kumiuin - evols at university of hawaii at manoa:...

8
:, i- - if ( CJ kUmiuin TJ. &. TTSATHSE. SC2Siu. SSsNr SL Last 4 beers' nifSTL tnce. SUGAR 96 Dgree Tee OstrifuFOs, 3,&9c; Per T&, $73.48. tre, JUs. SS; 3E. 7. Weisr; c3?y . SS Analysis Beets, 10a. SUd,; Per Tw, $33.00. VOL. L X- - HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER IO 1907. SEMI-WEEKL- Y WHOLE No. 2936 NAVIGATOR AFONG HE WORKMEN BESIEGING ARMED RETURNS LAME lig Tug Breaks Valve Stem 236 Miles at Sea. Wlti a. bstken lw-pressu- re valvt stsm. the Assi&sed OS Company's :tg Xavicar. eaprete Gerge icGoi-- l xiek. w4ei te e& barge llsnterey la t-- pec bsek to part last night, dock- ing at the fc wiarf at U:45 o'ciock. The 2Ce.TisMc and. her tow left the the come SisrSwr last Friday evening at o'clock, ilrs. Burns, who has been Harford anether o2 ? en l2& fisoks the ban k: for the &rge and. ais to Kin rtie 3ari GsHeatt. o& isdea. Cti Ssfe.y iast, at S o'ciscS: !a the g-- r. f rHs frKa Horafcfe. she roSe ber 13r-pressc- re Taive stei. A srple f hoers srere spszz gettia? ra&dy retera to Hoasteis. for pairs radar of -- xzzd. aetioa siel bask her tirw at zamQv 1-- 2 kaots. ste was iloatersy them itrs. sbe cwrfd make ten Smots, boct E I--: knts with a he.vy 2ii TThe retssra was witbact incident. H- - 3airs wiS be made here at once and -- the Xavigatsr wfH tate csn more fuel c aad prebabiy make a fresh start TZhursday tasrning. Cil is. great demand here and there Vg been delay In delivering what nseeded, tois reason the com 3any is anxlocs to rash cargoes. TThen ihe Navigator feft the Coast for Eo-- si she was to have the (Continued on page ) ANOTHER LICENSE IS TURNED DOWN Soard of License Commission- ers Held a Meeting Yesterday. The Board cf Commissioners 2sed a meeting yesterday afternoon. A 35ublic hearing was given to Ishimatra, wid appSed for a hotel Hcense for kia sa.bHhmer.t just TTaEdkl of Kuuanu sLvinuerFSnfeul, and running through x- - another- - short street. The place is si o-story frame building. The appli-at- .n was rejected. Ishlmatsu was s.n unsuccessful applicant for a retail some time ago. It was stated that number of licenses issued in Honolulu about thirty. There were about sixty last year. addition to these saloon licenses, however, there are the restau- rant and hotel Hcezises. The board Indulged in a general dis- -. cusska. of questions that have arisen in the practical administration of thb law. The sights and scenes at "Scot- - zs"s- - 02 Sunday were talked over, such Z coiamlssioners were thert coring tbe day telling what they saw. Irpector PenneH told of the work he bas dooe. Tbe question of whether the Brewery could deliver beer on Sunday discoseed and the law read care- fully In relation thereto. There wffl not be another public bearing until October 3. .One or two amplications license, would fcave come up pebHc hearing, have been wlthdrawn. -- - THB ALSWA EOAD. C S. Holloway, Superintendent of Public "Works, yesterday notified Ind Commissioner 'Pzsit that the engineers of his department were now at. work taking the cross sections of the pro- posed Boad. This means that J so re .u Is as AGAIN Litigation Over Estate Settled by the I Compromise. Sa far re. Aisnr ease being eprisd and settled, it looks is thegh it may jsst be fairly starred ea its eanrse through the courts. Two at least ef the ehOdrea. it is said, have bece convinced that th-- proposed -- a4 CeCtSlOnS VS. Income --- ?v ;. nr n? w-iti- Hr fflr- all aaeraed. new have x appeals, la all the Board Is ca ereesat tato tae ratter aai tae 1 uaaainiccs. ?h tt1I A" either to a ish ga perf .j j- -. iportaat of the aather thosga there, v- - ,5, - tv- - ,DMal nf th. r t riH. be mt priaeipals. P Not eorapraatise. i. C Peter Atiornev Gen eral, it is reported, has Into the ease as representative of Henry Afn, wbe. accordinc to what is be lieved is very authority. i rot satisae-- i with the proposed. Frank Thompson does rot deny- - that he has been retailed on behalf of X. B- - living " fr e ;Tar Ptet fr cargo years, it as taocca suit - Idcens saloon Alewa. gii eo- - ret its seeead tried. Aeordiai to a at: people 1 sho are ia a wsitioa to taow st least the priaeipal facts, the eeproause di-- 1 at provide ior aay of the ehildrea ea CT:p ux iirui uacgiitrs ia wacse t"! s".i sr Trnnv ."rswwi rr rr b wa orzpnaay ilrs. 5,' prop.rj. jMs Territory but - " -- Ej.'eai. la repairs oa tne st-- oierwise a fcote, g Jose renai-- s made era! premise on the part of ilrs. Af ong- sae wocii oeal taxrlv with them. "broost a. speed ofilt is stated bv a friend of the sihout going, Barns, coadi- - brought license saiooa In was which for cow iatelv taat IT.r -? ln?pr -- rrn- ? t . tn f"VT..a .i V..- ll...i.. a m j... . I r.c L i.c ?&- -. ;!.. iCt 11.U. as th as to the srp. is is far the the for tie ,jtion of the estate and of the income. jand that it is because the real status o-j- of aSairs has bes. learned that the fects other children than the four in whose behalf it was brought, is now to be abrogated. "When the public, learns," a friend of the family "as I believe it wiB. just how matters stand, the sym- pathy of the community will be with irs. Burns. It is hoped that it wQl not be necessary to mahe seanda-lae- s charges or to air any family skeletons. But on the basis of equity between chSdren having equal rights and entitled to equal treatment, ilrs. Burns' ease will appeal to the senti or fair psay in the eomraumtv. -- t- TNE SCHOOLS AIEJ01EO Great Increases in Attendance Are Reported Every- where. School opened In the public school an p eIeven yuiti cae not oea receivea irom any of the other islands, but everywhere on island the reports .are of In- - ti&aea aiiecuaace- - nearly every school is filled. Some of them are so crowded that the principals and teach- ers are put to their wits ends to pro- vide for all the children. At the High School at the Kauluwela school there are actually not enough seats or desks to all the pupils. In the High School every department is crowded beyond Its limits. Babbitt yesterday visited during the day the High School, the formal, Ka lihi-wae- Central Grammar, Kaiu- lani, BoyaL Hauluwela and Pohuka- - ina. At the Kauluwela school there is an Increase of CO pupils over last year; at the Boyal an Increase of 1M, and at Kalulanl 60. At Kallhi-waen- a last year there were 245 pupils. Tes-terda- y, although all of the last year's pupils who are exp-ct- ed back not In, there were new pupils bring- ing up the enrollment to 23?. It is not yet known among what race the increase of pupils is. The old Hopper residence is now In use as a school, for the first time since It was acquired as a part of the Tnnl deal. The pupils and teachers former- ly In the old coral house on Hawa!a lane, belonging to Kawaiahao church, are now housed In the Hop- per residence, the coral building is no longer used as a school. Ir Is one of the oldest structures In Hawaii. The new Kalihl-wae- na school build- ing was used yesterday for the first time. Preliminary reports received yester- day, which are only given as show Increases over last year ls follows: High School, 123; Central Grammar, 250; -- Walklkl, 20; Slomni, 2$; Manoa. 4: Normal, khe department wCI be ready to ;M; Maeiaae. 23:Pauoa, 15: Boyal. Nl fedvertise for bids for the construction J Kalolanl. 3W; Kaaluwela, ; ' Kallhl' f tbe road. waeha, I9. ORIENTALS AT VANCOUVER E TDK REFUSE D DOCTOR APPEALS DHD: FDD DYING MM The Is Sustained Only One of the Three. The Tax Appeal Court yesterday and lawyers cases jk,. eomprerri estate of th late H. A. Iseabers. Tne incorae tax of the estate was returei i a j st ISi53 and was raised the j teac ? Vsaalt battery and va- - J sor to SSSCJij. aa increase of J2SML I graECT. havinc beea known around This was the amount income j Waimea for two as a tax som-etnms- r like C3C of lif e 1 .... Insurance collected by the estate dur- ing the year. The contention was made that this money was not subject to income tax but. when distributed, would be liable to inheritance tax. court tooS this view. The inheritance tax on that amount will be about the as the income tax. A second case decided was that of the Campbell estate's appeal Increase in income tax of ILS3 made by the assessor. This was the amount Droupt, ta James than by gen- - neces- - iow. real said any ment this had come 3W; soon w.T The Jrom sary by the earthquake of April IS, Uvx estate claimed that this money was a part of the expenses in- curred In carrying on the business of the estate. The Tax Appeal court took this view of It and sustained the ap- peal. The assessor wul appeal to the Su- preme Court so as to get aa authori- tative ruling on the question of wheth- er Income derived from property in this Territory can be spent on enter- prises outside of the Territory and b exempt from the Income tax, The third decision was in the caao- of the appeal C G. Ballentyne. He returned his income at SXL78 and It was raised by the assessor to $U.S. It Is from the Increase of J1S.11 that the appeal was taken. This was levied the assessor on money received from the sale of stocks during the year. The appellant claimed, however, 1 that as the stocks when bought, pre vious to the year for which taxes were assessed, cost more than they had been sold for and that therefore in- stead of an income there had been a The court following the opinion of the Supreme Court in the J. B. Cas- tle case of a year ago, sustained the assessor and overruled the contentions of the appellant. ' t TO BE REOPENED Governor Frear yesterday formally approved the reopening, by Land Com- - over the Islands yesterday. Be-- j, of lQt3 and accommodate Superintendent Kaahumanu, hao and approxi- mations, Pohukaina. M Assessor and had Puna. HUo and Harnakna districts of Hawaii, which for various reasons have never been disposed of, or have re- verted to the government. Six of these lots are be disposed of as right of purchase leases and five them asf cash freeholds. Applications have been received for most, or all, of them, and applicants will be given an oppor- tunity to get them. They range In ap- praised value from Ji50 aa acre to J10. Some of them are in plots that were opened up ten years ago. One of the lots which has reverted to government has improvements on It In the way of buildings, fences. and sort of thing, appraised at $125. "When this Is sold the purchase price to that amount go to the original purchaser, less whatever rent was due the government at the time he surrendered the property. l -- - , BEST COUNTERFEITING OUTFIT YET CAPTURED KILO, September 9. Marshal Hend ry arrived here midnight from Ho-Dota- a, having in custody four Koreans and plant captured with them. The outfit is complete, the best yet obtain- ed. The Marshal will leave with the men material for Honolulu in the Clandine today. Hilos won the championship in the ffilo Baseball League yesterday, taking the seeond game in a series of three played therefor. UT HIS WIPE'S KAME. Instruments filed with the Beglstrar oi Conveyances yesterday record the conveyance by Fred if. KIley, through Z C. "Peters, to 'Mrs. Kiley. of resi- dence property on ITaldkl street near " Hastings; ""- - hron" in Japanese state Particulars of t - the Killing of the Lihue Prisoner. The kHUng of Torao Klsaimura at Iihne oa the 4th last, toy Jailor Enoch LovelL according to the report sent to Hoaolultt by the Japanese correspond- ent of the Jlyu shfcnbun. places T.ovell in a most serious situation. The dead man. was serving- six months' sen- - by asses- - of the the past Years oa an The of tax by loss. to of the that will last and The raine- - wortniess caaracter. He was sent to the Lihue Jail to serve out his sentence, a part of his hard labor be- ing to help in preparing a taro patch on the property of C W. Spits, at Xawillwili. In the gang with him were two others, a Japanese named Kato and a Korean. The breakfast prepared for the men on the third was found to consist of half raw rice, which none of the three could eat, so it was decided to ask Lovell for money with which to buy some bread. The money asked for was a part of J2o belonging to Nishlmura. held by Lovell while the owner was doing time. Accordingly the three went to the Jailor and made their re- quest. Nishimura acting as spokesman. Lovell. however, according to the story of the two living members "of the trio, refused to listen to them and before their request had been all pre- sented struck Kato with his fist on the side of the head, drawing blood. He then turned upon Klshlmur3, striking him first with his fist and then kick- ing him in the lower part of the abdo- men. The victim of these blows was knocked down and was unable to get up. - Lovell then got on his horse and commenced to herd the three prisoners back to Lihue, but Xishlmura was un- able to walk unassisted. After the three had been locked up again, Xlshi-mu- ra complained of severe pains in the abdomen and asked that a doctor be sent for. The request was refused. All night he suffered, in the morning renewing his request that a doctor be sent for, offering to pay the expense himself. Again his request was re- fused. Later In the morning his condition became so palpably serious that Lovell telephoned to Dr; Putnam. After ex- amining the man the physician de- clared that his condition by this time was such that he could do nothing for him. The man died about neon that day. As to the excitement, so reported, oi the Lihue Japanese, the Jiyu corre spondent denies that there was any. Some of the friends of the dead man came over from TVaimea and these began an agitation, wishing to take up the- - matter at once with their Con- sul General in Honolulu. On the ad- vice of Mr. Fukunaga, the Japanese editor at Lihue. they waited and as soon as it was seen that the authori- ties took up the matter the Japanese dropped whatever action they had con- templated. n PLENTY OF ROCK "We will be ready to advertise for bids for the Hilo breakwater work in about two months," said Captain Ot-w- ell yesterday. He has Just returned from Hilo, where. In company with Engineer Burbank, the whole details of the work to be done was gone over on the grounds. The trip was, in fut, that ilr. Burbank might become fa- miliar with the situation, as he will be more or less in charge of it when the work Is actually under way. "The situation Is now Just about where it has been for some time," said Captain Otwell, "the only change being that I have satisfied myself that there Is not only good rock to be found for the' work, but plenty of It and Irr sev- eral places. The most convenient place for the establishment of the quarry win be, I think, in Puna, where the ledge is exposed and in workable shape." H DIES OF HIS INJUBXES. Victor Allen, of the Union Feed Co., who had both legs broken, his head wounded and was otherwise Injured on Thursday last by being caught be- tween a building of the company and a wheel of a dray drawn by a run- away team which had been frighten- ed by the noise of an auto, died at the Queen's Hospital yesterday morning. An Inquest was held last "night and a verdict of accidental death ' ' returned. ' ' ? . (Associated Press CablegnuBS.) VANCOUVER, September io. The outbreak of the white laborers against the Asiatics of the city is still serious. The Chinese and Japanese quarters are in a state of siege and the Orientals are armed to resist any further attacks. White laborers have been sum- moned within a radius of fifteen miles of the city to march upon the Oriental section. One hundred extra policemen have been sworn in by the au- thorities and orders have been issued for the militia to stand ready to turn out immediately in the event of any further disturbances. Earl Grey, the Governor General, has telegraphed from Ottawa that order must be preserved. LONDON, September 10 The anti-Japane- se troubles at Van- couver had been expected here but the British, authorities have con- fidence that the Canadian government will prevent any recurrences of the rioting which has taken place. OTTAWA, September 10. The opinion is expressed here that Canada will pay damages to the Japanese and Chinese injured in the Vancouver rioting and will apologize to the governments at Tekio and Peking. 2TOBSIS, X, September 6. Eleven were killed here today In & railroad accident. AUSTIN", Tex, September 6. The International Harvester Company has paid a fine of 535,000 for violation of the anti-Tru- st law. LONDON, September 7. Capt Mlkkelsen and his companions are safe. The steamer Duchess of Bedford is wrecked. ATHABASCA ULNDINO, Athabasca, Canada, September 6. It is reported that the Arctic exploring schooner Duchess of Bedford is lost and Captaia Muckelsen and two others of the expedition are missing. SAN FEANCISCO, September 7. The transport Thomas sailed today wit& nine troops of the Sixth Cavalry and a detachment of field artillery for the Philippines. CHICAGO, September 7. A receiver has been appointed for the Belding Hall Manufacturing Company. President Hall appropriated $345,000. PARTS, September 7. The Moorish tribes have asked Gen. Drude to sus- pend hostilities for the purpose of negotiating peace. CHICAGO, September 7. Fred Fish, a retired broker, murdered his wife today and committed suicide. SAN FBANCTSOO, September 7. Judge Lawlor of the Superior Court has overruled the demurrers filed in the Parkside bribery cases. All the defendants then pleaded not guilty before Judge Dunne and the interrupted trial pro- ceeded. The trial of the officials of the United Eailroads will begin on Septem- ber 12. ST. PETEESBUBG, September 7. The Czar has granted permission for Count Stolypin, the Prime 'Minister of Bussla, to accept and wear the decoration bestowed upon him by the Emperor of Japan. ANTWERP, September 7. Work has been resumed in the dockyards witi four thousand strikebreakers. PORTLAND, September 7. Secretary of War Taft, who is on his way to the Philippines, arrived here yesterday. He was given a great reception by. the citizens. . 1 a t i t- - SAN FEANCTSCO, September 8. J. D. Spreckels gave his deposition yes-terd- in the big $30,000,000 damage suit instituted in New York by the re- ceivers for the Pennsylvania Sugar Company against the American Sugar Ba- nning Company, owned by H. O. Havemeyer and his associates, known com- - rmonly as the sugar trust. He testified that Havemeyer owned a large minority of the shares of the Western Sugar Company. He denied that the Spreckels' Interests owned or controlled any interest in any other American company in addition to the Western Sugar Company. PARIS, September 8. The Moors have asked that an armistice be ar- ranged for. There is a suspicion that this move Is only a trick on the part of the Moors to gain time in which to enlist more fanatics for the holy war they claim to be. waging. The cabinet will hold a meeting tomorrow to consider the Moroccan situation and to decide whether the asked for armistice will be granted or refused. x I " LONDON, September 8. Jarvis, the British champion swimmer, won race yesterday, swimming the distance in three hours and twenty-fo- ur minutes. CLEVELAND, O, September 7. Congressman Burton was today nominated for Mayor by acclamation in the Republican city convention. His opponent will he Tom Johnson. CTTx" OF MEXICO, September 8. In an explosion at the Esperanza Tnn yesterday afternoon twenty-seve- n persons were killed. SAN FEANCISCO, September 8. Four more suspected cases of plague were discovered here yesterday. VANCOUVER, B. C, September g Japanese Commissioner Ishii, who was here during the anti-Orient- al riot of yesterday, re- ports that the windows and doors of fifty Japanese stores were smashed during the rioting. Also two Japanese were wounded. These facts will be presented to Sir Wilfred Laurier, the Cana- dian Premier. VANCOUVER, September 9 This city has been the scene of great labor noting today. Two thousand Chinese have been driven out of the city, and$i5,-co- o worth of property has been destroyed. The police frustrated an attack on the Japanese quarter. LONDON, September g. A modus vivendi has been concluded between the United States and Great Britain concerning the New- foundland fishing controversy. It is substantially a renewal of the old agreement. PARIS, September 9. It is reported that France has proposed to Spain that the latter country join in the defense against the fanatical Moors with an army of 15,000 men, and that these be sent to Morocco at once. TANGIER, September 9. Raisuli's ultimatum for the release bf Kaid Maclean is that he, Raisuli, shall be given British protec- tion, be appointed Pasha and be assured of indemnity against any punishment for past offenses. TOKIO, September g. The insurgents in Korea are abandoning-organize- d resistance to Japanese rule of the country, and are resort- ing to a system of guerrilla warfare. PARIS, September 10. it a meeting of the Cabinet yesterday" it was- - decided that Morocco will be called upon to pay damages for the outrages committed by the insurgent Moors at Casablanca, the amount to be assessed at a meeting of an international com- mittee. HAKODATE, Japan, September 9. A mob today; chased four saflory of the United" States cruiser Chattanooga who were- - "ashore on leave. The affair resulted" from one of the sailors striking a Japanese . merdiantr r '- - ,' 'J 4 . J. A ,, 4 E. I " iliil

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Page 1: kUmiuin - eVols at University of Hawaii at Manoa: Homeevols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/3445/1/...i-if - (CJ kUmiuin TJ. &. TTSATHSE. SC2Siu. SSsNr SL Last 4 beers' nifSTL

:,i- -

if

(

CJ

kUmiuinTJ. &. TTSATHSE. SC2Siu. SSsNr SL Last 4 beers' nifSTL tnce. SUGAR 96 Dgree Tee OstrifuFOs, 3,&9c; Per T&, $73.48.

tre, JUs. SS; 3E. 7. Weisr; c3?y . SS Analysis Beets, 10a. SUd,; Per Tw, $33.00.

VOL. L X- - HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER IO 1907. SEMI-WEEKL- Y WHOLE No. 2936

NAVIGATOR AFONG HE WORKMEN BESIEGING ARMEDRETURNS

LAME

lig Tug Breaks Valve

Stem 236 Miles

at Sea.

Wlti a. bstken lw-pressu- re valvt

stsm. the Assi&sed OS Company's

:tg Xavicar. eaprete Gerge icGoi-- lxiek. w4ei te e& barge llsnterey lat-- pec bsek to part last night, dock-

ing at the fc wiarf at U:45 o'ciock.

The 2Ce.TisMc and. her tow left the

the

come

SisrSwr last Friday evening at o'clock, ilrs. Burns, who has been

Harford anether o2 ? enl2& fisoks the ban

k: for the &rge and. ais to Kinrtie 3ari GsHeatt. o& isdea.

Cti Ssfe.y iast, at S o'ciscS: !a theg-- r. f rHs frKa Horafcfe. she

roSe ber 13r-pressc- re Taive stei. Asrple f hoers srere spszz gettia?

ra&dy retera to Hoasteis. for

pairs radar of --xzzd. aetioa sielbask her tirw at zamQv

1-- 2 kaots.

ste was iloatersy them itrs.sbe cwrfd make ten Smots,

boct E I--: knts with a he.vy2ii

TThe retssra was witbact incident. H- -

3airs wiS be made here at once and--the Xavigatsr wfH tate csn more fuelc aad prebabiy make a fresh startTZhursday tasrning.

Cil is. great demand here and thereVg been delay In delivering whatnseeded, tois reason the com

3any is anxlocs to rash cargoes. TThen

ihe Navigator feft the Coast for Eo--si she was to have the

(Continued on page )

ANOTHER LICENSE

IS TURNED DOWN

Soard of License Commission-

ers Held a Meeting

Yesterday.

The Board cf Commissioners

2sed a meeting yesterday afternoon. A

35ublic hearing was given to Ishimatra,

wid appSed for a hotel Hcense for kiasa.bHhmer.t just TTaEdkl of Kuuanu

sLvinuerFSnfeul, and running throughx- - another- - short street. The place issi o-story frame building. The appli-at- .n

was rejected. Ishlmatsu wass.n unsuccessful applicant for a retail

some time ago.It was stated that number of

licenses issued in Honoluluabout thirty. There were about sixtylast year. addition to these saloonlicenses, however, there are the restau-rant and hotel Hcezises.

The board Indulged in a general dis- -.

cusska. of questions that have arisenin the practical administration of thblaw. The sights and scenes at "Scot- -zs"s-- 02 Sunday were talked over, such

Z coiamlssioners were thertcoring tbe day telling what they saw.Irpector PenneH told of the work hebas dooe. Tbe question of whether theBrewery could deliver beer on Sunday

discoseed and the law read care-

fully In relation thereto.There wffl not be another public

bearing until October 3. .One or twoamplications license, wouldfcave come up pebHc hearing, havebeen wlthdrawn.

-- -THB ALSWA EOAD.

C S. Holloway, Superintendent ofPublic "Works, yesterday notified IndCommissioner 'Pzsit that the engineersof his department were now at. worktaking the cross sections of the pro-

posed Boad. This means that

J

so re

.u

Is

as

AGAIN

Litigation Over Estate

Settled by the I

Compromise.

Sa far re. Aisnr ease beingeprisd and settled, it looks isthegh it may jsst be fairly starredea its eanrse through the courts. Twoat least ef the ehOdrea. it is said, havebece convinced that th-- proposed

--a4 CeCtSlOnS VS. Income--- ?v ;. nr n? w-iti- Hr fflr-

all aaeraed. new have x appeals, la all the Board Isca ereesat tato tae ratter aai tae 1 uaaainiccs.?h tt1I A" either to a ishga perf .j j--. iportaat of theaather thosga there, v- - ,5, - tv- - ,DMal nf th.r triH. be mt priaeipals.

P

Not

eorapraatise.

i. C Peter Atiornev General, it is reported, has Into theease as representative of HenryAfn, wbe. accordinc to what is believed is very authority. i rotsatisae-- i with the proposed.Frank Thompson does rot deny- - thathe has been retailed on behalf of

X. B-- living" fr e;Tar Ptet fr cargo years,

it as taocca suit

-

Idcens

saloon

Alewa.

gii

eo- - ret its seeead tried.Aeordiai to a at: people 1

sho are ia a wsitioa to taow st leastthe priaeipal facts, the eeproause di-- 1

at provide ior aay of the ehildrea eaCT:p ux iirui uacgiitrs ia wacse t"!

s".i sr Trnnv ."rswwi rr rr b

wa orzpnaay ilrs. 5,' prop.rj. jMs Territory but- " -- Ej.'eai. la repairs oa tne st--oierwise a fcote, g Jose renai-- s madeera! premise on the part of ilrs. Afong-

sae wocii oeal taxrlv with them."broost a. speed ofilt is stated bv a friend of thesihout

going, Barns, coadi- -

brought

license

saiooa

In

was

whichfor

cow

iatelv

taat

IT.r -? ln?pr -- rrn- ? t . tnf"VT..a .i V..- ll...i.. a m j... .

I r.c L i.c ?&- -. ;!.. iCt 11.U.as th as to the

srp.

isis

far

the

the

for

tie

,jtion of the estate and of the income.jand that it is because the real status

o-j-of aSairs has bes. learned that the

fects other children than the four inwhose behalf it was brought, is nowto be abrogated.

"When the public, learns," afriend of the family "as I believe itwiB. just how matters stand, the sym-pathy of the community will be withirs. Burns. It is hoped that it wQlnot be necessary to mahe seanda-lae- s

charges or to air any familyskeletons. But on the basis of equitybetween chSdren having equal rightsand entitled to equal treatment, ilrs.Burns' ease will appeal to the senti

or fair psay in the eomraumtv.--t-

TNE SCHOOLS

AIEJ01EOGreat Increases in Attendance

Are Reported Every-

where.

School opened In the public schoolan p eIevenyuiti cae not oea receivea irom anyof the other islands, but everywhereon island the reports .are of In--ti&aea aiiecuaace- - nearly everyschool is filled. Some of them are socrowded that the principals and teach-ers are put to their wits ends to pro-vide for all the children. At the HighSchool at the Kauluwela schoolthere are actually not enough seats ordesks to all the pupils.In the High School every department iscrowded beyond Its limits.

Babbitt yesterdayvisited during the day the HighSchool, the formal, Kalihi-wae- Central Grammar, Kaiu-lani, BoyaL Hauluwela and Pohuka- -ina. At the Kauluwela school there isan Increase of CO pupils over lastyear; at the Boyal an Increase of 1M,and at Kalulanl 60. At Kallhi-waen- a

last year there were 245 pupils. Tes-terda- y,

although all of the last year'spupils who are exp-ct- ed back not

In, there were new pupils bring-ing up the enrollment to 23?.

It is not yet known among what racethe increase of pupils is.

The old Hopper residence is now Inuse as a school, for the first time sinceIt was acquired as a part of the Tnnldeal. The pupils and teachers former-ly In the old coral house on Hawa!a

lane, belonging to Kawaiahaochurch, are now housed In the Hop-per residence, the coral building isno longer used as a school. Ir Is oneof the oldest structures In Hawaii.

The new Kalihl-wae- na school build-ing was used yesterday for the firsttime.

Preliminary reports received yester-day, which are only given as

show Increases over last yearls follows: High School, 123; CentralGrammar, 250; --Walklkl, 20; Slomni, 2$;Manoa. 4: Normal,

khe department wCI be ready to ;M; Maeiaae. 23:Pauoa, 15: Boyal. Nlfedvertise for bids for the construction J Kalolanl. 3W; Kaaluwela, ; ' Kallhl'f tbe road. waeha, I9.

ORIENTALS AT VANCOUVERE TDK REFUSE D DOCTOR

APPEALS DHD: FDD DYING MM

The Is SustainedOnly One of the

Three.

The Tax Appeal Court yesterday

and lawyers cases

jk,.

eomprerri

estate of th late H. A. Iseabers. Tneincorae tax of the estate was returei

i

aj st ISi53 and was raised the j teac ? Vsaalt battery and va--J sor to SSSCJij. aa increase of J2SML I graECT. havinc beea known around

This was the amount income j Waimea for two as atax som-etnms- r like C3C of life 1 ....Insurance collected by the estate dur-ing the year. The contention wasmade that this money was not subjectto income tax but. when distributed,would be liable to inheritance tax.court tooS this view. The inheritancetax on that amount will be about the

as the income tax.A second case decided was that of

the Campbell estate's appealIncrease in income tax of ILS3 madeby the assessor. This was the amount

Droupt, taJamesthan by gen- - neces- -

iow. real

said

any

ment

this

hadcome

3W;soon

w.T

The

Jrom

sary by the earthquake of April IS,Uvx estate claimed that thismoney was a part of the expenses in-curred In carrying on the business ofthe estate. The Tax Appeal court tookthis view of It and sustained the ap-peal.

The assessor wul appeal to the Su-preme Court so as to get aa authori-tative ruling on the question of wheth-er Income derived from property inthis Territory can be spent on enter-prises outside of the Territory and bexempt from the Income tax,

The third decision was in the caao-of the appeal C G. Ballentyne. Hereturned his income at SXL78 andIt was raised by the assessor to $U.S.It Is from the Increase of J1S.11 thatthe appeal was taken. This was levied

the assessor on money receivedfrom the sale of stocks during theyear. The appellant claimed, however, 1

that as the stocks when bought, previous to the year for which taxes wereassessed, cost more than they hadbeen sold for and that therefore in-stead of an income there had been a

The court following the opinionof the Supreme Court in the J. B. Cas-tle case of a year ago, sustained theassessor and overruled the contentionsof the appellant.

' t

TO BE REOPENED

Governor Frear yesterday formallyapproved the reopening, by Land Com- -

over the Islands yesterday. Be-- j, of lQt3

and

accommodate

Superintendent

Kaahumanu,

hao

and

approxi-mations,

Pohukaina.

M

Assessor

and

had

Puna. HUo and Harnakna districts ofHawaii, which for various reasons havenever been disposed of, or have re-verted to the government. Six of theselots are be disposed of as right ofpurchase leases and five them asfcash freeholds. Applications havebeen received for most, or all, of them,and applicants will be given an oppor-tunity to get them. They range In ap-praised value from Ji50 aa acre to J10.Some of them are in plots that wereopened up ten years ago.

One of the lots which has revertedto government has improvementson It In the way of buildings, fences.and sort of thing, appraised at$125. "When this Is sold the purchaseprice to that amount go to theoriginal purchaser, less whatever rentwas due the government at the timehe surrendered the property. l

-- - ,

BEST COUNTERFEITING

OUTFIT YET CAPTURED

KILO, September 9. Marshal Hendry arrived here midnight from Ho-Dota- a,

having in custody four Koreansand plant captured with them. Theoutfit is complete, the best yet obtain-ed. The Marshal will leave with themen material for Honolulu in theClandine today.

Hilos won the championship inthe ffilo Baseball League yesterday,taking the seeond game in a series ofthree played therefor.

UT HIS WIPE'S KAME.

Instruments filed with the Beglstraroi Conveyances yesterday record theconveyance by Fred if. KIley, throughZ C. "Peters, to 'Mrs. Kiley. of resi-dence property on ITaldkl street near

"Hastings; ""- -

hron"

in Japanese state Particulars oft -

the Killing of the Lihue

Prisoner.

The kHUng of Torao Klsaimura atIihne oa the 4th last, toy Jailor EnochLovelL according to the report sent toHoaolultt by the Japanese correspond-ent of the Jlyu shfcnbun. places T.ovellin a most serious situation. The deadman. was serving- six months' sen--

by asses- -

of the the past Yearsoa

an

The

oftax

by

loss.

toof

the

that

will

last

and

The

raine-- wortniess caaracter. He wassent to the Lihue Jail to serve out hissentence, a part of his hard labor be-ing to help in preparing a taro patchon the property of C W. Spits, atXawillwili. In the gang with himwere two others, a Japanese namedKato and a Korean.

The breakfast prepared for the menon the third was found to consist ofhalf raw rice, which none of the threecould eat, so it was decided to askLovell for money with which to buysome bread. The money asked for wasa part of J2o belonging to Nishlmura.held by Lovell while the owner wasdoing time. Accordingly the threewent to the Jailor and made their re-quest. Nishimura acting as spokesman.

Lovell. however, according to thestory of the two living members "ofthe trio, refused to listen to them andbefore their request had been all pre-sented struck Kato with his fist on theside of the head, drawing blood. Hethen turned upon Klshlmur3, strikinghim first with his fist and then kick-ing him in the lower part of the abdo-men. The victim of these blows wasknocked down and was unable to getup. -

Lovell then got on his horse andcommenced to herd the three prisonersback to Lihue, but Xishlmura was un-able to walk unassisted. After thethree had been locked up again, Xlshi-mu- ra

complained of severe pains inthe abdomen and asked that a doctorbe sent for. The request was refused.All night he suffered, in the morningrenewing his request that a doctor besent for, offering to pay the expensehimself. Again his request was re-fused.

Later In the morning his conditionbecame so palpably serious that Lovelltelephoned to Dr; Putnam. After ex-amining the man the physician de-clared that his condition by this timewas such that he could do nothing forhim. The man died about neon thatday.

As to the excitement, so reported, oithe Lihue Japanese, the Jiyu correspondent denies that there was any.Some of the friends of the dead mancame over from TVaimea and thesebegan an agitation, wishing to takeup the-- matter at once with their Con-

sul General in Honolulu. On the ad-vice of Mr. Fukunaga, the Japaneseeditor at Lihue. they waited and assoon as it was seen that the authori-ties took up the matter the Japanesedropped whatever action they had con-templated.

nPLENTY OF ROCK

"We will be ready to advertise forbids for the Hilo breakwater work inabout two months," said Captain Ot-w- ell

yesterday. He has Just returnedfrom Hilo, where. In company withEngineer Burbank, the whole detailsof the work to be done was gone overon the grounds. The trip was, in fut,that ilr. Burbank might become fa-miliar with the situation, as he willbe more or less in charge of it whenthe work Is actually under way.

"The situation Is now Just aboutwhere it has been for some time," saidCaptain Otwell, "the only change beingthat I have satisfied myself that thereIs not only good rock to be found forthe' work, but plenty of It and Irr sev-

eral places. The most convenient placefor the establishment of the quarrywin be, I think, in Puna, where theledge is exposed and in workableshape."

HDIES OF HIS INJUBXES.

Victor Allen, of the Union Feed Co.,who had both legs broken, his headwounded and was otherwise Injuredon Thursday last by being caught be-

tween a building of the company anda wheel of a dray drawn by a run-away team which had been frighten-ed by the noise of an auto, diedat the Queen's Hospital yesterdaymorning. An Inquest was held last"night and a verdict of accidental death' 'returned. ' ' ? .

(Associated Press CablegnuBS.)

VANCOUVER, September io. The outbreak of the whitelaborers against the Asiatics of the city is still serious. The Chineseand Japanese quarters are in a state of siege and the Orientals arearmed to resist any further attacks. White laborers have been sum-moned within a radius of fifteen miles of the city to march upon theOriental section.

One hundred extra policemen have been sworn in by the au-

thorities and orders have been issued for the militia to stand readyto turn out immediately in the event of any further disturbances.

Earl Grey, the Governor General, has telegraphed from Ottawathat order must be preserved.

LONDON, September 10 The anti-Japane- se troubles at Van-couver had been expected here but the British, authorities have con-fidence that the Canadian government will prevent any recurrencesof the rioting which has taken place.

OTTAWA, September 10. The opinion is expressed here thatCanada will pay damages to the Japanese and Chinese injured inthe Vancouver rioting and will apologize to the governments atTekio and Peking.

2TOBSIS, X, September 6. Eleven were killed here today In & railroadaccident.

AUSTIN", Tex, September 6. The International Harvester Company haspaid a fine of 535,000 for violation of the anti-Tru- st law.

LONDON, September 7. Capt Mlkkelsen and his companions are safe.The steamer Duchess of Bedford is wrecked.

ATHABASCA ULNDINO, Athabasca, Canada, September 6. It is reportedthat the Arctic exploring schooner Duchess of Bedford is lost and CaptaiaMuckelsen and two others of the expedition are missing.

SAN FEANCISCO, September 7. The transport Thomas sailed today wit&nine troops of the Sixth Cavalry and a detachment of field artillery for thePhilippines.

CHICAGO, September 7. A receiver has been appointed for the BeldingHall Manufacturing Company. President Hall appropriated $345,000.

PARTS, September 7. The Moorish tribes have asked Gen. Drude to sus-

pend hostilities for the purpose of negotiating peace.

CHICAGO, September 7. Fred Fish, a retired broker, murdered his wifetoday and committed suicide.

SAN FBANCTSOO, September 7. Judge Lawlor of the Superior Court hasoverruled the demurrers filed in the Parkside bribery cases. All the defendantsthen pleaded not guilty before Judge Dunne and the interrupted trial pro-

ceeded.The trial of the officials of the United Eailroads will begin on Septem-

ber 12.ST. PETEESBUBG, September 7. The Czar has granted permission for

Count Stolypin, the Prime 'Minister of Bussla, to accept and wear the decorationbestowed upon him by the Emperor of Japan.

ANTWERP, September 7. Work has been resumed in the dockyards witifour thousand strikebreakers.

PORTLAND, September 7. Secretary of War Taft, who is on his way tothe Philippines, arrived here yesterday. He was given a great reception by.the citizens. . 1 a t i t- -

SAN FEANCTSCO, September 8. J. D. Spreckels gave his deposition yes-terd-

in the big $30,000,000 damage suit instituted in New York by the re-

ceivers for the Pennsylvania Sugar Company against the American Sugar Ba-

nning Company, owned by H. O. Havemeyer and his associates, known com- -rmonly as the sugar trust. He testified that Havemeyer owned a large minorityof the shares of the Western Sugar Company.

He denied that the Spreckels' Interests owned or controlled any interest inany other American company in addition to the Western Sugar Company.

PARIS, September 8. The Moors have asked that an armistice be ar-

ranged for. There is a suspicion that this move Is only a trick on the part ofthe Moors to gain time in which to enlist more fanatics for the holy war theyclaim to be. waging. The cabinet will hold a meeting tomorrow to consider theMoroccan situation and to decide whether the asked for armistice will begranted or refused. x

I "

LONDON, September 8. Jarvis, the British champion swimmer, wonrace yesterday, swimming the distance in three hours and twenty-fo- ur

minutes.CLEVELAND, O, September 7. Congressman Burton was today nominated

for Mayor by acclamation in the Republican city convention. His opponentwill he Tom Johnson.

CTTx" OF MEXICO, September 8. In an explosion at the Esperanza Tnnyesterday afternoon twenty-seve- n persons were killed.

SAN FEANCISCO, September 8. Four more suspected cases of plague werediscovered here yesterday.

VANCOUVER, B. C, September g Japanese CommissionerIshii, who was here during the anti-Orient- al riot of yesterday, re-ports that the windows and doors of fifty Japanese stores weresmashed during the rioting. Also two Japanese were wounded.

These facts will be presented to Sir Wilfred Laurier, the Cana-dian Premier.

VANCOUVER, September 9 This city has been the scene ofgreat labor noting today.

Two thousand Chinese have been driven out of the city, and$i5,-co- oworth of property has been destroyed.The police frustrated an attack on the Japanese quarter.LONDON, September g. A modus vivendi has been concluded

between the United States and Great Britain concerning the New-foundland fishing controversy. It is substantially a renewal of theold agreement.

PARIS, September 9. It is reported that France has proposedto Spain that the latter country join in the defense against thefanatical Moors with an army of 15,000 men, and that these be sentto Morocco at once.

TANGIER, September 9. Raisuli's ultimatum for the releasebf Kaid Maclean is that he, Raisuli, shall be given British protec-tion, be appointed Pasha and be assured of indemnity against anypunishment for past offenses.

TOKIO, September g. The insurgents in Korea are abandoning-organize- d

resistance to Japanese rule of the country, and are resort-ing to a system of guerrilla warfare.

PARIS, September 10. it a meeting of the Cabinet yesterday"it was-- decided that Morocco will be called upon to pay damagesfor the outrages committed by the insurgent Moors at Casablanca,the amount to be assessed at a meeting of an international com-mittee.

HAKODATE, Japan, September 9. A mob today; chased foursaflory of the United" States cruiser Chattanooga who were- - "ashoreon leave.

The affair resulted" from one of the sailors striking a Japanese .

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HAWAIIAN GAKni,rtJESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1907. SEMI-WEEKL- Y.

LIL1HA STREET

INJUNGTON

Ai20 other allegations in the bUI

lor Injunction against the Rapid Tran-

sit Cfempasy Sled late Saturday arethe ioSowinsc

That that portion cf liHha streetever which the respondent company op

erates Its cars is of about two miles

is. length and raris through o. denseir-populat- ed

portion of the District. of Ho-rjolu-

That the residents along theline, of La$ha street sad ImmediatelyratM-- r thereto, asreresatiac aboutsix thousand, resort to and ase the cars

--operated ovtr aad aicas siid LUihastreet by said respondent company forthe purpose of transportation alongsaid street aad other streetswithin the District of Honolulu, overwhich the connecting liaes of the re-

spondeat company operate-- That theresidents of the District of .aonolulagenerally resort, to sad use the connect-In- ?

lines as well as the Liliha streetcars operated by the respoadeat cora- -caar. to reach points along the liaenf TJHfc street aad Immediately adjacent thereto. That the convenienceof the pchHc requires that a ten-minu- te

schedule, as hereinbefore explainedaad as now maintained by said re-

spoadeat company, coatiaae la respectto the cars of said company operatedover said UHha street-- Tour orator isinformed aad beBeves, aad upon suchInformation aad belief alleges it to bethe fact, that the said respoadeat cora-ran- y.

ia violation of the rights of thepublic aad its duties cader the law aadthe requirements of Its charter, threat-ens aad proposes to forthwith modifythe schedule of the said Liliha-Wsial- ae

liae to the ead that the said cars sooperated over aad aloag said T.Wha

street betweea the hoars of nine o'clockia the morning aad foar o'clock la theafternoon, aad betweea the hoars of sixo'clock ia the afteraooa aad twelveo'clock midnight, will operate cader atwenty-minut- e schedule, that is to say,cars oa said Ul!ha street will travelboth ways at intervals of twenty min-utes, aad the said respoadeat com-

pany threateas aad proposes to forth-with, during the said times, operateIts cars ove- - aad aloag Liliha street atintervals both ways of over tea raia-ute- s.

That the aforesaid liaes operated bythe respoadeat coaipany are the onlypublic traasportatioa facilities withinthe District of Honolulu.

That C B. High, Joha C Lane. X-- E.Gedge, J. Q- - Toaag aad L. L.

are citizeas of the UnitedStates aad of the Territory of Hawaii,aad resident within the District of Ho-

nolulu along a liae of aad immediatelyadjacent to said Liliha street. Thatheretofore, aad on, to wit, the 7th day1

of September, A. D. 1S7, they did, bothindividually and represeatiag the resi-dea- ts

along the liae of and immedi-ately adjacent to said liliha street,complain to the Attorney General ofthe Territory of Hawaii and present tohim that the convenience of the publicgenerally and the said residents In ref-erence to sail liliha street In partic-ular, required a ten-miau- te serviceupon and along said Lfliha. street, andthat a service of a greater Interval oftime than ten minutes between carswould be a serious incoaveaience to thesaid residents in respect to IJlihastreet and the publis generally andweald prevent reasonably prompt trans-portation facilities, cause unnecessarydelay at the transfer point of the IJliha-

-Waialae line with connecting lines,unreasonably obstruct aad retard thetraasactioa of business and the pursuitof pleasure aad reader the cars of thesaid respondeat company useless to thepublic as a means of transportationSO-n- ? to and from Liliha street.

1 GAIN ISBAD FIB FRUITS

There has teen a good deal of com-

plaint heard among the merchants ofthe city relative to the manner in whichthe fumigation or the Hilonian wasconducted. It is stated that almostall the fruit, fresh meats and otherperishable goods which were broughtdown in the Hilonian were destroyed,or damaged to such an extent thatthey were rendered useless for the mar-

ket.The apples which came down on the

Hilonian were completely spoiled, be-

ing cooked to such an extent that theywere soft as mush for three-quarte-rs ofan inch from the surface and were ren-

dered absolutely worthless. The chic-

kens, crabs and other cold storagegoods of this description were alsospoiled and could not be placed onthe market.

The loss of these goods has beenfelt more severely by the local menon account of the fact that they werebadly needed for use in the city at thepresent time while the Big Fonrsquadron is here. The apples whichcame down on the Hilonian were thevery finest of that could be found andhad been specially selected for ship-ment.

The markets of the city are at pres-ent in trouble on account of the factthat they have been unable to supplythe demand for a number of articlesof food which are in general demand.There are hardly any potatoes left inthe city and as for eggs, the supplycan nowhere near come up to the de-

mand. Large shipments of both eegsand potatoes are expected on the n,

which is due this week andwill relieve the famine which existsat present.

JAILOR SILENT

AS TO KILLING

"It is s mc5t regrettable circura-stsace.- 1

said High SacriS Henry yes-

terday, when seen by an Advertiser re-

porter at the Oahu jail, "that one of

tie ag of Jailor Enoch Lovell. who

has beea in the position from whichhe has just been removed for aineteenloag years, should meet with aa in-

cident of the kind which caused hisremoval."

Enoch LovelL jailor at Lihue, Eauai,the other day kicked a Japanese pris-

oner aad the prisoner died oa the dayfollowing. "What caused the kickiagof the prisoner the jailor himself will

aot state. There are two witnesses tothe affair aad they are both prisoners

sad as aear as caa be gathered fromtheir preliadaary lestiasoay, at the ia- -

quest, there was objeetipa to the food

that was served at the jail and theprisoner had words with the jailor iathat recard. resultiag ia Lovell admia- -

isteriag a kick, in the stomach, andknocking out the man in his charge,the dyiag on the day following.

Sheriff Bice of Kauai sent a wire-

less message to Honolulu requestingthat High Sheriff Henry go to Kauaiat the first opportunity and ir. Henryleft the city for the Garden Isle inthe steamer ilikahala on Thursdayevening.

lovell waived exaraiaatioa beforethe district magistrate on September6 and was committed to the grand juryuader $5000 bond.

"I appointed Uiehard Dias to takethe place of Lovell," said High SheriffHenry. "Dias is a part-Hawaii- andmarried aad he does not drink; I thinkhe is a good maa for the position.Lovell made no statement to me inregard to his kicking the Japaneseprisoner; he is reserving whatever hehas to say until he is brought to trial;he waived examination before the dis-

trict magistrate and was committed.I was very sorry that it became

necessary for me to remove Lovell,but there was aothing else that couldhave beea done under the circum-

stance; there h3d never before beenany complaint against the man andhe had been nineteen years in theservice. "Whether he had any excuse forhis treatment of the prisoner I am un-

able to say; I can imagine no excuseexcept that of self-defen- and as faras the evidence available is concernedthere seems no ground for self-defens- e.

He is charged with manslaughter andhas been admitted to $5000 bail.

The verdiet of the coroner's jurywas that the Japanese prisoner hadcome to his death through a kick ad-

ministered by Jailor Enoch LovelhAfter the kick the Japanese complain-ed of pain in the stomach and the nextday ho died. He stated that the jailorhad kicked him. There seemed nocause for any quarrel between jailorand prisoner except that the latter hadcomplained that the food he was re-

ceiving was no good. Xishimura wasthe Jap's name."

.--H.

WAIMEA JAPS SENT II

TBI E

Enoch Lovell the former Jailor atLihue who was held to the grand Juryof Kauai County for the killing of aJapanese prisoner, arrived in Hono-lulu yesterday morning by the "W. G.(HalL Presumably he came to lookafter a lawyer to defend him on thecharge of manslaughter. He Is atliberty on 3C bail.

The Japanese who was killed wasserving a sentence for vagrancy, hav-ing been sentenced In "Waimea. "Whenthe Japanese of "Waimea heard of hisdeath there was considerable extite-me- nt

among- them, and a delegationwas at once sent to Lihue, as theJapanese seemed to think that thiswas a San Francisco "outrage," andthat they must be ready to resent it.They consulted with the editor of theJapanese paper at lihue and wirelessmessages were exchanged with theJapanese Consul in Honolulu.

But as Lovell was relieved of hisduties instantly, and was dischargedas soon as High Sheriff Henry arriv-ed at Lihue, and a successor was ap-pointed, and Lovell was held for trial,the Japanese delegation could find nooccasion for a disturbance and wenthome.

SHEEMArf SAILS TOE COAST.

Promptly at 5 o'clock the UnitedStates Army transport Sherman sail-ed from the channel wharf for SanFrancisco and there were many peo-ple to see her get away, numbers ofthe ship's officers having relatives andfriends in Honolulu and the cabinpassengers, during their brief stayhere, having formed an acquaintancewhich guaranteed them a representa-tion of friends on the wharf. Thestay of the Sherman would have beenlonger had it not been for the factthat she was two days late when shearrived here, having been detained bya typhoon In Oriental waters. Shetook mail to the Coast and Is expectedto make the trip to San Francisco inseven days.

N1CII0N SERVED

OK RAPID TRANS

BY

(From Sunday's Advertiser.)An injunction was served last night on too Honolulu. Sapid Transit Com-

pany which will put & stop, temporarily at least, to any changes proposed inthe running time of tha cars on too Waialao-Xilih- a line. In too injunction theTerritory of Hawaii by Charles B, Hemenway, Attorney General, appears asplaintiff, and toe signature of John T. Do Bolt First Judge of too First CircuitCourt, is affixed.

The grounds upon which the Injunction was asked for and granted are thattoe changing of the Liliha street cars from a ten to a twenty-minut- e serviceduring a part of each day wfli inconvenience business and be a hardship ontoe public of Honolulu. la toe hill of complaint this Is set forth as follows:

'TThat for the purposes of reasonablvprornpt transportation facilities in thepursuit of business or pleasure, themaking of reasonably prompt trans-fers to connecting lines, the preventionof unnecessary delay in traveling overLiliha street In respect to the distanceto be traveled, and for the promptand rapid attention to business, thepublic convenience requires that at alltimes there be maintained oa the

line, a ten minute sched-ule in respect to Liliha street, and thatcars running over and along IJlihastreet proceed both ways at intervalsof not less than ten minutes; that un-less the said respondent company isprevented by injunction, it will pro-ceed forthwith to Install and Inaugu-rate the said modified schedule andoperate Its cars over and along Li-liha street both ways at intervals oftwenty minutes, and will preventthereby reasonably prompt transpor-tation facilities over Liliha street,cause unnecessary delay at the trans

Im nearHERD OF BULLS

The finest herd of blooded cattle thatever came to the Hawaiian Islandsarrived by the Hilonian Thursday. Theherd consists of thirty-thre- e bulls fromthe best herds of Oregon and "Wash-

ington and are for the Parker Ranch,the American Sugar Company Ranchon Molokai, ana for John Hind inKona.

The animals of the herd were allselected by Fred "W. Carter, late man-ager of the Cone Ranch near RedBluff, and 'were shipped and broughthere under his personal direction.Among the herd are a number of prizewinners and almost any of them mightwin In good company If made readyfor the show ring. Most of the ani-mals are Herefords, but there arethree Short-hor- ns and two Devons.They are all at the corral of the UnionFeed Company on Ala Moana, and agood many people have gone there inthe last two days to view the herd,which is certainly a show.

"Without question the finest animalIn the bunch and the finest animalever brought to Hawaii Is "Kamia-kln- ,"

a perfect Hereford bull fouryears old, which took the first premi-um as a Hereford at the Oregon StateFair held "at Salem in 1504, and thesweepstakes as a bull at the same ex-hibition, being Judged the Juniorchampion of the Northwest at thattime, then fourteen months old. Hewas not exhibited the next two years,but he was being fitted for the showring this year when he was boughtby Mr. Carter to bring down here.

He Is a beautiful animal, with theperfect Hereford markings, and ofenormous size, weighing 2110 poundsnow, though capable of putting onmuch more. "When he was landed fromthe Hilonian he attracted a great dealof attention at the wharf, the Hawai-ian- s

saying, "We have seen picturesof bulls like that but never till nowdid we see the real thing."

Another one of the very fine ani-mals of the herd Is "Rex," also aHereford, forty-si-x months old, a bullof great Individuality, a splendid sire,and showing well the Anxiety strainof Herefords.

"Correction" Is a short-hor- n threeyear old, and a beauty. He has beenIn the show ring twice and has twicewon first premium, once at the OregonState Fair at Salem, and once at thefair at Corvallis last June. The ani-mal Is a perfect type of the short-horn.

"Meddlar HI" is another short-hor- n,

five years old, and the kind of an ani-mal to take the eye of a grazier. HeIs light roan in color, and a well-shape- d,

smooth animal."Golden Heir" Is a two-year-o- ld

from the farm of Charles E. Ladd ofPortland, Oregon. He Is out of GoldenPrincess by Scottish King. He Is nota show animal but is extremely vigor-ous, strong, and very large for hisage. "While the others are not suchshowy animals they are all thorough-breds, of good strains and some ofthem right from the range.

They will all be shipped shortly tothe various ranches for which theywere bought. They are a decided addition to the blooded stock of the Islands.

HA NEIGHBOR'S KINDNESS.

Mr. "W. J. Fuller, J. P., storekeeper,Rendelsham, South Australia, writes:"I was called to see a neighbor whowas suffering from severe cramps andwho really thought he was past help.I gave him three doses of Chamber-lain's Colic, Cholera and DiarrhoeaRemedy, and In a few hours he hadquite recovered. I frequently use thisremedy in my own family and sell itto my customers on a positive guaran-tee." For sale by all dealers. Ben-son, Smith & Co., Ltd., Agents forHawaii.

THE TERRITORY

fer points of the LUlha-Waial- ae linewith connecting lines, unreasonablyobstruct and retard the transaction ofbusiness and the pursuit of pleasure,and render the cars so operated by Italong said XJllha street useless to thepublic as a means of transportation,all of which is to the detriment andIrreparable Injury of the public, andcontrary to Its rights In that behalf."

The fact that the Territory Is madethe complaining party to the suit Isdue to the advice of E. C Peters, whohad been retained as attorney for theLiliha street residents and who isnamed in the injunction papers as "ofcounsel." His advice was to the effectthat the Ullha street committee ofcomplaint should call upon the Attor-ney General and state their case. Thecommittee, consisting of C B. High,John C. Lane, N E. Gedge, J. O.Young and L. L. McCandless, did so,with the result that the fight Is onbetween the Territory and the com-pany.

INIS T

George P. Merrick of Chicago waslast "Wednesday appointed guardianof Charles "W. a Deerlng by JudgeDole. The appointment was made onthe petition of Merrick who for thepast ten years has had general man-agement of Deering's property. Thepetition alleges that Deering's estateamounts to about J100.000 and that theannual income is ordinarily about J1S,-0- 00

but that the said Deerlng, althoughof sound mind and of the age of thlrtyyears, has nevertheless so spent, wast-ed, and lessened his substance, asprobably to expose himself and hisfamily to want and suffering if somelawful means Is not provided to pre-vent him from so doing. Deering'sanswer admits the allegations of thepetition and consents to the appoint-ment of Merrick as guardian.

Merrick arrived a week ago Fridayon the Sierra and sailed for the Coasta week later on the Korea.

The papers and the proceedings Inthe case seem to have been guardedfrom the public knowledge with sedu-lous care by the clerk of Judge DeBolt's court. Job Batchelor, and byDeputy Clerk of the department, L.P. Scott. So carefully had the papersbeen filed away that It was with somedifficulty that Clerks Henry Smith andJames Thompson found them when In-

quiry was made for them.

WHERE SILENCE

The golden worth of silence has beendemonstrated strikingly In several re-cent instances in the Harriman steam-ship service. The big liners Mongoliaand Manchuria went ashore about ayear ago, the Mongolia at Midway andthe Manchuria near Honolulu. In bothcases the masters were held responsibleand their licenses suspended for sever-al months. Captain Porter of the Mon.golia made the filing of his report theoccasion for a wholesale criticism ofthe personnel of the Pacific Mail ser-vice. He talked much, and what Cap-

tain Porter said figured largely in thenewspaper accounts of the strandingand later In the reports of the Investi-gation by the government Inspectors."Bill" Chlsholm, who was chief engln-e- rr

of the Mongolia, and who. It issaid, was largely responsible for get-ting the vessel afloat and safely home,and who had every excuse for makingan extended report, refused to talk fopublication and told his story to thegovernment inspectors as follows:

"Beg to feport that at such an houron such a date steamship Mongoliawent ashort at Midway. Engines wereordered full speed astern and so ranuntil such and such a date, when thevessel floated."

Porter was fired.Chisholm was made marine superin-

tendent of the Harriman steamshiplines at this port.

Captain Saunders assumed all responsibility for the Manchuria'sstranding, kept his mouth shut andtook his medicine without a whimper.

Third Officer Hawes of the lost Har-riman steamer Columbia disregardedthe counsel of his friends and filed withthe government Inspectors a lengthyreport, in which he criticized some ofthe passengers, praised others andbrought serious accusations against themaster of the vessel that had sent theColumbia to the bottom. Hawes sup-plemented his report with newspaperInterviews and brought down upon hishead a heap of trouble so heavy that itthreatened his reason.

Hawes Is out of a Job.-- Captain Saunders sailed from here

the other day in command of the Man,churia. San Francisco Call.

OAHU COLLEGE

E XAMINAT S

(From Sunday's Advertiser.)Examinations for admission to 0.-h- u

College will bo held at 2 o'clock Inthe afternoon on the day the collegeopens, Monday, September 16. oneweek from tomorrow. These examin-ations are given for those studentswho do not enter on certificate. Ex-aminations for the removal of condi-tions and for extraordinary promotionwill be held at the same time. Theexaminations for admission to anygrade In the Preparatory school willbe held in Chas. R. Bishop hall; ex-

aminations for admission to any classIn the college, or for credit in anycollege subject, will be held In Pauahl

'nmlnit!nns should reelster v-- .. Sen- -.

tmhr ift Th nrnsneets. for a larco .'-- -. - ..attendance are good. Many students,who are coming from other schools,have already made their arrangementswith President Griffiths, For the ac-

commodation of those who wish to seehim on school business, Mr. Griffithswill continue to hold regular officehours every week day this week from9 to 11 a. m.

The preparations for. the school yearare now practically complete. Theworkmen are putting the finishingtouches on Pauahl, Bingham and oldschool halls. Chas. R. Bishop hall isall ready to open school.

The boarding department has beenopen for more than a week. Every-thing necessary will be ready when thechildren come at the end of the week.Some of the rugs have not yet ar-rived and there are a few other smallshortages but everything essential Isin the buildings.

During the summer plans have beenmade for the best possible fire pro-

tection to the college buildings, a 12-ln- ch

pipe has been run through thegrounds from Punahou street from thegovernment mains. To this are at-

tached three hydrants, one near Bing-ham hall and two at advantageouspositions near the dormitories. This isIn addition to the college water sys-

tem which gets its pressure from thetanks on Rocky Hill and which provedits worth during the pres;dent's houselire. Fire escapes at each end of ev-

ery dormitory are being provided anda standpipe system in the domltorlesIs bejng planned for. This will makethese buildings as safe as they arecomfortable.

II; h nMost Honolulu People Have a Weak

Part and Too Often It's theSack.

Everyone has a weak spot.Too often It's a bad back.Twinges follow every sudden twist.Dull aching keeps up, day and night.Tells you the kidneys need helpFor backache is really kidney-ach- e.

A kidney cure Is what you need.Doan's Kidney Pills cure sick

kidneys.Cure backache and all urinary Ills.Honolulu people recommend the

remedy."W. F. "Williams of Honolulu. Hawaii

is a light-hou- se keeper, and has heldthis position for the last 30 years. Hesays: "I was for a number of years,one of that numerous army of peoplewho suffer with their backs. Mineached and pained me to no small ex-tent, so that I was glad when I heardof a remedy for It, Doan's BackacheKidneys Pills. I obtained them at theHollister Drug Co.'s store, and begantheir use. They gave me great re-lief, and I make this short narrationof my experience for the benefit ofothers who perhaps do not know thatnearly all backache arises from thekidneys, and the best medicine for ItIs Doan's Backache Kidneys Pills."

Doan's Backache Kidney Pills are50 cents per box. for sale by all drug-gists: sent by mall on receipt of priceby the Hollister Drug Co., Honolulu,wholesale agents for the Hawaiian Is-lands.

--,

WITH BAD FAITH

CEDAR POINT, O., August 23. Sen.ator Foraker and Representative Nich-olas Longworth, President Roosevelt'sson-in-la- were tacitly charged withbad faith In connection with the pass-age through Congress of the pure foodand drug bill, in an official report madehere today by Dr. Charles A. L. Reedto the Ohio medical association, now iasession at this place.

The report defines for the first timethe cause of the hostility of the med-ical profession of Ohio to Senator For.aker. Dr. Reed is the official head, Inlegislative matters, of the entire med.leal profession of the country, number-ing 140,000 physicians. Dr. Reed's re-port, after detailing the final proceed.ings regarding the bill in the Senateand the House, proceeds to relate alleged acts not on the record. He says:

"The friends of the measure, duringthe long five or more years it was heldback by every species of parliamentarytrick, were being constantly told bySenator Foraker that be was. in favorof the bill, 'slightly modified.' It wasknown by the friends of the measur6days before the final fight that the opposition had been arranged; that Senator Foraker would appear for thewhisky interest; that Senator Hemenway would act for the patent medicinemen In general and for a medicine concern in Elkhart, Ind., in particular;that Senator Money would stand lotthe welfare of the food people. Theline of assault was thus made com-plete. This program was carried out.In the House Longworth's oppositionwas likewise veiled under the mask ofavowed friendship."

--HHarold Castle has taken a position

with Alexander & Baldwin and willremain in Honolulu, instead of returning to the mainland, as he had at first

I expected to do.

I

's new mSCHLREIDyj

HILO, Sept. 3, "From Vicar. Sec-

retary of the Board of Trade, Hiliv-T- oi

Babbitt, Superintendent of Public In-

struction, Honolulu. Would appreciateyour opening High school with addsMonday."

This is,a copy of a wireless message,sent on Monday last, to the Superin-

tendent of Vublic Instruction.The idea of asking .Mr. Babbitt to

make an address at the opening-of- . theHigh school originated with one of ta,jmembers of the Board of Trade oa Sat- -unlay atternoon. and was discuwlagain ou Monday. Secretarr Meatshad a talk with Principal Richmond, ftho High school, and the message wassent.

Superintendent Babbitt was instru-mental in arranging the site of thepresent High school building, coming toHilo to attend a mass meeting whUawas one of the liveliest and most earn-est ever held here. He has since work-ed persistently to get the building erect-ed and also to secure a special appro-priation for the new furniture for theschool, and it was thought that an in-

vitation extended to Mr. Babbitt, toopen the new building on Monday- - with.an address, would be a recognition ofhis interest ia the public schools of tfcisishwd.

HILO, September 2. Hilo's ne-hig- h

school will be open to receiveits first pupils on Monday morning.September 9, and the ringing of thebell will mark another step ia tfceprogress of tho Island of Hawaii, eventhough the new furniture ordered, farit will not be in place. It arrivedin Honolulu by the Alaskan and Is ex-pected to reach Hilo by the Kinauthis week.

The Hilo high school has four cJ,woll-lighte- d and ventilated rdedownstairs, capable of accommodatiag;160 pupils. There are six rooms up-stairs where 100 additional pupils oareceive instruction, making" a talcapacity of 260 pupils. The reom

commercial class is well equippe.It can accommodate as many as frtvpupils and it has eight new tvj.writers ready for use.In the school there will he twe tm:-ma-r

grades, seventh and eighth,0 awlthree high school jfrades, the niaik.tenth and eleventh. The staff" m-h- t

of: F. A. Richmond, priatMl:Miss Frank Potter, instructor in Be-hs- h

and Herman; Mr Charles La-i- er.

Latin and mathomaties; Miss LowDeyo, eighth grade; Miss Estlwr C.Pomeroy, seventh grade, ami a bh-wh- o

is expected from the Coast fortho commercial class.When the new building was vtsctwl

last week, there was much wsk tbe done before scnool opened, but ev-erything will settle down bv Mtr?.The grounds are, at present, in timworst saape, but a gravel poth frwthe entrance on Waianuense streetto the bnilding will enable the ."?ioiks to Keep out of the mud.

special features of the HS hiahschool are its well equippe-- l fobttatorr,its dark room for photography, mad itslittle library. While the shelvesthe library arc rather meagerlv fur-nished at present, it ia ftapetf thaicontributions will bo made to itsshelves from time to time. Tkare acta good fire hose m case of need, waiehcan be used in fire drills. Tie as-sembly hali, with its adjoining rMau,is well arranged, throwing three reasinto one. In the basement tae nWwill be cemented and equipped witoshower baths, one side for girfe awlthe other for boys. Tennis anil basketball courts are planned so that healtliv-sport- s

can be played by the pupils. "

Principal Richmond fo, v uHilo high school will have two cosrses.

"u j;cucrai mga scnool conrsa topupils for college. The other willbe designed to meet the needs of acommercial course, regular studies intypewriting, shorthand, commercial

arithmetic, bookkeeping, legal courtreporting and such other matters asoccur in a business office. These willbe taught in a business way as a busi-ness man needs thpra. Particular at-tention will be paid to the Englishlanguage and also to an extension ofthe vocabulary of the average pupilwhich, Mr. Richmond has found, islimited. In the commercial course thvocabulary will include business terms,phrases and expressions used bv thbusiness man.

j'03.1 ,of e whoie structure was5J0.000 with an extra $3000 for furni-ture. In every respect the building ismodern, convenient and well planned,and it now remains for the teaeberj,by goou work, io turu out pupils whowill be a credit, not onlv to Hilo batalso to the whole Territory of Hawaii.

THE HEW TELEPHONE

GOIUGMT AHEAD

Financial arrangements having beenconsummated, the work 0f construc-tion of the Automatic Telephone Co.'system In Honolulu will be pushed fromhenceforth.

"TOVlltoi- - Tlnla T, .. .....w. v.q ui xuvensiac, cai., anephew of Judge Dole, will amve hero-in an early steamer to superintend theInstallation. He Is well known here,not only from having been brought upon Kauai, .but from his services inlarge ditch construction on Maul.

Only One "BROMO QUMIWe"That is LAXATIVE BROMO OW-nin-e.

Used the world over to CureColds in One Day. E. W. Glove'ssignature 'on box. Made by PARISMEDICINE CO., Saint Look, TJ. S--

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JAILOR LQVELL HELD

TO THE GRAND J

mmfrr&&i,wimxwmmi-m-v --:T!?irBw!gwwr-wwnfwf

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER id 1967. EVI-VEE- Rf V

CSpecial by Wireless to Advertiser.)

LIEUE, Kauai, September6, 4:5i p. re Jailor Enoch 05

LovelL charged with causing tthe death, of a Japanese pris-

oner0

in his custody, waived 05

examination before the Dis-

trictOS

,S Magistrate today, and OS

was committed to await the 05

action of the grand jury. 05

High Sheriff Henry has ap-

pointed,S 3 new jailor to sneceed 05

o hira. 05

.S 05

S Eirh Sheriff Henry left 05

Thursday . evening by the Mi-;a- hl 05

for labue on the tele-

graphedOS

request of Sheriff os

.S Biee that he should go to Kan-a-i OS

by the first steamer. OS

is about fifty years of age and OS

has been long in the police ser-

viceOS

of Kauai. OS

.1 .s oJ .s v o o 0 o os 05

H

TIE OKOLEHA

STILL SHUT 1The okolehao distillery at Xapoopoo

is shut down.The promoters of the enterprise have

now gone fully into the distilling partof the business and have demonstratedexactly what they can do and at what

ost. They now know how to produce aproduct of uniform quality and at auniform cost. The machinery is fullytested and readv.

It is 3sow the intention of Mr. Gon-saive- s.

who Is largely Interested in theenterprise, to go to the Coast andmore fully exploit the possible market,and see exactly what can be done inthat respect and how large a marketit is possible to build up.

The whole matter will then be pre.seated to the stockholders for their de-

termination as to what shall be done.It is said that the possibilities of a

market are of the most flattering kindand that orders for a very considerableoutput already actually await the en-

terprise.

TOU FIRST HP

njJH ROHM

Editor Advertiser: Tobacco Leaf,2Cew York, states that Mr. McXess, thetobacco expert of the U. S. Departmentof Agriculture, Washington, D. C, hasresigned to take charge of the Ameri-

can Sumatra Co. of Leon Co., Fku, asvice president and manager. He says

it cost $10W) to plant and equip thefirst acre, bot the yield of the first cropjust harvested was 1000 pounds peracre, for which the company received;;0.S5 per pound, pole cured.

J. G. SMITH., H -

The schooner Ka Mol, deeply ladenwith ohte. ties for Kauai, tried to leaveport on Saturday afternoon but did notget away till Sunday. On Monday

vening she was still in sight at sun-down, standing away to the north-east.

MOTHERSihonld know. The troubles vriAmoltiradea of girls is a want ofproper nourishment and enoughof it JKow-s-da- ys they call truacondition by the learned name ofAnemia. But words change nofacts. There are thousands ofgirls of this kind anywhere be-

tween childhood and young lady.hood. Disease finds most of itsvictimE among them. Some ofthem are passing through the.mysterious changes which leadsip to maturity and need especialwatchfulness and care. Alas,how many break down at thiscritical period; the story of suchlosses is the saddest in the his-

tory of home. The proper treat-ment might have saved most ofthese household treasures, if themothers had only known ofWAMPOLE'S PREPARATIONand giTen it to their daughters,they would have grown to bestrong and healthy women. Itis palatable as honey and con-

tains all the nutritive and cura-tive properties of Pure Cod Liv-e-r

Oil, extracted by us iromfresh cod livers, combined withthe Compound Sjrup of Hypo-phosphit- es

and the Extracts ofMalt and THld Cherry. In build-ing up pale, puny, emaciatedchildren, particularly those trou-bled with Anemia, Scrofula, Ric-kets, and Bone tnd Blood dis-eases, nothing equals it; its toniomalities are of th& highest or-

der. A ITedical Institution says :"""We have used your preparationin treating children for coughs,t:olds and inflammation ; its ap--plication has "never failed ns inany case, even the most 'aggra"vated bordering on pneumonia."The mora it is used the less willbe the ravages of disease frominfancy to old age. It is both afood and a medicine, modern,scientific, effective from the first

ose, and never deceives or dis-ippoi-

"There is no doubtabout it" Sold by all chemistsJgefe end ihxoaghout ihe Kdd.

DIRT FLIES

ON FORT SHE

The dirt is flying on the side ofDiamond Head on the spot selected bythe army experts as the place fromwhich the first welcome will be givento any foreign war vessels approachingHonolulu aroand Ivoko Head with anyhostile intent. This spot is on theslope of the crater close to where theDiamond Head road ceases to climb anddips away in the direction of Waialaebay. the waters of which will be com-

manded by the great guns and heavymortars to be planted there. Exceptfor the section protected by the crateritself, for the guns are to be plantedon the mauka edge of the rock circle,the battery at Haimuki will be able tosweep the seas from Barber's Point toKoko Head. The approach toward theharbor protected from ihese guns bythe crater walls will be otherwise look-

ed after.At the present time a good start

toward preparing the ground for thebatieries has been made. A road hasbeen built from the main DiamondHead road to the scene of operationsand many wagon' loads or lumber havebeen hauled up there and piled up readyfor the making of casings for the con-

crete work. So far one hundred andtwenty-seve- n thousand feet of lumber

j aHd timbers have been taken to thesite of the fortifications, most of whichwill be used for the building of casesfor the forming of the concrete gunbases. This will give some idea of the

I amount of concrete work which thej plans of the army engineers call for.

commencement ot ims cuucrciework rests with the delivery of crushedstone on the fortification sites. Advert-

isements- for bids for the delivery ofthis rock are now out, the bids to be inat the end of the month. It will be atleast another month before the bids aregone through and the contract awarded,so that the work of delivery will notcommence probably until the beginningof November. The work of preparingthe cases will be started next week,however, so that once the concrete mix-er- s

get to work the gun foundationsand the magazine walls ought to go inpretty quickly.

At the present time about twentymen are employed around the fortifica-tion site, excavating and preparing theframework for the necessary buildingsfor the battery troops. The majorityof these men are Portuguese. Anothergang of men is at work at present inrepairing the Diamond Head road so

that the heavy loads can be drawn overit. This road has been allowed to getinto a state of bad repair and the worstof the chuck-hole- s are being filled in.It is possible, too, that the Federalgovernment will find it necessary torepair the storm drains which carrythe water from the hillside to the lowerside of the road. Just now the stone-

work put in on the lower side of thedrain entrance, to back the water upand force it through the drains, havebeen washed out and the next heavyrain will probably wash out some sec-

tions of the road altogether.It will be at least a year from now

before the first gun booms out fromthe Diamond Head casemate, but whenthe guns are mounted and ready for usethat part of the defensive scheme forHonolulu will be as complete as any-

thing of its. kind in the world. Amortar battery will be in plaee andthere will be both twelve and .fourteeninch guns, the latter something alto-

gether new in shore battery fixtures.Both the great guns will be of the 1905

model, the very latest, and the DiamondHead battery will hold the second ofthe kind to be installed so far by theUnited States goyernment. A fewmonths ago a battery of guns of thismodel was mounted in Cuba, none so farelsewhere.

In addition to this battery two othersare to be mounted at Pearl Harbor,with a range sweeping all of Waikikibay, while between Diamond Head andPearl Harbor will be another batterymounted, probably in the harbor of Ho-

nolulu itself or very close to it. It isalso probable that a battery will beplaced upon Punchbowl, the board ofofficers recently named at "Washingtonto select permanent military reservations in Honolulu having instructionsto loeate what areas of Punchbowl areconsidered necessary.

-

CAMPBELL RESIGNS.

Territorial Treasurer Campbell, whoIs a member of the Board of LicenseCommissioners for the County of Ha-waii, resigned that position yesterdayjust before sailing by the Korea. Hewill be away for some weeks, at anyrate. It is desirable that there shallalways be a full membership of theboard. Governor Frear will appointsome one to take his place.

- -C. S. Holldway tendered his resig-

nation as president and executive of-ficer of the Board of Agriculture andForestry to Governor Frear. He waschosen to fill the place during the ab-sence of W. M. Glffard. Mr. Glffard"Is not yet ready to resume the posf-tlo- n

and Mr. Holloway has consentedto continue in the position for 3 time.

ifc - rtrJT.il

DEATH SENTENCE FOR BANDITS

Montalan (death) Carreon (20 years) Sakay (death)FILIPINO BANDIT LEADERS CONVICTED.

Filipino Leaders Who

Ordered Torture

for Prisoners.

Death by hanging for four banditleaders, imprisonment for thirty yearsfor another and for twenty years forfive others, are the sentences passedin Manila by the Supreme Court onJuly 25 on the surrendered leaders whofor so long terrorized Cavite, Batan-ga- s

and adjacent provinces. Thesebandits, through their lawyers, plead-ed for clemency from the fact thatthey surrendered voluntarily to theAmerican authorities, tout it waspointed out by Chief Justice Johnsonthat sucn surrender was only on theguarantee that they would not be im-mediately shot but would be given afair and Impartial trial.

In answer to a further plea thatwhat acts they had committed hadbeen from patriotic motives and in de-

fense of the rights of the people oftheir country, the Justice read a seriesof letters, put in as evidence againstthem, showing the cruelty practisedand ordered to be carried out by themIn their revolt. One of the letters was:"Senor Pio del Pilar, Major General.

"Upon receipt of this order, pleasecomply with the same and direct thetroops to enter the town of Teresaand carry out the following:

"1st: Get all foods, such as palay,which you can carry, also take themoney In order to defray the expensesof our soldiers and the war.

"2nd: Arrest the Consejal, Meml-min- o

Grebillos, and all .persons con-

cerned with him In arresting our com-

missioners and as soon as arrestedcarry out on them the punishmentprovided In Order No. 9. April 10. 1904,

providing that the tendon Achilles shallbe cut and the fingers of iboth handscrushed.

"3rd: Should the townspeople offerresistance to the troops, burn all thehouses without showing mercy to the'inhabitants.

All the provisions of this letter havebeen passed on by the Supreme Juntaon account of the treachery committedby the inhabitants of Teresa to ourcommissioners.

"(Signed) MACARIO SAKAY."P. S. In this connection I would

warn you that before entering thetown of Teresa a plan must be devisedso as not to expose our soldiers."

. t

MORE B k I MONEY

MAKERS CAUGHT

(From Saturday's Advertiser.United States Marshal Hendry left

yesterday afternoon for Honokaa tobring back three more supposed mem-

bers of the gang of Korean counter-fitter- s

who have just been capturedthere. The notification of the captureeame in the following wireless messagereceived yesterday afternoon:

"To Marshal Hendry, Honolulu.From Sheriff Rickard, Honokaa. Cap-

tured three counterfeiters, Chu HongToting, Kim Keon. Moon, Pa Ha No;Kukuihaele gang; six five dollars pos-

session, attempting to pass same today.Answer."

Marshal Hendry looks on this cap-

ture as particularly important inas-

much as the capture includes the seizureof some of the bogus five dollar pieceswhich have been reported in circulationfrom time to time, but none of whichthe authorities have before been able tosecure. The capture of these coins isespecially significant in view of the dis-

covery by Marshal Hendry some daysago of a die for the manufacture of fivedollar pieces, at Lahaina.

-- -A divorce was granted to Annie Ka-ma-ka

from Maiu Kamaka on theground of desertion yesterday byJudge De Bolt.

2satividad (30 years)

ARRESTS

METAL 1(From Saturday's Advertiser.

Two more lads were arrested yes-terday In connection with the lootingof brass and other metals along thewaterfront unearthed by OfficerReeves. These two lads were DavidKauelo, about seventeen or eighteenyears of age, believed to be the ring-leader of the gang, and Kick Kanikou.The two boys stole a horse and buggyfrom somewhere, they say from Infront of the skating rink on Queenstreet, and drove over to 'Walmanalo.They started on Thursday. They wereapprehended there yesterday and Dep-uty United States Marshal Winterwent over In an automobile to bringthem back. He was accompanied by31. C. Masterson, the special examinerof accounts for the Department ofJustice.

The boys were arrested on a war-rant sworn out before CommissionerDavis, and they will orobably have ahearing today. They are charged withstealing property of the United States.

The horse and ibuggy they stole willbe brought back today.

I 1IS QUICKLY W

(From Saturday's Advertiser.)Mrs. Jennie E. Stackable, until last

Friday the wife of E. R. Stackable,was yesterday afternoon married to F.M. Bechtel, who was formerly at thehead of the immigration bureau at thisport, and who for the past year hasbeen in the employ of the Pacific MallCompany at Yokohama.

Mr. Bechtel arrived here by thesteamer Korea yesterday morning.During the forenoon a license authorizing the marriage of the two was issued by Tomizo Katsanuma, an agentto grant marriage licenses" and in theafternoon the marriage' was performedby the Rev. E. B. Turner, being almost his last ministerial act before go

ing to his new field of labor, Pala,Maul.

It is not known whether the mar-riage was planned before the arrivalof the Korea and the groom yesterday,or not. The groom had left Yokohamaseveral days and was in the middleof the ocean before the divorce, whichmade the marriage possible, was granted. But, whenever the marriage wasplanned. Captain Sanberg of the Koreahad been Informed by noon that It wasto be, for he told some local friendsthat Mr. Bechtel was to be married,though he did not say whom he was go-

ing to marry.But, whenever it was planned, the

marriage occurred early yesterdayand shortly after 3 o'clock the

newly-marri- ed couple went aboard theKorea, both departing for San Francisco by that steamer. It Is understoodthat Mr. Bechtel expects to go Intobusiness there unless he succeeds ingetting back Into the Immigration Ser-

vice, which It was reported from Yo-

kohama some time ago that he wastrying to do.

Mrs. Stackable's libel for divorce wasfiled last Friday afternoon. An im-

mediate hearing was had before JudgaDo Bolt and a decree of divorce wasgranted. By the decree Mrs. Stackablwas allowed lump alimony of JiOOO, butthe custody of their child, a girl otseven, was given to the father.

It was thought by some, when theyheard of the marriage and the proposeddeparture of the newly-marri- ed couple,that Mrs. Stackable might try to takeher daughter with her. But there seemsno evidence of" any attempt or desirato do this, and in any event it wouldhave been impossible, as the child wasIn the company of its father an day.

In the matter of the estate of M.Jose Amorin, the widow, AlexandrlnaAmorin, was appointed administratrixof the estate. The estate amounts toabout $100.

De Vega (death)

Villafuerte (death)

MM WWTO IF!, WETMORE

A most beautiful and Impressive ceremony was held In the Foreign churchat Hilo, Sunday, September 1, whena handsome memorial window was un-

veiled In honor of the late Dr. C. H."Wetmore.

Dr. Wetmore, It will be remember-ed, was a missionary physician, thememory of whose beautiful Influenceand good deeds still lives in the, heartsof many of HIlo's older residents.

Arriving in the islands in 1S19, hesettled at Hilo, and soon, by his ex-treme love for children, drew a classof young people around him, and de-lighted to lead and encourage themalong educational lines.

Dr. Wetmore was one of the prin-cipal founders of the Foreign churchat Hilo, and throughout his life wasits mainstay. It is fitting that a me-morial to him should be placed wherehe lived and wrought.

This stained-glas- s window 13 the giftof the Lidgate family and the curtaindrawn by Mr. A. Ltdgate revealed apicture beautiful and appropriate. Itrepresents the good Samaritan a3 hsbends solicitously over the almost life-less body of the man who was the vie-- ,

tlm of thieves. The expression on thagood Samaritan's face is a beautifulone, and the picture is typical of thalife of the friend In whose memory itwas given.

The memorial ceremonies were opened by a short talk by Rev. C. E.Shields, pastor of the church.

The presentation address was thenmade by Rev. J. M. Lidgate of Kauai,who told with feeling of his intimateassociation with Dr. Wetmore and otthe pleasure and benefit he had derived from such an association.

Hon. F. S. Lyman then responded forthe church and Rev. C. W. Hill spokeIn the name of Dr. Wetmore's family,two of his daughters Dr. FrancesWetmore and Mrs. Lucy WetmoreLewis being present the the time.

It is not an uncommon thing formemorial windows to be given by one'srelatives, 'but it is a rare thing for aman to so entwine himself around thehearts of his friends as to create inthem a desire to make a lasting testi-mony of their esteem for him.

It speaks well for the life and workof Dr. C. H. Wetmore that he shoulddeserve such a memorial. It alsospeaks well for the Lidgate family thatthey should so show their appreciationand love.

H--

ALONG MLIU RAT

The natives living along Kalia havebeen reaping the harvest of the seaduring the past few days. Everyclothesline in the neighborhood is fullof squids hung out to dry, and tha reekof half-cure- d ooma fills the desert air.The reason is one of those phenomenacommon along that section of the mudflats, ascribed by the natives to theparticularly heavy dews of Monday,Tuesday and Wednesday nights, on themorning following these .nights thewhole mud flats at low tide being' cov-

ered with dead and half dead squid,eels, and the little mullet-lik- e fish

known as ooma, literally hundreds ofthousands of theso last, so thick inplaces that they could be scooped upby the bucketful.

Yesterday morning there was nothingdoing, the high tide having washed thedead fish of the previous day away andleft a new supply. As it is however,most of the natives have a fish supplyput away to last them for the next sixmonths.

:f--

Mr. and Mrs. Llllkalanl will have thesympathy of the' community in the lossof their second son elsewhere recorded.

TD IEHIIJI FEBRUART

(Special by Wireless to Advertiser.)v HILO, Hawaii, September 6,v" 5:03 p. m'. Captain Otwell,v Unitod States Army EngineerO officer iu charge of War De-- .

partnient work in Hawaii, ex-- jv pects to advertise for bids forv tho construction of tho Hilo .5S breakwater within two months. "

. Work is to begin in February. vtv Captain Otwell has found sS suitable rock for the work. .S! He has also cxaminod tho

harbor and approaches for ap-- J$ propriato and suitable sites for S

w range lights as they should bo ,

when the breakwater is con- - c. structed. He is now in Puna, j.4 j,

? Appropriation for the Hilo ,SS breakwater was made at tha .SS last session of Congress. ,.

v .S .S .S v k . S ,. w v 08

GUN'STWO STOWAWAYS

The good clipper barkentine Inn-gar- d,

now in port from San Fran-cisco, changed masters up "in thocity." Captain W. A. Chri3tIanson.formerly for some years In the I.-- L S.N. Co.'s service In Hawaiian waters,succeeded Captain Smith. The Irmgardcame down In twelve and a half days.She had a full load of freight and onepassenger Henry Stelner, son ot Jas.Stelner of Honolulu.

Captain Chrlstlanson reports thatwhen three days out the Irmgard en-countered a strong southerly current.This kept Increasing In strength untilHonolulu was made the night of tho1st Inst. It shoved the Irmgard in oneday out of her course by thirty-thro- emiles north. Captain Chrlstlanson willreport this current to the U. S. Hydro-graph- ic

Office. After comparison ofnotes with other shipmasters, he be-lieves it to be a recurrence of the cur-rent to which the stranding of the P.M. S. S. Manchuria, about one yearago, has been attributed. According toa consensus of mariners' opinions thissoutherly current Is regarded as oneof annual periodicity.

Another incident of the Irmgard'svoyage her master says Is somethingthat has never before hauDened onboard a vessel between the Golden Gateand Honolulu. In San Francisco har-bor four sparrows came aboard thebarkentine. Some wavs out two nf fhnbirds became missing. The two othersparrows, however, stayed by the ves-sel all the way down. They fed regu-larly on the deck and were great petswith the. ship's; company. On arrivalCaptain Chrlstlanson facetiously re-ported his little feathered passengersto the quarantine doctor as "stow-aways."

--H

IE COLOUD

Army and Navy Journal. Four neweight-Inc-h guns for the U. S. S. Colo-rado were shipped from the Washing-ton Gun Foundry on August 16 to thenavy yard at Puget Sound, Bremer-ton. Two of the eight-Inc-h guns ofthe Colorado burst near Cheefoo, Chi-na, while the vessel was at targetpractise, as we have mentioned previ-ously. It is also the Intention to re-place some of the guns on other ves-sels of the Navy with stronger ones,as the occasion offers. The new gunsfor the vessel are hooped to the muz-zle to better stand the smokeless pow-der charges. For some time the Bureauof Ordnance has been considering theadvisability of replacing the old type3of gun, which were built before 1901.when smokeless powder was adopted.Accidents to the battleships Iowa andthe Colorado convince the officials thatthe old types of gun were not safewhen used with smokeless powder. Itwas then decided by the Bureau ofOrdnance to replace these guns by latemodels In the near future. The Colo-

rado has been ordered to Bremertonfor overhauling.

H---

A

F

The following quotations, bid andasked, of Hawaiian stocks and bond3are from the S. F. Commercial Newsof August 28:

Haw'n Com'l and Sugar 53.. 9S

Hon. R. T. & L. Co. 6s 1054Haw'n Com'l & Sugar Co... 79Honokaa Sugar Co 10 11Hutchinson Sugar Plant. ... 15 15f.Kilauea Sugar Co 2Makaweli Sugar Co 23 SOUOnomea Sugar Co 35 36Paauhau Sugar Plant. Co.. 15 15&Union Sugar Co 45

Official Sales-4- 0 Honokaa Sugar,U0.12 1-- 2; 10 Hutchinson S. P. Co., $15;100 Makaweli Sugar Co., J30.25.

Unlisted Sales 25 shares HonoluluPlantation Co., $20 per share.

HWHOOPING COUGH.

This is a very dangerous disease un-less properly treated, but all dangermay be avoided by giving Chamber-lain's Cough Remedy; It liquifies thetough mucus, making it easier to ex-pectorate, keeps the cough loose, andmakes the paroxysms of coughing lessfrequent and less severe. For sale byall dealers. Benson, Smith & Co., LtcLAgents for Hawaii. , p

s

J

Page 4: kUmiuin - eVols at University of Hawaii at Manoa: Homeevols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/3445/1/...i-if - (CJ kUmiuin TJ. &. TTSATHSE. SC2Siu. SSsNr SL Last 4 beers' nifSTL

i. mipiM.ii.i.a MMH

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER lo, 1907. SEMI-WEEKL- Y.

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE'.Entered at the Postoffice of Honolulu, H. T., Second-clas- s Matter.

Semi-Week- ly Issued Tuesdays and Fridays.

WALTER G.

Subscription Rates:

Per Month J 5 Per Month, Foreign

Pk- - year $3.00 Per Tear, Foreign

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

.TUESDAY

THAT RECORD FINE.Taking what may be regarded as the

it would appear that the controversy raging over the hne of 5L'9,4U,uuu,

Imposed bv Judge Landis on the Standard Oil Company of Indiana, presents

a means of identifying the publications, respectively, in two great classes

namely, one wearing the "Wall Street collar and the other neck-fre- e. By farthe calmest, most dear-cu- t and judicial treatment of the court's sentence, wmcn

has come to the Advertiser's notice, is that of the Xew York Tribune. It is

entirely innocent of railing at the big defendant corporation, as well as of

laudation of the court. The Tribune says "it is a vivid commentary on theprodigiousness of the business and earnings of a single corporation that a

court should sentence it to pay $"29,240,000 out of its treasury, and impose thatpenalty after an inquiry intended to reveal the ability of the corporation

to forfeit so immense a sum." It represents the judgment as a tribute to thestaying powers of the defendant, and presumes that Judge Landis assessed a

fine supposed by him to be collectable, as "there would be no more justification

for imposing a fine obviously nncollectable .than there would be for sentencing

a man to imprisonment for ten thousand years." The Tribune further takes

it as to be presumed that, if the decision of Judge Landis is confirmed by thehigher courts, "the government will in the end profit by a record-breakin- g

involuntary contribution to its running expenses from a corporate enterprisewhich has defied its laws," and concludes with the following sound observations,

which appeal directly to patriotic common sense:

"It will be a long time, however, before the present litigation ends, andthe fine of Saturday may be modified in the higher courts or even entirelyset aside. If set aside, the fine record will have been broken spectacularly, butnnprofitably. Yet in a way, whatever the actual result of the litigation, and

without prejudging the strength of the moral and legal points on which thecorporation bases its appeal, the mere infliction of a penalty so startling ought

to have a helpful influence in opening the eves of the managers of great cor-

porations to the danger of taking chances in evading or overriding the laws.

The Standard Oil Company's practices may have seemed to its directors de-

fensible and not illegal. Yet a Federal grand jury and a Federal petit juryheld that they constituted a clear violation of law. If great corporations were

as eager and industrious in observing the statutes in letter and in spirit as

they often seem to be in skirting and straining them there would be littleoccasion for those corporations to complain that they are being unfairly treatedby juries and little fear of their facing a monumental cash forfeiture like thatnow hanging over the Standard Oil Company of Indiana. Caution, fairminded-jies- s

and a determination to err on the side of safety in corporation managementwill be found, like honesty, to pay decidedly in the long run."

THE TERRITORY'S COMMERCE.Hawaii is no doubt the wealthiest political subdivision under the Stars

and Stripes. As elsewhere shown in considerable detail its total commercefor the year ending June 30, 1907, was $47,966,129. This is about $300 percapita for the population of the Territory. There is probably no country inthe world that can present such a showing of wealth in proportion to thenumber of its inhabitants. This, by the way, is a distinction the kingdom andthe republic both held, but not in such a large degree as the Territory ofHawaii. The resources of the islands have been developed under annexationin mueh greater ratio than has the population increased.

The trade' returns are instructive with regard to the progress of diversifiedindustries. They indicate many points at which these may be promoted andfurther developed. Although the exhibit thus far presented is not as flatteringin this regard as might have been expected, it is yet encouraging. The exportscontain items of articles, with respectable amounts, which a few years agodid not appear at all. It is known here, also, that with respect to some articleswhose export has almost or altogether disappeared, or else declined, the islandhome consumption accounts for a great deal of the deficiencies. Also, .we areaware here that some highly promising industries rubber for an exampleare only in the initiatory stage of development. Our mahogany lumber exportis a new one, our young pineapple industry is growing and there are manyother things, which can be considered in perspective, giving strong encourage-

ment for the belief that Hawaii has but just entered its full measure ofdsstined prosperity. .

n--

" FRIENDS OF

in

SMITH, Editor.

.J .35

ItOO

SEPTEMBER io

really influential press of the mainland,

- -i-jfj--

THE TRUSTS.

of the law, nor is it just ground either

disturbance are a part of the sametrusts and their evils.

N" iitre are those who sincerely believe the trusts a great and menacing evil

trao have disagreed with President Boosevelt in,his means of fighting them.There are those who believe that it is economic conditions which create thetrusts or make them possible, and that no efficient means of combating themwill be found which does not include a change in the economic conditionswhich produce them.

But it is neither of these classes who are now seeking to discredit thePresident's efforts, by creating a panic or a financial or industrial stringency,and charging the President's anti-trus- t policy with creating it. Those engagedin this nefarious business are either those who do not want the evils of the1 rusts ended, or those who care very little about it and for other reasons,personal or financial, are trying to discredit the President, and to destroy hisinfluence with the public.

In so far as these persons and interests succeed, it is an evil success. "jThe

President and those who believe with him as to the best means of combatingthe evils of the trusts, may be wrong. But the President can not be wrongin enforcing the law as he finds it. The law does not prohibit anything thatgood morals and sound .economics do not forbid. Therefore there should beno regret when any trust is convicted of violating the law. That all undoubtedlyguilty of these illegal practices have not yet been prosecuted is no groundfor slackening zeal the enforcementof sympathy or of leniency for those who are both prosecuted and convicted.

The effort to make the public believe that the President's attacks on thetrust will cause financial and industrialwickedness which creates and defends the

tNITRITES AND FAME.

' "When President Pinkham gave public notice the other day that analysesof the Nuuanu water indicated that consumers should filter and boil it beforedrinking it, he said that one analysis had shown the presence of nitrites,though other analyses had not. By an association of ideas, seemingly farfetched, but still perfectly natural, the mention of nitrites recalled to those whoknow his career, Jacob Biis. It was nitrites that made Jacob Biis famous.Biis was a reporter on a 2Cew York paper many years ago. One day in goinghis rounds in the City Hall he happened to study with some care one of thedaily reports of the Croton "Water System, the water supply of New York.The analysis showed the presence of nitrites. Biis didn't know what nitriteswere, but he found out, and at once began a campaign for an improved watersupply for the city of Xew York. He kept np his agitation in' season andout of season. He rang the changes on nitrites and their danger. He interestedmedical and other organizations in the good work. Societies for the care andaid of children got in line. Finally, action was secured. The water systemwas improved. A new system was created in which the evils of the othersystem were eliminated.

Finally, a public jubilation meeting was called of those who credited them-

selves or were credited with being instrumental in bringing about the improve-- .meat and they forgot to invite Biis until the last moment.

--4

Those who assert that the Bapid Transit Co. is obliged to water thestreets it uses ought to go further and find out why the company is not com-

pelled to perform that service. There is a prevalent impression that the enact-

ment of "the Legislature in that regard will not hold water, which is a serious

defect in anything designed for .street sprinkling purposes. The Legislatureias no power to amend a charter approved by Congress.

JUSTICE AND PUBLICITY.There are-- cases where the-- courts have to protect litigants or defendants

from such publicity as would interfere with justice. Cases sometimes arise,in divorce and probate, which it may be a court's duty to try with closeddoors. It is very doubtful if a court cari properly go beyond these lines toscreen parties before it from publicity. Indeed, outside of thelimitations, secret sessions of courts of justice in Hawaii are unlawful. So,inferentially, are wilful concealment of court records from public inspection.Tho open and above-boar- d administration of justice js one of the guaranteesof American liberty. It. is 'withal a safeguard against collusive divorces,predatory guardianships ana such evils.

Favors in respect of publicity are dangerous. If a lawyer handling ameritorious cause is granted a secret hearing, say" for reasons of delicacy, andlater allowed to commandeer a custodian of records to keep the proceedingsfrom the public, then a lawyer having in hand an utterly dishonest or selfishscheme, which he desires to railroad through the forms of justice, may findit easy to give reasons for claiming the 'same extraordinary privileges. Thereis less justification in Honolulu for such strategy of concealment, as has beenshown in the Deering case than In many other cities. Hero the press, whentaken into confidence in due time, has almost invariably conceded either ty

or slight mention to cases in court where prominence of publicationmight hurt innocent parties and there was no interest of the public, in anytangible degree, involved. -

The Deering case was a fair Subject for reporting, having a well-define- d

human interest with a moral lesson "annexed" to use a law term. Perhaps,though, had the conductors of tho local press been consulted, the matter mighthave been reported with a minimum of publicity. By taking another course,however, court, counsel and' clerk have compelled more publicity for the casethan they had bargained for more indeed than the matter is intrinsicallyworth as news.

. .Xew York State has awakened to the fact that it needs some of the im-

migration that is pouring' through its own and the nation's metropolis to oc-

cupy lands far beyond. Even natives of the State have figured so numerously inthe westward rush that its agricultural lands have been alarmingly deserted.Good farms can be purchased there now for from $10 to $30 an acre, and thisupon very easy terms of payment. There has been a depletion of the agri-cultural population of the State in low priced and productive farm homesjeady for occupancy, with markets --at their very doors, and swift and easytransportation by railroad, trolley .lines and good roads has been either over-looked, disregarded or unknown. President Boosevelt himself has become iden-tified with the great movement in his home State for repeopling the abandonedfarms. A convention of the active spirits in this movement is to be held inSyracuse on October 15, 16 and 17.

It is very gratifying to note that a distinct advance will be made 'in in-

dustrial training in the public schools with the opening of the new term. Bothas to definiteness of system and variety of the practical curricula prescribedthe plans of the department in this matter are ahead of any heretofore at-

tempted. Only by still further improving the system, from one fiscal period toanother, will Hawaii maintain its creditable educational record made in thepast. Industrial training is not a sporadic fad. it has attained the status ofa great national movement.

THE WIFE OF MAJORGENERAL WOOD WAS HERE

Aboard the United States Armytransport Sherman which arrived' here

Saturday afternoon from the Philip-

pines, via Nagasaki, and sailed yester-

day evening for San Francisco, wasMrs. Leonard "Wood, the wife of JlajorGeneral Leonard "Wood, II. S. A.. incharge In the Philippines, accompaniedby her son.

Mrs. Wood enjoyed her brief stayin Honolulu and expects within a coupleof months to be joined by her husbandon the mainland.

Admiral Dayton, now here aboard theflagship "West Virginia, who commands

EXCLUSION TALK

UUFHIUIT-- Pi - 1 -- - It

SAX FRANCISCO, August 17.1conference was held yesterday attho Fairmont Hotel between Congress-man E. A. Hayes or the Fifth districtof California and Professor John W.Jenks of the Immigration Commissionupon matters bearing upon the entryof the Japanese to this Coast, at which,it is understood, Mr. Hayes laid forthhis own well-know- n emphatic viewsand the feelings of his constituents andoi Lalitornmns in general to the Com-missioner. Congressman Hayes, as theonly Pacific Coast representative onthe Immigration Committee of theHouse, and from his aggressive anti-Orient- al

utterances on the floor of thatbody, was well qualified to speak forthe State in the Japanese immigrationcontroversy, and while at the conclu-sion of the conference he would not gointo the details of the discussion, headmitted that the invasion of thebrown men on the Coast was the pointupon which he and Professor Jenksheld the most earnest consultation.

"As Professor Jenks in his generalinvestigation of immigration affairslooks closely into the local aspect ofeach place he visits, we naturally paidspecial attention to the Japanese prob-lem on this Coast," said Mr. Hayes.

Ui ail immigration questions,this is the most vital just now. Theattitude of the President and of thsEastern" public and men of affairs haschanged greatly since last winter, andthe sentiment is now coming in accordwith California's contentions. I thinkthe legislation which will follow, as aresult of the Commission's labors, willbe of a national and dignified char-acter, that will uphold all our posi-tions against Asiatic immigration."

Congressman Hayes returned onlvlast week from England with his fam- -uy. ile announced that he is goingto introduce some stringent anti-Asiat-

labor legislation in the House atthe next session, and while in Europelooked into the status of Hindoo im-

migration to various countries, whichis becoming a problem in various partsoi tne world.

"I shall introduce a law looking tothe absolute exclusion of all Asiaticlabor from the United States," saidAir. Hayes. "It will bear equallyagainst the Japanese, Hindoos, Chineseand all races of the Orient whose entrance here and competition with Amer-ican labor and industry is looming upas a national menace. We had better,meet this matter now than twentyyears hence, when it will grow to bea gigantic race problem, as ugly anddangerous as the negro question inthe South and even worse than thatfor when there are half a million Jajf

the Pacific fleet, called on Mrs. "Woodyesterday afternoon aboard the trans-port, he and General Wood being greatfriends. The Admiral was accompaniedby his aid, Lieutenant Tompkins.

Captain J. P. Yost is one of the pas-

sengers going through to the mainlandaboard the Sherman. He is well knownhere, having been In charge of theMilitary Hospital here. Another pas-

senger of note Is Lieutenant Graham,once a member of the famous ArmyPolo Team 'and one of the best play-ers. He Is In the hospital aboard ship,en route home. Once an athlete, hissickness has sadly changed him.

LICENSE

The BoarO of License Commissionerswill tackle the "blind pig" proposi-tion. Apparently their plan is tocome up to the "blind pigs" on theirblind side.

The Board has issued Invitations tothe wholesale dealers of the island tomeet it in a conference on the sub-ject, next Friday afternoon at fouro'clock. The Board is acting on thetheory that the owners and managersof the "blind pigs" must buy theirliquor somewhere presumably of thewholesale dealers. Therefore the whole-sale dealers must be in a position toknow, if not absolutely, at least suff-iciently to make a very shrewd guess asto who own the "blind pig" ranches.Therefore, if the wholesalers, in aspirit of public service, or selfishly con-sulting their own interests from thelicense side-- of the question will joinhands with the License Board, they cansimply circle round the "blind pigs"ar.d corral them.

All persons holding wholesale li-

censes are requested not to forget thedate and place the Throne Boom ofthe Capitol, Fridayi afternoon at fouro'clock. Meanwhile the members ofthe License P)oard will Eee GovernorFrear and speak to him about fillingthe vacancy caused by the resignationof A. J. Campbell so that there will bea full board to welcome the' "visitors.

anese in California's valleys and theyhave driven the whites from everypoint of competition, they will have apowerful government at their backto complicafe the situation. Everyconcession we make to the Japanesenow will be a disadvantage later; wehad better face the matter squarelyand stick it out for absolute exclusionof every Asiatic laborer from ourshores.

"War is to be deplored, but if thi3means war, let us have it and fight itfor this principle, that no

Asiatic race shall be permitted toenter and occupy a portion of thiscountry and lower the standard ofAmerican living. There will be half amillion Japanese here' in a few years,and that will create a race problemthat will make the negro question seempaltry.

"If we have to fight to keep theOriental out of America, let it come.If we allow them to come in, the thou-sands of aliens would cause us, a warwith their mother country sooner orlater anyway it would be inevitable.The safest course is to keep them out,,and keep them out now. There has

,',beeh too much hedging, and nndigni

FEDERAL I FOR

STATE SCHOOLS

Representative Charles R. Davis ofMinnesota during the lost session ofCongress Introduced a bill known asHouse Bill 21737, the purpose of whichla to give Federal aid to Industrialeducation In the public schools of theseveral States. The following sectionsof the bill give an Idea of Its purposeand scope:

"Be it enacted, etc., That there shallbe, and hereby Is, annually appropri-ated, out of any money In the Treas-ury not otherwise appropriated, to bepaid, as hereinafter provided, to eachState and Territory for the mainte-nance of instruction in agriculture andhome economics In agricultural highschools of secondary grade and In-

struction in mechanic arts and homeeconomics in city high schools of sec-

ondary grade, a sum of money equalto 10 cents per capita, of the populationof each State or Territory, respective-ly, as shown by the last preceding na-

tional or State census, as shall be ap-

portioned by the Secretary of Agriculture and estimated for in the annualestimates submitted to Congress forthe Department of. Agriculture; Provided, That the funds thus appropri-ated shall be used only for instruc-tion in agriculture, mechanic arts, andhome economics, and that all .Statesand Territories and all schools accepting these funds shall provide otherfunds with which to pay the cost ofproviding the necessary lands andbuildings and of instruction In all gen-

eral studies required to make well--rounded high school courses of study:And provided further. That not lessthan one-ha- lf of the sum thus appro-priated to any State or Territory shallbe expended for Instruction in agriculture and home economics in agricul'tural high schools maintained underState authority in rural communities,and the number of such agriculturalhigh schools which shall be entitled toreceive the benefits of this act in anyone State or Territory shall not exceedone school for each ten counties In thatState or Territory.

"Sec. 2. That there shall be. andhereby Is, annually appropriated, outof any money In the Treasury nototherwise appropriated, to be paid, ashereinafter provided, to each State andTerritory for the maintenance ofbranch agricultural experiment stationsunder the direction of the State agri-cultural experiment stations now es-

tablished or which may hereafter beestablished In accordance with the actof Congress approved March 7, 1S62, thesum of $2500 for each branch experiment station already established bylegislative enactment of the respectiveStates and Territories, or which shallbe established in said States or Terri-tories in connection with agriculturalhigh schools as appropriated for by thisact: Provided, That no State or Ter-ritory shall be entitled to the benefitsof section 2 of this act until Its Legis-lature shall by law provide for the es- -

tabllshment of such branch stations andshall provide annually for the equipment and maintenance of such branchstations a sum at least equivalent tothat appropriated annually to the Stateor Territory under section 2 of this act;and the sum paid to each State or Ter-ritory under section 2 of this act shallbe applied only to paying the neces-sary expenses of conducting at suchbranch experiment stations experi-ments bearing directly upon the agri-cultural Industry of the United States,having due regard to the varying con-

ditions and needs of the respectiveStates or Territories and the respectiveagricultural regions therein."

Congressman Davis has sent a com-

munication to the Advertiser explain-ing why tie introduced the bill andwhat he hopes to accomplish by it.

He says:"In this bill I have undertaken to

give direction to the manifest deter-mination of the American people toturn the further development of ourpublic edubatlon In part towards tech-nical and economic lines.

"During the last twenty years publlaschools of secondary or high schoolgrade have made very rapid growth,showing that as our people increase inwealth larger numbers want educationof a grade higher than that providedIn the primary schools. Since onlypart of those attending high schoolsare needed in the professions, It Isclear that a large number of youngmen attending these schools must enteragriculture and mechanic Industries,arts and trades, and no fact Is moreapparent than that, a portion of ourhigh school work for girls should bedirected toward home-makin- g. i

"This bill contemplates building upa large class of people trained In highschool courses, combining Industrialand general education. "With patronsand teacners irom such schools, ourprimary schools will be able to carryagriculture, manual training and homeeconomics subjects ,Into the primary,rural and city schools. This bill willdo much to bring all classes of primaryschools to higher standards of scholar-ship, as well as to give their coursesmore of a practical bearing. This sec-ondary education will also encourageself selection on the part of pupils, en-abling them to better choose for themselves those lines of endeavor In whichtheir ability and interest will enablethem best to succeed. In this way thisindustrial education will provide forour colleges and universities studentsbetter fitted for the several lines ofhigher education and for the more orless technical vocations to which thesecollegiate and university courses lead.

"Not many of our States have suc-ceeded In properly financing and developing our primary schools, especially tnose in the rural communities. Itwould seem that at this Juncture theState treasuries of most States havemore than they can do to meet thecoming demands for better primaryschools. As the Federal appropriationfor State agricultural and mechanicalcolleges and experiment stations hasInduced the States to Invest moneyalong the lines of Industrial educationand research, so an additional appro-priation as contemplated In this billwould do much to encourage the Statesto make larger appropriations for thpractical and general phase of our pub- -

DEATH MD

SEX PUZZL

What caused the death of laooye Hbkutaro and why carae she &v Hawaiilast January disguised as a.an.

a. woman, Mumeno, who arrivedwith her?

These questions may go beyond thopolice department and be taken up fer-tile Fedural authorities.

Here is the story as told la last Fri-day's issue of the Jlyu Shirabnn and as.added to by the discoveries of Cnirof Detectives Taylor and Japanese Of-ficer Townsend.

On January 17 last there arrived laHonolulu per S. S. Korea two Japa-nese, presumably man and woman, giv-ing the names at the Immigration sta-tion above noted. They were married,at the immigration station and wentto live In a three-stor-y tenement nearthe Honolulu Iron Works.

About one month ago there arosetrouble between the two, and asetherJapanese, also named Inouye. acted asort of a peacemaker. Some of theJapanese of the tenement held a meet-ing, the peacemaker officiating, and tinsresult was that the woman. Mumeno.and her supposed husband agreed toseparate and Mumeno was transferredto a man whose name Is not at preseatknown, but with whom she la now liv-ing. -

Inouye Kikutafo started, to work fna coffee shop near the Honolulu IrsaWorks. As was ascertained later bya reporter of the Jlyu Shlmbun. thesewho came In contact with Inouye Kl-kut- aro

noticed some peculiar things."He"' always bathed alone, contrary to-th-

custom of Japanese men, and dMnot bathe as often as Japanese menare In the habit of bathing. "He" als&.was very particular about keeping-"his-

clothes close up about his neck,not wearing them loose as Is the cus-tom of Japanese men. In other ways."he" seemed unmanly, though no par.ticular suspicion seemed to have beenaroused at the time, these thing3 being:recalled after It was ascertained thatInouye Klkutaro was a woman and nota man.

On August 30 the masquerader be-ca- me

sick, mysteriously sick It devel-oped. Dr. Uemura was called and.took charge of the cose. Dr. Uemura,did not know what was the matterwith the patient, at least he so statedat the time. The patient was removed,to the Japanese hospital on IJliha.street.

A week ago the patient died. A re-porter from the Jlyu Shlmbun callett.on Dr. Uemura. having received wordthat Inouye Klkutaro was a. woman,and asked him as to the sex of thepatient who had died and concerningthe nature of the disease. Dr. Uemura.says the Japanese paper, denied thatthe mysterious corpse was that of afemale. Later, says the Jlyu. threat-ened with a "roast" unless he admittedthe truth. Dr. Uemura consulted with.other physicians and admitted thatInouye Klkutaro was a female. DriUemura, however. Issued a certlflcat- -

of death In which he referred to the-bod-

as that of a mal for some mys-terious reason still maintaining the de-ception. At the autopsy it wa3 estab-lished that Inouye was a female.

The Jlyu representative visited the-hous-

near the Iron "Works where-Inouy- e

Klkutaro had lived and askedconcerning the Identity of the Individ-ual. The Japanese In the building heKta meeting and gave It out to the Jap-anese reporter that they had agreed notto say anything about it. The reporterthen visited the cemetery where Inouye-Klkutaro'-

body lay burled ard foundthat the headstone declared It to berthe resting-plac- e of the Body of a Jap-anese man.

The woman, disguised as a man. hadcome from Fukuoka province, Japan,and was apparently about 23 years orage. Her hair was close-cropp- ed andshe had some reason, apparently, forgoing through the marriage csremonywith the other woman, Mumeno.

The matter has just come to the at-

tention of the police and xhey are work-ing on the case, and the Federal au-

thorities are likely to take a hand.H

The American bark S. C. Allen. Cap-

tain "Wilier, arrived early yesterdaymorning from Eureka, making the rnrkin the good time of fifteen days. She-entere- d

port at 8:30 o'clock, with lum-ber consigned to Allen & Robinson.

He system."The Federal appropriations, turning:

over to the States funds for agricul-tural and mechanical colleges and forState experiment stations, have beena means of decentralizing and orbuilding up local institutions of whichthe States are proud. Because it willcarry a relatively large sum of moneyto be administered by the States, thlxbill will do even more to magnify local,

than has the system ofState colleges and experiment stations.The peculiar reason for raising moneyfor the purposes of the bill is that thFederal government can Initiate Inevery duitrlct In each State populareducatlon Telatlng to the Industries andhome making, encouraging the Statesto do far more for themselves fremthey will do without this fund. It Is:not interference with States; It Is notmerely aid to the States. It is coopera-tion with the States, they to mass?the new enterprises. It Is cot new law-I- n

form, principle or object. It 1

merely another supplement to the LasdGrant Act of 1882 which established:State education and research, la agri-culture and In the mechanic arts, asalready supplemented by the HatcaAct of 1SS7, the Morrill Act of 1353.the Adams Act of 1303 and the NelaoaAct of 1907."

Wounds and Skm Disease cwmcL by"THE HOUSEHOLD SURGEON"Druggists refund moaey H

ANTISEPTIC HEAL-ING -- OIL fails. Made by PARISMEDICINE CO,, Sunt Lwk, U. iof A.

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HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER- - 10, 1907. SEMI-WEEKL- Y

. .. . - -

acwri'TTi nn en PINEAPPLES AND

ia- - j w & mam " a . feii Vi.3

.-- 1- kTEURM rwn 1 m reroyik. GRAPES ON MAUI

SAILDRS BEATEN

IN FAST GAMES

(From Sunday's Advertiser.)Two good games of ball were wit-

nessed yesterday afternoon . at thebaseball grounds by between 1100 and0200 spectators. While the fielding didnot show up as well as it might .haveon either side, the games were fullof interest and everyone was well sat-isfied. The local teams won in bothcontests, the St. Louis team defeatingthe Pennsylvania men by a score ofS-- L and the Picked Team coming outon top in its contest against theJIaryland, with a score 5-- L

The feature of the day was the gamepitched by Reuter. who appeared inthe box for the Saints, and was in I

the finest of trim. The struck out I

nineteen men, in the nine innings,save four bases on balls and allowedlint two hits. His work was such thatit placed him in a class by himself.He made the only error of his side"himself, the men behind him playingright up to the mark. Evers neverhad a chance to show his speed, notsetting a single put out or assist.

For the sailors McWhorter showed"up In the best of shape. He made theonly two hits which were allowed byReuter and converted one of these intothe lonely tally which was scored bybis sife His fielding was perfectionand le showed himself to be a playerof high class. Freeman pitched a goodgame, keeping hits well scattered asa rule. If the team behind him had

kiyed a clean game In the field therewould have been a small score.

The first game was full of casual-ties, all on the side of the Honoluluplayers. Soares' accident was themost serious. He was bit in the faceby a pitched ball and his jaw wasbroken. The doctors from two of thecruisers were present and examinednim, and finding that the injury wassevere sent him downtown at once fortreatment.

The other accidents consisted in alinger nail being torn off by Johnny"Williams and a dislocated thumb forBrans. "With all three men out of thegame It will weaken the teams whichplay today, but they should be ableto find good substitutes.

The ?wo "Williams boys were a towerof strength for the Saints. Johnny

'never had a chance in the field butmade three hits when at the bat, oneof which was a two bagger. Jlmmytook every chance that came his wayand made two base hits, both comingat the most opportune times.

In the second game botfl teams madefive hits but the Picked Team bunchedtheir Dingles while Leslie came up tothe scratch when it was needed andstruck his men out one after another.Each team made six errors, but thelocal men were strong when they werein danger, while the Maryland boysbad hard luck.

The winning of the game occurredin the second inning when the localpounced on Glowski for four runs. Hewas retired from the box in favor ofHiggins, who did much better and al-

lowed only one more run to be addedto the score. The naval men madetheir only score in the last inning andhad no chance of winning after thefirst two rounds were over.

The way in which Captain Fernan-dez and his men smashed liners andbard drives down at Chaplain Scott,on third base, was a wonder. Hegobbled up almost anything whichcame his way but it is safe to saythat he has a sore pair of hands today,as the result of the many smasheswhich came in his direction.

Brooks, In right field, put up a starfielding game, robbing several of theplayers of legitimate hits. Higginsonly allowed .two hits while he wasin the box and played a very nicegame.

FIRST GAME.Calderhead. the first man at the bat,

strack ouC McWhorter made a threebase hlF't6 right field, which nearlyhit the Owl cigar sign, and came homea minute later on a passed ball. Martin fanned and Glick went out secondto first.

Evers made a clean hit to left andwent out trying to steal second. JimmyWilliams fiew out to right and Aylettmade a base hit over shortstop. Bransgot to first on an error by Freeman,but Aylett was forced out on Lo On'sgrounder to third base.

In the second inning, Reuter only"pitched ten balls, all three sailorsstriking out one after another. In thefaints' half. Johnny Williams went outpitcher to first. Reuter was given abase on balls. Gleason flew out tosecond and Reuter was tagged out bythe Penns.' shortstop as he tried to getpast on Soares' grounder to third.

In the third" inning it was three moremen from the sailors team who fannedthe air. though Freeman was alloweda base on balls. Evers, Jim "Williamsand Aylett went out one, two, three

Reuter only struck out O'Connor inthe fourth, Glick sending him a groundball which made an easy out at first.and Martin going out on a fly to Glea-

son. Johnny "Williams made a hit inthis inning and got as far as secondon a passed balL He was caught be-

tween second and third, however, andno runs were scored.

Reuter still kept up the good workIn the sixth and struck out all threemen. The Saints had a life for a mo-

ment on Reuter's gift of a base throughO'Connor's low throw, but the lattermade up by doubling him with Soareson the latter's srounder.

One, two, three again the sailors wentout, two fanning. Then the trouble be-

gan. Evers sent a grounder to second,

but the first baseman could not holdthe throw, and the Saint was perchedon second when he got back to earth.Jimmy "Williams went out on a longdrive "to right field, which sent Eversto third. Aylett hit to short, who threwto third to catch Evers. with the re-

sult that both men were safe. Aylett

SwWSSM

went out trying to steal second. Bransmade a clean hit between first andsecond, scoring Evers. Lo On was hitby a pitched ball and Johnny "Williamssingled between short and third, bring-ing Bruns In. Lo On was caught atthird, making the last out.

In the seventh Reuter drove, a hotone at the Penns. third baseman,which he failed to hold, and took sec-

ond on a passed ball, Pat Gleasonwent through some monkey tricks' andthen dropped a beautiful bunt besidethe plate and was safe at first, withReuter on third. Pat stole second.Soares came to the bat and was hitin the jaw, as was t61d above. He leftthe g.ame, Williams taking his placeon the bases. This filled the bases.Evers bunted, forcing Reuter out athome. Jimmy Williams sent a fastgrounder between first and secondwhich brought in Gleason and hisbrother. Freeman tried a trick play ofthrowing to second base, but the ballwent wild and Evers scored. Aylettvcit out, pitcher to first, and Brunsrct.rcd the side on a foul to third.

In tie eighth Glick came into thebox and got his. Lo On went out on afly to left. Johnny Williams made atwo-bagg- er to the left field fence. Reu-ter was given a life by the first base-man's fumble. Gleason once moredroped a bunt at the plate, filling thebases. Jones hit to third, who caughtWilliams at the plate, and then Eversmade a single to short right, scoringReuter and Gleason. Jimmy followedwith a grounder to second, whichbrought Jones home. Aylett finally re-

tired the side with a long fly, of whichMcWhorter made a wonderful catch.

The summary:ST. LOUIS.

AB R BH SB PO A EEvers, ss. 5 2 2 "0Jas. Williams, 2b 5 0 " 2- - 1Aylett, cf. 5 0 1 0

Bruns, lb 4 11 6

Lo On, If. 3 0 0 0

Jno. Williams, 3b 4 0 3 0

Reuter, p 3 1 0' 0

Gleason, 2b 4 2 2 1 1

Jones, c. 1 1 0 0 4Soares, c 2 10 0 15

Totals 36 S 11 5 27 5 1

. U. S. S. PENNSYLVANIA.AB R BH SB PO A E

Calderhead, 2b... 4 0 0 0

McWhorter, cf. .. 4 1 2 0

Martin, c 3 0 0 0

Glick. rf. 3 0 ' 0 1

O'Connors, ss. .. A 0 "0 0

Goldfus, 3b 4 0 0 0

Fox, lb 4 0 0 0

Fritz, If. 2 0 0 0

Freeman, p 2 0 0 0

Totals 30 1 2 I 24 10 6

U. S.' S. PENNSYLVANIA.12345C7S9

Runs 1000000001B. H 10 00 000 102

ST. LOUIS.1234567S9

Runs 0 0 000233 S

B. H 20 010224 11

SUMMARY.Two-ba- se hit John Williams.Three-bas- e hit McWhorter.Hits Off Freeman, 7; Glick, 4.

Base on balls Reuter, 4; Freeman,1; Glick, 0.

Passed balls Martin, 0; Soares, 1.

Struck out Reuter, 19; Freeman, 0;Glick, 0.

Double play O'Connors-Calderhead-Fo- x.

Hit by pitcher Lo On, Soares.SECOND GAME.

Hampton started with a base onballs. Fernandez went out third tofirst, and Hamp. went out trying tosteal second. Darcy was safe on anerror of the shortstop and Lemon wentout second to first.

Higgins made a safe hit to center forthe sailors, but Miller, Scott and Scullyrtruck out and gave him no chance.The Picked Teamgot in deadly workin the second inning. Eddie Deshastarted things with a clean hit oversecond. Leslie made a two-bagg- er

along the third baseline, and Bill Van- -natta singled over second, bringingEddie home. A passed ball sent Lesliehome and Vann. to third. Jones walked. Miller hit to third, who threwhome to stop Vannatta, and Scullyheld the ball long enough to allow bothmen to get safe. Hampton flew outto center, Vannatta coming home, andJones stole home when a throw wasmade to keep Miller from second. Fernandez went out on a bunt and Darcyended things with a fly to right. Score,4-- 0.

In the next inning Higgins went intothe box, Glowski leaving the game andLudwig going to center. Lemon, Deshaand Leslie went out in succession.Things looked bad for the local boysfor a moment in this inning. Ludwigwas hit by Leslie and Miller got apass. But Scott drove a liner to Vannatta, who ate it up and doubled Lud- -j

wig. Higgins went out pitcher to first.There was no more scoring till the

seventh, when Miller got a life onScully's low throw of his bunt andwent to third when Higgins threwHampton's grounder wild over second,allowing Miller to take third. Fer- -nandez went out pitcher to first, butMiller got home on the play. Darcymade the last out, second to first.

The sailors scored in the last of theninth. Brookes struck out, Andersonmade a two-bagg- er to left and tookthird when Pierce went out second tofirst. Ludwig made a hit over second,scoring Anderson. The next man upknocked a liner Into Fernandez handsand wound up the contest.

The score:PICKED NINE.

AB R BH SB PO A EHampton, 3b. .. 4 0 0 0 1 11Fernandez, lb. .. 3 0 0 0 9 0 1Darcy, rf 4 0 0 0 0 10Lemon, If. 4 0 1 0 Q 0 1E. Desha, cf 4 12 0 0 0 0

Leslie, p 4 110 0 10Vannatta, 2b. .. 4 1 1 1 4 4 2

Jones, c. 3 1 0 2 10 0 0Miller, ss 4 10 0 3 2 1

Totals 34 5 5 3 27 9 6

JOE OANS BEATS BRITTIN SAN FRANCISCO RING

iMfr' IFWr &mBM

JOE GANS, WHO DEFEATED JIMMTE BEITT IN SAN FEANCISCOYESTERDAY.

.. . . . . . -

Joe (Jans won the fight yesterday in San 'Francisco with Jimmie Britt,getting the decision after five rounds of hard fighting. In the fifth roundBritt broke his left forearm, which caused Jris second to throw up thosponge and Referee Eddie Welch had no choice but to give the fight tothe negro.

The following Associated Press dispatches to the Advertiser give thofight by r6unds:

SAN FEANCISCO, September 9. The betting at the ringside is 2-- 1 infavor of Gans. The men weighed in at the .ring at 3.20 p. m. and neitherraised the bar at-13- 3 pounds.

BOUND ONE The fighting is very even,' Britt is very aggressive andboth are fighting hard. Britt has a shade the better of it.

BOUND TWO Gans gets the advantage after a fierce rally.BOUND THREE The pace is very rapidiwith honors about even.BOUND FOUR. Gans is forcing the fighting and has Jimmy spitting

blood and groggy.BOUjnD FIVE Gans still forces the fighting. Britt breaks a bone in

bis left forearm.. BOUND SIX Gans is given the decision.- -

I CUP

FIRST ROUND

(From Monday's Advertiter.)The preliminary round of the' first

golf championships which have everbeen held in the Territory, were play-

ed yesterday at the grounds of theCountry Club, for the Manoa Cham-

pionship Cup. The weather was per-

fect and the size of the entry list wasmost satisfactory. It had been expect-

ed that there would be about thirtyentrios but when forty players appeared

for the championships, the commit-

tee in charge was greatly pleased.The low score for the day was made

by Austin White, the fourteen-year-ol- d

boy who has dono so well in manyof the tournaments of the season. Hefinished the two rounds of eighteenholes each, in 170 strobes. In themorning play he made 44 and 39, thelatter score holping greatly in bring-

ing him into the leading place in theday's sport. His father, E. O. White,kept up the honor of the family bytaking third place with a score of 179,

U. S. S. MARYLAND.AB R BH SB PO A E

Miller, ss. 4 1Scott, 3b 4 1"Higgins, p.-c- f. .. 4 1Scully, c 4 3

Breen, lb. ........ 4 15

Brooks, rf. 4 3

Anderson, 2b. ..4 o

Pierce, If 4 1Ludwig, cf. ... 3 0

Glowski, p 0 0

Totals ..W...35 1 5 1 27 18 6

FlUHU iXlJiZi.

123456789Runs 04 0 0 0010 05B. H 0300000205

U. S. S. MARYLAND.4

123456789Runs 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11B. H 1000100125

SUMMARY.Two-bas- e hits Leslie, Ludwig, An-

derson.Base on balls Leslie, 1; Glowski, 2;

Higgins, 0.Sacrifice hit Fernandez.Passed balls Jones, 0; Scully, 1.

Struck out Leslie, 9; Glowski, 0;Higgins, 4. ,

Hit by pitcher Ludwig.Double play Vannatta (unassisted).Hits Off Glowski, 3.

Dr. tHigh taking the second honorswith 176.

Strange to say the sixteen players

holesnext

205.lels,

same age

met

sxvpfHipfirts Hinsn nnmnntinrr.present and enjoying the play al-

most much members thowho were absorbed

game. dainty lunch served andenjoyed much,

Tho round will playedSunday, holes the morning

Austin White

WhiteEvans

Gill.well

Gaines194

Merriam 197

l&it. Young

quotedIn

no subsidy atcongress.

T,,Tir INDEED.external application equal

Balmswollen Joints. matterhe. cansA Hnfment

will relief. dealers.Co., Ltd.,

Hawaii.

Maui, SeptemberThe Haiku Fruit and Co. has

J increased its nearlycent. Last year record

12,000 cases of canned pineapples.year 23,000 cases the estimate with

winter crop of 10,000 cases addition-al. This seems to warrant new andlarger

Another domestic thatwell that of

and wlne-makl- at Lastj'ear 'pressed out 7500 gal-lons of Burgundy, this year 14,000 gal- -Ions anticipated in spite of fact

( that bad weather has Injured the(grapes. The yield of grapes in the

section this year ev-idently a hundred per cent,than last year. Of the seventy-tw- o

stockholders of the local wine com-pany all with three four exceptionsgrow grapes and the wine companyproves successful will increase thearea of their vineyards. present

are receiving thirty cents pergallon wine made their grapes.The wine company has about 1S.00O

of wine in storage.reception will given Rev. and

Mrs. Turner on Friday evening, the13th.

Maunaolu Seminary, Pala, will openWednesday, Miss Heusner,

the principal, that a full schoolexpected that all pupils shouldprompt In entering.

Last Saturday, August MissElizabeth Mattison, the new musicteacher succeed Miss Ormerod, ar-rived Maul. Miss Mattison agraduate of the Oberlinof Music.

Plo-e- r returning thepastures and shooting

will begin the loth. This recallstho new hunting regulation thatone allowed hunt (parrywithout an annual licenseof five dollars. rather severelaw was in order protect thegame. It has been custom in thepast Irresponsible people certainlocalities slaughter birds indiscrim-inately, caring whether the birdshave broods of young not.

Theodore Richards of Honolulu madea brief business visit Makawao last

staying only one night.Rev. and Mrs. A. Baker of Kona

visiting Mr. and Mrs. Nicollof Hamakuapoko.. Mr. Baker has beenquit 111, better.

Last August 30th, T.Fleming of Grove Ranch departedthe Coast vacation severalmonths.

Father has come toPala. He has charge of Catholicchurches Puunene otherplaces

Geo. Wilbup and family willlocate at Los Angeles. His father hasalready started a soda water manu-factory

Atwater Haiku has re-

turned from the National Teachers'Association meeting held at Los An-geles, Cal.

Arthur Collins has HarryH?ncc TTnmntriinrmVrt enrVAVnr fnt

Mau, Co.Sam Baldwin has returned to the

'Coast after a vacation spent with

'

TRANSPORTS JO

RUN MOOT OFTEN

with greater despatch, Gen.

Parents, ne a senior xa.ewho qualified made the?on- - Levi osePh and a nul,er fsix less than 200 strokes, the

Hawaiians met the Longworth partytwo the lucky sixteen, whe recent trfp at the paU

making the score of These were jUst outside of Kipahulu, decoratedSam Wilder and Francis Brown, the them with and escorted themlatter beinir a young boy about tho Manager Ah Ping's for lunch.

Wallua-o- n the other side of Ki- -Austin White. His pahulu Qn the,r way Hana Ge0

markable playing caused a good deal Cooper the party with a carriagevery favorable comment and he is gayly adorned with bunting and

to become one of the cracks ""Wed them with iced drinks.., . , i August has been the most rainytne cjud. month of year, and kamaainas

The attendance at the club "was very state the wettest August ina great many of the wives, sisters seven years.

......nn1 nf . be- --- .. w- - x- - 0,ing

the ofsterner sex in the

A wasall the day very

final be next i

eighteen in j

This

doing

This

just

thirty- -

and eighteen in the afternoon,In case of a for The following item from the Army

holes and Navy Journal, should of inter- -the Championship, eighteen moreest in this city. The plan to have

will be played. Almost any one heretransport pass through everytho sixteen who qualified yesterday has twenty days. Instead of every month,a very good chance to win the title would naturally bring many more ves- -

of champion Hawaii, the play se,s this port and the'recommenda- -

.iV tion to this from General Leo-wi- llbe very even, from nard Wood sh(juld do much to br,nff

the form which has been sheffrn during such an arrangement,the past few months. The Army and Navy Journal says:

The names of the sixteen who quali-- l' In line with the recommendations"centl 'fied for the finals, with scores, Edwards that some made to

tie two are follows: facnitate the transport service thatIstR. 2dR. Total of troops and officers might

83 87 170

Df."High 89 87 ygE. O. 90 89 1,9J. C. 89 91 180

D. W. Anderson 89 92 181F. Halstead .91 9iF. Armstrong 92 95 'H. H. Walker 96 96 392

. ."! 95 93 193

C. Hart ...... 91 103 294

J. D. ...... 97 97

C E. Edmunds 99 95

H. 96 101

F. Klebahn 93

J. ...104 94 iqW. W. Thayer 96 102 193

H--Congressman iiiggins is as

saying that opinion there willbe' ship legislation thecoming session

, j , 'A

is toChamberlain's Pain for soremnscles or Nowhat mav the thf

give For sale by allBenson, Smith & Agents for

"MAKAWAO, 7.

Packingoutput a hundred

its was

Isa

amanufactory.

Industry is"Is grape-growi- ng

Kaupakalua.the winery

Is the

Kaupakalua wasgreater

orif

Atthey

for of

gallonsA be

on the 11th,states

is andbe

31st,

toon is

Conservatory

are to Maka-wa- o

pleasanton

nois to a gun)

paying fee

passed tothe

into

notor

toweek

S.are W. S.

but isFriday, D.

forfor a of

Edward recently

at Pala, and

W.

there.F. E. f

succeededof oa

he Agrlcultural

his

'

be made

is atallin ...to Qn the,r

to

A-t

as re- -to Q

of

or thetwenty-larg- e,

..u...

as as

as wasdone yesterday. tie

beaof

of as o.. : effectone judges

aDOutj

their in effort berounds, as so

transfers

T.

la4

C.

his

of

No

per

for

Leonard Wood has addressed to theSecretary of War a letter setting forththe need of a better service betweenthe islands and this country. He rec- -ommends that a new schedule be de-1-

vised by which the Interval betweensailings would be twenty days Insteadof a month or morej He asks thatthere beSwo trips each year from NewYork by way of the Suez canaL Thereis one aspect of the matter that seemsbackedvby argument enough to bringabout some relief. It happens everymonth that officers get leave whichthey want to spend in Japan or fur-19- 7

ther north, for a rest for themselvesand families. They are unable to getaway until a transport sails and thusoften lose a considerable part of theirleave, besides being put to great ex--Pense. The same experience occurs to'American teachers over there, andthe are even less able to stand sucha lss than Army officers. The matter

i will be taken up within the next few' 'weeks, and an effort be made to read- -i just the trangport schedules so as tomeet the trouble complained of bypractically the whole Army In the is- -lands.

Judge De Bolt yesterday granted aaAjn of alv0rceo LIkalanl Fernfrom uplne Fern for desertion andnon-suppo- rt.

5

SilirBEGINS SOON

Within four months at the longestthe work of extending the improve-ment of Honolulu harbor will be com-

menced, bids for the dredging of some-thing over three hundred and ftftrthousand yards having been opened atthe office of the U. S. Army 'Engineeryesterday at noon and being readynow to submit to the Department atWashington along with the recommen-dation of Captain Otwell. The lowestbid was that of tho Hawaiian Dredg-ing Company, which offered to do thwork at the rate of 97 cents a yard.The next lowest bid was that of thSan Francisco Bridge Company, J1.1Sa yard, the other bids being those ofthe North American Dredging Com-pany, $1.27 and Cotton Bros., J1.44.

The work to be done consists prin-cipally of dredging to a depth of thirty--

five feet below low tide level thatportion of the harbor lying northeastof. a line drawn from the turn in thoharbor line at the northeast corner ofSand island to the south corner ofQuarantine wharf, including the siteof the present lighthouse, and thatportion of the harbor between the rail-road and quarantine wharves.

The material thus brought up fromthe cuts made is to be deposited onSand island, it being proposed to re-claim this to a height or seven feetabove mean tide, necessitating the ex-tension of the present stone bulkheadabout 600 feet seaward and the repair-ing of the present wooden bulkhead.

There is Immediately available forthis work $235,000, of which $35,000 is.left over from the first appropriationsfor the harbor work, the rest havingbeen voted during the last session ofCongress. It is presumed that thafunds to pay for the completion of thiscontract will be voted before the com-pletion of the contract, but the con-tractor is warned specifically in thespecifications that there is no absolute)assurance of this.

The contractor will be required tocomplete the work within twentymonths of the time of letting the con-tract.

H

SIT MlAIEA HF.F1E07

Within the next few days the Hono-lulu plantation will commence refiningsugar and will tifrn out as fine anarticle as can be obtained anywherein the country. John A. Buck, closelyconnected with the Matson interests,is at Aiea at present and under his,direction the first work in the newrefinery will take place. The largerpart of the sugar from the Honoluluplantation has already been sent tothe Coast for refining but the remain-der of the crop, amounting to some-thing over 1000 tons, will be refinedhere before going to the market.

The refinery that has been installedat Aiea includes all the most modernappliances which have been introducedfor the refining of high grade sugar.Coal chars andbone filters have beeninstalled and the product of the localrefinery will equal the finest to befound in the United States.

The next crop at Aiea is estimatedbetween 23,000 and 25,000 tons of sugar,which will all be refined here, partbeing kept for local use but the largerportion being sent to the Pacific Coastfor consumption. Over 150,000 tons orrefined sugar are used each year inthe states of California, Washington,Idaho, Montana and Oregon, and theoutput of the Honolulu plantation willbe used to help supply this demand.

While at present the plan Is to sendthe refined sugar from Aiea to SanFrancisco to find a market, it Is likelythat the local sugar will be used to agreat degree in the Northwest andthrough this a .direct steamer line toSeattle or Portland may be broughtabout. The. cost of sending refinedsugar from this city to the Northwestwould not be very much more than ofsending It from San Francisco to thesame locality and there would be adistinct saving over the double tripfrom here to San Francisco and thenagain to Seattle and Portland.

-

US DEPUTY SHERIFF

Deputy Sheriff Bickard of Honokaa,who made such a brilliant catch ofcounterfeiters and their dies has hadrather a strenuous time since be wascl-et- to office. Only a short timeafter be assumed the duties of deputycharges were made against him by po-

litical enemies and he was called be-fore the Board of Supervisors for im-peachment. The trial was Interestingand exciting, at times, but the evidence,adduced was so flimsy that after sev--eral witnesses had been called thaBoard, on motion of Supervisor Fer-nandez, ordered a dismissal of thecase. The most that could be shown'was that Bickard was one of the prac-tical Jokers of the village and at timeshe would take a nip or two more than --

was good for him. At the last elec-tion he was returned to office and hasdone good service since, his work iaarresting the Korean counterfeitersbeing especially commendable. He isa son of the late William H. BJckard,one time manager of Honokaa SugarCo., and was educated in England.

In Alabama they tell this story toIllustrate Senator Morgan's ability asan advocate. A negro of well-know- n,

thieving proclivities was on trial forstealing a mule. Morgan defendedand cleared him. As lawyer and clientwere walking out of the courtroom Mr.3Iorgan said: "Bastus, did you stealthe mule?" "Well, Marse Morgan, itwas Jest like this: I really thought Idid steal dat mule, but pX ter what yousaid tb the Jury I was convince Ididn't."

11

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9HAWAIIAN GAZETTE TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1907. SEMI-WEEKL- Y.

Bystander THE KAPAPALA LANDS OF KAU

OFFERED FOR RENTAL FOR 21 YEARSJfcJLUfcJtJl"--"- "

rKTThat Thick-skinne- d Committee. fL.y&Jack Tars and an Overseeing Provi-

dence. apfrixirfia4TiWhat's In a Name? S7 SV ? Jf sHawaiian Amiability.

y.ifcs Suffer Nervous Prostration. L ih:oWA f ef- -

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There- - was-- a broad grin all over town last week when it was announced in

all ' earnestness that the Kepublican County Committee had presented to thewaiting Attorney General a list of the names endorsed by them as candidatesfor the vacancies in his office. Everyone enjoyed the joke except those who

eouldn't see it, and the only ones who couldn't see the funny side of the affairwere the reverend gentlemen of the County Committee. These met in all theirsolemnity, swollen out so with the importance of the occasion that some ofihem had to back up the stairs into the headquarters on Merchant street. Here

they dusted the council tablo with their elbows, borrowed the makings fromtho one unfortunate to have produced a full sack of Durham, and solemnly

jassed their endorsements. The awful sense of their responsibility stayed withahem for some time.

If the various members of the County Committee were not so pachyderma-tous and overlaid with gall they would stop their banderlogging, present theiraesignations to themselves and fade out of sight. They have been told oftenenough.

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Is it that tho high seas and the ships make good natured, rollicking menor is it that the- - rollicking kind are the ones who enlist in the navy? I canaot help remarking everywhere I go in Honolulu these days how different arethe pranks of the boys off the big cruisers to the ordinary 'behavior of theihakiclad soldier boys- - Perhap3 it is the uniform that makes the wearer agreat big boy when his trousers flap 'and a sterner chap when his ankles arecorseted with stiff loggings.

At any rate the sailors are having a jolly time ashore in Honolulu, evenif therdis'a sudden. decline in the value of horseflesh, and the same little cherubthat sits up aloft and looks after Jack at sea must perch around on some ofthe buildings here and look after him when he is ashore, for there have beenmore chances taken and been fewer casualties in Honolulu during the pastweek than im a year of ordinary times.

As an example of what is the ordinary thing nowadays, I noticed a sailorealmly picking his way across tho rapid transit bridge on King street over theNuuanu stream the other evening, while a car was heading for him at fullspeed. All the gongf tapping the motorman could do did not attract him inthe least, all the yelling of a score of people failed to fcaze him, calmly hestepped from one stringer to another on his uncertain way. The motorman-slowe-

down his car and finally brought it to a stop directly in front ofr thosailor, whoso feet struck tho fender bar before he even looked up. "When helid and found himself face to- - face with a blazing headlight, he threw up both

'lands and. sidestepped with such agility that he never touched a thing until-li- s

foet plumped into- - the mud at the bottom of the stream. Then;, seeingleaning out of their seats to see what had happened, he waved his

land airily at the conductor and remarked:"Thas all ri'. Go on wis sher car. Don't sthay here f'r me. Thas

all riVto "to1 to1 5

I almost had an attack of the Jam-Jamie- s tho other day and I feel surethat you will understand and agree with me that I was lucky to got off that,easy when you understand tho circumstances. I was accosted on the streetthe other day by an. irate individual, with a smiling countenance. You maythink that these two do- - not go together, but they did. The aforesaid gentle-man would probably not wish to have his name used so I will respect what.3 assume to be his wishes- - He, as far as personal countenance went, resembledto a great degree a late official in the Territorial government, whose

sentiments- - were once heralded throughout the land.The following tirade was directed against my person:"You fellows always will call me Jamie. I won't be called Jamio. My

aame.' iai James. I'm Jim. The ladies can call me Jimmy, if they like,, and Ilonir they will like, but you chaps on the papers here always- - call me- - Jamie.

--P'in not Jamie. I'm James. I'm Jim. Now, do what I want and 1'lli intro-duce you to an admiral and a governor some day. Eeinember I'm James. I'mJJnu I'm not Jamie."

Then ho wandered away and ever since I've been dreaming: "I'm. James.I'm Jim. I'm not Jamie."

w w w w

In my.-tim- I have witnessed a good deal of and bitterlycontested litigation- - But I never knew of any that ended as a recent case inHonolulu did. The- - litigation, which had been going on for about seven- years,-iras--

finally ended not long ago, so far as the courts' were concerned.. Thocrucial point iu the whole litigation was the legitimacy of one of the parties.Sis legitimacy and the marriage-- of his mother to his father was strenuouslydenied under oath and sought to be disproved at the mouth of witnesses, by.

lis aunt, the sister of his futhcr.. It was an issue that might well be expectedto produce bitterness between the parties. But after the litigation was-- all.settled and the end of the fight in the courts was brought about, the successfullitigant, .the one whose legitimacy had been questioned, and his mother whoso-marita- l

status had been discredited, just to show that there were no hard'fadings, called on the unsuccessful litigants, the ones who had deniodl thelegitimacy of the ono and the marriage of the other. They were; received,, alittle timidly at first, but soon cordially, and presently the past was all forgotten, leis were made for everybody, and seven years' litigation w;ta. as iitt had not been.

Perhaps, after all, Hawaiian amiability isn't a bad thing.w O w w

There was a great clashing of horns and pawing in the local! Elk kecilduring the week over the domino tournament until the thing was explained. AQ

tho crack players of the club met in caucus and signed a roundi-robi- pro-

testing against the actions of the House Committee in allowing dark horsesand ringers in the tournament and tho dust the antler wearers kit-S- up

as far as-th- e Grill kitchen and necessitated the changing of a lot of

the names of the. things on the bill of fare. George King, the man in charge

of the drawings for the games, was hurriedly sent for and the schedule he

Sad arranged and pinned up on the wall was thrust in front of him for anexplanation. One was needed.

Sandwiched in between the club contestants, in bold black writing, appeared

t names of many against whom any ordinary Elk would not 'dare play. Guy

IHvingston was bracketed to meet Dr. Sereno Bishop in the first round; JackDoyle vas to be the victim of Professor Alexander; Charlie Hall was slatedfor slaughter at the hands of Professor William T. Brigham; Doonie Hartmanfainted when he saw that he was to be pitted against Johnny .Martin, andITarry Murray was to face Palama Bath.

It was finally explained that some miscreant, not a brother Elk, had taken

liberties with the names of many well known persons and had filled in the,

blanks in the schedule unbeknownst to the committee in charge.- M--

In asking for charity you always get more advice than contributions..

A castle in the air won't work when you try to put a tenant in it.H

It makes yon smile when you. hear a woman say that money talks.

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Horaw;ith is presented a reproduc-tion', in. its most important features,of tlio-Tfr- elaborate map c the Kapapala; lands, whicBi was mafflj- by thesurvey department for. the laail depart-ment".. Shis map slirrrs tho twirndariesand' con-tours-

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acter of tho and indicates thepurposes to which it may be put. Italso shows the location and area ofthe principal kipukas or pockets ofgood land in surrounding lava.

The lease of the Kapapala lands ex-

pired July 1- - These lands include very

Ale Strikes Worth WhileCTh'o. Outtmk.)

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In. Biew of the interest liu Tabor disputes arouasd by the strike ofit may bo of interest to know tho extent and success or nou-succe-

of. s trite movements the countigr over. The figures given by the United StatesDapariouent of Comrrcxec andiliaJhor ini at recent buHEctiu caver the twenty-five-ye-

period ending in. 1905. Ha. that time, throughout the; countoy there were36,751 strikes and IKS lockouts;. Those togetlier affected 199,931 establishments'saiasrto cause interzrrfltion tciwork;: whale the onctmous- - iotal of 7,444,27ft em- -

ployas either went oat. on stri&E- - or were.-locke-d out by their emplaycrs. It mustbe remembered, alsov. that, in; addition to the eraployes. immeiiiatcly affected,many others in establishments connected with or dependent upon those closeddown were deprived!., in whsde or impart,. a woakl The-- builiSing trades havetin bad of having morre strikes- - and lockouts than any other

Many peoijle. will Be surprised to learn, 'that not much more thantovot-third- s "of the strikes ardcrcd wore cSrccted by Jabor organizations. Onthe- - other hand, those strilns- - which were ordericd. by labor organizations were

imciie generally successful than the othes. Tlio employes who went en strike!ini these twcnty-fiKO- . year3j. aecordiag to this joport, succeeded, in whole or inpart, mre often than- - fkay faileQy the percentage given for total failures on

' tleir part is 36.74;; while the emj-foyer-s when they took the initiative by lock

.

ing oitfc their eraployea, actually succeeded completely in their contention inmore than half f the cases. Tie ca-as- of a little over forty per cent, of allstrikes was a demand for increase of wages, either alone or in combination withother demands, while, the next largest cause was for recognition of the unionand union rule;, comparatively minor causes were actual reduction of existingwagre and demands far a reduction of hours. Only 3.74 per cent of the strikeswere sympathetic. Par the most important cause of lockouts was the questionof recognizing unions. It is worth while to compare with this record of eco

nomic wastc. financial loss, nnd personal suffering, the description lately givenby Mr. "W. E". Curtis, in the Chicago Record-Heral- of a manufacturing townwhere mutual benefit is kept in mind by both employers and employes, andwhere there has not been a strike within the present generation. This is Man-

chester, in New Hampshire, a city of about seventy-fiv- e thousand inhabitants,with mere than twenty thousand mechanics and factory hands, who producearticles- - of commerce to the value of forty-seve- n million dollars a year, includingone hundred and fifty thousand miles of cloth "enough every day to reachfrom the Morrimac to New York City and return." The employes are not organized because they do not need to be. They have, according to Mr. Curtis,confidence that the mill-owne- will raise wages when trade conditions justifyit, becauso they have done so repeatedly; and when trade conditions are bad,the employes accept a reasonable reduction, knowing also from experience thatformer wages will be restored when possible. In short, they believe in thejustice as well as the honesty of their employers, and instead of a continuousrunning fight between employer and employe to get the better one of the other,the two elements are working harmoniously together for the common good. Ifthe facts are as Mr. Curtis states them and The Outlook pretends tono first-hand knowledge on the subject there is an example here of that industrial peacewhich sometime must displace industrial war.

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much more in area than is shown on

this map, as it includes thousands ofacres of land above the 7000-fo- con-

tour, practically to the top of MaunaLoa. The may, however, includes aconsiderable area which is not to beincluded in the pastoral lands or ranjhlands the lease of which is to be soldat auction by the Land CommissionerSeptember 30. The land to be leasedis shown in the map as extending fromthe 7000-fo- contour down to thesteam crack of 1S63. This reduces thearea of the land now to be leased toabout half the area of the land onwhich the lease has just expired. Thereason for this reduction is that in itsapplication for a renewal of lease onthe- - expiration of its old lease, thelessee in its statements regarding therental value elaimed that the landabove the 7000-foo- t contour wa3 oflittle or no value; nor was the landbelow the steam craeks of 186S of muchvalue, and that therefore no additionalrental should be charged for these por-

tions. The Land Department there-fore determined not to include themauka lands in the lease but to re-

quires tho lessee to feuee along the7000-fo- contour to keep eattle outof tho broken lands above partly toprotect the water supply from there,and partly to see whether this land, ifkept dear of eattle and other animals,would not develop a forest growth of.value, as similar elevations on MaunaKca have done. On Mauna Kea valu-able growths of Mamani trees havestarted up since sheep and cattle havebeen kept out of it.

"What is known as the Kau desertbelow the steam cracks is an arid re-

gion, though there aro some kipukas init which give promise of being madeavailable for something. There is in

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many parts of it a sparse growth which,will support cattle for a part sof theyear. There are a few small patchesof fertile- - soiL On the coast a fewJapanese fishermen have establishedthemselves.

It is a part of the conditions o tholease that of the Kapapala lands thelessee must construct a lawful fencealong the makai. boundary as well asthis along the upper boundary. Thismakai' boundary is in effect the steameraeks which for a good portion ofthe distance are an effectual barrierto cattle out need to be reiniorceu inplaee3 with a fence to keep cattle fromone part of the land to the other.

In this Kan desert below the steamcracks there are considerable numbersof wild donkeys, ownerless, which haveincreased in number there until theyhave beeome a serious drawback to thevalue of the land because they eat anddestroy the pasturage. These willprobably have to be Itis the intention to seek to find use forthis land if possible or such parts ofit as have any value, and to lease itin such areas hereafter as will bestserve the purposes of andrevenue.

The Kapapala lands to be leased as'pasturage, therefore, extend

from the steam cracks of 1S6S tothe 7000-fo- ot contour. The conditionsof the lease Tequire fencing both aboveand below, and provide that any landrequired for settlement or Other pub-lic purposes during the term of thelease can be withdrawn by the gov-ernment by making an equitable rebatein the rental.

The whole area of the lands are, gen-erally speaking south and southwest ofthe C rater of Kilauea.

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exterminated.

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Castle & Cooke Co., LtdHONOLULU.

Commission Merchants

Sugar Factors

i!

AGENTS FOR

The Ewa Plantation Company.The Waialua Agricultural Cc, Ltd.The Kohala Sugar Company.The Waimea Sugar Mill Company.

The Fulton Iron Works, St Louis, Mo.

Tht George F. Blake Steam Pumps,

Weston's Centrifugals.The New England Mutual Lite Insur-

ance Company, of Boston.The Aetna Insurance Co., of mrt-for- d.

Conn.National Fire Insurance Co., of Hart

ford, Conn.

Castle & Cooke, Ltd.

Life and FireInsuranceAgents

AGENTS FOR

Hew EnglDtifl Muiuol Lile insurance Go

OF BOSTON,

lei Li teraiE ComHARTFORD.

INSURANCE

Theo, H, Davies & Co.,

(Limited)

Agents for Fire, Life andMarine Insurance.

Northern Assurance Company

OF LONDON, FOR FIRE ANDEstablished 1836.

..j cvrt., 3.975,000ACCUHlUWltu ruu.

tnrrinn MnrII II 111 Ul I IIIUIIUU IIIUi uu

OF LIVERPOOL, FOR MARINE-, 1,000.000

Reduction of rates.Immediate Payment of Claims.

Theo. H. Davies & Co., Ltd.

AGENTS.

11

Gill! mi itIL

The Famous Tourist Route of theWorld.

In Connection With the Canadian-Australia- n

Sleamship Line Ticketsare Issued

TO ALL POINTS IN THE UNITEDSTATES AND CANADA, VIA

VICTORIA and VANCOUVER

Mounti an sorts:GNFF. GLACIER. MT. STEPHENS

AND FRASER CANYON

EMPRESS LINE OF STEAMERSFROM VANCOUVER.

Tickets to All Points in Japan, China,India and Around the World.

For Ticket? and general information

apply to

THEO. H. DAVIES & CO., LTD.

Agents Onadian-Australia- n S. S. Line.

Canadian Pacific Railway.

Bank of HawaiiUNITED.

Incorporated Under the Lews of theTerritory of Hawaii.

PAID-U- P CAPITAL 5600,000.00SURPLUS 200,000.00UNDIVIDED PEOFITS 102,617.80

OFFICERS:Charles M. Cooke. PresidentV. C Jones .Vice-Preside- nt

p V. Hsfarlane..2nd Vice-Preside- nt

C H. Cooke - CashierC. Hustace, Jr Assistant Cashier

F B. Damon Assistant Cashier

I B. Damon Secretary

DIRECTORS: Chas. M. Cooke, P. C.

Jones. F. W. Macfarlane, E. F. Bishop,E. D. Tenney, J. A. McCandless, C. H.Atherton, C. H. Cooke.

COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS DE--

PAETMENTS.Strict attention given to all branches

of Banking.

TODD BUILDING. FORT STREET.

CHAS. BRETVEB & CO.'S

NEW YORK LINE

Regular line of vessels plylnbetween New Yoik and Hono-

lulu. The bark Foong Suey willprobably sail on or about Oct. 20.

Subject to change without noticeFREIGHT TAKEN AT LOW-

EST RATES. tFor freight rates apply toCHAS. BREWER & CO.,

27 KUby St. Boston, orTHEO. H. DAVIES & CO.. LTD.

Honolulu.

ra

v V "iHAWAIIAN GAZETTE, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1907. -SE-MI-WEEKElfl

Mm, Bremenjue Insurance Co.

The undersigned having been -- appointed agents of the above companyare prepared to insure risks againstfire on Stone and Erick Buildings andon Merchandise stored therein on thembst favorable terms. For particularsapply at the office of

F. A. SCHAFFER & CO., Agts.

North German Marine Iasuhance Co.

OF BERLIN.Fortuns General Insurance Co.

OF BERLIN.The above Insurance Companies have

established a general agency here, andthe undersigned, general agents, areauthorized to take risks against thedangers of the sea at the most reason-able rates and on the most favorableterms.

F; A. SCHAFFER & CO.,General Agents.

General Insurance Co. for Sea Riverand Land Transport of Dresden.

Having established an agency at Ho-

nolulu and the Hawaiian Islands, theundersigned general agents are author-ized to take risks against the dangersof the sea at the most reasonable ratesand on the most favorable terms.

F. A. SCHAFFER & CO.,Agents for the Hawaiian Islands.

S! U T

AT THE

(Special Wireless to the Advertiser.)HILO, September 7 (received 5:15 p.

m.) The Volcano wire was interrupt-ed after the earthquake shock. Com-

munication was restored this after-noon.

There was but a slight shock ofearthquake at the Volcano Thursday.A little smoke is coming out of thepit. Some .parties are going Into thecrater tonight.

BUCKLAND.

Passengers arriving yesterday onthe Kinau tell of a severe earthquakefelt there on Thursday. Clifford Char-lock of this city was In the Lycurguscafe at the time of the shock andstates that it continued for severalminutes with vibrations which couldbe distinctly felt. Purser Beckleystates that the wharf trembled andthe Kinau shook from stem to stern.Many of the passengers believed thatthe quake was the forerunner of a bigeruption.

-

LETTER LIST

Letters remaining uncalled for in thegeneral delivery for the week endingSeptember 7, 1907:

Baker, Jr, Jno Natsapuahi, MrsBrown, Herrn. Orosco, Leon

Leopold Petrovsky, MadameCaruthers, Warner Julie de (2)Cameron, K Piglnal, CeprianoCordelr, Mrs A Potter, ACramer, Miss Reed, A L (2)

"Warren K Rock, A LFurgeson, Mrs Robinson, John

May Sea View HouseGleason, "WHS PropHartman, Mrs Stone, Jr, Sam R

Bruce (3) Stevenson, MrsHamilton, Mr Stone, Mrs LucyHarry, Mrs S B (2)Hassard, Chas H Sumner, Miss

(2) Thomas, Mrs KingHIggin, Joe Thompson, MrsHodge, Raymond Thomas MHughes, J J Turner, S C VJewett, J D Tuch, CJor.es, H L Wolley, Mrs J HLee, Rev James M Wilder, Mrs G ICLily, Mrs Wright, W JMartin, David Zoltowski, AndreMiror, W J deMorton, Mrs J

JOSEPH G. PRATT,Postmaster.

,4

WILL HAVE II DEAN

INSTEAD DP A PESIDENT

The board of Regents of the newCollege of Agriculture and MechanicArts have decided not to attempt tosecure a president for the institutionat this time, but to secure some oneas Dean of the Faculty who shallhave organizing ability, and to put th".college into activity as soon as possi-ble.

Prof. Hilgard of Berkeley has beennotified by cable of this determinationand has been asked to secure someone as Dean. The following is thecable message sent to him:

Hilgard, Berkeley: Earl declined.Send Dean $3000 salary. He to --selectthree instructors. COOPER.

E

FROM HILO JAIL

HILO, September 5. Two prisonershave escaped within the last ten daysfrom the Hilo jail. One was a Japa-nese, who got away on Wednesday oflast week and was captured on Mon-

day at Honomu. The other was thecook at the jail, Tanaka Shukichi, alsoa Japanese. He was seen near theHigh school at five o'clock on Satur-day morning by a boy who ran up tothe jail and gave the first notice ofthe man's escape. When seen he waswearing his prison clothes and walk-ing down Waianuenue street

4--Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Rider of the Ka-kaa- ko

Mission had charge of the meet-ing at Oahu Prison yesterday.

t Old Sores Cured by"THE HOUSEHOLD SURGEON"Druggists refund money if DR.

PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEAL-ING OIL fails. Made by PARISMEDICINE CO., Saint Louis. U. S.of A.

'WIWfp!ga

Commercial NeysBy Daniel Logan.

91

- . . -

Shipments of domestic merchandise from the United States to Hawaii for

the year ending June 30, 1907, amounted In value to $14,124,376, against $11,-771,1-

for the corresponding year ending June 30 1906. This fourteen million

and odd of imports from the mainland were shipped from different customs

districts as follows: New York, $1,074,000; Humboldt, Cal., $97,858; Los

Angeles, Cal., $143,329; Puget Sound, Wash., $1,55S,5S8; San Diego, Cal.,

$3S22; San Francisco, Cal., $11,171,230; Willamette, Ore., $75,253; Memph-remago- g,

Vt, $296. American steam vessels brought $10,906,325 and sailingvessels $3,217,755 worth of the merchandise. The balance of $296 is the Ver-

mont shipment above mentioned, which the official statistician. of the Depart-

ment of Commerce and Labor puts down as "carried in cars and other land

vehicles." How the little shipment crossed the ocean is not related.Shipments of foreign merchandise from the mainland hither for the last

fiscal year amounted to $311,349, all from San Francisco excepting $5 from

Bangor, Me. Steam vessels brought $221,364 value and sailing -- vessels $89,-9S- 5.

Imports from foreign countries to Hawaii for the year ending June 30,

1907, amounted to $4,151,709, against $3,275,242 the corresponding previous

twelve months. Japan sent $1,557,441 (an increase of $690,029). From theEast Indies, etc., $664,440 came; United Kingdom, '$483,341; , Germany, $34S,-66- 7

(an increase of $177,170); Chile, $325,637; British Oceania, $3S2,281

(Australia, $304,154; New Zealand, $6420; all other, $71,707); Canada, $47,392;

France, $14,210 (an increase of $4478); Philippine Islands, $11,454 (an in

crease of $5403); the remainder comparatively small amounts from many

countries. Gold shipments from the.United States amounted to $75,000, against$327,957 gold and silver the previous twelve months. The total of all' im-

ports, domestic and foreign, to Hawaii for the year ending June 30, 1907, was

$18,662,434, against $15,640,274" for the twelve months ending June 30, 1906,

an increase of $3,022,160.Following is a comparative statement of the shipments of some articles

of domestic merchandise from the United States for the two years:'

Articles. . 1906. 1907.

Agricultural implements .'$ 9,587 $ 2,2S2

Animals 115,197 124,220

BreadstuffsCars, carriages, etc. . . ..--

1,472,230 1,452,608208,987- - 329,711

Chemicals, etc "214,031 441,871

Cloths, mfrs. of, etc . 872,332 1,606,157

Earthen, stone and china ware 29,411 60,216

Eggs 12,995 14,943

Fertilizers 611,583 698,241"

Fish 247,954 271,673

Fruits and nuts 138,495 183,022

Glass (window) 6,690 12,578

Glassware 81,615 91,742

u India rubber, mfrs. of ..' 94,614 113,824

Instruments and apparatus for scientificpurposes, including telegraph and tele-

phone 71,241 104,857

Iron and steel, mfrs. of....". 1,380,414. 1,S36,930

Jewelry and mfrs. of gold and silver 83,665 7,267

Lamps, etc., other than eloctric 16,131 39,059

Lead and mfrs. of 17,622 29,322

Leather and infra, of 307,848 513,6S6

Lime Sl,590 59,203

Malt 13,207 17,459

Matches 14,230 26,2S8

Meat and dairy products 587,334 616,282

Musical instruments 45,196 45,220

Naval stores .,. 10,991 17,791

Oil, mineral .' 1,23S,530 1,001,044

Paints, etc . 97,521 ' 110,030

Paper and mfrs. of . . 170,705 253,206

Spirits, wines and malt liquors 540,169 558,009

Sugar, molasses' and confectionery 93,490 134,869Tobacco and mfrs. of ....i-.- . 494,S1S 569,940Vegetables '.. 157,370 202,526Wood and mfrs. of S14,250 936,036

Wool, mfrs. of 192,852 261,195

Under the head of carriages, the item of automobiles appears for the firsttime in 1907, sjhc number being 104 and value $162,769. Thero was a decreasoin quantity of eggs, though the value is greater this year than last, and fer-

tilizers are about equal in quantity for both years with a considerably highervalue for 1907. Besides the shipments of domestic spirits, wines and maltliquors, the United States sent to Hawaii $34,591 value of foreign merchandiseunder this head.

HAWAHAN EXPORTS.

Shipments of domestic merchandise from Hawaii to the United States forthe year ending June 30, 1907, amounted in value to $29,054,5S1, against$26,S50,463 for the corresponding previous twelve months. American 'steamvessels carried $12,499,700, and American sailing vessels $16,554,791 value ofthis year's shipments. The great bulk of the merchandise consists of sugar.Of brown sugar there was shipped in 1905-- 6 712,560,997 lbs. valued at 3,

and in 1906-- 7 S04,249,041 lbs. valued at $26,S60,002, the gains for theyear ending June 30, 1907, being 91,6S8,044 lbs. in quantity and $3,019,199 invalue. Of refined sugar the 1906 shipments were 34,041,640 lbs. valued at$1,654,624, and the 1907 shipments 17,765,770 lbs. valued at $S32,995, a de

FINANCIALcoming

advertise business

Hawaii, recently

started department

business

and auditorsregu-

larly examine accountscorporations Oahu Railway

Railroad SugarBenson,

Co., Bishop Estate, KamehamehaHamm-Youn- g and

Catton,takes any concernsdesiring services.responsibility watchwords.

will audit anythey

may corrected, and when cor-re- ct

furnish certificateeffect, together balance

company's preparestatements clearly position

crease 16,275,870 lbs. quantity and $821,629 value. Including $177$355 molasses, the valuations for

$25,495,604 for $27,693,352, an increase $2,197,748.A comparative statement certain articles, tending illustrate the

status diversified industries Hawaii, is given the two years:

Articles. 1906. 1907.

Beeswax. $ 6,745 $ 4,373Coffee '. 248,618 129,249Eggs 663

Fibers, 9,049 14,997

.':...... 481 1,332Fruits and nuts. . ; '..'..-."- .. 287,603 393,979Hides' and skins 126,425 141,8S3Honey 34,04S '26,6S0

of., 67,464 98,145Jewelry. . . ; .':.. 18,916 13,724Leather and mfrs. .". 22,116 22,874

dairy products 7,499 8,200223,012 147,439

Silk, mfrs. 10,127 4,762Straw and palm mfrs. 530 2,579Vegetables ; 3,343 1,921

mfrs.' '. 47,543 63,261Wool, raw. 43,SS3 54,548

Exports from Hawaii foreign countries for the justamounted to $229,914, which $1S3,9S1 represented domestic products.

the increase being $173,601. Gold andsilver to mainland were $1,968. grand exports

$29,303,695. Adding the exports, $1S,662,434 as above, andHawaii shows a commerce amounting $47,966,129 for the ending June30, 1907.

NEW INSTITUTION.Independent auditing is

increasing vogue with financial con-cerns on the mainland. banks

the theiris Independently audited as an induce-ment to attract public confidence along

reserve, surplus, etc. TheCompany of incor-porated under the ofState with a capital $10,000, is pre-pared to perform this Important ser-vice any corporation or firm in thisTerritory. Bishop & Co., bankers, in1900 an accountantwhich, the beginning, confined its

to the examination of accountsin that banking house

Interested. greatly!

7

Increased the of Bishop& Co.'s accounting department

the of suchas & Land

Co., Hilo Co., Olaa Co.,California Feed Co., Smith &

Schools, von Co.NelU & Co. The Audit Co. now

up the forits Thoroughness and

are its Itsbooks, pointing out

Irregularities discovered and howbe foundwill a to that

with a sheetThe auditors will

showing the

of in in in1906 and in 1907 for total of sugar 1900

was and' 1907 ofof to

of in here for

'.

etcFish

'..".

Iron and steel and mfrs. f.

ofMeat andRice

ofleaf, of

Wood and of

to fiscal year pastof The

total for 1906 was $36,313, for 1907shipments the U. S. The total of

was this to value ofto year

into

Somefact that

with Audit

laws New Torkof

for

atworkof firms whichwas The

work

staff

,5. 4: . --i- i A

SKIN TORTAnd Every Distressing Irritation of the Skin

and Scalp Instantly Relieved by aBath with CUTICURA SOAP

And a single anointing with Cuticdba, the great skin euro and pnrestof euoffigatt.This is tho purest, sweetest, most speedy, permanent, and economical treatment fortorturing, disfiguring, itching, burning, bleeding, scaly, crusted, and pimply skimand scalp humours with loss of hair, and has received the endorsement of physicians,chemists, and nurses throughout the world.

Ijijniijrn

P" f - K

V --c AKXDCCSIl x j

y r 9 -

beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic toilet soap,however expensive, is to be compared with It for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, andnursery. Thus It combines In Oke Soap at One Price, the best skin and complexionsoap, the best toll jt soap and best baby soap in the world.

Complete External and Internal Treatment for Every Humour,Consisting of Cuticura Soap, to cleanse the sk'n of ent and tcales and soften the thickenedcuticle, Ccticura Ointment, 10 Inxtnntly allay itching, Inflammation, and Irritation, and sootheand heal, and C'UricDRA Kksolyent. to cool and cleanup, the blood. A SlNQLS Sit la oftenufficlen! to cure the most torturliu. dl.fleurlnjr, and humiliating skin, scalp, and blood bamnara,

with Iom of hair, when all ele fall Bold throaichout the world. Aust. Depot : It. Towns &Co., Sydney, N. d. W. So. African Depot: Lknxox Ltd., Cape Town. " All about the Bkln,Scalp, and Hair " free. Potter Driioasd Cnsx. Cobp.. Sole Prop., Boston, U.S.A.

Dr.T fTHs Rrftumria

TU "IDIf-M- M AlI I W Vll I JI I l m

Acts like a Charm in

DIARRHOEA, and uthe only Specific in

CHOLERA and

DYSENTERY.Tho only Palliative In NEURALGIA, GOUT, RHEUMATISM.

Convincing Medical Testimony accompanies each Bottle.3o'd It notilM by all ChemUts

Pru.es in England, 1U, 29, 46.

of a business, or any department of it,at a given date, and make suggestionsfor simplifying or systematizing thework of an office. Being a corporationwith a capital Invested in marketablesecurities the company Insures thatsuch responsibilities as it may assumewill be propqrly carried out.

GENERAL REVIEW.The Territorial Auditor's statement

for August shows current receipts of$101,483.19 against $67,045.42 for Augustof last year, an Increase of $34,437.7".Land sales and special road depositsaccount for most of tho excess. Cur-rent fund expenditures were $220,-991.-

or $07,004.13 more than Augustlast year. The current treasury cashbalance was $3S3,425.97, being $101,560.82

better than samo date last year. Payments under the loan act were $26,397.79. The loan fund has been broughtdown from $661,671.93 to $226,026.83 inthe year ending August 31. The sinking fund amounted to $15,223.90, out ofwhich $10,000 has been used in takingup bonds. Tho bonded Indebtedness is$3',708,000, being $112,000 less than a yearago.

Treasurer .Campbell sailed In the Ko-

rea on Friday to obtain the President'sapproval of a new loan of $288,000 and,that being obtained, to sell the .bonds.The proceeds are to meet appropriations on loan account for various publiaworks voted by the Legislature.' James F. Morgan sold yesterday un-

der foreclosure the city homestead ofthe late J. "W. Girvin, comprising a15,000 square foot lot with dwelling, onKinau street, Mrs. Flora VT. Girvinbeing the purchaser for $2700.

A consolidation was effected yester-day of the Union Express Co. and the'Pacific Transfer Co. A. D. Scroggy,manager of the Pacific, will hold thesame position with the Union-Pacif- ic

Transfer Co., whose headquarters willbe at 126 King street. The Union hasfor some years been a branch of theHustace-Pec- k Draying Co. Its directors agreed to the amalgamation onFriday at a meeting In which a major-ity of the stock was represented.

Sugar continues to look up, cen-trifugals having advanced 30 cents Inthe ton to $78.40, and European beetsparity $1.60 to $83. Stocks and bondscontinue extremely quiet, but with norelaxation on the part of holders.Dividends were declared as follows onSeptember: Onomea (S. F.), 40c. ashare: H. C. & S. Co., 65c. a share;Pepeekeo, 1 per cent. Ookala has fin-ished grinding with a crop of 5400 tons.Hawaiian securities In San Franciscoat last' mail advices were generallysome points below the prices here to-

day.Sales recorded by Honolulu Stock

and Bond 'Exchange for the week havebeen: O. R. & L. Co. ($100), 10 at 98;

Hawaiian Sugar Co". ($20), 100, 23 at32.50; H. C. & S. Co. (100), 5, 19 at 81.50 (S. F.) at $80.75; Oahu Sugar Co.($20), 25, 20 at 23.75, 110 at 23.623; Ho-nok- aa

($20), 75 at 10.73; Ewa ($20),20 at 25.25; Paia G's, $1000 at 100.

Ocean steam arrivals for the weekhave been the Indiana from Vancou-ver, the" "West Virginia, Colorado,Maryland and Pennsylvania (U. S.cruisers) from Yokohama, the Asiafrom San Francisco, the Hilonian fromSan Francisco, the Korea from theOrient and the Sherman from Manila,Departures have been the cruiser Ci-ncinnati for San Francisco, the Koreafor San Francisco and the Indiana forVancouver. "

MR

Mfflflff'

Millions of WomenUse CrTJCt-m- la p ATcluslvely, for pro.serrln.pcrifj1uj,ndbe3ttdfiBghaskln,for cleansing the sculp of '.nisu, scales, anddandruff, and tho stopping of falllig hair,for softening, wMteMng, and soothing red,xongh, and gore hands, In tho form of hathafor annoying lnititlonj. Inflammations, andchafilngs, or too free oroffenslTe perspira-tion, In the form of washes for ulcomtlvaweaknesses, and for many auudro astf sep.tic purposes which rcidily suggest tfcem-selv- es

to women, and eepiJally mothers.and for all the purposes of tho toilet, bath,andnnrscry. KoamountofpeisaasloncasInduce those who nave once ustd It to usjany other, especially for prcscirlng andpurifying the bkln, scalp, and hair of Infantaand children, Ccticuka. Soap combinesdelicate emollient properties derived fromCoticura, the great skin cure, with thapurest of cleansing Ingredients and tho mostrefreshing of flowerodonxs. Noothcroitif-cate- d

soap ever compounded Is to be comTjared with It for preservlnsr. rurlfylnir. ajid

4nrlAIUI VnCMIIIKiPCbl I VI Va II H WiaW v r 111

Checks and arrestsFEVER, CROUP, AGUE.

Tha Best Remedy known for

COUGHS, COLDS,

ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS.

I Sole Manufacturers,J. T. Davexfqrt, LtcL, London, S.E.

I OF JUDGE

D. KAHAULtLIO

WATLUKU, Maui, August 30. JudgeDaniel Kahaulello died at his home inLahaina this forenoon.

The late judge was seventy-thre- a

years old. He was educated at Laha-inalu- na

seminary and graduated withhonor. After graduation, he taught lamany Hawaiian schools on Maui. Horesigned and was soon appointed taxassessor and collector of the Lahainadistrict. He was In the meantimastudying law and equipped himself foethe duties of District Magistrate oC

Lahaina. He served as a DistrictMagistrate for many years and wasa personal friend of the late ChiefJustice A. F. Judd. He was one otthe best fishermen on the HawaiianIslands, being a navigator ot recogniz-ed ability. He was a well known Ha-waiian scholar and assisted In com-

piling the English and Hawaiian dic-

tionary used by students of recentyears. Until a few years ago he wasa staunch Republican, "but since hisresignation as District Magistrate habecame a Home Ruler. He was prac-tising law at the time of his death.

Resolutions of respect to the memoryof Judge Kahaulello were adopted bythe Maul Circuit Court, addresses be-

ing made by Judge Kepoikai, J. L.Coke, Dan. Case, J. M. Vivas and J.W. Kalua.

TO INSTANT DEATH

HILO, September 5. Francisca Lou-sa- na

Habel, a Spanish child four yearsof age, was walking on the beach atPepeekeo with her mother, and twoother Spanish women and their chil-dren on Saturday afternoon last, whena wave carried little Francisca Intothe sea into deep water. The motherof the child, Louise Roman HabeLnearly went Insane with grief hut herbaby's body has never been seen aince,and the waters there do not give uptheir dead.

HFROM MEXICO.

The following paragraDh was cllnnerlfrom the "El Sol." a newsnaner at TTp- t-moslllo, Mexico, it being a part of atetter to tne publisher from a friend:

On my last trip to my properties oathe frontier, my beast fell with itia t.nthe ground, wounding me badly, but bycnance provision J. naa Drought In myvalise a flask of Chamberlain's PainBalm, and after nslng It I was ableto continue my journey the following:day as if nothing had happened. Inever tire flf pralsinsr this DODUlar llnl-- iment or of recommending It." For salaDyt ati aeaiers. Benson, smith & Co.,Agents ior Hawaii.

m

m

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8 HAWAIIAN GAZETTE; TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER' 10, 1907. -iS-Efal-WEEKEY

Along the WaterfrontNot until Thursday, September 19, will the Big Four squadron get away

for the Coast, for 'Admiral Dayton, commander of all the Pacific fleet, has set

that as the earliest date of departure, so there are nearly two weeks more of

the stay of the navy boys in this port, and their stay means at liast $100,000

expenditure in Honolulu for what-not- s and incidentals, and food for

the1 vessels of the squadron. It is estimated that each of the vessels of the

squadron, the Avest Virginia, the Pennsylvania, the Maryland and the Colorado,

is paying oft" while here to the extent of about $14,000 and this amount is

spent by the men of each vessel in miscellany and nonsense, that is to say,

things to eat and drink; things to eat for the reason that a sailor always, likes

to get something different ashore and feels the appetite of his new surroundings

as soon as he lands; and things to drink, necessarily for the reason that aboard

ship, on duty, he cannot drink to the extent of being as happy as he can be

ashore where he has no responsibility until his shore-libert- y expires.

"Whether there be plague in San Francisco or not, as far as present orders

are concerned, the vessels of the Big Four will go to Mare Island, where the

105 short term men will be discharged. It is then possible that the squadron

will go to Bremerton where the four vessels will be put in dry-doc- k and gen-

erally overhauled to be in readiness to join the Atlantic fleet early next year.

Then they will all come to Hawaiian waters to maneuver and evolute, and the

people of these Islands are sure to see a great deal more of them, for these Is-

lands constitute the most strategic position of all the Pacific Ocean.

There was a very pretty ceremony aboard the flagship "West Virginia

last evening at 4:30 "o'clock, when the P. 31. S. S. Korea sailed for San

Francisco, for as the passenger liner passed astern of the squadron's flagship,

en route to the Coast, the band of the "West Virginia played a farewell tune inionor of Honorable and Mrs. Longworth who were guests at the last moment

at the Seaside Hotel and therefore were among the last to leave the beach for

the steamer.

INDIANA GETS AWAY.

The Barneson-Hebbar- d S. S. Indiana, Captain Graham, sailed for Vancouver,

B. C, last night at S:20 o'clock, with a little over 300 Japanese emigrants, a

few of whom were secured from the P. M. S. S. Korea which arrived from theOrient yesterday morning. A few cabin passengers were also taken. The

3ndiana was to have sailed on Thursday at 1 p. m., then her departure was

'Inferred until noon of yesterday, at which hour she had not cleared in theustom house. At noon yesterday her cabin passengers were aboard and their

friends were on the wharf to say good-by- e, but they had a long time to waitbefore they saw the last of their friends. The Indiana will not return here.

She is now going into the Nome trade, after having lost slightly on her ventureof taking away Japanese from Hawaii. Nearly all those Japanese who arrivedin the S. S. Korea from the Orient yesterday morning declared it as theirintention to work on the plantations here.

SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE.

ARRIVED.Friday, September 6.

.M. N. S. S. Hilonian, Johnson, fromquarantine wharf to Oceanic wharf,at 5:55 a. m,

P. M. S. S. Korea, Sandberg, fromquarantine wharf to Brewer's wharf,a. m.

Str. Mauna Loa, Simerson, from Ha-"Tv- ali

and Maui ports, at 5:10 a, m.Saturday, September 7.

French S. S. Amlral Olry, Le Cerl,irom Yokohama.

TJ. S. A. T. Sherman, Brugulerre,from Manila, 12, m.

Str. Kinau, Freeman, from Hawaiiand Maui ports, 10:45 a. m.

Sunday, September 8.Str. Noeau, Mitchell, from Kukul-hael- c,

1:45 a. m.Str. Iwalanl, Self, from Maul and

Molokal, 4 a-- m.Str. "W. G. Hall, Thompson, from

Kauai corts, 5:50 a. m.Am. bk. S. C. Allen, "Wilier, 15 days

Irom Eureka, 8:30 a-- m.

DEPARTEDA. O. Co.'s tug- Navigator, with tan-Qc- er

Monterey in tow, for Port Har-lor- d,

6 p. m.P. M. S. S. Korea, Sandberg, for San

(Francisco, 4:30 p. m.S. S. Indiana, Graham, for Vaucou-'ve- r,

8:20 a. m.,Str. Claudlne, Bennett, for Hawaii

and Maui ports, 5 p. m.PASSENGERS.

i Arrived.Per S. S. Hilonian, from San Fran-

cisco, Sept 5. H. M. Wells, S. Ken-nedy, Alice E. Knapp, Florence Per-ro't- t,

Jas. "Wagner, Mr. Preskow, M.On. Toder, Miss M. E. Paty, Dr. Ray- -

Harold

K. B,Enos,

L.J.

Kim, R.W. Achi,

S. S.

jirs.Gelm,

Hender-son, W.

W.C W. J.rian, Mapua,

V: 3Irs

Master Perrill, Master Perrill, Mm. C.Max Scheuer, A. P.

Schmidt, Mrs. E. W. Scott, Senda.Miss A. L. Miss E. M. Selter,Mrs. A. M. Smith, Mrs. NoyeaSmith, A. Stevens, Turner, E.Tuska, Mrs. H. Tuska,pier, Warner, S. B. Warner, W.E. Weed, Mrs. S. Wilson and Infant,

Ah Coon, Chu Tu Tong, ChunTing, Feng Hse Yun, Ho Ling, King

Kwan, Kwo Teng Zlen T.Chuing, Kwo Chi, Mrs. Wong

Ling Shao, Ling Chu Tao.Tong Hasuan, Tong Chong, HaYin Wang En-Ts- e, Yao Chung

Mrs. Yee Shee, Yung Chu En, LanAh Tung.

Per U. S. A. T. Sherman, Septemberfrom Manila. Col. Gardener,

W. Blauvelt, Maj. James K.Thompson, J. "W.Capts. D. B. Buck, E. R. Chrlsman, W.C. H. Dalton, E. Mor-ton, Chas. Bundel; 1st Lieuts. JackHayes, Roach, G. H. White, Wal-ter Harvey, C. R. W. Morrison, S.Smith, D. E. Shean, iawton; 2nd

W. C. Boswell, R. W. King,M. Churchill, L. James, F.

C. McCune, Peyton, J. Atkins,M. Riley, J. P. Bubb, A. Brown;Lieut. Col. W. L. Fisk, Capt, J.Jervey, 1st Lieut. C. H. Knight,Lieut. Robert Thomas, Lieut, Col.W. T. Wood; Majs. J. L. Powell, E.Mearns, A. S. Kulp,W. Xi. Kenly; Capts. E. P. Lawton, F.W. Cole, A. W. Morse, G. Gosman;1st Lieuts. S. Zenke, R. M. Culler,P.' L. Freeman, S. C. I. L. Hun-saker; S. S. W. Hussey, 2nd

C. F. 1st Lieuts.wen, E.

Lieut. E. Graham, 1st Lieut. C. Wll--liams-Foot- e, Lieut. P. McNally;

taond, C. S. Hall, Mrs. J. Greene, Pnt - n ,,,,, r s. Tnrtr. On.iMarion Greene. Nevadan Moore, L,eut cha A JIcCormick Mrs. c.M. Borden. Bros. Henry, Gardener and two daughters. Missffamcs and Frank, Miss Wirt, Miss M. Hm blaster Buck, Mrs. CUrlsmaha.oomis F. W. Carter, wife and 3 chil- -

chn Benncttflrcn. Mrs. Wilkins and son, Mrs. and M c a M to QndiMiss Eaton, Miss Giles, Miss T miL " a two sons.Miss Kluegel. Mrs. Lyle and child, , ??" .

AJBucfc Miss McGregor, Miss Thomp- - V wT "son, Miss Lucas, Miss Taggart, Mrs. Ro?cV fTS- - m7 MrS" Pf"C. B. Gray and 2 children. S. Ma-r- Ycy; t;RLVBlrtr R. W.quls. wife and child, J. BUmkenbeker. ?' f ean,

Mrs M. Churchill, Mrs. J.6ngmanPer str. Mauna Loa, SeptemberHawaii and Maul ports.-Fr- om Jne1TY and ca Mf- -

Kau: Bishop Libert. Edwin Wills. 7t T? 'tJ- - ' &'G. A. Wills, Miss E. Macomber. I ' Pwellcan(i"fant rs- - C- - MeelUMrs. P. K. Macomber, Miss E. Kau-tG- r: fa"d s' andnane. E. K. Ahu. J. J. Ahu. Dr. J. Ka-- '"fntV Ffean

Enoka Lovel. Mrs. J. G. Friel. "? M"; Hunsaker child, Mrs.

Ihk C. Kona: Miss SpV 1 Tw, ChaM. Greenwell. IC Shibayama. "euJ- - 0"'Gilbert, G. W. McDougall, A. ! 1 " ' n0' Chas. MortonMcDougall Miss E. Kaeo, Miss Manu. fe"ch: Capt.

L. Ackerman. Miss L. Cowan, J ?. eu ieh,

Mrs, W. L. Stanley. Lady Herron. D. , ,,1 G?I W"so"' Mrs.Stanley, Miss Stanley, Miss F. Kapi, "f .aMiss A. Miss M. Gohier, D. IC 51?UrtS Mls Beckhurts, J F.White. Miss J. Puipau, J. Mahoney. E- - f". Mrs.S. Kaal. Miss at Kekuewa. Anions G' M?rt0n MrS-Caspa-

' A" Jurich'Miss E. Leslie, Rev. H. K.Poepoe. Mrs. J. A. Magoon, M. Ma- - pfr Kinau, from Hilo and waygoon. A. Magoon. Miss Magoon. Its', f 7.--R. Warburg,

E. Magoon, L. Steiner, Mrs. R. F. " Kaina- - M. I. Hamilton. W. Puo-lang- e,

Miss N. Lange, Miss A. Dan.,t1lau F' PunuI Miss B. Kahanamahu,ford, Mrs. S. C. Allen and servant, Mls,s T-- Mrs. Alapai. J.

T,. MeWavne. Charles McWavne. foolioo, W. Ringer, D. H. Kahanamo- -K. McWayne. Oyano. Henry ' " E. F. Bishop, Mrs,

Hustace, Hustace, R. K. Smith,3JIss L. Santos, P. H. Dodge, Miss E.SiiVa. From Maui: F. B, Harvey, Miss

Wilcox, C. Wells, Miss L. Wells,A. S. Decker, H. Decker, W. Cro-ve- ll,

D. Pali, Dr. N. Ogawa, Miss L.

M. N.3Ubkr. J. Kalama, Henning, LeeChong, Mrs. Vv". Kaaihawe, Miss C.

Mrs. Davison, Miss M. Davi-son, C Jr. 69

Per P. M. Korea, September

jurs.Mrs.

Howard, V.Jackson, L.

C.Ma

T. A C.P.

B. B.

Seltzer,

F. E.E. T. B. Warn

G. B.T.

Chin Hu

Tai Han,Li LI

King

C.F.

Chaplain Hillman;

Bennett, F. C.

L. L.

D. B.

man, R.T. B. A.

O.P.

2ndF,

C. Macomb,

H.G.

Megill,C.

Lieut. Thompson;Wm. F. Willford; 2nd

A.2nd

QIIssMiss C.

Kennedy,

Miss

U

Lowden. 1W'

C. MissMiss

Miss

Mrs.Hulama,G;

ePtemer D.

Wooteey, Xa-t- it

Gliss Miss Ainahau,capt. Sach and 2 children, C. Charlock, Mr. Dias, Capt. C. W. Otwell,S. F. Burbank, J.Aiona, W. Maby,H. E. Everald, Master P. Lycurgus,Master P. Fredo, Mrs. Ah Yau, MissA. Frendo, Mrs. McLean, Bro. Wil-liams, Miss L. Ah Yau, Miss

fVau' ..Mlss A1ma Ayau. Mrs. A A.sL Searles, Miss Dow, Kaia

deck.6,

C.

G.

jaarcauino, m. M. Graham, L. L.Walton, E. C. Lyons. A.'Judd, J. K. Aea Jr., Creighton,--urs. li. boss, M. Ross, E. Helbush. Miss Anna Pung, E. Austin. H.K. Brown, J. T. Brown Jr., E.from Orient for San Franclsco.-- G. C..AlcaU( x Schwartz, D. EbelIns wArmstrong : A. Arte. H. M. Asch F MissJ Meyert Dora Lia&ate Mrs.Sechtel, Miss M. E. Bond, Capt. C. uagate, M. Bronco, Miss Gladys Hai-3ous- h,

S. X., D. Bronson, T. na P. Johnsoni Miss Mendila, Mrs.Bronson, Mrs. H. T. Cook, Miss C. E. K MiUer and chlld u

i. miss x.. . uku, o. . M. G.Bronco, Walker, Miss Aj. a. 111 rie, o. r. jiiioii, vx.

Mis3 Gelm, H. H. Ham-mer, Miss Sybil

Mrs. R. H. Keano,5L Kobayashl, Lefflngwell, Mrs.

Lefanswell, J. Lynch, R,Mrs. Meyers,

3Ulss de Nbie, H. PerrWr

Price,M.

AliceH.

Tou,Moon

Chu,Lin,

7,Maj.

M.

Liejits.J.

W.

AJohn

S. Bo

J.

J.

J.

from

Srunura.From

"'M.

n

str- -

K.Miss

Stein- -

M.Miss Miss

Miss,MIss

Miss

M.J.

N. Mrs. xM. E- -

Iss

E.Hastings, J. L. Bialsdell, Miss W. Wao,Miss H. Wao, Phillip Wao, Mrs. K."McKay, Miss A W. Smith, C. A Aki-n- a,

J. Aseu, Miss L. P.erry. MissMiss 'M. Lewis, A Mason, E.

C Brown, W. A Ramsay, R, R. Cat-to-n,

G. H. Choy, Mrs. D. K. Wilson,A Guild, T. Guild, Rev. G. I. Kopa,

ilrs. E. P. Low, Miss Annabella Low,Miss Evalin Low, Miss E. Low, MiceC. Low, F. Low, J. Low, Miss Kino,C. Nishida, H. Yamamoto,. Miss D.Hartwell, J. T. McCross,on, C. K. Not-le- y,

3Irs Atcherley, Miss E. Kaneha-Ic- u,

W. H. Purvis, C RickardV Mrs. J.GIbb, Miss M. T. Ahrens, W. J. Lind-say, Mrs. J. Lindsay, A. Lindsay, Rev.'C M. Kamakawiwoole, Miss M.

Miss Miriam Kamaka-wlwool- e.

'Miss M. Lindsay, Miss C.Vida, H. Vida, E. Glbb, C. Ahrens, J.M. Nunls Jr., Miss Irene Ahrens, Miss3?, Rickard, Miss M. Vrendenberg, E.Vrendenberg, W. Vrendenberg, MissM. Williams, Miss E. Enais, Miss ASorenson, W. J. Lowrey, D. Morton,"Miss E. Morton, H. Morton, J. G. Os-m- ar,

E. G. Thomas, Miss C. F. Thom-as, Mrs. G. H." Thomas, M. Thomas,Miss R. Huntington, Miss Helen Lyde,C. Campbell, Mrs. D. Taylor, D. Lyde,C. Campbell, Mrs. D. Taylor, D.

Miss E. Taylor, Mrs. G. H.Dunn, Master G. H. Dunn, Miss ElsaLidgate Miss V. Rickard, D. Bron-co, Miss L. Gibb.

Per str. W. G. Hall, from Kauaiports, September 8. "W. A Kinney,wife and son; Master E. Fountain,Master F. Fountain, Miss A. Fountain,B. F. Dillingham, A. Erdman, E.'Lovell, J. Lovell, Mrs. H. A. Jaeger,'John Fernandez, Master Fernandez,thereof, to be and appear before theMaster W. Kani, Miss J. Kekuku,'Miss A. Apua,- - Miss A K. Harrison,Miss Wllhelm, Mrs. J. F. Armstrong,blaster Neal, F. Lohr, Miss A. Akana,Miss Watase, Mr. and Mrs. Kaohi, K.'C. Ahana, L. Ukgha, Ah Chong Al,Ah Chock, Master Armstrong, .G. Mo-you-

A. Ishimoto, Master Masaichi,Master Deinich, Miss M. Chang, Mrs.Kalwi, High Sheriff Henry, C. Bourkeand 34 deck.

Per str. Ke Au Hou, from Hanalel,September 8. Miss Maude Horner,swer within twenty days after serviceMiss B. Johnson, Miss Ethel Edwards,Miss Meta Reldel, Mrs. Fredenberg,Mrs. LIndley and three children, MissRuth Lindley, Master Walter Scottand 10 deck.

(Per str. Noeau, from Kukulhaele,September 8. 11 on deck.

Per str. Iwalanl, from Maui and Mo-lokal ports, September 8. Mrs. S.

Mrs. F. Foster and child,Miss M. Melger, Mrs. K. IPoaha, MissCathcart, Miss E. Poaha, Miss M. Ma-no- e,

J. D. McVeigh, R. S. Hosmer, AM. Brown, J. Goldstein, A. Water-hous- e,

A Cathcart, W. Cathcart, E.Cathcart, Mrs. Hutchinson and 18deck.

Departed.Per str. Indiana, Graham, for Van-

couver, September 5, a. m. H. M.Whitney Jr., W. R. 'Waters, Geo. E.Sahlin, Mrs. J. Bachelor, J. H. Bache-lor, Miss M. Schmidt, Mrs. W. C.Wilder, Mrs. P. J. Hoyt and child, I.Cattrall, Mrs. M. E. Cattrall, A. E.Cattrall, I. L. Cattrall, C. V. Gray,Lionel Barneson, Miss Lishman, Mrs.S. M. WiUIams, W. P. Cobble.

Per str. Claudlne, for Maui and Ha-waii ports, September 6. Miss C. DeLima, Mrs. von Tempsky and twochildren, Mrs. J. W. Yarndley, Miss I.CrQok, Miss Hadley, Miss Macquon,Rev. E. B. Turner, wife and' threechildren; Miss E. Smith, Miss VanDeerlin, Miss O. Stute, CarolinaScholtz, D. Pahu, Miss Ahlau On Tai,Miss K. Wong Kong, Miss Kllgore,Mrs. Train, B. F. Damon, R, W. Shin-gle, W. G. Scott, A. K. Stander, Mrs.S. E. Damon, Moses Kauhlmalii, MissJ. Picanco, Mrs. H. Plcanco.

Per P. M. S. S. Korea, for San Fran-cisco, Sept. 6. Hon. Nicholas Long-wor- th

and wife, Princess Kawanana-ko- a,

Miss Muriel Campbell, Miss Beat-rice Campbell, Judge Hart and wife,Miss Anna Loftus, Julia Gaines, Miss'Hooper. J. R. Gait and wife, ' JohnGait, L. P. Gait, Mrs. F. M. "Swanzy,Miss R. Swanzy, Mrs. E. C. Judd,' Missants, In case they shall file written

A. Lewis Jr. and wife, H.Judd, Mrs. William Irwin and party,S. N. Lowrey, A. SIgnoux, wife andchild; Mrs. A M. Elston, G. F. Ren-to- n

Jr., A Scott, I. Scott, R. V. Mit-chell, Miss M. Scott, Miss A. H. Dow-set- t,

J. F. Weller, B. B. Southack, F.M. Hatch and wife. Miss Hatch, Mas-ter G. Smith, Miss E. Gunn, H. M.Dowsett Jr., Miss E. Dreier, H. Gladeand wife, S. A. Baldwin, F. Liebold,Miss Edith Thatcher, C. B. Wells,Miss Wells, F. A. Swift and wife. MissFrlda Gay, Miss F. Ballou, Miss C.'Balldu, J. H. Love, A. J. Bolfing, O.W. Kuhln, 'wife and son. W. William-son. J. S. Molony and wife. Miss Ber-ge- r,

Miss Yoshi Naito, Miss Dr. M.Burnham, C. C. von Hamm, Master A.Young, Mrs. Rosenberg, Miss L. Roth,S. Rosenberg, C. A Bachelder andwife, W. G. J. Lambert, Paul de laVergne, Gen. Calvin De Witte and wife,Calvin De Witte Jr., H. H. Burrell andwife, J. F. Morgan Jr., Capt. JohnBarneson, H. Barneson, J. Alexander,'W. S. Berdan, H. L. Hudson and wife,Miss B. King, F. W. Wichman Jr., S.'Dowsett, Kingsbury Sanborn and wife,D. A. Bittner, Miss Gladys Dodge,' GooKoon, W. D. Goodaie, H. E. Picker,Shiakawa, K. S. Gjerdrum, D. Dow-sett, W. E. Brown and wife, Miss M.'Carlson, G. Merrick, Mrs. A. Ropp, A.J. Campbell and wife, Y. Crosson, Mrs.A E. Gait, Mrs. Barneson, Miss MurielBarneson.

HDIED.

LA MONT At the Leahi Home, Hono-lulu, on September 9, 1907, GeorgeEdward La Mont, aged 39 years.Funeral from Townsend undertaking

parlors, Alakea street, at 1:30 p. m.today. Interment at Pearl City.

New York and Philadelphia papersplease copy.LILIKALANI In Honolulu, 7 p. m.

September 7, 1907, David Keawea-hul- u

Lilikalani, aged 18 years, secondson of Hon. and Mrs. E. K. Lilikala-ni. Deceased was named after the

of King Ka-laka-

a distinguished high chief.Funeral at 4 p. m. today, Sunday,

Interment in Kawaiahao cemetery.H

WHAT EVERYBODY SAYS MUSTBE TRUE.

Everybody who has used it saysChamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar-rhea Remedy never falls to give relief-fro-

pains In the stomach or diarrhoea,which is positive proof of Its relia-bility. For sale by all dealers. Benson,Smith & Co., Ltd., Agents for Hawaii.

Jn the suit of Ah Loy vs. Sylvano'Nobriga, judgment was entered In theCircuit Court yesterday in favor of theplaintiff for $150. The suit was fordamages a cow, which got Into ;aduaiiwiij ;aiui iuu t I

mmHAS ITS FREAKS

HILO, September 6. At their secondday's session the Supervisors of theCounty of Hawaii continued theirpolicy of hampering the police forceby refusing to allow Sheriff Keolanuito purchase two dozen handcuffs untilClerk Pua had ascertained what theywould cost. This means a delay of amonth before he can report to the nextmeeting and then a delay of probablytwo weeks before they can be secured.In the meantime prisoners may escapeas the Honokaa murderer did when thesheriff had to wait for more than amonth before he was allowed to offera reward for the man's capture.

Yesterday, tools were purchased forthe use of the prisoners who left forthe volcano this morning, and thepay of two guards wa3 authorized andthe men appointed. No action wastaken, however, on Governor Frear'ssuggestion that permission be securedfrom the Bishop estate to build theroad over its property.

Without notice to the road workers,their pay for July for work done wasreduced from $l.o0 to $1.23 a day inNorth and South Kohala and in Kau.Purdy made the remark that their paywas regulated by Territorial law, andKalaiwaa said they were getting plenty,facts that the laborers should not for-get when the next election time comes.

Correspondence from Agent Bowmanor tne .board of Health induced bythe visit of Dr. Currey, caused promptaction in authorizing the Constructionof culverts, drains, catch basins andthe walling up of a ditch of runningfresh water. Dr. Currey 's uniform hadconsiderable effect while he was here,and there was not a moment's dis-cussion or delay over the resolutionto "clean house."

Shipman made an effort to muzzlethe press by a motion to refuse news,but it failed. He was annoyed atsome published remarks about a roadroller that had been delivered to hisorder in Kau and which, he declared thenewspaper to have said was deliveredin the Pacific ocean and was still there.Later Shipman moved that the CountyClerk be authorized to pr-cba- se ticketsto a concert and dance, given last night,for each of the Supervisors and thetwo press representatives. The motionwas promptly seconded by one of Ship-man- 's

political opponents on the Boardand much to his disgust, bo found him-self compelled to vote for the motion,which was lost by 4 to 3.

Mr. and Mrs. London will arrive thisafternoon to be the guests of the Bald-ing- s

at Wainaka. For a few'days theynave been staying at the Louisson cof-fee plantation at Paauilo.

NAVIGATOR

RETURNS LAME

Continued from Page One.)Marlon Chllcott, but that vessel hadnot arrived from Honolulu.

The Navigator, therefore, designedexpressly for a. tandem-to- had to besatisfied with getting away with theMonterey alone.

"I have orders to look for the Chll-

cott," said Captain McGoldrick lastnight when seen by an Advertiser reporter, "and that is one of the reasonswhy this break In the machinery couldnot have come at a more Inopportunetime. Just before I left Honolulu lastFriday I received word thatlthe MarlonChllcott was still being looked for andfor the Navigator to keep a sharp look-

out for her and take her in tow wher-ever she could be found.

"Oil Is wanted urgently here and thisboat was put on this run expressly totow two vessels. I believe there was aflaw in the valve stem that broke andI suppose I should be thankful thatthe accident did not happen when wewere farther out. As it is the HonoluluIron Works will be able to repair thedamage and r guess we will be awayagain by Thursday morning. We leftthe tow, the Monterey, off port, whereshe will' He until we pick her up goingout. We will fill up with oil for fuelwhile In port, for you see we havebeen making a four days' hole in oursupply."

Captain Berg of the Monterey wasbrought ashore in the Navigator.

When the Navigator was seen offport last night she was taken for anisland steamer and little attention waspaid to her. It was not known that shehad returned until the watchman atthe pilot house recognized the double-stack- er

as she passed into the harbor,McGoldrick is an expert seaman and

navigator and commands the finest tugever seen in these waters. He got histow to port in splendid time "consider-ing the "accident to the machinery.

4--

BIG CHATTEL MOETGAGE.

A chattel mortgage to secure thepayment of a note for J7700 was filedfor record with the Registrar of Con-veyances yesterday. The mortgagor IsA S. Humphreys and the mortgagee,Frank E. Thompson, trustee. Themortgage covers the law and miscel-laneous books of Humphreys contain-ed in his law office, the desks, tables,chairs, filing cabinet, shelving, rugs,matting, pictures, bookcases, safe,typewriter, and a policy of Insurancein the Aetna Life. The principal se-

cured 1st to be repaid In three yearswith six per cent Interest.

QUININE THAT DOES NOT AFFECTTHE HEAD

LAXATIVE BROMO QuinineTabletsfor Colds, Grip, Influenza or anyCatarrhal disorders, Headache andFeverish or Malarious conditions.E. W. Grove's signature on every bok.Made by PARIS MEDICINE CO.,.Saint LouWU. S. of-A- J '3

LOCAL BREVITIES.

(From Saturday's Advertiser.)Mrs. S. C. Allen, who has been vis-

iting on Hawaii, returned by the Ma.-u- na

Loa yesterday.Ralph Johnstone of the; Internal rev-en- ue

office left for Maul yesterday onbusiness connected with the depart-ment. '

Rev. E. B. Turner, who has accepted the call to the pastorate of the Pa-l- a

Foreign church, left with his family for his new field of labor yester-day.a farm home and to teach the boys

Among the school teachers who returned by the Hilonian were Mrs. S,E. Greene, Miss Margaret Loomis, H.M. Wells, Miss Mildred Yoder, MisiMay Paty.

Miss Carrie Hart, a well knownyoung lady of Long Beach, Is organiz-ing a party of ladles and gentlemen fora trip to the Hawaiian Islands, to sailsome time in October. The voyage willbe made under Miss Hart's personal

supervision. Salt Lake Tribune.Lieutenant J. G. Hannah, of th

Tenth Infantry, until recently of Ho-nolulu, scored seventh place In thecontest between the commissioned of-ficers of the army, shot off on August17 at Fort Sheridan, Illinois. Hisscore was 275, eight less than the win-ner.

(From Sunday's Advertiser.)President Plnkham will Ignore J.

Lor Wallach's offer of $500 for anycase of leprosy he cannot cure.

Henry C. Hapal, Registrar of PublicAccounts, will perform the duties ofthe treasurer during the absence ofthe latter.

A cable request has been sent toand wife, Guy Macfarlane, G. IISurgeon General Wyman asking per-mission for Dr. James of the MarineHospital Service to accompany theSpanish and Portuguese Immigrantswho are to be deported. Many of themhave trachoma.

The Union Express Company and thePacific Transfer Company have con-solidated. The business will be con-ducted at the office of the, PacificTransfer Company on King street. Thenew company will be known as theUnion-Pacif- ic Transfer Company.

L. E. Pinkham, president of theBoard of Health, will leave for Wai-me- a,

Hawaii, in about ten days toselect a site for the home for non-lepro- us

boys of leprous parents whichwas authorized by the last Legisla--

Judge De Bolt has appointed PatrickGleason administrator of the estate ofthe late Susan Brash. The bond wasfixed at $2000.

A M. Brown has heen appointedprosecuting attorney for the policecourt, succeeding Frank Andrade. Hewill enter upon his duties Septem-ber 16.

It is said that the Afong case maynot be settled after all; that I. R.Burns, one of the parties is not satis-fle- d

with the terms of the proposedcompromise.

Fifty Spaniards and ten Portuguesewill be deported by the Amlral Olry.They came on the Heliopolis and Ku--meric. Some are stowaways and sometrachoma patients.

The ten dollar gold piece which theKaneohe Jailor received in his month'spay and which would npt ring, wasreceived by High Slieriff Henry yes- -tarday in a registered letter. It provedto be a good coin but with a crack Init. A perfect coin was sent In itsplace.

A cablegram was received yesterdayby Secretary of the Territory MottSmith from Surgeon General Wymanin response to one sent to him askingthat Dr. James be sent with the de-ported Spanish and Portuguese Immigrants. It stated that Dr. James couldnot be spared.

Former District Magistrate W. L.Whitney yesterday entered upon hisduties as First Deputy Attorney Gen-eral. He appeared before the SupremeCourt in the matter of the Tax As-sessor against E. J. Monsarrat. It wasstipulated that the matter should bepresented on briefs.

HOSMEB APPOINTED.Governor Frear yesterday appointed

Ralph Hosmer, the Superintendent ofForestry, a member of the Board ofRegents of the new College of Agri-culture and Mechanic Arts. He takesthe place of C. F. Eckart of the Ha-waiian Sugar Planters' ExperimentStation, who recently resigned.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFIRST CIRCUIT, TERRITORY OFHAWAII. HOLDING T3RMS ATHONOLULU, COUNTY OF OAHU.

Gustave Rose and Helene Kruger v.Roslna Rose, Bertha Rumbel and'Maud Kalkllani Chapman (a minor).

Term Summons (stamps).The Territory of Hawaii: To the High

Sheriff of the Territorv nf TTa-w.ii- i

F. Thompson, Miss S. M. Maggee, Missor nis Deputy; the Sheriff of theCounty of Oahu, or his Deputys

You are commanded to summon Ro-slna Rose, Bertha Rumbel and MaudKaikllanl Chapman (a minor), defend-sai-d

Circuit Court at the term thereofpending immediately after the expira-tion of twenty days after service here-Brow- n,

E. B. iMcClanahan and wife,of; provided, however, If no term bpending at such time, then to be andappear before the said Circuit Courtat the next succeeding term thereof,to wit, the January term thereof, to beholden at Honolulu, County of Oahu,R. L. Atkinson, Dr. H. E. Aldersonon Monday, the 13th day of January(1903) next, at 10 o'clock a. m., to 3howcause why the claim of Gustave Roseand Helene Kruger, plaintiffs, shouldnot be awarded to them pursuant tothe tenor of their annexed complaint.And have you then there this writwith full return of your proceedingsthereon.

Witness the Honorable J. T. DEBOLT, First Judge of the CircuitCourt of the First Circuit, at Honolulu,Oahu. this 13th day of August, 1907

(Seal)(Sig.) J. A. THOMPSON.

Clerk.I certify the foregoing to be a true,

full and faithful copy of the original,and that publication of the Bame wasthis day ordered. . -- .

HENRY SMITH,,' . Clerk. Judiciary Department.

Honolulu,1 August 19, 1907.

tipjasjiwigifSPfli!

The woman oa trie right severused Ayes Hair Vigor.. d

her hair, and now herself gaf-

fers from neglect. On the contrary,the woman on the left has alwaysused Ayer's Hair Vigor, and oweto it much of her youthful appear-ance and attractiveness.

iuersJiair Vigorproduces beautiful hair. Long;rich, heavy hair. Soft and silkyhair, free from dandruff.

PrspinJ by Or. J C Arer & Ci, tawH. iliiu. U.S..

HOLLISTER DRUG CO.. AGENTS.

BUSINESS OAE33S.

F. A SCHAEFER & CO. Importersand Commission Merchant- -. Hobo- -

ture. It Is planned to make this home- wrlulu, Hawaiian Islands. '

HONOLULU TRON WOEKS- - CO. Ma-chinery of every description made to

v 'order.

LEWERS & COOKE (Robert LewersF. J. Lowrey. C. M. Cooke). Import-ers and dealers In lumber and build-ing materials. Office, 414 Fort street.

HONOLULU STOCK EXCHANGE

Honolulu. Monday, September 3. 1907.

NAME OK STOCK.

3MXBC1XTUJC.

Kwa...H.w AoHmilt.tHaw rTnm A fln?ar f!nuaw sugar i;o

Honoku.HulknKabuko... vKlhelPUnCoLtdKipabulu ..VnlnRMcBrydeTsug Co Ltdubuu ougnr VO.unomea...uouia

Suaxs.

uouomu

Olaa Sugar Co Ltd

PaauhauSug Plan Cot ,UAMUU

""P!r.Pepeekeorioneer... .W&lalua Agri CoWallukuWalmanalo .?...Walmea Sugar Mill

MucKiLiSrona

750X00

100X00

500,000

500,000

iso.wo

Inter-IsUn-d a a Conow

HBT&LCo.Com. 1.150.000

Tel Co 150,000nanizu nuDoer Co GO.00CNfthlku CoO E & L Co. 4.0GO000Hilo SB Co ..Honolu'n Brewing &

duuung io i,;o .Boxss

Haw Ter4pc (Fireijuumsj.

HawTer pc (Re-funding 1905

Haw Ter iiipcHawTer 454 p cHaw er 5 p cHaw GoT't 5 r cCal Beet Sng & Bel

uo 6 p c.HaJknSpr imHamakua Ditch Co

Upper Ditch 6 p c ..Haw Con & Sugar

ioapcHawSugarepcmio K B Co 6 DHon KTAI.Cnllnc .sr;7-- r

- z f !MUUIU O P C .OK4LCo6pcOahu Sugar Co 5 p cOlaa Sugar Co 6 p craia ope,

A ir r K w. a8ng 8 p"

C'aclul. i

Fiid UpVal. Bid.

5.000,000l.MO.0002412.7552,000,000

2.000.000500 000

2.500,000160,000

3.500,000S.600.0001.000,000

5,000,000

500,000!750,000!750,000

2.750X004,500.0001.500,000

252,00a

1.500,000ieciriai;o. axixoo

Mutual

Rubber Aess.1,000X00

ion.mnlAmt.out

S15.UX)

eacuea1.000,0091,000.000

750X001&3.0U0

lxnoxooJOC.000

1200,000

ln.nco500,000

1.000,060TOLQDn

200,0002,000000

0CO4001,250.000

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McBryde Co

$1,000,0001

standing

lJ5mfim2.000000

J100

20100100

2010020

10020

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10050

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100100100

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50

100

IOO1001001001C0

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100

100

to"100,

23.1275 paid. tl6 per cent. paid.SESSION SALES.(Morning Session.)

None.BETWEEN BOARDS.

50 Paauhau, 15.50." ""

188

lloteISO126

130

mx

HALF-SIC- K

PEOPLE

Not sick enough to call the doc-

tor, but just sick enough to feelheavy-heade- d, listless and lazy.

Tou need a tonic; and. the bestyou can take 13

Malt NutrineIt will give you strength and

new life. Contains les3 than 2

per cent. alcohoL It Is pleasantto drink and Is

inax

iiM

8K

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78

6B

18254

85im

101

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In tflA CitnrpmA Cnvtvi- - VMlMlAv4lhiicase of Hoopll "Wire vs. Wabdqa. Ag-ricultural Company was a&vA- - a- -

anhmlttsJ (11.. v - V ..ouumtwicu. Ba.tgae ol 3 H nUMM. AgTl- -cultural Coraj&ay va. PoWt L vait,submitted oi'rJefe. . ' I

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