ir - university of hawaiinear future. scoheifpiuiis ' l ovor a hundred personsj the great...

8
' 4 rjw- 1I-- I - '" p - - timtqmft " VOL. VL. NO. 113 HONOLULU.. HAWAII TERRITORY, TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1913.-SE- MI WEEKLY WHOLE NO. 3795 DIPLOMATS ARE M5HD EARLY President Offers Posts to (Many Prominent ;. Citizens. Ambassadorships to Be Distributed Upon Acceptance. " By Federal W!reles Teleiranh.) WASHINGTON, March 10. (Special to Tho Advertiser) President Wilson lias not completed his roll of diplomatic appointments, but announcements aro expected within a few days. The Presi- dent has been considering many names, and has been Bounding prospective through his friends. The situa- tion tonight is about liko this: Richard Olncy, of Mnssachuscts, can bo ambassador to Great Britain if ho wishes. Democratic Chairman William 1". McCombs, can bo ambassador t'o France, if he wishes. T. W. Gregory, a lawyer of Austin, Toxas, may be am- bassador to Moxico. There is somo doubt whether ho would accept if ho worn offered tin, position. CharleB R. Crane, of Chicago, cau go to St. Fotors-burg- , or Pckin, if ho dosires. Augustus Thomas, tho playwright,, probably will be nmbassador to Franco if Mr. McCombs docs not accept. Other-wisc'h- a majj'bo offered tho ambassador-ehipto-Cferman- iTpderick J. renucm, ax uuuiu Nominations to Sonato. (By Federal Wireless Telecraph.) WASHINGTON, March JO. (Special r. Tim A.1t.nrlfir President Wilson todav sent the following nominations to tho senate: iirst assisiam iuoi. roaster general, D. C. Kojper, South Car .i:nn. ti.ii-.- i nccHRtnnf Tinstmaster con eral, A. M. Dockery, formerly Governor OI Missouri: lounn assiswiit iiuovn..n tor general, James uiuKcsieu commissioner of labor, Charles J'. iSc II. Marble la Confirmed. . IM t I'.. h wjanivnTow Mnrcli 10. fSnocial to Tho Advertiser) Tho Benate today conlirmeii tno appointment 01 .joiin ji Marble, as interstate commorce com missloncr. i-- f- AT THE WHITE USE (Br Federal Wire!ea Telegraph.) WASHINGTON, March 10. (Special to The Advertiser) Tho Wilson family party nt tho White House is beginning to break up. Mr. and Mrs. John A. Wilson, tho seniors of thn family, Mr. Wilson heing tho first cousin of the President .and tho oldest member ot the clan, leive today for their homo in Franklin, Pennsylvania. Almost simultaneously Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Wilton and their little daugh- ter go to New York, and nfter a visit thoy will proceed to their homo in Portland, Oregon. , The Whito House, since tho morning of Mnreh 4, has been filled with Wil- tons. The only children now that.ro-mai- are two grand-noi'co- i of the Pres- ident whose parents reside hero and who will Ic in oviilouro to glvo tho juvenilo tuncli to the oxecutlvo man- sion. HH WIPE Or GENERAL dLAD TO IIBAB HE IS ALIVE 'r Kdleral Wlreltii Tlcirrah.) 1,03 ANOBM3, March 10. (Special to The Advertiser) Mrs. Pnscual Orm co U happy today for tho first tlmo in moiitli, lullowlng tho receipt of u lot-to- r from her Imibund, saying that he is nifii In tlm Interior of Clitliualiua and will support tlm lluertu ovi.'riiiiioiit. FHAU OENIiHAL MAHBAOHJ1, I.OMJUN, llureli ll.--(l- ly Aioelut d I'll., i HUlu lo UrlluUMtiu)-Hov- -irl wall iiifgrmmJ i(ayoir u'nvuij Imrv luiUy, whu hum mml u tiudy ul Hid ulimlluu li uullmn Karujw, pr Xfii.. will ium. .). nil lli liiabllllll l n. .ilili l iliv l.iu It UlUtlll w Ih.I.I kiiI tfiii iiv mIUI t b tH'ltlilU naTIhhmah ajuiow t AVJJKlrj. iUi.i, in ui) A ..l-l- J 17M bl Ui 4l HuJUi'w) I m !. m IhHIAmI b, (,.. Iwllltl ii u,ui..i, ul H? tU44ingvi. t 4 i. im lui ilk uii4tfMii id lUt tit '..i. (.. Hit' t$ Inm Mu)i) vl I. . iij I 4t,f Itoyk (iHwii iti Jll'l ' '.I i,. Ilwfm !' HfMMl J"l 'i li i. r if imitMl mi rii ff 4 One of the Problems of the London "Bobby" 'S TALK TO DIPLOMATS SAYS EQUITY AND JUSTICE IN ALL INTERNATIONAL DEAL-IN- S SHOULD PEEVAIL. fDr Federal "Wlreieea ieiejrraia.) WASHINGTON, March 10. (Special to, Tho A'dvcijiscr) Secretary Bryan, today, formally re-- cclviaimost of the diplomatic corpB ia other women making a eimllai at another-poln- t. vu "!"l " ijawvm feficitiious speech, tcUlng tho corps, in tno name or wuson, or. ine earnest desire of tho administration to strengthen the Tclntions botweon tho United States and other members of tho great family of nations. Ho spoko in an optimistic way of tho possibility of accomplishing that result through the application' of tlio principles of jus- tice nnd equity in international deal- ings. Ambassador Jussorand. the dean of tho corps, replied and then personally presented tho members of tho diplo- matic body to the now secretary of stnte. They were particularly impressed by Mr. Bryan's earncsrappcnl to them to call upon hint personally nnd without restraint, whonovor thoy felt that tho relations between thoir own govern- ment nnd tho United States demanded speedy consideration and action. i -- a FOLLOWING EKPLflSION ID Federal Wlreleat Telecrapb.) VEK1NS, Frnnce, March 10. (Spo-cl- to Tho Advertisor) Ten persons wore fatally, and forty seriously, in- jured in a panic, caused by tho explo- sion of a moving-pictur- o apparatus in a small uptairs theater, lato last night. The audience numbered 120. ' In rushing to got out tho peoplo choked tho stulrway and many jumped from windows. Tho firo which follow- ed tho explosion was promptly extin- guished. - t ON WAY (Or Federal Wirtleas TclrtTaph.) ALKXANDHrA, Kgypt, March 10. (Hpoclal to Tho Advortier) J, Pier-pou- t Morguu, tho Americnu bunker, and I'orfirlo Jiiuz, former J'renMoiit of Muxico, were fullow.iussi)ugers on tho lluer Atlantic, which left hare today fur New Vork, viu Nujiluf, Dliiz will go to I'luiitu, uliiiro liu will incut Hie ollluer ouut from Muxlcw City lo iitcort liim back to Mi native lauj. ... , . ES TO BE i'rwfMr J'lwtiud;, lUu la m ! bv iiU,, luuighl Will lv hit Hl)4fM f liv "I'all b.a4iU)iy Unal ftthi IK I Hi).' Mi.luliuit ul Ouf HIU I'lulUuit,' - Hunt i hi m liny wiL Htllll ui hl liuiel illl'li MJ ntnl IHuM iWlli Jwel l i':i i.U" ttl Idt Ui,Hk. Hill fcWll; l' I i'V M lhlugt Wlftll In I In' ,l,i ul 4iMW , jlt.Mal, liilt auiii l.tuiU, THE SUSPECT. Militant Suffragettes After the King o o o o o o" o Burn Railway Stations For rj Ballot 5iTKrx?tft.ffi...crii' 'j.gliji'crarrestca THEIR HOME (ttr Federal Wirclena Telecrnvh.) " LONDON, March 10. (Special to Tho Advertiser) While King Gcorgo was on rouio to parliament today, five sulfraguts' stormed tho royal conch at Whitehall and attempted to present His Majesty with a. "Votes for Women" petition. Thoy wore arrested. Two in thn KinrWs coach nassod tho MalL :' d z . . . . lour militant suffragettes hurled nana fuls of paper at tho vehicle, but King unigu jguurtm iuu uuuviues. A crowu threatened to duck tho women in tho T T DOCTOK rBIEDMANN APPLIES HIS CULTURE TO A NUMBER OP PATTENT& NEW YORK, March 10. (Special to The Advertiser) Hope was held out to thousands of tuberculosis sufferers throughout the world today, by tho an- nouncement that three consumptive pa- tients trented nt tho Peoples' Hospital here by Dr. Frederick P. Priedmann aro doing splendidly. Declaration to this effect was made by Doctor Landermann, head of the institution. "All night sweats and pains in tho chest," Doctor Landermann told Doc- tor I'rlednuinii, "already hayo disap- peared and the patients show marked improvement." Much favorable comment was voiced hero today on Doctor Fricdmunn's. work yesterday, when ho treated soven tuber- culosis sufferers under government in- spection. In a thirty-minut- e clinic tho nervousness which marked his first demonstration was entirely absent lyid Doctor Friedman workod smoothly and quickly. Tho tests were witnessed by Surgeon F, F. Anderson and Passod Assistant Surgeon A. M. Stlmson, of the govern- ment's, health Borvlco, Tho seven casus treated by Doctor Frlcdinann yosler- - day aro to remnln under guvurnmont ob- - temitlon ami upon their development' will depend tho official report. I - . i. ...... GETS BBBBEB 10 LOOTS COUNTHY CLUO, I'luuf of HiitecthtM MeOulIlM yf-l-f dy utfuim) )uvi I(uuim' Ul ojh of " at th. 'HU,y ciuu, tijw Miuba miu. Wlluw III. ill Iftu dulUla ill iiuuuv oiilu Miliwbli' ring wiwUtulniTtlu ii K)ii. Ua rHwwi, HfurJiuu l W DwJNr "'Ml iui4il4 Mvvrtl uthr vuvtU in vartiiu mMutri urtileL Lh.h S.'uiiwl rmmil) lutloilltri i avMl uul UM klMt-- l tu (kiw I lU Ur mmujmn ul V u d ll,Hi tut4nt Ut ' tutr iiu li bat Ul"ki wi a ' l'i'li h Uti giMlkujf llu )wli .illUI lHUl'S fl umu muutmim hi, 'lUlt-AU- lt- Wa. t. 'I I Hi 1 Itiaa LaW J lb i IdM W4MftMt. - !, B&i iikilui -- (From Punob.) lake at St. .Tnmes Park nnd they quickly dispersed., Tho passenger station of tho Grcnt Western and Central Kallwnys, nt Saun-derto- Buckinghamshire, was destroy- ed by thorn today. "Votes for Women" placards wcro found in tho ruins. Sim- ultaneously tho Croxloy Green station in London, and tho Northwestern tail- - way station at Watorford. wcro fired fana destroyed.. uards' round nt tho''sovoral citations stowed suffragottcs are responsible, and it was added that thoro "would bo no peace until women woro given 'tho bal- - lot.' IS fTlr Federal Wlreleaa TeWrnph.) HOME, March ecial to Tho Advertiser) According to Vatican re- ports, tho Pope's condition is much today. His fovcr is threo de- grees lower and it is believed influenza ic his only present ailment. 'His speedy recovery is predicted. Tho Popo declared ho felt much Ho passed a trauquil 'night nnd prepared to rcsumo his audiences intho near future. scoHEiFpIuiis ' L Ovor a hundred personsj the great majority of whom were Orientals, crowded the corridor nt tho city hall, last night, to tuko the plumbing exam-iiiatlo- n requllod by the ordinance pars- ed roccntly, i Tho examination, presided over by J. J. Miohlstciii, was held in tlio coun- cil chnmbor, to which tho applicants wcro admitted one at a time, .nidging by the muni cr of persons npplying for mi examination it would iinpenr that Ilono'ithi bus as many plumbers as Chicago or New Vork, although it was remarked Inst night tlint shu might not liavo n ninny when tho of th L'xiiinllintinns nro mnilo known. Tlio board of plumbing rxamiiieri Is eimiuml of J. h. young. H. 1. Ilcrlcl ,"1""1' w- - l- Kty, W. I'. St. t'lnn und ('. h, Aimilin. mm m m m H FSH SKINS Willi fuur IUU lilajUmi lull uf bpUw ll . wstiuwriit tw "' ' U i'wiD "H" (''"'W MiUnu 'fl'l ll.lxih (mm n, wlnm tlm Lip ,.i.mI Utr4)i "ufi'ing. W fa.etl.uy I UlM) , " WH'f' U'" t'"tl' uf ik lull to Hi 4M Kit ui wu litMitiv ihruun '"' (tm tt U umfurwixl fiuif Manlal ya ul Mr TMuiti4 iiwl h tUu (i,t: fw i"nai a iiiiriiv wir n 'll I tic iiiuwi IMlMieMl ly Ml tH" fWW a B'1 H lll'WI 111 111 it l(l 1 l' lHMi ' W4''H MilkW I tiliftla .! lm, tutu lnl MM I l .t MsWtl ll. if DiraiT E AGAIN SPREADS DEATH EXPLOSION DEVASTATES TOWN OP IRVINE, SCOTLAND, AND MANY ABE KILLED. t (ri V'dirM Wlf-ii-- M THi"trt', GLASGOW, Scotland, March 10. (Special to Tho Advertlscr)-Atcrr- lfle rlvnamite explosion today wrecked tho town of Irvine in Ayrshire. Tho nuin-bc- r of dead is not yet known. Six bod- ies hnvc been recovered. It is said thnt tlm in hired number hundreds. The explosion occurred nt Nobel's works at Ardeer, thirty miles fmm thU citv. For a rsdiui of several miles it hud tho force of a deitruetlvo cartliquakc. The town of Irvine was shaken to its . foundations. Many houses, churches iui(l public Institutions were destroyed. Ceilings fell everywhere, partitions ncnrccly n window In tho town was left intact. Peoplo wnlking in tho streets wcro thrown to tho ground nnd ninny serious- ly injured. All tho inhabitants rushed from their homes Jn consternation. Tho wntcrfront and tho harbor are mnssns of wreckage. Thero wcro three distinct explosions followed by nn iin- - menso column of smoke two miles high. - - GUATEMALA TB IS OESTROYEfl BY 'QUIRE (M Federal VTIreleas WASHINflTON, Jilnrch lo Tho Advertiser) Causing a great loss of Hfo nnd property, nn earth- quake destroyed tlio town of Gunji-mouilp- Gnatomala" Sunday, according to telegraphic advices-rocqivc- hero to day jErom the Americnu minister to that country. " The shake covered a rndlirtn of fif- teen miles und communication with the district is sovored. A relief expedi- tion is en route to tho Btrickcn town, indohsemIts by . committee kept SECRET IN Acting on n cablo from Johnny Wil- ton, who claimed tbut ho hud received information from divers different "ml bccoud-lian- sources that President Wil son was oxtromely anxious io luivo the Doinocr.itic Territorial Central Com-mitte- c stnto its wishes us to whom should lie appointed to federal positions In Hawaii, thnt body hold a mooting lockod doors last night. Aftor it wus over and tho various speeches made by members had boon interpreted to John Kllitiger, and the flip-flo- brothers, Piicheco and Woltor, it was announced that tho proceedings nnd the naniCB of those endorsed would be hold a strict secret. However, it leaked out that ClareticO D. I'rlngle, tho man without u putty, had lie on endorsed for tho position of Internal roveutio collector to succeed Charles A. Cottrill. Those who hoard this wild thoy didu 't euro to hour tho naiuci of the others endorsed. "Jf thoy ondori-c- I'rnigln for such a position, it is no surprise tbut thoy wish to keep thoir other endorsements a sjcr.t." said ono prominent )olitI'iiu last night, who further remarked tbut the endorsement of the territorial com- mittee would h:ivo about ns much weight In Wtithlngton as tha fiivcrish and disjointed utt ranees of Johnny Wilson will liuva with tho President. As far us (ho majority of tlio Demo- cratic pnrtv in lliiwiill Is ooncnnml, fio liTiilorhl rointnlttcii linn long I rcnrdrd ns n Jol, ho Miinl, nnd tlio I'lidnru'iimnt t 1'rlngln fiirnishi's fur- ther i'miimi) fur limvlitor . PORTUGUESE FIGHT MOZAMBIQUE BLACKS I.lHlMJN, 1'urlugnl, Jubruary 18. Nuti ruuiiivwJ f rum lluxnuliiquv, I'ur uguo Itaul 4friwi, aiu fust iu ia iir ur lila, uniivr llivii piu'ipul iliiaf hupiiUB, HivudiMl llm tit Hum I'liU, Mi'MIUlblUHl', Ui'l ilriaeatlvil a Imgii uuiawir f liurut'4u ifuiuuitU, Tin I'uilugu imuiniialu l UI UUl t pUllllTtM itpt,ilUuu, HUM Wimm iliMunaad iMtn tu utiii it sal i i:. in ihjtlr 4uirliui Mi I until uitmi uf luui in. uli 1. Willi, uinlll WV4r a ulnHi'4 em I lu i iiiiiii-i- , iaaaba4 iim .. i.i ui ,ii lii.il Hlii) lUfifni ,, ,.l,..yi(,M (I,, M.a't. IIIU IfWiit h ''Hi HKl ! ulln vv flieuiatl li i.i uu L iiil, M4 tm J, .,4 hi- i .'""' i,u.Jvl fU I wllwaUM ll'.'U) I". J Ivui t,lM l(li ltul lull uyua4 Ji" iMi ul li-t- - I'li'ic i Ixnt, , t ermMga ,f glvat IMi'vllaai I lf lli.tl tu ll lliv- - IMI , ' M Mil t liglM ( ifjum.i'ac ir tht pmp 0H pHt4 iwi ihhmi mtfri a mb mmwYl n K t.f.tiith,4tvisu.ii,JiUti,'yiJiJj,r t.ktiirn aifcMurr,ihrwfin.5tiiKitji!ii4kmtitjiitr.timjt,ij)tx.iiij&ak3rA HUEHTA FEDERAL BEATEN IN BATTLE Rebels Capture Nacozari and El Tigre and Kill Many. Refugees Fleeing Across American Border For Safety. (rlr Federal WlrclcM .Telecraph.) DOUGLAS, Arirona, March 10. (Special to The Advertlso) Following a twolvo-hoii- r buttle, in which there Is iported to have been many killed nnd wounded, tho Nncionnlist robols occupy the town ot Nncozaii today. The fed- eral gnrrison ovnctiulod tho town lust evening uudor n ling of truco nnd 121 of its original 171 members marched weary and bedraggled into Agun Prlo-ta- , opposlto Douglas today. How many of tho fifty were killed and wounded Is not known. Tho iodcrnl garrison nt El Tigre, nn important mining center, also foil bo tyro tho Nnclonulists Into yesterday. Tho government commander surren dered without firing n shot and march- ed out of tho town. Armed towns- people hurried tho federals in their ro treat southward, killing four nnd wounding eleven, according to roports which reached Agua Prieta todny. General OjnJit, in command of tha federals at Agua Prtgta, withhold all possiblo information ,ot tno defeat ot tho government forces- - at- - JfnCoznrl. Various accounts of--t- battle, how- - over, were furnished by'strugglors from tlio town, who followed tho fedornlB la thoir flight. According to the stories, tlio robels outnumbered the federals, who offered a desporatu resistance Many tebclj wcro killed in addition to tho heavy federal losses, which seom certain. Nogalcs wiib tlnuwii into a panic of fear today, when a report was circu- lated that several hundred rebels, en- camped fifteen miles south of the town, woro marching toward tho border. Scores of refugees carrying their valu- ables fled to tho American biuc. t-- OUJBTEB DF THB SESSION IS GONE HOUSE BBVIEWS ITS WOEK AND WONDEUS AT ITS MODEBATION IN EXPENDITURES. Bpeakor Holstcln Informed tho houso yesterday how tho finances of tho samo sood in relation to the federal and tho territorial appropriations for expenses. There is a hitch between tho two housos as to tho proper division of tho federal coiu. The Bonnto fixed tho "divvy" at eighteen tlipusnud for tho houso nnd twolvo for tho senato and tho houso changed this to twenty thousand und ten thousand respectively, Tho amended resolution was returned to the senate, but no fur tho upper brunch bus taken no further nutlco of it. Out of tho twenty thousund tho Iiousii expects to get, tUMMIS had been spent up to the end of business of Its fifteenth ncstiluii day, Inst Saturday, leitvlng a balance of 115,817.05 on hand, but ktill subject to the whims of thu nciiulo, Of (lie Eu,000 territorial npproprln (Inn for house expen.un, jilliill.ll hud bviin npiiiit, Illglit here tlm sonato Iuu iiotlilng to pay us It punned Its uwu for uxponius of tho toamoii at 183,000. Up to lost Hulunluy, (hu llfteonlh day of tlio iMHiiDii Mini exuclly onn i(iirlor of lit nixty-da- llmil, HI bill had lutau inlruiluiw In tht) liouati Mvii ruiiiurraul nu4 liimu Joint r luliutlt bavii ulao liiau luliudun I. l.' Id ijiiltn a uumbw of nulifiirriiil und iolul uiiva wliluli aiu fom lliti .muin Tlio liuuao ulao kail altlveii pcliliuiia pfihtiuli"! ami uu buuilmil und imu m purla friiiii rUiutlUK rumiiillliie and lii dull' e JtuIMl I'vinuillltioi Ui bmu Uiailv uiiil te uiiuii uMiMiuiil ruin. i li ilia iiu4i4 liam Uwu ta iik) vB TIDINGS Mmhn Uala li HdUl ' li Kiaiii iti lw ailxlM ataltt li i Im li ki V k fulUM ! )' iT aNMf iv ti if 3

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Page 1: ir - University of Hawaiinear future. scoHEiFpIuiis ' L Ovor a hundred personsj the great majority of whom were Orientals, crowded the corridor nt tho city hall, last night, to tuko

'

4 rjw-

1I-- I

- '" p - - timtqmft "

VOL. VL. NO. 113 HONOLULU.. HAWAII TERRITORY, TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1913.-SE- MI WEEKLY WHOLE NO. 3795

DIPLOMATS ARE

M5HDEARLY

President Offers Posts to

(Many Prominent

;. Citizens.

Ambassadorships to Be

Distributed Upon

Acceptance. "

By Federal W!reles Teleiranh.)

WASHINGTON, March 10. (Special

to Tho Advertiser) President Wilson

lias not completed his roll of diplomaticappointments, but announcements aro

expected within a few days. The Presi-

dent has been considering many names,

and has been Bounding prospectivethrough his friends. The situa-

tion tonight is about liko this:Richard Olncy, of Mnssachuscts, can

bo ambassador to Great Britain if ho

wishes. Democratic Chairman William1". McCombs, can bo ambassador t'o

France, if he wishes. T. W. Gregory,

a lawyer of Austin, Toxas, may be am-

bassador to Moxico. There is somo

doubt whether ho would accept if ho

worn offered tin, position. CharleB R.

Crane, of Chicago, cau go to St. Fotors-burg- ,

or Pckin, if ho dosires.Augustus Thomas, tho playwright,,

probably will be nmbassador to Francoif Mr. McCombs docs not accept. Other-wisc'h- a

majj'bo offered tho ambassador-ehipto-Cferman-

iTpderick J. renucm, ax uuuiu

Nominations to Sonato.(By Federal Wireless Telecraph.)

WASHINGTON, March JO. (Specialr. Tim A.1t.nrlfir President Wilson

todav sent the following nominationsto tho senate: iirst assisiam iuoi.roaster general, D. C. Kojper, South Car.i:nn. ti.ii-.- i nccHRtnnf Tinstmaster con

eral, A. M. Dockery, formerly GovernorOI Missouri: lounn assiswiit iiuovn..ntor general, James uiuKcsieu

commissioner of labor, CharlesJ'. iSc II.

Marble la Confirmed.. IM t I'.. h

wjanivnTow Mnrcli 10. fSnocialto Tho Advertiser) Tho Benate todayconlirmeii tno appointment 01 .joiin jiMarble, as interstate commorce commissloncr.

i--f-

AT THE WHITE USE

(Br Federal Wire!ea Telegraph.)WASHINGTON, March 10. (Special

to The Advertiser) Tho Wilson familyparty nt tho White House is beginningto break up. Mr. and Mrs. John A.Wilson, tho seniors of thn family, Mr.Wilson heing tho first cousin of thePresident .and tho oldest member otthe clan, leive today for their homo inFranklin, Pennsylvania.

Almost simultaneously Mr. and Mrs.Alfred Wilton and their little daugh-ter go to New York, and nfter a visitthoy will proceed to their homo inPortland, Oregon. ,

The Whito House, since tho morningof Mnreh 4, has been filled with Wil-

tons. The only children now that.ro-mai-

are two grand-noi'co- i of the Pres-ident whose parents reside hero andwho will Ic in oviilouro to glvo thojuvenilo tuncli to the oxecutlvo man-

sion.HH

WIPE Or GENERAL dLADTO IIBAB HE IS ALIVE

'r Kdleral Wlreltii Tlcirrah.)1,03 ANOBM3, March 10. (Special

to The Advertiser) Mrs. Pnscual Ormco U happy today for tho first tlmo inmoiitli, lullowlng tho receipt of u lot-to- r

from her Imibund, saying that he isnifii In tlm Interior of Clitliualiua andwill support tlm lluertu ovi.'riiiiioiit.

FHAU OENIiHAL MAHBAOHJ1,

I.OMJUN, llureli ll.--(l- ly Aioelutd I'll., i HUlu lo UrlluUMtiu)-Hov- -irl

wall iiifgrmmJ i(ayoir u'nvuijImrv luiUy, whu hum mml u tiudy ulHid ulimlluu li uullmn Karujw, pr

Xfii.. will ium. .). nil lli liiablllllll n. .ilili l iliv l.iu It UlUtlll w

Ih.I.I kiiI tfiii iiv mIUI t btH'ltlilU

naTIhhmah ajuiowt AVJJKlrj. iUi.i, in ui) A

..l-l- J 17M bl Ui 4l HuJUi'w)I m !. m IhHIAmI b, (,.. Iwllltlii u,ui..i, ul H? tU44ingvi. t 4i. im lui ilk uii4tfMii id lUt tit'..i. (.. Hit' t$ Inm Mu)i) vlI. . iij I 4t,f Itoyk (iHwii iti Jll'l' '.I i,. Ilwfm !' HfMMl J"l'i li i. r if imitMl mi rii ff 4

One of the Problems of the London "Bobby"

'S

TALK TO DIPLOMATS

SAYS EQUITY AND JUSTICE IN

ALL INTERNATIONAL DEAL-IN-S

SHOULD PEEVAIL.

fDr Federal "Wlreieea ieiejrraia.)WASHINGTON, March 10. (Special

to, Tho A'dvcijiscr) Secretary Bryan,today, formally re--

cclviaimost of the diplomatic corpB ia other women making a eimllaiat another-poln-t.vu "!"l "ijawvmfeficitiious speech, tcUlng tho corps, in

tno name or wuson, or. ineearnest desire of tho administration tostrengthen the Tclntions botweon thoUnited States and other members oftho great family of nations. Ho spokoin an optimistic way of tho possibilityof accomplishing that result throughthe application' of tlio principles of jus-

tice nnd equity in international deal-ings.

Ambassador Jussorand. the dean oftho corps, replied and then personallypresented tho members of tho diplo-

matic body to the now secretary ofstnte.

They were particularly impressed byMr. Bryan's earncsrappcnl to them tocall upon hint personally nnd withoutrestraint, whonovor thoy felt that thorelations between thoir own govern-ment nnd tho United States demandedspeedy consideration and action. i

--a

FOLLOWING EKPLflSION

ID Federal Wlreleat Telecrapb.)VEK1NS, Frnnce, March 10. (Spo-cl-

to Tho Advertisor) Ten personswore fatally, and forty seriously, in-

jured in a panic, caused by tho explo-

sion of a moving-pictur- o apparatus in asmall uptairs theater, lato last night.The audience numbered 120. '

In rushing to got out tho peoplochoked tho stulrway and many jumpedfrom windows. Tho firo which follow-ed tho explosion was promptly extin-guished.

- t

ON WAY

(Or Federal Wirtleas TclrtTaph.)ALKXANDHrA, Kgypt, March 10.

(Hpoclal to Tho Advortier) J, Pier-pou- t

Morguu, tho Americnu bunker, andI'orfirlo Jiiuz, former J'renMoiit ofMuxico, were fullow.iussi)ugers on tholluer Atlantic, which left hare todayfur New Vork, viu Nujiluf,

Dliiz will go to I'luiitu, uliiiro liu willincut Hie ollluer ouut from Muxlcw Citylo iitcort liim back to Mi native lauj.... , .

ES

TO BE

i'rwfMr J'lwtiud;, lUu la m ! bv

iiU,, luuighl Will lv hit Hl)4fM fliv "I'all b.a4iU)iy Unal ftthi IK I

Hi).' Mi.luliuit ul Ouf HIU I'lulUuit,'- Hunt i hi m liny wiL Htllll ui hlliuiel illl'li MJ ntnl IHuM iWlli

Jwel l i':i i.U" ttl Idt Ui,Hk.Hill fcWll; l' I i'V M lhlugtWlftll In I In' ,l,i ul 4iMW

,jlt.Mal, liilt auiii l.tuiU,

THE SUSPECT.

Militant Suffragettes After the Kingo o o o o o" o

Burn Railway Stations For rj Ballot

5iTKrx?tft.ffi...crii' 'j.gliji'crarrestca

THEIR HOME

(ttr Federal Wirclena Telecrnvh.) "

LONDON, March 10. (Special toTho Advertiser) While King Gcorgowas on rouio to parliament today, fivesulfraguts' stormed tho royal conch atWhitehall and attempted to present HisMajesty with a. "Votes for Women"petition. Thoy wore arrested. Two

in thn KinrWs coach nassod tho MalL:' d z . . . .lour militant suffragettes hurled nanafuls of paper at tho vehicle, but Kingunigu jguurtm iuu uuuviues. A crowuthreatened to duck tho women in tho

T

T

DOCTOK rBIEDMANN APPLIES HIS

CULTURE TO A NUMBER

OP PATTENT&

NEW YORK, March 10. (Special toThe Advertiser) Hope was held out tothousands of tuberculosis sufferersthroughout the world today, by tho an-

nouncement that three consumptive pa-

tients trented nt tho Peoples' Hospitalhere by Dr. Frederick P. Priedmann arodoing splendidly. Declaration to thiseffect was made by Doctor Landermann,head of the institution.

"All night sweats and pains in thochest," Doctor Landermann told Doc-

tor I'rlednuinii, "already hayo disap-peared and the patients show markedimprovement."

Much favorable comment was voicedhero today on Doctor Fricdmunn's. workyesterday, when ho treated soven tuber-culosis sufferers under government in-

spection. In a thirty-minut- e clinic thonervousness which marked his firstdemonstration was entirely absent lyidDoctor Friedman workod smoothly andquickly.

Tho tests were witnessed by SurgeonF, F. Anderson and Passod AssistantSurgeon A. M. Stlmson, of the govern-ment's, health Borvlco, Tho seven casustreated by Doctor Frlcdinann yosler- -

day aro to remnln under guvurnmont ob- -

temitlon ami upon their development'will depend tho official report. I

-.i. ......

GETS BBBBEB 10LOOTS COUNTHY CLUO,

I'luuf of HiitecthtM MeOulIlM yf-l-f

dy utfuim) )uvi I(uuim' Ul ojh of

"at th. 'HU,y ciuu, tijw Miuba miu.Wlluw III. ill Iftu dulUla ill iiuuuv oiiluMiliwbli' ring wiwUtulniTtlu iiK)ii. Ua rHwwi, HfurJiuu l WDwJNr "'Ml iui4il4 Mvvrtl uthrvuvtU in vartiiu mMutri urtileL Lh.hS.'uiiwl rmmil)

lutloilltri i avMl uul UM klMt-- l

tu (kiw I lU Ur mmujmn ul Vu d ll,Hi tut4nt Ut

' tutr iiu li bat Ul"ki wi a' l'i'li h Uti giMlkujf llu )wli

.illUI lHUl'S flumu muutmim

hi, 'lUlt-AU- lt- Wa. t.

'I I Hi 1 Itiaa LaW J lbi IdM W4MftMt. - !, B&i iikilui

-- (From Punob.)

lake at St. .Tnmes Park nnd they quicklydispersed.,

Tho passenger station of tho GrcntWestern and Central Kallwnys, nt Saun-derto-

Buckinghamshire, was destroy-ed by thorn today. "Votes for Women"placards wcro found in tho ruins. Sim-ultaneously tho Croxloy Green stationin London, and tho Northwestern tail- -

way station at Watorford. wcro firedfana destroyed..

uards' round nt tho''sovoral citationsstowed suffragottcs are responsible, andit was added that thoro "would bo nopeace until women woro given 'tho bal- -

lot.'

IS

fTlr Federal Wlreleaa TeWrnph.)HOME, March ecial to Tho

Advertiser) According to Vatican re-ports, tho Pope's condition is much

today. His fovcr is threo de-

grees lower and it is believed influenzaic his only present ailment. 'His speedyrecovery is predicted.

Tho Popo declared ho felt muchHo passed a trauquil 'night nnd

prepared to rcsumo his audiences inthonear future.

scoHEiFpIuiis '

L

Ovor a hundred personsj the greatmajority of whom were Orientals,crowded the corridor nt tho city hall,last night, to tuko the plumbing exam-iiiatlo- n

requllod by the ordinance pars-ed roccntly, i

Tho examination, presided over byJ. J. Miohlstciii, was held in tlio coun-cil chnmbor, to which tho applicantswcro admitted one at a time, .nidgingby the muni cr of persons npplying formi examination it would iinpenr thatIlono'ithi bus as many plumbers asChicago or New Vork, although it wasremarked Inst night tlint shu might notliavo n ninny when tho of thL'xiiinllintinns nro mnilo known.

Tlio board of plumbing rxamiiieri Iseimiuml of J. h. young. H. 1. Ilcrlcl,"1""1' w- - l- Kty, W. I'. St. t'lnnund ('. h, Aimilin.

mm m mm H FSH SKINS

Willi fuur IUU lilajUmi lull uf bpUw

ll .wstiuwriit tw "' ' U i'wiD

"H" (''"'W MiUnu 'fl'l ll.lxih(mm n, wlnm tlm Lip ,.i.mIUtr4)i "ufi'ing. W fa.etl.uy I UlM) ,

" WH'f' U'" t'"tl' uf ik lull toHi 4M Kit ui wu litMitiv ihruun'"' (tm tt U umfurwixl

fiuif Manlal ya ul Mr

TMuiti4 iiwl h tUu (i,t: fwi"nai a iiiiriiv wir n

'll I tic iiiuwi IMlMieMl ly Ml tH"fWW a B'1 H lll'WI 111 111it l(l

1 l' lHMi ' W4''H MilkWI tiliftla .! lm, tutu lnl

MM I l .t MsWtl ll. if

DiraiT E AGAIN

SPREADS DEATH

EXPLOSION DEVASTATES TOWN

OP IRVINE, SCOTLAND, AND

MANY ABE KILLED.t

(ri V'dirM Wlf-ii-- M THi"trt',GLASGOW, Scotland, March 10.

(Special to Tho Advertlscr)-Atcrr- lfle

rlvnamite explosion today wrecked tho

town of Irvine in Ayrshire. Tho nuin-bc- r

of dead is not yet known. Six bod-

ies hnvc been recovered. It is said thnttlm in hired number hundreds.

The explosion occurred nt Nobel's

works at Ardeer, thirty miles

fmm thU citv. For a rsdiui of several

miles it hud tho force of a deitruetlvocartliquakc.

The town of Irvine was shaken to its .

foundations. Many houses, churches

iui(l public Institutions were destroyed.

Ceilings fell everywhere, partitionsncnrccly n window In tho

town was left intact.Peoplo wnlking in tho streets wcro

thrown to tho ground nnd ninny serious-

ly injured. All tho inhabitants rushedfrom their homes Jn consternation.

Tho wntcrfront and tho harbor aremnssns of wreckage. Thero wcro threedistinct explosions followed by nn iin- -

menso column of smoke two miles high.- -

GUATEMALA TB IS

OESTROYEfl BY 'QUIRE

(M Federal VTIreleas

WASHINflTON, Jilnrchlo Tho Advertiser) Causing a greatloss of Hfo nnd property, nn earth-

quake destroyed tlio town of Gunji-mouilp-

Gnatomala" Sunday, accordingto telegraphic advices-rocqivc- hero today jErom the Americnu minister to thatcountry. "

The shake covered a rndlirtn of fif-

teen miles und communication with thedistrict is sovored. A relief expedi-tion is en route to tho Btrickcn town,

indohsemIts by

. committee kept

SECRET IN

Acting on n cablo from Johnny Wil-

ton, who claimed tbut ho hud receivedinformation from divers different "mlbccoud-lian- sources that President Wilson was oxtromely anxious io luivo theDoinocr.itic Territorial Central Com-mitte- c

stnto its wishes us to whomshould lie appointed to federal positionsIn Hawaii, thnt body hold a mooting

lockod doors last night.Aftor it wus over and tho various

speeches made by members had booninterpreted to John Kllitiger, and theflip-flo- brothers, Piicheco and Woltor,it was announced that tho proceedingsnnd the naniCB of those endorsed wouldbe hold a strict secret.

However, it leaked out that ClareticOD. I'rlngle, tho man without u putty,had lie on endorsed for tho position ofInternal roveutio collector to succeedCharles A. Cottrill. Those who hoardthis wild thoy didu 't euro to hour thonaiuci of the others endorsed.

"Jf thoy ondori-c- I'rnigln for sucha position, it is no surprise tbut thoywish to keep thoir other endorsementsa sjcr.t." said ono prominent )olitI'iiulast night, who further remarked tbutthe endorsement of the territorial com-

mittee would h:ivo about ns muchweight In Wtithlngton as tha fiivcrishand disjointed utt ranees of JohnnyWilson will liuva with tho President.

As far us (ho majority of tlio Demo-

cratic pnrtv in lliiwiill Is ooncnnml,fio liTiilorhl rointnlttcii linn long I

rcnrdrd ns n Jol, ho Miinl, nnd tlioI'lidnru'iimnt t 1'rlngln fiirnishi's fur-ther i'miimi) fur limvlitor

.

PORTUGUESE FIGHT

MOZAMBIQUE BLACKS

I.lHlMJN, 1'urlugnl, Jubruary 18.

Nuti ruuiiivwJ f rum lluxnuliiquv, I'uruguo Itaul 4friwi, aiu fust iu iaiir ur lila, uniivr llivii piu'ipul iliiafhupiiUB, HivudiMl llm tit HumI'liU, Mi'MIUlblUHl', Ui'l ilriaeatlvil aImgii uuiawir f liurut'4u ifuiuuitU,

Tin I'uilugu imuiniialul UI UUl t pUllllTtM itpt,ilUuu, HUMWimm iliMunaad iMtn tu utiii itsal i i:. in ihjtlr 4uirliui MiI until uitmi uf luui in. uli 1. Willi,uinlll WV4r a ulnHi'4 em I lu iiiiiiii-i- , iaaaba4 iim .. i.i ui ,iilii.il Hlii) lUfifni ,, ,.l,..yi(,M (I,,M.a't. IIIU IfWiit h ''Hi HKl !

ulln vv flieuiatl li i.i uu L

iiil, M4 tm J, .,4 hi- i .'""' i,u.JvlfU I wllwaUM ll'.'U) I". J Ivui t,lM

l(li ltul lull uyua4Ji" iMi ul li-t- - I'li'ic i Ixnt,

, t ermMga ,f glvat IMi'vllaai I

lf lli.tl tu ll lliv- - IMI , ' M Mil t liglM (ifjum.i'ac ir tht pmp 0H pHt4iwiihhmi

mtfria mb mmwYl n K

t.f.tiith,4tvisu.ii,JiUti,'yiJiJj,r t.ktiirn aifcMurr,ihrwfin.5tiiKitji!ii4kmtitjiitr.timjt,ij)tx.iiij&ak3rA

HUEHTA FEDERAL

BEATEN IN

BATTLE

Rebels Capture Nacozari

and El Tigre and

Kill Many.

Refugees Fleeing Across

American Border

For Safety.

(rlr Federal WlrclcM .Telecraph.)DOUGLAS, Arirona, March 10.

(Special to The Advertlso) Followinga twolvo-hoii- r buttle, in which there Is

iported to have been many killed nndwounded, tho Nncionnlist robols occupythe town ot Nncozaii today. The fed-eral gnrrison ovnctiulod tho town lustevening uudor n ling of truco nnd 121of its original 171 members marchedweary and bedraggled into Agun Prlo-ta- ,

opposlto Douglas today. How manyof tho fifty were killed and wounded Is

not known.Tho iodcrnl garrison nt El Tigre, nn

important mining center, also foil botyro tho Nnclonulists Into yesterday.Tho government commander surrendered without firing n shot and march-ed out of tho town. Armed towns-people hurried tho federals in their rotreat southward, killing four nndwounding eleven, according to roportswhich reached Agua Prieta todny.

General OjnJit, in command of thafederals at Agua Prtgta, withhold allpossiblo information ,ot tno defeat ottho government forces- - at- - JfnCoznrl.Various accounts of--t- battle, how- -

over, were furnished by'strugglors fromtlio town, who followed tho fedornlB lathoir flight.

According to the stories, tlio robelsoutnumbered the federals, who offereda desporatu resistance Many tebcljwcro killed in addition to tho heavyfederal losses, which seom certain.

Nogalcs wiib tlnuwii into a panic offear today, when a report was circu-lated that several hundred rebels, en-

camped fifteen miles south of the town,woro marching toward tho border.Scores of refugees carrying their valu-ables fled to tho American biuc.

t--

OUJBTEB DF THB

SESSION IS GONE

HOUSE BBVIEWS ITS WOEK ANDWONDEUS AT ITS MODEBATION

IN EXPENDITURES.

Bpeakor Holstcln Informed tho housoyesterday how tho finances of tho samosood in relation to the federal and thoterritorial appropriations for expenses.

There is a hitch between tho twohousos as to tho proper division of thofederal coiu. The Bonnto fixed tho"divvy" at eighteen tlipusnud for thohouso nnd twolvo for tho senato andtho houso changed this to twentythousand und ten thousand respectively,Tho amended resolution was returnedto the senate, but no fur tho upperbrunch bus taken no further nutlco ofit.

Out of tho twenty thousund thoIiousii expects to get, tUMMIS had beenspent up to the end of business of Itsfifteenth ncstiluii day, Inst Saturday,leitvlng a balance of 115,817.05 on hand,but ktill subject to the whims of thunciiulo,

Of (lie Eu,000 territorial npproprln(Inn for house expen.un, jilliill.ll hudbviin npiiiit, Illglit here tlm sonato Iuuiiotlilng to pay us It punned Its uwu

for uxponius of tho toamoiiat 183,000.

Up to lost Hulunluy, (hu llfteonlhday of tlio iMHiiDii Mini exuclly onni(iirlor of lit nixty-da- llmil, HIbill had lutau inlruiluiw In tht) liouati

Mvii ruiiiurraul nu4 liimu Joint rluliutlt bavii ulao liiau luliudun I. l.'Id ijiiltn a uumbw of nulifiirriiil und

iolul uiiva wliluli aiu fom lliti .muinTlio liuuao ulao kail altlveii pcliliuiiapfihtiuli"! ami uu buuilmil und imu mpurla friiiii rUiutlUK rumiiillliie and

lii dull' e JtuIMl I'vinuillltioi Uibmu Uiailv uiiil te uiiuii uMiMiuiilruin. i li ilia iiu4i4 liam Uwu taiik)

vB TIDINGSMmhn Uala

li HdUl ' li Kiaiii itilw ailxlM ataltt li i

Im li ki V k fulUM! )' iT aNMf iv

ti

if

3

Page 2: ir - University of Hawaiinear future. scoHEiFpIuiis ' L Ovor a hundred personsj the great majority of whom were Orientals, crowded the corridor nt tho city hall, last night, to tuko

FILIPINOS i DRIVE

INDEPENDENCE

ML

IBr Ttitrti Wlraltss Tlerph.)WASHINGTON, March 8. (Special

to The Advoitiscr) Congratulations oftho Philippine people to President Wil-

son wero presented today by ManuolQuezon, resident commissioner. .Mr.

Qncroii loft with llio l'rcsldcnt a cable-cra-

from Speaker Krgion Osmcna, of

tho Philippine assembly, expressinghopo for Philippine independence nndeaying:

"To tn votir oaths of office mean thoforthcoming fulfillment of tho pledgesof tho Democratic party, reiterated in

four succcs-dv- platforms and sanction-

ed by the people of tho United States inyour elections. The Philippines conf-idently expect that during vour admin-

istration a docislvo step will bo takentowards their freedom nnd indepen-

dence."' Ambassadorship for Olnoy.

,11. .i Wlrrlma TflKrtH I

WASHINGTON, March 8. (Specialto The Advertiser) President Wilsonhas offered to Mellaril Olnoy of Bos-

ton, secretary of state in PresidentCleveland's cabinet, the post of am-

bassador to Orcat Britain. It is notknown whether Mr. Olnoy will nccoptnnd It was said today that tho mnttorhnd not gone so fnr as the sounding of aSt. .lames as to Mr. Olney's neecptancc.No appointments to the other diploma-tic pots of importance has been finally adecided on today.

Taken by Surpriss.(llv Fcdfrsl Wireless TeltEraph.l

BOSTON, Massachusetts, March 8.

(Special to Tho Advertiser) The defi-

nite announcement from Washingtonthat President Wilson hnd offered him

tho pnst of ambassador at tho Court otSt. James took Ilichard Olney nnd hisintimate friends by surprise today. Mr.Olney said:

"1 havo roerivod no such offer and Idoubt tho accuracy of ftho report."

No Secrecy for Wilson,(llv IVilfnl Wlretm Tetreraph.)

WASHINGTON. March 8. (Specialto Tho Advertiser) Joseph Tumulty,privato secretary to President Wilson,nmiounccd hero today that tho newspaper men would'havo entry to his o

unannounced and unhindered. Thismeans it will practically imposslhlo forany ono to boo oither tho President orTumulty without tho correspondents,leaning" the visitor's errand.

Discounts Oold Lace.WASHINOTON, March 8. (Hy Asso-

ciated Press Cnblo toThere arc to be no uniformed nides ex-

cept at state functions. This was thoorder issued today by President Wilson,who seems determined to do awny withmuch of the social red tape which has1. ......... f.,v.. ull.ailn.l ..fV..!. nl ,l.n l,, l.lirtIIVIKlUIUIl' HUVUULII ,111,11. D ill. HtU II....House.

(Hi Flrl Wlrrlraa Tclnrrarh.lI

WASHINGTON, March pecial

to Tho Advertisor)-Traduc- ers of Dr.Frederick Friodmann, discoverer of analleged tuberculosis cure, wcro nanueiia hard jolt hero today when SurgeonGeneral Hluo announced that tho youngBerlin scientist lus given his culturoto tho United States government with-out hopo or promiso of financial aid.

This permanently sets at rest pub-

lished reports that Friedmnnn camo toAmerica to mnke millions out of histreatment. Not only has Friedmnnnftvpn liiq cnltnrp tn tlm rrnvernmnnt.

nt thoof and that

will demonstrate his to thnt oil!

Another important announcement to-

day was thnt tho government is to givelVcidmnnn's culture nn immediate, amithorough test. With this end in view,Surgeou John Anderson and Passed As- -

investigation to inYork to condition. hospital

ords thathis tims

touicm jirsi. iiiu nw uu ul mo ,

most nutnro andmontliB of and examination.

If tho euro is proven eflicaeious andmonkey patients show improvement, itthen w'll bo given thosufferers government hospitals inFort Now-- Mexico.

If it will then extendedto the other twenty-si- hospitals in thgovernment service.

Friodmann Explains.NEW - YOMC, March 2. Doctor

Frieduianii, who camo to countryat tho invitation of I'harles K. Fiuley,a New York banker who hopes tho

will bu able to euro Idsof the disease, declares that his

remedy was a secret, that hopurposed to mnke known "to allworld" tlio method by it wincreated and tho manner which itwim administered.

It consisted of bacilli Ukim from aturtle into which tubercular bacillifrom a human boing injected,he explained.

have upon thofor fourteen yentii anil in last twonnd it half yours 1 have treated fromCum to aooii patieuu," he Merted."How liutiiy I U ulutulutelv eured 1

rannot estimate, but their number hatrun Into the hundreds. The rewtiJy eurtill forma of eseept wellCidi ii are quit bontde- u- that it, outhe point of death.

"The l H slow but thefirst offer i r to he -- Dti two or threwe ka kfler TU tint wkan hi tulula euro en Iw Mud g be mfc.li'd U a iukltr of liiunth.

of s4uiitititrti'U t illy Mrof lb

"I wsitt hII uuV'ul in trin v dl.Kivrry I tli.iih I.b'd uri4i.vir awuiiiii uf mr him l lit Qimuty.mriiiiiil. 4 I ' I' M 10 uit tv th At'"1"- -' v'VvfaMti. "

Uu. lur rrt4jni. .ui ktt he i4i. in. iHti4 liv"1" ' Mr. VLultyif liv tswuld flM " ' ' ' wl tf MM)

liumlrnl i4M'I w(f M

.utirti.iie ...t .. is it.i.iii i i . i. l l'kt. vi' lv lak: i'.ll. Ul lilt 1

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, TUESDAY, MAKCH 11, 1913. SEMI WEEKLY.

"I in'rciinr, " n d A

I m i mi i r r war. I i-, t otnotistrata ti f cure to tii- -

norV

Wirptoa. lar,.-l,OH Mltwh 8. (Sjcil

to TI o d riiianr) -- Aftar bavinx beenout for tinrt eight ami ft half hoar,the jiirs in the reso of Clarence 8. Dnr-row- ,

oii for allewO Jiiry brilwry,reported at rleven-thmy-flT- o'clockthis forcioon that they nnnblo to 4c

ajsree Judge Coaley dischargedthem.

Former Judge C W. Powers, of coun-

sel for the defense, asked for an Immcd-Int- o

retrial.Tho jiirv stood eight for conviction

nnd four fnr acquittal. On hl own mo-

tion Judge Conloy fixed March 31, as

tho date for the retirnl of Harrow.Harrow thanked tho court, and re-

marked. "I'll fight it out. T shouldJmvo been acquitted the evidence,nnd I shall surely faro better nexttime." .

flit Fp.lernl Wlrnrm intrst-n.-CHICAGO, Mnrch 8. (Special toTho

Advertiser) to enter n whitoslnvo Tesort by tho impossibility of liv-

ing on H a week, n woman, known intho underworld as "Kg," told tho sou-nt- o

wage prober's comtnlttco n storywhich mado the committco palo withhorror. ' ' Kg ' ' today is In a Jhlcngohospital, a wreck. Sho was enrried Intothe room almost helpless

testified that when her husbanddied leaving her a child to support,bunc-r- forced jnto n life of shnmc.

"While wbb there." she sworo, "aprocurer binught n girl seventeen yearsold to tho resort. They her up-

stairs fighting liko a woman. Thonthey locked hor in n room, took herclothes away nnd within n few. hours

man connected with tho resort wasbrought to seo hr. I could hearcreaming nnd crying every night for

month. Sho is nt tho hospital, now,a wreck."

Hero Senator .Tumi broko in, "I didnot hclicvo thcro was such a hell onearth."

Itcfusal to testify beforo tho commit-tee .Tamos Simpson, vico;prc3'idont cif Marshall Field nnd Company,a heavy fine or possibly a jail sentence. sic

Simpson, when examined, dolared thathe Marshall Field employed

4222 girls and women. Ho declaredtheir average weekly wnge is $10, butadmitted thnt "short-hour- " girls nropaid on a linsls of $8 por weak and thatmany of them do mako moro than$1 weekly.

Asked stnto tho profits of thoField business, so thnt tho probersmight bo informed as to whether wagesmight ho increased, Simpson

to answer. .

(Hy Kfileral Wireless Telegraph.)PAKIS, Mnrch 8. (Special to The

Advertiser) Qenoral LouisD'Kspcroy, commander of ono of thoFrench columns in Morocco, bus beenordered under thirty days' nrrcst bythe Oovoruor General of Morocco, ac-

cording to dispatch to tho Socialistucwspnpcr llumanitc, for having aban-doned a number of wounded French

during a march towardTho wounded men, together with

their guard of six men, disappeared nndnothing been heard of them since.

viviiuiui V in uy 4.UU.. . .i,!.. i. i,if"' ! "VuTtC ,n . .Tn,,n , ,,.0,1,iPI, in the. desert with- -

out medical aid. Tho Burgeon, it is declared, refused to obey tho order.,

HFederal Wireless Telecraph.)

LONDON, March 8. (Special to TheAdvertiser) Dispatches received herotoday from Sofia say that tlio BalkanAllies will reply Monday to thef rum the Powers regarding negotiationslor with tho Turks.

Advices from Constantinople, how- -

olution is imminent.-- .

lliy Federal W'r!e Telegraph.)BAIriMOlli;. Maryland. March 8.

(Siiecial to Tho Advertiber) Up toflitu nftiirlinnii tlinri llllil betMl tin addi- -

tional deaths uinoug tho injured in yes- -

ireaiiueiu.The hospitals nnd tho morgue, wcro

besiegod .as on yesterday by weepingwomen seeking their loved ones. Thodeath list hovers around fifty.is being mado in tlio bay for bodies.

It wall learned today that twonty-fiv- e

tons of remained uncx-pledc- d

iu ono of tho cars uboard tholighter tied alongside tho Alunchinowhen bIio oxploded.

Tho harbor authorities havo placed abuoy over tho spot to warn passingvessels of the danger lying beneath thowater. - H

(II)- - Federal WIrelea reJecrarh,)WASHINOTON.' March S. (Special

to The With a vlow to in-

creasing tho ludopcndenco of tho tor-pedo boats, destroyers and submarinesnow attached, to tho Atlantic licet, thonavy department today decided nslgutenders to each flotilla so that lit-tle vcseels could be operated independ-ent of it laud base,

in Hurrying out the plan, a changein pemoiinel will bo made in the com-mand of the llotHlii, Ciint, William S,Biiiis, now ou duty at the Naval WarI'ulloKe at Newport, lthodu Islund,

Cuptajn Kherloo, who will bea snip ii titi io tnoro iiuiy.

The liltlo viols ttill will bo d

a part of the Atlantic bnttlo-hip tlmd. but will he drilled o far uu

jioMihle liidepwtilniitly ut their morepowerful kleier-nhliie- .

U, H, HIM.llD,

MANAUU4, KiM'atfua, Mr(h 8.l AMuUltl I'rM rabbi lu Uur- -

lliillrln)--Jl- i yh arauis4Ike AmwiMiii iMmtluu uhtah1mI4 tui Ntvrr hwuu, Hum UulMMelee nitrite wf till4 and wveitilitJiif.l, mluUg i'14. KiiWMd 1.(mm, iMMMtHWHUl "" iuuiu 4iMtMi'Meal -- I lb itfMMMi fuii

"faP,aaJylJp' sw

""""wtinHiiWillilttiw u 0. $Xt$'iiB'.

Ml fmm m Uw (mum'i Jim

but also has placod his Borvices say. tho Turks aro again divideddisposnl Surgeon Gonoral Bluo nnd,nci (eaco terms nnoil-c- rv-

euroeiai.

sistaut Surgeon Arthur Stlmson havo1 tcrday 's terrific dynamito oxplosiou,been nssignod to the nndl a nero rejiurted bo aloft for Now tonight remain precarious Tho rec-wit-

Doctor Friedmnnn until ho has show forty-thre- e injuredthem how to 'administer wcro taken to tnoso institutions,

remedy. One died last night, fifteen wcro dis- -

Monkoys will bo subjected treat- - charged, mid twenty-seve- remain for

exhaustive willwork

tho

to tuberculosisin tho

Stanton,successful, bo

tins

physician

not andtho

whichby

hud hoen

"I been working eurothe

tuburruloal.

prureas oat,

iliueuUtluH.

'i'heinrihodtiijil etire,

kw

en

.Wisi.l.BH,

trml

ifcnnd

on

Driven

coiiimilc'smd

her

carriedmad

her

too.

may coit

Company

not

to

fairly

Franchct

Danllous.

has

(By

nott,

Search

dynamito

Advertiser)

totho

MAHINHH

Mullenuyiu4r,

but number

bs)4t

IS

;.:..:iSVN H i.it(). i slifnrnln- Hy .' aid Picas i'nl)tc- -

Winning I, six and a hill tonoth nr lie last game in tho se- -

rn lor the California- - ChallengeThrnpliy, the llswuilnu polo Id mieterdajr n I lei noon .added fnmo to

their banners on Oie Coronndo &fields. The goals were scored usfollows: Castle, 2; Dillinghnm. I:Ilnldwinj 1. Cnttlo was pcnaltz da half. During tho pluy FrankBaldwin was slightly injured.

. .

kAMTmiDAN- - WOTTNDETJ W7IILETRYING TO STOP FIOUTINO

DOt'OIiAS, Arizona, March 8. (ByAssociated Prcjs Cnblo to Star-Dullo- -

tin) A strong body of tho Mndcristasattacked tho Hucrtistn garrison nt ri

today. Tho members of tho gar-rison put up n stubborn resistance, andwhen oxtended hosttlt'es, with conse-quent lost of lifo nnd dnmngo totprop-crt-

scorned imminent, an Americanmine manager attempted medlnti6n."nowas wounded before his pouceful mis-sion became known. -

- STO irrjNX ICEBERGS.

DUNDEE, Scotland, March 8. (ByAssociated Press Cnblo to

The whaler Scofln today, equippedwith wireless, sailed to patrol tho steam-ship nnd sailing routes endangered byice. Tho trip is financed bytho Brit-ish board of trade.

CIRCUS CLOWN AND WIFECONVICTED OF MURDER.

'Tljr Fpdernl Wlrelfss TlnrrnriCHICAGO, March 8. (Special to Tho

Advertiser) Charles Conway, formercircus clqwn, nnd his wife,1 HcatricoConway, wera conviqled hero todny otmurdering Miss Sophia Singer, of Bal-

timore, in a lodging house hcie last Oc-

tober. Tho jury recommended a lifesentenco for Conway and fourteenyears for his wife.

9

dcM3f Hi sic tc sic sic sic sic stc sfc sic sic sk sic

V(BV'ifcdoral Wireless Telegraph)4rTKHBHAN, Persia, March 8.(Special to Tlio Advertiser) Antiu!(lentificd assassin killed'AImO.l'onstant'liorc,.wifo of tho Belgiancollector, of customs, early todny,and seriously wounded Mr. Con- - ?stnnl.

Tho couple were returning homofrom n midnight dinner when sov- -

cral revolver Bhots flrd intotheir carriage. The assassin 'S bo- -

licved to havo been a Persian. liersenpod.

(By Federal Wireless Telegraph.)CHIHUAHUA, Mexico, March

8, (Special to Tho Advertiser)General Pasqunlc Orozco, tho for--

liter Madero leador, has cast hislot with tho Hucrta government '

and is tho appointed gencral;in- -

chief of tho nrmy sent againstGovernor Carranza, tho "MaderoAvcngor."

Orozco plans to wago n cam- -

vPaign of extermination, llo has an- -

nounced that no quarter will boshown.

ik ik sic jfc sic fc A sic sk sk Jfc sk sfc sic sic sk

.

(By Federal Wireless Telegraph.)- -

NEW YORK, March 8. (Spe- -

cial to Tho Advertiser)' By put- -'ting over everything short of a

knockout, I'ackoy McFarlund, tlioChicago stock-yard- s fighter, wonout over .Tack Jlritton in thejr ton- - jfcround go hero'lnst night.

Uritton put over a right handcounter to tho chin in tho fourththat staggered McFnrland, but itwas tho only solid punch ho land- -

cd.

Jp tf U 4 J U al 1T t 1 l f "Is T T "P I n t f f I

tANOTHER OPIUM PLOT.

SEATTLK, March 7. (By Assoc'ntcdPress Cablo to Stnrtl ngdisclosures of nn international opiumplot involving Honolulu havo been madohere, it is nllogod, by tho custoniB andsecrot service inon, as tho result of thearrest of .lohn W. Kocors, Marion Ilorir-maii and C'hnrlio Louie, tho latter aChinese cafo keeper. It is declaredthat a confession has been obtainodfrom tho men showing tho oxistenco otnn international smuggling ring, withuntion-wid- o agencies, including Honolulu.

TIIE RING OF WORDS.

Bright is tho ring of wordsWhen tho right man rings them;

Fair tho fall of songsWhen the sineer slues them.

Still they nro carolled nnd saidOn wings they aro carried

After tho singer is deadAnd the maker buried,

Low ns tho singer liesIn tho field of heather,

Songs of his fashion bringTho swains together,

And when the west Is rodWith tho sunset embers,

The lover lingers nnd sings,And the maid remembers.

Itobert Louis Slovenian,T--

PERSISTENT GOLDS,There is no reason why a cold should

hang on for weeks, or until same rhrnn- -

lc throat nr luutf trouble is ileveoted,nnn 11 win not ir you irko Chamberlulu's CouBh Hemedy. Jy Hi remarkable euro of edds lint remedy hasiroin a imii unttiuinim' acquired m

worlil-wUl- tale nnd ue. You maykuovv llml a reuia4r (bat ban euoatnntlyginwn lu favor and MiwUrily fur lWMi tuty year bat We (baa orJlsary utwvii fir U by Hvmwi tfn.iibI r., lm aul for Hawaii 44VMtiMMRMlt.

TO CUIIE A GOLD IH QNF. flAY

1W XeftIl4Vlt giwuo ltiiuTiMrt, All druuiai. i. (unaumt naiUM u it fail, ut M.B W Urovv aUllMliti u i V

uu in,a. .. ., ,,ll a.

wholesale bbaft of

r

(From Sunday Advertiser)Criminal prosecutions, involving C.

Jv. Mngnlro, auditor of tho Conntv ntHawaii, and probably others will fol-

low closo upon tho oxposuro of the ap-

parent dofalcation of $71,602.35 of thepublic funds of tho county. This defalcation is pointed out in n report oftho Audit Company of Hawaii, made apart of a special report by tho scnatoholdover ways and moans commlttoo

m ycstorilay morning.Attornov General Thayer announced

soon nftcrward that tho work of pro-secuting the alleged offenders will startat once, that warrants will ho issuedns soon as tho sensational report canif:

wmUUF

OKAKLES K. MAGUTBE,Hawaii auditor who confesses defalca-

tion of many thousands.l J ! 1 1 A lf aV 4f lf 4e Jf 4t 3tp p n f T P l 1

bo moro closely examined and that theTerritory will not stop Until tho ap-parently crooked conditions which havoexisted in tho financial affairs of Ha-

waii for tho past soveral years aro com-

pletely investigated and tho offondSrsprosecuted to tho full extent of tholaw.

Tho report yesterday is tho scquol ofan examination of tho accounts of thatcounty mado by II. Gooding Field lastyear, investigated by tho Uilo board oftrade. As a result of tho disclosuresmado by Field nt that time Rufus Ly-

man is now tentatively serving nof threo years in High Sheriff

Henry's prison gang of Hnw.iii. Bo- -

causo of these disclosures tha, holdoverwnya and means comniitteo" arrangedwith tho Audit Company of Hawaii tomako a further investigation. Tho workof tho organization, nccording to thoicport, oven yet is not complete, thoughit shows tho tremendous shortage, ofmore than $71,000.

Of this amount Auditor Maguiro hassigned a confession admitting that hohad illogally drawn warrants aggregat-ing nearly $28,000 during a period cov-ering loss than threo yeara.

Not tlio Only Ono.Thoso in a position to know stato

that Mnguire is not tho only personconnected with tho nllegod thefts andthat tho inquiry will show that personsprominont in tho affairs of the Countyof Hnwaii will bo criminnlly involvod.

The llllng of the report caused u sou- -

sation in tho scnato yesterday. It wasimmediatolv accented and ordered totho printorj a copy to uo sont to thoattorney general, with instructions that

nnufor

'AJtornoy General Thayer who waspresent when report wns read, atonco got in communication with Sen-ator Judd, chairman of holdovercommittee.

Criminal Conditions."It is too lato to ask for warrants

of nrrcst todny," said Attorney G6n-cr-

Thayer. "Tho report speaks foritself and to say tho least shows acriminal condition of tho financial af-fairs of tho County df Hawaii. AuditorMaguiro, us tho report shows, has sign-ed a written confession to illegallydrawing wnrrants to nniouut of

whilo tho roport shows a knownshortage of $71,002.35. It a mattorwhich will require the most careful in-vestigation and will bo conducted thor-oughly by this ofllco.

As yet I havo not decided whotherthis will be undertaken by mysolf or adeputy in my office. It will probablyrequire threo or four months, Tho factthat tlio report would show theso con-ditions havo beon generally known forsome timo and I do not anticipate wowill experienco any serious diffcultyin locating tho pnrtios involved whenthey arji needed."

Speaks for Itself.Tho report is signed by all mombers

tho holdover committee, with Sou-uto- r

Judd ns chairiunn. Tho other mom- -

borw tho committco nro SenatorPhilip Pull nnd Senator Cecil Brown.

'This roport speaks for itself.' ' saidSenator Judd In moving its intno goniuo yesioruay. "in its accept-- a

nc o you approve of recommendation that matter he pluccd in thohands uf the attorney general. I re-gret thnt this action is necessary,"

Unanimous Vote.Though the uionibers of tho seir.ito

hud Jn a wuy been furwurncd that thuli'port would contain seimutluiiul facts,they were not jirepared, uppurently, forthe iiioriiilty of thu disclosures. Asthe. few Items howlng alight illicrop-ancle- s

were rood off tho lulerestuntil ligned confession of

MtitfUlri) to having iliuwn iiouijy Sb,-00-

from the treuiury whs rem), Notuiitll Hie film I puue- - reinhml vu

ujl oxleiit at the jiroved ahorluijoI(mi)Jip4, Tlitru a net a dlwenlliiKveio nlion (he nunttiuu ut aduptlni; I helSWi vs Dually jiul.

Ko Ariwt. Yet.Il u iHMtlui Ihsl a reouMi will U

Htm H uirnunai uniwiiuueJiitmu it ftif lit iMaiMiiai til MV

aa1 Meaiblr tiibaia. Uu hvialiu, ! r Aitamwr gwiiuta thai iii (iuj ba SsHWMWfslluii ul uuiuiwi'i.allail Wltb

lb IswaWsi l sui'iiium. Jiliv Hutbiaj( Ibai bu iw i itb 4tu m

i Maai) in 1 1 ulna! ib publwjai - ( ( ailttii fi(l4(

would involve plating the n flairs ofoffice in the hands of a custo-

dian, it was felt laat night that thoboard of supervisors would not wait forsuch n request, but would take some ac-tion on its own volition,

Board of Trade Action.in its report to the senate the hold-- 1

over committee states that the invest! I

gntion of tho of tho nuditor of I

Hawaii was undertaken nt tho rcnucstof tho audit committee of tho UiloHoard of Trade under date of October25, 1012. This committee consisted ofMessrs. Nichols, Filler and Doyo. Thoreport shows thnt an effort was mado bytho hohlpvcr committco to havo thocounty undertake this investigation,hut thnt duty was evaded under thopica that thero wns no money withwnicn to pay tno expense.

It was then that tho committee took.It upon itself to arrange for tho lnves- - poso this was .Tho follow-tiga- t

on which has brought such InB tho bank, through II. Y.disclosures. Tho report urges ten us replied to iho inauirv.

thnt tho findings of tha exports bo turned over at once to tho attorney cencrnl for action. Part two of this re-port, Bays tho committeo, will bo filedtomorrow. This will contain rc.commcn-dntions- v

for such legislation as willguard against a recurrenco of tho ap-parent wholesale thievery which hasbeen in progress in the government oftho County of Hawaii.

Roport In DoUU.Then follows the roport of tho Audit

Company of Hawaii. This is signed byMatt M. Graham, ns manager. It cov-ers thirteen typewritten pages givingin detail a list of tho discrepancieswhich show the illegal appropriationby Maguiro of moro than $71,000. Inopening, tho nudit company's report,

or outlining the instructions underwhich it worked, says:

SyBtom of Bookkeeping."In dealing ivlth the matters con-

tained in this roport it must ho borne inmind that no attempt was mado tomake a complctd or detailed audit oftho books.- - ''

"The system of accounts presentlyin use in the ofllco of tho county isbriefly as follows:. "Accounts against tho county nro

Jill made out on tho official forms knownas demands. After tbeso demands havobeen certified as correct by tho headof tho department to which tbe per-tain they are lodged with the countyclerk. Theso demands aro numberedconsecutively, signed and dated by theclerk and presented by him at the firstmeeting or tho board of suporviBoraheld alter they aro received. After

passed by tho financo committee oftho board (to whom, thoy nro referred)they nro marked as having been passedfor a certain sum payablo out of a cer-tain appropriation, dated and signed bytho chairman of tho board of supervi-sors and the' county cleric.

"Theso signed demnndB nro thenhanded to tho nuditor. Ho thon issuesn wnrrant payablo to tho individual orfirm tinmi.il in llin nnnrnvr-,- ilmn-itiil- .

Tlm.o oifT.in.i .lnmnn.ia nnnotftotn flin'authority of tho nuditor for issuing

I

warrants in payment of tho samo."The treasurer pays tho warrants is

sued by tho auditor with ;i check drawn

And found warrants

which authorizationsupervisors.

whnt theso

Hnnk ot

paid.g

cashier,

be-ing

on one of his accounts with .the First f.rom any other source showing whatBank of Hilo, Ltd. There nro six ac- - lalms demands chargeable againstcounts with tho bank, viz: general, tlle. county have logal y s,

school, pormanont iniprovoraentf1m,n1cd allowed and ordered paid byin!tlic of supervisors'; that whenreserve and preservation of game,

tho name of Chas. II. Swain, tr.ws.uier- -wnrranta on tho county were presentedto h,m. f ho hadnar1knoVl- -

of tho County of Hawaii.' orrpayment;.. . edgo us to whether they woro legally

Auditor's Books Bad. arJwn and ,BSUea or notbut B0 ;"Wo found tho books an this office wore signed by tho auditor or Mb

very badly kept and tho records un- - deputy nnd boro on their face thoj propriation against which they woro

"The general ledger did not balaneoi chargeable, he would pay them, al--

December 31, 1911, by $0,4(54.01. though in some cases not ovon ondorsodFrom this it follows that any statement by' tho procoduro, ofmado from tho books as' to tho financial course, provided no check on- tho actsstanding of tho county at of the auditor.

tnat wiiicutho administration of

the

tho

tho

of

of

thetho

the

tha

Is

Tit

could. not bo rolied upon. i

"The stubs of tho warrants, in manycases,, did not stato tho number of tho

that purpose"Wo found tho books of tho auditor i

in such a condition" that was impos - l

eiblo or ns to arrive at any correctstatement of tho finances of the countywithout making a fuller or moro com-plete audit of all tho bqoks and rec-

ords kept in his oflico than atour disposal enabled us to mako.

"The rcgistor of warrants issued ofthe general should contain a listof tho warrants drawn, tho number ofeach warrant, tho of tlio personto whom payablo, tho appropriation towhicK chargeable, and tlio amount. Astho amounts nro postod from thisbook to tho various appropriation ac-

counts in tho ledger, it forms ono ofthe most records of tho aud-itor. In this book wo found footingswrong, amounts of warrants entered inponcil, nnd items not posted to thogeneral ledger. Further, wo found thntwnrrants hnd been issued which hadnot beon entered in tho register.

"Several of tho demands upon whichwiirnnts had been issued wore not signed by tho chairman of tho ofsupervisors and tho county clerk, andmnny were not rccoipteu.

Funny Payrolls,"The payrolls for tho various road

districts were unsatisfactory. In somecases several of the names of thopayees appeared to have, writtenby the samo person and in oao or twopayrolls every signature was filled intho samo handwriting. Wo went to thodistricts of North Hilo and Hamakunfor tho purpose of paying off theInborers for the month of January. Intho district of North Hilo wosumo of them had uover horn the pay-toll-

,

although their Humes appeared init as having been eignod by thorn, andseveral who had signed not tellhow days they worked or whatrnto of pav per day they wcro supposodIo got. They hnd signed the payroll inblank thnt is, neither the num-ber of duyi worked hy them nor theamounts duo them being entered In It.It is obvious tlmt this practice of obtalnlng rorclpti In blank gives no jroteetlou Io tho rpuniy,

"In Jlumukuu found one jmyrollfilled lu entirely In the samo hundwrltInk and. wluu mi iixnluiiatlon wai railnl fpr, the roud supervisor Informed tumat lie col the laborers to sign loimrain rwelpu nbeu the wuinuia wvreha. tided lu I hem. and diet Ihiwe reealiitiYittP swat it I uMire ul ba audiurvaaii luouiii, uu quatilaaiug lb mi-liar leiiardluK Ibaae raaainli he ilalatlIbal I Lay x am ta bU aUlio. m '

Mf wa aaaiu la bare lvu mlIff a U raeaiH ftiaBkrtly Nt

11U.(J

nH.u f nut ih nrbeabiMl ike leaielM ut tear

tuu laael ariib lb dni4 a umM 1 iaa e4 ei uiuala l las

rear 1012 severalnnd been drawn payable to tho ordorof ttc First Hank of Uilo, Ltd., for

we could And noby tho On making Inquiryof the nuditor items were,ho stated thnt they wcro paymonti totho Firut Uilo, Ltd., for

of salaries. Wo then cnllod

monoyout day,

which been

ionbg

thoy

payee. Such

that dato

the time

fund

direct

beon

rond

with

?n.him ,! a ,1"t of tnc,.

iB"nientsiuub uv iiiAuiuiuu un ina& ne nau no uutails of how tho amounts wcro made up,and thnt the First Bank of Uilo, Ltd.,wcro tho only persons who could fnr-cis- h

us with that information."Bank Refused Karnes.

Under dato of February 17, 1D13, nletter was sent to tho First Dank otUilo, giving a list of theso wnrrants,amounting in all to $3305. which hadbeen collected by tho bank. The lottornab ! tt.n hnnir in .,.! . .i,, ....

Tho closing paragraph of tho lettersays:

"In.Teply, I beg to state thnt thesownrrants wcro turned over to this bankin payment of advances made ,.to coun-ty employes on account of salar-ies."

This-wa- s followed by another lottorfrom tho Audit Company asking fortho names of theso emnlovos. In ronlytho bank again replied over tho signature ot il. v. i'atton as cashior:

"In reply, wo bog to state that wehavo to doclino to give you the namesof tho employes referred to, ns it wouldnako public privato business transac-tions botweon. our cliontB nnd our-selves." ,

Unconfesscd Itoms.tho report Bays:

"A list ot warrants which have beondrawn without authorization from 1907to 1912 is appended to this report.

"Wo therefore report that wo con-sider there hns been incorrect, incom-plete and improper administration ofthe "financial affairs of tho county intho auditor's office as is ovidenccd bytho following:

"First. Tho books kept by the audi-tor aro in such a condition that no cor-rect statement of tho financial stand-ing of tho county can bo prepared fromthem.

"Second. Receipts for payments ap-pearing by tho bookB to have beenmndc, liavo not been obtained in manycases, and payrolls have been paid, al-though is quito evident that tho sig-natures of the persons entitled to thomonies woro all in tho same handwrit-ing.

Third. The eworn statement of thoauditor that ho has used certain war-rants for purposes other than countybusiness.

' Tho auditors found tho books ofTreasurer Swnln neatly and corroctlykept, and tho documents instructing histransactions filed in a businesslike andsatisfactory manner, but ho had boenInto in Caching Warrants.

"Tho present treaBuror cnmo into of--fico on January 1, 1911," says thoport, "and ho' informed us llini. 1. - hasuevcr been furnished with any information from tho board of supervisors

Many warrants wcro paid withoutendorsement.

"Wo "havo theroforo to roport that

fairs of tho county in the treasurer'soffieo in that the treasurer paid war- -

rants without investigating to seo ifthey wero issued pursuant to Section75 "Act 39 of tho Session Laws 1905;it may uo that under the Inw tho treas-urer's duty before cashing a warrantdid not require him to do moro thansatisfy himself that tho warrant borotho name ot tho nuiittor and tno namoof the appropriation under whichwns drawn, bttt that raises a questionwhich wo arp not qunlified to nnswor.

Other Casos "No Doubt.""Wo would point out thnt this rt

is in tho naturo of an interimreport nnd we havo rtoubt that theroaro many other cases in which thoromny havo been n misuse of county fundsduring tho pnst olght years which wohavo not been able to discovor owingto our not having had time to mako acomplete audit."

In his confession, covering n periodfrom 1010, until Juno, 1012,Mnguire wns caroful, apparontly, toevndo acknowledging illegally issuingwnrrants in fnvnr of others than thoFirst Bank of Hilo. Tho itemized state-ment of tho auditors, however, broughtout a still further startling condition,beginning Fobruary 13, 1907, nnd con-tinuing to Juno 14, 1912, during whichproof is shown thnt warrants aggregat-ing $71,002.35 wfiTe illegally issued byhim. There aro wnrrantsin all, any of them mado payablo per-sonally to C. K. Mnguire, a large por-tion of the others to tho First Hank ofHilo. The remainder were In ofT. If. Lalakea. Thoy range In amountfrom $110 to $2090. Nearly all thowarrants in favor of Maguiro wcro forless than 200, whilo those to tho FirstHank of Hilo averaged moro than $1000each.

All Had Been Paid.Continuing Its careful exposure of

discrepancies ud ovidenco of wrongdoing, tho report eaysi

"In connection with this subject ftIs important to state that we havofound that each touuty employeewhose salary has been passed by theboard of supervisors, durliitf the year1PI8 hns had an Individual warrautIsaued to him for ll salary. SVhatemployers' sulurlo are then referredto by the Firt Hank of Uilo, Lid., inIbtvlr IvIUr of I elli, Puhruuryf Thorefusal of the baub Io inform uj whosoulrlp were uiiiuiH'd to jJjuih made It

IwiMHwible for to folluw up thiswaiter farlaar,

"Hertiwu 78, Ak Ml, of h HussionJ.awi lisot, ejNiMflr pctidM I but"Tba auJIior abal) iju waiaali uathe iuwil lsuir la favyr uf .wauiis ibllllnl Ihervlu in illYtuwil uf.laiU'S atiij iliu-ai.d- a . ir.se aaaiwatiiit luuiti Mt.i,L k baaa ataaaiaat.. UhJ) a vrtlaeresib bii4 vf super laws ' fb a'

iiuiiilaHstl I'ea lliu

lurtncr investigation Do iiiiuto uemnim lor mo wumtuis m our opinion incro nas dcou mcom-tha- totlico take up prosecution. issued, although a space is provided plete the financial nf--

is

adoption,

ariMi

books

it

name

important

board

found

couldmany

we

he

"We

their

it

ro--

it

no

Fobrunry,

eighty-eigh- t

favor

ui

uu

Page 3: ir - University of Hawaiinear future. scoHEiFpIuiis ' L Ovor a hundred personsj the great majority of whom were Orientals, crowded the corridor nt tho city hall, last night, to tuko

JpwwRWWiSWPiPpilPPli,"

FREE SUGAR AND

THE INCOME TAX

HOUSE COMMITTEE DECIDES UPON1

ACTION TO BE TAKEN AT

SPECIAL SESSION.

WASHINGTON, March 8.-- (By

Associated Press Onble) It hasbeen practically doclded upon bytho ways and moans committee ofbouso, of which Oscar UnderwoodIs chairman, that It will introduce,and fight for tho passage of, a froosugar hill at tho special session.This action was agreed upon bytho Democratic majority of thocommittee last night.

Tho loss of tho millions of rov--onuo from the duty on sugar willbe made up, it is proposed, by thefederal Income tax of, probably,ono per cent It la expected that '

this tax will result in a reronuoof approximately $60,000,000 ayear.

Tariff Borision Only.(Tlr Kfdrl Wlrrlmi Telts-raph.-)

WASHINGTON, March 7. (Specialto Tho Advertiser) President Wilsondecided that tho spocial session of con

gress shall be called for purposes oftariff revision only. If tho progress ottariff legislation is rapid, however, hointends to send a special mosago tocongress asking for reform of tho cur-

rency nfter tho tariff work is finished.More Nominations. '

Flr Kerirrnl Wlretem TeiugTapll. )

WASHINGTON, March 7. (Specialto The Advortiser) Daniel G. Eoper, ofSouth Carolina, was nominated todayby President Wilson lo bo hrst assist-ant postmaster goncral.

Dr. Chnrles.P. Neill, whose rcnomina-tio- n

ns commissioner of labor failed otconfirmation in tho Inst congress, is tobo nominated ns commissioner of laborstatistics.

James R. Blakosleo, secretary of thoPennsylvania State Democratic Com-mitti'-

lus been fo'ected for nomina-tion an third assistant postmastergeneral.

Glarko Wins Senato Honors.tll VlrlsM Telecrapn.)

WASHINGTON. March 7. (Specialto Tho Advertiser) Democrats of thojsenato today clioso collator James li.Clarke, of Arkansas, for president protomporo of tho senato, over Senator

jHtf?t?r- 7stiK.iflaaH

HflaHHaBflsvi EsaSf

Senator Jas. P. Clarke of Arkansas.

Augustus J. Bacon, of Georgia, by avote of 27 to 14

Tho outcome was a great surprise,as it wis considered Senator Baconwould bo e lected. Tlio caucus cholco isequivalent to an election in the senate,

(Uy Federal Wireless Teltnaph.)BALTIMORE, Maryland, March 7.

Special to Tho Advertiser) Seventy- -

five- persons are reported to havo metdeath here today at Curtis Bay, a Bal-timore suburb, by the explosion ofdynamite aboard a dynamite boat beingloaded with explosives for Panama.

Most of the victims wore on theBritish steamer Aluucbine, which wasanchored near tho dynamite boat.. Tugsimmediately came to the sccao andthese are reported to havo rescued

twenty-flv- o injured.The shock accompanying the explo-

sion was terrific. A number of platoglass windows hero were broken, sky-scrapers wore rockod, sending tho in-

mates Into tho streets in terror, Win-dows at Ilavro Ko Grace, sixteen milesaway, woro shattered. The stato hous3at Annapolis was rocked violently.

Governor Goldsborpugh, fearing thebuilding was about to collapse, fled totho corr dors outside his office. At theBaltlmora quarantine station Mrs.Richardson, wlfo of a physician, wasinjured by flying glass.

Tho uavy collier Jason, a now craftawaiting its trial trip, was lying inmidstream. It was badly shaken, Itscargo shifted and for a time It was indaugor of collapsing, Tour or the Jan-ion- 's

cror vtere killed and twenty-flv-

hurt.On account of tin nature of tbs

It Is doubtful if the exact num-ber of dead will oyer be known, Inmany cases the victims were blown tofragment, The cause of tho explosionli a mystery,

SHOOK FELT 200 MILES,II K. ilrml WirtJfM 1IWllla

PHILADELPHIA, Mrcli 7- .- (Spe-

cial to The Advertiser) The uliotU ofthe exulotlcu of dynamite today atCurtis Uy was f)t Jn Philadelphia, ftdiitaiiise of praatjcHly goo ij.IU.

iIIk Winlrss Tmm I

KH IIMoM, Vutuia, UiU T

Hitil lo Thf Achrltf)'-ly- d AJ-l- iu, ItHxtir u tU uutlftW build ill (

toll . uuiily, Ullll ut l'lu ln,will li Mvtile4 ill thy ja liriMilJ UBWm., K, Svt I Mr pill lu i UHk. illr ...mm luinNtr uli Ult li H)g,

liiliIMf JM ! llJupH Ili uk fttr tvDlMisM t Utl IWWtMlii m i rii i)iinji itr" lu tar ji.4j i I r tiutrtuur U iswltili.t uf tbim k

WJJt&Ziii&k&M3bgM ku i lffikAtAM. .,

mmmmmummmu

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1913. H'KI.Y

(IU- - lVdrral Wireless Telegraph.)Vli:NNA, Austrln, Mnrch 7.

(Spcclnl to Tho Advertiser) ThoCrown l'rlneo of Montenegro, Intho recent fighting, had a narrowescape from capture by tho Turks,

I who surrounded nnd afterwardskilled every man of Iho Servianbattalion which went to thoPrlnco's rescue ,

" "'Tlj Ftdrral Wtrnats Tli-rsrh.-)

LONDON, MoTch 7. (Special to ThoAdvertiser) Olive Wharry, alias JoyceLock, a militant suffragette, today wnssentenced to eighteen months imprison-ment at mild labor for her riart in setting firo to tho pavilion restaurant attho famous Kew Gardens. Tho dofensointroduced no testimony.

Predicts Equal Suffrage.(Hr Federal Wlrelass T.lfmpb.)

WASHINQTON, March 7. (Specialto Tho Advertiser) A prediction thattho now congress will havo sufficientmembors favoring woman's suffrage tomako possiblo tho passago of an equalsuffrage amendment at Its first reg-ular session, was voiced hero today bySrenator Poindextcr, of Washington,

"Tho recent widespread change insentiment and the conversion of indi-vidual members of both houses to equalsuffrngo," said Senator Poindcxter,makes it altogether possiblo that thonew committee on this question will rt

favorably."Hungarian Women to VoVto.(Uy Frdfral Wireless Tettrrsph.)

BUDAPEST, Hungary, March 7.

(Special to Tho Advortisor) Tho 's

suffrargo cause won a notabloictory hero today, when tho lower

houso of the Hungarian pnrliamontadopted tho government's suffrago

bill, by which a largo number ofwomen are enfranchised.

(By Federal Wlri-lc- Trltgraiiri.)LONDON, Mnrch 7. (Spocial to The

Advertiser) Tho fnll of Janinn is ex-pected to expedito tho negotiations forpeace between Turkey and the BalkanStites. The success of tho Greektroops in capturing tucTurkish fortress,with its gnrrisqn of 32,000 men, compli-cates tho situation by putting Greecein a more favorable position, and thoAllies miibt now consider all her de-mands.

(Ily Federal Wireless TeleEiapti.)KOMU, Ita'y, March 7. (Special to

Tho Advertiser) A graft scand.il,with tho ono connected with

the building and furnishing of thoPennsylvania btntehouso, tiircntens togrow out of tho arrest of Oommendn-tor- o

Jiiccinrdi and Signor 'Borolli, mem-bers of tho firm of contractors whobu'lt the now famous law courts.

Tho structure, which was twenty.toars in building, ccst the government$8,000,000 histoid of $1,200,000, thooriginal contract price.

Tno result of a recent searching in-quiry led to charges of graft againsttho contractors nnd of bribery againstS gnor Silvestro, an official of tho rail-way administration. Tho latter escapedfrom Itily beforo tho warrant could beserved.

.. HMlv Federal Wlri'lesn Telegraph.)

LONDON, March 7. (Special to Thouvertiser) Tho .Lord Mayor of lion

don, and other now city officials oloct-e- d

in yesterday's election, called atuiiriuuruuKa uoubu xouuy unu were

to Dowager Queen Alexandra.Fifty years ago today Her Majesty

lanucu at uravesend trom Denmark andthree days Inter mnrriol tho Prince ofWales. Thcro was no official celcbra-tio,- n

of tho oent today, but QueonAlexandra gavo a dinner party tonight.

'Br Federal WlfVa Telei-ran- h

OITV OP MEXICO, March 7. (Spe-cial to Tho Advertiser) To crush outtho rebol mocment in Sonora, Coahuilaand Chihuahua, ton thousand seasonedtroops nro being armed nnd equippedhero today. The legislature of Chihua-hua will be dissolved if possiblo by thi3force and new elections cnllcd there.

A fedoral dotachmont was victoriousin a fi"ht with a big land of rebels intho Stato of Coahuila, according to

received here.

ADMntAL WIIiETTS NOWN

ON THE EBTD2ED LIST

llr Federal Wlrelena TMeer.nVWASHINGTON, March 7. (Special

to The Advertiser) Rear Admiral Al-bert Willetts, U. S. N., was placed ontho retired list of the navy today onaccount of a(.o. Ho was seen moro thanforty years of srvice. The admiral wasa chief engineer of tho old naval En-gineer Corps, since abolished. In De-cember, 1011, ho was appointed first di-

rector of navy yards..

TEEMS OF VAOIIT EAOE.'I "lfrnl Wlr'lens Telegraph.!

LONDON, Mnrch 7. (Special to ThoAdvertiser) Sir Thomas Lipton's chal-lenge for the America Cup stipulatesthat the competing yacht shall not ex-ceed sovcniy.flvo feet in length at thouatcrlinc, and that winning three outof five races shall ducldo tho iusuo.

illPRESIDENT WILSON SENDS

FELICITATIONS TO OZAB

(Fir Federal Wlrelesa Telerrsph.)WASHINGTON, March 7. (Special

lo Tlio A'lvcirtior) Tho threo hun-dredth anniversary of tho accession ofMleliiU'l JVJorovldi itomaiioff to theImperial throne of Jtusnln, promptedI'ri'aldent Wilnoii to send the Czar ameugu extending "corilial fclleltu-Hun- s

uud the linpu of tliu govuriimentof Hie 1'iiiltu) Ktatet that the bond offriendship which now unlli'a (he two(Dutiirlai in ii y ever continue uuijlriiglliii."

aUBAT riRH DKHTltOyHMANY VOKOHAMA HOUHKH

IHt rin WlrJM TIwn4,IVUKOJUIU. 4mm, IthitU l,- -

hjwi.Jl iu rim Ai vvrliur) Miikk--

Imlwlrwt JillWIttiMt eMrWM Mill MsMkllulim litilMtMii, iitln4lii Hut .lwiii.cIkujj., bus Um dHtrttjw by fit,Mu lumtt buliaiUjt W QMUNtflMj

"WflouBDW" or mm.

r M..iJ u fU Mmm) ntt niulnii. tflf MNWI4 u b Mthnl4lll' 'li( unit, I M'MaKtmllvl'tilt i litt Utti kmi It I ull.Mik

More Great Guns For Oahu

Will Be InstalledSecondBattery For Diamond Head

Additions to tho mortar defenses at Diamond Head havo beonby tho MaccmbtArmy Board, to consist of ono battery of

mortars, two andTslx guns for land dofenso pri-marily.

Hoary batteries havo been recommended for location at AhuaPoint, Pearl Harbor., Fort Shatter is designated as a four infantry regiment post and

ono battalion of infantry, and will bo tho largest garrison in tho Isl-

ands, designed to dofend Pearl Harbor.A general supply depot to cost nearly $200,000 is planned for Fort

Shafter.Oahu to bo mado the main defense of tho Western end of tho

Panama Canal. '

Details of tho recommendations oftho Macomb Army Board to tho wardepartment for increasing tho garrisonstrength And fortifications on Oahu,which wero considered behind closefl

doors a't nn oxecutlvo session in Wash-

ington of the houso militnry committorwhon Svcrctnry of War St nuon, MajorGenorul Wood, chiof of tho goneralstuff; Major General Alcshiro, chlotquartermaster corps, nnd Brig. Gen.Erasmus M. Weaver, chiof coast artillery division, wero prcsont, roachodTho Advertiser yestorday in advancesheets of the pnntoj report.

Tho 8tatomouts indicato tho import-

ance which military men of a.l branchesof tho sorKo place on tho continued development of tho Oahu fortificationsand upbuilding of tho army posts toaccommodate lnteeti thousiml men.

A leading recommindat.on of thoMacomb bo.ird is that the DiamondHead fortifications bo further increas-ed by tho addition of another batteryof mortars nnd with rilled guns to boused ns a land dofenso for tho exposedmortars in caso a hostile force Biiouldyffcet a landing nnd gain a position intho roar of Port Kugcr. This is ono oftho secrets now mado public.

A proposal of further fortification atPoarl Harbor on tho shoro of tho chan-nel opposite to Fort Knmohamoha ismudo, indicating that tho Macombboard found n weak spot on tho Nnni-leul- i

side of Poarl Harbor.Secretary of War Stimson stated to

tho committeo that the totnl mobilogarrison for Oahu, ns noW.plannod, con-

sists of six regiments of infantry, fullwar stronnth: ono cntiro rcgimont offield artillery and a "battalion of heavyfield artillery; ono company of

nn ultimato limit of ono bat-talion of threo companies of engineers,while tho succostion has been mado thatthat company should bo evontunllyraised to a battalion.

For tho manning of tho coast batteries. tho sccrotnrv said these troopswould consist of thirteen companies, ofwhich threo aro for hoivy siege art 1

Ierv included in tho land defenses.Tho war deputment plans to placo

theso forces ns follows:At Schofiold Barracks tho proposed

garrison is to consist of two regimentsof infantry, ono rogimont of field artil-lery, one battalion of heavy fiold artillery, ono field signal company, one telegraph company of tho signal corps, onoaeronautical dotachment of tho samecorps, and two field ambulance com-

panies.At Fort Shafter tho garrison is to

consist of four regiments of infantrynnd one battalion of cnginoers. there-by removing tho latter froln Fort DeRussjv

At r rt Hucer tho proposod garrisonconsists of two companies of coast nrt llerv for tho seacoast defenses properand ono company to man tho heavyBiogo batteries for tho lnnd dofenses.

At Fort Do Itussv only two companieswill bo required for tno guns.

At Fort Knmohnmohn tho garrisonis to consist of flvo companies of constartillery, ono compnny for tho mine defenses at Peur) Harbor and Fort Arm-strong nnd two companies for manningtho heavy guns for the land defensesAt Fort Armstrong thcro will simplybo a caretaker's dotachmont.

Each Tegimont of infantry is to bocomposed of 20!)5 officers nnd men; thecavalry regiment, 1241 officors nnd men.

For housing tlio present nnd futurocummnnds tho secretary referred tothp extensive building npoations ntCantncr, near Sehoficld Barracks, for acavalry regiment's permanent quarters

At Fort ICninohniuehn thero has beenno pcrmnnont construction for quarters,lint nt i ort Kuger tlioro was iniicn per-manent construction, and nt Do IiuFsynone yet nsiilo from tho fortificationsproper.

For tho guidnnco of the committee,tho secretary presented a statementprepared by tho chief of tho quartermuster corps, showing nn estimato oftho total cnut for the construction of nl!kinds necessary to house poriiiiinnitlytho totnl garrison, Including everything that hits been spent for perma-nent cnimtnirtloii ro far nnd everythingthat uoiilil be estiuutiil In be speut Intln fill urn. namely!Hehoflehl Hfirruck VltJ.SOl.'.MPort Blwftcr 3,J! I IWil.fiiTort Knmeliiiiiioho 738,UOO.Ou

l'nrt linger 336,072.31I'urt De lluwy (M,OQQ,00Fort Ariiiitniiiu 18.00d.OOOniifrsl Hid dajiyt nt

Fort UhKfjur 1113,000 00

Ttl .V8iT3'ie.WAt hwfltii JUrujkji llmrn hi mu

md"l tar jtiiofiiJ'y wwlfyrtlwi,

MM,"lu lit t'liuul ul llnwslt w hut itkll lewwum 11"' M'"" i"

'mp hn'I mioiiiw mtmi& i mmIUMieM," M4 li imitiatf "II I'

I'lmmie mk't H it uJj lts wmki iu ibv m(;mM wwMl iU

in iim uImmUW- - m ller tlmi 'pii or iii fUUMim li U

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t, . . A,jaliiliiiiifjEE2sltmjLsuB!L

quarters firsl, and according to GeneralWood, who interposed, it would cost$130,000 a year to keop tho troops Intents horc.

"Wo havo been moving tho troopsout thero','' added the Secretary,"without waiting for construction, andputting them into camp, because it wasdeemed so important to havo them ontho ground."

"1 want to show vou what tho Navylias done in oxponditures thore. Youwill remember that tho question offortifying the Hawaiian Islands wasprimarily a naval question, and wo woredirected to fortify becauso the Navyhad mado it a nnvnl station and hadmado it tho great naval base of thoPacific. Tho Navy estimates 'that thototal cost of their naval baso bill bo$12,0311500. Thcro has already beonappropriated $10,440,250 nnd there hasalready been cxponded or obligated uplo date, f7,307,50s."

Tho Sccrotnry snid tho fortificntionsand guns authorized wore substantiallycomplete, ami tno war Department hasgono ahead and built tho fortificationsnnd had built tho guns nnd has left totho last tho question of taking euro oftho qunrters for tho men. For ammu-nition for 1 law nil $915,210 hnd been ex-

pended, of which $477,000 has been

As to the increased fortifications ntDiamond Head nnd Pearl Harbor hohaiil that they wero trying to figurodown ns closely ns possiblo but Iff the,locommendatlous nro carried out, it will'involve heavy increased expense

"How much, approximate! J" in-

quired tho chairman."I would rather not mako any est!-mat- o

nt presont on that," replied thoSecretary. "I havo given you theselast figures having a total of over$20,000,000 in order that you might seetho amount invested there in navalstores and in coast nrtillory dofensc,'wnicu it is tno ouiect ot tno mouiioforco to dofend. Tho argument, Ithink, of Colonel Morrison, whom youheard tho othor day, showed tho neces-sity for a dofenso of thoso stores nnd

, defenses by a mobilo force to, protectinem ixom an enemy unit cotnu land litnncuncr part oi tno isinnu,

Tho Secretary had to explain to thecommitteo an apparent divergence fromtho original policy as to tho garrisonfor Oahu, tho first plang being to havobut two squadrons of cavalry here, onorcgimont of infnntry, ono of field nrtil-lory, somo engineers and signal corpsmen, all as a mobilo forco, with the in-

tention of reinforcing this garrisonfrom San Francisco at an outbreak of

. war. The chairman referring to tho' fact hat certain matters wero not madoof record becauso of having been givenat a secrot hearing, said:

"The gencrnl start uppcared nndasked to bo given n confidential henr-- (ing, and tho general staff then statodwhat the situation was in tho HawaiianInlands nnd tho responsibility that wasfolt, and then they indicated tho forcethey wantod to put thore."

Mr. Stimson said that military au-

thorities differed as to Uio size of thogarrison, but that tho udequato de-

fense of tho Islands was necoisary."Tho Mncomb Board," said tho

"has indicated tho desira-bility of certain additional mortals onAhua Point. Tho original defenses, myrecollection is; woro planned by thoTaft Board, and afterwards Colonel

'Story wns sent to tho Hawaiian' Isl-ands, nnd as a result of his investiga-tion und report mod'fientions weromade. A new board is now appointedand they visit tho Islands, and thoyindicato that, crtain other guns shouldbo ndded."

The Secretary said tho Macomb(Board was sont hero primarily to re-port on the; mobile defense. Tho chair-man wanted to know if anything defi-n't- o

is settled on tho question of de-

fense.Whilo-Gcner.- Weaver was unable to

state posltlvoly whether the MacombI Hoard recommendations for fortifica-tion Increases lit Diamond Jlcnd wns

'for land dofonse, the Secretary ttntedthat ho did not think it quite fnir to

I the gciierul staff to iirgiui on theso mig-- I

gestionis of the Macomb Board, because, tney bad not been approved by tho'general staff. "They havo been nug-- 1

gust i'd by the Macomb llourd ason (Im original plun nf ilc

feiico," mill the Secretaryfliwriil Weaver said Unit his under-atiiiiillli-

wns that tho two now mortarbiillnrin Introduced by tho Miii-niii-

liuaril prober nro liiluiiifoi) fur count doifno prinmrlly, but nlio like till mur-t- f

liMtlnrli'S iim iivnilublti for luml ilu.'un.li .!. ...til. -- i. .... i .... i -- .... i.....vj urv, itiiii etuHfiuui, unit win imIuiiiimI am) utod Inluiid. ulli).

Tim MwlHry nnliJi "'llie wortur atI'Mummi Jliwil wrn )iuJ Uy uuufllllllHl ItfUird OUtaiils thu Jrulur. Thatpill tliuin ju u iMsJiluij wiwn Ihity vn.-i-

I nrf itli y iiawful fur h ilMftw swainelUu, but Hliitt tlwv MMiliJ bu tuknu by

m mm) nlUcli rnnrC anor mt If limnif ikf IM Hi) rlu, iiuil itiw

l'ail l uum l lu mtu'i tin, new 14111

JIlJttM lit iMIld (lb iili Hit' HtiWUuuwit iim 1 4 ubi4iii4, u4 tut

MstttiaMI It 44ltH fIM(MMt liuutllijnm ui etuwly lu ib i ,, kui hi

i m "ii hint nl imnI ...... ....!..- - .......I ..1.1 I .1i

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H t,h t id l lla.i..il.. . p,

if mui iIHUil)'i . I a luml

, tj, Ithufelsj A

frt I ,Jk, 'frfirffffrifffmTHrTirrTMrffnffr

.i.n.i svrr suMMtotl Hint tin)uay eonld do much f the repair work

or the eonut artillery guns, tho Srtiuons is tlniie nt I'minmn.

"What was It Hint determined thnmlvUnbllity of quartering tho fullquota of troops on Onhu, rather thnnna tig j pon urn nf tii em at San Fran

Inqiiir it thn rliurmnn."I am verj glad )iiu ask thnt que-

stion," fnlil General Wood, "because 1

think I can give you nn axplnnnllon ofwhnt may appear to bo a varying poli-cy. Tho first report of the generalstaff was mads in 1003 or 1001, withTcfcronce to Oahu, and tho garrisonneeded. Tho great Ilusso-Jnpnnes- warhad not been fought. Wo know veryllttlo of tho power nnd military forcownicu inui country was going to

on tho Pacific. Almost immediately nftor that war a iloubt began tonriso ns to wlioro tlio big naval basoof tho Pacific should bo. Opinionfluctuated, but it continued to bo cen-tered on Manila Bay, until quite re-

cently. In 1009 it was understood thntthoro would bo n naval baso or stationin Manila Bay, but grndunlly tho opin-ion of tho Nnvy has changod nnd tuoyhnvo ultimately settled on Pearl Harboras tholr groat Pacific base, and wo nec-essarily havo followed thom. With thodevelopment of thnt power (Asiaticsea) nnd with tho dovolopmont of PoarlIlnrbor nnd its adoption as a greatbase, at which n good many millionsnro to bo spont by tho Navy, and havobeen spont, wo have boon compelled tobo rondy not in any uncertain way, butin a very Certain way, to dofend thntbnso, and thnt has resulted in our rank-ing appropriations to have our cntirognrrison there on n war footing ratherthan havo only a portion of it theroind the lest in San Francisco. There-fore, wo havo not mado tlie?o changesof our own volition, but w have beonmaking them ns n part of our policy iuwhich wo hnvo hnd to eooporato withtno finvy.

Secretary Stimson: "I would llko toput in tho record in substance nn epi-tome of whnt wns stated recently byColonel Morrison, representing theMncomb Board, ns tho reason for thodofenso of Onhu ns it now nppoars. Itnow dovolops thnt from a combinednaval and military standpoint, it isncce'snry thnt tho island of Oahushould bo mado, as fnr ns possiblo, nnimpregnable fortress to provont, on thonno iinnu. any ntiacit on tlio l'noitlcConst, and on tho other hnnd. becauseit serves as tho best. If not tho onlvpracticnl dofonso for tho western onilof tho Panama Canal."

WHOLESALE GRAFT

(Continued from Pago Two)rants issued paynblo to tho order ofthis bank during tho year 1012 androferred to abovo and cashed by thornwero thercforo illegally drawn nnd is-

sued. It is truo that thoy bear thostatoment "Appropriation Pay of Po-lice," but ns a matter of fact all thopolieo appeared to linvo been paid "byuiuiviQuai warrants.

A Fortuno Looted."Wo thon examined tho rogister of

warrants Lnck to tho yesrr 1005, whoncounty govornment commenced, foritems of n like naturo. Wo found thatfrom Fcbrunry, 1007, to Juno, 1912,there wero warrnntB drawn under thoappropriation "Pay of Police" amount-ing to $71,002.35 for ivhich wo couldfind no authority."

Magulro Oonfcssod.Confronted with tho ovidenco al-

ready in possession of the experts,Auditor .Mngulie mado the first confes-sion, which it is now bclioicd willresult in Bonding him to tho poniton-tiar- y

nnd jierhaps tako others with him.Ovor his signuturo ho ndmits to thoexperts thnt he has illegally drawnwarrants for tho total amount of

This covers twenty-si- sepa-rate warrnnts, ranging in amountsfrom $105, which is tho lowest, to$2099, tho highest, nil in favor of thoFirst Bank? of Hilo.

Tho first of these warrants, accord-ing to tho records and confession, wasissued February 28, 1910, and callodfor $085. In this manner moro than$17,000 was taken from tho countytreasury during tho year 1910. Bachmonth of tho year tho illegal transac-tions took placo, growing larger eachmonth until tho average for tho lastfour months bf 1910 wns moro thnn$2000 per month.

The first Illegal warrant in 1911 isdated in February hnd calls for $1200.Tho illegal practiso is not attemptedagain until in August and Septemberwhen tho total drawn wns $2290. Sep-tember, November nnd December nlsoproved good months for tho illegalwork.

Tho wholesale robbery, as it wastermed yestcrdny, continued throughhnlf of tho 1012, when about$1000 was sociirod. All these warrantswero in favor of tho First Hnnk ofHllo. The carefully itomlred list con-tains tho followiug signed confession:

"The list of warrnnts on UiIb nndtho preceding pogo constitute tho war-rant-

illegally drawn nnd usod by mofor purposes other thun county busi-ness during tlio years 1910, 1911 nnd1012.

"(Sgd.) C. K. MAOUIIti:."Subscribed and sworn to beforo mo

this 11th dny of February, 1913."(Sgd.) It. T, FOItUKST,

"Notary Public, Fourth Judicial Cir-cuit."

Thoso In Charge,Tlio members of tlio (muni of super

visum of tho County of Hawaii up toJanuary 1 Inst, who rufuiicil to order n

audit, were;J, I), Lewis, K. J, Austin, North and

South Hllo j Norman K, Lyman, I'wmiW. M. J'urily, HuimikuH; Knury I'.Ilorkluy, North iiml RoDlli KoIihIu) J.N. Knumou, North Mini tiuuth K'HiUiHum K ii u luii ii, Kan.

J'urily ud KmuIiiiiib wuru (lie onlytwo In this lot wlm with i 4ml im I ml UatJVovmiiber, 'fljij mmnlw now r.

I) Hw.llkif J, A. KtMlobu, Nurthmu) Hon 1, lllliii W. N Purity, llmtm-su-

Jl K. Hllliii. Ninth und ftoulli Ku.I'Slii; Julian D YiIim, Nnrlh soil toiilhKliUk) HttlU JUulUtllM UtU, II J. (

win, l'm.

iiirlaUwl I'riua (kLla lu Mlkr liulblllai)Tii um MwtiMatfriutf rt'lisi in

Ibi ul AtlVfMir 'Uii lHUtuW

iitf4 with li MHmi MylnUin$ t nnw (iw a 'i Iwmiy luuf btiur

ml il Is IvIlHISHl Ibal Us 1!lhllitIII (UU l 4M''t' W

'I.

"", riil,.. 4Jy 4sV .'

rrfiani-r- - tmttMmiM.rMiajMZEZXEtt5Z1a..JKZSt&tr.3tt

i CEMENT GUN

HI K1EH1EM

MAJOR CHEATHAM MAKES SOMEOIIANQES FOB PEARL HAR-

BOR BUTLDINaS.

Muj, B, Frank Cheatham, qunrtor-miistc- r

corps, who i,s In chargo of con-

struction in Hawaii, has submitted somoimportant recommendations rognrdlngtho typo of construction of army build-ings nt tho const artillery post at

says tlio Army and NavyKegistcr. It Is proposod not to innkouso of tho cement-gu- n typo, which hasbeen uaixl lu tho construction of Seho-ficld Barracks, for tho roason that thobuildings nro undor tho mortnrs or nonrtho guns of tho const defensos. MajorChoatham is iu favor of a typo of con-struction similar to that used by thopcoplo of Honolulu. It will bo possibloby this moans to construct buildingsfor tho four companies of tho coast ar-tillery to constitute tho garrison for$200,000, ns compared with $350,500,which wns the original eat mate. MajorCheatham in his memorandum on thesubject says:

"Owing" to the local conditions, andparticularly to the recont decision tolimit tho cost of officers' qunrtors inHawaii to $4000 for a con pany otllccrand $6000 for a fiold officer, it is d

that this is n case wlioro excep-tion to the rule of tho war departmentto construct pcrmnnont buildings onlyshould bo mado, nnd it !b strongly rec- -

ommonded thnt nil buildings bo offramo and only ono story high.

"The types of construction used lo-

cally havo beon carefully studied, nndit Is found that, owing .$ the absoncoof high winds, it is customary to usoan exceedingly light framo with singlowalls. Such houses nro nlmost universalhero and nro not only satisfactory, butnro ns permanent ns could bo pxpectodfrom construction. Tlio roll-tivol- y

small amount of lumber usedtho cost materially ns compared

with standard framo construction intho United States."

Sketch plans for nil buildings ntFort Knniohamclia, based on tho idoo,nbovo expressed, nro now being pre-pared and will bo forwarded for con-sideration at nn early dnto; tho delayin submitting them is duo to tlio fnctthnt nn engineer could not bo sparedfrom Schofiold Barracks until now.

It Is estimated that suitnhlo build-ings as nbovo suggested will cost Jbfollows. Field officers' quarters, fourbedrooms nnd two baths, $5500; enp-tain-

qunrtors, throe bedrooms and onobath, $1000; lleutenmit's qunrtors, twobedrooms nnd ono bath, $3500.

Burrocks to be of sumo typo of con-struction, frame, ono idorv high- - osti- -

mntcd cost, with mess hall and kitchen,$18,000 oach.

H--

1EOF KINGS

IS UP FOR SALE

PALACE AT KAHiTJA WILL PASSFROM AMIS' HANDS FOR

THE FIRST TIME.

(From Satin day Aihortisir)One by one the property holdings of

tho Knpiolaiu JJstnto nro being put ontho mnrkot, Puuloiluni, tlio homo ofi'rluco Kubininnnolo nt Wniklki, havingbeen offered for snlo enrly in tho wook,whilo jOHterduy, Mnnnger Colburn an-nounced that thi) old coral palaco atKailun, tho scene of mnny nrominontgatherings, will be disposed of shouldino rignt oner no mado.

The palace grounds proper cover halfan aero, whilo tho estate owns tho adjoining properties, so that thoro Is anunbroken frontngo of soven hundredfeot. Nearby is ono of tho biggestheiniiH on Hnwnil, fuirly well preserved,Tlio estate forms ono of the most nt- -

trnctivo spots in tho old town of Kni-lu-

for it was thcro in 1820 that thefirst missionaries from Now Kiiglnnd,after their long voyage around CapoHorn, laiuKd nnd hnd their first Inter-view with tho Hnwniinn rulers. Nearthe old palaco stands tho memorial totho early missionaries. Tho groundsnro dotted with cocounuts nnd thoro isnow qulto n groio of splendid lookingtrees.

Tho ancient palace wns built by Governor Kunkinl of Hawaii. It was handed down through various heirs until itenmo into tho possession of King

tho last of tlio Kamchnmohns onthu throne of Hawaii. Lunnlilo spontpractically his last days at Knilua, hav-ing gono thoro to rccuporato. FromLunnlilo it went to Princess Ituth.Thorn was a contest oor tho propertyand through a compromise it was finallypossessed by King Knlnkaua, and latelyhas been in thn possession of PrincessKnltiiifnnnolo, having formod part ofthe property left by tho late DowagerQueen Kiipiolnni.

"The palace Is run down but hnsbeautiful kna doors nnd windows nndfluUhliigs nnd stands ns n memorial tntho strong coimtriietlon of thu earlydays In Jlnwiill,

Manager Cnlburn Is considering onunr tw olTiir fur thu whole nf I'lialulliuiilit Wnihllil, Two nr tlimo nf thn hostlots could Im mid singly nt iiihv, butnlfers for the niitlrn proparly urn nowunder I'linddoriillon.

'J'hti homo of I'riiH'o Kulniiliiiianln isuu I hi pruprty, hil the old homof the IluWHgur Ifumtu Kitpliiliuii stillrwimlus h h ridli' nf tlm tfnldi'ii 'lasn( lli muimridilttl prii"l. (ni lurtfuImini is Sllwi with Ifujiliieo of ill' ri nllf KllmuH, UtHUy wl lh" Inkina lil'OrfIflfl from rulultfli m I A .... 1. lulus4urtuy th kistgc tur of iim uill

MIHYfmC'to'wn qUHSTION.Hmw Iu ru NihJ l i(uvtiou in

whli'li insur ut lwt(ilil iusi ii"WllnWt'MlSilll'f l'U(t ll.'lliiilv Ills rliillit frfl rsimUllo 4 Mi.n-au- mUl, Us iMsmilMiw Mfff ut "L l

Iwsys U iUmmmM u?u Yt si trIMialSM, MMIAi a ' , M4 l'Kll "'lUitnli .4rititMiiMii

1

i . . ftr. .MtiS&im. OFKSO sjmjo, iaga rriiiiirtf niyUiiil

Page 4: ir - University of Hawaiinear future. scoHEiFpIuiis ' L Ovor a hundred personsj the great majority of whom were Orientals, crowded the corridor nt tho city hall, last night, to tuko

HAWAIIAN GAZETTERODEOICR 0

Fntcrcl at

"T Mo-V.- t

Ye.

TUESDAY

MATIIXBON EUITOH

Ik PoMoflicc of Uonolultj.il I . Sccotui-Cla- s matter.I v .inl Fridays,

' Stl l9 drip I ion Kaiest .BAiVr Mm, I. f"frti .SoM.OOr Yrnr. Kor. Icn . M.00

Payable invanaMv in Advance., CHARLES S. CRANE, Manager.

MARCH 11

SIXTY-SECON- CONOBESS A REVIEW.

With the adjournment of congress on Tuesday, tlio end win written to two

years of epoch making struggle within pnrty ranks', nnd to three sessions of

rITort. only partially ' stiefoMful, to adjust tho differences between a Demo-crnli-

Iioufo, a senate timlor Democratic-Progressiv- e control, nnd a RepublicanPresident.

Mnny important plces of legislation were enacted within tlint time; in-

vestigations of n peculiar "significance to the public wero conducted; nnd ninnyrnliJDCts of general intorest were Inid niilo without action. Tho tariff, attackedalike from Democratic and Kepubllcan .lources, twice during that period, wnstho subject of attempted revision, but none of tho proposed changes becameeffective.

Tho Sixty-Secon- d Congress opened In 1011 with n special session calledby President Toft to consider Cnnadian reciprocity; it ended with an oxtrasession of tho Sixty-Thir- d Congress only n fow dnys away, to bo called byPresident Wilson for a general rovision of tho Pnyno-Aldric- h tariff law.- - Na-

tional conditions, tho birth of a new party, a gonoral election, and a com-

plete change of administration intervened between its beginning nnd its end.Activities of the short session just closed wore limited almost entirely toTontine work, because of tho determination to leavo to tho new administrationnil of the important subjects of n general character.

Perhaps tho most important developments of the cntlro congress nro thofollowing:

Canadian reciprocity law passed, but rejected by Cnnnda.

Wool, cotton, metal, nnd freo list tariff bills passed, but vetoed by Presi-

dent Taft. 'Constitutional amendment for populnr election of senators submitted to

tho States.Shipment of liquor into prohibition States forbidden by law.Arbitration treaties with Great Dritain and Franco negotiated, but failed

of ratification becauso of changes mndo by tho senate.Termination of tho treaty of 1S32 with Russia demanded by congress.Notice served on tho world by tho sennto, that tho' United States will

not permit foroign nations to secure military or naval footholds whero thoymight threaten safety of this country.

Children's bureau created in dopartment of commcrco and labor.Pnnamn Canal law passed, establishing freo passago for American const-wis- o

ships, and barring railroad-owne- vessels from tho canal.Campaign publicity laws passed, requiring a complcto public accounting

of all campaign funds.William Lorimer declared not entitled to scat as senator from Illinois,Judgo Robert W. Archbald, of commcrco court, impcachod'nnd convicted

on charges of judicial misconduct.Money trust investigation conducted, disclosing dotnilcd methods of presen-

t-day financial operation.Campaign expenditures investigated covering campaign funds of 1904,

!)0S and 1012; nnd disclosing correspondence between John D. Archbold, oftho Standard Oil Company, and members of congress.

Investigation mado of formation and operation of .tho United States StoolCorporation.

These compriso but a fow of tho laws passed, investigations conducted,treaties passed on, nnd legislntivo subjects considered ,during tho two yearsof tho Sixty-Secon- Congress. Tho two" 'great personal strugglos, involvingWilliam Lorimor nnd Judgo Archbnld, ran' ttironghout tho congress; nnd withtheir interesting personal phases helped p., draw nttpfitlon from tho actuallegislntivo work of tho two years. ,

Whilo congress passed an covering all government con-

tracts oxecjit on tho Panama Cnnnl, it took no acttoti,'M!" three important sub-

lets: workmen's compensation, nnd nrUtfrust lecislntion. Eoc- -

ommendatioiis were mndo by a. senate conimittcq,.in; then last wook of the session, for rndical changes in tho anti-trus- t law'tb.,rfl8to:nc.0inpotitivo conditionsnnd prevent monopoly; and they may bear 'fruit innlcglilntion under tho now

ndministration.Tho final' session, now ending, lias witnessed n strugglo in tho senate

between Republicans and Democrats, that1 prevented ,t)io confirmation of thogreater part of President Tnft's nppointm'dfits. 'With moro than two thousandappointments boforo tlio sennto, Democrats jdoclinod to"'pormit action on thogreat majority, and tho result is that President AyilsonwlU now fill tho placesby himself or through his cabinet officers.

This factional strugglo, coupled with tho intomnl Democratic contest fortho organization and control of sennto and houso under tho now administra-tion, injected tho political question into tho last session's work to an unusualdegree. Several bills that might havo become law in tho closing days of thissession havo been held back becauso Democratic lcadors preferred to liavo thosubjects carried over until a Democratic President, sennto nnd houso can havoan opportunity to carry OUt dcfinlto legislntivo programs.

Important actions In tho short session just clpsod includo:"Literacy test" Immigration bill passed, but vetoed by President Taft.Singlo six-ye- presidential term nmondment passed by 'senate. '

Lifo prisoners in federal prisons mado eligiblo to parolo.1'ive-yea- r closed season for fur-seal- s incorporated in tho international

seal treaty.Tcdcral control of water powers defeated in tho scnato.Manufacturers of foods required to stato tho net weight and contents on

outsido of food package. 'Government authorized by law to Beizo goods as soon as

imported into tho United States.Lincoln Memorial authorized to cost $2,000,000.Tho Democratic majority that took control of tho houso when tho congress

organized insisted on going ahead with othor features of tariff rovision, nndpassed wool, cotton, freo list and somo other bills. All thrco measures withtho aid of tho Progressive Republicans forces in tho senate, reached ProsidontTaft. Thoy wero vetoed, on tho ground that tho tariff board was conductinginvestigations, tho results of which must bo known boforo a proper rovisionof tho tariff could bo made.

Legislative work throughout tho special session, and tho long session begin-

ning in December, 1011, and running through last August, included tho fol-

lowing:Incrcaso iu tho size of tlio house of representatives, from 39G to 435

members.Ago and service pension law, increasing Civil War pensions.Eight-hou- r law covering government contracts.Admission of Arizona and Now Moxico to statehood.Use of poisonous white phosphurous in match-mnkin- provented by

tax,Puro drug law nmended to provent misleading labels on patont medicines.WiroleBs communication brought undor caroful regulation, tho law requir-

ing tho wireless on all ocean vessels to bo adequately manned.Government transport required to enrry an amplo number of lifeboats.Red Cross reeognliod ofllcinlly iib branch of government service in timo

of war.Federal relief ulen to 1012 flood sufferers in lower Mississippi Valloy.Commerce court-an- tariff board virtually legislated out of oxlstonco.Industrial comnilttlou authorlicJ, to study relations botwoon capital nnd

labor,Tho last congress witnwiod tho ratification of many important trcnUos

with foreign nations. Tho arbitration troutiw with Franco and Great Britain,negotiated by President Taft, however, were not ratified, becauso tho senateto amended them that tlio Pmldsnt eousldcrod thoy did not carry out theunderstandings made with the two Powers.

In the two yean, however, tho following Important ngrrementi have beenperftt4:

I'tuMtiUry Q!lm Tmty with Great Britain,Hurtli AUmitU )it FwhcriM tgMMMki wlli 0ft, IJrlUlB.Fur Heal Trutr "ttt 0rt HrlUlR, Hunts, nd Japan.iitwLUn WilM TiMtf wttk taHgy fjrflfgn nfiilewi,

liOwttUMg tfftr "' H Ml. '

.lAWAlJAN GVI-.JJb- , TfESDAVi MARCH 11. 1913 St?MI-WEEKL-

i - f., fijjkif (.

mMmmmummmmmm

n I uamiemmmmmMmivwvymmpm0mm IMIffHffil94f ftWPliWW

i'i ii t j ngrcrment coveting innltiry measures for the control of)i ilrinx

ImihtiiI h t. imtion trrt with Frsnro extended to H'I8.tortjrwriglii 'treaty with Hungary.Inlcrnstloril agreement cot critic; atslstanco and salvngo at tea.InvMllgRtinnK covering a Mo tango of Important subjects were

in hildltlon to thoe cnumcrntcd (tho "moiioy trust," campaign ex-

penditure nhil ttrel Inquiries), special cotnmittcci and' the regular standingonimittoes of tho two houses Conducted the following:

Tariff hearings, by ways and 'means committee, In preparation for now

Democratic tariff bills. ",Currency hearings, preparatory to frnmlng monetary reforms.Investigating of affairs of American Sugar Refining Company, and its

tllcged domination of tlio market.Inquiry into tho Titanic disaster.Investigation of conditions along Mexican border, nnd nllcgcd financing of

.Mexican revolutionists by Americans."Shipping trust" Inquiry, to "d'olermino extent of tho common control of

ocean routes. .

I Investigations of Indian affairs, on various reservations, and at Washington.Investigations of agricultural, treasury nndother government departments.Investigation of land grants nbout Controller Bay, Alaska.President Taft used tho veto power frcoly throughout tho congress. Fully

twenty bills hnvc met his disapproval, Including Democratic tariff bills; appro-

priation bills which contnincd commerce court, civil service and nrmy reorgan-

ization nnd legislation of which ho did not npprovo; waterpowor bills in which

tho prlnclplo of fodcral control was not recognized; and the immigration billcontaining tho "literacy test" feature.

GLASS HOUSES ON HAWAIL

It may bo painful, but it would appear to bo necessary that tho membersof tho legislature from Hawaii who have been calling loudly for an investiga-tion of tho territorial administration should look up the old adage whichsuggests that it Ls extremely unadvlse'ahlo for porsonsf residing in glass houses

to throw stones. rWhile it may seem unkind to drag out an ancient proverb at this time,

yet it must bo remembered- that for months past sovoral residents f the BigIsland huvo been busily and' noiscly demanding an investigation of tho terri-

torial government and linvo at tho same timo been just as busily engagedin trying to cover up tho scnndal in 'their own official family.

When II. Gooding Field mndo Ills investigation which sent Rufus Lymanto luxurious imprisonment, ho said 111, his report that all was not well withtho bookB.of tho county nnd tlin,t thoy fhould bo thoroughly examined, par-

ticularly ithoso' of the auditor's offlco. le gavo his reasons for jvritlng as

ho did. 'In reply to the Hilo board of fnido's request for an audit of thohooks, tiie' supervisors in office at- - tl" ,t'mei replied that thoy had foundField's report to bo "unroliablo and misleading and not worthy of tho leastcredit," nnd further assumed tho responsibility for Maguiro's ndministrationby Btnting.thnt "we found tho balance as shown in tho accounts of thoauditor's 'books to bo correct and that nil transfers mado by tho auditor weroduly authorized by tho board of supervisors."

Therefore .when Mr. Evan da Silvs, junkets o Hawaii to rohash the old

story of tho salo of tho postofllco site, which was fully and satisfactorilyexplained to Secretary Fisher, ho should seizo tho opportunity to put his own

officlnl houso in order with what speed ho mny. Until his Augean task iscompleted references to tho "Shame of Maui" nnd tho "Shame of Oahu"will come with poor graco from tho lips of "Big Islanders."

:

LOCAL LEGISLATORS OUTCLASSED.

Whilo tho members of tho present legislature seem to havo 6ntercd intoa race as to who will bo ablo to proffer tho most bills for consideration,- - thoycan not help but bo hopelessly outclassed by California. During tho presentsession of the legislaturo of tho Goldon State four, thousand bills havo beonintroduced. Of theso probably threo thousand nine hundred nnd fifty areworthless, representing only tho spoiling of a number of sheets of n fair gradoof paper. Tho remaining fifty good 'UilbTSvlll probably bo lost in tho shufflo.California appears to bo carrying to .a.' logical conclusion tho reasoning whichseems to prevail with tbo territorial legislators that quantity and not qualitycounts in presont day legislation.

.......

NO REDUCTION 'OF'' CABLE TOLLS.., nl

According to tbo annual report ofutijo Mackay Companies which has justbeon published, thero is no prospect of .that cable company reducipg its .T&tes

becauso of tho ontranco of. wiroless telegraph companies into tho Pncifio field.In fact tho report refuses' to consider tlio wireless companios as competitorsto bo feared, and states that tho business, of tho Mackay Companies has notonly beon unaffected by tho wireless systems, but has increased during thopast year.

iRefering to tho matter of rates, tho report says:

Theso are not the days for roduetions in rates. Prices and costof operation nro going up instead qfdown. Even tlio United StatesGovernment, which owns tho tolegrapi lines in the Philippine Islands,raised tbo telegraph rates ovor thirty-fiv- e per cont on tho average, on

February 1, 1013. Tho Commercial Cablo Company will refuso to cutrates whero it is apparent that tho Wusiness under such cut rato willbo conducted nt a loss. Its policy in this respect has beon fully justi-

fied thus far, in that its business nnd profit show no diminution buthavo actually increased duriug tho year.

As to wireless telegraph competition, tho report states:Your trustees havo bad no cnuso to change their views concern-

ing competition from wireless telegraphy. During tho past year trialsvoro mado of wiroless transmission and tho results prove that thismode of transmission is fnr inferior to that of cablo transmission,

Tho Marconi Wireless Company approached The Commercial Cablo-Post-

Telegraph Companies with a "viow of making a contract bywhich tho latter wero to bo mado tho collocting agencies of tho formerfor Transatlantic messages. Such an nrrangoment would, of courso,

havo been distinctly disadvantageous to Tho Commercial Cablo andPostal Telegraph Companies and tbo'so companies consequently do- -

clined tho proposition. Tho Marconi-Compan- y thereupon mado suck

an nrrangement with tho Western Union Company.

Notwithstanding its allusion to high,, prices and increased cost of operation,tho report presents a flattering financial statement in tho following para-

graphs:Tho Mackay Companies has no debts. Its outstanding preferred

shares ($50,000,000) havo not been increased during tho past Bix yoars.Its outstanding common shares ($41,380,400) havo not been increasodduring tbo pnst eight years. No bonds, notes or stock have beon is-

sued nnd no debts incurred during tho year.Tho income of tho subordinate companies of The Mackay Com-

panies is greater than is required to pay the dividends of Tho MackayCompanies, but its policy is-t- o obtain from its subordinate companies,only enough monoy to meet thoso dividends.

Dividends paid during tho year amounted to $2,000,000 on the proforrod,nnd $2,009,0-- 0 on tho common shares.

4 :

THE PASSING HOUR.

Tho Oregon logielaturo has passed a bill .making it a misdemeanor for meatdoalera to substltuto goat meat for mutton. "(Oh, you kidsl"

A wealthy Toxan has been acquitted of tho chnrgo of shooting a fatherand son, and 1b now at Uborty to give his attention to tbo surviving memborsof tho family.

While tho probers nro nt work, why not Investigate nnd report who isresponsible for tho various bills and resolutions coming to tbo house throughKalaklela, Kuplhca, Kanlbo, Pocpoe, Knwowehl and those other foeund legislators I

Tho women of Bulgaria, taking ndvantago of the absence at tho front of

their llego. lords, nro conducting vigorous campaign for equal suffrage. 'When

the Bulgarian fighters return homo thoy will find that they have another waron thlr"lind.

If tlio houte jiiJleiary abiumlttw is preparing to present n report thatKuiikleit merely aitod ni an attorney Iu collecting hli banana claim graft nnd

tlmj hJL nctioiis ara not teniurouhle, the members of tho committee should takelUa H'it'te rml yr ll'o report made bylho llllo supervisor on tho ehargea

1 fJJMl&rJW 1 tul MnKulrv. 0j report It on file, It cauuot beI'Jwmw, riaiMllaut duvilejuHcnU my show It to Iw,

"T-- ""wmt'JWwnsa

STiT CAMPAIGN

AT ELEVENTH

111!

Will Take Up rFight toPreseWe Tariff

on Sugar.

Aroused at last to tho importance ofdoing something toward a. campaign ofpublicity and. action In behalf of pro-

tection to tho sugar industry of thisTerritory it is probublo that a jointmeeting of tho Chamber of commerceand tho merchants'- - ussociatloa willbo held tomorrow afternoon to appoint. coinmlttio to coopernto with formerGovernor Gcorgo R. Carter in tho effortto co'nvlnco tho people of tho UnitedStates, and especially the members ofcongress, that there Is no necosslty fora reduction in sugar tariff.

Carter sounded tho key-

note of this enmpnign boforo the spe-

cial meeting of tho trustees of tho mer-

chants' association yesterday when hostated that duriug tho pnst decade thuprico of sugar to tho consumer has prac-tically remained tho samo, while ailother staples havo incroased in price.

This tact accentuated in tho rightway should have great weight with tholawmakers nt Washington, for it is pro-

posed to reduce tho "tariff ou sugar sole-

ly to make it cheaper to tho consumer.Hut by reducing tlj) tariff it would onlyadd to tho profits of tho sugar trustwhich controls tho refineries.

At tho nicotine vesterdav President

Acts

3539

backed by a committee of the tnerchants' association and tho chamber otcommerce, for nt kail tliltty dj, then,if necessary go to Washington and fol-low up tbo campaign.

Mr. Carter went Into considerable de-

tail In suggesting what might bo donehero nnd the rffectivenco of tlio workwhich might bo accomplished and

that everybody soya somothlngought to bo donis but want somebodyele to do it. Ho thought ho could boof more service- - hero nt this time,

Kvory congressman was now watch-ing his constituents and my campaignmado bore along proper lines would

tho host sugar men in thoirfight, especially in Colorado and Michi-gan.

"If I go to Washington rtow," con-tinued Mr. Cnttor, "I will go with thofeeling that I havo nil tho work to do,while the community sits still and,wnits. But if An activo campaign ofthirty days or mbrb hero, I will bo nbloto go with a feoling thnt I am backedup by a llvo community."

After considerable discussion a resol-ution introduced by Ed Towso nnd

by Mr. Sopcr, wns carried unani-mously placing tlio morchants' associa-tion on record in favor of Governor Car-ter's suggestions, nnd authorizing thopresident nnd secretary to arrange fornn immediato joint meeting with thochamber of commcrco to enrry out thoplans.

It is proposed to call an open mootingof nil members of the two organizationsfor tomorrow afternoon and get thingsstarted at onco.

GOVERNOR ISSUES PROCLAMA-

TION TO FILL HEWITT'SPLAOE.

Johnson of the merchants' association,!, Governor Frcar yesterday issued aopened tho session with congratulations proclamation calling a special electionupon having such a strong man as Mr. nto bo ,,c,d th first scnatoria, dis.Carter to go to Washington in conncc- -

tion with the sugar ta?lff campaign, fo' APrl1 21 "xt, to elect a suc-an- d

ho "called upon-Mr-. Carter to know ccssor to tho .late Senator Georgo O.

if ho would accept the' position. Howitt. E. A. Mott-Smit- secretary ofMr Carter said that ho was not anx- -

th Torritory ha8 aircaUy communlcat-iou- sto go to' Washington, but would

cd Wltu ih county clork of Hawaii tooflo so. if necessary, ns a matter cluty.He thought tho thing to do would bo prepare tho register of voters and ar-t- o

start a campaign in , Honolulu, range for the olection. Notices will atarouse public opinion, get tho people to onco bo Bent to a1 ole(.tlon inspectorsact and get behind tho man who goes ...,....

and maa to avoidin P,an8to Washington nnd back him up.Have Been Apathetic. ,

dc,aJ'- -

Tbo election will bo held within"The people hero havo been apathetic eightand have dono nothing as they ought days of the date of adjournment of thoto havo dono long ago," asserted Mr. legislnturo. It is figured that if it isCarter, "and .now they want me to go insisted that the oOlcial returns bo can-

to Washington and take tlio job of Jielp- - vassed the certificate of election coulding out. .Nobody has dono anything in not bo received hero until withfu threothis matter and there has been ty great working days of tlio timo of adjourn-lac- k

of energy, everybody thinking that nicnt. Meanwhile if it should como totho easiest way w-- s to get somebody a question of upholding of the Gov-ols- o

to do it. Though it is late to bo- - crnor's veto or upon tho confirmationgin tlio campaign, no fight is lost until of the recess appointments, tho presentjt is ended. It is too late for n cam- - minority could prove a powerful forco.paiga in the house, but a poll of tho Should ono Republican join the minor-sena- te

shows that it is evenly divided, ity it would make the houso evenlywith a fow dolibtful ones. "The cam- - divided, so a deadlock is not improb-paig- n

"should tend to strengthen theso able.men in their stand for a continued This is said to be ono of tho reasonsduty upon sugar." , a special election is being urged wi$h- -

Mr. Vartcr went on to snow mar, oumeiay. it is ostimaicu mat mo cp?cwhereas sugar has remained at 'tho "of Uio election will, bo about $lS0O. Ofsame price to the consumer for a do- - this amount $720 will go to tho soven-ead- o

or moro, it has increased in Yost ty-tw-o election, inspectors, who willto. the manufacturer. On tho other oacn bo paid $10 for that day's work,hand, tho cost of distribution has been Tt is understood that tlio Democratsmuch lower than for many other staples, 0f Hawaii will make a strong fight todue to tlio lack of many middlemen, mi the vacancy. Henry est, or isascAH grocers havo to carry sugar and do Hawaii, is mentioned ns one of the pos-n- ot

mnko a largo profit out of it, bo- - Biblo Democratic candidates. Eitherenuse it is a ono-pric- staple, whilo in Frank or Sam Woods, of Kohala, arocoffee or tea the consumer pays accord- - ulso possibilities to make tho raco foring to the brand, and oftontimes the the Democrats.cost to tho consumer is as much ns ten Antbne Fernandez, a staunch Repub-tim- e

tho cost of manufacture. As for lican, who ivas difoated for election Incoffee, it has nearly doubled in prico tie recent Democratic landslide,11 issinco it was placed on the freo list, ho Sj)0ken of ns a caudidnte. II, P. Beck-sai- d,

ley is another who has a strong fol- -

An exeollcnt suggestion by Mr. Car- - lowing, and it is between those two, ittor was that all tho business men in ;8 believed, choico rests as to whichtho city mention these arguments brief- - iu make the raco for tho Republicanly in their letters to friends or busi- - j,arty.noss associates on tho mainland and ho This is tho first timo in tho historyfelt suro that with 80,000 letters going 0f t)10 Territory that a senator hasout uvery month such n continuous cam- - i,ecil stricken at tho post of "Jluty. Thepaign would havo its effect. late Senator Trank Harvey died m tho

"I can go to Washington and talk mi,dlo of his torm. This resulted in amy arm ofT and cannot make as much Bpccinl election being called in thoimpression ns 6omo personal friend of third senatorial district in 1910, whoua senator whom ho has confidonco in g. Kalciopu was chosen to servo thucould make with a letter. Find tho unexpired two-yon- term. Kalciopuchannel which will bo most effectivo to BOught last year, but was

theso men," added Mr. Cartor. fcated.He again accentuated, tlio necessity oi Deat.h has thinned tho ranks of tho

doing things in a modorn way, which ho ,ouso 0f representatives threo times inasserted was to have a trained sharp- - tj, history of that body. Tbo latoshooter, or specialist, at work. Ho stat- - jjepresontativo Ewnliko was tho firstod that it was timo to start a cam- - to u;0- - tt0 was clectod from tho firstTp'nlgn with men outsido of the sugnr in- - representative district in Hawaii andilustry. on tho ground th.t arguments jiea in jg0offrom the morchants would bo moro of- - Tuo jato Archie Gilfillan, of thofoctiyo than from, the sugar men nlono. fourth district, was killed soon after

Necessity of Working. tho convening of tho legislaturo in"I don't want to say I won't go 1002. Gilfillan was in Philadelphia,

to Washington, for as a citizen horo I when ho mot his death. A specialthe necessity of working and tion resulted in tho return of W. W.

how it mav affect us all, and if I do Harris. Tho latter served during thonothing I will deserve any loss which sessions of 1903 and 190S.mny follow injury to tho sugnr business, Sonntor H. T. Moore died at Sanbut if I go and work hard, at least I Francisco in 1910, about ono year afterwill have a clear conscience, knowing I tho close of tho session of J909. A

have dono my best." thero was no special sossion a specialThen Mr. Cartor outlined tho work olection was not found necossary to

which should be dono in Honolulu, choso his successor.

The ORIGINAL and ONLY GENUINE.llks n Charm In

DIARRHOEA, oi.th only 8pcl(lc In

CHOLERA .ndDYSENTERY.

CALLS SPECIAL-ELECTI-

ON,

APRIL

DFJ.ColKs Browne's

Checks and arrests

FEVER, CROUP, AGUE.

The Beit Remedy known forCOUQHS, COLDS,

ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS.

The only Palliative In WBUBALOIA, OOUT, RHBUMAYIoM.tMbiitlti HAdlr&l TMtimoor Kcoecnuauiw ovttt..u i. n..,i. ,- - .ii rv.mi.t I Kola Uinufioturrrt.

rS ta uZ&& 'till. :i. 4e. I J T. PiVro.r. U4, Uoden, sx.

Iiil IIA'.'Y i'

lUtsmt Advt.

Page 5: ir - University of Hawaiinear future. scoHEiFpIuiis ' L Ovor a hundred personsj the great majority of whom were Orientals, crowded the corridor nt tho city hall, last night, to tuko

HAWAIIAN tfAXtrrrfi. Tl'RSftW, MAUCH II. 1013 -SE- MI-WUKKLY 6WBSflBWWi !WWWWBWntfflWPJHWKflHuWWSHWWHBWRT! W&WQ

POPE PIUS X DYING, IS REPORT;

MASS CELEBRATED AT BEDSIDE

Speculations As to Noxt

Wearer of Fisherman's.fill- v

Ring Rife..IT

' trl I w

(D Federal Wlreleta Telftriph.)ROME, March D. (Spcclf.to The

Advertiser)- Popo Pius X is dying. Atnny moment tho Holy Father may passaway. That is tho best opinion heretoday. Muss was celebrated at thobedside of tho Pontiff today, accordingto ono cIobc to the, household of hisHoliness. Cardinal Blsletl, pupal ma-

jor, Indignantly denied this report say-

ing that tho mass was said us usual intho oratory attached to tuo i'o' csprivate apartments. It was admitted,however, that tho fovcr has increasedand that tho Pope's digestion is im-

paired.Tho sedentary life of tho ropo in tho

past ten years has told on Pius X. PopoPius is 78 ten years younger than thovenerable Mons CapacelatioArchbishop of Capua and the dean oftho sacred college.

Tho American cardinal, James Gib-

bons of Baltimore, is the samo ago astho Pope, but ho has bnd tho advant-age of a more bracing cl.matc andgreater variety of life. Pins missesoven the simple joys which woro hiswhilo patriarch of Venice. His petdovo died tho dny after it was

to Home. His sister '& .deathrecently was a great blow to him. Butthe chief causes of his increasing weakness have- been tho vexed questions ofVatican statecraft now calling for immediate decision. Today most of thocardinals now in Rome were at theVatican,

Cardinal Orgolia, dean of the sacredcallego spent hours in consultationwith Cardinal Del Vnl, papal secretaryof state and Cardinnl Piotro Rcspigli.Dr. Marchia Favn, tho Pope's chiefphysician, as ho left tho bedside of hisdistinguished pationt, looltcd verygrave.

Already they are talking of thedeatli of tho Pontiff as something whichcannot be lone in coming and specula'tions aro rife as to who may succeedthe peaceful Pius. The three namesup at present arc Do Vnl, Rampolln,and Fnlconio. Rampolla very nearlysucceeded Leo XIII when Pius waschosen to wear the fisherman's ring.Tho Austrian veto prevented his elec-tion. That bar has now been removedbut a moro insuperable ono has arisenin tho attitude of tho new papel elec-tors. Del Val also has tho disadvant-age of being a Spaniard and a papelsecretary who ins created several in-

fluential members of tho college. Hois only 47 years old, a comparativeyouth when bo many are sixty, seventyand eighty" years old. CardinalO'Connel of Boston is tho next young-ics- t

DignissimuB for tho whlto lawn ofPopo of Rome It is believed herothat tho clioico of tho American caidi-jial- s

with tljo choice, of tho sacred col-leg- o

should Pius X pass' away at tlio'end of his present grave illness.

--. .

(By Fedeinl Wirelesa Teleffraph.)VIENNA, March 9. (Special to The

Advertiser) Interesting information isforthc"in.ng ns to the wo tl.at isbeing accomplished by tho surgeons at-tached to tho contingents of tho RedCross Society and the Knights of Maltain tho Balkan war. From Austria therehavo gone to Bulgaria to Montenegroand to Servia, fifty surgeons who arein chargo of about two thousind beds.Ono of them, Doctor Fredlicks, statesaccording to tho Lancet, that ho hashad an opportunity of observing 070cases of severo wounds in Servian sol-diers and oppresses his surprise at therapidity of healing and tho aseptic con-ditions of oven tho most dangerous in-juries. Men shot through tho body bybullets which penetrated tho liver, tho3ungs, tho spleen and tho intestines re-covered in a fortnight or so withoutmuch evidence of ultimata harm.

Tho modern bullet is rendered asep-tic by tho enormous heat of the burn-ing powder.

Tho forces of tho Slavonic nationscarry in their' outfit a first aid pack-age arranged after tho Norwegian orRussian pattern and about ninety-fiv- e

per cent of the wounded woro foundto liavo made uso of this package.Tho severest wounds were thoso in-

flicted by tho bayonet and they alsohealed with moro difficulty than bulletwounds. Shrapnel and other projectilesfired from heavy guns did great dam-ag-

mostly killing tho victims. Thosanitary precautions in tho alliedarmies seem to bo excellent, but notso on tho Turkish sido.

In Montenegro wjiero there is sadlack of medical requisites for tho war,the Austrian Red Cross Society hasundertaken an immense amount ofwork. Aa a rulo tho wounded rocoversufficiently to bo able to return to hofront after a fortnight, but thosewounded in tho abdomen or skull aronot in this category.

t(Bj Federal Wlreleu Telecrarh.)

PARIS, Mnrch 0. (Special to TheAdvertiser) Mrs, W. K. Vandcrbilt,Otto It. Kahn, J. P. Morgan, James H.Hydo and Jamdk Stillman are some ofthe Americans who have joined Mon-Fieu- r

Gabriel Astruc in. building thotheater Champs Elysce, tho most beauti-ful playhouse in Paris.

These are all shareholders in tho en-terprise, as aro a good many other per-sons well known in England, Franceand Germany,

Tho theater, which will bo openedApril 2, will bo devotod to the wholerango of musical and dramatic art andclastic and modern 'operas.. The build-ing will contain two auditoriums, oneseating 2000 and tho other C00O people.

"LEVI P. MORTON. FORMER

RECOVERINa

mr Vieral WlreteM Tclerracii.tNEW YORK, March 0. (Special to

Tho Advertiser) Levi V. Morton,President of the United States,

rallied today and his physicians nowhopo that tho veteran stutosmani nndfinancial magnate, now eighty. nine,will defeat ngo and Illness and rocover.

rSa'mJtvMM

t'''pjf ), JL' KFbr5iKBVBBHHHHHf

BIS HOLINESS POPE PIUS. WHO

ccHc

NAME IB SELECTEDFOR NEW GOULD BABY '

(By Federal Wireless Telegraph.)NEW YORK, March 9. (8po-ei-

to The" Advertiser) AnnoDouplns Gould is the niimo fortho now Jay Gould baby, grand-daughter of Mrs. Herbert Vosbecause of her marriage to tho

artist.The heiress to tho wealth of

the Goulds was seen tonight fora 'few moments by tho repre-sentative of The Advertiser atJay Goulds splendid homo, 1082Fifth avenue. She is a livelyyoung lady for her ago andwhen born on Wednesday weigh-ed just eight and a half pounds.

s)i4:(By Federal Wireless Telegraph.)

LONDON, March 9, (Special to ThoAdvertiser) A popular pastime now-

adays with continental aviators wouldsem to be flying trips by night over '

DYING

in'"1- - ' "iramunu .iu ,, B.- -,Great Britain. .Daring pilots -

-- demonstration of tho administration ororrarice leaveGermany their moor- -

,lia scrom ln tuberculosis cases in thotho Channel.atings dusk, speed overnnd then circle over British cities and JIounl sinai Hospital. Several

Jlashinc their lichts to mvstifv .tionta woro inoculated by Doctor Fried- -

and alarm thVBeoiilo bolow them. Withtheiirst indications of dawn, tho advon- - ct,m,cnt surgeons and ten other wlt- -

' iicsscs. Theko United States expertsture comes end. iho.to an prowling wi MW offldally np(m the burn- -birdman heads for home, houses ma- - jnp qUC8ti0n whether Friedman

before tho sun is well up and servos rank with Lister and Koch nsleaves the officials of Great Britain to ono of tho great benefactors of human- -

report ins excursion to tlio war oillco inLondon,

Reports of these night visits have be-co-

so general and at tho same timoeo disconccrtinc that tho eovcrumenthas taken official action and passed auui prohibiting tlio passugo o aircralt to Tho Advertiser) Gen-ov- er

certain specified areas. eral and Mrs. Wlckorsham and party,Any craft violating this regulation consisting of Martha Bowers, Miss

will fired and otherwise warned Frances Noyes and Frederick Moore,away. Tho bill was introduced into are on their way to San Franciscothe house of commons by Colonel See- -

secretary ior war, nnu it passedthrough all its stages at one sittingwithout discussion.. I

lie bin autnorizes tlio proper olli- -

ters, after giving a prescribed warning,mi nru ui, any airuruii iiuringiag mislaw, nnd to Use nny nnd every means toprevent infractions.

The government is providing sky gunsta repel these aerial trespassers and itwin uio nave me services oi mo navaiaeroplanes and hydroplanes and tho fly.ing fleet flf tho army, which consists ofabout n dozen aeroplanes and threesmall airships.

, , 7i .. ,

,wtSfiTVJSU March

" cf" (Special,I

to tuo Advertiser;-- 10 nvoiu tno nun- -

ureus or curious persons ossomuiea- -t

the New ork avenue Presbyterianchureji, where it was expected no wouiuoccupy Abraham Lincoln's pew, Presl - j

dent Wilson worswpped today in tnoCentral Presbyterian church, Third andI streets. The President was accom-panied by his wife and daughter, Miss.Eleanor Wilson, They came i in autos.There was a sail congregation at- -

lenaance.

shall walked from the Shoroham to thoNow York avenue church for services,

-(By Federal Wlreleaa Teleirapb.)

ROME March to ThoAdvertiser) Manager Parrillo, defend-er of tlie inntrimonlal bond has ap-

pealed against tho recent decision ofthe Rota tribunal annulling tho mar-riage of Count Roni Castellano andAnna Gould, now the Duchess Da Telloyrand.

Two decisions already havo beenrendered by this court, the first againstCount Do Castellaue, who sought thoiinmillmcnt and the second reversingtho former decree and granting tho

Tho case will now como upfor the third time in the sitting of theRota in about two mouth;. No mat-ter what tho decision of this court maybo another appeal i possible, but onlyif cased on errors in the proccoduro oron new evidence.

Jh that event tluBfgnntura tribunal,tho ytipreme court of' the uitican mighteither reject the appeal or If it admitsthe claim decide that thorn mutt huunotlier hearing hpfpru tho Rotatribunal. " . J.

18 IN THE VATICAN.

DOUGLAS, Arizona, March 9,

nir

his

Missbo on

jt-y-,

in

Do

(By Associated Press Cable)There Is ovory indication here to- -

night that a pitched battle bo- -

tween Mexican federalists andrebels will be fought just acrosstho frontier hero tomorrow. ThoAmericans are fleeing from AguaPrieta which will probably bo thetheater of hostilities.

Both tho rebel and federal corn- -

manders havo been warned by thoUnited States authorities thatthoy must take precautions to pre--

vent buUeta flying into Douglasand killing American citizens ashaB been tho case In other battlesfor tho possession of tho town.

-(By Federal Wlre'eu Telexraphi)

NEW YORK, Mrch 9. (Special toTho Advertiser) In tho prcsonco ofDoctors Anderson arid Stimson of thoUnited States Mnrine Hospital Sorvico,

, , . 1 i J... ., ''

Inann in tlle prcicnco of tho two gov-- .

ity, or is jusU a cunning raker exploit'ing the lingering hopes of victims oftL- - white plague.tk ' ;

Ttr Ketli-rn- l WirelfM Telegraph.)WASHINGTON. March 5. (Special

where they wiU embark for Honolulunoxt week. Tnoy expect to devoteabout two weeks to seeing Honoluluand its surroundings. Mr. Wickershamis a personal friend of Governor Froar.

Tho Wickersham party aro on a tour0i tno world and expect to return toKTour VWIr not narlloi- - Hinn ton mnntliahence.- - Miss Bowers is the daughter0f the late Lloyd Bowers, solicitor gen- -orai 0f j,e united States, and MissNovea Is a Wasnlnrton soeletv rrlrV

JAPANESE IS VICTIMOF HIGHBINDER WAR.

SAIf FRANCISCO, March 0. (ByAssociated Press Cablo) War betweent) jlicilWn,cr toug 0 Chinatown hasbrokcn out ... Dtlrinr a battlewith rcVolvcrs between gunmen of thoT,!n Tr t n.i ,?, a hi.,t,i., ' Mizuhari. a Japanese, was killed.

, , . 'OFFICER IS INJURED

WHEN MOTORCYCLE SKIDS

BnrrrvPTWT.Ti TiAr(Tr"vrQ tr.T.i.9.Lioutcnant Vtiigon First 'rnfantry,

ag injuro, t0(ay w,cn hig ,,,aVlilrlrcl at n turn in tlm rnn.l in

way in from Honolulu. Tho in- -

jured officor was sent into Fort fabnftoron n train. His foot was hurt nnd thiswill bo subjected to an X-ra-y exam- -

ination.

SERENADER WINSSUIT FOR DAMAGES

NEWARK, New Jorsey, February 21,A jury in the circuit court has award-

ed Hugh Porter, a member of tho"Skimmcrton" party, which In July,1911, serenaded Walter J. Force and hisbrido at their homo In Livingston, nearhero, $3000 for injuries received whenForce fired both barrels of a shotguninto tho crowd.

Forco was indicted for tho shooting,after spending somo time in jail, whilePorter nnd Walter Lovenguth, who wasnlio shot, wero recovering. Subsequent-ly ha pleaded guilty nnd paid a fineof $1000. A number of tho "Skimmer-ton- "

party testified for Porter, wbiloiiovernl residents of Livingston corro-borated tho story told by'Foree thathli brido was nearly in a state of col-lapse through fright beforo ho fired theshots, ns tho crowd, It was feared,would .break Into the bouse.

SEfifANRHlS

iii mix wiintDDta

DRAKE TO omOIATB TOR TUB- -

LIO LANDS' OOMMITniB ON

JTJNBXT TO lttLO.

RESOLUTION.. .Resolved that Walter F. Drnko

bo appointed and commissionedsergeant-nt-arm- s for the purpose ofcarrying out tho orders of the

of the committeeon public lands nnd internal Im- -

movements, having under Invest!- -

cation tho mutters required of tho$conimlttoo of public land and In- -

tcrnal improvements under resol- -

ution No. OS, in their iuvestiga- -

tioii in llllo, Hawaii.

!'Tills resolution, introduced in tho

houso Saturday by Representative Evanda 'Silva, was adopted without a dis-

senting vote. Thereupon Walter F.Drake assumed the oflico of tho

to tho subcommltteo ofI tho public lands and internal improve-.meat- s'

committee of tho house, withpower to servo, subpoenns on witnessesfor nttendunco boioro tuo Hearings olthe at llllo and gener-ally carry out all ordors of this investi-gating body.

Tho consisting of E.da Silva, chairman; J. K. Lotn andArchio Robertson, accompanied by W.F. Drake and other nttaches, loft forllllo yesterday nftornoon nnd expect tobo back in time to report nt Tuesday'smeeting of tho house.

Whilo in 11116 tho willsimillion ccrtnin toitnesics, notablyCounty Engineer Soathworth, for infor-mation on tho Mahukona wharf affair.Uliilcr H. R. 24. tho isdirected genernlrj to investignto thoadministration of tho oflico Of tho sup-erintendent of public Jands, whilo un-der II, R.' 6S, tlio snmo body is to in-

vestigate nnd report on tho conveyanceof puhlle lands by tho Governor to thoIlilo Railroad nnd other railroads andcorporations. This resolution brings upagain tno oui, old Btory or too postor-fic- e

site in Ililo acquired by tho HiloRailroad Company nnd which was fullyexplained to tho full satisfaction ofthe Socrotnry of tho Intorior Fisher.

READY TO BUILD

WIRELESS PLANT

MATERIAL ARRIVES FOR BIGMASTS MARCONI COMPANY

WILL ERECT AT EOKO HEAD.

With, tho material on hnnd for two.of tho great wireloss masts nt KokoHeadj! tho American Marconi compnnyis rcrfdy to commence erecting tho groatplanti-whic- will form ono of tho linksin the. chain of great stations whichwill iruo erected lor tno proposed"around-tlie-worht- " wiroli-s- s system.

Horses arid teams have already beenbent out to Koko Head with materialsfor putting up a construction campwhich will be occupied nt once by thoconstruction workers, whilo tho mastmaterial will bo hauled out at onco.

C. II. Taylor, supervising onginoorof tho Marconi wireless company statodyesterday that tho company was justbeginning in earnest its actual con-struction on the Koko Head plant, tobo a part of tho three-hundre- d kilo-watt station which will bo duplicatedto transmit and receive at tho samotime.

"Wo nro just getting tho c;unp laidout," said Mr. Taylor. "Tho men willhave to live oiit thoro as it is too farto enmo into town ovory day afterwork Tho material for two of thomasts is already landed in Honolulu,nnd wo expect moro on an oarly Amer-ican Ifnwaiian froighter from' theConst. This will bo tho rocciving mate-rial.

"Wo hopo to bo ahlo to got thowholo plant finished in six months.There nppoars to bo no roason whywo should not hn,vo tho work complet-ed In that time, nnd if conditions nrofavorable), it may bo ready beforo then.

"Whilo tho pormnnent work Is underway wo will put up n tomporary wire-less plarii bo that wo can bo in constanttouch with our station at San Fran-cisco, for our own uso. This will notbo difficult.

"All our operating Btnff will bo quar-tered at tho Koko Head station. Wowill havo a great station nt Kahuku,which will bo built at tho samo timons tho Koko Head station, but tho Kn-huk- u

station will bo connected withKoko Head by a land tolograph lino.

"This Koko Head station will bo onoof tho most powerful In tho world, nndprobably when completed, tho mostpowerful over built."

McMANIGAL WRITES A BOOK.LOS ANGELES, March 1. Ortio

McMnnlgal is writing what ho calls tho"roal story of my life." lie touches,however, on his connection with ihodynamite conspiracy only.

"Besides caring for iny children,"said McManigal today, "I am anxiousto show union labor, In which I stillhavo a great interest, that our effortsto correct evils by violonco nro destructive to nil our nopes or Betteringexisting conditions. Violcnca of thosort in which I was engaged is

and cannot succcod. Iappreciate that this sounds strangefrom me. but I am sorlous. I thoughtI was doing rieht, as far ns T thoughtnt all, when I wrecked non-unio- n build-ings, but havo had n lot of time tothink thlncs over and um satisfied that

know hist where I stand. Union labormust win by education and not byviolence.

J. Jl. Washington, need clffhty-sove-

tho oldest prisoner evor mdwltted tot io federal prison nt Leavenworth.KnnnftD, has begun serving n sentenceof three, years on a charge" of violatingiho federal liquor laws in Texas,

if 0,1) BUT AROHEWITT'S DEATHITO PHEVEHT

iNljliili!

Rufus Lyman, former secretary lo thelie'euso commissioners of tho County ofHawaii, slgnfJIcnntly romnrkod n shorttimo after ,ho hid been sentoncod tothree years' Imprisonment Inst jonrt"They nro on tho right track and iftho lnestigatlon is 'continued thoy willgot tho others."

This is as near to n confession nsLyman has come. Since then ho hasboon only nominally n prisoner in enroof Sheriff Henry's guards on Hawaii,living "on tho fat of tho land" nndtreated rojiilly by Mnguiro nnd other"of his old associates.

Tho sensational dlsclo-ur- es

camo with tho roport Saturday tiurecall the claims mado by tho board ofsupervisors last August following thofiling of tho report of 11. Gooding Field,tho export nccountant. Mnuy membersot tnnt bonra wero dcfcntctl in tho No-vember election, but somo continue torepresent tho county ns members, Underunto ot August iu last tlio supervisorsattempted to como to tho aid of Maguiro by denouncing Fluid's roport nsialso and not luiscil on Mcts. Follow-ing is a copy of tho special dlsnatvlifrom Hilo published in Tim Advertiserof that ilato:

"HILO, August 10. Tn reply to thoboard of trade, which submitted II.Gooding Field's preliminary report onthe county flnnnces to tho supervisorswith n request that the county .ppro-priat- o

tho monoy needed foi ii thoroughnudit of tho county hooks tho super-visors, last Friday, adopted tho 'ollow-In- g

report mndo by its finance com-mittee:

" 'Wo, tho undersigned, to' whom wasreferred n communication from a o

of tho board of trndo of Ililorequesting tho auditing of tho countyoookb nt county expense, beg loavo toloport as follows:

" 'Alter cnrefully rcadinir tho ro- -

quest submitted by tho snid committeoof tho bonrd of trade and tho supple-mentary report of II. Gooding Fioldthereto nttached, wo called tho countyauditor to meet ua in conferenco andto bring with rim his books, nnd nlsocalled upon tho said committeo of thoboard of trndo to bo present nt thosamo contcrenc.

" 'At this mooting, which was holdon tho Sth dny of August, 1012, atcloven o'clock, wo carefully oxamincdtho roport abovo referred to, cheekingoff each item therein set forth andcompnring samo with tho correspondingitems ns given by tin auditor in hisbooks. After n thorough examinationof these itemB we found that, so faras thoy wero set forth in tho said ro-

port, they wero not mbHlun tinted by thoauditor's .accounts. It seemed quitoapparent to us that tho report madoby 11. Gooding Fiold was not basedupon tho county books.

" 'In this connection wo mjght saythat wo found tho balances .as.shownin the accounts of tho auditor 'a 'booksto bo cqrroct and that all transfers fromtho different accounts mndo by the 'It'll-- 1

ditor woro duly authorized by!the bonrdof supervisors.

" 'Having found tho said report tobe unreliable nnd misleading 'and notworthy of tho lonst crodit, 'wo fecithat nt tho prcsont timo tho county,which is now struggling along with lim-ited funds, can not seo its ivay clearto set nsldo any sum betweon $21500and MfiOO for tho purposo of havingn complcto nnd dotnilod audit mado of,

the county books." 'Wo doom it vmfortunnto that tho

board of trndo, although wo bellovo itto be acting in good faith in this mat-ter, should havo been misled by II.Gooding Fiold 's report. Wo nlso o

.thnt tho hoard of trndo's actionwas tho result of its taking it forgranted that the report was correctand that it was mado nftcr a vorv careful, full and complcto examination oftlio county dooicb.

" 'Unless tho bonrd of trade can produco absolutely roliablo proof of thonecessity of having tho county bookBaudited at this timo at such a largooxpondituro of public monoys ns sug-gested by II. Gooding Fiold, wo fcolthat wo can not nt present grant thorequest submitted through Its commit-too- ;

but should tho board of trndo ornny othor porson desiro to hnvo thobooks of tho county of Hawaii audited,ovory nssistanco nnd courtesy will beoxtendod to thorn. ' "

--- -,

TID3 HOMELY BABY'S PROSPECTS.Let no parent despair of n plain

child. Ucnuty, so far from being "skindcop," largely depends upon tlio pro-portion between tho different parts ottho faco, and this depends upon theirrato of growth. Coforo n boy's voicebreaks ho may havo a very defectivecliin, a serious blemish for our ideal ofmanly beauty. Dut that chin may bodestined to grow just when tho boy'sboard begins to grow, and may trans-form him. I saw tho other day an oldschool follow whom I could scarcelyrecognize, so vastly Improved was hoBinco ins young uoyliood toy tho acquisi-tion of that chin which nnatomists tellus Is a peculiarity (and thercforo abenutyl) of our spocles. Robert Southoywas doscribod by his nurso as a "groatugly boy" when ho was born, but hogrow to bo so nandsomo that Byronsnid he would bo nlmost content to la-ther Soiithoy's pootry if ho might havoIts author's head and shoulders. I can-not say what percentage of ugly chil-dren turn out handsomo later In life.Rut cortainly many do, partly hncnusoin earner jiio me various parts of tuofflco havo developed nt somewhat un-

equal rates, and partly because of thoinfluence of another fuctnf' of beautyIn which Southoy was" rich. Its

but familiar name is thosoul. Strand MngartTic,

..'frt. -' Wlll'nm Rnriics, rlglity-nln- o yearsold. ono of tho nrgnnlzars at tho

party in New York mid formi'iiy year nctlvo in National politi-cal affairs, died nt Nntuiickul, Miiisu-chuictt-

of pneumonia, A widow, two-- in, WHIIain IlnriiGi, .lr., the NowYork polltlenl leader) -- nnd Thurlowweix llarnrtf, of Nnw York, survlvohim.

SHOCK TO

SOW(From Monday Advcttlscr.)

1IIIIBIIHBHIIRIBIIB BB Tho sonate will probably past Ha a resolution of condolonco this BB morning ln memory of tho lato BB Senator acorgo a. Hewitt, ana na then adjourn. Until tho widow BB arrives tomorrow morning from BB Hawaii, no arrangements will bo BB mado for tho funoral. A wlro- - BB less messago was Bont to Bona- - BB tor Motzger, who went to Hilo BB Saturday, and also to Mrs. How-- BB itt, notifying thorn of tho death BB of Sonator Howltt and Senator flB Motzgerwill mftko nrrangomenta B

to bring Mrs. Hewitt horo. ThoB body lies at tho Honry WllliamaB Undertaking Parlors. Havinga bocn a Mason tho Masonic prep-

arationsB aro ln chargo of Dr. O.B B. Cooper and J. D, Tncker,B while President Knudsou andB Senator Chllllngworth aro act-

ingB on behalf of tho senateBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB

Sonator Georgo O. Howitt of Wnlo-hln- u,

Kau district, Hawaii, diod attwenty minutes past two o'clock

morning in tho Quoon's Hos-

pital, whero ho had boon under treatment for three days. Tho nowa of hisdeath was n shock to his follow mem-

bers in tho legislature, although thoyknew tho votoran legislator had beenin poor health ovor sinco ho nrrlvolhero.

Tho death of tho Ilywait sonatorcreates n now lineup of party forces,tho Republicans) having seven, thoDemocrats bIx, with a Homo Rulor mak-ing up tho fourteen remaining sena-tors. .

As n vacancy caused by tho doath ofn sonator is not nppointivo, tho Gov-

ernor can not fill tho placo. Tho oflicomust bo flllod by nnd assixty days' notlco must bo givon bofdromi election can bo hold, tho lcgislatlvosossion will bo ovor boforo tho day ofelection cornea around.

Was Plantation Manager.In tho days of Clnus 8prockoIs, Mr.

Hewitt was gonoral manager lot thoSprcckols augnr plnrttation Interestson Hawaii in tuo district oi ii.au, meroembracing tho three separate propertiesknown as tho Nnnlolni, Ilonouapo andthu Illli'n plantations, lloforo thooverthrow of tho monarchy ho was condidcrod ono of the .nosl cnpablo man-jigor- a

in tho Island Kingdom. Ji'or nlmost tlio entire time ci ins mo in moIslands ho resided nt Wnlolur.u, Ha-

waii, in a comfortable homo, almost thomost pretentious in that part oil thogroup.

Georgo C. Howltt was born in Carth-ago, Now York, sixty-fiv- o years ago,nnd in early lifo lenrnod tho engineer-ing and machinist business. .Havingncqulrcd u thorough Ituowlodg-- j of theobrunches, hn wus lor niiio ye.'irs d

ns chief engineer of steamshipson tho Great Lakes and tho Atlantic)Ocean, making nlso a couple of tripson the Missiiippl rivor. In 1S70 hocamo to tho Pacific Coast anil was forthree years employed in tho ssmo capa-city on coasting steamers.

Ills first visit to tho Hawaiian islandswas iu 1870, when ho bocaino 'onginoorof I'rineovillo plantation, u pluco hofilled for three yours and was thou

iu tho much moro imnortuiit nndresponsible position of chiof oiigincrof tho Hutchinson plantation,

IIo performed his duties with his ac-

customed zeal and was promoted to thoovcrscership. liy strict attention tothe interests of tho company ho se-

cured thu appreciative confidence ofhis employers, and following tho resig-nation of Hugh Center, In order to tukochargo of Hprcckolsvillo plantation, '

Mr, Howitt was offdrod nnd accoptedthe moro lucrative position of chiefmanager of Naalehu, Ilonouapo andHilcu plantations.

Senator Howitt"servod,in tho Unionnrmy during tho War of tho Rebellionmid was prcsont at a numbor nf .Yitrtflus,IIo was a bugler in tho Twentieth Reg-iment of Cavalry, Now York Volun-teers, and for tho ontiro term of hissorvico was a mombor of tho hnnd. Howas nt tho battle of Petersburg, mid iutho campaign boforo Richmoud. H--

enlistod, in August, 1603, and wiib (dis-charged In August, ISO'S. Ho was uaccomplished musician anil his profic-iency added greatly to tho Hospitalityof his homo whoro ho had the happyfaculty of placing his guests at theirease. IIo wub a Mason and a memberof Lodge, I- and A. M.

Admitted to tho Bar.In Jnnuary, 3004. ho wlis odmittod

to tho practice of law in tho lowercourts. On April 23, 1000, ho was ap-pointed to solicit subscriptions for tho6an Francisco enrthquako fund in hisdistrict.

In September, 1001, the Ropublicausof Hawaii nominated him for tho son-ut- o

of tho Territory, ho at tho timo be-ing u member of the Republican terri-torial central commlttqc. He left thomanagement of the Hutchinson planta-tion in 1003, uftcr which ho dovotcdhimself to politics and became (i sena-tor. In 1802 ho married Miss EmmaMartin of Kau.

Whon Senator Howltt enmo to Hon-olulu to attend tho present session oftho legislature ho wns not In goodhealth. Ho stuck to his post and onlywhoii his physical strength failed, didho go o tho hospital.

- -- .,..A jury nt Soittlo, Washington, has

awarded 22,20O to Mrs, Anna L. Val-entino of Chicago bocouso tiio door ofn Northorn Pacific car was nlnmmcd ohher little finger, compelling amputationnt tho mlddlo joint.

QUICK RESULTS,An ordinary attack of diarrhoea may

bo cured by a singlo Uoso of Chambur-lai-Colic, Cholera, und Diarrhoea

Rwiiody, Only in the most sovoro anewis a naifoml or third iloso required. TryIt, For sain by Ilorison, Biulth & Co.,Ltd., agents far Hawaii, Advertisement.

3

Page 6: ir - University of Hawaiinear future. scoHEiFpIuiis ' L Ovor a hundred personsj the great majority of whom were Orientals, crowded the corridor nt tho city hall, last night, to tuko

pife--

6nif ' " r "fffmiTiT'

I 171

V-- ..

At Lastl

Eat Tour Cake, and Hart It Too.

The Harp I Now Broken.

Editing Under Tiro.

Boqncl to a Shark Host.

Well, the fart tlmt thcro has been crafting going on in Ililo, which everynewspaper office in the Territory has known for at lonst two years nnd whichpractically every paper has broadly hinted at, is at last officially announced.Why it was not announced long ago is tho wonder. It Is now nearly twoyears since The Advertiser, acting at tho request of a number of tho Ililoboard of trade members, outlined to tho Governor exactly the .situation thosenate report outlined yesterday. Tho Hilo Tribuuo, which has long beendemanding an accounting of tho county finances and hinting ns broadly astho libel laws would permit at tho stench in tho county offices, through thopersonal work of its editor brought tho matter to tho attention of whatsupcrvivors and officials he could trust. Tho executive committco of tho Ililoboard of trado knew many of tho facts. Even tho kindorgnrtcn childron inHilo knew that thcro was something wrong. Yet, it has taken months nndmonths and months to get those in a position of authority to do even tholittle that was necessary to lay bnro tho wholo rotten condition.

Tho liyitnnder does not want to bo an all around knocker, but it would'like to ask what hind of auditing has been dono by tho ones tho Territoryhas been sending so rcgulnrly to Hilo for tho past six, or sovon yearst Howdocs it come that, oven after tho straight tip has gono out that thcro isanything crooked about tho books, a discrepancy in balanco of $6000 at theend of the last year was overlooked?

The officials jif tho Territory havo been so timid about following upthoinformation given thorn, so afraid that they might do something out of thoordinary or bo rudo iir their work, that there is no assuranco oven yet thatany completo and proper investigation will bo mado of Hawaii County affairs.Noto tho leniency with which tho one convicted embezzler of Hilo is beingtreated and tho utter indilTcrcnco of tho authorities to tho charges in thatconnection mado by Tho Advertiser and others. Probably Maguiro has half adozen technical defenses to allow him to escapo punishment. ' Clark of tholocal jKlico court shortago simply laughed at tho courts, it mny bo remem-bered, that thcro nro others.

However, it is n good thing that tho exposure has come, oven if the of-

ficial delay has cost tho taxpayers of Hawaii some thirty , thousand dollarsthat are known of and how much olso not known of remains to bo seen.Now that tho thing has started wo will continue to hopo that tho territorialofficials will go through with tho wholo mess, no matter who may ho involved.

w ,5

A man. named George II. Hadloy, of South Norwalk, Connecticut, has in-

vented a machino by which you may cat your enko and hnvo it too. Eatingand drinking of tho best aro taken from tho list of luxuries and placod amongtho commonplaces by his invention, which is a gastrograph which reproduceson phonographic records nil tho gastronomicnl sensations nnd results, whichcan bo reproduced at will, by simply affixing tho gastronomicnl transmitterto tho palate, and starting tho Tccord. Tho gastrogrnph, according to tho in-

ventor, will reproduce tho most ample banquet from soup to nuts on a singlerecord, and tho mcnl can bo eaten a thousand times over.

Tho data of tho gastrograph have not been mado public as yet, but Mr.Hadly states that tho sensation recorder is affixed to tho palato nnd an electricwire transmits all the sensations to tho dolicnto cylinder on which tho sameis recorded, tho same as on a phonograph. A thousand records can bo madofrom one. Tho inventor is yet at sea as to whether tho effects on tho humnnsystem will 4jo tho same as tho primitive and original way of eating nnd drink-ing but ho is inclined to think thcro will bo little difference.

0 Jt S & StThere is one thing 'about tho Twenty-fift- h Infantry that disappoints mo.

In one respect that famous regiment has fullcn down. For years wo hnvolicon hearing about their Captain Stcuncnbcrg nnd what ho has dono nationally and internationally; ho was touted along in advnnco of tho arrival oftho regiment. "With a poet's pipe in his fist ho was pictured to us as marchig across Knnsns and heading for Leilchua, and wo hnvo not had even npeep from the pipe. With rhymes runniug out of his penpoint, wo have boonled to believe that ho would fling out 6omo onipiro-shnkin- jinglo nt everycurvo in the road. Hut not a couplet oven has ho breathed upon tho balmyair, so far ns I have heard. Decidedly, Steunenbcrg has failed to llvo up to'jus auvanco notices.

When I chncklcd my way through tho Cats of Leavenworth, I enjoyedin advance what I supposed ho would knock off about tho Dust of SchofloldBarracks; I imagined the literary captain pulling up to his packing box deskat tho big post and putting tho Dogs of Snelling to shame with n, chorusabout tho Fruit Flics of Oahu and paraphrasing his famous ditty concerningHerman soldiers with somo fow lines of eulogy for tho Hawaiian NationalOuard. Really, I think Steunenbcrg should bo reprimanded for tho oppor-tonitic- s

ho has overlooked. Take our legislature as a topic, for instanco,or our worthy mayor. What grcator subjects could any poot wantl

Glddap, Pegasus!P W V w w

Somo fow weeks ago Tho Advertiser published a very graphic story of ashark hunt in Pearl Harbor, illustrating tho tnlo with sufficient photographsto prove that every fish story is not necessarily untrue. In connection withthat publleatipn I have just received n letter from one man who participatedin the adventure, his letter indicating that some men will lio about fish,anyhow, no matter how carefully a nowspapor tells tho truth. Tho writerof tho letter loft Honolulu on tho first boat sailing for Vancouver nftcr hisshark hunt and a couplo of days out becamo ono of the sovernl about thogreen table in tho smoking room. Ono of tho other players, in tho courseof conversation, fished a copy of Tho Advertiser out of his pockot, opened itat tho page containing tho shark pictures my friend had taken and proccododto tell tho room Hint ho had not only written tho story for the pnper but hadbeen on tho expedition and had himself harpooned tho largest of tho twosharks taken. My friend says ho was startled for tho moment by tho claimsof tho man, but Jet him talk on,

"Hero I am just slamming tho harpoon into the sixteen-foo- t shark,"he said, pointing lo ono of tho launch pictures, with Duko Knhanamoku pois-ing the iron. "I am sorry that I turned my face nwny just when that wasBnapped. Hut I planted that harpoon in the right place. And say, that fishfonght us for nn hour. Twlco our launch nearly went over nnd onco thoshark jumped halfway into tho boat after me. If I hadn't kicked him righton the nose he would havo got ono of tho Indies sure," nnd bo on. After:that ho told about his ehnrk hunt every day, and every day my friend satthere and listened to it.

"You see," explained my friend, "I couldn't very woll bnwl him out,because ho was tho poorest poker player on the ship and had lota of monoy.1 couldn't afford to drive away a good losor Hko him,"

. kl v Jl OlMy hat U off to the editor of the Mexican Herald, tho American news-pipe- r

of the City of Mexico, whoo office was shelled and fought ovor in therecent street lighting, but who, In spite of everything, got out hU paper everyday nnd kept In a cheerful, not to wiy a fnretloii, frame of mind while Inthe performance. The Imuo of that peper of February 13 li juit received.It htm only four pages, one half the uiunl number. On tho first page aloneappears the news of the day and that Meern the terrific struggle tint wni

olni: on at the Hair. The otlter three pngM are ebUfly devoted to advertls.g. Kvldtncea are net lacking that It wai hard work to "get out" even

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, TUESDAY. MAHCH II, 1913 -SBK- H-WEEKLY.

WWHHMTillIHIIimi.lHUI....M IIIIUIIIIII WfWWHWWMIipW

Small Talks

rnaaqm

REPRESENTATIVE TAVAREB. I have' bought a safety raror.W. II. 0, CAMPBELL. This Ililo disclosure la no news to us. We have

been talking about it for two years.ROBERT M. METHEUN. No wonder tho Hilo supervisors didn't htro

the necFKsnry funds to pay for nn audit.BARNEY JOY. Mo and Hoarct will get tho Ghineso goat today. When

tho old Saints get together thcro is nothing can touch ua.II. W. BHECKONB. As a bit of good English, the President 's Inaugural

address was lino. Hut how many average Americans know yet what ho wastalking about! '

SENATOR PEKIIALLOW. It (corns Clork Welch of tho house commit-tee on agriculture, and so forth, was in charge of our junket to tho Collegeof Hawaii. I had to apologize,

JOHN K. NOTLEY. Had I boon as wiso as Honry Chllllngwortb, Iwould not havo umpired yesterday's gamo between tho and theTwenty-fift- Infantry. Never again!

8ELVA. Life is ono long drawn-ou- t joy, onco ono is out ofthe editorial chnir. My troubles now will bo to bco to It that tho oxpectodimmigrants nro safely admitted into this frco country.

SERGEANT-MAJO- R RIOIIEBON. Tho Twenty-fift- put Leilchua on themap' yesterday. Sports aro picking up at tho big post and after this nothingwill bo nblo to como within touching distnnco of Schofiold Barracks.

D. L. W1THINQTON. That ba'soball gamo betweon tho Twenty-fift- h

Infantry and the was ono which kept you upon your toes all,tho time nnd was worth $25 a scat to see. It was a great game of ball.

LORRIN ANDREWS. Every citizon of Honolulu who has tho future oftho city at heart should turn out to and attend tho mass meeting at AalaPark AVc'dncsday ovonlng on tho mnttcr of tho revision of tho city charter.

( j REPRESENTATIVE CONEY. When tho senate got thq. news that Ihad made the longest speech of my life tho senators immodiatoly adoptedmy II. II, H. It. 7 requesting congress to let us hnndlo tho liquor situation heroentirely. .

JOHN M. MARTIN. If those legislators of ours would only como over totho jail with me somo Sunday and seo tho ilno young mon doing time therobeennso of liquor thoy would be ashamed of tho way thoy voted on that reso-

lution to congress over tho prohibition bill.LIEUTENANT SAUNDERS. I have tho greatest aggregation of players

of the national, game. Yesterday they began to show their real form sincearriving in tho Islands and nftcr this I expect tho Twenty-fift- h will bo in aposition to meet nil comers nnd laugh nt thorn,

GEORGE LYOURQUS. Prince Constnntino is proving himself the great-

est genornl tho Balkan War has produced. At Salonika and Janina ho waspitted ngainst both Gorman nnd Austrinn officers, advising the Turkish gen-

erals, nnd ho outmnncuvcrcd nnd outfought them all.SPEAKER HOLSTEIN. While visiting Hilo wo mny hold an extraor-

dinary session of tho .liouso in tho southern metropolis. Tho trip itself willbo a record breaker nnd why not break anothor and givo tho second city thohonor of having tho legislature hold an official session?

F. B. M'STOOKER. Why doesn't Tho Advertiser, in connection withthis application of tho Itnpid Transit for n .charter renewal and oxtonsioa,advocate a policy of restricting profits to five por cent on tho capital

on nil corporations receiving a franchiso which creates a monopoly!Investors nro scrambling for five per cent bonds.

OERRIT P. WELDER. That Silvcstri has found a parasito to combat theMediterranean fly, is evidence .of tho sticktuitiveness of W, M. Giffnrd. Mr.

Giffnrd's intense interest in horticulture nnd the development of tho Hawaiianfruit industry has been of great valuo to .Hawaii and ho is entitlod to far moro

credit than ho will probably receive. If this parasito is tho right ono it will

mean millions in money to tho Territory.

tho four-pag- e number. But tho editor mnnaged to inject some spico thatsuggests that ho docs not beliovo in having n dull paper ovon though it bo

issued during n period when mirth musfWiavo been rare. So ho okod out hisreading pago with "Sbrnpnol from tho Bombardment," of which tho followingaro a fow samples: i ,

Say what you like tho last two days havo boon hard on siestas.Anothor day with no change in tho situation or your pocket. ,

Blessed nro tho builders who invented brick pavpments. for roof-

ing purposes."

All shot to pieces this morning's Herald without any linotypo,operators.'

Tho streets that aro being swept by tho machino guns nro notgetting dirty.

Humor has it that somo of tho regular patrons of Belem havo,changed their boarding house.

If thcro is anything funny about this situation it is tho newB-pap-

cold foot.x

The truth is, Percy, that Tuesday .was no day for flippancy noridle jest, but you know what familinrity does.

Mr. Shanklin has moved tho consulate n couplo of 'times in Bhort

order," hilt Tuesday morning ho broko tho record ns well as tho door.With banks and business closed for four days a good many people

who enn rido in automobiles hnvo no monoy with which to pay forbread, (

Regarding tho situation nothing can bo added to tho statementthat children nro selling bouquots plucked unmolested from tho Ala-

meda flower beds.Shnkespcaro must havo Icon in Moxico in tho early days whon ho

wrote: "I would givo all my faino for a pot of alo and safety."If avnilnblc Herald men had struck for anything less than twenty

, hours a day for tho last four days thero wouldn't havo been any

Heralds.And just to think that a fow months, or a year ago was itt,wo

wcro worrying about bucIi an insignificant thing as whether tho sonatowould pubs tho hundred million loan bill.It is conccivablo that theso bits of plonsantry aided members of tho for-

eign colony to bear up undqr a trying ordeal nnd minimize its perils. Perhaps

tho "shrnpnol" wcro written for that purpose

it was in a Honolulu public school tho othor day that tho teacher d

tho idea of having tho pupils tnko turns in singing a verso of somosong for tho general edification of tho class. She called for voluntoors amitho first one to shoot up a hand was a diminutive Russian lasslo, whoso rosi-donc- o

in tho Territory has been of less than a year. Tho girl was invited to

tho front nnd mounting tho platform piped this! ,

"O geo, I know;"O geo, Iknow;"For das Bibbel told mo so." ,

Which is about as close to tho words as tho average haola g'o'ts whor '

sings "Aloha Oe,"J & J J

Pau" Is a Good Word

Prince Knlnnlnnaolo, the Hawaiian Delegate to Congress, line a word in

his vocabulary that ought to bo placod within tho reach of all, rich nnd poor

alike, says tho Washington correspondent of tho Detroit Free Press. For its

size, it is'nbout as expressive n word as one. would want. Hawallnnts regard

it ns ono of their very best words.1'au. That is the word, pronounced ns la spoiled 'po."It means everything is off that there's nothing moro doing.If'n man plays you n mean trick nnd you find it out, you walk up to him

and map your fingers at him, and remark, simply!"Pun." Jutt thut nnd nothing more, nnd he knows you nro dono with him.Let in mppoio that you buy n beautiful woman coitly gifts and take her

to tho theaters all one winter, Intending to marry, her when you get aroundto It, and t,hon tome night bo up nnd goes to a dance with a young lwiber-ilaihc- r

who innkeu puns, nnd jokci with him about what a funny way youwalk. Instead of (uniting to explain that everything is off between you, allyou would hnvo to say would bet

"Pau."Then turn on your heel and MnlU away,Kilanlinagle wbuMh'I trdd It for litlf a down of tut gentr! run of

JIngllOi worJ,

MfmaMM;

SEMITE ACCEPTS

LO T

i.iuwmi mwiiiihi.ii

TON

IIOOBB ALSO WILL1NO AND TRIPMAY BE MADE SATURDAY

PROHIBITION.

(From Sunday Advertiser)Members of tho senate aro a unit ou

tho question of accepting the genorousInvitation of tho people of Hilo to vIbIIthat thriving town. Though the regularmorning of that body had beencompleted when tho invitation camefrom Hilo yesterday-

-

President Knud-se- n

reassembled the lawmakers, took a.

vote and declared that tho kind prof-fer had been accepted.

Saturday March 15 next, was tenta-tively sclectca ns tho date of leavingHonolulu for tho Big Island, thoughthis will not bo definitely decidod untilafter a conference with a committo fromtho lower houso.

This committee was appolntod bySpeaker Holstela in tho npuso yestor-da- y

morning following acceptance oftho invitation by tho members. Thocommittco consists of RepresentativesWatkiusWainbolo and Irwin.

A Bpccial messenger brought tho in-vitations to tho logiBlaturo yesterdaymorning. Tho offer carao through II.B. Elliott, president of tho Hilo boardof trade.

Resolution.Thoso who had expected a fight over

tho adoption of tho concurrent resolu-tion asking congress not to interforowith prohibition legislation on the li-

quor question in Hawaii were disap-pointed. Senator Motzger (not Wirtz)who introduced tun resolution in thosenate, asked that it be placed on tholauio to givq tno upper nouse an op-portunity to pass on a similar mousuropasseu by tuo nouso. Tins latter reso-lution was adoptetl without any oratoryand without n singlo vote in opposition.it will now bo forwarded to Washiag-ton- .

This was followed bv adopting Metz- -

gcr's concurrent resolution asking congress tor a wharf on tuo south andwest side of tho Island of Hawaii.

These problems, which threatenedtrouble tho previous day, had scarcelybeen settled whin Sonator Judd, of thoholdover ways and means committee,sent in his reports. Tho bulky documentshowing tho tiemendous work tho committee had dono in investigating thounanciai niinirs oi tuo diucrcnt coun-tries in tho Territory during tho pasttwo years were scarcely considored incomparison with tho supplemental re- -.port containing tho sensational disclosures oi tuo auairs or Auditor Ma-guiro of Hilo. Theso reports were unani-mously adopted.

Mnud Dawson, on behalf of herselfnnd sister, Eva Dawson, filod a peti-tion through Senator Coko asking fornn investigation of 'tho conditions un-der which thoy oro not reemployedas teachers and seeking compensationfor being prevented from securing em-

ployment nt thoir profession this' year.Tho petition charges Principal Edgar

Wood with displaying gront rudenesstoward Maud Dawson during'tbo springterm of 1912 and states that ho mani-fested a desire to make horposition inthe school unpleasant and unbearabloand to minimize the practical results ofher teaching. She asks tho sonato toarrange for an iuquiry at which shocan plac tho facts boforo 'that bodyfor final action on her petition for re-compense.

Tho petition will probably bo takenup tomorrow.

Three house bills woro brought up forsecond reading and reforence, two housobills went through third roading andfinal action was nlso taken on S. B. 23,providing for tho printing of n diction-ary of the Hawaiian languuge. Thismeasure now goes to the house. Short-ly nftcr cloven o'clock yesterday morn-ing ndjournm nt was taken until teno'clock tomorrow morning.

REPRESENTATIVES IK

WRANGLE ON BILLS

SEVERAL PASS, SOME TABLEDAND OTHERS DEFERRED-BU- SY

DAY FOR ALL.

wwiimmw

work

A big day's work, tho biggest sincetho present session began, was tho rosuit of yesterday's meeting of thohouse of representatives. Like busybees tho legislators struggled through,bettering somo laws and spoiling somogood ones, from ten In tho morning un-

til a little after noon and again fromone in tho afternoon until long pastthree o'clock,

Houso bills 18, 30, 78, 90, 1)3 and 116were passed on third reading, as weroalso senate bills 28 and 43. Kanibo'scemetery bill, H. B. 35, after a

wrangle, wont ovor for thirdreading to March 15. II. B. 41, by

to repeal the railroad trespassbill, also engaged the worthy solono ina long nnd masterly debate, whichamounted to nothing after nil as thirdrending went off finally to March 12.

Houso hill 71, to repeal tho water mo-

tor provision in tho inws of the waterworks, also kept tho lawmakers busyfor a while am), in order to savo timennd not hurt tha feelings of some mem-bers, it went over also to March 12.

llccause Representative Robertsonhad to inako an early tocatch tho Ililo packet on tho

junket to tho southern city,hit II. 11. 114 was deferred to March 12for third reading. Meanwhile, thoinongoone will roam at Inrgo nnd nobounty will be forthcoming,

I.lkewlie, beeuiite RepresentativeRllt'A was off nn tho same junket,

of the roinmlttre's report onII. 11. 10 wput nvr to tlu saute date.

On 'e'oniinnndntlon of the repetlvemihiiIHm. II. II. 43, 74 and 111 midS 1. IS r U.l.l, wh'le II 1 fllon 1f ,! M M,d H. II. U patted.. ., . mmA w ),f up for thirdr Muling tomorretr

5WE233BMK

FIELD OPENED

whyjdb hitThe beginning of tho investigation of

the financial affairs of tho county ofHawaii dates from early last year. Atthat tlmo tho chamber of commerco ofHonolulu employed 11. Gooding Field toInvestigate tho financial and adminis-trative methods of tho city of Hono-lulu- .

Though Field did not discoverovidenco of dishonesty ho pointed outiu his report whero a saving of ovor$100,000 per year could bo oiroctod byHonolulu by tho adoption of his rec-ommendations. Very fow of theso aronow being followed, tho city attorneylending in tho effort to discredit thereport because Mr. Field had pointedout tho cxtravagancoa of his depart-ment.

Ab a result of this Honolulu report,Fiold was employed by tho Hilo Boardof Trado to mako a similar investiga-tion of tho affairs of tho County of Ha-waii.

That report was filod last Augustand oventually resulted in tho arrestand conviction of Rufus Lyman for em-bezzling $0500 in liquor licenses paidto him as secretary of tho llconso com-mission.

"Soon after filing tho report," saidFiold, yesterday, "I mado tho state-ment : 'Even a cursory examinationwould divulgo irrogularitioa whichwould show negligenco and an absenceof any chock upon public funds.'

"Tho first thing I called for whontho examination began," continuedField," was for copies of tho annualfinancial reports of tho county auditoras submitted to tho territorial auditorto coraparo their uniformity. I founda completo nbsenco of uniformity andn gravo discrepancy in tho cash bal-ances as reported between tho closingnnd oponing dates of municipal ac-counts. I broucht theso ohvinun dif.fercnecs to, tho attention of Mnguiro atthat time. Ho. offered no defense beyond expressing much surprise at sucha condition.

"I then realized tho magnitude of ngeneral investigation and decided tocontc my work on some ono depart-ment. I selected tho oflico of tho sec-retary of tho liquor llconso commis-sioners.

"This work I conducted along tholines of tho Bureau of Municipal Re-search of tho cltv of New York, underSvhich I had my training, in this branchoi worn.

"Rufus Lyman was secretary of tholiecnso commission. From tho outsetmy work was blocked, first by Maguiroand then by Lyman, but sufficient

ovidenco was discovered show-ing tho accounts of Lyman short to thoamount of $G500. Lyman was sen-tenced to three yoars' imprisonment. Iwas conndent throughout of collusionbotween Lymnn and Maguire. It willbo rccnlled how" my report was receivedand how tho supervisors donouncod itns incorrect.

"When Lyman was convicted,though ho would not 'Bqucal,' hq inti-mated that tho lino of investigation Ihad started would, if followed, bringout conditions not thon roached. Thoreport filed by tho senate holdovercoinmitteo tpday does not surprise me.Asido from tho arrest and prosocutionof thoso responsible for this condition,which will probably follow, T feol thattho investigation will do much good inpaving tho way for placing tho busi-ness affairs of all counties in tho Ter-ritory upon a sound nnd safo businessbasin. "

DEFENSE PLANS

NTEREST OFFICERS

Tho exclusive announenment of thoplans of the Mnconru army board fortho further fortification of tho Islandof Oahu, presented in Tho Advertiseryesterday from an advanco report fur-nished from Washington, caused deopInteroat in Army circles, particularlythat portion of tho report which rocom-mond- s

thnt Fort Shaftcr bo mado thoprincipal garrison post lioro. Tho re-port contnincd a mnss of informationwhich wus interesting to nil branchesof tho service. Tho printed report wasfurnishod by Tho Advertisor to armyheadquarters hero and was given closoperusal by tho officers, including Gen-eral Macomb.

Second Is Floasod."Wo aro mighty glnd that Fort Shaf-

fer is to bo mado tho big?ost garrifonin the Islands," said a Second Infantryoflicor. "It moans that tho post areawill prabably bo greatly enlargod bytho addition of other lands, nnd tliorowill probably bo somo important workin filling in tho small valley which nowdivides a portion of the reservation.With this covered and lovolod therowill bo a splondid rescrvntioa whichwill cnablo tho department to sproad

I out tho post and maintain it largely asIn emnnapfc whnln ."

Colonial Force.General Macomb, Chiof'of Staff Conk-lin-

Adjutant Ooneral Campbell andLieutenant Andrews visited Fort 81m

on Friday, where thoy woro mot byColonel French nnd tho officers of thoSecond Infantry. Thcro was consider-able discission regarding tho depart-ment plans' for Fort Shaftcr and otherposts. Major Conkling explaining thesein dotal), although much was genorallyknown In army circles, Ono featurewas explained ns to ,tho posslhlo per-manency of station on Oahu of thoFirst nawnilnn Brlgado, which may boused as a colonial force, tho regimontsbeing permnnontly stationed hero, thoofficer and men being chnnged fromtime to time. This will Includn thoTint, Second and Twonty-flft- Infantryregiments, General Macomb will spoiknext TiiM'Ny Afternoon, nn othor phaissof tho military situation here.

The report of tho executive proceed-Ini-

before the hnusx committee,yroterdav, nmnlifloi in detail the

wlreV nort to The Adverti.cr fromWmliliicton, puhlUhed on IWember Hi,

w"'i lh war deixirtmwit'i pUna forIneriMnlnif th garrltmi Immediately brother rfylmmiti tnd toast artlllcrv', wan (slrrm imltliilly for L rttint.

Page 7: ir - University of Hawaiinear future. scoHEiFpIuiis ' L Ovor a hundred personsj the great majority of whom were Orientals, crowded the corridor nt tho city hall, last night, to tuko

pssswpfippiiihUELL CARE FUR

TlJBERGULOSfANS,

but appropriation ron firstAID AND PREVENTION IB

ELIMINATED.

Entirely in opposition to tho modernmethods of fighting tuberculosa, whichhold tunt u wgornus campaign of

is fur butter than to spendyears in cnr.ng ior niosu ", ""proper safeguards, would not hnvo

sufferers from tho dread disease,tho present administration appropria-

tion bill cuts out tho Palainu nursingEvstcm in its Entirety.

Under this bill, tlic current appro-priation" for the cam-palo- n

is $13,200 less thau was askedlor. It provides $03,200 for tho bicn-tn- 1

.rln,l n nirninst gSJ.-iO- for tho

,...! ,, ,orixl. It 19 neinizcu insuch n way that it adds $G00Q to theLcnhi Home appropriation; but cuts off

the Falama nurso system, which In

that district, tho worst white plaguespot on tho Islands, has reduced the

.....l,.,- - f . nt tuberculosis sixto 'nrcr ccut. so thnt not quito half thocases, in tho city nro found there,

of over sixty per cent as twoyears ago.

Tho l'alama nurses, It is assented,have performed valiant service in g

out cases of the disease, par-

ticularly in its first stages, whoro a euro

is poss.blc, and by teaching tho valueof fresh air and sanitation have pre-

vented Fcorcs of children and theirelders from becoming infected. Vet, itappears, that spending thousands inearng for hopeless cases, rather thanhundieds in prevention, is considereda safe, sound and humane financialpolicy. ;

Tuberculosis Versus Leprosy.

"Under this arrangement, providingonly for tho care of sufferers and notfor tho prevention of tho disease, theappropriation for tho Lc.ihi Homo, milhav0 to bo tripled every ten years, Vi

declared George R. Carter yesterday?"it nvnrn of nnnronriatine money--t- o

purchase lochs for tho barn door aftcoIUU UUIDU B O

"Tho Torritorv is nlanning to spend$300,000 in tho samo poroid for the caroana treatment or. cases oi leprosy, a e

which is not one hundredth part ascontagious or deadly or comipon astuberculosis. If thero 1b any cutting tobo done, it should bo from tho appro-priatio- n

of leprosy."Tho ppioiinu

should bo $100,000 for tho periodtwico tho amount given two years ago.That tho money was not wasted isshown by tho record of a reduction ofB'ixtcen percent in tho number of cases,duo to the splendid work done iu

"Tho Territorial Board of Health isdoing great work all over the Islands.I havo just returned from Knuai,where I found the peoplo installingventilators in their houses, abandoningthe uso of blankets as bed clothing andadopting proper" sanitary precautionsagainst disease. ,

"It would bo the height of folly toreduce thq appropriutionat this timo,when the work of tho board of health,and other organizations engaged incombating the disease, is just begin-ning to show results. ,

"Honolulu rnnks twelfth in the listof cities of the United States, whichhavo tho highest percentage of tuber-culosis cases to tho one hundred thou-

sand of population. A city that is ad-

vertised as a health resort and a para-dis- o

for tourists cannot afford to havothis rating nnd tho reputation of dodg-ing responsibility to save dollars andcents."

H--

WANTS OLD, OLD

STORY ONGE MORE

HILO REPRESENTATIVE ASKS IP,

ANY WAY EXISTS TO CANCEL

SALE OF FOSTOFFIOE SITE

Prom Saturday Advertiser.

Again has that old row, long hoarywith ago, over tho granting of the oldpostoffico site in Hilo to tho Hilo Rail-Toa- d

Company for a city depot, brokenout and, this timo, in tho houso.

ltODrescntntivo Irwin yesterday introduced II. It. CO which requests tho

or the public lands anainternnl improvements commiUee to in-

vestigate and report on tho matter. Thoresolution was adopted and now Representatives Silva, Lota and Robertsonwill hnvo to go all over again into thoancient history of tho case.

The question was maup a suoject oitho fullest inquiry in Honolulu whenSecretary jMsher was nore. in iiuo tnosecretary ngain went fully into tho details of the affair and. again, after returning to Honolulu still more was saidsaid nnd investigated on the matter.Many busy hours wero then spent ingoing over the history of tho case andtho secretary would certainly havo madoit known if in all this deal nnytuingunjustifiable had been done.

Irwin's resolution says:"Whercus. tho Governor of this Ter

ritory has lately caused to bo convoyedto the Hilo Railroad Company, Limited,for a nominal consideration, certainvaluable parcels of land sltuato in thocity of Hilo. including tho slto of thepostufllce in that city, under tho claimthat such conveyances wero warrantedii Ud called for uy tno provisions or. sec-

tion 784 of the Revised Law of na- -

Willi!"Therefore, lie It resolved, ttint tho

of the public lands com-mittee bo Instructed!

"(u) To Inquire and report to thishouso tho orcunlou am circumstancesof nny and all such conveyances of pub- -

lie mini us unve uecn mnuo to camHilo Railway Company, Limited, or tonnv other railway company or com-punl-

during the yean IPOS to 1013."flu Thu ra and value, m near an

prtiMlml.1" of turh parte! o eonvuvNlin yi in nny, or in with

(tie Ihrre was, lu the opinion of the

WKSSWIfllSSSSl

HAWAIIAN OAirrTE, TUESDAY, MAKCU 11, 1P1 J. SttMl WEEKLY.

hands orr n.ws ounHOUSE TO OONUUESS

(From Saturday AdvcrtUcr)My the vote n f twenty fit a for and

inly tlire'o Against, with Knnlho nnd("n tares nbtent. tho lower houro of thoeglstnture went on record jesterday.

imi being opposed to bating congressleglidnte fi tho Territory on tho liquortrnflle question.

Shortly before Inking adjournmentfor the Jny, Representative Coney ofKnunl Introduced a concurrent resolu-tion, tho meat of which was thnt tholegislature respectfully ask congress tokeep Its hnnds off Hnwnll nnd kill thotlronna Hill

Tho resolution cnuscd no surprtsoamong tho members, most of whomwcro fully nwnro tho question was tocomo up shortly, Tho Advertiser hav-ing printed a story to thnt effect onlyInst Wednesday.

Following tho introduction of hisresolution, lictiroscntnilvn Cnnnv. inmoving its ndoption by Iho houso, broWbtho record so far this session In thoduration of his speech. Ho Bpoko ntsomo length and with considerableearnestness.

"Mr. Speaker," said Coney, "In In-

troducing this resolution 1 am not try-ing vto bring up tho quostion of whetheror pot Hnwnll shall hnvo prohibition;whether Hawaii shall remain wot orgo dry.

"Tho question is, who should havoa right to legislate on tho mattertCongress which, under tho Organic Act,gave us thnt privilege and prorogntlvo,or we, who know best tho situation nthomo and tho feeling of tho peoplehero nt large.

"Less than three years ngo this ques-tion camp up before congress; somo

peoplo endeavored tohave tho national lawmakers declarethis n dry Territory, but congresspassed the buck up to us and. nt thospecial election held in July, 1010, thopeople of this Territory or an over-whelming majority declared againstproamnion.

"Thero nrc now measures before con.gross, Mr. Spenkcr, whoso intent wouldue to nave me national legislature; dowiat was declared against by the vot-ers, of this Territory only three yearsago.

"Tf the prohibition party hero wantsto have its will carried out, it is up tothem lo elect men who will do sothrough tho legislature of this Territoryand not otherwise. Jf tho citizens of

IHnWnn are capable of handling thoother affairs of nurelv local intorest.then they should hnvo the authority toalso handlo this matter. We havo beengiven certain rights under tho OrganicAct and lor congress to step in nownnd act for us, when wo aro perfectlyable to do so ourselves, would bo to

hisurp our riphts as citizens of nawnlinnd the United States. I movo thoadoption of tho resolution."

Members on Record.Representative Kawcwchi immediate-

ly seconded the motion nnd called foran "aye" nnd "iio" vote so as tohave everybody go on record ia thomatter. As more than a fifth voted infavor of tho roll cnll it was so ordered.Most of the members voted withouthesitation, a few said "kannlua' nnd"mnhopo," but on beinc called acainvoted without any further dolay. Sheldon's vote was given in such a muffledtono that it was bard to say whether hovoted "aye" or "no" nnd tho 8peakorordered the clerk to call tho mombor'sname a second time, no voted "yos."

With Tavaros absent on leavo andKaniho away without permission, thoroll cnll on tho ndoption of tho. reso-lution was as, follows:

Ayes Asch, Conoy, G. V. Cooke, Sil-v-

Goodness, Huddy. Irwin. Knaua,Kalakiela, Kaupiko, Kawowohi, Kins-le-

Kupiliea, Lota. Lyman. Mnkekau,"McCaiidlcss, Poepoo, Hobcrtson, Sheldon, JSpalding, Waiaholo, Watkins, Wil-cox'. Mr. Speaker. 25.

Noes Clarence II. Cooke, Paela andPaxson. 3.

Senato to Argue It.A concurrent resolution, identical in

wording, was introduced in tho senatoby Senator Wirtz, but no vote wastaken, It was probably bo laid on thetable when the house mcasuro comesup for notion. There is no doubt butthis resolution will precipitnto tho firstreal battle of tho session should itcome up for passage today. In opposi-tion to thoso who boliovo that tho re-cent plebiscite showed how tho peoplofelt on tho prohibition question is astrong force, in tho senato at least, thatis unalterably opposed to making anycompromise with tho "liquorinterests."

CABLE CONFIRMS DEATHSENATOR COKE'S FATHER

(Prom Sunday Advertiser)Senator Coko yesterday received a

confirmatory cable announcing thedeath of his father, John S. Coke, atLos Angeles, last Friday. Deceasedwas n native of Tennessee, aged eighty-si- x

ycars. Ho is survived by six sonsand ono daughter. Por a number ofyenrs he was collector of customs ofthe southern district of Oregon,

John 8. Coke, Jr., ono of tho sons, iinow circuit judge of tho southern dis-

trict of Oregon. Mr. Coko was ono of.the old residents of the South. He of-ten spoke of his old homo and wasproud of the fact that ho was a schoolchum and room-mat- o of General J. E.B. Stewart, tho Southern cavalry man,

Mr. Coke went to Los Angoles a fonmonths ago to escape the cold winterweather, no had not been in goodhealth. Tho funeral will be held fromtho family home in Coos County, Ore-gon, next Saturday.

-

SENATOR HEWITT VEBY SICK.Senator Hewitt of Hawaii is a very

sick man, according to reports from theU'dside yesterday. Senator Hewittmade a brave effort against illness to bont his desk in tho senate, but severaldays ago he was compelled to givo upand on Priday 11b condition was suchthat he was removed to the Queen'sHospital.

eommlttc. an existing necessity forsuch conveyance, such as until statutecontemplates, and whether there, was

proof made of inch neces-sity before the respective conveyance!were made

"(d) Whether, in tho opinion of thecommitter, there exiiU roaionnlilaground upon which to annul said

ur any of tbe-in- f

"(e) If imth rwiwiiuMo ground ex-

it!, what slept the tonuultlM may reuiiinur.il to rath surh iMvltlcmiufnd ul tooult "

ill NICE

SOON TO BE Ml j

HOLDOVER COMMITTEE REFORT

ON Tins IB DETACHED mOMOTHER COUNTIES.

Prom Saturday Advertiser.

It was announced hy Senator .Ttidd,just beforo adjournment of tho sonnto '

yestacday morning thnt tho report oftho holdover ways and means commit-tee oi tho sennto will bo presented nttho session this morning. Tor thnt rea-son tho uppor house will meat at nlnoo'clock this morning In the hope ofgotting through tho bulky document.

This is a report which has been ex-pected dnlly since tho opening of thoinsa nn 'I linen trim ntintil.l lt In tinni.tion to know state thnt tho main reportof tho committee will contain nothingoi n scnsnltonnl nature, though a sup-plements roport now In course of prep-aration will deal at length with conditions in Hawaii administration offinancial affairs and porhaps tear thocover off a number of things somowould fain keep secret.

."fluid's announcement enmo nt thocloso of ono of tho most busy hoursthe senators hnvo yet spent. An ordi-nary "day's work wns done in thnt briefperiod, giving the lawmakers nn oppor-tunity to ndjourn nt cloven o'clock toaccept tho invitation of President o

to visit tho Collcgo of Hnwnli.Governor Prear submitted a messago

containing n dotailod statement of thofinancial conditions of tho City andCounty of Honolulu nnd tho Counties ofHawaii, Maui and Kauai. It containsforty-seve- n closely written tnbulntcdpnges, showing in detail tho sources ofrevenue, amounts paid out and tho pur- -

poso ot tno expenditures. Theso statements nro from the nuditors of eachof tho counties. In his messago Governor Prear makes no comment, leavingthat to tho legislators after they havohad time to go through tho Voluminousdocument nnd making such investiga-tions as thoy deem proper. Possiblytho messago will finally bo rofcrrod totho accounts committoo or thi ways;md means committee where arratgo-ment- s

can be mado to havo oxpa.-t- pasion tho different reports.

Two Democrats, Senators Wirtz andMotzger, lined up against tho passagoon third Tending of house bill G7. Thisis tho mcasuro which provides for thopayment of members of tho NationalGuard of Hawaii who took part intho Camp Dnmon Encnmpmont lastyear. It went through by n voto ofeleven to two and now goes to thoGovernor for action.

Fears "Furbelows'."Senator Metzger succeeded in casting

such a cloud of uncertainty about thoroal meaning of bouse bill 39 that hosucceeded in having final action de-ferred until March 10 next. Had itgone up for final passage yesterdaymorning it would havo been defeated.This bill would "make it lawful" toadd a course of agriculturo nnd polit-ical oconomy in tho public schools oftho Territory. Tho bill went nlongswimmingly until yesterday morningwhen Senator Metzgcr began makinginquiries as to why it would bo neces-sary to majce such notion "lawful" andasking if tho real purpose, after all,wub not an attempt to add "additionalfurbelows" to tho school .curriculumnnd incidentally moro teachers nnd"further unnecessary expense." o

tho measure could be brought ton voto a motion was mado that actionbo deforrcd until Mnrch 10. This car-ried.

Houso bill 29 went through secondroadiug without opposition. This measure amends tho law relating to jurydut' nnd includes wireless oporntorsin tho list of thoso who will bo oxemoptt 2 -uuiii J"ij ciurvicu.

--4-

I FIGURES

IN NIL BILL

NAVAL STATION DOWN FOR $870,- -

600, OF WHICH $250,000 IS FORFOWDER MAGAZINE.

By Ernest G. Walker.(Mail Special to Tho Advertiser.)WASHINGTON, February 20. The

Naval Appropriation Bill, reported totho houso today, carries somo Hawaiianitems. Thoro Is a provision that horo-afte- r

pilotage receipts at Pearl Harbormay bo applied by tho secretary of thonavy, so far, as may bo necessary, notexceeding $3000 a .year, to payment oftho salary of tho harbormaster at thatport.

Tho total appropriations for construe,tion work at tho Pearl Harbor NavalStation amount to. $029,00p, of which$100,000 is for waterfront development,$30,000 for water system, $03,000 forpower distribution, mains nnd conduits,$30,000 for railroad equipment, $!)000for boat landings, $24,000 for ollicers'.quarters, $50,000 for torftodo boat slips,$25,000 for ico plant ni refrigeratingsystem, $100,000 forono drydockcrnnc, $100,000 for mnrkie railway, and$100,000 for continuanco of naval hos-pital.

Presumably theso Horns will all be-

come Jaw, although ut this writing thorois doubt about the fato of tho entireNaval Appropriation Bill, A big fightwill bo wuged nirolnst it in tho housoand the opposition may bo powerfulenough to prcient its ennctmont intolaw at this session, If so, tho hill willnecessarily bo passed nt tho extra ecusi on of rongrci", soon to follow.

Tim Naval Appropriation Dill alsocarries this paragraph for a navnl mag-azine nt KimliilH, Hawaii;

"N'nvnl tuHvarine, ICimliuu, IlimalhTwo uummlne-i- , ,',0,000j nitlro.idtranks and fl ,1,000 j ono t'lituiers'quarters, TOon-- , iiuehinrrv anil too'a,4(0.01)0; one ihipoins home, $00,1)00;lmlMliiu for toriM-do- and uiIiim, ICO,000 tn filling houiw, $10,000; ouuttyrtfMtinn lioma, 1)0,000; nmi

$1600; un unfitting roof, tftOOjbuilding (ut r.rln guard, JH400; m wi

'OAIIU IB OlVllNAriNii will or

-- -

"The general health of the ronmnhd Inn b.eu excellent. One rasa fk

of tj nhotil whs repurted fromBchoflold JUttni-ks- , tut the pstinttad received tho typhoid prophyl- -

axis wlilfh f irt InUNo od w th thousual diagnostic methods, llu-r-

Is doubt whether It wn n truecase of typhoid. Thl wo tho onlyease of this fovor noted In nny ofthe post. This freedom from typhold from among tho troops isroninrknlilo, especially ai it occursin the e vil population, particular- -

lj among tho orientals, quite fro- -

qnontlv. lioport of llrigndkorGeneral Macomb, department com- -

lnnndcr.

Brig. Gen. M. M. Macomb, in his an-

nual report for tho Department of Ha-

wnli for tho fiscal year ondiug Juno 30,1012. just made public, prnlsos Hnwnlina a health resort with climatic feuturos

hvuch. commend it as a gro.it garrison"'"'"K Br0?"a f",V00 nly ft

slnglo case of typhoid has been roportcd lrom a command which numbersabout four thousand ollicers nnd men,when tho report wns made, nnd this gar-rison hns boon increased to moro tunnG000 officers and men.

Tho sonior Burgeon of tho departmentIs tho sanitary inspoctor of tho depart-i- n

out," and in this capacity is directlyundor tho orders of tho departmentcommander, .nnd is his adviser in all... n i 1 nwn vnln.lHn . nniiA.nl nnnUntl.HUlU,,V.O .HtHIU IU gUUVitll Dtlh, HUM,

Jcooperativo measures between tho civilnnd military authorities regarding pre-cautions to provont tho spread ot con-tagious and infectious diseases, as wellas regarding tho proper caro of tho sickat tho posts. In Ilia roport GoncrnlMacomb states that 'considering thntHonolulu has already bcon visited byyellow fever, tho noed of tho advico of

,an experienced medical ollicer is self- -

evident."Fort Shatter Conditions.

Tho report states thnt Port Shnftoris a completed post, but that w.ib at thotimo when it was only a battalion postand not singled out for largo increasesof troops. Ho says tho sanitation con-ditions cannot bo bottored thorc, fun-ti- l

tho balance of tho reservation, nowunder lease, is turned oyer to thomill-tnr- y

authorities. Thero havo been moromosquitoes than thore should bo hero,

iin conscquenco of noirby rico paddies."Official Notico of Mosquito.

"Yellow fovor mosquitoes nro com-mon in Oaliu, and henco thoro is a con-stant dread thnt tho introduction oftho disenso by ships com-ing .from tho infectod Pacific Coastmight cause an epidemic through thesocurriers," says General Macomb. "Asa mnttcr of fact, a case was broughtto Honolulu by a Bhip from tho SouthAmerican Const and strenuous meas-ures wcro tnken to provent its spread-ing, tho most important "being nu nntl- -

mosquito campaign.''The work of destroying all mos-

quito brcoding places was vigorouslypusiied lrom .November 1, 1U11, toApril, 1912, at which date tho man-ng-

of tho campaign announe'ed to thocommittee that tho numbor of mosqui-toes in tho city had been so much reduced that yollow fovor could notspread if introduced, Ho stated thatwithout tho assistance givoii' by thonrmy and nnvy in this work it couldnot havo been iccomplishcd."

The problem of caring for tho sickof this command is bo similar in timoof penco to what it would bo In warthat practically tho samo rules govornthe disposition of cases. General Macomb states that In timo of war FortShaffer is probably tho only post intho department not Jiablo to bo under I

nro, and, moreover, "it lies well witli- -

in what would be tho last lino of do -

fense, and for theso reasons nlso it isplainly tho best site for a largo per - .

mnnont hospital."Inefficient N. O. H. I

General Macomb speaks positively ofthe inefficiency of tho national guardof Hawaii, stating that, "it hns notreached a stato of ofllcloncy and re-

quires a completo reorganization whichcan not be cllccted until nftor tho com-pletion of a suitnblo armory. Thoydeclined an invitation to take part irttho combined maneuvers planed for thocoming autumn (Soptombor, JB12) forreasons not accurately known to thisoffice

"It is considcrod vory dcsirablo thatthero should be n full rcgimont of or-

ganized militia stationed in Honolulu.It would te a most vnluublo additionto tho regulnr garrison of Oahu. Thoronre nt present regimental headquartersmid six companies ncro, but the oxpnnsion oi mis lorco io reg menial si.ronRr.ilis believed to bo practicable providedthat a suitablo armory bo built. Itwns to insuro thiB work being initiatedwithin a year that tho federal government set usido part ot tho barracks ot;thus nctinij in harmony with tho territorial government which has allotted$100,000 for the building Plans arenow under consideration. Tin erectionof this armory will mark a now erain tho history of tho National Guardof Hawaii and will open tho way, totho creation of a rcnlly efficient forco."

FHtST PHILANTHROPIC ACTA8 WIFE OF PRESIDENT

(Ht Kfdfr-,- 1 Wlrflni Tddirrniili.)BALTIMORE; Maryland, March 7,

(Special to Tho Advortlsor) ono of thofirst philanthropic acts of Mrs, Woodrow Wilson, slnco sho became tho FirstLady of tho Land, is a gift of $500 touuucuvr vuuugu nun--, wiii-r- iwu ui uurdaughters wore oducntcd, as part of afund needed to retain that institutioniu Baltimore,

pressed air locomotive plant, $18,000;In nil, 2nO,C0O."

The llivor and Harbor Hill, with Itsappropriation of $225,000 for Honoluluharbor. Is just pnssing tho sennto, ThoHonolulu item got out of tho senatounamended and is assured of becominglaw unlets it should happen that l'rodent Tsft vetoes the entire bill, as itIs ind ho Intends lo do. 'J'ho Hono-lulu item readu us follous- -

"ImiTovlmr harbor at Honolulu, Hawall ''ontlniilnu linpriivoinoiit ami fortntiiiitciiiiie. illo.OUOi Provided, Thatif In the jiul Kin out of lilt awruUrv ofwar ihf itt'M rwclmd In response toi,ilfMiiMMtit for bids fur drwluliikfnri not reumnulilu, hi iium-I-i of thrdm, mi nt lroln HtH'DJiriiitad shall berM-iiii- limy yxpsadcl for th"lrrl ti or mm n Intel Ion of n uiUhlilfwlmtf plant,"

"i'lll I HAVE

A JAIL SCANDAL?

sininirr tua bays he couldTELL THINGS THAT WOULD

STARTLE LIiaiSLATUIlE.

H1I0, Mnrch ", If tho legislativecommittee nppolnted to Investigate thomatter of tho tro.itinent of tho prison-ers nt tho Volcano rond jail, or any onoelse, wants nny Information thnt willmsko them sit up 'and tnko notico,Sheriff Pun is tho toy that can furnishit, Just whnt tho facts In his possession nro tho sheriff will not say; but hosays that thoy nro startling, and thatho will not hcsltnto nt producing thornwhen tno proper tuno comes.

Tho sheriff spoke of the subject nftorhis attention had been called to thofollowing statement which appeared inTho Advertiser lust weok;

"Complaints como frciu Hawaii thatin spite of tho statement of HighSheriff Henry thnt ho wns surpr scd tliopolico on tho Big Island permlttod

prisouers to liavo access tomany enjoyments not nntlclpntod un-d-

the law, l.ufus Lymnn still con-tinues to havo unlimited uso of thotolophoiic, talking over it for n qunr-to- r

of an hour at a timo nnd is accorded othor unusual privileges."

Amused at Henry,Pun wsb inclined to bo nmuBod nt tho

attempt mado by High Henry to passtno duck to mm, nsitno county suoriithns no authority whntovor ovor thoterritorial prisoners at tho Volcanoroad jail.

"Thot doos not worry me," saidPua. "Lot Henry try to pass tho bluincto mc, if ho likes. My shouldors nrobroad, and I, as long as T know that Iam in tho right, I don't enro.

"As a matter of fact, I hnvo, ofcourse, not the sllghtost authority oyortho prisoners in tho Volcano rond jail.Tho only connection I havo with thatinstitution lies in tho fact that I ap-point tho guards who look after thoprlsonors. That is dono by mo bocnusotko county pays thoir salnrios, as thouso of tho territorial prisoners by thocounty is considered in tho way of afavor cxtendod to this county. I havono authority over tho guards, howovor,iiuu mu uiu cuuiiu.uiy unuer iho nu-- .thority of tho jailor, who is appointodluy tno nigh sheriur.

Ia "Ablo to TolL""I have nove'r hail anytime to do I

with tho prisoners thore. On tho othorhand, I would be able to toll somo factsto tho high sheriff or tho legislatorswhich would Btartlo them.

"I passed tho jail thoro just thoother day, and I heard tho talking thatwas going on thore, and L, tell you, itwas interesting. ' '

Tho sheriff wns asked what was said,but he answerod thnt ho did not wantto any nnything for publication ntpresent.,

Discharged In Stripes.Another matter rclatinc to tho mis

management of tho Volcano road jail,wmch should ho takon up by tho legis-lature whilo it ib on that iaCorostingsubject, is tho manner in which dis-charged prisoners are trcntod that is,of course, thoto' who aro not favorites.The poor fellows without frionds or influenco aTo, whon thoy nro discharged,sent in thoir prison stripes all tho waytn Hilo, a distnnco of somo thirty-flv- o

wiles, part of which thoy mako byotiigo and part by rnil. When thoy nr--rivo in Hilo they havo to marchthrough tho most frequonted thoroughfnres of tho town, still in thoir prisonsujtH. As a mnttcr of fnct, thoy aronot given thplr civilian clothing untilthev reach tho Hilo jail.

-- -LOCAL OFFICERS

UNCOVER BIG PLOT

ARBEST OF IIAUSMAN LEADS TO

CAPTURE OF AELEOED OPIUMCHIEF IN SEATTLE.

Through tho arrest of Samuel D,Hausman, the nged Seattle businessmanin thia cU 0 , f", b "''""' '"'"sKlinS' Ul "doral government, it 1b

said, haB been placed on tho track of anation-wid- conspiracy to Import opiuminto the United States, and tho throoarrests made in Seattle as announced

i in tho tho result0( Closures "thoughmade bo a eof Huusmnn in Honolulu

According to tho cabled roport, JohnW. nogcrs, Mnrion Bergman nnd Char-H-

Louio, a ChincBo cafo keeper. wo:ourrostcd in Scattlo March 7.

It now appears that thoso arrestswcro duo to cnblo messages from Ho-nolulu following the arrest of ilaus-man- ,

and that ub n result of ovidencofccurcd by tho authorities bore, Haus-man appears in tho light of a powerfulmember of an opium ring with international connections, instead of tho tiredbusinessman, who Btnkcd his fow re

I mulning dollars in an Illegal i?amhla foifortune.

District Attorney Breckons and Col-lector of Customs Stackablo hnvo boonhard at work investigating Hnusman'sconnections, ever slnco his arrest andthey hnvo fftund, It Is said, that he isknown In Chicago, New York, Kan1'ranclsco and Soattlc, and that personsof high degreo nro responsible for hisactivities hero.

When District Attorney Brockbiis wasnuked whether tho arrests in Seattlehud any connection with tho nrrott ofliatisman horn, he said: "Pa bleu hawboon liotwecn Honolulu andHoutt!" which have had their effortI'm going out of ofllcq soon, but I'mgoing to Kt Mima nf the higher una Inthe opium busliiiMW before I iio out, Ithink.

"At fur is Mr, Ilniiimuii la concernd, we n In p(MM.QU of doruman

tary uvldi n slumln tbut h w eruuumi In tint opium I mill Months Unfura ha ell in i hum wud that Im I ad ron

a In Mtfb plain in the bigKtii eillua "

abic ron Tim

Gaviota Brand

EDW

FertilizersBIRD BRANDS

GIVE THE FERTILIZER A SHOWAND IT WILL SHOW YOU.

Yon noed to glvo our FERTILIZERShut ono opportunity to niako good.

Tbey aro carefully compounded ofIltgti Grado Material, and aro sold onMorlt. Wo loavo It to you to ba thoJudge

Pacific Guano S Fertilizer Co.Honolulu and HUo, Hawaii

BAN FEANCISCO, CAL.

"EMPRESS LINE OF 8TEAMEBH"JPBOM QUEBEC TO LIVERPOOL. .

via theCANADIAN PACIFIO RAH.WAT

the Famous Tourist Route of tho World

In connection with thoCanadian-Australasia- n KoyaJ Mafl Lino

For tickets and general Informationupply to

THEO.H. DAVIES&GO., LTD

General AgonUCanadian Paciflo Bly. Co.

CSaStlO & COOkG CO., LtdHonolulu T. H,

Commission Merchants

-- Sugar Factors

Ewa Plantation Co.Waialua Agricultural Co., Ltd.

4 Apokaa Sugar Co., Ltd.Pulton Iron Works of Bt. Louis.Blaks Stoam Pumps.Western's Centrifugals.Babcock & Wilcox BoiUra.Qreon'a Fuel Economizer.Marsh Steam Pumps.Matson Navigation Co.Planters' Lino Shipping Co.Kohnla Sugar Co.

Bank of HawaiiLIMITED..

incorporated Under tho Laws of thTerritory of Hawaii.

PAID-U- P CAPITAL $600,000.00SURPLUS 100,000.00UNDIVIDED PROFITS ... 157.6OZ02

OFFICERS:O. H. Cooko...-- . PresidentE. D. Tonnoyt B. Damon CashierU. O. Puller Assistant CashierU. McCorriston Assistant Cashier

DIRECTORS: O. U. Cooke, E. D.

feiiney, A. Lewis, Jr., E. P. Bishop,P. W. Macfarlano, J. A. McCnndloss,O. H. Athorton, Geo. R. Carter, P. B. "

Damon, P. C. Athorton, R. A. Cooke.COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS DE--

DEPABTMENTB.strict attention given to all branches

of Banking.JUDD BLDG., FOUT'BT.

Castle &. Cooke Co., Ltd

Life and Firsurance

AgentsGeneral Inmrrance Ageata, representing

New England Mutual Lif InsuranceCompany of Boston.

Aetna Piro Insurance Co.ATTENTION

We havo juBt accepted tho Agencyfor tho

andTho Protector Underwriters' 'of tho

Phoenix of Hartford.Theso are also among tho Roll or

Tom McCuroy, of Lob Angolos, hassigned Prankio Itussoll, of Now

us on opponent of the winner oftho Hud Anderson-K- . O. Brown go thatho Is to stage on March IS, at Los An-

geles.--.

BEST LINIMENT.Sllcht accidents nnd injuries nro a

frequent occurrence on tho farm and Intho worKsuop. A. cut, or uruisa whichIs often tho causo of much annoyancemid loss of time, may bo curod in aboutono-thlr- tho timo usually requirod byapplying (Jhiimburlaln's Pain Balm asHiian lis tlit injury is rocelvod, TheroIn un danger of blond poisoning result-ing from nu Injury whon this linimentis applied before tho parts bocoino

and Hunlhm. Por by Hon-.o-

Hiitlth k (' . Lid.. Mgonta for Ha-

waii, Advnrtiwment,

PIICS CURED IN O TO 14 DAYS.. l'A0 OJNTMUNT k uuaraiitimlu mini any ce of JlcJiliitf, lllliul,

JIImkIIiih or I'lotrudltuj l'fla in 6 tsHilayvttrtiKHioyritfuiHlftl- ,- Wailw lyI'AIUB M1CUJCINIC CO.,8alnt UmUU " of. A.

.sJfcSl cb - 4 A, sf tjl zgy f T isananj fmk)iM'fflk:'iiMlhjdtMMJ . . ' Jtt&&ftegmtea mmmmmiimmmhmumm nmmmmmemmmtmmffmrmvntmirnmmmmmtrntfmmnmmtnmtmmitwfmmmmmmmm

Page 8: ir - University of Hawaiinear future. scoHEiFpIuiis ' L Ovor a hundred personsj the great majority of whom were Orientals, crowded the corridor nt tho city hall, last night, to tuko

"rt Makes

sT" Hair

MP GrowWe arc talking about AycrHair Vigor. Just note that word

"Aycr's." You arc perfectly

safe with It. No harm to you or

to your hair. Makes the hairgrow? It certainly decs. Stopsfallinghair,too. Remember, it's"Aycr's" W2 are talking about.Ask your doctor about your hairand about Aycr's Hair Vigor.

Get his approval. Your own

doctor and "Aycr's" make astrong combination. It meansfaith, confidence, satisfaction.

Ayer's Hair VigorDOES NOT COLOR THE HAIR

fnpirtd t, Df. I. C. A jer In C-o-tp-l-l. Him . U. S. A.

Advt.

IlL'SINESU GAUDS.

0'OUTI,U "J0N WOKKS CO.of oury description mado to

oidcr.Advt.

MARINE TIDINGS

Friday, March 7, 1913.Sidney Arrived, March 3, S. S. So-

noma, henco February 17.Yokohama Arrived, March G, S. S.

Mongolia, henco February 23.Astoria Sailed, March 7, achr. A. F.

Coats, for Hilo.Fort Ludlow Sailed, March J, schr.

Mary K. Foster, for Honolulu.Saturday,, March 8, 1013.

San Francisco Sailed, March S, S. S.Persia for Honolulu.

Cnviota Arrived, Mnrch 8, ' Ship M.fhilcott, hence February 22.

Monday, March 10, 1913.Mnhukona Sailed, March 9, Bchr;

Muriel, for San Francisco.Mnhukona Arrived, March 8, .schr.

Annie Johnson, from San Frnncisdo.San Francisco Arrived, March) "8, S.

S. Ililoninn, licnci Fobruary 2S. joSan Francisco Arrived, March 10,

7 a. m., 8. S. Shinyo Mn.ru, hdnboMarch .4.

Oaviota Arrived, March 10, ep. M.Cldlcott) henco February 22.

Sydney Sailed, Mnrch 8, S. S. So-

noma, for Honolulu.San Francisco Arrived, March 10,

bktn. S, N, Cnstlo, hence. February, 21.-- - n

PORT OF HONOLULU.

AERTVED.Friday, March 7.

T. K K. S. ti. Tonyo Maru, fromSan Francisco, 8:30 a.m.

Str. llclcnc, from Hawaii ports, 12:45a.m.

Schr. Repeat, from South Bend, 9:30a.m.

Schr. Ida May, from Makapu, in dis-tress, p.m.

Saturday, March 8.Str. Mauna Kea, from Hilo, Laupa-hocbo-

Mnhukona, Kawaihao, Labainaand McGregors, 0:4! a. m.

Sunday, March 9, 1913.S. S. AV. F. llonin, from Monterey,

7:30 a. in.U. S. 11. C. Unalaga, from llaitimoro,

via Kucx and Yokohama, 1U:U a. m.Str. Claudine, from Kahului, 12:15

a. m.Str. Kinau, from Makawcli, Elcelo

and Hannpepe, 3:1.1 a. m.Str. Mikabala, from AVaiau, Polokunu,

Kalaupapa, Pukoo, Kamnlo, Knana-pali- ,

Lanai, Makena, Olowalu, Kiliei,McGregors, Kawcakapu and Kaunaka-kai- ,

12:30 a. m. ASvtir. Robert Scarlcs, from Grays

Harbor, 10:5.1 a. m.Str. W. G. Hall, from Nuwilwili, Aim-k'n- a

and Kuloa, 2:15 a. m.PtT. Niihiiu, from Kauai, 10 a. m.V. S. C. and O. S. S. Patterson, from

Eait Maui, 1:16 p. in. ,Monday, March 10. 1013.

V. M. S. 8. Siberia, from Yokohama,Kobe, Nagasaki, Shanghai and Hong-kong. 1:10 p. m.

A.-H- . S. 8. Columbian, from SanIraucieco, 8:15 a. in.

DEPARTED.V. S. A. T. Lognu, for San Francisco,

10 a. in.Str. Kilauc.i for Lahalna, Mc-

Gregors, Mnhukona, Kawaihao, Keair-hou- ,

llookcna, Hoopuloa, Honuapo andPlinaluu, 12:50 p.m.

T K. K. 8. 8. Tcnyo Maru, for Yokelama, Kobe, Nagasaki, Shanghai, Ma-nila and Hongkong, 5:10 p.m.

Str, Claudine, for Lahnnin nud5;15 p.m.

Gas fclir, Ida May, for Oahu ports,0:15 a.m.

O, 8. S. Sierra, for Ban Francisco,12 in.

Mauna Ken, fur Lahninn and JIlIo,3)15 p. in.

Ilk. It. P. Hlthet, for San Francisco,10 o. rn,

Drk. Jiituopnlla, for Taeoma, 12 a, in,,B. fi. Koju Maru, for North Coast,

IMS p. rn,

V a. Ill,

Arrtvi'a,

MARCH 1913. --SEMI.

Mrs. K. Miller. Mrs. 8. Drink. Dr. litis-to-

nnd wife, 11. V. Pntirn, Judge t,

It, Prick, K. Orht, II. O. Plum-tite-

ft, O. flimdridgo, I. Yoihlkawa, II.Koga and wife, 1). 1. MeKiunuii, ..iix--

MrKmnon. T. It. Itohlnsqn, A. (in I

,lr, i'. lloiukc, H. Johnton, A. Onrtlr,It H. Irwin (Jo. l Dnvlof, A. r l i

aren, T. Ikodn and wife, M. . l'.icbceo, .Ino. Palcontr, A. II. Hiiima, M.A. Niccoll. K. Dovniieliollo, V. F. IVyueM. I'nululnii, T. Ognwa and wife. UloHanson, wife nnd two children; .1. A.Noblll and wlfo, Mlsa A. Tittle, MUsi:. A. Atklni, Mtiflt. S. Atkins. .Mrs.

It. Hair, Mls Kyliiml, Mrs. McDonald,P, S. Loop and wife, Mins V. Loop, A.K. llnvcn, Mifajf. Haven, II. 8 hmitunnd wife, Miss Smith, Miss Kiinhcrly,Mrs. .7. K. Hamlllon, Mrs. II. F. Coul-

ter, Miss B. llclknap, Holmes nud wile,, H. Kinsey nnd wife, O. K. Swain,

O. N. Tucsloy, A. Hutson and wife, Mrs.Dwight, Mrs. Holmes, A. J. Ball, lJ. Barnstcin, J. Hiado, C. A. Mnrlarko,11. F. Fclld, C. F. Palmer nnd wifo, Mm.IteoJ, Allen AVlicclor and wife, S. It.Canncll nnd wife. Mrs. C. 13. Moore,Miss A. F. Nye, A. Junstoin nnd wife,Miss I, Blodgctt, Mrs. A. Blodgctt, P.Gardner nnd wife. Mrs. S. L. Ucrould,Miss Brooks, Mrs. It. Brooks, .1. L.Clinkskill and wife, Miss Clinkskill,Miss McFooly, T. M. Barrows, J. Scluil- -

tloworth and wife, .las. Mclscoly andwifo.

For str. Kinau, from Knuni and wayports, March 9. A. AV. McL.-illuiu- ,

Mrs. It. Monthc, It. Months, Mis. Jsisliimiirn, Muster Nishimura, iMrs. AV. II.Pillar, Miss Fruncis Pillar, Miss Grace1'illnr, 11. y. tijiulc. l.ce Man lliona, w.A. Hardy, V. Dan torn- -

way, J', .1. mini,! a. llanncstail, .Mrs.Danford, Muster Danford, JamesAkiinu, V. II. Iticc, dr., Hung Van I.eoMr. Hop Iling, Mrs. I.nn Hang, AhWo. Knm I'eu, Win. Knight, W. D. McHrvdo, ,T. Kannnitirnl, Fugimotif, II M.Coke, Mrs. Stownrd, W. G. Hull, Mrs.K. Wilcox, Fronds Gay, ('. Spitz.ClmrloH A. Iticc, K. Kopko, U. M.Purves, Mrs. lirves.

Per P. Jf. S. S. Siberia, from Orientports, March 10. K. Hilton, PaulHirnc.li, Frank A. Scranton, Mrs. PaulHirseh, Mrs. K. 11. Spencer. For SanFrancisco: Miss Maud Andrews, C. A.liclknnp, Itev. v. is. Jlrowster, W. A.llriggs, Mrs. W. A. Briggs, Mnstcr C.Iirigus, Miss II. Briggs, Miss M. Briggs,W. P. Clark, H. T, Hartigan, AV. H.I.ccklitcr, Miss Leo Shec, Geo. K. I.er-rigo- ,

Miss M. B, Lilly, F. Lowcnsteiii,Nni Prasit, Win. F. Allowny, Mrs. Win.P. Allovvay. .Tosof Hardak, Geo. Bury,Mrs. Geo. Bury, Geo. Bury, Jr., MissU. Bury, Fred Hnrdv, Mrs. Fred Hardyand maid, Mrs. W. P. Clark, M.N,T. Col-lln-

AV. O. Cullin, Mrs. AV. O. Cnllin, A.K. Hdgeomb, Mrs. A. E. Fdgcomb, E.I'Mgeomb, L. .1. Francisco, "Louis Glass,,1. AV.,Stunton, Mrs. J. AV. Stanton, A.

V., qtrmfci Mrs. A. AV. Stouo, AlbertVogel, ill. Wolf, ,T. D. KcithSim,Leung jill Yuen, 1). Maas, Miss Kthel(I. Miller, Yr Oliashi Geo. B. Pattisou,jrving t ltayinond, Yuen Hing AVan.

'Departea.PKr nKK1-TC-I In H en. fnr TCnnn nnil Knu

i 7. J. E. Hughes, AV. T.Frafetj WW. Geo. Smith, Miss It. Smith,Oj'IKaKiilia; Mrs. D. Kanuha, Jno. e

Hhdr servant, M!r. and Mrs. L. C.Aloi', ItiRs Mattliowson, M. Osakl, J.A, Mngnfre, M. Osoki, Miss YoungYcong, Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Ahoi, Miss,1, Cormvell, Mr, and Mrs. Kanuha, MissN. Chaug, Mrs. Chang Chong, Mrs. AV.

K. Leo, Geo. S. Alvos, Bov. and Mrs.T. Taikig, Mr. and Mrs. AVm.K. Lolciwl.

Per str. Claudine, for Kahului nndLahaipai ports, Mnrch 7. Miss C. Craw-ford, Mrs. .1. L. Corns,oll, Royal Vida,Mita L. Cockctt, Row nnd Mrs. .Tuddand child, Itov. R. B. Dodge, A. C. Bow-dis-

Mrs. West, T. V. Harris, AV. O.Smith, H. H. Eboy, C. K. Collins, II. II.Aknna, AV. O. Phillips, F. btange, Mrs.Mcltowc.

Per str. Mauna Kea, for Hilo via wayports, March 8. Mr. and AValtor Scott,Mr. and Mrs. K. V. Brown and child,Mrs. ,r. K. Kinney. Miss Kinney. J. E.Kinney, Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Ar. Turner,0. AV. Brimghnm, Dr. and Mrs, AA'd.

Wclclotadt, Mr. and Mrs. L. O. AVitting,Mrs. K. N. Holmes, Mrs. AVin. McKay,Mrs. 11. Brizard, Miss T. McKennn. M.McKcnnn, Huv. AVnuinan, Bislion Luc-cock- ,

II. Itipluy, Mihs MeOuiiV, Air.ami Mrs. L. A. Sherman, Capt. Stun- -

ncnLcrg. Jlihs .Mann. Miss .Mnuti, Mr,Mann, Mrs. E. T. Barnes, Mr. Barnes,jMihs Jinnies, .Mr. nail Mrs. ,l. A,Gregg, Mr. and Mrs. AV. S. McCurdy,Mrs. II. II. Ebey. Mrs. A. R. Monsarrat,D. E. Mctzger, AV. S. Johnson,. Mr. nndMrs. E. L. Bowen, Mr. and Mrs. F. M.Cary Mr. ami Mrs. E. J. Fry, Mrs. J.J. Loestnd, Mlsi Bennett, Miss AlicoCrnbbe, .las A. Wilson, M. F. Gale, AV.

H. Mori is, Miss Hose Herbert, R. R.AVest, Mrs. A. Richardson, Mihs Bitter,Mr. and Mrs. AV. II. Blacker, Mr. andMrs. V. 1). Evnon, Dr. A. R. Brown andwifo. AV. V.. Linn. Dr. 1). A. Stownrt,Mr. and Mrs. E. Hlaekshero, II. II. Eby,F. Hielborn, II. Teller, D. A. Silva, J.K. Lota, Henry Hoto, J. A. R. A'ierrn,

Per O. 8. S. Siom, for San Francisco,March S Mrs. Lorrin Andrews, II. C.Arnold, Mrs. Arnold, J. II. Ashdown, A.J. Bnll, Dr. C. P. Banning. ,T. Beaird,Mrs. Hoalrd, Master John Beaird, MrsM. E. Beery. Miss Marv Beery. R. Ar

Bias. Mrs. Bias, Miss Mildred Brouner,A. It. Brandon. Mrs. Brandon. It. II.Brittan, E. B Brown, Mrs. F. E. Brown,Mrs. It. (I. Uuclily. II. C. Burdick. H,

Hartley Cinncll, M. 11. Carpenter, Mrs.C. A Clarke, Miss K, Clarke, JuntosClinkskill, Mrs. Clinkuklll, Miss Jose-phine Clinkrklll, Robert II. Comstock,Mrs. Comstock, Miss 8. P. Conner. Dr.Frederick Coolc, ,1. II. Corey, Mrs. M. P.rrockiT. Hcwnll Crocker. Mrs. J. It. Dar- -

s!o, M. Ar. Decoito, S. Dclovnuo, Mr. J,Dwight, 11, AA'. Karlo, W. A. Par's, Mrs,A. v. Inris, II. V, Field, Paul Gardner,Mrs. Gardner, Mr. AA'. A. (Inrdiifr, Dr.G. Ii. Clnli'f, J. JI, Grron, Mrs. Green,Misn May Green, Abbott Orlgss, Mrs.Orlggn. A. U Hall. Mrs. M. E, Hnll,Miss C. AV. Hall, Mis. Beatrice Hnll,'). H.uisoii, Mr. Hanson, Master T.Hnin.011. Mr. J. It. Hamilton, A. Harvey,

'A. i., llllVBim, IVHlllP no Haven,C. l.....ll.. t... T.I...I... ir..l...l..lii.. u i,iv . T. i,. u,'iMn.. Oharloii lleblmrd and miii. Mrs. .1.

KrTi,u '' lIlKKiw. John lllwlo. B.Htr. A. (1. Hull, :W rgo

nl. ll.u,, Mr. .1. II.

''k.'b: AV. V. Ifarrin, tar Kwwwll. "jiWn . ll'ShLM,ttnK.V'.".J:

I'ABanNonuH,

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE,' TUESDAY, 11, WEEKLY.

.(AFitzpatrick,

' 4. ,, A.W1.I1MI .TIIB. ,1, . , IIVflKUVami dauirhtfr. Albrt II. Ilovl. MU.Ihii I). Iloyt, II, H. .lui'kiiiiui, iUt.Jarliiu.H, l,lout 1'. )'. Jnikwii P.M.A.,

Hh'm, il, I'ltiti,; ut M.Ki.,, Mri'

May Be Next U. S. District Attorney

SENATOR JAMES Ii. COKE.

FIFTEEN HUNDRED

HID FOB GIRL

PKETTY ROSA AVONO DECLINEDTO BE SOLD, HOWEVER JTJDQE

UPHOLDS 'HEE.

Refusing to marry tho man to whomshe had been sold by her parents, RosnWong, n protty Chiries'o girl'.'" fifteenyears old, fled, from her noma a fewdnys ago on the night boforo she wasto pass into slavery. She sought shel-

ter at tho Salvation Army. Homo?the girl's parents, Mr. 'and 'Mrs.

AA'ong Hoo, merchants of Moilill?, ap-pealed to .Judge AVhitnoy in tho juvenile court yestcrdny to order ' thoirdaughter to return to ber honle andmot with n Btcrn refusal when ; thoJiulgo loarned the facts. . '

Rosa AA'ong 'was born in Hiiw'aH,' andlias been educated in tho public schools.Sim dresses as an American girl and asan American girl bclioves that.sho isnot a chattel to bo sold into shvvery

Frank L. Packard, Mrs. P.Vcknnl, Ed-gar Painter, Miss Janet. Painter'1 Mis?E. R. Fottigrow, Mrs. M. Petrio, J. H.Prince, Mrs. II. Ramspercer. J. L. Richards, Mrs. Richards, j. P. M. Richards,miss Ann uiiey, u. u. scnwnrz, airs.S'hwarz, Mrs. E. Scott. J. Shuttleworth,Mrs. Shuttleworth, E. P. S estrueen, W,E. Sloan, Mrs. Everett P. Smith, Mrs,Trances Smith and daughter. Dr. A.

then

vanltipor, WalHer, Mrs. Walker, ner.AVntson, Mrs. AVntson. 11. Webor,

Mrs. Wbitnoy, Al-

fred WiW, Mrs. AV. AVood,Mrs. Canncll, Mrs. Corev.

str. Claudine. Maul ports,March Riobe, Mi Bench,!Mrs. Araulicizen, Miss Meiriman, Mrs.

Soares, Mrs. Rosa, Miss RosaPnares, Austin,

and wife, A. Mrs.:

Honolulu

tavs: '!Itirlttxn i.Iti.i.. A..r..A

limid liu.l r.ll.r

under tho guiso marriage, but en-

titled her own mate.Consequently when her parents in-

formed her that they had sold her foril.100 to ono Kain wife inaccordanco with thogirl revolted. She was infonnod thesale last Friday and spent the day inpleading with her parents to sellher to man pho did not love. Buther father informed her that nothingwould him chango from his posi-tion that Kam Kong had paid downmoney .aid that tho salewould go thiougb. Ho told her thatalthough sho was born in Hawaii andhnd attended American school thatsho was still Chine.se girl and owed"inques-tioiie- obedience the com-mands her parents...Seeing that her prayers wore

avail, the girl appearedbut Friday night she slipped fromher bed, crawled 'out andfled through tho streets to the Salva-tion Army Home, where she was given

Groom Was Insistent,AVhcn tho caso was called In tho juve-

nile comt yesterday morning, the parents, the! girl and Kam Kong, the

purchaser were present. Thegirl told her story, and tho parents admitted tliey sold licr Kam

Ho was asked what he thoughtmarrying girl who did- not love

him nnd did not want become hiswife. After deep consideration duringwhich lie kept liiB eyes fixed thogirl, replied that her parents con-tented, would insist gating hispound of

Judge AA'hitney declared that howould not foico the girl returnher home, that meant forcing hermarry man sho did love. That

"irl rnnld reed into distasteful marriapo under any consideration,

G. Smith, Mrs. Smith. Mrs. AV. C. and and there gave theStlckmnii, C. Stokes, Mrs. Stokes, 11, tody of Rosa AA'ong tho SalvationL. Strange, Mrs. B. Taylor, Dr. C. Army, which will enrofor

if. .M.T. J.

AVeber, Guilford II.Wild, S. J.

O. AVrigbt,Per for I

10 E. E. B.L.

L. A. L.1). L. P. Brown, R. ,

Mnvdu AV. Hardy.

isto

as aChinese custom,

nota

on

an

to

of noto

onof window

shelter.

would-b- o

toKong.of u

to

he ifho on

to toif

a nota

ho cusL. to

E. 8-- '

R.

L TEACH TI

Godlowski, Miss Godlowski, Robt. Ir- - "Reno was never like this." saidwin, llerr Bowman. D. II. Mctcalf and. Ben person, a wealthy res'dont of No-wif-

L. Smith, D. T. Flem ifg, Mr: and .' ,i,a,i laflt n,Sht who was a" m'Mrs. A. Godlowski. Mr. and Mrs. God- -

Ioski, Minn D. Godlowski, Claude God- - trouuction to real iuju wi.ii nuiainwski. Mrs. VS. A. Ramsay. trimmings. Mr. Pearson has been

iug tovcral weeks in tho.Jslands and

stroni!-- !

Doau't

Kong

account

leaves today for his home thSage-brus- h

Stato.Mr. and Mrs. AV. IJanisO)', old

fr!i,.lD nf fi ln.u.i ...,1.1 na l.nutA Woman Finds All Her Energy and agl nB,t. 'throwing open tho r home

Ambition Slipping Away. nr "'c evcning'n untertainment."Xevada ne.er was anything like

this," said Pciiri-oi- as the beHonolulu women know how the aches Kn depaiting. "The old State his al-

and pains that come when the kidneys ways prided itself on tie mnner infail make life a burden. Backache, hip which it can entertain," ho continued,iiains. headaches, dinv Kin!ll ,iltrta. "but fall short when comparedlug urinarv troubles, all toll nf sick wit1' Unwuii. That's nol their tault,kidneys and warn you of the stealthy t ''""ever; they ..imply havell't got II

dropsy or Bright' dib-- , "'ni,"". ",0t- - I've learmsl the hulaease, Do.in'a Backache Kidney Fills t""1?h.tn'1 Vm K"lng back homo toaro for the kidnovs onlv. Thov attack t"acl1 ,l to pomo ot.our vada girls.'kidney diseases by .striking at, the PIlINTINO CONTRACT FOR

Can sufferera desirecr thau thisproof woman's word! w,v f mi i. nf

X ru. .Innio. Rnniore "inn "" '"" " - r- -

St Bhlladoltihia. Pa..'I rmllit Ai'nvn

chooso

spoud- -

guests

begin -wVH... viiwti niwun nu ul--I vi

of

of

of

Had

to

be

irf

J.

of

chdo

.HUHI.VKivo Do-m'- DacKueho fills .,..,. f tu.. . i.tf ir,

Kidney coniilaint in tiiyciieo tcniHj-- , The work will be done by thocniuo on and I neglected to l'arndl.euf-tli- IVHIc, which hid thoattend to it until my condition wn lowest of the two b'iU Timterlou Otten 1 had to leuvn my houe- - ' rter was from thowork, and aound sleep wj '

The Terntorv wl I pay nt the r.Ho otowing tn baokuche. My hqcaino .ln per for one tliouwnd coplolaiiid nml ntllT and 1 had inch trrriblo pr ntl iu Kuglithi SCOdlny pell and hmitlacbun that 'it eoiilf will bu minted at the rate otH'eiue.1 tay wore 'Iia 1"' W- - The pr'e for f'OO ton-M-

tiRlit wan HlTeeteil and linrp iw 'hi llnwallaii Innuuue will beiiii(ii from mv tbpulder " per mih, wiiiii twi'iity.jiva rup-i-

Into my nrtna and Jolnii, inn'klug me a Inund heiMmkiii for rnvnibrri of thenk ui chili), When almuit ahwil will be U.H0 eiifluiu gite up, j nwriHM uf Duck

that

ho Klilrmy )MIi nud bcgnu tIBr ,i,c, , WI1ITU HI.AVHH IB H0OUDDiiuiy miihmi nii Hitiitiugu ollior

Iiireji'ini- -

.....I I ...... . ;l 1.. ..

make- -

a

acquiesce,

a

on

flosh.

"

a

they

ti

nffr

head

n

atWHEN BUNT TO 81HO,

fer T. K. K. H 8 Tuyo Uru. from 1 .1 . Jukiau ninf .l.rner. t ir.in I lLn, ...,hi i u.. u i,.. ...!. i,. vrw vmur iui ..,.. ri,.irum .'ntnlii, WwJi IHi. II W. W- I- 0. Joly, . 11. to, K.mp, bw.ii p..rHiuwiU" ' . i A. Ur'.ad.. nit 1.1 Lltlu ilnk ud l

Mtbt,

organization

AdH i'4H, HUHf-

cone BY

GWMIIfEE

FOR JOB

District Attorneyship Is

.. Coming His Way

McCarthy.

received in Honoluluto the trect that tho members of thohouse committee at Washington had c.illnl on Genera!dc"eynoli.s to appoint James D. Cokeistiict attorney tor Hawaii, caused atir In circles. TIiIb becaubot would appear that thov II loco no time filling "ifpdcralilTiees with members of their own,urty.

tnt matioas that a clean swcop wouldie Inade luxe been pouring into

from AVashlngton bv letter andable, and as a result, Col. C. J. Mcarthy yeste-dn- announced that ho is

i cnndldato for the position of collectorif customs now hold by E. R. Stack-ibl- e.

(iPTtliv, i ho is now city trcasur-- 'r, understood that the present fed.

yinl offici.ih might bo permitted toerve out the r terms, ami so bad taken

10 active stens toward securing theplnco, other than to have his naino

consideration when the timecame! " ' '

The news from tho mainlnnd, how-Jvo-

indicating that preparations are'he ng mado retlro tho presout fed'eral officials in San Francisco, and inother large cities, has caused ColonelMcCarthy to decide fo press his claims..

Alono In tho Field-A- sfar ns known, there is no other

person who is nn applicant for tho posi-tion, and ns Colonel is wido-l- y

and known, he is consid-ered a strong candidate and it is be-

lieved that lie will have nonot in securing thoof tho various Democratic organizationshere, but of tho business men of thocity as well.

The faction of tho Demo-crats, controls tho territorialcommittee, claims to bnve receivedword from "Washington that all appli-cations for federal positions must beartho endorsement of the territorial com-mittee.

Other .

. A' meeting of tho territorial com-mittc-

has been at which candidates will present their applicationsfor endorsement. '' bettorknown as "Soap Box,'"'Barron wantsto succeed Pratt as postmaster and iscounting on the of tho ter-ritorial committee.

U Colby is tho other candi-date for the position and ho is under-ooi- l

to have the endorsement of anumber of Democrats.

R. nnd C. D. Pringle aroboth after tho position of collector ofinternal revenue, but their candidacies,it is said have not received the. ap-proval of all tho party leaders. .

Bertram Rivenburgh expects to boappointed secretary of thew'tli AA'oods strong in the run-ning, wh'le II. Gooding Field is spokenof ns a man who make an excel-lent territorial auditor, it is epectrdhat thpse who have ben .secretlyspiling to the other positions will bo"smoked out" when the territorialcommittee me ts, if they decide thatthe endorsement of the territorial com-mittee is neecssarv

WANTS TEACHERS

TOCHASETRUflNTS

OATEEWORKED POLICE TOO BUSTTO HELP HAVE

TIME

Two lioufo bills nnd one senatepasted third reading in the house

yesterday, 11. 11, 51, fathered and cham-pioned by Sheldon, furnishing tho lalk-les- t.

Tliis bill repeals existing provi-sions of law whereby

detailed by sheriffs on recommen-dation ofschool principals, stoop tosuch menial sorvices as rounding uptruants who insist on staying awayfrom studies which aro furnished gratisby the

ijhcldon spoke for tho bills and thopoor and overworked police. "AVo havoprincipals now who don't teach, whoiiuve private ofllces and read newspa

SENATE'S PROCEEDINGS, pers. fhey got the police to round uplour ami kids to swell the

so the may get as

...i'.'.

pilnted in boolt form will as $130. Let tho teach;wlih ' today. Bids for the Hiev don't now, and they can the

tiu urnm oponod in under the di-- l upKitluov v.a.

tiial,

body page

If

enieniieiihi

lVilMtur

HINO

Mr.,

AA'ord

Attorney

in

to

only

which

called

Frank

Palme

would

meas-ure

attendance, principalprincipals

printingthusenato rounding themselves.

graduallylulmilttrd.

iiiii.ofisIuIo,

nildltloiiul

iplltUiiu'.

yesterday

judiciary

politicalD,cinorrnt

McCarthyfavorably

difficulty,indorsement

McCandloss

Candidates.

rCharlos,

endorsement

prominentAA'.'Cnthcart

Territory,

TEAOHEBS

ordinary police-men,

Territory.

Encouraging Truants.Itepri'M'titatUc irwln said the father

of tho bill was off on the wrons tack.and this brought Sheldon to his feet,protecting tho member from Hawaii wasiiiimiuoting him, Irwin moved to tabloHie bill.

"If till law U repealed,' saidAVntkln, "it will only add

to Jim number of truants. Tli'o boardof rdiiratiou (Miliuut uHord to pay a

tiuiiiit ulllvnr tn eueh ilutrlct.1'Ileprcintiilivn Coney ralllisl to llm

KUpiurr nt bit Haunt i'lltuin' unitpoke to tho niTrt tlmt lln jirecent

Ihw hh Hwliitve of oiilllt bctwfrqlUv hriir uinl ftsboul irlumU.

VI know uf m ilivi)l dm MvloUlliw the Uve Ie gfl thltu

imiim upimi tiii m'U "Vr hm tlieyT"1 '' uw"'.'. J' Jiwrv, i ti j) KIumv, 9 Krsffl, ll.l.d,i'H Mrs, Ikinu'. IktUeli Kldimv PUU r WI flrnir durntr. v mn1hi In,!' uf '" fori." wld " MuloUi

iimmn IIOMIIM JWN, J. I. Kruffl. A. ll !.ll, J, T. Iwrua,' sold I , nil i1iuTUU nu4 lt(iitwf MH( Wfctf tr , yll Hnd t(' " Thi, I. i,l on IwhrIMMI, Ml. J J. igitw, nut r Mr lr Mi. K I.Illlohii, A II t 6 wii par tmt ii Iiuim i,U) Hiiulln ludn 'whlu fUtvef " llllt nud ut ,vun H wx b.J tu' i,i .

' I.",, i' 'ur l.oioi. Mr. I o.i. 1 H rfHi, Wii ur miii i. inmM i,rti. vf prU wit. .uimflil u( lMrm yuMHK aitis u i'ii-- t tl pIJW t I'wiml uf

iw t, u j JHI ,'""". "" V U '" 1"'"'. M ' ht.rU'. 1. ll luli,ir Diug i., llonJliilu, mw.h in t . HuhJ up In II. i ,!.... I. I iirr msn inntmt, ..T rMlJ', w V 11.11 .not ..!) Iff T II Vlni'liiiiliMM l,i,l....lv ul,l. (ut llm tili.l tM I' ,,'', ji"''". mill Miliit. Itk

r r Mnui.il h. ,.,., li, , y,.,, y,Kii 1 (i Ull.ia lta.4 i1',i .i,t,, .i..u, , Uiv ... . ut if Ut, I m.. bf"".l!U. T. ,.''"'' '''.., M' Mllli Mi. J! .f.tw.ll Mlw Uromilxf Ibn UM, vii'. kil tM llt..iii14 ni.ll. trliu N )' , i '!.. imi.U la llU ltlll,. lb....!,, , , i um.1 i j ri.ltr H.u ltuf.IL. M.I. at 'A I' Ualliutt I.L. iu. t..lJ il..i.. I ....... I..., ...... .....I lJ n'lUb iU,ia,u uf IL. 4..liul L. L.iJ

: M Ji Al Ml

HONOLULU STOCK EXCHANGE.Honolulu, Mondy, Mnrch 10, 1913.

NAME OP STOCK

MiKAKTIL

CDrcwtrACo ... ...SUOAH

jaw. Agricultural ....law. Com. 4 Su. Co.Jaw. Su. Cotonomu

Ilonokaaiuiioi ,;;;;;llutcnln ton Sugar Plan-

tation CoKahuku. ,.Kckaha Sucar CoKoloa ,McBrrdc Rur. CA KAOahu Sugar CoOnomca ,uiaa Sugar Co. Ltd,..Paauhau Sug. Plan. Co,PacilicPala .tPcptckco ,Pioneer ....."....,Waialua Agr. CoWalluku Agr. CoWainunalo .....".Walmea Sugar Mill....

MiscflusbousInter-Islan-d S. N. Co..Haw. tleclnc CoJ. R.T..SL.CO. Put..

It. RT.AL.Co. Com.Mutual Tel. CoO.R1SL.C0I10R RCo, Pld1I0RR. Co. Com...:

Honolulu Brewing &Alanine Co Ltd

Haw. Irr. Co. LtdHaw. PincarplcCo..,.

I anions Olok Rub. CotHahangRub. Co

Dosos

Hay-- . Tcr. p c (FireClaims),

Haw. Tcr. 4 p c (Rc- -funding 1905) iHaw.Tcr.4nc Pub Im

Haw.Tcr. 4'p cHaw.Tcr. 4!f p cHaw. Ter. 3I pcCjI. Beet Sug.fi Refin-

ing Co. 6sHon das Co., Ltd 5s..naw. vom. a sugar to.

I HiloR.'R'6s' VlVruc'oflyyw,

Hilo R. R. Co. Rel. &Earn. Con. 6s

Honokaa Sug Co. 6 p cHoa.R.T.iSLCo.6pcKauai R Co. 6s..Kohala Dilch Cb. 6s....ttotomas Con. 6sMcBryde Supar Co., bsMutual Tel. 6sO. R. &L.Co:5pc...tOahu Sugar Co. 5 p c .Olaa Sugar Co. 6pc...Pacific bugar Mill Co.

6Pioneer Alill Co. 6 pc..Waialua Agr. Co. 5 pc.Hawaiian 6sHamakua Ditch Co 6s .

,and 3.

CArrrAipaid ir

tl.ZXl.000

5.000,0001,000.000

laouo.ooolooaooo

rsaoooz.ouu.0001,500,000

UO0.0001,000.000

800.000500.000

.1500.0005,000.000t .000.0005,000,0005.000.UX)

750,000ACi.uu

ilO.IU,CU),U

4.500,0013.uxi.i)

25A0U.I25.1M

2,250,0a750,a

t.an.Hx3&b!6u

5,0lX).AIfri,

2,800.001

500,00it, J5o.ua

500.IM

279.921

Amt.Ontstanding

110.00C

600.0001.500.0001.000,000I.OUU.UUU1.244,000

(100,000300,000

1,240,00)

1,000.030

1.673,000600,000620.000500,000500.00U

11,500,0002,000,000

240,0002,000,000

900.0002,500,000

500.0001,250.000

918,500800.000200.000

rVAt

100

201007320

10020

too

2520

100too2020

2050

100

1Uaiu101

ium

34W 25 1

... 35H finu 150 I

J"131 135

'ii' Mi" i. 155

3IK 32 f;3H 3U

'.'.'.'.'. Hi"130 .... i'fi iH 487 tfi &

150

134

6

22

40 K

100

106).'

W.

100 .

Aik

205

137 S6'

93

93"

lOOJf

10095 a

100104

102

H

Between Boards.40(1 Pioneer, 24.12",; 50 H. a & S.

Co., 34.75; 10 O. R. & h. Co., 135.00; 80Oahu Sug. Co., 17.75; 100 Hon. B. &JI. Co., 21.50; 80 II. C. & S. Co., 34.75;GO Onomea, 31.75.

Session Sales.10 Waialua, 88.00; 10 Onomea, 31.75:

35 Oahu Sug. Co., 17.02; 10 AVaialua,88.00; 1G0 II. B. & M. Co., 22.00; 15Oahu Sug. Co., 17.C2.

Sugar Quotations.88 dcg. Analysis Boets, 9s lid, parity

4.09; 90 Contrlfuguls; 3.54.Notice

Oahu books closed March 7 to 15 in-

clusive.AVaialua books closed March 8 to 15

inclusive.Dividends.

March 10, 1913. AVailuku, 1.00;Hutchinson, .20.

form twice a week, when tho steamer ;Harrives and departs." Ho seconded"Keprcsentativo Irwin's motion to tablotho bill.

Bill Passes.Representative C. II. Cooke stated

that, as chairman of tho education committee of the house, he protestedagainst tho passage "of this bill.

Tho motion to tablo was lost on thofollowing vote:

Aycs-- C. II. Cooke, O. P. Cooke,tloodncss, Huddy, Irwin, Kaniho, Kins-le-

Makokau, l'oepoo, Tavarcs, AVaia-hol- o

nnd AA'atkins 12.Nos Asch, Coney, Knaua, Kalaki-ela- ,

Kaupiko, Kawowehi, Kupihoa, Lo-ta, Lyman, McCandlcss, Paxson fehol-do-

Spalding, AA'ilcox, Mr. Speaker15.

Absent nnd not voting Silva, PaeleBobcrtson

Un tho motion to pass tho bill onthird reading Poopoo switched over infavor of tho measure and tho bill pass-ed by the minimum-require- d majority,10 to 11.

AVatkins' bill appropriating fivo thou-sand dollars for the relief of personsfreed from the Molokai Settlement andthe Kalihi Itccoiv'ng Station passedthird reading without n dissenting"vote.

AVith onlv two dissenting votos, Ta-varcs andiAVilcox, S. B. 33 (Coke) re-

lating- to tho sale of rncrchnndlso andfixtures in bulk, receivdd tho approvalof the house.

H. B. 90 and 102 had third readingdeferred.

Mileage' For Supervisors.Among the five new bills Introduced

yestorday in tho house there is onolittle and apparently innocent measure,now known as II. B. 148, which Repre-sentative Lota introduced. It providesthat county supervisors shall receivemileage nt tho rate of twonty.flvocmts tier mile each way, going to audreturning from board mcetiiies.

Kuplhea's II. U. 147 would requiromo inclusion or a stipulation in all con-tracts for public works to tho effectthat mechanics, rlerki, laborers orother employes shall not work morothan eighty hours per day, except iueases of emergency,

Either Knllhl pcoplo want a pnrlt orRepresentative Mct'anillou wants toprc.ent thorn with ono. II. B. HP, in-

troduced by him provide, forthe coiivcrilnn of a piece of laud uttho corner of Oullck nnd lieckleytreu, iu the Kallhl duttlct. Thu pro.oiid pnrlt U to be tome 330 feet in

I' ijKtli by about Mu ft In width, andwill contain a trlllu over an acre.

'" .". "..HMMI 1.1.1

Ui Aiij'lr I. to have a wUou fe-lur-

tu Mt IU0,000, nud to employM0Q wofkpf,,

-.--

UirnUKATIO VMiitl,WUm yov kiv, ihiiitHU)i In jrpur

taut t, luilvp itpply riu,wbMltn'KI'.IM lllH ttui fov will ul 'U. 'Fsr ! J1wf, Hwitb i'l, Hi

H

.. . . vymj" '-- "" j -- .,T....UtkiMlM.

1

n

I