A 'WA STAR. · sentenced Otomatsu Kawara to two years' Imprisonment, on a verdict find-ing the Jap...

8
I v i 'It. r K felt m mm m SUM star MA II ! 1R ?T A 'W A T7 A TT STAR. EDITION SECOND Classified Ads, Three Times, 25 Cents (VOLUME XIII. HONOLULU, HAWAII. TlT.ShVV M Y i. 1905. No. fCJt HAVE WE A BEEFTRUST? KMPOKT THAT FKDISRAL AUTHORITIES AUK TO INVESTIGATE A LOCAL SMALL DUPL1CATK OF "THIO GIU8ATKST 1 RUST IX HB WORLDI' UltHCKONS IN C01t UUSPONDHKCIC WITH DUPAIW-MMN- T OP JUSTICE REGARDING TUB MATTER. UM Hawaii a beef tiufcl. mul is Die- - Irlot Attorney Ilreckons about lo come to the front 11 h one of the federal gov- - ernments trust bustors. ar.- questions being asked In kv of ri ported cor- - V. 3. DISTRICT ATTORNEY It. V. BRECKONS, THK TRUST BREAKER OF respondeiu-- between Breckons nnd the department of JuHtlee concerning the meat business here. In Chicago and other meat centers a great warfare Is .being waged, started by the federal au- thorities to break up the system where- by, as Is claimed, the meat packers are able, through a combination, to control the price of moat on the hoof 41s well as prepared It Is said that the jjfr . "V 'V O". KAWAHA GETS TWO YEARS. Judge De Bolt yesterday afternoon sentenced Otomatsu Kawara to two years' Imprisonment, on a verdict find- ing the Jap guilty of nssault and bat- tery. Kawara killed a Japanese at Wal-mana- lo and was tried on an indictment for manslaughter. WEST POINT EXAMINATION. Albert K. Lyman began to take Ills qntrnnco oxam'natlon to the West Point Military Academy yestorday at Camp McKlnley. He was examined In writing, spelling and geo- graphy. Neither of the alternates pre- sented themselves to take the examin- ation. GIVE CHAMBERLAIN'S PAIN BALM A TllIAL. No liniment affords such prompt relief from rheumatic pains. No other Is so valuable for deep seated pains like lame back and pains In the chest. Give this liniment a trial and become ac- quainted with its remarkable qualities and you will never wish to be without It. For sale by all dealers; Benson, Smith &Co., agents for Hawaii . Its Bad Business whon the safe j rifled and documents which cannot be replaced, abstracted there- from. Our safe deposit boxes defy cracksmen and the fire fiend. Their cost is only $5 per year and upward, according to the size. H tmiot nn : 1 &crmwa M A 1 .11 Fort Street, Honolulu 1 .5r I V attention of the authorities h htm to omewhat similar eomlltton here, and that the matter is likely to ,.lk(n up .some u;o was nude that the me it sillers here had WHO MAY HAWAII. meat. morning other tlmo made a roduct.nn n the price of beef, with the hope cr j, raising consump- tion. Then after .1 tri.il of the system it was aunouiued that It had failed to Increase consumption, and the prlc'e was put back. This course of action, apparently showing a cotnplote con- trol of the entire market, Is stated to have attracted t' e attention of the federal auhoritles. - ! vv-- o : :- - omi I NEW STOCKYARDS COMPANY. The Wagner Stockyards Company has filed articles of Incorporation with j Treasurer Campbell, to do a general stockyards, pork, butcher and whole- sale live stock business in Honolulu The Incorporators are B. Wagner, S. F. Rice, G. J. Waller, John Burke and Ed. Ingham. The capital stock Is $$,000 'all subscribed. Wagner has 49 shares, Ulce and Ingham 1 each, Waller 19 and Burke 20. The president Is William Wngner, secretary S. F. Rice and treas- urer G. J. Waller. The corporation has acquired the property of the Wagner Stockyards Company a for $7,000. HOUSE PAINTING Neatly and artistically done at rea- sonable prices by Enos Bros. SOMETHING NEW. Have you seen the new shirtwaist Extender. It Is a device for holding shirt waist, skirt and belt together and does what Is claimed for it. The waist Is kept down and the skirt up. The price Is ten cents, In black and nickel, at Sachs'. $1.60 FOIt $50c. Arlelgh & Co. are selling regular $1.50 books at COc. Popular authors. Cloth bound editions. Now Is your chance7 Fine Job Printing, Star Office. maim SHOTGUNS, RIFLES, REVOLVER" Ammunitions A FULL LINE AT Ml Llmltod m FORT STREET Russia s Crisis Looks More Serious Now (Associated Press WARSAW, May 2. The Social-Democrat- ic lis called upon all workmen to Join the strike as a consequence of yontenlay'a bloodehed. over thirty ppillea of vJotJm killed yeotarday by the troa, await Iden- tification the nmrxue. Many woman and children ware laJuptU in tite noting-- . ENORMOUS LODJC, May 2. Seventy-liv- e thousand people are engaged In a strike tills plaro LINEVITCTOUTDQES UM PASH, May 2. General L t iiiis on Easier kissing h soldier. ivtn loutlnuea. MRS. NETTIE WASHINGTON, Iowa, May 2. Mis. Nettle Craven once a claimant to the millions of the late U. S. Senator Fair of California, died here today in the Insane asylum. BRITISH TORPEDO BOAT WRECKED. WIT TO SERVE . GOUT 01! CORK. May 2. The torpedo boat Berehaven. m FEABLESS CLAIMS WO THE BARK DON, WHILE CROSSING LOTS, RUNS INTO A REEF AND A BIG SALVAGE CLAIM. The Fearless salvage agreement with the ,bark Don was for $15,000, for pull- ing the bark off the reef at Diamond Head last Sunday. This is the sum said to have been agreed upon on the spot by Captain Olsen of the Fearless and the master of the Don. It Is said, how- ever, that the- - owners of the Don re- gard It as excosslve and that there will be a contest In the courtH. The Don's owners, It Is said, are disposed to think that $1C,000 Is more than they should pay for the brief exertions of the tug. The suit, If one is brought, will be In the local federal court. HOUSE JOURNA L 0 DOCUMENT WANTED IN THE MEHEULA TRIAL IS NOT TO BE FOUND. The original journal of the sessions of the first Housef of Representatives has been lost and the failure of the prosecution to produce it In the Mehe- - ula trial today resulted In a contest as to whether the printed journal could be introduced In evidence a a correct copy. Chief Clerk Buckland of the olilce testified that he had made1 diligent search for the document In question but had not been able to And it. It was lost a long time ago and its disappearance Is a mystery. After proving that the original was not obtainable Deputy Attorney Gen- eral Fleming offered one of the print- ed nnd bound volumes, but Anhford ob- jected on the ground that t was not a correct copy, whereupon J. V), Avery, stenographer of the House, wlio Jielpeil to make up the journal, was called to testify as to lU accuracy. Under cross examination by Asliford he stated that he had not compared It all with the original draft, though lie had compared some parts, The Journal contains Im- portant teUjJpny tor the proiecutlnn, Fine Job Printing, Btgr Offlge, Cable to The Star). Party at at STRIKE AT LODZ. nn-vl- li pa-- l down Hi" Ii if Ills Th" riMirKainz.iiiun of t ! M.uu hurlan GRAVEN DEA fjyren has been wrecked on a reef at LIST OF NAMES OF REPUBLICANS AND OFFICES THEY WANT TO FILL SOME TALK OF FUSION, For 'Sheriff, A, M, Brown or Clarence Crabbe. For County Clerk, 03, Kulauokala.il, Jr. For County Attorney, E. A. Douthltt or W. T. Rawlins. For Treasurer, E. U. Adams. Supervisor at largo, Mark P. Robln- - The above names constitute tint Re- publican candidates, being the most talked of among pollniclans, to be sub- mitted to voters In the coming primar- ies next Saturday. The sheriff fight Is all on over the island, but as to the other ofllces thore is not so much active work being done. Efforts have been made to switch both Brown and Crabbe to other olilces, and cither of them, could liavo another nomination by withdraw- ing from .the contest for sheriffs, but each declines to do so, D. Kalauokalanl, who Is being urged for county clerk, is the clerk of the presont House, nnd has made a good record in that capacity. Douthltt and Rawlins are .both wall known uttorneys, the latter .being deputy sheriff, while Douthltt has a brilliant record as dep- uty uttorney general. The position of treasurer calls for a business man hav- ing thcr confidence of financial institu- tions, to assist In financing the coun- ties, and Adams can till this bill. Mark Robinson is regarded as a very strong candidate for supervMor. Efforts are being renewed to arrange fusion between the Democrats nnd Home Rulers, and the matter is being seriously considered by the Home Rule organization. On Maui a fusion hns been arranged, and the following ticket is reported from us pruotdcally agreed upon by the fusion parties: William White for sheriff, T. B. Lyons for treasurer, D, II. Kaliaulello for auditor. J. Ii. Coke for county attorney, t'harles WJlcox for !,... I, ,,.l u, ,...... 1. seimtor Kalue. Thomas Clark, A. For-syth- e and George Kuuhl are up for dep uty sheriff's Jobs mid Judge Kahuulello for supervisor from Lahalua district. Wont ads in the H'ur bring quick re. suits. Throe lltjts throe times for 2b cents. UPPER HOUSE USES KNIFE HNAYV aLAHINQ MY HOTIf HOU 8E8 IN THK APPROPRIATIOK UJ mrV AX 1TKM OF THRRK THOU HAND DOLIKS FOR FW OK THK COUNTY QOVKUNMKNT MILL IS PA8D BY KKI'RiMKX- - TATIVI08-JOI- W CUT OUT ALTOGKTHKK. THIS SBNATB. The 8nat met for the aeoond day of the extra sooston, ami under auattanalon ot the rules lHshon made a miwtrt from the ways and means committee on Sen- ate INI1 No. S, the bill making special appropriations for the departmental use of the Territory. This la the old Henate I1I1I IK, which failed of passage at the regular session and which the governor Is Seclally desired should pass. It Is a dellolency measure. Tile report favored the passage of the bill, witli some sUirht amendments, ami went on the table to be considered wfth the bill. Senate Bill No. 1, appropriating $W0O for the expenses of the extra session, passed second reading and will be read for the third time tomorrow. The regular order then came on the second reading of Senate Bill Xo. 5, which carries appropriations amounting to $25,425.20. There was no change Jn the bill until the tax office appropria- tion of $600 was reached, and on motion of Dowsett this was Increased to $1000. The Public Works appropriation was Increased from $10,000 to $11,000, of this amount $5,000 being for roads In the tftfth and $5,000 for like purpose in the Fourth district. , The Item of $5,000 for the Bureau of Forestry was stricken out. The Supreme Court was given $200 And the Department of Justice $400 ad- ditional. The Land Registration Court was cut from $740 to $700, at its own request. Tlie Land Ofllce was given $500 addi- tional for Incidentals. The item of $1S& to repay District Magistrate Lindsay for time lost during his lllnoss, created some discussion. AchI wanting to change the form of the item, and DIokey objected to tlio Item altogether as establishing a bad prece- dent. Dowsett moved that the Item bo in- creased to $350, rending a letter from Governor Carter explaining the Justice of Judge Lindsay's claim. Achl moved to amond by making the appropriation $350, payable to Judd and Whitney, who served as second magis- trates during Lindsay's Illness. The matter could be got around In that way, as they could pay the amount to .Lind- say. The law allowed a salary for a second Judge. Dickey assented to tills at first, but upon further argument, moved to strike the item out, and this carried. The item appropriating $800 for (he pay of Supreme Court stenographers wnndored in the balance for a time, the ijonunucj on page &.) SUGAR L DWER SAN FRANCISCO, May 1. The New. York price of 98 degree centrifugals this day Is 4.18 cents a 1 10 u ml, or $91,00 a ton. 'l lie last previous quotation was April 25, 4.C175 cents a pound. KA1MUICI ZOO AT NIGHT. The Kawalhau Orchestra will play at tho Kalmuki Zoo Wodnosday and 'Fri- day evenings Xronj 7:30 until 11 p. m. Take an evening ride and iee the Arc Lights and the electrical effects In the Fish and TurJIo Pond. S e ANOTHER HOWL. This time it Is the baby, he has had to take Castor Oil when he wanted Kas-t- ol at Hobron's. Lutted's Hawaiian P01 In Pound Cam for sale by all druggists and grocers. A MATTER OFHEALTH ROYAL mm POWDER Absolutely Pure HAS HO SUBSTITUTE ix 111a nouais. Superintendent James C. Davis of th Department oTPtiMtc Instruction sesit his first HHclal conwiunlcaUon to the House of Representatives this moraMtC when he submitted his sett mate far ttat amounts required for the support e public schools, new buildings and Mnd-te- d matters for the two years etulNtC June SOth, WOT. The Superintendent's figures for sala- ries and ty rolls amounted to $768,710 as compared with $701,410, the Gover- nor's estimate. Current expenses are figured at $156,20 by Superintendent Davis, and at JIM, WO hy the Governor, making a total of $U10 by the Super- intendent as compared with $84160 by the Governor. The list of salaries throughout the whole estimate restores the figures which were paid prevbMis to the genral cut made a year ago. The following Interesting figures ore given in Superintendent Davis' esti- mate: Payroll for June, 1904, (before the out was made) $ 2,MLJ( Pay roll for July, 104, (after the cut waa made) tOMtt Present monthly my roll 30,311.40 Present iwy roll, restored.... 27,.4L Pay roll for biennial period to June 30, 1807 ll,8iq.bo' Salaries of 40 new teachers.. M,o60.00 Appropriation for biennial period 1001-- 7 If salaries are restored July 1 OSO.CIO.OO Appropriation if salaries are restored September 1 072,902. IS AylettoBuggeated the appointment of a comminSe of three to confer with a. similar commltteo from the Senate And decide on' what portion of the appro- priation for 'departmental purposes should go to the counties and what por- tion to the territory. Harris biiw no necessity for going to the Senate with the matter as the House was fully competent to Judge on each Horn. iioiBtmn moved the second rending by title mid. followed with a motion that the House consider the bill in commit- tee of the whole. The motion carried and Rice, despite his proles', was ap- pointed cha rman by Speaker Knudseti, Tlio bill was taken up Item h, Item. Consideration of an item of $1,000 for incidental expenses of tne Secretary's oHlce wag deferred. The following action was takjn on different paragraphs: For election expenses, Secrat'.iry'a off- ice-. $:i,0G0; passed. Printing and advertising, $10,000; deferred. 1 (Continued to Pnz 5.) MANUKA DUE TOMORROW. Tho S, S. Manuka Is due tomorrow from the Colonies en route to Victoria and Vanqouver. ODDS AND ENDS, aood Typewriter Paper at leas than cost. Regular 1.51 nnd l.SS values go- ing at 90 cts. box. Call early before Its all sold. Wall, Nichols Co. Automobiles can be hired day or night at Club Stables, Fort Street. AN 'ELEGANT OXFORD Bv SKSSSSSSH all styles. ATeksmeaiiiiiiKi There- Is good wi.ir in thest shoes as well ; s style; In fast there s more than $1 wear In them ulone, the style is gratis. I LIMITED., 12 2 051 FQRT STRHI8T MU ... . ft. I. n Hi

Transcript of A 'WA STAR. · sentenced Otomatsu Kawara to two years' Imprisonment, on a verdict find-ing the Jap...

Page 1: A 'WA STAR. · sentenced Otomatsu Kawara to two years' Imprisonment, on a verdict find-ing the Jap guilty of nssault and bat-tery. Kawara killed a Japanese at Wal-mana- lo and was

I v

i

'It.r

K

felt

m

mmm

SUM

starMA II

!

1R ?T A 'W A T7 A TT STAR. EDITIONSECOND

Classified Ads, Three Times, 25 Cents

(VOLUME XIII. HONOLULU, HAWAII. TlT.ShVV M Y i. 1905. No. fCJt

HAVE WE ABEEFTRUST?

KMPOKT THAT FKDISRAL AUTHORITIES AUK TO INVESTIGATE A

LOCAL SMALL DUPL1CATK OF "THIO GIU8ATKST 1 RUST IX HB

WORLDI' UltHCKONS IN C01t UUSPONDHKCIC WITH DUPAIW-MMN- T

OP JUSTICE REGARDING TUB MATTER.

UM Hawaii a beef tiufcl. mul is Die- -

Irlot Attorney Ilreckons about lo come

to the front 11 h one of the federal gov- -

ernments trust bustors. ar.- questionsbeing asked In kv of ri ported cor- -

V. 3. DISTRICT ATTORNEY It. V. BRECKONS,THK TRUST BREAKER OF

respondeiu-- between Breckons nnd thedepartment of JuHtlee concerning themeat business here. In Chicago andother meat centers a great warfare Is.being waged, started by the federal au-

thorities to break up the system where-by, as Is claimed, the meat packers areable, through a combination, to controlthe price of moat on the hoof 41s well asprepared It Is said that the

jjfr . "V 'V O".

KAWAHA GETS TWO YEARS.Judge De Bolt yesterday afternoon

sentenced Otomatsu Kawara to twoyears' Imprisonment, on a verdict find-

ing the Jap guilty of nssault and bat-tery. Kawara killed a Japanese at Wal-mana- lo

and was tried on an indictmentfor manslaughter.

WEST POINT EXAMINATION.Albert K. Lyman began to take Ills

qntrnnco oxam'natlon to the WestPoint Military Academy yestorday

at Camp McKlnley. He wasexamined In writing, spelling and geo-

graphy. Neither of the alternates pre-

sented themselves to take the examin-ation.

GIVE CHAMBERLAIN'S PAIN BALMA TllIAL.

No liniment affords such promptrelief from rheumatic pains. No otherIs so valuable for deep seated pains likelame back and pains In the chest. Givethis liniment a trial and become ac-

quainted with its remarkable qualitiesand you will never wish to be withoutIt. For sale by all dealers; Benson,Smith &Co., agents for Hawaii .

Its BadBusiness

whon the safe j rifled anddocuments which cannot bereplaced, abstracted there-from.

Our safe deposit boxes defycracksmen and the fire fiend.

Their cost is only $5 peryear and upward, accordingto the size.

H tmiot nn: 1 &crmwa M A 1 .11

Fort Street,Honolulu 1

.5r I

V

attention of the authorities h htmto omewhat similar eomlltton

here, and that the matter is likely to,.lk(n up

.some u;o wasnude that the me it sillers here had

WHO MAYHAWAII.

meat.

morning

other

tlmo

made a roduct.nn n the price of beef,with the hope cr j, raising consump-tion. Then after .1 tri.il of the systemit was aunouiued that It had failed toIncrease consumption, and the prlc'ewas put back. This course of action,apparently showing a cotnplote con-trol of the entire market, Is stated tohave attracted t' e attention of the

federal auhoritles.- ! vv-- o : :- - omi

I NEW STOCKYARDS COMPANY.The Wagner Stockyards Company

has filed articles of Incorporation withj Treasurer Campbell, to do a generalstockyards, pork, butcher and whole-sale live stock business in HonoluluThe Incorporators are B. Wagner, S. F.Rice, G. J. Waller, John Burke and Ed.Ingham. The capital stock Is $$,000 'allsubscribed. Wagner has 49 shares,Ulce and Ingham 1 each, Waller 19 andBurke 20. The president Is WilliamWngner, secretary S. F. Rice and treas-

urer G. J. Waller. The corporation hasacquired the property of the WagnerStockyards Company afor $7,000.

HOUSE PAINTINGNeatly and artistically done at rea-

sonable prices by Enos Bros.

SOMETHING NEW.Have you seen the new shirtwaist

Extender. It Is a device for holdingshirt waist, skirt and belt together anddoes what Is claimed for it. The waistIs kept down and the skirt up. Theprice Is ten cents, In black and nickel,at Sachs'.

$1.60 FOIt $50c.Arlelgh & Co. are selling regular $1.50

books at COc. Popular authors. Clothbound editions. Now Is your chance7

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

maimSHOTGUNS,RIFLES,REVOLVER"

AmmunitionsA FULL LINE AT

MlLlmltod

m FORT STREET

Russia s Crisis

Looks More

Serious Now(Associated Press

WARSAW, May 2. The Social-Democrat- ic lis called upon allworkmen to Join the strike as a consequence of yontenlay'a bloodehed.

over thirty ppillea of vJotJm killed yeotarday by the troa, await Iden-

tification the nmrxue. Many woman and children ware laJuptU in titenoting-- .

ENORMOUS

LODJC, May 2. Seventy-liv- e thousand people are engaged In a striketills plaro

LINEVITCTOUTDQES UMPASH, May 2. General L

t iiiis on Easier kissing h soldier.ivtn loutlnuea.

MRS. NETTIE

WASHINGTON, Iowa, May 2. Mis. Nettle Craven once a claimant tothe millions of the late U. S. Senator Fair of California, died here today inthe Insane asylum.

BRITISH TORPEDO BOAT WRECKED.

WIT TO SERVE

. GOUT

01!

CORK. May 2. The torpedo boatBerehaven.

m FEABLESS

CLAIMS

WOTHE BARK DON, WHILE CROSSING

LOTS, RUNS INTO A REEF AND

A BIG SALVAGE CLAIM.

The Fearless salvage agreement withthe ,bark Don was for $15,000, for pull-ing the bark off the reef at DiamondHead last Sunday. This is the sum saidto have been agreed upon on the spotby Captain Olsen of the Fearless andthe master of the Don. It Is said, how-ever, that the- - owners of the Don re-

gard It as excosslve and that there willbe a contest In the courtH. The Don'sowners, It Is said, are disposed to thinkthat $1C,000 Is more than they shouldpay for the brief exertions of the tug.

The suit, If one is brought, will be Inthe local federal court.

HOUSE JOURNA L

0

DOCUMENT WANTED IN THEMEHEULA TRIAL IS NOT TO

BE FOUND.

The original journal of the sessionsof the first Housef of Representativeshas been lost and the failure of theprosecution to produce it In the Mehe- -ula trial today resulted In a contest asto whether the printed journal could beintroduced In evidence a a correctcopy. Chief Clerk Buckland of the

olilce testified that he hadmade1 diligent search for the documentIn question but had not been able toAnd it. It was lost a long time ago andits disappearance Is a mystery.

After proving that the original wasnot obtainable Deputy Attorney Gen-eral Fleming offered one of the print-ed nnd bound volumes, but Anhford ob-jected on the ground that t was not acorrect copy, whereupon J. V), Avery,stenographer of the House, wlio Jielpeilto make up the journal, was called totestify as to lU accuracy. Under crossexamination by Asliford he stated thathe had not compared It all with theoriginal draft, though lie had comparedsome parts, The Journal contains Im-portant teUjJpny tor the proiecutlnn,

Fine Job Printing, Btgr Offlge,

Cable to The Star).

Party

at

at

STRIKE AT LODZ.

nn-vl- li pa-- l down Hi" Ii if Ills

Th" riMirKainz.iiiun of t ! M.uu hurlan

GRAVEN DEA

fjyren has been wrecked on a reef at

LIST OF NAMES OF REPUBLICANSAND OFFICES THEY WANT TO

FILL SOME TALK OF FUSION,

For 'Sheriff, A, M, Brown or ClarenceCrabbe.

For County Clerk, 03, Kulauokala.il,Jr.

For County Attorney, E. A. Douthlttor W. T. Rawlins.

For Treasurer, E. U. Adams.Supervisor at largo, Mark P. Robln- -

The above names constitute tint Re-publican candidates, being the mosttalked of among pollniclans, to be sub-mitted to voters In the coming primar-ies next Saturday. The sheriff fight Isall on over the island, but as to theother ofllces thore is not so much activework being done. Efforts have beenmade to switch both Brown and Crabbeto other olilces, and cither of them, couldliavo another nomination by withdraw-ing from .the contest for sheriffs, buteach declines to do so,

D. Kalauokalanl, who Is being urgedfor county clerk, is the clerk of thepresont House, nnd has made a goodrecord in that capacity. Douthltt andRawlins are .both wall known uttorneys,the latter .being deputy sheriff, whileDouthltt has a brilliant record as dep-uty uttorney general. The position oftreasurer calls for a business man hav-ing thcr confidence of financial institu-tions, to assist In financing the coun-ties, and Adams can till this bill. MarkRobinson is regarded as a very strongcandidate for supervMor.

Efforts are being renewed to arrangefusion between the Democrats nndHome Rulers, and the matter is beingseriously considered by the Home Ruleorganization.

On Maui a fusion hns been arranged,and the following ticket is reportedfrom us pruotdcally agreed upon by thefusion parties: William White forsheriff, T. B. Lyons for treasurer, D, II.Kaliaulello for auditor. J. Ii. Coke forcounty attorney, t'harles WJlcox for

!,... I, ,,.l u, ,...... 1.

seimtor Kalue. Thomas Clark, A. For-syth- e

and George Kuuhl are up for deputy sheriff's Jobs mid Judge Kahuulellofor supervisor from Lahalua district.

Wont ads in the H'ur bring quick re.suits. Throe lltjts throe times for 2b

cents.

UPPER HOUSE

USES KNIFEHNAYV aLAHINQ MY HOTIf HOU 8E8 IN THK APPROPRIATIOK UJ

mrV AX 1TKM OF THRRK THOU HAND DOLIKS FOR FW OK

THK COUNTY QOVKUNMKNT MILL IS PA8D BY KKI'RiMKX- -TATIVI08-JOI-W CUT OUT ALTOGKTHKK.

THIS SBNATB.The 8nat met for the aeoond day of

the extra sooston, ami under auattanalonot the rules lHshon made a miwtrt fromthe ways and means committee on Sen-ate INI1 No. S, the bill making specialappropriations for the departmental useof the Territory. This la the old HenateI1I1I IK, which failed of passage at theregular session and which the governorIs Seclally desired should pass. It Isa dellolency measure.

Tile report favored the passage of thebill, witli some sUirht amendments, amiwent on the table to be considered wfththe bill.

Senate Bill No. 1, appropriating $W0Ofor the expenses of the extra session,passed second reading and will be readfor the third time tomorrow.

The regular order then came on thesecond reading of Senate Bill Xo. 5,which carries appropriations amountingto $25,425.20. There was no change Jnthe bill until the tax office appropria-tion of $600 was reached, and on motionof Dowsett this was Increased to $1000.

The Public Works appropriation wasIncreased from $10,000 to $11,000, of thisamount $5,000 being for roads In thetftfth and $5,000 for like purpose in theFourth district. ,

The Item of $5,000 for the Bureau ofForestry was stricken out.

The Supreme Court was given $200And the Department of Justice $400 ad-

ditional.The Land Registration Court was cut

from $740 to $700, at its own request.Tlie Land Ofllce was given $500 addi-

tional for Incidentals.The item of $1S& to repay District

Magistrate Lindsay for time lost duringhis lllnoss, created some discussion.

AchI wanting to change the form of theitem, and DIokey objected to tlio Itemaltogether as establishing a bad prece-dent.

Dowsett moved that the Item bo in-

creased to $350, rending a letter fromGovernor Carter explaining the Justiceof Judge Lindsay's claim.

Achl moved to amond by making theappropriation $350, payable to Judd andWhitney, who served as second magis-trates during Lindsay's Illness. Thematter could be got around In that way,as they could pay the amount to .Lind-say. The law allowed a salary for asecond Judge.

Dickey assented to tills at first, butupon further argument, moved to strikethe item out, and this carried.

The item appropriating $800 for (hepay of Supreme Court stenographerswnndored in the balance for a time, the

ijonunucj on page &.)

SUGAR LDWER

SAN FRANCISCO, May 1. The New.York price of 98 degree centrifugalsthis day Is 4.18 cents a 1 10 u ml, or $91,00a ton. 'l lie last previous quotation wasApril 25, 4.C175 cents a pound.

KA1MUICI ZOO AT NIGHT.The Kawalhau Orchestra will play at

tho Kalmuki Zoo Wodnosday and 'Fri-day evenings Xronj 7:30 until 11 p. m.

Take an evening ride and iee the ArcLights and the electrical effects In theFish and TurJIo Pond.

S eANOTHER HOWL.

This time it Is the baby, he has hadto take Castor Oil when he wanted Kas-t- ol

at Hobron's.

Lutted's Hawaiian P01 In Pound Camfor sale by all druggists and grocers.

A MATTER OFHEALTH

ROYALmm

POWDERAbsolutely Pure

HAS HO SUBSTITUTE

ix 111a nouais.Superintendent James C. Davis of th

Department oTPtiMtc Instruction sesithis first HHclal conwiunlcaUon to theHouse of Representatives this moraMtCwhen he submitted his settmate far ttatamounts required for the support epublic schools, new buildings and Mnd-te- d

matters for the two years etulNtCJune SOth, WOT.

The Superintendent's figures for sala-ries and ty rolls amounted to $768,710as compared with $701,410, the Gover-nor's estimate. Current expenses arefigured at $156,20 by SuperintendentDavis, and at JIM, WO hy the Governor,making a total of $U10 by the Super-intendent as compared with $84160 bythe Governor. The list of salariesthroughout the whole estimate restoresthe figures which were paid prevbMis tothe genral cut made a year ago.

The following Interesting figures oregiven in Superintendent Davis' esti-mate:Payroll for June, 1904, (before

the out was made) $ 2,MLJ(Pay roll for July, 104, (after

the cut waa made) tOMttPresent monthly my roll 30,311.40Present iwy roll, restored.... 27,.4LPay roll for biennial period to

June 30, 1807 ll,8iq.bo'Salaries of 40 new teachers.. M,o60.00Appropriation for biennial

period 1001-- 7 If salaries arerestored July 1 OSO.CIO.OO

Appropriation if salaries arerestored September 1 072,902. ISAylettoBuggeated the appointment of

a comminSe of three to confer with a.similar commltteo from the Senate Anddecide on' what portion of the appro-priation for 'departmental purposesshould go to the counties and what por-tion to the territory.

Harris biiw no necessity for going tothe Senate with the matter as theHouse was fully competent to Judge oneach Horn.

iioiBtmn moved the second rending bytitle mid. followed with a motion thatthe House consider the bill in commit-tee of the whole. The motion carriedand Rice, despite his proles', was ap-pointed cha rman by Speaker Knudseti,

Tlio bill was taken up Item h, Item.Consideration of an item of $1,000 for

incidental expenses of tne Secretary'soHlce wag deferred.

The following action was takjn ondifferent paragraphs:

For election expenses, Secrat'.iry'a off-ice-. $:i,0G0; passed.

Printing and advertising, $10,000;deferred. 1

(Continued to Pnz 5.)

MANUKA DUE TOMORROW.Tho S, S. Manuka Is due tomorrow

from the Colonies en route to Victoriaand Vanqouver.

ODDS AND ENDS,aood Typewriter Paper at leas than

cost. Regular 1.51 nnd l.SS values go-

ing at 90 cts. box. Call early before Itsall sold. Wall, Nichols Co.

Automobiles can be hired day or nightat Club Stables, Fort Street.

AN 'ELEGANTOXFORD

Bv SKSSSSSSHall styles.

ATeksmeaiiiiiiKi

There- Is good wi.ir in thestshoes as well ; s style; In fastthere s more than $1 wear Inthem ulone, the style is gratis.

I

LIMITED.,12

2 051 FQRT STRHI8TMU... .

ft.

I.

n

Hi

Page 2: A 'WA STAR. · sentenced Otomatsu Kawara to two years' Imprisonment, on a verdict find-ing the Jap guilty of nssault and bat-tery. Kawara killed a Japanese at Wal-mana- lo and was

talc ttftnikip Ogimij, am hub WE "8BT CITY" ilT(For aMlttenal attt lalr afclMHnfratea 1, I or I.)

Thf flnf I iefifr Sttompr" of Hi l hp will arrive at and Itave ihla portM hrreunrtfi

FROM HAM FRAWCliCO.FMTVRA Mnr

AitAJflBDA MAT 12

nSmnx may uj&AMEtu June t

SONOMA JUKI 14

AIAMBDA JttWB MjTUKTURA JULY IAIOtEDA JULY 14

aiftRKA avvr mALAMEDA AVOWrr 4

0OKOMA AUOUT 1

'ALAMEDA AUOUarT IB

iVMMTCRA BWMBKA 6ALAMEDA sW.WEMBER K

BIXRRA IBFTBMBER 27

FORAI.AMKDA

DONOMA

LAMBDA.SONOMA

SIERRA

APRIL M

ItM

.nwiII

JUKI njtnnr

JULYjuly n

AUOUBTAuaua?AUOUtT N

la oonnasMon with string the above steamers, the Atfwils art pre-t- o

to Intending iMaaangorc cotpof 'hrtrtirh tkkeic by any railroadjpm tan Francisco all points the State, and from New York byJrteajuhlp line to ail European Ports.rr further particulars apply '

W. G. Irwin St Co.(LU ITED)

tirener&l JLgtv's Oceanic S. S. Company.

Canadian -- Australian Royal Ma

STEAMSHIP COMPANYSteamers of the above line, running connection with th- CANADIAN-PACIFI- C

RAILWAY COMPANY between Vancouver, 13. and Sydney, N.8, W., and calling Victoria, .C, Honolulu and Brisbane, Q.

Duo at Honolulu on or about tiio dates below viz:FOR USTRALIA.

'AOItANGI APR. 8

.MIOWERA C

MANUKA JUNE 3

AORANGI JULY 1

jllOWERA JULY 20

MO ANA AUG. 26

AORANGI SEPT. 28

MIOWERA OCT 21

MOANA NOV. 18

0AN

MAT

II

n

laeueIn Vn.hjf

at

MAY

FOR

MANUKAMAY

JUNEMOANAAORANGI

OCT

AT FIJI, UP ANDVOYAGES.

THEO. H. DAVIES & Ltd,, Gen'l Agts.

AMERICAN HAWAIIAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY.

DIRECT SERVICEYORK AND VIA PACIFIC COAST.

NEW TO HONOLULU.S. S. "ARIZONAN" To sail about May 13thS. S. "HAWAIIAN" To sail about June

SAN FRANCISCO TO HONOLULU.S. S. "NEBRASKA" To sail May nthS. S. "NEVADAN" To sail June 1st

HONOLULU FRANCISCO.S. S. "NEVADAN" To sail April 30thS. S. "NEBRASKAN" To sail May 21st

l'KUM AMUS. S. "NEBRASKAN" To sail MayS. S. "NEVADAN" To sail May 2CU1

EX. Xltiolrfolcl XsC. F. MORSE, General Freight Agent. AGENTS.

Pacific Mail Steamship Co.Occidental Oriental

Steamers of the above will call at Honolulu and this9Tt on or about the dates

FOR CHINA AND JAPAN.CHINA APR. 4

MANCHURIA APR. 25

KOREA MAY 10

COPTIC MAY 19

SIBERIA JUNE 3

JUNE 14

CHINA 21

JULY S

DORIC JULY 15

KOREA , JULY 29

COPTIC AUG. 9

SIBERIA AUC 23

MONGOLIA : SEPT. 2

CHINA SEPT. 13

MANCHURIA SEPT. 27

For general apply to

8IKHRA ...ALAMEDA

..ALAMEDA

VBMTURAAUAMVDA

8IBRRA ...A

..ALAMBDA

VMKTURAALAMBDA

...ALAMBOA

PRANCMCO.

MAT tMAT

T

JW4

I

..WPTBMBBR tJMinTBMBBR N

f f

tc

inC

B

staled,VANCOUVER.

MIOWERA APR. G

MAY 3

AORANGI 31

MIOWERA 28

JULY 20

AUG. 28

MIOWERA SEPT. 20

MOANA 18

MIOWERA DEC. 13

CALLING SUVA, ON BOTH DOWN

CO.,

MONTHLY BETWEEN NEWHONOLULU,

FROM YORK

5thFROM

FROM TO SAN

SliATTLIi TACUMA.51I1

;

Co.,

& S. S. Co.Companies leavebelow mentioned:

MONGOLIAJUNE

MANCHURIA

Information

FOR SAN FRANCISCO.KOREA APR.COPTIC APR.SIBERIA MAYMONGOLIA MAYCHINA MAYMANCHURIA JUNEDORIC JUNEKOREA t JULYCOPTIC JULYSIBERIA JULYMONGOLIA AUG.CHINA AUG.MANCHURIA SEPT.DORIC SEPT.KOREA ...SEPT.

H. Hackfeld Sc CoNot How Much You Eat

But WhatYou Eat

Food philosophy teaches us that GRANOLA, WHOLE WHEATSTICKS, GRANOSE BISCUIT, WHOLE WHEAT 'ZWEIBACH,GRANOSE FLAKES, PROTOSE, NUT BROMOSE, CARMEAL CE-

REAL, NUT SOUP STOCK, PEANUT BUTTER (In tins) NUT BUT-

TER (In Jars) are sane foods.We have Just received a consignment of the above from tho Sani-

tarium Food Co, of California, whom business la the preparation offoods which will have the approval of the highest dietetic authoritiesand which at the same time will please the most fastidious appetite.

SAN FRANCISCO PRICES.

Henry May & Co., Ltd.,ail Main 22 TELEPHONES Wholesale Main 92.

Wl HAWAIIAN TAM TtKJM'W, ,nv iiwrt

TWKf. MTN AND MOuN.Nin MiHin Miiy 4(h nt 4:1

fflflfifSf!!p.m. ft. a.m. a.m.

1 2.10 1.1 1.4 T.4I2.W 1.6

l.tl l.l.ll l.T4.18 l.T6.02 1.16.41 l.t

til1.411.111464.11

p.m.I.W

1.11 1.141.44 .lt.( 1I.M.M 11.11

1.66.94 10.M ,0.10

a.m.

inMSS.Ml.lt1.11S.Kl.tl

I'1Rtaea.

CM I.U.M 4.11

IK 6.KI.M Rein6.27 7.406.27 8.316.2" BM

S 6.30 1.7 6.64 ll.M 1.61 6.26 6.2S 10.lt,

Time of the tide ar taken from thU. E. Coast and Oeedetlc Survey t i

bles. The tides at Kahuiul and Hiscour about one hour earlier than nHonolulu, Hawaiian sta. dard time is10 hours 80 minutes slower than Green- -

wlch time, beta that of the meridianof 167 degrees 10 minutes. The tini.whistle blows at 1:80 p. in., which is1

the aame as Oreenwlch, 0 hours, 0 mn-ute-

The Bun and Moon are for loc altime for the whole group.

U. 8. Department of AgricultureWeather Bureau.

The following data, cowing a pcrio i

of 30 years have been compiled fromthe Weather ' Bureau and McKlbbmrecords at Honolulu, T. H. They arIssued to show the conditions tii ithave prevailed during tha month inquestion, for the above portod of yea it-- .

but must not be construed aa a forecast of the weather conditions for tin'coinlncT month.

Month, May, for 10 yearn.Temperature. (18W-1&- lncl.)

Mean or normal temperature, 75 dr-u--

The warmest month wm UuU of lMtr.

with an average of 70 deg.The coldest month was that of late,

with an average of 74 deg.The highest temperature was 87 di g.

on May 28 1S07.

The lowest temporature was CO deg.on May C and C, 1902.

Precipitation (rnln 1877-110- 4, lncl).Average for month, 2.33 Inches.Average number of days with .01 of

an Inch or more, 12.

The greatest monthly precipitationwas 11.29 Inches In 1886.

The least monthly precipitation was0.23 Inches In 1878.

The greatest amount of precipitationrecorded In any 21 consecutive hourwas 9.08 Inches on May 10, 1886.

Clouds and Woather (1881-190- 4, Inol).The prevailing winds have boen from

the northeast.Station: Honolulu, T. 11.

Date of Issue: April 28, 1905.

ALEX. McC. ASHLEY,Section Dlrctor. Woothor Bureau.

ARRIVING.TuoHday, May 2.

S. S. "li-rr- Houdlette, from Sydney,Aucliluml and Pago Pago at 8 a. in.

Wednesday, May 3,

S. 8. Vnturn, Haywanl, from Sanrrnnclsro, duo In afternoon.

8. H. Ni'Vodan, Greene, from SanFrancisco, due In afternoon.

S. 8. Manuka, Phillips, from Sydney,Brlsbano and Suva, due In morning,,

DEPARTING.Tuesday, May 2

S. S. Sierra, Houdlette, for San Fran-cisco nt 3 p. m.

Stmr. Mauna Loa, Slmerson, for a,

Malaoa, Konu and Kau ports tnoon. ' ,

Stmr. Klnu, Freeman, for Hllo andway ports at noon.

Stmr. Clnudlno Parker, for Maulports at G p. m.

Stmr. W. G. Hall, S. Thompson, forKauol ports at D p. m.

Stmr. Kcanhou, Tullctt, for Kauaiports at 5 p. in.

Stmr. Noenu, Peilorson, for Lahulnn,Kaanapall, Ilonoka and Kukulhaelc atc'p. m.

Wednesday, May 3.

S. S. Manuka, Phillips for Victoriaand Vancouver, probably sail In after-noon.

S. S. Ventura, Haywanl, for thoColonies, probably sail at night.

PASSENGERS.Arriving.

Per S. S. Slorra, May 2, from thoColonies for Honolulu. Mrs. G. C.Howard, Miss Marlon Arkwrlght, PercyYouhk. II. C. A. Young, S. W. Nelsonand C. J. RuhsoU.

Booked To Depart.Per . H. Slorra, May 2, for San Fran-

cisco: Mr. and Mrs. Grelg, Mrs. Rog-ers, Miss Rogers, S. A. Crook nnd A.Splvallo, Miss E. Angus, H. T. Hnysol-do- n,

John S. Ross, A.' Hamburg andwife, Clara Al. Snow, Thomas E. Wall,wife and child, W. M. Glffard, Mrs. J.B. Hopkins, George N. Newton andwife, E. F. Nichols, AUss A. Heutor,Aliss B. Howe, Misses (2) Zarlz, C. A.Bruns, J. J. Sulllvun, O. H. Walkor,Alhw Kltchon, I. S. Dillingham, Airs.Dr. W. G. Rogers, J. J. Cowall, wifeand 2 children, Rev. J. B. NIos andwife, C. F. Usinger, Airs. I. C. Sm'th,A. W. Woodford, Airs. W. JI. Shlpman,Air, and Airs. Woorehouse, Air and Mr.'AVrlgloy, J, H. Harrison, W. C. Grog,Otto Alooko, Airs. C. V. Sturtovnnt andchild, AUss Bohlen, Airs. J. W. Schoon-lu- g,

Aliss Alulr, Airs. Alulr, JosephHenrlckson, K. C. Dibble, wife and 2

children J. Al. Rlddlman, J. Hondrlck- -on, Frank Lawlos, N. Charwleskl, P.

Tetkal, P. Ragarto, N. Yokota,

AIAIL DUE TOAIORROW.The S. H. Ventura Irf due tomorrow

from Han Francisco with nliio dayslater mall.

When you feel that usual attack ofSpring fever coming on, don't punishyourself with unple-jsan- t medicines,Just order a case ot Rainier Boer andbe comfortable.

Constitute a Oompldte and ArtisticPictorial and Descriptive History

GREAT ST. LOUIS WORLD'S FAIR

(Reduoed Pen Sketch o! Cover. Site of Fge,llxl4 Inches.)

THOROUGHLY doesthis Great Expositionpresent tlie world's civili-

zation that if all men's otherworks were, by some unspeak-able catastrophe, blotted out,

the record here established would afford a nec-essary standard for the re-establishm- ent of ourentire civilization. And, just as the LouisianaPurchase Exposition held within its gates anepitome of the civilization of to-da- y, so theForest City Portfolios are a complete recordand reflex of the great Exposition. This greatWorld's Fair, one of the most remarkableundertakings in the history of American civi-lization and progress, will inspire many pens,but no history of the great event can comparewith the one written on the grounds by Secre-tary Stevens and illustrated with 480 magnifi-cent photographic reproductions, which trans-fer the Exposition to the printed page.

A BEAUTIFUL SOUVENIRAND MEMENTO

This paper has made special arrangementswhereby its readers can obtain the full series30 Portfolios for only $3.00, 10c for anypart desired Use the k 'Forest City" Couponin this issue.

Thirty Parts Now ReadyHow to Secure the Views.

These frws, which HI acompleto reflex and record of t) o Ex-position, are not distributed by ub as amatt o pro It, but rafjer t pleaseour readers. Although the regularprice Is 25 cents, we pl.ee thi entireseries thin the reuch of ever - ''kderat only

10ca Partto cover the co t of HANDLING,WRAPPING, ADDRESSING, MAILING, ETC. SImrly fill out the couponat tbe right and bring or send to uswith t.n cents, unl Port 1 will be mall- -(.1 to you at once, Add rear,

-- OF 1H- -

Ore

or

constitute

Fill out this Coupon and bring or send to us, with 10 CENTS, as Indicated below,

BE SURE TO STATE W slCll PART YOU WISH

1004.

HAWAIIAN BTAJt,Honolulu, Ilfnvnii: '

Inclosed herewith find TI5N IJiN'Jb lo cover costorpoKtngo nnd cxuciiko ol" ninllliig No of "Tho ForestCity," to which 1 aim entitled iih one of your renderH.

Name

1, 0 Inland ,

TTAWA-TTAiv- r ftTAP Portfolio n.mnirt.irmnfc Honolulu. Hawaii

Page 3: A 'WA STAR. · sentenced Otomatsu Kawara to two years' Imprisonment, on a verdict find-ing the Jap guilty of nssault and bat-tery. Kawara killed a Japanese at Wal-mana- lo and was

gAlTK Of ff4Walt

MMiritn

twmry T HawaM.

OAKtALaSaaa9l9S SMyiMwuMMtBM JM8PtYt...... MMst.M

OMkHW It. Cookp, e jtmmi vtca-riii- m

k W. aUcfarlae..iM VtafrJtoNMtfa It. CMki .. OhMwQ Unttaca Jr AariMant OuMmy. B. Oatmm Aaelatant CuMwF. S. Damon motmmt

1MMDCTOR8: Chan. M. Ooote, I. C.JMM, V. W. Macfarlane, K. F. BMMP.8. . Tanner, J. A. McCaiiJaa C. X.AOwrton, C. H. Cook.

COMMERCIAL AMD CAVIKOC 9aVPAJtTMairm.

Strict attention Riven te all branaltesof Banking

JUDD Bt'lLDINO. PORT HTBKBT.

CSaus Bprekels. "Win. Q. Irwin.

n uma vhpumuooL 11 Bcms&Go

BAXKBRShono-ul- u, n. i.

San Francisco Agent The NevadaNational Bank of San Fmnctoco.

DRAW KXCIIANGB ONBAN FRANCISCO Tfee Nevada Na-

tional Ba k of San Fnsnalaeo.0ND0N Union of London & Smith'Hank, Ltd.

NEW YOUK American Exchange Na-

tional Bank.CHICAGO Corn Iflxchaane Katie 1

Bank.PARIS Credit Lyonnala.TTitT T VT TW&a.il1a TldntfHONGKONG AND YOKOHAMA-- Th

Hongkong and Shanghai BankingCorporation.

NBW ZEALAND AND AUSTJULIA-Ban- k

of New 'Mi. nd, and Bank ofA 1 1 I.

VICTORIA AND VAXCOUVIC It-B-ank

of Britlah Nortn Amarw.

TRANSACT A GBI'HSRAL BANUINGAND EXCHANGE Hl'SINIIS.

Annrovad Seour'ty. Commercial andravellers' Credits lsaued. Bills of Ex-

change Bought and Sold.

COLLECTION PROMPTLY AC-

COUNTED FOR.

ESTABLISHED IN 1858.

BISHOP & CO.

BANKERS

BANKING DEPARTMENT.

Transact hushies In all departmentsof : riUlriK.

Collections car :ully utlended to.Exchange foowsht and sold.

Commercial and Travelers' Lettersof Credit Issued on the Bank of

California and N. M. Rothschilds &

Sons, London.Correspondents for the American

Express Cortipany, and Tlios. Cook

& Son.Intorost allowed on Urm and Savings

Binl. Deposits.TRUST DEPARTMENT.

Act oh TrusoH, collect Rents andDividends.

Safety Deposit ault.

ACCOUNTANT DEPARTMENT, D28

Bethel troet.Auditors and Truitooa In BankruptcyBcolts oxam'nod and reported on.

INSURANCE DEPARTMENT, i)2t

thel Streot,A(?ontH tor Fire, Marino, Life, Acel-de- nt

and EmployeiH Liability Intnir-nnc- o

Companies.

hie T

Limited.ESTABLISHED 1880.

Capital Subscribed Yen 24,000,000Capital Paid Up 18,000,000Rcsorvo Fund 9,720,000

HEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.

Bronchos s

Honolulu, New York, San Francisco,London, Lyons, Bombay, Hongkong,Newchwancr, Pekln, Shanghai, Tientsin,Kobe, Nagasaki, Toklo.

Tho Banks buys and reeelvoB for col-

lection Bills of Exchange, issua Draftsand Lettorx of Credit, and transacts agenral funking business.

Honolulu. Branch 67 King Street

T. HAYASHI,TAILOR.

Clothes Cleaned, Dyed and 71opalre4.537 Beretanla Street.

Oprpslte Queen's Hosjltal.

CIJEE HOONKBE,Hotel Street near Maunaltea.

PlumberLOUl CHUB, MANAOEIt.

Want ailn in the Htnr bring nulolc re-

turns, Threo Hues three tlinow for SC

cents.

n M (UK1 liai ' priliiH itiHK i ti( l.,t.i,' . i,, , H (in- - iwtHi mfW

In tlw iHtiMtntiii (.hkhiI Imimh Mi tm i tun. I rank N, iltaVft!f Nih York and S'lmmr I liHitit . tMmt (. ilw mrtlbru iff OelTa

leadership in rpHiWhHn liti In that Mau . It r mh a few monthsago that Mr. Illaek kcrpinit Smar ilatt awake n nights by biscandidacv for Senator Ihmw seat.

In that contest. Mr. Bhu-f- c nl (.ovtnmr ihkH were inpoikteallv. Governor Mell ha.) promi-.- ! Mr. IHark theand Mr. Black, relying pon ii. Itai am4 cwnmiuiwd(Mcti in Mc ffurt to leatri Senator I'laM'a 'wrrihln. At tint ItMmtntrtr Govenrar Clddl ftmd it cHtik?tt to break Ubi pwiiMiit toBlack a4 agree to ttte rt -- rK tin i Souauir Ucpew.

Mr. Black ivriouiih c!m:riiic.i HihI rfapeobit4. and iaMnlsttiy broke off ati Mtttuii w :! :.: inn (kritsfetf to tty to tfnl

EX-OO- I'ltANK BLACK.

apologetic letter that Odel! wrote Him. A few weeks ago the Plait fac--X

')0g,an--tmkm ?vcrll,ru 1 CJack for an alliance against Odell.

of the state comniiuec and the rcpublicaii I)Om of the

dLTtCnWVu'Wm l 1,aTC ,,CCn wcl1 rccuivc(l' telegraphicAlbany report that the deal was clinched yesterday andthat he rising boss of Albany county, Williamgram .on of the late Auric Weel, and in the l.t campaig ! Snmm

of Odell g executive committee, had joined the I'lalt-JJIac- k outfit andwas ready for a round-up- ,Jt has not been made clear how the feudist can get action, however,until tiie next rconramzntimi nf cint,. ..r.,.,..,!,,.,. .i , ,

ly put Odell out, and he is not the kitid of a man to walk out for the, ,

J .im.ioii is atiractmg interest among pol ticiansthoiiL'h, just the same.l ersons who recall the-event- s of the last republican slate conventionwill remember that the statement was made at that lime in terms thomost positive that warfare would be made against the Odell outfit after

r 'l,,u u,,u u,t: re)mmcan parly in New York would try to elim-inate lnm and his closet hackers fmm

he mnirn il r:'.... ..,. i.. .- ....rw .i i,.iiiii:m. r k tr,fi' ,iLri,'i i...'"." i"i iic never wasA;

i. f ''! Odelhte at best, and squirmed under the Odell leadership.When Odell was pilloried for his alleged, treachery to J's benefactor,benator J'latt, Humes began to draw away from him, and his loyaltymiring tlie campaign was rather to the party than to the boss.

With two such men as S, Ulack and William Hames, Jr. atJus side, and with the assistance, as it is reported, of William J,. Ward,the national committeeman. Senator Plait has a militant organizationtumult irt1tisiiu :., t:i.,.i.. ... t itv" "J" '"- - " viy i K'vi- - wiieu a great deal of trouble andmay eventually oust him from his leadership. Washington Star.

NATUJIA LIGATION QUESTION.Circuit Jud(f Mnthawmnn of Kallua

Iims ralaad a iiiesilon m to the rlKht ofnlrcult Jiidyaa of lite Territory to

cltlans. In the selection ofJuror for his last term, held on Hawaiithe Judge iiuestliiiiiiil the eligibility ofthose imturalliteil In tlipom-la- . A lurfc--e nuinhf-- r of nututull-xatlo- n

unilertakeii by circuit JuilgossIlK-- the oraanliiatlon of the 'JVirltoryut-- nffected by the point nilsud. A

sluillur question was raised by Jinlgoclear soine years bko, Ueut- - ilfclliiing toconduct any naturalisations on theground that he was without authority,

Want nils In tho Star bring ojilok re.turns. Three lines three limes for Sfi

cents.

A SAFE SPECULATION.If you have an attack of rheumatism

and Chamberlain' Pain Balm getsyou hark to work In a few days, willli not pay for Itaolf several limes over?There l no need for auiferlng fromrheumatism for a month or six weekiiKMirrlnir the expense of a large doe-to- r1

bill, whan a few applications ofthis Ihdinent, coal In- - but a smallamount will cure you. For sale by alldulers, Benson, Smith Co., agentsfor Hawaii,

MAOOON (JET POSTPONED.Juila Unhirison wo not able lo sit

on the gtipreme beiiali ytislerilaymid Mwgimn ouse went over to MayIK, um asked for by Mugoon In his mo-tion for a fonllnuanoe,

1HK tTK-iL4ti1- 1

fettrjCLAR INtmK lllffflltlj

mmoi.k itmtAsreti iAct

Mm

at tk ar wtMMa atrw t taa

tjaywlr f mmMhhm tai-

lor, r ta afatat Miaa

ra. atatartaia,

ararathe

At- -

UM

theaM lrtha Mb who

aadavar

aMl- -

and btaka, alt pn awal.

Our new Spring ml SowtrStock baa juat come to band.

i M. HC1NERNY, LTiD.MOKCHANT AND FORT STS.

HTKAMKIirf TO ABRIVE.Date. Name I'rom.May 2 Blerra Colonies

3 Manuka. Colonies3 Ventura Ban Francisco6 Mlowera Victoria, B. C.9 Siberia Yokohama

10 Korea 8a n Francrsco12 Alameda Ban Francisco10 Nebraskan Ban Francisco10 Mongolia Yokohama10 Coptic San Francisco28 Sonoma Colonies21 iorra Ban Francisco3-0-Chlna Yokohama31 AorongI Colonies

June 2 Alameda San Francisco3 Siberia Ban Francisco3 Manuka .Victoria, B. C.9 Nevadan Ban Francisco

13 Ventura Colonies13 Manchuria YokohamaIt Mongolia San FranciscoJt Sonoma .San Francisco20 Doric Yokohama23 Alameda San Francisco21 China San Francisco28 Mlowera Colonies20 Nebraskan San Francisco

Date.STEAMEItE TO DEPART.

Name.May 2 Sierra San Francisco

3 Manuka Victoria. B. C.3 Ventura ColoniesC Nn-ada-n fSan Francisco6 Mlowora Colonial9 Siberia Sin Francisco

10 Koroa Yokohama17 Alameda San Francisco19 Mongolia San Francisco19 Coptic Yokohama23 Sonoma San Francisco21 Sierra Colonies27 Nebraska tSan Francisco30 China San FranclBco!

Victoria, B. f.Juno 3 Siberia Yokohama

3 Manuka Colonh--7 Alameda San Francisco

J3 Vontura San Francisco13 Manchuria San Franciscoli Mongolia YokohamaU Sonoma Colonies17 Nevadan tan Francisco

20 Doric San Francisco24 China Yokohama28 Alameda San Francisco

28 Mlowora Victoria, B. C.

Calling at Manila,t Datn of Departure from ICahulul.U. 8. A. Transports will loavo for San

Francisco and Manila, and will arrivefrom same ports ot Irregular Intervals.

For tho midnight lunch. A sandwichJust right, not too thick and not toothin, and a sparkling glass of RainierBeer. Its a dollght you can't afford tomiss.

Flno Job Printing, Star OUU-e- ,

For.

Such Our AmwIsPurchased . . . .

By ' acb" we mean KNU.ISM HU E MOTTLED SOARwbich years ago was "the soap" of Hawaii. Today hontwivtiart turning Irom atfrnngc aoapt and arc demanding ENGLISHBLUE MOTTLED SOAP, rccogniiing at last tbtt there it noother toap "just as good."

ENGLISH HUT. Mc n ill-- n SOAP stands for all that itworth v hilc in soap. Looked at from an economical, sanitaryor labor m ine; int n Nk nr jrvr-- r f"r it.

E. Hackfeld&Go., LtdDISTRIBUTORS.

Make HomeHygienic

lileclric light is valuable in a sick room becauseit it hygienic, cheerful, easy to procure, without odoror deposit; bacmiie it does not selfishly exact ta por-tion of oxygon, and because it is at hand my momentat a MconiT'f notice.

l!lcoiric light in a Home is invested capital, theinloreat front which J amiability, health and a popu-lar fireside.

ic Co,, Lid, 223-2- 27

Street

A Piano is the Keynote of a Home

The price of a piano however debars many from enjoyingthe luxury of music. We make it possible for everybody to owna famous

FISCHBR PIA35JOSby our small monthly payments plan. You don't miss themoney and the instrument is your almost before you arc awareof it. We will sell you a Fischer for $400, cash or easy pay-ments, r

HAWAIIAN NEWS CO, LTDALEXANDER YOUNG BUILDING.

CHOXCB GOODSLadles' Bilk Kimonos jg.r) f

Children's Silk Kimonos 2.75 ,

Silk Short Kimonos 3,25Japanese Silks (In nil colors) per yard 400Bilk Cushion Covers with Coat of Arms, Silk Linen and Cotton Hand'

kerchiefs, Japanese Purses for ladles, Jnpanese Screens and latest styles eJVases at very low prices.

28 and 32 Hotel St. Robinson Block.

T--T

JRLJSL JHL ML JR. WWW

and over Tho Only Double-Trac- k Railway between the Missouri River

Tliroo FaMt OPjt-iI-j lnltyVIA

SOUTHERN PACIFIC. UNION PACIFIC ANDCHICAGO & NORTH WESTERN RAILWAYS.

Overland Limited. Vestlbulcd. Leaves San Francisco at 0:00 n,"nLDally. Tho most Luxurious Train In the World, electric Lighted Through-out. Double Drawing-Roo- Sleeping Cars, Composite, Observation, BuffetSmoking and Library Car. Dining Cars, Meals a la Carte. Less than threadays to Chicago without change.

Express. Vestlbulcd. Leaves San Francisco at 0:00 p. in. DallyThrough Pullman Palace and Tourist Sleeping Cars to Chicago. DiningCars. Free Reclining Chair Cars,

Atlantic Express. Vestlbulcd. Loaves San Franol' o at 7:30 a. m. Daily.Standard and Tourist Sleepers.

PERSONALLYWednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. Tho boat of everything.

Olxlocatso & Northwestern KyR. R. RITCHIE, O. A. P. C,

or S P Company's Ag nt 817 JIurket St. (Palace Hotel) San Franclsca.

To Typewriter I 'm is and the Office in General.lovI-j;tof- - SStn cle.l Typowrltoi'HParagon ribbons and carbons, Regent & Paragon typewrit-

ing papers, Remington, Derby & Macey Desks, made in threedifferent styles, Hales and Edison Numbering Ma-chines and Line Daters,

Edison Oscillators and Hand Mimeographs,I'clouze Postal and Office Scales,Macey Sectional Hook-case- s,

Rockwell-Wabas- h Filing Cabincls and Card Systems,A Repair Department for all Automatic Office Machinery.

HAWAIIAN OFFICE SPECIALTY COMPANYTel, Main 15, 72 King Sl "Waity Block."

King

nWt SW

JLJ jk. sZ

Chicago.

Eastern

CONDUCTED EXCURSIONS

Automatic

Fire Insurance!Atlas Assurance Company of London.Phoenix Assurance Company ot Londoa.New York Underwriters Agency.Providence Washington Insurant

Company.Phenlx Insurance Company of Brook

lyn.Fourth Floor, Stangenwald Building.

THE B, F, DILLINGHAM GO,, LIMITED

Qaneml Agents for Hawaii.

COMPANY, LTD.Kspmnade, co Allan and Fort eta

Manufacturers of Soda Water, dimg r Ale, Sarsaparllla, Root Beer, CresJSSoda StrawUerrv, Etoi Etc

Page 4: A 'WA STAR. · sentenced Otomatsu Kawara to two years' Imprisonment, on a verdict find-ing the Jap guilty of nssault and bat-tery. Kawara killed a Japanese at Wal-mana- lo and was

DAILY AND

lBilMUbed every (tentoon (except

Ebcml. tm aitttttm

(FRANK L, HQQO....,(TUESDAY

: IncinerationFor The Dead

Change

flit.SEMI - WEEKLY.

Sunday) the Star

$ S.oo12.00

,,,u.,.,,r,.,,7 MAY i, 1905

It scans rather a matter for con-

gratulation than otherwise thatthis community has been broughtface to face with the necessity ofproviding itself a suitable pub-

lic crematory. The structurequarantine island which until re-

cently lias been in a restricted sense available is in no way suited togeneral 'public use being only accessible by a drive of more than a halfmile o-e- r the tide-wat- er flat from Kalihi, th.c hearse often being luibdeep in water and mud. The retort itself is little more than a simplereducing oven having been hurriedly built in time of a scourge of epi-

demic cholera, as an expeditory measure, and was in no way plannedor suited for general public use. But that this imperfect equipment hasserved a valuable mission in the education of the public and in bringingabout a wholesome belief in cremation is indisputable.

The paramount necessity of the adoption of this sanitary precautionin times of public danger through the threatened ravages of contagiousdisease lias more than once brought this subject before our people inan exceedingly practical way with the result that today it may be truth-fully said that there is hardly to be found a community of the size ofHonolulu anywhere on the mainland or in Europe where n belief in anda desire for the cremation of the dead is more generally expressed, andwhere so much has already been accomplished towards dispelling theunwarranted objections of the past that have been based on prejudice,superstition and mistaken sentiment.

During the past few years the crude oven referred to has been calledinto service to carry ovlt the last wishes of many of our most prominentcitizens. There no longer exists any ground for the objection thatcremation is. urged as a class distinction when people in tlfc highestesteem of this .community, of choice, nominate that their bodies shallthus be speedily reduced to dust, that it may be-lh- least offensive tothe living. ,

then there exists little need for the more progressive mem-

bers of this community to expend time, money or energy in creating asentiment in the minds of the people here in favor of incineration. Thebelief already exists. All that is required is that the desire to have thedead body purified and wade white and clean and inoffensive, be foster-ed by the crc'tion of a thoroughly modern crematory chapel in a suit-

able place .is has already been done in almost every city on the main-

land with the population and importance of Honolulu and that a wisi!provisk.i be made fur the geometrical growth in the belief in cremation.

'No In:: The Grand Tactics

spite ofand

of arms it isif the of bat-- ..

ties have material IIfrom those marked M

1870.The have followed with of course modifications, the j

army system and the success which has attended their armsI.I 1,,. nrncmU flint ....1 .1.,. f . . 1.,. l...

JAAY

Ait tut, jiiawui v.uiimv.v una jnuvwu iiiv: uj.iii njnuiu iu wit; ijwnihas thus fa,r been

There in any of large of the toany that there is to be any in Liao- - the oiiicers of the Society for thethe every attack made by the and pogation of the Gospel the church

until a were of the field. us now and its Bishop, arewas what in ,809 when the

was 111 of the He thearmy. The .society found n.i on theat the forced them to retire island of of these proofs in paying

in the and the field until his tll(i income from the fund of the churchline of retreat a h"r.e' Tao

A. ii. rr 41. ci.-i.- i.. .1...we Jiiuif ui uic ou.iKiii; we

to

at

to

on

toin. thr

jii nit

tofinhlc ic Unc

jiii-- duvutt

f

anomohes

the

777..

on

the consistentthe Japanese the

ofvery

verychanges

inJapanese strictly,

Germany

TTWtAT

Do You

Take

that developed.is certainly nothing the battles

cause idea change grand tactics. Pro-yau- g

Russians repulsed JapaneseKuroki effected turning movement masters constituted,

The situation' occurred Archduke IXaTCharles command Austrian defeated hrench dinicuity

battle'bf Essling-Asper- n, teethe presentationLobau Danube, held Napoleon threatened

with movement. d!"'c"'ty

other

prlncl- -

Hawaii

religious purposes.created, neither

"WlHOirdr00tly

possible damage future

Jiuwan, nrmiy,

uosp"'. benefit

?,ve'"

Cllv.e Davles,

matter.

BoardGame that)

fowor'lOUStOrS.

while kind, well prin- - JectThe that Dervishes only tna' invested

that can make are"modern made interest "While here

battle time entire- - double that easi-ly successful. rolled right wing Japanese back perhaps church heretide Kuropatkin.

principle that battle thomade counter attack striking would very

rigl-i-t wing. result was that .Gladly transfer andthera8elvfrom field way has

the cause defeat said found whichhave been duo linvinrr hnttlp England both

through which whlch f"10..was

r.iiiu- - 1111.11.11se

T757 Frederick Great.Recurring minor details

,lr,Kff1 l.n.,

was

of

by

for

In successdevelop-

ment destruction,

undergonethat

the Franco-Prussia- n war II

warAt

that

be ?wU?

be

Bennigsen,

Kuropatkin

e

1 1 ... .i. tuy

we yumiuuis we 01 rague

on the battlec!.,1o otfo,.l,

wiiu nit iwyuiiei in nreseni

In tho. nf Aiifrlie.--

Hinrrl, i.nilv tUo:American there have beenso me iuciuiies and

to those experiencedthe of Hawaii to

mcrous to flic contrary notwithstanding. The Japanesehave advancing their men by

scries done in mnnv tlio snhliorfnr nnv tho hnrrrnc (Imt tho

icturos 1

FreshFilmsandPaper

STEAMER.

vGoodsHANDLED.

printing specialty

guaranteed.

mFort

proposed

indirectly

Ijenellciariospresented

1!"?"'"Vermont.

TLLEngland,

ilostnrlck

highest change defined principalciples. statement Eng-rac- es

people induced charges .'more'lnanweapons, Russians charges

against ShakhcThey

victory setting toward Oyama StSSlowing tactical nearly gained Eylau beneficialagainst Russians whatever.

.battle, Mukden

wings, ?"u'tyRussian

uispmyeu Japanese

tacticscnMln,"

transfer

church,

political transfer

statementsofficers careful system

inst.nipps iiwlivirlimlcnnHn.lnr

g&AlH,

ftbout wj)chperor to admire, mancuvres practice field iy contributed personspart German military tactics attack. The Prus- - benefit

sian armies in making spectacular muchattacks in changed system during XtrlZuZ England"Jattcr part of

in minds correspondents Irrevocably,material fact. Undoubtedly have been instances tor ,u, nrotuctlon

where bayonet used very The value, somewhat anaingous s.tuai.onbayonet influence. jsald immediately

American

?A Strong GripOn Trust Funds

brought

MANAGER

tactics

Manchurian

nrfranir

anomaliesanalagous

developedrushes,

tiit.ii:i.-iiii;iii- s

religious

Unitednight's

One rt,e(ffi0rciiurcli tnc matter ll'e endowment

The communion originally planted Hawaii,least largely supported Society Propogalion theGobpd Foreign Parts, known P. Tin: duringthe following establishment church transferthe jurisdiction the American church, and

time time, fund endowment of the bishopric. Thesefunds trust fund and held SocietyPropogation of Gospel, trustees; invest and hold,and pay the income Bishop Honolulu and successors,

I

uuiiaii.1 (.iiiiiv.il, jiivivi

1440

turning

against

doubtful

with

Photographic Order.

EVERY

None good.

Developing and

and

1

transferfund Tim

itauie Thohaving courts

tho rely nllow trustee"1VOf,t trust. UllOW

lhe beneficiary trU(itget control trust

the

TJlUH 11,0 situation

anil seem

funds woro ,,0l'l this samoWJ ror. U,. Tropogatlon

churches New Jersey anduuucuiiy

the appointment

r"""7': ,Vn

IIIVUBUIIUIII. cltlllO

niZiL Zr.... uuuiuraBut way has

found.now commissionedBishop consult with tho

socloty regard the

The Massachusetts Pishnnd Commissioners reports

becoming and fewerAnil nnnfr

puuiisue announcement tnaro

the were not any from transferring the here,the Japanese the the wn10

desperate against cTt.tZvridiculous. desperate rates there.

the the and for were made yield

the and the nnd Thefol- -

the for pel has interestthe by fund The

them the The the Japanese drove the fund here,vest responsibility

'care BUt fartlie been

his loft intnrvnl lino iwtiipon law rniirtM

cusithe

thethnrn

wicucs

uuiue

war

the

o.h.v ....v-i....- .

timo T7,.

Trial

work

here.

and

done.

run(1 W(000said the those isl-

and are not the ands, sole churchdiscovered the 1870 ,,e,'e whlcn invested

close formation and promptly the the bytlie trustees wlio transfer.wn-fci-

probably exist the the sensational than the grip Bmtlsh lawsthere some trust

was but they were rare. chief a'lies moral have fol-- 1

lowing tho Revolution, when

into notice

will,

the State.. ,h.ao.last session the that its

copal convocation, ot tlie luncl lorof bishopric Honolulu.

Hawaiian

Happily

precisely

Anglican was atwas by the

generally as the G.

years the the and the towere gifts bequests,

from to to forwere made were by the for the

the as to secureover to the of his

l!lllill!ll IUVWOlv.ll II.J.V lllv.ifc '.w,www.il.A il.i .l....!, . r 11 f r Iwu mi. mv jiiuui iiiuug

I, I

If so Give Hi a

BY

ONLY

Is Just as

good

Street

It was to theclnal of the .to

or ustbeen the

norOf tllO nOr

of t0or of thefund, to of

of the fund.1h of a,

10 neiu nK y

trust y

1,18 ror tno of thoIn

w mo was gotten',y of trustoos In

c; '

t,i mm IIIIO HO IianilS

n7 . , ,y

. ,,

so far no to do Itbeen T. who is

In Is byto

officers of the to

of

there areVlt In Ilia Gnmn thn...... una

of ofare 18 It is in

of1 he

Japanese of a could be toof the y- - more.

of appeareda of no in

a j oiilcers

of orthe for it. so noIn of s is ,by can be In

nn in hie nf the and nfof a

waiin

ofU if

of

of

.i:...i we

1

n .....

we

to " ',

(i

in

- -- w. .. ..- -

a of aof 1v nnn

nt n As

a

I

..... ... ....... ... w ....:: of wnBis are on in

a of of for tho of theof cou,d he to

war. are to it

of ofof

isOf the in its to existed

. 0 .

P

ofat of so con- -

m

in orfor of

in S.of

ofa

a

J U OH 10a! M ri ri turn ...n.ln In'ui u iu

oli.

t

law' the10

tno

,ut!

V

11

...... .. Mu

In

... ...is

is It

tho

it

by

in

in

OlassiOod Ads In to.W Hilt (Ml

KaprtM(wa CanvMri canmvMmw smpl mcnt r"OpfMrtMfiltr," Boa m, CKr.

lor Rout

A furnished houec. 7 reams, bath,servant r1 quarters, star OiMce.

lleuee KltMiu street near Alanal. Ap-

ply v, u. Damon, Judd building.

Foi n)o

Building lot corner King and Kame-hams- ha

road. Palamu terminus ofRapid Transit road. Apply at Staroffice.

Something New!Best 6c cigar In the market.Daniel Dera and Londres. guaranteed

clear Havana filler and wrapper.

HAWAIIAN TOBACCO CO.PHONE MAIN SS8.

DISTRIBUTORS.

SAFETY IN INVESTMENTSla Our First Consideration

We obtain for our stockholders thehighest rate of Interest consistent withabsolute security.

All our contractu are Guaranteed.

FIUENIX SAYINGS, BUILDINGS

AND LOAN ASSOCIATION

Judd .Building, Honolulu.Guaran.ee Capital ... 200,000

Paid in Capital 1,300,000

HENRY E. POCOCK Cashier.

W. G. Irwin Go.AGENTS FOR

Western Sugar Refining Co., SanFrancisco, Cal.

Baldwin Locomotive Works, Philadel-phia, Pa.

Newell Universal Mill Co., Manufac-turers of National Cane Shredder,New York, N. Y.

Paralllne Paint Company. San Francis-co, Cal.

& Co., San Francisco, Cal.Pacific Oil Transportation Co., San

Francisco, Cal.

Our Department

For Engraving, Printing and Emboss-

ing, should not bo overlooked when

in need of Stationery or cards of

"The Right Kind."

YOU cannot afford o economize on

these items; for you are by

the kind you use.

Cards from your plate $1.25 per hundred

H. F, Wichman k Co

I.IMITKl)

JEWELLERSFOKT STREET

an of the victimizing of a num-

ber of New Englanders by green goodsnw n.

What! a general ibrewery strike!Well, this Is getting serious now.

New conditions create new toTho term "strike-th- at

has originatedtwo or three years.

When tho crand Jury reported thatthere .Is no polygamy practiced itpresumably had In mind the simultaneous kind; not successive polygamy.

It Is said that this is tho way thechorus in the "Country School"at the Elks' minstrel show the othernight sounded to Sheplft "HI Henry:"Put down six and sixty-tw- o,

Gee! but this Is hard to do."

A MODEL --STAGE MOTHER.

(n Ann rr.i.trno mnMi of T.oiiaCrabtrce, tho retired died of

'od asQ early in April in New York,

reUrmfhlgf sh"

her mother have been living eitherln nw York or at Lotta'rf country os- -

tnt0 ln Nmv Jersey. Lotta was withlier at the 0d and so was her son, J,A. crabtree. Another son, aeorge, died

years agom alnn mnii. wna u mn

associated with hor daughter'sonroer tiwn iw. miring tno

orywhere, was in hor dressing room at,..,rv ,,,, ,...,1 ol.n.mmno.l linr

nd night. She was, In a way,Etta's wardrobe woman, and wasni.vnvH nn linn.l In hnln linr iIpahh.

This constant choporonago had thoeffect of discouraging suitors, In tho

when Lotta was not only a Broadway sensation but the richest Americanactress, she was reported astottering on the brink of a matrimonialengagement. Mrs. Cnibtree, It Is said,nlways broke off these matches In oneway or another, She hold the familynurso strings, too. and har head forlmulnnaa mnnmrAmAnl Irnnf Hio mnnav.... . .wnion ouut up the Lotta fortune.

the center and pne the the pushed ""'nister the law ofthat divided the forces and forced theVetreat! It dZl.r

they simply

futility any

willing

moreany

the

the

therethe

and

your

&

Ohlandt

Judged

account

terms

hore,

stunt

hundred

actress,

closely

head

days

froquontly

..Neutralize..Sliortage of

BY BUYING A

JBto.9 JEto.A FRESH SUPPLY JUST RECETVED BY THE

Paclic MmFOIIT AND MERCHANT STKEETS.

Honolulu Iron Worts.

STEAM ENGINES, SUGAR MILLS,BOILERS, COOLERS, IRON, BRASS

AND LEAD CASTINGS.

Machinery of Every Description Madeto order. Particular attention paid toShip's lacke-'i.hl- nc. Job Woik Exe.cuted on Short Notice.

(TV MI SIQUEEN STREETDBAIjXKS IJV

Firewood, Stove,Steam and Blacksmith

CoalWHO F uB A RETAIL.

Special AHenlfon Given ioDRAYING

ALSO, "WHITE ND TiOCK SAND.

LORD & BELSER,

General Contractors and Teaming.Bridges, Steel and Concrete, and SewerWork. Guarantee first-cla- ss work atlow prices.

Also Crushed Rock, Black and WhiteSand, Soil or Filling Material at lowestrates.

Office and yards, South and Kawala- -

hao Street, Telephono Main 108.

THE UAVVA11AN ItEALTIAND AlATUltlTI CO. Ltd.

Ileal Estate, Mortgages, Loans andInvestment Securities. Homes built 00

the Installment plan.Home Officei Mclntyre Building., T. H.

L. 1C KBNTWELL, General Manager.

The Pacific Hotel,1183 Union Street.

Rooms, first-clas- s, Meals 25cor Board $4.00 per Week andMeal Tickets $4.50.

Best Meal In Towd

COME AND TRY IT.

Want ads ln the Star bring quick returns. Three lines three times for 26

cents.

1 Good

Pioneer Cream

SUPPLY F

COli?, LI

fillEI IECommlHSion MorchautB,

Sugnr Factors.

GENTS FOR ' 'The Ewtt Pit, tatlr Company,

The Walalua Agricultural Co., LU.The K hala Sugar "ompany.The Walmea Sugar Mill Company.The Fulton Iron Works, St. Louis, Mo.

'he Standard OH Company.The George F. --.lake Steam Pumps,Weston's CentrifugalsThe New England Mutual Life InsUI

ance Company of Boston.The Aetni Fire Insurance Company oi

Hartfora, O nn.The Alliance Aj urauce Company ot

London.

EUItOl'EAN iiA It EE 11 8U01928 Fort, between King and Merchant.

FIRST CLASS SHOPWITH THREE BARBERS

Open (SunclayH

OPTIMO

A LovelySmoke!You'll Like It!One Box,You'll WantMore !

Try It.THE BEST SELLING CIGAR IN THE W0RI.D

LEWIS &co,LmDistributors and Sole Agents for

Hawaii.P. O. BOX 207.

M. 'PHILLIPS & CO.,Wholesale ImportersAnd Jobbers of

AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN DRY GOODS

Corner of Fort-an- Queen Sts.

Things

I.. Ill.lil I ,1

t

Sunnyside Condensed mikEvery Tin Guaranteed

Rich and Pure

Nirvana Ceylon Tea

olcl J&y A.U Grocers

Theo. H. Davies lb Co.,

Page 5: A 'WA STAR. · sentenced Otomatsu Kawara to two years' Imprisonment, on a verdict find-ing the Jap guilty of nssault and bat-tery. Kawara killed a Japanese at Wal-mana- lo and was

u

A Great SpecialBEGINNING HON DAYHORNING,, MAY 1

'Notable Lace Salei i

Here is an oporhiiiity for lovers of luces to buy Real Laceand Tortlions at prices which occur but once in a lifetime.REAL HAND.MADE TORCHQN LANCES AND INSER-

TIONS AT LESS THAN IMPORT PRICES.All widths from -2 to 6 jnehes wide, including the fine

Smyrna Laces.

10 cts. values 6 cts. per yd.15 cU. values 9 cts. par yd.20 cts. values 12 1- -2 cts. par yd.25 cts. values '. is CU. per yd.30 cts. values , 18 cts. par yd.

Just opened, a line of NEW DRESDEN RIBBONS. Lat-est cfTccts at 35 cents per yard.

And a new lot of LADIES' KNITT VESTS at 10 cts. each.

N. 8. MS' Off 8NDS

TEACHERSSALARIES

Too Slow

A meeting of the Territorial Teach-ers' Association was hold yesterdayafternoon at the, High school and reso-

lutions were passed In favor of restor-ing teaohers' salaries to the old sche-dule. Addresses were delivered byProfessor M. M. Scott, SuperintendentDavis, Commissioner Fnrrlngton, In-spectors Taggart and Baldwin and Dr.Rodgers. The r solutions adopted areto bo sent to Governor Carter, Presi-dent of the Senate Isonborg and Speak-er Knudsen.

Superintendent of Public InstructionA. T. Atkinson In his report to thegovernor for the period ending with Tilellrst of this year stated that the cutwas made, practically, by order of thoGovornor, and recommended that sal-aries be rostored. He said:His Excolloney George It. Carter, Gov- -

urnor of the Territory of Hawnll.Sir; In a lottor addressed to you Jan-

uary 19, I forwarded the needs forrunning of tho Department of PublicInstruction upon nn economical basis,and excluded the erection of new schoolhouses, which would come out of theloan fund. The estimate contemplatedthe restoration of salaries to their re-

gular schedule basis, and the openingout of now schools, both those whichare finished nnd those which are pros-pective.

Since the cut came In June of lastyear I have studied the rnatter withgreat care and I feel assured that Itwas too radical a measure Of course

--o

Col. Spaulding

hipmentsIt Is rumored In sugar circles that

Col. 'A. S. Spauldlng of Kauai has nkick coming and that he proposes to.take that kick into the courts unlesssomebody comes to time. Accordingto the rumor the' Colonel claims thatthrough tho slow shipment of his sugarto the mainland his product has lostthe chance of the recent high price andnow brings considerably less a tonthan it would had tho sugar reachedtho market some weeks earlier. ThoColonel Is aleged to lay the blame forthe failure of his sugar to be market-ed promptly on tho shoulders of thepeoplo having charge of tho shipmentof sugar. He Is alleged to claim thatthere should have been a sutllclent num

WANT PILOTS OFF

MAKAPfJU POUT

The recent grounding of the bark Donon Diamond Head reef has caused con-

siderable discussion along the waterfront over tho advisability of having avery great change niado In the presentsystem of pilotage to this port. At thepresent time the pilots go outside of theport to the neighborhood of the bellbuoy and there pick up the arrivingvessels.

It is now being ngltated to make amaterial change and have tho pilots Ina schoouor outside of the Island nearMakapuu Point where tho vessels arriv-ing could be picked up, Had Hierebeon pilots In the past to take chargeof vessels nt that place, none of thovessels that grounded on Diamond headwould havo gotten aground.

It Is urged In favor of the new Ideathat at most other ports In tho worldpilots nro sent farther away from avof'l than Is dono nt tho local port, andmat the only system here ought to uovhanged. Time Is an Important fac-tor to veBsols arriving at a port and Itla urged that If tho pilots were nt somopoint In the phannel nil of tho vesselsarriving from the ooust would take1 apilot whete,A9 they do nothing of thesort. .TluvittG tnny bo brought tothe attention of the Marine

r. Fort andCO. LIB., Beretania Sts.

you were acting for the best Interestsof the Territory at the momentbut It became a constantly carklngcanker of discontent. If the financesof the Territory should require suchradical measures In the future I wouldrecommend some other measure to meetthe deficiency. However we must hopethat no such acute a crisis may occurtigalu. Certainly provision at thopresent should be made to prevent anysimilar crisis with such very unploa-- ,snnt results.

As to the means by which to pre-vent a similar condition of affairs Inthe school department It Is very dlfll-cu- lt

to advise. If the people of thisterritory desire good schools they mustpay for them audd n high elllclencycannot be kept up without a proper sal-ary payment. Tho public school teach-ers of tho Territory have certainlynever been overpaid and yet what Isdrawn for salary seems a very largeamount of the income of the Territory.Tho highest salary that has ever beenpaid has been $225 a month nnd thisto only onp tenchor. . When any oneconsiders how much responsibility, howmuch previous experience there hasbeen required to lit the teacher for thisposition, the amount seehis very smallas compared with the success of peoploin other line of work. The amountthat has been asked by the Superinten-dent will barely suffice to make thealteration In snlarles and also the addi-tional salaries required for the newschools.

Say

her of sugar bottoms to take the sugaras fast as It was brought to this placefor shipment. Instead of such a con-dition prevallng, there were not a suf-ficient number of boats and the sugarplied up to an unufual degree. TheColonel Is said to be considering theadvisability of Instituting legal pro-ceedings for restitution of his loss.A suit to recover tho dlfterenco Inprice may bo brought.

At tho present time there are notover 1100 tons of the Spauldlng sugaron hand at the railway wharf at thisplace. The fall In tho price of sugarduring the last two months would notmake more than about $10,000 differenceat the very outside.

WELL MOWN

PEOPLE DEPART

The departure of the S. S. Sierra forSan Francisco this afternoon was at-tended by a Inrge crowd. The bandwas present. Many well known

were depurtlng and manyvisitors were returning to their main-land homes,

Among those who loft by the vesselwas W. M. Gilford. Ho goes to meethis wife and daughter who nro now onthe mainland. They will together, goto Kurope.

J. II. Harrison tho Kemlngton man,left for his homo In New York after aresidence of nearly live years In Ho-

nolulu. A farewell dinner was givenhim last evening.

T. P. Lansing loft for a business tripto California.

Major Thomas 13, Wall wife and childwere departing passengers for a trip totho mainland,

I. S. Dillingham left for a businesstrip to the mainland.

Miss Nelllo Kitchen was a departingpassenger for New York.

Mrs. Dr. W. a. Jlogors loft for thomainland,

S. A. Crook loft to meet H. W. LakeIn whose employ ho will jjontlnue In thehotel business,

A. Spllvulo who was oilu of the at-

taches at the Youns Hotel under H. W.

MAWAtMK Tt'tWHiA. MAY I, tm.

IN THE HOUSE i

(Continued from

rtvw rvfcikm of idW. M ll,M.

lretauret's oMre, incidental, ,1eiRlSSC'l.

-- iriiancn oINoa, U.M; ptMii.Aar.ioateC aaarlllea, $,); ftt.Tag Mfk JftetdsMtala, $4M daft!.Tax ofhe, Mau4, MtcMUfttia lt,fMi

deferred. . .

Tix hiiic. Hawaii, immNiu., $1,4 :

defer red.To cilice. Kaput, iRoMantais, $1,80;

dtfirred.Conveyance me, locluXtlals. 4siM.

paused. , ,Ti a veiling fipit 11,$ ; jk. rt .

out. I

Kept Irs to government proparty, $0,-C-

Ccferred.Bleotric light. Honolulu, $11,700;

stricken out.Klectric light, Hllo, $6,000; strloken

out.Kleclrlc light, ether than Hllo and

Honolulu, 1900; stricken outPolios Are alarm, $,4W; stricken out.Government sidewalk, f1,00; passed.ICallhl i)umtinir station, running ex-

penses, $t,G00; stricken out.Running expenses: Garbage crema-

tory, $i,X; stricken out.Kerosene storehouse, $1,400; passed.Items for roads and bridges, lire de-

partments and water works Items Indifferent Islands were stricken out.

(Public grounds: Honolulu, $1800;passed, llllo, $4000; passed.

Walluku and Lahalna, $1000; pasted.Bureau of Agriculture and Foreatry,

$20,$48; deferred.Assistance to Federal exerlmeutHl

station $5472. Passed.Public Lands Incidentals $7200. Pass-

ed.Survey Department $80,180. Deferred.Judiciary Department Incidentals $2,-00- 0.

Passed.Incidentals, nil courts, $2600. Pass- -

ed. 1

IiiHpeotlon of records of all courts,$600. Passed.

Law books, Supreme Court, $2500.Passed.

Law books Circuit Courts $1200. Pass- -ed.

Supreme court expenses $S00. Pass-ed.

lilndlng Supreme Court records 0.

Passed.Expenses of Circuit courts: First Cir-

cuit, $27,000; Second Circuit $10,000;Third Circuit $7,000; Fourth Circuit$10,000; Fifth Circuit $10,000. Passed.

The committee rose nt noon, roportedprogress and asked leave to sit again.

Tho House then took recess until 2

AFTKftNOON SICSSION.A now section was placed In tho de-

partmental appropriation bill when theHouse met this afternoon. It was anItem of $3000 for tho payment of attor-ney's fees and expenses In defendingtho County Act In all courts.

Tho Item for police Incidentals $10,000was deferred.

Public Instruction, furniture and fix-

tures $0,400, was passed.The Item for the purchase of books

$18,000 provoked a long discussion.

THE FEDERATION

TAKES ACTION

PROCEEDINGS SET ;N MOTION TO

RRING THE COUNTY ACT TESTCASE.

Tho Executive committee of tho CivicFederation held a meeting yesterdayafternoon to consider the county actcontest. The following resolution wusunanimously adopted:

"Whereas, The Legislature, pursuantto publ'c pledges und In accordancewith tho wish of the people of thisTerritory has pnssed a County Act;und

"Whereas, Doubt has been expressedby competent legal counsel as to theconstitutionality of said Act; and

"Whereas, There Is great uncertaintyns to the status of the finances of theTerritory by reason of this legislation;and

"Whereas, The matter should bo set-tled bofore the oxpense of the specialelection Is Incurred, and before the Le-

gislature now In special session, shallhave acted on appropriations. In orderto avoid the calling of still anothersosslon, should wild County Act proveto be Invulld; therefore,

"Resolved, That the committee Inbo Instructed to take Imme-

diate steps to have the County Acttested before the' Supreme Court of theTerritory."

Henry Ei Highton has been employ-ed to take charge of the' case, for thefederation. He Is working on tho pro-position new, and papers will probublybe filed in a day or two. Those pre-sent nt the federation meeting yester-day wore: C. H, Dlokoy, Attorney Gen-eral Lorr'n Andrews, A. F. Griffiths,David Al, Porloy L. Home, Ed. Towse,P. 1. Lowrey, R. H. Trent and D. L.VvUhtiiKloji,

TWO DIVORCES ASKED.Lono (w) has brought suit for

on tho ground of failure to pro-vide, against Peter Kenlenhanul, A.M, Drown Is her nttorney. PolpI hassued Dill Knlohua on the same groundswith C. H. and Lyle A. Dickey nscounsel.

TO RECOVER PROPERTY.Yong You et al have begun suit, by

A, S. Humphreys, against E. C, Hoi-stol- n,

for property valued nt $123 whlohIt Is alleged the defendant took unlaw-fully from tho plaintiffs.

Lake, roturnod to his homo In SanFrancisco.

J. Sutherland Ross the passengerngont of the Oceanic Company left onhis regular trip.

The vessel Is due In .ian Frunelnconext Monday.

. . ja a a

II THE SENATE

, (Continued from fat ant )

voteupnn tt ng a Me. ttawsetttfttttttd that tho supreme Court JwdgeMi own paring salaries to stenograph-r- a

out or their incidentals, and to UiiaDker objected atrenaovaly.

"H la not right tor tfcem to takemower appropriated for Moioontojt ai)dpar alarles," he Mid. .

Daweett and McCariWhkta explainedthat ach payment wat afeeotatelr nec-essary, there being no war t par8teimrMhera, and then the Hem waftrejected.

Ham f $22 and SIM per month forsalaries In the schot1 department werestricken out.

Paris moved the awropriatton of $1,- -000 for the Indigent alck of Island etherthan Uahu, and It carried.

Dickey moved the Insertion of $1660

for the free dlieneary at Honolulu, butreceived no second, and the bill paeeedas amended, it will be read for thethird time tomorrow.

McCandlen retorted, on request ofthe President, that the House wouldtake up the current apitroptiatton bill,which ta Henatp Hill No. 4, and theSenate took up Senate Hill No. I, thesalaries bill. Lane moved to Increasethe salary of the chief clerk in the Sec-retary's

'

office from $160 to $178 permonth, but it was lost.

The Item of $1,660 pay of steno-graphers and additional clerks, on mo-

tion to raise it to $7,800, created a lot'of(llsctiwalon on a motion to rfer, andfinally pased as in the bill.

The salary of wa cutyhe Treasurerto $260 a tliat the ltegIstrar to $225. The bonkkf!er and In-

surance commlaeloner were cut to $175

per month.The Item of $6000 for clerical help In

the Treasurer's olllce was referred totho Ways and Cleans Committee, aftersome boat had been raised In its discussion.

And then Item ten, ninkdng approprl- -

atlon for the pay of Supreme Courtstenographers, was reconsldored andreferred to the same committee.

The salary of the Tax Assessor of Oa- -

hu was cut from $250 to $220; the salaryof the deputy assessor of Oahu was cutfrom $175 to $160. The balance of theTax olllce expense went to the Waysand Means Committee.

The Maul Tax Assessor was aut from$175 to $150 per month.

The salary of the Tax Assessor onHawnll wus cut from $200 to $175 permonth.

The- - salary of the lloglstrar of Con-veyances was put at $175 por monthand of his deputy at $100.

$10,000 was appropriated for pay ofclerks In the Conveyance department.

The item of $3000 for salary of Indexexpert was stricken out.

The Hureau of Conveyances was giv-en two clerks at $100 per month eachInstead of threef

A motion was made to cut the allow-ance to Lllluoknlanl from $025

a month to $300, but It was lost.There was a warm fight to cut the

salary of the Superintendent of PublicWorks, a motion to cut from $300 'to$250 falling. Then Dlnftpy moved to cutit to $275.

effort failed, however, and thosalary remained the same. The salaryof the Assistant Superintendent at $250per month, .but for that salary he mustalso take charge of the water works.

The salary of the, chief clerk came upfor consideration next. It was movedto cut the salary from $200 to $175 permonth. Paris moved the reference ofthe whole department to the PublicLands Committee.

Bishop explained that the Superin-tendent of Public Works had told himthat the expense) of the departmentcould only be cut In certain matters ofroad work and electric light pay roll,and on this explanation Paris with-drew his motion.

Then the chief clerk's salary was cutto $175 per month.

The salary of the First Assistantuierit was cut to izu. i

The second assistant clerk (was cut to$100.

The third assistant qlork was strickenout.

The salary of the messenger and olllceboy was raised from $30 to $50.

Tho assistant superintendent's clerkwas cut to $100.

The assistant's stenographer was cutto $60.

The iltoni of $30,800 for pay of roadengineers, draughtsmen, chairmen,transltmon, etc., was stricken out.

Tho Items relating to the road super-visor's office for Honolulu, and ,the garbage departrnont were stricken out.

The olllce of agent of the PublicWorks at Hllo was abolished.

The olllce of Superintendent of Sew-ers wus abolished.

The electric light pay roll, $13,080 wasstricken from the bill.

The olllce p watchman at the pilot'soffice was abolished.

The salary .of the Superintendent ofPublic Works was stricken out.

The office of surveyor of water workswas abolished,

Tho appropriation for tappers andhelpers for the water works was cutfrom $7500 for two years to $0000.

The wutor works Inspector wasabolished, and the Senate took a recessuntil 2 p .m.

AFTERNOON SESSION.Consideration of the salaries bill was

resumed at tho uftornnon session andtho pay roll of the Honolulu Fire De-partment was stricken out.

The salary of tho Commissioner ofPublic Lands was out from $300 to $260,

The position of second clork of theland department was dispensed with.

The third clerk whs made secondclork at a salary of $50,

Tho aijproprlatlon for sub-agen- ts andrunnel h was cut to $0800,

The salary of the Superintendent ofForestry was fixed at $280 per month.

Tho salary of the surveyor was llxodat $225.

The Supremo Court was given onestenographer ut $W per month.

The salaries of the Circuit courtstenographers wa fixed at $1!IC permonth,

TWO DECISIONS

w f jay fyyv-- -. f?M4pfr o

BOTH REVERSED

At' PHEW K Out'HTitVKttHI bt ll.C1MON or riMBT AMI THI1I1)

C1HCU1T JU1XJKH.

The Mpretne Court rendered twomore brief declatoM ihla mcntlng. Inthe caee of 3. M. Vivas vs. Q, Akttnathe third court 1 reverted In the matter of a bond. The plaintiff had aJudgment for $IM and on apiieal a general bond fdr $fW was filed, ami thecircuit Judge dismissed the apiteal onthe ground that the statutory boiHl of"$100 for costs" had not been filed. Indeciding the case the court said:

"lly Hule 8 the exception In this casecould have been simply stated withoutbringing up the records in the caee."

itule 8, to which attention la called,reads as follows:

"Hills of exceptions shall containonly audi statements of facts or evi-

dence and only auch papers as may 1h

neoesary to explain the hearing of therulings upon the Issuea or questions In- -volved; undisputed facts shall lie sostated, and not the evidence fromwhich they are or may be deduced."

In the case of Mlddledltch vs. Kawa- -nanakon, the court reverses the firstcircuit court. It holds that the factthat an attorney is plaintiff in an action does not bar him from adding the8latutory att().llpy , ,he judgment.

SHIPPING II IIDI3PAItTINGTuesday, May 2.

Am. bark It. P. Hlthot, McPlmll, forSan Francisco at 11 a. in.

Schr. Concord, Uluuahnelc, for Ho-nol-

and Hllo at 3 p. m.Schr. Ka Mol, for Kohalalele at 3 p.

m.Schr. Mol Wnhlne, for Kohalalele at

11 a. in.

PASSKNGI5HS.Departing.

Per stmr. Klnau, May 2, for Hllo andway ports: P. Peck, Cnpt. W. C. AVnr-Jud- d

land, C. H. and son, Albert Hor- -nor, W. G. Walker, Mrs. K. Woodwardand 2 children, Miss K. Allen, Itev. P.K. Yoon. H. Kendall. P. W. Mitchelland wife, J. L. D. Morrison, Uaron K.von Shoda, Miss M. Baldwin, Miss M.Stlllmau, 13 ben Low, 2 children nndnurse, Mrs. W. G. Grlllltha, Mrs. M.Clarke, J. M. Vivas, Walter McDougall.Misses Luce and Sexton, Dr. Norgaard,H. A. Peulrs, Mrs. Cation. Robert Catton, C. M. Roberts and wife, 13. K.

Isaac Cockctt.Per stmr. Claudlne, May 2, for Maul

ports: W. G. Scott, T. 11. Lyons, A.Knos nnd wife, D. L. Meyer, C. McGon-agl- e,

A. W. Dunn, H. F. Howland, J. T.Taylor, W. G. Wh4teslde,,.D. H. Case, C,

wells, Mrs. Gomes nnd son, Miss C.Kelley, Miss R. Samuel, Tang

Young.Per stmr. Mauna Loa, May 2, for n,

Maaluca, Kona nnd Kau ports:G. W. McDougall, M. Klanip. --Mr. Hull,Mr. Hannoberg, Yuen Chong and son,H. G. Ramsey, T. Campbell, Mrs. O.Wilcox and child, Mrs. Hnttle Kelll andchild, George Clark, Otto H. Swezey,W. G. Ogg and wife.

ANOTHER JAPANESE CASH.j

Two more Japanese charged with i

fornication were arrested nftor mid-- 1

night last night by United States .Mar--shut Hendry nnd Doputles Winter ndRoenitii. They are Snlto and Mairli.They will have to await action by thenext Grand Jury.

Want ads In tho Star bring quick re-

sults. Three Hues three times for 2f

cents.ft4AftftAft-AAlMtft(s:fiiftftftftftf-

The Judge of the Torrens Land Courtwas given $175 por month. The clorkof the Land Court was given $100 amonth.

The salary of the District Magistrate '

at Honolulu, $175. Salary Second DIs- -

trlut Magistrate of Honolulu $C00 fortwo years.

Thore were no further changes In thehill until the Attorney GenoroPs olllcewus reached, when Lane moved tostrike out the salary of the second de- - j

puty uttorney genoral's otllce. Themotion was lost and then the salarywas cut to $175 per month. The thirddeputy was ulso cut to $175 per month.

The Item for tho Fourth Deputy At-

torney General was etricken out.I T.'ie iiyinoprlatlon for the pay of courtofficers was fixed at $2000 for two yea.rs.

) The salary of the Attorney General'sclrrk was fixed at $12o.

I Attorney Gonoral's stenographers,$100.

I At this point Bishop moved to strikeout the entire provision for the policedepartment from High Sheriff down.Achl suggested that the olllce of theHigh Sheriff could not be abolished, and

j that he would be lo warden ofOahu Jail, and have other Jails. Thesalary, however, was fixed at $860 permonth, and the High Sheriff was madewarden of Oahu prison. The High Sher-iff was given a clork at $100 a month.

Then the balance of the police appro-priations woro all stiickou out up toJailors and guards. The Jailor at Oahuprison was cut to $125 from $160.

Jailor at Honolulu Jail, $135.

The itoin of $10,200 for detectives wasstricken out.

The salary of tho Superintendent ofPublic Instruction was put at $250 permonth.

HALEIWA.The Halelwa Hotel, Honolulu's fa-

mous country resort, on the line of thtOahu Railway, contains every modernImprovement and affords Its giwats nnopportunity to enjoy all nniusementa-gol- f,

tennis, billiards, fresh and snltwater bathing, shooting, fishing, ridingand driving. Tickets, Including rail-way fare and one full duye room ant

Wjt endeavor to HdvftMee

the W sinews Internets of Ur

Ht4rna in vary hMfttHMte

.war. la M doing our mo-

tive way be somewhat sol-fkt- fi,

for, upon the prosperity

ef ettr patrons hlHgea our

own wwaas. We ean holp

you in matters portaiM to

Real Matate, Stacks, ltm,Ioans, Investment, Insur-

ance, etc.

board, are sold at the Honolulu Station,and Trent & Company for $6. For de-

parture of trains, consult time table.On Sundays, the Halelwa Limited, t

iwo hour train, leaves at S:22 a. m.;returning, arrives in Honolulu at Mp. m.

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.

BY AUTHORITYHANALI3I TO HA13NA, APPROACH-

ES TO WAINIliA HRIDGE ANDPORTION OP KALIHIWAI-HANAL- EI

IJI3ACH IIOAD,KAUAI.

Proposals will he received at the of-

fice of the Superintendent of PublicWorks, Honolulu, T. II., until 12 o'oloeicm. of May 23, 1005, for furnishing alllabor, tools nnd materials, etc., andconstruct Hnnnlol-Hnon- n road, recon-

struct approaches to Walniha bridgeand a portion of the Kallhlwal-Hannl- el

Reach rond, Kauai, T, H,

Plans and Specifications are on filent the olllce of the Asst. Supt, of PublfeWorks, and with C. H. Willis, chairman,of Hnnnlel Road Hoard, Hanalol, Kauai,copies of which will be furnishedIntending bidders on receipt of $5.00

which sum will be returned af-

ter depositing bid and returning plansand specifications.

No proposal will bo entertained un-

less submitted on the blank forms fur-

nished, enclosed In a. sealed envelope,nddresed to C. S. Hollowny, Superin-

tendent of Public Works, Honolulu, T.H., endorsed "Proposal for construct-

ing Hnnnlel to Hnepn approaches toAVainlha bridge nnd portion of

Reach Road" nnd de-

livered previous to 12 o'clock in. on theday specified.

The Superintendent of Public Worksreserves tho right to reject any or, allbids.

C. S. HOLLO.VMY,Supt. of Public Works.

Honolulu, T. H May 2, 1905.

APPOINTMENTS.

Notice Is hereby given that the fol-

lowing appointments have been made:District Magistrate. April 13th, 190S.

L. B. Nalnoa, Koolaulon, Oahu.Board of Medical Examiners. April

19, 1905. George Herbert, M. D.; JamesR. Judd, M. D. ; A. N. Slnolalr, M. D.

Commissioners of Public Instruction--

April 20, 1905. David L. Al, Mrs. Hen-

ry H. Wilcox; Wallace It. Fnrrlngton.Commissioners of Immigration, Ap-

ril 26th, 1906. John J. Cardan, John ILCraig, 13. D, Twmoy.

Commissioners of Public Aruhlves,April 20, 1905. Professor W. D. Alex-

ander, Albert P. Judd,BOARD OP PRISON INSPECTORS.

First Judicial Circuit. April Sfith,

1905. P. J, Lowrey, Ernest H. Wode-hous- e,

A. M. Mcnrydo.Second Judicial Circuit. AprJI 26th,

1903. Edward D. Carley, J. N. 'K. Kao-l- a,

William Hunnlng.Third Judicial Circuit, April 26th,

1006. IS. B. OhlUig, Luthor at. Aunget,H, Alnlnkaua.

Fourth Judicial rHrsult.-Apr- tl 26th,1905. William H. Ders,l. N, Holme,A. D. Lindsay.

Fifth Judlolal Circuit. April 20th,1905. A. S. Wilcox, W. D. Wlnlmrd,Robert Fountain,

Hoard of Health. April 36th, 100,.1. T. Wayson, M, D.

Board of Registration for Kauai nndNllhnu. April 20th, 1905, K, W. Kin-ney.

G. R. CAUTKIt,Governor

ISxecutive Building, May 1st, 1901.

For Sale!Bnrrod Plymouth Rock eggs, Fowls

from the beet poultry ynrds in Qll- -

fornln. $8 per 11; $6 per 40.c, Magoan llulldlng.

Page 6: A 'WA STAR. · sentenced Otomatsu Kawara to two years' Imprisonment, on a verdict find-ing the Jap guilty of nssault and bat-tery. Kawara killed a Japanese at Wal-mana- lo and was

4 M.nttK r ifDpMiltlon. I

W.I th. r ths

ICK QUESTION I

frlMJ kn . I rv"! I ''. T

1 4 a hk'imI'i in hot weather. WaMftV you rr stmloue to ft! thatifMi will nix" atUftictkm, IMrM Wit" tn supply r. Olr

h m iftipw no..

Wvpboni .161 Blue. Poetaee

I, G. IRWIN & CO., LTD ,

Iff ik. a. Irwin President and ManagerBait. D t.ckel..Flret VlM-PrMld- nt

if.Jt. J4ffard. ..S-co- K

5, M. Whitney Jr TrerrStlAYaril I vera IK1I J'

B k Lovekln Auditor

SM41 FACTOR, COMMISSION AGENTS

AOGNTI FOR THBfMlc Steat ahlp Company of San

Frunclaco, CaJ.

AGENTS FOR THBIfajttMh Union National Inauraiwe

Oatupany of Edinburgh.f.Mhilmlta of Magdeburg Oeamwl la- -

Miiance Company.IHiaaoe Marine and Oetewtt Asuranl

0e., Ltd., of London.Iaewl Insurance Company o LtVer-'SO-

MButo A "mar nee Company of London

Tajuestir rtnn n Inaurance Company

HAET & CO., LTDThe jfiiito Ice Cream Parlors.Chocolates and Confeotlotwlee Cream and Water IoeaBakery Lunch.

Ill H H IN Hit (SHY

Union PacificRailroad

SUGGESTS

1 jp seel O-imc-l

Ooixufox--t

Xlsree trains dally through cars, firstma second close to all points. Re--

lmt rates taki IT Oct soon. Write

S. E. Booth,General Agent.

Ifo. 1 Montgomery Street,San Francisco.

Travellers Agree

THAT

At Over MIS

Quickest, Finest, Best

A Train that SuppliesAll Demands

To St. Louis or Chicago

IN 3 DAYSfrom San Francisco.

ELECTRIC LIGHT?READING LAMPS,CLUB ARSALL GOOD ' .TINGS

Soutlierii PacificInformation BureauG13 Market fitreot,San Francisco.

RAILWAY AND LAND CO'S

OCTOBER G, 1904.

OUTWARD.

star "Walanae, Walalua, Kahuku andWay Stations 3:15 a. m 3:20 p. m.

9fT Pearl City, Ewa Mill and WayJUtlons 17:30 a. m., '9:15 a. jrni:6 a. m., '2:15 p. m 3:20 p. m.J:J5 p. m., $9:30 p m tH:15 p. m.

INWARD.Errive Honolulu from Kahuku, Wal- -

vta anr' Walanae 8.38 a. m S:3l

ilrriy Honolulu from F,wa Mill andPsarl Olty 17.46 a. m., 8:36 a. mljM a. m., U:40 p. m., M:31 p. in.,il p. m., i:0 jn.

"Deity.rndu.y ExceptedMmday only.Tiw Halelwa Limited, a two hour

train. 1 ve8 Honolulu - very Sunday ntB:X s. m. returning arrives In Honolain at 10:10 p. m. The Limited stopsenly at Poarl City a- - Walanae.

BL P. DENNISON8upt

KntumflmsmIf yntir itin. 1 . it" mm', Imnwi

it'lir, j illtU fx I ''ill. ill I if tin I inlfl through jniir ii..ih . It l jiMltaM.y

i 'ii'iimnt Inn. I'ufilv mif IiIihhI. pi t

i, ill h'I tli" t'u nitril imii miiiti- - I :

ii . .1 f our suflerlaf ta wto way.

i

i

I

We have the following letter from Mr, R..1. K'iwiiIiI, nf Mannuin. Ho. Australia, Mr.hiu'iiltt .iImi senile Ins iholognih."I mflvieil grivlly with r!iouma'.:-m- ,

n ii l.i Id mi' up lira lone tiui". 1 tr.. 1 aivat many mi ll Ii iiii'n, but they were of li i

hi no line. A frli'tiil who hail taken Aye i

Hirsaimrllla IihIik i iI me to try It. 1 thoug: tIt won in lie put iiko an l lie oiucr ninaicinro.Hut tlt"Ti was 1 criut unil iilcaiiaiit surpriseIn Btoro fur .nc, fiirnfUT taking one Itottle 1was Ik. iter Tl swelling liogan tit ho down,th iiiiina iMirnu to mi'. anil I feltlietterIn errry n.iv. Artir t iKlng only nve nouiegI ivan iiniili-t- i ! ruri-il- . Whllo I was takingthe 8arKtiarill.V I aim took Ayer's Jl'lllfl tokeep my bowels in gooil condition."

AYER'Soar apan

Tiicro ar,- - n my imitation S.irsaparlllab..iv. saro juuLt'Ajcr8.

Prcwirrlt. (V t r A.frC3..1.oell..MMS.,U.S.A

Castle & Gooke, Ltd

IVE-fit- fJLS.-a.c-I

hisyriEiss Agents

AGENTB FOP

New EnglandMutual LifeInsurance Co

OF BOSTON.

;Etna EireInsurance Co.,tr HARTFORD. CONN.

S. SAIKI,Bamboo Eurniture

ANDPICTURE FRAJI.ES.

Neat and HandsomeDesigns made to order.

E03 Beretanla Street, near Punchbowl.TELEPHONE BLUE 881.

CIIAS. S. DOLEATTORNEY-AT-LA-

Room G02 Stangemvald Building,Honolulu, Hawaii.

& CO,, LIMITED

QUEEN STREET,HONOLULU, H. T

AGENTS FORHawaiian Agricultural Company, Oaomea Sugar Company, Honomu SugCompany, Walluku Sugar CompanyOokala Sugar Plantation CompanyHaleakala Kan:h Company, KapapiURanch.

Planters' Line Shipping Company.Charles Brewer &. Co.'b Line of Boi

ton Pasl'.ets.

LIST OF OFFICER8.Charles M, Cooko PresidentGeo. H. Robertson. V.-Pi- & Mgy,B. Faxon Blahcp...Treao. & Secy.W. F. Allen... v AuditorP. C. Jones directorC. H. Cooke ' ectorG. R. Carter DirectorAH of the above named constituting

the Board of Directors.

The Hoalth Habit Is greatly encouraged by the purity and wholesomenessof ones food and drink. In the UnitedStates Government report tho purityand wholesomeness of Rainier Beer arecommended.

The Health Habit Is the Rainier BeerHabit.

IMMIGRATION BOARDS.The Board of Immigration held a

meeting on Saturday at the governor'solllce to organize. The members pre-sent took the oath of olllce. Therewere present at the meeting E. D.Tenney, J. II. Craig and John J. Car-de- n.

J. P. Cooke did not attend nndSecretary Atkinson Is absent from theTerritory. The Commissioners presentelected Tenney chairman and J. H.Craig secretary.

Purity, Wholesomeness and Flavorare the principal requirements of nsuccessful beverage the United StatesGovernment leport vouches for the firsttwo and the verdict of the consumerfor the last In Rainier Beer.

. C. SMITH,a. P. A. T. 4. Fine Job Printing, Star Ofuco.

A QUESTIONOFPRINCIPLE

THR MKUHRrJATtON I DIBA All ADVoCATaUJ AT 1WIMM UtPMUU 1tmm rvNOAttMMTAt. mufctruM or ctvtuytmi winfiovrr to wao war omtantlt upon au. kimm or ymTnWcntHK,

RDtTon STAR: In dealing an prlnllle with the qtfMtiotts inratvea1 In the

lute Inveatlffatlon of condRtotia at lwl-le- i.

delicacy and atrvngth are bothntiled. tin the one aide, there la aliltit for the lefRllaatlon of the moataerloua of vhen, hi well aa the mosttllftlrult to eradirute, on th other tide,

iHinul law Is appealed to, aa the onlyornlble remedy for the evil.If life were uaauinetf to basin und

ind In thla world and Ita rational pro- -held strictly within the Utlll- -

liuiiin theory, the argument for tsgali- -union would still be fallacious. Thatplan la limited to one sex and Its ex- -

ai Hons escape the larger halt of viciousliuiuunlty. More than that, wherever...i,.,! " un practically failed. Dr.t'harles D. Coooer, at the last annualmeeting of the Territorial Medical 80- -elety presented an ably written reportin favor of the policy oC regulation,which has been extetlotvely publishedand read. Rut its statements und Itstheory have been fully disproved byxucli r'ch contributions to the discussion aa the remarkable palter read byDr. Howard A. Kelly at the 56th annualw'ssion of the American Meillcal As- -Hoc iatlon and by the powerfully ex- -pressed views of Dr. F. R. Day of Ho- -no'u,u- -

The truth Ii; that, In considering this(luestlon, there Is buttons thing to bepreliminarily determined Is promts- -eulty between the sexes morally andeconomically right or morally andeconomically wrong? There can heonly one answer to thin (tuestlon, nomatter how dllllctllt It Is to extirpatethe evil, and It Is Impossible and foolishto avoid the ethical element. Ameri-can civilization, all civilisation that de-

serves the name, rests upon the accept-ance of a Supreme Being and of themoral law, and it has been demonstrat-ed by human experience that the recog-

nition of this truth Is essential, notonly to the uplifting of standards andtdeuls, but to the health, the energy,the order, und the comfort of humanity,

No sophistry can obliterate theseconclusions. A community ennnottamper with vice, ennnot recognize Itsoxistence ns a hurd necessity, cannottolerate nnd seek to minimize Its of- -

fects by law, without degradation andulllmate degeneracy. This Is a factthat all history Illustrates. Everyvice, as tho lawyers say. Is malum In seand embraces the leading churucteris- -

tics of crhnf. Therefore, no vice canbe legally acknowledged without repu- -

dlatlon of the foundations of Chris- -

tlanlty and of civilized life. The familyIs the confessed unit of, society, nnd in- -deed of national existence, and chastl- -

ly Is thp bond of the family.There are Individuals in every coun- -

try who, with their natural propensi- -

tics unrestrained or uneradlcnted, areprone to tho commission of murder, ofhighway robbery, of burglary, of for- -gery, of embezzlement, of larceny. Ifsome philosopher or scientist were tosuggest tho hypothesis that these factsare not to bo Ignored nnd, therefore,should be admitted by the law, and theconstitutional assassin . should hetaught to use weapons so us to inlllctthe least suffering upon his victims,the highway robber or the burglar tohandle his implements so as most artistically nnd with the minimum ofconfusion to do his work, the forger toexecute his labors In the most consum-mate style, the embezzler to handlebooks so as to cover up the traces of

hla dellnqaenry, or the thM tomil hla dvpratattama with tha MhMKkill and facility, atK-- h a man wmU ba

hooted off the atraata or sent ta anaaylHm for the Inaane.

And yet. oti principle, applying theultima ratio, thare la no difference be-

tween theae proposition and the dell-Itera- te

pronoaal to lagaliie a vice thatpropagate every form ofand crime, and In Itself hue demoralis-ed whole imputations and even nutlonit.The law which aupprennee exhibitionand conduct that ottenly a ftr01ft thepublic are not directed against paftl- -

cutar vices and are not regulations, ex- -

eit as they comtiel decency and goodIn a general sense. Rut a law

which prescribes areas where debauch- -

try or crime can be Indulged and Incomplete examinations substituted forstern Inhibition, is at once a solecismund a parody.

Remedies of course are In order. Hutwhat, are they? Not the remedy oftho drunkard, who ituteta his nervesto produce apimtlte and capacity formore drink. Moral Issues, especially

tm,y affecl letj., are d,tlcuit ofsolution. A combination, however, ofpr,nclple and policy, enforced by train- -lng, Jn moAun t,es Is most effectual.There was never a period when moreperfect command of the body and themind wus exacted In the circles thatrepresent the capital, the business, andthere! ore, the successes and the fall- -

tires of life. A sensualist or a vol up- -

uuiy, more emphatically a beast In theform of man or woman, cannot win theprizes that lit these days of Intenseactivity, glitter on every side. And forthe satisfaction of the deeper thirst fordevelopment that Intellectual andspiritual aspirations create, the lowerpuBs.ons, the brutal propensities, haveti. be subdued, not merely by the pressure cf organisation but by individualtraining und progress. It may well be J

lli.it, in the effoit to wring out of hu- -

inanity the lust vestige of bigotry anditiioler.mi'e, morality Itself has beentoo often ignored or discarded, and thateducation should represent the condl- -

ios to which all tolerable creeds andbeliefs accede. It is certain that thesanctity of the home becomes more and'"ore Important as the human race ad- -

vances on Its exalted mission. It Isequally sure that Ignorance, Idlenessand the multiplication of temptations,nre proline causes of debasement andthat knowledge, suitably and definitelyconveyed, Is a power that reaches bothKu'lishness and Idealism. In these dl- -

lections, the energies of the fumlly, ofthe controlling social circles, of theschools nnd of government, can be sys- -

tematlcally and profitably exerted.Least of all are the Hawaiian Islands

the place where moral standards canhe safely lowered. Here the saintlymislsonurles, with their families andtheir assistants, planted tho New Eng- -

and type of Christian and Americancivilization. Here, for eighty-fiv- e

years, they and their descendants havesli od. tm'tel und linn in the midstof tensuallty., have turned tin entirerace, nominally, and to a great degreereally, from the .vicious practices thatcome from Mood, from climate, andfrom Isolation, have moulded Institu-tions after the fushion of constitutionalfreedom, have produced a society thathas held itself uloof from contamina-tion, nnd have vindicated noble Idealsnot onlv by precept but by example. ItIs not here, pet hups above all other

THE NtXT PLACE THE JA

'jaw' -- vsr

ExperiencedHat Trimmer

Wc Itavo acctirnl the arrviccn ( an Hat Trimm"nd will luTcnfltr make tut trimniiiiK a spt-oiall-

All kimU of Hat marie to orrlor ami t ri in tin. I

K. I80SHIMAHonolulu, April 1 7, 1915.

OUR OWN LINESan Francisco to Chicago

(WITHOUT CHANGE),

STANDARD AND TOURIST SLEEPERS DAILY

Trade

Stopping cn route at Los Angeles, also "THE PETRIFIED FOR-

ESTS" and the "GRAND CANYON OF ARIZONA."

HONOLULU PEOPLE TAKE THE SANTA FE ROUTE DURINQ THB

COLD WINTER MONTHS. AN IDEAL TRIP ALONG THE OILED ROAD

BEDS ON THE CALIFORNIA LIMITED. TWO TRAINS DIALY.

Passenger Agent, W.

parts of the g'ohe, that the moral lawcan be inverted nnd vice lifted Intopromluonce and Invested with govern-mental sanctions.

It is to be hoped that Iwllel and nilIts concomitants, have become thingsof the past.

CITIZEN.

WILL TRV TOBACCO.Jured G. Smith, United States agri-

cultural commissioner, has sent a cir-

cular letter to plantations on Hawaiioffering to nsslst them In plantfngfrom one to five acres of tobacco on'each plantation. Laupahoehoe, Paau-ha- u

und the Hawaiian AsrlculturalCompany 1 ave accepted tho offer, andthe experiment will be tried at once.

SUNDAY ON MAUI.

The police department, acting undertho new Sunday law, made a raid onthe butcher shops last Sunday after-noon, taking In all who were found em-

ployed by the shops. They were re-

leased later In the day. The new lawdoes not permit them to keep openafternoons as formerly. Maul News.

Star Want Ads pay 25 cents.

PANESE ARMY

Mark

G. Irwin & Co., Office

BAD COC T

The band concert will be at ThomasSquare this evening. Following Is thoprogram:

PART I.Overture "Poet and Peasant"... SuppoIntroduction "Carmen ' BizetSelection "Persian" EllenbergVocal "Hawalan Songs". ar by Bergcr

Mrs. N. Alapal.PART II.

Four Popular Marches, by request."Hem I nolo" Alstyno"Yankee Girl" Lampo"Spirit of Liberty" Sousa"El Capltan" Sousa

"Star Spangled Banner."

Half the pleasure In dining Is in con-genial company order Rainier Beerand your Joy will bo complete.

Want nds In the Star bring quick re-

turns. Three linen three times for 25

cents.

WILL TAKE

Page 7: A 'WA STAR. · sentenced Otomatsu Kawara to two years' Imprisonment, on a verdict find-ing the Jap guilty of nssault and bat-tery. Kawara killed a Japanese at Wal-mana- lo and was

J

mm i mm in.

If. 1. MAM win PrMMtntJ. 1. &ke First Yue-PtMki- wit

W. Mi Alexander.Boaend eeFrsWetU T, Peak Third VUe-Preslde- nt

J. Waterhouse Treasurer0, M, Ilolph,. ................. SeretarrW. O. Smith Auditor

Sugar Factors andCommissionHerchants

AGBNfS FOR

Hawaiian Commercial & SugarCompany,

liaiku Sugar Company,Pain Plantation,Maui Agricultural Company,Klhel Plantation Company,Hawaiian Sugar Company,Kahuku Plantation Company,Kahului Railroad Company,Halcnkala Ranch Company.

111!Like

Water

It Isn't until the dry spoil coinos thatwe fully appreolnto the value of water.If you Invest id an EXCELSIORItOUND HOOP TANK you'll alwayshave plenty of water on your premiseswhether you live on Tantalus, In thoplains or on any of the other Islands

The price Is reasonable and the tanksare built to endure the stress of allkinds of weather.

LEWERS & COOKE, LTD,,

177 S. KING STIIKET

BEAVEll LUNCH ROOM,Fort Street. Opposite Wilder & Co

II. J. NOLTE, PROP'R.

First-Cla- ss Lunches served wltli tea.coffee, soda .fate', ginger ale or milk.

Smokers Requisites a Specialty.

Contractor and BuilderHouse Painttr

Kowalo, tinerldan Street, nearHonolulu H. t

Telephone Whit 601.

SECOND ANNUAL MAY

MB Mn"CONGRESS OF SONG"

In two separato

GRAND EVENTSSpecial Soloist.

IDA GRAY SCOTT,

From Chicago.

HAWAIIAN OPERA HOUSE

FRIDAY, MAY 5TH,

Under Auspice) ofKAMEIIAMEIIA SCHOOLS.

POPULAR PRICES.

BOYS' FIELDSATURDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 6.

Admission 10 Cents, Seats on sale atWall, Nlahols Co, , '

THE

Plumberle J, King StreetTflliphone .Main 61

NEW RESTAURANTMe Ing Low. 1036 Mnunakta Street.

Two dining rooms, first simI (secondDoor. Leo Hong Chop Sul (a Chinese

.,dish) .Beryad, $ All llflurs,. ..i

WALTHAM

WALTHAM

WALTHAM

IN USE. ALL

AMERICAN

MASS.,

WATCH

SIM

3

HKALTY TRANSFERS tt

Enleied for Record April 28, 1K05. rtJ no Klwlnl to James It Kawehl et al.DF J CroM et at by afft of intgee to

Oahu Railway Land Co FAF J Croaa et at by mime to Oahu

Railway L,and Co DGeorge .1 Campbell NoticeJohn Pulaa to flu Wo In Co I

Entered for Record May 1, lt06,

Ren to da Palva to Mrs Ieo Horir..rtiKaupejitt Loo Hons; and hah to Evan

da Sllvva- - MDavid A Loebenelein et al to F S In

Lyman Tr MI'uaa and wf to Kn'inal (k) DJennie K Kulkahl lo Chun HIn LJ Garcia Tr to A J Rodrlguee et al

RtlMaria G Hodrlgues to Maul Dry

Goods and Grocvery Co Ltd B SMaria G Rodrlgues to Mnul Dry

Goods and Grocery Co Ltd D .

A Enos et al to I, M Baldwin RelJonn Telxeira to Men Long et al LGeorge MoNamarow to Antonla G

Teixeira . uKapahu (w) to Lanlknpu E 8ylvn...DMacfarlane & Co Lid to J K Smytho.DArcenla do Rego and wf to Manuel do

Rego DEdward II Rogors and wf to L M

Baldwin MKoawo Knloo (k) to Nnmaka Kaal

(w) DIMary Carrllo and hsb to M Kalia- -I

loktilu DiChung Poy Fat by nfft of tntgee to

I Rubensteln F AK Tanabe to Mltuyoshl B SK .. Keknl and wf to John T Baker.. MEst of Jam oh Ronton by Exors lo

George F Davles ..DW Koalo and wf to W F Robinson... Dlino Knnnaona nnd wf to W F Rob-

inson MNeullanl Knllula to Ano Opeka DPeter C Jonos Ltd to William Kin

ney RelHenry Vlolra Sr to E H F Woltor Tr

AMMunu Nnkn' una to Walluku Sugar n

Co Ltd E LDavid Dayton Tr to Trs of Est of

S. C. Allen A M

Maria King Est by Tr to II Wnter- -houso Tr Co Ltd M

Recorded April 24 .005.Joe Fernandez and wf to Joe F Law-

rence, M; R P 0289 kul 3500. Walehu,Mnul. J300. It 207. n 320. Dated Mar25, 1905.

Hana Enoka (vvM to Hop Sin & Co,L; 23 ncr of R P 22CC, Wnllua-nu- l, Ko-oln- u,

Maul. 15 yrs at $30 per yr. B202. p 415. Dated April 12. 1905.

John Wilson and wf to James Sen-bour- n,

D; gr 2379, Knnpahu, i.omakua,Hawaii. $500. B 209, p 173. DatedAug. 18. 1898.

Joseph Emmsley ot al to J C Plcanco& Bros Bond; ad damnum $1500. B205, p 485.

Slu Lcong to Pang Fong, C M; lease-

hold, Anlft, Honolulu. Oahu. $181. B267, p 332. Dated "-- 11 24,1905.

Rarepta AGulIck to GustavoRledol, D; lot 17, Gllck tract. Hono-

lulu, Oahu. $375. B 269. p 174. DatedOct 24, 1901.

Saropta A Gullck (widow) to MaryRledel. J): lot 33, Gullck tract. Hono-

lulu, Oahu. $350. B 209, p 170. DatedOct 15. 1901.

H Kukumoto to T Ishlharn, C M:groceries, fixtures, book nos, etc, In

storo bldg No 147 cor Hotel andsts, Honolulu, Oahu, Int In 4

shores In Jan Rice Mill, Honolulu, Oahu. $700. B 267, p 383. Dated April 4.

' '1905.

Est of H C Allen by Trs to Wong HIn,nor R P 19S6 kul 6245, Kamakolo,

Honolulu, Oahu. $601. B 207, p 336.

Dated Apr 22. 1905.

See Clilnjr and hsb lo Joshua K.Brown Rr M; por R P 19&B op 2! porR P 1085 np 1 lots 12 and 13. Kninakela,Honolulu, Oahu. '

$1000. B 267. p STS.

Dated Apr 21, 1905.

P E Dorlond to II A Gerlnoh, A Mimtg F O da Rosa op lot 94 part B ofPatent 4032, Vnleiino Rd, Puna, Hawaii.$1200. B 262, p 113.

Ralph M Ralley and wf lo AbrahamR Smith, Di por R P 4541 kul 818 KwaRd. Honolulu. Oohu. 1S00, B 270, p141, Dated Mar 0, 100S,

Abrahn'm R Smith nnd wf to flaprgeM Raupp, Mi 6269 sq ft laud and house-hold furniture. Fwn Rd, Jlonolulu,Oahu. $1600. B 267, p 341. Dated April6, 1903,

Hanford R Dole nnd wf lo Onldle O

nii"nv. D' ?or pt 3210. 'roinifile7HO'nolulu, Ouhu, $1. II 266, p 430. nat.

' Mar 20. 1905.

Henry William to Mrs. Kannnl Ass,P; Ut Int In an 3 R P W kul 1M0,

Honolulu,' Oahu, $JS6lilt $180. B 466, p 438. Dated Apr 24.

100S.

Antonio R Plinentnl nnd wf et nlH

to Manuel Francisco, M lot 4 blk B,VUa Frnnon, Add, Hllo, Hawaii. 1400,

V 267, p 34B. Dated Aug 22, 1904.

K KlmQto to Sajurn FuJItB.TJ U; bigwl .indfs.,cfu:.AjMpni awi iyn 1M

HAWAIIAN IVAI, Tt'iWfAV. May i, w

watches18,000,000

WATCHES ARB NOWARE GUARANTEED BY

WATCH

Kankopun,

COMPANY, WALTHAM,U. S. A. THIS COM-

PANY IS THE LARGESTMANUFACTURING

f t

NEWS BY CABLE

... . .. ,tTROOPS l' NCONTRf LLA RLE.

WARSAW, May 2.- -A hundred werekilled or wounded In the riots. Invarious Instance the troops becameuncoiitroluble. The people used firearrna and bombs. The Csar'i infantryfired repeated volleys at the retreating;processionists.

NO TROUBLES OUTSIDB POLAND8T. FETErtSIIUKG, May 2. Except

Poland, there Is no trouble In theempire.

ADMIRAL TOGO WILL NOT FIGHTNEW YORK, May 2. Minister Ta- -

kahlra declares that Admiral Toko willnot offer battle to the Russian Meet, asthe rink Is excessive,

THEIR OPENING VICTORY.FUKAN, May 2. Kurokl'H army Is

celebrating with fetes, the battle ofthe Yalu.

THE CHICAGO STRIKE.CHICAGO, May 2. The conditions

here are aggravated. Two thousandImported as strlko

brankors have arrived. The authorities will not allow thorn to carry rlllos,

MEXICANS WORSTED.HONORA. May 2. In recent battles

between Moxlcan troops and Ynquls, amajor was killed and many Mexicanswounded. The Ynquls escaped.

OLYMPIADS JAPANESE LAND.

SEATTLE. May 2. The labor menmade an unsuccessful effort to bar outtho Olympla's Jnpnnose passengersfrom Honolulu. Tho Japanese, however, were landed and entertained.

PRESIDENT AND LABOR.GLENWOOD, Colo.. May 2. Pros!

dent Roosevelt has agreed to receivepetition from the labor men upon his

arrival at Chicago May 10.

BREWERY STRIKE ON.SEATTLE. May 2. A general brow

ory strike has begun.$ G "' $

Honolulu. Oahu. J630. B 265, p 4S0

Dated Apr 24, 1903.

Kate Cornwall by ntty to HenryWatorhouee Tr Co Ltd Mi Int In ostof W II Cornwell, dec. $30 por monthfor 1 yr. It 267, p 24". Dated April21, 1903.

Est of S C Allen by Trs to E Keknaulau Pratt (Mrs.) P R; por gr 3617

cor Hotel and Punchbowl Sts, Honolulu, Oahu. $1486.15. B 267, p 349. Dat-- ied Apr 20, 1905.

E Kokannlau Pratt (widow) to EloseFroboose Tr, D; por gr 3617, cor Hoteland Punchbowl Sts, Honolulu, Oahu$200. Ii 266, p 439. Dated April 19

1903.

Recorded April 25, 1905.

Alexander Lazarus to Lena O Rosewnrne, D; lots 10 and 15 of gr 3490

Kaupo, Hana, Maul. $10. B 200, p 440,

Dated April 22, 1903.

Fanny Strnuch Tr and hsb (P E R)to William R Castle, D; Int In npot kul 5011, Kallhl, Honolulu, Oahu$100. B 266, p 411. Dated April 21,ICOu.

John KaniRiiuwal to J IC Palamu,Rel; aps 1 and 2 of R P 6738 kul 11011,

Eleele, Kauai. $260. B 220, p 277. 7791-e- d

Sept 20. 1904.

John Walker to Notice, Notice:for Reg Title of lots 9, 10, 29 and

3tf, blk A of por gr. 3400 Mutlock Avoand Lunalllo St, Honolulu, Oahu . B206, p 497. DaUd Apr 6, 1905. '

John Walker to NotlcerNotloe; ap-

plet) for RK Title of por kul 139, HotelHt, Honolulu, Oahu. B 274, p 92, Dat-o- d

April 6, 1905.

A Lelhulu Keohokalolo and hsb (MK) to Olownlu Company, L; R P 6338

kuls 3702 and 5110 Olila, Ukumehume,Muul. 10 yrs at $100 per an Ii 262, p416. Dated Aug 12, 1904.

R W Shingle Tr to L F Alvureis D;Int In por R P 401 and'lM, Palama, etcHonolulu, OhIui, $1. B 266, p 443.

Dated Apr SB, 1905,

OSTROM COMIN.G.The Rev. Henry Ostroin, D, D. who Is

to tako charge of the revival woik horeIs a passenger on the steamer Ventura,ilue here tninorrow morning. Tomor-row evening a grand welcome roily Is

to bo hold In Central Union ahurch.There will be a chorus of forty voicesand a very large congregation Is ex-

pected.

There are no "blun" In Rainier Ber,It Is nil gold!, brown, the goldn brownof thp rlpensd grain,

sunt Wwl mj-Jkf- Z

Mm SUFFRAGE

111 THE CONVOCATION

KllftAI.A MIH8i KHNKB TWO

WOMEN DHLKUATEK WHO ARE j

BAKIIKU Ol'T Hl-- MAT OKT IN.

The Initial business session tf theBptacoftal Convocation of tke MhMlwnary District of HonvtulH was Met Vasteventn In the Sunday Sctoel rotti trfMl. Andrew's, Bishop Hestarlck pre-sldt-

Rev. John Ustorne and D, W. Anderson, as a committee on credentials,havlns; declared the certificates ot thelay delegates to be In order, the bishopannounced the convocation to be Insession. Hev. Putwlne was apilnt-e- d

secretary and Carl Iovsted assist-ant.

The following standing- - committeesMere appointed:

Council ol Advice Rev. Canon Ault,Edmund Hdles, Hris;adlr General Bd- -ward Davis, Rev. Canon Mackintosh.

Board of Equalisation D. W. Anderson, Yup Hee Young. Charles 1 Rhodes

Bducatlon Kev. Canon Ault, Rev.Frank Fits, Chans Kim, PMHp Iode.

legislation Rev. John Usborne. Rev.W. C. Blew art, H. E. HUjhton, U. M.von Holt, W. L. Stanley.

Finance Canon Ault, Harrison, V. R. Greenwell.

Electloiih-He- v. F. Fits, Rev. RobertPotwlne. I

Unfinished liuslness Rev. Alfred Ii.Hall, f. J. Testa. I

Henry Smith us treasurer of variousfunds and organisations of the churchleporletl for each fund searately. Forforeign tulslsons $1M,67 had been con-

tributed, every churdh and missionhavlns; paid its full assessment underthe aportlonment plan. For Diocesan Mlslons more man ?i,wu naubeen contributed. There have beenHome Increases In the endowment fundsfor cnnonrles and other purposes.

A list of all the bonds and other evidences of Investment was submitted.

Rev. John Usborne, for the committeefor the purchase ot a See House, reported recommending that In view ofthe other demands on the church atthis time, and for other reasons, thatno further steps be taken In this direction at this time. The report wasadopted and the commute continuedfor another year.

Tho report of the committee on legis-

lation and prlvllegeH was read by Rev.John Usborne, chairman. ' Tho committee recommended the oxpedloncy ofdesignating somewhat more fully "therights and functions of tho Bishop, toseparate the "Deu'n and Chapter of theCathedral of St. Andrew from thoparish of St. Andrew, and to define theline of demarcation between the rights,functions and property of, each, to es-

tablish tho parishes throughout thodloceso as separate corporations, tolimit tho distinct ownership of prop-

erty In tho name of the board of director of the Protestant Episcopal churchIn the Hawaiian Islands so ns to ex-

clude tho property of the dean andchapter and of the parishes, and to ox-te-

the light of voting for wardensand vestrymen to nil communicants oteighteen years of ago or over and toall baptized persons, who have attain-ed the age of twenty years and whohave contributed to parish funds, Insome manner recognized by the rectorsand vestrymon In their respectiveparishes, for six months prior to nnelection."

W. L. Stanley did not concur in tholatter portion of the report. The mat-ter will be considered nt tonight's meet-

ing.The point of tho proposed nmondment

In regard to voting Is that It will givetho right to vote In Parish meeting to.women ns woll as to men. The Ko-ha- la

Mission sent ns Its delegates Mrs.Fenton-Smlt- h and Mrs. Knl. But asunder tho presont canons they areclearly Ineligible, they were not givenseats In the convocation. If tho pro-

posed amendmont carrlos, however,they will bo eligible, nnd tho questionwill then doubtless nrlse, whether theywill thou be entlteld to seats In theconvention. It is probable tbat theremay bo a vigorous discussion nnd con-

troversy on this point. W. L. Stanley and F. J. Testa are opposed to thoamendmont, and to woman's suffrage,while there Is u considerable element In

the convocation which Is In favor ofboth.

A meeting was held In the Parishhoufce of St. Clement's yesterday afternoon, Bishop Restarlck In the chair, ota number of the clorgy and laity In-

terested In Sunday school work. Anumber of useful nddresos were madeand the Bishop spoko strongly In fuvorof special Instruction In missions.

The following Is tho program for theremainder of the program;Tuesday, May 2nd. Meeting of the Wo

man' Auxiliary and Guilds atSt, Elizabeth's House.

10 a, m. Celebration of tho Holy Com-

munion. Preacher, thu Rev. John Os-

borne.11 a. in. Meeting. in St. Elizabeth's

House. Order of Builnees:(1) . Organization, t(2) . Report of Secretary.(3) . Report of Treasurer.(4) . Appointment of Olllcers.(IS). Luncheon.(6). The United Offering

Sirs. Brnnson(7). The Woman's Auxiliary In Small

Places on these standsMrs, Fenton Smith

(8). The Junior AuxiliaryMiss von Holt

(9) Tho Girl's Friendly Society

Do not nocept the "Jtjgt ns good," In

slat upon trying Rnlnlr"Beer. You willalways oruor It It never changes.

BULLETIN

Knr the Wff Kmlins Arii 2. dm:..Honolulu, T. H . Mn- - i, iKon.

aMM BRA L SUMMARY,"howery weather has prevailed dur-

ing the nut week In nearly all sectionsof the group, with strong trade windsand temiwraturea somewhat below thenormal.

Young cane has made fair progress,but needs rain badly In leward Hawaiiand would be benefited In all sectionsby higher temperatures. The harvest-ing and grinding of matured cane isproceeding rapidly, but has len Inter-fered with In the Hllo and . .smakuadistricts of Hawaii by muddy roadswhich render transports! Ion difficult.Harvesting is completed In the north-ern portion of the Puna district ofKauai. Planting for the 1107 crop ofcane continues, but will be completedlater than usual In the Puna district ofHawaii on account of the rather latestart in the harvestlpg of the currentcrop. Coffee trees generally haveblossomed well during the recent show-ery weather, but the blossom has beendamaged somewhat by high winds Inthe Kootaupoko district of Oahu. Pas- -lure 'lands need rain rain In leewardHawaii and leward Oahu, but ore Invery satisfactory condition elsewhere.Pineapples for the summer crop are de-- jveloplng' rapidly; rice In all sections isgrowing well.

A heavy earthquake shock was ex- -perlenced at Naalehu, Hawaii, at --1:Up. in. of the 22nd Instant, but causedno damage. Kllauea crater. In Ha-

waii, continues In active eruption.

IMPORTANT INVENTION.Max Loreuz consulting engineer for

If. Hackfeld & Company has been al-

lowed a imtent for nn Important Im-

provement In cane crushing machinery.The feature of his Invention Is mechanism by which the Juice itself is carriedbnck from one set of rollers lo anotherto aid In tho maceration process, In-

stead of using water as formerly,which has to be evaporated out againal the expense of additlonel fuel.

xxM":::X':xX"::"W:::Mrs. L. F. Foleom

(10) . Women's Work at St. Eliza-beth's Deaconess Sands.

(11) . The aullds: St. Androw's,Guild. St. Clement's, St. Au-

gustine's, Kohnla; St, James', Hllo;Good Shepherd, Walluku; ChristChurch, Kona, and others.

(12). A Bible Woman's WorkMrs. Kong

Tho Triennial Convention nt BostonMrs. Charles L. Rhodes

7:30 p. m. Meeting of Convocation Intho Cathedrnl Sundny School Room.Socond Sunday After Enstor, May 7th.

11 a. m. Consecration of St. Eliza-beth's Memorial Church.

7:30 p. m. Mooting at thf CathedralIn the Interests of tho Brotherhood ofSt. Andrew nnd Luy Workers.

Want ads In tho Sta hrlng quick returns. Throo lines three times for 25

cents.

In a year there are four seasons.those wo enjoy one nt a time, in RainierBeer there are four great virtues. Purity, Wholosomoness, Flavor andStrength, these wo enjoy all of thetime.

K. UYKDA1028 Nuuonu Street, Honolulu, T. H.Between King and Hotel Street.

Straw Hat Manufactory. Any Styloof Straw Hat made to order. Pannmnand Felt Hat Cleaned.

0RPI1EUM THEATRESUMMKR EnOAUKMKNT

COMMKNOINCJ

Friday, May 5th.FLAGSHIP OF THE PACIFIC

THE ELLEPOfiO CO,

Presenting nn Entirely Now Roportolreof High Class Productions.

Tho Strongest Company ever broughtto Honolulu by this Popular Manager.

Opening Bill Friday and Saturday,May 5th and 6th, and Saturday Matinee

"THE BELLE OF RICHMOND."Monday and Tuesday, May 8th and 9th.

"MY FRIEND FROM INDIA."AVednesday and Thursday, May 10th

and 11th,"OTHER PEOPLE'S MONEY."

Friday and Saturday, May 12th & 13th,"KIDNAPPED."

Seat sale opens nt Box Olllce on Wod- -nesday May 3.

Prlcos: 75c, 50c, and 35c.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFirst Circuit, Territory of Hawaii.At Chambers In Probate.

In the Matter of the Estate of AntonioFernaudos Neves, deceased.Order for Notice of Hearing Potltlon

for Probate of Will,A Document purporting to be the

Inst Will nnd Testament ot AntonioFenmndes Neves deconsed, having onthe 10th day of April A. D. 1905, beenpresented to said Probate Court, anil a

Potltlon for the Probate thereof, andfor tho Issuance of Letters Testamen-tary to Rlclutrdn Autnne having beenllled by Julia F. Neves,

It is hereby ordered, that Monday,the ICtli day of May A. D. 1905 nt 10

o'clock a. in. ,of said day, at the CourtRoom of snld Court at Honolulu, Island of Onhu he nnd the same herebyIs appointed tho time nnd place forproving snld Will and hearing saidapplication.

It Is' further ordered' that notionthereof bj glycol, by puUlJaatlon, once a

.fk fur s o fejsslve we.Ifiiwftllnn Ptnr neWfSSSJMfpublish"! In Hanetifltt, Uw ItsMnM.tl.-- ,o i. not lest (tautprevious to the lime theNHfor hearing.

I i led rtt Honolulu. T. M., Aptfl MMA l ISOf..

iftlgned) ALKX LINtHMY JftHecond Jud-- e circuit Court NK

Crcult.Attest:

WM. R. K1MX.Clerk Circuit Court First CiNtf.

4tsApr. II, Id. V,, Mar I

BYAUTHQJiUTYCAT 1HON WATER J'lPls.

Proposals will he received r tfc

Superintendent of Public lastmattssiuntil II o'clock noon May ISth, INI, forfurnishing the lfcainaluna Jscbooi wttk071 ft. of t hki Cast iron lip In U ft.lengths weighing about NfJ lbs. fsarlength, JUndard Weight. Also 1 0fttIron Reducer from 30 Jn, lo I In. ajaiguaranteed to withstand a pressor OC

WO lbs. to sq. Inch. 'All to be delivered In flrst claai --

dltlon f. o. b. Wharf Lahaina a$LTlme of delivery is an Important MMtt

in connection with this order.Successful bidder will file bond tST

$175.00 upon signing contract.Proposals must be enclosed In a seal

ed envelope endorsed "Cast Iron WMMr

Pipe," and addressed to James C. DgafSSuperintendent of Public InstructionHonolulu.

The Superintendent reserves the rightto reject any and all bids.

JAMBS C. DAVIS,superintendent of Public InstrgaMsg.

ONE-ROO- SCHOOL-HOUS- E, KA-

HUKU, KOOLAULOAOAHU, T. H.

Proposals wlJ be received at lh of-

fice of the Supt. of Public Work, Ho-

nolulu, T. II., until 12 o'clock in. ofMay 15th, 1906, for constructing a One-roo- m

School-hous- e, Kahuku, Koolau-lo- a,

Oahu, T. H.Plans and specifications are on file

with the Asst. Supt. of Public Works,copies of which will be furnished In-

tending bidders on receipt of $5.00,

which sum will be returned after de-

positing bid and returning plans andspecifications.

No proioal will bo entertained unless submitted on the blank forms fur-

nished, enclosed In a soalcd envelope,addressed to C 8. Hollowny, Su-

perintendent of Public Works, Hono-

lulu, T. II., endorsed "Froosal for One-roo- m

School-hous- e, Kahuku, Koolau-lo- a,

Oahu, T. 11." and delivered previous to 12 o'clock m. on tho day specl-ile- d.

,The Superintendent of Public Works

reserves the right to reject any or allbids.

C. S. HOLLOWAY,Superintendent of Public Works.

Honolulu T. 11., May 1, 1903.

CORPORATION NOTICES.

ELECTION OF OFFICERS.

TROPIC FRUIT CO., LTD.

At the adjourned annual meutlng ofthe Tropic Fruit Co.. Ltd., held at theirolllce, Elite building, March 11th, 1905,

tho following were elected ns the Boardof Directors for the eqsuing year:

BYRON O. CLARK,T. J. KINO,F. C. ENOS,L. II. NEVIN,EDGAR HENRIQUES.

and snld Directors elected the followingolllcers:Byron O. Clark... President & ManagerT. J. King Vice PresidentBank of Hawaii TreasurerGeo. Iloenltz ScoretnryC. M. V. Forster Auditor

GEO. ROENITZ,Secretary.

ELECTION OF OFFICERS.

Notice Is hereby given that at theannual meeting of the Man ing Co.,Ltd., held April 22, 1906, the followingdirectors were duly oleotud to srvefor the ensuing year; and that saiddirectors ns by tho By-La- required,elected olllcers as follows:Ho Pol Dlreqtor and PresidentC. M. Tui.. Director and nt

Young Ping. ...Director, Secretary and Manager

Chang Cheo.. ..Director and TreasurerYoung Man Kam DirectorYoung Chlng DirectorYoung Mook Director

YOUNG PINO,Searotary.

SPECIAL MEETINQ.

KIHEI PLANTATION COMPANY,LIMITED.

The adjourned special mucking of thestockholders of the Klhel PlantationCompany, Limited, will be held at theofllco of the cornpnny, StangenwaldBuilding, Honolulu, on Tuesday, May9th, 1905, nt 10 a. in., for the purpose ofconsidering a proposed amendment tothe articles of association relating tothe par value of the stork, and for thetransaction ot such other business asmay be brought lutfore the meeting.

Stock transfer bonks will be closedfrom Saturday. April 20lh to Tuesday,May 9th,. both dates Included.

JNO. GUILD,Secretary Klhel Plantation Company,

Limited.Honolulu April 27, ISO. ,

Page 8: A 'WA STAR. · sentenced Otomatsu Kawara to two years' Imprisonment, on a verdict find-ing the Jap guilty of nssault and bat-tery. Kawara killed a Japanese at Wal-mana- lo and was

II Slice of Ham

start the day rlht, so doe aflate f toaoon there is rareMarine power tn sjood bacon.Ottr"AbOMA" HAMS AND BACONyfasss utirlvslled flavor l re

1W arejnWi Eastern meat, reemokedfcf Ua In order to do awar withthe otherwise almost inevitabledryness peculiar to Easternksms, which results from shlip-m-

to this Hlmnt".Our hams are always fresh,

Juldy' and rl. h.

Limited

Telephone Alain 45

AN. ERRATIC MAN is called "bugJsoife," but a man with a bug burrow-ing hit (ho roots of Ins hair is suffer-ing from DANDRUFF.

PACHECO'S DANDRUFF KILLER

Will destroy the bug that causes yourhair to fall off.

Sold by all Druggists and at the"Union Barber Shop. Tel. Main 232.

NEW

Tennis Go

for THE

Coming SeasonJUST RECEIVED

INCLUDING

III190513alls?OJULCl

RacketsVo are also prepared to fur

nish New Awnings and Verandah

Curtains, ' or Itecover Your Old

Awning Frames.

new Underwood

AND MANY

MAKES OFSECOND-HAN- D

TypewritersAND ALL,

VARIETIES OF

T W Papers and Supplies

Pearson & PotterCo., Ltd. 931Fprt Street.

WKATMIM KMOHT.

U. I. Weathar BvrtM Ofllea, TMMC

Temperature; a. m. 78; I a. m. Til10 a. m. 75; noon 76; mornln minlnvmOil.

Barometer 8 a. m., M.M; abtwlttteR a. m. &.W4 fralna ptt KMa

foot: relative humidity t a. m., If Mtrcent ; dew point I a. m. If.

Wind velocity I a. m., t, BfttHMt;x a. in.. 8, northeast; 16 a. m., It,northeasts noon M Mutt.

Rainfall during; 24 hours ended t a.in.. .01 Inches.

Total wind movement durtnir 14 hoursended at noon Itt mile.

AbttX. MbC AIILHY.Section Director, U. X. Westhw Bursas

Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Urown, will oc-

cupy the J. VI. Oat' residence after Ma;Tenders for constructing Hanalel-Ilnen- a

road are advertised for In thisIssue.

Hev. D. Douglas Wallace of ICona,Hawaii. Is the guest this week of Hev.Canon Mackintosh.

Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Oat leave for thecoast by the Sonoma, May SI, to begone several months.

The Kamehamefias defeated the Nor-

mals yesterday afternoon at baseballby a score of 13 to 3.

Captain Scott of the British Pegasuswas recently presented with a silverpunchbowl at Tacoina.

The Woman's Board of Missionsmeets this afternoon at 2:30 In the par-

lors of Central Union Church.A. Spllvvalo, formerly of the Alexan

der Young hotel staff, leaves today In

the Sierra for San Francisco.Next Saturday, the Honolulu cricket

ers will play a team from the Pacificcable office and repair shop.

In the cricket match played on Saturday afternoon Anderson's team defeated Jordan's toum by 153 to 60.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Rhodes haveleft the Alexander Young Hotel andare now at their own home, 1516 Youngstreet.

Members of the Kamehameha Alum-ni Association are requestedd to attendthe rehearsal this evening at 7:30sharp.

The Iioola und Hooulu Lnhul So- -

clety will hold Its regular meeting at10 o'clock tomorow morning at tho Ka- -'

pialunl Mntornlty Homo.It. Allen beat Holster of the Rapid

Transit in a match game of handballplayed at the Y. M. C. A. gymnasiumlust night. The score was 21 to 12.

Letters written to friends here, an-- !nuunco that Congressman Hepburn willarrive in Honolulu on tho first boatfrom San Francisco to reach" here In

June.Make home hygienic by Installing

electric incandescent lights. Elootrl- -

i lly in a homo Is vested capltnl IhoInterest of which Is amiability, healthand a popular llreslde. Hawaiian Eloc-- Iirk: Co.

A piano strikes tho key-not- o of homelife. You don't have to jay cash ifyou buy from us. Four hundred dol-

lars in small monthly Instalments anda famous Fischer piano Is yours. Ila- -

w aian News Co.

A reception to Bishop Itestnrlck nndthe clergy attending the Episcopal con-- Ivocation will be held at St. Clement'sparish house Thursday evening. Thereare no Individual invitations, but allchurch people und friends will be wel-

come.! F. M. Bechtel will contributea selection on the English horn.

The Kilobaud Art League will holda meeting this evening at eighto'clock In tl e Pavilion , AlexanderYoung hotel, at which Augustus F.Knudsen will spct'k on "Tho Song ofLife." Tomorrow will be tho Inst dayIn which to submit manuscripts forthe Kllohana prize story contribution.

At Its meeting last night, George DeLong Post, G. A. R.. made preliminaryarrangements for the appropriate ob-

servance of Memorial day. Tho com-

mute consists of F. Turrlll, chairman,Senator C. II. Dickey, W. L. Eaton, E.A. Strout and Post Comman-der Nelson.

Mrs. J. B. Hopkins will leave for SanFrancisco on tho Sierra today. Shewill visit relatives there for about amonth, and will then go to Europe andstayfor Several months with hersister. Mrs. Holalr Bollock, of London,Mrs. Bellock is tho wife of one of thebest known of the London critics, nnda writer of wide fame.

Under the terms of an act passed atthe regular session of the legislature,tho Chief Justice of the Supremo Courtwill hereafter have the appointmentof District Magistrates. There areolevon vacancies pending, nine to bofilled on May 1st one on May 2nd andone that should have been filled onApril 30th.

A BAD SMELLAbout the housp, cesspool, sink or

from a damp cellar, can be avoided byusing Creollr.e at Hobron's,

CHOICE ALGAROBA.

WOODSAWED AND SPLIT

OR IN 4 FEET LENGTHS

DELIVERED TO ANY PART OF THECITY. LEAVE ORDERS' WITH

W. W. DIMOND & CO.Agents for East Nlu Ranch.

How lone wIM Um rttrala a otteatrrn whk It now Majcussed in connection with the omntract contest. It la believed by many

that the legislature will not adjmrftwith the munty art contest unsettled,and that the sessions wiH heritor be

extended even If worfc It finished, un-

til the decision comes. There are tworeasons for this among legislators, oneIs that of the members who fear thaiIf they adjourn and the act is knockedout they will be sent Tor to come hereand hold another extra session. Theother reason is that flf the many members who will die in the laat ditch In

the fight for county government, andintend to know absolutely what Is thefate of the county set before finallyacting upon appropriation.

Senator Achl repeated this morninghis declaration that the work could befinished in ten days. "All the workcan lm done right here In open sessionand finished in six days It we workhard enough," he said. "Then If theHouse does not work quickly, after wehave finished, public opinion will exertsuch pressure that It will ltave to work"

The six day programme, however,will probably find a strong obstacle In

the county act litigation. The legisla-

ture means to pass appropriation billswhich will fit Into the proposed countysystem. The decision of the Supremecourt if tlie case is heard with all pos-

sible rapidity, cannot be expected In

much less than three weeks.

MEHEULA

TRIAL AGAIN

FORMER CLERK OF HOUSE OF

REPRESENTATIVES ONCE MORE

FACES TERRITORIAL JURY.

The second trial of S. Meheula, clerkof the last House of Representativeson an Indictment for gross cheat, wasbegun before Judge De Bolt hnd a Jurythis morning, Deputy Attorney GeneralFlomlng prosecuting a,nd C. W. Ash-for- d

defending.The Indictment chalges Unit Mehoula

as clerk fraudulently represented tothe House Committee on Accounts thathe hud purchused thirty volumes ofthe llawalan luws for $150 and that hemade out a voucher and procured andcashed a warrant for the $150, whenin fact no such purchases hud beenmade. The members of the House areall In attendnnco to testify as to whe-ther they ever received the volumesclaimed to have been furnished.

C. R. Bucklnnd, chief clerk of theSecretary's office was the first witnesscalled. Ashford raised some new questlons regarding tho indictment nnd thoJurors were excused while the iuestlons were argued. Judge De Holtoverruled the objections.

Bucklnnd produced the Journal of thelast House, which was offered In evldonee and Fleming proceded to roadextracts bearing upon the case, showing Mcheula's appointment as clork ofthe House, and a resolution authorizing the purchases.

The Jurors trying the case arc C.Lambert, E. Henrlques, D. M. Ross, T.A. Juen, Fred Turrlll, W. P. Roth, CG. Bartlett, Ben Guerrero, Job Bat-chelo- r,

F. J. Robcllo, F. M. KIley, M.W. Parkhurst.

CROWDED

m PASSENGERS

VESSEL ARRIVED ON TIME FROM

THE COLONIES TODAY EN

ROUTE TO SAN FRANCISCO.

With nearly two hundred cabin is

the S. S. Sierra urrlvod thismorning from tho Colonl.es after anuneventful trip. The vessel left Syd-ney April 17, Auckland April 21 andPago Pago April 25. She experiencedgood weather during most of the trip.Travel Is very heavy from the Coloniesto the mainland nnd It Is doubtful Ifall of the people who have booked bytho Sierra from Honolulu will 13e abloto secure accommodation. Six passengers stopped at Honolulu most ofthem being tourists.

Among tho through pasengers Is Consul General F. Dillingham the Ameri-can roprosentatlvo at Now Hoalund.Ho Is accompanied by his wife andfamily. They were guests today ofB. F. Dillingham while In Honolulu.

A. Cttvlll Is the famous Australianswimmer who is going to the main-land.

Captain Lewis ...il Is a British urmyofllcor who Is going to England accom-

panied by his wife.Baron and Baroness Von Swnln apil

Infant are through passengers.Mr. and Mrs. Henry Stead were rs

from the Colonies for SanFrancjsco.

Tho Sierra will take a number ofwell known people from Honolulu toSan Francisco. She sails at 3 ) 1.

today from the Oceanlo wharf.

Want ads In the Star bring quick re-

sults. Throo lines three tlrnjs for 2b

cents.

Awnm urnON TilUHSIUY, MAY

AT M CTCUOCK A. at.,I.

At my salesroom. M7street

Unclaimed Freightlrm the Wilder S. . Co., oasasM

Ing of several uaokatres, content unknown, but there ia a lot of

KJCW IT. CORRUGATED IWJK.10 o'clock prompt and no

JAMBS P. MORGAN, Auctioneer.

AUCTION SALE.

ON WEDNESDAY, MY 3,AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M.

At the residence of Mr. Win, Ber- -lowltz, Berelanla street.

Household FurnitureI am Instructed to sell at the above

residence the whole of the flue furni-ture therein. Would draw especial attention to

Bus Relief by Hutchinson,Pictures by Barnfleld. '

Handsome Koa Desk, Koa, WardrobeBookcase, Writing Desk, Clwirs,Sideboard, Extension Dining Tabje, .

Rockers, Rugs, Carpets, Cut G!tf,Bedroom guiles, Crockery, Tbl

Linen.Bed Linen handsome haad-t)- e

Curtains,Linoleum, Clocks JiljouMusic Cabinet in Mahogany.Kitchen .OooUs, Plants, Xtc.

JAMBS P. MORGAN. AUCfClONUllR.

A Foreclosure Sale !

Of several properties to tnke placeMay 13, 1805.

Will Interest many look the proper-ties up they arc situated In Palolovalley Munoa valley King street withartesian water right.

JAMES P. MORQAN, Auctioneer.

DAILY STOCK REPORT

Between Boards: Hales, 12 Walalua,$6S.

Ewa Plan. Co 29.50 30.00Hawullan Agrl 95.00 100.00

Hawalan Com &7.00

Haw. Sugar 32.60 33.75Honokaa , 21.00Haiku 170,00

Kahuku 32,00 32.50Klhel Plantation 11,50 12,00Kipahulu 25,00

Koloa 1C0.00McBryde Sugar Co, 9,25Oalm Sugar 133.00Onomea 30,50Ookala 7.00 8,00

Olaa Sugar Co 100,00Paauhau 22.50Pacific' Sugar Mill 200.00Pacific Sugar Co, 250.00Pala Plan 170,00Popookeo 105.00Pioneer Mill Co 152.50 155.00

Walalua Agr. Co, 70,00Woiiluku Sugar Co 280,00

Waimanalo Sugar Co, .. 150.00Wilder R. fi. Co 150.00Intor-Islan- d S. N. Co 150.00Hawaiian Electric 100.00Hon. R. T. Co. pfd 10(5,50

Hon. It. T 70.00Mutuul Telephone........ 9.00 9.50

Oahu R. & L. Co 75.00 77.00

Haw. aovt. 5s ,." 101. 00Hawullan Com. 5s 101.00Ewa 0s 100.00Haiku Cs 102.50 103.00

Hawaiian Sugar Cs 102.00Hon. R. T. Co. 6s 105.50Knhuku Cs 100,00

Oahu R. & L. Co. Cs 104.00 105.00

Oahu Sugar Cs 102.00Olaa Sugar Cs 98.00Pala Plan. C 102.50Pioneer Mill Cs 102.50 103.00Walalua Agr. Cs 101.00 101.75

TRYING SMUGGLING CASE.Judfcp Dole this morning began the

trial Qf Cyrus T. Green of Maul, oncharge's of smuggling. Green whs Indicted with W. Treanor, who pleadedguilty at the last term of court. Tileproperty alleged to have been smuggled arrived at Maul on the MathewTurner and consisted of some cases ofliquor. J, J. Dunne Is prosecuting thecase nnd J. W. Calhcnrt defending,Collector attackable was the first wit'i less called nnd Is still undHr examlnatlon. The jurors In the case are: J. P.Kennedy. F. AV. Mukbiney, C. Nellsonq. Huslace Jr., G. A, Martin, W. R.RlleyJ, W, L. Hardy, W. W, Hall, P,Jones, A. Gllmon, It. W. Perkins, J.C, Cart sr.

Want nds In the Star bring quick returns. Throe llncw three times for 25

cents.

n

We arePushing PaintThe painting season is athrtncl and we arc ready tosupply your need with

TheSherwin-William-s

PaintsLot us figure on the paintfor your house. S. W. P. willprove the beat andeconomical paint you canbuy.

Full colorasking.

SOLD

E. O. HALL

moat

I'm a crank about pure Hckcr for I've been the

wide world o'er, an' the bratulc that I have tripled

cai'i be numbered by the score; but when I gat tothink-in-' of the kind to me ntoet dear, why without

a doiibt my jedjawfU proclaims or PRUrtO SIf,IR

Crly Jim,

Priino LagerThe best beer in tliK worll n am other worM.

'Artistic decoratinIV you only knew how artistically

lovely wc can make the simplesthome, for a little bit of

I oTONoI,

AND

cards for the

by.

& LTD

426,

ING ST.

3

STREETS. TEL. MAIN 492.

One

you would not live another day inthose old rooms.

ijeoorjLAOJW!.. .S, S, SIGNS PROMOTE BUSINESS

Fresh BottledBock Beer

$2.oo PER DOZEN QUARTS.

CAMARA & 00.9LIQUOR DEALERS.

MERCHANT ALAKEA

A PoIIarHundred

SON.

"S

MeansCents

During these hard tlmos you look a t a dollar twice before you spend It. If;' 'you purchase from us you can make no mistake. We give

VALUE FOR VALUECOMPLETE KITCHEN OUTFIT 120.00

Comprising 1 No, 7 Lotus Stove, Z Pieces Pipe, 1 Stove Lifter, 1 StoveScraper, 1 Agate Kettle, 1 Agate Saucepan Medium, 1 Agate Saucepan Large,1 Steel Bakepan, 1 Agate Coffee Pot, 1 Agate Tea Pot, 1 Steel Fry Pan, 1 TinDish Pan, 1 Grater, 1 Coffee Strainer, I Tea Strainer, 1 Dover Egg Beater, 1

Kitchen Fork, 1 Kitchen Knife, I Kitchen Spoon, 1 aalvanlzed Bucket, 2 BreadPan; 1 Cake Pan, 1 Biscuit- - Pan, 2 Assorted Dairy Pans 2 Pie Plates 0 in.,I Can Opener, 1 Cork Scrow, 1 'Stove Brush, 1 Stove Polish, 1 Potato Maslter,-- l

Bread Knife, 1 Milk Pall, 1 Dlppor, I Tea Caddy, 1 Coffoe Caddy.

Complete Dinner Service, $15.00(Including Knives, Forks, Spoons, aiasses, Htc.)

See the Articles on Display In Our Walklkl Window,

If

4-- t

y v

'' I

V I

-. i

,

f

W. W. DIMOND & CO., LTD. h, ;

BJi B5i 87 King Street, . Honolulu, II. T,

i