry "Pickles;" neighbors ring the door-bell and shout "Pickles;" relatives vis-

it me In expectation of "Pickles." Yourpickles are my Nemesis. Please, dearsirs, quote them by the keg, barrel,hogshead, ton or shipload, and "pre-serve" me. Yours very .truly,

CARROLL WHITTAKER.P. S.? I wanttGherkins,' Cauliflower,

Onions, Martynla, Mixed, Peaches andMango.

C. W.To Messrs.

LEWIS & CO., LTD,LEADING GROCERS

10CO FORT STREET.n.") TWO TELEPHONES 240.

f . G. IRWIN 4 CO.(Llmltort.)

AGENTS FORWestern Sugar Refining Company of

San Francisco, Cal.Baldwin Locomotive Works of

Ph ielphla, Penn.Newell Universal Mill Company

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

N. Ohlandt & Oo.'b Chemical FertilizersHigh Grade Fertilizers for Cane and

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

tilizers for Cane and Coffee.Reed's Steam Pipe Cars

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

Papers.Lucol and Llnse d Oils, raw and bollev..Indurine (a cold water paint) In white

and colors.Filter Press Cloths, Cemt Lime and

Brick.

II J HillThe well known novelist died suddenly

on the morning of April 20th In Wash-ington D. C, of paralysis. Ilia lastbook

it 33

Just received and on sale at the

156 HOTEL STREET,

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

.x:..x..x..:x:":"Ww:"X"M-::-x--

EDITOR STAR: John BrisbaneWnlker. In the Cosmopolitan, has writ-ten a sympathetic but somewhat dismalsketch of the late John P. Altgeld ofIllinois. In this while certifying to Alt- -geld's sterling and unbending honesty,and his great ability In many respects,Mr. Walker says he was one of themost unpopular of men, giving as apossible reason for this alleged unpop-ularity that his Ideas were probablyahead of his time.

As one who enjoyed a personal, andIn some respects, Intimate acquaintancevlth Governor Altgeld, I must dissentfrom 'Mr. Walker's statement that Alt-geld was un unpopular man. Of coursepopularity is a relative term, relativeboth as to degree, and to time andplace. AVhatever may have been Alt-geld- 's

popularity or want of It else-where, he was certainly not unpopularIn Illinois, where he was best known.Outside of Illinois he was known prin-cipally as "the man who pardoned theanarchists." In Illinois he was knownfor more nearly what he was than thatphrase, unaccompanied by a knowledgeof the surrounding circumstances,would seem to Indicate, and there hehad an enduring popularity, and hismemory will long be cherished.

As to his popularity. It may be statedthat In 1884 he ran on the Democraticticket for congress in a district whichIncluded the northern part of Chicago,the University town of Evanston, andan adjoining agricultural county. Ithad been a Republican stronghold foryears. A Republican nomination wasconsidered equivalent to an election.He canvassed the district as It had sel-

dom been canvassed. If It had not beenfor a slightly cracked quality In hisvoice he would have become one of thegreatest orators of his time. He hadevery other qualification, wide and ac-

curate Information, a mind well stored,keen insight into human nature, asense of humor, lofty imagination, asplendid diction, keen reasoning pow-ers, and a presence and manner thatImpressed liearers with a belief in hishonesty. The result of that election

as so close, that it was several yearsbefore the Republicans again consid-ered the district a safe one.

Two or? three years later he was elect-ed a judge of the Superior Court ofCook County, by a decisive mojority,but resigned from the office before histerm had expired. In 1892 he was, theDemocratic candidate for governor ofIllinois. In that campaign he made acomplete canvas of the state speakingin every one of the 101 counties In thestate, and In most of them more thanonce. It was In this campaign that hewas opposed with the alarum ,"If Alt-geld Is elected, he will pardon the anar-chists." His reply to this was charac-teristic. He said: "If I am elected,and a petition for the pardon of theanarchists is presented to me, I shallconsider it; and if I think that theyought to be pardoned, I will pardonthem. Thus in a sense, the questionof whether the anarchists should bepardoned, was submitted to the peopleof Illinois, who were most nearly inter-ested In the question and knew mostabout it, and by them passed on. Altgeld was elected and took office In Jan-uary, 1893. Some months afterwards,a petition for tho pardon of the anar-chists wa3 presented. Governor Alt-geld appointed and announced days onwhich he would give the subject hear-ing. These days extended over severalmonths, and any person who desired tobe heard on the subject, either for oragainst their pardon, either orally orIn writing, was given every opportu-nity to be heard. Scores of people wereheard. They came from all classes ofthe community. The states attorneywho prosecuted, and members of theJury who tried the anarchists Joined Inthe request for pardon. There was verylittle opposition to their being par-doned. Finally after months of oppor-tunity for hearing, It was announcedthat the anarchists would be pardonedon Thanksgiving Day. Not a dally pa-per In Chicago raised a voice of ob-jection. Scarcely a voice of disapprov-al was raised throughout the state. Therardon was acquiesced in and approvedby nearly the entire people of Illinois.

It was not until more than a weekafterwards, that the Chicago Tribune,whose management had a personal dif-ference with Governor Altgeld, entirelyuside from politics, thought the pardona matter of sufficient public Interest, toJustify an interview with Judge Gary,the Judge who presided at the trial,and sentenced the anarchists. JudgeGary Is an eminent jurist, and an hon-e- tt

man. But he was then a man ad-vanced In years, and It had been no-ticeable for some time that his express-ed opinions regarding the anarchistshad been gradually growing more bit-ter. Moreover, he and Altgeld had hada violent difference during tho timethat the latter was on the bench. WhileI would riot say, nor do I believe, thatwhat Judge Gary said In this Tribuneinterview about Altgeld and his pardonwas either due to old age or conscious-ly to his former difference with Altgeld,the fact remains that such differencehad existed, and that Judge Gary's ut-terances regarding the anarchistsgrew much more radical as time separ-ated them from the trial.

But even this Interview, violent as Itwas against Altgeld and against hispardon of the anarchists, fell Hat at thetime, and attracted little attentionfiom the public. It was not until thecampaign of 1890, when Governor Alt-geld again ran for governor, when agreater effort If possible was made inIllinois to defeat Altgeld than to carrytho state for MoKinley, that it was re

Cell

Honolulu PhotoFORT

surrected and mado to do duty ns acampaign document, not so much In Il-

linois as In oilier states. It was usedwhere the circumstances of the pardonwere not known, as an argumentagainst Bryan, as showing that he wason n ticket supported by anarchists. ,

Whatever Its effect elsewhere, It hadUtile elTcct In Illinois, where Altgeld,.'ran ahead of Brynn, and received more 'votes than he did In 1S92, though he ,

was defeated. 'Few governors of Illinois have been '

more genuinely popular In Illinois, ormore deserving of It than GovernorAltgeld. It must be remembered thathe was the first Democratic governorthe state had had for over thirty years.There had been a generation of Repub-lican officials In every department oftho state government. All who werein appointive office, or who hopd tobe, or who had been and hoped to beagain, saw an end to their tenure ortheir hopes. There was an Instant crythrough every means of reaching thepublic ear, that the public service wasto be debauched. This cry wa Inlarge measure an honest expression ofthought. It would b strange if menwho had served In a thirty year periodof Republican state administrationshould not feel that to turn over theadministration to tho opposition partywas dangerous and direful.

Governor Altgeld was. confronts! atthe beginning of his administrationwith peculiar difficulties. Various ele-ments had contributed to his election.All these elements were entitled to re-cognition in appointments. The resultwas that there were many appoint-ments made which might justly be call-ed bad ones. No one knew this betterthan Governor Altgeld. But the polit-ical necessities of the case, as the polit-ical necessities of every such, demund-e- d

recognition of the various elementswhich had contributed to the party vic-tory. But while Governor Altgeld feltobliged to make appointments that hiskeen and honest judgment did not ap-prove, he did not allow himself to feelobliged to keep men In office after theyproved themselves unworthy. The re-

sult was that the demands of partyvictory being met, he was soon at lib-erty to make removals for cause, andJill vacancies on merit. And this sift-ing process went "on so rapidly that Itwas not long before the state admin-istration, In every deparlment, was Inthe hands of men worth and the re-

cipients of public conlldcnce, to suchan extent that the very tlrst year ofhis administration showed marked Improvement In effcieney nnd economy Inoil departments and In all Instltu'ions,oer preceding years, and the publicservice of Illinois was benelltted as itnever could have been by one adminis-tration being succeeded by anothei ofthe same political faith, because no ad-

ministration however strong, couldhave made the clean sweep, that achange of party domlnancy demanded,a clean sweep that while It removedmany men of excellence, also swept outof existence abuses that had becomerespectable by age.

Governor Altgeld, under stress of po-

litical necessity appointed some badmen, but he kept no bad man In office,and the people of Illinois know and rec-ognize that fact.

Of Altgeld's political career since hewas governor, and which Mr. Walkermay have had In mind when he saidAltgeld was unpopular, this may besaid. Altgeld sought to remould thetendencies of the political elementowhich were groping for advance Inmunicipal and civic administration,and to align them to definite,rational and attainable purposes. Itwas to this end that he became a can-didate for mayor of Chicago. That howas not elected, was not because hewas not popular, but because the limewas not ripe for It. The wonder Isthat under all the circumstances hopolled as large a vote for mayor as hedid. The people did not follow him,not because they did not have confi-dence In him, but because they had nothad time to be fully convinced of thewisdom of the course he proposed.

Governor Altgeld had the magnetismof honesty combined with great abil-ity. Wherever he went he compelledconfidence and admiration. He couldmould men in the mass and individual-ly. In his administration his persjnal-It- y

dominated throughout all theagencies of government.

In personal intercourse he was suuve,simple, courteous, sincere. I think thebest index of his character was thefact that of the scores of newspaper menI know, who by the course of theirwork came into real acquaintance withhim during his public and political car-eer. I know of scarcely one who did notbecome his sincere friend and admirer,Irrespective of differences of politicalopinion, or of antagonism between thepapers they represented and the gov-ernor. I know no other public man ofwhom this is true in the same degree.To me,, It is an irrefutable test of goodmanner and genuine greatness. It.

THE Mi WHO

WROTE CYRANO

CHICAGO, May 21. Judge C. C.Kohlsaat, In the United States DistrictCourt today, issued a perpetual lnjunc-t'o- n

against the production Inthe United States of Edmoud Rostand'splay "ryruno de Bergerac" In the suitbrought against Richard Manslleld andA M. Palmer by Samuel Eberly Gross,the millionaire Chicago real estatebroker. Tho Court, in Its order, ruledthat Mr. Gross was also entitled to anaccounting of the prollts from the play,but Mr. Gross waived this right andaccepted Jl as satisfaction.

Supply Company,STREET

The HI VistaPanoramic

If you wish to take a photograph of a group, a wide building, an ex-tensive landscape, or anything else of tho kind, you place tho cameraas near the object as desirable and simple take the picture. No troubleto get everything In. You do not move, but the lens moves and takesa picture of a scope of 180 degrees.

Catalogue showing picture taken with this camera free for the

1

HAWAIIAN $

Engineering &Rooms 508. 500, 510

All classes of Engineering work solicited. Examinations, Surveyand Reports made for any class of Waterworks, Steam and ElectricalConstruction. Plans and Speclfk itlons and Estimates prepared, andConstruction Superintended In all branches of Engineering Work. Con-tracts solicited for Railroads, electric and steam: Tunnels, Bridges,Buildings, Highways, Foundations, Piers, Wharves, etc.

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

FREDERICK J. AMWEC, M. Am. Soc. C. E.,Englncornnd Mnnngor.

W. R. CASTLE, JR., Socrotary and Treasurer.VAV.W1VAVAVAV.V.V.VAWAV.V.W1W1VAVAV."

Mr. Gross Is the author of a dramaentitled "The Merchant Prince of Corn-vllle- ,"

the leading character of whichwas distinguished by the big nose thatmade Cyrano famous. This drama, Mr.Gross maintained, was printed for pri-vate circulation some time before theappearance of the celebrated Frenchplay, ami according to expert testi-mony, was the basis of Rostand's work.

'd lancuae ,.,,.. Th.

most Important of tho similarities inthe two dramas was the wooing byproxy of tho leading characters In abalcony scene made notable In Cyra-no by Mr. Mansfield's production.

DENVER (Col.), May 21. RichardManslleld made the following state-ment this afternoon regarding the In-

junction issued by Judge Kohlsaat Inthe suit Involving the lights to "Cyra-no de Bergerac": "The decision ofJudge Kohlsaat can have no effect up-on the presentation of 'Cyrano dc Ber-gerac' beyond the fact that Mr. Grosswill receive royalties In the future In-

stead of Mr. Rostand. What effect Itwill have In France Is an entirely dif-ferent matter, but It may probably re-

sult In the Theater Francals and thegreat American and European artistsoverwhelming Mr. Gross with ordersfor plays and Chicago will In future bethe center of another new Industry."

DR. STEWART RESIGNS.BOSTON (Mass.), May 17. It came

as a surprise to the musical element ofrtrttatnn tmlnv t f Inn.n Hint T TT CI

ste'wnrti organist at Trinity EpiscopalChurch, has resigned and will return toSan Francisco It is understood thatDr. Stewart's resignation Is due to thefact that he is not in sympathy withbuy choirs, which the vestry of Trinityhas decided upon having. J. WallaceGoodrich, a prominent Boston musi-sla- n,

has been called to succeed Dr.Stewart.

BOSTON PHOTOS ADMIRED.MOSCOW, May 17. Boston profes-

sional and amateur photographers arebrilliantly represented at the photo-graphic exhibition here. The picturesof the Americans are attracting muchattention and admiration from Chinese,Japanese, Austrian. German, French,British and Austrian artists who are at-tending the exhibition. The RussianArtistic Photography society In evi-dence ot Its appreciation of 'the highchuracter of the American exhibit hasdecided to take part in the photogra-phic exhibition at Boston In August.

NO LOSS OF TIME.I have sold Chamberlain's Colic, Cho-

lera and Diarrhoea Remedy for years,and would rather be out of coffee andsugar than It. I sold five bottles of ityesterday to threshers that could go nofarther, and they are at work againthis morning. H. R. Phelps, Plymouth,Okla., U.S.A. As will bo seen by theabove the 'threshers were able to keepon with their work without losing asingle day's time. You should keep abottle of this Remedy in your home.For sale by all dealers. Benson, Smith& Co., general agents.

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

..ivrcsi-oloicii- at Tiill'.irs..Suits Made to Order In the Latest

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

S. SAIKI,Bamboo Furniture

ANDPICTURE FRAMESNeat and HandsomeDesigns, made to order.

663, Beretania Street, near Punchbowl.

Always on Hand

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

HONOLULU HARDWARE CO. LTD

P. O, Box 609.

39 N. King St. Tel. Main 393.

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

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

. O. Box 881. Telephone Jll.

SING HOP LEE,FORT STREETCORNER VINEYARD.

BUTCHER SHOPOpen on flonday, April 28

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

JT

8HVKK,

Construction Co.Stangonwatd Building,

CASTLE & C00KE, UM1TED

Commission Flerchants.

SUGAK - FACTORS.

AGENTS FOn

The Ewa Plantation Company.The Walalua Agricultural Co., Ltfl.The Kohala Sugar,. CompanyThe' Walmea Sugar Mill' Company.The Fulton Iron Works, St. Lonia,The Standard Oil Company.The G rge F. B ke Steam Pu .Weston's Centrifugals.The New England Mutual Life InsttH

ance Company of Boston.The Aetna Fire Insurance Company 9

Hartford, l onn.

The Alliance Assurance Company VS

London.

Dandruff Is a disease. Not a naturalcondition of the scalp. The 1 tolling, thIrritation, the white UUks-- on thmclothes, the rapid loss- - at-- lials ach In-

dicate the disorder and. its-- end bald-ness. No matter wliat caaiscd' yourdandruff, how long you have had It, orhow severe it Is, Pacheco's DandruffKiller Is a positive cure.PACHECO'S DANDRUFF KILLER,

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

CASTLE & COOKE. L1MITEL

Life and Fire

ant

t3!r AGENTS FOB flJ

NEW ENGIyAND MUTUAL

LIFE INSURANCE CO.

07 BOSTON.

I mm coOT HARTFORD. CONN

Japanese KimonosFOR

Ladies and Girls

TE'A SETS, ETC.VALSO.

Curios at

Telephone 8311 White.Corner of Nuuanu and Hotel Streets,

Now Goods ReceivedBy Every SteamerFrom Japan

'v.

.1 A

I

--hi

1Vf

;' "it

';?

mVV'

EIGHT.

M2 W A l V I J KT I S U M I i . '1

Business Is tiulct but If you buy yourlots' Tor loss than they are actually

nnh niitl know how to build a neat,tidy cottaBC, some one is Koine to gota bargain.

Pipiian don't Tiotber niu for a fewdnvs whctf-- promise you- - somethinggood.

L. 0. ABLES,, Real Eqtato Agotifc

TELEPHONEMAIN liO

O. BOX243

Honolulu Iron Works,

BTEAM ENGINES, SUGAR ISXLXt

BOILERS, COOLERS, IRON, BRXKAND LEAD CASTINGS.

Machinery of Every Description MStc Order. Particular attention palfl i.Bhip'i Blacksmlthlng. Job Work Ba

cuted on Short Notice.

HAWAIIANEWA, OAIIU

THE

AGRICULTURAL CO.,

PIONEER MILL. HAIKU, PAIA, KO-LO-

SU-

GAR, 'KE1CAHA.

m Map,StookBond Broker

laiobar Honolulu Stock and Bond Exchange

Campbell.Merchant

. Honolulu, T. H.

Telephi no 101

P. O. Box 083

11, IAtTTl--

SMALL MOTORS,FROM $1 :0 EACH.UJP.

V -- I

SomcthinELECTRIC

WAIALUA, KAIIUKU,

McHRYDK, HAWAIIAN

and

Office, Block,Street.

Main,

TOPS AMOTOR.

NewPERFECT

Will run for hour, .and by using""colored disks, beautlrul Illusions areproduced,

BATTERY FAN MOTORS.

V

miNMCMlDUNION AND HOTEL STREETS,

'ft--' TELEPHONE MAIN. 317.HONOLULU T. II.

J Ilopp & Co Papo'Coyno Furniture Co rage JII. May & Co rage u

Jus. F. Morgan Page 8

Mnlle Restaurant I'age u

..(NEWS IN A NUTSHELL

t'urnirnuihs 'Unit Ulvo CondensedAchb of lite Jlay.

Business houses generally have closed today In respect to the spirit orMemorial Day.

Hartshorn window shades at less thancosi una week at Coyne Furniture Co.See advertisement.

H. May & Company Invite you tosample their fresh Honolulu made can-dles at tnelr enndy counter.

Tomorrow at 10 there will be an auc-tion salt of groceries and tailor goodsat the rooms of Jas. P. Morgan.

11. W. Robinson leaves tomorrow forWalalua to Investigate the Klmuramurder case, In which he appears for,the defense.

Aiujur A. Hart, who was With Eu-gene Hulllngton on the 'Sumner, parti-cipating In the Samnr "hike," Is athrough passenger on the Peking.

.lames H. Hoyd will act as grandmarshal on the Fourth of July andhead the parade which It Is hoped willbi! added to by Moats from variousorganizations and merchants.

Four gold medals to be contested forby pupils of the various Catholic edu-cational Institutions in the city havebeen offered by the Young Men's In-

stitute, Damien Council, No. 052. Twoof the medals are offered to the con-vent and two to the St. Louis College.

Judge Humphreys this morning sign-ed a decree in accordance with his de-

cision In the case of John Kldwell vs.Frank Godfrey, ordering Uie latter todeed the Manoa property Involveu toKldwell, also an Injunction restrainingGodfrey from prosecuting a suit toquiet title, now in court.

J, W. HALL'S DEFENSE

The trial of the J. W. Hall case wasrtsuined before Judge Robinson thismorning at a o'clock. C. H. .Brown, amember ot the Grand Jury, which pre-sented the Indictment, was called bythe defense, to testify as to an allegeddiscrepancy between the date-- given byMrs. Jtoli before the Grand Jury andthe date given In the trial. It appearedthat there was a month illfference be-

tween her two statements. Kinney objected for the piosecutlon to the testimony, on the ground that It was notproper to attempt to impeach tlie witness without first confronting herwith the discrepancy, but the testimonywas allowed to go In.

The detendant took the stand as thelast witness. He told a detailed storyol the events of the day of the allegedassault upon the Holt girl, his narrative agreeing with that of his daughterend Mrs. Hall.

During a recess Juror Cooke took hiswheel and rode to Inspect certain prem-ises Involved lu the case. When courtitsumed session, Judge Robinson ob-

served him showing a diagram to an-other Juror, and inquired about it. Onlincllng out what Cooke had done thecourt suggested that all the Jurorsshould make the similar visit. Kinneywanted to take them to each of theplaces described by the various wit-nesses, but De Holt objected, and Itwas finally agreed to allow the case toproceed, without any such visits.

The witnesses for the defense werebrought forward to show that on thenight when the complulnlng witnessstayed away from her home she was atthe Hall home, and slept with Hall'syoung daughter. The latter testified tothe girl coming to see her, remainingah day and leaving for homo at night,only to return and say there was noone at home. It was stated that Hallhad telephoned to the Holt residenceto let the Holt family know where thecirl was. but J. It. Holt and others Inthe house denied having received suchii nifSstacro.

The next morning Hall drove tneyoung girl to see his new house in Ke-ii'nl- n.

where the crime was alleged tohave been committed. Mrs. Hall andthe defendant's daughter testilied thatthe vounir Holt girl asked to be allowed to go, and that Hull proposed thathlH uiiv. tro too. Mrs. Hall did notwant to go. and Hall and the youngliolt irlrl drove to the place together.

There were several Clilneso In andabout the house, painting at the timeand they testified to seeing Hall andtin- - girl visit the place. According tothp clrl's storV It was here that thecrime was committed. Most of themorning was spent here by Hall and'Miss Holt, and shortly before noon Hallilrove back to his home for lunch. TheHolt girl came back alone. Then shewent to her home where Holt scoldedher for staying away all night, and sheui.nt und nromlsed not to do so again,This was all that happened at thattime, and It was not until weeks laterthat the alleged events of the dny werelearned by the Holt ramliy. wun uieresult that Hall was arrested.

Mrs. Hall sat by her husband duringall of Hit-- heating yesterday. . The caseattracted quite a number of listenerswho appeared to enjoy the hearing, andthe courtroom was well filled, most ofthe time during the trial. The com-

plaining witness did not remain aboutShe was brought by Sister

Albertlna, and looked after by the lat-

ter. (Several times during the takingof her testimony It was necewary forthe court to adjourn, as the young girlo,inr.iirnii to trlve way. and could notbe persuaded to answer questions. Shetold a story cteariy implicatingbut differing In some respects, It Isstated, from the story she relatedthe Grand Jury.

The evidenco in the Hall rape caseclosed this morning, and argumentsare on this afternoon.

to

BISHOP ANZER DECORATED.PRKING. Mav 8. The Chinese Em

peror has conferred upon Bishop Anzerof South Shantung the button ot thefirat rank In acknowledgment Of his

i.n,inr,i in mnlntaln cood relations between the Christians and theHeathen.

Notico to Owners of Ilacc Horses

.Entries for the Races on June 11 and11 will close on Juno jru, ai i vwith the 'secretary at C. R. Collins'HarnesB Shop, King street, near Fort,

By orderEXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

C. L. CRABBE.'Secretary,

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1902.

JAS. F. M0JRG AN,

Auctioneer and Broker65 Queen Street

1'. 0. Vox 5941 Telephone 72

III

AUCTION SALEOF

ON SATURDAY, MAY 31,AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M..

At my salesroom, 65 Queen street, Iwill sell at Public Auction a largequantity of tailor goods, consisting ofassorted

Suitings, Linings, Trimmings,Tailors' Irons, Shears, Shirts,Sewing Machines andGroceries, consisting of Herring,Lunch Tongue, Epicurean delicacies,Peaches, Pineapples, Grapes, Pears,Apples, Cherries, Tomatoes, Corn,Beans, Condensed Milk,Lobsters, Shrimps, Chicken, Beef,Ham, Pickles, Candles, Tea,Soap, Sapollo, Cigarettes,Clothes Pins and a large quantity of

other goods.

JAS. F. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER.

AUCTION SALE

. - ixnmirnr

ON - MONDAY, JUNE. 2,

AT 10 O'CLOCK A: M.,

On the premises, second house Inrhristlev lane, off of Fort Btreet, Justniinvn VInevard street. I will sell atPnhlle Auction the entire householdfurniture, consisting of

Beds, Bureaus, Washstands,Springs, Mattresses, Bed Clothes,Pillows, Comforters,

' Rockers, Tables,, Chairs,. Matting,Dining Table, Nets,, Dishes,Glassware, Kitchen Utensils,Ice Box and a new Oil Stove.

JAS. 1?. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER.

JAS. F. MORGAN'

Auctioneer and Broker,

65 Queen Street,0. Box.594 Toloniione ?2

FRESHTo-D- ay

Having made arrangements with afirst-cla- ss candy maker recently arrived. We are pleased to announce thatIn future we will make

FRESH EVERY DAY

Cocoanut Taffy ..Peanut TaffyStrawberry TaffyVanlla TaffyMolasses Taffy ...Butter Chips

Trj thesebetter made,

44yyyX

X44X4x

All at 40c.pound

candles! There are

CONFECTIONERY DEPARTMENT

WALL, HICK CO,, LTD,

Delicious Soda

Quality In soda Is everything.Customers say ours has theflavor, snap and flz that theyenjoy and can't get elsewhere.But you ate a good Judge ofsoda. Pretty good Idea to followthe crowd that comes hero dayafter day. Must be some reasonfor It there Is Soda Is only a,trlfle. Most merchants treat Itas a trifle. But with us this hasthe same careful attention thatevery other department of ourbusiness receives. We spareneither pains nor money tomake It right. The water Iscarbonated on the premises.

' Fresh cream made daily fromcow's milk; fruit flavors usedexclusively. From start to fin-

ish It Is absolutely right.Next month we move to ournew store, Ehlers' block, Fortstreet, where more room can bespared for soda. We have someagreeable surprises In store Inliquid refreshments. After we

are well settled we will have anopening, day,' when every ladywill receive a souvenir and freesoda to everyone all day long.

DRUGGISTS

HOUSEHOLDFQRNITURE Hir??i?E9ten'nnmimmrn(Rut mmm

AND DRY GOODS

NEW GOODS BY EVERY STEAMER,

TEL. BLUE 392.

4

xi

tx4

It

x4

i4ixx

t

a

none

P. O. BOX 885.

Going

ThisS

Away

iimmer ?

If So, You Need a NewSuit Case or Bag.

WE HAVE THEM HERE IN GREAT VARIETY. OF EVERY GOOD

KIND OF LEATHER, WITH FANCY TRIMMINGS AND WITHOUT, FULLLEATHER LINED AND CANVAS LINED, HIGH PRICED AND LOWPRICED; BUT NONE OF THEM OF LOW QUALITY. WE MARK THEMAND DELIVER THEM FREE. --;

WE SELL TOURISTS REQUISITES CHEAPER THAN REGULAR

DEALERS DO, BECAUSE WITH US THAT LINE IS MERELY AN INCI

DENT OF OUR BUSINESS. WITH THEM; IT IS A SPECIALTY.

JUDGE PRICES BY THESE TWO:

Judd Jones Shaw.

SUIT CASE, made of finest selected case leather, steel frame,Holland linen lined, hand sewed, French edges, corners rivetedand stitched, patent spring locks, brass trimmings, bag handlewith brass loops riveted, four straps and shirt pocket In body,22 long, In russet and chocolate colors $6.95.

OXFORD BAG, extra large, heavy stock, long grain, hand sew-ed, English steel frame with polished brass lock and catches,Hlenna handle, elegantly leather lined with pockets, stayhinge. -

Inches long 14

Price $6.55

Whitney & Marsh, Ltd

Millinery and DressmakingHouse

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

Arlington Block

Lin Sing Kee,TINSMITH,

Does Sanitary PlumHnfNuuanu Street, Opposite Emma.

Hall.

.xxxxxxxxxx X'"Xx-xX"Xxxxx-xx

College Hills.Latictr or 4i,le

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

nolulu and save money by so doing.

Cost of a lot 100x150 at College Hills $1,200Cost of Cottage and Outbuilding z,300

XTotal Cost 1 3,500Apply money In hand 1,000

. Negotiate a loan 0 7 for...., $2.600

Interest one year on $2500 7 f.. 175Taxes on $3,500 1 w 35Insurance on house $2000, 3 years $30, 1 year.?...".,.. 10Incidentals 20

Total annual expense $ 240

Making 'our monthly rental $20 Instead of $40 you are novr pavinar.

Apply your saving In rent In reducing your debt and with other sav-

ings you will soon have your homo free of debt?

Healthy Location; Rapid Transit by Vour Door;

Fine Water Supply; Altogether a Delightful

Spot for a Happy Home

For particulars apply at office of the Trustees of the Oahu College,

4 Building to P. C, or Jonathan

in.

IN

do

i

i?4yvy'4

44vY4YYYYYYYX424yX

"..... - f J

15$7.05

16$7.40

NEW STORE.

17$7.90

THE

18$8.25

Hotel Street

JAPANESE AND

AMERICAN

i

NEW

Dry GoodsMERCHANT

TAILOR.

GOODS.

1E. FUKURODA,

t

Robinson Block. 14 Hot)l Street.

OFFICERS.

, Ltd.

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

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

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

Sugar Factors andCommissionnerchants

AGENTS FORHawaiian Commercial and Sugar Com-

pany,Haiku Sugar Company, iPala Plantation Company,Nahlku Sugar Company,Klhel Planta.lon Company,Hawaiian Supar Company,Kahulul Rail oad Company,

AND

Tho California and OrientalSteamship Company

Note Heads, Bill Heads, Statementand Fine Commercial Printing at tktSt.r Office.