women m0 11 - university of hawaiʻi

8
W j' Telephone 2365 Star Business Office SECOND EDITION Gar? VOL. XVIII. rfONOLULU, HAWAII, FMDAY, NOVE.MJ5EK IS, 1M10. No. 5809 MORE ELECT UN RESULTS REPUBLICANS 100 r Latest calculations on the national house o representatives, based on complied but unofficial returns, show the Democrats will have a safe work- ing majority of 30. The outcome of the United States senate Is now definitely settled. The Itepublicans are assured of 17 new senators, which, with 34 holdover se- nators, gives them a total of 50. The Democrats are assured ot 15 now se- nators, which, with 25 holdovers, gives them a" total of 40. One senatorship is In doubt the successor of Carter in Montana, where there is a tie, on the unofficial count. The determined totals, however, leave a republican majority in the senate as follows: Total membership, 92; necessary to majority, 47; Republicans, 51; Demo- crats, 40; doubtful, 1. The 17 Republican senators consid- ered assured are from California, Con- necticut, Delaware, Iowa, Massachu- setts, Minnesota, Michigan, Nevada, North Dakota, (2), Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Utah .Vermont, Wash-Jngfto- Wisconsin and Wyoming. The 15 Democratic senators consid- ered assured are-fro- Florida, Indiana, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Missouri, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and West Virginia. A summary of the contest for Gov-- ELECTION WON'T WASHINGTON, November 9. Rea- lizing the reai significance of tlp De- mocratic landslide that ousted the Re- -' publicans from control in the house, President Taft nevertheless believes that the party of which ho is titular leader will now become united and present a solid front to the enemy in 1912. Throughout political circles The Hawaii County Board ot Super- visors on Wednesday adopteo. a hot re- port on the fire station sij matter, protesting against the action taken by Governor Frear and Marston Camp- bell and accusing them of bad faith. Wills I Among your duties Is that of MAKING YOUR VILL. 1910 Is nearly past. Better have It drawn today. Consult tho Hawaiian Trust Compan y , Limited i3 3 j 923 Fort Street. ELECTION FIGURES FRO IN DETAIL; E ft GOOD III THE SENATE r. - 2.iui;.x'F j ernorships shows the following gov- ernors elected, with the approximate plurality: DEMOCRATIC. Governor ' Plurality. Colorado Shafroth Idaho Hawloy 1,000 New York Dtx . . .GG.OOO New Jersey Wilson 48,000 Connecticut Baldwin 3,500 Massachusetts Foss 33,000 Ohio Harmon 60,000 Oklahoma Cruce 1,500 Oregon West Wyoming Carey Alabama O'Neal 50,000 South Carolina Blease 00,000 Texas Colquitt North Dakota Burke 3,000 REPUBLICAN. Pennsylvania Tenor 33,000 New Hampshire Bass 7,000 Rhode Island Pothierr 900 Iowa Carroll 10,000 Kansas Stubbs 14,000 Michigan Osborn . . v 40,000 Minnesota Eberhardt 50,000 Nebraska Aldrlch 5,000 South Dakota Vessey. .' 12,000 Wisconsin McGovern California Johnson. .25,000 Nevada Oddie .' . Tennessee Hooper 12,000 Fusion. ' ' CHANGE TAFT A BIT today the chief subject for discussion was the assertion, made by friends of the President, that the Republican party from now on would look to Mr. Taft for active leadership. PROGRAM NOT'CHANGCD.' . At one o'clock the president met the (Continued on page 7.) The report of the road committee was as follows: "In re communication No. 612 dated Honolulu, November 9th, 1919, from Marston Campbell, Commissioner of Public Lands, addressed to B. B. Rich ards, president, Board of Trade, hied with this Honorable Board and refer- red to this committee, it is recom mended that the county clerk he and Is hereby directed to notify Mr. E. E. Richards to the effect that the board of supervisors have no knowledge of any arrangements that "have already been made" by tho Honorable Marston Campbell as stated by him for the re- moval of the fire station to the block on tho north corner of Wailuku. street and Shipman street extension nor was It at any time consulted In referenco thereto. Tho board of supervisors of the County of Hawaii have not agreed to pay their share toward the Improvement of Kuhio street as stated In tho Honorable Marston Campbell's communication, but did, on the 4th of August 1910, In compllanco with tho request dated August the 4th, 1910, of committee from the Board of Trade of Hllo and keeping in view also tho express promise of Governor W. F. Frear contained in his commu-nlcatlo- n under date of August 30th, 1909, in which ho agreed that tho town portion (Federal Lot) could bo used (Continued on Pace eight.) i T CLARK INDICTMENTS KNOCKED OUT; NEW ONES FOUND; 11 CHARGED Circuit Judge Henry E. Cooper ren- dered a decision today sustaining the demurrer to the indictment in the cases again former Police Court Clerk Honry N. Clark, on the ground that Clark was not as alleged in the indictment, a "custodian" of public funas. New indictments were quick'y found by the Grand jury, and C'ark was arraigned again. The new indictments accuse him as an employe of the 'city and county, entrusted by the district magistrate with the cus- tody of public money. SIERRA HAS ER SRINGS MANY Tho popular liner Sierra, of the Oceanic Steamship Company, arrived in port early this morning, berthing at the company's wharf a few minutes before eight o'clock. She carrie.d 145 passengers, of whom 109 were in tho saloon; 25G0 tons of cargo, 2G7 sacks of mails and seven automobiles, six belng consfgned to tho Von Haram Youilg Company and the other to B. O. Hall and Sons. Purser T..-C- . Smith reports a very pleasant trip across the Pacific. The weather was delightful, particularly the beantitful moonlight evenings; tho passengers were congenial and several entertainments were organized to. make the voyage an enjoyable one. M. Paton, who is well-know- n locally, was one of the foremost in arranging con certs and he gave several good ven- - triloquial turns. Mr. and Mrs. Z. Old-fiel- two vaudeville entertainers who are to open at one of the local houses of entertainment, were also in great demand, and others of the passengers and ship's company assisted the good work along. Chief among these must be mentioned the Sierra's band, a new organization which has done much to whl'o away the hours for tho passen gers on hoard". Though only a new Institution the band has become one of the features of the ship, and selec- tions are given nightly on deck. Last evening, to mark the final night at sea, the members ot the band assembled In the social hall and enlivened the even- ing with musical selections. Tho members of tho hand, regarding which Purser Smith is enthusiastic, are as II. W. DoLeon, representing Barnum and Bailey's circus, arrived In Hono- lulu this morning on tho Sierra, to make arrangements for tho circus to open up hero about the first of next month. It has been decided to bring hero a part of the famous show, and it will arrive on the Wilhelmina, No- vember 29. Mr. De Leon expects to securo permission to use Aala park for the exhibition. The portion of tho great American circus which Is coming hero will In- clude tho usual acrobatic stunts, and a managerie. There will bo two rings going, and the managerie will Include in animals never seen at all by a largo portion of tho local population. he It is many years since a circus visit ed Honolulu, and most of the young- sters in tho city never saw one. Most of them never saw an olophant, and it is safo to say that thoro will ho a rush to havo a look at the one that Is coming on tho Matson steamer. Tho last circus here came In 1895. The Territorial Grand Jury submit'-te- d its partial report to Circuit Judge Cooper this morning, and true bills were found in the following cases: . Ramon Bariado, et als, burglary first degree (two charges); Jose Ferrae, larceny first degree; Yeo Wong Gun.' burglary first degree; Thomas Saffra,, assault and battery with a wenpon ob- viously and Imminently dangerous to life; Henry N. Clark, embezzlement (two charges) and Ben P. Zablan, em- bezzlement. The charge against Za- blan Is similar to those against Clark. OWN OA D PASSENGERS HERE follows: Leader, Walter Howard, vio- lin; W. Forster, one string solo violin; George Pearse, banjo; Joo Pitts, banjo; C. McLaughlin, cornet; XV. Bridges, guitar; L. S..Chaves, baritone and J. Claus, accordion. The aggre- gation is a very entertaining body and won the approbation of passengers and ship's company alike. Among tho passengers are many well jjypwn people, a large number of 'whonf will 'make the trip to the vol- cano. Indeed, thirteen had previously booked passages by tho Mauna Kca which leaves this afternoon at four o'clock and others have declared their intention of visiting Hawaii before leaving the islands. , Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Baker, mission- aries at Kona, returned by tho Sierra as well as the following: E. A. Berndt, of Dlmond and Company; Dr. W. T. Brigliam, curator of the Bishop Mu- seum, who has been in hospital at Sah Francisco undergoing :.n, operation. Dr, and Mrs. J. J. Carey, Dr. Cooper, W. J. Conroy, Mr. and JMrs. A. Gartenborg, Mrs. Churchill Harvey-Elde- r, Hon. J. S. Irby, H. M. Thomson, G,m . Von Hamm, G. J. Waller, Mrs. Blanche Young and her two cliildrem n Dr. Carey is returning with his wife who was taken seriously 111 In Chicago with typhoid fever and whose illness necessitated Dr. presence. Mrs. Carey is now thoroughly restored to health. W. J. Conroy, the millnery commer- cial traveler, is becoming well known (Continued On Pago Eight.) S. K. Kelllnol, Representative-elec- t from the Island of Maui, is a rival of Speaker Holsteln for the position of speaker of the next house. Kelllnol has served In tho legislature before, and. his friends think that he Is fit for the speakership. Also Maui would like to win the plnco, and apparently thero Is going to be a warm contest. Speaker Holsteln has very strong support, as a natural result of his having held tho job, distributed ap- pointments and made a good record. Kolilnol arrived In Honolulu this morning on tho Mauna Kea. "It's all tho family anyhow," ho said. "The Speakor will ho a Republican whoever Is." f HANKSGIVIVNG LINEN SA&E. Ilogirriilng Monday and lustinc until Thanksgiving thoro will bo a great salo of fine Linens at Sachs. At this sale, will bo sold tho largest direct importation of Linens ever made tho Islands. Ktmn'fmH i Wftjj&illiril ton iiir.ftir M MAINLAND WOMEN IN IN I0ND0 1 50 ARE A (Associated Press Cable to The Star.) LONDON, November 18 A thousand woman suffragists, trving to force their way into tho House of Lords and get at Premier As-quitl- i, battled with the police here today. The suffragettes gathered early, with intent to dematid a personal interview with the Premier, and extra police were hurried to the scene. A hundred and fifty women were arrested in the battle with the police which followed the efforts of the suffragettes to force their way into the presence of the Premier of England. The female mob was finally driven back and the police took m of the mAjt active members to jail. The suffragettes wanted to demand introduction of a woman's suffrage bill in Parliament. It is announced that Parliament will adjourn until Nov. 28. AMERICAN FLEEE SAILORS IN RIOT (Associated Press Cable to The Star.) CNKRHOUHO, France, Nov. IS. Two hundred American blue-jiickc- s from the division of the American licet visiting here (odav were expelled from a local cafe for disorderly conduct mid proceeded to riot and stone (he cafe building. They were suppressed, by an extra force of gendarmes summoned to Hie scene. It is nynnHoil lmt i.m'.n will be many court martini's following the investigation being made by the officers of the American fleet. CRIPPEN'S BEFORE here IMaz Russia Metal Fort LOS Nov. IS. Oippen, father of Crippen, who is in under of death for murder of hi u-i- died here The causes of death old and worrv caused by his son's The son is to be in week. ; SUJM'KKSSIiJI) , OANANKA, Nov. IS. Eleven on cnarges oi lomenting revolution SUREST DEFENSE This is the season when slcknoss stalks through the land in tho form of pneumonia. Tho sifrest defenso against tho disease is Chamberlain's Cough For bv all deal ers, Benson, Smith & agents for tiawan, . IB POWDER Absolutely Puca Tho baking powder madofrom Royal Grano Oroam nf Ta4 NoAhuMoLime Phosphate M0 D N ESTED THE HANGING HEVOLUTIOX. Mexicans have been arrested againsl the government. OOOOOOOOcOOOOOOC- - Banister's New Styl es In-- Tan Gun Vici Kid and Tan Kid rnanuFaciurers' Sfioe Co., Lid. 1051 Street FATHE ANOKLKS, .Myron Dr. London sentence the today. were age plight. hanged Loudon next' Remedy. sale Co., only Just Vicl OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO'

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Page 1: WOMEN M0 11 - University of Hawaiʻi

W

j'

Telephone 2365 Star Business Office SECOND EDITIONGar?

VOL. XVIII. rfONOLULU, HAWAII, FMDAY, NOVE.MJ5EK IS, 1M10. No. 5809

MOREELECT UN RESULTS

REPUBLICANS

100r

Latest calculations on the nationalhouse o representatives, based oncomplied but unofficial returns, showthe Democrats will have a safe work-ing majority of 30.

The outcome of the United Statessenate Is now definitely settled. TheItepublicans are assured of 17 newsenators, which, with 34 holdover se-

nators, gives them a total of 50. TheDemocrats are assured ot 15 now se-

nators, which, with 25 holdovers, givesthem a" total of 40.

One senatorship is In doubt thesuccessor of Carter in Montana, wherethere is a tie, on the unofficial count.

The determined totals, however,leave a republican majority in thesenate as follows:

Total membership, 92; necessary tomajority, 47; Republicans, 51; Demo-

crats, 40; doubtful, 1.

The 17 Republican senators consid-

ered assured are from California, Con-

necticut, Delaware, Iowa, Massachu-setts, Minnesota, Michigan, Nevada,North Dakota, (2), Pennsylvania,Rhode Island, Utah .Vermont, Wash-Jngfto-

Wisconsin and Wyoming.The 15 Democratic senators consid-

ered assured are-fro- Florida, Indiana,Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Missouri,Mississippi, Nebraska, New Jersey,New York, Ohio, Tennessee, Texas,Virginia and West Virginia.

A summary of the contest for Gov--

ELECTION WON'T

WASHINGTON, November 9. Rea-lizing the reai significance of tlp De-

mocratic landslide that ousted the Re- -'

publicans from control in the house,President Taft nevertheless believesthat the party of which ho is titularleader will now become united andpresent a solid front to the enemy in1912. Throughout political circles

The Hawaii County Board ot Super-

visors on Wednesday adopteo. a hot re-

port on the fire station sij matter,protesting against the action taken by

Governor Frear and Marston Camp-

bell and accusing them of bad faith.

WillsI Among your duties Is that of

MAKING YOUR VILL. 1910

Is nearly past. Better have

It drawn today. Consult tho

HawaiianTrustCompan y ,

Limited i3 3 j923 Fort Street.

ELECTION FIGURES FROIN DETAIL;

E ft GOOD

III THE SENATE

r. - 2.iui;.x'F jernorships shows the following gov-

ernors elected, with the approximateplurality:

DEMOCRATIC.

Governor ' Plurality.Colorado ShafrothIdaho Hawloy 1,000New York Dtx . . .GG.OOO

New Jersey Wilson 48,000Connecticut Baldwin 3,500Massachusetts Foss 33,000Ohio Harmon 60,000Oklahoma Cruce 1,500Oregon WestWyoming CareyAlabama O'Neal 50,000South Carolina Blease 00,000Texas ColquittNorth Dakota Burke 3,000

REPUBLICAN.Pennsylvania Tenor 33,000New Hampshire Bass 7,000Rhode Island Pothierr 900Iowa Carroll 10,000Kansas Stubbs 14,000Michigan Osborn . . v 40,000Minnesota Eberhardt 50,000Nebraska Aldrlch 5,000South Dakota Vessey. .' 12,000Wisconsin McGovernCalifornia Johnson. .25,000Nevada Oddie .' .

Tennessee Hooper 12,000Fusion. ' '

CHANGE TAFT A BIT

today the chief subject for discussionwas the assertion, made by friends ofthe President, that the Republicanparty from now on would look to Mr.Taft for active leadership.

PROGRAM NOT'CHANGCD.' .At one o'clock the president met the

(Continued on page 7.)

The report of the road committee wasas follows:

"In re communication No. 612 datedHonolulu, November 9th, 1919, fromMarston Campbell, Commissioner ofPublic Lands, addressed to B. B. Richards, president, Board of Trade, hiedwith this Honorable Board and refer-red to this committee, it is recommended that the county clerk he andIs hereby directed to notify Mr. E. E.Richards to the effect that the boardof supervisors have no knowledge ofany arrangements that "have alreadybeen made" by tho Honorable MarstonCampbell as stated by him for the re-

moval of the fire station to the blockon tho north corner of Wailuku. streetand Shipman street extension nor wasIt at any time consulted In referencothereto. Tho board of supervisorsof the County of Hawaii have notagreed to pay their share toward theImprovement of Kuhio street as statedIn tho Honorable Marston Campbell'scommunication, but did, on the 4thof August 1910, In compllanco withtho request dated August the 4th, 1910,of committee from the Boardof Trade of Hllo and keeping in viewalso tho express promise of GovernorW. F. Frear contained in his commu-nlcatlo- n

under date of August 30th,1909, in which ho agreed that tho townportion (Federal Lot) could bo used

(Continued on Pace eight.)

i T

CLARK INDICTMENTS KNOCKED OUT;

NEW ONES FOUND; 11 CHARGED

Circuit Judge Henry E. Cooper ren-dered a decision today sustaining thedemurrer to the indictment in the

cases again former PoliceCourt Clerk Honry N. Clark, on theground that Clark was not as allegedin the indictment, a "custodian" ofpublic funas. New indictments werequick'y found by the Grand jury, andC'ark was arraigned again. The newindictments accuse him as an employeof the 'city and county, entrusted bythe district magistrate with the cus-tody of public money.

SIERRA HAS ER

SRINGS MANY

Tho popular liner Sierra, of theOceanic Steamship Company, arrivedin port early this morning, berthingat the company's wharf a few minutesbefore eight o'clock. She carrie.d 145passengers, of whom 109 were in thosaloon; 25G0 tons of cargo, 2G7 sacksof mails and seven automobiles, sixbelng consfgned to tho Von HaramYouilg Company and the other to B. O.Hall and Sons.

Purser T..-C-. Smith reports a verypleasant trip across the Pacific. Theweather was delightful, particularlythe beantitful moonlight evenings; thopassengers were congenial and severalentertainments were organized to.make the voyage an enjoyable one. M.Paton, who is well-know- n locally, wasone of the foremost in arranging concerts and he gave several good ven- -

triloquial turns. Mr. and Mrs. Z. Old-fiel-

two vaudeville entertainers whoare to open at one of the local housesof entertainment, were also in greatdemand, and others of the passengersand ship's company assisted the goodwork along. Chief among these mustbe mentioned the Sierra's band, a neworganization which has done much towhl'o away the hours for tho passengers on hoard". Though only a newInstitution the band has become oneof the features of the ship, and selec-tions are given nightly on deck. Lastevening, to mark the final night at sea,the members ot the band assembled Inthe social hall and enlivened the even-

ing with musical selections. Thomembers of tho hand, regarding whichPurser Smith is enthusiastic, are as

II. W. DoLeon, representing Barnumand Bailey's circus, arrived In Hono-

lulu this morning on tho Sierra, tomake arrangements for tho circus toopen up hero about the first of nextmonth. It has been decided to bringhero a part of the famous show, andit will arrive on the Wilhelmina, No-

vember 29. Mr. De Leon expects tosecuro permission to use Aala park forthe exhibition.

The portion of tho great Americancircus which Is coming hero will In-

clude tho usual acrobatic stunts, and amanagerie. There will bo two ringsgoing, and the managerie will Include inanimals never seen at all by a largoportion of tho local population. he

It is many years since a circus visited Honolulu, and most of the young-sters in tho city never saw one. Mostof them never saw an olophant, andit is safo to say that thoro will ho arush to havo a look at the one thatIs coming on tho Matson steamer. Tholast circus here came In 1895.

The Territorial Grand Jury submit'-te- d

its partial report to Circuit JudgeCooper this morning, and true billswere found in the following cases: .

Ramon Bariado, et als, burglary firstdegree (two charges); Jose Ferrae,larceny first degree; Yeo Wong Gun.'burglary first degree; Thomas Saffra,,assault and battery with a wenpon ob-

viously and Imminently dangerous tolife; Henry N. Clark, embezzlement(two charges) and Ben P. Zablan, em-bezzlement. The charge against Za-

blan Is similar to those against Clark.

OWN OA D

PASSENGERS HERE

follows: Leader, Walter Howard, vio-lin; W. Forster, one string solo violin;George Pearse, banjo; Joo Pitts,banjo; C. McLaughlin, cornet; XV.

Bridges, guitar; L. S..Chaves, baritoneand J. Claus, accordion. The aggre-gation is a very entertaining body andwon the approbation of passengersand ship's company alike.

Among tho passengers are manywell jjypwn people, a large number of'whonf will 'make the trip to the vol-cano. Indeed, thirteen had previouslybooked passages by tho Mauna Kcawhich leaves this afternoon at fouro'clock and others have declared theirintention of visiting Hawaii beforeleaving the islands. ,

Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Baker, mission-aries at Kona, returned by tho Sierraas well as the following: E. A. Berndt,of Dlmond and Company; Dr. W. T.Brigliam, curator of the Bishop Mu-

seum, who has been in hospital at SahFrancisco undergoing :.n, operation. Dr,and Mrs. J. J. Carey, Dr. Cooper, W. J.Conroy, Mr. and JMrs. A. Gartenborg,Mrs. Churchill Harvey-Elde- r, Hon. J.S. Irby, H. M. Thomson, G,m . VonHamm, G. J. Waller, Mrs. BlancheYoung and her two cliildrem n

Dr. Carey is returning with his wifewho was taken seriously 111 In Chicagowith typhoid fever and whose illnessnecessitated Dr. presence.Mrs. Carey is now thoroughly restoredto health.

W. J. Conroy, the millnery commer-cial traveler, is becoming well known

(Continued On Pago Eight.)

S. K. Kelllnol, Representative-elec- t

from the Island of Maui, is a rival ofSpeaker Holsteln for the position ofspeaker of the next house. Kelllnolhas served In tho legislature before,and. his friends think that he Is fitfor the speakership. Also Maui wouldlike to win the plnco, and apparentlythero Is going to be a warm contest.

Speaker Holsteln has very strongsupport, as a natural result of hishaving held tho job, distributed ap-

pointments and made a good record.Kolilnol arrived In Honolulu this

morning on tho Mauna Kea. "It's alltho family anyhow," ho said. "The

Speakor will ho a Republican whoeverIs."

fHANKSGIVIVNG LINEN SA&E.Ilogirriilng Monday and lustinc until

Thanksgiving thoro will bo a greatsalo of fine Linens at Sachs. At thissale, will bo sold tho largest directimportation of Linens ever madetho Islands.

Ktmn'fmH iWftjj&illiril ton iiir.ftir

M MAINLAND

WOMEN IN

IN I0ND01 50 ARE A

(Associated Press Cable to The Star.)

LONDON, November 18 A thousand woman suffragists, trvingto force their way into tho House of Lords and get at Premier As-quitl- i,

battled with the police here today. The suffragettes gatheredearly, with intent to dematid a personal interview with the Premier,and extra police were hurried to the scene.

A hundred and fifty women were arrested in the battle with thepolice which followed the efforts of the suffragettes to force their wayinto the presence of the Premier of England. The female mob wasfinally driven back and the police took m of the mAjt active membersto jail.

The suffragettes wanted to demand introduction of a woman'ssuffrage bill in Parliament.

It is announced that Parliament will adjourn until Nov. 28.

AMERICAN FLEEE

SAILORS IN RIOT(Associated Press Cable to The Star.)

CNKRHOUHO, France, Nov. IS. Two hundred American blue-jiickc- s

from the division of the American licet visiting here (odav wereexpelled from a local cafe for disorderly conduct mid proceeded toriot and stone (he cafe building. They were suppressed, by an extraforce of gendarmes summoned to Hie scene. It is nynnHoil lmt i.m'.nwill be many court martini's following the investigation being madeby the officers of the American fleet.

CRIPPEN'S

BEFORE

hereIMaz

RussiaMetal

Fort

LOS Nov. IS. Oippen, father of Crippen,who is in under of death for murder of hi u-i-

died here The causes of death old and worrv causedby his son's The son is to be in week.

;

SUJM'KKSSIiJI)

, OANANKA, Nov. IS. Elevenon cnarges oi lomenting revolution

SUREST DEFENSEThis is the season when slcknoss

stalks through the land in tho formof pneumonia. Tho sifrest defensoagainst tho disease is Chamberlain'sCough For bv all dealers, Benson, Smith & agents fortiawan,

.IB

POWDERAbsolutely Puca

Tho baking powdermadofrom Royal GranoOroam nf Ta4

NoAhuMoLime Phosphate

M0D

N

ESTED

THE HANGING

HEVOLUTIOX.

Mexicans have been arrestedagainsl the government.

OOOOOOOOcOOOOOOC- -

Banister's

New StylesIn--Tan

GunVici Kid andTan Kid

rnanuFaciurers'

Sfioe Co., Lid.

1051 Street

FATHE

ANOKLKS, .Myron Dr.London sentence thetoday. were age

plight. hanged Loudon next'

Remedy. saleCo.,

only

Just

Vicl

OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO'

Page 2: WOMEN M0 11 - University of Hawaiʻi

TWO

Oceanic Steamship CompanySierra Schedule

UUTB 8. T. ARRIVE HON. LEAVE HON. ARRIVE 8,

NOV. 12 NOV. 18 NOV. 23 NOV. 29

DEC. 3t DEC. 9 DEC. 14 . .....DEC. 20

DEC. 24 DEC. 30 JAN. 4 JAN. 10

I 4

tConnects at Honolulu with C. A. Lino for Sydney. C A. Lln leavesHonolulu tor Australia Jan. 8, 10 and over? 28 daya

Arrives In Honolulu a week In advance ol C. Une iteamer en routeU Bydney.

RATES from Honolulu to San Francisco First Class, $65 ; RoundCrip, $no. Family Room, extra.

Reservations will not bo held later uian twenty-fou- r hours prior to thoadvertised sailing time unless tickets are paid for in full.

FOR PARTICULARS, APPLY TO

C Brewer & Go., Ltd.GENERAL AGENTS.

Canadian-Australi- an Royal Mail Steamship Go

t.r.M of ihriTD lino runnln In connection with the CANADIAN

PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY between Vancouver, B. C, and Sydney,

M. S. W., and calling kt Victoria, B. c nonomiu uu n.u.i.. .

FOR FIJI AND AUSTRALIA. FOR VANCOUVER.

r.RAT.ANntA DECEMBER 9 MOANA DECEMBER 7

MARAMA January 6 MAKURA DECEMBER

Calls at Vanning Island.

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

Theo, H Davies & Co., Ltd., Ge'l Agents

Pacific Mail Steamship Co.

Toyp Kisen Kaisha S, S. Co.

Bteameni of the above Companies will Call at HONOLULU and Leavetfcla Port on or about the Dates mentioned toelow:

LEAVE HONOLULU FOR ORIENT. LEAVE HONOLULU FOR 8. F.

NIPPON MARU NOV. 29 SIBERIA NOV. Vi

SIBERIA DEC. 5 CHINA '....NOV. 19

CHINA DEC. 13 MANCHURIA NOV. 26

MANCHURIA DEC. 19 CHIYO MARU DEC.

CHIYO MARU DEC. 27 ASIA DEC. 10

191L MONGOLIA ; DEC. 24

ASIA JAN. 3 TENYO MARU DEC. 31

"i... , KOREA :..JAN. 7w; NIPPON MARU 21

I SIBERIA 2S

I CHINA FEB, 4

MANCHURIA 11

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION APPLY TO

H. HACKFELD $t CO. LTD

Matson Navigation Co.'s Schedule, 1910t DIRECT SERVICE BETWEEN SAN FRANCISCO AND HONOLULU.

ARRIVES. S. "LURLINE" NOV. 9

S. S. "WILHELMINA" NOV. 29

S. S. "LURLINE" DEC. 14 '

S. S. "W1LHELMINA" DEC. 27

1S1L

JAN.JAN.

FEB.

SAIL.S. S. "LURLINE" NOV. 17S. S. "WILHELMINA" DEC. 7S. S. "LURLINE" DEC. 20

S. S. "WILHELMINA" JAN. 4

" 'i

CASTLE & COOKE LTD ;. GENERAL AGENTS.

American-Hawaiia- n Steamship Co.FROM NEW YORK TO HONO LULU, via Tehuantepec, every slxtn

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

FROM SEATTLE OR TACOMA TO H0N6LULU DIRECT:S. S. Arizonan to sail.. , December 4'

S. S. Virginian to sail December 1C

for furtner information apply toH. HACKFELD & CO, LTD, AsenU, Honolulu.

B P. MORSE, General Freight Agent.

'UNION PACIFIC TRANSFER COi'S

I , . New Telephone Number Is

'Absolute Reliability in Handling Baggage, "Moving Furniture, Pianos,etc. WOOD AND COAL. STORAGE. '

KING STREET, NEXT TO AlJEX.YOUNG HOTEL.

Firewood and CoalBest Grades Always On Hand

Concrete Brick, Crushed

Rock and Sand

HustacePeck Go. ID. IPhone 2295 63 Queen Street

Ln

re

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1910 ,

TIDES, SUN AND MOON.Full moon, Nov. 1C at 1.64 m.

n sj S si si ?! J ?mm --5 3 o s

a.m. ft. l'.TT vTif. aTmT j

U U U Ji2 7H0 8iH8:13 6sl8 S6

8;lJ;1815 2:27 1.9 2:25 8:10 9.08 4M.1

10 3:09 2.0 .1:05 8:40 10:00 8:146:17 5.4(5

JI --li1 Jiif Jlii? !15117 llIosP. M, T

18 ,4:26 2.2 4:22 9:45 12:00 0:155:17 7:10

l:10tieLl719 5:21 2.2 5:10 10:21 8:19

6:171:1720 C:08 8.1 8.08 11:03 2:18 9:22

Times of the tide are taken fromthe U. S. Coast ana Qeodetlo Surveytables. The tides at Kahulul andHllo occur about one Hour earjierthan at Honolulu. Honolulu standardtime is 10 hours 30 minutes slowerthan Greenwich time, being that ofthe meridian of 157 degrees 30 mins.The time whistle blows at 1:30 p.m.,which is the samo as Greenwich

X) hours 0 minutes. The sun andmoon are for local time for the wholegroup.

I Shipping in Port ft

(Government vessels.)Kukul, from cruise,

August 19.

Thetis, from crulso, Sept.

Mcrcnanr vessels,Ethel Zanc, Am. scnr. from Ililo, Oct.

13.

U. S. L. H. T.

U. S. R C.

Flaurciico AVard, Am. sen. from.Midway, Nov. 10.

Columbian, Am. sir., from Seattle.Nov. 17.

Collingham, Brt. str., from Baltimore, Nov. 10.

Cooke, fromTownsend, 2.

31.

Alice Am, str., PortNov.

PROJECTED DEPARTURES.For San Francisco.

China, p. M. Co., November 19.Sierra, O. S. S. Co., November 23.Manchuria, P. M. Co., November 2G.Chiyo Maru, T. K. K., DecemberWilhelmina, M. N. Co., 'December 7.Asia, P. M. Co., December 10,Sierra, O. S. S, Co., December 14.Mongolia, P. M. Co,, December 24.Tenyo Maru, T. K. K., December 31.

For Vancouver.Moana,. C.-- it. M. s., Dec. 7.Makura, C --A. R. M. S., January 3.Zealandia, C.-- R. M. S., January.

Moana, C.-- R. M. S., March 1.For Fiji and Australia.

Zealandia, C.-- R. M. S., December 9,

p.

Moana, C.-- R. M. S., January 7.Makura, C.-- R. M. b , February 3.Zealandia, C.-- R. M. S., March 3.

For China and Japan.Nippon Maru, T. K. K., Nov. 29.Siberia, P. M. Co., December 5.China, P. . Co., December 13.Manchuria, P. M. Co., December 19.Chiyo Maru, T. K. K., December 27!

INTER-ISLAN- VESSELS.For Hilo ana Hawaii Ports..Mauna Kea, I.-- I. S. N. Co.. Everv

Tuesday. '

Mikahala, every Tuesday,For Kauai Ports.-W- .

G. Hall, I.-- I. S. N Co.. EveryThursday.

Kinau, I.-- I. S. N. Co.. EvervTuesday.

For Maul and Hawaii PortoClandine, I.-- I. S. N. Co.. Everv

Friday., Kau and Kona ports.

Mauna Loa, I.- -I s. N. Co..' alter- -nato Tuesdays and Fridays.

TKANSFOP.T SERYICE.U. S. A. T. Crook at Manila.U. S. A. T. Warren at Manila.U S. A. T. Sheridan at San Fran

cisco.U. S. A. T. Dlx, at Seattle.U. S. A. T: Buford, at San Francisco.U. S. A. T. Thomas at San Fran.

clsco.TI. S. A.'T Logan, as San Francisco.

PASSENGERS. v

Arrived."Por S. S. Sierra, irom San Venn.

cisco: Mr. and Mrs. A. n. AinvntwwMrs. Mary A. Allen, Mr. and Mrs, A.S Baker, Mrs. Nella A. Bell, R JBell, W. J. Bellinger, E. A. BerndtMiss F. Blacow, Mrs. Anna lllodgett,Mrs. C. M. Book, MIssDorotliy Book,Dr. W. T. Brighain, Dr. and .Mrs. J. J.Carey, J. F. Cochrane, Mr and Mrs.S, R. Commandor, Miss Harriet Col-lin-

Miss Sallle N. Collins, Dr. Coopor,W. J. Conroy, j. Coppersmith, Miss N.'wane, mi: and Mrs. C. Cummins and

tor Dow, Mrs. Dow, Mrs. II.j'. jane. v. A. Undo, sir nni ai0, ......

J. T. McConnac, O. B. McLean, J. T.Marshall, M. Mayer, Miss EdwinaMoore, Mrs. F. Nelson, Mrs. W. F.Nordholt, Mr. and Mrs. .Z. Oldfleld,Hans.Olsen, L. H. Perkins, M. Paton,Mr. and Mrs. E. II. Prentice, AlbertKnnuall, Mr aud Mrs. R. W. Robinson,Mr. and Mrs. Ludwfg Schlff, Mr. andMrs. B. Shadwell, Mr. and Mrs. W. W.Mrs. Jessie C. Shaw, B. D.. Stanley,Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Thomson, Mr andMrs. B. O. Tlldon, Miss Tildon, J.Turner, C. C. von Hamm, G. J. Walled, C. Welssman, Mr. and Mrs. H. D.Wheeler, Miss Adelaide Wheeler, MissS. Wheeler, Miss S. Whitman, Mrs.Blanche Young, Master AlexanderYoung, Master Meredith Yonnir. AlovZoffman, and Miss Ida Zoffman.

Per str. Mauna Rea from Maui andHawaii ports: U. Hagens, Mrs. Rich- -'

ardson, Mrs. Neuman, Mrs. Sylvester,Mrs. J. Sylvester, Misses Sylvester (2jMrs. L. Maby, L. S. Conness, W. B.storkmui, C. W. Smith, J. L. Young,Geo. Robertson, Mrs. R. Smith, K. S.LIdgate, Mrs. W. Litigate, Mrs. H. T.Walker, T. H. Fltzpatrick, Mr. andMrs. A. Mason, Mr. and Mrs. J. G.Lewis nnd 5 children, Sam Spencer,C. McBride, C. W. Ashford, H, P. Bec- -kley, C. E. Wright, Geo. A. Cool. H.Akona, and wife, K. Lindsay, Ja3.Lindsay, Kaleko, W. G. Scott. W. F.Drake, Miss E. Lloyd, Mrs. E. A. Peck.J. D. Cameron, T. M. Harrison,, N.Scharlem, Miss Johnson, D. H. Case,W. T. Robinson, S. Kelienve, W. A.Ramsay, A. V. Peters, H. M. Coke, Jas.L. Coke, Mrs. E. E. Dye, MIss.M. LumSung, G. Masuda, K. Hiroknwa.

IPPIJLKThe American schooner W. R. Hume

of 589 tons, uniler the command ofcaptain McKenzIe, arrived In port thismorning, thirty-seve- n days out fromme Columbia River.

strong trades and easterly swellwere reported by the Mauna Kea,

iiicn arrived this morning from Mauiand Hawaii ports, bunging in fifty se-ven saloon and lifty-on- e deck passen-gers- ,

as well as a varied cargo. Onthe outward trip the steamer Niihauwas passed at Hakalau, and the Kaiu-la- ni

at Paauhau and the Maui at Honokaa. The Mauna Kea passed theHelene off Kukuihaele and the Mika-hala at Lahaina. The Niihau is ex-pected to arrive in port on Sunday,and the Maui is also expected in withcattle on that day.

The steamer Enterprise was atwhen the Mauna Kea lPft. hn.

arrived last Sunday. She will nrolmbly leave for the Coast fnrtnvschooner Spokane was ,n0oi,.lumber at the railroad wharf.

The Mauna Ken's cartrn ii,i,iton pieces of koa lunilmr mm 1sting blocks, one automobile, two crates"of chickens, ten crates of turkeys,

,beei' '0gSl emi,ty b".escords wood, locomotive tires andi packages of sundries.me deck passentnrs n m, h

Kea includedno Japanese, 12 Hawai-lan- s,C Chinese, 5 Portuguese, 4 whites,Po,to Weans, 2 Koreans, 2 Rus-sians, and 1 Filipino.

SILK HATS DISAPPEARINGLONDON, Oct 22.-- Thr0

Daratively few silk ,, " " !don today, and the averaKe man ml "

his dress headwear last .hr0 !long as he did formerly. f,.Pie reason that he uses it much lessrequently. Of course, everybody whos anybody possesses this at one timeindispensable and still fashionable ar-icl- e,

but it is used only for ceremon- -Inl occasions, and is not oftoneven in Picadilly or the park.

yjne reason for this falling ntr inpopularity of the silk hat is due, according to a well-know- n manufactur-er, to the advent or the motorcar,which enables an ever increasingnumber of people to llv nut ntwhere the silk hat, with its attend- -'am irock coat, is unnecessary. An-other reason Ib the vogue of the Ham-burg soft hat, popularized throughthe fact that King Edward frequent-ly adopted that type of headwear. Inthe cltv too, tho silk hat has largelygiven way to the once despised "bowl,or," or "billy-cock- ," as It was origin-ally called. Tho morning coat, equallywith the frock coat, tho place of whichit has to a great oxtent taken, needsa silk hat, but tho lounge suit Is nowtho most popular wear, and with Itgoos either the bowler or the

Upton Sinclair, the well knownwriter, 10m uie othor day about anfant, Mr. and Mrs. II. L. Day, Mas- - school address that ho onco made.Mr. and "It was a school of little days." saidMi: Sinclair. '"Tho Jumrln w cnA. R. Fanno, Master Fanno, Dr. J. II. '

th vntn i V .7Farrell, E. 11. Fassett, Mr. and Mrs J ' 1 tinv ., " t,hUSand C0,"eS

thoW. Frike, Mrs. J. F. Fugazzl, Mr dnd ",e' n"d fellng fluBh'Mrs: A. Gartonberg and two chlldrh,,

T

. 0!Vencd m' Ilre88 by laying a live- -

R. M. Uollar bul 00 tho tabI beft"oColder, C. B. Grimes Mrs I me.Churchill Harvey-Elde- r, Mr. and Mrs

1 nm eoIns to tnlk to J'o boysA. S. Healy, A. II. Hodson, Hon. 3. about sclnllsm,' 1 said. 'I hope toS. Irby, Mrs. Irby, Mrs. G W. Jar- - convert you all to socialism. AVhen Idan, Miss Dorothy Jordan, Miss Et-- Inlshmy remarks the boy that giveshelyn Jordan, Mrs. H. p. Knight and m the best reason for turning so- -

child, Mrs. A. Lachman, H. W. Leon- - ciallst will get this (Ive-doll- bill.'ard, C. Littleton, W. McBride, Dr. "Then I spoke for some twenty

minutes. The boys were all convertedat the end. I began to question them

You are a socialist, are you?'said to the boy nearest me.

"Yes, he replied."'And why aro you a socialist?'

asked."He pointed to the crisp five-dolla- r

bill. 'Becauso I the money,' hosaid."

Miss Luella Prouty Littiepage ofthe reclamation service of the UnitedStates Is said to know more aboutthe arid lands in the anyother woman in the country. She notonly knows about the lands, but sheknows how to make them fruitful, andshe gives Illustrated lectures on thesubject In different cities.

Willi 11Estate for sale, special op

portunity. Some' one can secure a

nice home in Kaimuki at a discount

of 10 per cent., on Its actual cost,

owing to the fact that the owner has

left the country and wishes us to

make a quick sale Cash or install

ments. Particulars at our office.

Wo have also a ?2,000 bargain on

Kalakaua Avenue

Office, Corner Mer-chant and Fort Sts.

s

sir,'

need

west than

Real

Honolulu, T. H.

X6XV O 040 OOOA flash arid your message is A

there if you use the Y

WIRELESS S

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

CONTRACTIN THE -

New England MutualLife Insurance Com-

pany Of Boston, Macs.

buuijro me manyadvantages it offerswith those of other

companies

Castle ft Cooke, Lid,

GENERAL. AQENT3

TOO MUCH stress cannot belaid on the importance of havingyour eyes fitted with properglasses.

S. E. LUCAS - - - OpticianMasonic Temple, Alakea St.

DrinkMAY'S OLD KONA COFFEE.

Best in the Market.HENRY MAY & CO.

Phone 1271.

TOM SHARPThe PainterElite Building

Block

C.BREWER&GO..LTD

Sugar Factors andCommissionMerchants

OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS.B. F. Bishop PresidentGeo. H. Robertson

Vice President MonagtrW. W. North TreasurerRichard Ivera BecretaryJ. R. Gait . AuditorGeo. R. Carter DirectorO. H. COOke TOrnotnvR. A. Cooke .' Director

THE ONOTO PEN 4For

jjj

A. & CO., LTD.

Hotel, opp. Union. jS

WVVVrtW.VVftVAWLVll

Catton, Neill & Co.,Limited.

Blacksminand Boilermakers.

First claei worK at reasonable rati.

vv

Rmpire Houseateiy Palace Grill.)

Bethel SL Opp. Empire Theatr.Open Day and Night, Culslno Unaur

passed.BEST MEALS AT ALL HOURS.

1 CHUNG KICK 60 LTD

ANDJOB

Ho. 49 Cor, of Smith ul Hotol Btu,.

Is

2171.

Visit our store and note the elegakidisplay of curios, drawn andhand work.

WE OF OUR

K.Dot near Nnuann.

ATLAS OF

NTW YORK

to.

The I F, Co,, Ltd,General Agents for Hawaii.

Fourth Floor,

salve For Plies,0 contaln nothing injurious.

Eore. cutB, burns ina allof tho human racePrepared by

faecret Salve Specialist &Wo. 10 King St Honolulu. T.'H.

ol401 Bldt

HEW PHONE

FOUNTAIN

Christmas.

B..ARLE1GH

Engineer, Machinists.

CHINESE NEW8PAPHKPUBLISHING

PRINTING.

mi mmAbsolutely Pure

TELEPHONE

Display

novelties,embroidered

Woman's ExchangeINVITE INSPECTION GOODS

FUKURODA

FIRE

ASSURANCE COMPANYLONDON.

TJNDTnTJWTJT'PTi.riciAGENCY.

PROVIDENOS WASHINGTONSURANCE COMPANY.

Dillingham

Stangenwold

Somma's special

cnrr2hi.Ji!.e3.cllI0nl0.

Territorial Board

ImmigrationStangenwafd

HONOLULU.

1697

INSURANCE

Sharp SignSAre

Trade Promoters

ttuvch wire iviattressesnnf Mt ffC0,IeTnt nnfactuto. Noheten. Satisfaction

Beds and Mattresses.

HONOLULU WIRE BED CO.'LTD.,Kapiolani.

Chop

Good

Honolulu

Building.

OFFICB:

Cor. King and Alakea Sts.

Page 3: WOMEN M0 11 - University of Hawaiʻi

f PS

AMUSEMENTS.

Savoy TpleiHotel and Uethel mauka side ot street.

I WIL80N 8I8TER8.

America's greatest lady song anddance artists.

FRANK FOSTER.

Leading monologue artist ot the Cir-

cuits on Doth coasts.

COUNTESS 1RMA de POMME.

The lady whoso volco lias enthralledthousands In Europo and America,

IT 18 THE BIGGESTSHOW IN TOWN

Doors open at 6:30; Show begins 6:45,

Empire TheaterHotel Street

Keala Kaai and Etta Hilbun Vocalists. ,

Motion Pictures

Admission 15c, 10, 5c

Park JMterWills & Hassan,

World's Greatest Equilibrists.. and

MOTIONPICTURES

Novelty TheaterCor. Nuuanu and Pauahl Sts.

, THE MUSICAL MILLERS.

WISE AND MILTON.

GEO. W. STANLEY

Character Artist.

and

LATEST MOTION PICTURES.

. . Y. WO SING CO.

Groceries, Fruits, Vegetables, Etc.

Butter 35c lb.; Fresh Dried Fruits.1186-118- 8 Nuuanu Street.

Telephone 1034. Box 952

WoodlawnMANOA VALLEY.

See CHAS. S. DESKY.

r a a? is reAll Kinds Wrapping Papers and

Twines; Printing and Writing Papers.American-Hawaiia- n Paper & Supply

Co., Ltd.Fort and Queen Streets, Honolulu,

phone 1410. Geo. G. Guild Gen, Mgr.

Cover your floor with

.ChineseMatting

or

JapaneseCotton Rugs

A large shipment Just revelv-e- d

from the Orient. Many

beautiful patterns.

Lewers & Cooke,LIMITED.

177 S. King St.

Shaw & SevilleNEW MONUMENT WORKS.

Latest Compressed Air Equipment.

King Street Near AlaUea.... Honolulu

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

iiWiiriiiM-.'feifi'- riiinf ruin

MORE SOLDIERS B

ORDERED E

WASHINGTON, November 18. Thetwo batteries of the First Artillery

(Light), now stationed at Fort Sill,Oklahoma, being Datteries D and B,

havo been ordered for duty at Honolulu.

Orders wero also issued yesterdayfor the headquarters and CompaniesA, B, C, D, E, F, O and H, of the Se.eond Infantry, now stationed at FortThomas, Kentucky, to prepare for Hawallan service.

MEXICAN AUTHORITIESREADY FOR REBELS,

LiAKEDO, Mexico, November 18.General Vlllare, the commander ofthe department ot the frontier, yeatcrday moved his headquarters fromMatamoras to Nuovas Laredo, propared t0 crush the nrst signs of reDemon against the Diaz Government

Mexican troops aro being strungalong the frontier to prevent the further importation of arms and to driveback any filibustering expeditions thatmay be sent from American territoryto tho aid of the plotters discoveredconcerned in the widespread designagainst the Mexican government.

Many arrests of suspects havo beenmade and the authorities claim to bein the possession of much evidenceconcerning the plot and those involvcd in it.

ANOTHER MEXICAN FORAY,

MAFRA, Texas, November 18. Itis reported here that a body of sixtyarmed Mexicans have crossed the RioGrande and aro advancing upon thetown. The citizens are under armsready to resist any attack, whilenumber of mounted men have beensent through the county to sound thealarm.

Tno town Is well prepared to defend itself.

STRIKE BREAKS OUTIN THE CANAL ZONE

COLON, Panama, November 18.President Taft has finished his inspecHon of the canal work and sailed yesteruay for Guantanamo, leaving behind him a serious situation, with onehundred bollermakers out on strikeand a number of others among theskilled laborers threatening to throwdown their tools.

One of the important matters whichthe President visited the canal zoneto discuss was the question of higher pay for the skilled laborers on thowork, the demand being based on thestatement that the cost of living hadincreased since the wage scale wasfixed. Colonel Goethals, in charge ofthe work, Informed the President,prior to his coming here, that tho do.mand of the men was not justified, In-

asmuch as there had ueen no Increasein the cost of living in the canal zonewith the exception of -. raise of a centa pound in meats.

Tho President mei delegations of(the men yesterday and listened totheir presentation of the case. Ho pro-mised to take the matter under

but the delegates Insistedon an immediate answer. This thePresident refused to give, with theresult that the bollermakers havostopped work and others announcetheir Intention of stopping today.

TABLE LINEN FOR A BRIDE.The girl who is starting a dower

chest will be particularly interestedIn her table linen.

She may well choose either Dres-den or Irish linen, or both, as both aresaid to wear Indefinitely. Where onebuys tho napery In sets, these Includecloths of two yards wide by two, twoand a half, and three yards long, andnapkins of breakfast and dinner size.

If possible, buy theso sets in theirnatural color, and bleach them in thosun. Chemicals used for whiteningaro likely to destroy the texture ufthe linen. Luncheon sets como Inboth Irish and Dresden woven naperyIn all white.

Tho newest luncheon sets, however,aro made from Austrian linen, andconsist of a round cloth and twelvenapkins. Each piece carries a damaskthistle desrgn in pale green, maize,blue or rose on a wlllte ground.

Attractive also are the sets of Hoi-bel- n

pattern in German linen. Thethirteen pieces lncludo an oval spreadand round napkins, with scallopededges and a design in blue or redon a white ground.

CROUP.Not a mlnuto should bo lost when

n child shows symptoms of croup.Chamberlain's Cough Itemcdy givenas soon as tho child becomes hoarso,or oven after the croupy cough aprears, will prevent the attach. Forsalo by all dealers, Benson, Smith &

Co., ngonts for Hawaii.

Fine ol Printing, Star Office.

tUAittu.A..

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER Is, 110

OS E l 'S FELLOW-EDIT- OR

OF THE OUTLOOK SPEAKS F00

NEW YOKK, November 11. Dr. Ly--

man Abbott, edlto of tho Outlook, ofwhich Theodore Roosevelt is a contri-buting editor, today gavo out his (Dr.'Abbott's) interpretation of tho recentelection embodied in an editorial toappear In the next lssuo ot that pub-llcat'o-

"Popular dissatisfaction with present conditions, especially with thehigh prices; indignation at tho manifest control by the special interestsof the tariff revision, and still more atthe defenses and eulogies of the tariffbill; wrath at tho corruption and thehypocritical pretenses disclosed in cer-

tain Influential Republican circles,coupled with the forgetfujness of thefact that the exposure and tho prose-

cution were furnished by Republicans;a growing conviction that there was analliance between the special interestsand the Republican oligarchy, with thebelief that the easiest way to hit at Itwas by voting with the opposition;the fact that the Republican partywas divided between tho Insurgentsand the regulars, while tho Democraticparty, freed from tho tradition ofCleveland and tho personality ofBryan, was, for the first time in years,united all theso causes combinedhelped to bring about a political revolution.

"But I do riot believo tho election Indicates a reaction and a revolution.Tho fact that In every state except In-

diana, where there was a definite po-

pular Insurgent movement within theRepublican party, that party won inthe election; that in every state except

NAVAL EXPEND TUBES

THE VARIOUS GREAT POWERS

The British Admiralty has prepareda comparative statement of total ex-

penditures of the naval powers duringthe last ten years which affords foodfor reflection for economists. Thesecolossal figures in the short period ofa decade aggregate more than fiveand n quarter billions of dollars. Eventhis tells but part of the tale, for inmost cases the totals do not includepensions and the other indirect expen-ditures which, nevertheless, are coninectcd with the existence of naval es-

tablishments. Theso aro more or lessbalanced by items In other budgetswhich do not appear In the British to-

tals, so that the comparison is not mi-

nutely accurate, but the totals whentabulated presont some significantfacts, the most conspicuous being theenormous preponderance of the British

M

Pennsylvania, where there was nosuch movement within the party, orwhere It failed, the Republican partyfailed in the election; thnt with thesingle exception of the Senator fromIndiana, no Senator who was retiredby failure to secure a renominatlon or

represents tho progressiveelement In the party that ot the gover.riors elected a decided majority re-

present the progressive rather thantho reactionary element in their res-pective parties; that the insurgentsaro insurgents no longer, but aro re-cognized as leaders in the Republicanparty all indicates that the election,which is a signal triumph of tho De-

mocratic party, is not a defoat of pro-

gressive principles and does not indicate a decadence of the progressivespirit.

"Nor do I think the Jack o'lanternbugaboo of Mr. Roosevelt's imaginedmonarchlal ambition cut any consldorable figure in the election. The factthat the greatest falling off In the Republican vote was in the State ofPennsylvania, where his voice was notonce heard in the campaign, Is sign!Meant if not conclusive, on that point.

"Mr. Roosevelt was called in to savethe situation. He responded to thecall, but could not turn the tide. Hedid something more Important hoheartened the progressives In his ownparty, carried forward purification sowell begun by Hughes, and did something to Inspire with the spirit of ge-

nuine and national democratic pro-

gress tho party of his political oppo-

nents."

OF

ziaval outlays. The following tablegives the aggregates for tho last tenyears both of the naval expendituresand of the amount of new constructionIn tons:

Naval Newstruction,

1900-191- 0 tons.Great Britain.. $1,695,000,000 1,48C,800France 645,000,000 366,000Russia 550 000,000 293,000Germany 080,000,000 521,700Italy 290,000,000 120,000United States. 1,110.000,000 60.1,100

Japan 285,000,000 97,000It will be seen that the British ex-

penditures are still more than twicethose of Germany, and that In the o

the United States spent far morothan any of the powers exceptingGreat Britain. Tho tables in detail

' Of all the Glidden Tours, that of 1910 was thelongest, and by far the hardest. It lasted for sixteenrunning days and covered 2,851 miles. It starred atCincinnati and went " by way of Dallas, Texas,"through thirteen States to Chicago.

Words and pictures cannot make plain the rackingcobblestone roads of Kentucky the stump-studde- d

forest trails of the Tennessee mountains the swampsof Arkansas the deep, treacherous sands of Texasthe mud of Kansas the bridgeless southern streams orthe sweltering heat that punished cars and men alike.

It Is the opinion of experts who made this tourthat no car in the world could have completed It with aperfect score. Yet, from Cincinnati to Louisville toNashville to Sheffield, Ala to Memphis to LittleRock to Hot Spring to Texarkana to Dallas toLawton, Oklahoma to Oklahoma City to Wichita,Kansas eleven consecutive days out of the sixteen,through the hardest part of the trip and for fivedays after every other car on the tour had beenpenalized, not a single point could be assessed againstthe Chalmers "30" the $1500 car $1600 with mag-neto, Prest-O-Li- tank and gas lamps.

In all the history of motoring, there is nolike this. The Glidden Trophy has never

been won before by a car costing less than $4000.If you are thinking of buying a car, what better

proof could you ask of reliable performance under all

MotorUetrued

show also, that the increase from 1901 ended his career yesterday, being ia'to 1910 was most marked In the cases stantly killed in a fall or eight hun-o- f

Germany and the United States, the dred feet. His death was byadvanco In the case of Germany hav- - one of the most disgraceful scenesing been from $47,000 000 to $ 100,000,- - ever witnessed in America, hundreds000, nnd in our own case from 0f people fighting over his body for000 to $137,000,000. France mnlntnln.ed Its budgck atabout $02,500,000 nn- -

nuaiiy until 1909, when tlio total wnsswelled to $75,000,000. The yearly aggregates for both Russia nnd Japanfluctuated during tho decade, for pretty obvious reasons, and Italy's outlays increased from $24,500,000 to

Philadelphia

MOB FIGHTS FORSOUVENIRS OF TRAGEDY.

DENVER, Colorado, November 18.Ralph Johnstone, the pupil of Or- -

vlllo Wright, whoso sensational flightsin his Wright machine havo been fea.tores of tho recent aviation meets,

Great

Now In

A Voting Coupon50 cent purchase.

is a

souvenirs of the ghastly tragedy.

The person receiving the largest number of votes by 9 p. m. on December24 will be presented with the beautiful

High Grade Foster PianoAt present on view in our window.

Somedody going to get

ifihy Not YouGet your friends to shop at JORDAN'S during

November and December andSpecial values this month

LINENS.A grand stock of new merchandise in every depart

ment. Inspection Invited.

Jordan

MOTOR CARSHPHE Chalmers "30" is the only

medium priced car that wasever awarded the Glidden Trophy

Qralmers

Holiday

made

Company Detroit, Mich.'

mnsjuiiV-'ri- "

Exhibition Garage

Associated Garage Ltd.

BORN.

HALL In Honolulu, November 17,1910, to Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Hall,a son.

To Captain and Mrs. Os-

car Peterson, at Waiakea, Hllo,Nov. 10, a son.

KINNEY To. Mr. and Mrs. Henry W

Kinney, at Waiakea, Hllo, Nov. 10,

a son.

You'll want a now hat for the holi-

day season. Wo'll show you somenne uiff aea nf prices you can't resistYnt lllnjr. Hotel street.

Voting Contest

ProgressFree With Every

valuable Christmas Present

save 'the votes for you.in IMPORTED IRISH

Dellverta art

BoSl?ca

conditions than you have in the Glidden Tour ncerJof the winning Chalmers "30" t

The Chalmers "30" has never been defeatedIn any Important motoring event by any car oflu price and power class. The Chalmers "Forty"won the Detroit Trophy in the 1909 Glidden Tonr.Chalmers cars have won more events of all kind Inproportion to the number entered than other can.

In addition to perfect mechanical performance,yon get in the Chilmcra all the; beauty of lint tadfinish that you can find In any car. )

What more could you ask In any car at any pricethan you get in the medium-price- d Chalmers t

We have never had so large a volume of bnsineasas we have now. There has never been so satisfying ademand for Chalmers cart ai there has been since weannounced out 1911 models. Yet this demand willnot affect the Chalmers policy of building cart forquality, not quantity.

We suggest, therefore, that you place yonr ordernow, so as to be sure of getting the car that It yonrfirst choice. Chalmers can are the first choiceof those who look most carefully Into the

and know the most about automobilevalues.

1911 can art now on exhibition.being according to schedule.

tutelar Stldin Patent

lAirf-f-r-

On at

THREE

followed

$80,000,- -'

Ledger.

PETERSON

automo-bile question

J

T1

A.

Page 4: WOMEN M0 11 - University of Hawaiʻi

fouh . . TIIB HAWAIIAN BTAIt, FIUDAYj NOVEMBER 18, J 910

dail' and semi-weekly- .

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Subscribers who do not get their papers regularly will confer a favorby notifying the Star Office; Telephone zdoo.

"... .1 knlhThe Supreme Court of the Territory or Hawaii rrais ucn. -

HAWAIIAN STAR (Dally) and THE SEMI-WEEKL- Y STAR new.papersof Hawaii, ( sultabl e for aa

of general circulation throughout.the Territoryand decree entered or renderedvertlslng proceedings, orders, Judgments

In the Courts of the Territory of Hawaii."should not be addressed to an I --

dividualLetters to THE HAWAIIAN STAR

connected with the offles, but simply to HAWAIIAN STARoraccording to tenor or purpose.Business Departments,to the Editorial or

DANIEL LOGAN

FRID iVY NOVEMBER'

THE rin M ATE SOLUTION.

.EDITOR

made an uigun cntrorrespontlont, .asfrequentMr. Osborne, aworthy of attention in behalf of extending the proll f"'f m

io the plantation Held laborers. Such a scheme b j go aof labor, aslw. iiMitt t,iti'iitl I iVItVillT 111"

THE

strikes and theMuigration

well as stimulate effort of the laborer to make himsc 1 ol Hill vniutwith the laborers has the merit o

for his wages. A division of proiltsbeing capable or immediate adoption. It would only, ''ever, be a

partfal remedv for the delieiencies of the present ol seemingof labor for sugar an alions.and holding an adequate supply the.

The labor question for the main industry is becoming more 1 fi ti i. ,r,.n-ii- i r ntlii.i- - industries that renin re a' large amount

them to compete, on some- -

of labor at rates of wages which will enablethin" like fair terms, with similar industries uim-wiuii-

tiSomething more than prolit-sliarin- ami uie urn nu "

act planting will be needed, to place the sugar me )U,the

18,

newer industries, salely he.Non. u,e 'V " ,simnlv oi me wu .uc-- -. ......of cliean labor, anu

i .... ', i :

ments for obtaining ana Keepmf;v n iw. ,iu.,m nlroadv tried or discussed by

nlrmlm-- s for solving the labor p

1010

the sugarl'oniem, which ims ureu u luvuig uuk

ever since the beginning of the industry, the scheme tbat must noiu a- r- -e if not the slipreme solution is that of independent cultivation of

lfiiwl Unit llV n (' H I IllUin. in l rniin unit. Ma

working out successfully with white farmers in Queensland, and the

beet su-- ar industry of the United States is a domestic example that

mav fairly be quoted in its favor. ome oi me iuuuiuk Mip.iiare coming round to supporting the principle of cultivation by small

farmers, promising a fair deal for the niilling.of cane raised by home-

steaders. '

Self-attractin- g labor conditions would end the necessity or assistedimmigration. Wherever labor is offered fair living chances, the

'

sup-

ply does not fail the demand. .

THE PAVING MATTER.

An approach to rational criticism of the board of supervisors on the

paving question is made by the Advertiser today. While it disavowsWnwwt iii tho. Warren bitulitbic contract, upon which its

recent attack on the board was nevertheless based, it makes turtlier,iuu.ioinf.iit rwrnvdinir that matter which call for correction.

Asserting in effect that the supervisors trilled with the Warrenproposal since February last, the Advertiser proceeds to say: "Notone of them made any suggestion that ligures,,be secured ironi ouiercontractors, although there was a lot ol ran; anoiu advertising un- -

This is not so There were suggestions that bids from other con-

tractors, for different kinds of paving, should be obtained. A majorityof the board, however, favored the bitulithic from information re-

garding its success elsewhere. Its promoters also were the iirst onesenterprising enough to make a proposal for paving, or to show any

readiness to undertake such work, and were therefore entitled tfl

special consideration provided that they proved their terms to be

reasonable. Time was also an important element, for if once a battleof rival pavements were opened there would be small chance of adecision within a year.

It was after the mayor's veto of the paving ordinance had beensustained that the board resolved to call for bids. As the resolutionwas confined to the Warren bitulithic pavement, and the Warrenpeople declared they would not bid, the resolution was not carried out.To go back a stage, it may be mentioned that the failure to prove theterms fair, together with indiscreet conduct in promoting the measure,had much to do with the sustaining of the mayor's veto. Here is wheretlie Advertiser iniirht have found reason to criticise the board. It wassuggested to the road committee, when the matter was referred to it,that it should report data showing that the price was fair. The committee disregarded the suggestion,inaking only athat the ordinance pass. Similarly, no satisfaction was obtained fromthe chief promoter, by a member who asked him for data to answer theobjections regarding the price. So the members ot the road committee,equally with the Warren people, are responsible' for the fact that theordinance was finally submitted to the board, under the veto, without aword or a figure in reply to definite allegationsQshowing the price tobe excessive. The like silence was maintained by the road committeeand the promoters when the contract was again brought up this week,after the road committee had failed to make any reservation of itsfunds for the work which it could easily have done at any tune between July 1 and October 1, the further back the easier. If, therefore,the Advertiser laid its fault-findin- g in the right place its criticism ofthe board of supervisors in this matter would have real weight

There are..ptber assertions and opinions in this morning's articleWHICH UU injustice tu ims uuuru ui isuin un i iwwiv. uviiu-u- :

two extracts in point :n;

Two years have passed since the .present supervisors, "were elected to office, and today we are no nearer havingdecent downtown pavements than then.

This is what the supervisors are to blame for. They haveutterly neglected their opportunity. It was not because thematter was not presented to them nor because they have notspent plenty of time in talking it over. It is simply becausethey were too incompetent to do anything but sit aroundwrapped in their mantles of importance. Fort street hasbeen in a disgraceful condition for ninny months. It was thedeclared intenion of the supervisors to pave it, but whetherthey expected paving concerns were going to fool with themfor a sixteeii-thousand-doll- contract or whether they hopedto so disgust the Fort street merchants that they would getin and do the work themselves, is not in the minutes.

The first paragraph quoted is not true. Merchant street for its en-- '.' tire length has been decently paved with a near bitulithic process. Itssurface is as clean and smooth as asphalt. 1'ieces dug out of it by aplumber Inyiijg a pipe, when it was only a few weeks completed, com-pared favorably in hardness with the Warren bitulithic samples ex-

hibited Jiere. Hotel street from Alakea to Richards has been widenedand paved with oiled macadam, doing away with a disreputable' pieceof street which was the most disgraceful heritage, considering thatHotel .street led to tlie leading Hotels and clubs, left to county govera meat.

As to whether the supervisors "expected paving concerns were co- -

iug to fool with them for a sixteeu-thousaud-doll- contract," the facts

Uncle WaltThe Poet Philosopher

Last eve t sought the church and heard a gifted pastor preachthe Word. He talked of men whose days were o'er two thousand

years or more. He talked of kings whose bonesTHE were dust, whose sceptres were reduced to rust so longPREACHER ago their stories seem like fragments of a summer

dream. Ho said no word of those who strive inthis old world, intense, alive, who light their battles every day, ob-scurely, in their feeble way. I'd just as soon be in the dark con-cerning Father Noah's ark; L care not for the tents of Rani, or Joseph'scorn, or Jonah' whale; 1 want to hear 'my pastor talk about the peo-ple on this block, whose lives are full of stings and smarts, whoseproblems often break their hearts. I'd rather learn some way to cheersome hopeless toiler struggling here, than learn how Pharaoh blewhis dough about live thousand years ago. The dust of kings in an-cient ground is worth a half a cent a pound; and Ashur's widows'tears were dried before old ,7 till us Caesar died; the things of whichmy pastor talks are dead as Adam's brindled, ox, but all aroundus there are cries, and wringing hands and weeping eyes. He'll haveto get his text on straight, and bring his gospel up to date.Copyright. 1010, s- - aeo. Matthew Adams. WALT MASON.

have been shown' indicating that one paving concern did fool withthem to its own discomfiture and the postponement of paving for-Fo- rt

street. ,That the present board of supervisors has not inaugurated a sys-

tematic scheme of paving the business section, and only done theactual work in that direction already indicated, can not be made thegrounds of a serious indictment of them for incompetency, nor justi-fication for the abusive language of the Advertiser. When the boardtook ofllce there was an enormous amount of slreet"construction re-quired in town and suburbs, particularly in the rapidly buildiii" upnew residential sections. Many miles of the older and most importantthoroughfares were also sadly in need of reconstruction or repairs.There-- is still much to be done, but what has been accomplished tlieboard should have credit for. .Moreover, the board was pledged tothe voters for the construction of tlie island belt road. This 7tnii..has been redeemed in two large contracts, costing thirty thousand.umi.ii-..-

, m nun now mere is a line automobile thoroughfare aroundthe island.If the Advertiser cannot be generous, it ought at least try to befair.5BeH3BR-3fc- 2

PLANNING

NEW YORK, Nov. 10. .The Com-

mercial cable company has evolved anew system of tolls which it believeswill reduce the cost of cable messagesone-hal- In explaining the proposedsystem, Clarence Atackay said:

"The Commercial cable company hasbeen at work for some time past informulating a plan by which the ratesfor cablegrams sent by the generalpublic, In other words cablegrams inplain language as distinguished fromcode language, will be reduced aboutone-hal- That plan has now been

GONGDOi

TO GUT GABLE TOLL?

L

GAINS AND LOSSES

Congressional gains were made bythe Republicans and Democrats in thefollowing states and districts:

Connecticut,Illinois, Gth, 7th, 9th, 10th....Indiana, Oth

Iowa, 2d

D. 11.

2d 1 ..4 ..1 ..1

Iowa, 4th, 8th 2Kentucky, 9th 1 ..Maine, 3rd 2Maryland, 3rd Gth 2 ..Massachusetts, 3rd 1 ..Massachusetts, 14th 1

Michigan, 1st, 5th '2 ..Missouri, 14th, (It), 13th, 14th,

10th 4 1

Nevada, at large 1

New Jersey, 3d, Gth, 7th, 8th.. 4 ..New York, 1st, 3d,' 4th, Gth,

13th, 15th, 17th, 21st, 25th,27th, 33d. 3Gth 12 ..

New York, 3hdNorth Carolina, Gth, 8th, 10th. . 3 . .

Ohio, 2d, 7th, 11th, lGth, 18th19th, 21st 7 ..

Oklahoma, 3d 1 ..Pennsylvania, Gth, 8th, 12th,

22d, 24th 6 ..Pennsylvania,, lQth .f-- 3

Rhode Island, 1st. . . . "V." . ... iWest Virginia) 1st, 2d, J3d, 4th.. 4 . .

i :t ' . - V !

Totals 57 1

Net Democratic gain, 50.

worked out, and inasmuch as it willrequire the of the tele-graph lines In Europe, where the gov-ernments own the lines, our plan In-

volves a proportionante reduction inthe land line rates charged by Euro-pean governments, "and hence the co-operation of those governments willbo necessary.

"At present the cable rate is 25cents a word. The proposed plan isto charge 12 2 cents for every fiveletters in that class of telegrams. Wehave found by careful investigationand examination of a great numberof cable messages that plain languageaverages only five leters to the wordand hence, if we charge only 12 2

cents for five leters (every letter inI the cablegram being counted asthough the whole cablegram were oneword), the result would be that thepublic in sending cablegrams would

I pay but half of what it now pays. Itis a part of the plan that these re- -

duced rate messages would be subjectI to prior transmission of messages paidfor at a higher rate.''

Unfurnished.

Aiea, 3 B. R ?50.00Kalmuki 7th, 6 B. R 45.00Kam. IV Rd., 4 B. R 25.00Lewers Road, 3 B. R 30.00Kalmuki Oth, 2 B. R . 30.00Kam. IV Rd., 3 B. R 25.00Waipio, 3 B. R 12.00,Pawaa Lane, 2 B. R 17.50Bates Street, 4 B. R 50.00Kam. IV Rd., 2 B. R 15.00Klnau Street, 3 B. R 30.00Beretania'st. 3 B. R 30.00

Trent Trust Co.,LIMITED.

Kee-Lo-x CarbonHAS NO EQUAL.

The noii-sinu- t, non-greas- e carbon that will give clear copies.

The paper for the man who wants to read his,copics.

Hawaiian News Co., LtdMAIex'SI0UMl5

I

DO YOU SPRAY?And are you anxious to get rid of tho many pests that ruin your

plants and trees7 if you want to Bet rid of the pests you will be In-terested in "lll.ACK liKAI'' 40" and the following expert testimony:

From O. H. llremucr, Secretary Citllfoniln State Commission ufHorticulture!1 am convinced In my own mind that "Black Leaf 40" willprove a great success on youiiB lecanlums and other soft bodiedscale Insects, also white lly larvae (A. cltrl), whoh UBfcd In com-

bination with a small amount of.oll emulsion or soap.used

i nu.v aeuii un ciiiuicuv;' uiuruuHfliy lesieu Oil tlirlDS anu IlttVOthe same combination, "Jilaok Leaf 40" and 2 per cent, oilemulsion. On red snider with romarknbln si

I have also used "Black Leaf 40" In combination with Arsenateof lead for calvyx spraylngof apples and not only prevented thoattack of codling moth, but completely controlled tho curl leafaphis, which has been such a destructive pest for the past fewyears,I also am convinced that the coating of tho seed of the cucurbl-ta- ofamily (cucumbers, squash, etc.), or any other seed attacked bywire worms with the ordinary "Black Leaf" will prove the mosteffective remedy yet tried for these troublesome pests.

One 10 1- lb. can of Black Leaf 40 will make up 1,000 gallons ofthe spraying lluld you need. Wo' have It put up In smair bottles fortho convenience of those who only need a little to spray a few choicePmi,b A1,10 Hawaiian Experimental Station experts what theythe ioai-2Ul-

b can atSa' ''l b(mIes by tlle Ballon or by

E. O. HALL & SON, LTD

TOYS! TOYS!At last we have our Toy Department open again with a

fresh stock of Toys, Gaines, Puzzles, and a line line of books.

WAIwi, NICHOLS CO., xtaEXCLUSIVE PATTERNS IN HANDSOME GREYS

English and American Weaves. Made to your order withaim styie unequalled.W. W. AHANA 62 South King Street

Nasal CatarrhWE HAVE SHE REMEDY RELIEF IS SURE.

THYMO-BOilO- L

PROMPT AND EFFECTIVE FOR A QUARTER.

Nasal Douches for 75 Cents.This is one of the latest and best catarrh remedies:

Benson, Smith. & Co., Ltd.HOTEL AND FORT STREETS. PHONE 1297.

CLEAN CURTAINS FOR THANKSGIVING.The most critical of your guests will be unable to find faultwith your curtains after we have cleaned them.

FRENCH LAUNDRY. J. Abadie, Prop. 777 KING STTelephone 1491. No branclies;

I You think of THANKSGIVING DINNER and you think 1

HEINZI Mince Meat1

FOR THE PIE. ,'

I Your grocer sells it. Insist on having it. iI Make a list of the "57," they will add to the dinner. 1

Art Glass DomesAIND

eading LampsSpecially Selected For The Holiday Trade

The Hawaiian Electric Co., Ltd.

Page 5: WOMEN M0 11 - University of Hawaiʻi

r

ft

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1910

Financial and CommerciBy I. X. TIMMOSS

THE LATEST

MARKET

The Federal Reporter (New York)of November 1 contained the follow-ing:

RiAW SUGAR The only businessreported Is a salo of 10,000 bagsCubas which was made last week tothe Revere Sugar Refilling Company,for prompt shipment from Liverpool,on the basis of 3.80c duty paid, de-

livered Boston for 96 dog. test. Therels,more of this Cuba sugar In Europethat could today bo bought on thesame basis, and either new or old cropbeets are obtainable on about today'smarket. There- are now three car-goes of Javas, amounting in all toabout 20,000 tons, at the Delaware,Breakwater unsold, two cargoes ofwhlch'J'belong" to European holders,who also own most of the Cuba sugarthat is in store in New York, for im-

porters' account. For these suppliesthe equivalent of 3.88c duty paid isasked, the sugar evidently being heldabove the market in the belief thatsome refiner, in need of Immediatesupplies, will pay the premium asked.On the other hand, refiners aro indifferent, and state that they are notinterested in making further purchases, even at the prevailing spotprice. The closing is very quiet, withthe spot market on the basis of 3.80cduty paid for 9G deg. Centrifugals,3.30c duty paid for 89 deg. Musco-adoe-

and 3.05c duty paid for 89deg. molasses sugars.

EUROPE. Prices abroad haveshown a slight Improvement, and to-

day's closing Is firm, as follows:November BuyeKS 8s 9d, equals

3.84c, duty paid New York.December Buyers 8s 10d, equals

3.84c, duty paid New York.May Buyers 9s 2d, equals 3.92c,

duty paid New York.August Buyers 9s 4d, equals

3.9Gc, duty paid New York.JAVAS. Aside from the three car-

goes at the Breakwater unsold, theroaro about 48,000 tons due to arrivebetween now and tho first of the year,20,000 tons of which are unsold.

LOUISIANA. The harvesting ofthe crop seems to be going on verysatisfactorily, and arrangements arenow the Drown, Hancarload of Louisiana sugars to NewYork.

DOMESTIC BEETS. Yesterday thowestern refiners, who have been nam-

ing a price 4.40c for Chicago andWest, advanced tho price to 4.50c,

which is tho price the Michigan re-

finers have been naming.REFINED SUGAR. All refiners are

quoting on the basis 4.G0c, cash less1 per cent., f. o. b. New York TheFederal Sugar Refining Company hasnamed a price of 4.55c at some

nolnts where they havesugar they wish fo clean up, but thisIs not the general quotation, and doesnot apply to sugar for shipment fromNew York. At the moment the Fede-

ral Sugar Refining Company is aboutj, week behind in making deliveries.

FOR A NIGHT OR TWO.

If one has the time a trip to Haleiwaduring the week will be ample com-

pensation for any trouble mayY,o In packing. Tho end of the two

hour ride is a delightful one andone would fall to enjoy the brightmoonlight nlgljts. On Saturday therewill probably be a dance, one of thosort so much enjoyed by the guests

of this hotel.Owners machines find tho trip

over tho road a pleasant one and

there is always a gathering of en-

thusiastic motorists the hotel. Per-

sons who aro here for a so-

journ will find tho ride by train full-- of interest.

. - Fine Job PrratwR. wot .ouTca

Circus

SUGAR

El

JSC"

ComingThe Great Show

OF

Siepst, iiiifion & Foster

From The Famous Barnum & BaileyCircus,

Will Arrive Hero Per S. S. Wilhol-mln- a,

November 29, And Open5.

2 RINGS 2

Watch Out For Later Announcements,

PLANTERS

ANNUAL BANQUET

It was a nice, quiet little time of Itthat the members of the HawaiianSugar Planters' Association .had atthe Young hotel last evening. Thebanquet phase of the pllikla went offub such things have hitherto eventu-ated, thero being musical accompani-ment to the ordinary, proceedings.Seated at the center table with Chairman E. D. Tenncy were Governorrrear, Judge Dole, W. O. Smith, De-

legate Kalanlanaole, G. N. Wilcox andothers.

After the feast the party adjournedti Uitj makal pavilion where thetheatrical stunts were pulled off.Among tho features was a comical5kotcn entitled "A Little Bit of Each,"staged by sonic of tho best playersfrom tho Orphouin. Other actors anduclrosscs of the city's play-hous-

nlso presented selections or special-lie- s.

The musical part the entertain-ment was 'excellent.

"The folowlng were present: Presi-dent B. D. Tenney, Governor W.Frear, V. O. Smith, C. F. Eckart,R. Stackable, T. Davies, S. B. Dole,G. N. Wilcox, A. G. M. Robertson,Prince Cupid, L. A. Thurston, W. G.Ogg, Chalmers, A. G. Curtis, Wm.Pullar, J. Ross, F. W. Terry, J. H.Mackenzie, W, Lanz, A. Ahrens, C.Wolters, W. H. Campbell, A. W. T.Bottomley, E. H. Wodchouse, J W.Waldron, W. II. Babbitt, R. W. Shin-gle, L. Weinzhelmer, F. Klamp, J. T,Moir, Noel Deerr, E. V) Wilcox, J. P.

Cooke, A. Adams, Alex. Lindsay, E,M. Ehrhorn, W. J. Hartung, C. R. Wll.cox, L .D. Larsen, G. Rodiek, G. Chalmers, J. A. Kennedy, L. J. Warren, RFursey, A. E. Jordan, H. B. Penhallow,D. L. Conkling, H. Focke, F. Weber,K. 3. Hosmer, F. Evans. J. A. Wight.A Smith, II. II. Renton, J. H. Wale,j . Waterhouse, Geo. McCubbin, W,C. Parke, R. S. Norris, A. LIdgate, Geo.Watt, C. H. Atherton, R. Catton, W. F.Dillingham, B. D. Baldwin, W. J.Dyer, Edw. Pollitz, A. Gartley, GeoRentjn, H. Lyon, John Hind, J. N.S. Williams, Wm. Stodart, O. HSwezey, C. H. Tuttle, B. F. Bishop, JGibb, V. S. Clark, M. Campbell, WTfoteiihauer, A. Horner, John Watt,S. S. Peck. W. W. Goodale. Geo. Cas- -

being made to forward first Ue R c C. H. Cooke, G.

of

of

thero

no

of

atshort

of

F.E.

C.

J.

C.

L.

sen, L. S. Hjorth, W. R. R. Potter, F.R. Werthmuellcr

Tho committee in charge of the dinner were E H. Wodehouse, W. IIBabbitt. A. W. T. Bottomley, and LJ. Warren.

REPORTS OF DUN

AND (BRADSTREET

R. G .Dun & Company (New York),writing under date of November 11,have the following td say concerningthe business situation:

In Its bearing upon the future buying power of the country the most im-

portant development of the week Is

the official confirmation of tho Har-

vesting of the biggest corn crop on

record, considerably over 3,000,000,ouubushe's. The government report ofcotton ginned Is also holnful,, indicat-

ing a crop well in excess of last year."Th business outlook, however,

is doubtful, and under conservativernntrol with the volume of transactions considerably below full Rapacity.Tim financial situation continues tomaintain an ascendancy over the com-

mercial and while thero is no s.uusiautial recession of the more hopefulsentiment recontly established, finan

cial conditions aro not clearly dolln.pi!W"nWfBSfngfh'6co)fBressIonaland state elections-- , remove one lro- -

uprtant uncertainly, but enpugn timeflas --not eiapSed 1h "'which' Xo form acomplete judgment as to the ultimateeffect upon trade Interests. Physical

conditions which make for continuednational prosperity aro nearly all thatcould bo desired. What is holding

back tho full measure c businossactivity and profit that is desired areperplexities of man's own making,

which spring output the conflicting In-

terests of competing classes."It is tho hopo of rapidly gottmg

rid of most of theso anxieties mui io

at tho basis of tho recently developeuvital change in actual conditions.

'Iron aiid steel trado is waiting fortho railroads to make their rail andothor purchases, tho railroads havebeen waiting for tho rate question tobo settled and the election and linanclal uncertainties to be removed.

' The dry goods market is in a waitlug condition with the bulk of trnns- -

sactlons for immediate requirements.Increasing consumption of coppor isone of tho hopeful features of tbosituation and tho greater magnitudeof export trado Is another.

"Shoe conditions aro most stablebut the volume of trado continues

BISHOP STREET PROMOTERS HOLD

EaTENS BUS WEEKLY

Bids bave been opened at tho ollices The Promotion Committee yesterof Architect Emory for the reconstruct uay afternoon received from R. Ktion of garage buildings and tho erec- - Bonlne the revolving Kiosk, carryingtion of new buildings made necessary J views of the Islands, which will boby the extension of Bishop street from placed in a window or the PromotionMerchant street to King street. j

'rooms. This unique ornament Is to

A considerable slice is to be taken be illuminated day ana night, andoff the Ewa side of the Associated Ga- - j wni be operated by electric power,rage building and considerable stretch j Each of the twelve panels in theof new wall Is to be put in. About framework carries a large and well-one-h-

of tho presont Schuman ga- - selected view of some part of the Isl- -rage goes out, leaving a long narrow nllds. When in Oporation this kioskolllce building facing on Merchant Wii be very conspicuous. The Corn-stree- t.

Back of the latter will bo a mltteemen expressed themselvesgarage, having 75 feet front ter(ln.. nfteroon na noinc much

on the present Schuman promises andrunning back 125 feet to the rear ofthe Stangenwnld. Another building,also of concrete, will start near theWalklkl end of tho big structure andrun out to Queen street, Its width being GO feet and depth GO feet

Tho tenders as received are as fol- -'

lows: John Ouderklrk, $1I,G24; Lucas I

Brothers, $14,891; F. Rodward, $14,- -'J Z made to Admrial Rees, commandant958; F. Bertelmann, $15,370; Fred ,,,,'of tho nava' station, rcgnrdIlarrison, $1G,490; John Walker, $1G

070.

Ouderklrk, being the lowest bidder,will receive the contract. Work willbegin as soon as possible.

PAPERS FILED THURSDAY.

Kapahu Alakal to von Hamm-Youn- g

Co., Ltd., c. in.,L. K. Kakani and wife to Kaeleku

Sugar Co, Ltd., receipt.L. Klrkpatrick to Joseph M. Irvine,

deel.Mary K. C. Ah Chow and husband

to Lahalna Agr. Co. Ltd., deed.Kapiolani Est, Ltd., to Jacob S.

Bailey, lease.James Collins and wife to John

Bryan i, deed.Est of B. P. Bishop by Trs to Kane-oh- e

Rico Mill Co., Ltd.,, lease.

OPIUf CASE.The charge of having aided In the

concealment and Importation of opiumagainst Chew-ye- e was the morning

continued this morning ness HeJudge and Jury, and, qulto

The Attorney ,busy had mosefound gn able

premises and tho Berndt's principal businessthe jury and the tho coast was Investigate tho

house of the defendant. During thohearing of tho there was ex-

hibit of opium valued aton the table In court-roo-

AORANGI RUNNING AGAIN.

SAN FRANCISCO, November 12.

The of snipping relations between San Francisco and Aus-

tralia was signanzed yesterday by thein port of the liner

Union com-- 1 the Pinectar Company,came Welling-- 1 ,naue pinectar

Mr uernat thisgive this more commanicatlon Zealand and Aus-

tralia.Within month, tho Maital, sis-

ter ship of tne Aorangl, will also bethe

moderate. leather holds firm insteady demnnd,

upper leather, grainssplits ,are dull ever.

Bradstreet, day, pub-

lished tho following:"Trade reports whole arc moro

favorable for sometime. Distribution at retail has quitoKcnerally improved, largely because

colder weather andbumper corn and oat crops, though

some of southwest and thesouth report that weatherdeterred However, thomuch business in retailhas resulted larger Yoiumo jou-bin- g

reorders, for season-

able goods, boots and shoes andwomen's wearing npparel. Quiet con

tinues in tho textllo trades, and whilethe undercurrent ischeerful, of

business In largo volume. Holi-

day goods being shipped In largoolumo nnd arc Bond-

ing In orders for spring"Tho largo crops aro taken nugur

lowor prices for foodstuffs, but thisnot looked for immediately and

some notably oggs and gut-

ter, Atcolcctlons have improved, but pay-

ments are not yet all shouldbe.

Industrial operations show littlobottermont, somo toxtilo mills havoresumed, but affairs In tho iron andsteel trado havo not assumed suchshapo to allow clear prediction

tho future. While railorders aro oxpectod this month,rallwnys whole do not give muchpromlso of ordering heavily

"A significant featuro trans-

actions In wool for export profitable. This week English buyers

pleased tho innovation.Unanimous endorsement was given

tho purposes of the 100,000 form,ed by Mr. C. A. Stanton.'. com-

mittee will not only Tiolp workalong, but will rece:ve and handleIts funds, provided 'ill the club'.i

"

W. H. Hoogs reported. on visitH.

II.

lug the fence removed aroundthe station's park. Admiralanswered tho question by asking another, however, he wanting knowwhy the did not sprinkletho streets of the naval station neighborhood oil to make thowaterfront there tolerable to the publie.

Mr. Wood's weekly report (rmblished was read and proved ofmuch interest tho

ROM

MEET

THOM

COAST TOUR

A. Berndt, manager ofand Company and secretary of theMerchants' returned in

preferred Chlng Sierra this from a bustbefore visit to California. looks re

States Robertson a markably well, althoughDistrict gave evidence., all the tnme, a enjoy

as to the opium the tour.

Dlmond

United

havingof the defendant, Mr. on

judge, counsel visited prop

trial an$2,000 lying

the

arrival British

placed

goods.

re-

garding

of Purilssina Hills Oilfor purpose ho up

Into Santa Maria oil district.report, will bo submitted tolocal stockholders company in

days, favorable char-acter.

Tne second business of Berndtdo placing agencies for

product of Clark FarmCompany, which will be handled

Aorangl of the steamship Sales

E

Com-

pany,

Pinectar.

pany. The vessel from ..j an connections,"the forerunner of iieet that will : morning,

cltypnce directwith New

the a

on run.

Soleprico with a but

particularly and

on the same

as auniformly than

of the realizationof

parts theopen has

improvement.better lines

In, oiparticular,ly

dry

conservativelythero is no anticipation

futurearo

travelling menhotter

to

Ijproducts,

aro high. tho samo time

that they

a

as asomo

thoas a

soon,is that

nro

NG

with

Club,Thethis

as';

a

fromRees

toauthorities

with so as

yesterday)to committeemen.

Emll

Association,

to

as

erty theand that went

the Hiswhich tho

of thea few Is very In

Mr.had to with

a theby

ton, a saIa 'and

very

probably arranged for the sale of ourentire output on the Pacific Coast.

"Pinectar has taken like wild-fir- e

over there, and our problem In thefuture will be to supply the demand.I can plainly see that the output heromust be speedily and enormously In-

creased. Manager Covington, of tnePinectar Sales Company, has beenhighly successful In closing advan-tageous contracts."

"Business conditions on the Pacificcoast are much improved," continuedMr. Berndt. 'In fact this Is the firstyear since the earthquake that buslness has been normal. Everythingthere now looks jrosperous andtho future Is promising."

THE 100 000 CLOB

HAS GOOD START

The organization of the "100,000

Club." which was perfected at theUniversity Club yesterday and referred to in the Star of the afternoon,lias boon received by tho public withmore than ordinary interest. At themeeting of tho Hawaii PromotlouCommittee in tho nftornoon the project was unonlmously endorsed. Earlythis morning Secretary Stanton be-

gan the active work of enlisting thocooperation of the ontiro city, und Islooking for a couplo of young ladiesto assist.

Particulars concerning .tho organlzatlon may bo found In the following

(Continued to Page 7.)

TIME FOR CORRECTION.It is easy to make n blundor at In

the Y. M. C. A. matter; but it Is thoeasiost thing in tho world to go rightafter it, and correct tho same!

EDITOR TIMES

purchased largo quantities In tho Bos- - tnrors nro running two-thir- to throeton market. Eastern shoo manufac- - fourth capacity,"

1

.

LANTERS

I L T G

The Hawaiian SUgar Planters' As.soclatlon held a meeting, lasting abouttwo hours, this morning for tho purpose of finishing up the discussion oflabor matters.

Some of tho details sifted out oftho reports and discussions were re-

ferred to tho trustees of tho Association to be handled tn sucli manner nsmay bo deemed proper. Other mat-ters of more local uaturo were referred to tho associations on the isl.nnds to which they properly belong.

The convention this year, whichended with the adjournment sine dlothis morning, was ono of the mostsuccessful on record. Tho attendancewas good, and interest excellentthat everything wentfriction of any sort.

LOWER P

HAVE

ME

ofe Without

fs

STOGKEXGHANGE

Most of todny's stock sales were ofWaialua. Between boards 25. 5, 50 and50 shares had sold at $90. On theboard this morning 10, 5 and 10 sharessold at 89, after which 25, 5, 25, 25,5 and 10 Bhares sold at $88. At theclose $SS was bid for the slock and$89 asked.

Between boards 20, 0, 5 and 10

Oahu sold at $24.50j. after which thesame was bid for more and $24.G25asked.

Ewa sold at $27, three blocks of45, 25 and 20 shares changing hands.At the close $2G was bid and $27asked.

A sale of 100 Olaa was made at $4,

after which $3,875 was bid and $4,125ashed. McBrydo was $3 bid and $3,875asked.

Some Honolulu Brewery sold be-

tween boards ,20, 40 and 35 sharesrealizing $20.75. At tho close $21.25was asked for this stock.

Tho following bonds have been soldIn the period slnco yesterday: $3000Hawaiian Irrigation, $101.50; $1000Hllo R. R $100; $1000 Ilonokaa, $102.-'5- 0;

$1000 Pacific Sugar Mill, $102.A sale of 5 shares Hllo Railway

common was made at $11.Pioneer this morning Is quoted at

$170 bid and $175 asked.

SanIS, 9 a,

ber 12.

MARINE REPORT.Friday, November IS.

Francisco Arrived Novemberm. S. S. Siberia, Novem- -

A petition for the probate of the willof tho late John Degreaves, who diedon October 31, last, was presented toJudge Robinson th's morning. Thodeceased left a lot of land on Lanlwalstreet, Kewalo, Honolulu valued at $1,-25- 0

and $400 in Bishop & Co.'s bank.

Mrs. Chnrles Wllbour, who has beenexamining tho prisons of Euroep, saysthat tho system there Is much bettorthan in this country. A man maywork at his trado or profession andsupport his family, mtt In this coun-

try tho labor unions object to prisonlabor, sho says, and so tho familiessuffer

hence

FIVE W

STOCK MANGEBetween Boards 20 Hon. B. & M.

Co.. $20.75; 40 Hon. B. & M. Co.,$20.75; 35 Hon. B. & M. Co. $20.75;

Ewa, $27.00; 25 Ewa, $27.00; 20Ewn, $27.00; 20 Waialua, $90.00; 5Wahilua. $90.00; $3000 Haw. Irr. Gs.,$101.50; 1Q00 Hllo 1901 Gs., $100.00;$1000 Ilonokaa Gs., $102.50; 50 Waialua, $90.00; 50 Waialua, $90.00.

Session Saloa 5 Hllo Com. $11.00;,100 Olaa, $4.00; 20 Oahu Sug. C.r$21.50; $1000 P. S. M. Gs $102.00; 20Oahu Sug. Co., $24.50; 5 Oaru Sug.Co., $24.50; 10 Waialua. $89.00; 5Waialua, $S9.00; 10 Waialua, $S9.00;10 Oahu Sug. Co., $21.50; 25 Waialua,$89.00; 25 Walalim, $SS.O0; 25 Waialua, $SS.00; 5 Waialua, $88.00; 5 Waia- -

Stocks. Bid. Asked.C. Brewer & Co '500.00Ewn Plant. Cof 2G.00 2G.75Haw. Agr. Co 206.00 230.00Haw. Com'l Co 33.00 33.50Ilonokaa Sug. Co.... 12.50 13. 7G

Haiku Sug Co 150.00Hutchinson Sug Co 15. CO

Kahuku Sug. Co 17.50Kokaha Sug. Co 205.00McBrydo Sug. Co 3.00 3.875Oahu Sug. Co 21.50 25.G25Onomea Sug. Co 3G.00Olaa Sug. Co 4.00 4.125Paauhau Sug. Co.... 17.00 19.75Pala Plant. Co 150.00Pioneer Mill Co 170.0Waialua Agr. Co.... SS.00 89.00I 1'. S. N. Co 110.00 ..Haw. Electric Co 170.00 ..O. R. & L. Co 125.00 130.00Hon. B. & M. Co 21.00Haw. Pino Co. 32.00Cal. Beets Co Cs 100.00- -Haw Irr. Co Gs 100.00 102.25Hllo R. R. Gs 100.00 100.25llilo R. R. Ex. Gs 9G.00Ilonokaa Sug. Gs 102.00Kauai R. R. Gs 97. 25-

McBrydo Sug Cs 93.00Mutual Tel. Cs.... 102.00O. R. & L. 5s 101.75Pacific Mill Cs 102.00 102.25

Waialua Agr. Cs 101.00

MR. VON HAMM BACK.

C. C. Von Hamm, of the Von Hamm-Youn- g

Company, was a returning pas-

senger In the Sierra this morning. Howont east largely on automobllo busi-

ness, visiting the various agencies re-

presented hero by his big concern.Mr. Von Hamm had a rather busy butpleasant time, nnd returns in flnohealth and spirits.

Sugar 3.90cBeets, 9s, 0 U4d

Henry Waterhouse Trust Co,

Members Honolulu Stock and BondExchange.

FORT AND MERCHANT STS.

James H. florgan.Stock andBond Brokeif

Member of Honolulu Stock andBond Exchange.

Stock and Bond Orders receiveprompt attention.

Information furnished relative toall STOCKS AND BONDS.

LOANS NEGOTIATED.Phona 1572 P. O. Box 594

HOW HUNGRY SAM HAD ClllCKUN FOR DINNER.

1

2

Page 6: WOMEN M0 11 - University of Hawaiʻi

ecc

Thin?

Pale?All run down, easily tired, nerv-ous? And do not know whatto take? Then go direct toyour doctor. Ask his opinionof Ayer's Sarsapariila. It con-tains no alcohol, no stimulation,and is a blood purifier, a nervetonic, a strong alterative, an aidto digestion. Ask your doctorabout Ayer's non-alcohol- ic Sar-sapariila as a strong tonic forthe weak.

Ayer's Sarsapariilaj .

nml by Dr. I. C. A.r & Co., Uwill, Mm., U. 8. A.

Fraternal meetings

HONOLULU LODGE NO. 618,

B. P. O. ELKS.Meets In their ball on King Street

near Fort, every Friday evening. Visitlng Brothers are cordially Invited toattend.

JAMES D. DOUGHERTY, E. R.GEO. T. KLUEGEL, Secretary.

Hakmony Lodoe, No. 3, I. O. O. F.Meets every Monday evening at 7:30

(E Odd Fellows' Hall, Fort St. Visit-

ing brothers cordially Invited to at-

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

E. R. HENDRY, Sec.

ttONOLULU IRON WORKS CO., LTD.

Steam Engines, Sugar Mills, Boilers,Coolers, Iron, Brass and Lead Cast-ings, Machinery of every DescriptionM de to Order. Particular AttentionPaid to Ship's Blacksmlthing. JobWork Executed on Short Notice

Oat & HossmanSTATIONERS ANDj

1 BOOK SELLERS.

Merchant Street near Post Offlc.

ALEXANDER I II III LTD

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. II. ATIIERTON DirectorG. G. KINNEY kctfng Auditor

SUGAR FACTORScojuiibsion ukiiciiants

AND

INSURANCE AGENTS.AGENTS FOR

Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Comcany.

Halk'u Sugar Company.Pala Plantation.Maul Agricultural Company,Hawaiian Sugar Company.IC&huku Plantation Company.Kahulul Railroad Company,rialoakala Ranch Company.Honolua Ranch.McBrydo Sugar Company.Kauai Railway Co.

SEE THEGrabowsky Truck

Honolulu Power Wagon Co.W. M. Mlnton, Mgr.

s

Forcegrowth s

WILL DO IT. S

Quarter SizesAT

Regal Shoe StoreKing and Hotel Streets.

Sweet VioletBUTTER

C. Q. YEE HOP & CO. TEL. 25)

Fine Job Printing, Star OHlce.

Hearf&SKiior r ma.

JTuX TalksJy Barbara.

HIS VACATION

He was discussing his vacationtrip. Ho was going home, and he al- -

ways did. to spend his holiday with. . ..nis motner.

"And what arc you going to takoyour mother?" asked the girl.

FRIDAY,

"Take my mother?" ho enquired ,!0U1 n,av 1,0 a routine, a matter ofsurprised. "Tako my mother? I am course, hut this thing shows that younot going to tako her unythlng. Why havo thought ot especially, thatshould I take her anything?" your mind has dwelt on her with some

"Goodness me! Aren't you going taste, or some wish that you havoto take her anything? Not a single, heard her express. It is that whichsolitary thing? And you haven't seen Sves her pleasureher for a year?" "I can see her now showing your

"Why, no," ho responded slowly, Rift to the neighbors with prido andas if an idea were just dawning upon saying. 'My boy brought it to me.',him. "1 hadn't thought of taking Sb ptobably won't uso it. Sho willher anything. Tho idea never oc- - H't it away In her bureau drawer,curred to me." But every time sho goes to that bu- -

"Yoa are a good man," responded vcau drawer, she'll pick It up andthe girl. "But, oh!" Tho exclamation lool 11 over' and her hcart wln srowwas most expressive. vam to think you thought of her.

"What should you tako her." mlm- - Oh. If men would only realize howicked tho girl, halt in fun, half in IlttIc things like this mean toearnest. "How do I know? I do women. You send her money, andnot know your mother. Surely you J wrlto llel letters and you go

know some little thing sho would Il0le OIlco ftc"- - IJt these areHko. And if vou can't tako any- - a wa' Perfunctory and routine,thing else, you can tako her a glorl- - Surprise her! Just gloriously sur-ou- s

big box of bonbons. She would l"'Ise her tor once!"be happier over a box of candy than ' believe I will. It seems queerever was nny girl you took bonbons that women count so on sucht0 things. But I suppose they do slnco

"I am going to take her myself," say bo. My mother knows I lovolie said grandiloquently. "That's the her. 1 d a good deal for her andbest thing I can take her." sacrifice a good deal for her."

"That's right too, that's the big "That's all right," responded thothing," returned tho girl, "but thewomen like little things also. Tholittlo gladness over something youhavo thought to bring her' will boalmost as as tho big gladnessover seeing you. It will sing in herheart like tho clear, sweet flute that

LLOYD-GEQR- GE

HIIS IDLE RICH

LONDON, Oct. 22. All Londonthe clubs, the press and the hotellounges are talking about Davl.lLloyd.Gcorge's attack upon predatorywealth, mado in a remarkable speechthe other evening in the City Templebefore the members of tho LiberalChristian League.

In beginning Mr. Lloyd-Geor- saidthat his speech would be al

and added that, although therewas a great unrest manifested all ov-

er the world today, It could hardly bedue to either protection or free trade.At length he got down to his topic,

!

tho unemployed not the unemployedpoor', but the unemployed rich. He

I

said:"There aro hundreds and thousands

of men who get tho best training,physical and mental, that money canafford. They spend a third of theirlife in training for work, and thenthey end by devoting themselves ' toa life of idleness. I say that that Isa scandalous and stupid waste of first-clas- s

material.And there is no more shallow ful,

lacy than that those Idle rich peopleprovide employment for so many hun-

dreds of thousands of persons and aretherefore rendering service to thoState. What they aro really doing Isto withdraw some of tho most capa-

ble and skilled men from useful, pro-

fitable, productive labor. The manwho Is engaged to tie on anotherman's tie might otherwise become aflrst-eln- ss laborer. They aro justhelping each other to do nothing, and

Do ItlON'T

untilYou'll

TOE HAWAIIAN STAR, NOVEMBER 18, 1910

ome

her

lm,ch

her

much

keen,

TRIP HOME.

flashes out and ripples above theB'cat, deep orchestra,,"U ,8n,t the actual thing you take,"

sho went on, "It's the fact that youthought to take her something, thatit was an individual act of thought.n your part in regard to her. Coming

E. "ims om worm grows cornand wheat and potatoes and all sorts

t necessary tilings, nut it is nicethat it grows flowers also.

all at the expense of tho community. Ido not refer In the least to men ofbrains, who earn enough to purchasea littlo leisure, for they work hardenough, as we all know. I am refer-ring to tho Idle rich, and there is alarger class of that community In thiscountry than anywhere else in theworld,

"You see them lunching In the Lon.don clubs every day. You see thornIn country lanes, gun at shoulder, adog at heel. You see them tearingabout at speeds which exceed the lim-

it, not for the purpose of rechargingnerve cells which have heen exhaust-ed by labor, but as tho serious oc-

cupation of their lives. There is fartoo large a 'free list' in this country.No concern could afford it social,agricultural, industrial nothing could

stand It. Yet somebody must sufferfor it. Somebody is suffering for It.If you count in all the retainers I cal- -

culate that this class comes to 2,000,-- j

000 of people, enough to populatethree large cities. If they all lived inthree largo cities nobody would standit, but they happen to be scatteredall over the country, and so it goesoa.

"What is to bo done? WhateverIs to be done must bo bold. Hithertowo have been too timid, too nerv-ous, too fearful, too paltry, and achiev-ed nothing. Tho result is that wo arehopelessly in arrear, and ere we hnve'half settled one prouieni new onescrop up. The time has come for athorough overhauling or national andimperial conditions. It 3s a time which6omes in every enterprise commer-cial, national, or religious and woeto the generation that lacks the cour-

age to undertake tho task. I believetho masses of the paeple are readyfor great things if .they are led. ifthey are organized, and If they areshown tho way."

Now !

PUT IT OFFits too late.

surely need

H53llaHljigtHllMlHlfflllBBlBlal

some printing during theholidays. We deliver thegoods when it comes downtO printing. Our Prices are Right.

THE HAWAIIAN STARPrinters and Publishers

Phone 2365

SPORTSBLUES BEATEN

BY M WHITES

Ono of the most interesting gamesin the Indoor baseball series now be-ing played at tho Y. M. C. A. was con-

tested last evening when tho hithertounbeaten Blues went down to defeatagainst the Whites. The game wasplayed in fifty-eig- minutes, but Inthat time twenty-fiv- e runs were scored,the Whites piling up four in the first,eighth and ninth, as well as a singleIn tho third. Tho Blues Bcored twoIn the first, three in tho second andseventh and four in the ninth. Thogame was full of excitement. Thescores were tied In the' third, and thoBlues shot three ahead In the seventhbut were ono down at the end of theeighth. Both teams netting four Intho ninth, victory went to' the Whites.

The Reds and the Blacks, who arelevel for the back mark, will meet thisevening.

FOOTBALL TODAY

This afternoon three games In theGrammar School Association FootballLeague will be played, as under:

Iolanl vs. Central at Makiki. 1

Normals vs. Punahou at Punahou.Itoyal vs. St. Louis at the Boys'

Field.On Monday Kaahumanu and Kame-hameh- a

will meet and this game pro-

mises to be the best of the series, asonly one point separates the two teamsin the competition table.

There will be a reading today by Dr.A. L. Andrews at the College of Ha-

waii at four o'clock. AH Interested aroInvited.

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.

Wanted.Two attractive young ladles to soli-

cit members for the Ono HundredThousand Club. Apply at the officeo.-

- t'has. A. Stantlon .secretary of thoOne Hundred Thousand Club.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFirst Judicial Circuit. Territory ofHawaii. At Chambers No. 4236In Probate.

In the matter of the Estate of ClementSnoyd Kynnersley, Deceased.Oil reading and filing the petition

and accounts of Robert Wallace, ofKealakekua, District of Konu, Islandand County of Hawaii, Territory ofHawaii, Ancillary Administrator withthe Will annexed of the Estate in thesaid Territory of Hawaii of ClementSneyd Kynnersley, late of The Dearn-dalc-

Uttoxeter, County of Stafford,England, Great Britain, deceased,wherein ho asks to be allowed thesum of $y'JS!).7S, and charges himselfwith the sum of $4090.2G, and nsksthat the same may be examined andapproved, and that a final order may bomade of distribution of the propertyremaining in his hands to tho personsthereto entitled, and discharging himand his, sureties from all further responsibility as such Ancillary Admin-istrator with the "Will annexed.

It Is Ordered that TUESDAY, the27th day of DECEMBER, 1910, at TENo'clock ii. m before the Judge of saidCourt at tho Court Room of said Courtat Honolulu, Island of Onhu, be andthe same hereby is appointed as thotime and place for hearing said peti-tion and accounts, and that all personsinterested may then and there appearand show cause, if any they have, whythe same should not be granted, andmay present evidence us to who areentitled to the said property.

By Order of the Court:J. A. THOMPSON, Clerk.

Holmes, Stanley & Olson, Attorneysfor Petitioner.

for Petitioner.4t. Nov. IS, 2u, Dec. 2, 19.

Victor :: MachinesSold on EasyPayments

Honolulu MusicCOMPANY

88 KING STREET HONOLULU.

MORE

PIMMCURES

Added to the Long List dueto This Famous Remedy.

Camden, N.J. "It is with plcasurothat I add my testimonial to youralready long list hoping that it mayInduce others to avail themselves of

1 this valuable medi.cine.LydlaE.Pink-ham'- s

vegetableCompound. I suf.fered from terribleheadaches, pain inmy back and rightside, was tired andnervous, and soweaklcould hardlystand. Lydia E.Finkham's Vegeta-ble Compound re-stored me to health

and made me feel like a new person,and it shall always have my praise."

Mrs. W. P. Valentink, 002 LincolnAvenue, Camden, N. J.

Gardiner, Me. "I was a great suf-ferer from a female disease. The doc-tor said I would have to go to thehospital for an operation, but Lydia E.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound com-pletel- y

cured me in three months."Mns. S. A. Williams, K. F. D. No. h,Box 30, Gardiner Me.

Because your case is a difficult one,doctors having done you no good,do not continue to suffer withoutgvlng Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable

ompound a trial. It surely has curedmany cases of female ills, such as in-flammation, ulceration, displacements,fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodicpains, backache, that bearing-dow- n

feeling, indigestion, dizziness, and ner-vous prostration. It costs but a trifleto try it, and the result is worth mil.lions to many suffering women.

EmbroideriesAll styles and prices.

Gliaxi ItCeo127 Hotel Street,

A CLEAN HOUSE AND

Pau ka HanaARE FAST FRIENDS.

Hats & ShirtsBig new lines. Low prices.

YatHing - Hotel St.

FURNITUREUpholstered,Remodeled,a ii cl

Refinished

THE RIGHT WAY

J.Hopp&Co.,LtdEXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR

THE

Y. YOSHIKAWA, ISO KING ST.

BY AUTHORITYRESOLUTION.

No. 374.BE IT RESOLVED by the Board of

Supervisors of the City and Countyof Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, thattho sum of SEVENTEEN HUNDREDAND NINETY-NIN- E AND THIRTY-FOU- I

HUNDREDTHS ($1799.34)DOLLARS, being tho balanco sub-scribed for tho construction of tho Pa-cli-

Heights Road, and which Is to bopaid Into the County Treasury by thoPacific .Heights residents, Is herebyappropriated out of the General Fundfor account of Maintenance of Roads,Honolulu District.

Introduced byJ. O. QUINN,

Supervisor.Dated, Honolulu, October 18, 1910.Approved this 7th day of November

A. D. 1910.JOSEPH J. FERN,

Mayor.llts Nov. 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 15,

1C, 17, 18.

SEALED TENDERS.

SEALED TENDERS will bo re-

ceived at tho office of tho Superin-tendent of Public Works until 12 m.,of Saturday, November 2Gth, for thoconstruction of a Ono room additionto tho Thernpeutlcs Laboratory atKallhi Receiving Station, and formoving tho present Treatment Lanal.

Plans, specifications and proposalblanks on file In the ofTico of thoSuperintendent of Public Works.

Tho right is reserved to reject anyor all bids.

MARSTON CAMPBELL,Superintendent of Public Works.

Honolulu, Nov. 12, 1910,

What's The Use?of suffering and scratching your headwhen tho only thing you havo to dois to use

PACHECO'8 DANDRUFF KILLER.

to Btop that awful itching and stonyour hair from falling. This preparatlon is an Instant relief for prlck- -ly neat.

Sold Dy all druggists and at Pi,checo's Barber Shop. Phono 1732.

Casue & CookLIIVHTBD

Honolulu, T. U.

BHIPPING . ND COMMISSIONCHANTS.

SUGAR FACTORS and GENHRAL DC--arm a

representim i

Ewn Plantation Co. 4Walalua Agricultural Co., Lt. '.Kohala Sugar Co. jWalmea Sugar Mill Co. jApokaa Sugar Co., Ltd. j

Fulton Iron WorkB of Bt. LouU.Westons Centrifugals. j

Babcock ft Wilcox Boners. j'

Green's Fuel Economizer.MatBon Navigation Co.New Bneland Mutual T.lf. t.ARce Company of Boston.Aetna insurance Co.National Fire Insurance Co.Citizen's Iniumnna fV (RirifnM

Fire Insurance Co.)The London Assurance nomn

tlon.

For SaleTwo Fine Lots

In Puunui

A Big Bargain

Bishop Trust Co.,.Limited

924 BETHEL STREET

Bridge and Beach stoves ior Coal wWoo.

Quick Meal Blue Flame Oil Stovea.Perfection Oil Stoves.Giant Burner Grasollna Stoves.

EMMELUTH & CO.. LTD.Phono 1511. No. 145 King St.

It Build1 OSTEOPATHY II 175 BERETANIA STREET. I

BUY THE GREAT

"WHITE FROST"The Refrigerator Without a FaultSpecialty Adapted to the Needs ol

the Hawaiian Islands.

Coyne Furniture Co., Ltd.,Young Building

I IF YOU WISH TO ADVERTISE 12 HcworariiKai& ANYWHU1U3 AT ANYTIMBft Call on nr VJrlf

1 G ft DARE'S ADVERTISING AGEKCYV fV4 atisomo Streett WN PRAKCI8CO, CALIP.

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

Page 7: WOMEN M0 11 - University of Hawaiʻi

You CannotAFFORDto take any unnecessary riskwith your hard earned savings.All sorts of inducements areoffered to invest In some formof speculation. The shrewd in-

vestor is satisfied with the ab-

solute security for both principaland Interest; afforded by ourSavings Department.

1Ulillll VI IIICapital and surplui $1,000,000

ESTABLISHED IN 1830.

BISHOP SCO

BANKERS

Commercial and Travelleri'Letteri of Credit issued on thtBank of California and The Lon-

don Joint Stock Bank, Limited,London.

CorrMpondenta for tht Amer-ican Express Company, andThou. Cook 3c son.

Intereit allowed on term anaBarlngi Bank Depoilti.

Bank ofHonolulu

Issue K. N. & K.Letters o f Creditand Traveler'sChecks availablethroughout theworld. j6 j .jt Cabletransfers at lowestrates jfi jfi jt & jfi

c.Brewei&CoMLti

Fire and MarineInsurance Agencies

Royal Insurance Co. of Liver-pool.

London Assurance Corpora-tion.

CommercialUnionAssur&nceCo. of London.

Scottish Union and NationalInsurance Co.of Edinburgh,dedonian Insurance Co, ofEdinburgh.

Upper Rhine InsuranceCo., (Marine).

f LIMITED.Capital (Paid Up) Yen 24.C30.00a

Raierve Fund Ten IG.250,000

HEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.The bank buys ana receives for

collection bills of exenango, issuesDrafts and Letters of Credit, andtransacts a general banking business,

The Bank Tecelves Local Depositsand Head Office deposits for fixed perlodi.

Local Deposits $25 and upwards forone year at rate of 4 per annum.

Head Office Deposits Yen 25 andupwards for one-ha- Jf year, one year,two years or three years at rate of4 per annum.

Particulars to be obtained on

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

YU AKAI, Manager.

Iwakami &CoJapanese Silks, DryGoods and Hats ofAll Kinds.

Robinson IttocK Hotel Street

Ohio Clothes Cleaning andDyeing Cos new telephone is

1496Una Job Prlntnix Star Olflo.

ELECTION T

CHANGE TIFT it BIT(Continued from Fag" One.)

members of his cabinet and was closeted with them for nearly two hours.The results of iho election were dis-cussed. It was learned later thatPresident Taft told the members ofhis cabinet that he would not changehis program one lota as the result ofthe Democratic majority in the house.It was made plain to the cabinet mem-bers that Taft will continue to workprogressively, yet conservatively.

LAW TO BE ENFORCED1.The enforcement of the anti-She- r

man law, for Instance, will bo carriedout along the lines laid down by thepresident when ho went Into office.It is claimed that the plurality rolledup by Dlx in Now York was causedmainly by businessmen who were dis-appointed at tho course pursued byColonel Roosevelt. In New York stateat least the so called Insurgents hadtheir chance to show what they coulddo, and yet they failed.

President Taft does not see wherethe Insurgents who have obtained control in various districts nave demon- -

started their strength with the people.He does not take the position, however, that tho Insurgents should becondemned. He merely believes thatthey should cease their attacks on theregular leaders and get together forthe battles that are to come.ASKED TO ACT ON OWN ACCOUNT

The blunt suggestion to PresidentTaft that he now play politics on hisown account was mauo to him by oneof his political advisers, it was statedthat the democrats were really com-ing Into power on no definite platformand that they were as much divided onthe question ot tho tariff as were therepublicans at tho last session.

Champ Clark, who probably will boelected speaker, Is a free trader andhas many followers in the hbuse. If atariff bill should bo framed by a waysand means committee appointed byClark it would be strongly against pro-

tection.REFUSES TO PLAY POLiTICS.

A Democrat-insurgen- t fight, similarto the one that shattered tho unity ofthe republican party, would at oncebe precipitated. Theso argumentswere cited to President Taft today, inthe course of an argument that itwould be good politics to call a specialsession of the new congress next sum-

mer for the consideration of a tariffbill. The country would then see theDemocrats In action. It can be statedhowever, that President Taft has re-

jected all proposals that he play poll-tic- s

to Insure his in 1912.Ho says he has outlined his belief re-garding a revision of the tariff sched-ule by schedule, and that the demo-cratic majority In the house will notmake the slightest difference in hisprogram.

When the tariff board is ready thewool schedule will be submitted tocongress, and If the Democrats at-

tempt to dodgo the issue then thopresident will leave the verdict to thepeople of the country.

NO 'SPECIAL SESSION.As for a special session of congress

and a general revision of the tariff,the president will not consider sucha thing for a moment. ,

The Democratic landslide caught the1

Insurgents as well as the conserva-tives. President Taft, therefore, hasreason for his belief that the internalsquaobles within the republican partywere mainly responsible for the stun-ning set back given to it at the polls.His cabinet officers believe that Mr.Taft's popularity has not diminishedIn the slightest degree and that aftera year of democratic power he will bethe logical candidate for president In1912.

FIRST SOCIALISTELECTED TO CONGRESS

MILWAUKEE, Wis., November 9.

The social-democrat- party appears tohave achieved a notable victory yesterday by electing Victor L. Berger,fifth district, to represent Wisconsinin congress. Borger, If the unofficialreturns aro correct, will havo the dis-

tinction of being the first social-democr- at

to sit In congress.In addition to this tho party swept

Milwaukee county, electing Its countyticket from top to bottom by plurali-

ties ranging from 3,000 to 7,000, tholatter being attained by William A. Ar-

nold, lue candidate for sheriff. Thevote for governor In Milwaukee countywas:

Jacobs, social-domocra- t, 23,812;republican, 20,030; Schmltz,

domocrat, 15,895; Van Huron, prohibi-

tion, S05.

13 LEGISLATORS ELECTED.Added to this the socialists elected

13 members to tho legislature, oneand 12 assemblymen from Mil- -

watiKoo county.Borgor wnB pitted against Henry C.

Cochoms,. an "Insurgent" Republican,and Joseph Carney, a Domocrat. Dor-gor- 's

plurality unofficially is estimatedat 2S8. Cochoms is the young man ofuniversity football fame who placedUnited States Senator La Follette In

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, FRIDAY, NOVEMBEK 18, 1910 SEVEN

nomination for president at the lastrepublican national convention,

NEW YORK, Nov. 9. Marked gainsin the socialist vote throughout thostate are shown in the returns fromyesterday's election. Figures avail-able indicate, a total vote for CharlesEdward Russell, nominee for governor, of 05,000, nearly double the 33,- -

991 votes of 1908. In New York cityRussell received 27,230.

Most significant are the increasesSixty-fiv- e cities that gave a

vote of 7,850 a year ago show 28,000this year. Outlying districts, whichformerly showed less than 10 votes,this year report from 100 to GOO.

Among the large cities that showsubstantial socialist gains are Buffalo,Schenectady, Syracuse and Rochester.

BEVERIDGE GONE.INDIANAPOLIS, November 9. Sen-

ator Beverldge's hopes for anotherterm at Washington went glimmeringtonight when returns showed conclu-sively that the Democrats havo electedthe majority of the Indiana assembly.According to the latest figures, theDemocrats will have a majority on-

joint ballot of 32.

John W. Kern has been indorsed bythe Democrats and in all probabilitywill become tho colleague of SenatorShlvely, also a Democrat.

THE 100 000 CLUB

pnnnST T

1 1 r JUL).Continued from page five.)

Object and Purposes.The Honolulu One Hundred Tuou-san- d

Club is organized to attract Ame-

rican citizens, Investors and businessmen to the city and to work tor thedevelopment of the island"? with theexpectation of Increasing tho popula-tion of Honolulu to 100,000 In lf15.

The object of the campaign will boto bring people here to live and to

the work of all movonontsand civic organizations that havo atendency to increase our populationand be of benefit to tho developmentand welfare of our city.

Membership.Any resident of Honolulu, regard-

less of occupation, age or sex, is elig-

ible to membership.Dues and Assessments.

Annual dues to bo fifty cents, includ-ing initiation fee. No assessments tobe made.

Officers.The officers will consist of a board

of fifteen managers, who will elect apresident, one vice president, execntlvo committee, treasurer and secretary. The secretary will be the onlysalaried officer connected with the association.

Annual Meetings.The annual meeting will bo held on

the first Tuesday in January in eachyear. The usual business to come before such meetings will be transacted,including the election of the board ofmanagers.

Board Meetings.The board of managers will meet

the first Tuesday In every month forthe transaction of business. The sec-

retary will execute the wishes of theboard. Special meetings can be call-

ed upon request of three managers.Any member of the club Is privilegedto attend all meetings of the board.

Money.All funds of the club will be receiv-

ed by the secretary and turned over tothe treasurer. All expenses will bepaid by warrants drawn by tho treas-urer and signed by the president andtreasurer.

Vacancies.The board of managers will have

power to fill any vacancy in its mem.bership or Its officers.

Quorum.Five members of the board consti-

tute a quorum for the transaction of

business.Following Is the application for

membership In the club, which maybe clipped out, filled In and sent to Mr.

C. A. Stanton, together with the mem-

bership fee of fifty cents:APPLICATION FOR MEMBERSHIP.

I.of herebyapply for membership In thoHonolulu One Hundred Thousand Cluband promise to boost Honolulu for aperiod of one year, or such a time asI may choose to' remain a member. I

further agreo and promise,First. That I will always say a good

word about Honolulu nnd tho Hawai-ian IsIandB whenever and whereverthe opportunity occurs;

Second. That I will encouragehomo industry, realizing that overydollar spent and invosted at homemeans that much added to tho benefitof Honolulu nnd the Hnwnilan Islands;

Third. That I will encourage overymovement to help make Honolulu abeautiful and henlthful Amorlcan cityand secure for her a population of OnoHundred Thousand people by tho year1915;

Fourth. That I will supply thonamos and addresses of two porsonswriom I will recommend to member-ship In the club.

Addross

CONVICT ROAD

HAWAII

That the work on tho famous convict-mad- e nutomoblle road to tho vol-

cano has been "totally Inefficient" andhas cost Hawaii county over $10,000 isstated inn report adopted by the Hawaii Board of Supervisors this week.The board asks that It have control ofthe prisoners' work In future. It In-

structed the county clerk to answera communication from Governor Frearon the subject as follows:

"In re prisoners now at work onHalemaumau Road It Is recommendedthat, said prisoners be at once removed to the I mile section of the Kinroad, the county to assume all ex-

penses of moving camp and Jail, andthat tho work of grading snld sectionbe at once proceeded with, nnd alsothat the county or Hawnll bind Itselfto furnish all machinery necessary torush the work of constructing the road

RUSSIA ICSRELENTLESS IR

ST. PETERSItlRC;, Russia, Nov. 3.

Statistics just ai hand show how relentless has been the government'scampaign against all persons suspect-ed of participation in the revolution-ary movement of 1905-190- 0. Last Sep-

tember sixty men were condemned todeath in different parts of the king-dom. This brings the number con-

demned to death 511 the last ninemonths up to 3C3. Of these 118 havobeen executed.

During the same period the onslaught on the press has been increasingly vigorous. In September peri-

odicals In the various provinces havopaid 5.000 rubles ($2,500) in lines im-

posed by the police nnd the govern-ors. Many papers, especially in Po-

land, Georgia and Little Russia, havobeen compelled to suspend paymentowing to fines.

In the last nine months 152 flues,amounting to 41,000 rubles ($20,500),

havo been imposed on the newspa-

pers, yet, according to the constitu-

tion, Russia has liberty of tho press.Though five years have elapsed

since tho constitutional movementwas begun and, the people who tookpart in it have long been leadingpeaceable lives, the gvernment is vin-

dictively persecuting all of them on

whom it can lay its hands. Many ofthese In Frauenherg, Riga province,were handed over to a military tri-

bunal on the charge of taking part in

the revolutionary rising of October

and November. 1905. The number

thus accused was 224. Oct. 24 sixty-tw- o

were condemned to prison at hardlabor, many for life, and seventy-on- e

to long terms In another part of Russia.

In the Don province 800 Cossacks

NEFFICIEN T.

WANTS TO SUPERVISE

to completion, provided however thatthe board of supervisors Is given theright to superviso and direct tho pri-soners In their work and also thattheir number bo Increased to 25 ormore and not at any time to be allow-ed to fall below twenty. In this con-nection it might be stated that theboard of supervisors have been dis-satisfied for some time past with thetotally inefficient work done by theprisoners on the Halemaumau road,and doubly so as tho county has hadto pay out over $10,000 on that jobwith no right to advise as to the pro-per expenditure thereof, and it was fortho purpose of correcting this fault bythe use of more up to date methodsof construction and improved and pro-per machinery that this board has ask-ed for authority to appoint n person tosupervise nnd direct tho working ofthe prisoners, but all to no avail '

SC-SB-

woro brought befoiv a military tribunal for Insubordination.Twenty-tw- o wore sentenced to hardlabor for life and flfty-tw- o to servo In

the disciplinary battalions. Four daysearlier tho same tribunal sentencedsix men to hard labor for life andtwenty-fou- r to tho disciplinary bat-

talions. Those figures aro official.

POPE RECEIVES AMERICANS.

ROME, O.-t- . 29. Tho other day areport was circulated hero to the ef-

fect tho Pope was again 111, that hiscondition was serious, and that thedoctors were In consultation overhim.

But tho report was entirely unjus-tified, for on tho very day that it wasprinted here, Pope Plus received In

prlvnte audience Bishop Kennedy, roe.tor of the American College, who in-

troduced to the Holy Father Miss Is-

abella Ryan, of Dubuque. Iowa, andher sisters, with whom tho Pontiffconversed most amiably, and to whomho imparted special Apostolic Bene-

diction as a reward for their loyaltyand generosity toward the Church.Theso Americans say the Pope couldnol have looked better than ho did on

the occasion of their visit.

OLDFIELDS AT SAVOY.

The famous Oldflolds Homer V.

and Bella arrived In tho Sierra this

morning and will appear at tho Savov

theater for n brief season, beginning

with this evening. Tonight they willput on a preliminary comedy sketch,Interspersed with some excellent mu-

sic.

Dr. Augusta Stowo Gullen of Toron-to will represent tho medical alumnaein the senate of tho "University of To-

ronto, to which honored position shehas recently been elected. She wastho guest of honor recently In Bostonand is qulto noted among tho womanphysicians of tho world.

Once upon a time, a man who was too economical to takea paper, sent his little boy to borrow the copy taken by his

neighbors. In his haste, the boy ran over a four dollar stand ofbees, and in ten minutes' looked like a watery summer squash.

His cries reached his father, who ran to his assistance,

and, failing to see a barb-wir- e fence, ran into it, breaking it

down, cutting a handful of flesh from his anatomy and ruining

a five-doll- ar pair of pants.

The old cow took advantage of the gap in the fence, got

into the cornfield and killed herself eating green corn. Hearingthe racket, his wife ran, upsetting a four-gallo- n churn full of

rich cream into a basket of kittens, drowning the whole "flock."In her hurry she dropped a seven-doll- ar set of teeth. The baby,left alone, crawled through the spilled milk into the parlor and

ruined a twenty-doll- ar carpet. During the excitement the oldest

daughter ran away with the hired man, the calves got out and

the dog broke up eleven sitting hens.

Moral Subscribe for our paper.

THE HAWAIIAN STARNEWSPAPER ASS'N. LTD.

P. O. BOX 366 PUBLISHERS PHONL 2365

KNOWN EVERYWHERE.Chamberlain's Colic, Chalcra and

Diarrhoea Remedy Is today the bestknown medicine In use for the relief

cure of bowel complaints. It curedgriping, diarrhoea, dysentery, and

bo taken at the first "unnaturallooseness of tho bowels. For sale bynil dealers, Benson, Smith & Co.,agents for Hawaii

Fine Job Printing, Stnr Office.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THBFirst Circuit, Territory of Hawaii.Holding Terms In the City andCounty of Honolulu.

MARSTON CAMPBELL, Superintend-ent of Public Works of the Terri-tory of Hawaii, Plaintiff and IVtioner, vs.

JAMES STEINER: MRS. THERE-SA LOUISSON; THE FIRST NA-

TIONAL BANK OF HAWAII, an Ha-

waiian Corporation having its princi-pal office at Honolulu, Territory of Ha-

waii; ELIZABETH J. MONSARRAT;R. W. SHINGLE; SIMPSON DECK-ER- ;

JESSE M. McCHESNEY, ED.TOWSE and CHARLES W. ZIEGLER,Trustees of Mystic Lodge No. 2,Knights of Pythias or Honolulu; MYS-

TIC LODGE No. 2, KNIGHTS OF S

OF HONOLULU; LIBERTHUBERT J. L. BOEYNAEMS, Bishopof Zeugma, Vicar Apostolic of Hawaii;ST. LOUIS COLLEGE ALUMNI

an Hawaiian Corpora-tion navfng Its principal office at Ho-

nolulu, Territory of Hawaii; JAMESF. MORGAN; JOHN SULLIVAN;JOHN BUCKLEY; JOHN DOE, MARYDOE, and RICHARD ROE, unknownowners and claimants, Defendantsmd Respondents. TERM SUMMONS.

THE TERRITORY OF HAWAII: TOTHE HIGH SHERIFF of the Territoryif Hawaii, or his Deputy; tho Sherltt3t the City and County ot Honolulu orhis Deputy:

YOU ARE COMMANDED to sum-

mon JAMES STEINER; MRS. THE-RESA LOUISSON; THE FIRST NA-

TIONAL BANK OF HAWAII, an Ha-

waiian Corporation having its princi-pal offlco at Honolulu, Territory ofHawaii; ELIZABETH J. MONSAR-RAT; R. W. SHINGLE; SIMPSONDECKER; JESSE M. McCHESNEY,ED. TOWSE, and CHARLES W.ZIEGLER, Trustees of Mystic LodgoNo. 2, Knights of Pythias of Honolulu;MYSTIC LODGE No. 2, KNIGHTS OFPYTHIAS OF HONOLULU; LIBERTHUBERT J. L. BOEYNAEMS, Bishopof Zeugma, Vicar Apostolic of Hawaii;ST. LOUIS COLLEGE ALUMNI AS-

SOCIATION, an Hawaiian Corporatloahaving Us principal office at Honolulu,Territory of Hawaii; JAMES F. MOR

GAN; JOHN SULLIVAN; JOHNBUCKLEY; JOHN DOE, MARY DOB,

and RICHARD ROE, unknown ownersand claimants, defendants, In casethey shall file written answer withintwenty days after service hereof to beand appear before the said CircuitCort at the Term thereof pending Im-

mediately after the expiration of twen-ty days after service hereof; provid-ed, however, it no term be pending atsuch time, then to be and appear be-

fore the sad Circuit Court at the nextsucceeding term thereof, to-wl-t, thoJanuary 1911 Term thereof, to bs hold-e- n

at the City and County of Hono-lulu, on Monday, the ninth day ot Jan-uary next, at 10 o'clock a. m., to showcause why judgment of condemnationot the lands described In the Petitionherein and for any other relief de-

manded in the Petition should not beawarded to Marston Campbell, Super-intendent of Public Works, pursuantto the tenor ot his annexed Petition.

And have you then there this Writwith full return ot your proceedingsthereon.

WITNESS the Honorable PresidingJudge of the Circuit Court of the FirstCircuit, at Honolulu aforesaid, this27th day ot August, 1910.

(SEAL)(Signed) HENRY SMITH,

Clerk.(Endorsed) L. No. 7199. Reg. 3. Pg.

162. Circuit Court First Circuit, Ter-ritory of Hawaii. Marston Campbell,Superintendent of Public Works of theTerritory of Hawaii, Plaintiff and Pe-

titioner vs. James Steiner, ct als., De-

fendants and Respondents. Summons.Filed and Issued at 11:15 a. m. August,27, 1910. (Sg) Henry Smith, ClerkReturned and filed Aug. 31, 1910, at-1.-

A. K. Aona, Asst. Clerk.ALEXANDER LINDSAY, JR., Atty.

Gen'l & W. B. LYMER, Dep. Atty.Gen'l, for Marston Campbell, Supt. ottPub. Works.

: )Territory of Hawaii, )

) BIl.City and County of Honolulu.)

I, Henry Smith, Clerk ot the CircuitCourt of tho First Judicial Circuit, Ter-

ritory of Hawaii, do heroby cortlty theforegoing to be a full, true and cor-

rect copy ot tho original summons intho case of Marston Campbell. SuperIntendont of Public Works of tho Tsr-rltor-

of Hawaii vs. James Stelnor ot

als., as tho same remains ot recordand on fllo In the office ot tho Clerk oj,laid Court.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I havehoreunto set my hand and affixed thaSeal ot said Circuit Court, this 2nd day,ot September, 1910.

(SEAL) HENRY SMITH.Clerk ot the Circuit Court of the First,

Circuit, Territory of Hawaii,

ft- -'

Page 8: WOMEN M0 11 - University of Hawaiʻi

J31GHT

Classified "Ads"WANTED.

"Salonlad.v for dryKoods departmentof large General Store. Address "A"

thW offlc."LE880N8 IN GERMAN

KTvu t u "I on "in GentiauTTteaMeiwoftRble. Apply to C. Menke. Ger-

man- School.- ort SALE." "

A twenty-liv- e libnw powerengine and pump In

firm class condition. Can be - seenworking In Oahu College." Koclis'llarber' Chair nil" designs,

'fha best ana most Sanitary HarborChair made. Come and sec latestsamples. H. Jeffs agent, Uethol streetHonolulu.

ELOCUTION. "J""Miss" Kay" Hell Uachei'Eiocutlon,Oratory, Physical and Voice Culture,Studio 1259 Lunalllo Street. Phono1342.

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

week. Suit given at once. FrancisLevy, Outfitting Co., Sachn Bldg., FortStreet

BUY AND SELL.

Dlanionds'and" Jewelry bought, sold

and exchanged. Bargain in muBloal

Instruments. J. Carlo. Fort 'St.

OLEHRPOE SPLOF

White and Colored

Cotton Wash'Goods

Monday morning, at S o'clock,we will place on sale at greatlyreduced prices a splendid as-

sortment of- - batistes, lawns,mulls, madras, ete both whiteand colored; see our windows.

EHLERSEXQUISITE

ARTPRODUCTION.

HAWAIIAN VIEWCALENDERS

for 1911

COLORED AND IN SEPIA.COc and 90c.

The prettiestHoliday Giftyou can make.

8 S

COMPANY

"Everything Photographic"Fort below Hotel.

What's the Matter

With SugarStocks?

. REAL ESTATE

Is the best oE investments. No

s'.ty in the world has so bright a

future as Honolulu, and If a person

uses judgement In buying ho should

bo able to provide well for the fu-

ture if he Invests his savings In

SeautifulKaimuki.

With the coming of Uucle Sam to

Pearl Harbor, the opening of the

Panama Canal and the general de-

velopment that Is bound to follow a

careful realty investment Is bound to

be worth many a sacrifice.

K AIM U K I

Land Co., Ltd.,

Main Office: King and Fort streets;Branch Office. Waialae and KokoHead Avs. Phone 1C59.

Dr. Hugh L. DickeyEye, Ear, Nose, Throat.. .1150 Ala-ke- a

Street, (opposite Royal HawaiianHotel Hours and 1:304:30Sunday 10-1- Evenings by appoin-

tment. Telephone 3024.

A motiqn to remand tho case of

Ciiook Sing v. R. W. UrockouB will

bo submitted in the Federal Court to.morrow, morning.

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.

Circus page C

Wanted "Probate Notice ' G

Yat Hing " C

Chan. Kee " 0

THE WEATHER

Local Offloe, U. 8, Weather Bureau,

Honolulu, T. H,, November 18. 1910,Temperature, o a. m.; S a. m.; 10

a. m.; and morning minimum:73; 77; 77; 79; 71.Barometer reading. Absolute hum-

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

30.07; G.G74; 07; G5.

Wind velocity and direction nt 6 a.m.; S a. m.; 10 a. m.; and noon:'

J J N. E .8 E; 14 E; 11NE.. Rainfall miring 24 hours ending 8 a.m. 03. inches rainfall.

Total wind movement during 21hours ended at noon, 233 miles.

WM. B. STOCKMAN.Observer.

NEWS IN A NUTSHELLParagraphs That Give Condensed

News of the Day.

Honolulu Lodgi No. GIG B. P. O. E.meets this evening' at 7:30 o'clock.

Come and see our big new lines ofembroideries in Swiss, Cambric, andMuslin. All seling at holiday prices.Chan Kee, 127 Hotel street.

You're always next at the Silentfiarber Shop . Six chairs In opera-tion.

Charles A. Wills presented his petition in bankruptcy for discharge tlil3morning before Judge Dole. The peHon was granted, and an order ofdischarge made.

W. W. Shannon, who has just beenelected Superintendent of State Point-ing in California, by a plurality ofabout fiO,000, was an arrival in Hono-lulu by the Sierra this morning.

Governor Frear and Superintendentof Lands Marston Campbell will leavefor Kohala on Tuesday next. A complelo circuit of Hawaii will be madeIn connection with land matters.

The case of Danniel D. Wall againstE. P. Pike and Peter Burrows, ownersof the wrecked ship Helga, will comeup in the Federal Court tomorrow forhearing. This is a claim for wagessaid to be due.

See that you get your green stampswhen you are buying at the stores.And call at the show rooms, and seethe many valuable .articles you gettor them.

Co'lector of Internal Revenue Drakqreturned to Honolulu this morning. AtMaui Drake Inspected the KaupakaluaWine & 'Fruit Distillery, which hefound in excellent wonting order, andturning out a first-clas- s grade of wine.

Two nttractfve young ladies arewantod to solicit members 4for theOne Hundred Thousand Club. Applyat office of Chas. A. Stanton, Kingand Fort streets.

An important meeting of the ManoaImprovement Club will be held at thoresidence of Judge H. E. Cooper, Puu- -

pueo, Manoa Valley, on Monday evening at seven-thirty- . Matters of general interest to the valleyitos will beunder discussion.

The Christian Endeavor Society ofCentral Union Church will give aswimming-part- y at tho Outrigger Clubthis evening, an invitation being 6.vtended to. the friends of tho society toattenu. supper Is to bo served atseven o'clock and the plungo is scheduled for eight o'clock.

Yamadn, who was fined $100 in theDistrict Court for having assaultedpolice officer, was before Judge Coon.or in connection with his appeal. Thedecision of the District Court was up-

held. Salto, another Japanese, whoappealed against the fine of $100 in-

flicted by the District Court for .asimilar offense, was also before JudgeCooper. His Honor reduced the finsto $25.

Oahu College has received as a giftfrom Wlllard E. Brown, the classicstatuo, "Tho Boy with the Thorn," andthe has relief "The Aurora." Thoformer has been placed in the corridorof Charles R. Bishop Hall, where theyoungsters whoso experiences with

thorns are still fresh will tho-rou-

ly appreciate It. The Aurorawill be placed In Cooke Library. Bothworks of art are sure to be muchadmired and enjoyed.

On motion by Shlpman the CountyClerk has been instructed to write thoGovernor asking that Supervisor Fer-nandez, who resigned a few days agoIn order that he might run for theSenate, be for the remainder of the term of the presentBoard of Supervisors. Hilo Tribune.

Tho case of Sorcnsou and Lylaagainst tho United States wns refer-red to in tho Federal Court this morning, and Judge Dole allowed tho go-

vernment until Decemuor fi in whicnto file it's brief.

, MRS. ELDER HERE.v

Mrs Churchill Harvey-Elde- r, whosohusbund, assistant city oditor of theLos Angeles Times, was ono of thosewho were killed in tho Times explo-sion, returned to Honolulu on theSierra this morning.

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1910

PUBLIC OPEN

OF SCHOOL HAL L

The trustees, faculty and studentsof the Mid-Pacif- Institute extend acordial Invitation to friends of all nationalities to be prosent at a ThanksHiving reception to be held on the oc-

casion of tho public opening of thenew Mills school hall in Manoa valley, on Saturday afternoon, Novem-ber 2u, from two o'clock to six o'clock.At four o'clock special dedicatory ex-

ercises will 'be held in the assemblyhall. Former students of Mills Insti-

tute, the 'Japanese boarding school andtho Korean Mission school will kindlytake special notice of this Invitation.

INSISTED

VIOLAT 0 IA fine of $100 was imposed on a

forlorn.looking Russian woman at thepolico court this morning, whose of-

fense consisted in having sold liquorat. Iwilei without a license. She plead-ed guilty to the ofTense, but thoughboth tho prosecuting attorney and themagistrate had inquired Into the mat.ter in an endeavor o bring to lightsome mitigating circumstances, bothhad failed. Indeed, II was found thatthe woman had been warned on sev-eral occasions but still persisted inthe sale. When Judge Lymer imposedthe above-mentione- d, fine, ho remarked that it seemed a hardship, but $100was the minimum. The woman declared she was unable to pay, so shegoes to jail.

SLIER RATES

MOST 8E 0

Dnillltv Afrnrnn. CI

this morning explained tho effect ofthe decision given by the SupremeCourt yesterday in the case againstTue Bun, who was sued by the Ter-ritory for $117 on account of sewerrates. This was a test case, and thefacts in favor of the defendant weroas strong as in any case that couldbo found, so that the decision of theSupreme Court is final. Therefore,sewer rates as charged at present arelegal and are collectable by the Super-intendent of Public Works.

The decisionjn the case of McCand- -

les v. the Territory in which McCaud.less sought to compel the Superin-tendent of Public Works to allow theconnection of his premises with thopublic sewer without signing the formof application compiled by the Superintendent of Public Works, was alsoin favor of tho Territory. Tho formused by McCandless was the usualone, but he had struck out the agree-ment to pay such rates as should befixed. The Supreme Court's decisionis to the effect that the failure ofanyone to pay sewer rates, rendershim liable to have the connectionwith the sewer cut, as mentioned inthe agreement to be signed.

Magoon & Weaver appeared for TueBun, and W. S. Edings for McCand-less. Both cases for the Territory wereconducted by Deputy Attorney Gener-al Sutton.

COAST URG ING

C0A TW

ENSION(Special Cablo to The Star..)

SAN FRANCISCO, November 18.At today's session nf tho Pacific SlopeCongress, it was resolved to hold aCongress each year. Governor Glllettof California- - was elected president,and ten vice- - presidents were unnoinLed, including Governor Frear.

Resolutions were carried ureinethat a battleship fleet be stationed inthe Pacific Ocean; an increase in thearmy for tho protection of the Coast,and that legislation be enactdi to aidthe American merchant marine.

Tho Congress also went on recordin favor of relief from some of theburdens of tho coastwise shippinglaws.

The construction of a national high-way- ,

from Canada to Mexico, was urg-ed.

'

The San Francisco Panama Canaloxposition was ondorsed, also San Diego's proposed oxposition.

Hawaii is represented by tho sec.rotary of tho Territory, E. A. Mott--

Smlth.The congross Is to meet next year

in Portland.

A discontinuance of the action, TheRemington Typewriter Co.G. Kellogg, has been filed. v

KEEPING RACK

STEAMER CROWD S

The Superintendent or Public Workshas In view a schomo by which thecrowds who welcome tho incomingmall steamers will be held in check,and tnus prevented from hamperingthe work of those officers whose dutiestake them to tho wharves. A portablerailing will be placed In position be-

fore the steamer is alongside thewharf, and doors will be opened onlyto allow the Ingress of those author-ized to board the vesse s. This workwill bo carried out as soon as theworkmen are available to erect thenecessary railings.

S R AS

R 01 1(Continued from Page One.)

throughout the islands by reason ofhis many business trips pere; he Isagain on another of them.

The Hon. J. S. Irby, Colorado StateSenator, is hero on a trip and proposesto spend some little time in the is-

lands.A report reached the Sierra that the

Wilhelmlna made a record run on herlast trip, getting from port to port infive days seven hours, as against theSierras five days nineteen hours andfifty-seve- n minutes. "We did not takeheed of the seconds," said" PurserSmith, when remarking on the timefor the trip, "but if we were up againstthe Wi'helmlna again wo would doso. I can't get that last race out ofmy head; that was a fine example ofjockey captaining that Captain John-son put up, but he was up against aman who knew every move on theboard and was not caught napping. Weknow the Wilhelmlna tried to get themails, but the Postoffice officials knowwe do the better time and thus theygive them to us. But if this new timereported by the Wilhelmlna Is correctwe will have to open up the Sierra abit; she never runs at full speed.When next we get out together, earlyin the next year, the Wilhelmlna willhave to move faster to show us theway. She will then have a sugarcargo of seven or eight thousand tonsand will not be able to skim over thewater like she did last month."

Last night the Lurllne was sightedby the Sierra. It was a perfect nightand the Lurline make a pretty picturewith all her lights showing as shepassed outward to San, Francisco.

0 BOARD

(Continued iivm Page One.)

for the purposes of the County of Ha-

waii with perhaps a small portion ofIt retained for Territorial purposes,pass a resolution authorizing and gua-

ranteeing the construction of said Ku-hi- o

street, the same being a conditionprecedent to the making available andeffective tho authorization and appro-priation by Congrsss of the sum of$200,000 for a Federal building atHilo. The board of supervisors Is pre-

pared to carry out faithfully its pro-

mise to construct Kuhio street, andwill expect equal good faith on thepart of Governor Frear in the matterof the disposition of the lower half oftho Federal building lot, and will moststrenuously protest against the remov-al of tho fire station to the block onWailuku and Shipman streets as pro-

posed."As to the fire station it is recom-

mended that this Honorable Board ofSupervisors most strenuously protestagainst the lack of good faith shownby the Governor and Commissioner ofPublic Lands in the matter of tho divi-

sion and disposal of the lower portionof the Federal building lot and theirpeculiar action In persisting in the dis-

posal at public auction for the bene-fit of privato parties of that lot onthe corner of Kuhio and Waianuenuestreets desired by the county as a flrostation site and against the wishesand requests of the public and Itsbenefit."

NEW K1CE MILL.The K1. Yamamoio Rico Mill is the

largest as well as tno finest In thoIslands. All machinery Is of the verylatest pattern. The famous TenguRice Is cleaned at this mill. With tholarge cleaning capacity they are' ableto handle considerable out-sid- e parti-cular work which they guarantee.

JUDICIARY BUILDING.Tho Superintendent of Public Works

said this morning that tho next Legis-lature will be asked to grant the sumof $100,000 for the purpose of reno- -

vatlng the Judiciary building. Thowork of removing tho plaster fromtho ceiling of the first Circuit Courtwill be begun forthwith.

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

Thanksgiving Sale of World-- ?

Renowned Irish LinensWc have received this week from Belfast one of the largest direct

shipments of Table Linen ever imported into the Islands. These goodsdo not require to be "talked up;" they include the famous "Shamrock"brand manufactured by John S. Brown & Sons. Shamrock Linenshave a popular reputation of over one hundred years and good house-keepers everywhere are familiar with their excellence and beauty ofdesign.

y RALE BEGINS MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14th,And will continue until .Thanksgiving, November 24th.

LINEN NAPKINS, in Luncheon and Dinner Sizes.LINEN DAMASK CLOTHS,

FRINGED DAMASK DOYLIES, All Linen.Beautiful Linens such as we wjll offer at this Sale make handsome

Christmas Gifts. They can be purchased in Sets all to match or.. :....! f1lit. .....1 V,.. I.!..,. 1... 1. ,1nnn tVn limxi .. n)n...ln.l !

also a line line ' ,

TABLE DAMASK, , ";

GLASS TOWELLING, GLASS CLOTHS, J

DOYLIES, PANTRY CLOTHS, ETC.

. S. Sachs Dry Goods Co.Cor. Fort and Beretania Sts.

1

...HeavyWill do damage to

FILLING annas done.

P. M. PONDCONSTRUCTION AND GRADING CONTRACTOR.

Soil and Coral supplied. Telephone 2S90.

WOOD

and

COAL

serious

3335

CP

GET ANDFOR ALL

THE

opp. Fire Station

been

Sand,

Rains...your yard unless proper

SAND

and

CORAL

THEM RIGHT. WE ARE

CONSTRUCTING

CONTRACTORS

Honolulu and Drayingcompany, Jvfcd

Queen St., opposite Kaahumanft. Telephone 2281.

and MeatsIPoiiltrvEITHER nAVEV

HEADQUARTERSCRAVES. QUALITY

Metropolitan

THAT THEREST.

W. F. and A. Proprs.1814.

Th

GRADING

lilt Dim

Construction

STOMACH

leat MarketHEILBRON LOUIS,

Telephone

dny ?

Will bo a day of Thanksgiving observed in OVOrv Rtatn nnilTerritory of tho Union.

You no doubt Intend to celebrate the occasion, and will have alarger number than usual at your dinner table; requiring a numberof additions of many articles necessary for your table and kitchen.

As usual you can get them at

We have tho largest assortment and our prices aro right. Court-eous attention, prompt delivery and guaranteed satisfaction, youknow you will receive.

W.W. Dimond & Co., Ltd.DEALERS IN HO USE HOLD NECESSITIES.

Sole agents for tho celebrated Jo wol Stoves and tho GurneyRofrlgerators. 55.67 King Street Honolulu.

1