prizefight gam bler co its suicide · the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody...

16
i I I ; Telephone 365 Star Business Office SECOND EDITION 1 VOL. XVIII, " SIXTEEN PAGES. HONOLULU, HAWAII, SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1910 SIXTEEN PAGES. No. 5708 J i si ' i",v y t r .: A- f PRIZEFIGHT am m an trm era B 13 3B t031 BHB o SSIl KSS The seizure of five tins of opium of two tius of opium from the grip American-Hawaiia- n S. S. Arizonan yesterday morning by the cus- tom officials opens up a greater scheme of smuggling than was at first understood to be the case. It appears that the two tins of opium in the grip or satchel of the Chinese Leong Sang, was nothing more nor less than a plant, a blind, a bluff, under which to hide the smuggling ashore of a great quantity of the poppy juice from the Arizonan. The Federal officials received secret information to the effect that Leong Sang and the other Chinese were, smuggling opium ashore and the sleuths of the customs department immediately descended upon the men mentioned, and, while these two men were having their effects searched and were being, placed under arrest and brought before the United States Commissioner and U. S. District Attorney Breckons, the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody rich, the half-poun- d tins of Hongkong No. 1 now selling at $75, unstamped of course. The two tius of dope, it is alleged, were placed in the grip of Leong Sang to distract .the attention of the officials, as was the case with the five tins above mentioned. DA LY 6 1ST 1 ill Bernadino Madera and Celestine de Cortes, charged with assault with a deadly weapon with Intent to kill one Condito, a laborer employed at Kn-huk- u plantation, waived examination before Judge Andrade this morning and were committed to the Circuit court for trial. Condito has been in the hospital between life and death as a result of the assault, a razor and dagger figuring as the weapons in tho case. The charge of malicious injury brought by Henry Davis against H. C. Brown, of Wahlawa, was taken un- der advisement by Judge Andrade un-t- il next Thursday. A popular baseball man was found guilty of using threatening'language and was given his choice of putting up a bond of $150 or going to jail for 30 days. The chances are that he will put up the bond. The rest of the cases on the calen- dar were continued. f AT THE POPULAR STORE. Attractive displays of brand new goods at Sachs Dry Goods Co., this week. See advertisement In this is- sue. Among the new goods is a com- plete assortment of the famous Onyx hosiery. Si INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENT INSURANCE $5.00 down and $1.00 a month secures you $00.00 a month in case of accident or $50.00 a month,' in case of sickness, with $600. in case of accidental death. Can you afford to neglect your- self or family for such a paltry sum? INSURANCE DEPARTMENT. Hawaiian sTrust ' Co., Ltd. 828 Fort Street. mil GAM from a storekeeper and the seizure of- - a Chinese steward aboard the E DUCK OFF THIS AFTERNOON Unless something unfareseen hap pens between now and threo o'clock the collier Prometheus, with the cruis- er Chattanooga in tow and the Cleve land as convoy, will sail for San Fran- cisco. Final preparations for the de- parture of the special squadron were being made on all three ships this morning, the decks of the ships show- ing a good deal of activity. The trial trip of the Prometheus yesterday afternoon proved satisfact- ory to the members of tho board of survey, who were ordered to see that the engines of the big auxiliary were in condition to stand the tedious trip to Bremerton with the disabled man-of-w- in tow. Tho engines which caused so much trouble on the trip from San Francisco worked much better than the engineers expected, tho result being that the collier did not come Into port last night but lay at anchor outside tho harbor On account of the poor condition of the Cleveland's boilers and engines, It is doubtful if more than eight knots an hour will be made between hero and San Francisco, as Captain Rod man noes not intend to take any chances with his ship, and considers that an eight-kno- t speed will be all that is necessary. The Prometheus and Chattanooga will keep company with the Clove-lan- d as far as the Farallones, when they will chango tholr courso and proceed directly to tho Bremerton navy yard near Seattle unless orders are received by wireless to tho con- trary on the way up. , THE PARK THEATER. Tho greats bill at tho popular open air theater will bo given on Monday night, not Sunday as was announced in the Advertiser this morning. The artists this wook wllj do some wonder- ful stunts, the Crottens being strong men of tho stamp ot Sandow. Dysol Is a ventriloquist up to tho best of them and his act has nover been du- plicated here. Throughout the en-- , tortalnment promises to l)o tho best over givon at tho Park and tho placo should bo crowded In consequence Miss Ethel May and Mr. Gardner 'will continue to delight tho nudlenco with thoir sweat singing. Fine Job Priming; Star Office. BLER Hawaiian Trust Co. is executor or tho estate of the late James Alfred on Colburn who died July 2 and left fl widow, Mary Jane. Ho left city prop- erty worth $3,800 and cash, $U8 .Tho widow gets personal property and in-- ' on come of estate during life, after which him property goes to decedent's brother's and children in Australia. Leong Fat must appear to show why and he should not be adjudged guilty of is contempt for refusing to pay his wife alimony in divorce proceedings. Judge Robinson grants Wallace HO- - RET URN TO CAUSE (Associated Press NEW YORK, July 23 The to today of fifty men the five hundred who struck work rioting which has been suppressed T mm DEAD OF HEART DISEASE Alexander C. Elston, a motorman employed by the Rapid Transit Co. died suddenly of heart failure this morning at his home 12G9 Fort street. Elston has been on sick leave since the ICth f July and under the care of Dr. Walters. Elston has always been considered an efficient and trustworthy man by his employers who were shocked to hear of his death today. As far as the officials ot tho company know, Elston was alone, having no relatives or family. . Funeral services will bo held tomorrow under tho auspices of the Honolulu Street Railway Employ- ee's Benefit Association. LATTERDAY SAINTS. Reorganized church on King street near Kapiolani. Elder M. A. McCon-ley- , pastor. 9:45 a. m. Sunday school. Lesson, "Peter's Pentecostal Sermon." 11 a.' m. Morning worship. Sermon, "Prayer," by pastor. 0:30 p. m. Zion's Rellglo Literary Society Lesson "Trouble with Morian ton Ancient America 71 B. C." 7:30 p. m. Evening worship. Sermon "A Living Church," by pastor. Special music by choir. Seats free. All welcomo. Tho proverbial without a thorn" again came to light yesterday whon Mrs. C. O. G. Miller dropped a bejewelod gold purse, containing over $200, .from the enl of the pier In front of tho hotel.' It was at tho liveliest time of tho dally swim, and I ho loss spread liko wildfire. Immodlatoly Julia Lang-home- , Marian Newhall, Elizabeth Nowhiill and Holene Irwin swam out to the spot and their diving achieve- ments would have startlod oven tho recent performers at tho Orphoum. However, their "submarine"' ability availed nothliu?. and Mrs, Miner's friends aro still hoping against hope that some fair mormald will recover hoc valuables from tho depths of tho son. S. F. Bulletin CO Jackson divorce from his wife, Emma, grounds of adultery. Judgo Robinson grants Hermann Ludowlg divorce from his wife, Agnes, grounds of desertion. She wroto that he had never saved anything she was happier without him, re- commending that he "amuse himself always be gay." She says that Hilo an old hole and that Honolulu Is a Paradise They wero married in 1888 and havo had seven children, three being minors. x WO RK M ROT NG return work of Cable to The Star.) ai the New York refinery, caused by the police. PROBE FAILS TO ELICIT EVIDE ICE All efforts so far to get any Infor- mation about the murder of Chun Ton from the five Chinese who wero brought up from Kahuku yesterday havo proved fruitless. Unless they decide to give some light on tho terrible crime, tho police are up against it very badly. Ton was supposed to havo been InpossessI6nof a large amount of opium at tho time of his, death and It is quite possible that the desiro on the part of some of his friends to steal tho precious pop- py juice led to the murder ot tho un- fortunate man by a person or persons unknown to tho police. Before In the history of crime the police have always been able to ob- tain some clue that would result In the running down of tho suspected persons, but in this case they aro en- tirely at sea and will probably re main so, unless somo of tho Ave de- cide to confess everything that they know which seems to bo very unlike- ly at present. TWO SERVICE OFFICERS. Lieut. James L. Ahorn ot this city, who has been stationed on the cutter Thetis, on tho Pacific, has arrived home from Honolulu and will remain in this city several weeks to recuper- ate. Lieut, Ahern Is In poor health on account of tho strenuous sea service ho has experienced In tho last year, and is home to recuperate. First Lieutenant of Engineers James Humphrey Chalker was commissioned a captain of engineers Juno 27 to rank as such from Juno 6, on which date Captain of Engineers Edward G. Schwartz retired. Capt. Chalker Is now stationed at Honolulu. Wash- ington Star. NEW RIC& MILL. The K. Yamamoto Rico Mill Is the largest as well as tho finest In tho islands. All machinery Is of the very latest pattern. Tno famous Tengu Rico Is cloaned at this mill. With tho largo cleaning capacity they aro able to handlo coiiBldorablo out-sld- o parti- cular work wnich they guarantee. Pine Job Pr.ntini. Star Oirii: M ITS SUICIDE GIRL SPRINGS (Associated Press Cable to The Star.) BARCELONA, July 23 Antonio Maura, the former Spauish pre mier, who was wounded here yesterday by a would-b- e assassin, was saved from death by the heroic action of girl who, that Maura's life was threatened, sprang upon and grappled with the assailant and confused his aim. T FIGHT B AND KILLS ii (Associated Press young.cousin, MSELr CniCAGO, July 23 A man of this city who lost $10,000 through bet that Jim Jeffries would defeat Jack Johnson in the heavyweight fight on July 4 at Reno, has committed suicide on ac- count 61 his loss. TWO DROWNED IN CLOUDBURST (Associated Press Cable to The Star.) BISI5EE, Ariz., July 2.'5 In a cloudburst two persons have been drowned and six others are missing. Property loss amounts to .$150,000. " BON LLA SAILS OVERTHROW DAVILLA (Associated Press Cable to The Star.) NEW ORLEANS, July 2'.l It for Honduras with men and arms Davilla. g TO overthrowing $4 Manufacturer's Shoe Co., BIG RECEPTION AT SEOUL SEOUL, July Ambassador Terauchi was given great reception here SAFE GUAItD ILLNESS. Make It a rule ot your homo to keep Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy as a safeguard against bowel complaints. For sale by all dealers, Benson, Smith & Co., agents for Hawaii. POWDER Absolutely Pure Tho only baking powder mado with Royal Grape Cream of Tartar e Ho Alum, No Lima Phosphate his a fearless. seeing laying a Cable to The Star.) is reported that Bonilla has sailed with the intention of . i Shoe A home for tho feet not a Prison. Wo havo them In nil leathers both In high and low. Especially good for office men and clerks. Ltd., 1051 Fort St., - Honolulu 23 of Japan a today. AGAINST i "a I 'I .1 "(if I n .t J'

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Page 1: PRIZEFIGHT GAM BLER CO ITS SUICIDE · the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody rich, the half-poun-d tins of Hongkong No. 1 now selling at $75, unstamped of course

i I

I ; Telephone 365 Star Business Office SECOND EDITION 1

VOL. XVIII," SIXTEEN PAGES. HONOLULU, HAWAII, SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1910 SIXTEEN PAGES. No. 5708 J

i

si '

i",v y

t r .:

A-

f

PRIZEFIGHT

am m an trm era B 13 3B t031 BHB o SSIl KSS

The seizure of five tins of opiumof two tius of opium from the gripAmerican-Hawaiia- n S. S. Arizonan yesterday morning by the cus-

tom officials opens up a greater scheme of smuggling than was atfirst understood to be the case.

It appears that the two tins of opium in the grip or satchel of theChinese Leong Sang, was nothing more nor less than a plant, a blind,a bluff, under which to hide the smuggling ashore of a great quantityof the poppy juice from the Arizonan.

The Federal officials received secret information to the effect thatLeong Sang and the other Chinese were, smuggling opium ashore andthe sleuths of the customs department immediately descended uponthe men mentioned, and, while these two men were having their effectssearched and were being, placed under arrest and brought before theUnited States Commissioner and U. S. District Attorney Breckons,the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody rich,the half-poun- d tins of Hongkong No. 1 now selling at $75, unstampedof course.

The two tius of dope, it is alleged, were placed in the grip of LeongSang to distract .the attention of the officials, as was the case withthe five tins above mentioned.

DA LY 6 1ST

1 illBernadino Madera and Celestine de

Cortes, charged with assault with adeadly weapon with Intent to kill oneCondito, a laborer employed at Kn-huk- u

plantation, waived examinationbefore Judge Andrade this morningand were committed to the Circuitcourt for trial. Condito has been inthe hospital between life and deathas a result of the assault, a razor anddagger figuring as the weapons intho case.

The charge of malicious injurybrought by Henry Davis against H. C.Brown, of Wahlawa, was taken un-

der advisement by Judge Andrade un-t- il

next Thursday.A popular baseball man was found

guilty of using threatening'languageand was given his choice of putting upa bond of $150 or going to jail for 30days. The chances are that he willput up the bond.

The rest of the cases on the calen-

dar were continued.

fAT THE POPULAR STORE.

Attractive displays of brand newgoods at Sachs Dry Goods Co., thisweek. See advertisement In this is-

sue. Among the new goods is a com-plete assortment of the famous Onyxhosiery.

SiINDUSTRIAL

ACCIDENTINSURANCE

$5.00 down and $1.00 a monthsecures you $00.00 a month incase of accident or $50.00 amonth,' in case of sickness, with$600. in case of accidental death.Can you afford to neglect your-self or family for such a paltrysum?

INSURANCE DEPARTMENT.

HawaiiansTrust '

Co., Ltd.828 Fort Street.

mil

GAM

from a storekeeper and the seizureof-- a Chinese steward aboard the

E DUCK OFF

THIS AFTERNOON

Unless something unfareseen happens between now and threo o'clock

the collier Prometheus, with the cruis-

er Chattanooga in tow and the Cleve

land as convoy, will sail for San Fran-

cisco. Final preparations for the de-

parture of the special squadron were

being made on all three ships thismorning, the decks of the ships show-ing a good deal of activity.

The trial trip of the Prometheusyesterday afternoon proved satisfact-ory to the members of tho board ofsurvey, who were ordered to see thatthe engines of the big auxiliary werein condition to stand the tedious tripto Bremerton with the disabled man-of-w-

in tow. Tho engines whichcaused so much trouble on the tripfrom San Francisco worked muchbetter than the engineers expected,tho result being that the collier didnot come Into port last night but layat anchor outside tho harbor

On account of the poor condition ofthe Cleveland's boilers and engines, Itis doubtful if more than eight knotsan hour will be made between heroand San Francisco, as Captain Rodman noes not intend to take anychances with his ship, and considersthat an eight-kno- t speed will be allthat is necessary.

The Prometheus and Chattanoogawill keep company with the Clove-lan- d

as far as the Farallones, whenthey will chango tholr courso andproceed directly to tho Bremertonnavy yard near Seattle unless ordersare received by wireless to tho con-trary on the way up. ,

THE PARK THEATER.Tho greats bill at tho popular open

air theater will bo given on Mondaynight, not Sunday as was announcedin the Advertiser this morning. Theartists this wook wllj do some wonder-ful stunts, the Crottens being strongmen of tho stamp ot Sandow. DysolIs a ventriloquist up to tho best ofthem and his act has nover been du-

plicated here. Throughout the en-- ,

tortalnment promises to l)o tho bestover givon at tho Park and tho placoshould bo crowded In consequenceMiss Ethel May and Mr. Gardner 'willcontinue to delight tho nudlenco withthoir sweat singing.

Fine Job Priming; Star Office.

BLER

Hawaiian Trust Co. is executor ortho estate of the late James Alfred onColburn who died July 2 and left fl

widow, Mary Jane. Ho left city prop-

erty worth $3,800 and cash, $U8 .Thowidow gets personal property and in-- ' on

come of estate during life, after which himproperty goes to decedent's brother's andchildren in Australia.

Leong Fat must appear to show why andhe should not be adjudged guilty of iscontempt for refusing to pay his wifealimony in divorce proceedings.

Judge Robinson grants WallaceHO- -

RET URN TO

CAUSE(Associated Press

NEW YORK, July 23 The to today of fifty men

the five hundred who struck work

rioting which has been suppressed

T mm DEAD

OF HEART DISEASE

Alexander C. Elston, a motormanemployed by the Rapid Transit Co.

died suddenly of heart failure thismorning at his home 12G9 Fort street.Elston has been on sick leave sincethe ICth f July and under the careof Dr. Walters.

Elston has always been consideredan efficient and trustworthy man by

his employers who were shocked tohear of his death today. As far asthe officials ot tho company know,Elston was alone, having no relativesor family. . Funeral services will bo

held tomorrow under tho auspices of

the Honolulu Street Railway Employ-

ee's Benefit Association.

LATTERDAY SAINTS.

Reorganized church on King streetnear Kapiolani. Elder M. A. McCon-ley- ,

pastor.9:45 a. m. Sunday school. Lesson,

"Peter's Pentecostal Sermon."11 a.' m. Morning worship. Sermon,

"Prayer," by pastor.0:30 p. m. Zion's Rellglo Literary

Society Lesson "Trouble with Morianton Ancient America 71 B. C."

7:30 p. m. Evening worship. Sermon"A Living Church," by pastor.

Special music by choir. Seats free.All welcomo.

Tho proverbial without athorn" again came to light yesterdaywhon Mrs. C. O. G. Miller dropped abejewelod gold purse, containing over$200, .from the enl of the pier Infront of tho hotel.'

It was at tho liveliest time of thodally swim, and I ho loss spread likowildfire. Immodlatoly Julia Lang-home- ,

Marian Newhall, ElizabethNowhiill and Holene Irwin swam outto the spot and their diving achieve-ments would have startlod oven thorecent performers at tho Orphoum.However, their "submarine"' abilityavailed nothliu?. and Mrs, Miner'sfriends aro still hoping against hopethat some fair mormald will recoverhoc valuables from tho depths of thoson. S. F. Bulletin

CO

Jackson divorce from his wife, Emma,grounds of adultery.

Judgo Robinson grants HermannLudowlg divorce from his wife, Agnes,

grounds of desertion. She wroto

that he had never saved anythingshe was happier without him, re-

commending that he "amuse himselfalways be gay." She says that Hilo

an old hole and that Honolulu Is aParadise They wero married in1888 and havo had seven children,three being minors. x

WO RK

M

ROT NG

return work of

Cable to The Star.)

ai the New York refinery, causedby the police.

PROBE FAILS TO

ELICIT EVIDE ICE

All efforts so far to get any Infor-

mation about the murder of Chun Ton

from the five Chinese who werobrought up from Kahuku yesterdayhavo proved fruitless.

Unless they decide to give somelight on tho terrible crime, tho policeare up against it very badly. Ton wassupposed to havo been InpossessI6nofa large amount of opium at tho timeof his, death and It is quite possiblethat the desiro on the part of some ofhis friends to steal tho precious pop-

py juice led to the murder ot tho un-

fortunate man by a person or personsunknown to tho police.

Before In the history of crime thepolice have always been able to ob-

tain some clue that would result Inthe running down of tho suspectedpersons, but in this case they aro en-

tirely at sea and will probably remain so, unless somo of tho Ave de-

cide to confess everything that theyknow which seems to bo very unlike-ly at present.

TWO SERVICE OFFICERS.

Lieut. James L. Ahorn ot this city,who has been stationed on the cutterThetis, on tho Pacific, has arrivedhome from Honolulu and will remainin this city several weeks to recuper-ate. Lieut, Ahern Is In poor health onaccount of tho strenuous sea serviceho has experienced In tho last year,and is home to recuperate.

First Lieutenant of Engineers JamesHumphrey Chalker was commissioneda captain of engineers Juno 27 to rankas such from Juno 6, on which dateCaptain of Engineers Edward G.Schwartz retired. Capt. Chalker Isnow stationed at Honolulu. Wash-ington Star.

NEW RIC& MILL.

The K. Yamamoto Rico Mill Is thelargest as well as tho finest In thoislands. All machinery Is of the verylatest pattern. Tno famous TenguRico Is cloaned at this mill. With tholargo cleaning capacity they aro ableto handlo coiiBldorablo out-sld- o parti-cular work wnich they guarantee.

Pine Job Pr.ntini. Star Oirii:

M ITS SUICIDEGIRL SPRINGS

(Associated Press Cable to The Star.)

BARCELONA, July 23 Antonio Maura, the former Spauish premier, who was wounded here yesterday by a would-b- e assassin, wassaved from death by the heroic action ofgirl who, that Maura's life was threatened, sprang upon andgrappled with the assailant and confused his aim.

T FIGHT B

AND KILLS ii(Associated Press

young.cousin,

MSELr

CniCAGO, July 23 A man of this city who lost $10,000 throughbet that Jim Jeffries would defeat Jack Johnson in the

heavyweight fight on July 4 at Reno, has committed suicide on ac-

count 61 his loss.

TWO DROWNED

IN CLOUDBURST(Associated Press Cable to The Star.)

BISI5EE, Ariz., July 2.'5 In a cloudburst two persons have beendrowned and six others are missing. Property loss amounts to.$150,000.

"

BON LLA SAILS

OVERTHROW DAVILLA(Associated Press Cable to The Star.)

NEW ORLEANS, July 2'.l Itfor Honduras with men and armsDavilla.

g

TO

overthrowing

$4

Manufacturer'sShoe Co.,

BIG RECEPTION AT SEOUL

SEOUL, July Ambassador Terauchi was givengreat reception here

SAFE GUAItD ILLNESS.Make It a rule ot your homo to keep

Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera andDiarrhoea Remedy as a safeguardagainst bowel complaints. For saleby all dealers, Benson, Smith & Co.,agents for Hawaii.

POWDERAbsolutely Pure

Tho only baking powdermado with Royal Grape

Cream of Tartar eHo Alum, No Lima Phosphate

his a fearless.seeing

laying a

Cable to The Star.)

is reported that Bonilla has sailedwith the intention of

. i

ShoeA home for tho feet not a

Prison.Wo havo them In nil leathers

both In high and low.

Especially good for office menand clerks.

Ltd.,1051 Fort St., - Honolulu

23 of Japan atoday.

AGAINST

i

"a

I

'I

.1

"(if

I

n.t

J'

Page 2: PRIZEFIGHT GAM BLER CO ITS SUICIDE · the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody rich, the half-poun-d tins of Hongkong No. 1 now selling at $75, unstamped of course

'Oceanic Steamship CompanySierra Schedule

LBAVE S. F. ' ARRIVE HON. LBAVE HON. ARRIVE 8. V,

JULY 9 JULY 15 JULY 20 JULY 2G

JULY 30 AUG. 5 AUG. 10 AUG. 16

AUG. 20 AUG. 26 AUG. 31 SEPT. 6

BEPT. 10, SEPT. 10 SEPT. 21 SEPT. 27

OCT. ! OCT. 7 OCT. 12 OCT. 18

jConnects at Honolulu with C. A. Line ,for Sydney. C. A. Lino leavesHonolulu for Australia Jan. 8, 10 and every 28 days.

Arrives In Honolulu a week In advance of C. Line steamer en routeto Sydney.

RATES from Honolulu to San Francisco First Class, $65; RoundTrip, $110. Family Room, extra.

Reservations will not bo held later than twenty-fou- r hours prior to the

advertised sailing time unless tlcKets are paw tor in iuu.J

FOR PARTICULARS, APPLY TO

GENERAL AGENTS.

Canadian-Australi- an Hoyal M Steamship Go

Steamom of the above lino running In connection with the CANADIAN-PACIFI-

RAILWAY COMPANY between Vancouver, B. C, and 8ydney,

N. 8. W., and calling hi Victoria, B. C, Honolulu and BrUbanc. Q.

FOR FIJI AND AUSTRALIA. FOR VANCOUVER.

MAKURA AUGUST 19 ZEALAND1A AUGUST 1C

ZEALANDIA SEPTEMBER ICMARAMA SEPTEMBER 13

Calls at Fanning Island.

CALLING AT SUVA, FIJI, ON BOTH UP AND DOWN VOYAGtiS.

Theo. & Davies & Co., Ltd., Ge.-'- l Ants

Pacific Mail Steamship Co.

Toyo Risen Kaisha S. S. Co.-

i

Stcxmers of tho above Companies will Call at HONOLULU nd Leave

this Port ok or about the Dates mentioned below:

LEAVE HONOLULU FOR ORIENT. LEAVE HONOLULU FOR S. F.

CHIYO MARU JULY 20 MONGOLIA .July 30

ASIA AUG. 2 TENYO MARU JULY 30

MONGOLIA .'.'.' AUG. 15 KOREA AUG. 7

TENYO MARU AUG. 23 NIPPON MARU AUG. 20

KOREA AUG. 29 SIBERIA AUG. 28

NIPPON MARU SEPT. 13 CHINA SEPT. 3

SIBERIA SEPT. 19 MANCHURIA SEPT. 10

CHINA SEPT. 2G CHIYO MARU SEPT. 17

MANCHURIA OCT. 3 ASIA SEPT. 24

CHIYO MARU OCT. 11 MONGOLIA OCT. 8

ASIA OCT. 18 TENYO MARU OCT. 15

MONG'oLiA'.': OCT. 31 KOREA OCT. 22

TENYO MARU NOV. 8 NIPPON MARU NOV. 5

FOn FURTHER INFORMATION APPLY TO

H. HACKFELD & CO. i TP

Matson Navigation Co.'s Schedule, 1910DIRECT SERVICE BETWEEN SAN FRANCISCO AND HONOLULU.

Arrive from San Francisco Sail for San Francisco.

Lurline August 3 Lurline August 9

Wllhelmina August 9 WILHELMINA August 17

Nevadan August IS Lurline September 6

The S. .S. Hyades of this line sails from Seattle for Honolulu, DIRECT, onor about July 16, 1910.

For further particulars apply to

CASTLE & COOKE LTD.,..-- - GENERAL AGENT8.

American-Hawaiia- n Steamship Co.FROM NEW YORK TO HONOLULU, via Tehuantepec, every sixth

day. Freight received at all times at the Company's Wharr, 41st Street.

South Brooklyn.

FROM SEATTLE AND TACOMA TO HONOLULU DIRECT:3. S. Virginian to sail July 25

S. S. Mexican to sail August 6

For further information apply toH HACKFELD & CO., LTD, Agents, Honolulu.

C P. MORSE, General Freight Agent.

(IN ON-P- AG

TRANSFER

126 KING ST.

FIG

CO. LTD

BAGGAGE, 8HIPPINQ.

8TORAGE, WOOD,

PACKiNG, COAL.

PH0J1E

50FURNITURE AND PIANO MOVING

Firewood and LoalBest Grades Always On Hand

Concrete Brick, Crushed

Rock and S a n d

Hustace-Pec- k Co. LID

Phone 295 63 Queen Street

THE HAWAIIAN STAB; SATURDAY, JULY 23, iOlO.

TIDE8, 8UN AND MOON.

Full moon, July 21st at 10:06 p. m.

3 g 2a 5, I 2 Is

ai 3 5 1 W tl g s 11

P. M. It. A.M. A. M. P. il.Sets

18 IMS 1.9 0:13 C:02 9:35 5:29 6:48 2:18

19 2:21 2.0 1:13 6:42 10:05 5:200:43 3:02

20 2:55 2.1 2:03 7:18 10:85 5:80 6:43 3:52

21 3:30 2.2 2:12 7:57 11:03 5:30 6:42 Klsca

22 4:05 2.2 3:27 8:10 11:27 5:30 0:42 7:3.1

23 4:40 2.1 f4;10 9:25 11:54 5:316:41 8:18

21 5:13 2.0 4:58 10:10 5:31!6;41 9:00

Times of the tldo aro taken fromtho U. S. Coast ana Geodetic Surveytables. Tho tides at Kahulul andHllo occur about ono hour earlierthan at Honolulu. Honolulu standardtlmo Is 10 hours 30 minutes slowerthan Greenwich tlmo, being that oftho meridian of 167 degrees 30 mfns.Tho time whistle blows at 1:30 p.m.,which Is tho same as Greenwich0 hours 0 minutes. The sun andmoon are for local time for tho wholegroup.

Shipping m Port

(Government Vessels.)Kukul, U. 8 L. H. T., Cai'rlger.U. S. S. Cleveland, Rodman, Manila

June 21.

U. S. S. Chattanooga, McDonald, Ma-nila, June 21.

U. S. R. C. Thetis, from cruise, July11.

U. S. S. Prometheus, from San Fran-cisco, Jury u.

(Merchant .'easels.)Alden Besse, Am. bk., Miller, San

Pelro, May ,18.Mary E. I'oster, Am. schr. Port Lud-

low, Juno 15.

A. F. Coats, Am. sch., Morris, Had-loc-

Juno 30.Golden Shore, Am. sch., Aberdeen,

July 4.

Alice Cooke, Am. sch., Penhallow,Port Ludlow, July 18.

S. C. Allen, Amer. bk., Wllke, FortBragg, July 16.

A.-H- . S. S. Arlzonan, Nichols, SanFrancisco, July 22.

M. N. S. S. Nevadan, San Francisco,July 23.

TRANSPORT SERVICE.Logan, from Manila for Honolulu,

July 15.

DIx, from Seattle for Honolulu,July 15.

Sheridan, arrived San Franciscofrom Honolulu, July 12.

Sherman, from Honolulu for Manila. Tuly 14.

WIRELESS SPARKS.S. S. CHIYO MARU, AT SEA, 8 p.

m., July 22. 85Y miles from Honolulu,moderate northwest winds, smoothsea.

S. S. WILHELMINA, AT SEA, 8 p.m., July 22. 826 miles, N. E. winds,smooth sea.

S. S. SIERRA, AT SEA, 8 p. m., July22.--396 miles, N. E. winds, .

S. S. MAKURA, AT SEA, 8 p. m...July 22. 1104 miles, moderate S. W.winds.

ARRIVED.Saturday, July 23.

M. N. S. S. rrevadan, San Francisco,5 a. m.

C. A. S. S. Marama from Victoriaand Vancouver, 11 p. m., July" 22. En-tered port at 7.30 a. m.

I. I. S. S. Mauna Kea, Hllo and wayports, 5 a. m.

PASSENGERS.Arrived.

From Victoria, per S. S. Marama,July 23. Dr. S. E. Cummins, Miss C.M. Cunningham, Miss Martha Rath,Miss Mary Rath, T. M. Johnson, Mr.and Mrs. W. S. Witte, Mr. and Mrs.C. Hauko, W. Babbige, Mr. and Mrs.L. G. Richardson, Miss Dorothy Rich.,ardson, Miss Constance Richardson,Miss Fenwick, Miss Rey Bell, MissA. G. Dunne and Miss S. Gurney.

From Hllo and way ports, per S. S.Mauna Kea, July 23. J. F. Horner,Jno. Fait , Mrs. H. B. Hobron, F. S.Dodgo and wife, J. Howard and wife,Misses Moward (2), Miss S. Vox, MissJ. Chawer,, Miss C. Macfarlano, ,E F.Grimes, H. H. Cornby, Misses McCar-thy (3), Miss J. Young, Miss E. Peter-son, Miss L. Wa-gnor- , Miss M. Popple-ton- ,

S. W. Wilcox and wife, Mrs. Jas.Lisson, D. E. Metzer,, J. Down H. F.Ludewig, Rov. C. Mijagaua, T. Kito,C. Nakamura, Miss E, A. Perkins, M.Splnpla, H. B. Manner, J. P. Davis,C. P. Benton, wife and child, Mrs. H.Dowsett, J. Hutcheson and wife, MissHutcheson, J. R. Nokookoo, Miss Kae-wehan-

Miss Kamal, Mrs. Jameson,Mrs. M. Anderson, Mrs. G. Bright andchild, Rov. R. Kashlwn, Rev. N. Naka-wish- !,

W. Jordan, F. J. Lindemnn, W.T. Frost, Miss Bottlge, C. H. McClan-ahau- ,

Miss Kawewehi, Miss Battlgo, H.T. Barclay and wife, J. H. Jones, Mas-ter K. Willlo, Mrs. L. A. Parish andson F. J. Lowroy and wife, A. Lowrey,S. Kennedy, A. Makokau, F. W. Jame-son W. S. Kabojakawa and wife, M. F.Furkoda, R. S. Hosmer, M. Hino, Takn-hash- !

and wife, K. Nakamura, T. Ka- -

nasakl Miss Hnnsemor, Rov. J, Tanakn, Young Quong Sam, Rov. C. Nakamura, S. KYinda and wife, Mrs. Koda'ml and child, MIbs Ito, Mrs. G. Llndsay and children, Rev. J. W. Wndman,Mrs. W. Weight and 3 children, J. S.Walker, A. M. Brown, II. M. Kanlho,J. Douglass, Mrs. Do Rcgo and 2 children, Bro. Francis, Rev. C. H. Mln,Misses.

F DREIGN STEAMERS

MJMESTEAMES TO ARRIVE.

Duo Namo from21 Mongolia Yokohama25 Hongkong Maru ....Hongkong2C Chlyo Maru ...'..San Francisco3C Tenyo Maru Yokohama

STEAMERS TO DEPART.Depart Name For

July21 Mongolia San Francisco25 Hongkong Maru ....Valparaiso26 Chlyo Maru Yokohama30 Tenyo Maru . . . .San Francisco

ELECTION OF OFFICERS.

HAWAIIAN FERTILIZER CO., LTD.At the annual meeting of tho Ha-

waiian Fertilizer Co., Ltd., held thisday the following officers were electedto serve fo rthe ensuing year:B. D. Tennoy PresidentJ. P. Cooke Vice PresidentJ. Waterhouso SecretaryE. F. Bishop . TreasurerGeorge H. Robertson AuditorR. A. Cooke DirectorC. H. Atherton Director

J. WATERHOUSE,Secretary.

Honolulu, July 18 1910.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS.

Estate of Emily Backeberg, Deceased.Notice is hereby given to all credit

ors of tho said and above named EmilyBackeberg, deceased, to present theirclaims, duly authenticated, and withproper vouchers, If any exist, even iftho claim Is seeuerd by mortgage up-on real estate, to tho undersigned.administrator of the estate of paid deceased, at Its place of business at themakai-Ew- a corner of Fort and Mer-chant streets, In the City of Hono-lulu, within six months from the datehereof, the same being the date of thefirst publication of this notice.

Dated Honolulu, June 30th, 1910.HENRY WATERHOUSE TRUST

COMPANY, LIMITED,Administrator of the estate of thesaid Emily Backeberg, deceased.

5ts June 30; July 7, 14, 21, 28.

BY AUTHORITYSEALED TENDERS.

Sealed Tenders will be received atthe office of the Superintendent ofPublic Works until 12m of Saturday,July 30, 1910, for tho laying of 12"wooden stave pipe, Kula pipe line,Island & County of Maul, T. H.

Plans, specifications and proposalblanks are on file in the Departmentof Public Works and may also be hadfrom Mr. F. E. Harvey, Camp Ollnda,Makawao, Maul.

The Superintendent of Public Worksreserves the right to reject any or "allbids.

marston Campbell.Superintendent of Public Works.

Honolulu, July 19, 1910.

NOTICE OF OPENING OF GOVERN-MENT LANDS.

Notice is hereby given that all ap-

plications for the opening of publiclands for settlement, must bo madeupon blanks furnished by tho Com-missioner of Public Lands or tho sub-agen- ts

of the different land districts,and tho applicants must swear to thesame before a sub-agen- t.

MARSTON CAMPBELL.Commissioner of Public Lands.

Dated at Honolulu, July 19, 1910.4ts. July 20, 21, 22, 23.

Xiill IF

OFFICERS and DIRECTORS.H. P. BALDWIN PresidentJ. B. CASTLE 1st Vice-Preside-

W. M. ALEXANDER. 2ndJ. R. GALT 3rd Vice-Preside-

E. E. PAXTON SecretaryJ. WATERHOUSE TreasurerW. R. CASTLE DirectorJ. GUILD DirectorC. H. ATHERTON DirectorG. G. KINNEY Acting Auditor

SUGAR FACTORSCOMMISSION ' KUCHA NTH

AND

INSUUANCK AGKNTS.AGENTS FOR

Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Com-

pany.Haiku Sugar Company.Pala Plantation.Maul Agricultural Company,Hawaiian Sugar Company.Mahuku Plantation Company.Kahulul Railroad Company.Haleakala Ranch Company,Honolua Ranch,McBrydo Sugar Company,Kauai Railway Co.

MEN'S LAUNDRY WORKJ. ABADIE, Prop. Telephone 1491

French Laundry 777 Kinu street

STATEMENT OF CONDITION OF

THE BANK OF HAWAII, LTD.OF HONOLU LU, HAWAII

At the Close of Business, June 30, 1910.

ASSETS.

Loans, Discounts & Over-drafts $2,875,085 62

Bonds 674,864 17Bank promises & fixtures 96,896 76Cash and with Banks. .. . 1,218,553 61Other Assets 3,071 47

$4,868,471 66

LIABILITIES.

Capital Paid Up $ 600,000 00Surplus and Profits 523,888 06Pension Fund 33,704 86Deposits 3,710,238 71Dividends Uncalled for 640 00

06

I, F. B. Damon, Cashier, do solem nly swear that tho above Is true to thobest of my knowledge and belief.

Examined and found correct: f. n. DAMON. Cashier.C. H. ATHERTON,E. F. BISHOP,R. A. COOKE,

Directors. H. II. WALKER, Auditor.Subscribed and sworn to before m0 this 12th day of July, 1910.

J. D. MARQUES,Notary Public, First Judicial Circuit.

Lots In FruitvaleOne Cent Per

Square Foot

4fJtUXJ

Or a trifle over for home sites of more thanone acre each, adjoining the celebrated PukeleHomestead in PALOLO VALLEY, ten minutes'walk from the car line.

These lots are adjoining the beautiful homes ofOwen Williams, WilliamA. Rideout, Charles J.Schoening, Edward F. Patten and others. Therear of these lots extends to the hill slopes, fromwhich grand views are to be had. Correct soilfor all kinds of fruit

Let me show you this property,

$5oo per acre and up.Map in my window.

Chas. S. DeskyFORT STREET

' $4,868,471

.

'

EXCLUSIVE PATTERNS IN HANDSOME GREYSEnglish and American Weaves. Iade to your order with -

and style unequalled.

W. W. AHANA 62 South King Street

3

Yat Hing StoreRemoved from King and River to Hotel, near Bethel.

We have just received per S. S. Wilhelraina a splendid line ofbest qualities in embroideries and laces. They are all well made,handsomely, finished and strictly high-grad- e goods. Prices o and 10cents a yard.

Ocean View TractAN IDEAL PLACE TO LIVE.

Artesian Water, High Elevation, Electric Lights, DelightfulClimate, Paved Streets, Koko Head Breeze, Sufficient Rainfall Excel-lent Soil, Level Property, Cool and Healthful, Good Location PureAtmosphere. '

Our fixed prices are $500 tor corner lots and $100 for inside lots,size 75ft x 150ft. or 11.250 an. ft. nnoli. fliin tormn om r,n .od,and $10.00 per month on each lot. Call up telephone 659 and make ancuiyujuunuiii wuii unu oi our representatives.

Kaimuki Land Co., Ltd.,MAIN OFPIC BRANCH OFFICE

KING AND FORT STREETS WAIALAE St KOKO HEAD AVSPHONE 059

"Your Credit Is Good"

"YOUR CASH WILL DO BETTER"In Furniture, Wire Mattresses, Iron Beds, Etc., Etc.

IXRERXEI HONOLULU WIRE BED CO., LTD.,KKapiolani Block Cor. King and Alakea Sts.

Page 3: PRIZEFIGHT GAM BLER CO ITS SUICIDE · the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody rich, the half-poun-d tins of Hongkong No. 1 now selling at $75, unstamped of course

Alb urnsFor Post Cards and Viows.

KEEP YOUR PHOTOS ANDPOST CARDS In Albums.

Wo have Albums In perman-ent binding and extension back.

Paper and Cloth Seal anilBurnt Leather.

10c to $C..OO.

Honolulu PhotoSupply Co., Ltd.,Fort Street below Hotel

COHSOLIDRTED SODfl WBTEB

Is Absolutely Pure

TELEPHONE 71.

J. KBRSHNKRnUTO HUE BEPQIBIKG

1177 Alakea St. Phone 411

W.EFUI1ER&C0'S

wmm.

COVER'SLewers & Cooke,

Limited

. 177 S. King Street

Wall, Nichols Co.,Limited.

Keep constantly on handTENNIS BALLS

TENNIS RACKETSTENNIS NETS

GOLF BALLS GOLF CLUBS &Everything In the Sporting and Athle-

tic line..71 King Street

Catton, Neill & Co.,Limited.

Engineers, Machinists, Blacksmith!and Boilermakers.

First class woru at reasonable rate.

Silver PlateFlat Ware

30 PER CENT OFF

J. A. R. VIEIRA & CO.

113 HOTEL STREET .

BEFOREtaking a policy of lifeinsurance in any othercompany ask to see the

CONTRACT- IN THE -

New England Mutual

Life Insurance Com-

pany Of Boston, Mass.

and compare the manyadvantages it offerswith those of 'other

, companies

Castle & Cooke, lidQBNORAL AQENT5

AU REVOIR.

Everybody's going somowhere,It's as hot as It can be,

And tho people aro dispersingTo the mountains and the sea

Spring fever's full upon usAnd tho land Is fast asleep

Tho vacation bugsAnd Its making envy creep.

When to Reno everybodyTried to "touch" a dozen twelves,

All their friends said "nothing doing,"For they wanted It thomselves.

Every steamer's full of peopleDecked with every kind of lei,

And they smile In pity on usAs tho band plays them away.

Everybody's going somewhoroDistant pleasure fields to roam

You and I are plain nobodies'Cause we've got to stay at home.

ELEANOR RIVENnURGII.

Cupid has been up to his pranksagain, girls! And what do you sup-

pose he has done this time? Why hehas played us tho neatest, cutest andwiliest trick of tho season, when hewhistled to two of his young victims,and winking mischievously whiskedthem into St. Andrew's Cathedral onMonday afternoon, thinking nobody

would "get wise," thu little rascal, so

ho could perform his joke and then,when we found It out. hold his sides Inlaughter, at how, slow wo were!

Well, he accomplished his end, thenaughty rogue, and

But you are all getting Impatientto know who were the ones aboutwhich all this fuss is being made.

To make a long story short whicheven In Its serial form Is only abouttwo chapters long Miss GenevieveLangton, the beautiful young belle oftho younger set and one of the mostpopular girls In Honolulu, on Mondayafternoon, at five o'clock, in thesimplest and quietest manner Imagin-able, became the bride of Mr. CharlesBennett, the handsome and fascinat-ing young baritone operatic star, andeven while this Is being read by youIn a stupor of surprise, Mr. and Mrs.Bennett are unconcernedly living atthe Alexander Young Hotel.

It seems that Mr. Bennett becameonamored of his Jicautlful young bridewhile in Honolulu about a year ago,when he was en tour with the Her-bert Withers Concert Company, andtho much feted and admired guest of

General and Mrs. Hem-enwa-

and tho courtship which be-

gan so promisingly was continued bymail ever since.

At last Mr. Bennett came down and,at a pretty luncheon given in com-

pliment to Miss Langton, her engage-ment to tho visitor was announced.

Of course all the girls yere delight-

ed and surprised, for even the bride-elect'- ?

closest frionds had not hadIntimation of tho case, and were put-

ting their heads together wonderingjust when the wedding would takeplace, and where, and what would Ge-

nevieve wear, and would she be nervous ,and all that, and deciding Justwhen they would spring tho first big

MR. AND MRS. BENNETT,

TtiD HAWAII. BTAU, SATURDAY, JULY 23," 1910.

By MRS. RIVENBURGH

shower on her, when lol they pick uptoday's Star and all Is shattered.

What a victim of reproaches andcongratulations these two young, hap-

py pooplo will be, after todaylTho wedding ceremony on Mon-

day was performed by Reverend Canon Simpson, General He- -

monway acting as best man, and MissSarah Lucas as maid of honor to thobride, who was given away by herfather, Mr. William Langton. Only afew of the relatives of tho brldo andmost dearly Intimate frlendB witness-

ed tho ceremony.Mr. and Mrs. Bennett will reside at

the Young Hotel until their early de-

parture for Bennington, Vermont,whero Mr. Bennett will tako his love-

ly young bride for a visit to his rela-

tives before returning to Boston,which will be tholr future home.

A A

Among tho lstarting passengers In

tho last Wilhelmina was Dr. C. B.

Cooper, who, as Lieutenant Colonel ofthe National Guard rifle team, wenton to join the boys at Camp Perry.Later, Dr. Cooper will trayol in theast, visiting Washington, Chicago,

Philadelphia and New York, wherehe will spend somo tlmo at tho va-

rious hospitals. He will return In

about four months.

4 A ftBy tho last mail local friends of

Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Howard were therecipients of programs of the variousLondon theaters, one of which hailedfrom the Theatre Royal, Hawmarket,where a new play, a dramatization ofMaurice Maeterlinck's "The Blue Bird"was presented. Edmond Rostand's"Chanticleer," which has practicallytaken the world by storm, has herald-

ed a new era In the dramatic world,and the Blue Bird Is a farmyard fairyplay on a similar theme.

A characteristic feature of the Lon-

don program Is a note wherein after-noon tea at matinees, Including breadand butter, Is served the audience atan additional charge of Cd. We donot oven get ice water In Honolulutheaters which could to advantage fol-

low the example established even Inthe summer playhouses oE New York.

On Monday, during the stay In thisport of the Manchuria, Colonel SamParker and Princess Kawananakoaentertained at a very sumptuous andelaborate luau of which Mr. R. P.Schwerin was the guest of honor.The beautiful home of Princess Ka-

wananakoa on Ponsacola street, withits green terraces .and trees ladenwith blossoms of the golden showerand Ponciana Regia, was a fittingspot for the Hawaiian feast whosemerit lies as much In the beauty of Itssurroundings as in tho menu. PrincessKawananakoa made a handsome andgracious hostess gowned in a Frenchcreation of white not, heavily embroid-ered in soutache over white satin andwearing tho long senorlta pearl ear-

rings so greatly in vogtre. With herin a bower of palms and golden show-

er, Colonel Parker received the largonumber of guests as they swung con-

tinuously up the drive In motorsnnd carriages, to the strains of Kaai'sorchestra, which played within a fern-cla-

enclosure.The luau was served on the lawn

In a lanal which had been erected ofpalm nnd cccoanut fronds with Ha- -

wallan and American flags draped

NEWLY WED COUPLE

gracefully within. Tho tables werestrewn with mountain ferns, malloand scarlet carnations, a lol of thesesweet blossoms being at oach placeand worn by tho guests during thopleasant meal.

Tho menu, whoch contained speci-mens of ovory delicacy known toHawallans and tastefully cooked andserved, was a delight to tho visitingguests who had been invited, In aparty from tho steamer by ColonelParker, and each mysterious bundlewas merrily undone, revealing In asteaming breath of. richness an aromaas delicious as It was inviting.

The music was also a lfovelty, theHawaiian boys singing tho old me-lodies and sentimental ballads ofthese islands. Many toasts, humor-ous and otherwise, were proffered inthe amber wine and tho affair wasconcluded characteristically by a huladancer In a round of merriment, tnoluau having been proclaimed by thekamaainas present one of the mostcomplete and characteristic overgiven in recent years.

Among those present at the feastwere Mr. Reml P. Schwerin, Admiraland Mrs. Corwin P. Rocs, Captain nndMrs. Marlx, Paymaster Beauflls orthe French cruiser Montcalm, Mrs.Walter Macfarlane, Mr. and Mrs. Al-

bert Sire of Now York, Mr. and Mrs.J. Milton Pray of San Francisco, Mrs.Sydney Smith, San Francisco, Mr. andMrs. Mlnott of New York, Mrs. Hu-bert Vos, Miss Annie Graham, MissGertrude Macfarlane, Mrs. Bryan, Mr.and Mrs. H. F. Lewis, Mr. and Mrs.Robert Shingle, Miss Ada Rhodes,Miss Irene Dickon, Mrs. G. Smithies,Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Taylor, Dr. Hod- -

gins, Mr. Frank Thompson, CaptainJ. Rupert Foster, Mrs. Mannio Phil- -

Hps, James Parker, Ernest Parker,Major Purdy, Mr. and Mrs. J. Balch,Mrs. Gussle Schmidt, W. Lucas, Mr,and Mrs. Carl Widemann, Miss Beatrice Campbell, MIbs Sibyl Winter,Miss Clare Cummings, Mrs. CharlesFalk, C. S. HolloWay, Miss Whitney,Miss Ethel Whitney, Captain Houd- -

letto of tho S. S. Sierra, Captain Johnson of tho S. S. Wilhelmina, Mrs. It

,W. Atkinson, Miss M. Mclntyre, Mr,W. Williamson and Miss Mary Low,

4 4 4Admiral and Mrs. Corwin P. Rees

entertained at an elaborately appoint-ed dinner on Monday evening, In hon-or of Admiral de Castrlos, In com-

mand of the visiting French cruiserMontcalm, and Mr. and Mrs. WalterDillingham. The color scheme of de-

coration was pink In a setting ofgraceful palms and soft maidenhairferns and was exquisitely lovely, asaro all social functions whero Ad-

miral and Mrs. Rees preside.Thoso present besides Admiral de

Castries and Mr. and Mrs. Walter F.Dillingham were Captain Cheron ofthe French cruisor Montcalm, BritishConsul and Mrs. Ralph G. E. Forster,Mrs. Hubert Vos of New York, MissMargaret Walker, Mrs. Herman Fockeand Mrs. Eleanor Hyde-Smit- h of SanFrancisco.

Invitations aro out for a bridgeluncheon at which Mrs. Charles Bryant Cooper will preside on Tuesday;

e.Mrs. J. A. Palmer is entertaining at

a very nandsomo luncheon this afternoon at the Courtland In honor ofPrincess Kalanlanaolo and Mrs. J. M.

Dowsett, who Is soon to loave for anextended tour through America nndEurope. Tho luncheon tablo, set ontho lanal enclosed with national flags,was gracefully adorned with massesof delicate rose pinks and maidenhairfern, tho same blossoms and spraysof fern being daintily spread over thocloth, with the place cards done Inwater colors of a similar design.

Covers at this pretty luncheon worelaid for Princess Kalanlanaole, Mrs. J.M. Dowsett, Princess Kawananakoa,Mrs. Pottle Bcrger, Mrs. Marlx, wlfoof Captain Marlx, U. S. M. C, Mrs.Alice Brown, Mrs. Mary Gunn, MissAda Rhodes and Mdslle. Droyfus ofParis,

This afternoon is boing spent Inbrldgo, when delicious rofreshmontsof sherbet, cream and bon bons willbo served.

4 4 4One of the most unl'iue and beauti-

ful affairs of tho past week was thopolulluncr given by Mr. John F. Col-bur- n

at bis lovely home on Klnnustroot, In honor of Princess Kalanla-naolo, Princess Knwnnunakoa and Mr.and Sirs. Shoellno of Snn Frnnolsco,on Tuosday ovoning.

Tho dlnuor was sorved al frosco, h

nu oxpanslve and dollcioiulyfragrant ylungylang hush, which sogrows to form a largo arbor. ThohlogsQim) of this bush ary unusuallyuwoot at. night, and wore but ono of

': c .Sv v..

PRINCESS

tho many Interesting features of thisoxcecdingly delightful dinner.

Tho largo grounds were illuminatedby Chinese colored lanterns, festoon-

ed from one great shado tree to an-

other, and the dinner tablo was light-ed by colored electric lights.

After recolvlng a cordial and hospitable welcome from Mr. Colburn, whohis two attractive daughters, MissSarahand Miss Daisy Colburn, whowere charmngly gowned in white lin-

gerie frocks, the' guests were seatedat a long table, which as coveredby broken leaves of sweet malln, andgraced by an Italian vase as a center-piece laden with red carnations andmaidenhair fern. Lels of the samewere tied about the shouldrs of thoguests taking their seats.

The place cards were substituted bysmall Hawaiian oyster shells, whltlnwhich under a Hnwalian flag thenames were neatly Inscribed. Thesesouvenirs were accepted by the guestson leaving as a dainty and original re-

minder of the pleasant occasion.All the rare Hawaiian dlshos wero

enjoyed by the guests, perhaps thomost delicious being the desert ofcocoanut shorhert, wheh is made fromthe tender meat and milk of youngcocoa nuts and is one of the most en-

joyable of dainties.Princess Kalanlanaole was gowned

In a red cloth frock, and wearing uhandsome coat of white Battenburglace, while Princess Kawananakoaworo a confection of black lace overwhlto satin with long drop ear-ring- s ofpearls.

Mrs. Sheeline looked very lovely ina robe of cream cloth.

During dlnuor a ladles sextette,which was another of tho very prettyfeatures of the evening, sang sweetlycharming all present.

These wero Princess Kalanlanaole,Princess Kawananakoa, Mr. and Mrs.Sheeline of San Francisco, Miss O.Sullivan, Mrs. Nawahi, Miss IreneDickson, Mr. Cecil Brown, Mr. SamParker, Mdsllo, Dreyfus of Paris, Cap.tain and Mrs. Marlx, Mr. and Mrs..Charles Lucas, Mr. and Mrs. A. P.Taylor, Mrs. Ashford, Ella Long, Ma-

yor Fern, Carlos Long, and John Col-

burn.4 4 4

Mrs. A. Gartenlwrg and her chil-dren, Carolyn and Jean, have arrivedfrom Honolulu to spend tho summerhere, and aro staying at 9G4 Tenthstreet, Oakland. S. F. Chronlclo.

4 4 4Mrs. W. D. Huntington returned yes-

terday on tho Sierra after a stay of

: The Won dertu

Merely turn on the faucet,

comas scalding hot; turn oft

Making it, by far, the mostheating

inif m imWMMfwr im 1111 riiiiii ifiiii iiiriiimm niwi 1 i

TIIREa '"l

,

KAWANANAKOA.

several weeks in Honolulu. Shewas greeted at tho pier by a group of

friends. S. F. Call.

ft aThe social event of tho week was

the golden weiWlng anniversary cele-

bration on Monday 'afternoon, of Pro-

fessor and Mrs. W. D. Alexander.The Invitations had read from three

thirty until six o'clock, and betweenthese hours hundreds of guests filedInto tho luxurlnnt grounds of thehome on Punahou streets with congra-tulations and good wishes for the hap;py couple.

Over the entrance of the quaint oldhome, now In Its fifty-fift- h year, andoccupied by the Alexander family forthirty-si- x years, was a dainty archmade of festooned vines and goldenshower sprays, and banked on eitherside by ginger branches and pepper.The front veranda was ablazo withgolden lilies, huge bowls of thetestrikingly beautiful flowers fillingovery nook and crevice.

On the makai lanal, enclosed withtender young bamboo shoots and de-

corated by Clcll Breunner roses, co-

reopsis and golden shower, tho vener-able couple received, assisted by tholrlaughter, Miss Alexander, and the

members of the bridal party of somany golden years ago.

They stood In one corner, In a per-

fect Lower of peyper branphes andyellow kamanl leaves, under a roman-tic bell .which was completely con-ccalo- d

by yellow shower blossoms,and suspended from the center nndeither side by trailers of smllnx, yel-

low confection and liborty satin rib-

bon in the same palo shade. Thisbell was firs! used by Dr. Alexander'sfnthor at his goldon wedding In Mauland was slnco a factor in the nuptlclsof Mrs. D. D. Baldwin, Mrs. HaroldRico and Mrs. Joe Cooko, nieces ofMrs. Alexander.

In tho recolvlng lino with Professorand Mrs. Alexander wore: Mrs. S. M.Damon, Mrs. Alexander's sister; Mrs.D. D. Baldwin, her sister-in-law- ; Mr.H. P. Baldwin, her brother; Mrs. o

Bishop, Mr. Hustaco, Mrs. CarrloHayselden, Miss Frances Johnson,Miss Mary Parker and Mrs. P. C.Jones, tho two latter of whom werobrldemalds at tho original wedding,Mr. H. P. Baldwin being tho test man.

When not standing to receive thonewly arrived guests the relativesamong those being soized by DwlghtBaldwin who pinned yollow coreopsison them the host and hostess sat

(Contlnuod on Page 7.)

Ruud

A gas water heater with a brain.

Connects with every hot water faucet inthe house.

You do not have to touch the heater at all.

the

water.

v

night or. day, and the waterfaucet and gas is extinguished.

economical method known of

tDaily demonstrations at tho

I Honolulu Gas Company, Ltd.,Young Building, Honolulu.

II'i:1

v?

11

KtiI

' i '";

1

Page 4: PRIZEFIGHT GAM BLER CO ITS SUICIDE · the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody rich, the half-poun-d tins of Hongkong No. 1 now selling at $75, unstamped of course

wL- - '

Why mE

:, I'ii- -

fr, ,

II-

- I

fa.

If&fm THH HAWAIIAN BTAlt, SATURDAY, JULY 23, "1910. ' -' . , - r""';.

t -

iTlxe. KLaLroLiiaLinL Stan?DAILY AND SEMI-WEEKL- Y.

ffublished every afternoon (except Sunday) by the Hawaiian StabNewspaper Association.

THE STAR ACCEPTS NO LIQUOR ADVERTISEMENTS.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES:Eocal, per anaumPoreign, pet annum xa.oo

Payable in Advance.. Entered at Post Office at Honolulu. Hawaii, as Bccond class mall matter.

8ubtcrlber8 wh0 d0 not get their papers renularly will comer a favor

IV

V notifying the 8tar Office; Telephone 365.L.tL TU

The 8uDreme Court of the Territory of Hawaii na accmrcuand THE 8EMI-WEEKL- STAR newspaper

HAWAIIAN STAR (Dally) Suitable for ad--M genera circulation iiiruuunu. and decree entered or renderedvarftlsing proceedings, orders, Judgments

Letters AN STAR should not be addressed to anyconnecTed wU;; the office, but simply to THE HAWAIIAN STAR,

Business Departments, according to tenororpurposc.or to the Editorial or

DANIEL LOGAN

SATURDAY

RESTRICT IOX1STS VOTI3 YES.

EDITOR

.JULY 20. 1010

On Tuesday nqxt the liquor question in Hawaii for years to come

who voles no to pWill be settled for better or worse. Every manthe verdict be in thethe foundation, shouldwill help to lay

the liquor selling interest tone-nti- ve, for an offensive campaign by

make this Territory, especially its towns, more wide open than ever

restriction of the liquor busi-

ness

infor the trafllc. Nobody who believes

should be misled by talk that prohibition means more alcoholic

Wx drink' consumed than ever. Prohibition on tne niam.a..u, ...uof the past few years, has caused an euorn.uu

Wi ,..,. ... :..

i

;itliqUOr UUllSUinjmuii.

If is well

for

. . . .. . i I I Cu --- -

"

.

'

f

IN

known that many who arennd moderate

prohibition

SURPRISES STORE.

drinkers, regular

irreeular,Clubmen,

been heard to express

and otherwise, are going to uie.... 1 1

business men, officials, nine antlmii- - I'onviction that alcoholic

drink does nobody any good while doing a great niunj Muiuub

harm. Workingmen on small wages have been heard to say that they

would vote for prohibition, as it would enable them to carry home

their earnings on payday instead of leaving the sustenance of their

families in the saloons. There are men under, some duress to the

liquor interest who are so afraid of reprisals that they do not openly

side with prohibition' now, but who have told their friends in con-

fidence that their vote will be yes on Tuesday. There will

likeTy be surprises at the count in many polling booths.

United States Public Health and Marine Hospital Service,

Office of Medical Officer in command,

Honolulu, T. II., July i, 1010.

To the Editor of the Star, Honolulu, T. H.

.' Dear Sir: Under an editorial headed "Fair Play' oc-

curring in vesterday's Star, the statement is made that after

a consultation with the Federal authorities a case of small-

pox was sent in to Queen's Hospital under a diagnosis of

chicken pox. Will you in the interest of fair play state when.? this case occurred and who were the consultants in the case.

Respectfully,'lu - CARL RAMUS,

;' Chief Quarantine Officer.''

T,he statement in question was of "a famous case previously re-

lated, hy this paper," and the relation was of "an incident that hap--- T

pened before county government." That was long before any of thepresent Federal staff came here, hence we do not feel obliged to statemore-- specifically "when this case occurred and who were the consult-nut- s

in ihi :is(i." Probably the hospital records would supply the in- -

fovirirtfidn. There was no reflection on the Federal quarantine service' inteiided or implied. The case was originally cited to show how un-lid- o

and uniust it was to denounce the Honolulu police sur- -

nPft 'for !rivinir the wronn cause of death in a case where he conduct- -

' ed an autopsy. Yesterday's reference to the former statement, made

on July 12, was apt from the fact that a very bitter attack had been'

made,, after the incident was supposed to have been closed, by one of

the --Federal physicians upon the police surgeon.

TRADE OF THE UNITED STATES BY HEMISPHERES.

An increase of 85 million dollars in exports from the UnitedStates to other countries of the Western Hemisphere and a decrease

of 14- - million dollars in those to the Eastern Hemisphere during theeleven months of the current fiscal year is an interesting fact developpd hv an analysis of the year's trade made by the Bureau of Statisticsof the Department of Commerce and Labor. The figures show thattlm wains in exnorts occurred in those parts of the world in which

.manufactures form the bulk of the merchandise imported, while thelosses occurred in those countries in which foodstuffs constitute an

'imnortant wart of the import trade. Of the domestic exports to the

i f .1 I c

R various grand divisions last year, manuiacuires lormuu, iu uiu tunu uiNorth America, CO per cent; South America, over Ho per cent; Oce-

ania, 85 per cent; and Africa, GO per cent of the total, nnd to thosesections of the world the exports from the United States increased;while in the case of Europe, to which manufactures formed nearly 30

ner-cent- , nnd foodstuffs, 31 per cent of the exports, and Asia, to whichmanufactures formed 70 per cent, and foodstuffs 10 per cent of theexports from the United States there were decreases during the year,

The New World is rapidly increasing the share which 'it takes ofproducts of the United States and is, as shown by the figure alreadyquoted, responsible for practically all the gain of 71 miHibh' dollars i

made in the exports of the United States. W,lHle Oceania, shows again of 8 milliou and Africa a gain of 1 million in the value of exportsthe'reifo during the eleven months, their gain of 9 million is" more than

, offset by a Joss of 23 million dollars in exports to Europe and Asia.In 890 America took 15 1-- 2 per cent of the total exports, from theUnited States; in 1900, 1C 1--2 per cent, and in the fiscal 5(ear nowclosing will take over 20 per cent, unless the month of June shoulddevelop a marked decline in the share of the export trade going toAmerican countries. Twenty years ago the exports to all Americafrom the United States were valued at 133 million dollars, in 1910

they will probably exceed 475 million dollars; their relation tp the to-

tal exports having increased, as already indicated, from 15 1-- 2 percent. to more than 20 per cent. This means a gain in exports toAmerica in twenty years of more than 250 per cent, while to all other.parts of the world the exports from the United States were increasingbut 80 per cent.

9t. i.jjy

Oh, the bore intoa store, where the mer-

chant and clerks were all busy; and he told an old tale that wasmoldy nnd stale, nnd made all the listeners dizzy;

REAL LIFE and he hummed and he hawed and he droned nnd heDRAMAS pawed, and no one rejoiced at his sally; and the fool-kille- r

came and climbed onto his frame, and plantedhim out in the alley. Oh, the orator rose, nnd he talked through hisnose, and he screeched like a vane on n steeple; and he pounded theslats of the vile and he wept o'er the woes of the people;and the ills we endure nnd the griefs of the poor, had filled him withsorrow and dudgeon; then the foolkiller came and got onto his game,and swatted him once with n bludgeon. Oh, the man who sings bassthrough a hole in his face insisted all evening on roaring; ho vendedthe limbs of our favorite hymns his voice nearly ripped up the floor-

ing; in vain did we hint that he'd do well to sprint, he said he wouldsing "Annie Laurie;" and the foolkiller yelled as the singer he felled,and buried his lungs in a quarry.

Copyright, 1910, by Geo. MutllitjW Adams

II

Unele WaltThe Poet Philosopher

long-winde- d journeyed

plutocrats,

ROM

VANCOUVER

With twenty first, fourteen-secon- d

and six third class passengers for Ho-

nolulu, the Itoyal Mall liner Maramaarrived off port too lato last night toenter, but came alongside the Alakeastreet wharf at seven-thirt- y this morn-ing.

Fine weather with light variablewinds was encountered the entire voy-

age from Vancouver and Victoria. Afew tons of general cargo werebrought for Honolulu.

During the stay In Vancouver theMarama was equipped with one ofthe strongest wireless outfits on thePacific, which will according to ex-

perts to capable of sending messagesa dlstanco of 2500 miles when proper-ly tuned up.

Deck sports, dances; card tourna-ments etc. were held nearly oeryday for the benefit of the passengers.The delay in leaving Victoria wascaused by the late arrival of the steamer from San Francisco with a numberof passengers for the Marama.

The Marama will leave for the Co-

lonies at two-thirt- y this nfternoon.

ASSASSINS BUNGLES.

BARCELONA, July 23. AntonioMaura, former Spanish Premier, waswounded here yesterday by a would-b- e

assassin. The assailant vis ar- -

ested.

CENTRAL UNION CHURCH.Dr. White will preach at the morn

ing service at 11 o'clock.The subject of his sermon will be

The Inheritance of the Meek."Along with the other churches

the Central Union will adjourn itsevening service and unite in the bigunion prohibition Rally at Kawaiahaochurch at C:30 and afterward at AaiaPark.

The male quartet will sing at themorning service at Central Union andat tho Prohibition Rally at Kawalahao church in the evening.

The Bible school will meet as usualat 9:50.

METHODIST CHURCH.The First Methodist Episcopal

church, corner Miller street and Bere,tanla' avenue, John T. Jones, pastor,residence 1020 Beretania avenue.

Class meeting 2 o'clock. WilliamKnott, leader.

Sunday school 9:45 a. m., R. H

Trent, superintendent.Morning worship 11 o'clock. Ser

mon by the pastor: subject, "The Recognition of Friends in Heaven." Mu

sic by tho quartette.There will bo no Epworth League

service or ovenlng preaching service.Tho Epworth League and church willunito with tho other cnurches of thocity in a union prohibition meeting attho Kawaiahao church at 0:15, and at

Close

RESOURCES.Loans and discounts $ 75,800.84Overdrafts 59,159.96

Furnituro and fixtures.... 2,715.22

Due banks & bankers 51,377. 58

Cash on hand 53,216.40All other resources 113,483.62

WALT MASON.

7 o'clock join In the parade and marchto Aala park and tako part In thegreat mass meeting to be held there.

Strangers, tourists and friends areurgently requested to attend the morn-

ing service and listen to the pastor'sdiscourse on the soul-stirrin- g and ins-

piring theme announced above.

KAUMAKAPILI CHUItCH.Mr. John Q. Woolley will speak to-

morrow morning at Kaumakapilichurch at eleven o'clock. Specialmusic will to given by the girls fromthe Industrial school. A cordial Invi-

tation is extended to' all.

WHY SUFFER FROMRHEUMATISM.

It is a mistake to allow anyone tosuffer from rheumatism, as the paincan always be relieved, and In mostcases a cure effected by applyingChamberlain's Pain Balm. The relieffrom pain which It affords Is aloneworth many times its cost. For sale byall dealers, Benson, Smith & Co.,

agents for Hawaii.

Prinoesfe Kirils:CROWDED LAST NIGHT.

Signor Antonio'sSURPRISE CIRCUS

Wonderful Troupe of PerformingDOGS AND MONKEYS.

The Greatest and Cleverest TrainedAnimals In the World.

THE MARVELOUS TYLER.Balances Mattresses, Casks, Japanese

Screens, Etc.OTHERS FEATURES.

LATEST MOTION PICTURES.PRICES 10c and 15c,

HONOLULU INSTITUTE for PHYSIOTHERAPY. Cor. Beretania andRichard sts.: onen from 8 a. m. to 7 p,

m., except Sunday. Electric LigntBaths, German Nauheim Baths, Steamand Hot Air Baths, German Sitz uatnsFlnsen Light, Massage, Gymnastic, XRay's High Frequency, etc., etc.

Trent TrustCo.,LIMITED.

OPPOIIUDIII

foilMestiptA Property For Sale. Two

good houses, 90,000 square feet

of land (over two acres). Is nearto center of City.

$6000.00 Is the Price.

Trent Trust Co.,LIMITED.

REPORT OF RESOURCES AND LIABILITIES OF

The Yokohama Specie Bank, Ltd.,OF HONOLU LU, HAWAII.

At the of Business, June 30, 1910.

from

J355.753.62

LIABLUTIES.Deposits $352,390.10Duo to banks & bankers.. 416.91

Bills payable 1,246.59All other liabilities 1,700.00

$355,753.62

I, Y. Akai, Manager of tho Yokohama Specie Bank, Ltd., HonoluluBranch, do solemnly swear that tho foregoing statements are true and cor-

rect to tho best of my knowledgo and belief.Y. AKAI,

Subscribed and sworn to before me this 30th day of June, 1910.DAVID L. PETERSON,

Notary Public, First JudI clal Circuit, T. H.

Good DisplayVisit our store and note thololcea-- A

display of curios, novelties, drawn andband embroidered work. '

Woman's Exchange

Y. Yoshikawa163 King Street, opp. Young Building.

Good, new bicycles second hand,

any kind, cheap. Tricycles for ale.

Motorcycles repaired and retired.

Job Printing, Star Office.

White Label

OLIVECompare them with any other brand of olives in the market

and you will be instantly convinced of their superiority. '

SOLD BY ALL GROCERS

Just one line to remindYOU

Sherwin - Williams -

3R E

$25;

Fine

A. JML JB IPaints and FinishesYou Know The Rest

E. O. HALL & SON LTD.,CORNER FORT AND KING STREETS.

Gillette BladesCOST TOO MUCH

TO THROW AWAY

13uj a "King of All" or a "Resh" Strop and keep a keen edge

on the old blades.

50 cents

Benson, Smith & Co., Ltd.FORT AND HOTEL STREETS.

Smith - PremierTYPEWRITER

Visible Writing. Back Space Lever, Speediest Escapementever devised. Gear Driven Carriage (no straps or bands), Col-

umn Finder and I'aragrapher.

DOUBLE KEY -- BOARDHawaiian News Co., Ltd.,

AUUA. HUUJNU UUlLUliNli.

MazdaThe Improved Tungsten Lamp

"MAZDA"THE TRADE MARK THAT GUARANfTEES THE HIGHEST STANDARDOF QUALITY IN METAL FILAMENTLAMPS. rJJiLim&

"MAZDA"Equals tho STERLING mark on silverware.

The Hawaiian Electric Co.,

ft

Page 5: PRIZEFIGHT GAM BLER CO ITS SUICIDE · the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody rich, the half-poun-d tins of Hongkong No. 1 now selling at $75, unstamped of course

THE HAWAIIAN BTAIt, SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1910. 51VII

Financial and CommerBy JLf. I- - TIMMONS

STOCKS

PIThe shareholders of tho Bank of

California National Association metyesterday and ratified tho merger ofthat bank with tho San FranciscoNational Bank, to become effectlvoAugust 1, 1910. The capital stock oftho Bank of California will bo Increased from tho present $4,000,000 to$8,600,000, divided into 85,000 shares'of the par value of $100.

Tho stockholders of tho San Fran-cisco National Bank will recelvo

In cash and 5000 shares of thenow issue, and a dividend will bo de-

clared of the $4,000,000 out of tho sur-plus. The dividend on the entire issuowill be 9 per cent, which is equal to18 per cont on tho old capital stock.Fully 85 per cent of the stock was re-

presented at the meeting. San Fran-cisco Chronicle.

VALUE

YORK

OF

S

BONDS

MARKET

IMPORTS

RECORD

WASHINGTON, July 12 The totalvalue of tho foreign commerce of theUnited States during the fiscal year of1910, which ended on Juno 30th, was$3,302,821,017, according to completereturns mado public by the Bureau ofstatistics of the Department of Commerco and Labor today.

Tho total imports were valued at$1,557,854,S54, exceeding those of3,907, the previous high record year,by more than $123,000,000. The totalexports were exceeded only by theyears 1907 and 1908, and were valuedat $1,744,96G,203, falling $136,000,000behind 1907, and $11C,000,000 below1908. They exceeded 1909, however,by $82,000,000.

A rapid decline of excess exportsis evident. They exceeded imports by$187,000,000, as against an excess of$351,000,000 in 1909, and $006,000,000in 1908, the latter the high year .forexcess of exports.

Imports free of duty were $756,000.- -

000, as compared with $644,000,000 in1907, the former high record year forfree Imports. The dutiable importswere ,$802,000,000, against $790,000,000in 1907, the high record year for duti-able imports.

Brick Kahl, a planter of Hawaii, isat the Argonaut with Mrs. Kahl.Call.

MEMORANDUM BOOKS JJ Loose-lea- f and pocket mem- -

orandums of every description. 5Best assortment and lowest Jprices in tho city.A. B. ARLE1GH & CO., LTD. 5

Hotel, opp. Union. 5

iyCcUi. Asthna. Bronchlils indEEEEEE

0 Lun1 tronblet quickly cured bvfr

ipOWELLSlPI BALSAM II OF I1 ANISEED j3 Of all Chemists

8k and Stores. m

CERTIFICATE OF TREASURER.

I, D. L. CONKLING, Treasurer ofthe Territory of Hawaii, do hereby cer-

tify, In accoraance with tho require-ments of Section 2577 of the RevisedLaws of Hawaii, the same beingportion of Chapter 158 of said RevisedLaws nroviding for the Incorporationof banking corporations, that I haveexamined Into the condition 01 meBANK OF HONOLULU, LIMITED,a corporation formed under saidChapter 158, and that the said corpor-ation has complied with the provisionsrenulred by Bald Chanter 158. asamended, to. be complied with before:commencing the business of banking, .bag.and that the said corporation, BANKOF HONOLULU, LIMITED, Is auth-orized to commence said business ofbanking.

In witness whereof I have hereuntoset my hand and affixed the seal ofthe Treasury Department this 2ndday of Juno, 1910. '

(SIg) D. l. CONKLING,'

, , Treasurer of thoTerrJtory of'

(Seal) Huwall.f

PARTICULARS OF

THE FIRE AT PAIA

Tho Maul News gives tho followingaccount of the llro at Pain, resultingIn the destruction of tho big storothore:

A fire of unknown origin broke out. mmuico, win can bpo- -

of y na- - kane and give them another round ofIn Paia store at Pala at half past I, Lot,,erstwo this morning, Friday July 22, amicompletely destroyed the building andcontents.

Messrs. Walter Engle and Richard-- 1 leo is operating along proper bolng subject coffee. Corn- -

son who occupied a cottage back oftho storo wore tho first to discoverthe fire and they hurriedly telephonedto manager F. P. Rosecrans and sum-

moned help but the fire had gainedtoo groat a headway to enable thosewho camo to savo anything or even toenter tho burning building. Apparent-ly the firo started from tho neighbor-hood of tho paint and qil room in therear portion of the store.

The plantation offico which adjoinedthe storo was also totally destroyed,but tho plantation people were ablo toremoo and save all of the valuables,books and records before tho oflTccbuilding was destroyed.

A large merchandise warehouse ad-joining the store was also burned, butthrough tho combined efforts of thepeople who had hurried the scenea second merchandise warehousewhich was at a little distance fromthe store was saved.

A conservative estimate of the los3is $100,000, which is fully covered byinsurance. Tho origin of the lire

a mystery at this writing, butso far no suspicton of Incendiarism i3

advanced, and may have been causedby spontaneous combustion from thefact that tho blaze started theneighborhood of the oil and paintroom.

Manager Bosecrans has opened uptemporary quarters in the' warehousesaved from the fire, nrd Is conductingtho buslics3 of '.he stove and wa'iingon his customers Friday morning,even before the members of tho burn-ed building have cooled and turned toeveryday ashes. The plantation e

force has opened up in the labora-tory building and are attonding to rou.tlno business matters as if nothinghad occurred to mar or disturb theeven current of their every day labors.

OUTPUT OF llllCULTURAL

Agricultural Company finishedgrinding last Thursday and theyield is 29,295 tons. This companyis composed of the following sugarestates: Pala, Haiku, Kallallhui, Ala- -

kawao, Kula, Pulehu ana Kailua. Thetotal capitalization is $4,900,000.

Last year the yield of Maul Agricul-

tural Company was 28,808 tons, whichwas 1,200 tons above tho estimate.Tho estimate for this year was 27,750,

so that the estimate has been exceed-

ed again, this time by 1,545 Nextyear tho acreage will bo 321 acresmore than this year.

In addition to sugar cane, Maul

Agricultural Company is engaged intho raising of pineapples, cotton, cornand rubber. About 4,000 rubber treesaro to ho tapped this year.

PROVISIONS, ETC.

The following are wholesale quota-- 1

ttons for standard groceries and feed- -

stuffs for this date:Flour, patent, $5,50 to $3.75 a bar-

rel.Flour, straight, $5.00 to $5.25 bar-re- l.

Alarket strong and advancing.Corned beef, , tins $3.20 to

$3.25 per dozen.Corned beef, tins $1.90 to

2.00 per dozen.Corned beef, Australian, 1 lb. tins

$1.65.Salmon, red Alaska, in tins, $5.25

to $5.50 per case of four dozen, Is.Salt Salmon, Rod Alaska, in barrels,

$9 to $lp. Largo King salmon, nominal.Rolled barley $27.50 to jua.uu.uHay $2G to $28.Bran, $27.00 to $29.00.Rice (Hawaiian), $3.75 to $4 per

bag. Very weak..Rlco (Japanese), $4.30 to $4.45 per

Valencia oranges' aro $3.75 to $4 abox.

Apples now crop, $2 to $2.50 perbox.

New potatoes, $1.50 to $2.25 perhundred.

Onions Now. California, $2.50 to$2.75, .

81n Job Prtnttna, star Offlc.

ROUTINE MATT

HAND LEO OY

On account of it being an irregular are already planning early trips todate, perhaps, only three members Honolulu. On his return to theshowed up for tho meeting of the' Islands. Secretary Wood, of the Pro- -Hawaii Promotion Committee yester--

afternoon. at

tho " fouraglnjf

a

IU1G LIUlli UUUUItJU nUlU 1 VjUU, v vj.v.tolling of the work being done in and After the business or tho meeting hadaround Seattle. It seems to bo tho boon disposed of the committeemenconcensus of opinion that Mrs. Head- - took up a number of topics, one of

lines them the of

to

from

Mauitotal

tons.

and doing excellent work. plaint has been made that HawaiianThe Acting Secretary roported hav- - coffees are being blended in such a

ing received three letters from coast wnv tllnt te indlviduality ls lost andprinting houses in regard to llthograp- - tlio superiority of tho local producthie work required for tho 1911 floral appreciated. Mr. Mclnorny, whoparade. Two of them announced that jb taking immenso interest in coffee,they would prepare and forward dc- - reported a visit from an eastern busl- -

signs, but tho third stated that "ess man who offered to take andit would stay out of tho competition, market the whole of the HawaiianAs the invitation to compete was sent coffee crop at good prices, providedout generally on tho mainland, it is couiu uo certain tnat tho real nrti- -

anticipated that a largo number of cl was delivered to him.entries will bo received at an early it seemed to bo the impression of,dae- - some of tho members of tho commit- -

A batch of letters woro received tee that the coffee growers wero get- -

from Lusiness men of Spokane, drawn ting tho short end anyway, as a resultout by literature sent from hero at of the absence of competition for thothe request of Zeno IC. Myers. It ap- - purchaso of their product. It waspears that when Mr. Myers was In stated that thero wero only two orSpokane he told tho business men that three buyers, with the result that thohe would send them some reading mat- - growers really received very little forter that would open their eyes in re- - tho output.gard to Hawaii. The letters received However, this Is a phaso of thoin response to tho literature show subject which will be taken up and in- -

that a genuine interest in the Islands vestlgated fully later on. At presenthas been aroused. Tho president of tho committee will endeavor to seetho Spokane Chamber of Commerce that only the pure artlclo of Hawaiianand other leading citizens of that city coffee is sold as such in tho market

flfPOTATION OAHU

An unprecedented drop took place was bid and $130 asked. Waialuain Oahu stock this morning unprece- - will fall below its estimate for thisdented for the reason that no cause year.for a decline appears on the surface. Ewa proved the exception to theThe stock has simply been turned rule this morning and showed renew-loos- e

in large quantities, several of od activity. Between boards 25 sharesthe bigger brokerage concerns having found a buyer at $34,375, followed tyunusual blocks to sell. 8 on tho board at tho same. At the

On the street 30 and 70 shares sold close of the session this morning $34.-a- t$32.25, and this morning on tho 375 was still bid and $34.50 asked,

board 15, 10, 25, C, 50 and 6 shares A salo of 105 Olaa was made atsold at $32. Then came the delugo. $6.25, at which the stock seemedTho stock appeared, literally by the fairly firm. At the close of thisdray load, at $32, while bidding drop- - morning's session $5,125 was bid andped to $31,875. There was a plain, $6,375 asked.open, undisguised, Indisputable, deli- - Sales of 50 and 40 Hilo Railway Co.berate effort to bear to. smash the common stock were made at $12.stock. A large concern leading In the A sale of 50 shares Brewery wassellers' market claimed not to knowthe cause of the slump; but conjec-tures would not down.

Tho only businesslike reason forthe decline is to be found in the ap- -

$19.50, evidentlyfeeling doubtful of the success pro-

hibition Tuesday.Tho week stock

in a very stateprehension that next year's crop may Timidity prevails at every hand, andnot be up but this bears seem control of theis exceedingly far fetched. situation. It Is presumed, however,

Waialua was still 10 shares that matters will adjust themselves inselling at $129. At the close $128.50 time.

I

:

T EiEIICY OF

Willett & Gray's sugar letter of July be safely to bo

7, which arrived In tho mall this morn- - closed up, as our teflnors sooner or

ing, the In regard draw, to some extent atto raw sugars:

, The interesting feature this week In

our report Is the given elso-wher-

of tho total consumption of su-

gar tho United States, for tho sixmonths ending June 30th of this year,as with tho same periods oftwo years. These figures

made at the buyerof

nextends with the mar-k- ot

unsatisfactory

to expectations; tho to havo

weak,

SUGAR

MARKE

In

Ml TERS

T FAVORS SELLERS

considered eventually

contained following later must

statistics,

comparedpreceding

least, upon full duty paying sugarsnoxt Cuba crop comes to ma-

turity.Tho week under review shows an

Improvement from 4.30c per lb., 96

test basis Centrifugals, to 4.33c. perlb, tho closing qtotatlon, but thisdifference of 3c. per 100 lbs, Is, at tho

show consumption of 1,011,820 tons, close, virtually nominal, as no busl- -

against 1,602,907 tons last year, and 1.-- noss can e done at less than tho586,889 tons In 1908, It will bo noted basis which is likely to resultfrom tho invlslblo stocks of refined during the coming week. Augustmostly in refiners' hands, that the clearance hold at 3c. c. & U. at themeltings or production of refined su- - close. Sellers continue to contractgar has been greater than the rc- - their offerings within narrower limitsqulroments for consumption. This In- - and hence, wo infer that continuedvisible supply will disappear during Improvement in prices, even althoughtho last six months of tho year. slow, must follow.

Considering all conditions of trade, Europe, also, has undergone a favor-th- o

actual consumption of sugar must able change In prices during tho week,be considered satisfactory, although Beot quotations last week wero 14s 10

toreceipts at

of raw sugars at length arrived. tober-Decemb- advanced to lis 6

hold Cuba are now d., against 9s. 4 d., last year atder full control, wid prices be this time. Javas In Europo aroasked for tho samo moro nearly based 14s. 6d., against lis. 4 last yearupon tho price of boot sugars of tho at this time.now crop for Octobor-Decerabe- r dell- - F. O. Llcht us favorablo

Tho present dlfforenco-o- f pa- - porta for tho growing European beotrity between Centrifugals and now crops.crop beets for October-Decembe-r Tho wholo world's trond on sugarlie por lbs., difference can from now to tho maturity new crop

REW0

ASKS

COMsu T

Harry Armitngo and Mnrtln Grime,two of tho J. Plerpont Morgans ofHonolulu's Wall street, are out witha prospectus of another oil company,tho lands to be locnted In Californiaand the wherewithal to come fromthis fair paradise. The concern is

as the Norrls-Mldwa- y Oil Com-pany, capital $500,000, the shares be-ing $1 per. All the officers are s

except Harry Armltage, whois vico president; and H. G. Middle-ditch- ,

who is attorney and a directorthe company.

The prospectus tells a whole lotabout tho company's land and whatnewspapers havo said about tho oilbusiness; and then promises that itswell will be flowing by November 1

noxt. Tho incorporators of tho nowcompany surrender their intorost inforty acres of land for 100,000 sharesof the stock, valued at 25 cents asharo.

Past efforts to float oil companieslocally have depended largely for success upon tho attltudo Honolulubusiness men respect to them. Twosuch companies havo been qulto pro-misingly started as a result of havinglocal men in the principal offices andtho fate of tho newer proposition intho Islands will doubtless also dependlargely upon tho personal influencoof the few men interested in it.

DODGE IN HILO.

Frank S. Dodge, representing thoBishop Estate, returned this morningfrom Hilo whero ho has representedhis corporation in tho negotiations Inregard to tho new harbor lines. AsIs well known, tho Bishop Estate ownsmuch of the lands to bo affected bytho Improvements planned. Air. Dodgostated this morning that ho feltsuro everything bo to Haw. Tor.tho satisfaction of everybody.peoplo seemed to bo more thanunusually willing to "get together" ontho proposition, and tho results wouldundoubtedly prove all that could bodesired In the end.

PAPERS FILED.The following papers wero filed yes-

terday for registration:Sam Lifteo and wf. to Emmallno H.

Llftoc, deed.Joo Andrade to Frank Gonsalves,

bill of sale.Alcleana Hoopil to J. F. Kuroda,

lease.Kilauea Sugar Plant. Co. to United

States America, deed.Alutual Bldg. & Loan Socy. of Ha-

waii to Isaac L. Cockett, release.Jaclntho R. Souza and wf to Alutl

Bldg & Loan Socy of Hawaii, mort-

gaged.W. G. Irwin to Honolulu Park Com-

mission, deed.A. H. Dondero to G. L. Samson,

mortgage.Ambrose K. Hutchinson, Tr., to Y11

Len Kui, lease,Kolba Co. to AIcBrydo

Co., Ltd., A. L.H. Rahim to Sarah J. Graco deed.Georgo P. and wf to Sarah G.

GracoJuliana Gouvela and hus to Sao

Alartlnho Socy of Hawaii, mortgage.Georgiana and hsb to W.

R. Castlo Tr., mortgage

is towards somewhat higher priceseverywhere.

Java sugars aro still waiting buyerson tho basis about 4.51c. landed, 96

deg. test, for Soptembcr-Octobo- r arrl- -

val, and the market oventually shouldJincludo purchasers of those sugars 10

some extent least.No further business has been done

In Phlllpplno sugars, of which only amoderato quantity remain unsold fromprocedlng crop. Tho encouraging

sales of theso sugars this season, atlargo profits to the Filipinos, is .1

strong temptation for theso Filipinosto increaso their ciop rapidly to tho300,000 tons limit without assistancefrom putside. syndicates.

Rqcoints at the Four Ports increas-

ed Ttnd meltings diminished, tho lattoron account of the holidays. Stocks In

tho United States and Cuba togetheraro now 626.2G5 tons, against 635,90'J

tons last week and 550,629 tons lastyear.

Tho weeklyout 1,686,000

Cuba cable, figurestons visible pro.

slightly under tho normal. l'2d. o.b. Hamburg and are this (Uiction dato which, withThe tlmo for improvement In prices week 14s 11 3 d. with new crop Oc- - tho same t,hls trao as last

has 3-- 4

Tho stocks In un- - 11

can Cane

cables

Is100 which of

known

of

ofin

of

Sugar Sugar

Castledeed.

of

at

year, would give a total Vrop of 1,808,- -

582 tons. If tho crop Is to finally turnout materially less than 1,800,000 tonstho weokly receipts should begin toshow It in reduced amounts, of whichthero aro no present indications. Th3growing crop of Cuba Is making favorablo progress but, of courso, It Is tooearly yot to say much about It

In gonoral, at tho closo, tho tono

STOCK EXGHAKGE

10.30 A. M.

Session Sales CO Hon. n. & At. Co.$19.50; 8 Ewa $34,375; 15 Oahu Su-

gar Co., $32.00; 10 0ahu Sugar Co.$32.00; 25 Oahu Sugar Co., $32.00; C

Oahu Sugar Co.' $32.00; 50 Oahu Su-

gar Co.. $32.00; C Oahu Sugar Co.,$32.50.

Between Hoards 30 Oahu SugarCo. $32.25; 70 Oahu Sugar Co. $82.35;10 Waialua $129.00; 20 Ewa $84.3715;5 ESwa $34,375; 50 Hilo Com. $12. 00;40 Hilo Com. $12.00; 105 Oiaa 46.25.

Stock. Bid. Aakftd..Brewer & Co $400.00

Ewa Plant 34.876Haw. Ag. Co 185.00Haw. Com. Co 40.50Haw. Sug. Co 43. 00

Honomu Sug. Co.... 150.00Honokaa Sug. Co ... . IS . 00 18. 25Haiku Sugar Co 152. 0'J

Hutchinson 17.375 17.875Kekaha Sugar Co.. 197.00 225.00Koloa Sugar Co 160.00AIcBrydo 6.125Oahu Sugar Co 31.875Paauhau 20.00Pacific Mill CoPepeckco 155.00Pioneer AI111 Co 226.00Waialua Ag. Co 128.50Walmea AIH1 Co 117.50

S. N. CoHawaiian Elec. Co.. 200.00Hon. K. T. Co. pfd.. 105.00Hon. B. T. Co. com.. 105.00Mutual Tel. CoO. It. & L. CoHilo R. R. Co 11.875Hon. B. & M. Co.... 19.50Haw. Pine. CoPahang Bub. pdHaw. Tor. (FC) 4s.. 100.00Haw. Ter. (B) 4s 100.00Haw. Ter. 4 100.00Haw. Tor. 4 100.00

would settlod 3 .

f.

C

I. I.

Hilo Hamakua Ditch 0s. .

100.00103.50102.25

41.00

C.2532.0027.00

150.00

227. 50

130.00

122.50

15.00144.50

12.2520.0033.5019.00

Haw. Irr. Co. 6s.... 103.00

Haw. Com. Co. Gs 105.00Hilo R. R. Co. Gs 100.25Hilo R. R. Ex. Gs 99.0OHonokaa Gs 103.00 103.50Hon. R. T. Co. Gs 106.50Kaul P. R. Cs 101.00Kohala Ditch 6s 100. BO

Alutual Tel. 6s 102.75AIcBrydo Co. 6s 99.00Olaa Sugar 6s 94. UO

Waialua Ag. 6s 101.50

and tendency of the market favorssellers.

Tho best man was Air. C. B. An-

drews and the ushers Alossrs. Greon-well- ,

Floming and Rycroft.After tho ceremony, which was by

Reverend Ebcrsole, the bridal partydeparted in nutos to tho homo of thobride's parents, where a supper wasserved to the bridal party and imme-diate relatives of tho young couplo.

Tho young couplo departed tho fol-

lowing day to Hawaii, whero theirhoneymoon will bo spent.

Miss Baraclough entertained at avery daintily appointed luncheon onSaturday at tho Courtland complimcn.tary to her sister who left in thoSierra for San Francisco.

Tho decorations were in goldenshower, a centerpiece of these bhm-som- s

with bouquets, at each placo iowhich menu cards wero attached completing the appointments. Covers wevo

laid for seven.

The reception and ball to bo glvonat tho Aloana hotel noxt Saturdayevening by tho Hawaii Yacht club,promises In ovory way to bo a most

beautiful and elaborate affair.Tho invltntions aro now out and

all the iveoplo of promlncrico In

Honolulu.

IN THE MOONLIGHT.

Under most conditions a joy rido leup to Its name. When It Is In thodirection of Halelwa It topples oyerwith joy because tho party has anti-cipation. Tho good dinner, and pos-

sibly a danco at tho hotel, Increasestho volumo of pleasure. Tho moonshines bright this week and a rido toHnloiwa any ovoning will bo a plea-sure beyond expression. Tho wcdk-en- d

at Uils popular hostelery Is a Jojto tho man or woman who Is tlretlout through business or social cares.

Sugar 4.30cBeets, 14s, 7d'

Henry WaterhousB Trust Co,

Members Honolulu Stock and BondExchange.

FORT AND MERCHANT STS.

Page 6: PRIZEFIGHT GAM BLER CO ITS SUICIDE · the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody rich, the half-poun-d tins of Hongkong No. 1 now selling at $75, unstamped of course

SIX

Ayer's Sarsapai'illaMakes Good Blood

Trick your skluwith a noodle.Ton will soothat it is

full ofblood.Hut whatkiud otblood?Itlch andpuro? Or'thin anditnpuro?Inipuroblood col o MEL 1

ors tho skluwith cczonia, iJKWni im voider

l ' II him aarrashoi, plmplos,pustulos, salt-rhout- bolls, carbun-

cles, and otlior sores. Tboso simplytoll of soinothlng bad down doop In

tho blood itself. Oltitmonts, washes,powders and cosmetics will not reachtho evil. You must tako out all Im-

purities from tho systom with

AVER'SSarsaoarilla

1and thon sea how quickly tho skintroubles will disappear.

As now made, Ayer's Sarsa-parll- la

contains no alcohol.There are many imitation

Sarsaparillas.Be sure you get "Ayer's."

Prepared by Dr. J. C. Atr & Co., Lowell, Mm., U.S.A.

Fraternal Meetings

HONOLULU LODGE NO. 616,

B. P. O. ELKS.

Meets In their hall on King Streetnear Fort, every Friday evening. Visit-ing Brothers are cordially invited toattend.

JAMES D. DOUGHERTY, E. R.

GEO. T. KLUEGEL, Secretary.

Harmony Lodge, No. 3, I. O, o. F.Meets every Monday evening at 7:30

la Odd Fellows' Hall, Fort SL Visit-

ing brothers cordially invited to at-

tend.H. E. McCOY, N. Q.

E. It. HENDRY, See.

Honolulu Iron! oris

.STEAM ENGINES, SUGAR MILLS,BOILERS. COOLERS, IRON, BRABS

AND LEAD CASTINGS.

Machinery ot Every Descriptionad to Order. Particular Attention

rld to Shlp'a Biacksmlthinc JobWork Executed on Short Notice.

Oat & PlossmanSTATIONERS AND

BOOK SELLERS.

Merchant Street near Post Office.

Y. WO SING CO.GROCERIES, FRUIT8.

VEGETABLES. HTO.

California Hotter, Itto rt.; CooklxaButter, 3Bc lu.; Fresh Dried Fruits.

118G-11- Nuuanu Street.Ttltphont Main 23a. Box III

VilO CLOTHES CLEANING CO.

'.' Beretanla Streec, Near Fort.We clean and press suit oT clotnes

every week at 1.50 a month, payable(n advance, lnaies clothes cteanea

nd pressed. Work guaranteed.

DR. F. SCHURMANN '

'OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN. OSTEO-

PATHIC OCULIST.Hours. Consulting, 23 p. in. Sat-

urday Excepted. Operating, 812 a.m., 3- -6 p. m. -

Telephone 33. Office, corner Bereta-

nla and Union streets.HONOLULU, T. H.

All kinds WRAPPING PAPERS andTWINES, PRINTING and WRITINGPAPERS.AMERICAN-HAWAIIA- PAPER &

SUPPLY CO., LTD.

QEORGE G. GUILD., General Manager,

Fort and Queen Streets.Honolulu PHONE 410

SEE THEGrabowsky Truck

Honolulu Powor Wagon Co.

W. M. MInton, Mgr.

ForcegrowthWILL DO IT.

SP ORBY JAMES W.

At three o'clock this afternoon thostarting gun for the fourth round-the- -

inland yacht race will be flred, thoGlndys. Knniohntnehn, Charlotte C andHawaii being the yachts that will try.for the handsome tropny presontod by j

George It. Carter. Muchcan be hoard on nil sides i i wo iasi anu exciung games ot

as to which yacht Is the one most baseball nro scheduled for this after-likel- y

to win;" but after careful con-'noo- n at Athletic park, tho teams thatslderatlon with past form to go by,1 will play being Punahou Alumni vs.the Kiimohameha seonis to be tho! J- - Cb nnd Waseda vs. tho Marines.favorite.

in .i race like this one today will !

be. a jncht is obliged to bo able tonnint vpi-- bleb Into the wind on

count of the fact that a head wind j

will be met with most ot tho way

'round tho island.For n sloop the Kaniehamoha can!

point far above the average as shohas proved In more races than one.

The Gladys Is another yacht that Is

good on windward work, hue she isnot the boat the Kam Is.

Crozier thinks with his yawl rigthat he will be able to do better thaneltho-- of tho other throe yachts, butwith two exceptions the Charlotte isan" unknown quantity.

Since her launching' nearly a yearago she has won two races, whichwero only saved by a very close mar-gin In each case. Tho victories of theother three yachts nre so numerousthat it would tako too much space to'publish them.

Strong steady winds Is all that theowners ask for today and tomorrow.The rest they say will' be easy, as thobest boat will win providing there areno accidents.

The yachts will sail around thewesterly end of the Island, finishingoff the bell buoy.

BIG LEAGUE RESULTS.

Yesterday's big baseball games onthe mainland resulted as follows:

National Pittsburg ,14, Brooklyn1; Cincinnati C, Philadelphia 4; St.Louis 4, New York 0. Other gameswere postponed.

American 1, Chicago5; Washington 2, Chlcago2; Boston0, St. Louis 3; New York 11, Detroit8; Philadelphia 6, Cleveland 7; Phila- -

delphia- - 1, Cleveland 1 (game calledIn fifteenth Inning on account of dark-ness).

MATCHES ARE ASSURED.

Negotiations wqre completed lateyesterday afternoon by Larry Twomeyfor the use of Aloha park for nextSaturday night, when Pat Cornyn andJack Cardoll will meet in a fifteenround boxing match for sixty per cent,of the gross gate .receipts.

At the same meeting the principalssigned articles and posted forfeits fortheir appearance in tho ring.

Both men havo been doing llgjittraining In preparation for tho 'goever nince their arrival, tho heavy andfinishing touches to their training be-

ing scheduled to start today. Themen havo agreed to hox at catch-welcht-

tho stvlo of flchtinir to bodecided at the ringside before thomatch.

Mike Pa ton will probably refereothe bout, as both men are perfectlysatisfied with Mike, who knows thogame from start to finish.

Snrconl and Matterson, a new man,will meet In an eight dound go beforethe big one, the other go not havingbeen definitely decided upon.

'Simmons of the Thetis, is very anxlous to meet some one his weightand it is quite probable that he willbe matched In the first preliminary,Twomey is making his demit as aboxing promoter, nnd for that reasonthe houso should be taxed to Itslimit. The public who havo receivedseveral shocks as a result of boxingmatches In the past, can rest assuredthat everything next Saturday nightwill be clean and square.Both Cordoll and Cornyn aro going In

tho ring with only onj thing in mindand that Is to win. If Cordell shouldwin It is almost certain that ho willchallenge Dick Sullivan for anothermatch for the middle weight championship of Hawaii.

POLO PRACTICE TODAY.

Members of the Oahu Polo Club willmoot at Moanalua this afternoon,several periods of play having beenarranged In tho event of enough play-or-s

putting in appearance.As practice for tho Inter-Islan- d

tournament Is absolutely necessary,It Is hopod that ovory playor will boon hand for nractlce on tho fourregular days botweon now and August10.

The third and deciding game be-

tween tho Cavalry and Oahu teamswill oe played noxt Saturday aftornoonat Moanalua. This game should at-

tract a big crowd as oach toam haswon a game. If both teams play asthey did lu tho bust ganto, tho Oahu'sshould have little trouble In defoatingthe prldo of the army.

The rod team will probably bo com- -

lflB HAWAILkN MLArf, SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1910.

TSYACHTS RACE TODAY FOR

THB MS COP

speculation

Washington

W. BREWSTER.to

a

lsod of tho following players thisafternoon. Walter nnd Harold Dllllng- -

ham, Sam Baldwin and All'Magoon.

ALUMNI VS. J. A. c. s, WASEDA VS. MARINES.

bitIs

I All four captains promise to have It.their best men in tho game which willadd more Interest to tho playing, ns

fans want to see players in thogame that aro ovenly matched.

The first game will be tho champions of the Oahu league last year,and the Alumni team from Oahu College. Castle will do tho twirling forhis alma mater, which will bo enoughto guarantee tho game being interest-ing from a fan's standpoint.

The last game with tho Marines andthe Wasedas should bo a good one,as tho Marines havo reinforced theirteam with tho best players at CampVery.

rhe regular fans who attend thogames feel certain that tho O. C. A.and Waseda teams will have thehonors' at tho end of the games.

Tomorrow tho C. A. C.'s will meetthe Marines in tho first game, thesecond lelng between tho Portugueseand Waseda teams. No ono can fore-tell with any degree of certainty the up,outcome of any baseball game, butthe general feeling seems to be thatthe Portuguese and Chinese teamswill take the honors from tho Waseda theand Marino players.

MILITARY BALL.When this story is being read, the

fans at the league grounds will berooting for their favorites in the Mili-

taryfor

games. Tho Fort Ruger and Natlonal Guard teams aro playing thefirst game, the second game beingscheduled between the Fort Shatterand Hospital Corps players.

If fast performances aro to be takenInto consideration, the two teams re-presenting the mllltla of Hawaii aregoing to be the victors. Both the re-

gular army teams are lacking In themain thing in baseball, and that isteam work. Tho two local teams arebetter in this regard, hut there isstill a great deal of room.for Improve-ment.

WASEDA'S RECORDThe following Is a list1 of tho games

played by tho Waseda baseball teamsince their arrival and tho scores Ineach:

Won.July 4 Wasedas 8, Chinese C.

July 9 Wasedas 5, Marines 1.July 10 Wasedas 3, Portuguese 2,

IS Innings.July 12 Wasedas 1, Navy 0, 12

innings.July 14 Wasedas 1, Military 0.

Lost.July 3 All Oahu C, Wasedas2. rJuly 1C Oahu Alumni 1, Wasedas

0, 17 Innings.July 17 Chinese 9, Wasedas 5.July 19 Navy 1, Wasedas 0, 13

Innings.July 21 Military C, Wasedas 5.

YACHTS N EARING PORT.Somewhere a few hundred miles to

the northward and eastward of Oahu,there are three yachts struggling forthe supremacy of the Pacific in thothird ocean race hold under the aus-pices of the Hawaii Yacht Club.

The Hawaii, Sweetheart and Mol- -

uiou are me wnuo racers tnat aresailing with every inch of canvas setno doubt, for the coveted finish lineoff Diamond Head.

Fourteen days ago today at noonthe yachts will havo been on theirway, In what promises to be the mostexciting race ever held for the prizedblue ribbon of tho Pacific.

A good many people expect that oneof the racers will arrive today, but asevery ship arriving from the coasthas reported light winds, it Is doubtfulIt they will be sighted for several daysto come.

Every ono In Hawaii Is anxious tosee the local entry finish first, but assho is not a light wind boat It is quitepossible that she will be beaten unlesssho got miles ahead in the first fewdnys out of San Pedro.

"A strict day and night watch is being kept for tho racers by tho com'mitteo at Diamond Head, and ns soonas ono Is sighted the Hawaiian Electric company will let the public knowby four whistles, followed by threeblasts for tho' Hawaii, two for theSweothoart and ono for the Mollllou.

SPORTING NOTES.

Which will it be ono, two or threo j

whistles?

Four whlstlos nnd thon three makosseven, which Is considered to bo alucky numbor.

The Hawaii will prove a groat dls

appointment if she don't win thisrnco.

The ronton for her dofsat will botho nmln topic of tnlk for some tlm

coiflo, If tuch a thing should hap-

pen.o

Talk of that kind Is much bdttorthan the usual kind about town.

If tho Hawaii should win, save upyour money for tho big time nextSaturday.

The owner of tho Mollllou will bohappy man If his yawl wins the race.Professor Abe can't account for his

team being defeated by the Militaryteam.

He says thero will bo a differencetoday and tomorrow.

Castle Is going to try Hard for a nosame today as far as his team

concerned.

Wlnne says thero will bo nothing to

Soares has a smile that would Indicate victory tomorrow.

o

Louis is not fond of eighteen inninggames, so ho says.

oX record crowd is expected tomor

row if th weather Is good.

Lowrey and Kennedy are practicinghnrd for the Wall cup.

lUherton Richards will have to playsome if he wants to win tho cup again.Castle and Low are both out for thecup this time In dead earnest.

oLow says he will try out "like" on

other days but tennis days.

Bockus will also attempt to win thoevaslvo cup. "Bock" you better give

the young cnampionsuip days areover.

Entries for the Hall cup will openfirst part of August.

The exact date for the opening playing has not been decided.

At least forty entries are expectedthe Hall cup play.

The cup will be well worth winning,according to the donors.

By the way, has the Wall cup arrived from the coast, Mr. Wall?

"Sonny" Cunha says no time fortennis any more. Every one hopesthat he will change his mind, how-

ever.

Nowell says that the Hall cup looksgood to him. Steere says the samething.

COMING

BASEBALL.July 23 N. G. H. vs. Fort Ru- -

ger; Fort Shatter vs. Hospl- -

tal Corps.July 23 O. C. Alumni vs. J. A.

C; UU .S. M. C. vs. Waseda.July 24 C A. C. vs. U. S. M.

C; P. A. C, vs. Waseda.. TENNI8.August . . E. O. Hall cup play

(singles.)September ..Wall cup tour- -

ment (singles.)Soptember .. B. O. Hall cup

tournament (singles.)t- - GOLF.

July 17 Medal play tourna- -

ment H. G. C.July 31 Novelty tournament

tCountry Club.

August 21 Two ball foursomeCountry Club.

August 28 Foursome tourna.ment H. G. C.

POLO

f August Inter.Island Tourna- -

ment.ffl B

' LONG BRIDGE SPAN.

The long span of concrete bridgeover Wlssachlckon at Philadelphiais not long to hold the distinction ofthe largest structure of its kind in thoworld. Its span is 233 feet, and thoRocy river bridge of 280 feet clearspan Is now under construction atCleveland.

A bridge having a central span of281 feet has been designed for Spo-

kane to carry Monroe street acrosstho Spokane river. A span of 285

feet has been adapted to carry theNew York barge canal over a gorgeIn the vicinity of Medina, N. Y. Abridge recently placed under contractby the civic authorities of Romewill cross tho Tiber with a span ot328 feet. Tho cost of this bridgehas been estimated at $250,-00-

A bridge comparablo with It Inovory respect is now half finlshod atAuckland, Now Zoakind. It has a to-

tal length ot 910 foet nnd Its mainfoaturo is a spau of 320 feet, whichwill carry a forty-foo- t roadway at anolovatlon of 147 feet above tho groundbelow. Chlcogo Tribune.

DECLARES

BROKEN

COUNCIL GROVE, Kansas, July 23.

In an address yesterday before anaudience at a chautauqua here Sen-

ator Albert B. Cummins of Iowa as-

serted that the pledge innilo In the Re-

publican national platform Is 1908 fortho revision of tho tariff was not ful-

filled by congress at the last session.He declared that Aldrlch, Cannon

and others, who took the lead Inframing the tariff bill never attempt-ed and never Intended to keep thopledge made to the people by theRepublican national convention atChicago.

Senator Cummins said further thatSpoakor Cannon, Senator Aldrlch andother standpatters were driving thonation Into socialism orcontrol and away from tho individualcompetitive theory.

Under the leadorshp of Cannon andAldrlch, bo went on to say, the tariffwas rovlsed without tho slightest heedto the cost of production.

Senator Cummins denied thecharge that he was trying to organizea new party.

SAFETL APPLIANCE FAILED.

FORTRESS MONROE, July. 23 Theresponsibility "for the explosion whichresulted in tho death of eleven artil-lerymen here. on Thursday Is laid tothe failure of tho safety mechanism tooperate when tho sudden powerfulpull was given by the artillerymanattaching tho lanyard.

NEGRO CHEUFFER SUSPECTED

CHICAGO, July 23 Ernest Stevens,a negro chauffeur, formerly employedby President of the Monon railroad,was arrested here yesterday. He issuspected of having been connectedwith the railroad man's death. Stev-ens is declared to have threatened tokill Rawn.

BANK $70,000 SHORT.

NEW YORK, July 23. The Russo-Chines- e

bank in this city was reportedshort $70,000 yesterday. Negotiablebonds to this amount, it was said, dis-

appeared last week and there Is noclew yet discovered as to how theywere made away with and the bankofficials are at a loss to explain thediscrepancy.

TAFT GOES TO BANGOR.

BAR HARBOR, Maine. July 23.

President Taft's visit here closes to-

day. He will proceod to Bangor andlater will go to Ellsworth, the home ofSenator Hale, where he will, remainuntil tomorrow.

WEEK'S

CARLETON CHASE, A NEWFAVORITE.

"Ryan's Rccoptlon," which has hada successful run at tho New Orpheum,will havo Us last porformanco tonight,Monday night "A Fanjlly Cyclone."another bright and breozy musicalfarce, will follow. Now songs, now

mimic and new dances nro promisedall the principals doing special numbers. A successful soasou Is promisedfor "A Family Cyclone."

AMU8EMENT8.

New Orpheum(Phone 660.)

Casino Musical Comedy Co.

IN ANOTHER HIT.

"Ryan's Reception"

EVERY NUMBER A WINNER!EVERYTHING NEWI

Special Matinee Saturday Anywherein tho House, 25c.

Monday, July 25

ANOTHER SURPRISE

"AFamily Cyclone"Prices 25c, 50, and 75c.

BaseballHonolulu Athletic Park

Saturday, July 23--

1:30 p. m.

O. C. ALUMNI vs. J. A. C.

U. S. M. C. vs. WASEDA

Sunday, July 24C. A. C. cs U. S. M. C. .

P. A. C. VS. WASEDA

ADMISSION 75C., 50c, 25c.Box Plan for season tickets at

Chambers Drug Co.

Empire TheaterHOTEL STREET

-- Changes a Week- -

Admission 15c, 10c, 5.

Pari TheaterMISS ETHEL MAY,

Soprano Soloist From Keith's.GEORGE GARDNER,

America's Favorite Irish DialectComedian.

DESMOND SISTERS,Songs and Dances

THOMPSON,Singer.

CARL WALLNER,German Comedian.

J. V. GIBSON,Song and Dance.

CUNHA'S ORCHESTRAand

MOTION PICTURES.Admission 6c, 10c, 15c.

Novelty TheaterCor. Nuuanu and Pauahl Sts.

Wise & MiltonColored Artists

MOTION PICTURES.

A CLEAN HOUSE AND

Pau ka HanaARF. FAST FRIENDS.

buy-

Regal Shoes

DrinkMAY'S OLD KONA COFFEE.

Best In tho Market.HENRY MAY & CO.

Phone 22.

WE INVITE INSPECTION OF OUR GOODS

K. FUKURODA

Hotel near Nnuanu. UonoluU

Page 7: PRIZEFIGHT GAM BLER CO ITS SUICIDE · the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody rich, the half-poun-d tins of Hongkong No. 1 now selling at $75, unstamped of course

MONEYWHILETRAVELING

Purchaso tho Travelers Che-ques issued by tho AmericanBankers Association which arouniversally acceptable and re-qut-

no personal Introduction.Each Chcquo carries its own

means of Identification.Issued in Denominations of

$10., $20., $50 and $100.

For Sale By

III OF HAWAII

Judd Building, Fort and Mer-

chant Sts.Capital and surplus $1,000,000

ESTABLISHED IN 1830. i

I

BANKERS I

Commercial and Travellers'Letters of Cradlt Issued on theBank of California and The Lon-

don Joint Stock Bank, Limited,London,

Correspondent! for the Amer-ican Express Company, andThou. Cook ft Son.

Interest allowefi on term anaBavinjo Bank Deposits.

I

rne YOKonama sdbghLIMITED.

Capital (Paid Up) Yen 24.000,000

?erve Fund Ten 16,250.000

(HEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.

bank buys ana receives 'orcollection bills of exchange, issuesDrafts and Letters of Credit, andtransacts a general banking business.

The Bank reqelves Local Depositsand Head Office teposlts for fixed pe-

riods.Local Deposits $25 and upwards for

one year at rate of 4 per annum.Head Office Deposits Yen 25 and

"Upwards for one-ha- lt year, one year,rtfa-- years or three years at rate of4 per annum.

Particulars to be obtained on ap-- tsllcatlon. .

Honolulu Office Corner Merchantand Bethel streets. P. O. Box 168.

YU AKAT, Manager.

BUY THE GREAT

"WHITE FROST 99

The Refrigerator Without a Fault.Specialty Adapted to the Needs ot

the Hawaiian Islands.

Coyne Furniture Co., Ltd.,Young Building

G.BBEWEHAGO..LTD

Sugar Factors andCommissionMerchants

OFFICERS AND DIHECTOIIS.

B. F. Bishop PresidentGeo. H. Robertson

Vice President ManagerW. W. Njrth TreasurerRichard Ivers SecretaryJ. R. Gait AuditorGeo. R. Carter DirectorC. fc. Cooke DirectorB. A. Cooke Director

Uiewei&Co.,lilFire and MarineInsurance Agencies

Royal Insurance Co. of Liver-pool.

London Assurance Corpora-tion.

CommercialUnionAssuranceCo. of London.

Scottish Union and NationalInsurance Co. of Edinburgh.jledonian Insurance Co. ofEdinburgh.

Upper Rhine InsuranceCo., (Marine).

TOM SHARP, The Painter Signs Of All Kinds. ScenicElite Building SharpSign Work, Decorating, Graining

Phone 397 Paper Hanging, Etc., Etc.

Society(Continued from Page 3.)

beneath tho boll on a handsome tama-rind settee, a beautiful golden wood,highly pollshod and carved, the Doug-

las coat-of-arm- s belonging to Mrs.Alexander's family being the centralback decoration.

Tho drawing room so quaintly fash-

ioned in simplicity and graced by fur-nltur-

somo of which wns tho firstof Its kind over brought to those is-

lands, tho upright piano being bankedhigh with deep red Jacqueminots, anda cablnot in one corner being all buthidden behind tall vnsos of AmericanBeauties. Monnalua's parkllko es-

tate and its hot-hous- had been In-

vaded to advantage, its choicest speci-mens being displayed on this aus-picious occasion. There were CecilBreunner roses and La France rosestoo aiid others of every kind and hue,being terracod high on every side andclustered lovingly about tho dearones' photographs, decorating thewalls, nnfl close to the doorway lead-ing into tho dining room was suspend-ed a basket of golden hearted pan-sle-

From the chandelier over tho din-ing room swung a rustic box of whiteorchids tlod with asparagus fern andyards of yellow liberty, satin ribbon Itwas a gift from Mrs. Alexander Youngwhose own beautiful, never to be for-gotten golden wedding took place sucha short time ago.

' Over the doorways were mottoes,made many, many years ago of"mouse-foot- " on white tapa. "Two ,

are better than one," Abby andWilliam" and "In Union is Strength"wero the inscriptions which are veryfrail with age ana dy beginningto crumble. Hero too are the old !

family portraits, and in between thesewero huge bowls and containers over-

flowing with coreopsis, golden show-er, Shafter daisies and more roses.

The decorations throughout weredaintily arranged and reflected greatcredit on Miss Alexander in whosohands they were cleverly designed.

During tho afternoon delicious re-

freshments of lco cream and cake andfr.uit punch wero served In a marqueeon the shady lawn, where to enhancetho merriment of the occasion, theHawaiian band played appropriateairs. Tho Idea of the occasion wassuggested In all things, even thewhite Japanese napkins bearing thetrim stencilled dates in gold.

The wedding cake, frosted In goldand bearing the dates of the wedding

thf h?M B,fde.nwedd,nRago,

Was cu,t( yi

first slice was lifted by her charmingTVMino ,lol,t- - 111.. At ml. -

wedding gown was also displayed. Itwas a simple white frock witl, an ex-

pansive skirt for hoops and an overskirt which was originally looped upwith clusters of orange blossoms.

Several addresses wero made, oneby Mr. O. H. Gullck, relating thotouching Intimacy between their families, and another by udge Dole,who thanked Professor Alexander forhis marvellous development of Funa-ho- u

colloge where the latter was prin-cipal for seven years, presenting himwith a gold watch and chain, bearingthe inscription, "With golden memo-ries from his Punahou pupils," andhis wife with a diamond brooch. Mr.Gullck's speech terminated with thepresentation to Mrs. Alexander of agold chain purse, within which $100in gold was discovered, "from oldfriends." Mr. Frank W. Damon reada paper of reminiscences written bytho venerable Mrs. Sereno E. Bishop,who was seated on tho lanal.

Among tho groat and bewilderingarray of gifts to Professor and Mrs.Alexander on this occasion were ahandsome Satsuma bowl in blue andgold, a Limoges punchbowl in palegreen and gold, two very handsomebrass Jardinieres from Japan, a dozencoffee cups and saucers in whito andgcjd, one dzqp eervlce plates inwhite and gold, Bohemian glass cakeand fruit dishes, olive and bon-'bo- n

bowls, and one dozen sherbet glasses,a beautiful cabinet, fashioned from atamarind tree which had grown intho grounds of Dr. and Mrs. Alexan-der; a handsome chest for sllvor, achaste gold fountain pen, from thesurvey department, which was or-

ganized .by Dr. Alexander; a verybeautiful gold salver, upon which thefamily initial wns engrossed, fromProf. Alexander's brother In Oakland,a gold chatalalno purse with one hun-

dred dollars In gold, a lovely goldchatalalno pin from tho small grandchildren, a handsomo souvenir spoonwith tho Hawaiian coat-of-arm- adozen silver and gold coffee spoons,a dozen sliver and gold salt spoons

I and boats of gold, a dozen salad forks,

In Bllver and gold, a dozen gold andsllvor, teaspoons, a very elaborate andunique bon bon basket of gold andspoon from Annapolis, two dozens Icecream spoons, with monogram anddates, an artistic shaded study droplight in opaque green and gold, acarving set with mother of pearl han-dlo- s,

n raro Japanese bowl, a royalBokhara rug, a butter knlfo in goldwith blue enamelled adornment, acarved silver book rack, a berry spoonof gold, a gravy spoon and handsomelargo gold punchladle, numerous pins,brooches, souvenir spoons and ringsand, last but decidedly ono of thomoat beautifully touching, a piece ofparchment on ono side a spray ofgolden shower in water colors, on thoother that wonderful little stanza fromBrowning:

"Grow old along with me."The best Is yet to bo

"Tho last of life, for which the firstwas made,

"Our times aro In His hand"Who saith, a wholo I planned,

"Youth shows but half-trus- t God, secall, nor be afraid."

A very delightful feature of thoaftornon wero solos, sung by Mr.Philip Hall, whoso sweet voice wa3greatly appreciated by tho assembledguests. He sang for conclusion agolden wedding song, tho words ofwhich were written for this occasionby Mr. James Alexander to the air ofAuld Lang Syne, and the guests alljoined in tho chorus of Auld LangSyno making a very Impressive con-clusion to this very auspicious day.

One room of tho Alexander homewas a confusion of letters, cables andtelegrams, sent from all parts of thoworlJ with congratulatory messages.Not tho least Important of these wasa wireless announcing, on this festiveday of days, a little son born to Mr.and Mrs. Harold Rice a nephew andn,ece of tho honored couple. Thomessage, presentod to tho baby's father while at the golden wedding, wasthe occasion of merriment and ashower of new and unexpected con-gratulations.Words of the Goldon Wedding song

written by Mr. James Alexander,for tho golden wedding of Prof, andMrs. W. D. Alexander.

Should Life's long pathway bo forgotWhich hand in hand was trodThrough fifty years of wodded loveBy gracious help of God.Though now the tread of age is slowAnd grey the brows enfold,The sweet and tender love of youthHas ne'er grown dim or old.We praise the Lord whose hand has

ledThrough aLong may He lead through scenes of

earthAml tn ihn.""Chorus For Auld Lang Syne.

Over five hundred invitations hadbeen isstiod to this golden wedding, agreat number accepting. Followingare a few of those present whosonamos were Inscribed In the greatregister: Mr.- - and Mrs. Wade WarrenThayer, Mr. and Mrs. Erdman Baldwin, Dr. and Mrs. Whitney, Dr. andMrs. James Judd, Mr. and Mrs. W. .1.

Forbes, Reverend and Mrs. John Erd-man, Mr. and Mrs. Marston Camp-bell, Mr. and Mrs. H. Von Holt, Mr.and Mrs. Philip Weaver, Mr. and Mrs.John Guild, Mr. and Mrs. Wallace R.Farrlngton, Mr. and Mrs. Okumura,Mr. and Mrs. Guliclt, Mr. and Mrs. O.H. Gullck, Mr. and Mrs. W. M.

Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Damon,Mr. and Mrs. J. N. S. Williams, Mr.and Mrs. O. C French, Mr. and Mrs.Isaac Cox, Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Smith,Mr. and Mrs. S. A .Baldwin, Mr. andMrs. Julian Monsarrat, Dr. and Mrs.N. B. Emerson, Mr. and Mrs. JohnBush, Mr. and Mrs. U. Thompson, Mr.and Mrs. J. B. Alexandor, Mr. andMrs. W. T. Pope, Mr. and Mrs. FrankBaldwin, Mr. and Mrs. Sedgowick, Mr.and Mrs. John Gllmore, Mr. and Mrs.F. N. White, Rev. and Mrs. Wadman,Mr. and Mrs. Hemenway, Mr. andMrs. James BIcknoll, Mr and Mrs.James Rath, Judge and Mrs. SanfordB. Dole, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bald-

win, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Logan, Mr.and Mrs. Ben Marx, Mr. and Mrs. F.W. Damon, Rev. and Mrs. Ebersole,Mr. and Mrs. W. R. CaBtlo, Mr. andMrs. A. P Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. J.A. McCandless, Mr. and Mrs. R. Reld-for-

Dr. and Mrs. Baldwin, Mr. andMrs. Theodore Richards, Canon andMrs. Ault, Mrs. Sarah Newcomb, Mr.E. A. P. Newcomb, Mr. and Mrs. W.A. Wall, Canon and Mrs. Usborno,Rev. and Mrs. J. P. Jones, Mr. andMrs. T. G. Thrum, Mr. and Mrs. J.Waterhouse, Mr. and Mrs. W. W.Chamberlain, Mr. and Mrs. C. E--. Liv-

ingstone, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Hend-rick- ,

Mr. and Mrs. Jones, Governorand Mrs. Frear, Mr. and Mrs. A. C.

Alexander, Mr, and Mrs. J. M. Dow-set- t,

Mr. and Mrs, George Potter, Mr.

and Mrs. C. W. Baldwin, Mr. and Mrs.C. H. Hitchcock, Judge and Mrs. S.M. Ballou; Mesdames Ada Gibson,S. M. Lack, S. Lawrence, R. B. Lead,E. W. Jordan, A. Montano, H. A.Parmolee, Charlotte Ewlng, ElizabethTurner, Wm. A. Clark, Gurrey, C. F.Wolfe, Blcknell, Mary R. Robinson,Mist, A. U. Smith, Jane Hosmer, EllenWeavor, Lena Fraser, C. B. Cooper,Shaw, E. F. Bishop, C. LovelanJ, L.A. Thurston, A. Wall, M. Church, G.H. Gere, Mary Clark. Moore, E. K.Rice. Ethelwyn Beckwlth, Will. Wein-ric-

King, Lena Marshall. Rowland,It. L. Hakey, Gortrndo Damon, Har-riet Green .Frances Judd, D. C. Lind-say, Philip Frear, Plorro Jones, C.Ashford, C. M. Wakeflold. D. D. Bald-win, E. I. Spalding. James Konnody.S. Norton Bobo, Martha Smith, hi. F.Bishop; Misses Marlon Austin, Car-rie A. Gllmnn, Kate Woodward, RuthSmith, Ramona Marks, Nolllo Blck-nell, Cathorine Reynolds, E. Lyons,Janet Mclntyre, Florenco Yarrow, Ly-di- a

Coan, Marguerite Ashford, Car-rie Green, Agnes Judd, Alice, Doro-thy and Gussie Lindsay, Cornelia "Wa-lters, Julia Gullck, Edna, Jean andMao Damon, Edna Allyn, Maria For-bes, Harriet Forbes. Schweitzer, Cor-nelia Maltey, Annie Hustace, Mar-garet Lishman, Susie Jory, MargaretShaw, Clare Uecke, Mary Burbank,Jennie Armstrong, Susan Clarke, He-len Alexander, Florence Leo, EmmaGroom, Florenco Sigel, Mary Law-rence, Ella Fletcher, Martha Hitch-cock, Muriel Gibson, Allen Hitchcock,Sophie Rycroft; Messrs. H. P. Bald-Wi-

W. Monsarrat, Edgar Wood. F.Barrlck, Alexander Lindsay, Jr., E.G. Reeco, C. F. Schultzler, W. D.Westervelt, Lylo Dickey, DwlghtBaldwin, C. H. Dickey. J. F. Brown, J.P. McDonald, Prof. M. M. Scott Dr.Rogers, Charles Hustace, Jr, PhilipHall, Warren Chamberlain, JamesDole, John Lucas. A. B. Ingalls, A. B.Clarke, George Castle. A. D. Bolster.Ashford, Merrlfleld, Col. Soper, Wil-liam L. Bond, G. Peter and Robert E.Bond.

H. M. Queen Liliuokalani entertain-e- d

informally on Monday evening ata chowder and swimming party ather homo at Walkikl, In complimentto the officers of the U. S. S. Cleve-land. Her two adopted sons Mr.Joseph Aea and Mr. John A. Domlnis,acted as hosts for this occasion andpresided most graciouly during theevening.

Tho houes were thrown open andevery room was ablaze with scarletcarnations and maidenhair, tho tableon the lanal whence tho buffet chow-der supper was served bearing avery large centerpiece and being pro-fusely strewn with these pretty flow-ers- .

Softly shaded chandeliers add-

ed greatly to tho effect and after theguests had enjoyed surfing and swim-ming for a time they mounted thoconcrete stairs which drop from theterraced lawn into the sea, and re-tiring to rooms assigned them, whichwero all prettily bedecked In carna-tions, prepared for the hot supperwhich awaited them on the lanal over-looking tho sea, to tho soft singingof tho Hawaiian quintette boys.

After supper the music being en-

ticing, the young guests spent a merryevening in dancing in tho moonlight,at the conclusion of which severalbig motor cars were called and thoguests motored about the city.

Those present at this affair, besidestho officers ot the U. S. S. Cleveland,who wero tho honored guests, wereMisses Helen Kimball, Lilian Robert-son, Marjorio Freeth, Manu Whiting,Ethel Whiting, Beatrice Campbell.Belle McCorrlston, Miss McCorriston,Mrs. Bosworth, Mrs. William Camp-bell and Arthur Gay.

Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Barclay, ofarrived by tho Mauna Kea this

morning and will remain till Tuesday.They aro registered at the Young.

Miss Mae Damon was tho charmingyoung hostess at a brIJgo afternoonon Monday from four until six o'clockIn honor of her cousin Miss Maltby,who is at present her house guest.Tho affair was very informal, threotables being entertained m the pic-turesque tea houso in tho Moanaluagardens.

The prizes wero very appropriatebeing designed of carved ChineseIvory, and tho rofroshmonts of Ices,tea and coffee wore served by waitersat small tables. Among those whoenjoyed Miss Damon's hospitality onthis occasion wore Mrs. Corwln P.Recs, Mrs. Eleanor Hydo-Smlth- , Mrs.C. B. Cooper, Mrs. Georgo Potter, Mrs.S. Sr. Ballou, MrsHerman Focko andMrs. Fred Damon.

'S

Admiral do Castries, commandingtho French cruiser Montcalm on herpresent voyage In Pacific waters, was

host of a very handsome dinner onboard tho cruiser on Sunday evening.Tho dinner was served In tho admi-ral's quarters with oxqulslto appoint-ments and Borvlco, for which thoFrench entertainers aro especially

Tho decorations consisted ofAmerican Beauty roses as a heapingcenterpiece and softly shaded lightswhich enhanced tho beauty of thocnsomblo to a degreo, while sweetmusic during dinnor played by thoorchestra of the Montcalm was agracoful complement.

Those prosent on this occasion asguests of Admiral lo Castries wereAdmiral and Mrs. Corwln P. Rees. U.S. N., Acting Governor and Mrs. E.A. Mott-Smlt- British Consul andMrs. Ralph Forater, Mdllo. Grns, Con-

sul Marques, Commandant Cheron,Commlssalro Oliver, and Surgeon Ker-gesho- n

of tho French crulsor Mont-

calm.a 9 a

Judgo and Mrs. Ballou will entpr-tal- n

on Wednesday evening next at adinner in honor of Mr. and Mrs. W. FDillingham.

aThe opening of tho now Union Grill

was celebrated on Wednesday even-

ing by an elaborate stag dinner by Dr.

A. Marques, tho commercial agentqf France, given In honor of Admiral

do Castries of tho French navy, atpresent In command of tho cruiserMontcalm. Tho four private din-

ing rooms in tho second story of thocafo wore opened into ono largo ban-

quet hall, and was tastefully decorat-ed with draped flags, French andAmerican. Tho round tablo at whichtho guests wero seated was adornedby golden marigolds, scatterod overthe cloth. In combination with maid-enhair, and as a centerpiece heavilydraped In blue, red and white confec-tion, Intertwined, stood a largo bowloverflowing with scarlet carnations.Tho place cards represented tho na-

tional colors.During dinner the orchestra of the

Montcalm rendered sweet airs verysoftly, among these being a few ofthe well known operatic selectionsand gayer French ?ongs.

The menu was as follows:Consomme

Uku au "Grill"Petlts pates Votalllo

LegumesPunch a la Romalne

Filet bralsoHaricots vorts, Asparagus Salado

Omelette SouffleoDessert Fruits Fromago

Glace a BananasVIns: Morca Blanc, Lyesverge, Ronge,

4Champagne

Those presont to do honor to thisauspicious occasion were Admiral doCastries, Mr. E. A. Mott-Smlt- RearAdmiral Corwln P. Rees, Senor Cana-varr-

Commandant Cheron of thocruiser Montcalm, Commlssaire Oliverof the Montcalm, Consul F. A. Schae-for- ,

Surgoou Kergeshon of the Mont-

calm and Dr. Marques.ft

On Monday afternoon from four tosix o'clock, Miss Agnes WIckstrunipresided at a very pretty tea at thoPleasanton in honor of Miss Eynonof Philadelphia, who is at present thohouse guest of her siste,r, Mrs. War-ren. Tho boautiful surroundings ofthe Pleasanton, with its atmosphereof quiet refinement and wldo spaciousrooms and lanals, was a pretty spot,whither about thirty guests wendedtheir way.

Miss Wlckstrum, with tho guost ofhonor, received on the cast lanalwhich was profusoly decorated in thelovely golden shower, and in a per-

fect arbor of these striking blossoms,the guests wero presented to MissEynon who was very attractivelygowned In pale pink satin, and woar-In- g

a pink Bilk nlcturo hat withshaded pink plumes.

Tho hostess was gowned in whitelingerie, which Is so pretty and daintyfor this season of the year. Tea,coffee and Ices wore servod on tholanal, from small tables decorated In

sprays of tho golden shower, Mrs.Shccdy preslJlng over tho tea cups,

and Mrs. Reldford ovor tho coffeeurn.

During the afternoon some delight-

ful music was enjoyed, Miss Wlck-

strum playing a few selections on thopiano, while Mrs. Stephen Norton

(Continued on Page Eight)

A STRAIGHT TIP.Be suro and take a bottle ot Cham-

berlain's Colic, Cholera and DiarrhoeaRemedy with you when starting on atrip. It cannot bo obtained on boardtho trains or steamors. Changes ofwaters and climato often cause suddenattacks of diarrhoea, and it is best tobo prepared. For Salo by all dealers,Benson, Smith & Co., agents for

NEGLECT Of i(e IIRcauses it to loose Its natural colornnd to fall off.

PACHECO'S DANDRUFF KILLER

will bring back tho natural brilliancyof your hair and make It grow luxuriantly. It is also a marvelous quickrelief for prickly heat.

Sold uy all druggists and at 's

Barber Shop. Phone 232,- -

Sweet VioletBUTTER

C. Q. YEE HOP & CO. TEL. 251

cast e & Me.Honolulu, T. H.

SHIPPING . ND COMMISSION HHR--

CHANTS.SUGAR FACTORS and GENERAL IN--

SDRANCE AGENTS.representing

Ewa Plantation Co.Walalua Agricultural Co., Lttf.Kphala Sugar Co.Waimea Sugar Mill Co.Apokaa Sugar Co., Ltd.Fulton Iron WorkB oi St. Louis.Westons Centrifugals.Babcock & Wilcox Boiler.Green's Fuel Economizer.Matson Navigation Co.New England Mutual Life Iniu

nco Company ot Boston.Aetna Insurance Co.National Fire Insurance Co.Citizen's Insurance Co. (Hortlorft

Fire Insurance Co.)The London ABsuraose corpora-

tion.

FIRE IBiGEATLAS ASSURANCE COMPANY OF;

LONDON.NTW YORK UNDERWRITERS

AGENCY.PROVIDENCE WASHINGTON IN-

SURANCE COMPANY.

Thb B. F, Dillingham Co,, Lid,

General Agents for Hawaii.Fourth Floor, Stangenwald Building.

Have You

That ten room house at Kalmukl

which can be bought for

r$39500l

Tho lot Is 45,800 square feet.

This la a property that should not

have to go begging. ,

Bishop Trust Co.,Limited

BETHEL STREET

Oahu RailwayTABLE

ODTWAIID.For Waianae, Walalua, Kahuku apd

Way Stations 9:1B a.m.. 3.20 p.m.For Pearl City, Ewa Mill, and Way

Station 17:30 a.m., '9:15 a.m., ll:S0a.m., 2:15 p.m., 3;20 p.m., 6:15 p.m.,t9:30 p.m., 11:15 p.m.

For Walilawa and Lellehua 10:20a. m., 6:15 p. m., f9:30 p. m.. Jll:15p. m.

INWARDArrlvo Honolulu trom Kahuku, WaU

alua and Walanao '8:36 a.m., 5:31p.m.

Arrive Honolulu from Ewa Mill andPearl City WAS a.m., 8:3 a.m.,

11:02 a.m., 1M0 p.m., M:2 p.m.,5:31 p.m., 7:30 p.m.Arrive Honolulu trom Wahlawa an

Lellehua 'OilB a.m., 1:40 p.m., 'BiSlip.m.. tl0:10 p.m.The Haleiwa Limited, a two-ho-

train (only first-clas- s tickets honored),leaves Honolulu every Sunday at 8:3a. m.; returning, arrives in Honoluluat 10:10 p.m. The Limited stops onlyat Pearl City and Waianae outward,and Walanao, Walpahu and Pearl CityInward.Dally. tExcept Sundays. JSundaya

only.a. P. DENISOK, F. C. SMITH.

Superintendent. a. P. A.

Page 8: PRIZEFIGHT GAM BLER CO ITS SUICIDE · the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody rich, the half-poun-d tins of Hongkong No. 1 now selling at $75, unstamped of course

U'...r i

Stiff-H

to

EKHIT THE) HAWAIIAN BTAJK SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1910.

Classified "Ads"WANTED.

Hoy with bicycle to curry importJijiply Star Huslness office."""We neat you" before" the largest mir-

rors In town and trim your hair justat you' desire It. Come and see your-

self life size at Jeff's Uarber Shop.PQRSALE."

'

Four cylinder, Foril runabout--

In

first cIrbs condition. Telephone- 205

If interested and nek Mr. Kolly for de-

monstration or address Ford, do thisjiapor.

'rr1 FOR RENT.

Small G room Cottage. Until and Gas.stove, $H.00. 143G Young street, orPhone 15G3.

dramatTcTAIaKIE KENNY, Dramatic Studio from

San Francisco, 175 Boretanla. Prac-

tical private course. Act-

ing, Elocution, Monologues, Vaude-ville, Dancing, Reading. Grace Cul-

ture. Phone 33.

MEN'S .CLOTHINGMen's Clothing on credit ?1. 00 a

week. Suit given at once. FraaolsLevy, Outfitting Co., Sachs Dldg., FortStreot.

WANTED TO I5CY

Old boohs, magazines, Hawaiiantamps-an- curios. Books cxchxnsea.

Wtodoif Curio Bazaar. Fort Strsst,Rboto Pauahi- -

DUY AND SELL.

Diamonds and" jewelry bought, sold

and exchanged. Bargain In musicalinstruments. 3. Carlo, Fort St.

THE ART OF

MetrographyOR

Brass Piercingcan he easily learned; we havetlie complete outfits and a largoassortment of the stampedbrasses.

EHLERS1California Oil

INVESTMENTSA3 shown by the official statement

of the San Francisco Stock Exchangeover ?l,4o0,000 were paid by the listedoil complies for June.

Some remarkable records have beenm:.le by some of the oil companies,promoted by us, Illinois Crude for in-

stance. This company has paid $9,100au acre in dividends nlready and isproducing now about GO per cent more

.oil than it did a couple of year ago.'Through our long experience in

'Cr'iforuia oil we are able to selectonly good companies for our hundredsof clients. We may mention Premier,'Sextion Six. Palmer, Yellowstone,Cresceus etc. which are all heavy pro-

ducers. Amongst the low price-stock- s

WE RECOMMEND THE IMMEDIATEPURCHASE OF SHARES OF THE"VENTURA OIL DEVELOPMENTCO." .which according to present in-

dications will become our banner com-

pany.The shares are offered now AT 15

JENTS EACH, but the price will beADVANCED ON JULY 22. Maketherefore your investment now, andreap the benefit of the advance inprice. . We have sold a great manyshares, and we want you to join us inthe road to success.

P. E. R. STRAUCHAgent

Lincoln Mortgage & Loan Co.San Francisco Nev York ChicagoWalty Bldg. 74 S. King St.

For. Rent.Furnished House in Kaimuki. Two

Bedrooms. Large grounds. Splendidview. Rent $30.00. Apply this office.

, ATTENTION1

An Investment of Twenty-Fiv- e Do-llars will buy 100 shares stock In Lake-Vio-

Oil Co. No. 2, only 1 4 milesfrom the world-ttunou- s hlg oil gusher.This Is the best oil proposition overoffered in Honolulu; better than sugarstocks; equally as safe, and the possi-bilities of profit beyond comparison.You are neglecting your best interestsif you fail to call on me at once.

J. OSWALD LUTTED,1139 Fort Street.

Next to convent. Phono GOO.

JMr. and Mrs. W. D. Feunlmorc willall in a couple of weeks for Hono-

lulu, wdmro they will spend the latesummer. S..F. Bulletin. (

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.

Prohibition League Page 11

N. S. Sachs Dry Goods Co Pago sA. II. ArlolMh & Co Prtfco 5

TowiiBond Undertaking Parlor. Pago ItPage 14

It llackteld & Co Page 10

Townsond Undertaking Palo. .Pago 14

Waldron Page 14

McCherney Coffee Co Page 13

Hawaiian News Page 10

Von linnini Young (Stevens) . .Page 15

Von Hnmin Young (Everltt) . .Page 12i .I. . . . .

THE WEATHER.

Local Office, U. S. Weather Bureau,Honolulu, T. 11., July 23, 1910.

Temperature, 0 a. m.; S a. m.; 1')

u. m.; and morning minimum:71; 75; 78; S0;'G9.Baromotet roadlng. 'Absolute hum-

idity (grains por cubic foot; relativehumidity and dew point at 8 a. m.:

30.04; G.17G; GG G3.

Wind, voloclty and direction at G

a. m.; 8 a. m.; 10 a. in.; and noon:2E; SE; 8X12; 11NE.Rainfall during 24 hours ending S a.

m. .01 lncho rainfall.Total wind movement during 'Z

hour ended at noon 173 miles.WM. B. STOCKMAX,

Section Director.

NEWS IN A NUTSHELL

Paragraphs That Give CondensedNewt of the Day.

Pete the champion shoe shiner Is atthe Silent Barber Shop.

Ehlers have complete outfits forbrass piercing.

Loose-lea- f and other styles of poc-car-

as they are highest priced ma- -

riety at A. B. Arleigh & Co., Hotelstreet opp. Union. Finest assortmentand lowest prices in the city.

Nolte's restaurant opens at 5 a. m.

end keeps open until 7:30 p. m. Mealsat all Intervening hours promptlyserved.

A four cylinder Ford runabout Infirst class condition is offered for salecheao. Particulars in classifiedcolumn on this page.

We have several mottoes, but allmean that "the best meal In thecity for the money, served In themost satisfactory manner is to befound at Nolte's."

The baggage service of Union PacificTransfer Co., is absolutely first classand dependable. No annoying waits forhaggage or misplacing- - of neededtrunks. Phone 58.

Attractive displays of brand newgoods at Sachs Dry Goods Co., thisweek. See advertisement in this issue. Among the new goods is a com'plete assortment of the famous Onyxhosiery.

Never before have Ice Cream Greez-er- s

been offered as such ridiculouspries. Ono qt., 75 c ea; 2 qt $1.00 ea;3 qt., $1.50 ea; 4 qt 2.00. At W. W.Dimond & Co, Ltd, for this week only.

"Where Do You Eat?" Is a ques-tion that is frequenejly asked. Youwill find that men of epicurean tastewill tell you that for 25c the mealserved at Nolte's cannot be excelled.

Cut out this and take it to YatLoy Co. corner King and Nuuanustreets, and on your making a cashpurchase of 50 cents or upwards youwill receive ten green stamps in ad.dltion to those usually given.

Mr. and Mrs. Gerrit JudJ are atpresent visiting in Maui, where theyaro tho house guests of Mr and Mrs.Baldwin. .' v;

A very delightful and informal teawas given on board the U. S. S.. Chat-tanooga yesterday afternoon from 4 toG o'clock at which Ensign Looman

as host. The guests includ-ed only a few girls of the younger setwho were chaperoned by Mrs. Marix,wife of Captain Marix, U. S. M. C.

Roy Wheeler of Los Angeles is herewith his large touring car, having ar-

rived yesterday to meet Mr. and Mrs.Robert Burdette. The Burdettes havebeen traveling in the Orient and re-

turned yesterday on the Chiyo Mam.They will remain at the Palace for aday i r two and then will accompanyWheeler on the motor trip to theirhome In the southern city. Mr. andMrs. Burdette have many friends in

town who will make their stay me-

morable In a social way with severalentertainments if the length of theirsojourn hero affords an opportunity.Call.

MISUSE OF NAME.Editor Hawaiian Star: I under-

stand that the liquor interests in cer-

tain posters on billboards printed inthe Hawaiian language are quotingine as being against prohibition.

Some time ago I was interviewed bya Bulletin reporter to give my viewBon tha present law. I stated at thetime that, if the present law wasamended in certain respects, then thatlaw would be preferable to prohibition.The amendments were drastic thoughIn lino with certain other liquor lawsIn other states. At that time, I statedto tho Bulletin reporter that thegowere merely my views on the presentlaw and should not indicate in one wayor tho other how I should voto onJuly 2Gth. Tho posters are put up with-out any authority from mo and myviews are misrepresented.

Your slncorely,ALFRED L. CASTLE.

Honolulu, July 23, 1910.

SocietyBobo sang to tho warm appreciationof all present.Among thoss present were Miss Vio-

let Mnkee, Mrs. L. J. Warren, Mrs. M.M. Garrett, Miss Harriet Lucas, MissHelen North, Miss Irma Ballentyno,Miss Mario Ballontyne, Miss EthelSpalding, Miss Harriet Young, MissAllco Cooper, Miss Gault, Mrs. Ste-phen North Bobo, Miss Smith, Mrs.Lindsay, Miss Blanche Sopor, MissEdith Meyer and Miss Kathryn Ste-phens.

4ft AMr and Mrs. J. M. Dowsett were

the honored guests on Saturday after-noon, at a very elaborate fnrowell luauat Walanao given by Mr. and Mrs.Fred Meyer, tho former of whom isthe manager of the Walanae planta-tion, x

This beautiful affair was given atthe Meyer home at Walanae. thohouse being decorated with quanti-ties af oxquisito pansles nnd other fra-grant flowers, and tho large lannl.where the feast was spread, being en-

closed hy festoons of maile broughtfresh from the surrounding mountainsfor this occasion. Tho Idea was avery pretty one and created a strikingeffect. At each juncture where thegraceful festoons met, were groupedhuge clusters of double scarlet hibiscus blossoms, the long tables beingadorned by fragrant malle trailers andscarlet carnations scatterod thicklyover a green bed of ferns, with largecalabashes of these fragrant flowershere and there, Intermingled with mimerous varieties of gladiolus.

When the guests were assignedtheir various seats (tho honored onesbeing seated at the table of Mr. andMrs. Dowsett) they were gracefullypresented with long heautlful lels ofred carnations and sweet malle whichadmitted, owing to their length, being wound several times round theneck.

And then the feast began, and sucha feast! Every delicacy, some ofwhich are almost impossible to obtainat the present time was presented In

neat packages, and the hills and thesea had been robbed of some of theirchoicest viands.

Over one hundred and fifty guestssat down at the luau, fifty being pre-

sent at the table of the honoredguests.

The Walanae band alternated withthe Walanae quintette club during thorepast, after which danclrig was in-

dulged in and a gloriously good timeconcluded the afternoon.

Among those invited from Honoluluwere: Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Dowsett, Mr.and Mrs. E. Faxon Bishop, Mr. andMrs. Frank Richardson, Mr. HarryWhitney, Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Hollo-way- ,

Mrs. Mary Gunn, Mr. and Mrs. A.A. Wilder, Mr. Carl Muhlendorf, Mr.

and Mrs. Herman Focke and MissMargaret Walker.

Avj-- v.- - vj-

Lieutenant and Mrs. Bowen, of FortShatter, entertained at a handsomelyappointed dinner at their quarters atthe post on Monday evening, in honorof Mr. W. G. Irwin, who departed inthe Sierra on Wednesday for SanFrancisco.

The color scheme of decoration wasyellow, beautiful sprays of goldenshower and shaded candelabra, en-

hancing the beauty of the appoint-ments.

The place cards were artistic scenesin water colors, and covers "at this,elaborate dinner were laid for Mr.William G. Irwin, Mr. and Mrs. E. ISpalding, Captain and Mrs. Chapman,of Fort Shatter, Mrs. Pardee of FortShatter, and Lieutenant and Mrs. G.C. Bowen.

Some very exquisite gowns wereseen at this dinner, tho beautifulyoung hostess, who is the undisputedbeauty of the post, being attired in animported evening gown of pink satinelaborately trimmed in gold lace.

Tho most important and pleasantacquisition to our social circle arriv-ing in the Manchuria from the main-land aro Governor and Mrs. Walter F.Frear, who have been ' on tho wing"since leaving Honolulu."Governor and Mrs. Frear, accom-panied by their little daughter, Vir-ginia have travelled extensivelythroughout tho United States, their iti.norary including New Haven wherethey were the recipient of many

occasions, New York, whoreGovernor Frear enjoyed a reunionwith his former class mates, one full I

day in wasnington, D. C. which wasin itself ono bewildering round ofgaieties, breakfasts, luncheons, din-

ners and motor tours with their nu-

merous friends at tho capital, a halfday at Ithlca, where the George Jr.,Republic was vlsUed at Freovllle, NY, and which held a fund of 'interest,and Chicago, Oakland, San Franciscoand Santa Rosa, where relatives ofGovernor Frear and friends, were ri-

vals In ontcrtnlnlng them,Mrs. Froar relates of the dreadful

heat throughout tho eastern cities at

m MY FAMILYI Have Used Peruna at Various

Times for Soveral Years."

I Recommend Peruna,Edward M. Burtt, 5 N. JeffersonMr.Ave., St. Louis, Missouri, U. S. A.,

writes : "It affords mo much pleasureto annouueo that I havo used your medlcine at various times for several years,and tha tit has given enliro satisfaction,not only In my own family, but also thatof others Of my friends. And wouldcheerfully recommend the uso of Peru-nn- ,

ns I certainly do endorso your med-

icine"Catarrh of the Stomach.Joseph Sehuler, It. V. D. No. 1,Mr.Latty, Iowa, U. S. A., writes : "I

think it is my duty to tell you what yourmedicine has done for me. It hascured me of catarrh of tho stomach oftwonty-flv- o years' standing. Manythanks for your kind medical advice."

Peruna Is handy to keep In the houseall tho year round. It is good for thecokU of winter, it is good for tho pettyailments of summer. It is good for thograndfather and tho grandchild. It ia

t favorite remedy for the housewife.

present, and they found California'scool coast a great relief.

Honolulu however, seems best toour governor and his charming wifeand they are exceeiMngly happly to behome again.

AAAOne of the most elaborate affairs of

tho week was the bridge afternoongiven ffat the Moana .Hotel by Mrs.Walter Macfarlane in compliment toPrincess Kawananakoa when society'3elite in all its fascinating glitter werepresent at the handsome affair.

Upon arriving, the guosts were cor.dially received by Miss Ethel Whiting,a companion and close frond oI"MIssBeatrice Campbell, and 'n turn' pre-

sented Princess Kawananakoa, Mrs.Walter Macfarlane and Mrs. RobertShinglo and Miss Beatrice Campbell,who stood in the alcove of the hotelin a bower of palmsnnd roses.

Princess Kawananakoa's gown wasa marvel of rich elegance, being a par-isien- e

creation of a black Spanishlace overdress above a skirt of whitesatin. She wore long pearl ear dropswhich are so becoming to her status-qu- e

beauty, and was the center of ad-

miring glances, during the afternoon.Miss Whiting looked extremely

pretty in a grass liven robo heavilyembroidered In great raised chrysan-themums; and wearing a black picturehat with white flowing plumes; whileMiss Campbell wore a lingorio frockin the latest mode of oversklrt effect,which was elaborate to a degree andrecalled tho cheerful cloisters of theelite shops of Ney York. She yorewith this summer costume a chlowhite lace hat trimmed in old rose andblack roses round the crown.

One of the most striking figures of

the occasion was Mrs. M. E. Gross-man, who wore a gown of old rose sa-

tin trimmed profusely In gold lace,and an immense black picture hatbearing sable willow plumes.

The prizes were very handsome, andbrought Joy to the winners, Mrs. Jas.Dougherty carrying off the first prize,a silver cream and sugar jug, Mrs. J.Morton Rlggs the second, a sliver cardcase, and Mrs. Widdlfield a silver hat-

pin holder. vDuring tho afternoon delicious re-

freshments of sandwiches, cakes, Icegbon bons, tea, coffee and chocolatewere served, and among the largenumber of guests present on this de-

lightful occasion were: Mrs. HubertVos, of New York, Miss Annie Grahamof New York, Mrs. James Dougherty,Mrs. J. Morton Rlggs, Mrs. Widdlfield,Miss Manu Whiting, Miss BeatriceCampbell, Miss Ethel Whiting, Prin-cess Kawananakoa, Miss Alice Mac-

farlane, Miss Lady Macfarlane, Mrs,Robert Shingle, Mrs. Walter Macfar-lane, Mrs. M. E. Grossman, Mrs. T. V.

Lansing, Mrs. Fred Damon, Miss AdaRhodes, Mrs.- - Charles Lucas, Mrs. H.F. Lewis, Mrs. Maris, Mrs. Lane, Mrs.

Corwin P. Rees, Mrs. Richard Ivors,Mrs. A. M. Brown, Miss Grace Robort-son- ,

Mss Marjorio Freoth, Miss LilianRobertson, Miss Irene Dickson, Mrs.

Jack Balch and Mrs. Frank

Attractive Display of NewGoods

SWrSS & CAMBRIC EMBROIDERIES andchoice lot in new and pretty patterns.

LADIES'' BATHING SUITS in Black and Navy Alpaca withwhite trimmings. Also, a few with Scotch plaid piping on tho blouse,very stylish cut.

NEW CURTAIN. SCRIM in artistic stoneilled designs at 25c peryard.

FINE FIGURED BATISTE 30 inches wide nnd all now patterns,G yards for $1.00.

INFANTS' CASHMERE SAC3UES-i-embr6tdcred",l- n" Pink, Blueand White from $2.75 to $3.50.

NEW SHIPMENT OF R. & G. CORSETS have just been unpack-ed. Wo can now fill orders in all sizes and styles in this popular cor-

set.ONYX HOSIERY We have a full stock of these well known

goods in Cotton, Lisle and Silk. We recommend our Plain Black Cot-ton Guaze, 3 pair Tor $1.00, as the best value offered at this price; cor-rect weight and texture.

, LADIES' LINGERIE DRESSES In the latest oversklrt and shortsleeve effects. $14.00 to $20.00.

RUBBERIZED SILK RAIN COATS in plain colors and stripesfrom $14.50 up.

SACHS DRYCor. Fort and Beretania Sts.

BestCoalPrompt Deliveries

I andWood

Honolulu PhoneConstruction 281

Queen St., next to

It's Good MeatVEGETARIANS ARE ALL RIGHT IN THEIR

PHONE

WAY. GOOD

conatrucMouno"

Insertions. A

GOODS CO.,

Opp. Fire Station

of Any Quantity

and Graying

Company, Ltd.

Inter-Islan- d Office.

MEAT WHAT MAKES TJI&

22E2SE22J2SE2 rassEBEaEEBs

BOX m.

Every child canuse it

No experienceis needed

null well failure crt A,

91 00SO00

SUIU'LY LIMITED.

BLOOD CORPUSCLES RED. CABBAGE-

, WON'T DO IT IN TWICE THE TIME.

Metropoljtair Market

W. F. Heilbron, Proprietor. Phone 45.

We Use lo Preservatives In our Cream

Special care to keep it cold and protect it from contaminationassure ample keeping qualities.

Many believe, too. thatPURE CREAM IS MORE HEALTHFUL.

We sell direct to our customers, or through May, Day or Lewisthe grocers.

TFlno Pond DLia?880.

ICE CREAM AND DESERTSMADE IN FIVE TO TEN MINUTES WITH

POLAR !g1?E. 3EMSEEESS

It In no Htmple Inearn "Jiwt It mi luiiioiMllilllty.

For the Hot Weather SaleNow riiiiiilnK. ami which will lost thin wcolc ouly, we have nrrnnireil the fal-lowing prleeNi

1 Qunrt Size, ench . ,2 Quart Size, euch , ,:t (tuart Slav, euch . ,1 t(uart Size, each , .

CO.ME IN EAniiY, AS THE

IS.

P. O.

ho made (lint in I

12

IS VERY

A

W.W. Dimond &Co.,Ltd53-r- 7 KING STREET,, HONOLULU.

1

Page 9: PRIZEFIGHT GAM BLER CO ITS SUICIDE · the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody rich, the half-poun-d tins of Hongkong No. 1 now selling at $75, unstamped of course

i

- vT

20 d section THE HAW Hi ranPAGES O 1G.

PAOB5 9 TO J5.

V

HONOLULU, HAWAII,. SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1010

PARADISE PARAGRAPHS

Booze is thicker than water.

BY WILL 8ABIN

After the plebiscite tlie deluge.

Hawaii had a Woolley lamb,Sho called It "Plebiscite;"

But if the lamb is "wet" or "dry,"We'll know next Tuesday night.

xx--

Somebody last Sunday delivered a sermon on "The three L's ofthe sea." We'd been leading our life right along all these years under

v the impression that there was only one 'ell. Still, if there are three,all .the better; then there will be more variety.

.;:--Old earth's an aero-plane- t,

From mount to aero-plaln- ;

Us mortals take a little ride.4-

And then fall off again.

There's a story conies from a! certain Honolulu boarding house to"the effecfthat the landlord picks up and pickles the rinds of water-melons thrown away by his guests. ,

The old world is an auto,And everybody spins

For a joy-rid- e every twenty-fou- r hoursOn the road of a thousand sins.

You can't spike Speaker Gannon. He fainted at Winfleld one dayand made several speeches at Emporia the Monday following. He'smore of a revolver than a cannon. Incidentally, Cannon must be aprohibitionist, for he can speak without being loaded.

XX--

That Boosevelt's headquarters should be Oyster Bay is hard on theoyster's reputation for silence.

XX--

Some sins we never tackle;For some we do not' care; i ,

Some we newr have chance to try, 1

And some we do not dare vBut most ,of us tackle sins enough,

On this life's beaten track,To be saved from a trip like Elijah's,

v To heaven In a red-ho- t back.X-- X-

Labor Day is not such a long way off, so why not get up a greatprocession of those who really labor? We have failed several yearsin getting out anything in the way of a representative labor parade,so, to make sure of this year's celebration, let us at once arrangewith the Federal, Territorial and City and County officials to turnout all the prisoners in the prisons and jails, giving them a good holi-

day and supplying the public with' a fine exhibition of horrid ex-

amples. This might be the line of march:guard of Police, mounted and on their own legs.

BAND, MADE UP OF MUSICAL PRISONERS (playing "Bar, bar, blacksheep; sheep behind the bars'.")

BERGER'S BAND (no jail reflections).

MORE POLICE.

City and County Supervisors (to lend moral tone to procession).

MAIN PROCESSION:

1. Platoon of cho fa convicts, waving ball receipts and shouting "Lay onMoDuff ! You are the stuff!"

2. Varied selection of vagrants, led by Benevolent Order of Bums.3. Amalgamated Association Assault-and-Batterer- carrying clubs, knives,

slung-shot- s and cane-knive-

4. Exalted Lodge "of Wifebcaters,' carrying motto, "God Bless Our Home,Nit!"

5. Hi Henry, bearing enlarged crayon portrait of Anderson Grace, with$500 reward sign attached, followed by escaped convicts attending by specialinvitation. '

6. Secret Order of Parole Parlor No. 1; Thugs and Agitators;Commuted Community Lodge No. 23: Miscellaneous Misdemeanants

7. Unconvicted criminals. All thoso who have done things which haven'tbeen found out are entitled to join the throng.

POLICE PATROL WAGON, with BELLS.

FLOATS: (a) "Liberty Overshadowing the World," Anderson Grace bidbind farewell to his comrades at Kaplolanl park, (b) Johnny Martin makingan address at Oahu prison, (c) Chief McDuffle with threo gamblers in eitherhand and one in his teeth, making a raid.

AUTOMOBILE SECTION (consisting of scorchers who have been fined)

CITY JAIL GLEE CLUB.

POLICE AND REPORTERS."' PUBLIC!

X-- Xi

It is a rellection on the interest taken nowadays in sailing vessels,as compared with the interest of former more romantic years; whena crackajack bark like the S. C. Allen, with a crackajack skipper likeCaptain Wilier, can enter port after a splendid run of sixteen daysfrom Fort Bragg without a single newspaper or shipping publicationagency making any note of the fact. Captain Wilier has a recdrd tobe proud of, and it is not the first time in the last generation that hehas made a fine vessel kick up her heels across the Pacific.

x--x-

"Illicit still" waters run deep.X-- X-

The name of the liquor license inspector is Fennell, not Funnell.:x

Occasionally agitated by a sense of decency, the Advertiser corrccts editorial misstatements by acknowledging The Star is right, withthe reservation, however, that SOMEBODY was wrong.

vAt last Saturday's baseball game between the Wasedas and thePunahou alumni there was a young man, Hawaiian born and anAmerican uitizen, wio undertook to make it disagreeable for a num-ber of citizen spectators by crying out unkind and unreasonable criti-cisms of the Punahou team. He would not take good advice and re-

move himself, nor would be take the tip to quiet and cease his un-patriotic prattle. Had ho been handled roughly by the indignant per-sons near him, he would have received no more than was his due. Asound thrashing in the presence of a crowd might have done himgood and served as an example to some others who do not seem toappreciate the first principles of patriotic decency. Hnd he rooted forthe Wasedas, well and good, for every man is entitled to root for whom

Where Charity Fails

Jane Adams contributes to the July number of The North Ameri-can Review. a carefully analyzed article on "Charity and Social Jus-tice." It is an earnest plea for the economic value of prevention toeradicate deleterious social conditions rather than to alleviate themand the relation of industrialism to these conditions. She says:

"Have the body of charitable men and women done what theyought to eradicate dark tenements, unclean milk, disease breedingfood, and many another evil to which the attention of the sanitary en-

gineer needs be perpetually directed if the health of the poor is to bepreserved and their children kept alive? What might they not, do ifthey properly, bestirred themselves at this moment of human conserva-tion and city planning? They could overwhelm every city governmentin the laud with verified knowledge which exactly fits in with thetrend of the times, and they could also make new demands upon everyinstitution which is now under State supervision and administrationto supply the requisite data to the State Legislatures. . . . What havethe charitable people contributed to the movement for State controlover industrial diseases or the protection of machinery? What havethey done to secure old-ag- e pensions, industrial insurance, employer'sliability act, the regulation of the hours of labor, the control of thesweated trades, the prohibition of the sale of intoxicants? Perhapsthe charity of the past may have claimed a share only in the last two,but certainly contemporaneous charity is faking a leading part in theestablishment of the various safeguards against premature- disable-ment and dependence of the worker. It is perhaps significant that themost drastic survey of industrial conditions ever made in Americawas inaugurated and carried out by editors of a paper called 'Chari-

ties.' From the human as well as from the economic standpoint thereis certainly an obligation resting upon the charitable to discover howmuch of their material comes to them us the result of social neglect,remedial incapacity, and the lack of industrial safeguards."

TEACHING GOOD MANNERS IN SHOPS

A.school of good manners for shop

assistants in Germany is the latestdevelopment in technical education,and its foundation by the Associationof Shopkeepers reveals the thorough

ness with which every detail of tech'nlcal training is superviseucountry.

It is considered that shop assistantsshould learn not only the "Intricacies'of their respective trades, but alsothe way to behave in dealing with

leading

school is 10 Improve as

shown by the fact that the cost ofit is borne 'by the shop

keopers who are convinced that andshop can sell more goods

in this than tlie men and whohave received no specialin this branch of their

Classes of the school are to beheld in evening to enable workers

cuaracier,oxclting

ONEPlay.

manner's judicial,gov'nor

Ballet Girls: Conkling,Lindsay Campbell,

prohibition,Because best

after chorus to theishing singing:)

land

weeping, singing:

conductingthqmseLVes,

well-traine- d polishedassistants

activity.

gracefully,

indicative

Another

Honolulu

costume,

Capitolyellow tights,

smiles,

instruction

Marston

thatarmors raise

new-fangle- d

our omotlons.flowers,

mado our presence,

pensnnts.

soliloquizing:)To Indict,That question!.

every

forglvo,Important

iiiiiiniiiiiniumnniHiiiniiiiiiiinniinniininiiiiiniii!iniHiHiHiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimng

BYTHE MAN

TOWN

iiiiiuiuiiuuiuiiiuiiiiiuiuiuuuiiujiiiiuiiHiiiiiiiiitiitiiiiiiittaiiiiirT

There not municipality in the world having suchlargc'and rugged in the keeping government as the cityand county of Honolulu. district court seats outside ofcapital itself are strung along about of coast line,having magistrate and deputy sheriff their subordinate offi-cers to supported of the municipal There abouttwo hundred miles of streets the towns and more hundredmiles of country roads to maintained, and the mileage of newthoroughfares increasing. The highways cross mountainranges, deep and crooked gulches and of beach quicksands.Metropolitan police and departments, with automatic electricalalarms for both, kept up in good condition. Maintenancesupplies for schoool houses worth several hundred dollarsare Mauy public parks kept order. public band ismaintained. Sanitary services with the treatment of

sick, the burial of paupers, the care markets, the supervisionfish and meat and milk regulation of and

plumbing, the disposal of garbage, and the maintenance of jails,carried on by the municipality. Aid is given pro-

motion. The metropolitan section increasingly lightedby the municipal plant, only the water for the Terri-torial government. For these municipal property taxed

one-hal- f of per cent, this being moiety of the propertv taxby the government. rest of municipal

revenue consists one-hal- f the regular income tax for the Islandof paid over the Territory and business fees,and from courts and various inspection fees, collecteddirectly by the municipality. There is levied no assessment on abut-ting property for the streets, nor betterments incases of widening or straightening grade-reducin- g of oldThe entire revenue is about $700,000 year. Considering the greatextent of covered with the settled portions apart butlinked together with good roads needing high class engi-neering and work to build consideringthe demands expenditures give capital theTerritory respectable status among cities for civic countenance

is safe to say few citieshave to their credit proportion to revenues availableHonolulu, notwithstanding the ever-read- y but ill.iuformed fault-finders.

Intelligent judgment on accurate information thereif. no pest an ignorant critic.

nttomi. Thn munic nal authorities t,.un ncuuiiig in Honolulu lie her how. mm m-n- .

customers, how to talk nicely and of Berlin lent Shopkeeper's sent fen persons who participated in the ceremony and festivity ofhow to bow how Association for tho school free me marriage years ago. All of flieni are residents of Hawaii and

to customers, how of cost, thus imparting to the now nearly all ol spent of their here. Most if' not allLto conduct an animated conversation movement oiuciai which were norn in islands. Xo doubt as lnanv more of the life ncwithout unduo familiarity and so on. interest. Lor- - quaintances of the counle illicit have :,m,l,.n r,.n, (i,

ol the group. the- - contingent at the golden wedding were blondesggISaigar53ar lls weI1 i,s of Caucasian race. The incident disrnilH

will, but his deliberate insults toward the men, he himself ltiil1 (lllt has said about the uncongenjality to white peo- -

being locally born, educated and brought-u- p boy, were not i" i"u 1"11 V monoes, oi tropical countries. Hawaiionly Of boorishness but of an empty soul which has love for coiiii-j-- '' '"ies oi advanced age in proportion the total nuui- -

iiiwi fif fni lmsmnnsi! nnr snvt mnst onnvp.nip.nt. A man without "cv inhabitants the tonmerate zone coininnnifiocountry is to be pitied, but man who deliberately defies one of the 1Iieso l)eoIhJ or their forbears sprang. nonsensical theory is

loftiest, human sentiments is to be condemned. exploded by such showing of longevity as the records of white set--- -

singing:)

LOVE ANOTHERA

, ACT I.

wonderful

prohibition

(Chorus Lloyd Sullivan;Judge Marston arrayed

authority bells:)

(Enter Campbell escapes wings,print, allegedly

business,

condition,

impecunious

(Enter Attorney

AROUND

probably

eighty

treasury.

yearlystretches

provided.

supplies, building

beingowing

services

Territorial

district

buildingstreets.

territoryautomobile

expensive maintain,necessary

conveniences comforts, anywhere

depends

brunettes

Perhaps

would some hadtemerity propound present prohibition plebiscite contest.

alcoholic stimulants essential vigorous existnuwtropical country. Probablydiug attended centuryabstainer, and doubt

(Enter Governor Frcar ballet lavender tights and not nlishiinm-- a nmi 1,,, ...i. .......imiiirjm uuu mu, uiwumi.juuiu.il xuree men mere were tlie bunch, whose loong lives been

I'm tho official,

newthe

Myam I;

I've sweet dispositionAnd will vote

On the twenty-sixt- h day of July.

by Clerkand in

andHe's sweet dispositionAnd votes

for Hawaii!

flourblue

young women

I'm theAnd tho

Of every plotFor house and lot

On the right sir!

cut oldthe

ing

and alsoFor tricks are dark and for ways are vainOn the part of tlie never

Commend iis toIn we trusted, but now wo are busted

cannot expressThis of used to be ours,

And wo withto be cut up plots, for and

For

as Hamlet,Indict not to

Whether hotter cop sin,Hig, little, old, to all,Or forgot only ohaso

bigger game of crlmo?

isarea of its

Its, Ave themiles

its andbe out are

in than abe

is

Are

are andthousand

are in Adealing indi-gen- t

ofof the,

areall to charity and

is wellpower to

all isbut one acollected The

of ofOahu license fines

of newor

all

"and andto of .

a-

and it thatmore in the than

"and

' ' 'worse .

-

,l t I tluv f .

have theagreeably, rooms Mty

treat them have most liveslliese

keen Berlin I,,m, .

Inn

he Punahou rciat been

no? nf such than

aa

ing

sweot

tiers Hawaii make, and that is one have theto in the Itis that are to in

every one of the ten at thewho half aiio has boon liiplnmr

no those wlimn ih Imvn conn 111(11

in livmi t. ,

Kicuii nuuuug uauuiil oumt, in too, have

Aa

a-

It Is

"'a a

f

Is in

oris

toor

to

a a

a

"""

in -- il o

is

111ao

a

in

n

a n.

fV In 1MA......

crowded with toil as well as crowned with success in their roaniWivospheres. One is tlie greatest scholar, another tlie wealthiest captain ofumusiry in ine isianus.

It is what one unlearns as much as what one has leni-no- w),m,makes one wise.

A paracranhcr has of a ihhvmdhiiw iinmni'iuf iintn,i n.- l J - - ........ it .iv iiu- -

other comet would soon annear. as he had n lofKnvm. fn,.t-- r inkon nalley's.. This reminds me that Ilalley's comet was not workedhard enough by Hawawaiian promotionisfs. So far as have orheard there was no spot in the world at which the comet was seen insuch magnificence as The biggest jokes I saw on the suhioct

the expressions of disappointment on the mainland at tliecomet's being "ot quite what it had been cracked up. At least thesewails sounded humorous here, where those saw the comet at itsbest, when yet in the east, might have declared with truth thatpictures of the wonder at former appearances were to the realitv soon

(Spreads out blueprints and proceeds to up half a dozen plant- - at Honolulu n6w as a mosquito to a dragon II v. Poor Londonations and distribute land ainoug the public applicants by hand- - got scarcely a glimpse of the comet at any time when it was worth

tuem pieces of map cut from blueprint. Enter, at this skige, seeing. Perhaps the best picture of the comet made in all tho wnrblplantation captains of industry wearing sugar-can- e hula-skirts- , dauc- - was the photograph by a Japanese in Honolulu for a postcard. Talk- -

thatwho cane,

notions;sugarAnd

country thatwhich

houses lots,

I'.reckons,

tho.'twere

unknown knownand

The real

each

the

bycosts

for

far

for the

than

the

the event

told

read

here.were

win)

tho

ing uuuiu me ceiesuai scenery qi Hawaii, though, how many knowthe supernal spectacle that is afforded by the full moon rising fromthe ocean as viewed from the car terminus at Kaimuki? It was some.thing last night the splendor of which no artist ever conceived: Loom.ing a vast disc of burnished gold in a broken cloud bank, It made pic-lure- s

of flaming castles forming an unearthly illusion. Until it roseclear of the vapory screen the burning clouds at moments looked likoa tremendous volcano lloating upon the ocean. It was a scene that nopen or pencil could describe. If it only came once in seventy-fiv- e vphiminstead of several nights every, month, people would flock from allparts of the world to see if.

Few notice the common things of tho universe, vet often fhnv nminfinitely greater than the uncommon.

mi

Page 10: PRIZEFIGHT GAM BLER CO ITS SUICIDE · the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody rich, the half-poun-d tins of Hongkong No. 1 now selling at $75, unstamped of course

TEN.

ECE ASSURED

BI NEW TREATY

ST. PETERSBURG, July 17. TheNovoo Vremya In a leading article

today expresses great expectations

from the Russo-Japancs- o convention.The Vremya considers it a foundation

tor durable peace In the Far East,

serving as a barrier against the en-

croachments ot outsiders In thatsphere adding that Russo-Jnpanei- o re-

lations relieve Russia and Japan ot

the burden ot heavy armaments, en-

abling Russia to complete the Amur

Railroad and continue colonization

on a vast scale.The Vremya declares that tho situa-

tion created by the convention Is unfa-

vorable to Korea, China, America andthe central European powers In so faras their policies are based on a con-

tinuation of misunderstandings be-

tween Russia, China mid Japan. Itcenti'dors that Secretary KnoxManchurian proposal was instrument-al In hastening the conclusion of theconvention.

CHINESE LITERATURE.

To the average western mind Chi-

nese literature is a closed book. "TheChinese," Mr. John Stuart Thomsontells us, however, in his work with

that title, can boast counterparts ofsuch glories of English literature asMilton, Shelley, Chatterton, LeighHunt, Edgar Allan Poe and others otequal importance. The poet Tu Pu,the celestial Chatterton, "starved todeath on a temple's steps," and Poe's"Raven" 1 matched by the century-ol- d

"White Owl Ode," which has Itsexact plot. The Chinese also havotheir Herodotus, Horace and Ovid.

If western ignorance rates the Chi-

nese as a race without literature, thoChinese, It seems, entertain a generaland, to their minds well-founde- dis-

dain for the west, as compared withtheir own racial and national super-iority.. Mr. Thomson quotes at lengththo trenchant diatribe of a bonze(whose name he does not give) inwhich he flays western arrogancofor pretending to any such claim. Hocommands attention, for he does notmerely assert. He gives his reasons.Thus:

"You were great once, and thatis not now. You will never producea bible or a Shakespeare again, foryou are used to luxuries, and you willforever displse the simple povertythat produced the poetry of Eliza-beth's time, and the manly virtuesthat evolved the philosophy of Pla-

to's and Paul's day. Tho bible gaveyou sturdy virtues, but now that youhave machinery you are looking untowealth for greatness."

The bonze ascribes China's superi-ority to the Chinese "lack of rebel-lious envy on the part of the unhap-py many against the privileged few,"and the "little opportunity for thatgrinding oppression which breeds un-

dying hate, because prominence andunselfishness are synonymous." "Weglory In teaching Confucius in allour schools. You throw your great-est book out of your national schools."

After declaring that we were "hard-er fo civilize than any race," he pre-dicts our downfall and the exalta-tlor- i

of China. "In the adaptation ofourselves to the inventive age youwill see that we shall reach tho high-est . possible standard. We haveconscience enough to follow whattime, the only test (and test us by it!)has proved to bo right. Look to your-selves!' Mr. Thomson adds on his own ac-

count, that when the extension of rail-road- a

shall scatter the dialects, theChinese will havo "that unificationof speech and resultant dissemina-tion of ideas," whose absence havo"kept them from moving forward asa very assertive body in the world'spolicy." This has not been due, hedeclares, to lack of religion or In-

ventions.Mr. Thomson's maintains that

there are only three races "who ap-preciate and constantly use humorthe American, the Scotch and tho Chi-nese-

Mr. Thomson's name Is JohnStuart, and tho receipt of Injecting ajoko Into a Scotchman may come tomind, When a little Hakka girl, car-rying her brother on her back, wasasked: "Is he heavy?" she replied,"No, he is my brother." Tho naiveteseems the pathos of humor, but Mr.Thomson carefully explains that thechild had no se'nso of humor or ofhumanity In responding, "but the grinon my 'rlckisha men's faces showedthat thoy had seen the other phase."If "the other phase" is supposed toappeal to a sense of humor, It may botho kind which Mr. Thomson creditstho Chlneto with.

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

HecvtwSSS&9

TO TIP OR NOT TO TIP.

To tip or not to tip, that is the attention. A certain typo of thoWether It Is wiser to en- - thy will not stop tipping because of

dure the covert sneers of minions, orby generous tipping to end It all, andthus secure attention above one's

though ono may call thfsbut a lesser form of bribery

One's mind runs somewhat afterthat fashion nowadays, since tippinghas becomo so universal a practice.Perhaps the question willnot worry us much longer, for legis-lators are taking up the matter, andeven so august n body as tho HousoCommittee of the District of Columbiaare a bill to abolish tho

tho. vorv rmtiv tnt--

Talksweal-questio-

neighbors,

bothersome

considorilng

nuisance. Tho measure provides who might Insist upon tipping be-th-

any proprietor, manager, waiter. caus0 they have more money thanor servant, of any hotel, restaurant,or cafe, in tho city of Washingtonwho accepts tip shall be guilty of amisdemeanor and fined not to exceed$500. A second and far more im-

portant clause stipulates that any per-Bo- n

who offers a tip shall be guiltyand subject to the same penalty. Thebill is based on tho simple principlethat tho tipper Is as bad as the tippee

like the bribe-give- r and the bribe-taker.

The American has never takenkindly to the tipping system, not solely because he begrudges the money,but because the practice goes againstthe grain of the American spirit. ItIntimates a certain attitude of ser- -

villty on the part of the ono rccelv- -

ing the tip and that attitude is tin- -

American. It smacks too much ofthe Old World wav of recardlnc one'sfellowman.

But the practice, despite the hos-

tile feeling toward It, is growing. Theproposed measure shows what foot-

hold It has. But the proposed meas-ure will not be effective unless back-ed up by public opinion. It will simply bo a Uead-lette- r law.

The people who tip lavishly andunthinkingly are, of course, the rich:But their action makes it necessaryfor the less wealthy to tip If theyhope in many places to secure any

INVENTOR OF COTTON GIN

TO

The movement looking to the erec-

tion of monument In Savannah to

tho memory of Ell Whitney, the In-

ventor of the cotton gin, which pro-

ject was first launched by James Bran-

don of New York, who Invented theTeazer gin, which is a recent Improve-ment on the Whitney gin, is now wellunder way. Mr. Brandon, who is nowin Savannah in the Interest of thoTeazer gin, will himself subscribo

sum as the nucleus around whichthe monument fund will be built.It is curious coincidence that nei-

ther Whitney nor Brandon had seengrowing cotton at the time their In-

ventions were perfected. Mr. Bran-don expresses himself as much sur-

prised that none of the monumentsnow here commemorated the achieve-ments of Whitney. He at once sotabout remedying this omission.

Sufficient data has not yet been se-

cured to mark approximately the placewhere the shop of tho great inventorwas situated the exact spot will pro-

bably never bo known. FurtherInvestigation in this direction is nowbeing pushed rapidly. The promotersof the monument desire the

of the people of Savannah in thoundertaking as well as those Interestedin tho cotton Industry over tho south.Mr. Brandon thinks that this tributeto the man whom Lord Macaulay said"did more for America than Petertho Great did for Russia," has alreadybeen too long delayed.

Tho monument will not be locatedin Savannah proper, but on the oldGreeno plantation, some miles up thoriver, whero Whitney was makingliving by teaching children the ruleof three at the time the Idea for thogin became clear In his mind. Thomonument will be on tho public roadand will bear suitable inscriptionscommemorating tho Inventor's workand indicating the spot where the In-

vention was completed. Tho monu-ment will he pretentious and imposingor only a simple shaft according astho glnners and spinners of the coun-try respond heartily or otherwise totho call for subscriptions.

Tho invention of the cotton ginlinks tho city of Savannah closely tothe history of tho cotton trade. Thothen Yankee school teacher first sot

TUB HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1910.' ,1 t

ome

a

a

a

a

a

a

a

the law. Law means to them little,The people then who can really makethe measure against tipping effectiveare the business men themselveswhose employes receive tips. If ho-

tel and restaurant keepers and allsuch employers would mak0 a stringcnt rulo that their employes shouldnot receive tips and back It up withInstant dismissal If they accepted gra-

tuities of any kind, they would ere-at- o

a public opinion that would makethe proposed law effective. The pub-

lic would bo with them and tippingwould sbon bo abolished. The few

they know what to do with wouldsoon bo cried down.

The hotel or restaurant managerwho would take this stand and publicly announce It on nl' his advertis- - ijlug matter would soon be overrunwith business, for it is a reform thepeople want. Rut to Institute It theseemployers would need to pay the'remployes niore wages and that is

the Ay in the ointment. The public,by means of their tips, help to paythe wages of the employes in restaur-ants, hotels and such places, andwhile the public will do this, employ- -

ers are loth to stop them. So that itIs a dllllcult proposition to get uotei- -

keepers and restaurant managers to

net together In the matter. Dut thosewho would take the lead would mak ahig hit, and in the course of time oth- -

ers migni ue inuueeu lu..u,Tipping is, as the bill names it, a

nuisance. It is also an Imposition;and if one looks at it ethically, itlias no ground to stand on. For thetip Is of the family of bribes and

it lowers the self-respe- of the one

who takers it. Every one should lenu ,

his voice in creating a strong publicopinion to back up the 'measure to

abolish the tip.

HAVE iilEN T

up his machine on the plantation orGen. Nathaniel Greene near the pre-

sent location of Montelth, in 1793.The invention of the gin was the firstgreat factor in cotton raising develop-ments as tho inventions of Arkwrightwere in manufacture. The machinedid away with the tedious and unsat-isfactory hand method. Almost imme-diately tho acreage In cotton Increas-ed largely. Savannah handled Very lit-tle cotton till after Whitney construc-ted his gin. Savannali exported thefirst bag of cotton ever sent fromAmerica to a foreign country.

It was also near this city that thefirst sea-inlan- d cotton was grown.Tho experiments with the culture ofthis staple were first made by JoslahTatnall and Nicholas Turnbull, onSkidaway island. The seed was origi-nally brought from the Bahama Is-

lands in 1785. Tho establishment of thecotton trade is tho keynote of Savan-nah's commercial prosperity.

Whitney was born in 17C5, in Mas-sachusetts. Ho came south as aschool teacher, migrating from placo.to placo until ho was finally takenin by the widow of Ben Green as tu-

tor in the family. The gin was com-pleted in the winter of 1792-179-

Tho model of the machino was shownby Mrs. Greeno to a fow of her neigh-bors, tho possibilities of the inven-tion being so apparent aB to createuniversal interest and comment. As aresult, unscrupulous persons brokeInto the place where the model waskept and carried it away. It is said I

that many similar machines were Inactive operation throughout tho coun-try before tho Whitney invention wasperfected and patents secured, whichwas not done until a year later.

In spite of tho universal use towhich tho cotton gin has been put,and tho revolution In tho cotton In-

dustry which it precipitated, thero Isno stone to mark tho memory of theinventor in this section where ho liv-

ed and worked and where tho machinewas perfected. It was not until Mr.Brandon camo to Savannah to tryout his improvement on tho Witneyinvention that any notice was takenof this lack of official recognition onthe part of tho pooplo of Savannahand Georgia, Mr. Brandon Immediate- -

ly turned his attention to tho matterofg rectifying this error. Tho result Istho present movement looking to theerection of a monument to Whitney,which movement apparently will meetwith tho most signal success. Savan-nah Morning News.

Fine Jot) Printing, star OfQc.

Senator Tillman, referring to ono ofhis antagonists in Congress, Bald, thoother day, "He reminds mo of theLondon cabby who Btood glaring atanother cabby whose vehicle had got-

ten In his way.

'"Aw, wot's tho matter with yer?"demanded the aggressive one.

" 'Nothlnks the matter with me, yer

D - E -L -I- C -I -

Daintily Pleasing tois every one of The famous

Heinz's5

bloomln' idjut" 'Yer gave mo a nawsty look ' per-

sisted tho other."'Mo? Wull, yer certainly 'avo a

nawsty look, but I didn't glvo It ,

so 'el'p mo."

Fine Job Prtnnoi. nut orflos.

O -U-mem

the Taste

t -

Include in each morning's order to the grocer some of Heinz's absolutely puregoods. There is Tomato Soup, India Relish, Sweet and Dill Pickles, BakedBeans, Apple Butter, Pearl Onions, Red Kidney Beans, Tomato Ketchup,Mince Meat, Horse Radish and many others.

A New Shipment Just ReceivedFor Sale By Your Grocer

A II

GOOD TASTE AND JUDGMENTare more essential to having a beautifully appointed table,than large expenditure.

Let ua shew you unusual patterns In

Community SilverIt has a distinct richness of appearance and charm of

design which rival sterling.It a more than triple plate it coats hut a trifle more

than ordinary plated ware it lasts a life time.

W. W. Dimond & Co., Ltd.5357 K'ng Street.

ifliaMkf;Mrn-ii:i- i

4 a1L

Page 11: PRIZEFIGHT GAM BLER CO ITS SUICIDE · the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody rich, the half-poun-d tins of Hongkong No. 1 now selling at $75, unstamped of course

4

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1010. ELEVEN '

i

And Abolish The Saloon I

That Is The Real Issue

I:

'2

I

Page 12: PRIZEFIGHT GAM BLER CO ITS SUICIDE · the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody rich, the half-poun-d tins of Hongkong No. 1 now selling at $75, unstamped of course

TWELVE THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, JULY' 23, 1910.

GARAGE AND AUTOMOBILE NEWSVon Hamm-Youn- g Go.

Report Many Aiito SalesThe llrst 1911 Packard which arrlv- - proved; the carburatlon will bo in-e- d

this week for the von Hamm-Youn- g creased; the clutch will be ImprovedCompany has been tho center of at- - mateHally. It will-requir- only a very

traction in automobile circles. Auto- - " ount of power to disengageIt ana It is said to be one of mostmotile enthusiasts generally agree casll operatcd utcncs ever des1gn.

that the fore-doo- r body is tho proper ed. The rear axle will be of full float-bod- y

to have, as It protects tho driver Ing type, the Weight of the car beingin the front seat against rain as well carried on tho axlo housing Insteadas dust, which is impossible In an . of on the axle shaft. The surfaces ofopen car even though the driver wears the brakes will bo Increased 141 ina rain coat. dies. The 1911 Cadillac will have a

This 1911 Packard will bo delivered double drop framo, lowering centerto Mr. A. W. Carter for his ward, Miss of gravity and giving a lower

Parker, when she arrives pearanco to the car. Tho increasedfrom Hawaii next week. Miss Parker power will permit tho factory to cenrintends to take her Packard with her the cars higher, causing less motorto tne mainland, where she will tour vibrntlon and greater speed. TheCalifornia and the East in same. wheol-bas- o will be increased six

Packard was sold during ches. The body will bo greatly Imtho week to Mrs. S. C. Allen. This Proved throughout and will bo upcar also has tho new fore-doo-r body, holstered with hand-buffe- d leather ofcarrying seven passengers. the highest quality. The foot boards

Tho von Hamm-Youn- g Company will be covered with linoleum, metalhave also just closed tho sale of a bound, and a great manv other im.

Packard touring car to Kovoments will bo made, placing thoMr. J. C. Quinn, who intends to put car at Pce of $1700. In the cate.same into the rent service. Mr. sory of ?3000 cars.Quinn is very proud of his beautiful The von Hamm-You- ng Company'scar and will have no difficulty In se- - repair department has been full upcuring tho choice loads as the Packard with work this week, and even thoughis a great favorite in tho rent busi- - the repair Bhop has been doubled inness. , size curing the last week It is not any

A Packard phaeton too large to take care of tho largewas sold this week to a prominent anoint of work which is constantlyDusiness man m town, who will take eing entrusted to the automobile ex.delivery of his car next week. l)erts of this well-know- n firm.

The new salerooms of The Von A great deal of Interest has beenHainm-ioun- g Company have been aroused by the late announcement ofgreatly admired. It is a fine, airy tho Pope Manufacturing Company,structure and shows the beautiful cars who l.ave Informed tholr inn.il Tnnmoff to great advantage. In the rear of sentalives, The von Hamm Youngiuo miesroom is a large electric company, that their 1911 cars will becnargmg plant, capable of taking caro equipped with larger and more power.oi six electric cars at one time. Spe- - ful motor, a heavy and considerably

: "" muuiu iui iuuse- - wuuewmse, a tour speeu trans-electri- c

charging, and it is just as mission with direct drive on theeconomical to own and operate an fourth. It will further have especial-ele- c

itno car In Honolulu now as it is l constructed, easy riding springson the main and. nnd ;l greatly lmproved cIutch TheA great deal of interest has been car will show a great many Improve-arouse- d

by the announcement of the ments throughout, with a number of1911 Cadillac. This beautiful car refinements on tho body, which willnrw?, .I f med "1 niake thIs Pl'lar car f ie fore- -AnnKv ,D, ,miVk0t Jnost of American makes today.m i

4A great improvement8 ? 170l-fac-

toi7- The von Hamm Young Company hasluade Bevera, saleg thls wee of the,r

lo una car, sun auuing to tne enviable popular lines of Cadillacs, Stoddardreputation of the 1911 car. Daytons, Flyers, orderedTho engine of the 1911 Cadillac will by prominent society people who will

have i larger bor0 and greatly Increas- - ho seen soon in their new cars,ed power; the intake pipe will be im- - The wonderful Buick has againproved; the crank shaft will bo larger; come to the fore in racing, finishingthe connecting rod bearing and the second in the 150-mil- e race for thebearing surface will be improved and Cobe trophy, and beating theincreased; the water manifolds and driven by Mr. Harroun, and also

will be copper instead of ing Mi. Grant driving his Vanderbilthose; tho new car Will have a greater cup winning Alco. In the secondradiating capacity. It will be equipped event tho Buick driven by L. Chevro-wit- h

a Bosch high tension magneto let, was an easy winner over otherin addition to the famous Dolco sys- - cars coming in first in nine minutestem. The starting crank will be im- - tv.elve and two-third- s seconds.

HUDSON CARS HOLD

CENTER OF STAGE

only limitedone of

machines behas

tho famouselectric horns, sell

all Its parti-cular

Hudson cars are leading in the The type of Stewart carbureterllne of automobile excitement received is by wealthyat present. carloads of these Los give3superb machines were received by the his attention to this device thoAssociated Garage the of of the game. It has neverweek and Manager stated been although It ismorning ho was not whether known all along coast.

one or left. sociated Garage has handled It fromDr. Hollman bought one of tho im-tb'- e it appeared. It is Justly

proved roadsters A. T. Gomer, of .claimed to be the simplest andthe dredging company, was the pur- - reliable device of its Inchaser of another. John Fleming was It is the of

the buyer of the Hudson touring principles and requires no springs,car ever received in the Islands and which In the ordinary device lays themRoberc Atkinson tho second to variations in temperature,one. All of purchases are and tear and all sorts of

most enthusiastic as to tne nuason, iruuuies.the car as the An of this appliance

ever In its class. car is while,is refined and besides itsgraceful lines general high-grad- e

appearance, It has a amountof power.

Allltl,l.lalready referred to has been booked,but the Associated is not yet sure ofbeing to get any more, so greathas been the demand for these cars onthe mainland.

.E E. Battelle, of Maul, was a pur-

chaser during the week ot one of thecars already on hand.

John Erdman, has justleft for tho on his vacation, leftan order with Manager Hall, of tho

for ono ot the now Hud-so- n

touring cars.is heels over head

in work of every kind, Manager Hallreporting a condition almost approach-ing boom the past week. Cars

during weekbooked for future delivery has kepttho under "high gear" allthe time.

next cars expected, and soonto arrive, aro tho now 1911 Chalmers,than which there is nothing better Inits class. Several orders for thesehave boon booked for delivery on ar-

rival; nnd as tho could

t'

and Thomas

Marmon

and

a allotment, ofthose counting upon these ele- -

gant mayThe prospective

ceived a few of monoplexwhich at $15. This

horn has a- tone ofattractiveness.

The JustJust manufactured a

Two gentleman of Angeles, who

first this loveHall this advertised, well

that sure j tho The As-he had two

time firstand most

kind existence,

first

secured openthese wear minor

characterizing best investigationvalue seen The well worth

throughout, t ,

nndsurprising

l" - w

able

Rev. whoeast

Associated,

Tho Associated

a duringsold tho besides those

management

Tha

Associated get

' s

some

disappointed

own,

pure

development

ADVERTISING HAS

BECOME ART

Financial advertising is today inits infancy a formative periodpractically where commercial advertising was twenty-fiv- e years ago. Thopo'ley of financial advertising is belng transformed, and within the nextfew years will be completely changedTho financial advertiser who todaytakes advantage of this transformstion, skillfully applies both scienceand art to his financial publicity, hasalmost unlimited fields for moneymaking, business building opportunities. Financial advertising as to kindmay bo divldod into threo classes(1) Selling securities such as bondsstocks, notes, etc. (2) selling services and facilities as do brokers,

MAXWELL

AN AMAZING TEST

Final scores of the contest for thoGlldden and Chicago trophies, creditthe Maxwell team with making thobest average score in the most amaz-

ing test of cars and of men over conducted in this country.

When tho technical experts of theAmerican Automobile Associationcompleted their final examination andoperative teat, it was found that thoteam of two Maxwell cars had sur-

vived the racking run of 2850 miles,through thirteen states, In better con-

dition than and two or throe-ca- r

team In either division of the contest.Tho penalties assessed for slight

trouble with equipment gave the teaman average of 129 & 2 points whichwas 59 points penalty less than thonearest competing team. Further-more, only three of the nine teamswhich started were able to remain inthe contest and of tho other six teams,only one car of the team finished thecontest in Chicago.

While these records show that everycontestant had to endure the greatestmechanical torture, they do not tellthe significant story of price compari-son, for tho reason that a team of carsaveraging $3,000 in selling price, in-

cluding the Glidden winner, Incurredmore than three times as many penal-ties as the Maxwell team averagingonly $1500 in price.

Also the Maxwell car which wasdriven by Jesse Illlngsworth of Dallas,Texas, in the Chicago trophy divisionover the samo route and under theidentical conditions that governed theGlldden division won second placewith better score than the car whichwon the Glidden trophy although thatcar had twice as much power andcosts twice as much.

In all, the showing made by thoMaxwell was a glowing emphasis ofthe fact that In tests or reliabilityand endurance these cars are strongfinishers.

flOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCfinancial institutions are not philan-thropic institutions, but are conductedfor profit. Financial institutions havesomething to sell In tho samesense as a manufacturer, jobber, orwholesaler or retailer has somethingto sell. Selling requires salesmanship.Salesmanship is of two kinds, (1)personal and (2) written. Writtensalesmanship and advertising are syn-

onymous.Two important things to be consid

ered in an advertising campaign are i

(1) what Is said, and (2) to whom itIs said. The first may be includedunder "copy" and Includes tho pur-- 1

pose to bo accompllshed.the contentsof the advertisement, and tha typo-

graphical make-up- , shape, .border,type, etc. The second may be clas-

sed under "media," being the chan- -

Associated Garage just re- - nel through which the

for

scientific

customer is reached. Tho "copynow used by financial Institutionsis either (1) general publicity, ot (4)result-producin- g advertising. Generalpublicity, as the term Indicates, isadvertising of a general and indefi-

nite kind, usually consisting of mere-ly name, business and address. Thiscorresponds to the name on one's office door, and accomplishes littlemore In producing results. Result- -

producing' advertisement Is educa-tionr- .l

and instructive in character,and Is designed to secure direct returns both in inquiries and orders,and at the same time build up andmaintain a permanent clientele. Thecopy us.ed should vary so as to adaptitself to tho readers of the particularpublications used. It should be timely, and should bo changed frequentlyso as to have news value as well asadvertising value.

Result-producin- g advertising notonly pays for itsolf, but producessplendid profits on tho investment.The word "Investment" Is used advisedly, for many advertisers whouse result-producin- g advertisementcharge tho expenditure to tho Invest-ment account, whereas advertisers oftho general publicity type properlycharge their advertising expenditureto tho expense account. Whether thefinancial advertiser has ono salesmanor twenty, his entire advertising cam.paign should be conducted so as toassist them in their personal effortsand enable them to secure greater results. His follow-u- p system will enable him to with and assfst his salesmen by giving them In--

formation as to inquiries and correspondonce from prospective customers In their respective localities. Th0various principles and suggestionsapply to all financial advertiserswhether tholr business Is conductedover tho counter, by mall order mebanks trust companies, etc., and (3)fi- - ,thod, or with tho aid of salesmennancinl nnrlrpa mnattnera fllvrl.iAn.ia .. .." - una wnotner tne Business is local or

uuuuu) lo mo oeuei oi some, national In' scope.

MITCHELL BEAT

AJJJO RENO

Schuman Carriage Company havoreceived tho following self explanatorycopy of a telegram sent by the SanFrancisco agents of the Mitchell auto-

mobile to the factory at Itaclne, Wis.,soon after tho big Jeffries-Johnso- n

fight:"On account of immense crowds at--

Thohad

long,

liv'tho flcht over inReno, San Francisco papers illke lots- - They havo a11 ueon

a great race for soken for although Mr. Wells an-ear-

Every that ho may have two

mean3, railroads andrelays, have been resorted to.

The "San with theOsen & Hunter Auto decided ona Mitchell Six; .loaded same with theregular Issue the "Call" office;started with tho paper trains leavingat Oakland two fifteen A. M., crossingtho Sierras, about three hundredmiles, arriving at Reno two

P. M., beating all railroads andleading all by two and

hours, and beatingthrough trains schedule by six hoursand forty minutes."

Mr. Schuman reports many inquiriesduring tho week for the popular Mitchell, the" standard E. M. F., tho littleFlanders and other cars carried by hisconcern. A few each of these carsare now on hand and others aro soonto arrive. Orders are now being takenfor delivery In the near future.

For seashore or general summerwear sheer linens are as good andquite as correct .tor the washablegulmpe as are the eyelet

ALCO CARS FOR

RO L HAWAIIAN

lino Alco cars, for which thoRoyal Hawaiian garago been waiting

so aro believed to be In, thoof tho freighter Nevadan, Manager

Wells having received word that theywould probably bo shipped in thatsteamer. All local automoblldo'm hasanxiously awaited the coming of thesecaTs, as the aro the highest priced ma.

JeffHeH..Tnhnsnn chines imported hero anythingat Nevada. Practlc-hav- o

developed fight Mydeliveries. conceivable Hclpates one or

Including auto-mobile

Francisco Call"Co.,

at

twenty-fiv- e

competitorsthree-quarter- s

of

hold

for sale. Orders aro now being takenfor a second lot which will shortlyfollow the first shipment.

Manager Wells reports excellentshop business and an unexpectedlygood rent demand, considering thatthis is tho slow season of tho year.

SEALED TIME WON

BY CADILLAC

Coleman B. "Harris, of Wilmington,Del., driving his Cadillac Thirty, wontho sealed time run of the DelawareAutomobile Association.

The' run was from Wilmington toOxford, Pa., and return, a distanceof 72.G miles. The sealed time was4 hours 19 minutes, and the Cadillac'stlmo was 4 hours li minutes.

that decides the route, figures ' .

out tho time which shall bo

0 OWNERS

HUME CONTEST

' SAN FRANCISCO, July 10. A uni-

que contest haB just been devised bytho Hudson Motor Car Company ofDetriot for Hudson owners. Everyowner who enters the contest must, onJuly 17th, make a tour of not less than100 miles in the machine. The ownerneed not dri,ve, but If not driving homust accompany tho driver on thotrip.

No restrictions are made as to thocour-i- chosen, except that not morothan ten miles of the route bo coveredtwice. If a car, thomust carry at least four, and If a road-ster at least two passengers. So longas the run is made between sunriseand sunset no consideration will botaken of tho tlmo consumed, it beingstated this is in no way a speed con-test Consumption of gasolino and oil,with the percentage based onand the condition of tho road travel-ed, will, however, bo an importantfactor in determining tho award. Atleast threo photographs'must bo takenduring tho trip, and these, thoowners' written, description of thetour, will bo tho chief evidence uponwhich tho will be made. Al-

together there will be twenty prizes,ranging from $10 to $150 each. Aspecial prize of $25 is offered to anywom.m driver who complies with allthe conditions and drives the car theentire distance herself. She need notown the car, but the owner must ac- -

In a sealed time run, the committee company her.upon

allowed.

touring machlno

weather

with

decision

The time Is kept secret from the dri-- ' time closest to that decided upon byvers, and the car which finishes in tho committee is tho winner.

Price, $1,350.00 f. o. b. Factory

Standard equipment includes Splitdorf Magneto, Oil Lamps, large Gas Lamps,Generator and Horn, Mohair Top and Glass Frond cost $100,00 extra,

SPECIFICATIONSA' Color Royal Blue

Seating Capacity Two, four and five personsClutch , Cone

, --Wheel base no inches.

' rGauge 56 inchesV Tire Dimensions 34 x 3 2 inches' ' Brake Systems . .Two Sets contracting and expanding on both rear wheels

Horse-powe- r Thirty- Cylinders Four

Arranged Vertically under hood' " Cast En Bloc

Bdre '. . . . 4 inchesStroke 4 3-- 4 inches

' - Cooling WaterRadiator Vertical Tubo

y, ' Ignition Jump SparkElectric Source ; Dry battery and magneto

v Drive t ShaftTransmission Selective sliding gear on rear axleGear Changes .Three forward, one reverse

.. "The coming out of this car at $1,350,00 is one of the big events in theautomobile world,

You can't understand the full, force and scope of this statement until you.

you khow what has gone into the making of the "EVERITT 30,"

The newest factory and the oldest builders tells the story in a single phrase,

A Carload has just arrivedCOME and SEE THE CARS

THE VON HAMM-YOUN- G CO.. LTDSOLE AGENTS

Page 13: PRIZEFIGHT GAM BLER CO ITS SUICIDE · the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody rich, the half-poun-d tins of Hongkong No. 1 now selling at $75, unstamped of course

Vf

i

vv

. jo.

1

0

1. . 'I

Fashionsml l .'

And Fads

Large laco collars aro wornRibbon embroidery Is revived.Plain colorejl parasols aro most

liked.Paris Insistently holds for the touch

- of black.The durablo pongees aro moro po-

pular than ever.The newest material for under-- ,

wear Is cross-ba- r dimity.TJnderwear of cotton crepe Is a

new fad that will bo popular.All-whtt- o gloves are worn less than

they havo been for some time.Scarfs with Persian centers have

deep borders In solid colors. 'Its durability makes percale one

of the favorite fabrics for tho sum-mer. '

The newest tailored shirt waistsare made with the yoke In tho back.

Skirt hems aro wider this Bummerthan they were last by a good twoinches.

Tho one-sea- small bishop sleevo' Is the favorite for the tailored shirtwaist.

.Pumps and slippers owo much oftheir effect to their tows, buckles orrosettes.

Cotton voiles are among the mostuseul material for simple afternoonfrocks.

The most popular white footwearthis summer will bo a high boot ofcanvas or kid.

, The Paisley tie is a pretty touchwhich will add richness to the mid-summer shirt waist.

For evening wear the favorite slip-per adornment is a largo- - rhiriestonoor cut steel buckle. f

There is a surging revival of thevogue for coin and water-spotte- d fou-lard.

There Is a general Inclination to-

ward patterned fabrics as against selfcolored materials.

Facings of hats may be of velvet orof silk, and while black is most used, '

colors may bo used also.Snowy white skirts will dominate

every summer resort when the hotweather comes In full force.

The big hat of the day and the col-- 1

larless gown demand that the veil bo'

worn loose- - and flowing.Bangles are numerous In all styles ,

from plain gold to gem-starre- anddozens are worn on each wrist.

Black dotted net is newer than thesquare, flat weaves for the yoke andsleeves of tho k gown.

Striped chiffon, looking quite likotucks, will make an effective yokingfor the moro elaborate gowns.

Some of the newest hats are largoand flat with a rolling brim held Inplace with a novel thistledown pom-pon.

Embroidered dotB on cotton or lin-en floss will bring the dress color upto the yoko of plain white or ecrunet.

Parasol handles this summer are acompromise between tho very longdlrectorie stick and the short Englishstyle.

The latest thing In nightcaps aremade of very sheer India linen, witha simple design done in shadow embroidery.

An odd bizarre stylo of dress may"go" in the' house as a quaint conceit,but never should bo seen , on thestreet.

Suede gloves are more worn than aglace kid, probably because the fit Ismuch better and the hand looks smal-ler in it.

Black and white is not a becomingcombination for a pale face with lighteyes and dull hair. Such a face needswarm colors.

When half shoes are worn be par-ticular about laces. Heavy ribbon,such as is used for the silk bow, lookswell on broad silk laces.

Colors in the silk stockings of the'moment include all the gloriousshades of the rainbow, and tho vividshades aro in high fashion.

A belt with a slender buckle gives alonger waist; a white belt should beworn with a, white ,waist unless oneIs very long'wnisted.

Some of tho colored silk stockingsfrom oyer the sea are elaborately

wjftb; wonderful flowers andconventional designs. '

A scarlet patent leather belt and atio of scarlet worn with a plain whitetailored waist and a white linon skirtwill bo ono of tho season's fads'

Persian silk covered cord put onin braid patterns is one of tho uses ofthe many colored silks that aro herethis season in such brilliant array.

lartest fixings.!iwaisJ

silk ABcbt or bow. There Is no end totbo,Bchemes to which It lends itself.

Clerical collars tho ones buttoningat tho back, with shaped turn-over- s

embroidered In white with a touch ofcolor are among the popular trifles.

Buttons aro made of silver thesedays and inlaid with littlo spots ofbright enamel. Two or three ofthese tako tho place of a dozen ofany other sort.

Wide etamino ribbon, alb cotton,but printed In chic Egyptian and Per-sian designs and colorings, are In de-

mand for scarfs for panama and otherouting hats.

Tho most popular ribbon rosette ismade from half-Inc- h double-face- d sa-

tin ribbon, made into a number ofknotted groups. Five yards are need-e- d

for each rosette.Striped materials, especially in the

popular combination of black andwhite, gray and white and blue andblack, come next in favor to tho coindotted fabrics.

Soutache braiding combined withembroidery, using- - heavy silk, makesa more striking garniture than all-sil-

embroidery, This is yet a favoritedecoration.

Persian and other oriental effectsare leaders o fthe moment in ribbondesigns and colorings, and aro ex-tremely effective when combined withplain fabrics or other plain ribbons.

A novelty In the binding of hats isto take a ribbon about three incheswide, gather at each edge, and drawup to fit over the brim edge as wideon the lower as on the upper side.

The Charlotte Corday is fast gain-ing in favor in tho lace lingerie hats.Lace Is used over a colored silk lin-ing, and a bunch of flowers or arose made of ribbon Is the trimming.

Tho Idea this season is to.faco thounder side of the brim of the hat outto within one-hal- f inch of the edge,instead of applying a band severalinches In length, as was done astyear.

Tho chantecler frills are admirablefor the collarless necks of dresses,so much worn, and their sharply scal-loped edges done in a color aro notwithout the suggestion of feathers.

NEEDLEWORK NOTESTo scallop a sheet, folk back tho

goods and make the scallops over thedoubled, portion. It will then be muchfirmer and will last much longer thanif made in the ordinary manner.

A pair of crocheted bedroom Clip-pers to use in the summer can bemade of tho mercerized cotton, whichcomes for the purpose. Use pink andwhite, blue and white, or lavenderand white for tho slippers and theywill be very cool and pretty.

Cretonne is still enjoying hours oftriumph. It no longer appears in thqcrude colors of other days, but istoned' to a life-lik- e -- resemblance ofblossoms. It is used for coveringdressing tables,, lounging chairs andChesterfield couches In one's bedroom. Garden hats and naraRnls nrmade of It, and flowers cut from thefabric are appllque"d on net blouses.The cretonne waistcoat Is ono of thesuccesses of the season.

While children should find the sum-mer a long" playtime, it is better forthem to have some tasks for theirhands, and making a pair of horse-rein- s

Is suggested as a handy pieceof work for either boys or girls. Apair may be made by spool knitting.No doubt every child knows how toknit over a spool; if not, ho canlearn easily, and mother can set thestitches on the pins and start the roll,which, fastened together, will makea pretty pair of reins for baby.

Some of the neatest' suits In rose orold hluo linen are prettily embroidered in mercerized cotton of a differentcolor from tho suit.

When a hole in a stocking is verylarge, it is a good plan to place apiece of net over tho hole and thendarn in the usual way. Tho netserves as a foundation and makes thedarn neat and strong.

A dainty collar can be made withstrips of narrow satin ribbon, edgedon the upper side with frills of softValenciennes laco. Three stripsshould, stltched-t- o a chiffonfoundation. For the jabot portionmake strips pf ribbon and laco in-

sertion and edge with ruffles of Va-

lenciennes.In maRuYg. a shirt waist to leBsen

materially $he difficulty of ironingshirt waist sleeves, open the sleevefrom shoulder to wrist after joiningtho undor-ar- seam, hem tho rawedges, finish tho forward lap with

lace and join tho alcove again withbuttonholes land tiny flat pearl but-

tons.When working tho first namo or In-

itial in script upon handkerchiefs orunderwear, tho French now uso thesame shado of embroidery floss which

it has become a fashion to usecoarse linen and cotton threads fortheembroidery of tho mulls', these heavythreads arc split or separated for theworking of initials or names.

rHEALTH AND BEAUTY

An excellent remedy for bruisesIs a mixture of equal parts of 6am-pho- r,

alcohol, water and.ammonln.

After a dusty trip tho faco shouldbo carefully bathed In varm waterand porhaps massaged with coldcream.

A simple remedy to euro a wart Isto batho it several times a day witha strong solution of bicarbonnte of so-

da. ,

Turpentino applied to a' bruise willquickly relievo pain. Applicationsof hot witch hazel aro also excellent.

An inoxpensivo disinfectant for asick room can be made as follows:rut some ground coffee In a saucerand in tho middle place a small pieceof camphor gum. Light the gum witha match. As tho gum allows the cof-

fee to burn with it the smell Is mostrefreshing.

FOR WOMAN'S EYE.While lacings on gowns aro not a

new feature, the fashion is becomingexceedingly popular, for lacings ap-pear In every place where an excusecan bo found for them.

Dresses and blouses are laced downthe left side with soft ribbons Insteadof with hooks and buttons.

The sides of tunics frequently showlacing connections, while middy blous-es aro slashed in the front at tho outeredge of tho sleeves, also tho sideseams at the lower edges. Even yokesdisplay narrow threadlngs of ribbon,ending at the lower edge In a bow,cravat fashion,

Among tho summer garments In vo-

gue is a separate waist and skirt in-

tended for wear together as a morningtoilet.

The waist is of pure white linenneatly tailored and trimmed withtucks and buttons. The turnbackDutch collar and cuffs to match aroedged with real Irish lace, insertionand narrow edging. ,

Tho skirt is of imported white wash-able poplin thoroughly shrunk and Itclose3 down center front with detach-able pearl buttons.

A smart belt to complete the cos-tuni- o

is of patent leather, In white,red or black.

Skirts both for suit or separate wearare not greatly different from thoseseen mst season. Ono may find thostyle she likes, whether It Is pleated,gathered, banded at the knee or footor cut In tho "skimpy" stylo popular inIn Paris.

A CLEVER MONEY-MAKER- .

The very, very latest device forcoaxing pennies out of generous coatpockets Is tho gift box with a puzzlepadlock. "Unlock tho Box," directs asign over the mysterious coffer, "andtake any gift you like, which is fastened with a good-size- d padlock, forwhich there Is no key. After examln- -

Ing-th- o padlock in search of a hiddenspring or button one discovers thatonly a penny or coin, Inserted in a slotat the top of the padlock will do thetrick. These padlocks come with apertures for coins of various sizes, the25-ce- size being the most profitable,but tho dime or nickel size provingmost popular. Within the box are trlfling favors wrapped in white tissuepaper and tied with ribbon.

GIFT FOR AN INVALID.If you cannot think of anything else

to tako tho invalid friend, carry alonga bottle of eau de cologne not perfume of any sort, but delicate colognewater. This may be dropped In thowater used to batho tho patient andwill prove most refreshing and sooth-ing. An invalid also likes to have thocologno on a table by the bedside;and during convalescence may smellthe delicate and refreshing odor, orkeep a handkerchief moistened withit on the forehead.

WOOD HELPS FLOWERS.Heavy plants, such as tho cactus

nnd the hydrangea, should be grownin wooden vessels. Tho vessels aremore suitable for porch ornaments,retain the moisture longer, can bopainted to match porch furnishing andaro not Inconvenient to handle Ifhandles aro nailed on each side. Flow-ers fjrown Jn woddon wisels arostronger than those grown in glazedcrocks or tin vessels.

MINT TEA FOR THE NERVOU8.Mint has many virtues nnd a few

vices. Well washed, tho leaves pulledfrom tho stems, slightly mashed andboiling water poured ovor, there re-

sults a "mint tea" that is a sovereignremedy for nervous as well as stomachtroubles. Served In a thin glass withcracked Ice and a littlo sugar In it, itcools cod quiets tho system generally.

In preparing the mint tea the bowlJs cjlosely covered until "tho contents

bottle that can bo closely corked' andsot on ice. When wanted ice shouldbo pounded very line nnd a littlo sugaradded if liked. Some prefer the tea un-

sweetened. New Orleans Picayune.

THE UNFASHIONABLE CRADLE.Cradles are going out; children are

not wearing them any more. Peopletell us that rocking Is unhygienic;babies, according to modern Idea-- ,

should go to sleep naturally In a sta-tionary, germ-proo- f bed, with an-tiseptic pillows and a sanitized rattle.Sentiment may save tho cradle for alittle whllo, but sooner or later It willgo to the dusty attic along with thehair cloth sofa. Maybe the infant oftomorrow will bear up somehow underthese accumulated misfortunes, willstrugglo along somehow to maturity,but what about tho artists, tho poets,tlio song writers? What a world of.sentiment nnd melody has been wovenaround the theme of tho mother nndtho gently rocking cradle! What kindof soni; will tho poor poet of tho fut- -

uro be able to make about an enameled Iron crib with brass trimmings.Jucccss.

(Washington Star.)PARIS, June 23, 1910.

One of tho noticeable features ofdress trimmings is the importance ofbuttons. Of stone, jet or of materialover molds they aro generally made,and grace nearly every gown for day-time wear.

Striped black and whlto leather beltaro the favorites, and that Is a claimthat Is enviable In this belted season.

Cornflower bluo satin plays an im-portant part in evening wraps. Onogorgeous model of Paquln Is lined with

couee. uuvuig uus

Old our specialty.

Tho cloche;shaped hats thatperhaps;' the Charlotte Corday

shapes moro thdn any other, arc quitepopular, although thero Is appearingin the very select showrooms a decid-ed reversal of the shapo In the broad,low hats that aro predicted to takothe summer girl by storm and, inci- -

dentally under tho brim, if she wishfor protection. Turbans havo been re-f-

protection. Turbans have been re-

legated to motor cars.Puffed crowns of laco and facing of

vnlenclonnes are used on tho clochoshapes, whllo tho large hats arc sim-ply trimmed with a wreath of floworsor foliage.

Llllnc and rose color, when exactlytho right shades nre choson, aro asuccessful conblnatlou. Tho touch ofblack Is everywhere apparent. It Issurprising fo see how general "la Itsuso over hero, and yet how Ignorantaro many designers In other count-ries.

Black and white checks and stripes,with touches of blue, are used for trot--tteurs, or walking suits, for coolerdays. Indeed, tho uso of bluo withgray effects Is a decided color note,

' which tho American, if she be wise.will tako for keynote of her sum-mer symphonies.

At tho Pre Catelan a stunning after-noon gown was seen of yellow linen.Wooden beads In a huge buckle formcaught tho wide folded girdle of blacksatin at tho left sldo. These beadsagain wero used ns a deep band onthe odgo of tho sash ends. The half-sleev-

wero edged with a deep cuffof Irish lace, whllo tho gulmpc wasof the same, piped at the top with dullbluo and black satin. A parasol witha long curVed band of gold was car-

ried with this costume, which had tho

WHEN WILL THEY JOIN IN THE

iMcOhesney CoffeeCOFFEE ROASTERS

expense, wo.uru give you

REHEHBERBut wc can give you any quality you

Street

Our Best Coffee is sale

calling at 16 Merchant

SANTA ROSA, July 10. GovernorWalter F. Frear of the Hawaiian Is- -

lands, accompanied by --Mrs. Frear anddaughter, Virginia, spent yesterdnynnd hero nt tho country homoof Surveyor of tho Port of San Fran-cisco, Edward F. Woodward, near thiscity. Mr. Frear and Mrs. Woodwardaro brother and sister. From heroGovernor and family will go to RossValley to visit Dr. and Mrs. FrederickL. Burk.

MINING COAL IN MANCHURIABERLIN, July 7. Baron Mumm

von tho German am-

bassador to Jnpan, who 1ms

from a tour of Investigation Inx Man-

churia records, among other oof Japnnoso activities, that

2500 tons of conl are being takendaily from tho Ftishun mines, whichJapan acquired by the Portsmouthtreaty.

Only three shafts havo been sunkInto a coal seam 140 feet thickwhen tho Ambassador visited thomines. Two others are nearly ready,and a total production of 7000 tons perday Is expected. Baron Mumm saysthat tho Antung-Mukde- n Rallwny of170 miles, which Is being convortedfrom a narrow military road to thonormal gauge, will bo finished In tboautumn of 1912. The Korean govern-ment is paying six millions for thoconstruction of a bridge near the Ya-l-

Tho line has 183 bridges and 2,1

tunnels.

Q

u uuiier coueu xor mc same

Qwant. O

$CO

Qo

You get it only, by

Aim Ituaitmcu id iimiiilir ivlirtlncn In TMinf ic T?nn cj iiwr ntwl fltMiwlitwir frti rPtw7n Tim nnnn.

ciiiioicu to

city of our Roaster is 100 pounds per hour. Wo solicit the shipping trade, the, trade of hotels, Prestaurants aud large consumers generally. To all such we deliver the goods. To consumers, CDwho use from five to ten pounds, we will he pleased to supply. But to such Ave can not XH

deliver. It does not pay us. If we did so, you would-hav- to pay an increased price for the M,... .L 1 ' 1 1 ' .V11 - 1 .11 if J. 1 1Jy not

money.

Kona is

resem-ble,

thq

FIGHT?

16

N.B. not on in

street.

today

tho

returned

can

McCHESNEY COFFEE COMPANY,Merchant

packages,

McOhesney Coffee

Sehwnrtzenstein,

Co.

Co.haSiEersT aT6Iff'then-Blraln'ed,,poured.lnt- a'.uS L l' ... 'A "fVf. V . ...' li '.-- . si' . i tt- ( .. : H.

-- 4

1

.,

.it h- - LA

Page 14: PRIZEFIGHT GAM BLER CO ITS SUICIDE · the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody rich, the half-poun-d tins of Hongkong No. 1 now selling at $75, unstamped of course

r

FOURTEEN

''DREAM 0 LOVELINESS

THAT

FADE"

"I'AHAMKK OF THE PACIFIC" By Ronald Buchanan, in

IMmedin N. Z.) Evening Star, June 4, 1910.

method

Works.

THE JULY 23, 1D10.

'choicestducts the skill mnl cultureus Honolulu. And bo

car car nnd from strcotpast the Oahu cc.'lege,beautiful Manoa backtown, Its ofpeoples the world; andby the Nuuanu Valley linothe Hoyal where

Hawaii's He. TheItself closed

A dusky femalo facepears at theas we approach, ard our

Inquiry answerscurtly "No, you can't come in horcPrinco David lately been gathered his fathers, and tho wreathsand emblems about the door tell agrief unburlcd. thonirnln In thn of nOUarl- -

"The question Is often asked 'Which orable, and arc not disappointed. t the flne Moana notclis the more attractive, Honolulu or It would bo quite useless attempt on Walkikl beach. This is scenoColombo?' But there is never 'any any the fish on view of the famous g and surf- -

.Imiht in thn mini! nf nnvnnn who lias thorn In fnrm nml rnlnrlnp thnv mir. boaTd riding. The latter.WO are inform- -

. . . . ., eJ to bo witnessed nowhere elseseen uie rara- - pass nnytmng mat ino oru.nary mor- -eyer ,n Q aro dlsappolnted

u,sc U1 luu 1 """ til has ventured to associate that at tho tlmo of our vlsit thls par- -

bo one ot many pamnnicts with the denizens of the deep, ticular sport was not in Aissued by the Union Steam Ship Com- - jt is hardly an exaggeration say few canoe3, however, aro engagedpany of New Zealand connection that nowhere either In the realm of the exhilarating sport of shootingwith tho increasingly popular "All ornithology or horticulture could tho breakers and relied" route and after my brief day in anything bo found to excel the turning to shore on the long sweep ofHonolulu I felt quite prepared to ac- - these piscatorial specimens. There tho ocean swell. Tho Americancopt without much ar- - are SOmo things that must be scon to ors, during the recent visit of the Unit- -

gumcnt, although I had not soon be understood, and the Aquarium ed States Fleet to Honolulu, triedColombo. I have since visited Is one of them. Tho Amer- - their skill at these healthful sports,the Indian port and am inclined iCan resident, by the way, speaks oi and while their success was only mo- -

to stand by tlie dictum of tho guide- - the Aquawrium. are not allowed derate, their was no doubtbook with something like assurance, to forget that we aro tho territory I complete The temperature of thoI accordingly adopt the of Uncln Sam. Here and there wo. ro- - water at Walklki Is said to average

It is still early morning when the mark tho nuaint intonation and un- - 80 degrees, and as tlie gradual slopelTjubIo summons all sleepers on board usual pronunciation of "tho citizen of of "each and ahsenco of un- -

tho R. M. S. Marama to awake, for thn trrn.it Ttonnfclln. TSrnrvwWn wn uenow maKe 11 iiarucuiany eaie us

at G:30 the health officer is to make ar pMpH unnn to wrnatln with hiR a bathing place, a capsize need nothis inspection, and mutt needs bo coinage. It not easy under the best be attcnded with very serious con- -

present and presentable. The lights of circumstances to mentally convert sequences from any point of view,As ated Hono ulu is aare still burning about the harbor, bo- - dollars and cents into tho talready

hind which the town shows dimly, shillings, hut when tho visitor sits VXlrevealing little of its size and nothing down to meal, a la carte, and endeav- -

of its surpassing loveliness. Between ors to keep abreast of his liability,us and the harbor lies, "the magnlfi- - th0 effort is peculiarly distressing.cent new, fourteen-thousan- d ton, tn- - it is told of one of our membersplescrew turbine steamer Tenyo Ma- - who, in a fit of generosity,ru (I quote from the local paper) invited three ladies to lunch with himjust arrived on her maiden voyage on shore, that his digestion sufferedfrom Yokohama. We are lying in the a derangement as tho re

STAR,

theof ot

Into to

and theto

mlxturoof on again

to

Is

partially doorIn

respectful somewhat

hasto

still cardirectionat

to theof

iiono.utu.

tneto in

in

0f sail- -

statement

enjoymentin

spectistics of the Hawaiian Islands as a

In the group there are up-

wards 70,000 Japanese, 25,00016,000 2,300 Amer

icans, and 1,500 Germans,and nationalities are

al- -i The native

iuaUDtCau iuu ao uaa tuC a. - ot u.s uuompi 10 Keep nguring and thore about 6)000ia. Ui. uuului o wa.u Wim .u- - uiiugs oui as me progresses. certain Honolulult ,s sald that a

xerest-enua- nced tne satety ot our Fronting the lies Kapio- - who warn tres-noi-

of vlew-- the swarms of sharks lani park, distinguished by a name nansnra off his section found it ne- -

xfaat our vessel. The hour that is associated with much that is cessary to put up a notice in sevenuiuwu cra un imcu ui uu uetiv, uesi. in me msiory or Hawaii; oui we languages. The first said:

good humored company, realising, have no time to explore It. We pro- - Bera be nrosecutod." or some- -

perhaps for the first time, how many ceed to see what wo can of the cliy I thing like that- - the last said "Ski- -

are. The ceremony is soon over, in various directions by moans of ,j00. The Japanese are still comingThe Health Officer passes tram rides. Honolulu has a splendid into the grou Jn iarge numbers, andaiong tne lines, eyeing eacn or us electric tram system, and one may the ultimate of this im- -

critically as he passes, and ticking travel for any in any direc- - migration must, surely be awaited byua off one by one on a little tlon for five cents, the right Americans with Interest, if not withho holds in his right hand. Then a of transfer, without further payment It impossible to at--

hearty "That's all, thanks," from tho to 'any branch or cross line. In this tempt to see Honolulu in the timebreaks up the and we way w0 traverse quite a number afforded by the stoppage of a steam.

breakfast and to prepara- - fine and are delighted er. The Punchbowl crater.lmmediatelytions for going ashore. Steaming expression with the beauty of the at back of tho town; Diamondcarefully the narrow, reef-boun- d scenery that greets tho eye in every Head crater at tho eastern extrem- -

channel that forms the to direction. Palms of every lty; the Bishop museum, with itsthe harbor ot Honolulu, the Marama the majestic royal, the stately date, unrivalled collection of Polynesianmakes her way towards the berth at line tho streets throughout the city, the Capitol,Bishop's wharf, and before long we aro whilp all alone the wav American formerly the Royal with itswending our several ways about the and English homes look out from un- - famous collection of paintings alltown. der their of tropical beauty, these and. much more besides remain

With many of ns the Aquarium Is had seen the romantic of So we wend our way

the first objective. Wo have heard vegetation before in the hack to the steamer and are givenso much about it seen it describedas about the finest institution of its

in the world, tnd so forth. Con-

sequently we expect something mem- -

W. W.

and proi

way

but

is

says and

over

the

Wo

tho

is

it

meai

is

South but never before had I 8Uch a send-of- f as will live long

witnessed such a delightful blending r Tho Royal Hawaiianof the best in Nature and art the Dand Is there, sweetnil nl refit, wnrlrn nf r.n,i pnrrnnnn-int- r music: Hawaiian ladles

CITY MAUSOLEUMThe ideal system of burial. The being every-

where throughout the civilized Approved by the Hawaiianof Health. Plans and specifications approved by Camp-

bell, Superintendent of Public The change from earth burialto the mausoleum plan is urgently by conditions they existin Honolulu at the'present time.

The Townsend Undertaking Co., LtdBERETANIA ST., OPP. SACHS' STORE.

HALL, President. J. H. TOWNSEND,

Let's get down to the base of thetrouble as the cake of

PAU KA HANAsaid the scrub lady dirtwhere Pau Ka Hana Reigns

FRED. L. WALDRON,Distributor

HAWAIIAN SATURDAY,

transfiguringman

wo bo fromstreet,

upValley;

with strango

Mausoleum, thecroatest of deadMausoleum against

apopenedreply to

Takingthe

wo

description

everprogress.

seawardbeauty

atHonolulu

designation.

tho

wo

accustomed

permanent

whole.Chi-

nese, Portuguese,British;

Coreans otherlargely represented.

BUiu half-white-

uy aquarium resident wished

surround

wni'

wequickly

outcome aliendistance

machine withpnnrehension.

purser parade,adjourn to streets, beyond

theup

entrance description,

ethnological specimens;palace,

settingbeauty unexplored.

tropical

kind

Seas, inmemory.

discoursingscores

adoptedworld.

Board Marston

demanded as

Treasurer.

to no

of

of

of

to

of

ofare mere, an aecKea in me gorgeouscarnation necklaces that are such afeature of personal adornment in thissunny land; representatives of theseveral sections of this most mixedpopulation are there; and amidst muchwaving and shouting of farewells westeam out to resume our voyage onthe broad Pacific. Honolulu passesinto the realm of happy recollection.it is a memory that will linger, adream of loveliness that will not soonfade.

QUEER PROVISIONS FORCONDUCT.

SON'S

WASHINGTON, July 8. RobertSt. George Dyrenforth, the eight-year-ol- d

foster son ot Robert O. Dyrenforth, the former Commissioner of

Patents, faces a busy life with highrewards If he qualifies. The lad isthe solo heir of his foster father. Thelatter's will, in which tho value ofthe estate is not given, filed for pro

bate today, provides these conditionsfor Robert if he would inherit the estate when he reaches the age of 28:

He is to bo graduated from a publicschool by the time he is fourteen.

Ho is to take a full course at Harvard and win a degree before he is18.

That is to be followed by sixmonths' study of law at Oxford. Thenho must return to tho United StatCB,graduate from West Point and, afterholding a commission in tho army, resign, "bo thoroughly oducated in tholaw" and begin its practice.

His vacntions are to be spent IntruvollnB through France, Spain, Italy, Greece, Gormany, Denmark, andRussia, in the order named. Ho isnot to boconio a Catholic; he Is tolearn manual training, dancing, music, ind bowaro of women.

tine Job Printing, mar omca

'V in. I. '

She sees the pitcher make, a balk shesays "He makes me weary!"

But when he splits the plate she asks,"Now isn't he a dearie?"

That twirler, he's all right, I think, tlrsteam can't do without him,

But when my girl admires him so, I'mnot so sure about him.

IN

Sew

She makes a hit with me, you bet, thisjolly, rooting girl,

And when she cheers the home team onit sets me in a whirl;

She knows the game as well as I, a foulhit from a fair one;

And when I see her at the game, I'd liketo make this pair one.

SROOMSThey have just been opened

in the rear of the AlexanderYoung Building, entrance fromthe alleyway near King Street.

A beautiful line of automo-biles on display now.

THE VO HAMM YOUNG CO.. LTD

Bishop and King Streets

Page 15: PRIZEFIGHT GAM BLER CO ITS SUICIDE · the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody rich, the half-poun-d tins of Hongkong No. 1 now selling at $75, unstamped of course

I IFOR SALE!

Tho only available beach Propertyon tho car lino.

Wo havo for salo at Walklkl 400

feet of Beach Property, a portion

well Improved with a largo and com-fortab-

house. ,

We bto authorized to offer this pro-

perty, as a wholo or In fifty or a hun-Ure- d

foot strips to suit tho purchaser.

Particulars and terms1 at bur office.

'Waterhodse I

Corner Fort and Merchant Btrttta.

juon i wait For The Mall Use if

THE WIRELESS

On Sunday mornings tho officeIn mind frnm aIctVi- n

m o

FOR SSIylSBridge and Beacn Stoves lor Coal or

Woo.Quick Meal Blue Flame Oil BtovMPerfection Oil Stoves.Giant Burner Qasollno SIotm.

EMMELUTH & CO., LTD.Phono 21L No. 145 KIn St

Sows Special salve For PilesGuaranteed to contain nothing Injurious.

Cures chronic sores, cuts, burns ana allskin dlseaies of the human race.

Prepared by

G. SOMMA." Secret Balve SpecialistNo. 10 King Bt Honolulu. T. H.

25c.Writing Paper By Tho Box,

Our Special Offer

A. B. ARLE1GH & CO., LTD.

Empire Chop House(Lately Palace Grill.)

Bethel St Opp. Empire Theatre.Open Day and Night, Cuisine Unsur-

passed.BEST MEALS AT ALL HOURS.

James F. Horgan,Stock andBond Broker

Member of Honolulu Stock and BondExchange.

Stock and Bond Orders receiveprompt attention.

Information furnished relative to allSTOCKS AND BONDS.

LOANS NEGOTIATED.hone 72. P. O. Box 594

Jwalcami SsCoJapanese Silks, DryGoods and Hats ofAll Kinds.

Robinson Blocs Hotel Street

1 CHUNG DM 80 LIO

CHINESE NBWSPAPBRPUBLISHING ANDJOl, PRINTING.

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IF YOU WISH TO ADVERTISE ag IN NEWSPAPERS Sn -- " - mil iuuq X?, Call on rtm Writ V

8 ft DIKE'S ADVERTISING AGENCY'

ixj Sansome Streetf BAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.

Anecdotes ConcerningWell-Know- n People

David Belasco, playwright and the-

atrical manager, tehs this talo of thovlays when ho was n. newspaper re-

porter. While so employed ho put In afew days with a gang of tramps Inorder to get "color" for an article hohad been assigned' to write.

"I found tho hobos to bo a merrylot, with as many stories as the endman of a minstrel show. One ofthem told In my hearing of havingbeen given a mince pio by tho youngwlfo of a farmer. Next day tho trampappeared at tho farmhouse again andsaid, Would you be kind enough' ma'-

am, to givo mo tho recipe for thatthero mince-pi- e what I had hero yes-

terday?"'"Well, tho idea! cried tho far-

mer's wlfo. 'Land sakes, man, whatdo you want that recipe for?'

" 'To settle a bet,' replied tho tramp'My partner says you use three cupsof Portland cement to one of molassesbut I claim it's only two and a half.' "

Andrew Carnegie tells of a ScottishSunday school In which a class wasbeing examined In Scrlpturo knowl-edge by the superintendent.

"'Can any boy or girl tell me howNoah would bo likely to use his timowhile in tho ark?' astted the superin-tendent." "There was silence ror some time,but at length one boy timidly showedhis hand, and on being asked what hethought, ho replied,

"'Please, sir, ho wad fish.'" 'Well, yes, he might,' admitted the

superintendent.Presently another lltttle fellow was

seen to wave his hand excitedly, andon being asked to speak said,

" 'Please, he couldna fish very lang.''"What makes you think so, my

little man?' asked the superintendent."Because thero was only twa worms

in tho ark,' was the reply."

General Funston tells a story of asoldier In the Philippines, who wasnursed through tho rice fever. Onhis recovery he thanked the nurselike this:

"Thank you very much, ma'am, feryer kindness. I shan't never forgitit. If ever there was a fallen angel,you're one."

H- l-Glenn h. Curtis says of the Wright

Brothers good humoredly:"They don't own the air, you know.

Did you hear about that conversationthat was overheard between them atthe Dayton plant?

"'Orville,' cried Wilbur, runningout of doors excitedly, 'look! Here'sanother aviator using our patent!'

'"Ho certainly is,' shouted Orville.'That's our simultaneous warping andsteering movement to a T!'

"'Call a cop!' screamed Wilbur.'Get another Injunction!'

"But Orville, who had looked upthrough his binoculars, laid his handgently on his brother's arm. 'Comeon back to work, Wilbur,' he said, 'it'sa duck.' "

In the center of a garden, on a ped-estal, stood a large glass globe. Asthe guests sauntered about it afterdinner, one ,of them, happening totouch it, discovered to his amazementthat it was warmer on the shady sidethan on the side facing the sun.

An argument immediately sprangup; and. in tho course of tho debate,the phenomenon was attributed totho law of reflection or that of repul-sion, or something equally formidable.

"I don't know what you be a'talkln'about," remarked tjio old gardener,who had been an attentive listener tothe conversation, "but T do know that,fearin' the sun would crack this 'ereglobe a while ago I turned it around."

M- --

Kaiser William of Germany tellswith much gusto and amusement thofollowing story, in which ho hltnsclffigures ns anything but the hero:

"I was discussing the theory andpractice of medicine with good doc-

tor von " says tho Emperor, men-

tioning tho name of one of Gormany'amost celebrated physicians. "We fin-

ally fell into animated conversation asto tho workings ot tho human brain,Its marvelous mechanism, its oxtremodelicacy, and the ease with which Itcan be thrown odt of order.

"'If you were familiar, your Ma-

jesty, with the symptoms of concus-sion of the brain ' began the doctor.

'"But I am perfectly familiar withthe symptoms of concussion,' I inter-rupted.

" 'I am astonished,' replied the gooddoctor.

"'Let mo prove my knowledge,' I

said. 'If for oxamplo I banged myhead terrifically against yours, wouldwe not both suffer concussion of thebrain?'

'"Pardon mo, sire,' ho replied, 'Ithink that I might.'

"I did not punish him for lese-ma- -

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATljRDAYJ JULY 23, lilO. FIFTEEN

JeBty," laughingly concludes tho Em-

peror, "rlghly aa ho desorved' It."

H- I-President Pallleres of Franco tells

of a native evangelist who know verylittle English but who was fond, nonetho less, of speaking publicly In thounfamiliar tongue. One Sunday howas exhorting a congregation com-

posed chiefly of Americans and Eng-

lish and startled his hearers bylaunching forth into a prayer endingwith, f

"And now, good Lord, wo pray theoto protect and pickle us all tho restof our lives."

When tho service was over tho am-

bitious linguist's attention was calledto his expression, "pickle us."

"Well, what would you?" said ho."Is It not tho same, to preserve andto pickle?"

Roosevelt says the in-

cident that amused him most since hisreturn to America occurred in hissummer homo at Oyster bay on thoday of his arrival there. Respondingto the clamor of his townsfolk for anInformal speech, Mr. Roosevelt rovert-e-d

for a moment to his pet subject-r- ace

suicide. In the crowd was a manwith three small children nronned nnon his shoulders and a woman closebeside him carrying two babies.

"Tho speech was going on smoothly," narrates tho former President,"when the man with tho three chil-dren broke In with a voice that couldhavo been heard a quarter of a mile.

" 'Hey! Teddy' he shouted, 'can youbeat this? It's a full house, Teddy.Triplets and twins; three of a kindand a pair! "

King George the Fifth of Englandwas telling a group of friends of someof his experiences since the Britishcrown and scepter came Into his keep-ing.

"I was at an informal tea tho otherafternoon," said the king, "and wasbidding my distinguished hostess goodbye when her little daughter, a childof seven or eight years, came forwardtimidly, looking as if sho had some-thing to say. She was a beautifulchild, and when her mother formallypresented her she courtesied prettilyand said in a loud, clear voice.

'"I think your Majesty is a verywonderful man.'

" 'Why do you say that, my dear?"I asked.

"'Because,' said the little girl, 'ma.ma toia me to."

President W. C. Brown of the NewYork Central railroad said at a lunch,eon, apropos of his "back to thefarm" pronouncement:

"Some city men take very hard mysuggestion about a return to agricul-ture. They seem to think that thofarm pays as poorly as apprentice-ships used to do and you know whattho old-tim- e apprentices said aboutthat.

'"Wo get,' said the apprentices,'board and clothing the first year,clothing and board tho second yearand both of them tho third year ' "

HfLife on the big ranches in California

frequently develops odd cbaracters.Bill Hawkins, a man who had workedfor years in Mendocino County, haddeveloped a distaste for convorsa-tio- n

and verbal dispute that made himfamous throughout the state. OnceJeff Norton, managor or the Placidaranch, selected Bill HawRins and ayoung fellow known as "tho Angel"for some work that necessitated theirremaining away from the ranch housofor sovoral days. As tho pair werestarting out, Jeff drew "The Angel"asido.

"Now look hero, 'Angel,' don't yourile Bill. Don't start your tonguo towaggln when ho don't want to talk.The first thing you know, if you gitto hittin' off a conversational stunt,Bill'd fling up tho Job. I can't affordto lose him, so don't talk."

All day long Bill and "Angel" work-ed side by sido without a word. Inthe evening, after they had boiled theircoffee, they sat back against theirrolled blankets, smoking their pipes.Suddenly Bill gruffly remarked, "Iseen a cow today on tho other sideof tho clearln. "

"Cow?" queried the "Angel." "Itlooked like a bull to me." And then horemembered Jeff's warning andpromptly rolled Into his blankets. Hoawoke the next morning to find Billbreaking camp.

"I say, Bill! Packing up?""Yep." ,

"Quittln tho Job?""Yep.""Well, what in thunder aro you

quittln' for?"Bill arose, slipped tho blanket strap

over his shouldor, and remarked delib

WfflrlMiff'irB-IiBlll- i III! t ilHririWMIIIII'Wl Ok iiti ii Hill HWiMllllllillln lli III IHiil IHlllll' j HI III

erately, "There's too much damnedargument about this camp."

Dr. S. Weir MUctTfcp, tho notedPhiladelphia physician and author,and to EnglandJosoph H. Choato were chaffine eachother not long ago when Mr. Choatoremarked: "There's ono thing nboutyour profession, Doctor, that I havoalways envied. You bury your mis-

takes underground.""Truo enough, Joe." retorted Dr.

Mitchell, "and yours usually swingupon trees, you know."

Senator Reed Smoot tells a storyabout a certain type of man who hocalls tho "other peoplo's business fel-

low." Ono of tho kind was trying toextract Information from an elderly,prosperous-lookin- g man who sat nexttho curious person In the smoking-car- .

"How many people work In your of-

fice?" he asked."Oh," responded the elderly one,

AT OYSTER BAY.

Sole Agentsby tho Stevens-Durye- a Co.,

I STEVENS'

7

getting up and away his ci-

gar, "I should say, at a rough guoss,nbout two-third- s of them."

If tho diet is planned to meet thoneeds of tho system In warm weatherthero will bo llttlo danger of diseaseand of tho many which,are caused by eating intho heated days. tbat inthe summer wo do not need the foodswhich givo heat or thofoods, such as meat.

Carload the well knownreliable Stevens-Durye- a

has just arrived includingModel Touring Oars. r cut ,as per

f&mBSb wggsE;-- &&m

throwing

Indispositionsindiscreet

Remember

tlssuc-buildln-

A of

Xbelow.

One Model A A 6 cyl., Touring Caras per cut below."

$3300fo.b.factory

DURYEA

andTwo

Price,

Price,$2850

f.o.b. factory

Chicopii Frills

The Model AA is the Latest Creationof the Stevens factory; it embodies all the splendid points of formermodels, with, the addition of a great number of improvements whichplaces this car at the head of the foremost American makes.

Come and see the new cars; demonstrations given by appointment.

The von Hamm-You- ng Co., Ltd.

Manufactured

'T.I

U3

: $

1

.1

".MS

14

X.

2

mi

AX

ns

Page 16: PRIZEFIGHT GAM BLER CO ITS SUICIDE · the real smugglers were landing enough dope to make somebody rich, the half-poun-d tins of Hongkong No. 1 now selling at $75, unstamped of course

Travellers9 Writing Pads'"JHE Neatest and Simplest Device ever thought of for Travellers.

Consists of a Tablet of the Best Linen Bond writing paperfastened to a shallow box of Envelopes. J The box makes a convenientwriting pad. f The outfit is always together. Two Sizes. See them at

Why Candy Stores DoNot Sell Hardware

There is a characteristic bit o the old-tim- e Mark Twain in thevolume. "Mark Twain's Snecches." which the Harriers hn.vn iiist iml.

HuSh tlejohn, for whom 'Tales of Grandfather'The preface, scarcely half page long, written by Mark boy. were

Twain himself and is a confidential note to the reader:"If were to sell the reader a barrel of molasses, and he, instead

of sweetening his substantial dinner with the same at judicious inter-nals, should eat the entire barrel at one sitting, and then abuse me formaking him sick, would say that he deserved to be made sick fornot knowing any better how to utilize the blessings this world affords.

"And if sell to the reader this volume of nonsense, and he, in-

stead of seasoning his graver reading with chapter of it now andthen, when his mind demands such relaxation, unwisely overdoseshimself with several chapters of it at single sitting, he will deserveto be nauseated, aud he will have nobody to blame but himself if he is.

"There is no more sin in publishing an entire volume of nonsensethan there is in keeping a candy store with no hardware in it. It lieswholly with the customer whether he will derive from them the bene-

fits which they will afford him if he uses their possibilities

The Buttermilk FadProfessor Elie Metchnikolf, whose researches in bacteriology have

been productive of much scientific debate, has gained the popular ear.The layman may know little of bacteria, but when science is expressedin terms of buttermilk he sits up and takes notice. The buttermilkseason is here. Indeed, the Metchnikoll' theory has also arrived. He

. , . . .. . . . .1 1 l ji. ji pl i 1 r i 1 l i t i ji.i

I

a

1

I

Ia

a

to

jiuft uiu a mu constant visitor Walk.j i .1 1 - i if i i i rm i r jiurn.emeu .muv i no me iacij faultsthat the artificial buttermilk lad sweeping Europe, andhas touched America.

Bulgarians, Armenians and all (he descendants the Tartars re(o drink sweet milk because of stomachic distress which it &

I

a

I I

a

II

II

aI

a

I

ol10 is

is

I

a yoghoor.t, matron, in a ov inor as the all product strong of Carlyle in

are myriad are it all If snv.known to us, buttermilk, whey, junket, cream, curds, cheese,

sour Are to become brewers of producedby a ferment, a culture, or by a quick souring andSudden cooling process develop a lactic culture of

variety? Buttermilk, of course, is minus the butter. Matzoonor yoghoorl are fermentative bacteria or not develop atruce of alcohol. The koumiss of the the kephir theTartars has sugar and yeast added, which naturally produce alcohol,making these milk beers one-thir- d alcoholic as malt beer.These are the drinks one of the greatestscientists, commends to the as conducing to digestion,health, complexion virility.

the nun. with mounted swept from Turk-estan across the plains of Western Europe to at imperial Romeitself, terrifying Europeans with their man-hors- e didthey subsist? the terrible efficiency, ofpersonal prowess, of the ability the barbarian to move so

They doubtless kephir, a slightly alcoholic milk brew.Many of our discoveries are merely rediscoveries. It be kindfld .bossy solve the prohibition riddle us yet. News.

Friend Great WritersMemories of Campbell and Wordsworth, and Carlyle.

(London Chronicle.)In the cloistered quiet of the Charterhouse there is living today

little old gentleman is taking a keen interest in

ous

Hawaiian News Co.. Ltd.

friend of the family. This Mrs. dimming had been in her youngdays none other than that "bonuie Lesley" "gaed o'er the border"

took Burns' heart with her."It when was at school at Melrose," continued Mr. Espin-

asse, "that saw He was driving in a carriage a silver-haire- d

old gentleman with little boy riding a pony at his side.. The littlewaslishcd. a was

written. remember how envied him

"Another of my boyhood's memories at was the poetCampbell. He being feted in the town, and friend of my fa-

ther's permission for me to be allowed in with the dessert. He wasa dapper, little fellow, none too sober toward end of the ev-

ening, some of the kirk ministers very shocked at his stories.A friend of .my father's, too, was Lord Jeffray of the Edinburgh

was presented to him and invited to breakfast at his beautifulhouse at Craignook. remember he had wonderfully brilliant, pierc-ing eyes.

"But of those early years my most treasured memory is a visitpaid to Wordsworth at Rydal Mount. was spending my holidaysat Kendal. After long post-chais- e journey and a walk of fifteen orsixteen miles, arrived at the cottage dusk, and both thepoet and his wife half asleep in the little parlor. They hadbeen forewarned of my coming by a relative and very kind tome. Wordsworth himself showed me around the house garden.

"He nearly seventy but a fine figure of man, tall, uprightand stalwart still. had a 'nose, and his was not nearlyso refined as should have thought'. he gave one the im-

pression of a farmer rather than of a poet."It through his connection with the British Museum Library

Mr. Espinasse was able to be of especial help Carjyle over theCromwell letters, but his acquaintanceship with the Sage of Chelseabegan long before and continued long after. Afterward Espinasse

iiriiH)imuuu iiium-j- , .uiur umy rouusi jjuigiaiis, uiiii i,ectune a at Cheynccuiuiucme long me. nere denying "Despite and inconsistencies," said Mr

offuse

Espinasse,"you could never get away from Carlyle's greatness and overwhelmingenergy of mind. can see now in old brown dressing crownhitting on a footstool on the hearthrug, blowing the smoke from his

limes occasions. Ihey Urew milk lieer, koumiss, mtmooguo on Cromwell, some other subjectkephir, leden cliema, case may be, the of lactic that Scotch accent his. Mrs. would sit silence.acid lennent. The products of milk and but few she had heard before. he became verv fierce, she would

like buttor, milk. we, too, lactic beer,

hop-lik- e bacteriathat may acid still

anotherthat may may

Swiss and of

about aswhich Metchnikoll', living

world goodfair and

When Attila, his hordes,strike

the aspect, bowWhat was secret of that that

of hordefyst? drank

may thatwill for Detroit

ofScott

who the

andwho

andwas

Scott.

Edinburghwas

gotjolly the

and wereRe-

view.

about foundsitting

wereand

wasHe huge face

Altogether

wasthat

Mr.

many

him his

'Don't be angry with Mr. Espinasse. He is not to blame.'"lie had no amusements. He was always writing, talking or read

ing, with pencil in hand. As to the troubles between the pair, they)were at least as happy as .they or any one could have expected. Ofcourse .Mrs. Carlyle wanted and deserved to be something more thanmerely 'Carlyle's wife.' She was a brilliant conversationalist, butnever had a chance except when he was away. It was perhaps a littlesignificant that once when I asked Mrs. Carlyle, who had a prettyvoice, to sing 'Auld Robin Gray' she delicately refused for an unspoken reason.

Our Foreign Policy"The Foreign Policy of the United States" is the title of a timely

article in the July number of The North American Review, by CharlesJohnston, in which he reviews the attitude of our Government towardsforeign powers since Mr. Hay was Secretary of State. He then takesup for consideration the details of 'the foreign policy under the newadministration: the dividing of tWforeign affairs in four great divi-

sions according to geographical and political relations; and the reor-ganizations of the diplomatic service which requires examinationsfor the candidates similar to the Civil Service. He summarizes :

"In general I think it might almost be .said to bo a new axiom ofthe present administration that the department of state should endeavor in all cases to give all proper support to legitimate and beneficial

present endeavors to celebrate the memory of the great poets that are ! American enterprises in foreign countries, at the same time scrutin-gone- .

This is Mr. Francis Espinasse, one of the brethren of the fam-- J izing such enterprises in order to arrive at a conservative decision ashostel, and in his younger days an author and journalist of no to which thev are worthy of support, aud as to the deer

mean repute Mr. Espinasse, in his eiglily-Kovoiit- h year, can throw his which Avoul(i be justme(I , Q m , ,emory back to days when he talked with Wordsworth and dined'

ee of supportbenefit to the

lTlutwl btnles' Uml by theu' 1,ul!ltl0 to the important policies of thewith Thomas Campbell and Sir Walter Scott driving out from Abbots-- 'fbi-,1- . government. This attitude puts new life and energy into what might

. Moreover, as the friend and helper of Carlyle in his earlier, years (,r'ei1 ,,e merely formal acts and relations. It is likely to be of realMr. Espinasse is probably the last survivor of the real intimates of and lasting benefit to many foreign. countries, which will be able, inme anions wium-- uiuu w,fo and eonservativo to American, , ways, profit by organizing power

' " Amei,cnn caPltaIih.it one should find today in the heart of London almost a firsthand .io general development of

link with Uurns. When he was a boy in Edinburgh there was still liv 01v,lizayon whlle t the same time stimulating American commerce,lug there an old lady of eighty-two- , Mrs. McLehose, once the famqus enterprise and influoucd. A policy of greater energy and initiative"Clarinda" to whom Burns made such desperate love. There was" will take the place of what was perhaps the too cautious and negativealso a certain Mrs. dimming of'Logie, a "genial old Scottish dame"

jforeign policy of this country."

' ' ' ' .r-- -

,

It has been said that theof the civil war fill

more ofthan the facts

of that time and Fromtime to time of the

men of that day,never see

are told by the of thatnew on the

of theJohn a

AlexanderYoung Bldg.

Unwritten War Page.WHEN GRANT'S DECISION SAVED THE NATION.

(Chicago Dally News)unwritten

history wouldmany volumes closely printedmatter contain known

generation.Interesting stories

famous which other-wis- o

possibly would print,veterans strug-

gle, shedding light for-tunes lime's turbulent politics.

General McDonald, himselfcommander In the federal army and disappearance. great controversyparticipant in many of the most des- - was onperato engagements of the war, re-cently made public some stories ofGrant the general aud Grant the pre-

sident which one looks for in vain Inthe ordinary history. As a personal

i friend of th0 soldier-presiden- t, Gen.McDonald, has offices in Dear-born street, claims to know somethingof the chieftain's private affairs. Ina recent Interview the old soldiersaid:

Raised Regiments in War."Before I entered the army I was

engaged in steamboating on the Mis-sissippi and its tributaries, runningall tho way to tho Gulf of Mexico. J

owned and commanded my own boatand, indeed built, owned and command-ed boats for rorty-od- d years I will be80 my next birthday.

"When the war broke out I raiseda Missouri regiment at my own ex-

pense and It cost me, all told, from518,000 to $20,000 for the federalarmy. Mine was the first troop, ac-

cepted by Mr. Lincoln after his ini-

tial call for 75,000 men had been an-swered. I was quite sure that itwould be accepted, as Mr. Lincolnwas my attorney in 1849 and thespring of 18,50 and wo were closefriends up to the day of his assassina-tion.

Reported to President."He sent for mo three times to re-

port to him at Washington on variousmissions while I was in tho army, andono of those occasions had to do withthe. differences between Generals Hal-lee- k

and Grant."After the battle of Fort Donelson

Grant called mo to htm and explainedthat he wlshod to get to Nashvilleahead of Floyd, the confederate gen-eral, who was headed for that town.

youne

thrownthe confederates arrived

wnere near the place. We talkedtho matter over irf detail and in the

Grant accepted myNashville by water. He did reach

there ahead of Floyd and the lattergave turned back. thattime Grant was with the of theMissouri a department command-er under Halleck.

Now that Halleck didn'tlike Grant's move said so atWashington. I visited the capitalthe of Mr. Lincoln and thepresident nsked about the mat- -

and that General Grantwas 'a great comforter to him' andother excellent things which I knowwould cheor Grant Needless to Grant was not reprimand-ed. was not tho last trou-ble had at Washington.

When Grant Disappeared."Skipping march through

Tennessee Mlsslppl and tho cap-ture of Vicksburg, I want to pass onto tho results of capture,least what place Immedlateli

Grant a portion

9

the war department for eighteendays, if my memory right.This caused a great furqro In Wash-ington. Nobody knew what had be-

come"At that 1 was commanding

the district of western Tennessee,with headquarters Memphis. The

of War, Mr. Stanton, order-e- d

Adjt.-Ge- Thomas to make in-

vestigation of General Grant's move-ments and ordered Grant himself ,toreport at Washington to explain his

a The

who

"A thorough investigation was madeand Grant not only was sustained byMr. Lincoln, but received, the com-mand the armies of tho UnitedStates, with the of lieutenant-genera- l

the first officer ofin the country.

Conferred to Acceptance."General Grant to Memphis

after receiving tljo offer Wash-ington and passod a day with dis-cussing the advisability of his ac-

cepting the proposition. He toldwhat political Influences had affectedthe commanding generals of the armyof the Potomac and said that didnot feel like leaving tho that

had served so long to go t6 Wash-ington, where many prominent gen-

erals had been 'slaughtered by thepoliticians,' Ho had no friends orenemies, said, at that time, butundoubtedly wouli' be' compellod 'tomeet tho same difficulties which hadbroken the hearts of other generalswho had preceded

"I ropoatod to him llr. Lincoln'sown words regard to his being 'agreat comforter.' This seemed topleaso the general. I also 'told himthat if would go to Washington,simply walk, am2 pay his respectsto Mr. Stanton, th secretary of war,say nothing to any person as to hisfuture movements, but go straight tothe white house and send In his cardto Mr. Lincoln, would come outright.

"Tell him,' I said, 'that you thankhim for the honor conferred upon you,but that fdr fear that a political fightwill follow and the fact of your hav-ing no friends to look your owninterests make you hesitate; that you"

would ask in the event of a contro- -

Ho asked how it could done and I versy of any character that per- -

loia mm could make it by the river muted to lay the matter before himroute and have fortifications personally before any move should beup before any- -

end plan and wentto

up and Atarmy

and

it seemsand

atrequest

me

he told mo

immensely.say,

thatho

Shlloh.

that or attook

afterward, took of

longserves me

of him.time

atSecretary

an

ofrank

that rank

ascame

fromme

me

hoarmy

he

he

him.

with

heIn

all

after

bo be

mado. With that understanding Itold him to take the position, accom-panying his acceptance with a positivestatement to the president as tosuccessful outcome of the Allof which was done.

And the Rest is History."Mr. Lincoln acquiesced Gen.

Grant accepted the position. notonly led the armies successfully,brought the war to a successful ter-mination.

"General Grant had only been com-mander in chief, however, about threemonths when ho expected contro- -

ter. I told htm frar-kl- what I thought versy between him and tho secretary

But

thoand

thewar.

andHe'

but

of war as to Grant's movements oftils armies In the field broke out, andhe was called again to Washingtonby Secretary Stantoa. Arrived theretho goneral said: 'Mr. Secretary, we'llgo right to the whito house ajid laythis matter before tho president.'

"Woll, they went. Both mado state-ments and Mr. Lincoln listened' at-tentively. After hearing both sideshe turned to Stanton and said:

" 'Stanton, you and I hayo been fight-In- g

this war long enough and we'votnado a failure of it. ? guoss wo'lf lot

his army and marchod to Jackson, tho Grant have his own wny and see whatcapital or Mississippi, and tuon dis- - ho can do.'nppearcd. Ho actually was lost to "That remark closod the war."