port miles yalu japanese vladivostok cruiser ashore port · leged was the shooting of a japanese...
TRANSCRIPT
&Psrfl E9 H 'kK
VOL. XXXIX, NO. 41. HONOLULU, H. T FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1904 SEMI-WEEKL- Y. WHOLE No. 2591.
STIRRING BULLETINS FROM THE SEAT OF WAR
Russian Army Marching on Port Arthur-Hats- usc Sunk Ten Miles OffShore-Rumo- red Defeat of Yalu Arrhy-A- lso a Japanese Land Victory.
-- Vladivostok Cruiser Ashore Port Arthur Entrance Not Blocked.--"' '" ' ' ' - ...f,. -- . I ....., ... ... ... ... f ..f f .. ...
l 1 t I t I k 4 ' t ' ' ' ' ' J ' I ' t ' T t ' t
?&&&msaasfmxzP ' lr v. --..,.:.j". ' - s. .. .ili , -
THE SUNKEN BATTLESHIP HATSUSE.''.- -',... ,.,....
SEVENTY THOUSANDRUSSIANS MARCHING TO
RELIEVE PORT ARTHUR
ASSOCIATED PRESS CABLEGRAMS.) .
LONDON, May 20. The News correspondent at Tientsin says
that 70,000 Russians are marching to the relief of Port Arthur. The
(Japanese are hastening offensive operations.
RUSSIAN CRUISER ASHORE.
PARIS, May 20. The Russian cruiser Bogatyr grounded in a
fog at the entrance to Vladivostok harbor and is in a perilous posi-
tion.
The Bogatyr is one of the fleet of four cruisers of the "Com-
merce Destroyer" class which has been operating from Vladivos-
tok since the opening of the war, and the latest exploit of which.was the sinking of the Japanese transport Kinbhui Maru. The Bo-
gatyr was built at Stettin in 1900. She is of 6,500 tons, has a speedof twenty-thre- e knots, and is considered a better vessel than the'American built cruiser Variag, which was sunk at Chemulpo at theopening of the war.
RUSSIANS BADLY BEATEN.
LONDON, May 20. The Standard's correspondent says thatiwhile the Japanese were landing on Monday near Kaichau a battleoccurred at Hsincheng in which 2000 Russians were killed and
Wounded. The Russian army retreated.
RUMORED JAPANESE DEFEAT.
NEWCHWANG, May 20. It is reported that the Japanesearmy has been defeated at Fengwengcheng and driven back.
WARSHIP FOR NEWCHWANG.
WEI-HAI-WE- I, May 20. A British warship has gone to New-cliwa-
to protect British interests.
LOSSES AT CHINGLIENCIIANG.
TOKIO, May 30, Gen. Kuroki reports the Japanese losses atClilngllenchnng on May 1, na killed, 333; wounded, 816, The Jap-anct- ic
buried the bodies of 1363 Russians and captured G13,
PORT ARTHUR NOT SEALED,
ST. P15TI5KSHUHQ, May 3o.Tic Admiralty cnlm )im theentrance to J'oit Arthur wn nevnr hlocltcili
BICQUbi May iq The Korean Government ling annulled nillib lienllt'ti Willi llie KlMlMlHi, llltltilll) tile tlll))l' 60iu;ej!jnp nearilie V.llll.
(illliiiinrTRANSVAAL "
illltf if flJBBif nallNTMrIwllU fiWIlMaJ MM M MMflB JUIf full
' VI T - 'jfh:'
-aii
" t,.,
.
HEARST HAS A
ESCAPE
(ASSOCIATED PUES8 'OArtAiKUKkB )
SANTA CRUZ, May 18. Thecommittee on resolutions of theDemocratic State convention re-
ported adversely on Hearst in-
struction. The convention re-
jected the report and voted to
instruct the delegates for Hearstby a vote of 365 to 346. Therewas a long controversy.
WISCONSIN AGAINSTHEARST.
MILWAUKEE, May 18. TheDemocrats of the State conven-tion outvoted Hearst and endors-ed Edward Wall as Wisconsin'scandidate for the Presidency.
MONTANA DOWNS HIM.
GREAT FALLS, Mont., May18. The Hearst forces were
NARROW
CALIFORNIA
h
)
J
WILLIAM RANDOLPH IinAItST.
beaten in the Democratic State convention and the delegation willgo uninstructed.
QUEEN COMING HOAe!"
SAN May 17. Ex-Que- en Liliuokalani and Dele-gate Kuhio arrived in San Francisco today from St. Louis. TheQueen plans to sail for Honolulu in the Sonoma, leaving here the26th inst.
THE CRUISER ALBANY IS EN ROUTE TO HONOLULU
WASHINGTON, May 30. The battleship Wisconsin, the gun-
boat Vicksburg, the collierti Alexander and the Frolic have sailedfrom Cavite for Clicfoo, The Frolic will join the New Orleans,The cruiser Albany lias sailed for Guniu and will proceed thence toHonolulu.
THE SUNKEN JAPANESE CRUISER YOSHINO.
IN
FRANCISCO,
ll.f.fii.j.ff.lf.fi..ii..i.l.l,j ,, . .1,.,
BATTLESHIP HATSUSEA VICTIM OF RUSSIAN
TORPEDO FLOTILLA
Washington, May 19th, 1904.To SAITO, Honolulu.
Admiral Togo reports as follows : While our third squadron wasreturning from Port Arthur in a deep fog, the Yoshino was struckby the Kasuga off Shantung Promontory on the 15th inst. and sunk.Ninety of the crew of the Yoshino were saved. On the same day,when the Hatsuse, with other vessels, was steaming ten miles offto the southeast from'Laotishan, she was struck by one of the ene-
my's mechanical mines and sunk. Just then the Russian flotilla ofsixteen torpedo-boa- t destroyers approached but was repulsed by ourcruisers. Three hundred of the crew of the Hatsuse were saved, in-
cluding Admiral Nashiba and Captain Nakao.TAKAHIRA.
The sinking of tlic Japanese first-clab- s battleship Hatsuse, oneof the flncbt vessels of the battleship squadron, and of the veryspeedy cruibcr Yoshino conbtitute a severe lobb to the Japanesenavy. In battleships Japan has but three left of the class of theHatsuse and two smaller vessels. The Hatsuse was a vessel of 15,-0- 00
tons and her complement was 731 men, which may have beenincreased for active war operations. The vessel was built at Els-wi- ck
in 1899 and was a sister vessel to the battleship Shikishima.She was four hundred feet in length, seventy-si- x and one-ha- lf feetin width, and twenty-seve- n and one-ha- lf feet deep. She was armedwith four twelve-inc- h guns, fourteen six-inc- h, twenty three-inc- h,
eight three-pounder- s, six two and and had fourbiibmerged torpedo tubes. In her speed trials she made. 19.11 knots.Her equipment was modern in every respect.
It was on the Hatsuse that Midshipman Kajimura was killedin the fust naval engagement at Port Arthur. On the Hatsuse asaiiorXhad his right hand shot off. lie at once picked up the severedmember with his left hand and walked off with it to see a doctor.Midshipman Kajimura' ako, although terribly mutilated a shot whichhad cut him almost in two, with the utmost sangfroid requested thebystander.--, kindly to pick up the fragments of his person which layscattered about the deck where he stood when wounded.
The Yoshino had a speed of over twcnty-tlue- e knots and hadquite a reputation as a fighting vessel for .she had served in the warwitli China. The vessel was built in 1K9J at the same shipyardswhich inter tinned out the Hathusc. Her tonnage was .1,150 andshe cart Ud .y) men,
Washington, May igth, 1904,To SAITO 1
The commander of our forces which landed nt Liootung reportsHorn ))wen on the idth iuut. as followm
"In dally HhlrmlshcH, our tlftnohmcniH hnvlni,' always been hiicifMHiul, ami inymu piieniy urivaii tne enemy jmjjii nnumicu n'
I nneifiHn vicinity, aiul tlwitioyet) thy ynsniy'tf railway mill iplnuropliit the lflth liiat,, ofmr Bullous fiKhilngi owmilvil th holjjhtu,
n dm limn jtiHtihm Our BMuiiiUiUj in thb UaiiIp whip m'j, )mwniu u ttlUm wmiwliiJ." TAKAIIIHA
YuUlUjtm, hlny mlu JQiM
3.
".. Ta
"2
A' sl
K
T jH..m tw at (.(3 Hawaiian fcAZETini," Friday,' may 20, 1904 semi-weekl- y.
JURY SETS
WORTH FREE
Joyful End to His
Wife's AnxiousWaiting.
(From Wednesday's Advertiser)After an absence of ten minutes the
jury returned a verdict of not guilty inllic case of Chief Mate Worth, of theChilian ship Othello, on his second trialthe present term for assault with adangerous weapon. The case went tothe jury at seven minutes past four yesterday afternoon. Judge Dc Bolt, onhearing the verdict, immediately orderedthe defendant discharged.
Mrs. Worth, who had been watchingthe trial all day from the space forspectators, received the glad words withtears of joy, and all the police officers
in court were among those who onlywaited until the fond wife had wel-
comed her spouse hack to liberty untilthey offered him each the glad hand.The distressed woman could not re-
press her interest in the trial while itwas going on. When Captain Flint'sabsence was being discussed she warmlyused words to this effect:
"I saw him pass along Queen streetat half-pa- nine this morning and heought to he here when he is wanted."
"Remarks are not necessary," JudgeDe Holt said in mild suppression of thebreach of court decorum.
Again, when a Japanese undertookto coach the prosecuting attorney in
g a. witness for the de-
fense, Mrs. Worth audibly told the manto mind his own business.
THE TRIAL.Henry C. Worth was put on trial for
a second time this tcrn before JudgeDe Bolt yesterday morning, under in-
dictment for assault and battery with aweapon dangerous to life. The act al-
leged was the shooting of a Japaneseseaman in the neck, on board the Chilianship Othello on the evening of Sunday,March 20 last, while the defendant waschief mate of that vessel and the vesselwas lying; off the mouth of Pearl llar-l)o- r
within sight of Honolulu. At thefirst trial the jury disagreed and wasdismissed. Defendant on that occasionsaid in his evidence that he wanted aspeedy trial, knowing that several eye-witnesses of the shooting were out ofthe Territory, because he wanted to getaway.
W. S. Flcmine, Deputy AttorneyGeneral, again appeared for the Terri-tory, and Samuel 1 Chillingworth forthe defendant. The following jurorsas drawn were declared a satisfactorypanel by both sides: J. R. Gait. II. C.Austin Jessin Andrade. Chas. F. Mcr-rifiel- d,
W. M. Campbell, Albert Lucas,Edmund Norrie. Jos. J. Dias, R. W.Davis, E. O. K. East, E. II. Wodc-Iioits- c
and Q. II. Berrcy.Yasuda Otojiro, the man who was
shot, was the first witness. Next wasFrankliir C. Sawyer and then HadoistaKatokichi, a massively built Japanese,who testified to having been dircctlybc-Iiin- d
Otojiro during the trouble. Theevidence further was that Worth knock-ed Otojiro down with a blow on theside, and when the man got upshot him in the neck. Otojiro went overthe side of the vessel afterward withoutassistance, holding the wound with hisliand. In the launch the wounded mandid not join in a conversation takingplace among the other occupants of theboat. He was until some-one gave him a drink of gin, when heliccamc quite animated. Thc witnesssaid he came from Molokai twice to at-
tend court. On hesaid the four "foreigners" aboard thevessel stood behind a Japanese whostood behind himself upon the deck.
Captain Harry W. Flint, of the harborpolice, failed to answer as a witness forthe prosecution when called at 1 1 150a. m., and a bench warrant issued atthe instance of Mr. Fleming failed tobring him in when the court resumedat 2 p. m. after recess. The prosecutionthen rested.
Mr. Chillingworth called the defend-
ant, also Torres, the Chilian steward ofthe Othello at the time the shootinghappened.
Worth told pretty much the samestory as he had done at the first trial.On he said that in-
stead of the seven Jaanesc put aboardthe vessel as sailors, he found there werethirteen. The surplus he took to bestowaways, but admitted that two ofthem might have paid their passages.Of the recruits he considered two asgood men. The others were not goodsailors, they could not go aloft. De-
fendant as before testified that whenIn- - struck the lanancse on the chin andthe pistol went o(T the fellow was coin-
ing at him with a knife and he shot,not thinking whether to kill or not, be-
cause he felt his life was in danger. Asto the aliened attempt to bribe the officer
arresting him, he said lie was willingto pay $jo in icttleinent of damage
fr the injury.IAI.CSMUN CAU.UD IN.
In fulluwiiiK ulemm uppmred In
11 iiuict) in special summon to rr., 11 before Judge l Blt etr- -
11 in in : uiane MwnnwiiLfwnin, 1 ,,lim nil A Mlr, J "hit M.
I m Ji . I bis, Purirb Rui,' i, 'i I niarlM F MmI I) V h J feM, vI I,, I" II ..in AUwrt J.ti M.
I W-- w V Ait, B W
Ji. I' VMI.1W, W UtfkofcI ..'iiiJitII M. ' ' MWta, V U
I1.1i. I" M'.1 l hit
mvi
t.ln1 I., .
The petition staled that John Mortonwas the son of Frederick Mcrton andthe nephew of Mrs. Rebecca Hart, wifeof the petitioner. Frederick Mcrton,it was further stated, formerly residedin Honolulu but departed therefromabout 18 yea is ago. On February 25,1891, at San Francisco, Frederick Mcr-ton delivered to petitioner an instrumentin writing, by which he ptt his twochildren, Fanny and 'John, under thecare and custody of petitioner, then ofAlameda county, "to be by him properlyprovided for and educated during theirminority." Mr. Hart was specially au-
thorized to take the children from SanFrancisco to South Kona, Hawaii, thereto w "'iced at such school or other in-
stitution as to him seemed licst. Themother of John Mcrton died when hewas about one year of age.' His fatherwas last heard from about the year 1900,when he wrote to. petitioner from Cali-
fornia.DESERTING HUSBAND ABROAD.
A libel for divorce brought by AmeliaK. Green, alias Oakcs, against FrederickM. Green, alias OakcS, on the groundof failure to support states that the par-ti- cs
have never lived together as hus-band and wife in the Territory of Ha-waii, though the libellant says she hasbeen a resident of Honolulu since 1898.She nravs that a cony of the libel andsummons lie sent to the united StatesMarshal for the district of Californiafor service. The parties were marriedin San Francisco in November, 1882,and no children have been born of saidmarriage.
REHEARING ASKED FOR.Palolo Land and Improvement Co.,
Ltd., by its attorney, 'J'. McCants Stew-art, has filed in the Supreme Court amotion for a rehearing of its waterrights suit against Wong Quai ct al.,on the grounds that the court in
of April 16 overlooked ma-
terial facts and committed mistake ormisapprehension of facts of the case.The original hearing of this case byMrs. Nakuina, Commissioner, occupiedmany weeks. Her decision was mainlysustained by the Sunremc Court.
NEW TRIAL MOTION.Defendant in the malicious prosecu
tion suit of J. C. Axtell vs. H. E. Hen:drick, in which a verdict of$looo dam-ages was returned, has by his attorneys,Robertson & Wilder, filed a motion fora new trial on the grounds of evidenceerroneously admitted and excluded, oferrors in the court's charge to the juryand of the verdict as being contrary tothe law and the evidence.
THE LOVE GUARPIANSHIP.Henry Watcrhousc Trust Co., Ltd.,,
files an answer to the complaint in'equity of James Love, seeking releasefrom cuardiausliin. against James Love,Jr., Annie K. Hart and the defendantabove named. Some allegations arc admitted, others denied, and tins dciend- -ant says it has now on hand as trusteeonly the sum of $4200, as to which itabides the direction of the court.
COURT NOTES.It is stipulated in the case of Yau
Wo Tong partnership against cr
Co., Ltd., and Arthur M.Brown, High Sheriff, that defendantshave ten days further lime within whichto answer the complaint, provided suchright has not already expired.
Judge Robinson was engaged all dayyesterday hearing the suit for injunc-tion of foreclosure of mortgage and forreformation of mortgage brought byChas. S. Desky against Chas. W. Booth,relative to Pacific Heights residencetract.
Henry E. Cooper, executor of the willof L. lfillman, deceased, has applied foran order to take the deposition of Dr.C. B. Cooper, a material witness forprobate of the will, who is. about toleave the Territory.
F. A. Schaefcr & Co., by their attor-neys, Robertson & Wilder, file a motionfor a decree nro confesso in their suitfor foreclosure of mortgage againstMaui Sugar Co., Ltd.
A SILLY SAYING."It is a common but silly opin-
ion prevailing among a cer-
tain class of people that thoworso a romeily tastes, smelb orhurts, tho moro oillcacious it is."So says a woll-know- n Englishphysician. IIo further mills :
"lor oxamplo, lot us considercod livor oil. As it is extractedfrom tho fish this oil is so offen-
sive to the tasto and smell thatmany cannot uso it at all, nomattor how badly they need it.Yot cod liver oil is ono of thomost valuable drugs in tho worldand it is tho greatest pity thatwo have not thus far boon abloto freo it from thoso peculiari-ties which so soriously intorforowith its usefulness." 9 This waswritten years ago; tho work ofcivilizing and redeeming it liassiuco boon triumphantly accom-plished; and as a leading
in tho roniedy called
WAMPOL'S PREPARATIONtho oil rotains all its wonderfulcurative properties with no badsmoll or tasto whatovor. It ispalatable as honoy and containsall tho nutritive and ottrativoproperties of l'liro Cod LivorOil, extracted by us from freshcod livers, combined with thoCompound Syrup of llyponlios-pillio- n
mid KxtrnuU of Mull midVild Cherry; or.mtliiK inotlt-nlii- ii
of uiiuiUiiI(h1 jiower for thoilUmnoA mo! jii'iiviilniit mid fiw
ini miionu limn, wniiii'ii mui miiiilitin, 'j"iro 1 no othor wniwly t
to oomiMirtf with It. It lrwm ilt illneilvtt iiuwiir of iliuU)iimi'ii mui in m.tmi iiiiimri.
MMiTliruttt still I.uiim TniuliiM,Nftmi bki!t Mini MrfU'liiim AiWflMif, U lu ijiiIbI)m ihi tmt itj I'iiry. )r,II i'; Minima, wf IWk wtm" I tliu! muling li ihi yllli,
j
I urn "M yrrii ihmmii' Iklit) .1 ut $ui MlliVum .i
mj" Ihi nil Hi mimM .
il( .11I HllliU H 111 Uuilf
SITES FOR FORTS COME
HIGH NEAR HONOLULU
Purchase of Land for the Defences of OahuDifficult Because of the Steep Prices A
Fortune for a Lease.
(Mail Special to the Advertiser.)
WASHINGTON, D. C, May 7. The
Engineers of the War Department are
already looking into the question of se-
curing sites for fortifications on the Ha-
waiian islands asprovided in the forti- -
iv-iiin- l.nw. nnrd rrrcnilv tiv Con- -...gross and providing an appropriation
$200,000. Thus far the work is only
preliminary and no definite steps areyet expected for a month or more. The
matter has been referred to Lt. Col. Wil- -
liam II. Ilcuer, who is stationed atSan Francisco nut who is familiar withthe availability of sites for fortificationsin the territory. His recommendationswill he awaited by the Engineer officers
.here. It is thought not improbable thatCol. Ilcuer may pass the matter on toLieut. John R. Slattcry, now stationedin Honolulu, that the latter may asccr- -
tain some details about the situation.When the papers have come back to,Washington the engineer officers hereexpect then to be in possession of 11- 1-
some action. ;
ii."..t. wanan 15 anus. iiie item was uui cu- -Some here that the Warpeople Mtcd in(o ,aw fof. obvous rca5onSj but
Department mayi ask the opinion of ,nc testimony of Capt. Hutchins and theCapt. George McK. Williamson in an questions, of members of the Committeeinformal way about certain questions in- - j may not be without interest,
"We have asked for that appropria-o- nvolvcd. He is regarded as an expertt of ?,5 forrM years. saidsome of the matters involved and
also very familiar with the value of land Deciratc from tilc Hawaiian islands
Government did some, but .very little,"Then they have been doing it them- -
selves to now? said Mr. Gillctt...yeSi 'sir replied 'Capt. Hutchins."You can continue to pay what is
in the territories.It is recognized at the War Depart
ment that the purchase of land in theislands is difficult, because of the high I
prices at which all land is held. A vet- - J
cran engineer officer, who has been to ;
Hawaii,.,.'..said here, today that the pre- -. I
vailing opinion oil the mainland is
that land in Hawaii is cheap, whilethe fact is it is sold by the squareinch. What the proposed sites for for- -'
tifications arc thc War Department willnot say. The subject has been carefullyconsidered but the plans arc kept underdouble lock and key and will not be....Uivulgcu. j
I
An example of how costly land is inHawaii is given by an army officer whovisited the islands not many monthsago. 'We had inspected the govern- -
incut tract, known as the grassy plain, '
said he, "and comprising about 16,000
acres. It has been leased by the gov-
ernment for a long term, the annualrental being $500 a year. Some of thetract is excellent land, admirably adapted for grazing; a part of it is also hillyand not fit for anything. The lease, inwhich Mr. Dillingham, a very estimableman, is interested, has twelve years yetto run. As officers representing thegovernment we sought to ascertain theprice at which' the remainder of thislease would be sold. They replied tous that the price would be $164,000. Ofcourse wc were in no position to drive a
bargain, for the government docs notauthorize its officers to do that. Had webeen I suppose a much smaller pricethan that would have been accepted bythe owners of the lease."
There was a small appropriation bythe Congress which just adjourned forfortifications in the insular possessions,hut it is not expected that any of thiswill be applied to Hawaii. One reasonis that it will all be needed for otherislands and another is that the sites forfortifications have not yet been purchasedin Hawaii.
The report which a board of armyofficers made last Autumn, after a" visitto Hawaii, on sites for army posts, is
still with the general staff. It has notbeen made public and has not even beenseen by tho officers who made it, sincethey attached their signatures to it.
As was stated several weeks ago Con-
gress refused to appropriate any moneyfor buying sites for a military post nearHonolulu. An estimate of ?jo,ooo forki'curiuK n site on the land above referredin wa submitted by the Quartermaster(ieuoral's ofhVu. l.iiutl. Col. (icsrg.eKuhlen, of tlia Qwuturmniier' pnrt-iiuii- i,
iipin-aru- before (lie tukcoimuUlvof 1 hu lluiim Ap.ri'iri4iiin cuumiltltw
uwivtrwi bms iwmhw on lhi"i,,j lt bwji m4e ptiUk
hh.v i miMivM ttuuiirniitiWin. II Jm wiilttUve liiliiii. ( Mm.,
a mriitbr m( llw uU'iumiiiiut-- . iiftpiwlwt nU'iii lb iH'iu mi JMw Ut Iii
timliili, Cut HwIiIkh ndm"Uf MH l mtiiuu m
uihiin "HIS HHUI i.ui.i.1, HIV iniJ.'ii.4ali l Itublu lnni i.fl,i.lU4ll lllIMIII lj.j,, f J
tli l I Willi 111! I1II'M i l H rt .
,' tlnU Wm iIm. 11 I. 'II lull ,)!''. I I .
l ii 1 "I. - .)I.I 'I ,
"What do you want to build upon it?"asked Mr. uillett.
"A post of two companies next 'year,i m i.- - i t:.i --
-I"' possiuiy more iaier o... v.u..
"Havc you any coast defenses there?""No. sir." was the reply. "This is in
tended for the garrison, probably infantry, as contemplated at present. Itwould not be available for coast defenses,In fact the site of these defenses has notyCt )Cen fixcl
"How can you get this under this ap- -propriation?" asked Mr. Gillctt. "WhatriK,lt ,,ave you t0 usc and for nljiitarypurposes under this appropriation, whicharc not purposes of scacoast defense?"
-- j (Io not know gir rcpHcd ColRuhlcn. "When the question was uplast year it was not intended to put coastnrfillfr; llmrpf nnrl Ihnv rrrpntlv rnneluded to build a post for infantry."
"That could not come in under thisscf'"'" asserted Mr. Gillctt.
I do not know how they construe the,aw tat way asscrle(, Ruh,en ,.T
cou not strictly say it is a scacoastdefense. Under the law I should say itwould not strictly come in," which ended'
"GUIS AND LIGH1 HOUSES.
NPt. pred beforeelame' sutcom- -nmtcc and testified about an estimate of
isting lights and lighthouses in the Ha- -
came in and said tnat Hawaii was aterritory. Nobody of the Lighthouseboard seemed to know that it was a ter- -pilnni mill r ilnlnniimn tlin iinMrtf wn
t . ' ' , ., r for thc Secretary of Coin- -mercc and Labor, addressed to theComptroller of the Treasury, asking if
paid out any money from our generalappropriations for the territories andsla(cs which had bccn namC( spccificaiywhether he would approve thc vouchers,and he said he would. That settled thequestion. Then the President issued theproclamation 111 regard to the Hawaiian'isllnds am, a ma(tcrs went througll,We will have to take that out of ourgeneral appropriation. That is loadedon to us now. There are about 28 lightsout there and there will have to be a
-- . nlrim. more. The buov work hasan yCcn (ione by private parties; the
necessary out of the general fund?" asked Representative ilemenway, chairmanof the Appropriation Committee.
"We have to have an engineer andnaval officer and a clerk and tnesscnger,and then wc will have to get quarters,and we will have to have some sort ofplace to store our supplies out of thc '
weather," replied Capt. Hutchins. "Itrams there more than halt the year.
"This item was put in the bill beforethe decision of the Comptroller was ob-
tained" suggested Col. D. W. Lock-woc- d,
engineer secretary of the Light-house board.
"Then it can be stricken out?" saidChairman Ilemenway.
"I do not see any reason why it can-
not." rcplicd Col. Lockwood."Is iherc any harbor in the Hawai-
ian islands besides Honolulu?" askedRepresentative lenson, of Missouri, amember of the committee..
"There are not many harbors," replied Capt. Hutchins. "They are merelyanchorages and it is very difficult toland."
"Is it shallow?" asked Mr. Benton."Xo. the water is rather deep," re-
plied Capt. Hutchins.Delegate Kalanianaole is still in
Washington, lie sa.id today that hemii-l- it nossiblv co to Honolulu beforegoing to the Chicago convention, whichwill he held June 21. tie lias reccnujcabled to Gov. Carter to ascertain whatthe Governor's plans are about comingto the convention. The Delegate stillthinks it more' probable that he will goas far as San Krancisco with his wifeand meet there the Hawaiian delegatesto the convention.
The Interior Department othcials saidtoday that, everything must be runningsmoothly in Hawaii as hardly an officialeoinnittiiic.it Ion has been received fromthere in a month. Considerable satisfac-tion was expressed at the manner inwhich Guv. Carter is gelling along withthe leuishitiire in the special session,
KUNRST G, WAl.KKK.- -- -
IT WOltlJB l.IKH MAOJC.-T- ho ro.Hot iibtrtlnuil from i'IiiiiivIibiIwIii'i' 1'iiln
lllm wlwn applM 10 h bum or l
l u in-il- l l limtuiUMiU'.iuii tlmt II tinaalmost nmirlrBl tin enVil, An In-
jury of Dili bind heuU ttiiliugl irmliir-Htiii- n
ulitm 1I1U ih)iiii-i)- ' U iiiiIIbi) ulldUtilfM lb Humid I M'i' mwto $
ui hvu 11 l'i Ml. by Mil lUll-- n
.nut .liiinii lt 111111, Vmllit &
r Ah in (! H ill
HBCEPTI0 N FOR
Tl li FILIPINOS
, ui.,11 llklltu 14 la Itn mikik Kiill
fm mm liurf U(ll lli4i,Mw . M tlllilt"' ' '' '', , ,, I il. H(. , Uf)uiri.i mk f 11 vbMlM 1. I '. j . li, i ... i
of the delegation which' will probablynrrlve from Manila on the Siberia to-
morrow morning. A meeting of theJoint committee! from the Chambpr ofCommerce nnd theWIcrchnnts' Associa-tion was held yesterday morning, nndthe plun outlined In the Advertlaor jifew days ntro, elaborated'. The programdecided upon, includes the reception tothe commissioner? either ut the wharfor on a tug In the stream, when thesteamer nrrlves. This is to be followedby the trolley ride ''which will probablyoccupy the entire morning. Luncheonwill be served nt the Moanu Hotel, andIn the afternoon the party will go ona special train to Ewa for a thoroughInspection of the plantation nnd mlfl.In thc evening will bo the concert andreception.
At the meeting yesterday J. G. Spen-cer was chosen chairman nnd E. JI.Boyd secretary. Tho. following com-mittees were appointed to take chargeof the entertainment:
Guides for Plantation nnd Sugar MillJ. G. Spencer and J. II. Soper.City Excursion C. .Hedemnnn nnd E.
M. Boyd.Luncheon E. A. Mclnerny and J. G.
Rothwell.Concert E. M. Boyd.Transportation J. A. Kennedy.The program Is of course subject to
change according to the wishes of thevisitors. Honolulu is to be the nrst oftwenty principal cities in the. UnitedStates to be visited by the party, whichIs composed of the leading businessmen nnd planters of the Philippines.Special attention Is to be paid to man-ufacturers, etc., the tour being largelynn eduentlonnl one. The Siberia mayarrive late tonight In the opinion of theagents, but will remain for at leasttwerjty-fou- r hours.
t
GRAND JURY
IN QUESTION
Testa's Abatement Plea
to His Indictmentfor Libel.
(From Wednesday's Advertiser)F. J. Testa, on being called to plead
to his indictment for criminal libel before Judge De Bolt yesterday, by hisnttorneys, T. McCants Stewart and C.A. Long, Hied a plea in abatement,supported by defendant's aflldavlt, up-
on the following grounds:"First. That the Indictment herein
Is illegal nnd Invalid, in that certainpersons are on the Jury panel, and acted as Jurors, and participated In theproceedings of the grand Jury findingsaid Indictment without being legallyqualified to act as grand Jurors in andfor this court.
'Second. That said indictment is illegal nnd invalid, in that it was notfound by the number of Jurors requiredp law to nnd nn Indictment."
Hie prayer is inai me piea. in numu-me- nt
be sustained, that the allegedIndictment may be- - quashed and thatthe defendant may be discharged fromfurther attendance upon this court.
Defendant, In his affidavit, makesallegations that, condensed, are as follows:
That the following named nre serv-ing as grand jurors at the present termof court, viz.: J. II. Schnack, Wlnfred.in. Babbitt, Fred, Turrlll, Henry Illck--
Joseph Andrade, II. P. Benson, JasIfiott Jr., John Kdwards, Alex. Lyle, DJ. Styne, J. C. Axtell, F. V. Mclntyre,John A. Baker, Win. Jlutch and GuyOwens.
That certain of said persons are notqualified to serve as Jurors, and werepresent at and participated in the proceedings of the grand Jury when saidalleged indictment was found, "to theprejudice and injury of this defendant," viz.:
John Edwards, convicted in the Po-
lice Court of Honolulu on Feb. 21, 1SS0,
of larceny and sentenced to one year'sImprisonment nt hard labor and to paya fine of $5 and costs. Further, thatsaid Jolm Edwards, on April 28, 1SS1,
In the District Court or Honolulu,pleaded guilty to a charge of larcenynnd was sentenced to 0110 year's im-
prisonment'at hard labor and fined
$10 nnd costs. Further, that said JohnEdwards, on December 31, 1903, wascommitted, by the District Court ofHonolulu to answer before the CircuitCourt to assault and battery with aloaded revolver on one Mnunn.
Henry Hlckey, who on February 1,
1899, pleaded guilty to tho charge ofhaving" opium or a preparation thereofunlawfully in possession' and was sen-tenced therefor to pay a lino of $250
and costs.Flnnlly, "That deponent verily be
lieves, and upon such belief solemnlysuggests, tlmt said nlleged Indictmentwas not found by tho number requiredby law to find nn Indictment."
Deputy Attorney aeiiemi k, u. l'ei- -
crs being pi'scnt for tho Territory, byrmiHoilt of tho court Hot tliolugiinu'iit of tho plon In abatement for0 o'clock thlH nwirnlng.
NATIVE LOST F.YE
,NAQUAELA ihjlit bwttteuii fuur HhmmIUii nil
ili T4iiulu ni'U nt )'giniibuH UifVPimm rullM In m uf Mi rtnlilvinUm ti ty, n4 M$ UtNW'l MMll'
uiU Kd"ii "lii" it m hi ill '"ami lit.' mill iii. uf bit li'JUlltf
'I'llM I.H"lll. I.. -.- Illf KMHttM III
MHti I) i'1" l'"Ui" tiftl'b 'lu4 i'i itMi 'llw H'n fmibl
Mi. m it. 44 h(i.ii W'i" fiiiMllkll HI -I hit Mil I" I MkM0 OH4 lb ii"t
f - IvIJliil fct VMf-- l idl HpI i ft tkt M
VOUCHERS IN
TWOJOURTS
Mcheula's Chancefor Escaping
Sentence.
(From Thursday's Advertiser.)Owing to counsel for the defendant
being engaged in the Federal Court,the trial of Solomon Meheula for grosscheat In connection with the House-voucher- s
was continued by Judge Do-Dol- t
yesterday morning until today.Members of the House of Representa-tives subpoenaed na witnesses in theseveral voucher cases crowded thocorridors.
Before Judge Dole in the United'States District Court, C. W. Ashford'presented authorities on the motion fora new trial of Meheula, convicted o
destroying public documents, to showrthat the conviction was unlawful onaccount of evidence used against
which ho ha'd involuntarily-furnishe- d
before he grand Jury. J. J..Dunne, replying for the United States,,argued that the objection to the evi-
dence in question came too late, since-i-
was not made at the trial. Judge-Dol- e
will probably reserve decision un-
til the postponed sentence day, whichis Monday next.
LIQUOR CASE ACQUITTAL.
Antone Fernandez was put on trial. .
yesterday morning before Judge DeBolt for selling liquor without a. li-
cense. W. S. Fleming appeared forand A. G. Correa for
After one challenge by de-
fendant, retiring John Kidwell, the fol-
lowing Jury was found satisfactory:W. M. Buchanan, John Coffee, PercyLlshman, H. It. Macfarlane Jr., Hen-ry P. Kaohi, S. K. Paulo, Jessin An-
drade, George Kealohapauole, C. J.Ludwlgsen, James BIcknell, H. C. Aus-tin and C. J. Flshel. Considerably de-pleted bottles of gin, wine and whis-key, also some tumblers, were exhibits-o- f
the case. About five o'clock thetrial ended with a verdict of not guilty.
FLINT CONTEMPT PURGED.Captain Harry W. Flint, a defaulting
witness, was brought before Judge DeBolt by Officer Esplnda late on Tues-day and having given a satisfactoryexplanation of his failure to appear atthe Worth trial, also on motion o
Deputy Attorney General Fleming, thecourt ordered him discharged. Hisstatement was that on the previousday, not feeling well, ho had been ex-
cused from duty by the High Sheriff,and although well enough to have at-
tended court on Tuesday he lay downand slept, forgetting all about the trial.
MOANA HOTEL ANSWERS.C. "W. Ashford, attorney for both de-
fendant and garnishee, filed answersin the suit of Lowers & Cooke, Ltd.,vs. Moanu, Hotel Co., Ltd., and C. V.
C. Deering, garnishee. For defendantit is a denial of each and every allega-tion in the complaint. Mr. Deerinj de-
nies that on the date of process he was-th-
attorney, or agent, or factor, ortrustee, or debtor of the defendant,also denies that, at the times In ques-tion, he bad nny of the goods or ef-
fects of the Moana Hotel Co. in hishands. This is a peculiar case, in thata hotel guest is garnisheed on his sup-
posed bill.PACIFIC HEIGHTS CASE.
"When the plaintiff rested beforeJudge Robinson yesterday In the suitfor injunction of foreclosure and forreformation of mortgage, C. S. Deskyvs. C. "W. Booth or the Pacific Heightscase, Mr. Magoon moved to dismiss thocomplaint. The court denied tho mo-
tion, when the defense began Its ense.It was still on when the court rose at4 p. in. for the day. Cathcart & Mll-vert- on
appear for plaintiff, nd Ma-
goon & Llghtfoot for defendant.COURT NOTES.
Judge De Bolt denied the motion fora now trial In the case of Man Chong,convicted of mur-lo- in tho second de-
gree for killing Policeman Mnhelonn.C. W. Ashford noted exceptions.
Excelsior Lodge, I. O. O. F., has-unti- l
May 24, by stipulation of respon-
dent, to file a brief on demurrer in Itsinjunction pult ngnlnst Honolulu RapidTransit & Land Co.
Judge dear appointed W. C. Weedon.administrator of tho estate of humHoy, deceased, under bond of J3000.
C. O. nittlnc has filed n motion forn now trial of Ivuimunoto, convicted ofiiHHault with n dangerous weapon,
Muniiol M. 1'Viit'lni v. California.Feed t'n Ltd,, (t n) Ih dlwiillnufih
GIVEN ATTENTION
uini km !' "" "" ,'1 "'iinwi m wfc '"" 1
U,i fur I4 illll m ! 1. .' I
,. Im Mlt hl Ml Mlttl .li 1
Knife M ill in i 1. t ' MtMMI- - '
llll" $ In " ' ' '' 11'llllll '" ' ' '
I Mill I'M ' ttlM'J I '
ui Htll 111-- . - ' IM"'"1'Immit ' Hh"4mW "tf,,4.M.I ." IM l'
OR, COOPER'S
CREDENTIALS
Power to ConsultWith National
Officials.
(From Thursday's Advertiser.).President L. E. Pinkhnin, Dr. C. B.
Cooper, John C. Lane, Dr. W. II. Slays,3Tred. C. Smith and Stark P. Robinsonconstituted the meeting of the Boardof Ilenlth yesterday afternoon. C.
Charlock, secretary, and SIlss Slae"Weir, stenographer, were In attend--anc- e.
Business was submitted by the presl-tle- nt
In a written statement, which was
read as a whole and nfterward actedupon serlatfm as far as reaulred.
THE ECONOS1Y POLICY.
The president reported that, on con-
sultation with the Governor, as di-
rected by the Board, the following or-
ders were given:"The milk Inspector's olllce to be
vacant Slay 31.
"The druggist at the Dispensary to
be discharged Slay 31. .
"A consultation was had with theGovernor and It was directed that therelie no responsibility taken ns to theGovernment physicians beyond thatcontemplated by the law. There ho-
ling no direct appropriation for medi-
cines for Government physicians It--was directed no temporary expedients
)e undertaken."There was some general conversation
over the announced resignations of
.several Government physicians. It wasremarked that the salary of $10 amonth allowed by the Legislaturewould scarce pay the horse feed ofsome physl:!ans.
Finally the wholn mittcr wbs leftjin the hands of a specialconsisting of Dr. Slays, Sir. Smith andthe "president.
DR. COOPER'S SIISSION.
"Dr. Cooper has' prepared for, hisJourney to Washington," the presidentwrote.
"A booklet has been prepared that,it Is hoped, may be valuable In creatingpublic sentiment in the Plates towardaiding the Territory ot Hawaii in itshumanitarian work for the lepers."
Orally, President Plnkham informedthe Board that Dr. Cooper had passedupon the matter contained In thebooklet. The Board approved of thepresident's action In having an editionof 2000 copies of the treatise fordistribution by Dr. Cooper.
There was a confidential Interchangeof views, at Dr. Cooper's suggestion,regarding the representations of healthmatters In the Territory which themedical delegate should make to theWashington authorities. After he hadexpressed his own views Dr. Cooperwas, on motion of Dr. Slays secondedby Sir. Robinson, given full power ofconsultation with Surgeon General"VVyinan and others at the national'Capital.
Dr. Cooper goes to Washington fullyaccredited by. the Governor and theBoard of Health, upon the nominationot the Surgeon General, to attend theconference of United States health of-
ficers as chairman of the section onleprosy.
DONATIONS TO DISPENSARY."I received this morning a small con-
tribution from a young gentleman Inald of the Dispensary," the presidentstated.
"He refused to allow his name men-
tioned, but the spirit of the gift can-
not fall to be recognized."I hand you herewith a letter from
Messrs. II. Hackfeld & Co., Ltd., mak-iln- g
the most generous contribution oftwenty dollars per month for Dispen-
sary work."I believe the physicians who so
kindly remember the sick will ilndtheir efforts generously seconded."
Dr. Slays moved a vote of thanks to31. Hackfeld & Co., taking occasion toepeak warmly of the readiness alwaysevinced by that corporation in comingto the aid ot the Board when help wasneeded. Sir. Smith seconded the mo-
tion, which was passed unanimously.VARIOUS MATTERS.
"The nrteslun well at the Insane Asy-
lum Is being cleaned out with the Ulca
of seeming nn ninplo nwl Independentwater supply," tho president' statu-jnn- ni
run,"Tlmro In a Kient 00'1 'r water at
tho Asylum t present.i Jmvn iihi'Ib " iHimbur of Impeo-tloi- m
iIuiIiik Ui w'uk,"Tim oxotiilloii nf the lti of lnnd
for Mm Kuplitlnnl nirlH' llomu undOminnitlim IMtlial will Imvo In Jro
tteftrruil mull imwim nyr"iiii'l for Urn fiimln for nII"
Mr l.oiiw whh Hnniiwil fuiiliur limn
(r u i.'"H nf llu wuiimlHtm UjMiii
diHHUH f.ir Miiiwttm by flwwiiiiiiinli'i))i laim
Hi Ma tilw WIW IWti fttrlUwfw llw HMWt wwm
i i. , .itH Wlm mwmb to
l'H it Jlitluu i.. ili l
titniM'f I " ' " " "
i ' .ili .i ilk -
THE COUNTY
COMMISSION
Governor Carter Will
Name Members Ere
He Leaves. .
Governor Caster has under considera-
tion the names of live men to appoint
ns a commission to frame n County
Government bill for submission to next
Legislature. From the fact that the
Governor hns called Henry E. Cooper
Jcctured that Sir. Cooper will be np-In- to
consultation with him, It Is
as chairman of the commis-
sion.The Democratic party has recom-
mended E. SI. Watson, and the Home
Rule party J. SI. Poepoe, to the Gov-
ernor as their respective representa-
tives on the commission. He hada willingness to have the op-
position parties given representation, so
as to make the commission n mediumreflecting the views ot all the people.
Beyond the foregoing Informationnothing regarding the matter was
divulged at the Capitol yesterday, ex-
cepting a somewhat definite intimationwas made that the commission would
bo announced before the Governor'sdeparture on Saturday. Sir. Cooper
was seen last night, but like the exec-
utive was uncommunicative ns to de-
tails.
METHODISTS AND
WORLDLY PLEASURES
LOS ANGELES, Slay 12. A questionof important bearing, which hnB comeprominently to the fore in the Method-
ist General Conference proceedings dur-
ing the past twelve hours, is that in-
volving a change in discipline to theextent of entirely removing the churchban on the pleasures of dancing, card-playi-
and theater-goin- g. It seemsnot unlikely that the conference willvote to remove the present rigid re-
striction regarding the Indulgence ofthese recreations. Theof the committee on state of church, ofwhich Judge H. S. Sibley is chairman,has reported back to the main body Its
recommendation upon this matter In
which It urges a radical change In thechurch rule on the subject, making itsimply nn advisory restriction, Insteadof a mandatory prohibition as at pres-
ent. Under the prevailing rule themember of the church who attends adance or theater Is guilty of a directinfraction of tho rules of the churchand may be punished by expulsion, butIf the recommendation now proposed isndopted this penalty will be renderedentirely optional with the authorities.The committee on state of church hasnot decided definitely just what formthe recommendation of the committeeto the general body Mill take, but Itseems assured that It Mill propose someradical changes In the discipline alongthe line outlined.
This committee is also consideringother Important changes, among whichis one involving the ratio of representa-tion In the general conference. Theplan which has been proposed, andwhich has met with some favor would,If adopted, reduce the membership ofthe General Conference from tj$ to 500.
The absorbing topic of conversationamong' the delegates this morning Isthe announcement made last night ofthe candidacy of Rev. Dr. Robert SIc-Inty-
pastor of the First SlethodlstChurch of Los Angeles, for bishoprichonors. The announcement of Dr.
candidacy, by his friends, cameas a' total surprise to the delegates andparticularly to the Pacific Coast con-
tingent, who have under considerationthe name of but one cundldute, Dr. G.F. Bovurd, president of the Unlvjrsltyof Southern California. The PacificCoast delegates will caucus this even-ing to select a candidate on whom tbeycan concentrate their united support.It Is generally conceded that the PiicKlcCoast will bo allowed to name ono ofthe bishops and until the entrance otDr. Slclntyro Into the race only thename ot Dr. Bovnrd had been consid-ered. Tonight's caucus will determinewhich Is able to muster tho greateststrength among tho Coast delegation.
Bishop I. W. Joyce presided over to-
day's session of the General Confer-ence, which was addressed .'dining thomorning hours by the Mlimlimiiry Midi-Di-
J, C, Iliuizell, nf Afilcn, and V.W. Witrno, of India,
HOW TO AVOID THOUIII.N.-H- nw
li Ilia tlnm to pnivl'lu ymiriHilf nnd fain.Ilywlilnt iiotllu of UlimiibtH'liilM'fl Qullu,Oliniimi mul OlunlMhui Itiiiioily, Hnlmu'i cerium In Im nwilwl ImfnrH I lieKUininvr It over, mul if iirwurH huwinuy hiv vuu it lilit lo luwii In llirnlKiil ui' In uur lmWl nmimiD' ll It
vilir ttiiinlllw) Im N i In hum I
nUMftiwrul iiwtllvJiw In uw fur IwkInMi4tlni bub fw wMdmi mulMi. Nn ti4)f vm affmd in I
WltUltl 11 ViH Ufa iff Ml ifaUHMI IM4
4iU0lif. litU!. tuttU it fit, inuiM n
n
LAHAINALUNAWATER
SEMINARY
RIGHTS SECURE
Pioneer Mill Co. Will Pay Back Rents and Re-
ceive Water to Which It May Be Entitled.
An Amicable Agreement.
(From Wednesday's Advertiser) ""
Governor Carter held a conference on the Lahainaltina water
rights controversy with A. T. Atkinson, Superintendent of Public
Instruction; Lorrin Andrews, Attorney General, and D. II. Case,attorney for Pioneer Mill Co., yesterday afternoon.
"It'looks as though we would be able to adjust our differences,"Mr. Case said after the meeting. "All parties tried to be fair andconsiderate toward each other.
"Yes, it will likely be settled without coming to trial. We shalltry to put the agreement in written form. I shall return fromMaui on the 28th, and then the whole matter will probably be ar-
ranged."Attorney General .Andrews could not give out all of the details
at the present stage, but spoke of certain things as being prac-
tically settled. 7.
"The plantation will pay the Government all back rents forthe use of the water," Mr. Andrews said. "It will get all the waterit is entitled to. There will be no deprivation of water sufferedby the school. All the water that it requires will be reserved."
The Lahainaluna Seminary's water resources have nothing todo with the Department of Public Lands. They are ancient ap-
purtenances of the institution, which is the oldest public schoolin the Hawaiian Islands. Since the aim has developed to make ofLahainaluna the leading agricultural seminary in the Territory, withprospect of a Federal subsidy, the water supply of the institutionis more important to itpiow than ever before.
NEW JAILWILL ACCOMMODATETWO HUNDRED PRISONERS
With the completion ot the new Jail,one of the most serious problems whichhas been confronting the authoritieswill have been settled. The Jail, an In- - j
stltutlon designed originally for theCounty of Oahu, will be rendy for oc-
cupancy within six weeks, and the dif-
ficulties High Sheriff Brown has beenexperiencing in housing an excess ofprisoners Mill be settled, as will theserious questions raised by JudgeGear's famous "Infamous imprison-ment" decision.
Supt. Hollowny expects the new jailto be completed within nbout six weeksand additional room will then be avail-able for two hundred extra prisoners.many of those now In Oahu Prison be- - j
lng crowded two and three In a cell.Only the prisoners convicted of mis- -'
demeanor will be confined In the new:jail and they Mill be kept separated!from the long term convicts. This willconform Mith the decision of Judge.Gear In which he held thnt prisonersconfined In Oahu Prison were treatedas men convicted of an Infamous
MRS. GLEN COLLINSINJURED IN A RUNAWAY
Sirs. Glen Collins, formerly SIlss
Schenck of Now York, a member of the
"400" and wife of Captain Glen Col-
lins of Ills British Majesty's army, wasInjured on Monday 'Millie out drivingbehind a span, and as a result maytake an early departure for the Coast.Captain and Sirs. Collins have beenguests at the Sloana Hotel since theirarrival on the Slongolla last Friday.On Slonday the couple engaged a lightbuggy and a spun. Sirs. Collins, who
s driving, used the whip on one ofthe horses and It suddenly shied. Thevehicle was overturned. Both the oc-
cupants were thrown out, and Sirs.Collins, having the reins, was draggeda. short distance before the horses werebrought to a stop.
DEADLOCK INSPECTIONOF IMPORTED ANIMALS
With but little discussion the I!oa,rd
of Health yesterday referred the letterappearing below to tho committee onrules and regulations. In the mean-
time tho communication indicates thatat present thero Is no safeguard atHawaiian ports against tho Introduc-tion of contagious (IIhi'iihch mmingallium!, Tho communication follows;
Honolulu, May n, moi,I., II. I'lnklmin, si I'nmliluiii ot
Die lloiml of llniiltli, Oily.Hlr; I Im'k l" iwkiinwMgn riMielut ot
your favor ot Urn Ultli limi., finolrxilnunuiy of Koiiiiimiik'fiUim fiiiin J, ),riliitw, funiivr Huvuriinwiii VMlnrlimry.I nulw llwi vuu imll niy uilBiiilmi IdMwilumi m$ mul IWT, iin) ilMt 11 I
Hur niiiiiMWMi i ii il HiiiMdnl im '
iwr tar iu Utfiwuurti I wu lU1. a .1... (M......I if.u..MHtvriM ui ilia iwfiumf' llWiih iJwUm uf (to UUiMr hi ik Jtt11 Ur iiiHMlNNt In thvHm UH wtt4twJ utMtui lb? 4ltmlluu ' IW
' fuMli WtMknI In- rmitfi tilft' t !t'4ii"J
iii (punt! 't-- .f iiiiiii i" 0 1
1'.-- li iii in . 1, not 1
I 1 I M . ii' Mi
1904- -
crime, and must first be Indicted by agrand Jury. Fortunately, however,Judge Lindsay, whose court was theone affected, has not been following theruling of the circuit Judge, and the ex-
pected jnll delivery did not materialize.Not n particle of wood Is being used
In the construction ot tho new Jail.It is being built entirely of steel, bricknnd cement.
The structure is 117x27 feet nnd is tobe three stories In height. There aretwo rows of cells on the ground lloor,with a wide corridor between, sixteencells on either side.
There are to bo three tiers of cells,one ubove the other, with cement stepslending to the sccqnd nnd third floors,making ninety-si- x cells In all. The wallsof the Jail are made of brick three deep,with heavy Iron gratfiigs. The floorsare to be of cement. The new jnll Isjust Kwa of the old prison, nnd will beconnected with It by a cement wall.The Legislature mnde an appropriationof $20,000 for the construction of thonew Jail, but the contract price for thebuilding now being erected will not ex-
ceed $18,000.
Sirs. Colllns's injuries, though slight,have been quite painful, her face be-
ing considerably scratched.It Is now the Intention of Captain
and Sirs. Collins to take the first boatback to the Coast, whence they will goto Now York and probably to Europe.Tile two blooded polo ponies, the milchcow and a very fine pianola theybrought with them are to be sold, andthey will take passage on the Siberiawhich Is due to sail on Slay 21. Cap-
tain Collins wishes to thank the stran-gers who were the good Samaritans tothem at tho time of the accident.
The captain Is an olllcer ot theQueen's Own Cameron Highlanders, amember' of the Loudon Naval und Slllt-tur- y
Club, and his estate Is CliftonHall, Rugby.
Their reason for tnklng this notion wasdue to tho fact thai their attorneysadvised them that tho law us speci-fied In Section 1CS1 was contrary tocertain United States laws, coveringiuter-Htut- o shipments,
1 havu referred this question to theAttorney ' nimenil'fl Department, andthey liuvo tho mutter In hand at Hidlii'twuiu time In talking tho inutltTnvnr with Mr. Putum, ho m'miiih to iiKieuwith thu ntlonioys of llio ,MiiopolinMunt '", In ivKiinl (it eliiirnoH for
I Imvii IIioijhIiI, limvuvnr, Hint It Im
williiii Hi" pownr ot thu llimiil nfIIkuIUi in iiiuI(m muuliiiluim uovwiimtHi luiMirtlluii of llvu hum'K, mul 14H
It u uuilMjuittlly ".Dim liniwrUnl In!iliiwl iraualil nuu tli
""? twmumi 11 mii.i.u4ni, wuw mm mm mm
IN
w imnmmn limn hi tmummtwnt4iiiHgivj 11m tteftiur t rww M
Hiuv'ujr & HMNMII tUHllttr III I !"H " IM IM HtMl (HI ill III" iitllt
l'. of lllil oM'"" f'1"II M.i ( , illil I .illl li .. )' 4I I. I I i'llll'
sn moorcniB
Reports of Honolulu andHilo Inspections
for April.
Dr. J. S. 11. Pratt, city sanitary olllcerand Inspector of cemeteries, In his re-
port for the month of April to the pres-
ident Of the Board ot Health says:"Six complaints of nuisances were
lodged. All were Investigated and foundto exist nnd were abated.
"Klght notices were soivednnd nil tho parties compiled with theorders given In tho notices.
"Four deaths were Investigated nndn post mortem ordered In one Instance.
"Twenty recoininendntlons for hotel,roHtaurnnt nnd lodging house licenseswere Issued during tho month nnd 872
adults can bo lawfully lodged In thebuildings. Two recoininendntlons forlicenses held over from previous monthson account of sanitary conditions wereIssued and ISO adults can bo lawfullylodged under these licenses. Five arestill held over from previous monthsnnd two from this mouth until certainorders given have boon compiled with.
"There were seventy-fou- r Inspectionsof graves made, two being for disinter-ments and the rest for burials. In theKing street Catholic cemetery, the edgeot one box wns exposed, two were ex-posed In Kawnlahao cemetery and twoIn Pauoa church cemetery.
"Fifteen permits to keep mvlne nndfive permits to keep ducks wore Issued.
"A number of Inspections were madeof pig pens nnd duck ranches In com-pany ot the Inspectors nnd a visit wasmade to tho duck ranches ut Wnlklkland Kalla In companyNit a committeeof the Hoard.
"Inspections of two plnccs on Kmmastreet nnd ono on Fort street weremnde with the inspector)! und later withyourself.
"The number of Inspections madeduring the month outside of those men-tioned were fit."
D. S. Bowman, sanitary Inspector ofIIIlo, reported a total of 7G7 orders car-ried out. Total Inspections made were1300. One and three no-
tices were compiled with, while thelimit had not expired on eightnotices given.
H
Public Praise is Public Prop-erty Honolulu People
May Profit by LocalExperience.
Grateful people will talk.Tell their experience for the public
good.Honolulu citizens praise Doan's
Backache Kidney Pll.Kidney sufferers appreciate this.They find relief for every kidney 111.
Read what this citizen says:The Rev. ,T. Nua j Kawalahao In-
forms us:"I suffered rom kidney trouble,
which was, I believe, caused by mylifting heavy weights whilst young.Pains In the small of my back wereone of the symptoms f my complaint.Sly trouble extends buclcto the timewhen I wns 28 years of age, and as Iam now 49, thnt Is a considerable pe-riod. During all this time I was sub-ject to pains In the back. They con-
tinued despite the fact that I consult-ed several physicians and took numerous remedies. No relief thus gainedcan be compared to tho benefit ob-
tained from using Doan's BackacheKidney Pills. I have got on wonder-fully well since taking them. I amquite satisfied with tlu ' result, andshall always' have some of the pills byme, oven when going from Honoluluto other missionary fields in the SouthPacific. There is no other remedy llkoDoun's Backache Kidney Pills for kidney complaints, Inclu tng backache."
Doan's Backache Kidney Pills aresold by all druggists nnd storekeepersnt T0 cents npp liny (six linynn fnr$2.00), or will bo mnlled on receipt ofjprice by the Holllster Drug Co., Ho-- jnoiuiu, wholesale agents for the Hawnllan lslnnds.
H--TO CUBE
HEAD IN FOWLS
Honolulu, May in, 1901,
Kdltor AiIvoiilHcri Can you InformHit of 11 Hufo nnd mmy way, If theroIs nun, In euro Hornlioad In fowU andnlillgo a H.MALL FAIIMIJH,
Hoiiiiw oir I Im hoiiIih mul covir tint
niiruH with miy Idml of kiwihu, luni orvimulliiu. Thin ulluyu Mm IrrllHtloiijmul Ifuvi iliu fowl from Huininliliur tintWIN llllWI,
Tlmii iMtli ttuull ulfnnlml ulilulimi illliuiiil, IY uw U)i liHI Ultili UllJlg u
iuliii; iiwuIiIim Mil mui, tHjulri iluwuli iIihmi ttu ur iwu ifti wf u miliumIbtM MNMIiHMli U4W tWnHMWUfllJ Wf
IwrmMw. ww uWwiwiui Ml turwl lim w4 lv UwMniful f maimuii fi awkwi iKviHH
IHW UVtlUlfHI I ll'U'lUtf HlOWH Ifmi iim Wl'H' H" Idi hMi l huilny li i 1 i.it i inUxJ
ll' . fc.,11 U' ll P ' tl i) lIH'.tl "I' M H " Mili ll, 4. ll I I ' . ' i fl'Ul. I I I . Hi I till , I
1,-11- ( , I ,. ll I, t.
pSTMWAJi'lWf " 'T'FJ h m iu 1 whi hii ' p4w . i.r nr jmn Wt mwwi nn " " "
ASA TRIED
TOJSCAPE
Diminutive Jap Hid inGunny Sack at
Makiki.
Asa, tho diminutive Japanese whorobbed several households of Honolulun few months ngo, Is wearing a rcd-strlp- ed
suit nnd a bull nnd chain now-ndn- ys.
Asa was sent up for a year, afew weeks ngo nnd ha mnde n unique;attempt to escape from tho prison gang;last week.
One gang of long-tim-e prisoners hasbeen working Intely In the Staklkl quar-ry. With them Is Asa. While tho sixty-od-
prisoners were lunching the otherday, Asa thought he saw an opportu-nity to escape. He quietly slipped from,'tinder tho eyes of the gunrds and hidbehind a number of boxes which had.been piled within tho quarry. His nextmove wns to got possession of an oldgunny-sne- k which had been used forcarrying feed. Into this bag Asa climb-ed, concealing his entire person, nnilmaking his hiding place more secureby pulling an empty box over his body.
When the prison luna lined up thocoilvlcts after lunch one man was miss-ing. The roll was called and Asa fail-ed to' respond. During the mcnl, thecamp had been encircled by thp halfdozen gunrds and they were very muchmystified ns to how any man could havebroken through the circle without theirknowledge. Thu prisoners were llrstquestioned, but refused to give any In-
formation und tho quarry wns thenthoroughly searched. Finally 0110 otthe guards carelessly kicked over oneof the empty boxes, nnd Asa, curled upIn a gunny sack, appeared. Tho u
was taken back to prison nndwas given a ball and chnln for safe-keeping. Also Wnrden Henry gave hima new suit, 11 gorgeous .oneby which ho can be easily distinguishedfrom his foflow prisoners.
PACIFIC MAIL TO
PAY RIO LOSSES
Claimants against tho Pacific MallSteamship Company for losses sustain-ed tn tho wrecking and sinking of thosteamship Rio Janeiro obtained on Slay9 a favorable decision lit tho UnitedStates Circuit Court of Appeals whichreverses the findings ot United StatesDistrict Judgo John De Haven. Thodecision was rendered by Judge Ers-kln- o
SI. Ross. Tho responsibility ofthe loss of life In the Rio was placedupon the Pacific Stall Company. Thomatter came up In tho case of ClaraBarwlck who had entered a claimagainst the loss of her husband on tho
liner.Tho decision ot tho court of appeals
Is based upon tho proposition thnt allof tlie Chinese crow of tho Rio couldnot speak or understand English nndthat the crew, therefore, was Inade-quate for tho exigency that arose.Hence the company was held respon-sible for tho loss of life that followedupon tho Incapacity of tho crew tolaunch the life boats properly.
Tho Rio, while attempting, on Febru-ary 22, 1001, to enter the harbor of SanFrancisco In a dense fog at half past5 o'clock in the morning, struck upon asunken rock or reef outside tho GoldenGate and Bank within twenty minutes,drowning about 200 persons, mostlyChinese.
Tho following extracts are fromJudge Ross' decision:
The evidence Is that under such con-
ditions five minutes wns ninplo timefor the lowering ot tho boats. It fur-ther shows that thero was no panicamong tho passengers or crew, thattho passengers behaved w.oll, nnd thatthe captain Immediately upon thoship's striking tho rocks sounded thonlnnn and called the crew to theboats. Each of the boats was com-
manded by a white officer and mannedby a part of the Chlneso crew. Yetbut three of tho eleven boats were lowered Into tho wntor, one of which, the
er boat No. 10, was loweredby Olllcer Coghlan nnd the ship's car-penter, nnd but three of tho hundredund odd pnssengers that the ship car-ried wero taken Into nny boat. Theromust, In tho very nnturo ot things,have been some paramount, controllingcause for nil this. And that cnuse, wo
think, Is very easily to bo seen. Itwas not merely for tho reasonthat tho men depended upon to mantho boats were Chinese. To tho con-
trary the nvldonro Is that tho Chineseinako oxcoiiout Hiillors.
Hut how about Chlneso sail-ors or fiiillni'H of any other clnsn orrnro who dinnnt understand tho H
tlml lioenino noeoHsnry In theriuiiHii of llii'lr iltitloM bcninmo of alurk of knowMKi' of (ho luimimgo Inwhich limy lmv lo Im nlvtrn? Tlmt'HIliu nlluMtlOII Wll llHVii In (lOIIHlilor Hint
ilulm mine linn.Tim lumu hIiovvh Hint Hie Oily nf Mill
i) ,11111110. lufl lli port nf Honolulunn Dim viivhh Uinlni' uoiii'lili'iiilloii willit wrw of nljilily-fmi- r pIiIiwiiimii mil-p- ri
by wlill nitii' Tim iillluniii 1011I1I
out tmi Hi laiiputfHp f Hi I'liiiivmiMWl but l wf Dm utllnrllht limit
tlu nthl iMrf lln-m- uMlllil uihHI'lUI llf Hi" UlUMNV' 1UWN"I'I"
fitftd mi4i of Urn nflliWl M '" "
Kuuiiuai.li diid I'lltml IIIMUall Illl' l'"tlh .1 lii. Kihii'mii . 1 Tv Mi' mil
riH-- i ' fl l'l' II t I f t lOMl
i. ui'lfcij 'I i Mil I lk'r If 4tH
, I .l-- J H'
J!hl
m 1 mt
In 'I--
41.JPM
ltt4HiW'"t''JV
Hawaiian Gazette.Entered at the P ilnfllre of Honolulu,
II. T., Second-clas- s Matter.8EMI-WEEKL- Y.
ISSUED TUESDAYS fi.HD FHIDflYS.
WALTER 0. SMITH, Editor.
SUDSCMl'TION RATES.Tcr Month (. .M
Per Month, Foreign 73
Per Yenr 5 00
Per Yenr, Foreign 6 00
rauabic lnvarlablu In Advance.
A. W. PEARSON,Manager.
FRIDAY J! AY 20
A BURDEN ON HAWAII.
The request from Washington thatHonolulu shall do something for theentertainment of sixty Philippine Com-
missioners Is the thlnl one of the Kind
which hns been receive J during thepast few months. The last previous re-
quest hnd to do with Prince Pu Lunnnd the one before that with SecretniylTnft and party. Quite likely the 1 ed-er- al
Got eminent will request similarattentions for the Duke D'Abnuzl.Honolulu, as the tint American port toreceive distinguished people crossingthe Pacific from either Australia r theOrient, Is apparently expected to do thepreliminary honors for the PederalGovernment and even, on occasion, tospeed the outward-boun- d visitor. He-fo- re
this summer I over the city willbe given opportunities to initiate or sec-
ond the olllclal hospitality of the Unit-ed States for a number of foreign ieleh-ritle- s
going to or coming from theWorld's Fair.
All this is delightful but costly. TheGovernor has, we believe, a small umat his disposal for State entertain-ments, but a single great functionwould use It up. It was not the Leg-
islative Intention, moreover, to rpendtills money for the delectation of theguests of the United States governmentbut for such distinguished Americanvisitors as Senators, Ministers Plenipo-tentiary, Governors and Generals. Inthe present exigency, that for the en-
tertainment of sixty Philippine Com-
missioners), the burden has been pissedto private citizens, nnd the Chamberof Commerce nnd Merchants' Associa-tion nre considering mi elaborate- pio-gra-
of entertainment, 4'J'u piopoilyhouse and feed these people and showthem the island can hardly cost lessthan $500; Indeed, that sum would cut'kings yfiry close.
' 'Now so fnr as Hawaii is individuallyconcerned It does not care anything forthe good or 111 opinion of Chlnc-- e
princes or Philippine commissioners, itJookg fur no Immigintlon hoi any grealamount of tourist travel nor advei Us-
ing fiom these tianslent classes. Ofcourse It wMics them well and wouldbe glad to have them diop off at .mytime to soo tho sights and spend some-thing; but it uatutally usks why itshould devote hard-earne- d and inuch--jieed-
local money to their cntcituln-me- nt
wlieh the benefit, If any, Will
accrue to the United States....And this. u6--
3 u to the point. IfHonolulu 1b to be an Intuituburenu for the guests of Uncle bam,then Uncle Sam should see that thenecessary inoncja are provided for p.ij-In- g
the bills. There is a laigo enter-tainment fund nt Washington. Couldnot some of It bo deposited heie to theorder of tho Governor for such ii-- p usthe coming of the sKty Philippine ra
implies-- ' Assuiedly thePresident cannot expect this oveibui-dene- d
Terrltoiy to foot such bills anymore than he could expect the DHtiictof Columbia to do it, noi is it fair toask the Governor oi the comnieiei.Ubodies to assume an obligation wnlchIs purely Tederal and public In Its na-
ture.C j in
i'Tiie Examiner Is still faking warpictures. Under the caption "itcmark-abl- e
photograph of Japanese Infantrylined up for action, made exclusivelyfor the Examiner by Jack London,"that paper pilnta a military scene InJapan where a caieles.s line of troopsstands under flowering- tiees with twootllcers out in front, one of them look-
ing over his shoulder at the camera.So far from being "remarkable" sucha picture can be bought at any time Ina ToKIo store. It is a most peacefulaffair and as little resembles a photo-graph of soldiers ready for notion asa milking scene does a lound-u- p ofwild cattle.
1
The latest amazing lomance from nnInter-Islan- d steamer Is the stoiy of theflying ilsh which came In at u port andput the Ico machine out of commis-sion. A week or two ago a wlialoscratched his back on tho keel and dis-
turbed the equilibrium of the fill p. Alight in tho surf with a slunk was fur-ther buck and sudden boiling of thowater around the vessel iih If fiom avolcanic spurt on the tmu ilooi, Illu-
minated the enrllei iiiiiiiUIu'h, Theythat go down to tho hum In shliw,
on the Intsi-lslu- l onto,IiiiukIiwIIoiim thm would put
AllUlllUN lo s)iuin.
Jii'lH" J.lltls'w Men nf "four ym nftun luimful itilinlnUlrHiluii m JiiOhw"
k lllt Itluu nf lIllKillllS who ww Tfpr (nl wf IiU ilsvtslai) uvsnuM,ui ubuui far apart a MillsI 1 1 W) lbs ml tblllV.
p umii iimw'm ismsjsjijiswi.w
'I hv Kiiuibw, HurUt uf wUii4) k rJt-H- f
il thai luting IMMir Nmmv1)iui Wui
.1 MUSlI - 1 lll SH4 IMfaNI trtMM
twin) ' "') miiuv turn (mi Alhui
lbs I " ii .1 id- - IdtMi.i'lull il H
..4 i I,Dl J
Itf l '
)l rM itI Ml II I
A CHANCE FOR HAWAII,
While there never was any use Iniisklnit the United States Governmentto return the customs receipts of, Hn-wn- ll,
the fact that so much money Isbeing taken from Us in that form IB usound nrL'timnnl to use nt Washingtonfor tho puiposc of gettjjig n vnlunbleconsiucraiiou in cxcwiukv.
There nre many things Congressmight do for us, some of which we "hallhave In time nnywny such .is forta andpublic buildings. What wl should piillfor Is something not to bo had withoutpulling, something that will lestoie vlocal trade part of the prosperity i.ntederived from the circulation of customslevenues here.
Why not u large mllltaiy poJt? Nota post nf two or three companies oreven of 'a battalion, but one lit for thecommand of a Urlgadlor General aicgtmcnl of Infantry, a leglment ofcavalry, at least live batteries of artillery, a company or two of engineersand a hospital contingent. Such a lorcewould expend enough money In Hono-lulu, month by month, to keep nil Kindsof business active. The Advertiser be-
lieves that proper representations atWashington would get It, especially asInrid to accommodate a large mllltaiyforce has already been ncrrulied herefiy the Federal government.
We speak of "proper representations."These nre, us we understand them:
r. That the United States lias tropical possessions In and bordering on thePacllle ocean Samoa, Guam, the Philippines and P.innma whence u callmay suddenly come for troops. It isnot wle. If avoidable, to send detailsfrom northern climates as the men melikely to loe time getting acclimated.Hawaii Is a place where, amid health-ful surroundings, troops mny be rea-soned for service in hot climates. F-o- m
here they could easily reach any Pa-
cific tropical station where they mightbe needed.
II. The argument used by MajorGeneral MncArthur In favor of build-ing the Hawaiian mllltl.i to a high rtnteof elllclency applies with tenold forceto the building of a great regular tinnyestablishment here. If there arechances of war In the next few yearsnnd Hawaii Is to be safeguarded for thesake of the Coast, the Federal govern-ment must depend upon Its own well-train-
troops, not upon the undisciplin-ed levies of the National Gunid.
III. Tho United States has takenaway so large a part of the revenuesupon which Hawaii formeily depended,fjiat It would be only fair play to give)ilu Tenltory the benefit, now fieely
Lonrerm) upon other paits of theUnion villi' ) Jjave no claims to specialpqinpeiiHatlon, of it money-spendin- g
gnu Noil.These considerations, made the most
of at Washington, ought to go a longway touyulH getting Hawaii the laigeInciease in Its consuming class whichthe needs of business call for.
A PACIFIC ROMANCE.
For good er reading com-
mend us to the Jules Vcmo novelette,attilbuted to a gentleman on theciulser Tacoma, relating to a. possiblesuivival of tho men lost with the Unit-ed States sloop-of-vv- ar Levant whichleft here 44 years ago for San Diegonnd was never been again.
According to this Interesting specu-lation the Levant could not have lostthe mast which was aftei wards foundon shore In Hawaii unless she had runhgtotiml. Her day, Jt N picsume;!, was
befoie tho pi notice fti'eW Up of cuttingaway HID masts of a beanl-Onile- d ves-
sel "lo light tho hull. Having runaground, It must have been on somehithoito unknown island, hence, if thoisland enn now be dlscoveied, a. colonyof Levant suivlvois may be found sub-sisting on goonle eggs and sea airand walling patiently to hear whetherSouth Caiollna seceded or not.
Tor n stoiy oft the TnCOliin. this Isexceedingly rich At the present out-look the Imaginative poisons on theinter-Islan- d steamers must gunid theirI.iuiels, "
, -SUGAR AND OTHER THINGS.
With sugar neailirg four cents it Isnow 3.87G or $77.50 per ton Hawaii be-
gins to bieatho easier and take cour-- .
uge. So long as the life of. the landIs established In sugar, common hopesand feais will bo regulated by themarket reoort of tho one commodity.This Is not a healthy condition for ncount! y to be in, but one may not com-
plain of that unduly while the greatHawaiian staple is rising In price.Nevertheless tho best friends of Ha-
waii nre those who hope and work fortho time when tho quotations of sugarwill Inspire no more eagerness herethnn those on a half dozen otherngrlcultuial commodities. Then wo
shall not be unduly elated bv a risenor deeply depressed by n. drop; amitho choice between Hawaiian wealthand poveity will bo bevoml tlie powerof any one trust to fix.
The Cossacks who have been oper-
ating In northern Korea weio sentthere to nienaco the communications or
tho Japanese army that crossed thoYnlu, Thoy wont Into tho country be-
fore tho butilo in which tho lluelnnwore defeated with such Jiwwy Ions nndHindu tholr mldn III iKiioiaiiot) of tho(not thai tholr own nvenutw of cHonpo,
wivo 111 ho illrwtlim of VllllVIllOitwru imibnlily p1om1. It nnl Knownwliulllur lllnK riwuuphu, nnwr mmr l4
wl An)"i wuul, lull If
limy win. III vttftiii'M w Hull )mImivm Iwd 1 raw of tludr llvim.
Mr llttlfuur, Ijv UnlMmj lli IHWWHI
'iilimii lu hmm tU tt'i mwsiloM
iwtg lu us twm&ti but l'rvMm4 t
)- ;r mm imi lu iitv iwaj ilWc Mi tiMR$trlMi " IwU
4vttv A UwMy fl i't U
HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1904 SEMI-WEEKL- Y,
I MI,1I It
In jj)
FIRST JAPANESE DIJAJTER.
The Japanese, In the loss olj the bat-
tleship Hnlsu'e, tho fast cruiser Yoilnno and the smaller cruler Mlk.ia,hnvc met nn unexpected misfortune.The loss of the Yoshlno l nttrllAited to
n collision; but' the Hatsuse nnd Ml-kn-
nre snld to have been sunk by
Huslau inlne. The dlsustcr reduces
the Japanese bittleshlp squadron to
live, exclusive of the guard ship ChenYuen, which. Is not on foreign duty.For the loss of the two cruisers therecent purchases from Chile will more
than nnko up; but the Hntsuso Is not
likely to be replaced unless, us, s
doubtful, the Japanese succeed In cap-
turing a ilrst class Kusslnn vessel in-
tact.Until full p'irtlcul.w nnlvc theie will
be n suspicion in the public mind that
the Hntsuse suffered from the at'ftckof ono of tho submarine boats which
the Iluslnns are said to have at Port'
Arthur. It Is Impossible to conniveher In the midst of the Itusslun mine
field, especially since the enhance to
Port Arthur was obstructed. She did
not need to ventuie there for the hake
of bombarding, the usual station for
such purposes being three miles out.
InBhore work Is not a battleship' or-
dinary business. Heading the Hat-suse- 's
misfortune In the light of thecnbled statement that the Russianshave so far dislodged the obstructinghulks as to permit the passage of .small
craft, what more natural to suppose
than that a submarine torpedo boat
was the Instrument of the Japaneseship's sudden doom.
inline the above was written the,I
news came thnt the sinking of the Hatsuse occurred ten miles off Port Ai.liur,with the Russian toipedo llotllla in closeproximity. TJils information Increases
the likelihood that a submarine boatwas used.
The reputation of the battleship hasfallen to a low plane In this war andit is even suggested that the time will
soon come when fighting ships will
abandon nrinor for the same reasonthat fighting men discarded It manyyears ngo. The more prooaDie resuuis, however, that battleships which filestill needed as platfoinis for gieat guns
will be accompanied In notion by acovey of submniine boats, the businessof which will be to engage and givewarning of an enemy of the same class.As the torpedo boat was offset by thetorpedo-bo- at destroyer, so the sub-
marine may be matched or oveicome by
vessels of its own kind.Greater caution-wil- l doubtless be ex-
ercised during the icmalnder of thewar by the Japanese blockading 'ves-
sels. Theie is no telling what may Mp-po- n
yet in the way of foielgn Interfer-ence and Japan needs to husband hernaval resources with the utmost raic.Doubtless, as a menus of. full protcc:ion, etinoullnnry efforts Will he lnadV .
by the nimy lo dlapoSbess Russia of hei
two P.iclllc poits.--t
The Illustrated papers continue to
Impose on their readeis In the matterof war scenes. Harper's Weekly forMay 7 has a two-pag- e plctme labeled
The Japanese In Xoi thorn Korea Ad-
vance of Reenfotcements to Wlju."That picture was taken In January,1S93, and reptesonts a mnich of Jnp-ane- e
hoops and coolleB from the SI g
Promontory, which appeals In thebackgiouud, towuids the walled -- town
of YUng Chlilg. The original has been
In possession of this otllce for years.The London lllustiated News iils'o hasa picture of an alleged maich of Jap-
anese hoops In northern Koren, outunfortunntely It equips them with themiv nl Hag.
1
It seems hardly worth while to seatchthe public Institutions of Hawaii forAlgei lion Shaw. It he had been in anyof them the fact would have conic outduring previous Inquiries. If Shuvv Is
living, the chances are that he will be
found In the Otlent wheie the senLcnid
cities nre lull of men who me hyingto mako the Western wojld foiget them.Austtalla lias also been mentioned asKhnw's possible refuge. Hawaii Is tooHtnnll a place for a man like him,
whose picture has been publlnhed twlco
and whoso story has been told over andover again, to hide nway In. Rvon
criminal, trained to tho utmost wari-
ness, Minis It Impossible to conceal lilin- -
elf hero.
A rnmnilSMlnn lo Kl tnwugli saltleiInln lliiwitll lu tiinii umiuy '"!nuinl wmiM bo wnilli wlill. HutunniiiiiMioii in ni'niiiiln nw nini iinl-- r
Iiixdk fur u tH4rHl' uipiilJihl landwhlvh U uvsiUirdmwi) m will) (lis
senium uf uvriiiil lUSl KlllUK U
liilMtysr mt lbs mm IhlHB lll Ml)
MH Vl U$ MlllMUb
Vtivi is ii us lu ttfcmt Iimhih pirntm t4 inb ifc i'uiim Hif r- -
VUllfS USUI ll''itlMUl fUf iMtllltMttttlm iii Mihouw in rWnsi MVvi.ii'iKilt M " lh 'i 4 Isymut- - ltu((IP" mil 'imJi- kS))lM N
CHINA'S FOREIGN TRADE.
The foreign trade of the Chinese Em-
pire In 1503 surpissed nil previous rec-
ords; the total was 511,000,000 hrtlkwnntnels, or I3lfi,000,000. The nnnunl re-
port of the Inspector-gener- al of cus-
toms for the Chinese Empire, whichhas JUBt been recehed by tho Hureauof Statistics of the Department ofCommerce and Labor, shows that theImports In 1903 were valued at 326,730,-00- 0
halkwan tnels, npd exports athalkwan tnels. At the value of
CI cunts American gold, which Is statedns the average exchange for the year,the equivalent values lire; Imports,
'J20a',113,000, and exports, J137.1S3.000. Ab
compared with former years the totaltrade Is almost exactly double what It
was a decide ago, but only a littlemore than 2 per cent greater than In
1902. Imports exceed those of theprevious year by about 4 per cent,while the total value of exports Is
practically tho same.Harvests In China were abundant
last year and helped to recoup theIosse staim Mood and drought and warIn the years Just preceding. The silkcrop in Mld-Chln- a, however, Is report-ed as a disastrous failure, and affectedadversely the balance of export busi-
ness. Forty years ago half the ex-
ports consisted of silk and silk prod-
ucts, while now this Item Is only 35
per cent of the total. The value ofexports of all kinds of silk, exceptpiece goods, fell from 70.S12.000 halk-
wan taels in 1902 to 62,193,000 halkwantaels in 1903; the expoit value of silknlnnA trnnila Vinu Itifirnnonil Fi""tM
Jnn.nnft Imlkunn tnnla tn 12.006.000.
Tea shows the greatest Increase In ex-
ports. Not only did the quantity In-
crease, but the prices realized arehigher, so that the 1903 export valuewas 20,334,000 halkwan taels ns com-
pared with" 3 1- millions less in thepreceding year. Owing to increaseddemand from America, export of mat-
tings Increased from 2.S09.00P halkwantnels to 4,110,000 halkwan taels
The article of Import In which the!largest Increase is found is opium,
which increased over eight milliontaels, to a value of 43,831,000 halkwantaels In 1903. Metals, Including manu-factuie- s
of lion nnd copper, Increased50 per cent to 15,316,000 taels, and therewere also Imported railway supplies tothe amount of nearly 8,000,000 taels.American kerosene decreased largelyIn quantity, nnd to some extent In
value also; its value Is now nearlyequaled and its quantity Is exceeded by
Sumatran oil, imports of which, in1902, amounted to less than half thevalue of the American product Im-
ported. Imports of Russian kerosenealso nearly doubled. The value of theAmerican kerosene amounted to 6.6S0,-00- 0
tnels, the Russian to 2,332,000, andthe Sumntian to 6,026,000.
Good crops are responsible for thelargcj diminution in rice Imports, which
was less thnn a thlnl of the i902 Im-
portation of 23,000,000 halkwan taels.Foielgn (lour also fell off a milliontaels, or about one-fourt- h, its placebeing taken by the product of recentlyestablished mills grinding Chinese
wheat. Imports of cotton yam In- -
creased, while plain fabrics fell from
015,000 pieces pieces,tay. 82.
from 326,400,000.mnny
jears the
suit will
Col. nowd
43 per cent. It Is stated that now
over cent of cotton goods
aie in that This In- -j
crease the importation yarni
home manufacture from yam is ap
parently one of the causes of the gen
decrease the importation of,
ton Japanese fabrics are the....i.. ., in which.,... Increased Imports .Jltl jtt.i -
are shown. The increase in imposit-
ion of ynrns chlolly from Japan.
It Is up the Jury Commissioners
again. Tho inuicimiMimbrought by Tetrltorlut JmyIs to their neglect to nothing
Theie Is excuse for havingJury CoinmlHslonoia n,,.pomu Infant) themselves in
mlvnnce of the eligibility of tho men
they nirry on llio pioceHsosJUHtlii', Thnt tho inlstitUos they
make n,y ho ,..ml.o,l, I. .... oxi-u- s
TlwmoliinllKotowsmlspnssHw'IV"JmUiiisiit wlili'H slunilil ii)l dim i HI d.lI a ln lmM)nilo,
u.iiai. uhinvniili with a fswnidits fur suls itfMiul sully iltf 0 ittUIHi'i
lilt S 'i nkow, ill MvimUirVMUIttr)' lib tmW m sMWIHi
Mtjii tsiri m i hu jimwMl Ml llt fMB4HHlBH
t"-- " "III) I'UhUlf 4M'lll"H V.,1 PlM
Ii, mmi4 tl.- - D sJSik If! I i '.I'll m MliJ till fid)
LOCAL BREVITIES.
(From Wednesday's Advertiser.)lltshop Restarick has returned tram
a visit to the Island of Hawaii.Present tendency of the local Demo- - Cnuc many bolls-crat- s
Is for Hearst Instruction to Xa- -llonnl Convention delegates. I
n'"1 ot,,cr "tiptloi.s, besides )oS ofThe Federal Government has fun.lsh-- 1 nil"-'H-t. that tired feeliny, fits of bi- l-
ed the olllces of the Governor and the,vviin tne most approveu let-
ter filing cabinets.P. Inukca Is still on the Is-
land of Hnvvali organizing DemocraticIn which It Is reported he claims'
to be meeting with success.Mr. A. 31. Nowell, head bookkeeper
of the Wulalua Agricultural Co., andfamily leave on the B. S. Alameda3Iay 23th for Roston, to be gone untilthe of August.
J. C. Cohen Is quoted as being stilthopeful of a favorable answer from theCalifornia Republican delegation toChicago with regard to taking Ha-wull-
band upon Its Journey.A new by-la- w of the Democratic
party allows any voting resident of nprecinct to become a member of itsparty club, without respect to the pre-cinct which he may be registered tovote.
Lieut. Spencer of the foot policeyesterday. He go to Maul.
He did not go on duty on 3Iondny andthe High Sheriff considered hoviolated his vacation permit whichto have been dated yesterday. TheLieutenant thereupon resigned.
All of the members of the House ofReptesentntives are under subpoena aswitnesses In the trials of Solomon
Enoch Johnson and Jonah e,
to begin with of 3Ieheulatoday, for offenses connected withHouse expenditures last yenr.
Refore the Governor's departuie hewill settle with Secretary Atkinson, usActing Governor in his absenc, thematter of commissions office-holde- rs
expiring before his return. Amongthese officials are Judge P. L. Weaverof the Land Court and Deputy AuditorH. C. Meyers. These will probably bereappointed.
I. Ihllil, who has been Index clerkof the Registry of Conveyances fortwenty-tw- o years, is mentioned for pro-motion to the position of Deputy Reg-istrar In place of C. H. 31errlam, promoted to be Registrar. U. K. Kune,copyist, nnd Lot Kaulukod, book clerk,have had their positions abolished Intlie scheme of retrenchment.
(From Thursday's Advertiser.)The Xntlonnl Guard will probibly go
into camp the regulais at' CampMcKInley next month.
W. II. Hoogs has resigned nsof the Hustace, Peck Co. and will
devote his time to privateThe sugar .agencies in Honolulu are
reported to be planning n, closer com-bination of Inteiests for marketing theentire Island sugar crop.
Letters received from San Franciscojestcrday state'd that Miss KateClatke, a sister of Captain andwell known In Honolulu, was to havebeen mairled on 3Iny 12th a 3Ir.Abell.
The weather record for nndthe Hawaiian Islands for the year 1003
has published In pamphlet form.lecoid was piep.ired by Robt.
Lydecker, Tenitorlal Meteorologist, un-
der the auspices of Hawaii Terri-tory Survey.
Pi of. Albert V. Smith, husband ofMis. 3Iary Roberts Smith, both wellknow n In Honolulu, has resigned hispiofessoishlp at Stanford nnd ncceptedthe post of director of Sibley College ofJlechnnlcnl and Rlectilcal Rnginpjilngut Cornell Univeislty.
Invitations have been issued byPi luce and Piincess Kawanannkoa toattend the christening of their infant. princo D.ivid Knlakaua, at St
1Ionolulu lntel on j,, connection withthe sake cat.es.
jirs. John Guild with her two littlegirls returned ycsteidny on the baikW. U. Flint after nu absence of nearlyn ear spent in California.
Harry Murray, whoso clerkshipthe Public "Works otllce has been nDorlslied, will resume the management ofhis carriage-makin- g uuslness.
High Sheriff Drown left on theInst evening for Lnhnlnn to In-
vestigate alleged Irregularities thepolico department on that Island,
Tho New' York Is tho cruiser uponwnich Cnpt. Rvnus entertained Kai- -
ser William at Kiel somo years ago.She wns iiImi Admlial Sampson'H llng--
' off Santiago.
!''' Commissioner J, V. hasUu,iuthea oveitlue accounts for Go-v-
0IimPnt nmj ,ctns nmnuutlnhj.o,000. Ho will lose no tlino In mnk- -
ug erforla rnko tho Into theIreasuiy,
-,'"'" r" 'n T
V" "".,"' , ,., Honolulu nn Isltcru' ""'" 'fiom llio iimlnliind. mI Ilia lomtl
Itoslnlllto lins not ioosIvdiI Its supplyt His foiivuntrTlis jwllce ars isvwllnit In writ I III
Hl hIiihb His Nnw YmH nnd llsn
jg fuil ,(w Ywh SI)IUIUHlllJ.U i.mu)', mil fi stisli iimn Urn
'VSSWI MUNlHSUasr Mi) ll'li ism
...I XTX:i?JJE&ru lu litfw fife ' ww m- -r ;,,) )SHv(llliil UV ImSI4 llisjfj'i) ISISM' "' H"
10 to 13.S35.000 and Augustine's Chapel, "Walklkl, on Sun-fan-
lecentlon will be heldMny Agoods Increased but slightly;afterwauls at the lesidence.
cotton ynm Increasedpounds to 305,000,000 pounds. For j A omce3 wm be c,osed on
cotton goods sold China . Memorial Day.consisted mainly of. woven fabrics. In Argument of the Pacific Heights In- -
1S7" the Import of ynrns constituted junction take place before
only C per cent of the total cotton .'JudBo Robinson today.Thomas Fitch is located ati... i.! ....,!. It wnsgoods imported, Ca, but vlslt
50 per themade country.
in of andof
eral in cot- -
cloths.
was
tofnlluro or
tlie Guindduo and
e.so. nounless mko
pains to
ihoono toof
Iklttls
UttUI UIMIHSf
0m4U
iNWsir mm
H
Curtis
clubs,
middle
the
In
may
hadwas
that
of
with
mana-ger
Interests.
Clarke
to
Honolulu
beenThe C.
the
In
in
VinXt
to inonuy
Am
HlHIIII'l
fl
"'
to
)jl I Hll'UI"H I VUllHf I" II" I lit NI" 'i t 'ii Hii nt i I I'll li lvl I ilU
iir l iMtll'i i t, in!' ii'v tfi 4 ( '" M" s ' M" "4 it I ill l l'"4 InA . llli- I ISI'.H '
III I I I' .! i it- C ' I SH'Ii ' , s i i ll I ) I I I
. , t i i i ' I ,1 l is' I ' ' Jlt f.t 1 iii,.i t Wl fulli I l f ' I ' J i4 I lt"'
I I V II I 1 i Wlkil f TJ, p l ti' ll'lil I
I I 7 b ki. it ft i ' j ift , i i i J.
Humorsof the Blood
troti!iii,-ilim- ile.
loitsilpm, tlidigestluii nnd headache.Tho sooner ono j;uH rid of them tho
butter, and tho way to yet rid of thcnnnnd to lutlltl tip the system thnt hassnffiMi-t- l fiom them Is to tnko
Hood's Sarsaparillaand Pills
Forming lu combination tho mosteffective nllcrath o nnd tonic medicine,as shown by uncqunlcd, tadical and.permanent cities ofScrofula Salt RhoumPsoriasis Bolls, PlmplosrAll kinds of Humor RhoumatlsmBlood Poisoning DyspopslaCatarrh Doblllty, Etc.
Accept no substitute, but bo sure toget Hood. nnd get it today.
BUSINESS CAKDS.H. HACKFELD & CO, LTD. Geners
Commission Agents, Queen St., Honlulu, H. I. ,
P. A. SCHAEFETt & CO. Importers)and Commission Merchants, Honolwlu, Hawaiian Islands.
LEWERS & COOKE. (Robert lowers,.PV J. Lowrey, C. M. Cooke.) Importera and dealers In lumber and buildIng materials. Office, 414 Fort 8t.
HONOLULU IRON WORKS CO. Ma-chinery of every descritlon mads ts)order.
HONOLULU STOCK EXCHANGE.
Honolulu, 3Iny 10, lt'04.
NAMEOFBTOCK, Capital. Val. Bid. Alt
Mercantile.C. Brewer & Co. -- . ,000 000 loo 'bts--
Buqir.
Ewa 5,000,000 19Uaw.Aericultural.... 1,200,100Haw. Com. ti Sugar Co. 2.312.TS0 45 soiiawniiau sugar uo . 2000 000 20..llonomu 750 000 IcO..Ilonokaa 2,000,000 ilHaiku 600,000Kahultu 500.000 'l8Kihellian. Co., Ltd.. 2,SO0,00OKlpahulu 160,000Koloa 600 000McBryde8ugC0.,Ltd. 8,500,000 3uauu sugar co., 3,X)000 85Onomca 1,000 000Ookala &00,000Olaa Sugar Co., Ltd... 5,000,000Ulowalu .... 150,0001'aauliuu SugPlanCo. 5 000,000Pacific 500,000Pala 750 000Popcekco 750,000 140Pioneer 2,750,000VVaialua Agri. Co 4,500,000 35 "40Wailuku 700,000Walmanalo 252,000
Steamship Cos,
Wilder S S. C. BOO 000 120Inter Island 8. 3. Co.. 600,000 97
Miscellaneous.Haw. Electric Co 500,000n. It. 'a. A L. Co., Pd 100H. H. 1 . & h Co., O . i,'666,'obo 80Mutual 'I el. Co 150,000O. R. & L.Co 4,000,000HUoit. 11. Co 1,1.00,000
Bonds.
Haw. Gov't.. 5 p. c. 99Haw. ler.,4p. c.(tire
uiaimKj., .. 93HIloK. H. Cu.,8p c.Hon. K I'. .t I,. Co.,
B P. c. . . 104Ewa Plant., 6 p. c...O K. A L.Co 104KOahu buirar Co.. 6 n. c,Olaa Sugar Co , 6 p. c.waiaiuaag kU.itpc 100'KaliukuBp cPioneer Mill Co. 6 p c.
METEOROLOGICAL RECORD.
By the Government Survey, Publishes-Ever-
Monday.
B4KOM. THERM. O
. g
5-- a a s 11
' i f "i I iH 7 30.07 30.00 71 BO .06 70 -5 Us 1
S SSO.M'iO.Sb B9 80 1274 16 NK 1- -0
M VJ.W29 92 6 81 ,C0 7i'l I .T J0J9.P9 2J.V4 f3 80 O0 7SO-- 4 .. 0
W II JO.0i,V9.93 61 H .00 71 t NK 1
t i2 8n.oi 2.ta 2 eo .i06ii he aY 13 30 .0J .9.) 6 70 8i .00,69 1 i 0
I UNC-NN- E. " SW-NN- E.
Barometer corrected to 32 T. and se
level, nnd for standard gravity of Lat.4S. This rorreotlon Is 4W for Honolulu.
TIDES, SUN AND MOON.
a I o !o a
iuh: ft? k i.ift : b 5 s : 5 aa ' a m M -i
Kt. .m a.ia in Beti.in
p.4.19
in2,n 4 00 u.ao 11,40 5.716.31 8.01
'17 &.VI 2,0 4,4) 10. 1U a.vi a.ail 8,67u in
IB 1) (6 1 P 5 II lo.n 0,31 .' U3 9.(31'J, 0,&5 1 8, U,9S u. i; I.a 5,20.14 10.45
i.in20j 1,51 1 7i 1 M i Ml S,!Ort,li'll,37
;i b 51 1.5, V.'ii AU
VJ . ' lO.ltt i.n Id i. ,19,04 0,V4
ti 11.01 11,10 4,W 6 51 ,iH, I.U
tiMMlor of lliu ii)in Mny 8l"i.
Tliiifs of IIib tl)l ll",l fm "'Ulillii HIU Ooi ' 0oilotl9 ttr
y (shlfs,'JIIS IIH ' MSHWI'M "" """ "
'Dbmit our Nur Nillvr l""t ! Hon
iulHKllitt iHM'HN Hm l I )io
Uuii Hems' (list m Ills lilsildWH vi irjJljEfV! liilrl) iwui TMIlwtplfljfi mh WIliyjjiwiIHlH'
ut i is Ik ui yimmMHatr r-- rrT WW Bid (W Jtl IIIM4
htli) i) I, I'll I 4 i
I , I 4 , 4 il Jm ! ii , , i i..I,, , i
TERRITORY'S
CASE FAILS
Testa Indictment Is
ConfessedNullity.
P. J. Testa was dlschargwl by JudgeDo Bolt yesterday mornlr.g, the mo-
tion to quash Tils Indictment forcriminal libel having been granted.Deputy Attorney General Peters, whenthe motion came up for nrgument,stated that the TTltory confessedthe part of the pfea In abatementwhich, relftled to Grand Juror Ed-
wards. Tte court ait once granted thesprayer 'Ot the mtftlon and ordered thedefendant dlschM'geil.
Attorneys Stevnrt and Long chal-
lenged Uie rlgfct of the present grandJury to bring tiny Indictment againstthe 'dtVendnnt.
Mr. Peters said he did not confess:nll 'of the rfilegntlons In the plea asto TJdwar'ds.
Judge De Bolt remarked that he'could not e any right the defendantmight hnve at thnt time.
Solomon Meheula's trial for grosscheat, alleged to have been committednvhlle he was clerk of the House of'Representatives last year, was ngaln'postponed yesterday morning. TheeauseUhls time was the fact that only13 qualified jurors were In attendance.Attorney General. Andrews, who
for the Territory, expressed awillingness to proceed to trial with
'the twelve men whose names shouldfirst be drawn. C W, -- Ashford, lor
'the defendant, would not so have IJ.As talesmen then reculred to be sum-
moned. Judge De Bolt continued thecase until Monday.'Meantime Mr. Ashford has signified
his Intention to nttatk the Indictment,'the discovery having been made thatHenry Hlciey.was a member of the
jgrand Jury at last term. He la one5f the grand jurors of the presentterm vliose light to sit was called
lln question in the Testa case on ac-
count of his once having pleadedrgullty to tbi charge or opium In pos-
session and been fined $230 and coststherefor.
Legal opinion appears to be dividedon the question of whether a defend-ant who has pleaded to an 'Indictmentcan afterward move to have the In-
dictment qua-she- d.
There 1s also some discussion of thequestion of whether defendants con-
victed find Imprisoned 'under Indict-ments presented by tin Illegally con-
stituted grand jury cannot "be llbernted on linbea-- corpus proceedings. AJudicial nnswer In the nflirmatlvswould set at large some of tho tough-est criminals ver sentenced In Ha-waii.
QUESTION OF COSTS.Isaac Noar, who woit his appeal to
the Supreme Court Ir. the partitionsuit brought against hlni by Lee Chewand others, now appeals from a ruling l
by Judos Iloblnson In which the ex-
penditure of $29.f3 for a transcript ofevidence wns refused to be taxtd ascosts. The ground of refusal was thatithe statute did not provide that suchexpenditures may be recouped In theform of nnHessmerit ns costs in equitysuits at chambers. In mnjclng an or-
der permitting the appeal, Judge Tto- -'blnson says that the points and ques-tions Involved In the statement of ip- -peai appear to be tJt such Importanceto the court and the profesblon as torender desirable an early declsiwnthereon by the Supreme Court.
DREDGING CASE APPEAL.H. Hackfeld & Co., Ltd., by its at-
torneys, Kinney, TcClannhan &Cooixr, has filed Its bill of exceptionsto Judge De Bolt's relusal of a newtrial of Clark &. Henerys BUlt againstItself and Castle & Cooke, Ltd. The1)111 takes In Judjo De Holt's decisionand his various rulings on tho caseleading up thereto. .Among thegrounds tnken to the Suwemo Courtare the following:
No proof that plaintiffs. In tho ex-
ecution of or entering Into, their con-
tract, relied upon the promlfro of de-
fendant.No proof of benefit to H, Huckfi'hl
& Co. from tho dredging of Pearllliulior chunuul by plaintiffs, conse-quently no iMinnldi)rutloii shown fornnlntl!tin!tiit priuulsu of ilL'tVmliint.
No proof nf Mioh Independent pro-min- t)
lit) tllmlmsulnlit'il ft mn tlml of Itspiliii-lpiil-
, tho Onhii Hugnr Co,I'luliillfTn Iiiivm not plmwu IhutJ'imil
Jliirtmr In mum In emiiiiiwroii,I'litliilirfti nr.t mil tho iiMl purl Inn In
Inlwimt, IhivIhk mmIkiimI Ihwlr iIkIHto thw uiuiittv tnjml fwr In Uulloii lru,t fa,
rmitiuct wan a nmm an uf mmiiiii'ly Mini iml mi Iim)wiii)vi)I JD'uiiiIm,
N.I ivlil.ijm liul iililllT ('Willllu iiffur uf iJifmulMH
N.i uwihuim lit iIium Hwi IUuK- -
mi h ". ,iu, i miuum lUaiI 14411 lUilitil' mujw (4 miMHD$ Ufihul II tkiit vVlN' MMitfta) lUl IW
"H. I" lt dutt Itt l)ii)tlitf ftMik)
I'm I iL fJi.l Mi M.fcMl t) '
iu u I)" f vMkit tbitii'Hi in Unit 'rj Ji'1 . i i i i !
1
y
of
General sanitary and health condi-
tions throughout the Territory werefavorable In April, nccordlng to thereports of Government physicians tab-
ulated by Registrar Lawrence. In-
fluenza nnd the grip were reported,one or the ether, bV seven doctors nsmalndtes unusually prevalent. Thosereporting the grip were Dr. B. F. San-do- w
of Wnlmea, Kauai, nnd Dr. C.A. Peterson of Koolaulo. nnd Koolnu- -poko, unnu; while Influenza wns re-
ported by Dr. T. McMillan of Wala-nn- e,
Oahu; Dr. H. Wood of Walalun,Oahu; Dr. A. Mourltz of Leeward Mo-lok-
Dr. E. S. Goodhue of North Ko-n- a,
Hi wall, and Dr. R. G. Curtis ofOlaa, Hawaii, who also Is the onlyone reporting typhoid as "unusuallyprevalent with IB cases.
Whooping cough was reported asunusually prevalent by Dr. J. Molonyof Lahalna, Maul, with 30 cases; Dr-I-
F. McConkey or Makawao, Maul-D- r.
R. J. McGcttlgan of Hann, lu-ll, nnd Dr. B. D. Bond of North Ko-lial- a.
Dysentery or diarrhoea Is reportedby Dr. R. J. Wilkinson 'of Llhue, .Ka-ua- l,
.and Dr. McGettlgtn of liana, asprevalent and from one to three casesby several otiiers.
Dr. F. L. Putninn of Kealla and Hn-nal-
Kauai, mentions beriberi; Dr.C. A. Davis of Ewo, Oahu,
and Dr. McConkey of Maka-wao, rheumatism, as prevalent.
Those hfvlng no idlsen.se unr-sunll-
prevalent to report were Dr. C. R.McLean of Koloa, Kauai; Dr. J, Wed- -dick of Wailuku, Maul; Dr. J. Atcher- -ey of South Kohnln, Hawaii; 'Dr. E.
S. Goodhue of South Kona, Hawaii;Dr. F. Irwin of North Hllo. Hawaii:Dr. C. X.. Stow of South Hilo, Dr. J.Holland of Puna, Hawaii, and Dr. S.McCarthy of Kan, Hawnll. There werefrom I to 5 cases in" typhoid, however.In South Kona, Kau, South Hllo andNorth Hllo, while Lahalna had 12
cases or this fever.Dr. H. Wood of Watalua Is the only
physician having any recommenda-tion to make, Which he 'does as fol-
lows:"One or more 'lots near R. "R. Sta-
tion should be drained. The naturaloutlet Is across 'line of Governmentroad and owner, represented by At-torney C. W. Ashford, hns refused tobear expenses. (This wns one yearago.) The conditions nre bad and sev-
eral residents have spoken to me aj,bout tho drainage"."
Every one of tho 0 physicians an-
swering the question in that regardsays that tuberculosa Is not increas-ing In Ills district. -
AN AMERICAN EDITOR, Mr. John"E. Codk, publisher of the Iianner- -.Stockman, of Clnrendon, Texas, U. S.A., in a letter regarding Chamberlain'sColic, Cholera and Dlatrhoea Remedy,f.ays: "On one occasion I am sure Itsaved my life, curing mo of a verybad attaclc of cramp colic." This rem-edy meets with the same succrna Inthis country as In America and neVHrfails to give relief. For sale by alldealers anil druggists, Benson, Smith& Co., Agents for Hawaii.
f--Ewa Plantation Co. will redevin
$100,000 of Tts bonds on July 1, thesaiiwj amount as wns redeemed lastyear... .e.). ... - . . --efrom any HnKlllty under Its contract..
MRS. WRIGHT WILX,.Henrjr Holmcfi petitions for anclllnry
letters of administration with Uie willannexed upon the estate of ElizabethWright, wife of Thomas Wright ofStalndrop, County of Durham, England, who died nt Nuwcntle-on-Tyn- e,
England, about Mny 10, 18W, possessedof renl and pergonal estate In the Territory of Hawaii, viz.: Pour hotibolots nt Knlmukl, Honolulu, valued tJ1200; 2L shares of thu capital stoekof Oahu Sugar Co., Ltd,, uil depositIn Bishop & Co.'h savings bank val-ued at J2C03.TC. 1'utltlouer flies n pow-er of nttorlioy to himself from Tlio-inn- H
Appleuiirth nnd Juno Campbo-1- ,
brother uniH sister of tho testatrix, lonot for tlioin In tho premises, llioylining ltr oxeciitniH In Kuglnnd, Mr'.WilKlit Koiiminihii vnilnus nf hor per-oih- iI
uflVolH to her slulem nnd nti".Jut Oahu fliignr Co, nloolc tn hr Iiiim.IiiiihI iluilng hi llfn mill nt IiIh
Id ho sold, tngt'thnr Willi HitIiiim) lit Knlmukl, nm) tho iuoohaIhcqiinlly illvl0il iiinnnHNl tier llir"lii'iilheiit iiml ihriHi nlnlum, lli prln-rlp- ul
ami IiiIdidbI in Jilhun & 'Hi, rhmiH In Mm li mil 1tM s U), OiilmDuiivHi. llunuhihi, an iii Mm UmmIIIiImwiiiI wvIiik Iwuk a aim ymfo
8H lu JOHN ItllllmiH, Hilt) I llu Ujain iii in mum wvwhuy la f;,r
lHri iWHI
Urn UHMU UMta l,,l'l4.ii liici (14)J I) f VmitUt i
Mlll4 Jvl4lll f III MHI MiJ
tUli if ui ii . n4 Ill4l iltillulii) IUiwhII niii'oif J'liy fhi l't41 t t : l HI' I' lM lii i il i m j m , .. 1 n ii I,
t- J Hi, iU,.f Ir ttr it.
HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, FRIDAY, MAY 20,
APRIL HOT MATTER FROM HAWAII YOUNGEST WOULD PLAY
UNHEALTHY FOR GREAT CAMPAIGN ATTOBHEY
Reports GovernmentPhysicians Mostly
Favorable.
Narrations of Progress of Islands Under the Stars
and Stripes for Use of the Republican
Orators and Writers.
By direction of Governor Carter, a yiass of carefully digestedinformation upon the condition of Hawaii since annexation goes for-
ward to Washington in the Siberia's mail tomorrow'. .Most of thework has been done in the office of the Secretary of the Territory.
All of the data is intended for ttse in the Republican presidentialcampaign. The request for the material came from Win. J. Loeb,Jr., secretary to the President. Former Secretary Cortclyou in theprevious campaign sent a similar request here with regard to theperiod then elapsed after the acquisition of the Hawaiian Islands bythe United States. The facts and figures now supplied will bespread broadaist in pamphlets, reproduced in thousands of newspa-pers and served out iij oratorical tidbits from the stump.
In the matter going forward to Secretary Loeb there arc chap-
ters and subdivisions on the following topics:Commerce ot Hawaii.Treasury Department. Expenditures on public works. Public
health outlay. Insurance business. v
Education in Hawaii.Public Lands.Land Registration Court. ;
Forestry. Agriculture. Entomology.Survey Department.E. A. Mott-Smit- h contributed the chapter on commerce, on
behalf of the Chamber of Commerce.An article on the Sugar Industry is expected before mail closing
from W. O. Smith, for the Hawaiian Sugar Planters' Association.In the period of a little more than six years since annexation
the sum of about six and a quarter million dollars has been expendedon priblic works in these islands.
No less than $2,332,000 has been spent in the same lime uponprotection of the public hcaltlf in Hawaii.
For the past year there have been policies of insurance fire,life and marine written in this Territory covering almost theamount of $20,ooo",ooo.
THE GOVERNOR APPOINTSTHE COUNTY COMMISSION
HENRY E. COOPER, Chairman;CLARENCE L. CRABBE,FRED. W. BECKLEY,E. M. WATSON,T. McCANTS STEWART.These are the members of the County Act Commission, who
yesterday afternoon received their individual commissions fromGovernor Carter. The authority for appointing the Commission iscontained in a joint resolution of the Legislature at the recent spe-cial session, which reads as lollow.s :
""Whereas, The Legislature of the Territory of Hawaii has beenconvened in special session to consider the serious financial conditionof the Government ; and "
"Whereas, The people of the Territory have expressed them-selves in favor of county government;. therefore
"Be It Resolved, That a Commission of five be appointed by theGovernor to draft a County Act, the members thereof to serve with-out p&y. And .that such Act so prepared and such expenses as maybe incurred by them, with the approval of the Governor, be submit-ted to the next regular session of the Legislature."
FAMOUS EXPLORER WILL
VJSIT ISLAND MOUNTAINS
John iMuir, tie famous geologist, author and explorer, is a pas-seng- ei
on the Siberia from the. Orient today and will .remain in theislands for two or three weeks. While here lie will probably ex-
plore the various snounlains of tin' group, for mountain climbinglias been his chief work since boyhood. Although now sixty-si- x
jears old IMuir is still as enthusiastic a mountain climber as ever,smd hcwillcvery likely rezch the summit JLIalealcala,Kea Mauna Loa before leaving Uie islands.
iMuir is even now returning from a tour of exploration whichincluded the forests of Siberia Manchuria, extending later intoJava the Philippines.
Muir's famt; rests chicfiy on his exploration of the Siena moun-
tains Alaskn. He also visited the mountains of NorwaySwitzerland, and has written about many of his trips. Much of hisfame rests upon his work as an author. Muir Glacier, in Alaska,was named after him.
0
THE JOME RULERS
Tim IIoiiim lliiln I'XoiHit' uiiiiiiuii.'
tailed In M"l 11 ti til n i"'ii"iiiihWIhk ywilwilwy lw"H4 m mImio'iilIviNlllMII HUM lllll l"H Tll MH11I
up Mf llw In ewUJ i In tlux tuiIII llllir llMtl KMMLur MlituMliilIMIN flWH hiiiUl Hit mHlnluliuw h ItV ri l MwuiiiK mii
ibtti itttug Mbrr iVi'ii mm h unttttt tv lb lpl ii"iHli in" ll'"illinium In 4ll "! H MM ldiiMull lU MllMliilM ." II I'l I ' 'III:'I UlH MB I H I ('I'll"
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andand
and and
wiiy
ENTITLED TO
L CADET
II.H.iH li. iiilllli'l li aiiiilliir iiulutlit M"iHM.M HllI'M n t Icllfl !
iml.iI )iwi4liiy Ifliilll lllll Ul'l'l'i.vtli i Iiiim I III ll'IA'lll 11 ilunUIIVxui iiiti imvii .I'rt'liinn l.niiilii wyiHill Ml lllv I WllllMIl'll VlUll WliJnull III Ntm "l mV'KI' UN ffKUlliMHl
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I'l I li' tfclllJ I I I 'I ,1 I
Senator Dickey Admitted an Attorney at
Age of 61.
Clmrlea Henry Dickey wns ycntcrilnymlmlttcd to tho bar ot tho SupremeCourt of the Tenltory, tnkliiK the onthof an attorney before Chief JusticeFrenr.
This most Junior member of the Ter-
ritorial bnr Is the Senatorfrom JInul lu tho Legislature, the present Post Commaniler of Geo. W. DoLong Post, G. A. It., anil futher ot LyleA. Dickey, attorney anil lately DistrictMagistrate of Honolulu. Ills certificates of character are from V. A.Schaefer nnd W. W. Hall, merchants,who testify to favorably knowing theapplicant for thirty years pust. Sena-
tor Dickey's application for admissionto the bur reads as follows:
"Supreme Court ot thu Teirltory otHawaii, October Term, 1903.
"In re application ot Charles HenryDickey for admission to thu bar ot theSupreme Court of tho Tenltory.
"Application. .
"To the Honorable Supremo Court otthe Tenltory of Hawaii:
"I would icspeetfully petition forto the b.ir of your honomble
court and for n license to practice Inall tho courts of iccoid In the Terri-tory.
"Aly age Is sKty-on- e. I was born atOttawa, Illinois. 1 am an American.Jly lesldence Is Haiku, M11UI, Territoryot Hawaii.
"I studied law for over three enisIn tho olllco ot my father, T. I,yleDickey, afterwaid Supieme Judge otIllinois, and In tho olltccs of Hon. M.11. M. Wallace of Chicago and or Win.Itedding of Morris, but did not applyfor admission to tho bar then, l'orthe past tluce yeais 1 have been
my legal knowledge by takingtho couiso of the Sprnguu Correspond-ence School ot Law of Dotioit, Michi-gan. I have not completed thu entirecourse but expect to do so.
"I Inlng herewith certlllcntes ot mygood moral clmracter.
"Respectfully,"GHAHLRS HHNHY DICK13V."
NAVAL MENMUST ACT
Alleged Thief Turned
Over For CourtMartial.
T. Bedell, machinists' yocman on tho
cruiser New York, was anested by
Detective McDulllo yesteulay for rob-
bing a Hhlpmate. He will be turnedover to tho naval olllcers to bo courtmartlnled ns High Shot Iff Hrown doesnot want to have thu man bound overto the grand Jury, and when tho casecomes up for trial to llnd his. wit-
nesses from oft the New York missing.lledell was nnested by Detective
McDulllo ye.stculny and lu said to haveoffeied the oillcer a bilbe of fifty dol-
lars for his release whch was accept-ed, and tho man put Into a cell, He-de- ll
Is accused ot having taken $390
In cash fiom Chief Yeoman liutler. towhom the money hail been entrustedby various sailors. A twenty-fiv- e
dollar oheck wns also missing but Ilo-de- ll
told where this was, although hoJlenled taking tho money, lledell wnssearched at thu station and $101.75
found In one of his shoes. Ho claimed to have won It In shooting craps.Thu pollcu found upon Investigationthnt lledell had been having a glori-ous tlmo whllo ashore. Ho orderedtwo suits ot civilian clothes midclmmp.igiiu llowed whuiuver ho went.Ho iniiilu pruKuntH to vailnus sailorfrlnmlH, mid spout IiIh money freely.
"- f-Troaaury Warrants Payable,
TnuiHiirnr A. J, CiiihiImiI kIvhh no- -(li'u hi thin I sum, Hun iuhImiiii-iji- Turn.my wniiniiu mini N. looa to ISO I,
Ini'limlvv, mil In fwiii) Ht'tli Tuiumiryiiliuii piunwiilullnn, ,n thu lntMl nfwiiiiniln in m smhm mi llilu ixjuHull In IM, IW IimimI tU'i)UlUuii ufiiiMii uuiia bj iw uummmUv vu.IWwiikJ rue the n' u irtitjv
hamiif tar vi UiUfiri.4ilillM Nllihb'b Mllll 14WIHIinilr tmM tt vi.u in I'til UiiiMT u
Mil- UVIU'il xi'i'4 I1.1 llim JMirjMW nf! n mil rMti4 Uhmiil mi i t4unttri' iii I141I nm-- i Imih iitmi'
illMi Unit , (I ult iii 4iiin' In, It.MW
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"Mm Ul'41. If 41 Mill
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T
Baseball League Holds
Regular Weekly
Meeting.
The baseball league at Ha meeting;yesterday deferred action on a requestfor tho use ot the grounds on Decora-
tion Day by a nlno from the cruiserNow York. "IJob" White had arranged for a game between a picked nine
from tho clly and the New York team,
but tho baseball trustees anil theleague did not seem to view that mat-
ter favorably, although tho game wasto bo for tho benellt of any local
charity which the trustees mightname. President Isonbcrg stated at.the meeting that the request for theuse ot the grounds hadn't been proper-
ly presented, and ho seemed to resent1
tho way In which the trustees hadbeen treated. J. O. Carter Jr., wns
against any playing on DecorationDay, saying that the teams hadbeen criticised a year ago for playingon thnt day, and ho thought also thata poor game might spoil tho season,
for tho league.
Mr. White stated that ho had been
nnxlous to arrange some sport for thelh-e-t and as the game could not be
played on Sundny and Decoration Daywas open, ho suggested that dny. The
local team was to bo of picked men,
nnd tho New York nlno would also In-
clude Bcvnrnl men from tho Marines.On motion of F. H. Thompson actionon the matter was postponed for oneweek In order that a definite proposi-
tion might bo submitted.I,ORT IlAIil.S EXPENSIVE.
President Isenberg reported that hehad paid out $5.75 for balls returnedby boys nt Saturday's game. Theleague Is paying twenty-fiv- e centsnplcco for each ball brought In, nndsmall boys nro reaping a harvest. Pre-
viously they carried oft tho balls whichcost tho league fifteen dollars a dozen.Tho first Sntmdny, seventeen ballswere lost, and tho second Saturdaythirteen balls failed to come back overthu fence, so thnt tho league Is gettingoff cheaply when tho balls returnedcost only $5,75.
WILIi HEGIN AS USUAT,.r
President Isenberg nlso called atten-tion to tho expressed wish that thogames should be called Hfteen minutesearlier, or at 1:30 every Saturday. Mr.Carter thought that tho present timewould bo sulllclently early pro-
vided the games were not allowed todrag. Ho slid that each captainshould have his men ready to go to
bat without hunting nil over thogrounds for a suitable stick. Ho sug- -
gested nlso that players should not de-
lay the game by walking after foulbulls nnd thought It this plan wqsndojitPd tho games' would be finishedIn much less time. It was decided toadopt his suggestion and the games
will bo cnlled ns usual at 1:15 o'clockfor the present.
The drawing for practice nightsnext week losulted ns follows: Mon-
day, Punnhous; Tuesday, II. A. C.s;AVednesday, Malles; Thursday, Knmc-hnmeh-
nnd Frldny, thu ElUs.-- .4..
JUSTICE GUARDED
WITH IRON CHAINS
At tho beginning of tho April termof the Fi'doral court, Judge Dolu hadhempen hawsers stiulchcd across thodilvuwny passing umlur tho courtioomwindows, This was lo'slnii (ho tiullloof iliityH iiml uhiId on (hut roiili, tiniiolHti nf wliluh hiiilly liiliiiiiii'i unitpiui'iMHlliiyij, Nnw llui loimn iiii hci'iiNIllMllllllail Willi HUlVmilimil linn ill 11 1
lmiiiMl 111 inwu mi tfiiimr .Mi'II In tt wwnlur Iiml lli uiiiliiuHi. 4
llvu.itn MWff ttu iiublblUul lh liinuuii-- r uuiiaiMM 4tii iii- -i
J4tlUlttlil ulruvi. riiiiii Ininif w.i'l f"iMil bill lUhlitl III "I i lulw ) .11
tk n wiiii' 1.,, .Lu in 1.1 nmPry"- - .lUilNv il i 4 ..Mi if ui,".S4 IL JUII l) .4111111111 .)i... i
lHi ilti4ln 11 .III .in MjI.iImIiI 'i.Ml Will" ll Hilt illll ' in
i't i'l) "H til VV
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6 .....
COHEN IS
DISCHARGED
Judge Lindsay Could
Find No Guilt
In Him.
(From Thursday's Advertiser.)Police Judge Lindsay yesterday found
J. C. Cohen, manager or the Orpheum,not guilty of the charge of assaultinga police ofllcer, and discharged himafter making some caustic remarksconcerning the conduct of tho policeofficers who nttended the performanceat the Orpheum last Saturday night.
At the conclusion of the testimonygiven by Manager Cohen, Judge Lind-say announced that arguments ofcounsel would be useless as he hadalready made up his mind as to whatopinion he would give. AttorneyRobertson for Mr. Cohen looked at thejudge for Just an Instant and then re-
marked with a smile that the "defensedeclines to waste any of tho Court'stime trying to change his mind." HighSheriff Brown said also with a smile,"the prosecution can't hope to."
The Judge stated that It was his be-
lief the police had not acted right intrying to force their way Into theOrpheum In the manner testified to.He felt that If the police had appliedto the management In a decent man-ner the manager would have grantedpermission for them to enter buildingwithout dllllculty. "I do not believethe police acted decently In the mat-ter. Qf course the police have lightsand their duty, but Mr. Cohen alsohas some rights which .should berespected. If there was any assaultat nil on Cohen's part, and I verystrongly doubt there was, it was atthe most a technical one. I find thedefendant not guilty and dischargehim."
The most Important witness on thostand at the examination yesterdaymorning wbb Manager Cohen himself.He told of the order he had given tothe doorkeepers to admit only policeofficers in uniform, but to refer plainclothes men to him at the box olllce,where he would give them tickets. Atthe same time he wished to take downtheir badge numbers and present thelist to the High Sheriff the next dayto ascertain whether or not they hadbeen sent to the Orpheum on duty.
He was sent for and went to thegallery door where he found Leslie whoasked that the men In plain clothesbe allowed to enter. Cohen askedwhether they were detailed for dutyand Leslie replied that he ordered themto come In. Cohen objected and thensaid that they would have to go overhis body before he would let thementer. He put hla arms ncross theentrance and two or three officerspushed him back. Ho regained hisformer position and was then pulleddown by the officers directly In frontof him and the whole bunch fell downthe steps.
He stnted that ho received two blowson his forehead from somebody's fists,and that at the bottom he was kickedthree times In the chest. He called outto the officers to stop kicking him.Then hands were laid on him and hewas brought to his feet, one ofllcerholding to him by the neck. He wasdragged to Fort street and then to thecorner where the patrol wagon wasrung up. He asked to go In a hack,several having driven up and friendsoffered to take hhn with them to thostation. He said Lieut. Leslie wouldnot permit him to ride In a hack.Cohen said there were to his knowledgeabout twelve officers attending theshow. He was asked who had lilt hltn.
"I don't know, but I would like toknow," he replied with a hard glancent a row of officers.
Cohen said he was always willing toallow officers In the theater in uniform,and It others came on the direct or-
ders he would extend the same priv-ilege. It was a matter of courte3y tothe officers, but he felt that on thisoccasion the privilege had been ubused.
H
L L
IS T
To Participate in Debut
of Oklahoma City
at St, Louis,
OMaliiimtt llirouKli Ik iiuiruitIU, Ok-M-
ina 1 iiy, ml ir iintr TumtoryI lUwtiii, iliuujili lr iihiIiujimHi, a
or ut I11I ui l u rffiuUuN tt 1U1 It,I u I' lIUill III IHMiWsillou willi 1 IUikJuIu w IUl Uutliiim, VM)i, )'i'iiii tmrllrm 4vflliU0wi 11 i4 i IUwu 'rii4uttwM fnwiini 111.
intl hi1 .! I'.
I .... f. I'
l lotting n )Uf lMI I.M It Mlt( Wllllk
. Iij ..Ull II' " l IM t lH I
I l .lil i. iV I I
I. , ii
HAWAiwvN 1 FRIDAY, SEMI-WEEKL- Y.
"" ' t T ' T
NhW YORK'S THREE MOST
A MANSION FROM WHICH WASHINGTON DIRECTED A BATTLE, THE INN WHERE HE HISADDRESS, AND THE CHURCH WHICH HE ATTENDED. T
Ayi BHon P kiv ' k. HA ' if 7 Sr t 4l
sK 0V"MIhMJkZEi PBHE2 D r ?xTfl HMtX (. 2 IHMHAHJfHflLf
JsMMsUrOl X ?rvl 1 JfiVjffi'V 'TpJWPPIJPWBIl C Jj HP(BIE
m-.- -- , - l -. . ., TFRAUNCF.'S TAVERN. WHERE OCCURRED WASHINGTON'S
MEMORA11LE FAREWELL TO THE OFFICERS OF HISARMY.
fi,f,i,.nf.m,i,i.f.i.fi.fi.44.f.fi.4.iifnifiii)ii t f "ft f " t " t "
for September 5, and the'motive ,1 ceje-lirnti-
in the world'1; eye oftlic attain-ment of the asc of "sycct sixteen" thisyear of the Oklahoma metropolis. With-in its sixteen years, the city lias grown,as Mr. Rockwell says, "from a scatteringtent town of tlic wild plains to a citywith thirty-fiv- e thousand busy, prosper-ous inhabitants, having sixteen miles ofpaved streets, twenty miles of streetrailway, churches of all denominations,public schools and colleges, in fact, athoroughly equipped city."
President Roosevelt is announced todelier an address on Oklahoma CityDay, and tue city "will make her debutinto the socictv of the sisterhood ofcities of the Republic" represented bya "beautiful young ladv. Miss MiriamRichardson," who 011 the city's behalf"will receive, and he assisted by maidsof honor from many of the importantcities of the United States, also fromabroad."
Cities in every quarter of the globehave been invited to participate in the"City of Sweet Sixtecu's" debut. Ho-nolulu's bid is couched in thelanguage :
"If we could receive a few wordsof greetings from 'Our Neighbor inthcIsles, we would appreciate it most high-ly. This would not only complete ourprogram in a most magnificent manner,but would be hailed and applauded bythousands of voices, who arc lookingforth to this occasion as one of the mostunique and impressive ceremonies at thegreat World's Fair.
' I he Indies' Committee will arrangeto have a beautiful young lady to act assponsor for your city, when hearing fromyou that the greetings are forthcoming."
Chances are that Honolulu will haveseveral beautiful young daughters of herown at the Exposition on September S,each quite capable of gracefully acquit-ting herself as a maid of honor to "SweetSixteen's" debutante, while also accom-plished enough to say "Aloha" in severallanguages.
Taft Under Knife.WASHINGTON, May n. Dr. W.
II. Richardson performed an operationy on Secretary Taft for the remov-
al of a growth resulting from tonsilitis.The knife was ued on the Secretary'snose and the pain was acule, resultingin violent inflammation. To-nig- Sec-
retary Taft'b temperature is io., but heis resting comfortably and has everyprospect of a speedy recoery.
The Secretary planned lo go to Sar-ana- c,
N. Y (or a few day'srel, hut lie will lime to remain in hisroom for a few days. Taft in the lastfour e,ir lias umltrunno a strain whichwould i;in Iipkeit down ninny men ofstroiitt constitution, hut with his rohntframe, hu line health ami cheery ilitiuMi-liu- n.
he has enninmril at work ami hatof Itiie hern dpMrmly tt'al"mK Instretiuih Hit ihtcittii, lioueter. nuwlicclarit 1 list lit must ukr things twiyand Haw miitf ivi at .n it, mtttuj).
I W I'rrtUUllI In day aililwl liU Mil- -
ti.nii. lu ihtiM uf litD Jm'itir. and iw.miit " ' " "i '". 'V--' ."-.'- "
inu u iiw irmiaaefci. butitiuil m uww uj m mriMi'i umtti;, m mmm m mt .w aUn4t mi W ttw Im ,w4 li mi
nil MM
IJIMtttlM Mluruii. lmw iti4
WMtJrrMi lh 'tviwmUk M ' -
mmHmmi" h t
UAE'I h. MAY 20, 1904
T"T '' t
MADE
S
following
(Associated Press Mail Special.)
NEW YORK, May 12. An explana-
tion of tiie explosions heard at PortArthur which led to reports that the
Russians were destroying their warshipsharbor is furnished in a Port Dalny, with
from Petersburg. docks, warehousesthe effect that the garrison at Port Ar-
thur is endeavoring to clear the harborentrance of the stone-lade- n ships sent inby the Japanese. In order to removethe obstructions divers said havebeen sent down who placed charges ofdynamite in position and succeeded inblowing away enough of the cement androck cargoes to admit the passage oftorpedo boats through the channel.
YENESEl'S CONSORT SUNKNEW YORK, May 12 Through the
posting by tiie general staff of a list. . !
taming twenty names of ofiicers andmen killed on board the torpedo trans- -
port Amur April a naval disasternot before reported has just become pub-
lic, says a World despatch from St. Pe-
tersburg. According to the despatch theAmur (which was a sister ship of the
torpedo transport Yencsei) was;laying mines in the Port Arthur road-
stead when she struck one and sank.
THE FIGHT AT ANJU.
SEOUL, Korea, May n, 5 p. m. (de-
layed in transmission) Infantry rein-
forcements reached the beleaguered Jap-
anese troops at Anjti at 6:30 o'clock onthe evening of May 10th. The garrison
l fnnidit iWr-..u- . fnr tv.,.K.n linn .i.o1m.11 rcscrviiiK their until 111c cicim--' ,
were at close range upon each attemptlo storm the eale. TI11' Cns;ipU then
'retired over the eastern lulls toward
I'yong, the provincial capital,leaving liliy killed ami wounded on thefield one officercaptured, The Japanese lost four killedn.1,1 tiv wmmilmi. lint!.!.. mi .,.!,., .r:,ni.
fT'vi.i(iiii-PiMr'-iMi'iiv,fnMi'f-
operator The Jnpaue.u troops aie nowin pursuit ol the enemy and an dittaemem is mmnemnriiy expccicn,
It p. mipim.i'il ili.il the Coitiu'U arepart of the body which crusted heueimairf uf ilu) Yaju near Cluiigiiliinand ftipieil t'UMWiu. Net JiiWiliUjnf III litasU-- r uhlvli lud sHIsmuIimI lliofi'
yM .u. III. V-- I.I ll,.v T..w. u7, -- ...TT...tififp i if 9 tff itf tmim wvii rm4itirmm in etrrv mil iliwr 4n iu narlit iwuy ami em idl tits sumimHiUKi'HiMti, niittt ktimlu mw h nmntlUpwhm i mmm wriii nmt
HUtWiNli I IU) NV lUit'kl,hi M-iW- 4 a tu
f in Usui lKtiU I.m 1,1.,t
h ui it. im m ' j mitit. I i 11 llslstS iia ' .till.M
.., 4,.. .,., -- 4
FAMOUS HISTORIC BUILDINGS.
.tVI
K"v
ST. PAUL'S CHURCH. ON LOWER BROADWAY,PRESIDENT WASHINGTON WORSHIPPED.
ANOTHER RUSSIANTORPEDO TRANSPORT
BLOWS HERSELF UP
t '" " t "'" " " " iff
the east coast of the Liao Tung pen-
insula, was intended by Russia to bethe chief commercial emporium of itseastern dominions. An edict providingfor its construction was issued by theRussian Emperor July 30. .899, and
and railroad facilities, was opened tocommerce in December, 1901.
Talienwan Bay is one of the finestdeep water harbors on the Pacific. It is
free from ice in winter time and shipsdrawing thirty feet of water can enterat low tide without difficulty and withoutthe aid of pilots can sail or steam along- -
side the immense docks and piers, wheretheir cargoes can he loaded into railroadcars and run direct for 6,000 miles intothe city of St. Petersburg. Five largepiers had been constructed, each sup- -
in that World fully equipped allSt. It is to em improvements,
are to
urt
Youg
and
!'
""" '""' ..ru..u iraeKs amiimmense warehouses and elevators, gas,eIcctrlc li(;hts alul watcr aml a )argcbreakwater was being constructed so that theships could lie at the piers and load andunload regardless of weather. Docks forforeign vessels, steam and sailing, ex-tended between the piers and along theshore for two miles. Iherc were twofirst class drvdocks, one intended for or--(1.inary ocean steamers and the other de--signed to accommodate the largest vessels of war or commerce.
Over ?6,ooo,ooo had been expended onthe harbor system before the end of 1902,and it was estimated that the cost ofcompleting the works would be nearly
20,000,000, but this does not in any wayrepresent the total cost of the erectionof this great commercial port which,with Port Arthur, distant about twentymiles, was leased by the Chinese Gov- -
cruiuciu to Kiissia in i
dailyar,y
.V''000 Ti WCre. c,l!,nIe,on constructing
port and town. The total, populationhail been estimated at about 60,000,
i"M!' Cliinee, Japanese, Koreans andRussians,
THE CZAR'S PLANS.Sl PRIhKSnUKR. May u, 1:28
ii, iii.l'.iuik'ror N c tola U arranging- -
to t$o to KharKoff May a.t to hid farewell
1 il... TVitih Armv Ponii ,"," ill de.- "' "" ' " '"--
The Aswwlalwl lr learns from iliaIiIbIiwI tuurs'i' that tl! Umpersir it ej.i'n4mnl niiatouk lo 8 lo Hie (rent.m. i.i. . ,..., ...,.,.i i, i.. ..u,l .,.
" """ ".. I ! .m.tHut'li shi Ik suhisin, but Ii rmliKHl
llwl tmianimii uf siif dvuuiid liU
prvsMts1 ! Uiw KnriMi, ii is
mm m 'n4isl umsiW iui i
ill Mluti lit iMWtli m all lis JlUl.ilU.lf JklUalk JuiilUI lilla L .1 dlUllUFk.
m4 w4utl fc, Umm u( . fak tm Mw )f ,y
'I fri," nii tw Tin tu wiiliNdti Jji I li.il U. i
... t!- - t. s- -" , . i.fe h 'l " "' ' ' ' ''W '!.Tf n uh r, m
Hiiu.jFh
P'H'jMrnr
I
- sti Imp hi i iy . t.,i t mi j t tlH ,, i4tt lkt l wkTaT
c
WHICH
i'f.. 4'.f..4'--,t--- t '"" ''" t"
peror Nicholas desired to meet theenemy is that he carries on his bodytthc mark of wound inflicted by a fanat-ical Japanese policeman when he wasattacked in a theatre at Otsu, duringhis visit to Japan in 1898, only beingsaved from death by the noble actionof his cousin, Prince George of Greece.Should he finally conclude to go, theEmperor would not assume active com-
mand of the troops, but would have animperial headquarters, taking, with himall the members of his military cabinet.Being on the spot, the Emperor wouldmore easily adisc General Kuropatkinin the event ot any question ot greatmilitary moment which he might desire
.!!"bl" '.S nut, 01course, tue wotuu nothe stimulus which the pergonal pres-ence of the sovereign would have on theofficers and men.
CYRIL BROKEN UP.ST. PETERSBURG, May
Duke Cyril's nervous r system and hisheart are seriously affected as the re-
sult of his experiences at the time ofthe blowing up of the battleship Petro- -pavlovsk off Port Arthur April 13. Theofficial report of his medical attendantssays the Grand Duke will require theclosest attention, and most careful treat-ment. His cure, thcdoctors say, will bea" difficult and tedious process.
JAPANESE CAUTIOUS.ST. PETERSBURG, May 12. From
official advices received here it is
evident that the Japanese are proceed-ing very cautiously toward the invest-ment of Port Arthur. While an inter-ruption of telegraph and railroad mayagain occur at any time communicationwjt, tile fortress was still open last
jKllt, Advii received by the GeneralStaff show that the invaders wiio landedat Pitzwo arc marching slowly on KinChou, which is an advanced position
the Russian Gibraltar, detach-ing only a small force to cut the line atPolandie, thus giving rise to the reportsthat they had effected a landing at PortAdams. The Russians have occupiedSisthao Bay, on the cast side of theLiao Tung peninsula, opposite Kin Chou,showing that they hae no intention ofwithdrawing further south. On thecontrary, indications point to a stubbornresistance.
presence at Port Arthur of Gen- -nrn Knit- - r,.v,.-l,.,- l in tin. nflVint .lis.patches may signify that the garrisonnf the fortress is much stronger than,1C ""lans desired tiie enemy to he- -lieve. Folk commands the Fourth Sibe- -riau R,0 Division of 10,000 men. Ifthe ."'.whole division
.U on . the Manning
tpeninsula, l.eiieral hioessel lias at leas
J."' "lei III lll ill) pmmi, wiiieu wnumrvmlr llio
. te.nien. ofIort, Art mrii&imeiv umiemi uiiicm hip jiii.im'"bring up three time that number oftroops.
There u i,)lk ..f Jajwuese eulllng offthy vir mpiily uf Pert Anlmr, hutlitis is iluelared to lw inipossllile us
sN'tsatei is 1I1 eil( Miurei' ufm suppii, w uviu uniy bfUiH used
in t mmw
HMMIIf lMJlMlltW iu totUt B
lintn and eatr mm dlVt1 Wlltllr 4ml -- ssfts Wm4 mm 4VWIJ.IMimiimM )Mll In th Wtt if i fcMU)
i lts b itiHitHlstTl JWN WlM) iltu iUi.Hi MMIttwM Whin IWIMh Mii Una fi 1mmw 11 MiUM(..(. i. .lS m.Vl "WWWIfmln. .1 , m 4 kiH ! 1U
ttnfc. it nifiH.'4 iNW ps Wall. ?$lM,ll IT"
tf?---
Th--Cultivatlon of fSthe Sugar Cone"a treatise on the fundamental prin-ciples of growing Sugar Cane, shouldbe In the lunula of every planter.
The value and use of
Nitrate of Soda(THE STANDARD AMMONIATE)In Increasing and bettering thegrowth of Sugar Cane la now so wellunderstood that the rent profit In bu-g- ar
growing may be said to dependupon Itn use.
This Book ana other valuable Bul-letins of value to ever1 one engagedIn agriculture, arc sent entirely freeto anyone Interested. Send yourname and complete address on PostCard.Win. S. Myers, Director, G John
St., New York.
f ' ' . I 4 4
CHAS. BREWER & CO'S. 4--
NEW YORK LINE tBark Fooling Sucy sailing from
New York to Honolulu aboutAug. 15. FREIGHT TAKEN ATLOWLST RATES.
For Freight Rates apply toCHAS. BIIE-WER- . & CO.,
27 Kllby St., Boston,
f Or C. BREWER & CO., Ltd.,1. Honolulu.t T
HamDura-Breme- n Fife insuronGG Co.
The undersigned 'having beenagents of the above company
ire prepared to Insure risks against1re on Stone and Brick Buildings andm Merchandise stored therein on thonost favorable terms. For particularsipply at the ofTlce of
F. A. SCHAEFER & CO., AgtR.
North German Marine Insur'oe Co.
OF BERLIN.Fortnna General Insurance Co.
OF BERLIN.
The above Insurance Companies haveestablished a general agency here, andthe undersigned, general agents, areauthorized to take risks against thedangers of the seat at the most reason-able rates and on the most favorableterms.
F. A. SCHAEFER & CO..General Agents.
General Insuranoe Co. lor Sea,River and Land Transport
of Dresden.' Having established an agency at Ho-nolulu and the Hawaiian Islands, thoundersigned general agents are authori-zed to take risks against the dangersof the sea at the most reasonable ratesmd on thf most favorable terms.
F. A. SCHAEFER & CC,Agents for the Hawaiian Islands.
"TheOverlandLimited"
BLHCTRIC LIOHTBP
CaliforniaTo the BAST via
The Union Pacific
This Train is really a
First-Cla- ss Modern Hotelwltn Handsome Parlors, DrawingRooms, Bed Chambers, Boudoirs,
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Barber Shops, Bath Rooms (hot niulcold water), uupcrbly appointed Dic-
ing Rooiiih, Blltlerlnj with Mirrors, CutOIiuh, Frutrrnnt Iflnwer, Kleotrlu Can-ilolab-
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'lfcl Ha, se,
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hill liirsriniUfiii Oii'iriullir h)rnliM4
H I'. HOOTili
lb L liiifjf 0. pir. a
IMPERIAL LIME99 0 jMai Pure.
Tlw very best Limo and in thebest containers.
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CALIFORNIA FEED Go.
AGENTS.
CASTLE & COOKE CO., LdHONOLULU.
Commission Merchants
SU&AH JTACTOBS.AGENTS FOR
Tho Ewa Plantation Company.The WalaJua Agricultural Co., Ltd.The Kohala Cugar Company.he Wajmea Sugar Mill Company.he Fulton Iron Works. St. Louis, Mo.The Standard Oil Company.The George F. Blake Eteam Pumps.Weston's Centrifugals.The New Englnnd Mutual Life Insur-
ance Company, of Boston.The Aetna Fire Insurance Company,
of Hartford, Conn.The Alliance Assurance Company, of
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INSURANCE.
Theo. H. Davies & Go
(Limited )
AGENTS FOB FIRE, LIFE ANE
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Northern Assurance Companj
OF LONDON, TOR FIRE ANDLIFE Established 1836.
Accumulated Funds .... 3,975.000.
British and Foreign Marine Ins, G(
OF LIVERPOOL, FOR MARINE.Capita 1,000,0CK
Reduction of Rates.Immediate Payment of Clalma.
THEO. H. DAVIES &. CO kUAGENTS.
Castle & Cooke,LIMITED.- -
LIFE and FIREINSURANCE
AGENTS. . .
AGENTS FOR
lew EDDlQnd Mutual Lite insufonoe Go
OF BOSTON,
EM Life Insurance Company
OF HARTFORD.
mm faiis'iii!The Famous Tourist Route of the
World.
In Connpctlon With the Canadian-Australia- n
Steamship LineTickets are Issued
To All PointB in the United Statesand Canada, via Victoua. and
Vancouver.
MOUNTAIN RESORTS:
Banff, Glacier, . mi.it Stephens-- nil Frw-e- r Clinton.
Empress Line of Steamers from Vancouvel
Tickets to All Points In Japan. China,India unci Around the Woild.
For tlcketu and ent'-- al Intoj ituttloaapply to
1H0.O. II HAVIGS& CO.. LTD.Al'tintx Prifinrtlnn .'siuilliin 8, 8, tAo",
Cm, i Itultwav
THE NEW FnENOH REMEDY,
THERAPION. r?fc!wty.m! mum ninuuillMiiuiVyliwwl.IILXUII, JelKII Wlt4 ' uJ utht in, .siuVtiiM wllli ii(tUrU In In iw In lufcihlM i Uk fJ,mlurMMMKe , thing Mtliif lulls) to) nhiTHEnArMON NiJ J w"' ll mIwlJwilwl au't ". il U Mlll uutlt it ("I dlfW'tt;Huu 4 I). Mm I''1' " "" '. ,,lu'
lu4i llwitl, 6Mtii l(t"u)1 '"".' ""hiltti will ml (iiu.ll.' WW vn t",f!i ,
lTliMi W tl I UliMM I" tf)W VN,MIMHlil4 t.i It. .Inlt limiHlftat U Iwlll
MlKWIlt W ll.Wtl4llM lbU( 11111111 Hi' '.I. iU )') ) IJtt4IMtUlifer, ll It. ff, i tMti liviii lw Uf
teJMMMwhfrJfoM
mMmmxHIHHH IV M
wtfOiiwPiiJk wJmjwun M ;
nwwiifm
RUSSIAN STORY
FIRST LAND
ST. PnTERSHURG, Mny t, D.47 a. m.
The IlUBslnii loe nt the battle ofwere 2000 men nnd lor-t-y
officers far greater than previouslyreported.
This Is the olllclil estimate of Major-Genera- l
Kashtallnslty, who dliectlyI
commanded the division that puttered
the brunt of the nttack and whoseI
report was received jesterdny by the
Emperor. Many are Inclined to pinto
the Russian losses even higher. Gen-
eral Kashtallnsky mentions also thatmore than TOO wounded hud arrived ntFeng-II- u nnd these may notbe Included In his calculations. He
made no attempt to estlmnte the Jap-
anese losses, merely stating that theymust have been colossal.
The magnitude of the Russian hveshad nn almost stunning effect on thoauthorities and aroused general jrlef,mitigated only by satisfaction nt thebraery displayed by the Russiantroops.
Not for a moment was there any In-
tention to pay such n terrible price 'ordelaying the enemy's crossing of theYalu. This fact wus known through-out the city nnd gae rise to renewedreports, attributed to olllcl.il bouices.that General Kuropatkin had olllciallycensured Lleutennnt-Gener- nl Z.isa-lltc- h.
If this was so General Kuropat-kln'- s
telegraphed criticism of Zassn-lltc- h
was carefully left out of the-- dis-
patches which hae been published,nnd the general Impression now heldIs that he will remiln In M itichurla.
TO SAVE TWO REGIMENTSGeneral Kasht.illnsky's report stnb-llsh-
the fact that tho Russians sus-
tained the greatest loss in ordir tosave the two regiments which wei"
Antung.The Eleventh leglment was given the
post of honor at the rear with instruc-tions to hold back the oncoming Jap-
anese. The Twelfth regiment and theThird batten's quick-firin- g detachmentwere directed to retire. By the tim. thelatter movement commenced the Jip-nne- se
had almost surrounded the Rus-
sian position. The Twelfth leglmentwas compelled to charge with the bayo-
nets and succeeded in breaking throughthe enemy's line. The Second batten'squick-firin- g detachment,, lthout noises,could not move the guns' and were itm-pelle- d
to nbindon them The men ofthe Second battery put their shouiiiersto the wheels In an effort to push theguns up the mountain side, but theJapanese fire was so hot that thev
to the protection of the Eleventhregiment.
Nearer and nearer approached theJapanese and a charge upon the Elev-
enth regiment and the Second batterywas imminent so the guns were aban-doned.
PRIEST LED THE TROOPSThen a priest led the troops and ihe
begin the terrible march across thevalley.
"Chlu-llen-che- is history and wemust now deal with Impending events,"said an olllcer of tho geneial stuff
The Idea has pi ev ailed that the Rus-
sians would not make a stand ntbut the fact that a Jap-
anese occupation off thnt point wouldenable a movement to the southwest,thus cutting oft the Liao Tung penin-sula, Is taken into consldeiatlon by theauthorities, leadin" 'i the expectationthat General Kuropatkin will dispatchstrong theie and maken determined stand
The activity of the Japanese, it Is re-
ported here, is not only north of theYalu, from which there Is constantscouting, but also off the Lino Tungpeninsula, though the fillure to tealPort Arthur may Interfeie with theoperations they had been expected tocirry out ou the west coast of thatpeninsula.
KASIlTAIilNSKY'S REPORT.ST. PETERSBURG, May Th;
Emperoi today received the followingdlspitch from General Kuropatkin
"Major-Gener- al Kashtallnsky reportsas follows,
"'I consldir It my duty to report thecircumstances of the grievous battlefought by the troops under my com-
mand with the superioi forces of theJapanese on Slay 1st.
"'Eaily on the morning of Apiil 30ththe Japanese begun to oppress our leftHank, having on tho pievlous eveningoccupied the Khnssan Heights, after nnattack In consequence of which I or-
dered the Twenty-secon- d regiment,which had occupied Khnssan, to letlrencios,n the Al river to out position ntPotletlnsky.
" 'On the morning of tho same di an
MARBLEHEAD AND
minim iaahm 1 iii
HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1904 SEMIWEEKLY.
OF THEENGAGEMENT
extraordinary, ptolongcd nnd violentbombardment of our whole position nt
commenced from AVIJuI foresaw thnt the Japanese after thebombardment, In which over 1.000
projectiles weie discharged, would takethe offensive.
ORDERED INTO BATTLE." 'I recelv ed orders from Lieutenant-Gener- al
Znssalltch to ncccpt battle andto retain m position nt Potletlnsky.
"'My left Hank was defended by two'battalions of the Twenty-secon- d regi
ment nnd the third battery of the SixthBrigade.
" 'The Jap incso took the offensive ntr o'clock In the moinlng, dispatchingnt least one division of Infantiy which,advancing In column, sustained enor-mous losses but crossed tho ford andattacked position, which was ex-
posed to the fire of thirty-si- x field gunsand siege batteries.
" 'The Japanese advanced and occu-pied the position. Townul noon I
that the Japanese had loutedthe bnttnllon of the Twenty-secon- d leg-lment posted at Chlngow and wereturning my left Hank.
" 'At 1 o'clock In the afternoon myleft Hnnk was relnfoiced by two bat-talions of the Eleventh .regiment nnda battery commanded by Lieutenant-Colon- el
Moravsky which were sentfrom tile reserve by General Zassalltchwith orders to hold their ground untilthe departuie of tho Ninth and Tenthregiments fiom Siikhoda. I oideredthe Eleventh leglment to occupy acommanding position In the lear fromwhich they could Hie on the enemyfrom two sides.
"'I held Lieutenant-Colon- el Moi.av-skv- 's
battery In reserve and oidered theTwelfth leglment, the Thltd batteryand the quick-fliin- g guns to letlre un-
der cover of the Eleventh regiment.'"My chief of staff led the lear
guard to Us position.AN AWFUL CROSS-riR-
" 'At 1 o'clock the Japanese approach-ed so closely to the position held bythe Eleventh Regiment that the thiidbattel y could not pass along under thecioss-llr- e, and, taking up a position ashoit distance from the Japanese, re-
mained there until the end of tho 1 ght-In- g,
losing Its commander, Lieutenant-Colon- el
Moiavsky. A compmy withquick-firin- g guns was In ought up fiomthe rear guard, and the offlcei com-manding this force, seeing the dillkultsituation of Moiavskv's battel v, tookup a posltioif on his own Initiative. Helost half of his men and all his horsesand attempted to iemoe his guns bvhand ro the shelter of the hills undeithe Japanese cioss-lh- e. The qulclv-lli-In- g
pieces discharged about :n,000 bul-lets.
CUT ITS WAY THROUGH.'"The Twelfth Regiment cut Its waj
thtough and saved Its colois."'The battel y of the. Sixth
Brigade, hiving attempted to lejoiu theleserves by anothei route, could notascend the mountain slopes, with onlhalf Its horses, and, returning Jo itsoilglnal position, iccelved the Jap meseattack.
" 'The Eleventh Regiment, which heldIts giound foi two houis moie wltl.heavy losses, foiced a pissnge at thepoint of the bujonet and ciossed thelavine with its colois. It lost itsColonel We lost foitv olllceis andabout 2000 olllceisand men
" Ihe Jap mese losses must have 1 eenenonnous
" The Russians tetiied In good or-
der on Peng Ilimn Cheng"'The men of the Thlid Division
maintained their excellent moiale, nndovei 700 wounded proceeded with theirleglments to Teng Huan Cheng' "
GERMAN SCHOOL
IS
At the .annual meeting of the GermanSchool Association, presided over byPastor Filmy, it was reported that theaverage dailj attendance of the schoolifor tlie past year h id been 53 ManyAmerican children are utilising the op-
portunity for instruction in German1 he summer vacation school willheld this jcar as last, four davs a weekfor six weeks of the holidays.
Enul A. Hermit, treasurer, reported re-
ceipts of $527 for the jcar, with ex-
penses of $l5i 50 Officers for the en-
suing jear were elected as follows1President, Rev W Felmv
Consul II A. Iscnhcrg; secretary,A. Constabcl: treasurer, Enul A. Hcrndt;auditor, J l; C nbcl. directors, J. JLeckcr and Wolfram Fchny
CONCORD ON WAY.
-
an vdiii 11 ji umim
The cruiser Marblehead and gunboat Concord sailed yesterdayfrom San Francisco for Honolulu, and will probably arrive about
May 2G, They will probably follow the custom of the other boatscomiiiR here by btenmlng at an average of ten knots per hour.
w 1
our
be
HEW WATER
S
Works Being Advanced
at WaiKiki andKalihi.
Work wus bolng pushed yestetday In
connecting the Puhon pumping stationwith the Knlniukl leservolr upon the Ymain blanching respectively to thotreceptnclo nnd to the Diamond Headreseivolr. This woik will dispense withthe old main connecting the pump withthe Knlniukl reservoir when the workswere bought by the Government. Wa-
ter was shut off for the day, notice hav-ing been given to consumers.
Excavations are yet to be made forthe Diamond Head leservolr connectingmain, but the work will Immediatelyfollow the completion of the Knlmukibranch. When the entire system comesinto operation, the Honolulu water sit-
uation will be considerably lclleved.Kern &. Ltshmnn, whose bid was low-
est and time asked shortest among allcompetltois, have been awnrded thocontract for constiuctlng the-- Knllhtleseivolr. As previously repotted theprice is $33,000 nnd tho time 190 dujs.The site Is to the leai of KamehnmehnBojj)' School gicmnds This woik willstill further go to assuie Honoluluagainst a water famine.
THE COMING SONGCONGRESS HERE
Preparations for the 'Tlist MusicFestival" are piogresslng lapldly andpractice Is being carried on with gieatvim by each of the sepaiate choruses.
The Hist full Mheui'Tl f'i- - the 'Con-
gress o'f Song" which takes place ntHawaiian Opera House the evening ofMay 28, will be held In the OpeiaHouse next Monday evening. In thofiiquent drillings which follow, thechoruses will be ananged so as to taketheir places without any confusion,and this has In en no l'tllo pioblcm,but It has been solved In a most .satis-
factory manner. The units 1 chorus ofthree bundled voices will be the mostmagnificent undertaking over attempt-ed In Honolulu That the event Is ex-
citing a great amount of Inteiest isamply demonstrated by the lupldlty Inwhich tickets are being sold. Not onlywill the music be a wondetful andpoweiful blending of harmony but theOpen House itself will be most be-
comingly decointed foi the event. A
committee has been appointed to adornthe enthe Inside of the house withipptopiiate college colois and will bopiesided over by the aitlstlc ability ofE A. P New comb.
The second event of tho Musicrcstlv.al stjled "Children's Contest andCarnival" Is entirely separate nnd willbe held ill the Bovs rleld In Lillhastieet, Situidny afternoon, May 28 Inthis theie will be over six bundledvoices fiom the grammar schools nilunder the Immediate direction of Mis.Tucker.
. M--I". Ilopklnson Smith, the author and
nitlst. told this mother-in-la- 5 urn ntWnshlngton, D C . tin othi 1 evening"Airah jou're lookln" veij sad, ' naldPit O'llollihiin, addressing Ills filendPi-li- s the olhei daj ' Ol feel sail'"responded Denis 'Dive lost my mother-in-l-
aw'" "Haid1" exclaimed Patl gorrah It's almost Impossible' '
A Life SavedNovor givo up. No matter how ill
you are. Ayor's faarsaparlll.i has curedsomo terrible cases, and itwillouro you.
Mr. Thou, II. Cnnhri, lUrrol Creek, Drip- -aiuiiu, now noimi w an , wrin
'I fn'l it my duty In lut milli ring piwiilolimiw uIl.l a wimiiIi rful litiHHl.iiurlmnif
tmslldiw U A)r ..My IIIiii--
hic-a-n willi Mh.mi .iln In Hi" II111I14, wlilluI ,i4 IuihIIIiiu wi'i wiml, A'nr iltynrtun I umlil mil ,ill.,uinl iilleiml turllilniwliw Sly I.1111 liirinil liMlly I'Uik. Ihii'iiml lilnii hut rani" mil nil nn r my lnly, umlIbaii 1 iiouumiHiui rum mii 111 i ihmpTutM lur wmm to, mill imryllilni; wuurtali hut I uimw Miwl-n- r immI wtut.i r. uinl
liUMKUl mill Vll" I'd tlMt IMillilliK "HI III (mi
iiiimi lur iw I hi'l ImmiiI imitili Mlviiilkm' titrwimtlll llul I llimiMla I mhuMffva ft wtal at Hut UjiJii'JH- - .Wlvrlnklim
Inllli. T llMiimlu I hit it IIIIlK Ultrh" I llir lilml ttiHllt. r Imillii um I IIMIRII-uiliii- ,
uiul kllll mi Um 1 I uuiliwlly, lltl11 nil jihI Hi ih I in lift in M frIIh Hut llliw ill ! I'll.. I itlll iwtvlllu - I lnilili Ui 1 , . ..( um IUIlr kMiMiiiL 'in, ld
AYER'.SSarsaparilla
(Mm ii ii wif. inktHim
)0mlU I hu v um . I kU ( ij I'MUM . w itj
Hair 55 Inches LongOron by Cuticura.
JITS3 B , of L , eends us through our British AgonU, Messrs. F.NRw-nitrt- & 8o.xs, 27 ami '23, Cliartorhouso Square, London, E. C, a strand ofcolt, glossy hair cut Irom her own head and measuring flfty-nv- o Inches In length,
y3SSIHIV
ATJ
tEmsmsa!BmissrssE8EBm
which tho atmcxoii drawing Is a pliotographlo o. SI10 nttrlbutos her
' mngnlflconthcid frequent slinm- -with CuTictntA Boap, folloTed by
light dressings Cimcnr-- gently rabbodI IntotliOBcalp. rrorloustotliousootCtrn- -CtJiu,hor halrwas dry, thin, and llfoloss,and c.amo out hand tuU t such an cztont
, that feared she would lor.o soon
MILLIONS WOMEN uso CtrncnnA Boap exclusively fnr proservlnu,purifying, and beautifying tho skin, for dooming tho scalp of crusts, sc lies, and dan.draff, and tho stopping falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothlnc red,rough, and soro bonds, and for all tho purposes tho tollot, bath, and nursery.
Complete External and Internal Treatment ,for Enry Hiiwar,
Consisting of CUTirunA Vur, to cleanse tlio kUii of cruts i il wiles soften thethickened cuticle, Cuncmi v Olutinent, to IntUnlly nlliy lull imiinlUiu, nml
booUiu nml heil.nml Cl 1ICIII.V 111 MM, to (ool limit Kanvo tho lituoil. ASlNULt. Set Is otli 11 nuilloleut to t uio tliu mof t tm tiirlnir, illHllurliig, nml liumlllit'nwulp, and blood luiinuun, v los of lnlr, w lie 11 nil falls, bol I tin mttli the w n.M,
Depot: It. Towns ACo ,Silimj,.N.'l W. So.Afrt.nn Di ml- - I.io tiTli.CapoTon 11. "All nhoiit tliu In, 1111 llilr,"frec l'orrut lil.uo Al C111.M. ("oai-- ,
bold Propi" , ClJTlci in I'r-- i' " ton, P, S
HOST POPULAIRPUBLICATION
iMi tk.H wtotot NP fcB
THE SU.ND.AY
ADVERTISER
1 itinn m.n 'ii.i '.ai
of
of hair topoos
of
Inslio It.
OP
ofof
nml
sol
lib clo 'tAust.
This Is but ono of many romarkablicases of tho preservation and rctontlinof tho hair In scouilngly hopeless cases bywarm Bhampoo3 with Cuticuiia Boajfollowed by light drosslng3 of Cutjcuiia,purest ot emollient skin curo3. litistreatment at onco stops falling hair, clcr.nthe scalp of crusts, scales, and dandrt.li,soothos irritated, itching surfaces, stimu-lates tho lialr folliclivs, supplies tho rootswith energy and and makesthe hair grow on clean, cucct, whole-Bou- io,
healthy scalp, when all clsa falls.
js' sBhB irSW
sfc
wnninniiui.wtvtvwjiniiinim WW JtMitnrttn
ii. inniimw
mllu
10
" ")"' Ih.kit
WAR NEWS, CHURCH NEWS, SPORTING NEWS,GENERAL NEWS AND ALL THE LATEST WORLD'SNEWS BY CABLE.
MISCELLANEOUS, LITERARY AND HUMOROUSSELECTIONS, AND A CONTINUATION OF THOMASFITCH'S INTERESTING ARTICLES ON HIS FOR-
EIGN TRAVELS. PUNGENT PARAGRAPHS OF THEBYSTANDER.
INTERESTING READING TO SUIT EVERYTASTE, AND WITHAL, A CLEAN PUBLICATIONADMISSABLE TO THE FAMILY CIRCLE.
Published by the
Hawaiian Gazette Go.,Limited.
65 S. King St., Honolulu, Hawaii.
iihiiiwh
COUNTS AS COOKS.Time is chefs' and waiteis' club about block from the
Wnhloif in New York city, and whenever lie weather is line the1111 mini niaj be standing out on the cut b. The other day atotijilt of knowing Niw Yorkeij pasMtl on tin other hide of thestint, and one of tlieni, in a mood foi fun, Mopped and Middinlyi.illnl out, "Hello, coiiutl" 'J hen lie bowed at the ciowd nn tinnub About kix men in the gioup made graceful mkumhdKnn nt You ic HwM)iiri! to Iml few uobleuieii in tliee Kinp.111.1 tii Urn rmtl Uiinif. It would vun bu afu to try fm did.it thin little eM' 1 lull Tlierw h iuUtken imirniioii that all
ln noble who eoiut In lliU ide me in MMtftill if lor(UIU 1 I
itli 0 iimU'tiHoiiy Thin iuiprMiNi wAtikUlyut ihfti my mt uf iIivhi $Mm in n mN4W
uuii juv Umni, mm wwrMinr iwliitti Mi '"utlv wlim In nKfct o MmbA tih
I tMiMt" Hit Ul ti MH M- - MIH
"imim1i immmmkmvtkii ii1 iMMliiiilMMt teffimnirfiMi mw'th l .i,; JJiL
nourisliiiiint,a
ttt
"
ii
1 'U, "
a at
i seen
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11 ii 4 Mii im( lltl U a iinl l4 Mi II I'H !!
m-- 1
El jiiiiirraTwttTgafca j;IMiMMMaMMaMMaJrtaMilMMt
....,.
:?Ji&yX'Kd
NEWS OF
u. s.
ARRIVED.Tuesday, May 17.
Schr, Lady from Koolau ports at 3a. 111. with 150 bags rice.
Am. hkt. lienicia, Iiourkc, .14 daysfrom Newcastle, anchored off port,bound for Elcclc at 9 a. in.
Stmr Maun.i Loa, Simcrson, fromKan, Kona and Maui ports, at 5:15a. m.
A. II. S. S Alaskan, Nicols, fromSeattle, at 8:15 a. 111.
Gaso. schr. Eclipse, Gahan, for Ana-hol- a,
at 12 m.Wednesday, May 13.
U. S. S. Molilcnn, Holmes, fr . SanFrancisco, at 1:30 p. m.
Stmr. Mlkahala, Gregory, from Kau-ai ports, at 4:35 a. m., with 300 headsheep, 1 cow, 11 bbls. pol, 20 bags bot-
tles, 57 packages sundries and 5029 bagsof. sugar.
Stmr. Nllhau, W. Thompson, fromMakawell, at 7:10 a. in., with 4S00 bagssugar.
Thursday, May 19.
Stmr. Maul, Bennett, from Ookala,Pnpaaloa, I'aauhau and Kawalhae at7:45 a. in. with 76 head cattle and 11,-4-
bags of hugar.Am. bk. W. B. Flint, Johnson, 14
days fiom San Francisco at 7 a. m.Stmr. J. A. Cummins, Searle, from
Koolau ports at 10:05 a. m.Stmr. Llkelike, Napala, from Maul
and Molokai at 4 p. in. I
Gaso. schr. Eclipse, Gahan from I
Kauai ports at 6:50 p. m.Stmr. Kg Au IIou, Tullett, from
Kauai at 8:50 p. m.DEPARTED.
Tuesday, May 17.Stmr. J. A. Cummins, Searle, for
Koolau ports at 7 a. m.Schr. Ka Moi, for Honoipu and Ko-hale- lc
at 4 p. 111.
Stmr. Claudme, Parker, for Mauiports, at 5 p. m.
Stmr. W. G. Hall, Thompson, forKauai ports, at 5 p. 111.
Stmr. Likelikc, Naopala, for Maui andMolokai ports, at 5 p. in.
llr sp. Scottish Hills, Robbin, forSydney, p. 111.
Am, bkt. Khkitat, Cutler, for theSound at 0 a. in.
Wednesday, May IS.
Br. ship Scottish Hills, Bobbin, forSydney, at 3:30 a. m.
S. S. America Mam, Greene, for thoOrient, at noon.
Schr. Lady, for Koolau ports, atnoon.
Schr. KawallanI, Ulunahele, for Koo-
lau ports, at 5 p. m.Am. bktn. Benlcla, for Eleele, at 4
p. m. (From outside anchorage.)Thursday, May 19.
U, S. S. Tacomi, Nichols, for SanFrancisco at 10:30 a. 111.
U. S. S. Thetis, Hamlet, for crulsoto Maul, Molokai and Hawaii ports at2 p. in.
Am. bktn. Albert, Turner, for San aFrancisco at 11:10 n. in.
Am. schr. Mary K. Foster, Thomp-son, for San Francisco at 4 p. m.
Stmr, Mlkahala, Gregory, for Kauaiports nt 5:40 p. m.
Stmr, Nllhau, W. Thompson, forHonoknn, Onomea, Hllo, llonunpo andPunaluu at 10 a. in.
Stmr. Llkelike, Napala, for MolokaiMaul and Lanal ports at S p. m.
PASSENGERS ARRIVEDFrom Kan, Kona and Maui ports
per stmr. Mauna Loa, May 17.Kan; C C. Jinnies, S, Tauaka, 'l hos. j
Homelier, A. C. Uvtkin, 11. NiehwtU,Tlisliop Reitarick, E. P. Low, Mill lkona. Mite 1.. E. Winiir. From Konawru J. Cornier, L Ah lloon, V, J.
right. Chru Willli, I.. A. IMrlih,Mr- - M V, 1'ro.H-r- , M. I?. Scnll, Mit( (im-mAul- Mi Stella l'wlru, Mm.11 j l(i'iiMun kiiji I m. H
Mi., nil I. Irn. fjilwi M,Jir HiMhh.lii J P Mikviiwl iuto) kh.1. 1.1 taMi. K'u ANi. .fi,MiikI iuu.i H M IUni.kinil, iUn )hA- -
). ,l,!r.. n II Cam, i lI'. tip m,.iii Uu ), (itm )
V ..I... i 1 llHiftil A W 'HtMf,)i.ui., i 11 Hint ' MltMi-
I'H .1 III1 "i U
m, .
. i i.iIk
THE WATERFRONT
NAVAL TRAINING SHIP MOHICAN.. ...-''- '
MOHICAN AGAIN
VISITS HONOLULU
(From Thursday's Advertiser.)For the second time In a week Hono-
lulu has welcomed a wooden trainingship of (ho old type In the U. S. train-ing ship Mohican, which arilved yjster-da- y
afternoon nt 1:30 fiom San Fran-cisco. The vessel moored nlongsldeNaval Dock No. 1. The Mohican willprobably remain In port until Sundayor Monday when she will piocecd toCnvlte, P. I., to be assigned as the sta-tion ship nt the Olongapo Naval Sta-tion.
The Molilcnn Is commanded by Com-
mander F. II. Holmes, who Is nn old-tim- er
In Honolulu, having been here Intho long ago with the old training shipJamestown, when Admiral Glass washer commander. The executive oflicer,Lieut. Slgnor, Is well known at thisport, having visited It about a dozentimes.
The complete roster of officers Is asfollows: Commander F. II. Holmes,Lieut. M. II. Slgnor, Ensign J. R. De-fric- s,
Ensign Ilobert Morris, Ensign J.G. Church, Ensign E. E. Scrnnton,Naval Cadet J. P. Hart, Naval CadetA. B. Beed, Surgeon E. J. Grow, Pay- -master A. M. Pippin, Gunner J. F.Pearson, Boatswain H. Werner, PayClerk II. II. Pullaueh. Carpenter T. F.Logan hns been on temporary duty onboard and yesterday reported for dutyon the llagshlp New York,
The Mohican carries about 195 lands-men In training. About 140 of the menwill be distributed among the vesselsof Admiral Glass's lleet, leaving Inround numbers about 200 men aboardthe Molilcnn who will go to Cavlte.
TJie Mohican Is a line specimen ofthe old-sty- of warship. She is bark-rigge- d
and was finished In 1SS3 at MineIsland, her keel having been laid aboutfifteen yeats before. With her big win-
dows for portholes, she looks a com-putable vessel and will doubtless bomuch preferred as a station ship In thetropics to the unnoted vessels of mod-ern build.
BUFFALO IS
TOMORROW
The cruiser Buffalo Is due tomorrowfrom Ciiinm. She may get In tometime today, although not expected bythe naval people befoie tomorrowmorning. The Buffalo Is coming heroto coal and will proceed to Panamaafter u short stay. She has aboard
number of short term men who areto bo sent home fiom Panama on thePrnhie. The Buffalo will then pro-
ceed to S.m Francisco to become atraining ship In place of the AdaniBand Mohican.
wife. C. Dunkhase. T. S. Holt, llaronMuiick, C. H. Hall, Miss Jlyrne, MissT. G. Cumiinuham. Miss A. P. Cunningham, Mis Woollier, J. R. Cun-i- 1
ningliam, J. R. Jr.,M. M, llrown and wife. MrsGeo. M. Ralph, Mrs, V. N. Rohm,Mn E. J. Roiph. Prom Maui to lliloi
Severance, Mrs. L, Severance, Mrs.luiKiiisKy.
Per itmr. riauiline. May 17. for Mauitiorl Rev. O, !'. '.meron, Mils MaryRomero, Mrs, W. O, Aiken, ehilil andkrvm. Miu A,M. J'aiii, Mlti A, S.
i:...-1'"-"i'E"Jk-- . S- - I .'w rriwyi V Hi'kmiM.., I' uimtr, l
I'M. ItHiiblr Mini MlhututlM, Unv IV li li
mi IMfl 4 $ WUu, 19 A Wim4WHif, i' f mmm.4i nrufimmw I'Ntl
N It J'Ml U M it WitM Mh r W9t m ' mp
1'rwHNMi. II, ItaliUiH, C. II. WelU,Mr. G. Yumita m elilJralrmr, W, fl flail, fur (jjutlnnrii,
ltMtdMi, P,n,JValbr,if-- M
r i' lUrrieL. II. fl lliirir. Tin Wo.
it4UlW
THE
DUE
CuunuiKhain,
THE OLD RELIABLE
&AK1WPOWDERAbsolutely Pure
THERE tS NO SUBSTITUTE
MORE WAR VESSELS
ARE COMING SOON
The cruiser Albany Is duo to arrivefrom the China station next Saturday,the 21st. She Is In command of Lieutenant--
Commander W. P.. Bush who Is
well known In Honolulu.The Wheeling Is due from Samoa on
June 25th and will go on to the MareIsland navy yard. She la belnK re-
placed by the Adams which will bethe station ship.
t
RECRUITING FOR
THE SQUADRON
The local recruiting stution is a busyplace at present. The' Now York andBennington are both shipping manymen, and nil of them have to go throughCaptain Nlblack's hands as recruitingollicer. Cooks and mess attendants aremost in demand.
The Mohican brought 140 landsmenwho nio to 'be distributed among thevessels of Admiral Glass's squadion.
MORE COAL FOR
NAVAL STATION
Admiral Terry hns been notllled ofthe sailing of tlnS French bnik "PierreLotl" from Cnrd! with coal for thoNaval Station, Shu has 2922 tons ofbest Cnrdiff coal on boatd. No in-
formation us to the date of sailing oftho vetiHcl was given, although the let-t- or
of udvU'o was dated May 3rd.
nun TODAY.P. 8, AlniiH'dn. Dowdell, from San
Francisco, due,8. H, Hlbiilu, Bnilth, from the Orient,
due.L'ruUur Buffalo, may mrlvo from
Cluani tonight.
n, k, M.UHr. nf iho o. 11. a u c.i.'hoilleii, will Met lMkii(i(kii)Hir fur tinIIIIO HHIIIU4MI 1'Hi WIlllH V, Wi I'lOUIJ"IHlilM H VHemillll tll 111 111 UtMM,
i'IIAMIIUIILAIWH OUIU1II HUM!.UV U th liwlMf ( wini. Hji1miiI mi) mt tm KhH4nn to iha
m iwr vyrv. n i iiiiMid mmmw m mm, new ruuti
iM w !)' ni rnrnt'awiipi. ! u$m )
1)IHIMI Mf U lHUftH' ! IlliMM m wm '
''Mm
WIRElSS TELEGRAPH
FOR THE NAVAL STATION
Lieut. George C. Sweet, U. S. N., has been detailed to leaveSan Francisco on the naval transport Solace to proceed to Manila toequip the American warships' there with wireless telegraph plants.This is the bare announcement given in the naval orders but it hasan important local bearing.
Lieut. Sweet, it is believed, will' stop off at Honolulu and makearrangements for the installation of a wireless telegraph plant atthe Navnl Station. This done, he is to go to Midway Island for thesame purpose. Guam, in turn, will be similarly equipped.
It is known that the United States government is now ready togo into the wireless telegraph business on a large scale and thatprovision will be made to have every warship carrying the Amer-ican flag equipped with a modern wireless plant. Each naval stationwill be given a. wireless apparatus so that messages can be exchang-ed between vessels and the shore.
LUMBER PLANT BURNED.
CHICO, Cal., May 20. Thehas burned here with the loss of a
Company's
METHODIST BISHOPS NAMED.
LOS ANGELES, May ig. The Methodist Conference haselected J. F. Berry, H. Spellmeyer, and W. F. McDowell, as Bishops
place of the three recently retired.
U. S. SUBJECT
TANGIER, May ig. Mr. Perdicans, an American citizen, andVarley, a British subject, have been abducted by brigands.
BATTLESHIP
(Continued from page 1.)
21b Japanese, including 5 officers, were killed, and 783 Japanese, in-
cluding 33 officers, were wounded. The Russian corpses byus were 1,363 and the prisoners were 612. Our 21quick-firin-g field guns, 8 quick-firin- g machine guns, 1,021 rifles, 63horses large quantities of ammunition, clothing and tents etc., and atFenghuang also large quantities of ammunition, clothing and pro-visions." TAKAHIRA.
Notes.The Maul came in yesterday morning
from Kawalhae with cattle and sugar.The naval transport Solace Is due to
sail from San Francisco for Honoluluon May 20th.
The cruiser Tacoma got away yes-terday morning about Pleven o'clock onher search for the lost island.
The Llkelike arrived yesterday after-noon, depaitlng ngaln for Maul nndMolokai ports In the evening.
The Mary E. Foster and the Albertgot awny yesterday for San Franciscowith sugar cargoes. Both vessels car-ried passengers.
The Hawaii arrived atSan Francisco yesterday from Eleele.She took 27,500 bags of sugar fiom Mc-Bry-
plantation which will get thebenetlt of the prevailing high prices.
The bark VV. B. Flint arrived yester-day morning from Snn Francisco with400 tons of merchandise for Honolulunnd 000 tons for Mnkaweli. The FlintIs discharging her cargo at the Irmgardwharf.
The rule regarding visitors on Pa-cific Mall steamers will be strictly en-forced by Hackfeld & Co., the agents.Visitors must leave the ship half anhour before the sailing hour, and willnot be admitted nboaid the vessel within such time.
Captain Johnson, of the W. B. Flint,which .11 rived yesterday, was presentedwith a gold watch at San FranciscoJust before the sailing of his vessel.The watch was a mark of appreciationfiom the agents of the vessel, Alexan-der & Baldwin.
H"REGGIE" VANDEBBILT IN EXILE.
District Attorney William TraversJerome, who represents no politicalparty and who has no organization of.any kind behind him, manages to makehimself felt more than nny other publicolllclal In New York. He calls himselfn. Democrat, but he has been for yearsopposed to the brand of Democracyoffered In New York city. He also hasalways been opposed to Bryan. Rep-resenting a kind of Democincy of hisown making he hns succeeded In forc-ing T.immnny Into all kinds of awk-ward positions, nnd It Is not too muchto say that If Jerome suddenly diedTammany would lift the lid the nextday. As It stands, the wigwam knowsthat Just so soon us gambling beginson u whoH'b.Ue hcnle Jeiomu will beginhis celebrated raids. Jerome figured Intho news tho other day In n character-istic innnner. Freddy Clcbhnrd called onhim and plaintively IihiuIumI If theiowniiu't some (iiunco for his youngcousin, "HcbkIu" Viiiulcitillt, nver com-ing Imek to New York without beingimllnl up us u wlliums In Iho reluhr.ttuilfuiiutfhl KiiinhlliiK I'll"". Jeromu umlflohlmnl n m "lull-follo- nt (he Union,hut Ihln inmlo nn limlnclnii mi tho po
"llli Jurnmo. Hi' toM Oi'IiImihI llmt liuwouldn't proniUi "lUwl" Hiiyililiwfin II Immmim llmt Him ili'hl ymniKimin in til" t'liy In Hindu iti) ivlti fiomI1 n.illv Uuruujli luiuugli Hi tmwuw nf duly wlih'li jMitmw IiuihnmhiUImhi lillMMlf.
fitmiuuMHi in nuiw ma.
fl ib KV Tut !JIiMil M"M'Hwi luniyliw mAvh DM Mf tW
it ( iiti HtHi in mwt'k mi in ? Ili-i- ! urn lu iM.1,1.1, tn. ww tt ii''p)ty I" MM
ill i Hl I4i ( l.f lllll
Sierra Lumber plantquarter of a million.
in
buriedbooty:
Shipping
fcarkentlne
ABDUCTED.
HATSUSE.
coaches, thirty-thre- e chariots, or post-chais-
and twenty-si- x phaetons. Allwere Importations from France andEngland. To own a carriage was Inthose days considered a mark of high-est respectability. The elegant post- -chaise, or chariot, a development ofthe sedan chair, was the most perfect-ly designed carriage ever built. It Is
i seen at this day only In monarchicalcountries, where It Is used at royalreceptions and other grand occasions.
j --H N
Admiral Skrydloff is to do as hepleases with the Port Arthur squadron.W. wniilil nrlvlaa Vilm In tnlrn If Vinrlr
I in the country somewhere and put ItIn a cyclone cellar. The Chicago Rec
d.
HThe Commercial and Official Record
tontalns all meeting notices and all cor-poration notices of every hind and
WHY MOTHERS.WORRY (
Did you ever hear a motherworry over a plump child?There is no better bank ofhealth for a child to drawfrom than a good supply ofhealthy flesh. v
Scott's Emulsion not onlygives a child weight and,plumpness, but it feeds thebrain, bones and nerves withstrength and active power.
Fewer mothers wouldworry if they knew moreabout Scott's Emulsion.
Scott's Emulsion is substi-tuted by cheap emulsions andso-call- wines, cordials andextracts of cod-liv- er oil.They can do you no goodand are dear at any price.Why buy them? Scott'sEmulsion has been the onereliable preparation of cod-liv- er
oil for nearly thirty years,WYIWcndymmumple f.-- upon request.
SCOTT llOWKL--,
404 1'url Sticet. New Vo.k.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
KSTATU ALIIION JI, UMJN.VAN,
'1'hu umlurHlwiul, hnvinir heen dulyiiipolntd uh AdinlnlHiraiiir nf thu UInlu of Albion II (llttiimin, Into of Ma- -liUW'ulli lllli Of KlUIHl, ilut'WIMll, )U- -liy Hive nulu t nil uiwdllmi' of (midilwwihMl ID jilt ill lliull rl u 11m, dulyiuiiliiiiUHul, tun) with nnwi' vmnli-r-
If Hi))' iHklm. vii If Hid vlulni UMtuid hy iiiuhumw umii mui mi urnlli llllll. Ullluil' Ml III l'hllHH 111' l'i.H'Ut UUMilvMi W 11 hill U IHMIllIlN f'oil. II"
' nf IW MbllMMiiii or VMIIilu i
UiMuitii fryw llm die) U" duv nIWI " MlWUlvd lli will I"WiM Ami mII (in"!! intii ih. , t
idfituct'l iiiutiii 1 11 iiim .
I 4NH HlutlMll VlU. l, .. tilVl..ih.i k I .1 (14i
A4ll il ltll.llllll I f II) I .1 ' iI II III I it I lj I
HpHMp pHVNp 0 W ll '!' ' P imfrv i T- - 0t WFW
FORECLOSURES.
MORTGAGEES NOTICE OF INTEN-TION TO FORECLOSE AND OF
"feALE.
Notice la hereby given that In accord-ance with law nnd by virtue of thepower of sale contained In that certainMortgage made by Vincent Fernanda.to W. O. Smith, Henry Waterhouse nmlMary S. Parker, Trustees under tin-Wi- ll
of W. C. Lunalllo, deceased, datelJune 16th, 1899, recorded Irt the Regis-try Offlce in Honolulu in Liber 192, onpages 382-38- 4, the said Mortgagees In-tend to foreclose said Mortgage" forbreach of conditions therein contained,
it: the nt of principaland Interest upon the promhsory noteof said Mortgagor secured by saidMortgage, when due.
Notice Is also hereby given that alland singular the lands nnd premises!conveyed by nnd described In salJMortgage, and the Improvements there-on, hereinafter described, will be soldat public auction by said Mortgageesat tho auction, room of James F. Mor-gan, on Kaahumanu street. In Hono-lulu, Oahu, on Saturday, the fourth dayof June, fi. D. 1904, ut 12 o'clock noonof said day.
The property covered by said Mort-gage nnd Intended to be sold ns afore-Fuk- l,
is all that real estate and theimprovements thereon, situated at Kn-llh- l,
Honolulu aforesaid, described asfollows:
First: All of that certain house lotsituate on the Ewa side of Knlllii RoadIn Kallhi, Honolulu aforesaid, andknown ns Lot No. 1, ns delineated anddescribed In a Map made by R. W. Wil-cox dated January, 1897, and being thosame premises conveyed to said Vin-cent Fernandez by deed of AbrahamFernandez, dated July 1, 1893, recordedIn said Registry Offlce In Liber 183 onpages 140-14- 1, and more particularlydescribed as follows:
Commencing nt the North corner ofthis Lot and running:
S. 33 00' W. CO feet along premises ofS. C. Dwight; thence
S. 50 00' E. 100 feet along Lot' No.2; thence
N. 35 00' E. 50 feet along Lellanlstreet; thence
N. E0 00' W. 100 feet along premisesnow occupied by Domlngos J. Lopes tothe Initial point, and containing "anarea of 5,000 square feet, more or less.
Second: All of that certain house lotsituate on the Ewa side of Kallhi RoadIn Kallhi, Honolulu aforesaid, andknown as Lot No. 2, as delineated onsaid Map of R. W. Wilcox made Jan-uary, 1897, and being the same premisesconveyed to said Vincent Fernandez bydeed of Abraham Fernandez, dated Jan-uar- y
4th, 1S99, recorded In said Regis-try Oillce In Liber 188, pages 333-33- 1,
and more particularly described as fol-
lows:Commencing at the North corner of
this Lot nnd running an follows:S. 35 00' W: 50 feet along premises of
S. C. Dwight; thenceS. CO" 00' E. 100 feet along Lot 3;
thenceN. 33" 00' E. 50 feet along Lellanl
street; thenceN. 50 00' W. 100 feet along Lot No. 1
to the Initial point, and containing anarea of 5,000 square feet more or less.Together with all the rights, privilegesand appurtenances to said above de-
scribed properties belonging.Terms: Cash, In United States Gold
Coin.Deeds at the expense of the pur-
chaser.For further particulars Inquire of
William O. Smith, Judd Building, cor-ner Fort and Merchant streets, Hono-lulu.
Dated Honolulu, May 6, 1904.
WILLIAM O. SMITH,MARY S. PARKER,
Surviving Trustees under the Will -
W. C. Lunalllo, Deceased,Mortgagees.
"2587 5t-- F
FOR SALE.
Pure White Leghorn Eggs from Im-
ported fowlsi. Prize winners. ?2.00 perdoz. Inquire
W. E. SHAW,1104 Keeaumoku St., Honolulu. P. O.
Box 471. 2586
KODAKSAND
The LatestFILMS Dates
Seeds Dry PlatesandPhotographicMaterialsof every description.
DEVELOPING and PRINTING
A HixwiiiUy,
I
flood Work Qunrsnteed
HolliDter Drag Go,
I'OHT HTHKBT.
I
,41
141