TO THE JURORS JAPANESE IN - eVols
TO THE JURORS JAPANESE IN - eVols
TO THE JURORS JAPANESE IN - eVols
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S. WEA<strong>THE</strong>R. BUREAU, June 4. Last 24 Hours' Rainfall, .00. SUGAB. 96 Degree Test Centrifugals, ,4.36c Per Ton, $87.20.<br />
Temperstcre, Max. SO; Min. 72. Weather, fair. 88 Analysis Beets, lis. 3d. Per Ton, $87.40.<br />
<strong>TO</strong>X-- . LI OX 45 HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1908. SEMI-WEEKL- Y WHOLE NO. 3013<br />
TAYLOR TELLS<br />
LEE LET S<strong>TO</strong>RY<br />
<strong>TO</strong> <strong>THE</strong> <strong>JURORS</strong><br />
V<br />
HULft TRUST<br />
.<br />
IS POSSIBLE<br />
The Entente Cordiale Between<br />
Princess and Madame Is<br />
Ruptured.<br />
TIE CHE OF<br />
TiEJIC PARK<br />
What Was Done at the Recent<br />
Meeting of Park<br />
Commission.<br />
<strong>JAPANESE</strong> <strong>IN</strong><br />
KOREA FORC<strong>IN</strong>G<br />
<strong>THE</strong> FIGHT<strong>IN</strong>G<br />
Efforts of the Defense to Show a Fatal Variance<br />
Between thz Indictment and Proof Offered<br />
Thompson's Cross-Examination.<br />
The taktap T ilhwiiy tn the Lee<br />
Tjm. uri fci,:M ygsMofeqr jwendng be--<br />
JMpt JMMBMn &sd the Jury<br />
ihe day ba-ta<br />
The<br />
Lee ihe commission the<br />
DopMty Attorney<br />
tKe4f wtHnedwhat<br />
U<br />
mU prove. This<br />
was sad merely that<br />
Tyr at Le Vat's Mtiatfve. bad bad<br />
aewcra' iMrficws Lee Let In<br />
the latter had proposed that<br />
Taylor for a c rMnrartn of $909 a<br />
we& sbdMld a. 1ml whieh Lee<br />
Let classed to fee dK spokesman<br />
or gambling aad ted Chong. He went in<br />
5--- v' torasat of this pacpese.<br />
A F Taytor vrae the first witness<br />
m..i Be we that a po--i<br />
has<br />
Ho and , Detectives.<br />
Ht h,J keen r what<br />
Let' testi- -<br />
brief<br />
with<br />
tell<br />
rkach<br />
LEE<br />
carry<br />
paid Yuen there<br />
knoTr' wnom since learned<br />
CMef 4r lal Inn it. tot the<br />
-- .c r. comnriiwt had been mislaid.<br />
A , 1 tu Cered in evidence.<br />
Tb n ;r aarrowty eress-ex&min- ed<br />
TV ' as to haw the tana mission was<br />
a - He time ahjeeted to its in-- X'<br />
siouoo oa twa giwcaAs first, that<br />
r.c-pradaef- laa tu f the commission<br />
t. ibeea sufficiently explained.<br />
ttaattfce commission cre--<br />
1 u. . .<br />
,uwc vmuxuxui z2iLsJ?oke,n.oi-.- . finally iir xejet sam naa<br />
tftw infill Charged the Sefendantlsomething private to to<br />
j The latter asked Ayres might<br />
1 --r bnbiag a.<br />
--. . . '<br />
if<br />
. .ti iee ust. saiu not,<br />
. , . .<br />
Wh<br />
iv;-:- Axtacaey General<br />
zsiroi ladtctmant charged about would<br />
at tvu: fc"1 r<br />
(Klc wTirar." &m& that the words<br />
rur-plwu- pajice oaBrer Might tneatad as x.<br />
Te this Tbanpsoa repHed<br />
chat a: oa the Indictment would<br />
have beeai dennrrrahle as aot speetfic-.:- -r<br />
aitaKinp the crime charged; for<br />
the Attorney General was an executive<br />
and though aa Attorney<br />
iri; had boen attempted to be<br />
reached la tht way. this was that<br />
cj Depot? Attorney general Sat--a<br />
prodnoed a from the Flf--<br />
BavaUaB la which tue<br />
Co art had held that the<br />
piHrg odacex and police comstaMewere<br />
aao-aK- ,<br />
A search disclosed the<br />
tmex. however, that this<br />
la a T cae where e qnasdoa was<br />
thf acency of service of dfU procm<br />
i that it was at tune waen<br />
thr otatate spoke indiscriminately<br />
poj-- ,Bo r and constables, while the<br />
BT.tv a- - ander which the present<br />
SitrrJ! was acting seemed to provide j<br />
; r nntice aficets<br />
Judce nobmaoa examined Taylor<br />
fartJer ;.-- Ijected to by Larnach and the objec<br />
was sustained, Judge Robinson<br />
turning the laugh on Thompson by<br />
sayiug that while original commlsslon<br />
was .the best evidence of<br />
against contained,<br />
mony of the appointing power that he<br />
.had made an appointment was quite<br />
as good evidence as the commission<br />
issued to the appointee.<br />
Taylor's status as a police officer and<br />
an executive officer having thus been<br />
established, he was recalled "to the<br />
story of the alleged bribery.<br />
TAYLOR MEETS LET.<br />
Taylor testified that he knew the defendant.<br />
He first met him on Tues-da- v.<br />
Kebruarv 5, at tho stor of<br />
hiraj com<br />
pany with M. Ayrcs to meet a<br />
Chinaman whose name he did not then<br />
he was<br />
but he<br />
jrrv xtru nc went uv iiiuicr.vt<br />
Reports<br />
determine Just what search<br />
had ttKX mad? for the origiaal com-nw- !a<br />
I: aeeme that Taylor, before<br />
laaviac iv San Francisco, bad gath-e- 4<br />
a? a larse aamher of papers of<br />
vain t pnt ta a safe place daring<br />
m ahaence He had Intended to take<br />
nt tajLitiva with him Saa Fxan- -<br />
cfcwo a a of ieenUn-caiv- w<br />
there and whiV had seen<br />
U vim jrathertng up hte papers,<br />
1 mile not say positively that had<br />
ncmaEy taken It to Saa Francisco.<br />
Jnde ruled that the copy<br />
not tntmancea at iais ubib<br />
it naa not aeea mwh<br />
aearch had been made for<br />
tptna As the second<br />
be-rse- en<br />
vrhether there tens a fatal variance<br />
the indictment and the corarnls-a- m.<br />
It wa passed oa. and seems<br />
now not to mtpartast, as Taylor<br />
wm temporarily withdrawn and Sheriff<br />
iaahe was caned, and testified<br />
I appelated Taylor a police<br />
TATLOR A POL3CEMAX.<br />
ta&nted t<br />
at tmte pefert ta Had out if he had<br />
a mi and' ton, but this was ob--<br />
JOSEPH KUNEWA FOR<br />
TAX ASSESSOR FOR MAUI<br />
CaapbeH Ms<br />
tar Tax Assessor and Colleesar<br />
of Maul It is Joseph H. Knnewa.<br />
Cuag&eB wS send the same to the<br />
Sepc&Oesa Territorial Central Com-- s<br />
aad Use Republican County<br />
Pntrrmtelee f Mas! for endorsement.<br />
Scaewa las been Tax As<br />
sessor ani CoHector for the Districts<br />
ff E aafl TValanae .for three years<br />
xx ss tees ccsnectet with tbe tax<br />
Zae ve wrs aad mere.<br />
-<br />
.ment made by H. M. Ayres. They<br />
entered at the King street door and<br />
were met by Lee Tong. who conducted<br />
them through the store to a back<br />
room, where the four sat down<br />
refreshments were in.<br />
PRELIMIXART SMALL TALK.<br />
The convention at first was on in<br />
subjects, the lichee nuts,<br />
which formed part of the refresh<br />
ments, one topic, their original<br />
habitat and their place in the<br />
Mvmnrrw tT CiTiLa lirtcnttnlitr wlnr<br />
i.'. ..... tion<br />
the<br />
H.<br />
and<br />
brought<br />
different<br />
furnishing<br />
J ..J. ..w.. ......j .f.....,<br />
aiec at tie<br />
say Taylor.<br />
ill --pattoe aScer." which if not<br />
... .,. remain, out ana iee<br />
Larnach j were ajone Lee Let said he wanted to<br />
that Ue the, speak something which<br />
nttiie ECCm otdcer. to i wt" "c" l"- -<br />
muMii, tr mug,<br />
a<br />
wuicu<br />
fee<br />
that<br />
officer,<br />
not<br />
terms<br />
decJsVw was<br />
a<br />
oavT<br />
to<br />
meanfi his own<br />
he<br />
he<br />
he<br />
Kohtnson<br />
be<br />
unit.<br />
the<br />
ta<br />
point.<br />
sat<br />
be<br />
he<br />
cross-exami- ne<br />
laontd<br />
has made<br />
Deputy<br />
stsat<br />
.u auiit up<br />
gambling games, papal-ka- u and che-f- a,<br />
but that Lee Tong was new to the<br />
business and that he, Lee Let, had<br />
better represent him. Lee Let said<br />
Lee Tong had good "backing, and that<br />
what they wanted was to be allowed<br />
to start papal-ka- u games There Is a feud between Honolulu's;<br />
hula purveyors and Madame Puahl and<br />
the Princess Theresa don't speak as<br />
they pass by.<br />
It fell out thus:<br />
The Princess, who presides over a<br />
cosy little Terpslchorean parlor at the<br />
corner of King and Alakea streets, conceived<br />
the idea that by furnishing a<br />
series of refined hulas to be given<br />
under the auspices of the Aliiolani<br />
Royal Dancing Club, during the stay<br />
of the ileet. she would not only be<br />
doing herself some financial good but<br />
would be helping out the entertain<br />
ment committee by giving the boys<br />
something they would be sure to want<br />
to see.<br />
The Princess spoke of the matter to<br />
her friends and mention of it appeared<br />
in the newspapers.<br />
Now there is another hula magnate<br />
in Honolulu besides the vivacious Princess,<br />
Madame Puahi, justly famed for<br />
the recherche little wriggles which she<br />
ever and anon gives at her Kapiolani<br />
Park residence.<br />
When Madame Puahi learned that<br />
Princess Theresa was' planning big<br />
things in the hula line .she got not<br />
only mad but busy, and making a' tour<br />
of the local hulaeries engaged every<br />
dancer in sight for fleet week. She<br />
will entertain in the name of the<br />
at Chinese<br />
Xew Tear's time and that they would<br />
pav Taylor J550 a week. In addition.<br />
Lee Let offered to supply a detective<br />
at informer, who would supply Taylor<br />
with information as to other games<br />
that would start up, so that raids<br />
could be made on them. There was<br />
discussion as to details of the plan,<br />
and an engagement for the next day<br />
was made.<br />
<strong>THE</strong> SECOND DAT.<br />
The next day Taylor went, aceom- -<br />
, ! panied by Officer Leal, to a point<br />
I - ... I'.. l-across<br />
ine sireti mini we mm tuuus<br />
store. Taylor went into the store and<br />
went to the back room and found Lee<br />
Let alone. On this occasion there was<br />
further discussion on the general sub<br />
ject. Further details were gone Into.<br />
Lee Let said that the hul which he<br />
represented thought $900 a week too<br />
much and that $700 a week was<br />
enough: that that was the amount<br />
they had formerly paid. Moreover, in<br />
case any of the gamblers at the Lee<br />
Let hui gambling places were arrested.<br />
Taylor was to furnish them a lawyer<br />
and pay their fines, if they were<br />
fined, out of the $700 or $?00 a week.<br />
Lee Let read from a paper written in<br />
Chinese characters an outline of the<br />
whole plan. As he read Taylor took<br />
notes and afterwards read his notes<br />
back to Lee Let and asked him if<br />
they were correct. Lee Let said they<br />
were. This was introduced In evidence,<br />
t<br />
<strong>THE</strong> THIRD VISIT.<br />
Oa the next visit he again met Lee<br />
Let alone. On this occasion Lee Let<br />
said that the hui desired to start other<br />
games than those which had already<br />
been proposed and asked how much<br />
this wonld be, to which Taylor re<br />
plied that it would be the same as the<br />
other Taylor inquired how he was to be<br />
assured that he would get the money<br />
and Lee Let said that he himself would<br />
(Continued oa Page Ten.)<br />
H.<br />
"He has always done his work<br />
excellently," said Treasurer Campbell,<br />
"and is In line for promoUon. I selected<br />
him some time ago but made no<br />
announcement of the selection before<br />
because I did not have his consent to<br />
the appointment. He has finally consented,<br />
and I shall submit his name to<br />
the committees.<br />
"He was bom and educatedon Maui<br />
and so be Is going back to his old<br />
home."<br />
Kao-nohiok-<br />
Dancing Club.<br />
"When the Princess got wise to Madame<br />
Puahi's stratagem she got hot,<br />
to put it mildly, but determined not to<br />
be outdone, in communicating with the<br />
dancers of Laie, Hauula, Punaluu and<br />
other places on the windward side of<br />
the island, with the idea of rustling<br />
up any hula talent available in the<br />
suburbs.<br />
"Mrs. Puahi has got all the old, ugly<br />
girls in town," declared the Princess.<br />
Their bones crack when they try to<br />
dance."<br />
"Mrs. Wilcoxrxan't get any good hula<br />
girls outside of Honolulu," remarked<br />
Madame Puahi: "the country kind aro<br />
all. too tame. I'm the leading tula lady<br />
in Honolulu and when I give a dance<br />
there is lots of fun and good time and<br />
everybody likes to come and see."<br />
It was stated yesterday that friends<br />
of the two ladles are trying to get<br />
them to agree in a joint plan of cam<br />
paign, and while- - nothing definite Is<br />
known. It is far from improbable that<br />
Honolulu may be the happy possessor<br />
of a hula trust in the not distant fu<br />
ture.<br />
T<br />
TIE BIG COLLEGES<br />
The College Entrance Examination<br />
Board --svill hold its examinations at<br />
Oahu College June 15-2- 0. The certificates<br />
of this Board now admit students<br />
to all colleges in the United States.<br />
President P. L. Home of the Kair.eha-meh- a<br />
Schools will be in charge of the<br />
examinations.<br />
The examinations for admission to<br />
Harvard will be held at Oahu College<br />
June 22 to 27. President Home is also<br />
the proctor at these examinations.<br />
The examinations for Yale are also<br />
held at Oahu College, and are under<br />
the charge of Dr. O. ifontague Cooke.<br />
They are scheduled for June 24 to 27.<br />
Oahu College will have ten candidates<br />
for the College Board examinations,<br />
three for Harvard and one for Sheffield.<br />
In addition a number of students will<br />
enter various colleges on certificates<br />
without anv examinations.<br />
Students who propose to take any of<br />
these examinations and who have not<br />
already made application for them<br />
should arrange with the proctor or with<br />
.President Griffiths at the college.<br />
i COMES <strong>TO</strong> <strong>THE</strong><br />
The Dominic! children and their<br />
mother have been provided for. Judge<br />
Hart, after reading the account of<br />
their destitution, hurried up town and<br />
saw that two of the little ones were<br />
put in the Salvation Home at his expense.<br />
A lady, whose name Is not<br />
given, paid for the care of another<br />
child, and Staff Captain Bradley look-,e- d<br />
after the fourth one. The baby, as<br />
already stated, Is in the care of Its<br />
godfather. Mrs. DomlnicI has been<br />
taken to the Queen's Hospital by Dr.<br />
Bumham. Night before last the ten<br />
by ten room in Chinatown where the<br />
stricken family lived was occupied by<br />
ten people, the seven Dominicis having<br />
given shelter to three friends as<br />
unfortunate as themselves-- Clothing<br />
is now needed for the children, and'<br />
some money for the purchase of deli-<br />
The last regular meeting of the Ho--i<br />
nolulu Park Commissioners, held in<br />
(Associated Press Cablegrams.)<br />
the office of L. A. Thurston, was quite SEOUL, The Japanese government an ag-<br />
an Interesting one from many points<br />
of view and was attended by gressive<br />
A. S. campaign against the Korean insurgents. have<br />
Cleghorn, who presided; H. E. Cooper, sixty-nin-e engagements within nine days, during which 372<br />
E. S. Cunha, Marston Campbell, L. A.<br />
Thurston and W. M. Giffard;<br />
killed and<br />
also Su-<br />
55 prisoners taken.<br />
perintendent Toung and Eben Low, by NEW YOKE, June 2. The steamer Mauretanla, 35 nautical days<br />
special invitaUon.<br />
&fA. ,t.j. (nnillim n .. record for the Cunarders, has earned an annual subsidy of $750,000.<br />
.3 n .....u...!..<br />
the minutes of the previous meeting, PORTLAND, Oregon, June 2. The today's election was two<br />
the secretnry read a letter from the Republican Congressmen. The single-ta-x and woman's suffrage were beaten.<br />
K. R. & L. Co . stating that It had- -<br />
CARSON CITY, Nevada, Juno 2. The Democratic State Convention in<br />
wired and turned on lights in the .<br />
buildings and grounds of the Beach<br />
sesslon here instructed its delegates for Bryan.<br />
Park at an expense to-- it of $23i 63 and HARB<strong>IN</strong>, Manchuria, June 2. A serious boycott Japanese goods has<br />
further notified the commission that been declared throughout Manchuria.<br />
there would be no charge made LONDON, June 2. General Redvers Buller, who commanded the British<br />
the company for the power used, but .<br />
"<br />
cacies for the sick mother would help<br />
out.<br />
M-- ?<br />
The S. C. Allen made a smart passage<br />
up from here to Grays Harbor.<br />
She saiTed oh May 13 and arrived<br />
Jane 3.<br />
the Transvaal war. is dead.<br />
that the company would not be responsible<br />
for maintenance or damages MADRID, Spain, June 2. The accouchement of Queen Victoria is expected<br />
accruing through use of the current. during this month.<br />
The commissioners requested by let- - PORTLAND, Oregon, Juno 2. The torpedo flotilla arrived here today,<br />
nkola nrrexamine 2r2 -- d<br />
C<strong>IN</strong>C<strong>IN</strong>NATI, June won the Latonia Derby. Time, 2:35 3-- 5.<br />
see that it was in a safe condition and ' were<br />
result<br />
forces<br />
WASH<strong>IN</strong>G<strong>TO</strong>N, June 3. Secretary Garfield is en route to San<br />
also by thanked the Rapid Tran- - Francisco, whence he will sail for Honolulu on the battleship Maine<br />
s!tmrnVor,Us dna,Uon, d ac; to investigate labor, the coastwise trade, and harbor improvements,<br />
furnishing of<br />
SAN jfcAXOIBCO, 3.-- June The<br />
power.<br />
remains of Prince Kawananakoa, who<br />
There being no electric lights In the died yesterday, will be sent to Honolulu on the Manchuria, leaving here the<br />
keeper's cottage on. the beach, it was 9th of June.<br />
intimated that if asked the Hawaiian WASH<strong>IN</strong>fl<strong>TO</strong>N, June 3. John Hays Hammond has entered the contest<br />
Electric Co. would install and supply<br />
for Vice president.<br />
lights free of charge therein. The request<br />
was made by letter. ST PETERSBURG, June 3. The cabinet proposes to issue an internal<br />
The next matter of interest was the loan of $100,000,000 to make good the deficit in the budget, which provides!<br />
request .of Eben Low for the use of a for famine relief, war debt, and the purchase of military stores,<br />
portion of Kapiolani Park for a cow- -<br />
WASH<strong>IN</strong>G<strong>TO</strong>N, June 3. Severe rains at Panama decreased, during May,<br />
the a01"1 f soU to be excavated in the canal cut 500,00.0 cubic yards,<br />
lantic fleet in this city. The request<br />
was granted and Low will be allowed LEIPSIC, June 3. Herr Schiwara. the author, has been sentenced to<br />
to fence In a portion of the park and twelve years' Imprisonment for disclosing military secrets to France,<br />
change admission to the shows held PR<strong>IN</strong>CE<strong>TO</strong>N, New Jersey, 3. Today Grover Cleveland celebrates<br />
within the enclosure. He will have to , r j r . ;<br />
pay a portion of his net profits to the<br />
commissioners and leave the park in LISBON, 3. Three anarchists arrested here while<br />
he condition in which he found it. disembarking from Arres.<br />
The debts of the commission were CHESTER, June-3- . Three street cars navebeen dynamited by strikers.<br />
next touched upon and very feelingly<br />
hr Mr Cnnr&r nrhn dptnilPil thp Tllim- - WASH<strong>IN</strong>G<strong>TO</strong>N, June 3. Takanira, in an interview, states that<br />
ber of sleepless nights he had passed P2111 te taking measures to entirely stop the emigration of laborers to tha<br />
on account of them. The back ac-- States.<br />
counts were<br />
Park<br />
view<br />
soul-wracki- ng and weigh- -<br />
RIO tje JANEIRO, 4. The Brazilian training ship Ben- -<br />
and he had undertaken personally to Jamm Constant, en route from Honolulu to Yokohama, picked<br />
see svhat could be done in the way of up twenty shipwrecked men on Wake island.<br />
raising money to them. In con- - Wake island is one of the chain of sand islands extending northwestward<br />
sultatiop with Superintendent Toung from this greup.<br />
he ascertained that the latter had sold VIC<strong>TO</strong>RIA, June 4 A typhoon is reported from West Australia<br />
SresuT"of SratUthlssum vsed the loss of forty pearl and two hundred and seventy lives.<br />
and the sum of $340 saved out of the GUAYAQUIL, June 4. The plague epidemic is now under control. Sinco<br />
appropriations, accounts to the the eight of May there have been forty-tw- o new cases and nineteen deaths.<br />
amount of JS90 had been paid. Eighty .patients have been cured, and there are now thirty-seve- n on the sns--<br />
Considerable adverse discussion took<br />
place In connection with the fact that pecl; "<br />
Superintendent Toung had sold the PARIS, June 4. Five Socialists have been elected to the Prussian Diet<br />
mules In question without the know I-- June<br />
has<br />
been<br />
with<br />
by,<br />
letter<br />
cepted<br />
June<br />
June<br />
Buenos<br />
Embassador<br />
"United<br />
June<br />
settle<br />
which.<br />
luggers<br />
county<br />
for the first time in the history that body.<br />
edge or approval of the Commis- LONDON, June Penny postage between Britain will<br />
sion, the of the Commissioners<br />
being that the property of the Com- be instituted October<br />
mission should not be sold without its VIENNA, June 4. Twenty students are out on strike.<br />
direction. The transaction was finally BUTTE, June 4. Railway service here demoralized by flood.<br />
approved, however.<br />
Treasurer Marston Campbell present-<br />
VERNE, Pennsylvania, June 4. A storm here has caused the loss of half<br />
ed his statement showing a balance on million dollars.<br />
hand of $634.77. "Treasurer Campbell LONDON, June 4. The and Labor members of the of<br />
also presented a statement showing commons have entered a protest against the proposed visit of King Edward<br />
tne total amount 01 expenon on u h defeated.<br />
the Beach Park premises from JuIji 6<br />
23. 1905, to March 31. 190S, showing FADJLAND, Oklahoma, June 4. The bank in this city was robbed last<br />
d that there-ha- been contributed by the night, the robbers escaping with $10,000 in currency.<br />
county, JiilS.iO; by the Territory, SAN rRANCISCO, June 4. Sixteen Chinese were discovered in this city<br />
Sturf SSft aint0SfdSon "to" today in a sealed freight car which had arrived from Galveston, Texas,<br />
which the Territory furnished prison PARIS, June 5. Two hundred thirty arrests have been<br />
labor to the number Eof .,92 days' labor. made fa connection with the disturbances at the Pantheon.<br />
thlDqs2wabuyad llowing ilK PARIS June the ceremony over the of<br />
men's bath house had not been com- - Zola here morning in the Pantheon two shots were fired at<br />
pieted as directed at a 'former meet- - Alfred Dreyfus. A spectator was wounded in the hand. The as-i- ng<br />
...<br />
revealed the fact that the lack saHant loujs Gregori, is a member of the staff of a military paper<br />
of work was on account of lack of r<br />
OI tt,;'<br />
funds, the county having refused to ,;L,y ' .. ,<br />
approve the bills already Incurred. The JiW XUrCri., June 5. Uliver f. rieimont IS Qying 01 an oper- -<br />
estimate for completing the work and ation for appendicitis.<br />
also erecting ioor at the womens gT pETERSBURG, June An imperial order has been<br />
bath house was a little over ?22o, this . .<br />
issued the of,J figure being possible only with the reorganizing system command m the navy.<br />
prison labor. The work was ordered HELENA, Montana, June The streets of this city are<br />
done and will be paid for out of the flooded and traffic delayed by washouts and landslides.<br />
22e rSiSffif the June eot the decision ih the<br />
--<br />
Hustace, Peck & Co. had a di- - "ght with Papke. There was fast fighting.<br />
r4ected to them calling their .attention GUANAJUA<strong>TO</strong>, June A dam burst here yesterday and a<br />
to the rules 01 tne part against neavy score of people are missing.<br />
Their teams were reported<br />
by the superintendent to the cutting up<br />
the roads and seriously Injuring the<br />
bridges in hauling cement. A bill for<br />
insurance on the park buildings<br />
to J 53.36 was approved and<br />
the meeting then adjourned.<br />
ARE <strong>TO</strong> HIE 'A<br />
5.<br />
begun<br />
There<br />
insurgents<br />
of<br />
T.<br />
of<br />
were yesterday<br />
of<br />
4. Great and America<br />
1.<br />
thousands a<br />
Montana, is a<br />
a<br />
Socialists House<br />
to<br />
E<br />
and<br />
remains<br />
this<br />
a<br />
5.<br />
5.<br />
note<br />
5.<br />
XliUllM&.<br />
LIQUOR LAW SAPPED OF<br />
amounting<br />
PART OF ITS EFFECTIVENESS<br />
One of . the most deci- risdiction was good; that the liquor<br />
sions yet rendered touching the liquor license law did limit the jurisdiction<br />
to<br />
license law passed by the last Legis the district court of the district<br />
where the liquor was "seized. This delature<br />
was handed downby Judge An- -' cision, If upheld, will affect a number<br />
drade yesterday afternoon. The deci- of cases now pending-<br />
Private parties are active in prepar-- sion was in the case of a Chinese from<br />
ing for the entertainment of the fleet j,, defendant waa represent-a- s<br />
well as the regular fleet committees ed by C. F. Chillingworth and a plea<br />
appointed by the Governor. to the jurisdiction was entered.<br />
A hui bas been formed ami has leased BSr thIs Plea defendant denied<br />
the oia Enterprise Mill premises on t1 the District Court of Honolulu<br />
Alakea ana Biehards streets for the had Jurisdiction to try or determine<br />
purpose of renting booths for Hawaiian the case. It was contended that under<br />
entertainments of various kinds. tbe liquor license law the defendant in<br />
Concessions have already been rented " cases could only be tried in the<br />
to Hawaiian tableaux, hula Janees, mov- -' district court for tha district Jn xhlch<br />
lug pictures, etc. The grounds will rep-- the liquor was seized. As the liquor<br />
resent a regular midway, and, will be "va3 seized in the District of Waialua,<br />
brilliantly lighted. the case could be tried there only.<br />
A. V. Gear is agent for the hui that After extended argument. Judge An-- is<br />
promoting the plan. tirade decided that the plea to the Ju- -<br />
- on appeal. It Is<br />
the first law which has had the effect<br />
of limiting venue to particular districts.<br />
-<br />
MEET<strong>IN</strong>G CALLED BY GOVERNOR.,<br />
Acting Governor Mott-Smit- h has<br />
called a meeting, to take place In th3<br />
Governor's office Saturday morning at<br />
10ro'clock, pf those interested In 'the<br />
entertainment of the Association for<br />
the Advancement of Science, which<br />
proposes, if sufficient inducements offer,<br />
to hold a convention here In 1919.<br />
There are several fellows and members,<br />
of the society resident here, and it is<br />
with- - a view to getting the ideas ot<br />
these men that the meeting Is called.<br />
J -<br />
M
POOLE CAUGHT<br />
ir REEVES<br />
(From Wednesdays Advertiser.)<br />
Soldier Poole, who is wanted in Sac<br />
Tamanto for the theft of some valuable<br />
jewelry, was eapturcd by Dotective<br />
Reeves yesterday afternoon at "VYaianae<br />
unexpectedly. Hooves was sent down<br />
the road to investigate some burglaries<br />
at Waianae, and on his way on the<br />
train heard of the trip of a strange<br />
white man through tie conntry the daj.<br />
before. On inquiry the description of<br />
the stranger seemed to tally with that<br />
of the missing soWier, and when Waia-na- c<br />
was reached Beeves started on a<br />
still hunt.<br />
Strangers, and especially white<br />
strangers, are a seven-day- s' wonder in<br />
small country places here, and when in-<br />
quiry was made among the re3idents,as<br />
to fne whereabouts of the stranger<br />
there was plenty of information forth<br />
coming. Xne ollicer was toiu inai we<br />
liaolo was playing cards with some<br />
-- women at the beach. Reeves got the<br />
Deputy Sheriff and an officer and went<br />
to the place where the stranger was en-<br />
joying himself, and, recognizing Poole,<br />
placed him under arrest.<br />
Poole offered no resistance whatever<br />
and did not appear to be the very dan-<br />
gerous man that his friends had tried<br />
to mate him out to be to the police.<br />
He is now in custody, and will be held<br />
pending directions for his disposition<br />
irom the Chief of Police of Sacramento,<br />
who has been notified of the capture of<br />
tho man.<br />
A diary was found on the prisoner<br />
when searched by Keeves. It reads as<br />
lollows:<br />
The first trip around the Hawaiian<br />
Island on the 29th day May starting<br />
irom Honolulu spending the first night<br />
at Iwea (Alea) visiting the Iwea<br />
(Alea) sugar plantation next morning<br />
took the limited on the Ocha (Oahu) R<br />
R. to Ewa Mills where I spent a very<br />
pleasant evening with the natives with<br />
their singing and string music and<br />
above all the Hula dancing biding them<br />
pood bye the next morning I took the<br />
train for a very beautiful beach town<br />
called Walanae where I was greeted<br />
with another feast corresponding to<br />
the one at Ewa Mills with the excep-<br />
tion of the wine and gin which were<br />
added to it which made us all very<br />
lively and full of fun but yet very<br />
peaceable a native as a general rule<br />
under the influence of liquor is a very<br />
quiet and peaceable person to get along<br />
with but I stayed all night which was<br />
Sunday and until Monday afternoon<br />
after biding them adieu at 4:30 I took<br />
the train to another beautiful planta-<br />
tion called Waialua where I met with<br />
a German and his wife and told them<br />
of my experience with the natives and<br />
when they found out that the native<br />
songs made a hit with me they first<br />
got busy with a grapahone and played<br />
about 150 or 175 pieces consisting of<br />
American and native music and then<br />
they sang lots of native songs and of<br />
course the Germans are very fond of<br />
beer so we had several bottles of beer<br />
" and then we sang and danced to the<br />
music of the grapahone until we were<br />
tired and sleepy then we retired for<br />
the night not expecting such a sur-<br />
prise when about 10 o'clock in the<br />
mcrnlng a native and his wife who<br />
were just married the night previous<br />
were shlveered and we were aroused<br />
from our slumbers and Invited to at-<br />
tend the party which In their language<br />
Is called Luah (luau) so we were prac-<br />
tically up all night and we had eaten<br />
and drunk so much during the night<br />
that none of us cared for any break-<br />
fast the following morning at 9:30 after<br />
biding all my strange but true friends<br />
good bye I took the train again for<br />
Kahuku where I spent another pleas-<br />
ant evening with a large family of na-<br />
tives this little town I forgot to men-<br />
tion Is right at the end o' the R. R.<br />
after spending a pleasant evening and<br />
"most of the next day here I took the<br />
train at 4:30 P. M. toward Honolulu<br />
again and stopped at a little Japa-<br />
nese town which I passed on my way<br />
out by the name of Puulki where I had<br />
an enjoyable supper consisting of rice<br />
and many kinds of meat and Japanese<br />
wine I spent the night here with a Jap-<br />
anese family and next morning took<br />
the train back to Honolulu and I can<br />
truthfully say that the trip I just layed<br />
before you Is worth any mans money.<br />
Poole made the following statement<br />
at the police station last evening:<br />
"I first knew of the trouble I was<br />
in by reading of it in the paper. I<br />
did not want to go back to the Coast,<br />
as I was being treated right here and<br />
liked it at the barracks. That Is what<br />
made me beat it. I read the paper<br />
and then came down town. I went<br />
around among the boys a little and<br />
they were all talking about what the<br />
paper had to say about me. I went<br />
out to the barracks again and a cop<br />
in t buggy stopped me when I got off<br />
the car and asked me If I was Poole.<br />
1 told him that I was not and then<br />
made for the country.<br />
"All I know of the trouble in Sac<br />
ramento is that early in December<br />
there was a woman whose father ran<br />
an ice cream parlor on K. street be-<br />
tween 5th and 6th. She lost a watch<br />
from the store and asked me if I knew<br />
anything about It I did not. After I<br />
first heard of the loss of the watch I<br />
weeks and then enlisted In the Army.<br />
I came down here in February."<br />
.<br />
A CERTAIX.CTJIIE FOR BOWEL<br />
COMPLA<strong>IN</strong>T.<br />
When attacked with diarrhoea or<br />
bowel eomplaint you want a medicine<br />
that acts quickly. The attack is al-<br />
ways sudden, generally severe and with<br />
increasing pain. Chamberlain's Colic,<br />
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy has<br />
never been known to fail 'in any case<br />
of colic, diarrhoea or summer complaint<br />
in children. For sale ly Benson, Smith<br />
& Co., Ltd., Agents for the Hawaiian<br />
Islands.<br />
BREGKflNS CITEO<br />
11 POLICE COURT<br />
(From "Wednesday's Advertlter.)<br />
United States District Attorney R--<br />
Breckons was arrested yesterday,<br />
on a warrant sworn out by Theodoiw<br />
Richards and Issued by District Magis-<br />
trate Andrade, charging him with vio-<br />
lation of Section 30SS of the Revised<br />
Laws of Hawaii, in being present at<br />
a prize fight.<br />
The arrest, which was formal and<br />
purely technical, was made by Sheriff<br />
Iaukea who, in company with Judge<br />
Andrade, went to the Judiciary build-<br />
ing with the warrant. Mr. Breckons<br />
was In Judge Dole's court room at the<br />
time engaged In the trial of the Kokl<br />
case. A note was sent to mm saying<br />
he was wanted in office. "When he are supposed to have been at the bed-n-p- nt<br />
thpre. Sheriff Taukea stated side of the dying man. Prince and<br />
mission, formerly served the warrant.<br />
and Judge Andrade took his recogniz-<br />
ance until this morning at 9 o'clock.<br />
The action In swearing out a war<br />
rant under the Territorial law not<br />
the action of the Civic Federation, but<br />
of Theodore Richards In his capacity<br />
as a citizen. Mr. Richards wished this<br />
clearly understood. It seems also to<br />
have been done without prior consul-<br />
tation of an attorney.<br />
Theodore Richards and Rev. E. "W.<br />
Thwing had a consultation with Breck-<br />
ons on Monday concerning action to<br />
be taken regarding Saturday night's<br />
contest. Breckons refused to take any<br />
action pending instructions from "Wash-<br />
ington, he having' written fully regard-<br />
ing the matter to the Department of<br />
Justice, Mr. Richards and Mr. Thwing<br />
having been made acquainted with the<br />
tenor of the letter.<br />
Richards and Thwing then consulted<br />
Judge Dole, urging him that he issue<br />
a warrant. Judge Dole took the ground<br />
that while he had the power to issue<br />
a warrant, still the matter having been<br />
reported to the Department of Justice<br />
at its request, he thought it only<br />
proper to wait until the views and<br />
wishes of the department could be<br />
learned. Though he might issue war-<br />
rants to bring persons accused before<br />
him, and though they might be com-<br />
mitted to await the action of the grand<br />
jury, even If the grand jury found In-<br />
dictments, the District Attorney could<br />
nolle prosequi them. Judge Dole ex-<br />
pressed the opinion that if those in-<br />
terested were determined to take ac-<br />
tion at once, the place for them to<br />
proceed was in the Territorial courts.<br />
"When Theodore Richards applied for<br />
a warrant for Breckons it was sug-<br />
gested to him by both Sheriff Iaukea<br />
and Judge Andrade that a penal sum-<br />
mons would answer every purpose of<br />
bringing both Breckons and the whole<br />
matter before the court. Mr. Richards,<br />
however, said that as he was the one<br />
responsible for the action he desired<br />
to take, he felt it must be In his own<br />
way.<br />
"Warrants were also issued on Rich-<br />
ards' complaint against Jockey Willis<br />
and Ah Sam. "Willis was booked to<br />
sail by the Mauna Kea for Hilo where<br />
he is engaged to ride. was re-<br />
quired to give bonds in th- - penal sum<br />
of $500 which were speedily secured. Ah<br />
Sam was released on his own recogniz<br />
ance, as Breckons had been.<br />
The cases being in the District Court<br />
they come under the jurisdiction of<br />
County Attorney Cathcart or some one<br />
of deputies, to prosecute. Ly'e A.<br />
Dickey was later in the day retained<br />
to assist the prosecution. He went at<br />
once to consult with Cathcart. The<br />
latter said that the thing had been<br />
sprung without consultation with him;<br />
that he did not intend that his efflce<br />
should be used to work the whims or<br />
purposes of individuals. He should<br />
therefore consider the matter whether<br />
In his opinion the cases ought to be<br />
prosecuted or not, and would act ac-<br />
cordingly. If he determined that the<br />
cases ought to be prosecuted he would<br />
personally be in court to prosecute<br />
them. If he decided that the cases ought<br />
not to be prosecuted he would nolle<br />
prosequi them. So that it will not be<br />
known until this morning what will be<br />
done, whether they will be nolled or<br />
prosecuted, or whether Dickey will be<br />
allowed -- to appear on behalf of the<br />
prosecution.<br />
A number of lawyers have volun-<br />
teered to defend Breckons. Among<br />
them are Holmes & Stanley, "W. A.<br />
Kinney, M. F. Prosser and Frank<br />
Thompson.<br />
The list of witnesses named on the<br />
subpoena is as follows: Frank E<br />
Thompson, "W. C. Peacock, Charles E.<br />
Meston, George F. Henshall. C. S.<br />
Crane, Edward Dekum, John Lucas,<br />
Dr. F. H. Humphris. Edward Dekum<br />
is In (Europe. Just how he came to be<br />
reported as among those present at the<br />
contest was a subject for quip and<br />
joke around town.<br />
Breckons declined to discuss ar-<br />
rest, further than to say that several<br />
lawyers had volunteered to defend him.<br />
The section of the statute under<br />
which these warrants have been sworn<br />
out is as follows:<br />
Section 30S8. Any affray is the fight-<br />
ing of two or more persons in a public<br />
pice; and includes any prize fight or<br />
other premeditated contention, where<br />
no weapons are used. "Whoever takes<br />
part encourages, or promotes an<br />
affray, or is wilfully present as a spec-<br />
tator at any prize fight or other pre-<br />
meditated contention, shall be punish-<br />
ed by fine not exceeding five hundred<br />
dollars or by Imprisonment at hard<br />
labor not more than six months.<br />
H<br />
FEDERAL COURT PAY<strong>IN</strong>G<br />
THOUSAND A WEEK<br />
was around in Sacramento about three The United States Court is dlstribut- -<br />
Ing Federal money in this Territory at<br />
the rate --<br />
of about $1000 a week. This<br />
rate has been going on for about three<br />
months.<br />
Monday and Tuesday, United States<br />
Marshal Hendry paid out $1264.75 in<br />
jurors' fees alone. Something over<br />
$800 was paid out last week.<br />
H--<br />
SIGNED FOR SIX MONTHS.<br />
The crew of the yacht Hawaii have<br />
signed for the round trip. The articles<br />
read that they will take her to any<br />
California port and return to Hono<br />
lulu at a regular stated wage per<br />
month, the trip not to consume more<br />
than six months.<br />
HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, FRtDAY, JUNE 5, 1908.<br />
DEATH OF PR<strong>IN</strong>CE DAVID<br />
KAWANANAKOA YESTERDAY<br />
Was Heir Presumptive<br />
of the Throne of<br />
Hawaii.<br />
(From "Wednesday's Advertiser.)<br />
Prince David Kawananakoa died at<br />
the Hotel Stewart, San Francisco, at<br />
5:15 o'clock yesterday afternoon. He I<br />
had been taken ill ten days before, a.<br />
cold developing into pneumonia. Col. !<br />
Samuel Parker, Mrs. Parker, the j<br />
Misses Muriel and Beatrice Campbell<br />
ana jonn oiiker 01 iiiio<br />
his<br />
i<br />
his I<br />
was<br />
He<br />
his<br />
his<br />
in,<br />
Princess Kalanianaole, who had been<br />
summoned from Washington, are ex-<br />
pected today. It is probable that the<br />
body will arrive here on the Manchuria<br />
about June 14. The funeral will doubt-<br />
less be conducted with royal honors<br />
and the body placed in the Mausoleum<br />
after lying in state at the Roman<br />
Catholic cathedral.- - The completed ar-<br />
rangements will be made known In a<br />
few days<br />
<strong>THE</strong><br />
there<br />
r.s r,...j t t-- ,, ...... 1 their attractive home In Pensacola<br />
Plikoi was not only ere- - stf,eet' 1"': elns fil,led 7"?<br />
of the reign, Including<br />
ated a prince as a member of tne<br />
dynasty, but he was de- -, " - " V,<br />
Besides his brother, Prince Kuhio<br />
- imp f twi ,.,- -.<br />
both of Hawaii and Kauai, and was<br />
the great grandson of Kaumualll, the w"? ' """" """"<br />
king of Kauai. Prince David was'and thelr "j"? cnildren.<br />
born February 19, 1S6S, at Kaala, at<br />
the mouth of Pauoa Valley, Honolulu,<br />
on the old homestead of Kapiolani,<br />
queen-wif- e of King Kalakaua. He was<br />
the son of the High Chief David Ka-<br />
halepouili Piikol and the Princess Ki-nol- ke<br />
Kekaulike. David Piikol was<br />
the son of the Chief Piikol and the<br />
High Chiefess Kekahill, the latter be-<br />
ing the sister of Kapakea, father of<br />
Queen Lilluokalani, thereby making<br />
the late Prince David second cousin<br />
of the Queen. The Princess Kekaulike<br />
was the daughter of the High Chief<br />
the Princess the, ", ,",<br />
latter, as above stated, being the<br />
daughter of King Kaumualll, last king<br />
of Kauai, relinquished his rights<br />
to the throne to Kamehameha the<br />
Great. Kaumualll married the<br />
Princess Kapuaamohu, his half-siste- r.<br />
In Probability the body<br />
grandmother, i<br />
be brought Honolulu the Pacific<br />
the Princess Kinloke, was called a<br />
"mauplo," which means that she was<br />
the issue of two high chiefs, thereby<br />
giving her the highest rank known in<br />
Hawaiian genealogy.<br />
Prince David's<br />
Kuhio, was a son of Laakea, a high<br />
chief, who in turn was a descendant<br />
of Queen Kalanlkaulelelalwi, a queen<br />
Hawaii. On both sides of the house<br />
Prince Kawananakoa comes from royal<br />
lineage of Kauai and Hawaii.<br />
The Prince was educated under the<br />
late Alatau Atkinson and at Punahou<br />
College, later he became a stu- -<br />
SA iltA C Cm rttf&.A f l 1<br />
ill (.atuuuiiu. uiicinaius &CUL<br />
England, where attended<br />
for two years traveling much on the<br />
of the royal courts Europe. His<br />
brother, Prince Kuhio Kalanianaole,<br />
the present Delegate Congress<br />
made calls<br />
After the death Kalakaua, the<br />
On<br />
to engage Hon. L. C.<br />
adviser.<br />
begun<br />
means of<br />
campaign saloon<br />
enfirelv<br />
of<br />
Hon.<br />
P. Baldwin of<br />
R.<br />
as of<br />
P. has<br />
first campaign<br />
their<br />
weed<br />
glaringly<br />
WSmk<br />
LATE PE<strong>IN</strong>CE DAVID<br />
KAWANANAKOA.<br />
moon, two weeks, and<br />
then returned to<br />
For the four years Prince and<br />
Princess Kawananakoa have resided at<br />
Kahalepouili Tf<br />
Kaiakaua<br />
Wnrt.fl<br />
the deceased leaves sur--<br />
last<br />
bIfJallT.B;a- -<br />
great-grandfath-<br />
L.1U1H111, icu 11 xz vent a, iratiu AUIU"<br />
kaua, four and Lydla<br />
three years.<br />
At the home there<br />
reside an old couple, Kauai<br />
and his wife Kellikele, both of<br />
been with the late since<br />
his birth. is S7 years of age<br />
his 83. Kauai has been<br />
Prince David's personal al-<br />
ways, and the<br />
when he went to Europe. He<br />
traveled with on the mainland in<br />
later The old couple feel that<br />
tn 1sft Vniti" nTtn rY 111<br />
Kuhio and Kinoike,<br />
u " V<br />
David the time of<br />
who<br />
King<br />
of<br />
school<br />
of<br />
his were and Mrs. Sam- -<br />
uel Parker, of<br />
Hilo, the Misses and Beatrice<br />
Campbell. It likely that and<br />
Princess will in<br />
San Francisco today from<br />
a"<br />
will<br />
!- -<br />
kahele. Prince David's<br />
to<br />
and HH<br />
lie<br />
to he<br />
to<br />
and<br />
and<br />
is<br />
on<br />
Mall S. sailing from San<br />
Francisco June arriving here<br />
As there are a number<br />
. of Hawaiians in San in- -j<br />
eluding many of Hawaii's sweet sing-<br />
ers, it Is a death watch<br />
will be maintained the remains,<br />
much if the In<br />
On arriving here It Is likely that the<br />
body will lie in possibly the<br />
Catholic cathedral, the having<br />
become a about a year ago.<br />
Until that time Prince David was a<br />
member of the Masonic a<br />
32nd degree Mason, he withdrew<br />
. U 7,, , oa" muiry ocnooi hls then<br />
VtiUJ Prince was ill ten days.<br />
At it was thought his illness<br />
not be and Mjss Sar--<br />
continent and being received in many gent of New Tork who arrived Mon.<br />
from<br />
on the Siberia to be the Princess'<br />
guest this summer, was charged<br />
the information his<br />
n it u h i i i'I'iiiiiii;i iiikii n l m inrnmrnniir . ....<br />
.., , ..v .. .....v.ue,.uu.. gne tne morning news of a<br />
u,rpe" turn for the was cabled<br />
When King Kalakaua crowned<br />
was Wo 1pff wnnnintti rv s n iho s<br />
In (about nine after his<br />
years slberia, intending to remain on the<br />
accession to the throne of Hawaii), Coast several months for the of<br />
Prince Kawananakoa, with his two is health<br />
brotlfers. Edward and Kuhio, was cm- -<br />
PrlnCe D'avd dled at the stew.<br />
ated a Prince of the Crown of the art, whlCn ls located on Geary street,<br />
Kalakaua dynasty, so that he would Opp0slte St. Francis Hotel. The hotel<br />
be in line of succession to the throne nas a sort of Honolulu head-a- s<br />
Kalakaua II. The Prince was al- - nuarters and was under th manaee--<br />
ways present with the at state ment of Xoah Gray, formerly manager<br />
banquets and levees, and of the Alexander Young Hotel of this<br />
on all formal occasions he received Pitv<br />
with His Majesty. Whenever the<br />
aboard foreign war-<br />
ships. Prince David accompanied him.<br />
of<br />
Princes David Kuhio resided with<br />
Lilluoka-<br />
lani,<br />
Kawananakoa.<br />
attendant<br />
Kalanianaole<br />
Manchuria,<br />
that<br />
were<br />
Catholic<br />
membership<br />
day<br />
illness.<br />
worse here<br />
ISM<br />
become<br />
receptions,<br />
David's the<br />
in San<br />
his taking at the<br />
Hotel in 1S91.<br />
The of Kawana- -<br />
the widowed Queen Kapiolani, mainly nakoa. will stav nroceedines set for<br />
at her in Waikiki, is now hearing this week Judge Llnd-th- e<br />
home of Prince Kalanianaole. say. J. Kruger is the plaintiff,<br />
1900, when Hawaii became a Ter-- with the Estate and Alex-ritor- y.<br />
was the candidate & Baldwin as garnishees and<br />
of the for Delegate enjoined as to certain This<br />
to Congress, running against Colonel matter was argued before Judge Lind-Samu- el<br />
Parker, Republican, and Rob- - sey and further argument<br />
ert Wilcox, Hulev, the latter bc-- ( was continued until<br />
ing elected. Prince was also was filed for yesterday<br />
one of the delegates to the Democrat!'; Registrar Merrlam a deed by<br />
at Kansas City in 1900. The Gilbert J. Waller was<br />
silk banner to Kansas tuted for Samuel Parker as attorney<br />
City by the delegates Is now an orna- - in fact for David Kawananakoa. The<br />
ment of the Kawananakoa on j was executed May 8, 1908. It is<br />
Pensacola signed by both Parker and Kawana.<br />
On January 6, 1902, Prince Kawana- - nakoa. At the same time was<br />
nakoa married Miss Abigail Wahika- - a deed by Kawananakoa by<br />
Campbell, daughter of the late he conveyed Jo E. A. C. Long, trustee,<br />
James at the old Occidental all the unconveyed portion of the<br />
Hotel, San just three premises described in Royal Patent<br />
after the marriage of her muther, Mrs. (grant) 4636, situate at Auwaiolimu,<br />
Abigail Campbell, to Colonel Samuel , The Princess Kawananakoa and<br />
Parker at the same place. On the oc-- the Princess Kalanianaole both<br />
of the Kawananakoa nuptials, I the deed to any of<br />
in<br />
Archbishop Reardon, Bishop Mont- -' in the The consideration<br />
and Father Prendergast offlci- - pressed Is one dollar. Is no<br />
ated. The party went to j statement of the trust upon the<br />
ington, D. C, to .spend their honey- - land Is to be<br />
A. L. C. ATK<strong>IN</strong>SON COUNSEL<br />
FOR ANTI-SALOO- N LEAGUE<br />
Monday the Anti-Saloo- n League<br />
A. Atkinson<br />
as its legal He has accepted<br />
the position and work. This<br />
action the prosecution the<br />
against the with<br />
vigor and resourcefulness. An<br />
new line-u- p supporters for this<br />
cause has been assured Men like<br />
H. and Hon. George<br />
Carter are behind the movement,<br />
representative the new blood<br />
in the organization Mr. J. Cooke<br />
been added to the finance committee.<br />
The objective in the now<br />
on foot will be a local backing of the<br />
Liquor Commissioners in determi-<br />
nation to out the saloons<br />
most menace public and<br />
rj'; - "U-- J -<br />
remaining Honolulu.<br />
past<br />
Kalanianaole,<br />
also native<br />
whom<br />
have Prince<br />
Kauai<br />
wife<br />
accompanied young<br />
Prince<br />
him<br />
years.<br />
Vtnvtn<br />
death Colonel<br />
John Baker<br />
Muriel<br />
Prince<br />
arrive<br />
Washing;<br />
S.<br />
8,<br />
June 14.<br />
Francisco,<br />
likely<br />
over<br />
as body Honolulu.<br />
state, at<br />
Prince<br />
'<br />
fraternltj,<br />
but<br />
first<br />
might dangerous,<br />
with<br />
concerning<br />
arrjveti<br />
benefit<br />
King<br />
King<br />
Prince uncle, late King<br />
Kalakaua, also died Francisco,<br />
place Palace<br />
Prince David<br />
home which before<br />
Frank<br />
In Kapiolani<br />
Prince David<br />
Democratic party property.<br />
yesterday<br />
Home Thursday,<br />
David There record<br />
with<br />
Convention which substi-handso-<br />
borne<br />
home deed<br />
street.<br />
filed which<br />
ahuula Campbell,<br />
Francisco, days<br />
Oahu.<br />
join<br />
caslon release right dower<br />
land.<br />
There<br />
entire Wash- - which<br />
held.<br />
voted<br />
fresh<br />
Maui<br />
while<br />
which<br />
order<br />
years,<br />
about<br />
large<br />
David about<br />
Hotel<br />
death<br />
death<br />
ander<br />
there<br />
decency. The second number in the<br />
program will be the safeguarding of<br />
the present liquor law, the slogan being,<br />
"Let it alone." The third will be<br />
local option. Those unacquainted with<br />
the Hawaiians do not know what a deep<br />
interest they arc taking in this conflict<br />
against tne saleon. They have begun<br />
to see that alcohol me?ns death to their<br />
race, and that they have been deceived<br />
by those who have led them to believe<br />
that liquor drinking is a mark of<br />
progress in civilization. AH along the<br />
line recnits are rallying to the Anti-Salo- on<br />
cause from the ranks of leading<br />
Hawaiian3. The Teoming campaign will<br />
be a hot one, and the new attorney of<br />
the league win put all his enthusiastic<br />
resourcefulness into the battle to win.<br />
SEMI-WEEKL- Y<br />
IS 6<br />
<strong>IN</strong> HAIII-N- EI<br />
HONOLULU, T. H., May 12. Sugar<br />
is King. To Hawaii he Is a most in-<br />
dulgent monarch, for he has brought<br />
this little group of islands to the point<br />
where it Is the greatest exporting coun-<br />
try of Its population on earth. This<br />
iear tho Hawaii sugar crop will sell<br />
for between $40,000,000 and $50,000,000.<br />
The price Is high on account of great<br />
shortage in Cuba, Java and elsewhere.<br />
The crop here Is larger than ever be-<br />
fore. Last year it was 410,017 tons.<br />
This year it ls estimated at from<br />
475,000 to 500,000 tons.<br />
Hawaii has been growing sugar for<br />
nearly a century. By 1S75 the produc-<br />
tion had increased until the annual<br />
crop was 12,500 tons. Then something<br />
happened. The United States made a<br />
reciprocity treaty with the Kingdom of<br />
Hawaii and the sugar from the islands<br />
was admitted to America free of duty.<br />
Immediately the sugar business began<br />
to take on new life, although the crop<br />
returns did not show an enormous In<br />
crease for some time. Sugar cane can-<br />
not be grown over night. Each crop<br />
grows two years In Hawaii. Even the<br />
two-ye- ar period was not the beginning<br />
of the greater day, for all great busi-<br />
ness must grow. Modern methods of<br />
agriculture have brought the Hawaiian<br />
cane fields to their present productiv-<br />
ity, but It was the abolition of the duty<br />
on sugar entering the United States<br />
that made this development possible.<br />
Twenty years after that treaty went<br />
Into effect Hawaii became frightened<br />
lest the United States might abrogate<br />
It, as it had the right to do upon one<br />
year's .notice. Hawaii was clamoring<br />
for annexation. The war with Spain<br />
came up, Hawaii's great strategic value<br />
was impressed upon Congress, and an-<br />
nexation came. Free sugar was made<br />
a fixture by that act, for Hawaii was<br />
annexed and made a part and parcel<br />
of the United States before the "in-<br />
sular possession," to which the Consti-<br />
tution does not follow the flag, was in-<br />
vented.<br />
The treaty of 1875 was made before<br />
there was any beet sugar interests in<br />
the United States, or it would never<br />
have been made at all. If the Ameri-<br />
can beet sugar Industry had been as<br />
great in 1S9S as it Is now, Hawaiian<br />
annexation probably would have" been<br />
defeated.<br />
Hawaii, having benefited by these<br />
things, is now a unit 'n opposing the<br />
extension of like assistance to the<br />
Philippines. The worst nightmare<br />
that can come to a Hawaiian planter<br />
is the dreamof Cuban annexation.<br />
Hawaii has the backing of the power-<br />
ful beet sugar Interests in this, and the<br />
beet sugar people have the backing of<br />
the entire "stand pat" party on prin-<br />
ciple, so its danger Is remote.<br />
It is interesting to take a retrospec-<br />
tive glance at the industrial history of<br />
Hawaii to show what King Sugar, with<br />
an American free market, has done.<br />
Just twenty-fiv- e years ago a pamphlet<br />
was published in Honolulu reviewing<br />
the sugar industry of the islands.<br />
Maps of the various islands were given<br />
with the plantations marked on them<br />
in red. Tables showed how much land<br />
was planted in sugar cane and how<br />
much more there was available for that<br />
purpose. At that time, 1882, there were<br />
55,000 acres of cane, and the estimate<br />
of the "maximum possible" acreage<br />
was 72,500. As a matter of fact tho<br />
present acreage Is 213,400, or nearly<br />
three times the "maximum possible"<br />
of twenty-liv- e years ago.- - The same<br />
authority said that on the island of<br />
Oahu, where Honolulu is situated, the<br />
acreage was 3,000 and that Its maxi-<br />
mum extension would be 3,500. The<br />
sugar acreage of Oahu now is 36,532.<br />
The statistician of 1SS2 was honest<br />
and painstaking, and his estimates of<br />
the maximum possible extension of the<br />
industry were not made by guess, but<br />
by careful surveys. But he did not.<br />
and could not, take Into consideration<br />
the present methods of irrigation and<br />
steam cultivation.<br />
The irrigation plants now in use on<br />
Hawaiian sugar plantations cost over<br />
$14,000,000. As there are only fifty plan-<br />
tations of considerable size this indi-<br />
cates a great expenditure for indi-<br />
vidual plants. In fact only twenty-si- x<br />
plantations have Irrigation systems at<br />
all, the others depending on rainfall.<br />
Six plantations have plants which cost<br />
over a million dollars each. A good<br />
rain that will fill the reservoirs means<br />
a saving of a thousand dollars a da<br />
for pumping on more than one planta-<br />
tion.<br />
This kind of agriculture- - requires<br />
capital. The sugar plantations of Ha-<br />
waii have a combined capitalization of<br />
something over $70,000,000. The owner-<br />
ship of this is-- divided between about<br />
7,000 shareholders. The control of the<br />
sugar industry is centered in the hands<br />
of half a dozen big companies in Ho<br />
nolulu, sugar factors. These companies<br />
act as agents for the plantations, and<br />
they are not prohibited from owning<br />
shares In plantation stock, not by any<br />
means. There are fourteen suga.<br />
agents on the list, but there are six<br />
big ones. These big companies grew<br />
out of small stores established many<br />
years ago in the days when nobody<br />
dreamed of doing business bJ the mil-<br />
lions.<br />
The small sugar planters of the old<br />
days had to have supplies for their<br />
places. They obtained them from a<br />
Honolulu trading store. When the crop<br />
was made they sold their sugar to the<br />
same store, or employed the store to<br />
act as agent for Its sale. As the sugar<br />
business grew from a small matter of<br />
farming to the proportions of a mighty<br />
industry, the factors grew with it. But<br />
the old ways are strong, and these old<br />
Institutions can today sell you any-<br />
thing from a million dollar steamship<br />
to a box of carpet tacks. They are<br />
still supply stores of the general type,<br />
waxed great and rich.<br />
As .half a dozen firms and a dozen or<br />
so men control the sugar business, they<br />
control the business of Hawaii. They<br />
are King Sugar's ministers. Up to this<br />
time no one of them has been charged<br />
with disloyalty to his monarch. They<br />
are faithful servitors. It was inevita-<br />
ble, of course, that the concentration<br />
of this economic power Into a few<br />
hands would cause strife. There have<br />
been sharp contests, there are now<br />
murmurlngs and bickerings.<br />
It is said that a total stranger can<br />
buy machinery or other supplies from<br />
a sugar agent much cheaper than one<br />
of that agent's plantations can buy it<br />
A muck raker would undoubtedly find<br />
some molasses on the tines of his Im- -<br />
EVANGELIST<br />
COM<strong>IN</strong>G HERE<br />
The T. M. C. A. has secured for a<br />
series of men's meetings, the man who<br />
is recognized as the greatest speaker<br />
to men in South Africa. He Is making<br />
a two-ye- ar tour of the world, and In<br />
response to urging from both the Newr<br />
Tork office of the T. AT. C. A. and from<br />
the local association has consented to<br />
stop off one boat In Honolulu. He will<br />
arrive en the Manuka June 27, and<br />
spendabout a week in tho city.<br />
Mr. Russell will preach In Central<br />
Union church both morning and even<br />
ing the last Sunday of the month, and<br />
meetlnga for men will be held In dltfer- -<br />
ent places and at different times, the<br />
plan of these meetings to be made by<br />
the religious work committee of the<br />
Y. M. C. A. at a meeting Thursday<br />
afternoon.<br />
Since being in the States the past<br />
few months, Mr. Russell has won for<br />
himself the name of "the Moody of<br />
South Africa." both his personal ap-<br />
pearance and great success with men<br />
suggesting the title.<br />
Speaking of his work in Washington,<br />
D. C, one of the T. M. C. A. secre-<br />
taries say3 of him: "He has the hap<br />
py faculty of adapting himself to the<br />
meeting at hand; whether at the uni-<br />
versity, car barn, with the soldiers, at<br />
the engine house, or at the associa-<br />
tion, he has made himself .it home, and<br />
given a straight gospel talk that touch-<br />
ed the hearts of the men."<br />
Mr. Russell has been in evangelical<br />
work in South Africa for thirty years.<br />
The story of his experience as a pio-<br />
neer evangelist is a thrilling one. In<br />
the gold fields, with the Boers after<br />
the war, in Cape Town, then up and<br />
down over the whole country he went,<br />
everywhere welcomed and meeting<br />
with marked success In every field.<br />
The visit of Rev. David Russell will<br />
be made the occasion of the greatest<br />
series of meetings for men Honolulu<br />
has had for many a day. He is a<br />
great man. and will do a lot of good<br />
while in the city.<br />
JOHNSON AT PALO AL<strong>TO</strong>.<br />
J. A. M. Johnson, well known to the<br />
trade as an importer of paper at Hono-<br />
lulu, and later at Yokohama, Japan,<br />
has resigned his position with tho Japan<br />
Development and Trading Company,<br />
Yokohama, and is now at Palo Alto,<br />
Cal. Paper Trade.<br />
A. W. Carter, manager of the Parker<br />
Ranch, accompanied by his wife, re-<br />
turned to Hawaii yesterday.<br />
plement If he trailed It over Hawaii.<br />
On the other hand, the prosperity of<br />
the islands and everybody in It has<br />
been made by sugar, ls supported<br />
and without sugar would perish<br />
miserably. The sugar barons hav<br />
brought a great curse upon their land<br />
by the Importation of an excess or<br />
Oriental labor, perhaps, but whatever<br />
blessings the country has they also<br />
orougni.<br />
Politics in Hawaii is not ldeallv fr<br />
from corruption. It wasn't in the old<br />
clays of the monarchy, and It isn't now.<br />
But it Is to be doubted If any state in<br />
the Un'on has laws which throw as<br />
much light Into the inside worklnes<br />
of corporations as do the laws ot Ha-<br />
waii. This in spite of the fact that n.<br />
dozen men control all of the one great<br />
Industry of the country. It is not<br />
meant that these laws are Utopian, or<br />
that they accomplish great resuts. It<br />
is merely the wonder that such pub-<br />
licity laws are on the statute books.<br />
The sugar barons apparently have-no- t<br />
been put to the necessity of study-<br />
ing politics. They had a bill In tho<br />
legislature two years ago to enable<br />
them to bring In some Portuguese and<br />
Spanish Immigrants, badly needed to<br />
relieve- - the labor situation. They did-<br />
n't mention it to their leader In tho<br />
Senate and It went to the table. If<br />
he had known It, It could have been<br />
passed without a word. As it was. It<br />
required hard work to pull It through.<br />
On the whole, the sugar barons seem<br />
not to be such bad barons after all.<br />
The community knows that they<br />
have built its prosperity and. In a<br />
measure, the community is grateful.<br />
These things may change. Some or<br />
the sugar barons are placing obstacles<br />
In the way of homesteadlng and other<br />
efforts toward Americanization, fearine<br />
the effect upon their system of labor.<br />
This attitude Is antagonistic to the<br />
moving spirit of the territory, and .<br />
when the clash comes It will be the<br />
sugar barons' heads that are cracked.<br />
Some of the sugar barons, especially<br />
the British and Germans, still believe,<br />
or affect to believe, that the United<br />
States will again open the doors to<br />
Asiatic Immigration so far as Hawaii<br />
Is concerned. The majority of the<br />
American planters look toward tho<br />
south of Europe for help.<br />
The sugar planters have problems, of<br />
course, but in Hawaii their outlook Is<br />
rosy. Just now they are glorying In<br />
the biggest crop of their history and a<br />
top-not- price. Even If the dreaded<br />
thing happens and Philippine sugar, or<br />
even Cuban sugar, is admitted Into the<br />
United States without duty, the sugar<br />
planters may find consolation In the<br />
rapidly Increasing consumption of su<br />
gar, inirty-flv- e years ago the sugar<br />
crop of the world was two of three mil-<br />
lion tons each year, over half of which<br />
was made from cane. It did not reach<br />
four million tons until 1S83, when for<br />
the first time tho beet sugar produc-<br />
tion was a little the larger half. The<br />
crop reached the ten million ton mark<br />
In 1902, six of which was from beets<br />
and four from cane.<br />
The last annual statistics reported a<br />
world's crop of over twelve million<br />
tons, seven from beets and five from<br />
cane. The Increase of consumption of<br />
sugar In the United States, as might<br />
be expected, has been startllngly rapid,<br />
having tripled in a quarter of a cen-<br />
tury. This growth continues all over<br />
the world, and the sugar producing sec-<br />
tions are called upon to do their ut-<br />
most So far as Hawaii Is concerned,<br />
it is believed that practically all the<br />
available sugar land Is now under cul-<br />
tivation. But such predictions are un-<br />
certain, as witness the "maximum pos-<br />
sible" estimate of twenty-fiv- e years<br />
ago. In the meantime. King Sugar<br />
smiles on Hawaii, and this territory 13<br />
one part of the United States that<br />
knows not the meaning of industrial!<br />
adversity in the good year 1903.<br />
t.<br />
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yffyr A<br />
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be<br />
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die<br />
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wa.<br />
arr<br />
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pro A<br />
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Die<br />
tin.<br />
Hu:<br />
W.<br />
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Star<br />
and<br />
Hal<br />
Ayr<br />
Her.<br />
F.<br />
K<br />
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solut<br />
For<br />
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AC<br />
iS HI<br />
WANTED MONEY<br />
OFrow Thursday's Advertiser.)<br />
Good frftss was made in the Koki<br />
coat Swuh ate ease is chief<br />
at it W soaie hopes of doing, but it<br />
wajsts<br />
finish<br />
naaU<br />
crfNa W<br />
ataled<br />
Jw wea<br />
CMtUH<br />
aaaaart<br />
enwet.<br />
XaTto<br />
aamaiar,<br />
JhadfeaaK.<br />
if.<br />
aar<br />
waaai<br />
The jrevernment<br />
yesterday,<br />
ad will probably<br />
iilwaM<br />
sre<br />
ax<br />
A. "H. X. Bettemley on the<br />
Me a<br />
3k<br />
1<br />
atn<br />
r<br />
at j aat 'ow<br />
m<br />
-<br />
a<br />
. did<br />
was<br />
of yesterday. He identi- -<br />
of letters of advice dpn. , hee-in-<br />
t7k1 TMaknn I 1"V wt, I<br />
AV&J W JXSMWfJ O V" .<br />
agatast which Koki drew.<br />
iatoiast in the case so far<br />
were concerned developed<br />
& Nawahi was on the stand.<br />
that b November 13 last<br />
to Wasaiea. to pay his taxes,<br />
to aowt S70. After pay--<br />
ke was talking with Koki,<br />
boa to lean him $1500, say- -<br />
ais father had died and that<br />
wore pressing him for<br />
He ottered a mortgage on his<br />
to seeare the loan. .Nawalu<br />
jaafce the kaa, not knowing<br />
law yopcrty was encumbered<br />
'aad it betBg too far to go to<br />
to and Ht"<br />
SOBS FOB DIVORCE.<br />
Kofcaaoha has begun a suit<br />
or haiaaad, George Kckauoba,<br />
He is known in Koolau,<br />
tae caapie resided, as Mormon<br />
, aad he achieved a good deal of<br />
last Tear br his trial for vio- -<br />
: the EdaNONts' Act. In that trial<br />
who aaw soes for divorce,<br />
aorjarr to help him out.<br />
she anores his conviction for<br />
the IMwiiiiiIi Act with Annie<br />
Kelehaa as ground for di- -<br />
Acaa "rAs the money:<br />
W. C AcM hK fttod a petition asking<br />
to allow him fee for his<br />
aa attorney on be-- I, 4.. ,.<br />
af Joe Kalia aad Itesehna Kulia,<br />
acediags relating to the<br />
t Aatoae jieangnes, thoir<br />
SUBS K P<strong>IN</strong>EAPPLE PLANTS.<br />
A. V. Bawac has began suit against<br />
doing business<br />
Cwnpaay, for $42o,<br />
ptaats supplied.<br />
CrAJMMAN ARRESTED.<br />
the mtter the estate of David<br />
a<br />
a<br />
,,,<br />
a<br />
as<br />
Raymond Reyes, ,..uuP mnn<br />
appear tlons objected to<br />
it awning oruexcu, as impossible a to<br />
a for arrest was m advance weight<br />
he<br />
8UIK<br />
IT.<br />
sens?<br />
court testimony any<br />
the afternoon. satisfactorily must<br />
aw in<br />
west oer for a 'week.<br />
HOLMS ENTERED<br />
<strong>IN</strong> nsCASE<br />
kn 'rr<br />
mJ- -<br />
iatr Attorney Cathcart<br />
ptoseoui the case of ne uum Bw<br />
District Attorney Robert<br />
charged with being<br />
a nriae fight. Judge<br />
after hearias the motion,<br />
graated it, aad the mueh-di- s-<br />
f the Territory vs. urec- -<br />
a great anv more pres--<br />
the aaKee eoart yesterday morn- -<br />
is asal for tribunal 10<br />
aad thaxe present were many<br />
Kmsra residents who had<br />
jiifialrr iavited to and<br />
act to leapoad at their peril. The<br />
tk aot present in court, but<br />
repreteated by attorneys,<br />
& Marx, Holmes Stanley,<br />
Si with M. I.<br />
f eaaweeL<br />
aa<br />
aWJ amlt nhnri<br />
having<br />
," and<br />
Thompson<br />
there had a prise<br />
a thorough investigation of<br />
he felt that prosequi<br />
be<br />
not wish to<br />
iw aiiwiadrntnnil m the matter for<br />
crhteh he said were<br />
MFSrat There is a good deal of<br />
laafct ia aty auad, as well as in the<br />
ads of am others, whether the box-- K<br />
oa Swtarday could be really<br />
aBed a agat ia aay of the word.<br />
"tVioad Thr United States District<br />
rV eaVe, as well as the County<br />
icfaped take any action in<br />
the aaatter wfaea requested to do b<br />
She oa that have been interested in<br />
eace. aad as the two officials<br />
1 because<br />
thiak I have any right to in- -<br />
oa the defendant being prosecuted.<br />
lalid I consider that the action<br />
toJbm br the complaining witness in<br />
that cae tvas entirely improper, in<br />
view of the fact that, as I have said<br />
aafare, people that should have<br />
tohaa the iaUfaitivc in the matter have<br />
to do It. then I feel that I<br />
a right<br />
proper course to pursue, now<br />
that the praad Jury is session. Is to<br />
Mir the jaatter before that body, and<br />
If they Sad that an offense has been<br />
uauiartaod then they return an<br />
bat if they find there Is<br />
caessb evidence to warrant an indict-xae- nt<br />
they return a no do<br />
ot consider the proper course<br />
was in having Mr. Breekons<br />
sjsested on a bench warrant,<br />
again ask the court to rJlow the nolle<br />
Tiroswrai."'<br />
Among<br />
present in the court-<br />
room Theodore Richards, A.<br />
Dickey. E. "W Thwing and John Mar-<br />
tin. Jack Scotty Meston, Dr.<br />
HqmparK M. F. Prosser, J. D. Gaines.<br />
XT. C Hatch, Judge<br />
Stagey. L. E. S. L. Chilling-wort- h.<br />
Pat deason. Judges<br />
ssad ilahaalo. Charles Crane, Frank<br />
C. F Chilllngworth, H. M.<br />
Ayres. F E. Thompson, George F.<br />
tHensbalt. C K .otley.E. C. Peters,<br />
T". IT MHverton. Harold GIffard, Dr.<br />
33essarrai and many others.<br />
SPBAIXS CUBED.<br />
Bathe the parts freely with Cham--<br />
Pain Balm and give them ab- -<br />
iKtlntc rest, and a quick cure is certain.<br />
Far sale bv Beaon, Smith & Co., Iitd.,<br />
Arcsts the Hawaiian Islands.<br />
II<br />
a<br />
HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, FRIDAY, JUNE 5, tQo8. SEMI-WEEKL- Y<br />
<strong>IN</strong> LEE LET CASE<br />
(From Thursday's Advertiser.)<br />
A jury to try Lee Let was secured<br />
shortly after three o'clock yesterday<br />
afternoon In Judge Robinson's court.<br />
Nineteen men In all were examined on<br />
their voir dire, six of them being chal-<br />
lenged peremptorily one for cause.<br />
As soon as the jury was secured an<br />
adjournment was taken to 10 o'clock<br />
this morning when the hearing of evi- -<br />
There was a delay of nearly an hour<br />
In beginning the case caused by the<br />
fact that Col. Jones, the stenographer,<br />
was on the witness stand in an eject-<br />
ment suit in Judge De Bolt's court.<br />
As soon as the roll of the jurors was<br />
called, Frank Thompson, in reply to<br />
a question by Judge Robinson, said<br />
that the defendant Lee Let was ready,<br />
and Deputy Attorney General Larnach<br />
the Territory answrred ready.<br />
Twelve men called into jury<br />
box, and Mr. Larnach very concisely<br />
tolc" them that in this case the indict-me- rt<br />
charges Lee Let with bribing or<br />
trying to bribe Chief of Detectives A.<br />
P. Taylor. He then began the examin-<br />
ation of the jurors, Frank Godfrey be-<br />
ing the first questioned. Mr. Lar-<br />
nach asked the jurors as to their ac-<br />
quaintance with the defendant and his<br />
attorney, and if relation of attor-<br />
ney and existed or had existed,<br />
and generally whether the juror be-<br />
lieved e could give a fair and and<br />
impartial trial.<br />
Thompson's questions were as to the<br />
jurors' acquaintance with Larnach and<br />
Sutton, who are conducting the pros-<br />
ecution, with A. P. Taylor, Chief of<br />
Detectives, and with R. O. Matheson<br />
and H. M. Ayres, two of the witnesses<br />
in the case. He asked If, in arriving<br />
at a verdict, there would necessarily<br />
be placed on the present police admin-<br />
istration the seal of approval, or upon<br />
tVi rtrAinr1lncr o A m In tct T" t tfTt tnA CPfll<br />
'<br />
as<br />
them. To this Larnach objected as be-<br />
ing irrelevant, but -- Judge Robinson<br />
overruled the objection.<br />
Thompson asked if jurors had any<br />
prejudice against Chinese, or had opin-<br />
ions as to whether Chinese were more<br />
prone to tell the trutn or otnerwise<br />
than whites. E. H. Lewis said he haa<br />
was excused for cause. Mr.<br />
Thompson asked if jurors would give<br />
the same weight or credence to the<br />
faotlmnnf nf n r"hinpJP n thV WOUld<br />
the.,. ,,nder the same condi- -<br />
t before Judge Mr Larnach this<br />
Tceraay as being for juror say<br />
fccaeh warraat his what or credence he<br />
Reyes was brought into would give to of<br />
lie ex-- witness as have the whole 01<br />
absence the morning, and . the witness' testimony, his demeanor<br />
that<br />
attend<br />
his &<br />
aot<br />
fight,<br />
as<br />
to<br />
that<br />
sfe<br />
Tafaed<br />
not<br />
and<br />
were<br />
Frank<br />
and<br />
were the<br />
.<br />
.<br />
and<br />
the<br />
and all other circumstances before him<br />
before he could say what weight or<br />
credence he would give to the testi-<br />
mony. Thompson cited a case from<br />
California where that form of ques<br />
tion was allowed. But Judge Robin-<br />
son sustained the objection holding<br />
that juror be asked as to<br />
whether he would give the same con<br />
to the of a Chi-<br />
naman as to a white, not as to<br />
, ., , ... ,.. .<br />
in ,wneuier Snc b<br />
CteMoas,<br />
testimony<br />
With another juror' Thompson, hold-<br />
ing up an Advertiser, asked him if he<br />
recalled reiding a particular article<br />
respecting the Lee Let case which ap-<br />
peared In it. To this Larnach<br />
on the ground that juror had<br />
already stated that he had read .the<br />
articles in the Advertiser but that they<br />
would not affect his verdict. Thomp-<br />
son argued that he had a right to In-<br />
quire into the mind of the juror to<br />
learn whether or not he had been in-<br />
fluenced by his reading independent of<br />
whether the juror was conscious of<br />
such influence not. He said that<br />
there had been more than articles<br />
on the subject of Lee Let published<br />
in the Advertiser. Mr. X.arnach ob-<br />
jected that question was not what<br />
the Advertiser had said, but whether<br />
Ig 1" usa-.u- ,<br />
1, t hrtho rhlof nf<br />
the cases aeaiast Breekons rro,.i? nc ,<br />
."ll.bt tr;PT.1ith done. Judge Robinson<br />
feTEr.?1:! wwS "! the objection and refused to<br />
" 7 r ; allow the question through<br />
bee<br />
a nolle<br />
siaatod. lie did<br />
sight<br />
sease<br />
so<br />
re- -<br />
the<br />
3ave<br />
Interfere.<br />
The<br />
will<br />
"will bill.<br />
that<br />
parsHed<br />
those<br />
iyle<br />
Peacock,<br />
Pinkham.<br />
Kaulukou<br />
Halstead.<br />
QUICKLY<br />
for<br />
for<br />
man<br />
the<br />
client<br />
the could<br />
sideration<br />
rut<br />
,.i.i,t<br />
the<br />
forty<br />
the<br />
out continued references to the Ad-<br />
vertiser, and its attitude. He asked<br />
should appear that certain arti-<br />
cles were written by A. P. Taylor<br />
would affect the juror's verdict.<br />
When this policy became obvious, Mr.<br />
Larnach began asking jurors to<br />
their views of the credibility of news-<br />
papermen, putting his question in this<br />
form:<br />
"Should be nessary to call wit-<br />
nesses in this case newspapeimen,<br />
would you give their testimony the<br />
same consideration that you would<br />
other witnesses?"<br />
Twelve men having been found who<br />
on their oaths said that they would<br />
discredit neither newspapermen nor<br />
to interfere saw fit to refuse, chinamen, of their occupation<br />
to<br />
in<br />
I<br />
I<br />
Nrlain's<br />
object-<br />
ed,<br />
or<br />
stained<br />
If it<br />
if<br />
it<br />
as<br />
it<br />
as<br />
in the one case, or their color in the<br />
other, they were sworn to try the is-<br />
sues. They are:<br />
Robert Bemrose, Edwin Benner, J. J.<br />
Egan, William A. Hall, C. J. Ludwig- -<br />
sen, Thomas McLean, jacoo uraen-stei- n,<br />
Charles P. Osborne, John Pada-ke- n<br />
Jr., Frank J. Robello, J. J. Sulli<br />
van and Fred Turrill.<br />
Judge Robinson gave the Jury the<br />
usual admonition not to discuss the<br />
case with others or to let others dis-<br />
cuss the case wltth them and dismissed<br />
them for the day.<br />
The taking of testimony will pro-<br />
ceed this morning.<br />
. 4--<br />
JTJDGB PABKEB COM<strong>IN</strong>G.<br />
Judge Parker, the private secretary<br />
of Secretary of the Interior Garfield<br />
and the man who assisted very ma<br />
terially in getting through the appro<br />
priation for Hawaii's Agricultural Col-<br />
lege, will be a visitor in this city pos-<br />
sibly on the next transport from the<br />
Coast. He is expected to go through<br />
to the Philippines and returning here<br />
about August remain a couple of<br />
weeks. It Is possible, however, that the<br />
coming of Secretary Garfield may<br />
change the plans of the Secretary's<br />
secretary and he will come hete and<br />
remain wiIle his chief is In the Islands.<br />
H<br />
IMPEND<strong>IN</strong>G STBIKE.<br />
Eight hundred members of the two<br />
organizations of masters, mates and<br />
pilots at .San Francisco may quit as<br />
the result of the suspension of ibe<br />
captains of three steamers, rharged<br />
with falling to obey the rules of navi-<br />
gation May 6, when the battleship fleet<br />
entered that port.<br />
AFTER JOHNSON<br />
<strong>THE</strong> DELUGE <strong>IN</strong><br />
<strong>THE</strong> REGIMENT<br />
The departure of Colonel Samuel<br />
Johnson for the Island of Hawaii is<br />
likely to have a profound effect on the<br />
First Regiment of the .National Guard.<br />
"When Johnson, then a captain, be-<br />
came first, lieutenant-colon- el and then<br />
colonel, the National Guard consisted<br />
of four companies, practically skeleton<br />
companies, barely able to muster enough<br />
men to keep from being mustered out.<br />
Now the regiment has nine companies,<br />
all well filled, and the men turning out<br />
well to drills.<br />
"With the departure of Colonel John-<br />
son for Hawaii, he feels it necessary to<br />
resign as Colonel, and his resignation<br />
will undoubtedly be tendered to Acting<br />
Governor Mott-Sinit- h this morning.<br />
There was, up to a few hours ago,<br />
every likelihood that Colonel Johnson's<br />
resignation would be followed almost im-<br />
mediately by the resignations of at least<br />
four captains of companies. If these<br />
resignations do not follow, it will be<br />
because Colonel Johnson has used his<br />
personal influence to prevent, and has<br />
by appeals to the esprit du corps of the<br />
National Guard induced them to rer<br />
main.<br />
The trouble is one of old standing,<br />
and widely known. Though it has neycr<br />
been publicly stated, it is known<br />
throughout the regiment and very gen-<br />
erally among the public. There has<br />
been constant friction between Adjutant--<br />
General Jones and the field and<br />
line officers of the regiment. This<br />
friction reached an acute stage some<br />
A<br />
The Salvation Army workers have<br />
found a case of very real distress In<br />
a wretched home on a lane back of the<br />
Chinese Joss 'House on King street.<br />
A Porto Rlcan named Lorenzo Do--<br />
minicl and his Portuguese wife and<br />
five small children live there. The<br />
father occasionally gets work at a dol-<br />
lar a day but the mother has been<br />
sick ever since her last child was<br />
born, two years ago. The eldest child<br />
Is nine years old; the others are six,<br />
five, three and two years old. In the<br />
house Is nothing but a dirty mat on<br />
which the family sleep. There is neith-<br />
er bed, chair, table, stove, dish or<br />
cooking utensil and absolutely nothing<br />
to eat. At least there was nothing to<br />
eat yesterday, though the father, when<br />
he gets his dollar, does the best he<br />
can by the hungry ones.<br />
Staff Captain Bradley and his lady<br />
assistant, Captain Baker, found these<br />
poor people and are at their wits' end<br />
what to do. Their home for children,<br />
the McCully place, might make loom<br />
for two of the little ones, but the num-<br />
ber already there has exhausted their<br />
funds. They could take care of two<br />
infant Dominicls for $10 A month but<br />
they lack the $10, and cannot safely<br />
reduce the bread ration of those now<br />
on their hands. Should they take in<br />
two more inmates they would also<br />
have to buy a cot and bedding. As<br />
the Salvationists at the Home are liv<br />
incident<br />
years<br />
The a new road su-<br />
pervisor to succeed Sam Johnson, re-<br />
signed, will made the next meet-<br />
ing the Board<br />
There three candidates"" for the<br />
vacancy: Cummins, J. Holt,<br />
and David<br />
Tom Cummins, chief clerk<br />
of the road has been<br />
nected the department since 1S97,<br />
and has served under nine road super<br />
visors, as follows: .<br />
Cummings, Fred Goudle, John<br />
Ouderkirk, Campbell,<br />
Lloyd, Dwtght,<br />
Henry Vida and Colonel Johnson.<br />
END OF <strong>THE</strong> BANZAI.<br />
A meeting the Board License<br />
was held<br />
tenoon. The application Suga,<br />
the Banzai King<br />
street and Iwilei leave<br />
license . made,- - and<br />
refused. Suga has been in Japan<br />
for or three years and the<br />
has been brother under<br />
power of attorney. The rule recently<br />
adopted the board not to grant li<br />
censes non-reside- affects Suga.<br />
Hence application leave to<br />
the license.<br />
June 30 will see. the end the<br />
months ago, and it required the<br />
constraining force that<br />
Governor Prear could bring bear at<br />
that time prevent a of<br />
by some of the most effective<br />
officers the regiment.<br />
Colonel Johnson has always been a<br />
rallying influence in the regiment, and<br />
largely through his energy, effort and<br />
influence the friction has been kept<br />
down a minimum, and very hearty<br />
work for building the regiment has<br />
been done.<br />
Among the company officers Tvho felt<br />
constrained resign when it became<br />
known that would<br />
have leave the regiment because of<br />
the new engagements as employment<br />
had entered into, were Captains<br />
Costa, Gorman, Angus and Neely.<br />
Colonel Johnson has been urging them<br />
to remain for the sake the regiment,<br />
and it is likely that has succeeded.<br />
will a very hard thing<br />
Sam Johnson's place in the regiment.<br />
Few men have the organizing quality<br />
that has, combined with the ability<br />
to infuse a spirit emulation and an<br />
esprit corps. The conditions which<br />
have brought about the situation that<br />
has for some thre and which<br />
Colonel Johnson's influence bridged<br />
over will make it the harder for a new<br />
man to step and keep the regiment<br />
present efficiency. this<br />
time, when it is the desiie of the "War<br />
Department to build the National<br />
Guard here, it will require hard work<br />
on the part of Governor Frear meet<br />
the exigencies that have been thrust<br />
upon him in the matter of the First<br />
DESTITUTE AND SICK<br />
<strong>THE</strong> MIDST OF RICH<br />
AND HEALTHFUL CITY<br />
ing on $3.50 per week themselves and<br />
dividing that, they don't know<br />
where to turn. But little aid ever<br />
had from the Associated Charities<br />
as the salary inroad upon the funds<br />
that is such that there<br />
isn't much left to around among<br />
the deserving poor. sad case<br />
lately, involving a family, the Chari-<br />
ties offered a dollar a week's worth<br />
groceries, which is the amount the Sal<br />
vationist commander here gives them<br />
out the $10 a week has to fight<br />
the world with.<br />
The children the Salvation Army<br />
Home could take the five-ye- ar and<br />
three-year-old- s. The baby has been<br />
passed on to the care the godfather.<br />
The fate of the nine and<br />
ld<br />
children has not yet been considered.<br />
to the sick mother, she is in a<br />
condition and must secure a<br />
bed and a nurse once. The lady<br />
physician. Dr. Burnham, whom the<br />
Salvationists Interested in the case,<br />
will remove, and perhaps already has<br />
removed, the woman to the Queen's<br />
Hospital and will take care of her free<br />
of at least two months.<br />
But naturally the patient cannot hope<br />
to get on well while her worry about<br />
the. children lasts. A sick mother,<br />
thinking her little ones trying to<br />
sleep in their clothes on a dirty mat<br />
in Chinatown and crying for something<br />
to eat, and foraging day man-<br />
goes and decayed bananas, is not like-<br />
ly to get well. And the children<br />
likely to fall sick.<br />
Such caries as these make a strong<br />
plea a Children's Hospital.<br />
ADMITTED <strong>TO</strong> PRACTICE<br />
ON MOTION OF HIS SON<br />
There was an unusual in Judge Dole's court yesterday. It<br />
that of a father being admitted to practice law on the motion his son.<br />
C. Dickey was admitted to practice in the Federal Court on the motion<br />
of his son, Lyle A. Dickey.<br />
The father of C. H. Dickey and the grandfather Lyle Dickey for<br />
many a Justice of the Supreme Court of Illinois, and of the most<br />
distinguished jurists of that State. C. Dickey has represented Maui in the<br />
Legislature Hawaii at several sessions.<br />
appointment<br />
be at<br />
of of Supervisors.<br />
are<br />
T. P. L.<br />
at present<br />
department, con<br />
with<br />
W.<br />
Marston T. L.<br />
C. B. C. B. Wilson,<br />
<strong>THE</strong><br />
of<br />
Commissioners yesterday af- -.<br />
of T.<br />
proprietor of saloon.<br />
road, for to<br />
transfer his was<br />
two saloon<br />
by his<br />
by<br />
to the for<br />
transfer The probabilities<br />
are of<br />
Banzai saloon.<br />
all<br />
re-<br />
straining and<br />
to<br />
to number resig-<br />
nations in<br />
to<br />
up<br />
to Colonel Johnson<br />
to<br />
to<br />
he<br />
of<br />
he<br />
It be to fill<br />
he<br />
of<br />
du<br />
existed<br />
in<br />
up to its At<br />
up<br />
to<br />
Regiment.<br />
<strong>IN</strong><br />
Crownlnberg.<br />
are<br />
be<br />
of organization go<br />
In one<br />
of<br />
of he<br />
are<br />
of<br />
As<br />
critical<br />
at<br />
charge, for<br />
of<br />
for<br />
are<br />
for<br />
was<br />
of<br />
II.<br />
of A. was<br />
one<br />
H.<br />
of<br />
of<br />
H.<br />
run<br />
can<br />
by<br />
IHQ GET MATTER<br />
IEFIIECIUOMDIIT<br />
lusv. E. W. Thwing called on At-<br />
torney General Hemenway yesterday<br />
to Inquire how the suggestion made by<br />
County Attorney Cathcart that the al-<br />
leged prizefight matter should be<br />
brought before the grand jury, could<br />
be accomplished. Attorney General<br />
Hemenway told him that It could be<br />
done In either of two ways. It could<br />
be brought to the attention of the jury<br />
by a member of the body Itself or bj<br />
the Attorney General's Department<br />
To have It brought by the Attorney<br />
uenerars .Department, ne .would re-<br />
quire that an application should b<br />
made to him, though this need not be<br />
a formal matter, but he would require<br />
that a clear summary of the evidence<br />
on the subject to be offered should b<br />
presented In writing so that the de-<br />
partment would be able to judge of its<br />
scope and character as well as to what<br />
it tended. That when this was don<br />
the department would Judge of wheth-<br />
er It should be presented to the Jury<br />
.or not.<br />
Mr. Thwing expressed himself as<br />
satisfied, and went away.<br />
David Keys, who borrowed Father<br />
Valentine's stereopticon and did not<br />
return It, was arrested In palama yes-<br />
terday by Officer Apana.<br />
-<br />
1 0 s<br />
mm<br />
(From Thursday's Advertiser.)<br />
The Board of Supervisors met last<br />
night. Nothing important came up for<br />
discussion with the exception of the<br />
resignation of Road Supervisor . Sam<br />
Johnson who goes to Hawaii to accept<br />
a position as outside manager of the<br />
Hawaiian Mahogany Company.<br />
The resignation was accepted and<br />
many kind words were expressed in<br />
appreciation of the good work of Col-<br />
onel Johnson and the pleasant rela-<br />
tions which have existed between him<br />
and the board.<br />
Present were: Chairman Hustace,<br />
Supervisors Dwight, Harvey, Cor,<br />
Archer; Fern; Clerks KalauokalanI,<br />
Buffandeau, Aea, Col. S. Johnson, Dep-<br />
uty County Attorney Milvorton, Coun-<br />
ty Engineer Gere, D. KalauokalanI, "W.<br />
L. Frazee, Fire Chief Thurston, Tom<br />
Cummings, and representatives of the<br />
press.<br />
The following bills were ordered<br />
paid:<br />
Leahl Home $125 00<br />
County office rent 150 00<br />
"Waianae road district<br />
234 50<br />
County Attorney 74 60<br />
Waianae road district 278 23<br />
Electric Light Department 10S0 56<br />
Police and fire alarm system... 69 25<br />
Ewa road district 951 85<br />
County .Auditor<br />
10 25<br />
Koolaupoko road district 1464 40<br />
Hawaiian Band<br />
Keepers of parks<br />
Poundmaster<br />
Koolaupoko road district ...<br />
County Clerk<br />
... 46 50<br />
... 29 50<br />
5 72<br />
... 390 03<br />
.. 30 20<br />
Road Department 3S26 16<br />
Garbage Department 422 25<br />
Waialua road district 169S 53<br />
Police Department 184 30<br />
Coroner's fees 12 00<br />
The treasurer's report for the month<br />
of May was read and ordered filed.<br />
POLICE REPORT.<br />
Sheriff Iaukea's report of the police<br />
department for the month of May was<br />
read and "ordered filed.<br />
The total number of arrests was 315<br />
as against 373 for May, 1907, a decrease<br />
of 2S. The total number of convictions<br />
was 253 as compared with 283 for the<br />
previous period, a decrease of 30.<br />
COMMUNICATIONS.<br />
Superintendent of Public Works<br />
Campbell informed the board that all<br />
proceedings in connection with the<br />
widening of Alexander street between<br />
Beretania avenue and Bingham street<br />
have been perfected.<br />
Deputy Sheriff Oscar Cox of Waialua<br />
wrote asking for a three weeks vaca-<br />
tion to commence June 18. The request<br />
was granted.<br />
PETITIONS.<br />
A petition was read asking for the<br />
of street<br />
mauka from Waialae road to a point<br />
about opposite 12th avenue, and known<br />
as Center street, also a short street<br />
about 150 feet long running Ewa from<br />
Center street. Referred to road com-<br />
mittee.<br />
A petition was read asking for the<br />
illumination of Hobron lane by at least<br />
six incandescent lights. Referred to<br />
electric light committee.<br />
johnson'resigns.<br />
The following communication was<br />
read: Honolulu, T. H., June 3, 1908.<br />
To the Honorable Board of Supervis-<br />
ors, County of Oahu.<br />
Gentlemen: As I am about to leave<br />
the city, I herewith respectfully tender<br />
my resignation as Road Supervisor for<br />
the Districj of Honolulu, and as Super-<br />
intendent of the Garbage Department.<br />
In so doing I feel it my pleasant duly<br />
to express myself most favorably<br />
towards the employes of two de-<br />
partments, who through long service<br />
ioyalty and efficiency have enabled me<br />
to give satisfaction to this community.<br />
I also wish to thank the members c<br />
the present Board for tbe hearty co-<br />
operation and kind support offered me<br />
at all times, and with much apprecia-<br />
tion, I remain.<br />
Very respectfully,<br />
SAM'L JOHNSON,<br />
Road Supervisor, Honolulu.<br />
The chair eulogized the good work<br />
done by Col. Johnson and expressed<br />
himself as sorry that he could not<br />
serve his term out.<br />
Harvey said that the board couldn't<br />
hold Johnson if he wanted to leave<br />
and added that he was probably going<br />
to better himself in his new sphere.<br />
He saw nothing to do but to accept the<br />
resignation and moved to that effect.<br />
Archer refprred to Johnson's good<br />
work and in seconding Harvey's mo-<br />
tion expressed his personal aloha.<br />
The motion was unanimously carried.<br />
The chair thanked Johnson for the<br />
board for the way he had attended to<br />
his duties and stated that he had come<br />
as near pleasing everybody as It was<br />
possible for a man to do. He wished<br />
him success in his new position and<br />
expressed a hope that his successor<br />
would be as satisfactory to board<br />
as Col. Johnson had been.<br />
A DISPLEAS<strong>IN</strong>G LETTER.<br />
The following communication was<br />
also read:<br />
Honolulu, T. H., May 19. 1908.<br />
Board County of Oahu,<br />
Gentlemen: I beg to call to your at<br />
tention, that it Is two months and a<br />
week today, since the last petition was<br />
filed and so far nothing has been done<br />
towards what has been petitioned for,<br />
except one small light, which I and the<br />
balance wish to thank you gentlemen<br />
for, but, certainly would like to have<br />
you comply with petition.<br />
I further wish to be Informed If the<br />
board Intends to comply with, the pe-<br />
tition and I further wish to call to<br />
your attention, that considerable road<br />
work has been done on different roads<br />
since the first and second petitions<br />
were filed and we have been waiting<br />
and are stilf waiting and I and the<br />
balance of the voters and taxpayers<br />
consider it an injustice, especially for<br />
the reason that the people with the<br />
pull are served first and we, the work-<br />
ing class, have to wait till you get<br />
good and ready.<br />
Respectfully yours,<br />
JOSE J. DIA8.<br />
The chair thought that the letter<br />
was disrespectful and sald'that. when<br />
V,<br />
W<br />
emu pit<br />
The official lineup of the Santa<br />
Clara baseball team was received by<br />
the last mail, and appears in this issue<br />
for the first time.<br />
Already the fans about town are<br />
getting busy, speculating as to just<br />
what sort of a proposition the town<br />
boys are up against. That the visitors<br />
will bring along some classy ball there<br />
is little doubt, for their reputation is f<br />
at present in the ranks of the top-notch-<br />
They have played moro<br />
games of ball during the past winter<br />
than any team on the Coast, and have<br />
tried out nearly every team in the Pa-<br />
cific Coast League, in what they call<br />
the "warm-u- p scries," leaving many<br />
of their opponents on the short end.<br />
They are all headv vounirstcrs. who<br />
"have handled" a ball more than once or<br />
twice in their lives, and when they play<br />
them the local boys will see what base<br />
ball is really like.<br />
Kilburn, the captain and pitcher, has<br />
been heard of before, his picture hav-<br />
ing appeared in this paper several<br />
weeks ago.<br />
Shafer, who plays on the receiving;<br />
end, is a man after the style of Bliss<br />
of Mike Fisher's players, with an eyo<br />
like an eagle and an arm like a rapid-fir- e<br />
gun. It is safe to predict that a.<br />
little practice in base-steali- will bo<br />
needed before some of the home boys<br />
safely negotiate the second landing.<br />
Among tho players to come is one<br />
who it may be well to mention, Peters,<br />
tho utility man, who can play almost<br />
anywhere. For batting qualities this<br />
youngster is certainly the limit, his<br />
average being equal to that of some of<br />
the bigger league bugs. The team<br />
throughout consists of heavy stickers,<br />
assuring the local fielders of plenty of<br />
opportunities to show their metal.<br />
Fortunately, tho home teams are well<br />
placed in this line, as what better<br />
fielding could bo expected than that<br />
dished out day after day by such men.<br />
as Kia, Aylett, Bruns, Olmos and gome<br />
of the other strong men of the Hono-<br />
lulu diamond.<br />
This little jaunt to tho Islands is<br />
looked upon by the visitors as one<br />
they are glad to bo included in, and<br />
will not only prove of benefit to Ha-<br />
waii's boys in furnishing a higher edu-<br />
cation in America's greatest game, but<br />
will turn out to be a banner stroke in<br />
promotion work for tho Islands.<br />
Up to yesterday there had been quite<br />
a demand on the box office for reserved<br />
seats, which is not only encouraging to<br />
the promoters, but assures the fans of<br />
Honolulu that unusual interest in base-<br />
ball Is now taking shape. The lineup<br />
of the team selected to play the open-<br />
ing game is as follows:<br />
Player. Position.<br />
Kilburn Pitcher and captain<br />
M. S. Shafer Catcher<br />
macadamizing the running Broderick First base<br />
the<br />
the<br />
the<br />
Watson Second base<br />
McNally Third base<br />
A. J. Shafer Shortstop<br />
Salberg Bight field<br />
Kennedy Center field<br />
Lappin Left field<br />
-<br />
T<br />
DENIES MILLS' SUIT<br />
The Supreme Court yesterday ren-<br />
dered a decision dismissing the appeal<br />
of Harry T. Mills in his habeas corpus<br />
proceeding by which he sought to have<br />
reviewed his commitment for contempt<br />
by Judge Andrade In tne District<br />
Court. The opinion of the court is by<br />
Chief Justice Hartwell.. It is published<br />
in full in another column in this issue.<br />
MANTJFACTTJBEES COM<strong>IN</strong>G.<br />
A committee of the directors of the<br />
Illinois Manufacturers' Association has<br />
decided that two hundred members of<br />
the association will go to Japan, China,<br />
Korea, the Philippines, and other<br />
countries within the next six months<br />
to work for the extension of American<br />
trade. The committee will be trans-<br />
ported to Japan in a special steamer,<br />
the first of a new line of steamships<br />
that will ply between this country and<br />
the Orient.<br />
Dias learned to write a decent letter<br />
Its contents -- would have the recogni-<br />
tion of the board and not before.<br />
METCALF WRITES.<br />
The following communication was<br />
read and filed:<br />
Navy Department,. Washington,<br />
May 2LJ908.<br />
Sirs: The Commandant, Naval Sta-<br />
tion, Hawaii, in a report, dated the<br />
20th ultimo, has brought to the atten-<br />
tion of this Department the great as-<br />
sistance rendered by the local fire de-<br />
partment on the occasion of the out-<br />
break of fire In coal shed No. 3 at the<br />
Naval Station under his command. The<br />
Commandant states that the spirit<br />
shown in this Instance is a fair sample<br />
of the general friendliness and cooper-<br />
ation manifested by the local authori-<br />
ties. Territorial and Municipal, as well<br />
as by Federal authorities represented<br />
by other departments of the-Gen-<br />
eral<br />
Government.<br />
The Department desires to express<br />
its appreciation and thanks through<br />
you to the Chief Engineer of the fire<br />
department "and his subordinates for<br />
their prompt and efficient aid to tho<br />
naval authorities on the occasion in<br />
question.<br />
Very respectfully,<br />
V. H. METCALF.<br />
Secretary.<br />
The Board of Supervisors, County of<br />
Oahu, Honolulu, T. H.<br />
MISCELLANEOUS.<br />
It was decided to appropriata $1500<br />
for the Installation of ten fire alarm<br />
boxes in and around Honolulu.<br />
The chair stated that Col. Johnson<br />
rouId remain here long enough to show<br />
his successor the ropes.<br />
Johnson said" he expected to be here<br />
terrdays longer and that he would do<br />
all In his power to assist his successor.<br />
The matter of a new road superin-<br />
tendent will come up at the next meet-<br />
ing of the board.<br />
It was decided to appropriate $450 for<br />
a new safe.<br />
ia-'-<br />
.<br />
Hi<br />
1<br />
1<br />
i<br />
3<br />
y
-- IVmjugpiMjiyiVJ imp"<br />
IHHpSit 'aSB'pn-- - r j'v i i<br />
- Acr ?<br />
HAWAI1A GAZETTE<br />
Entered at the Postoffice of Honolulu, H. T., Second-clas- s Matter<br />
Semi-Week- ly Issued Tvesdays'and Fridays.<br />
WALTER G. SMITH,.Editor.<br />
Subscription Rates:<br />
Per Month J .25 Per Month, Foreign ".J .35<br />
kr Tear 13.00 Per Tear, Foreign 14.00<br />
Payable Invariably in Advance.<br />
CHARLES S. CRANE, Manager.<br />
FRIDAY MAY 29<br />
<strong>THE</strong> YACHT HAWAII.<br />
The citizens of Hawaii may well be proud of themselves as well as of the<br />
yacht which they have sent to San Pedro to bring home the transpacific cup.<br />
The yacht Hawaii embodies the hope and pride of the people of Hawaii,<br />
for, even though they have not all had a hand in building her, so large a num-lc- r<br />
have done so that in every sense of the word she is the "national representative"<br />
of Hawaii; for Hawaii was a nation before it was a Territory, and<br />
with. all loyalty to the great nation of which it is now a component part, it<br />
maintains a just pride in all things distinctively Hawaiian. This feeling has<br />
i now found expression in the building of the beautiful yacht which bears our<br />
same.<br />
In no one thing that has happened since annexation have the people of Ha<br />
waii, shown more direct personal interest than in the building of the yacht to<br />
compete for the transpacific cup, about to bo raced for.<br />
The list of over seven hundred persons and companies, published herewith<br />
who have contributed money or material for the construction and equipping<br />
of the yacht, only makes a partial representation of those who have helped<br />
make her a" possibility. Numerous entertainments and exhibitions have been<br />
given for the benefit of the yacht, in which many took part, whose names do<br />
not appear on the listpwhile the corporations who have subscribed represent<br />
many hundreds of individual stockholders.<br />
The building of the yacht Hawaii is a new sermon on the old text "In<br />
union there is strength."- -<br />
"With the indefatigable executive committee, Messrs. Cooper, "Wilder and<br />
31clnerny, to lead, the people have gotten behind them and pushed the proposi<br />
tion through, and the task of building av $20,000 boat by popular subscription<br />
has been accomplished. It was team work which did it. Team work always<br />
counts. -<br />
Whether the Hawaii wins or loses, we believe that the building of her was<br />
worth while.' She is a demonstration that the people of this community are true<br />
sportsmen; ready to give their time and their money for the development of<br />
the sport in its most royal form.<br />
May the best boat win, and may the best boat be the Hawaiil<br />
. -- h<br />
WIRELESS AND NAVIGATION.<br />
The discovery of the mariner's compass enfranchised navigation from the<br />
bonds which up to then bad hampered, it, and made navigators bold. It made<br />
possible the discovery of America and the circumnavigation of the globe. But<br />
it was not until the invention of the chronometer, making the determination<br />
of longitude certain and simple, that navigation became either safe or a science.<br />
From that day to this improvements in mechanism with an occasional dis-<br />
covery or adaptation of a principle to make the determination of position<br />
and easier, have""been constant. Improvements in charts and more exact determination<br />
of the latitude and longitude of coasts and dangers have greatly<br />
decreased the perils of navigation. The telegraph and the cable have been the<br />
simple 'means of much increase in certainty as to the longitude of places<br />
throughout the whole circumference of the globe.<br />
Now wireless telegraphy is knocking for admission as a practicable means<br />
for more simply and more accurately still, than by chronometer and sextant<br />
alone, determining longitude.<br />
M. Bouquet de la Grye, at a recent meeting of the .French Academy of<br />
Science, read a paper, proposing a plan to utilize wireless telegraphy. His<br />
proposal seems correct in principle, and the only question is whether wireles0<br />
telegraphy Has" yet reached the development necessary to make the application<br />
practicable. M. dc la Grye's proposal is simply the adaptation by means of<br />
the wireless, through an infinitely greater radius, of the time-ba- ll or the time--,<br />
whistle. It is an application by means of wireless of the uso already made of<br />
the electric current overland lines and submarine cables to determine the exact<br />
.longitude of plae?s. He simply proposes that wireless telegraph station's,<br />
wherever located, shall, at noon, GreenwiclTtime, send out into space an agieed-o- n<br />
signal of that fact. Every vessel provided with wireless apparatus and<br />
within the range of a wireless station will thus be able to correct absolutely<br />
any variation in its chronometer. In this way that cause of error would be<br />
entirely done away with.<br />
t<br />
BRYAN'S GROW<strong>IN</strong>G STRENGTH.<br />
William J. Bryan will go into the Presidential fight with far more strength<br />
than he displayed either in 1S9G or 1900. With the years, he has become more<br />
conservative; and, indeed, he was never so radical on some vital issues as the<br />
immensely popular President Roosevelt has been. In fact, the President is not.<br />
unjustly accused of stealing Bryan's thunder. Giving Bryan the strength of<br />
his issues as they have developed at the hands of political foes, as well as<br />
friends, and he is a really formidable leader. He may also count on a personal<br />
following which has grown up outside of politics. For years ho has been<br />
lecturing on moral and religious topics with an eloquence which seems based<br />
on conviction, and this has saved the South to him despite the active opposition<br />
of its politicians and its press. He is also a total abstainer as to liquor<br />
and tobacco, so he gets some benefit from the moral wave which is now sweeping<br />
th6 country. Hard times always help an opposition candidate in the United<br />
States, and unless prosperity should return during the summer the Bryan army<br />
will be reinforced strongly by the financially apprehensive or disturbed voting<br />
elements in the other parties. "V<br />
So the candidacy of Bryan, twice defeated as he has been, is not one to<br />
he laughed down the wind. This year he will make his final effort for the<br />
Presidency with almost as much in his favor as Grover Cleveland had in 1SS4.<br />
It will require all of President Roosevelt's personal influence, a fine organization,<br />
and plenty of money to keep the Nebraskan out of the White House.<br />
That would be the case, we fear, even if Governor nughes or Speaker Cannon<br />
should run the two most popular Republican aspirants.<br />
I . .<br />
,"" <strong>THE</strong> LATE PR<strong>IN</strong>CE DAVID.<br />
Prince David Kawananakoa was heir presumptive to the throne of Hawaii<br />
during the life of the monarchy, the Princess Kaiulani being the heir apparent.<br />
A nephew of Queen Kapiolani, he was of the blood of the Aliis, becoming<br />
Prince by legislative .enactment so as to supply a line of succession. Prince<br />
David was very young at the time of the overthrow, and probably did not<br />
realize what it meant to him; and later he accepted annexation with a cheerful<br />
spirit, and, joining the Democratic party, became its first candidate for Con-"grc-<br />
as against Robert W. Wilcox, Home Ruler, and Samuel Parker, Republican.<br />
In that election Wilcox won.<br />
Though balked in his political ambition, the lines of Prince David soon<br />
fqjl in pleasant places. A few years ago he married the most beautiful of the<br />
great Hawaiian heiresses, and from that time on his-lif- e was quiet and domestic,<br />
surrounded by all the comforts that money could obtain. Lately he had some<br />
misgivings about his health, and it was to seek the benefits of a climatic change<br />
and an or life in the Canadian wilds that he went to the Coast. But<br />
the fog and raw winds of San Francisco laid him low, as they did his royal<br />
uncle, King Kalakaua, and as they have so many others who had Ihed long in<br />
ine tropics ana aid not understand the dangers of sudden change.<br />
. In this sudden shock of bereavement the sympathy of the Hawailans and<br />
whites alike will be with the widowed Princess and her children.<br />
The most effective and least costly public work that is being done for<br />
charity in this town today is that of the Salvation Army. There is heart and<br />
sympathy in it as well as practical good sense and economy. San Francisco<br />
philanthropists lo"ng ago learned that it paid to keep the-Ar-my in funds, and<br />
the lesson has not been lost on- - Honolulu givers. There is still, however, an<br />
unseized opportunity to extend the Army's usefulness in the care of unprotected<br />
children, and while waiting for a Children's Hospital to materialize,<br />
people who believe in that charity might, well do something for the Salvation<br />
Army Home. It only costs $10 a month to keep a Salvation helper between<br />
two "<br />
little ones and starvation.<br />
,<br />
Hawaiian gazette, friday, june 5, 1908. SEMI-WEEKL- Y<br />
)<br />
sim-ll- er<br />
<strong>THE</strong> LIQUOR TRAFFIC.<br />
Extract 'From Governor Hanly's Speech at the Republican<br />
State Convention at Indianapolis.<br />
Personally, I have sen so much of the evils of the traffic in tho<br />
last four years, so much of its economic waste, so much, of its physical<br />
ruin, so much of its mental blight so much of its tears and heartache,<br />
that I have come to regard the business as one that must be held and<br />
controlled by strong and effective laws. T hear no malice toward those<br />
engaged in the business, but I hate its every phase. I 'hate it for its<br />
intolerance. I hate it for its arrogance. I hate it for its hypocrisy.<br />
I hate it for its cant and craft and false pretenses. I hate it for its<br />
commercialism. I hate it for its greed and avarice. 1 hate it for its<br />
sordid love of gain at any price. I hate it for its domination in politics.<br />
I hate it for its corrupting influence in civic affairs. I hate it for its<br />
incessant effort to debauch the suffrage of the country; for the cowards<br />
it makes of public men. I hate it for its utter disregard of law. 1<br />
hate it for its ruthless trampling of the solemn compacts of State constitutions.<br />
I hate it for the load it straps to labor's back; for the<br />
palsied hands it gives to toil; for its wounds to genius; for the tragedies<br />
of its might-have-been- s. I hate it for the human wrecks it has caused.<br />
I hate it for the almhouses it peoples; for the prisons it fills; for tho<br />
insanity it begets; for tho countless graves in potter's fields. I hate<br />
it for the mental ruin it imposes upon its victims; for its spiritual<br />
blight; for its moral degradation. I hate it for the crimes it has com.<br />
mltted. I hate it for the homes it has destroyed. I hate it for the<br />
hearts it has broken. I hate it for the malice it has planted in men,<br />
for its poison, for its bitterness, for the dead sea fruit with which it<br />
starves their souls.<br />
I hate it for the grief it causes womanhood the scalding tears, the<br />
hopes deferred, the strangled aspirations, its burden of want and care.<br />
I hate it for its heartless cruelty to the aged, the infirm and the<br />
helpless; for the shadow it throws upon the lives of children; for its<br />
monstrous injustice to blameless little ones.<br />
I hate it as virtue hates vice, as truth hates error, as righteousness<br />
hates sin, as justice hates wrong, as liberty hates tyranny, as freedom<br />
hates oppression.<br />
I hate it as Abraham Lincoln hated slavery. And as he sometimes<br />
saw in prophetic vision the end of slavery and the coming of the time<br />
when the sun should fall upon no slave in all the republic, so I sometimes<br />
seem to see the end of this unholy traffic, the coming of the time<br />
when, if it does not wholly cease to be. it shall find no safe habitation<br />
beneath Old Glory's stainless stars.<br />
GOVERNMENT CONTROL OF WIRELESS.<br />
Just why the United States government should want to secure control of<br />
tho wireless telegraph system in this country was made clear at a recent Congressional<br />
hearing. One of those who appeared in favor of tho measure, Rear- -<br />
Admiral H. N. Menncy, declared that the Marconi Wireless Company had given<br />
the Navy Department much trouble. "One of the incidents," he said, "was<br />
that of the .steamer St. Paul, an American vessel on her way to JNew York. When<br />
passing Nantucket she was called by the lightship, a United States govern<br />
ment vessel, and was asked by the lightship to communicate to the authorities<br />
on shore the fact that she had been damaged and suffered some loss during a<br />
gale. The Marconi station on the island of Nantucket immediately interfered<br />
and 'drummed' to prevent tho United States vessel (the lightship) from communicating<br />
with an American merchant vessel. The St. Paul carried a Marconi<br />
telegraph apparatus, and the lightship carried instruments of another system,<br />
for which reason the Marconi shore station would not allow the government<br />
vessel to communicate with the St. Paul. That the Navy Department regarded<br />
as an outrage. In another instance the Lebanon, a vessel that the Navy Department<br />
designated and fitted for the purpose of destroying derelicts in the<br />
tracks of commerce, was out searching for a derelict which had been reported,<br />
and hearing a vessel sign her name, caljed that vessel and signalled 'U. S. N. A.<br />
Lebanon, at sea, June 2, 1900, to captain of Vaderland: Accept my compliments.<br />
We are lookinc for a derelict! Have vou seen nnvl What in vnnr<br />
position and which way are you going Thanking you in advance. Macdonald.'<br />
To this request reply was made: 'CannoJ; give it to you. Not allowed to work<br />
with you. So good-b- y. V. D.' The Lebanon was out destroying derelicts for<br />
the benefit of the commerce of the world, and this commercial vessel refused<br />
to furnish important information or make a pertinent reply because the wireless<br />
telegraph instrument she had on board was a Marconi instrument and the<br />
United States government vessel used an instrument of a different system, of<br />
American make. The nature of the Vaderland 's answer left no doubt as to<br />
the reason of her refusal to communicate."<br />
The outcome of all this may easily bo the absorption, as a government<br />
monopoly, of the American wireless systems. Such a measure would be inevitable<br />
in time of war, and it seems commercially important in lime of peace.<br />
.<br />
SCARECROWS <strong>IN</strong> <strong>THE</strong> PATH.<br />
As this journal pointed out the other day, the question of transportation<br />
and freight rates is not one which vitally interferes, or need vitally interfere,<br />
with the settling up of this country by farmers. Any one who takes the<br />
trouble to inquire will find that it is only those who raise small truck and<br />
l&tle of it, who feel that existing freight rates are a dangerous burden on industry.<br />
A study of the freight statistics between the Island of Hawaii (Kona<br />
side), Kauai, and this island, will show that large growers of salable things<br />
at a distance from this market are doing so big and continuous a business by<br />
steamer as to warrant the belief that they are making money by it; and it is<br />
a long time since we have heard complaints from pineapple, sisal, coffee and<br />
other large shippers that the rates were at all discouraging. If they were, or<br />
it they become so, an appeal to Congress to include inter-islan- d business within<br />
the remedial scope of the Interstate Commerce Commission would probably<br />
be heeded. If not, the Legislature has authority to pass a rate bill.<br />
The critics of small farming always make much of slight or imaginary<br />
CDstacles. The pioneer farmers of America who had to hew --trails through<br />
the woods to distant markets trails which were gorged with snow in winter,<br />
often muddy in summer, and always infested by wolves or Indians knew what<br />
obstacles were, and would have laughed at those which arc set up to scare<br />
farmers away from here. They made' nothing of hauling corn fifty miles to<br />
transfer it to a batteau on some river, which would carry it to the distant<br />
trading post or mail road. But when a piece of land is three mile3 from a good<br />
road here, connected with it by a trail which industry could quickly improve,<br />
there is "a chorus of warning to the farmer who wants to take it up. Evidently<br />
some of our people think an American, farmer is a weakling or a mollycoddle<br />
instead of a man who makes the waste places glad and like the farmer of<br />
Wahaiawa finally compels railroads to come to him. Qr, which is quite as<br />
likely, they know nothing about the American farmer, and care less.<br />
And yet this country can never reach its best estate without him. Tho3e<br />
rural places Tvhere he is scarce are the least prosperous, happy and progressive;<br />
-<br />
Secretary Garfield will not lack for the same hospitality that ' Secretary<br />
Straus received. He will .not pxpect to have any "freedom of the city" conferred<br />
upon him or other tomfoolery enacted for the purpose of bringing some<br />
small-fr- y politicians into view. The Governor and other high- - officials, the military<br />
and naval commandants and leading citizens will call on him, and he will<br />
have such s as he may need for his investigations. Doubtless, as in the<br />
case of Secretary Straus, there --will be some public as well as private banquet<br />
ing, but the omission of circus business may" be counted on as a sign of the<br />
good breeding of the town.<br />
J)<br />
V<br />
Jm<br />
ROAD ENG<strong>IN</strong>EER NEEDED.<br />
The Advertiser has no names to suggest for road supervisor in place of<br />
Colonel Johnson, but it thinks well of the proppsition that the man in the place-shoulknow<br />
something about road engineering. Colonel Johnson, who was ,at<br />
a national military college in Russia before he came to America, knows-- a good<br />
deal about it, and Mr. Gere, who has charge of the roads on. the other side<br />
of the island, is proficient in tho art. Here in the district of Honolulu, where?<br />
the liifrWnx-- a fcpnr thn he.iviest traffic and are the more seen and used and'de-scribed<br />
by visitors, there is more need than there is outside for engineering<br />
work of the best sort; and it would certainly seem an policy<br />
to keep a fine road engineer in the rural districts and hand over the care of the<br />
highways here to a head luna or a politician.<br />
.There is, we understand, a Bureau of Good Roads in tho Department of<br />
the Interior, the business of which is to loan experts to road-buildi- localities<br />
needing them. If it does not seem practicable to get a good road engineer to.<br />
take Colonel Johnson's place, it might bo very practicable, indeed, to get a.<br />
good man from Washington to show the incumbent how to build roads in a.<br />
scientific way. Whatever new and better methods liavo been discovered during;<br />
late years ought to beknown here, as they might tend to reduce the cost of<br />
our highways as well as to improve efficiency.<br />
The Advertiser assumes in this discussion that the Supervisors want gooil<br />
roads and are not going to take advantage of the opportunity given them by- -<br />
Colonel Johnson's resignation to use the road bureau as a mere political engine.<br />
If that were their intent, of course it would not be worth while to import any-- ,<br />
body to help, unless it might be a Tammany alderman.<br />
Colonel Samuel Johnson has been the best road supervisor this city ever<br />
had, and his resignation involves a public loss. But a place in private employ<br />
where merit is rewarded is better than an unstable and uncertain one in tho-publiservice,<br />
where merit makes enemies. The more Colonel Johnson's work,<br />
has commended itself to the taxpayers the more forcible has been the opposition<br />
to him among the politicians; and on two or three occasions he has had a narrow<br />
escape from being forced or frozen out of his county offices to make room for<br />
machine workers." Now ha has chosen to give his energies to a private corporation,<br />
for which the warmest admirers of his official course will be the last to<br />
blame him.<br />
--t<br />
land-seeke-<br />
If the Hawaii Promotion Committee cannot givo information to<br />
rs assuring them of transportation facilities, together with<br />
freight charges on products which will leave anything 'to the producers,<br />
all it can tell about tho available lands will be a delusion and a<br />
snare. Star.<br />
As settlers on three islands arc now raising export pineapples, sisal, bananas<br />
and some tobacco and having no trouble with transportation and freight charges,<br />
why should new-comer- s, going into tho same lines of agriculture, cxpeet anyf<br />
Isn't it time that that ancient bogey of the Star's was put to rest!<br />
h<br />
Three vigorous business men with a paid secretary are all that are really<br />
needed to put the fleet entertainment plans through. Five men ran the executive<br />
part of tho government of Hawaii during the revolutionary days, and it<br />
takes about that number to control the business of' a transcontinental railway<br />
system. Ton men conduct the government of the United States. When anything<br />
executive is to be done, it is a mistake to leave it to a large voting body.<br />
There should be a small group at the central point able to hire detail work done<br />
and to.absolutely direct it. Under such conditions the wheels of administration:<br />
are not easily blocked.<br />
John Hays Hammond is not likely to make much headway as an aspirant<br />
for Vice President. His connection with the Guggenhcims would not helpv him.<br />
at the polls, and the record he made in South Africa could hardly escape the<br />
cartoonists. When Hammond begged clemency of Oom Paul for his part in<br />
the Jameson raid, the rugged old Boer remarked: "They are all good dog<br />
now and come to lick my hand." On the whole, Mr. Hammond had bettert<br />
stick to the Guggcnheims. It will pay better than politics.<br />
The Advertiser hates to meddle with the neat little stratagem bv which it<br />
is made to appear as a complainant in the Lee Let case, but in justice to itself<br />
it must disclaim all such relations to the pending trial. This journal's, only contention<br />
has be6n that Lei Let should bo tried under his indictment, not surreptitiously<br />
let off with a Duvauchclle nol-pro- s. The case having been called,<br />
that ends the Advertiser's interest in it, excepting as a purveyor of the news..<br />
Wake island is not a cheerfuj place for castaways, and it is lucky for the<br />
twenty men marooned there that the Benjamin Constant happened along before<br />
it was too late. Some day the government will have a gunboat stationed here,,<br />
the business of which will principally be to cruise amon? thn snn.'l lilr.f<br />
fislands looking for shipwrecked men or vessels in distress. It would be a Iabor- -<br />
of humanity with many practical results.<br />
M--<br />
The Advertiser this morning publishes those extracts from the<br />
Naval Appropriation bill which were made law in place of tho Bates<br />
bill, which was killed in the Senate. Star.<br />
Better send a marked copy to Representative Bates. He is still in ignorance<br />
of the death of the bill he passed at the request and with the aid of the<br />
President.<br />
If tho Tirst Infantry would agree to the proposal, a request of Governor<br />
Frear for the detail of a regular army officer tb command that regiment might<br />
be acceded fo. Schools get such officers for commandants; why not militia regiments?<br />
especially those which the government looks to for help in the defense<br />
of its fortified ports.<br />
The Republican party is commonly pictured as an elephant, a<br />
beast which is capable of bearing juite a considerable burden. But<br />
the local G. O. P. seems to be getting a bit more than even an elephant<br />
should be asked to carry. Star.<br />
Its mahouts are load enough for a Jumbo. -<br />
-<br />
Twelve ships will do very well for Honolulu, but if the President were toltl<br />
that it would be desirable to have the whole fleet parade here, where most off<br />
the Japanese ami Hawaiians can see it, before a detachment is sent to Labaina,<br />
he would probably see the point. J"<br />
The government, having given Prince Albert Kuneakea a State, funeral<br />
antthosc places where he is in a majority are the richest and most advanced. three or four years ago, may be expected to pay the ss No<br />
same<br />
place<br />
honors to<br />
under the flag needs him more than<br />
the<br />
Hawaii<br />
lato<br />
does, nor can get him Prince David Kawananakoa. .""<br />
easier by trying and can serve him better after he has come. And in his way<br />
is nothing but the selfishness of a feudal institution and an outcry of "Wolf!<br />
Wolf!" in places from which the wolf has long since vanished.<br />
Who<br />
'<br />
is "Oliver" P. Morton, whom the afternoon press had dying in<br />
New York! The only famous Oliver P. Morton, war<br />
General<br />
Governor<br />
Sir Redvers<br />
of<br />
Buller came out of the<br />
Indiana,<br />
Boer war<br />
ilieJ<br />
with a diminished years ago.<br />
reputation. This was not due to want of capacity,, but because, like various<br />
Union generals in the first twoyears of the Civil War, his government expected<br />
too much of him with the forces in hand. It is the lucky general who comes The sore toe is still on daily exhibition at the Vealery.<br />
iu ior me nmsn in a It looks a trifle<br />
uig war, not the one who clears the way. What General more inflamed than usual. Try Wallach's Toe Salve.<br />
Buller did, like what Generals McClellan, Hooker and Pope did in the American<br />
war, was of large importance to the cause, in that it taught<br />
t -<br />
how the enemy<br />
should be fought. But the laurels were reserved for the generals who profited The Civic Federation showed hard sense in declining to stand sponsor for<br />
by the experience of the pioneers and swept away a foe whom the long fight the arrests which followed the boxing contest.<br />
had weakened. ,.<br />
' - V<br />
Honolulu reformers will find plenty of aid against vice and crime, but they<br />
will get very little against sports. '<br />
-- -<br />
t -<br />
The most dangerous foe of the moral issue in politics is the fanatic who<br />
runs amuck inits support. ' r<br />
Isnot the Kahuna law being again violated by white visitors to this city? s<br />
.'5 if<br />
1 -<br />
'<br />
V<br />
Wl<br />
,- -'<br />
m<br />
sjL<br />
4k<br />
JL<br />
tl
4<br />
I<br />
1<br />
I<br />
It,<br />
X Advertiser Photo. jj<br />
Scene of Great Enthusiasm Marks Departure of<br />
BBK<br />
(From "Wednesday's Advertiser.)<br />
yesterday afternoon bad a regular Regatta Day appearance,<br />
with crowds who Lad come to eee the transpacific yacht<br />
fcrSM .Pedro aad to bid the gallant little craft Godspeed.<br />
mm aaade. The pciil caw anted<br />
cropped<br />
to come a little after 1 p. m., and by 2<br />
ia atteadaaee and niado a slight delay<br />
with mostc<br />
"<br />
in the yacht's<br />
,<br />
QMS the ariaarte f castiar off all was business aboard the Hawaii. The<br />
ha f the otoces had to be ataderoom for, ropes and<br />
MMHK, M ever aad a package would be received<br />
fftaai a Uni shore.<br />
other gear required<br />
by someone aboard<br />
ia for unbounded admiration as she lay at the wharf. As<br />
datKatr pia, beautifal ia line and finish, and with her colors gaily flying,<br />
Ac "waa, hadead, a thiag ef beauty.<br />
HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, FRIDAY,<br />
RAC<strong>IN</strong>G YACHT HAWAII LEAV<strong>IN</strong>G FOR SAN PEDRO<br />
HAWAII'S HOPES GO<br />
WITHHER BOAT<br />
Cup Racer Made Good Impression<br />
in Brush Outside.<br />
thickest on the Alakea-strc- ot wharf, from which the start<br />
Alt 25 pL m. the yacht left the wharf and sailed to the Era end of the<br />
1 a aart prefiauaary canter for the benefit of the public. Returning,<br />
the Alaleea-stxe- mC<br />
et wharf, she tacked about with such grace that the<br />
ae if by preeoaeerted signal, vented their admiration of the<br />
The;<br />
ia hearty cheers.<br />
agaia headed Ewa way, breaking out sail after sail. Turning<br />
her topsail", and, skimming the water like some great bird,<br />
the ehaaael aad stood out to sea, her long cruise fairly begun.<br />
was oaite a spectacular affair. Flags were mastheaded on<br />
part, aad whea the proper moment arrived every whistle in or<br />
an aloha to the Territory's own boat.<br />
pleatifally sprinkled with launches<br />
to do hoaor to the occasion.<br />
and other small craft,<br />
drawiag aad a bent the Hawaii until almost abreast of Dia- -'<br />
sqaared mond light. Hawaii<br />
the taeer away for Head Tho was first if-I.-.. Dnnrt<br />
the sloop Kameha- - on one side of the tug and then on the! 1 IV W IQtVi<br />
aad workiag to other, like a hawk flying about a larger<br />
of the fcqj boat. By the time bird and annoying it. It was wonder- -<br />
Myrtle beathewse was passed the ful the way she handled in a seaway.<br />
appreciably on tho In an endeavor to ge; some pictures of<br />
the wiod, which in. the boat from the Intrepid, it was nec<br />
the harbor was fight oa aeeoant of the essary to request Captain Harris to luff,<br />
fcaiHiaga, begaa to amke the Hawaii so that the tug could get far enough<br />
ahead. This was don" several timas,<br />
to the taae it was playing in her<br />
It has hcea reported thai it<br />
to get the Hawaii's lee-r.<br />
bat yesterday the report was<br />
aartrae, aad the beautiful vessel<br />
heat to the breeae like a thiag of life.<br />
There was ae hmrriaess about her as in<br />
trials with her eratsing sails,<br />
t ifianacf shows that the<br />
of Captaia Harris was good<br />
rod that the traumas: of the ballast<br />
icaw what was seeded.<br />
Teat11 day Ae KaaMbaseba got hor<br />
1 final. The aiore she stayed with<br />
the rea the awe it was seen that she<br />
vac nalrliwcid In leaviag the "harbor<br />
the echooaer took the :rgalar course out<br />
Vy the spar baoy, while the Kaniehn-rea- a<br />
rot totaeis aad tried to steal to<br />
wtadward of the raejr. This was just<br />
what the skipper of toe big boat was<br />
Wkiac fr. aad he kept throwing his<br />
-- at ur irto tbc wiad apparently wait-- &<br />
JUNE<br />
5,<br />
isaspwippf? 'MyygFTr<br />
1908.<br />
m V<br />
&&&$$- - I I I nt HAWAII - - - ....-,- U<br />
O<br />
CAPTA<strong>IN</strong> S. J.<br />
"I'LL BR<strong>IN</strong>G BACK THAT CUP, OR SAIL <strong>THE</strong> STICKS OUT<br />
OF HER. ALOHA! "CAPTA<strong>IN</strong> HARRIS OFF DIAMOND HEAD.<br />
sail the sticks out of her. Aloha!"<br />
Among those present on the tug<br />
which accompanied the Hawaii to sea<br />
were Acting Governor Mott-Smit- h, L<br />
A. Thurston, II. P. Roth, Captain Tripp,<br />
Richard Young, Trcd Noyes, W. II. D.<br />
I King, Richard Ivers, J A. Coombs, C. C.<br />
j Rhodes, Charles Albrifht, C. S. Crane,<br />
George Henshall, L. S. Conness, and<br />
others.<br />
Came About<br />
The history of the Transpacific yacht<br />
race makes interestingreadinp.<br />
At the time of the destruction of San,<br />
Francisco, the Hawaii Yacht Club was<br />
and the Advertiser photographer got preparing to hold a cruising racefrom<br />
some splendid views of the vessel at San Francisco to Honolulu, open to<br />
her work. the boats of the Pacific Coast. When<br />
Her crew had not been at sea more the disaster made this Impossible as<br />
than twenty minutes before they shiffed planned, the South Coast Yacht Cub,<br />
the natty yachting si its with which of San Pedro," offered to conduct and<br />
they were arrayed wLen they left the manage the race from its own port,<br />
wharf and appeared in working clothes. In the summer of 1906 this contest was<br />
The "Waialae wind made the boat jump, pulled off with three entries, the<br />
and a fine opportunity was given to see schooner Lurline, owned by Commoner<br />
action through the water. She dore H- - H- - Sinclair, of the South" Coast<br />
takes the water cleanly, cutting into it Yacht Club; the ketch Anemone, owned<br />
like a knife and leavos it with scarcely b' JIr-- Tutt- - sf the Xew Yrk Tacht<br />
a ripple, there being absolutely no pull<br />
" tnc Hawaii Yacht Club. The beats<br />
of water noticeable utcrn. From the finished In the order named,<br />
boll buoy to the Castle residence, a 'lis- - At a banquet given at Pearl Harbor<br />
tance of two and a half miles, the time ln nonor of the visiting yachtsmen af- -<br />
ter tne flrst Transpacific race, Commo- -<br />
expired was fourteen minutes. This ore sinc,a,r the advIsability<br />
shows that the Hawaii for the distance of making the race a biennial affair.<br />
was doing almost ten knots an hour. It was then and there practically de- -<br />
fr ' When the wind from the channel was cided that this should be done.<br />
At tne same banquet W. H. Mclner- -<br />
met she started to leive the Intrepid, ny prom!sed that ..jn the next Trans.<br />
K.imrhaneha, bat the Ha-- v and one of the crew of the schooner ex- - pacific race the Islands will send a<br />
waat tj wait, and kept hibitod the end of a roj e to the skipper Doat that will sail circles around the<br />
? " ;e tiaH, vatil when oppo- - of the tug. This was the signal for the<br />
v me Castle residence she was leading<br />
the KaaMkaaseha by a long half mile.<br />
Captain Lane of the lug Intrepid bad<br />
a <strong>TO</strong>rrr rf interested spectators and<br />
2wspapcr nea with hhn, and followed<br />
Lurline and triangles around Anem- -<br />
tnjr to put back to Honolulu.<br />
..Then you. have to buiM your boat<br />
When parting, amid the cheers of in heaven," retorted the owner of the<br />
those on the tug and the crew of the winnInS yacht Lurline.<br />
schooner, Captain Harris was heard ta "W' 5n - J"- hlt<br />
w"l be about the same," answered<br />
remark: "I'll bring oack that cup or jiclnerny, amid tremendous anplause.<br />
-- -.<br />
I Personnel<br />
HARRIS.<br />
01<br />
--REMTWRETCTT<br />
--Williams Photo.<br />
of<br />
Committee<br />
The transpacific yacht committee of<br />
the Hawaii Yacht Club consists of H.<br />
E. Cooper, chairman: W. H. Mclnernv.<br />
secretary; C. T. Wilder, treasurer;<br />
Sanford B. Dole. Col. Samuel Parker,<br />
R. W. Shingle, Alex. Lyle.<br />
This committee was subdivided into<br />
an executive committee consisting of<br />
Messrs. Cooper, Mclnerny and Wilder,<br />
who were entrusted with the work of<br />
carrying out the details of the Hawaii's<br />
construction and equipment.<br />
Henry E. Cooper, of<br />
the Hawaii Yacht Club, was Minister<br />
of Foreign Affairs under the Provisional<br />
Government and the Republic of<br />
Hawaii. He was also Secretary of the<br />
Territory under Governor Dole.<br />
W. H. Mclnerny I? president of the<br />
firm of M. Mclnerny, Ltd., one of Honolulu's<br />
largest and most progressive<br />
C. T. Wilder was Hawaiian Consul<br />
in San Francisco In the latter days of<br />
me monarcny. xouay ne is neaa or<br />
the Tax Bureau.<br />
Sanford B. Dole was the first President<br />
of the Republic of Hawaii and<br />
first Governor of the Territory. Today<br />
he Is United States Judge for the<br />
District of Hawaii.<br />
Colonel Sam Parker was Minister of<br />
Foieign Affairs under the monarchy.<br />
Today he Is famous as a financier and<br />
a conductor of vast ranching enterprises<br />
In the Territory.<br />
Robert W Shingle, president of the<br />
Waterhouse Trust Co., beside being<br />
one of the most piominent business!<br />
men In the community. Is an enthusiastic<br />
sportsman.<br />
Alex Lyle is a shipbuilder of reputation<br />
and superintendent of the Marine<br />
Railway, a structure which has<br />
plajed and is playing an Important<br />
part In the waterfront history of Honolulu.<br />
M--<br />
Wood Cables<br />
Loyd Childs<br />
H. P. Wood, secretary of the Hawaii<br />
in--<br />
"<br />
WA<br />
The yacht Hawaii, Hawaii's entry for the transpacific yacht race from San<br />
ppdro to Honolulu, was specially designed by Crowninshield of Boston, and built<br />
by Sorenson & Lyle, shipbuilders, of Honolulu, for this race. The dimensions<br />
of the Hawaii are as follows :<br />
HULL.<br />
Length over all r. 6D ft.<br />
Length on load water-lin- e<br />
v 52 ft.<br />
Beam over planks<br />
6 in.<br />
4 in.<br />
16 ft. 10 in.<br />
Depth of hold<br />
9 ft.<br />
Draft extreme 10 ft."<br />
Cast-iro- n keel-weight<br />
12 ft.<br />
MASTS AND SPARS ALL OF HOLLOW WOOD.<br />
Mainmast 5C feet long<br />
Maintopmast v 23<br />
Mainboom 37<br />
, Maingaff 33<br />
Foremast . --rrrr. 50<br />
roretopmast 2C<br />
Foregaff v 30<br />
Squarcsail yard ". .42<br />
SAIL AREAS.<br />
Mainsail .".<br />
. 11S9 square feet<br />
Foresail 6S0<br />
Staysail . . . . 107G<br />
Torcstaysail 20S .<br />
Jib<br />
Large jib topsail .'<br />
340<br />
C60<br />
(i<br />
n<br />
Maintopsail 209 , it<br />
Forctopsail I .53<br />
Squarcsail 1020<br />
Total sail area 5541 square feet<br />
There are other light sails, but these constitute the regular working saib<br />
which will be used in the race from San Pedro, which will probably be with a<br />
fair wind from the northwest, over the starl ord Low, for the first few days,<br />
and then with a fresh northeast trade wind, oer the starboard quarter, for<br />
the remainder of the trip.<br />
The distance from San Pedro to Honolulu is 2232 knots. If tho wind is<br />
fresh, as it usually is in July, the Hawaii iihould log an average of 200 knots<br />
a day, which would put her in Honolulu on July 15.<br />
I K,-- lllMll I II 111 I ajHK:n. a<br />
I<br />
W&wmtmJm<br />
MB:HRHH<br />
I Williams Photo.<br />
H. E. Cooper. W. H. Mclnerny. C. T. WUder.<br />
I OF HAWAII YACHT CLUB.<br />
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF TRANSPACIFIC YACHT COM-<br />
MITTEE<br />
Promotion Committee, despatched the<br />
following cable to Loyd Childs, agent<br />
of the committee in Los Angeles, yesterday<br />
afternoon:<br />
.<br />
"Loyd Childs, Los Angeles".<br />
"Yacht Hawaii sailed San Pedro<br />
great enthusiasm.<br />
' "H. P. WOOD."<br />
two-thirt- y,
fi HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1908.<br />
8 - V '... "" - ' s x v.-W- M<br />
J.K. SVBIWMEKHKarkUtM.7.- - .. Z 4 ifcri: - - --- 14";fmivyt- -<br />
ra'-:sp?i- i<br />
-<br />
SEMI-WEEKL- Y<br />
. . '. a<br />
- ,hZ.X (TW A". .TaWV - VTirfliJ.'Stt 3roj j.ijr r.4qicv- JL<br />
<strong>THE</strong> HAWAII EEADY <strong>TO</strong> STAET FOE SAN PEDEO. Advertiser Photo.<br />
ssss$$$s5sssss$ Finanr.p. nf<br />
Cap!. Harris HlHHv.'. ;-<br />
- :A r Yacht Hawaii<br />
his first consideration, he never fails<br />
to take advantage of every sane opportunity<br />
to make time.<br />
Crew of<br />
the Hawaii<br />
The crew of the yacht Hawaii, with<br />
their nationality, age, capacity and<br />
pay, are as follows:<br />
W. H. Stroud, American, 30, mate,<br />
WO per month.<br />
H. Burk, German, 37, second mate, j<br />
?4. '<br />
A. Lundquist, Swede, 23, boatswain,<br />
$50.<br />
Ray B. Rietow, American, 21, purser,<br />
25 cents.<br />
J. L. Hamilton, Ceylonese, 54, cook,<br />
$55.<br />
Sam, Hawaiian, S3, seaman, $40.<br />
Carl Greenn, German, 19, seaman, $40.<br />
Dan Arcia, Hawaiian, IS, cabin boy,<br />
$10.<br />
The crew signed on in the office of<br />
V. S. Commissioner H. N. Almy yesterday<br />
morning:. It will be note'dthat<br />
the cook draws the biggest wages- at<br />
the lot and that the first officer gcis<br />
no more than seaman's wages.<br />
Stroud and Rieto'w are members of<br />
the Hawaii Yacht Club.<br />
First Race<br />
and Second<br />
The first transpacific<br />
follows:<br />
race resulted as<br />
Lurline<br />
Days. Hours. Minutes..<br />
'<br />
12 7 29<br />
Anemone 14- - 0 25<br />
La Paloma.... 15 11 20<br />
In the coming race the starters will<br />
be:<br />
Commodore H. H. Sinclair's schooner<br />
Lurline.<br />
John Kyle's yawl Lady Maud.<br />
L. B. Johnson's yawl Gwendolyn II.<br />
Hawaii Yacht Club's Hawaii.<br />
The South "Coast Yaqht Club offers<br />
two valuable cups for Ihe coming race,<br />
which starts from San Pedro on July j<br />
4. Sir Thomas Lipton will also pre<br />
sent a cup as a trophy, for the winner.<br />
The race Is open to all yachts of ,<br />
not less than 49 feet waterline length,<br />
belonging to any regularly-organize- d<br />
yacht club of any country, without re<br />
strictions as to rig, number of crew,<br />
professional or amateur: or sails, but i<br />
clipper ship of Seas,<br />
which made the record passage of 1P3<br />
pers of that and was<br />
in the shipyards of Medford (Mass.),<br />
Damiscota (Ma.) and Mallory's, Mys- -<br />
days from Honolulu to New Bedford<br />
He also worked on otherno<br />
motive power other than sails shall<br />
be used.<br />
Time allowance will be given, based<br />
on one-ha- lf hour per foot of racing<br />
length for the entire racing on the Rio de<br />
to and having<br />
rail<br />
- famous clip-ti- c<br />
at the Iast-mm- ed Painting 350.47<br />
"Koa finish Lucas<br />
Sovereign the<br />
Bros., J6S.26. $273.S5,<br />
$1086.47; lumber and<br />
day employed materials, $613.72... 2,144.30<br />
Ways 3S6.76<br />
Bills payable 3,000.00<br />
Printing 17673<br />
1.37S.05<br />
(Conn.j,<br />
town Cables '. 31.20<br />
being married on October 24, 1S54. . Commissions<br />
2.00<br />
Mr. Lyle,was construction foreman<br />
for the<br />
Insurance<br />
67.00<br />
late Horace I. Crandall in Wages 13.00<br />
building the Iatter's patent marine<br />
railway<br />
Honolulu Iron Works<br />
in the United' States and Nova<br />
Co<br />
160.39<br />
Uru-leng- th<br />
distance, Scotia' la Plata in Inter-Islan- d<br />
be the load waterline length, at Honolulu, besides<br />
Steam<br />
been superintendent of a marine Navigation Co. .. 23.00<br />
way in Nova Scotia. After the com- Lewers & Cooke.... 63.09<br />
pletion of the works here he became E. O. Hall & Son... I 16S.98<br />
superintendent for Mr. Wilder, con- Union Pacific Trans<br />
tinuing as such until Sorenson & Lyle fer Co 1.50<br />
acquired the lease. His eldest son, Cash - 1,865.54<br />
James Alexander Lyle, is now super-<br />
,<br />
intendent of the railway.<br />
$21,036.S2 $21,036.82<br />
plus one-ha- lf the length of the over<br />
hang.<br />
H<br />
History of<br />
James Lyle<br />
James Lyle is the senior member i<br />
the .firm Sorenson & Lyle, builders !<br />
of the Transpacific yacht Hawa'l i<br />
Since 1SS1 he has as one<br />
of the men of Honolulu to whom any<br />
detail in the line might be<br />
entrusted and would<br />
tention of expert<br />
receive the at- -<br />
his '<br />
of<br />
6t<br />
been regarded<br />
of shipping<br />
an who knew<br />
business and,-wa- s sure to see that1<br />
work was and well done.<br />
James Lyle was Dartmouth, '<br />
honestly<br />
born at<br />
on N.-S- Halifax harbor, ., seventy-fou-r<br />
years ago. He entered shipbuilding<br />
as soon as he quit school. His father<br />
built clipper ships for Cunard. founder<br />
of the, Cunard Steamship Line and<br />
was among the pioneers of steamboat<br />
building. Lately the sidewheel ferry<br />
steamer, Sir Charles Ogle, which he<br />
built about eighty-fiv- e years ago, was ,<br />
noted in the press as the oldest steam<br />
on-th- vessel e British registry.<br />
While a young man James Lyle removed<br />
to the United States, going to<br />
work in the yards of the late eminent<br />
shipbuilder, Donald McKay, at East<br />
Boston. There he helped to build from<br />
start toftnish the illustrated American<br />
"t<br />
!<br />
Vi<br />
The Subscribers to il<br />
The Yacht Hawaii:<br />
Tbe yacht IlaiTaii<br />
bj-- is&poBSored the<br />
Hawaii Yacht Clnb, and Ilenry E.<br />
Cooper, Chas. T. Wild-- r and "W. H. y,<br />
the executive committee of the<br />
clnb, who have borne the burden of<br />
raising the money and superintending<br />
her construction, are entinea io immense<br />
credit for what thoy have done.<br />
Tn fact, but for thoir indefatigable at--<br />
tention to the matter, tile Hawaii would<br />
never have been built; bat after all. it<br />
is the people. of Hawaii, of all classes,!<br />
nationalities and stations id life wfio<br />
have furnished "the sitt-w- s of war.<br />
The following list o subscribers will<br />
maie an interesting study, showing, as<br />
it .does, how broad hni boen the inter- - L<br />
est in tho boat and how general has ,<br />
been the response:<br />
Alexander Young Buliaing Co.<br />
i Alexander Young Hotel Co.<br />
t American Hawaiian S. S. Co.<br />
Ahana & co.t l,w., w. v.<br />
Alexander and Baldwin.<br />
? Allen and Robinson.<br />
Benson, Smith and Co., Ltd.<br />
Bulletin Publishing Co.<br />
Brewer and Co., Ltd., C.<br />
Bishop Insurance Agency, Ltd.<br />
Club Stables Co., Ltd.<br />
Consolidated Soda Works Co.. Ltd.<br />
Castle and Coolie, Ltd.<br />
Coyne Furniture Co. v<br />
Rp-.r.orf- of<br />
Captain S.J. Harris", captafn of the<br />
yactjt Hawaii, came to Hawaii as far<br />
back as 1888.<br />
He was then a sailor before tho<br />
mast on both the barks TV. B. Godfrey<br />
and Forest Queen.<br />
In 1898 he brought the schooner Concord<br />
to Honolulu and two years later<br />
returned to the Coast.<br />
Tke Concord was the' first vessel Io1<br />
enter the harbor after the annexation ,<br />
Hag-raisi- of 1S9S. The flag was<br />
raised i'.<br />
at noon and" Captain Harris<br />
brought the Concord In at 3 p. m. He<br />
sailed the schooner In these waters for<br />
a year and was then for a time In the<br />
employ of the Inter-Islan- d fe llMi '.. - ',--.- af money Donated to the<br />
Bgiiifiifws - I 5H<br />
.? MSmsm Si3F i<br />
S KSHSJSSsTJ.'. S A)iflSVi'rs'5?JPr . See 7<br />
. KMPPi. t:Mairr b<br />
and Wilder<br />
steamship companies.<br />
On returning again from the Coast<br />
lie brought down the schooner Charles<br />
Levi "Woodbury, and sailed her for a<br />
time on the Midway and Laysan Island<br />
run.<br />
"About five years ago he took the<br />
schooner "Woodbury to San Francisco<br />
in 17 2 days, beating the bark St.<br />
Katherine by eight days on the run up.<br />
The time made was remarkably good,<br />
considering that It was the summer<br />
.season.<br />
3Jor the past fifteen months Captain<br />
Harris has been in the employ of the<br />
I.-- I. S. N. Co., and has until recently<br />
been mate of the steamer Niihau.<br />
The company lias granted him a vacation<br />
In order to allow him to captain<br />
the yacht.<br />
Captain Harris has the reputation<br />
of beimr a snlendid seaman, and while<br />
the safety of his vessel is Invariably!<br />
a<br />
The Cost ot Urafi and Sum of<br />
CaUS6.<br />
The trial balance of the yacht Hawail<br />
fund works out as follows: -<br />
Donation's<br />
Benefits<br />
i Bank of Hawaii.. 13S.03<br />
First National Bank<br />
of Hawaii<br />
'<br />
Labor Sorenson &<br />
Lyle 3.9S4.93<br />
F<br />
ALEX. LYIiE<br />
ji<br />
Commodore of the Hawaii Yacht Club, and who, for private reasons,<br />
Vt<br />
resigned the captaincy of the Hawaii.<br />
i t tings, including<br />
standing and run- -<br />
,,nlng rigging 2,677.79<br />
Masts and spars.... 1.04S.S0".-.- .,<br />
-<br />
Hawaiian Dredging Co. ;<br />
Hawaiian Hotel Co.<br />
Hawaiian Electric Co., Ltd.<br />
Hawaiian Trust Co., Ltd.<br />
Hawaiian Fertilizer Co., Ltd.<br />
Hawaiian Mahogany Co:<br />
Hawaiian Pineapple Co.<br />
Hawaiian<br />
Materials Allen &<br />
Robinson, $136.51,<br />
$40S.32, $577; Lew-e- rs<br />
& Cooke, $139.1S,<br />
$133.55, $400; Wilder<br />
& Co., $00.7S, $24.68;<br />
E. O. Hall & Son,<br />
$1.75, $15.58, $17.69;<br />
Hon. Iron Works,<br />
$ S 6 2 .4 0, $444.45,<br />
$59.35; James Nott,<br />
$174.F.O, $52, $46.32;<br />
Criyne Furniture<br />
Co., $201.60, $24.31;<br />
Sorenson & Lyle,<br />
$1640.06 5,450.03<br />
! Discounts 60.S1<br />
j Stationery '<br />
J Plans and specifica- -'<br />
tions 508.00<br />
Shed<br />
406.44<br />
stevedord-n- . -<br />
Hustace, Peck and Co., Ltd.<br />
Hall and Son, E. O.<br />
Hind. Rolph and Co.<br />
Hollister Drug Co., Ltd. l<br />
Hoffschlaeger &Co? i<br />
Hawaiian Gazette CO.<br />
Hong Kee & Co.<br />
s Hackfeld and Co., H.<br />
.Inter -Island Steam Navigation Co.. Ltd.<br />
$15,939.1GyJordan and Co., LtcL, E. 'W.<br />
il,597.3SKunalu Rowing Club.<br />
Lewars & Hooke, ' Ltd.<br />
Love's Bakery.<br />
May and Co., Ltd., Henry.<br />
Matson Navigation Co.<br />
Makiki Fire Station. '<br />
Masters Masonic Lodges.<br />
Manufacture Shoe Co., Ltd. '<br />
Mercantile Printing Co ''<br />
Metropolitan Meat Co.." Ltd.<br />
McCabe, Hamilton & Renhy. Co.; Ltd.<br />
Mclnernv Ltd., M.<br />
Pacific Mail S. S. Co.<br />
Peacock and Co., Ltd., W. C.<br />
Phillips and Co., M.<br />
Pupils, Olaa 12 Miles School.<br />
Pacific Guano & Fertilizer Works.<br />
Portuguese Colony. vv<br />
Seaside Hotel Co.. Ltd.<br />
Schober, Laird & Co.<br />
South Coast Yacht Club.<br />
Sing Chong & Co. ,<br />
Sorenson & Lyle.<br />
Toyo Kisen Kaisha S. S. Go.<br />
union Feed Co., Ltd.<br />
Vnn Hamm-Youn- g Co."<br />
.Longshoreman's Mutual Benefit Asso-f<br />
v '<br />
ciation<br />
! Lewis and Co., Ltd.<br />
,Vieira and Co., J. A. R.<br />
wruer estate, a. u.<br />
Witerhouse Trust Co., Ltd., H.<br />
Wichman and Co., Ltd., H. F.<br />
Waialua Agricultural Co., Employes of<br />
Young Brothers.<br />
Allen, Mrs. . C. Akai, Y.<br />
Aluli. No.i W. Andrade. JoseDh<br />
Aea, Joseph K., Sr. Afong, Albert<br />
Ai, C. K.<br />
Auerbach, R. L. Bank of Hawaii.<br />
Abies, L. C. Bishop Trust Co.<br />
An In, Y. Bonine, B. K.<br />
Apana, L. Brown, John<br />
Aea, Joseph K., Jr. Bllirs, John H.<br />
Achl, W. C. Bush, Hirarn F.<br />
Armstrong, James Barnard, E. "w.<br />
Akai, Y. Bell, Gilson D.<br />
Angus, Geo. H. Bray, Isaiah<br />
Armltnge, Harry Booth. Robt. B.<br />
Aiken, W. O. Barwick, Frank<br />
Abrams, L. Buchly, R. J.<br />
Anderson, R. W. Bower, Geo. A.<br />
Adams, Andrew Brown, Cecil<br />
Atherton, C. H. Belser, J. J.<br />
Atherton, F. C. Bigelow, Geo. L.<br />
Atherton Estate. Bickerton, Spencer<br />
77 if"'"""""""""""""""sttf""""fc3 yjTfffTaJ Jiw7v3KBBBi7"Sli5?' iM JfMH ' ' 'EeSSSKSbbbbbHKiebbbRsVV'Si t<br />
. <strong>THE</strong> HAWAII'S COMPANY. Williams Photo.<br />
A. Lundquist, Sam, E. B. Eietow, C. Greena, Dan Arcia, J. L. Hamilton,<br />
H. Buck, Captain S. J. Harris, W. H. Stroud.<br />
"<br />
v<br />
Beckley, Geo. C. Giles,. H. AVO..v<br />
Blackman, A. J. Goodness; Guy S.<br />
Bayer, Julius Groves, George<br />
Bayer, C. Glnaca, H. G.<br />
Buffandeau, E. Gait, J. R.<br />
Eockus, C. G. Gartenberg, A.<br />
Blcknell, Jas. Guessefeldt, R.<br />
Brash, O. W. Goetz. "W. H.<br />
Bartlett, Beatrix S. Gedge, Norman<br />
Eartlett. Beltlen R. Girvln. C. "W.<br />
BarUett, Ethel GJeoson, Pat<br />
Brown, X.. H. JL Gregory, James<br />
Bechert, F. F. Grieg. T. W.<br />
Brown, E. C. Gartley, A.<br />
Bush, G. F. Gill, Thos.<br />
Bartels, P. H. Grossman, M. E.<br />
Banning, B. R. Grinbsum, M. S.<br />
Baldwin, F. F. Galr, Carter<br />
Baldwin. H. P. Gait, John<br />
Breckons, R. "W. Gay, Francis<br />
Babbitt, W. II. Gaines, J. D.<br />
m.l.M c TP Glffard, "W. M.<br />
w"<br />
BTett, John Harvey, F. R.<br />
Bryan, W. A. Hojstein, H. L.<br />
Bath, E. R. HolokahiW, W. H.<br />
Buck, John A. Henning, W.<br />
Brown. "W. E. Harvey, Fred. E.<br />
Brown, Chas. A. Hayes. Dr. Henry<br />
BtV.ey. W. A. Holloway, Flora<br />
BrUshelli, F. Hustace, C, Jr.<br />
Ealdwin, H. P. Haneberg, A,<br />
Bolte, C. Home, Perley L.<br />
Bailey, J. S. Holt, Jas. L.<br />
Brown. R C. Hills. W. J.<br />
Burnette,.Madeline Hills, John<br />
C. and Henry G. Hind, Geo. U.<br />
B&hrans, Mrs. C. Hong; Quon<br />
Halstead, Frank<br />
Collins, C. P.". Humburg. J. F.<br />
Crane, H. S. Hatch. F. M.<br />
Coombs, Walter R. Hutchinson. E. L.<br />
Crane, C. S. Holloway, C. S.<br />
Cashman, D. J. Hapai. Henry C.<br />
Dimond SCo., W. VT.<br />
First National "Bank.<br />
Ewa Plantation Company Employes.<br />
Ehlers and Co., B. F.<br />
Girls' Industrial School.<br />
Gonpalves and Co., Ltd., M. A.<br />
Honolulu Iron Works Co., Ltd. Culman, H. Howell. W. L.<br />
Honolulu Iron Works Co., Ltdi (Black- Chu Gem Hastings, Miss<br />
smith Shop).<br />
"""<br />
Croaiex, Geo. A. Alice<br />
Honolulu Plantation Co., Ltd.<br />
Cowes, John F. HoOman,-'Hael<br />
Honolulu Rapid Transit &,. Land Co-- .<br />
Ltd.<br />
Honolulu Brewing and Malting Co.,<br />
' -<br />
Ltd.<br />
- - -<br />
Honolulu Baseball League." t .<br />
' ,<br />
Carden, J. J. Hoffman, Florence<br />
Qarden, W. T. Hoftjnan, Harry<br />
Carden, Jack Hooking, Sybil<br />
Carden, Edward Hao, D. K.<br />
Clark, F. E.. Dr. Hulu, M. K.<br />
Cleveland, H. W. Hawes, A. G.<br />
Cooke, Goo. P. Hamano, H.<br />
Campbell, E. M. Hendry. E. R.<br />
demons, Chas. F. Hatch. Frank L.<br />
Castle, W. R. Hemenwny, C. R.<br />
Carter, H. C. Henry. William<br />
CSunMing Howlnnd, J. H.<br />
Ca'rtwright, Bruce Konpr, "W. L.<br />
Cohen, J. C. Hustace, Frank<br />
Cgllins, C. R. Hughes, John A.<br />
Crook, L. R. Hutchlns, C. J.<br />
cqok; M. K. , Harrison, Fred.<br />
Cook, Leon H. Harris. VI. W., Jr.<br />
Crozier, Chas. Holmes, Henry<br />
Campbell. Marston Herbert, Allan<br />
Campbell C. 5. Hind, R. R.<br />
Cooke, A. f Hitchcock, H. R.<br />
Conkllng, D.T Hustace, Chas., Jr.<br />
Cummins, T.. P. Hedemann, C.<br />
- Z<br />
Charlock, Chas. HeU- - G. F.<br />
i Castle, W. L. Hosmer, R. S.<br />
Clark, W. A. Hastings, Mrs. Alice<br />
Carter, A. W. Hitchcock. D. H.<br />
Castle, Geo. P. Hocking, Genevieve<br />
Clark, A. F.<br />
Cunha, E. S. Ingram, Sirs. R. C.<br />
Cntton, Robert Irvine, A.<br />
Castle, J.-B- . Isanberg, R. M.<br />
Cooke, C. M. IsjetxJiwg", Cw. B.<br />
Cooper, Geo. O, Ihihl, Isaac.<br />
Constabel, A. Ingalls, A. B.<br />
Cooper, H. E. Ivers, Rr<br />
Cooper, C. B. Irwin, W. G.<br />
Castle, A. L. Isenberg.Mrs. V. R.<br />
Crane, Ezra Isenberg, R. A.<br />
Carlson, F. Isenberg, A. H.<br />
Carter. A. W. Isenberg, D. P. R.<br />
Cooke, J. P Ingham, Ed.<br />
Carter, Geo. R.<br />
Campbell, Mr. and Jones, P. C.<br />
Mrs. A. J. Jorgensen, J.<br />
Crownlngberg, Judd, A, F.<br />
David Jenkins, C F.<br />
Cooke, Miss Alice Jaeger; J. E.<br />
Cummins, Mrs. J.A. Johnson, Sam<br />
Jordan, R. A.<br />
Damon, S. M. Jarrett, Paul J.<br />
Dekum, Edward Johnston, Mark G<br />
Dulsenberg, E. G. Jungclnus, A. H.<br />
Dunkhase, Carl Johnston, II. J.<br />
Dole. James D.<br />
Dickson, W. A. Kimball, Geo. P.<br />
Dougherty, Jas. D. Keola, Jas. N. K.<br />
Dyer, Jas. D. Kakanl, L. K.<br />
Dyer, W. J. Kuwabara, J.<br />
"<br />
Deas, A. A. Kelly, Thomas<br />
Doyle, Chester King, C. Et<br />
Dole, S. B. Kaneakua, J. M.<br />
Dillingham, B. F. Knudsen, A. F.<br />
Dillingham, W. F. Kelly, Jno. M.<br />
Dillingham. Harold Kellogg, L. G.<br />
Dreier, August, Jr. Kalanlanaole, J.<br />
Dreler, Edward Kennedy, Jns. D.<br />
du Rol, C. KalauokalanI, D.,<br />
Denlson, Geo. P. Jr.<br />
Dowsett, A. C. Kopke, E.<br />
Dodge, S. Kennedy, Jas. A.<br />
Dodge, F. B. Klebahn, F. W.<br />
Devlin, Jas. Kinney, W. A.<br />
Davres, T. CHve King, T. V.<br />
Da vies, Geo. F. Kekumano, S. L.<br />
Dowsett, Miss King. G. W. R.<br />
Alleen King, Robt. D.<br />
Dowsett, Llewellyn Kuneua, J. H.<br />
Dexter, Mrs. S. King, L. C.<br />
DIetz, G. Kelly, Jas. J.<br />
Kerr, H. L.<br />
Elgin, R. R. Knudsen, E. A.<br />
Ewart. A. F. King. T. J.<br />
Eakin, C. C. King, Chas. E.<br />
Emerson, N. B. Ivrumbhaaft C. C.<br />
Enos. John B. Kawananakoa,<br />
Evans, J. C. Princess<br />
Efilnger, John Kanakanui, S. M.<br />
Enston, 1L C. KukeaChaa.<br />
Emerson, A. W. Kalna, Miss Helen<br />
Eame8, A. W. Kruger, F. J.<br />
Kingsbury. Mrs.<br />
Farley, J. K. Kearns, Mrs. A.<br />
Fuller, Capt. A.<br />
Fogarty, E. P. Low. Bben<br />
Frear, W. F. Long, Caries A.<br />
Fernandez, Jos. Levenson. Jas. D.<br />
Fernandez, John Levy, J. M.<br />
Fitzpatrlck, T. J. Lewers, Robert<br />
Farwell,vJ. v. Little, John<br />
Fuller, Geo. G. Lyons, John E.<br />
Francis, H. S. Lam Man Beu<br />
Fairweather. N. S. Low, J. S. '<br />
trazier, Chas. R. Lucas, John<br />
-<br />
Friend<br />
Lucas, Harry F.<br />
Fujiyama. S. B. F. Lam Sav Kan<br />
Francis, J. W. Lyser, F. C.<br />
Forster. C. M. V. LInderman, F. J.<br />
Forbes, W. J. Lau Tang<br />
Faye, H. P. Lake, H. T.<br />
Fairchlld, Geo. Ludington, C. C.<br />
Frear, Mrs. W. F. Little. Geo.<br />
Luiz, Joseph<br />
Gundelflnger, S. Llttlejohn, C. T.<br />
'(Continued on Page Nine.)<br />
n<br />
Ef<br />
pern<br />
4 fenci<br />
now '<br />
down<br />
that<br />
Pat<br />
cable<br />
that tl<br />
lulu B<br />
lulu f.<br />
will a<br />
Korea.<br />
4 ional<br />
Tha:<br />
ad I!<br />
"HAT??<br />
Xett<br />
trary,<br />
Leagai<br />
are sta<br />
tke a<br />
last Si<br />
Joy<br />
fin of<br />
to plai<br />
. pr.<br />
Jeanne<br />
la st<br />
the tn<br />
catire<br />
to se<br />
good n<br />
any pi<br />
class h<br />
J<br />
It is i<br />
Good-tabl- e.<br />
If yot<br />
not He<br />
Ever<br />
The c<br />
Hard<br />
Spoils<br />
crazy.<br />
Isn't r<br />
You c<br />
win foU<br />
O. E.<br />
Altaraal<br />
Cx, sa:<br />
Olntraec<br />
itching<br />
a great<br />
and icl<br />
caused 1<br />
noying<br />
scratchl:<br />
consciou<br />
nua?ber<br />
the silg.<br />
of Doar<br />
catiort g<br />
and Itc<br />
Ointmea<br />
be."<br />
Doan's<br />
ache Kk"<br />
ists an.I<br />
bos (six<br />
,ojj recel<br />
JSpas C<br />
Islands.
&<br />
f<br />
4W<br />
Sports df<br />
m<br />
for<br />
-<br />
tb!s u would to champion<br />
l. ln talk of in , in and gratitude mean a struggle with<br />
.-- pr.ctie.lry J best tourist sailor welcomes<br />
fact recent<br />
SEsaturvc<br />
Xtt. .r is in receipt of . letter of<br />
peaa-isatr- o from the Park Coraniis- -<br />
MT& crae to<br />
C n Park<br />
tta-.ur- indicated<br />
an issue<br />
reason<br />
the curses torrid<br />
exhibition of<br />
i" be during<br />
l-- pd to tt terms contain-<br />
ed : 5ii letter, mi . is prepariri to<br />
fmA '.Licps ahead as rapidly possi-M- e.<br />
SV. have been received from four<br />
--<br />
i k'U.r the coBStmeuoa of the<br />
imm ko-- i Meaehera.<br />
tl- - nj Mill has Imi swarded the<br />
W<br />
-- ..:. lis bid feeing lowest, and<br />
twm imdrr highest Md.<br />
W Kuii polo nam H bard work,<br />
am word iaon from Gardea Isinnd<br />
taai '" k boys there are confident<br />
of tstinc t.rk the '.rophy with tl'ic.<br />
Tt i- -.n troofer mill orobablv be a<br />
h<br />
(hah.<br />
IE I<br />
M stiver can.<br />
Me<br />
as<br />
n a if it woald be op to<br />
'i JAasi teaT to show the<br />
rioer of Kaaai a poiat or two<br />
pla mp.<br />
La for a loaf; bees aax--<br />
rw naUeta with Kaaai, ami<br />
tti gauatlet has been thrown<br />
i, Che latter it is to be hoped<br />
a Masai anil accept the gage.<br />
the<br />
Th Oahs lailege aiae the rub-li- -r<br />
nh IS-- Lwbm CoUege oa the 1'un-ako- ai<br />
4iaaaoad Taacrday.<br />
It be uawmbtnl that the Saiats<br />
ttoe aeraaA.<br />
the<br />
Th .,- - yctnerdaj a good one,<br />
iif - Li& s to 4.<br />
H.j. i.T ibr raaahoBS, struck oat<br />
jpiw :; baaes 00 balls, asd al- -<br />
Llt.<br />
.11 a. f r St. Laaia, struck oat 7<br />
M-- a, Ki,1Lr4 t, ami alhwafd 12 hits.<br />
Tl wtn tmomt&z ,<br />
Ohi.-- Calage. Loais.<br />
lu I l ...2 .e Cfemeat<br />
Dawn- - Espiadn<br />
1!.-- ha lb.... Hoopai<br />
Aim.. --A KahewalA<br />
Hoaj. ...... .....aw ....... agiish<br />
J. . ......sb.... Ayau<br />
Taci.-.ri- 4 if Pelio<br />
Lra-t- . .cf English<br />
Da. If...". .Soiehi<br />
IW aaafirefe rR Ftmacx aad Welch.<br />
rauich. Ckacaa i ia receipt of a<br />
cahlr fraai Xeio Uairersity, stating<br />
that they accept the offer of 'the Hono-lal- a<br />
IhtataB Leaae to coaae to Hono-iat- a<br />
far a aeries at gajaes. The team<br />
will mm here Jahr 7 br the S. S.<br />
Avrea<br />
That mean that the great interaa- -<br />
aa rrn- - ) etwee Keio,.Saat& Clara<br />
,1 ad liiitii wiil abtolately take place.<br />
BAKNEY<br />
PAY <strong>TO</strong> PLAY<br />
reports to the eoa- -<br />
i '. the Hoaolara Jlasebail<br />
- d.i trasteee of the leagae<br />
are standi; Lack of Lmpire Bower in<br />
-- :. .e he toak agaiaat Baraer Joy<br />
haat Saturday.<br />
Ji will ioatrrelT have to pay his<br />
f - drtUant before he is allowed<br />
? c a Vic gave again. Xo<br />
: iilar. is the staad of both<br />
Wc ;.!- - rrxMees ia the autter.<br />
?a --n porsin Bower the leagne aad<br />
t- - - hare the approval of the<br />
vniiT - !iriaje coamaaity, want<br />
leaa halt ad who doa't pay<br />
mnmty t Kstea to back-tal- k from<br />
mtmytr. no matter of bow high<br />
be may be.<br />
J II<br />
It & at Tast in Honolulu.<br />
Coas watiiitd saople are often<br />
table.<br />
IT J Tail a the reason, you would<br />
aat be saxyeH.<br />
hare Itcbtog piles?<br />
ooactaat Ushlag sensation.<br />
Sard to soar, border to get relief.<br />
brl m yoojr tapor, nearly drives you<br />
ami rcBaC aad care a long-fe- lt want?<br />
ooai brnve relief and cure If you<br />
M fallow tats advice.<br />
O. X. OoUar. saperintendent of<br />
Ahaaaaaa ramber mills, Brunswick,<br />
saps: I caa Doan's<br />
Qtatsaeac very highly. I used It for<br />
I11M m pes froca which I have been<br />
a. creax FeCerer. A. constant burning<br />
sad Hchtag existed which not only<br />
cm tateese acony but was<br />
ag<br />
aad mortifying, as I was<br />
aad dfgcfng almost<br />
to pet reUef. I used any<br />
aaaWr af remedies bat nothing "had<br />
tae Mjte effect until I got a box<br />
of D" OtataMMrt. The first applt-eatto- B<br />
cave aie reBef aad burning<br />
aad lichin; sooa stopped. toan's<br />
Oietateat k an that it is claimed to<br />
ZkaaaV OSatmeat and Doan's Back<br />
aabe Sddaey VtBe are sold by all chem<br />
2sts at 50 cents<br />
"box fix boxes SZSn or will be mailed<br />
in receipt of price Holllster<br />
i? Cl, Agents for the Hawaiian<br />
JUNE 5, 1908.<br />
pill TIE MOST<br />
fired lands<br />
hei<br />
GETS mi<br />
II<br />
Hn-07Tr- .r t w m iRr.mt Vancouver, b. c. May is. it is<br />
( literary lights, from Mark Twain and JaPan's proudest boast that has publicity her adherence to the doctrine<br />
.Robert Louis Stevenson to Jack Lon- -' for ner sworn ally naval of dcor, has adopted a<br />
don and the Honolulu Promotion Com<br />
mittee, have made much of the beau- - "<br />
of Hawaii in truth lhp land nt greatest oceans. Indeed, many Japan-(fo- r the integrity China, she is matur--<br />
neer-endln- g spring Is a paradise for ese statesmen base their assertions that plans that can have no purpose if<br />
tourists. It is land, longed-fo- r land lnere win De " ln ule near leaiure uu not involve passing oi<br />
nftor- - nt lwtt ,-- ,ini- - n h .oan'lon - United States, large parts Chinese territory Into<br />
polo always beho:d8 not dare<br />
ronneetion both even which would<br />
tketis<br />
the I<br />
that the treaty<br />
the<br />
MUST<br />
held<br />
has<br />
for<br />
the<br />
the<br />
a<br />
arifl<br />
was<br />
r..m<br />
W.<br />
the<br />
mac<br />
par.<br />
tHe<br />
who<br />
SappHeet<br />
To<br />
Ga recommend<br />
very<br />
yenatefcte?<br />
per<br />
toy<br />
she<br />
mightiest open she<br />
the that the<br />
the<br />
01 out. xiawau, lying wunin uie<br />
border of tropics, is yet so fortu-<br />
nately that It Is b'est with all<br />
the beauties of tropic lands while es- -<br />
him use caping the of zone.<br />
the<br />
at<br />
the<br />
tia<br />
won<br />
&.<br />
m<br />
St.<br />
p,i-- . leajrae<br />
the<br />
the<br />
nicy<br />
just<br />
the<br />
the<br />
the<br />
the<br />
The beneficent trade-win- ds sweep over<br />
war uie ireaiy uiai<br />
tho Tslajicle nparlv th n-h-! voir<br />
the contracts bound to<br />
melting all seasons Into one,<br />
nnp nrlne- support uie uuier 111 case war wiui<br />
Here, then, Is the charm of tropical<br />
seas, the wealth of tropical fruits, the<br />
delight of tropical flowers; ln short,<br />
the land that hasnever known and<br />
never will know the sere and yellow<br />
leaf. Kere, too, is that mysterious rug-gedne- ss<br />
of volcanic piles which tells<br />
that Hawaii, most favored of lands. Is<br />
also the youngest of the isles of the<br />
sea. Nothing is gray the barest and<br />
nf vaJmtia clrloa la ticv&v ,nen who read current history to<br />
neutral in color. A floating over<br />
valley, or clinging to mountain J'ur'"Be J",1, u" '"" "s ku"u<br />
side, may suggest shadows of gray, but<br />
K she is to her plac<br />
is more in it of ashes of roses or alize.s thj"<br />
the of the turquoise.<br />
The modern globe trotter demands<br />
that th,e beauties of nature be served<br />
to him on a golden salver with a'l the<br />
latest conveniences. Hawaii this<br />
demand. Honolulu's hotels are of the<br />
best and varied to suit taste.<br />
one f them, a great pile of stone and<br />
mortar, one might think himself liv-<br />
ing In a Broadway hostelry. In anoth<br />
er, framed in a "setting of exotic flow-<br />
ers, one finds still lingering the atmos<br />
phere of the old Hawaiian royalty. Tet<br />
another spreads its quiet verandas<br />
where surf of the finest bathing<br />
beach in the world threatens to break<br />
over the breakfast table.<br />
One is wh-ske- in a rapid automobile<br />
over a perfect road of asphalt and ma-<br />
cadam to magnificent preolpicp<br />
the Pali, the trysting place of the<br />
winds and the grandstand before which<br />
BK suae -- ..ji,. nieninva nno nf th<br />
. . ,,. .. ..,..j -- .<br />
most Inspiring views in the world. One<br />
takes a Pullman car on the toy rail- -<br />
road for a journey to the side<br />
of the Island. In Hawaii, and Hawaii<br />
only, can one have his dinner on a<br />
hotel veranda overlooking a lake<br />
living fire in the crater ofthe greatest<br />
active volcano on the globe. This great<br />
sight Is only four days and forty dol<br />
lars from Honolulu. To Hawaii's na-<br />
tural beauties, and to its perfect cli-<br />
mate, havp been added all the conveni<br />
ences which modern American civiliza-<br />
tion can suggest for the care and en-<br />
tertainment of the visitor, be he sight-<br />
seer, commercial traveler or prospec-<br />
tor. .<br />
To most American visitors, except<br />
those who live along the PacifiiTCoast,<br />
it is the otr Hawaii<br />
which Is its "most striking feature. A<br />
newspaper in an Ohio city a few weeks<br />
ago caused muph amusement in Hono-<br />
lulu by its astonished comment upon<br />
a copy of the Honolulu Pacific Com.<br />
mercial Advertiser, which by chance<br />
had fallen into the hands a Buckeye<br />
editor. The Ohio man thought it worth<br />
comment in his columns, and in an<br />
amazed tone informed the public of the<br />
fact that Honolulu' was a place where<br />
people not only conformed to the con-<br />
ventions of life, but had a newspaper.<br />
letters that constantly come to<br />
Honolulu it is to be seen that the<br />
Ohio editor's Ignorance upon the sub<br />
ject of actual conditions in this really<br />
progressive part of the United States<br />
is widespread. In the Pacific Coast<br />
states, to which Honolulu is as near<br />
as Xew York, the people know better,<br />
but east of the Bocky Mountains Ha- -<br />
waiians complain that the prevailing<br />
ideas of these Islands are obtained<br />
from pictures qf the of Captain<br />
Cook ln the geography.<br />
Sandwich Islands were savage a<br />
century ago, but the modern circum-<br />
navigator of the globe who stops in<br />
Honolulu will have no need to look<br />
at the Stars and Stripes to tell<br />
that he Is in an American town, with<br />
all the American attributes. Mer-r- v<br />
"Widow hat. the Diabolo top, an.l<br />
all the little fads and fancies of our<br />
national life have their run In Hono-<br />
lulu just as promptly as they dr. in<br />
Qulncy. Illinois, or Bangor, Maine.<br />
It is interesting to know that wire-<br />
less telegraphy was first used in prac-<br />
tical commercial affairs in Hawaii.<br />
The first commercial system installed<br />
by Marconi was that connecting the<br />
islands of the Hawaiian group, and this<br />
preceded for some time the connection<br />
of the islands with the jest of the<br />
world by submarine cable. ques-<br />
tion of inter-islan- d communication had<br />
always been a perplexing one. Ho-<br />
nolulu was the capital, bolh politically<br />
and financially, and the people were<br />
.. . , X... l.<br />
lrrl-- Pul lo grVlt intuiiveiiieiiw! "i l"c "c<br />
cessity of waiting upon communication<br />
by slow. and irregular steamers from<br />
island to Island. Experiments werfe<br />
made toward an Inter-Islan- d cable, but<br />
as the channels are so very deep the<br />
shore ends were cut off on the sharp<br />
coral reefs almost before the cable was<br />
i laid.<br />
Once the people turned to carrier<br />
pigeons as their saviors. Pigeons were<br />
bought, cotes erected, and arrange-<br />
ments made to forward messages and<br />
letters from one island to another by<br />
means of the homing birds. But the<br />
pigeons failed to become a commercial<br />
success. Then came Marconi's discov-<br />
ery of the wireless. Hawaii was first<br />
to see the practicability of the discov-'er- y.<br />
Marconi was induced to set up<br />
stations on the various Islands, but as<br />
his system was then In an experiment-<br />
al stage the service was inadequate and<br />
not reliable. The Territorial Legisla-<br />
ture had faith enough to grant the<br />
Wireless Company a subsidy, and it<br />
struggled on with Its experiments. Fi-<br />
nancial success finally crowned the ef-<br />
forts of those Interested, although not<br />
until the briginal company had failed.<br />
Xow one walks a telegraph of-<br />
fice ln Honolulu and a telegram<br />
to anv point ln Islands in just as<br />
matter of fashion as he would send<br />
a wire from New Tork to any other<br />
city of the Union.<br />
In 1903 Pacific cable reach-<br />
ed Honolulu there was a day of great<br />
ENGUSH ALLY<br />
in the world, and that between policy of preference and ex-the- m<br />
can the two elusive nrivilpere: standing<br />
fact<br />
earaivaIjFor<br />
between<br />
oahus won<br />
rubber<br />
N<strong>IN</strong>E<br />
COME<br />
Xot'ha1nliiij,<br />
HAWAIIAN GAZETTE,<br />
situated<br />
PnnahousTi.t.-- t<br />
KEIO<br />
WILL<br />
FRIDAY,<br />
Jl<br />
England and Japan binds them to<br />
make common cause the one with the<br />
other when either Is In war<br />
with another nation. It will be recalled<br />
that prior' to the close of the Rus--<br />
T 1L. X A J .!- -.<br />
fr<br />
agreeu<br />
should each be<br />
the and<br />
that<br />
01<br />
In<br />
aad<br />
The<br />
him<br />
The<br />
The<br />
Into<br />
fact<br />
two or more foreign nations. The<br />
treaty made since then binds the one<br />
to fight for the other if even only one<br />
nation is opposed.<br />
But would Great Britain stand by her<br />
treaty In case war should be brought<br />
about between the United States and<br />
Japan? To answer this quest'on there<br />
are many conditions and circumstances<br />
which tend to point to one conclusion.<br />
To begin with it is a fact known of all<br />
cloud<br />
good<br />
the the<br />
the<br />
the<br />
the<br />
the<br />
the<br />
in the English heart. England re- -<br />
there<br />
keep<br />
heart<br />
meets<br />
other<br />
Frm<br />
death<br />
sends<br />
when<br />
the Mistress of the Seas, and her<br />
primacy In the commercial world she<br />
must hold on to every bit of Interna-<br />
tional trade she now has, and lose<br />
none of the opportunities that the<br />
future has in store for her.<br />
But Japan, sworn ally that sho is,<br />
is Just now waging a commercial war<br />
against British interests that is pro-<br />
voking many an outcry from British<br />
traders. She is going Into India, into<br />
China, into Korea everywhere that<br />
British trade opportunities are to be<br />
found, and Is there converting war al-<br />
lies Into commercial enemies. That the<br />
result Is a diminution of England's<br />
respect for her side partner in the East<br />
is as plain as day. Already the mut-terln- gs<br />
of discontent are heard and<br />
evidences are multiplying that Japan's<br />
unfair commercial policies are begin-<br />
ning to react against her. A promin<br />
ent British author states that English<br />
public opinion is fast against<br />
the Japanese. He says:<br />
"England and Japan are in a1liance.<br />
But it would be foolish"to ignore the<br />
fac,t that the imperial and commercial<br />
policy Japan must inevitably, if<br />
maintained, strain this alliance to the<br />
breaking point within a single gener-<br />
ation. The wholesale emigration of<br />
Japanese coolies will Inevitably create<br />
problems Involving a choice for Eng<br />
land between a cordial friendship with<br />
our colonies and a partnership with<br />
Japan; we will have to decide In China<br />
between offending our ally and main-<br />
taining our treaty rights, and commer-<br />
cial opportunities unimpaired; and ln<br />
Korea we are already facing the al-<br />
ternative of protest, or the limitation<br />
of a great future market.<br />
".For years England and America<br />
were obsessed by the vision a great<br />
Russia, all powerful and all knowing,<br />
moving forward Into the Far East al-<br />
most with the resistlessness of fate.<br />
Men marked what was thought to be<br />
her campaign of silent, exclusive, and<br />
apparently unceasing self aggrandize-<br />
ment, and the of Russia was<br />
witnessed with dread, for it was the<br />
belief that where Russian power spread<br />
the prestige and commerce of other<br />
a? V V ? w w w w O w iJ w i3 w w w''<br />
rejoicing. The newspapers issued spe-<br />
cial cable and for the first<br />
time in its history Honolulu knew what<br />
was going on in the world on the same<br />
day that It happened. But the same<br />
newspapers which made so much of<br />
the cable news had been using press<br />
specials by wireless for many months.<br />
In fact, Honolulu had. the first paper<br />
In the world to employ the wireless<br />
telegraph as a news-gatheri- agency.<br />
Of course, the cable did much for<br />
Hawaii. Until five years ago when a<br />
steamer came into Honolulu from San<br />
Francisco, almost the entire town<br />
would be down at the dock yelling to<br />
the passengers on board ship, "What's<br />
the news?" and the passengers would<br />
take delight in surprising the islanders<br />
with their ld San Francisco<br />
Information. Now there are few Ha--<br />
waiians to meet the boats, and the<br />
passengers are anxiously inquiring,<br />
"What has happened In the world dur<br />
ing the six days we have been at sea?"<br />
The traveler comes from the<br />
Orient finds Honolulu the beginning of<br />
the Occident.- - A party of fifty Japa-<br />
nese, merchants and bankers, who had<br />
never been away from their home<br />
country before, recently started on va<br />
trip around the world. The first for-<br />
eign soil they touched was the Amer-<br />
ican port of Honolulu. The Alexander<br />
Toung Hotel was an eye-openi- crash<br />
which showed them the difference be-<br />
tween the Occident and the Orient.<br />
This is the largest building in Hono-<br />
lulu. It Is six stories high, and has<br />
large electric elevators manned by<br />
thoroughly reckless young Americans.<br />
The Empire of the Rising Sun does<br />
not boast of an elevator in its entire<br />
domain. About fifteen' Japanese crowd<br />
ed into the elevator and" asked to go<br />
to the roof garden. They never had<br />
been in an elevator before and the<br />
boy knew it. They went to<br />
the roof garden at express schedule,<br />
screaming and yelling and holding onto<br />
the iron work on the inside of the cag3.<br />
When they got to the top they de-<br />
clined to get out and asked to go to<br />
the basement. For practically half the<br />
afternoon the Japanese around-the-wor- ld<br />
party, fifty leaalng merchants<br />
and manufacturers, wore chasing up<br />
and down in the elevator with all tho<br />
delight of an American hoy on his first<br />
roller coaster party.<br />
There Is an old Egyptian saying to<br />
the effect that he who once tastes Nile<br />
water longs for it evermore, and the<br />
same principle Is true of Hawaii. The<br />
traveler who follows the trail until it<br />
leads him to this enchanted land of<br />
eternal spring finds Its Influence well-nig- h<br />
irresistible when he takes riis<br />
leave of it. No matter to what<br />
he owes allegiance, he must pleasantly<br />
remember the deep-slashe- d, cloud-capp- ed<br />
mountains, the laughing break-<br />
ers, the crimson flowers, and the<br />
pleasure-lovin- g people who always<br />
feast and sing in happy Hawaii.<br />
' n.VEEKLY Y<br />
nations declined. Today the shadow<br />
of the Russian bestriding the<br />
world from the German Ocean to the '<br />
gates of India, overlord of Persia,<br />
siipreme In the councils of Peking,<br />
! master of Korea, owner of Manchuria,<br />
has passed.<br />
"Now we "know the weakness of the<br />
I Russian giant. But that which men<br />
yesterday believed Russia to be, Japan<br />
.now is. Proclaiming with all possible<br />
the the<br />
power national<br />
thev command nrnnlnal.v<br />
I<br />
tie<br />
of<br />
ing<br />
var ine<br />
of<br />
1 joy<br />
involved<br />
I<br />
of<br />
..<br />
of<br />
of<br />
i<br />
-<br />
turning<br />
of<br />
of<br />
growth<br />
editions<br />
who<br />
elevator<br />
clime<br />
Colossus<br />
Japanese hands; Korea she has al<br />
ready occupied as her own particular<br />
territory. She does not threaten India<br />
from the north x by the advance of<br />
armies, but her teachers are stirring<br />
up unrest among the people of India,<br />
and holding up visions of a united<br />
East. And her official agents have for<br />
two years been at wort on a great<br />
trade campaign there aimed directly<br />
at Lancashire's most profitable mark-<br />
et." These consederatlons ln themselves<br />
are pretty' strong arguments why<br />
Great Britain would not take the side<br />
of Japan in an American-Japanes-e war.<br />
But they are not half so strong as the<br />
fact that the only thing whic'i could<br />
bring about a war between the United<br />
States and Japan is the very question<br />
in which England has even a greater<br />
interest than America. Wherever<br />
England has a colony she finds Japan<br />
longing to send some of her surplus<br />
population there. Wherever the Union<br />
Jack Is supreme the Japanese woull<br />
like to become residents. As he gains<br />
more power, as he recuperates from<br />
the devastations of war, that Tace pride<br />
and self assertiveness which Is char-<br />
acteristic of the Japanese will, if it<br />
sees the opportunity, insist on the<br />
riirht to en anvwhere at any time. And<br />
that means intense opposition In the<br />
English colonies. It therefore is but<br />
a diplomatic necessity that England<br />
shoulduphold America ln her deter-<br />
mination to restrict Japanese immigra-<br />
tion. Aside from the great power of<br />
kindred blood ln uniting nations In case<br />
of war, the Interests of the two Anglo-Saxo- n<br />
nations are identical in the mat-<br />
ter at stake.<br />
But more than this. England knows<br />
too well the might and power of the<br />
United States. Canada is a permanent<br />
hostage for peace between the two<br />
countries. Our armies could strike the<br />
great trunk line railroads and stop her<br />
food supply from there. Our own food<br />
supply could be cut off from her, and<br />
privateers could prevent the wealth<br />
of India reaching her shores. It is true<br />
she would have the larger navy. But<br />
how much more would she have at<br />
stake. Though the sun never sets on<br />
her possessions, neither does it ever<br />
set on the opportunities to strike her.<br />
We have enough, if all comes to all,<br />
to support a war for years and years.<br />
We could live a hundred years with-<br />
out buying a dollars' worth of stuff<br />
from abroad. Our power of national<br />
endurance is beyond that of both Eng-<br />
land and Japan. We have a great<br />
deal at stake in case war should<br />
come, it Is true, but not nearly so much<br />
as England. If England and Japan<br />
could tale the Philippines from us, wo<br />
could certainly take a wining uanaaa<br />
from them, and there are the British<br />
West, Indies at our door.<br />
Beyond this Is to be remembered the<br />
the away settled<br />
ern Hemisphere has had its existence<br />
guaranteed by the Monroe Doctrine,<br />
the upholding of which is essential to<br />
their future security and the integrity<br />
of the Western Hemisphere. They<br />
would be expected to contribute to the<br />
upholding of the power that has been<br />
their greatest assurance against for- -,<br />
eign aggression. Add to this the moral.<br />
If not the physical, support of one or<br />
more of those European which<br />
are jealous of England's sway of tho<br />
seas, and you have a combination<br />
which even the British lion would not<br />
care to tackle.<br />
Another item which would add to the<br />
situation would be the unrest of India.<br />
It will be recalled that once before<br />
England's war in India was one of the<br />
things which brought about victory<br />
for Uncle Sam. Today revolt is in the-ai- r<br />
In this same India. Let England<br />
become engaged in an exhausting war<br />
with the States, and India will<br />
certainly make the most of the op-<br />
portunity to throw off the British yoke.<br />
Cutting herself off from the supplies<br />
and markets of the Western Jlemis-pher- e,<br />
and affording India her long<br />
looked for chance to revolt, would be<br />
so disastrous to England that it might<br />
easily prove her Undoing as a leading<br />
nation.<br />
From standpoint one takes<br />
it, England's interests are against war<br />
with the United States. Such a war<br />
would be most disastrous to British<br />
welfare and no one realizes this more<br />
then the venerable John Bull. The<br />
world may be sure Japan not<br />
enter into a warv with the United<br />
States, or give this country occasion<br />
to enter into a war with it, without<br />
first consulting Great Britain. And It<br />
is not hard to conclude what England's<br />
answer would be. Her whole future<br />
might depend upon that reply. When<br />
the time comes for the choice to be<br />
made England's answer will undoubt-<br />
edly be an emphatic, straightout dec-<br />
laration against war with the UnltPd<br />
States. The Japanese statesmen who<br />
depend upon any other response will<br />
be grievously disappointed.<br />
England begins to see the day when<br />
she cannot maintain her present naval<br />
supremacy. For years it has her<br />
policy to keep the British navy Just<br />
a notch higher than the combined<br />
strength of any other two nations in<br />
the world. Recently the War Minister<br />
stated to Parliament that he doubted<br />
If the United Kingdom could much<br />
longer maintain this policy, owing to.<br />
the fact that Germany and the United<br />
States had embarked upon such large<br />
naval programs. He said to keep the<br />
English navy up to such a point would<br />
cause a financial strain greater than<br />
England could bear.<br />
The one great fact in the situation<br />
is that Japan, being an island kingdom<br />
like England, aspires to grow into Just<br />
such a trading and shipping nation 'as<br />
Great Britain. Whatever headway it<br />
makes with this ambition will be more<br />
at the expense of the English than any<br />
other people. Therefore it is evident<br />
that Japan cannot succeed in becoming<br />
the master of Asia and at the same<br />
time be used to bolster up British<br />
supremacy In the same sphere. So<br />
long- - as England continues to foster<br />
Japan's ambition she is merely groom- -<br />
Tfiiafffca. jeW<br />
<strong>JAPANESE</strong> lil<br />
<strong>THE</strong> NORTHWEST<br />
SEATTLE, May 19. There are more<br />
Japanese ln Seattle than in any oher<br />
city on the mainland of the T nlted<br />
States, and tney are making their<br />
presence felt in the commercial life of<br />
the. northwestern metroplis by rapidly<br />
pushing into every line of business.<br />
They have fifty tailoring establish-<br />
ments, sixty eating houses and restau-<br />
rants, forty barber shops, two banks<br />
and two newspapers. They also have<br />
numerous rooming houses and hotels,<br />
shoe factories, bakeries, meat markets,<br />
groceries and general stores. They own<br />
and operate employment agencies, ex-<br />
press and trnsportatlon lines, printing<br />
offices and laundries.<br />
Inasmuch as the Japanese are to be<br />
found ln such great numbers in this<br />
particular American community. It will<br />
be important to know what sort of<br />
impression they have made upon the<br />
people among whom they have come<br />
to live. For weeks past these letters<br />
have been dealing with 'the. situation<br />
from a foreign viewpoint, telling what<br />
Americans have to say who live<br />
among the Japanese ln their own<br />
country. Now the opinion of Americans<br />
who have had experience with the<br />
Japanese in the United States will be<br />
given. One notable'feature of the race<br />
question on the Pacific Coast Is the<br />
way the people here at once begin to<br />
compare the Chinese with the Japan-<br />
ese, always to the detriment of the lat-<br />
ter. At one time John Chinaman was<br />
a much abused person out this way,<br />
but since he has been excluded and the<br />
Japanese allowed to come Into the<br />
country in swarms, the good reputation<br />
of the Chinaman has Increased a thous-<br />
andfold.<br />
I called at leading real estate and<br />
renting office in Seattle to inquire<br />
what kind of tenants the Japanese<br />
make. The head of the firm received<br />
me and there was no mincing of mat-<br />
ters in his reply. "They are no good,"<br />
he said emphatically. "They are so<br />
unreliable and tricky that they almost<br />
worry the life out of us. It takes twice<br />
as many men to handle their business<br />
as it ought to. We used to get along<br />
so well with the Chinese that we went<br />
after the business of the Japanese<br />
when they began to come ln, but we<br />
soon found to our sorrow that although<br />
they are both Orientals, there is a vast<br />
difference between doing business with<br />
a Japanese and a Chinaman."<br />
"What is the difference between<br />
them?" I ventured to interrupt. Be-<br />
fore he could answer, a Chinaman<br />
came In the door and lined up before<br />
the counter where a young lady clerk<br />
was writing receipts for rent. The<br />
head or the firm touched a button and<br />
told the boy who answered it to show<br />
the Chinaman into the private office,<br />
where this conversation took place bet-<br />
ween them. "John, your lease is up<br />
on your house. Do. you want to stay<br />
there another year?" "Yes, I take<br />
him one more year if you bring new<br />
roof and make the rent no mofe big,"<br />
said John. "How much is it you pay?"<br />
asked the agent. "I bring fifty dol-<br />
lar a month plenty quick If you bring<br />
new roof. Can do?" The anxious<br />
tenant was told that the roof would be<br />
fact that every republic on West-- 4 "brought" right arid that<br />
powers<br />
UriUed<br />
whatever<br />
that will<br />
been<br />
the matter.<br />
This particular Chinaman had been<br />
a tenant nine years and had never been<br />
late with his rent. The firm did not<br />
even have a written agreement with<br />
him, a plain understanding of the terms<br />
being all that was needed. When ask-<br />
ed if this might not be an exceptional<br />
case, and if some Japanese might not<br />
have been just as prompt, the agent<br />
replied: "We have had years of ex-<br />
perience with both of them and wo<br />
found that once a Chinaman enters<br />
into an agreement he will generally<br />
keep it, and that as a rule a Japanese<br />
will not keep any contract that he can<br />
break, If It Is to his advantage to get<br />
out of it."<br />
One of the principal lines of work<br />
that attract the Japanese is domestic<br />
service, but in this they fall far short<br />
of being as satisfactory as the Chinese.<br />
One great objection" to them is that<br />
they are unreliable and will seldom<br />
hesitate to leave their employer in tlie<br />
lurch if some more lucrative position<br />
offers itself elsewhere. Impudence<br />
Is another charge made against them,<br />
many instances having been reported<br />
where housewives have had to tele-<br />
phone for their husbands to come<br />
home a't once because the Japanese<br />
servant had become Insolent. However,<br />
it would doubtless be unfair to claim<br />
that this was a general fault of the<br />
Japanese In domestic service.<br />
The universal complaint about them<br />
seems to be their lack of Interest in<br />
their work. They invariably have a<br />
book around somewhere and are study-<br />
ing and working with their lessons at<br />
every spare moment. Of course their<br />
ambition to gain knowledge and im-<br />
prove their station In life Is commend-<br />
able, but there can be no doubt that<br />
It detracts from their value as ser<br />
vants". When they accept employment<br />
as menials they ought to obey orders<br />
and do the work assigned them with<br />
a proper spirit. Instead of this, the<br />
average Japanese domestic takes his<br />
situation merely as a makeshift, and<br />
all the while he Is perfoimlng a ser-<br />
vant's tasks, he does so with the full<br />
belief that he Is the equal or superior<br />
of every member of the household in<br />
which h"e Is employed. The least little<br />
friction never fails to bring this point<br />
to the surface. One lady expressed<br />
the experience of many housewives on<br />
the Pacific Coast when she said: "The<br />
.Japanese are too proud and sensitive to<br />
work out. I got so I was afraid to<br />
tell one of them to sprinkle the lawn<br />
for fear I would insult some of his<br />
ancestors, or step on the toes of the<br />
Mikado."<br />
A saloon keeper who wanted a<br />
porter was heard bewailing the fact<br />
that he had to depend upon the Japan-<br />
ese for this kind of work. He formerly<br />
had a Chinese who stayed with him<br />
through a long term of years, and only<br />
gave up his job after he became too<br />
old to work. The old Chinaman pat-<br />
tered around the place In his sandals,<br />
doing his work quietly and painstak-<br />
ingly. He had no ambition, but he was<br />
a fine porter. Since the old man went<br />
away, there has been a succession of<br />
Japanese boys in his stead. "As yet<br />
none of them have remained over six<br />
months. They Invariably go to night<br />
school, study English around the place<br />
ing a dangerous ri-- for her own during the day, adopt American clothes,<br />
position in the Far East. land soon quittheir jobs.<br />
APPEAL NOTED ON<br />
STAMP TAX DIE<br />
W. A. Love and others have appeal-<br />
ed from a ruling of Treasurer Camp<br />
bell in egard to the stamp tax on<br />
three deeds of conveyance from the<br />
heirs of Robert Tove to the Robert<br />
Love Estate, Ltd. The grantors ln the<br />
deeds claim that the tax stamp should<br />
be $1 on each deed, that being the<br />
amount for the monetary consideration<br />
In each case. The Treasurer has ruled<br />
that the jitamp duty on one of tile<br />
deeds shah be $266, $1 based on the<br />
monetary consideration expressed in<br />
the 'deed and 265 on the stock con-<br />
sideration expressed in the deed, the<br />
value of the stock being based on<br />
affidavits of the parties in connection<br />
with the organization of the corpor-<br />
ation. In a second deed the Treasurer<br />
rules that the stamp duty should be<br />
$7, Jl for the monetary consideration<br />
expressed and $6 for the stock consid-<br />
eration. In the third deed the Treas-<br />
urer rules that the stamps should be<br />
$2, $1 for the monetary consideration<br />
and Jl for the executory agreement.<br />
The appeal Is from the Treasurer to<br />
the Supreme Court under the statute.<br />
KEYES IS CHARGED<br />
WITH EMBEZZLEMENT<br />
David Keyes, who was arrested on<br />
Wednesday morning by Detectives;<br />
Reeves, Apana and Medeiros, was<br />
formally charged last evening with<br />
embezzlement. Keyes was badly want-<br />
ed and managed to keep out of the<br />
clutches of the law for a couple of<br />
weeks with the aid of a native girl<br />
who kept his whereabouts hidden front<br />
the police. He was finally located la<br />
a house on Dowsett lane in Palama.<br />
According to the police Keyes' opera-<br />
tions extend over a considerable period<br />
of time and among many people.<br />
Among those suffered at his hands 1<br />
Father Valentine, who In an endeavor<br />
to help Keyes out, loaned him a mov-<br />
ing picture machine, several picture<br />
films and slides, Keyes claiming that<br />
he was going into the show business.<br />
Instead of doing so he sold the outfit<br />
to a Chinaman for. an lnsignflcant<br />
sum. The Chinaman will probably<br />
have to stand the loss, as all the arti-<br />
cles have been seized by the police<br />
on a search warrant and will be held<br />
as evidence against Keyes.<br />
While the ambition of the Japanese<br />
to rise above the level of menial labor<br />
is undoubtedly to their "credit, the fact<br />
remains that this same ambition unfits<br />
them for the class of work for which<br />
they are most needed. The argument<br />
advanced for allowing them to come-t-<br />
this country is that their labor is<br />
necessary to develop its resources, but<br />
If they are going to work only a few<br />
weeks on the 3obs where they are<br />
wanted, and then graduate Into bank-<br />
ers and merchant princes, they are<br />
probably too smart for this climate.<br />
The main thing the Pacific Coast needs<br />
is muscle.<br />
While Japanese officials are busy<br />
telling us how the Japanese love the<br />
United States and admire all Ameri-<br />
cans from Commodore Perry on down,<br />
the rank and file of their countrymen<br />
who are living here do not bear out<br />
their statements. The Japanese orat-<br />
ors tell us of the gratitude of their<br />
nation for the lessons we have taught<br />
them, and the friendship we have<br />
shown them. This looks well in print<br />
but how much appreciation do wo<br />
actually find among the Japanese who<br />
live In the United States? Instead or<br />
trying to cultivate the good will of the<br />
people who only a few years ago wel-<br />
comed them here, the Japanese havo<br />
seemed utterly indifferent to the fact<br />
that many of their actions were ir-<br />
ritating to their "traditional friends<br />
and benefactors."<br />
In the White River "Valley, between<br />
Seattle and Tacoma, the Inhabitants<br />
are very much incensed at the Japan-<br />
ese because they Insist on violating the<br />
law prohibiting the killing of robins,<br />
meadow larks, thrushes and other kinds<br />
of song birds. It Is said that the<br />
presence of the boisterous Japanese<br />
men and boys in large numbers In the<br />
parks of Seattle on Sundays and holi-<br />
days has become so objectionable that<br />
many ladles and children have ceased<br />
to frequent these pleasant play-<br />
grounds. Still another cause for com-<br />
plaint is the importation of Japanese<br />
girls for immoral purposes. The law<br />
is evaded 'by means of bogus mar--,<br />
riages, and the immigration officials<br />
have been put to much trouble ln try-<br />
ing to stamp out the evil.<br />
One point in favor of the Japanese as<br />
against the Chinese is that they are bet-<br />
ter customers for American-mad- e goods.<br />
They immediately adopt American wear-<br />
ing apparel, while the average China-<br />
man is content to dress in the simple<br />
garb his fathers have worn for ages.<br />
The Japanese also buys more American--<br />
made food supplies and neces-<br />
saries than the frugal Chinaman. When<br />
it comes to a show of public spirit, the<br />
Japanese again outranks the China<br />
man. At the time the cruiser Wash-<br />
ington visited Seattle the Japanese<br />
colony subscribed liberally to the funds<br />
for entertaining the sailors, and made<br />
handsome presents to the officers.<br />
They take a prominent part in Fourth<br />
of July celebrations and other Ameri- -<br />
can holidays, providing speakers, fire-<br />
works and other regulation features<br />
of such occasions.<br />
As a matter of fact the Japanese are<br />
right up to date in official representa-<br />
tion wherever they may be found, at<br />
home or abroad. The trouble with<br />
them seems to be their inability to<br />
come up to specifications. Their dip-<br />
lomacy is always Just a few laps ahead<br />
of their ability to deliver the goods.<br />
As this failing becomes more general-<br />
ly recognized their speech makersaro<br />
going to experience much difficulty In<br />
keeping oil on the troubled waters. The<br />
Individual Japanese has fallen so far<br />
short of expectations in regard to hon-<br />
esty, reliability and compatibility, that<br />
he entirely discredits the fine utter-<br />
ances of his official orators. In short,<br />
he Is such a disappointment that' hta<br />
future-conta- ct with Americans willy<br />
cause diplomacy to have its hands full<br />
to keep the peace.
p.<br />
LA6QR PROBLEM<br />
<strong>IN</strong> 1IMEI<br />
SONOL.ULU. T. H.. May 13. In Ha-<br />
waii the labor question Is ever present.<br />
ever paramount and settled, j are crowded sanitary circutn<br />
One-four- th of the total population of<br />
the Territory is made up of laborers<br />
actually employed in the cane fields.<br />
Of these more than one-ha- lf are Jap-<br />
anese and Chinese; in other words,<br />
nop-cltiz- en and Sugar<br />
demands cheap labor. Hawaii lives on<br />
sugar and unless it has a permanent<br />
supply of remarkably cheap labor it<br />
laces ruin. Before annexation to the<br />
"United States the government and the<br />
planters, sometimes acting Jointly and<br />
sometimes acting separately, brought<br />
in laborers from various parts of the<br />
world under the contract system.<br />
"When the United States flag perma-<br />
nently floated over the Islands, and<br />
American laws applied to Hawaiian<br />
affairs, contract labor was without the<br />
Bale of law.<br />
The leading men of Hawaii then<br />
tnrned toward Europe as a source of<br />
labor supply. It was thought the<br />
south of Europe would furnish hardy<br />
laborers perfectly willing to work for<br />
wages which the planters could afford.<br />
Being Christians and Europeans they<br />
would naturally be In sympathy with<br />
American institutions and ideals, and<br />
would bring forth a second generation<br />
of real Americans. Under the plan<br />
adopted by the states of South Caro-<br />
lina and Louisiana, the planters con<br />
tributed sums of money to a fund, and<br />
of the sent an independent instead<br />
an agent to Europe. He succeeded in<br />
obtaining two ship-loa- ds of Immigrants,<br />
one Portuguese and one Spanish.<br />
Then fell the blow from the Federal<br />
Government at Washington in the form<br />
of a decision that Immigration stimu-<br />
lated In this fashion was illegal and<br />
must cease. Afterward came the re-<br />
striction of Japanese Immigration.<br />
Thus Hawaii found Itself in the posi-<br />
tion of being prevented by either pri-<br />
vate or public enterprise from assisting<br />
immigration. It is too small and too<br />
out of the way to attract<br />
immigration, and Its labor question is<br />
acute.<br />
Politics thrives on conditions. The<br />
Southern States of the Union, with<br />
practically no exception, are suffering<br />
fromlack of labor supply. The mil-<br />
lions and millions of men and women<br />
who have come to American shores<br />
from Europe in the past fifty years<br />
have all found homes north of the<br />
Mason and Dixon line, or the<br />
Mississippi. The Southern States were<br />
stagnated on account of the "devasta-<br />
tion of the war when the great tide<br />
of immigration began, and it is only<br />
within the past seven or eight years<br />
that the South "has begun to feel the<br />
need of new white blood. The South<br />
Is like Hawaii in it needs this<br />
immigration but cannot get it. While<br />
the North Is clamoring for regulations<br />
which will place further restriction up-<br />
on the influx immigration, the South<br />
is crying for a relief from labor famine.<br />
South Carolina sought to solve the<br />
problem by state-assiste- d Immigration:<br />
Louisiana tried the same thing, but<br />
influences at Washington<br />
were able to put a stop to the plan.<br />
If it were not for the fact that the<br />
Southern States, and some of the Pa-<br />
cific Coast States, were thus suffering<br />
from a shortage of labor supply, the<br />
situation would be quite<br />
hopeless. As it Is, the Hawaiian lead-<br />
ers are confident pooling interests in<br />
Congress. Although they have no vote<br />
they will be able to secure some legis-<br />
lation which will permit the Territory,<br />
as a public necessity, to bring about<br />
artificial immigration from Europe.<br />
Even the sugar planters sadly accept<br />
the fact the days of Orientalism<br />
are passed.<br />
The mere question of getting laborers<br />
to come to Hawaii is only half the<br />
problem getting them to stay has<br />
proved equally difficult.<br />
The first laborers imported to Ha-<br />
waii, when the native Hawaiian labor-<br />
er was found inadequate, were ISO Chi-<br />
nese brought in in 1S52, during the<br />
reign of Kamcthameha III. These la-<br />
borers cost $50 apiece to bring over.<br />
They were paid $3 a month in cash<br />
wages and furnished with food, lodg-<br />
ing and clothes, which cost $4 per<br />
month more. There was no economic<br />
difference between the system of con-<br />
tract labor, which had its beginning at<br />
that time, and actual slavery. Since<br />
that laborers have been brought to<br />
Hawaii from Manchuria, Korea, China,<br />
Japan, the Islands of the South Seas,<br />
from Norway, Germany, Austria, Italy,<br />
Jtussla. Portugal, Spain, Madeira and<br />
the Azores, while both whites and<br />
negroes have been recruited in the<br />
United States. Since 1852 the number<br />
of labor immigrants to Hawaii has<br />
reached the enormous total of 1SS.O0O<br />
or 25,000 more than the total popula-<br />
tion or the Territory at this time. What<br />
has become of them? Some have died<br />
of course, but the Immigrant class is<br />
usually sturdy and the records show<br />
that the birth rate has been-su- ch as to<br />
practically offset the deaths. Still<br />
there are 91,000 not accounted for.<br />
These figures when mean<br />
that one-ha- lf or the laborers brought<br />
to the Territory go away.<br />
Over 125,000 Japanese have come to<br />
Hawaii, but nearly half of them made<br />
It a stepping stone to so on to the<br />
United States. Before contract labor<br />
rras abolished It used to cost the plant-<br />
er. In the matter of steamship fares,<br />
.an average or $75 for a Chinese, $65<br />
for a Japanese, $112 for a Portuguese,<br />
and $130 for a Norwegian. As the<br />
Europeans always came in large fami-<br />
lies, and as the Japanese usually came<br />
singly. It was much cheaper to bring<br />
In Japanese. After the days of con-<br />
tract labor when the Japanese came<br />
on thejr own accord, the steamer fare<br />
dropped as low as $30. In the five<br />
years prior to 1SS8 the Hawaiian mon-<br />
archy expended over $1,000,000, and the<br />
planters almost as much more, in im-<br />
porting laborers. Five shipments of<br />
Portuguese cost per capita JS9.45, of<br />
which the government paid $52.41 and<br />
the planter $37.04. As there were so<br />
many women and children, Jt cost for<br />
each adnlt male, laborer $2S6.15. In all,<br />
Hawaii has expended between $9,000,000<br />
and $10,000,050 In paying for the trans-<br />
portation of laborers which it has In-<br />
duced to come to its shore. One-ha- lf<br />
of these have left the Islands, and only<br />
about one-fif- th of them are now work-<br />
ing In the fields.<br />
The reasons Tor the migratory habits<br />
these laborers are many and com-<br />
plex; but perhaps the principle one Is<br />
that with few exceptions, the most of<br />
them, can, without Inconvenience, pack<br />
their grips and move at an hour's no<br />
tice to any quarter of the world, anu<br />
be just as much at home where they<br />
go as where they came from. The great<br />
majority the laborers live In quar-<br />
ters or In barracks. These buildings<br />
are sanitary and reasonably clean, but<br />
so small that there can be little pri-<br />
vacy between members of the family,<br />
and so close together that there is but'<br />
small separation from neighbors. They<br />
never bo that<br />
most<br />
stances prevent keening chickens "or<br />
pigs, while a cow or a horse is an Im-<br />
possible luxury, even though the<br />
householder has means to afford it.<br />
The thinking men of Hawaii realize<br />
that something must be done which<br />
will make the life of the agricultural<br />
laborer in the Islands so attractive and<br />
so homelike that he will be content<br />
to stay and raise his family on the<br />
plantation, thus building up a perma-<br />
nent home labor supply. Mr. Lorrin<br />
A. Thurston, in discussing this ques-<br />
tion, said: "The remedy will found<br />
In domiciling the employe. By domi-<br />
ciling him I mean giving or selling<br />
him, at a price within his reach, a<br />
piece of on which he can create a<br />
home; on which he can raise fruit and<br />
vegetables for his own use, maintain<br />
a few domestic fowls and animals, and<br />
in connection with which he can gather<br />
around him a few luxuries and con-<br />
veniences such as are not and cannot<br />
be accumulated and, protected in a<br />
plantation camp. He should have a<br />
home to which he can retreat and be<br />
his own master; a place where he can<br />
live and where his family can live<br />
without being subject to the possibil-<br />
ity of dispossession without a day's<br />
notice; a place where he can feel<br />
he is an individual and not a compo-<br />
nent part a gang; a place where he<br />
by the authority legislature, can be man, of<br />
of<br />
of<br />
voluntary<br />
west of<br />
that<br />
of<br />
powerful<br />
Hawaiian<br />
of<br />
that<br />
here<br />
day<br />
analyzed<br />
of<br />
of<br />
be<br />
land<br />
that<br />
of<br />
a dependent hireling, subject abso<br />
lutely to the orders of another.<br />
"It may be claimed that this home<br />
Instinct does not exist among the class<br />
of people who constitute our plantation<br />
laborers. This is undoubtedly true of<br />
some of them. The unmarried Chinese-labore- r<br />
seems to prefer to work and<br />
live In a crowd, and with exceptions,<br />
does not do otherwise when he becomes<br />
his own master. There are undoubted-<br />
ly many others of various nationalities<br />
who have become habituated by long<br />
usage to contentment with present con-<br />
ditions. But even among these more<br />
room is appreciated. This is evidenced<br />
by the fact that If 100 laborers are re-<br />
moved from a plantation camp design-<br />
ed for 200, it will be a matter of only<br />
a few days before the remaining 100<br />
will, If permitted, spread themselves<br />
out over the entire camp to secure<br />
more room and privacy.<br />
"But there are thousands of other<br />
cases In which, to a greater or less<br />
degree, the home instinct and all the<br />
incidental desires and feelings connect-<br />
ed therewith, are possessed by plan-<br />
tation laborers as fully and completely<br />
as by members of the community who<br />
stand higher in the social scale. Take<br />
the Portuguese for example. There Is<br />
not, to my knowledge, a Portuguese<br />
tenement house In the Territory. They<br />
have hundreds of little individual<br />
homes, costing from $300 tp $1000 each,<br />
which they have built with their own<br />
money. Wherever, on the plantations,<br />
there are detached houses with ground<br />
around them, the Portuguese are eager<br />
applicants for them.<br />
"There has been, perhaps, more op-<br />
portunity for development and exhibi<br />
tion of these tendencies among the Por-<br />
tuguese and Germans, because the<br />
migration of those two nationalities to<br />
Hawaii has consisted exclusively of<br />
families, instead of an overwhelming<br />
proportion of male adults. Moreover<br />
these nationalities have no intention of<br />
returning to their old homes. They<br />
have permanently expatriated them-<br />
selves and will never have any homes<br />
except those which they make anew<br />
for themselves. They also belong to<br />
races which for generations have been<br />
migrating all over the world. Emigra<br />
tion and permanent settlement abroad<br />
is therefore a common thought to them.<br />
"The Hawaiian Territory is not the<br />
only place where the labor question has<br />
been a vital isjiie. Cuba was In a<br />
like dilemma, when. In ISSG, slavery<br />
was finally abolished. The plantation<br />
system had flourished there for gen-<br />
erations. When the slaves were set<br />
free they would not work for small<br />
wages and were too uncertain and lazy<br />
to earn high ones. They showed a dis-<br />
position to wander and to become Irre<br />
sponsible vagrants. Destruction star-<br />
ed the planters in the face. They had<br />
to act quickly or go under. They acted<br />
both quickly and successfully. They<br />
cut up their vast estates into lots of<br />
from ten to fifty acres, and sold or<br />
leased them at nominal rentals to their<br />
Jap- -<br />
mem lv uuy uie uuiic prouueea. xnis<br />
was the genesis of the ed 'colo- -<br />
nial system' which has been success-<br />
fully continued In operation In Cuba<br />
ever since.<br />
"I believe that the suggestions made<br />
above, or some of them, or others along<br />
the same general lines, will eventually<br />
be adopted. The same masterful spirit<br />
which has made Hawaii what It Is will<br />
meet and solve the problem. Dan-<br />
gerous conditions have been met and<br />
conquered in the past, and the sugar<br />
industry of the Islands established on<br />
a broader and firmer basis than ever.<br />
It will continue to expand and be a<br />
source of profit for generations yet to<br />
come. While it w(ll take energy,<br />
breadth of spirit and progressive in-<br />
telligence to solve the labor problem,<br />
the way will be found. Sugar will long<br />
continue to be King of Hawaii."<br />
. .<br />
AN AUSTRALIAN" COMMERCIAL<br />
TRAVELER'S S<strong>TO</strong>RY.<br />
It is the commercial traveler who<br />
finds the many changes of climate and<br />
water trying. Mr. Chas. G. Chapman,<br />
who represents a large .Brisbane con-<br />
cern, had been troubled for years with<br />
chronic diarrhoea. On one of his trips<br />
a fellow traveler recommended Cham<br />
berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea<br />
Kenipdv, and this is what he savs of it:<br />
"I procured a and experienced<br />
great relief after taking a few doses.<br />
Before the bottle was finished I was<br />
cured and have not been troubled<br />
since." This remedy. is for- - sale by<br />
Smith & Co., Ltd., Agents for<br />
Hawaiian Islands. " "<br />
MOV<strong>IN</strong>G <strong>THE</strong> MORTARS.<br />
The first of the fifteen ton mortars<br />
for the fort at Diamond Head was<br />
taken from the O. R. & L. Co'p ya- -l<br />
yesterday morning and taken to Leah!<br />
where it arrived about 2 o'clock in the<br />
afternoon. There are Jtlll four more<br />
of the guns to be moved. Thp next<br />
Is expected to br'n? more of<br />
the mortars and accessories on June 10.<br />
fc- -<br />
HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1908. . SKMI-WEEKL- Y<br />
-- -<br />
coigpouii gun uhtilleb<br />
HONOLULU fflNNUIT<br />
(Advertiser Correspondence, Copyright<br />
by Frederic J. Haskln.)<br />
HONOLULU, T. H, May 14. Beautl<br />
ful Honolulu, the metropolis of the J<br />
mid-Pacifi- c, disputes with ancient<br />
Babel for the polyglot championship of<br />
the world. Within a stone's throw of<br />
the capitol of Hawaii, formerly the<br />
palace of the queen, ,ls a vacant lot<br />
In which is displayed a warning pla<br />
card which screams defiance in seven<br />
languages. "Not a public highway."<br />
That is English. "Kapu." That Is Ha-<br />
waiian. "Nao se passe aquL" That is<br />
Portuguese. And then the hysteric<br />
paint brush says the same thing in<br />
Chinese, Japanese and Korean, and<br />
finally It turns to good old American<br />
slang and says, "Skldoo, 23." This<br />
property owner, in his desire to keep<br />
the wanderers off his grass, has paid a<br />
great tribute to the cosmopolitanism of<br />
Honolulu. Great American cities which<br />
have received the enormous influx of<br />
a European Immigration are today<br />
enormous congresses of all nations, but<br />
it must be remembered that Honolulu<br />
has only 40,000 inhabitants.<br />
Truly cosmopolitan as It is, it is also<br />
very metropolitan in many of its as<br />
pects. Despite its great Oriental popu<br />
lation, its Buddhist temples and Shinto<br />
shrines; despite its sitting under an<br />
extinct volcano; despite its blue tropic<br />
skies and Its luxuriant tropic foliage,<br />
Honolulu is a truly American -- city,<br />
modern and up to date, and it looks<br />
the part.<br />
Probably not more than 8,000 of Its<br />
inhabitants are American or British in<br />
blood. Nevertheless the American ele-<br />
ment dominates, as it has dominated<br />
ever since a little band of New England<br />
missionaries landed here eighty-eig- ht<br />
years ago. One of the most interesting<br />
of the "sights" of Honolulu is the Ka-lula- nl<br />
School, one of the public schools<br />
named in honor of the beautiful Prin-<br />
cess Kaiulani, who was heir apparent<br />
to the Hawaiian throne when Queen<br />
Llliuokalani was dethronedr The Kaiu-<br />
lani School is attended each day by<br />
about six hundred embryo American<br />
citizens. There are 598 of these six<br />
hundred who are of par<br />
entage. Just two of the six hundred<br />
are Americans. It Is a significant fact<br />
that these two American children are<br />
dominant -- in their respective grades.<br />
and are the leaders In the games and<br />
embryo organizations which the chil-<br />
dren have.<br />
There Is no attempt at uniformity of<br />
costuming in the American fashion.<br />
There are Japanese boys in skirts and<br />
Chinese girls in trousers. There are as<br />
many styles of hair dressing In Kaiu-<br />
lani School as there were in the ruffled<br />
brain of him who Invented the undula-<br />
tion Marcel. Japanese girls with hair<br />
on paper 'trusses; Japanese girls with<br />
pompadours a la Illinois; Korean boys<br />
with topknots; and Korean boys with<br />
hair parted In the middle; Chinese<br />
girls with bangs and bow tows; and<br />
Chinese girls with kid roller curls.<br />
In the morning the children in the<br />
"receiving room," where a Hawaiian<br />
girl is giving the infant class its first<br />
homeopathic dose of English, have a<br />
song the burden of which Is "Good<br />
Morning." This simple salutation is<br />
sung first in English, then in Hawai-<br />
ian, Japanese, Chinese. Portuguese and<br />
sometimes in German, Swedish Span-<br />
ish or French for the sake of variety.<br />
After the day's work in this school is<br />
done, the Japanese and Chinese chil<br />
dren scamper off for another set-t- o in<br />
the schools of their own people, while<br />
all the Occidentals go to play. The<br />
old adage that "all work and no play<br />
makes Jack a dull boy" is a bit of<br />
Occidental wisdom which cannot be<br />
stretched to apply to the Oriental.<br />
Notwithstanding the American ap-<br />
pearance of that part of Honolulu<br />
which Is blessed with modern office<br />
buildings and towering hotels, which<br />
makes this, a truly American city, one<br />
has to wander but a few squares away<br />
to find himself In another world. The<br />
sense of smell is the first of his five<br />
sentinels which warns him that he Is<br />
approaching the Oriental quarter. It<br />
is not disagreeable after one is used<br />
to It, but it Is certainly distinctive and<br />
it is certainly Oriental. It is a smell<br />
of China and Japan the odor of Asia.<br />
Prominent in the Oriental quarters of<br />
Honolulu is "Newspaper Row. Here<br />
In buildings side by side are published<br />
three Japanese dailies, one Chinese<br />
daily, a Hawaiian daily and a Korean<br />
former slaves, making contracts withLnewspaper. Honolulu has more<br />
bottle<br />
Hilonlan<br />
anese daily papers than English, more<br />
Oriental newspaper than English, Ha-<br />
waiian and Portuguese combined. It<br />
has a greater number of periodicals<br />
printed in different languages than any<br />
city of its size In the United States.<br />
The Japanese element Is the most<br />
aggressive of any of the an<br />
peoples in the city. The Chinese were<br />
content for many years to remain<br />
within that quarter of the town set<br />
apart for them, but the Japanese have<br />
resented such a distinction and have<br />
overflowed with both shops and homes<br />
into all parts of Honolulu. One of the<br />
tourist "entertaining schemes now ex.'<br />
citing the minds of Honolulu promoters<br />
is the utilization of the artistic tem-<br />
perament of the Japanese colony. The<br />
beautiful and romantic Nuuanu Is a<br />
little stream flowing through a pic<br />
turesque valley to which It gives Its<br />
name.<br />
Nuuanu Valley was. a battleground<br />
in the glorious days of the ancient Ha-<br />
waiian war gods. It was sacred as the<br />
site of native temples long before the<br />
missionaries came, and now It Is most<br />
ly given over to beautiful villas, golf<br />
links and a fine automobile road. In<br />
this picturesque and romantic valley it<br />
Is proposed to transplant a bit of old<br />
Nippon. The stream looks a3 If It<br />
were fed from the snows .of the sacred<br />
Fujiyama, and the rocks through!<br />
wnich It scurries-- might be in Nikko.<br />
There will be a Japanese tea-hous- e, a<br />
temple, an avenue of'sacred lanterns,<br />
and a bevy of. Geisha girls. It will no<br />
longer be necessary for the fourlst to<br />
go further than Honolulu to have his<br />
fling at Japan.<br />
The common ordinary American from<br />
Iowa is apt to make many mistakes in<br />
sizing up nationalities when he is new<br />
to Honolulu. The Chinese waiters<br />
minus their cues, he thinks are Japan-<br />
ese; the Japanese newsbov from whom<br />
he buys a newspaper Is a Korean; the<br />
half-Hawaii- an woman he sees on the<br />
street Is a Spaniard; and the Hawal<br />
HONOLULU, T. H. May 15. There<br />
are more than 300,000 acres of fertile<br />
and desirable land in Hawaii as yet<br />
untilled. Much of it is not in use at<br />
all, -- and the remainder is used for<br />
pasturage. More than half of It Is<br />
owned by private parties, the remaind-<br />
er being government land. The small<br />
farmer is wanted In Hawaii, and the<br />
government has some seventy thou<br />
sand acres which it stands readv to<br />
hand out to settlers who will come this<br />
way. Most of this land is Sign anu<br />
dry. It Is from 2,000 to 5,000 feet above<br />
sea level, where the rigors- - of winter<br />
and the burning heat of summer are<br />
alike unknown. It is a region of<br />
perpetual spring.<br />
Perhaps very little of this land is<br />
available for the production of sugar.<br />
A farming industry that turns out raw<br />
material worth $25000,000 each year,<br />
where the entire territory Is smaller<br />
than even the little state of New<br />
Jersey, Is not likely to overlook any<br />
such opportunities for further expan-<br />
sion. That part of Hawaii which is<br />
cultivated already produces enough to<br />
make it the greatest exporting coun-<br />
try of Its size in the world. But sugar<br />
is not the only thing that flourishes in<br />
the Islands.<br />
Pineapples are profitable to grow<br />
wherever soil and climate favors them.<br />
and the Hawaiian product is equal to<br />
anything produced In the West Indies<br />
or elsewhere. It Is not too much to<br />
say that the pineapple may in itself<br />
bring about statehood for our mid- -<br />
Pacific possessions. On the island of<br />
Oahu there was a tract of 15,000 acres<br />
of land which was believed to be with<br />
out value. A colony of fourteen families<br />
from southern California thought they<br />
saw a living in it and bought it for a<br />
song, settling on it themselves. That<br />
was seven years ago. Failure after<br />
failure followed as they tried to grow<br />
different crops. At last they tried<br />
pineapples with the result that their<br />
disappointments were soon forgotten.<br />
That land now sells for $200 an acre--<br />
and shows an annual profit that justi<br />
fies the price. Hawaii now has over<br />
3,000 acres in pineapples and the in<br />
dustry is on such a profitable footing<br />
that in a few years there will be at<br />
least 10,000 acres under cultivation.<br />
Large areas of good land are avail<br />
able, and the markets of the United<br />
States take all that Is grown and then<br />
call for more. Pineapples usually bear<br />
fruit two years after planting, and<br />
the first crop averages ten tons to the<br />
acre. The cost of production ranges<br />
from $10 to $15 per acre, and the fruit<br />
is sold to the canneries at from $20 to<br />
polite, is a Samoan. It is a perplexing<br />
mixup of race and color.<br />
The color line has not been obliterat-<br />
ed, but it Is drawn In a very, very soft<br />
gray. There are people who are Im-<br />
mensely proud of the fact that they<br />
belong to an old family that is a<br />
family which has been in Honolulu<br />
for two or three generations, and<br />
whose blood is still all white. But<br />
they do not advertise this pride of<br />
white blood with a brass band, for<br />
they have some estimable neighbors in<br />
the highest circles of society whose<br />
blood is mixed. Let it be said to the<br />
everlasting credit of Honolulu that It<br />
has kept natural and Inborn race pre-<br />
judice well curbed. So far as color is<br />
concerned, there is almost no mani-<br />
festation of prejudice as against the<br />
yellow, the bronze or the brown. But<br />
the black that is another story.<br />
A teacher in the Honolulu public<br />
school, who has had charge of hundreds<br />
of pupils of all races for many years,<br />
admitted that the only time there has<br />
ever been any trouble among the chil-<br />
dren on account of race prejudice was<br />
when some American negro children<br />
came to school. A distinguished negro<br />
lawyer, now attorney-gener- al of Li-<br />
beria, made a great onslaught on Ho<br />
nolulu politics and society a few years<br />
ago. Good New England sentiment<br />
opposed him and stern New England<br />
steel put him to flight.<br />
There is still another feature of the<br />
cosmopolitanism of Honolulu which is<br />
quite different from anything that is<br />
known in any of our cities on the main<br />
land, not even excepting New York.<br />
It is an unpleasant feature, and there<br />
fore one Is glad to say that It is slowly<br />
but surely passing intolhe limbo of<br />
forgotten things. This feature is the<br />
political jealousy of the British and<br />
German residents of Honolulu who<br />
have have not yet recovered from their<br />
chagrin because of American annex<br />
ation. Many of them have not become<br />
naturalized Americans, some of them<br />
never will. The Britain in Honolulu<br />
is quick to tell the visitor that It would<br />
have been far better for Honolulu if<br />
the Stars and Stripes had never been<br />
unfurled over the Island. At first he<br />
suggests that the independence of the<br />
monarchy was Ideal, but If that could<br />
not be maintained he is quite sure that<br />
It would have been better to add Ha-<br />
waii to the domain of Britania.<br />
The German is pessimistic and dis-<br />
gruntled and he Is still hopping mad<br />
because the United States will not let<br />
him Import Chinese laborers under<br />
contract. Until sf few years ago the<br />
Church of England had a strong fol-<br />
lowing here which aimed always to<br />
secure British political supremacy. The<br />
work of this Church has been taken<br />
over by the American Protestant Epis-<br />
copal church and many of the old<br />
wounds caused by the battles between<br />
the British and the missionary parties<br />
have been healed. But this is a pass-<br />
ing affair, and it is not uncommon to<br />
see the children of British royalist<br />
take violent Issue with their parents<br />
on the subject of Americanism and<br />
politics of today.<br />
Cosmopolitan it is, metropolitan it<br />
must be, Honolulu is still American.<br />
The American element is dominant.in<br />
practically every walk of life. The<br />
street railway system, the sewerage,<br />
the clean streets, the schools, the<br />
politics, nearly all that Is good and<br />
much that Is bad. Is distinctively<br />
American. If all of the territory were<br />
as much under American dimlnion and<br />
influence as is Honolulu, there wculd<br />
be no strife In the Issue of the<br />
Americanization of the Islands, The<br />
careful property owner who d'splaved<br />
his warning in so many languages,<br />
beginning with good English and end-<br />
ing with American slang, paid his<br />
tribute to cosmopolitan, polyglot Ho<br />
nolulu, but he acknowledged that the<br />
American was the beginning and the<br />
Ian bellboy who Is well educated and J ending of It alL<br />
$26 per ton. The fancy fruit that goes<br />
to" the eastern markets Is worth as<br />
high as $200 per ton. Although tfiis is<br />
strictly an "Infant Industry" as com-<br />
pared wlth what it promises to "be,<br />
even now the annual yield brings a<br />
good half million of hard cash Into the<br />
islands.<br />
Bananas grow in Hawaii in great<br />
abundance, but as yet there is little<br />
market for them. Potatoes do not<br />
thrive well, but there is a eady<br />
market for all that cm be produced.<br />
The Agricultural Experiment Station<br />
at Honolulu finds that a fpedes of rot<br />
holds down the yield. The statior is<br />
trying to get the laborers on the sugar<br />
plantations interested in the grow'ng<br />
of silk worms. It Is po'nted out that<br />
If the families of these laborers, In-<br />
cluding the children, can be Brought<br />
to the-poin- t of giving tlreirattention<br />
to this work it will very materially<br />
augment the Income of the household<br />
and tend to give stability to the labor<br />
ing class. It Is hoped that attending<br />
siiK-wor- ms will be made a side issue<br />
here like the American hen is made it<br />
sde "issue on the farms of the United<br />
States. Melons do not thrive verr well.<br />
In Hawaii they have a little beetle<br />
known as the melon Lug which is as<br />
fatal to melons, cantaloupes, pumpkins,<br />
squashes and cucumbers as the tsetse<br />
fly ia to horses in Africa. The experi-<br />
ment station is trying to produce mel- -<br />
that will be immune to this deadly<br />
insect.<br />
Rice offers an opportunity for money<br />
making. A Chinaman was asked wheth-<br />
er he made any money growing rice.<br />
He replied that he grew two crops a<br />
.year. One paid the expenses of both<br />
and he put the returns from the sec-<br />
ond crop into his pocket only the<br />
Chinaman didn't say it quite that way.<br />
Cotton growing promises to be a prof-<br />
itable industry in the future. Experi-<br />
ments have been made which show<br />
that a grade of sea island cotton can<br />
be grown which compares favorably<br />
with that of South Carolina, both in<br />
grade and in yield. A Peruvian cotton<br />
has been found which flourishes in Ha-<br />
waii and yields excellent returns.<br />
Coffee is the poor man's crop in Ha-<br />
waii. It grows in the high, cool re-<br />
gions of tho islands. It does not re-<br />
quire expensive machinery either to<br />
grow or to prepare for market. Neither<br />
does it deteriorate with age, but rather<br />
improves. It is a cash crop and can be<br />
drawn against as soon as a single bag<br />
reaches the market. The yield is high<br />
and the returns sure, while the trees<br />
themselves are exceptionally free from<br />
disease. Twelves acres of ooftVe land<br />
have been known to yield twelve tons<br />
of coffee, althoush a good crop is a<br />
thousand pounds an acre. One man can<br />
attend, to twenty acres except at pick-<br />
ing time. Pickers are paid fifty cents<br />
per hundredweight of berries brought<br />
to tho mills. Women are the best<br />
pickers and pick some 200 pounds a<br />
day. Children are employed to pick<br />
the lower branches, so that stooping is<br />
almost eliminated. The annual crop is<br />
valued at about a third of a million<br />
dollars, some 45,000 acres being devoted<br />
to it. Nearly all of Hawaii's coffee<br />
goes to the mainland of the United<br />
States!the greater part being used on<br />
tho Pacific Coast. It is mild in type<br />
and has a. very Vlitferent flavor from<br />
tho heavy South American coffees<br />
which find such favor in the States.<br />
The rubber industry in Hawaii is still<br />
in tho experimental stage, but experts<br />
believe the opportunities for profit are<br />
going to be large. Preliminary experi-<br />
ments by the government indicate a<br />
high yield from even voung trees. Over<br />
400,000 rubber trees have been planted<br />
in the islands and still other plantations<br />
are being established. The increasing<br />
.Ionian.!, and of (, ,"<br />
rubber in the commerciil world makes<br />
tho price of this commodity very at-<br />
tractive proposition to the planter. But<br />
rubber growing is business which re-<br />
quires scientific knowledge and which<br />
yields slow returns. It is not inviting<br />
to the small farmer.<br />
Experiments w;ith tobacco show that<br />
grades which compare favorably with<br />
the best that Cuba and Brazil have to<br />
offer can grown<br />
Hawaiian tobacco can come into the<br />
United States duty free, and therefore<br />
has an enormous advantage over that<br />
of Cuba and other countries. With this<br />
advantage, and an equally good grade<br />
of leaf to Hawaii tobacco growers<br />
certainlv stand to win big returns from.<br />
their labors.<br />
Hawaii is not the place' for the mon-<br />
eyless man who to grow rich<br />
by tilling the soil. The farmer in these<br />
islands faces vastlv different conditions<br />
from those he encounters in the" cotton<br />
fields of Texas or the corn fields of<br />
Iowa. This is semi-tropic- al country<br />
and the methods of agriculture differ<br />
as widely from our own as our climate<br />
differs from that of Hawaii. The set<br />
tler who comes here must have enough<br />
money to buy his land, to employ his<br />
labor, and to live from to to four years<br />
while waiting for his first crop. There<br />
are little things he will have<br />
to do which require that patience which<br />
comes only with the consciousness of a<br />
balance in the bank. On the other<br />
hand, he who comes here with the nec-<br />
essary capital and the required patience<br />
finds awaiting him an opportunity that<br />
is probably not equaled by any spot on<br />
the globe. And if he be citizen of<br />
the United States will receive<br />
from his compatriots here that<br />
will warm the cockles of his heart.<br />
Hawaii needs farmers. She must<br />
have American She wants<br />
some of that conquering blood to which<br />
our western prairies and mountains<br />
have yielded their treasures of mine<br />
and field and forest. In the language<br />
of Governor Frear "The policies of<br />
small landed proprietorships and diver-<br />
sified industries are not necessarily an-<br />
tagonistic to the prosperity of the sugar<br />
industrv. Probably nowhere are busi<br />
ness enterprises, and small, con<br />
ducted more under corporate<br />
forms, but nowhere are they<br />
conducted more honorably or with Jess<br />
abuse of capitalistic power. The sugar<br />
industry is that from which directly or<br />
indirectly the territory and its people<br />
derive their main snpport. But it will<br />
be that the territory should<br />
not keon all its eges in one basket<br />
especlal'y when thaf bask"t' upset Is<br />
threatened bv probable tariff revision.<br />
The high Interests of thee l'and re-<br />
quire them to be peopled as f-- r as may<br />
be by small landed nroprietors."<br />
Not even the solid phalanx o& the<br />
beet sugar interests of the Northwest<br />
can protect Hawaii-in- s from seeing the<br />
ghosts of tariff revision. Philippine free<br />
trade, and Cuban annexation. Some of<br />
the Hawaii-in- s are at work<br />
heaping their et-g- s in baskets other than<br />
tha one of sugir. They have blazed<br />
the way and opened the door of oppor--<br />
<strong>THE</strong> COLLEGE OF<br />
AGRIGULTURE<br />
It seems quite certain that Professor<br />
Gllmore is the president of tne<br />
faculty of the college of HawaiL Th<br />
matter is quite cleared up by a. para-<br />
graph in a recent-lette- r from Goyeraor<br />
Frear to Acting Governor Mott-Smi- ta<br />
in which he says that Messrs. Gartley<br />
and Hosmer had met Professor Gil-mo- re<br />
and that they approved of his<br />
appointment. This practically settles<br />
the matter as the Board of Regents<br />
acting under the recommendation of<br />
President Schurman of Cornell Uni-<br />
versity had tendered the office of pres-<br />
ident to Professor Gllmore<br />
the gentlemen above mentioned who<br />
accompanied Governor Frear on his<br />
visit to Washington.<br />
Another important Item from Gov<br />
ernor Frearis letter was to the effect<br />
that the unexpended balance of ths<br />
Federal appropriation would not have<br />
to be turned back to the Federal<br />
Treasury. This will place the financial<br />
resources of the college in a. very sat-<br />
isfactory condition as it has been im-<br />
possible to expend any very large per-<br />
centage of the amount received last<br />
April. The Board of Regents, how-<br />
ever, are taking advantage of the large<br />
amount on hand to purchase a very<br />
complete library which will Include all<br />
of the standard works on the approved<br />
subjects. Between ten and twelve<br />
thousand dollars will be expended In<br />
this way and the subjects covered are<br />
as follows:<br />
Schedule A 1. Agriculture: 2. Horti<br />
culture; 3, Forestry: 4, Agronomy; 5,<br />
Animal husbandry: 6, Dairying; 7,<br />
Veterinary science; S, Poultry indus<br />
try; 9, Apiculture.<br />
Schedule B 1, Mechanical engineer<br />
ing; 2r Civil engineering; 3, Electrical<br />
engineering; 4, Irrigation engineering;<br />
Mining' engineering; 6, Marine engi<br />
neering- - 7, Railwav engineering: S, Ex<br />
perimental engineering; 9, Textile In<br />
dustry; 10, Architecture; 11, Machine<br />
design 12., Mechanical drawing: 13<br />
Ceramics: Stenography: 15. Type-<br />
writing; IS, Telegraphy. 17, Printing;<br />
IS, Shon work.<br />
Schedule C 1, English language: 2.<br />
English literature; 3, Composition; 4.<br />
Rhetoric: 5, Oratory.<br />
Schedule D 1, Mathematics; 2, Book-<br />
keeping: 3, Astronomy.<br />
Schedule E 1, Chemistry: 2, Physics:<br />
3, Biology: 4, Botany; 5, Zoology; 6,<br />
Geology; 7, Mineralogy; 8. Metallurgy;<br />
9, Entomology; 10, Physiology; 11, Bac-<br />
teriology; 12, Pharmacy; 13, Physical<br />
geography; 14, Meteorology.<br />
Schedule F 1, Political economy; 2.<br />
Domestic economy; 3, Commercial geo-<br />
graphy.<br />
A complete set of Instruments for<br />
the mechanical and engineering courses<br />
are being selected by"Mr. Gartley<br />
with the necessary astronomical<br />
Instruments to thoroughly cover tho<br />
requirements of that course. A full<br />
equipment of high class apparatus for<br />
laboratory work in physics and chem-<br />
istry are also being selected.<br />
NEW HOSPITAL PHYSICIAN.<br />
Dr. F. H. Humphris has been elect.!<br />
chief of the medical staff of :he<br />
Queen's hospital to succeed Dr. RaM- -<br />
ths inn.leon.t. .npplr<br />
heaufc<br />
, BMMa ras.,s<br />
a<br />
a<br />
offer,<br />
-<br />
a<br />
a<br />
a<br />
a<br />
large<br />
probably<br />
"<br />
to Maul in hopes of recupef.U'ns an--<br />
regaining his health and strength.<br />
tunitv for the American who has vnnth.<br />
industry, end a few thousand dollars<br />
All who desire to turn these assets into<br />
wealth and happiness, the while living<br />
in a ventablo paradise, should answer<br />
tho luring call of TJuclo Sam's little<br />
be on Hawaiian soil. ' ocean gem Hawaii.<br />
expects<br />
hundred<br />
he<br />
welcome<br />
citizens.<br />
generally<br />
conceded<br />
alrendv<br />
coming<br />
through<br />
14,<br />
to-<br />
gether<br />
, DONE BY TRY<strong>IN</strong>U.<br />
Nobody can toll what ho can<br />
do till he tries. When a thing<br />
ought to bo done the modern<br />
spirit movea us to keep working<br />
away at it until it ia done. In<br />
the face of thia idea the "impos-<br />
sible" vanishes. Wheto there's<br />
a will, there's a way. "If we<br />
could but rob cod liver oil of<br />
its sickening taste and smell and<br />
then combine it with two or<br />
three other ingredients wo should<br />
possess the beat remedv in the<br />
world for certain ""diseases that<br />
are now practically incurable."<br />
So said a famousJEinglish physi-<br />
cian twenty-fiv- e years ago. "But<br />
it will never be done," to added.<br />
"You can no more turn cod liv-<br />
er oil into a palatable medicine,<br />
than you can turn tho Codfish<br />
itself into a Bird of Paradise."<br />
Yet he lived to admit that in<br />
WAMPOLE'S PREPARATION<br />
the "impossible" had been ac-<br />
complished. It is palatable a3<br />
honey and contains all tho nu-<br />
tritive and curative properties of<br />
Pure Cod Liver Oil, extracted<br />
by us from fresh cod livers, com-<br />
bined with the Compound Syrup<br />
of Hypophcsphites, Extracts of<br />
Malt and "Wild Cherry. This<br />
remedy ia freed from the bad<br />
peculiarities Dr. Frothingbwn so<br />
detested, and it ia precisely tho<br />
splendid medicine he wished for.<br />
Use it freel" and confidently for<br />
Hysteria, Wasting Complaints,<br />
Anemia. Blood Imjraritie3, Asth-<br />
ma, and Throat and Lung Trou-<br />
bles. Dr. W. H. B. Aikins, Phy-<br />
sician to Toronto General Hos-<br />
pital, sayB: "I sm much pleased<br />
to state that the results from<br />
using Wampole'a Preparation of<br />
Cod Liver --Oil have been uni-<br />
formly satisfactory; it appealed,<br />
to me aa being prepared accord-<br />
ing to correct scientific princi-<br />
ples. It increases the appetite<br />
and. influences the digestion of J<br />
food-- ; it ia delicious to take, vnii W<br />
not disappoint yon, and ia effeo<br />
'.ive from the first dost1 One bot.<br />
La conncea. At all chssikta.<br />
fEA1<br />
We<br />
and<br />
bee<br />
know<br />
soil<br />
Paci<br />
1<br />
1 A<br />
Hortt<br />
OF<br />
Accsrae<br />
biltf<br />
gf Capita<br />
Re.<br />
Im<br />
TtN.<br />
The<br />
Ib Con<br />
tral<br />
<strong>THE</strong>O.<br />
Agents<br />
lncorpor<br />
PATTMJ<br />
gUKTI.- -<br />
ondiv:<br />
I Charlei<br />
P. C. Jc<br />
P. W. i<br />
c. n. o<br />
C Husu<br />
y. b. d<br />
F. B. D<br />
DIHEt<br />
Jones, F<br />
E. D. T<br />
Athertot<br />
ooaOfS<br />
Strict at<br />
jMjF 5 <strong>TO</strong>DD B<br />
Castle<br />
In<br />
OeBeral I<br />
New E<br />
Company<br />
Aetna<br />
We ha<br />
for the<br />
Citizens I<br />
The Pro<br />
I<br />
These --<br />
Honor in<br />
I<br />
(
4<br />
f<br />
ha<br />
14<br />
Ltue<br />
IS -<br />
r<br />
tc<br />
I<br />
B t<br />
it<br />
IT--<br />
b6<br />
is<br />
OS--<br />
or<br />
tea.<br />
' J<br />
i ea<br />
tbe<br />
fee.<br />
TB- C-<br />
&<br />
"w<br />
fefiP- -<br />
HELP <strong>THE</strong> EARTH<br />
AXD <strong>THE</strong><br />
EARTH WILLHELP YOU<br />
TEC nth teriilitrr icr every product<br />
sad pan nn ".he market only what has<br />
fcees jawwo of real value. Let us<br />
too ttoe purpose for which you want<br />
10. Imc mmi wilt supply you.<br />
Aodreee us<br />
Pacific Guano and Fertilizer Co<br />
Huaolalu. II- - T.<br />
<strong>IN</strong>SURANCE<br />
Jheo. H Davies & Co.,<br />
(Limited)<br />
Agents for Fire, Life and<br />
Marine Insurance.<br />
Korthsm Assurance Gompany,<br />
OF UONT"". FOR FIRE AND<br />
LIFE. Established 1836.<br />
Accxsnclated Funds<br />
3,975.000<br />
Billial mil foiii Marine Us. Co.<br />
--.- r ,t-v-- vt mD xrA'PTVF<br />
1,000.000<br />
Capital<br />
Redaction of rates.<br />
3awiclc Payment of Claims.<br />
Theo. H. Davies & Co., Ltd.<br />
AGEXTS.<br />
UUDUI PfiGIBS RAILWAY<br />
The Faocs Tourist Rtrute of the<br />
f WorW<br />
Is CeiwecWB Wkh the Cana Jian-Au- s-<br />
rafea - Lio: Tickets<br />
are Issatd<br />
<strong>TO</strong> ALL PO<strong>IN</strong>TS <strong>IN</strong> <strong>THE</strong> UNITED<br />
STATES AND CANADA. VIA<br />
VIC<strong>TO</strong>RIA at VANCOUVER<br />
Mountian Resorts:<br />
BANFF. GLAaFR MT STEPHENS<br />
AND FRASER CANNON<br />
EMPRESS L<strong>IN</strong>E OF STEAMERS<br />
FROM VANCOUVER.<br />
Tkiets w AH Pewits in Japan, China,<br />
ImSa and Around the World.<br />
For Tickets and general information<br />
Apply to<br />
<strong>THE</strong>O. H. DAVIES & GO., LTD.<br />
Agents Oiadxan- - utralan S. S. Line.<br />
Can?diar Paatic Railway.<br />
Bank of Hawaii<br />
UNITED.<br />
Vaerporated rnder the Lews of the<br />
Territory of Hawaii.<br />
PAHWJP CAPXTAIi 5600,000.00<br />
TTBTT.Tr5<br />
200.000.00<br />
TJXIsrvrDHD FE0XTT3.... 102,617.80<br />
OFFICERS:<br />
C2xarf M Coeke. President<br />
P C. Jcincr, ..Vice-Preside- nt<br />
rl . ifirtaae..tnd Vice-Presid-<br />
ci H.Oooe.<br />
Cashier<br />
C. Hastacc Jr<br />
Assistant Cashier<br />
F B. Dumb... ...Assistant Cashier<br />
F B. Dubm<br />
Secretary<br />
MEBC<strong>TO</strong>RS: Chas. M. Cooke, P. C<br />
Jests. F. W. ilacfariajie. E. F. Bishop,<br />
K. IX Tenoey. J. A. McCandless. C H.<br />
jL2ierja. C H. Cooke.<br />
rmwrrrTAT. AND SAV<strong>IN</strong>GS<br />
Said aUentloB given to all branches<br />
a lianklnir.<br />
rGDD BXTTLDrKR FORT STREET.<br />
Castle & Cooke Co., Ltd<br />
Life and Fire<br />
Insurance<br />
Agents<br />
Ceseral Isssraace Aeects. representing<br />
New aglanl Maraal Life Insurance<br />
Onapasy ot Bostaa.<br />
Arcxa Fire Iasaraace Co.<br />
ATTENTION<br />
"We have just aecepted the Agency<br />
for tk<br />
Cltiress Inscrance Co. (Hartford Fire.)<br />
and<br />
The Fretoctor Undeiu liters of the<br />
Phoenix of Hartford.<br />
The xre'e s'o arrcng the Boll or<br />
Ecnor r Ssn Francisco.<br />
HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1908.<br />
iilO JUUl lipo VrlllLC.<br />
rj- - f JUUi WKOO VyUlUilCiJC,<br />
I lr-- your ears transparent ?<br />
Ana ao you ioox tain<br />
and care--<br />
iSSStSL rn? It<br />
') takemuch<br />
imagina-<br />
tion tosee<br />
red lips,<br />
S<strong>TO</strong> I blooming<br />
cheeks, and<br />
a bright, cheerful face, in every<br />
bottle of Ayer's Sarsaparilla.<br />
If your-- appetite is poor, your<br />
digestion imperfect, and you feel<br />
nervous and weak, you ought to<br />
take<br />
AYER'S<br />
Sarsaparilla<br />
It expels all impurities from the<br />
blood, and gives strength and vigor<br />
to the nerves. It will surely re-<br />
store you to health.<br />
As now made, Ayer's Sarsa-<br />
parilla contains no alcoliol.<br />
There are manv imitation<br />
Sarsaparillas.<br />
Be sure you get "AYER'S."<br />
Prtpired by Dr. J. C. Ayer L Co., Uell, Mats., U.S.A<br />
AY2BS ptt.t.r, the belt family laxative.<br />
HOLLISTER DRUG CO.. AGENTa<br />
Castle & Cooke Co., Ltd<br />
Honolulu, T. H.<br />
Commission Merchants<br />
Sugar Factors<br />
Ewa Plantation Uo.<br />
"Waialua Agricultural Co., Ltd.<br />
Kohala Sugar Co.<br />
Waiuiea Sugar Mill Co.<br />
Apokaa Sugar Co., Ltd.<br />
Fulton Iron Works of St. Louis.<br />
Blake Steam Pumps.<br />
Weston's Centrifugals.<br />
Babcock & Wilcox Boilers.<br />
Green's Fuel Economizer.<br />
Marsh Steam Pumps.<br />
Matson Navigation Co.<br />
Planters' Line Shipping Co.<br />
DROUGHT DELAYS WORK<br />
The abnormally dry weather in the<br />
upper Nuuanu Valley is greatly retard-<br />
ing the work on the Nuuanu dam and<br />
reservoir. Under present conditions no<br />
sluicing, or none that will in any way<br />
interfere with the water supply of the<br />
city, is being done.<br />
All the pumps put in place have been<br />
tested and have been found fully capa-<br />
ble of doing the work, but until heavier<br />
rains come they cannot be put to work<br />
pumping water for sluicing.<br />
There has been no heavy rainstorm<br />
in the upper Nuuanu ATalley since last<br />
March. Superintendent of Public<br />
Works Campbell says that if they could<br />
only now have a few of the storms that<br />
used to damage the dam to the extent<br />
of a few thousand dollars they could<br />
be harnessed and put to very useful<br />
work.<br />
M<br />
SUIT <strong>TO</strong> TEST PRIVATE<br />
T OF FISHERY<br />
An appeal has been taken in the case<br />
of the Territory vs. Masuda from the.<br />
District Court to the Circuit Court.<br />
Masuda was arrested for fishing con-<br />
trary to Act S6 of the Session Laws<br />
of 1505, that Is to say, for fishing In<br />
the fishing right of Walpio, a vested<br />
fishing right set apart to the John Ii<br />
Estate under the Organic Act, the<br />
fishing right being leased to Mak Sam.<br />
Masuda was fined ?10 and costs by<br />
Judge Andrade.<br />
-- -.<br />
HE BOBBED APANA'S PLACE.<br />
Sam Kahl, a young Hawaiian from<br />
Walanae, was formally charged with<br />
the burglary of Ap.tna's restaurant at<br />
Walanae last evening. It seems that<br />
on the last day of May the premises<br />
were burglarized. Sam Kahl from Wa-<br />
lanae arrived in Honolulu the next day<br />
with a large amount of money for him<br />
and proceeded to lay it out in the<br />
stores of town purchasing for himself<br />
some fine linen and other wearing ap-<br />
parel. He then returned to Walanae<br />
and his generally changed appearance<br />
was commented upon. His apparent<br />
prosperity turned suspicion against<br />
him and he was Interrogated by Dep-<br />
uty Sheriff Gilllland. He and his pa-<br />
rents claimed that there had been the<br />
sum of fourteen dollars saved up by<br />
the family which had been turned over<br />
to Samuel with which to make a trip<br />
to Honolulu. The purchases of Samuel<br />
however footed up over thirty dollars<br />
and after trying to account for his<br />
adaptness at high finance he broke<br />
down and made a full confession of his<br />
burglary of the Walanae place. The<br />
sum stolen was twenty-eig- ht dollars.<br />
FUSION AGA<strong>IN</strong>ST HEMENWAT.<br />
Mrs. Atcherley telephoned last night<br />
that the Home Rulers and Democrats<br />
would combine to cut off the salary<br />
of the Attorney General and staff in<br />
the next Legislature owing to their<br />
attitude toward TVallach. She said the<br />
deal was being engineered by Notley.<br />
Mrs. Atcherley remarked that Dr.<br />
Cofer would not be interfered with as<br />
he Isn't getting any pay.<br />
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS.<br />
Entered of Record May 27, 190S.<br />
Minnie H Kaine and hsb to E H<br />
Kahoounaftia ck) D<br />
Lelaioha and hsb, et al, to Henry<br />
Birch D<br />
Malm Kaholno (w) to Ane. Poepoe,<br />
et al D<br />
Hilo Sugar Co to G H Vicars D<br />
Court Lunalilo 66C0, A O F, by trs,<br />
to Antone L Perry . ..Rel<br />
C Wr Booth and wf to Frederick E<br />
Steere D<br />
William B Thomas, tr, to Thomas<br />
Pineapple Co, Ltd -- D<br />
Samuel S Peck and wf to Bank of<br />
Hawaii, Ltd M<br />
Allen & Robinson, Ltd, to Chas F<br />
Murray Rel<br />
Chas F Murray to Eleanor P Frei--<br />
tas D<br />
Entered of Record May 28, 1908.<br />
Kaiokoill Keaho (w) to Mrs Annie<br />
Llftee .. D<br />
Julia I Oneha and hsb to Vincent<br />
E Pangelina "... D<br />
J Gonsalves Franca by mtgee to<br />
John P Dias Fore Affdt<br />
J Gonsalves Franca by mtgee to<br />
Guilhermina Franca D<br />
Entered of Record May 29, 190S.<br />
S Norris to Claus Spreckels & Co<br />
.. Adtl Chge<br />
Alice R Heapy to Susan D Heapy.PA<br />
S K" Oil! and wf by atty of mtgee<br />
to P E R Strauch Tr Fore Affdt<br />
S K Gill and wf by mtgee to P E<br />
R Strauch Tr AM<br />
S K Oili and wf by atty of mtgee<br />
to P E R Strauch Tr Fore Affdt<br />
S K Oil! and wf by mtgee to P E<br />
R Strauch D<br />
Geo P Thielen to Western & Hawn<br />
Invst Co Ltd M<br />
Jessie H Kaena and hsb to T.<br />
Brandt<br />
.' .D<br />
Madge Waring to W R Foster Rel Dow<br />
H M Lawson et al to Allen & Rob-<br />
inson, Ltd .CM<br />
Ho Sun and wf to James Arm-<br />
strong et al D<br />
James Armstrong et al to Trs of<br />
Est of B P Bishop Ex D<br />
Entered of Becord June 1, 1908.<br />
Manoel Joaquin to August Antone. .CM<br />
Sarah Kipi by agt to Tong Fat...'. L<br />
Ah Guy toHirano L<br />
ChokicBi Auiasaki to Utaro Ta--<br />
nioka BS<br />
J V Bay to S Kawai and wf Bel<br />
Carl S Smith and wf to Mrs Elvira<br />
M B Smith D<br />
W illiam Hinau and wf ct al to Kau- -<br />
laiiihau (w) . . . D<br />
J N Kaailua to William Henry. . . M<br />
Lewers & Cooke, Ltd, to W G<br />
Rogers AM<br />
Arii Gcnjiro Co to Arii Genjiro...PA<br />
Arii Genjiro Co by atty to Ho- -<br />
nomu Sugar Co CM<br />
D Kawananokoa by atty to Gilbert<br />
J Waller SubPA<br />
Walter A Hardy to Jacob Hardy. . D<br />
John Macaulay to Tr of Malie Sylva D<br />
Aulia Awaawa (k) to Kelomika<br />
Awaawa (k) et al D<br />
J Kauhane to Henry G. Bertelmann L<br />
Bichard II Trent Trto Victor M<br />
Souza Bel<br />
David Kawananakoa by attv and<br />
wf to Elia A G Long Tr. .'. N D<br />
Recorded May 18. 190S.<br />
A Lewis, Jr, and wr to B K Clark<br />
andwf,D; int in lot 2, blk A, Kapiolani<br />
Tract, Honolulu, Oahu. $215.40. B 300,<br />
p 437. Dated May 15 1908.<br />
Heinrich Benjes, by Atty, to Esther<br />
A White, Rel; por R P 6303, kul 93, Ma-ki- ki<br />
street, Honolulu, Oahu. $2300. B<br />
301, p 202. Dated May 15, 190S.<br />
John B Freitas and wf to Lillio Wil-<br />
kinson, D; lot 21, blk 107, Palolo Val-<br />
ley, Honolulu, Oahu. $1750. B 302, p<br />
420. Dated May 16, 1908.<br />
Lillie Wilkinson and hsb (J W) to<br />
Trent Trust Co, Ltd, M; lot 21, blk 107,<br />
Palolo Valley, Honolulu Oahu. $750. B<br />
301, p 202. Dated May 16, 1908.<br />
V E Pangelinan and wf to Mutual<br />
Bldg & Loan Soc of Hawaii, Ltd, M;<br />
lots 22 and 24, blk 2, Kapiolani Tract,<br />
Honolulu, Oahu. $500. B 301, p 206.<br />
Dated May 16, 1908.<br />
Mbaai Kekuewa (widow) to Waianae<br />
Co, D; B P 1062, kul 2958, Pahakoi,<br />
Waianae, Oahu. $500. B 302, p 41.<br />
Dated May 16, 1908.<br />
W M Minto and wf to Charles A<br />
Beeves, D: lot 17, blk A, Minton Tract<br />
Honolulu, Oahu. $300. B 302, p 425.<br />
Dated May IS, 1908.<br />
Samuel Parker to Gilbert J Waller,<br />
P A; general powers. B 304, p 1(2.<br />
Dated May 8, 190S.<br />
M S Grinbaum & Co, Ld, to M S Grin,<br />
baum, D; por R P 1710, kul 1811,<br />
buildings, etc, Kawaiahao, Honoolulu,<br />
Oahu, etc: int in Grs 766, 2624, 2990,<br />
3014, 2930, 2641 and B P 7126, build<br />
ings, etc, Hana, Maui, etc; int in all<br />
lands in Ter. of Hawaii. $27,614.93. B<br />
302. p 426. Dated May 15, 1908.<br />
Loo Tan Cheo et al, by Gdn, to Oahu<br />
Railway & Land Co, L; pors B P 5694,<br />
kul 6545, Waikele, Ewa, Oahu. 8 years,<br />
paid 51. B 233. p 218. Jjatea April 3U,<br />
1908.<br />
Geo Mundon to Hilo Mercantile Co,<br />
Ltd, C M; livestock, harness, surrey,<br />
and wagons, Puna, Hawaii. $25.25 and<br />
adv to 500. B 303, u 307. Dated May<br />
13. 190S".<br />
Alice L Andrews to George II Akau<br />
et als, P D; por B P 1101, kul 513, S<br />
Hilo, Hawaii. $1, etc. B 302, p 417.<br />
Dated January 15, 190S.<br />
Ah Kb and wf to Joseph Espinda, D;<br />
por B P 1663 and 15 head cattle, hui<br />
land, Mailepai, Kaanapali, Maui. $350.<br />
B 302. p 416. Dated May 15, 190S.<br />
Joseph Goo Kim to Tr of Isaac N<br />
Hakuole, D; B P 3526, kul 10157, Kipa-hul- u,<br />
Maui. $40. B 302, p 419. Hated<br />
May 16, 1908.<br />
Wailuku Sugar Co to Lupa and hsb,<br />
Exchg L; a land, Papaina, Wai-he- e,<br />
Maui. 49 yrs. B 298, p 215. Dated<br />
Mhy 13, 190S.<br />
Lupa and hsb to Wailuku Sugar Co,<br />
Exchg L; por B P 4095, kul 355, Kale-pele- pe<br />
3, Waihfc, Maui. 49 yrs. B 29S,<br />
p 215. Dated May 13, 1903.<br />
Ter of Hawaii, by Supt Dept Pub<br />
Instrcn, to Territory of Hawaii, D; 2100<br />
a land for forest reserve, Kuja, etc,<br />
Maui. B 302, p 423. Dated May IS, 190S.<br />
Recorded May 19, 190S.<br />
German Savs & Loan Socy et al by<br />
atty or tr to Ella A C Long, tr, Rel;<br />
gr 463S, cor Punchbowl and Kinau Sts,<br />
Honolulu. Oahu. $4000. B 301, p 209.<br />
Dated May 15, 1903.<br />
Kapiolani Est Ltd to E A C Long,<br />
tr. Par Sur L; lot 1 and por lot 2, gr<br />
4G3C, Auwalolimu, Honolulu, Oahu. $1.<br />
B 29S, p 221. Dated May 15, 1908.<br />
German Savs & Loan Socy by atty<br />
et al to E A C Long, tr, Par Relrot<br />
1 and por lot 2, gr 4636, and rent and<br />
Income of same,, cor Punchbowl and<br />
Luso Sts, Honolulu, Oahu. JL B 301,<br />
SEMI-WEEKL- Y<br />
p 210. Dated May 16, 1908.<br />
Elia A C Lon , tr, to Antonio F Cen-- 1<br />
teio, D; lot 1 and por lot 2, gr 4636.<br />
"or Punchbowl and Luso Sts, Honolulu,<br />
Oahu. J6C1. B 302, p 428. Dated May<br />
15, lifUS.<br />
A R Silva to Antonio F Centelo, B<br />
S; leasehold, bldgs mdse, 1 horse,<br />
wagon, etc. cor Punchbowl and Luso<br />
Sts, Honolulu, Oah... $1400. B 304, p<br />
173. Dated May 15, 1908.<br />
Antonio F Centelo and wf to Pedro<br />
L Teixlera, D; lot 4, gr 4636, Luso St.<br />
Honolulu, Oahu. $500. B 302, p 430.<br />
Dated May 19, 190S.<br />
Aug Dreler to Tr of Anna D Mark-ha- m<br />
et al, Tr D; 2995 shares in Au<br />
gust Dreler Ltd. $1. B 302; p 433.<br />
Dated Nov 5, 1907.<br />
L L McCandless to Young See Hop,<br />
L; 9a land, Manana, Ewa, Oahu. 30<br />
yrs 1 yr at $200, remainder at $250. B<br />
298, p 222. Dated May 18, 1908.<br />
K Fernandez to Trs of Kaumakaplli<br />
Church of Honolulu, M; por R P 156,<br />
kul SI, cor Smith and Pauahi Sts, Ho-<br />
nolulu, Oahu; pors R Ps 6731 and 4491.<br />
and gr 2066, ap 2, Palama. Honolulu,<br />
Oahu. $2500. B 30L p 213. Dated May<br />
19, 1908.<br />
Elia A C Long, tr, to Abel S Nasci-ment- o,<br />
D; lot 14, gr 4636, Punchbowl<br />
St, Honolulu, Oahu. $726.70. B 302, p<br />
436. Dated May 15, 1908.<br />
F W Bluehdorn to Armin Haneberg,<br />
P A; general powers. B 304, p 175.<br />
Dated May 15, 190S.<br />
E K Kalehua and wf to C F Peter<br />
son, tr, M; por R P 309, kul 952, Hono<br />
lulu, Oahu. $1400. B 301, p 21C. Dat<br />
ed Jan 28, 1.90S.<br />
C F Peterson, tr, to Allen & Robin-<br />
son Ltd, A M; mtg E K Kalehua on<br />
por R P 309, kul 952, Auwalolimu, Ho-<br />
nolulu, Oahu. $1433. B 301, p 219.<br />
Dated May 15, 190S.<br />
Wm Allen to Allen & Robinson Ltd,<br />
A M; mtg and addn chge, U Haumea<br />
et al on por R P 309, kul 932, Auwalo-<br />
limu, Honolulu, Oahu. $430. B 301, p<br />
229. Dated May 15, 1908.<br />
Annie Kahullauheelanl to Fanny<br />
Strauch, D; por lot 5, kuls 1074 and<br />
59FL, and 3 ft R W, Alewa, Honolulu,<br />
Oahu. $400. B 299, p 406. Dated June<br />
14, 1907.<br />
Kapiolani Est Ltd to John D Paris,<br />
D; pors grs 987 and 1178, Kawanui, N<br />
Kona, Hawaii. $1400. B 302, p 431.<br />
Dated May 18, 1908.<br />
Keola Kanoho and hsb (H) to C<br />
Brewer & Co Ltd, D; 1- -2 int In ap 1,<br />
gr 916, Kuhua, Hilo, Hawaii. $550. B<br />
302, p 438. Dated May 19, 1908.<br />
J H D'Alamelda to G J Kamakalua,<br />
Rel; ap 2, R P 5242, kul 10066, Walpio,<br />
Hamakua, Hawaii. $150. B 301, p 222.<br />
Dated May 18, 1908.<br />
G J Kamakalua to L Akana, M; ap<br />
2, R P 5242, kul 10066, Walpio, Hama-<br />
kua, Hawaii. $150. p 222. Dat-<br />
ed May 18, 1908.<br />
Recorded May 20, 1908.<br />
Mary E. Low to Keola Kanoho and<br />
hsb, D; lot 20, blk 3, Puunul Tract, Ho-<br />
nolulu, Oahu. $150. B 02, p 439. Da-<br />
ted April 20, 190S.<br />
Fanny Strauch and hsib (P E R) to<br />
Keola Kanoho (w), D; por lot 5, kuls<br />
1074, 59FL and 3 ft r w, Alewa, Ho-<br />
nolulu, Oahu. $450. B 302, p 440. Da-<br />
ted May 19, 1908.<br />
T J Qulnn to von Hamm-Toun- g Co<br />
Ltd, C M; 2 cylinder model F Bulck<br />
touring car No 9414, Oahu. $1000. B<br />
301, p 22--. Dated May 12, 1908.<br />
A J Gonsalves to von Hamm-Youn- g<br />
Co Ltd, C M; 4 cylinder model M Pope<br />
Hartford touring car Mo 1755, Oahu.<br />
$1350. B 301, p 225. Dated May 12, 1908.<br />
Ke kahuna Makalil and wf to J Ma-ullo- la,<br />
31; ap 3, R P 687, kul 1188, Ka- -<br />
palama. Honolulu, Oahu. $100. B 301,<br />
p 227. Dated iMay 16, 1908.<br />
J K Kaanaana to Sun Wo Chan Co,<br />
L; int in pes land, Kawalhapai, Wai-<br />
alua, Oahu. 15 yrs at $25 per y. B<br />
298, p 224. Dated May 9, 1908.<br />
Stephen K Parker and wf to Wm J<br />
Alapai and wf, D A; female child,<br />
Cecelia W Parker. B 304, p 176. Da-<br />
ted May 11, 1908.<br />
Western & Hawn Invst Co Ltd to<br />
Charles W Booth, Par Rel; 0a land,<br />
Kalulani Drive, Honolulu. Oahu. $1.<br />
B 301, p 231. Dated May 15, 190S.<br />
Western & Hawn Invst Co Ltd to<br />
John Sheehan, Par Rel; lots 26 and 27<br />
and pc land, Pacific Heights, Honolulu,<br />
Oahu. $1. B 301, p 233. Dated May<br />
16, 1908.<br />
"Western & Hawn Invst Co Ltd to<br />
Elizabeth K Booth, D; int in aps 1<br />
and 3. R P 3500, kul 3178, Kallhi, Ho-<br />
nolulu, Oahu. $500. B 302, p 442. Da-<br />
ted May 11, 1908.<br />
C W Booth and wf to John Sheehan,<br />
J; lots 26 and 27 and pc land, Pacific<br />
Heights, Honolulu, Oahu. $300. B 302,<br />
p 443. Dated May 16, 1908.<br />
Bishop & Co to Yee Chong, Rel; por<br />
ap 2. R P 1125, kul 709, bldgs, etc, Fort<br />
st, Honolulu, Oahu. $1300. B 301, p<br />
234. Dated Aug 23, 1907.<br />
Hutchlngson Sug Plantn Co to John<br />
K Mahelona et al, D; int In kul 8034,<br />
Makaka, Kau, Hawaii. $1. B 302, p<br />
441. Dated Feb 18, 1908.<br />
John Haa and wf to Will Prestidge.<br />
M; la land, Hamakuapoko, Maui. $30.<br />
B 301, p 230. Dated May 20, 1908.<br />
Recorded May 21, 1908.<br />
Helepololei and wf et al to Trs of<br />
Est of Bernlce P Bishop, D; 0a<br />
land, Walalaeiki, Honolulu, Oahu. $1.<br />
etc. B 300, p 444. Dated May 13, 1903.<br />
Est of Bernlce P Bishop by Trs to<br />
Helepololei (k) et al, D; R P 2150, kul<br />
1788 and land, Walalaeiki, Ho-<br />
nolulu, Oahu. $1, etc. B 299, p 407.<br />
Dated May 13, 1908.<br />
J H Schnack and wf to J A Lucas,<br />
D; lot 31, blk B, Nuuanu Tract, Ho-<br />
nolulu, Oahu. $300. B 300, p 446. Da-<br />
ted May 19, 1903.<br />
See Woo Co to H H Parker, Sur L;<br />
R P 13S0 and 3 pes land and int in R<br />
Ps 3580 and 1396, Kaneohe, Koolaupo-k- o,<br />
Oahu. $1. B 29S, p 228. Dated<br />
May 21, 1908.<br />
H H Parker to Lo Den Kul et al, L;<br />
R P 1380 and 3 pes land and Int In R<br />
Ps 35S0 and 1356,-Kane- ohe, Koolaupo-k- o,<br />
Oahu. 7 yrs at $450 par.y. B 298,<br />
p 229. Dated May 21. 1908.<br />
Henrietta Luning (widow) to Maria<br />
Brede, M; por R P 6S2, kul 1214, Kallhi,<br />
Honolulu, Oahu. $325. B 301, p 235.<br />
B 301. p 235. Dated May 20, 1903.<br />
Nakahara Ukutaro Jto Chas E King,<br />
C M; cane crop on por lot 33, Olaa,<br />
Puna. Hawaii. $271.50. B 303, p 310.'<br />
Dated May 12, 1908.<br />
J E Gamallelson to Hilo Mercantile<br />
Co Ltd, Agrmt; in re modification of<br />
mtge in liber 232 fol 1 of lot 7. Prna-hawa- l.<br />
Hilo, Hawaii. B 304, p 178. Da-<br />
ted Apr 21, 190S.<br />
Wm Kinney to J E Gamalielson, Can<br />
L; por lots 3 and 6, r w, bldgs, etc,<br />
Ponahawai Lots, Hilo, Hawaii. B 29S,<br />
p zzo. atea May 12, lsira.<br />
Wm Kinney to J E Gamalielson, L;<br />
por lots 3 and 6, r w, bldgs, etc, Ponaha<br />
wai Lots, Bilo, Hawaii. 16 yrs; $o00<br />
1st yr; Rem Term $6"0 per yr. B 298, p<br />
25B. Dated if.iv'l?. 1903<br />
SAVE YOUR SK<strong>IN</strong><br />
How to Preserve Purify and Beautify<br />
the Skin and Complexion.<br />
To preserve, purify, and beautify the skin, aud prevent pimples, Motehes,<br />
blackheads, redness, roughness, yellow, oily, mothy skin, chappW, aa2<br />
many other forms of skin blemishes, no other skin or complextoa bom to<br />
for a moment to be compared with Cuticcra Soap, because no other seas<br />
reaches the cause, viz., the clogged, irritated, or ittfamtd condition of the Posas<br />
SAVE YOUR HAIR<br />
How to Prevent Falling Hair Scalp<br />
Humours and Dandruff.<br />
Cleanse the scalp and hair thoroughly with a wnrra shampoo of Crnt<br />
ctTRA Soap, rinse with warm water, dry carefully, nnd apply light dreaaiBC<br />
of ConcmtA, purest of emollients, gently rubbed into tho scalp. TbS<br />
Bimple, refreshing, and inexpensive treatment will clear the scalp and hair<br />
of crusts, scales, and dandruff, soothe irritated, itchiwj surfaces, stimulate th<br />
hiir follicles, supply the roots with energy and nourishment, aivl make th<br />
hair grow upon a sweet, wholesome, and healthy scalp, when all else fails.<br />
SAVE YOUR HANDS<br />
How to Mafce the Hands Soft and<br />
White in a Single Night.<br />
Bathe and soak the hands on retiring iu a strong, hot lather of CtmctJRA.<br />
Soap. Dry thoroughly and anoiut freely with CtmcuBA Ohument, th<br />
great skin cure and purest of emollients. Wear during the night old, loose<br />
kid glores with the finger ends cut off For red, rough, chapped hands,<br />
dry. fissured, itching, feverish palms, shapeless nails, with painful finget<br />
ends, this one night treatment is simply wonderful and a blessing to all<br />
afilicted with sore, chapped, rough, or tender hands.<br />
CutlCUra Complete Eitemaland Internal Treatwent for Etery HuMr,<br />
CotuiatlncorCcTtcrm Sair.tocleania thmUnof cnaU and icalei<br />
The Set and nen the thickened cuticle. Cutiocka Ointment. to Inntantly aiiar<br />
Itching. Inflammation, and irritation, and sootl e and h al.aod CXTI- -<br />
otni KE&OLTEirr.tocoo and cleanae the blood. AbzxoucSrrlsoitenrimelrnttocorethenioa<br />
inrianiiir, aisneunnfr, ana tmmlllatlne aldn, scalp, and blood bnmonrs, with Ion of hair-wh- en all<br />
eise rails bold throughout the world. Anst. I'epotj R. Town & Co., Bydner. N. 8. W. So.<br />
African n.nnr I..,.r..r Ltd.. Cane Town. M All V. . .1. oii f. . - .. m .T<br />
mi<br />
'ilii.uoAiiDC'uait.CoKrSoleProPiBoiton.U H<br />
The Subscribers to<br />
The Yacht Hawaii<br />
(Continued<br />
Lane, John C. Mclntyre, F. F.<br />
Larson, William McCarthy, C. J.<br />
Lindsay, D. C. McClellan, "W. H.<br />
Lindsay, Alex., Jr. McLean. Jas. L.<br />
Lawrence, D. P. McCandless, J. A.<br />
Lowe, Geo. K, Mclnerny, J. D.<br />
Love, W.A.. McCandless Bros.<br />
Lyon, W. C. M. Mclnerny, Ltd.<br />
Lowrey, F. J. Mclnerny, W. H.<br />
Lutted, J. O. McCandless, L. L.<br />
Ludwigsen, C. J. McDougall, W. P.<br />
Lee Let McCandless, J. S.<br />
Lewis, D. H.<br />
Larson, G. A. Nathaniel, K. M.<br />
Lorenzen, J. C. Nelll, John<br />
Lewis, A., Jr. North, W. W.<br />
Lloyd, Lucy Nicolai, Gust<br />
Lucas, Geo.-W- . Neely, A, W.<br />
Lord, E. J. Notley, Chas.<br />
Larson, Mrs. G. A. O'Nell, Geo. J.<br />
Lewis, Phillip<br />
Lando. J. Otremba, F. N.<br />
Lyle, Mrs. S. Ono, K.<br />
Lyle, Mrs. Jas. Peterson, R. C. A.<br />
Miss Edith<br />
Lyle, Perkins, R. W.<br />
Phillips, Charles<br />
Maxwell, Geo. W. Peck, Solomon<br />
Morton, Edgar<br />
Peacock, W. C.<br />
Macaulay, J. R. Pogue, W. F.<br />
H. C.<br />
Meyers,<br />
Pritchard, J.<br />
H. V.<br />
Murray,<br />
Paxson, S. S.<br />
Moore, H. T. Prescott, Anne<br />
Miller, Fred. C.<br />
Peck, L. T.<br />
Miller, Edward Peter, Manuel F.<br />
Moller, E. Pregil, J. G.<br />
Moana Hotel.<br />
Potter, Geo. C.<br />
May, D. G.<br />
Parke, W. C.<br />
MacLean, Jas. R. Paxton, E. E.<br />
MacKenzIe, J. H. Perry, Antono<br />
Macfarlane, F. W., petrtef T H<br />
putz Geo.-- E.<br />
Macfarlane F. W. PennaHoWf H. B<br />
Marshall, E. L. Parker, Samuel<br />
Mills, H. T.<br />
Penhallow, D. B. P.<br />
Mahelona, S.<br />
Morse, C. P. Qulnn, Clem K.<br />
Marcallino, John<br />
Merriam, C. H. Randall. S.<br />
Murphy, A. E. Robinson, W. T.<br />
Mott-Smlt- h, E. A. Rodenhurst, W. V,<br />
Matsumoto, K. Robertson, A. G. M.<br />
Marshall, E". M. Rycroft, Robert<br />
Mills, H. T.<br />
Ross, D. M.<br />
Mahelona, S. Reynolds, C. B.<br />
Morse, C. P. Hobbins, R. A.<br />
Marcallino, John Robertson, A. S.<br />
Merriam, C. H. Robertson, Geo. H.<br />
Murphy, A. E. Riley, H. L.<br />
Mott-Smlt- h, E. A. Rycroft, R. H.<br />
Matsumoto, K. Hoth, H. P.<br />
Marshall, E. M. . Robinson, M. A.<br />
Muhlendorf, Paul Relnecke, H.<br />
Myers, Zeno K. Roth, W. P.<br />
Morgan, J. F. Rose. S. B.<br />
Matson, Capt. Wm. Rietow, R. B.<br />
Moir, John T. Ross, George<br />
Monsarrat, Jullun Rubinstein, I,<br />
Moses, R. T. Ryan, Paddy<br />
Mulr, J. M. Riggs, J. M.<br />
Mahaulu, A. b. RIggs, Mrs. J. M.<br />
Maxwell, Mis Robinson, Mark P,<br />
Mary Renton, H. H.<br />
May, D. G. Rice, C. A.<br />
McCrosson, J. T. Reist, K. B.<br />
Mclnerny. W. H.-- Reist, W. L.<br />
McKay, William Reist, K. A.<br />
Kane Keanu and wf to Henry Mar-tinse- n,<br />
D; R P (gr) 2114, Kawala, Kau,<br />
Hawaii. $250. B 300, p 441. Dated May<br />
16, 1908.<br />
James Kirkland and wf to Manuel<br />
S Leval, D; int in ap 2, R P 7184, K<br />
1759, Wailuku. Maui. $850. B 300, p<br />
439. Dated May 12, 1903.<br />
Kaialii and wf to J K Hueu, D; R P<br />
2802, kul 1297, aps 1 and 3, int in R P<br />
(gr) 1911 and bldg, Keanae, etc, Koo-la- u,<br />
Maui. $150. B 302, p 445. Dated<br />
Feb 25, 1903.<br />
J P Kahahei to Joseph Hookano. D:<br />
1- -2 int In R, P 3277, kul 4S53, Waieli.<br />
Wallua, Maul. $100. B 300, p 440. Da<br />
ted May 14, 1903.<br />
Kamakahukllani (w) to Willie Har-<br />
vest, D; int In por ap 2, R P 2230, kul<br />
3275, Walehu, Maul. $5. B 300, a 442.<br />
Dated May 20, 1903.<br />
Kukala (k) to Geo H Stephenson, D;<br />
R P 2747. kul 4S27S aps 1 and 3,<br />
etc Lahatna, Maul. $1, etc. B<br />
300, p 443. Dated May 9, 1903.<br />
Kanaana (k) to Fred W Mllverton,<br />
D; 1-- 2 Int In R P S532, kul 6178 Pana-ew- a,<br />
Lahalna, Maul. $1, etc. B 300, p<br />
448. Dated May 20. 1908.<br />
Recorded May 22, 190S.<br />
Namanu Paoa and wf to P Sllva. Tr,<br />
M; pc land, lot 13, Kaneohe, Koolau- -<br />
8<br />
'tiui uio oaoii, ocaip. uu tiair. po fraa.<br />
from Page 6.)<br />
Rosenblendt, M. Toussaint, L. M.<br />
Renton, H. H.<br />
Richardson, F. D. Underwood, L. H.<br />
Rycroft. Robt.<br />
Robertson, Mrs. A. Von Holt, H. M.<br />
G. M. Vetlesen, L. M.<br />
RIggs, Mrs. J. M. Von Tempsky, L.<br />
Richardson Geo. Vieira, J. A. R.<br />
JVan Valkenberg, A.<br />
Searle, H, C.<br />
Lyons, Thos. B.-<br />
Smith,<br />
Widemann, Carl<br />
Jared Williams, J. N. S.<br />
Smith, R. White, C. Henry<br />
Smith, W. O. Wright, C. E.<br />
Sanford, A. N. Wilcox, Ralph L.<br />
Solomon, Isaac White. E. O.<br />
Stackable, E. R. Wright, R. E.<br />
Sanborn, W. F. Woodward, R. A,<br />
Shlpman, W. H. Waldron, F. L.<br />
Smith, Henry Wond, Geo. J.<br />
Sanders, M. N. Wilson, A. A.<br />
Sopcr, John F. AVlght. Mrs. J.<br />
Spencer, C. K. Wolr, L. H.<br />
Steven, O. A. Warren, J. T.<br />
Savidge, William Watklns, Norman.<br />
Schuman, Gus Wall, Walter E.<br />
Stelllng, J. H. Williams, Chas.<br />
Smith, B. H. Weaver, P. L.<br />
Stone, E. J.<br />
Wall, A. C.<br />
Stlllman, O. K. Wilder, G. P.<br />
Smithies, Geo. E. Weed, F. W.<br />
Scott, Robert Williams, Geo. H.<br />
Scott, O. C. Walker. S. A.<br />
Schultze, H. Watson, E. M.<br />
Stackable, R. C. Wirtz, Ambrose<br />
Scott, L. P. Weight. C. S.<br />
Slmonton, M. T. Waggoner, B.<br />
Sharp, Miss Alice Wright, C. D.<br />
fShaw, Jonathan Williams. J. J.<br />
Silllman, R. D. Woodward, D. M.<br />
Steiner, Harry Woods, Jess<br />
Sachs, N. S. Waterman, E. J.<br />
Smith, F. C. Waterman, C. F.<br />
Shaw, S. I. Wallace, K. R, G.<br />
Schwartz, Joseph White, W. J.<br />
Smith, A. H. Winter, F. L.<br />
Seabury, A. W. Wilder, A. A.<br />
Spltzer, J. S. White, C. G.<br />
Sutherland, Jame3 "Whitney. W. L.<br />
Simerson, A. C. Willis, C. J.<br />
Sllva, J. T. Wilcox, G. N.<br />
Schaefer, G. E. Wilcox, A. S.<br />
Guhr, E. Waterhouse, Albert<br />
Schaefer, C. T. Waterhouse, W.<br />
Splnnle, Chas. O. Walker, J. S.<br />
Sharp, Tom Wilder. J. A.<br />
Sorenson, Mrs. V. Walker, H. H.<br />
Stroud, W. H. Waterhouse, John<br />
Schaefer, F. A. Williams, H, H.<br />
Wlthlngton, D. U<br />
Taylor, Jas. T. Wood, H. P.<br />
Trent, Richard H. Wilder, J. Q.<br />
Thayer, W. W. Wight. C. L.<br />
Thurston, L. A. Weedon. W. C.<br />
Thurston, Harriet Wakefield, Jas.<br />
P. Woon, William<br />
Thurston, Robert Walsh, P. J.<br />
S. Wilcox, G. N.<br />
Thurston, Lorrln Whitney. H. M.<br />
P. Wilder, H. A, c<br />
Tripp, A. N. Wilder, W. C.<br />
Thompson, F. E. Wallace, Mrs. "L.<br />
Thrum, Thos. G. Wilder, Mrs. W. C.<br />
Thrum, David F.<br />
Takakuwa, Y. Young, J. L.<br />
Thompson, Jas. A. Young, Alexander<br />
poko, Oahu. $47. B 301, p 236. Dated<br />
Feb 24, 1908.<br />
Kealakaa (w) to Helepololei (k), D:<br />
Int In R P 2150, kul 1788 and 136-100-<br />
land, Walalaeiki, Honolulu, Oahu. $55.<br />
B 299, p 413. Dated May 22, 1908.<br />
Kaanaana (k) to Helepololei (I:), D;<br />
Int in R P 2150, kul 1788 and 0a<br />
land, Walalaeiki, Honolulu, Oahu. $55.<br />
'<br />
B 299, p 414. Dated May 22, 1908.<br />
Abigail KTC Parker and hsb (S) to<br />
Hawn Evangelical Assn Bd of Tr, Tr<br />
D; R p 1958, kul 387, Main st, Lahalna,<br />
Maul. $1. B 299, p 409. Dated April<br />
29, 1908.<br />
4--.<br />
BE ON <strong>THE</strong> SAFE SIDE. '<br />
Your physicianjnay be busy or out<br />
of town just at the time some member<br />
or your family has an attack of colic or<br />
diarrhoea. Such cases frequently provo<br />
fatal before a doctor can be summoned<br />
or medicine secured. No physician can<br />
prescribe a better medicine than Cham-<br />
berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea.<br />
Remedy. It has been in use for mors<br />
than a third of a century and ha3 never<br />
been known to fall. For sale by ;Ben-Sv- a,<br />
Smith & Co., Ltd., Agents for the<br />
Hawaiian Islands.<br />
v -- , Tw<br />
- W --T - j.-'-- ji<br />
'Ill<br />
1<br />
1<br />
J<br />
e
10 HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1908. SEMI-WEEKL- Y<br />
-- i<br />
rf1<br />
mWsPQM<br />
AKlN5<br />
POWDER<br />
Absolutely Purs<br />
. Tha only Esakeng powder<br />
made with BoysS Grope<br />
Grsam of Tsvfes -<br />
HoAfym, M Urn P&sspfrafa<br />
60 YEARS'<br />
EXPERIENCE<br />
rnirra<br />
' Trade Marks<br />
Designs<br />
Copyrights &c<br />
Anyone sending n sietrh and description inT<br />
ouIcl.tr ascertain our oiinlon free whether an<br />
Invention Is irbillj' patentable. Communica-<br />
tions utrlctlyconflileiitlal. HANDBOOK on Patent<br />
cnt free. OMest au'encj- - f&r eecurlnfr patents.<br />
I'ntenta taken throuch Jluiin & Co. receive<br />
tpcelal notlct. without cbnree. latho<br />
mnm nwnm<br />
A handsomely !llntratl weeklr. lJreest dr.<br />
dilution of any srlentlUc Journal. Terms. 13 a<br />
yc.tr: four months, $1. Bold by all newsdealers.<br />
fcCQBIBroadNeW<strong>TO</strong>rK<br />
Branch OQce. 625 F BU Washington, D. C<br />
BUS<strong>IN</strong>ESS CAEDS.<br />
HONOIULTT IRON "WORKS CO. Ma-<br />
chinery of every description made to<br />
order.<br />
LEWERS & COOKE (Robert Lewers.<br />
P. J. Lowrey. C. M. Cooke). Import-<br />
ers and dealers In lumber and build-<br />
ing materials. Office, 414 Fort street<br />
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.<br />
DR. McCLENNAN The Royal Hawai-<br />
ian Hotel; cottage N. Entrance<br />
Beretania street, near junction of<br />
Alakea and Emma streets Hono-<br />
lulu. Specialist in chronic, difficult<br />
and lingering diseases. An honest<br />
opinion given at first consultation.<br />
Accommodation furnished Island pa-<br />
tients. Telephone 229.<br />
DF HAWS THRONE<br />
Editor Advertiser. The statement 'in<br />
the Advertiser of this date thaE the<br />
late Prince David was "Heir Presum-<br />
ptive" to the throne of Hawaii, is lia-<br />
ble to be misunderstood, and Is not in<br />
accordance with the law of succession<br />
as provided for in the Constitution of<br />
3SS7, article 22 of which is as follows:<br />
"The crown is hereby permanently<br />
confirmed to His Majesty Kalakaua.<br />
and to the heirs of his body lawfully<br />
Dcgotten, and to their lawful descend-<br />
ants in a direct line; failing whom, the<br />
crown shall descend to Her Koyal High-ne- ss<br />
the Princess Liliuokalani, and the<br />
heirs of her body, lawfully begotten,<br />
and their lawful descendants in a di-<br />
rect line. The succession shall be to<br />
the senior male child, and to the heirs<br />
of his body; failing a male ohild, the<br />
succession shall be to the senior female<br />
ehild, and to the heirs of her body.<br />
In case there is no heir as above pro-<br />
vided, the successor shall be to the per-<br />
son whom the sovereign shall appoint<br />
with the consent of the nobles, and<br />
publicly proclaim during the sover<br />
eign's life; but should there be no such<br />
appointment and proclamation, and the<br />
tnrone snail become vacant, then the<br />
cabinet, immediately after the occur-<br />
ring of such vacancy, shall cause a<br />
meeting cf the Legislature, who shall<br />
elect by ballot some native Alii of the<br />
Kingdom as successor to the throne;<br />
and the successor so elected shall be-<br />
come a new stirps for a royal family;<br />
and the succession from the sovereign<br />
thus elected shaTT- - be regulated by the<br />
same law as the present Boyal Family<br />
of Hawaii."<br />
It will be Eeen by the foregoing that<br />
the late Prince was only an "Heir Pre-<br />
sumptive," in the sense that he was<br />
eligible for election to the throne, by<br />
the .legislature, as an Alii. B. C. L.<br />
Honolulu," June 3, 190S.<br />
The presumptive heirship was dic-<br />
tated in the terms of King Kalakaua's<br />
will, and while the choiee did not have<br />
legal force it would probably have been<br />
observed if the monarchy had lasted<br />
and the conditions which Prince David's<br />
accession would have met had come to<br />
pass. Ed. Adv.<br />
-<br />
DIED.<br />
BATFD<strong>IN</strong>S In Honolulu, June 1, 190S,<br />
the infant sou of Mr. and Mrs. W. T.<br />
Rawlins.<br />
CARO In San Francisco, California,<br />
June 3, lOOsN-Elst- e, beloved wife of<br />
Alexander Caro, and daughter of<br />
"William H. and Selina McLean, for<br />
... . , , ,<br />
2, 190S, Mrs. Sarah Manasse, wife or<br />
Rev. Manasse, from pneumonia.<br />
Seventy-si- x years of age.<br />
Funeral from the Kawalahao church<br />
at 3 p. m. Wednesday. Exercises un-<br />
der the direction of the Kaahumanu<br />
Society. Revs. Parker, Timoteo, and<br />
Lono assisted, in the services.<br />
H<br />
The American schooner Alice Cooke,<br />
from Port Ludlow, arrived yesterday<br />
after a remarkably fine trip. Captain<br />
Penhallow reports that nothing un-<br />
usual happened on the way down. The<br />
Alice Is at Allen & Robinson's<br />
wharf.<br />
MAR<strong>IN</strong>E<br />
The great height o. one of the mule<br />
skinners of the transport Dix was the<br />
principal topic of conversation along<br />
the waterfront yesterday and divided<br />
the honors almost with the yacht Ha-<br />
waii. The man was several inches over<br />
sue feet tall and large in proportion.<br />
He was an expert with the animals,<br />
and towered amongst them at 'the wharf<br />
while his companions were lost amongst<br />
their charges.<br />
Yesterday belnrr regular island steamer<br />
day and Hawaii day as well a greater<br />
number of people were alongshore than<br />
have been on the front" for many weeks.<br />
The Mauna Kea drew her usual crowd<br />
at noon on her departure for Hilo, and<br />
the other steamers leaving from the<br />
JJauna Loa wharf in the afternoon Tiad<br />
their Tegular quota of attendants.<br />
JtJtJt Jt ar Jr jt jf JJx<br />
5j MAR<strong>IN</strong>E REPORT.<br />
"sir-a- i- yir at-- ar atraf ac-g- t- w<br />
(From San Francisco Merchants Ex-<br />
change.)<br />
Tuesday, June 2, 1908.<br />
San Francisco Arrived, June 1, bk.<br />
Geo. Curtis, hence. May 13.<br />
San Francisco Sailed, June 2, S S.<br />
China, for Honolulu.<br />
San Diego Arrived, June 2, S. S. Ari-zona- n,<br />
from Salina Cruz.<br />
San Arrived, June 3, A.-- H. S.<br />
S. Arlzonan, from Cruz.<br />
Honolulu, "Wednesday, June 3, 1908.<br />
San Francisco Sailed, June 3, S. S.<br />
Hilonian, for Honolulu.<br />
San Diego Sailed, June 2, S. S. Arl-<br />
zonan, for San Francisco.<br />
Victoria, B. C. Arrived, June 3, C.<br />
A. S. S, Manuka, hence.<br />
San Francisco Sailed, June 3. A.--H.<br />
S. S. Columbian, for Honolulu.<br />
Seattle Sailed, June 3, A.-- S. S.<br />
Alaskan, for Honolulu.<br />
Thursday, June 4.<br />
San Francisco Sailed, June-- 3, S. S.<br />
Alaskan, for Seattle.<br />
Kahului Sailed, June 3, S. S. Vir-<br />
ginian, for Kaanapall.<br />
Kaanapali Arrived, June 3, S. S.<br />
Virginian, from Kahului.<br />
Grays Harbor Arrived, June 3, S.<br />
C. Allen, hence May 19.<br />
San Francisco Arrived, June 4, Cel-<br />
tic Monarch, hence May Efc- -<br />
--San Francisco Arrived, June 4, S. S.<br />
Arizonan, from San Diego.<br />
PORT OF HONOLULU.<br />
AERIVKD.<br />
Tuesday, June 2.<br />
Tug Kaena, Jorgensen, from Pearl<br />
Harbor.<br />
"Wednesday, June 3.<br />
Str. CKInau, Gregory, from Kauai,<br />
4:49 a. m., with 8330 bags sugar and<br />
sundries.<br />
Am. bk. Coronado, Potter, 10 days<br />
from San Francisco with general cargo<br />
to "W. G. Irwin & Co.<br />
Am. schr. Robert Lewers, Under-<br />
wood, 21 days from Port Gamble with<br />
lumber for Lewers & Cooke.<br />
t U. S. S. Iroquois, Carter, from Pearl<br />
Harbor.<br />
A.-- H. S. S. Nevadan, Greene, 8 days<br />
from Seattle, 9 p. m.<br />
Thursday, June 4.<br />
Str. Noeau, Mitchell, from Kukuiha- -<br />
ele and Honokaa, 4:30 a. m.<br />
Str. Nllhau, Oness, from Hawaii,<br />
5:04 a. m.<br />
Str. Claudine. Bennett, from Hawaii<br />
and Maul, a. m.<br />
Str. Helene, Nelson, from Hawaii,<br />
2:40 a. m.<br />
A.-- H. S. S. Despatch, Kokeritz, from<br />
Eleele.<br />
Am. schr. Alice Cooke, Penhallow, 26<br />
days from Port Ludlow.<br />
DEPARTED.<br />
Str. Mauna Kea, Freeman, for Maui<br />
and Hawaii at noon.<br />
Str. W. G. Hall, Tullett, for Kauai<br />
at 5 p. m.<br />
Str. Iwalani, Self, for Molokai and<br />
Maul at 5 p. m.<br />
Str. Likellke, Naopala, for Hamakua<br />
ports, at 5 p. m.<br />
IT. S. A. T. Dix, Ankers, for Manila,<br />
at 6 p. m.<br />
Am. schr. yacht Hawaii, Harris, for<br />
San Pedro, at 2:30 p. m. '<br />
Schr. Moi Wahlne, Sam, for Hama-<br />
kua, at 2:45 p. m.<br />
Str. J. A. Cummins, Searle, for Wal-manal- oj<br />
TJ. S. S. Iroquois, Carter, for Pearl<br />
Harbor.<br />
Schr. Ka Moi, Mana, for Paauilo.<br />
O. S. S, Alameda, Dowdell, for San<br />
Francisco, 10 a. m.<br />
Str. Maui, Bruhn, for windward Ha-<br />
waii ports, 5 p. m.<br />
PASSENGEES-Pe- r<br />
str. "W. G. Hall, for Kdual ports',<br />
June 2. Miss "W. Silva, S.Robrnson,<br />
A. Robinson, E. J. Banks and wife?!<br />
Mrs. p. Weber, R. G. Hendersonv C.<br />
Hay, Judge Hardy. r . -<br />
Per str. Iwalani, for Molokai" an3<br />
Maul ports, June 2,-- Wm. Mutch, RevJ<br />
A. B. "Weymouth, Lee King.<br />
Per str. Mauna Kea, for Hljo.and<br />
way ports, June 2. W. K. Notleyahd<br />
wife, Mrs. H. R. Bryant, "W. M. Gif-fard- ",<br />
W. G. Hall, "W. E. "Wall, Leigh-to- n<br />
Hind. R. Hind, A. W. Carter and<br />
wife. Mr. and Mrs. V. L. Boefik. Mrs.<br />
W. Waterhouse. J. Kirkland. A. Mason,<br />
R. "W. Shingle, E. J. Gay, R. G, E.<br />
Forster, Mrs. L. Kekaula, J. F. Hag--lun- d,<br />
E. "W-- Howard, J. S. French, Mrs.<br />
A. Auld, Mrs. K. Keohokalole, H.<br />
B. Mariner, H. Hamlin, Rev. J. F.<br />
Cowan. Mr. and Mrs. Thompson, Mrs.<br />
C. McKenzle, Miss Nettle McKenzie,<br />
Miss Sophia McKenzle, Miss Emma<br />
Baker, Miss M. Akaua, Miss M. Lud- -<br />
wlg, H. Rovlnowltz, J. M. Kepoo, P.<br />
merly or Honolulu. cocKett, u. AKona.<br />
TTonni,.!., TT.iwnH. .T.in'J PT str-- KInau. June 4. for Kauai<br />
H.<br />
Cooke<br />
Diego<br />
Salina<br />
ports,<br />
ports,<br />
ports,<br />
H.<br />
ports. J. W. Doyle and servant, A.<br />
Mengler, Tan Wo, C. M. Lovsted and<br />
wife, A. J. Blackman, L. Welnzhelmer,<br />
W. Fisher and wife, Mrs. F. Weber,<br />
Miss C. McColgan, L. L. Harding, Mrs.<br />
Felker.<br />
Per str. Claudine, from Hawaii and<br />
Maui ports, June 4. Rev. S. W. Wad-ma- n,<br />
A. RIchley, Houn Chi, Lanl Kaai<br />
Kapu, H. P. Baldwin, Miss E. Soule,<br />
Mrs. Silva, Jno. Rodrigues, Mrs. Hen-<br />
dry, Mrs. Mist, E. Moller and wife,<br />
A. P: McDonald, S. H. M. Brown, John<br />
Gomes and wife, R. C. Searle and wife,<br />
'Bins<br />
Distressing Attacks "to Which<br />
Many Women AreL Subject.<br />
What the Tonic Treatment Has<br />
Done to Correct the Cause of<br />
This Recurring and Painful<br />
Illness.<br />
There are few ailments that cause<br />
more genuine misery in the home than<br />
the attacks which are generally term-<br />
ed sick headaches. These attacks are<br />
often periodical, and when the mother<br />
of a family is prostrated at Intervals<br />
there is jiot only her own suffering to<br />
consider, but the discomfort caused<br />
the other members of the household.<br />
Too often the recurrent symptoms be-<br />
come so regular and familiar to those<br />
about her that the sufferer gets but<br />
little sympathy in her awful suffer-<br />
ing.<br />
Sick headaches arise from a variety<br />
of disturbances confined to the<br />
stomach and digestive tract and most<br />
Lcf them can be cured or relieved t$<br />
a marked degree. The tonic treat-<br />
ment with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills<br />
has been successful In a large num<br />
ber of cases, one of which is that of<br />
Mrs. Mary A. Terry of 721 East Main<br />
street, Clinton, 111. She says:<br />
"For thirty years I was subject to<br />
sick headaches. They bgan when I<br />
vas a young girl and would occur as<br />
often as two or three times a week,<br />
seldom missing one. When these at-<br />
tacks came on I would get very sick<br />
at my stomach and vomit. The strain<br />
was so great that the blood-vesse- ls<br />
In my head would swell up, my eye-<br />
balls would feel hot and the muscles<br />
In my neck stiff and .sore. During<br />
these spells the pains in my head were<br />
Intense and throbbing and would<br />
sometimes last for three days. I<br />
would be unable to sit up, being often<br />
confined to my bed.<br />
"All of my mother's family were sub-<br />
jected to violent headaches and the<br />
doctors told me I inherited it. Triey<br />
said I was in a bad condition and<br />
that it would take some time to cure<br />
me. They never gave me more than<br />
temporary relief and after years o"<br />
doctoring I gave them up and started<br />
taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I<br />
began to get a little better after tak-<br />
ing a few boxes and steadily Improved<br />
until I was cured. I have felt well<br />
since and never have any nore<br />
trouble with my head. I have always<br />
recommended Dr. Williams' Pink Pills<br />
to anyone suffering as I did, for J hope<br />
the greatest confidence In them.'<br />
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are solif by<br />
all druggists, or sent by mail, postpalJ,<br />
on receipt of price, 50 cents per bo,<br />
six boxes for $2.50, Tjy the Div Wil-<br />
liams Medicine Co.,"chenectady; N. Y.<br />
,<br />
JL<br />
DEFENSE BEG<strong>IN</strong>S<br />
<strong>IN</strong> CASE<br />
The defense has begun in the Kbki<br />
case. The government yesterday<br />
morning put Mr. Horner on the stand,<br />
who testified that at about the time<br />
the alleged embezzlement took place<br />
he bought a number of money orders<br />
at the Kamuela postofflce, paying for<br />
them principally in ten-doll- ar gold<br />
pieces, paying $600 in all in $10 gold<br />
pieces.<br />
The defense subpoenaed witnesses<br />
from a number of business houses in<br />
Honolulu with whom Kokl did busi-<br />
ness to prove by them that Koki's<br />
credit was good at the time he is al-<br />
leged to have tried to borrow $1500,<br />
which was soon after the death of his<br />
father. W. G. Ashley of E. O. Hall &<br />
Son was the first witness called. The<br />
prosecution objected to his testifying<br />
from memory as to Koki's account at<br />
the time and required the witness to<br />
bring the books of account of the con-<br />
cern to testify from them. This course<br />
was followed in each case and the en<br />
tire day was occupied with witnesses<br />
and account books. The evidence<br />
showed that at this time he owed In<br />
all, to merchants in Honolulu, about<br />
$1600 or $1S00. The defense will occupy<br />
all of today and may occupy longer.<br />
How many witnesses will be called In<br />
rebuttal Is not yet known.<br />
DISTRIBUTED WHAT WAS LEFT.<br />
' The final accounts of P. Mahaulu as<br />
administrator of the estate of Hope<br />
Kuuku were approve'd yesterday by<br />
Judge Lindsay and the administrator<br />
was discharged. The order of final<br />
discharge recites that he has distrib-<br />
uted the sum of $15.70, all that<br />
after the attorney in the case<br />
had been paid a fee of $25, and that<br />
Jie Is therefore discharged from fur-<br />
ther obligation.<br />
-<br />
CHAMBERLA<strong>IN</strong>'S COLIC. CnOLEBA<br />
AND DIABBHOEA REMEDY.<br />
This remedy has been In use for over<br />
thirty years and has proved itself to be<br />
the most successful remedy yet discov-<br />
ered for bowel complaints. It never<br />
fails. Sold by Benson, Smith & Co.,<br />
Ltd.. Arrents for the Hawaiian Islands.<br />
Per str. KInau, from Kauai ports,<br />
June 3. W. Grelg, wife, child and ser-<br />
vant; Mrs. Barron, L. Weinzheimer,<br />
Mrs. Mehllng, J. Mendes, K. Taketa.'C.<br />
W. Baldwin, Mrs. Gomes, G. Inouye,<br />
M. Matsuchlta. R, Ito, and 54 deck.<br />
Departed.<br />
Per O. S-- S. Alameda, for San Fran-<br />
cisco, June 3. Miss J. L. Brown, Rev.<br />
H. Bingham,Mrs. C J. Cooper, Miss<br />
A. Crozler. J. S. Carton, Mrs. L. 'B.<br />
Coan, M. I. Dow, Miss A. F. Dennlson,<br />
Mrs. Ferrelra, T. F. Galligan. L. T.<br />
Garnsey, Mrs. G. L. Keeney, Mrs. S.<br />
L. Montague, C. D. Miner; Miss 1.<br />
Mutch, I. P. Newsome. Dr. O'Day, Mrs.<br />
O'Day and three children, 'Captain J.<br />
Miss N. Dow, Rev. D. W. K. White, ,R-- Parker, R. Sharp, Mrs. Sharp, two<br />
Miss White, W. P. Miller, T. A. Burn-- 1 children and maid. J. A. Scott, S. Top-ingha-<br />
L. Barkhausen and 59 deck. ' litz, Miss Underwood, A. K. "Virgil,<br />
LOCAL 'BREVITIES.<br />
iTrirti 'Wednpsday's Advertiser.'<br />
.. a j3e Hardy., after a short visit In<br />
town,, returned to Kauai In the Hall<br />
last evening. -<br />
Eight deaths from tuberculosis oc-<br />
curred in Honolulu during the fifteen<br />
flays ending May 31.<br />
i, Tha latest estimates for the 1908 crop<br />
in the Islands give a total of<br />
492.1S0 tons, as against 440,017 tons last<br />
year.<br />
Clinton J. Htitchlns writes from the<br />
Coast that he has been appointed man-<br />
ager of the agencies of the West Coast<br />
Life Insurance Company.<br />
Charles "W. Parks, the civil engineer<br />
of the Navy Department who arrived<br />
by the Siberia to take up the Pearl<br />
naval station work, called on someone passed the door that opened<br />
Acting Governor Mott-Sml- th yester<br />
day. -<br />
Inspector J. S. Carton of the Santa<br />
Fe system, who has just returned from<br />
Hawaii, speaks 4n-- the highest terms<br />
of the value of the koa and ohia forests<br />
of the Big Island. He leaves by the<br />
Alameda today. '<br />
"Dr. Koch, while calling on Acting<br />
Governor Mott-Sml- th before he left,<br />
said that If Hawaii were nearer Ger-<br />
many he would come here every year.<br />
He said Hawaii was the most beautiful<br />
country, he had ever seen.<br />
(From Thursday's Advertiser.)<br />
Rev. Hiram Bingham left In the Ala-<br />
meda yesterday for San Francisco.<br />
Several Hindus left for San Francis-<br />
co In the Alameda yesterday. They<br />
were not pleased with the prospects<br />
of light work here and did not want<br />
work in the fields.<br />
Mark Alexander at anv<br />
General hospital, at 2:30 then In the out-terda- y.<br />
take place side of presently<br />
at his residence at Kallhi 4,left- -<br />
o'clock afternoon.<br />
Governor Frear left Chicago at 5<br />
o'clock yesterday for San Francisco.<br />
He will sail from Francisco on<br />
the Manchuria due here June 15, it is<br />
expected. Acting Governor Mott-Sml- th<br />
by yesterday's mail wrote Gov-<br />
ernor Frear at San Francisco.<br />
James L. Holt says he is not a can-<br />
didate for the position of road super-<br />
visor.<br />
steamer Mauna Loa, arriving<br />
this morning, has a full of Puna-lu- u<br />
sugar for the Amy Turner.<br />
It is expected that when the Pearl<br />
Harbor works get started In the fall<br />
fully 1500 men will be employed there,<br />
David Keys, who stole Father Valen<br />
tines picture machine, has upon inves-<br />
tigation been charged with embezzle-<br />
ment.<br />
Stuart Johnson, formerly In charge.<br />
of construction at the Diamond Head<br />
fortifications, is suggested as a suita-<br />
ble man for county road supervisor.<br />
Fujito, the Japanese who bit a piece<br />
of Henry Leslie's ear oft on Wednes-<br />
day night, had his case continued in<br />
the police court yesterday until today.<br />
-- .<br />
AT <strong>THE</strong><br />
FLEET MEET<br />
Present at the meeting of the fleet<br />
executive committee yesterday after<br />
noon were George R. Carter, chairman;<br />
J.F.Morgan, G.-W- . Smith, H.P.Wood,<br />
L. T. Peck, Colonel Jones and F. L.<br />
Waldron.<br />
The matter of furnishing accommo-<br />
dations for the sailors who could not<br />
afford to stay at hotels when ashore<br />
was placed In the hands of the com-<br />
missary committee who will take the<br />
matter up at once.<br />
Eleven hundred and fifty dollars<br />
was granted the commissary commit<br />
tee a hookupu.<br />
Twenty-fiv- e hundred dollars was ap<br />
propriated for a ball after consider-<br />
able discussion, Carter and Peck vot-<br />
ing against it.<br />
It was reported by Carter that $13,--<br />
975 were in sight for the fund.<br />
There were several heated passages<br />
during the meeting between Carter and<br />
Waldron, latter being dissatisfied<br />
with the treatment of the entertain-<br />
ment committee by the executive com-<br />
mittee.<br />
Waldron threatened to resign as<br />
chairman of the entertainment com-<br />
mittee If its requests were not granted<br />
by the executive committee,<br />
that Carter was trying to run<br />
whole shooting match himself.<br />
He demanded that the reports of the<br />
entertainment committee be adopted<br />
before the calling of the Joint meeting<br />
today.<br />
The members of the committee In-<br />
dulged in an animated discussion and<br />
Carter told Waldron that he was try<br />
ing to play horse.<br />
Waldron --wouldn't stand for this<br />
pleasantry and left the meeting.<br />
It Is possible that the entire enter-<br />
tainment committee will resign in<br />
sympathy with Chairman Waldron.<br />
There is also a chance that the execu-<br />
tive committee may resign should<br />
there be anyfurther trouble at the<br />
meeting this afternoon.<br />
r--<br />
JAP BITES EAE OFT.<br />
Henry Leslie, a young brother of the<br />
late Sam Leslie, lost of his ear<br />
In a drunken brawl at Nlu last night.<br />
He mixed up with a Japanese fisher-<br />
man with whom he and some others<br />
had been drinking with the result that<br />
before the two were separated the Jap<br />
had committed mayhem. The injured<br />
lad was brought to town by David<br />
Halle the caretaker of Tom Lucas'<br />
place at Niu and sent to the Queen's<br />
Hospital by police. A mounted<br />
patrolman was sent to Nlu to get the<br />
Japanese who did the biting.<br />
POOLE NOT WANTED.<br />
Poole, the man who was chased<br />
away from Fort Shatter by a report<br />
published that he was wanted In 5a:-remen- to<br />
for theft and who was cap-<br />
tured by Detective Reeves at Walanae,.<br />
Was released from custody last even-<br />
ing by the police authorities as the<br />
Chief of Police of Sacramento cabled<br />
that he did not want him. Poole went<br />
back to the barracks and will be pun-<br />
ished as a straggler.<br />
f--<br />
The Water Department has sent out<br />
notices to a number of water-privile- ge<br />
holders warning them of waste In the<br />
use of water. In each case there has<br />
been a promise to comply strictly .vlih<br />
the rules.<br />
MOB TELLS TIE<br />
LEE LET S<strong>TO</strong>RY<br />
(Continued from Page One.)<br />
pay him a hundred dollirs each day.<br />
At this meeting another meeting for<br />
the next night was arranged, but on<br />
the advice of Attorney General Peters<br />
Taylor did not keep the appointmen:,<br />
going there again on Saturday night.<br />
<strong>THE</strong> MONEY PAID.<br />
Again matters of detail were gone<br />
over, and finally Lee Let was about<br />
to nass some gold to Taylor when<br />
Harbor<br />
irom me room anu i-- i-- ci miuimu<br />
the gold unt.l the person had passed.<br />
Then he came over to Taylor and put<br />
$30 in gold in Taylor's hands, closing<br />
one of Taylor's hands over the othei<br />
and enclosing the two with his own<br />
two and shaking them and saying Mr.<br />
Taylor I hope we have good luck "<br />
Taylor looked at the gold and saw- -<br />
that there was only $50 and said to<br />
Lee Let that the understanding was<br />
that the money was to be paid $100<br />
at a time. Lee Let sail the balunr?<br />
of the hundred would be paid<br />
laterr Taylor asked If It was to be<br />
considered then that this was a part<br />
payment of the first hundred do'Jars,<br />
and Lee Let said It was. Taylor<br />
thereupon wrote a memorandum stat-<br />
ing that he had received $50 on that<br />
account and put his initials on it and<br />
asked Lee Let to sign It. Lee Let.<br />
however, replied, "No, Mr. Taylor, we<br />
understand each other; we don't need<br />
John died the writing."<br />
Palama yes- - Taylor put the gold<br />
The funeral will Pcket his coat, and<br />
late at<br />
this<br />
San<br />
The<br />
load<br />
for<br />
general<br />
the<br />
stating<br />
.the<br />
part<br />
the<br />
M--<br />
<strong>THE</strong> CRIME F<strong>IN</strong>ISHED.<br />
Larnach tried to get further testi-<br />
mony from Taylor in regard to a<br />
meeting on Monday night for which an<br />
appointment was made at the Satur-<br />
day night meeting, and also a ncto<br />
which Taylor received from a person<br />
he had seen in Lee Let's store pur-<br />
porting to come from Lee Let. But<br />
this was excluded as being testimony<br />
as to events occurring after the com-<br />
mission of the crime and not being<br />
a part of the res gesta.<br />
The witness was then turned over<br />
to the defense for<br />
n.<br />
Thompson asked Taylor where he was<br />
born, to which Taylor replied that he<br />
was born In St. Louis, Missouri,<br />
In 1S70j, Thompson then led him<br />
step by step, and from month to<br />
month, and year to year In his life's<br />
history from Salt Lake City back<br />
to St. Louis, to Washington, to<br />
New York, to Cuba, back to New-Yor-<br />
to Elkhart, Indiana, to Chicago,<br />
to Washington again, to Salt Lake<br />
City, to Honolulu, to Manila, and ba-j-<br />
to Honolulu again. On his return to<br />
Honolulu Taylor went to work for the<br />
Advertiser and remained In that em-<br />
ploy until 'the first Monday- -<br />
in January<br />
1907, when after several times declin-<br />
ing the offer of a place oh the police<br />
force and to be placed in charge of<br />
the detective department, he finally<br />
consented and-wa- s appointed.<br />
Thompson inquired In detail as to<br />
Taylor's discussions "of this case with<br />
Matheson and Ayres, Other witnesses<br />
in the case. Taylon said that he dla<br />
not recollect discussing it with Ayres<br />
immediately following the occurrences.<br />
If he had discussed it with him since<br />
then it was at the time they were<br />
both called to the Attorney General's<br />
office to be examined as to their testi-<br />
mony, though he was not sure that<br />
they had discussed It then. And at the<br />
noon recess when Thompson had seen<br />
them together "in earnest conversa-<br />
tion" as he had expressed it to the<br />
court, Ayres had asked him regarding<br />
a certain date, whether It was the<br />
third, fourth or fifth. He had dis<br />
cussed the matter w.th Matheson at the<br />
time of the occurrences and he might<br />
have since though he did not recall<br />
It except perhaps at the time they<br />
were called to the Attorney General's<br />
office.<br />
Thompson asked him if he left the<br />
Advertiser when he Decame Chief of<br />
Detectives and If his pay from the<br />
Advertiser ceased then. Taylor said<br />
he had left the employ at that time<br />
and his pay ceased then. Thompson<br />
asked if he had ever written anything<br />
for the Advertiser since or furnished<br />
material for articles. Taylor said that<br />
he had written a very few articles<br />
since, one of them Tuesday night, and<br />
that he had furnished material for<br />
other articles as he had for all the<br />
papers.<br />
Thompson then showed Taylor a<br />
copy of the Advertiser of February' 9,<br />
1907, containing the first account of<br />
the Lee Let bribery, and asked if he<br />
bad written It or furnished the ma-<br />
terial for it. Taylor replied that those<br />
parts of the article which were copies<br />
of the reports he wrote at the time,<br />
he had written, giving one copy to the<br />
Attorney General, one to the Sheriff<br />
and one he had left at the Advertiser<br />
for Mr. Smith for the purpose of let-<br />
ting Smith know what was going on.<br />
as he wanted the advice of Smith as<br />
a friend. He said he had not given<br />
them especially for publication, and<br />
though he was not altogether sur-<br />
prised when they were published, they<br />
nad not been given for that purpose.<br />
<strong>THE</strong> FORTY ARTICLES.<br />
Thompson then showed Taylor a copy<br />
of the Advertiser of February 15, 1907,<br />
and asked him if he had written the<br />
article concerning Lee Let which ap-<br />
peared In that Issue. Larnach object-<br />
ed on the ground that it was immate-<br />
rial whether Taylor had written them<br />
or not. Quite extended argument fol<br />
lowed. Thompson argued that he had<br />
a right to show to the Jury the mind<br />
of Taylor as it was at the time, with<br />
its interest and bTas; that the Adver-<br />
tiser contained forty articles big and<br />
little about the case during the four<br />
.nundred-od- d days since the occur-<br />
rences; that while each one alone<br />
might count for U'tle In Influence, the<br />
continued repetition might; if Taylor<br />
wrote these or any of them or fur dish-<br />
ed the material for any of thri. It<br />
would show his Interest; they could<br />
only know whether he had irrltten<br />
them, or which, by asking him<br />
FORTY REDUCED <strong>TO</strong> T5-N- .<br />
Judge Robinson thought the matter<br />
a little remote, but, although ne said<br />
he regretted taking up so mi eh time,<br />
he would allow the line of cro<br />
Thompson said he wc uld save<br />
time by eliminating the moie trivial<br />
references to the case, and in the nd<br />
A WONDERFUL DISCOV-<br />
ERY.<br />
This is the ce of ruearth and rfrfjtmL 3m<br />
when alt natare. so U speak, ii ranei5bT II<br />
the scientific for ti.e comfort end happlsa of 11<br />
man. acieace ana i&ueea bum Slant S&isie<br />
dnrinc the past centary, and among the ir<br />
no meSDS least important dlseoTerie in l<br />
cine comes that of XBERAPIOX.<br />
This preparation U unquestionably one ef<br />
the most centime and reliable Patent 34V&-cin- es<br />
ever introduced, and has, we understand,<br />
been used in the Continental Hospitals by<br />
Ricord. Rostan, Jobert, Velpean. Mauonsenr.<br />
the Chassaignac. and indeed by aj<br />
who are regarded as authorities in saei mat-<br />
ters, including the celebrated LiUcmand. aa4<br />
Uoux. by whom it was some time Mnce nni-forr-<br />
adonted. and that it is "Worthy th at<br />
tention of those who require such a remedy wa<br />
think there is no doubt. From the time of<br />
Aristotle downwards, a potent scent in the<br />
of these diseases has (liVe the famed<br />
philosopher's stone) been the object of search<br />
of some hopeful, generous minds, and far<br />
the mere power1 if such could ever hara<br />
been discovered of transmuting the baser<br />
metals into pold is surely the discovery of a<br />
remedy so potent as to replenish the failipj<br />
energies in the one case, and in the other so<br />
effectually, speedilr and safelr to expel from<br />
the sistem the poisons of acquired or inherited<br />
disease in all their protean forms as to lean<br />
no taint or trace behind. Such is the Xew<br />
French Remedv T11KR.IPIOX, which may cer-<br />
tainly rank with, if net tale precedence of.<br />
manr of the discoveries of our dar, about<br />
which no little ostentation and noise have beea<br />
made, and the extensive and g<br />
demand that has been created for this medi-<br />
cine wherever introduced appears to prova<br />
that it is destined to cast into oblivion all<br />
tnoe ouestionaoie remeaie mat were tormerrr<br />
the sole reliance of medical men. Diamond<br />
Field Advertiser. Kimberlev.<br />
HONOLULU S<strong>TO</strong>CK EXCHANGE<br />
Honolulu, Thursday, June 1. 1903.<br />
NAME OK B<strong>TO</strong>CE.<br />
MBCJLTIUI.<br />
O.BrowertCo<br />
BC9A3.<br />
ftpltaj<br />
STi 5.060,0<br />
Haw. Agricultural 1.200.060<br />
Haw Com A Sugar Col 2,312.765<br />
Haw 8u8ir Co .! 2,000,000<br />
Honomu... ...! 7SO.000<br />
uonout....l Z.000.UU.<br />
aairr...<br />
ogq out<br />
Kauku.-..- . 500,00t<br />
Klhel Plan Co Ltd. 2.S00.0K<br />
Koloa 500,000<br />
Mcuryae am uo Lid I s.seu.ooc<br />
0&hu8ogar Co..! S,800,00C<br />
inomea . l.ocu.OOC<br />
In" n..... ' 500.00D<br />
Olaa Sugar Co Ltd . B,000,00C<br />
Olowaln ..v . ......' 150.60C<br />
raaunan 3ng flan Co, 3,000.00f<br />
Padflc.,<br />
Pala.,<br />
Pepeekeo<br />
Pioneer... ....<br />
Wnialua AgrlCo. .<br />
Wailuku<br />
Wairaanalo .<br />
WaimeaSi gar Mill<br />
MlSUIIX3ZOE6<br />
Inter-I&- l .ml H 8 Co..<br />
law Electric Co.<br />
HRTALCoPfd.<br />
HRTAL Co, Com.<br />
Mutual Tal Co .<br />
Nahlxn Rubber Co<br />
N'ahlku Rubber Co....<br />
uk&lco<br />
UIlo R R Co...<br />
Honoln'n Brewing A<br />
amnruo i.ia.<br />
Hbw Pineapple Co..,<br />
Bonds<br />
HawTeripc (Flie<br />
Claims)<br />
Haw Ter 4 p c (Re-<br />
funding 1805 ...<br />
HawTer4PO....,<br />
Haw Ter H pc...<br />
Haw Ter itf p c ...<br />
Haw Gov't 5 d 0<br />
Cal Beet Sag & Ref<br />
l.o o p C ..<br />
Haiku 6 d c<br />
Hamakua I Itch Co<br />
Upper Ditch ope...<br />
Ha com A Sugar<br />
Co 5 p o .....<br />
Haw Sugar 6 p c<br />
Hilo R K Co 6 p o<br />
Hon R T 5 LCo 8 p c<br />
ahuku 6 p c. ....'.<br />
UcBryde Bag Co 8 p c<br />
)K4LCo8pc<br />
.lab, a Sne&r Co A n e...<br />
)1 8nrar Co 6 p ci<br />
-- ac fie Sugar Mill<br />
Co 8 a . .1<br />
'la 8 p c<br />
Pioneer Mill Co 8 pel<br />
.Va'alna IfCnSne<br />
c<br />
Paid O;<br />
HA.0tt<br />
SOO.000<br />
750X<br />
7W.0OC<br />
3,750.(rc<br />
,500.fa)<br />
2C2.UA.<br />
m.ooc<br />
1.W0.WX<br />
SXJ.O0O<br />
1.U0.060<br />
150,000<br />
6G.C80<br />
Aisees.<br />
4,000,000<br />
1,000,000<br />
100.000<br />
0,000<br />
Ami. Out<br />
standing<br />
ns,oco.<br />
eowsc<br />
1.0CP.T00<br />
l.OtO-X-<br />
1,041,090<br />
31,9X1<br />
1.000.000<br />
2C0.00C<br />
1.671,000<br />
473,003<br />
l,noo,coo<br />
647,000<br />
206,000<br />
2.000XCC<br />
900.000<br />
1.250.0TC<br />
BO.OGC<br />
450.OG0<br />
1.Z50.000<br />
t,5C0.000<br />
ZJXVMC<br />
.!. IBMl Aik<br />
Jloo ..,<br />
..<br />
C<br />
..<br />
18K<br />
10Ci<br />
1T5-- J<br />
101<br />
) w- -<br />
23.125 paid. t2S per cent paid.<br />
SESSION SALES.<br />
7 & L. Co., 101.<br />
BETWEEN BOAT1DS.<br />
10 O. & L. Co., 101.<br />
128<br />
101<br />
115<br />
100<br />
O. R.<br />
R.<br />
100<br />
100<br />
reduced the forty articles to ten which<br />
he thought of Importance enough to<br />
find out whether Taylor wrote or In-<br />
spired them. With the exception of<br />
the parts of the articles of February<br />
9, 1907, which were copies of his re-<br />
ports, and perhaps some slight Infor<br />
mation he might have furnished for<br />
the article of February 15, 1907. he<br />
neither wrote nor furnished the mate-<br />
rial for any of the articles until after<br />
his return from San Francisco, when<br />
he was Interviewed by a representa-<br />
tive of the Advertiser, the Interview<br />
being published May 13.<br />
At this point the court adjourned for<br />
the day, Thompson saying in response<br />
to the question of Judge Robinson<br />
whether he had completed his cross-examinati-<br />
"I haven't commenced yet."<br />
RILE! <strong>TO</strong> SUCCEED<br />
SAM BHIFLE TEAM<br />
Among other positions which Col.<br />
Sam Johnson will resign is that of cap<br />
tain of the rifle team. This consists<br />
of all those members of the National<br />
Guard who are In practise competition<br />
for a chance to go to the National<br />
contest held each year on the main-<br />
land. Practise going on regularly.<br />
The men are practising especially at<br />
the longer distances, which was the<br />
place where they made the poorest<br />
scores last year.<br />
Johnson will doubtless be succeeded<br />
as captain of this team by Major<br />
Riley.<br />
o<br />
JOHNSON'S FAREWELL<br />
<strong>TO</strong> FIRST REGIMENT<br />
Col. Sam Johnson has called a meet<br />
ing of the officers of the First Regi-<br />
ment, National Guard, for 4 o'clock<br />
this afternoon, at which he will take<br />
his formal farewell of them as an of-<br />
ficer of the regiment. Acting Govern-<br />
or Mott-Sml- th will be present, and<br />
Adjutant General Jones may be.<br />
9<br />
VITAI. STATISTICS.<br />
The mortuary report for the month<br />
ending May 31st show the deaths<br />
have been 80 for the district of Hono-<br />
lulu. Of these 47 were males and 33<br />
females. Of the 80 the greatest nam- -.<br />
ber of any one nationality was<br />
among Hawallans. Under one year<br />
age 23 deaths are renorted. The above<br />
shows a decrease In the death rale<br />
nvor fifl. itnmianAnillnt, mnntH nt lOSt<br />
year of 24. Births reported during<br />
montllf 68: marriages reported, 116.<br />
28<br />
13<br />
to<br />
5ffiV<br />
BBsP"'<br />
D<br />
Ci<br />
ah<br />
Crtsv<br />
Mey<br />
FE<br />
Om<br />
hgatln<br />
split I<br />
era ef<br />
. a cioi<br />
receivi<br />
i ? torney<br />
j St l,aer'<br />
--OSrJ<br />
camo :<br />
5gJ? tainint<br />
W varion'<br />
m fur, at<br />
I showin<br />
I the go- -<br />
m vire.<br />
I Whe<br />
I<br />
W import;<br />
tJin sev<br />
"tf<br />
tween<br />
cheek.<br />
I , Yestc