12
5 H W. WILCOX 1MJJ1 ESTABLISHED 1904. VOL. 18. NO. 52. LIHUE, KAUAI, TERRITORY OF HAWAII, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1922 SUBSCRIPTION RATES, $2.50 PER YEAR 5 CENTS PER COPY Christmas Tableaux Presented to Throng 'ARMORY IS CROWDED TO DOORO BY PEOPLE OF ALL NATIONS Christmas Carols Sun.q ALL TABLEAUX AND SOLOS PLEASE THE ENTIRE AUDIENCE Tho over new and wondprful Btory of the birth of .esus of Naza reth In Bethlehem was told last night nt th'u Lllnio Armory by a series of tableaux. More than 800 people crowded Into tho armory and the annual Christmas production far exceeded all the audience's fondest expectations. Tho singing of the Christmas car ols by the entire audience was an added touch and to help those whose memories had failed them, the words wore flashed on the screen. All join ed In singing tho sweet old melodies that have como to be a very part of Christmas itself. Tho first tableu represented the prophets and tho prophecy according to Isaiah, was read by Thomas Vance. The second tableau was tho Annuclation and tho Christmas story was road also by Thomas Vance. Tho third tableau, the Herald An gels, was one of the most striking of the evening, tho costuming and posing being very unusual. The song and tableau, tho Three Kings of the Orient, was by far tho best received of them all. The trio number which was sung by tho three kings was an old Christmas carol, "Wo Three Kings of Orient Are." This song was rendered by Simeon Dlas, Henry Malina, and John Maka riani, who played tho three kings, was1' greatly enhanced by the won derful costumes worn by the sirg ers. Tho fourth tableau portrayed tho shephords awaking and following the star of Bethlehem. This was follow ed by a number by the cantata chor us. Tho sixth tableau was the. Madoii' na nnd child, and a solo "Sleep My Jesu Sleep," was sung by Elinor Dale during this number. Mrs. Ma bel Jensen made a very striking Madonna. The manger scene with Mary and Joseph and three little cherubs around the manger was the seventh tableau, while tho Adoration, the last tableu made the most beautiful picture of them all. Too much credit cannot bo given tho committeo which was headed by Miss Edith Rico and Miss Edith Hanson, for the wonderful success of the Christmas tableau. The program committee for the tableau was Mrs. H. D. Sloggett, Miss Edith Hanson, Mrs. Frank Crawford, Mrs. Alma Rogers and Rev. It. W. Bayless. Others who contributed to tho success of tho evening wero W. Hall, Nell Locke and W. H. Rico tlr. . Tho program was as follows: Community Singing. The Prophecy (according to Isa- iah). 1 Tableau: The Projihets. Solo: "O Jerusalem", Alma Rogers 2 Tableau: The Annunciation. Tho Christmas Story (Luko 2:8-14- ) Thomas Vanco. Hark the Angels Sing: Community Singing. 3 Tableau: Tho Herald Angels. Tho First Noel: Community Sing ing. 4 Tableau: Tho Shepherds. ' Christians Awake: Cantata Chor- us, 5 Song and Tableau: Three Kings of Orient. O, Little Town of Bethlehem: Com- munity Singing. C Tableau: Madonna and Child. Sleep My Jesu Elinor Hale. Silent Night, Holy Night: Com- munity Singing. 7 Tableau: The Manger Scene. Come, All Ye Faithful: Community Singing. 8 Tableau: Tho Adoration. Accompanist Frances Allen. Violinist Mabel Watorhouso. Mary Mabol Jensen Joseph Thomas Morgan Tho Angel Gabriol Lyndall Jacobs Tho Herald Angels Margaret Sloggett, Mabel Kuhl- - Annual Cantata Pleases Large Crowd BEST PRODUCTION EVER, IS THE GENERAL VERDICT The Christmas cantata, "Tho Coming of the King," rendered at Lihuo Memorial Parish houso on Sunday evening, wns a musical treat that will long bo remembered by the largo audience that sat enthrall- ed throughout the rendition of this famous cantata. .Tho complete program of solo and chorus work was rendered in that pleasing and artistic manner for which this community is becoming famous and showed long and pains- taking preparation. Much credit is duo Mrs. Ralph W. Bayless, conductress, and Mrs. Wil- liam Grote, pianist, for tho splerdld uuecess attained in this (master- piece. These ladles are both recog- nized as musicians of a high order r.nd tho musical personnel selected by them for the occasion did them full credit. Tho soloists were Mrs. Almu Rog nrs, Mrs. Adrian Englehard, Mrs Elliott Wood, Miss Elinor Dale, Mrs, Win. Henry Rice, Mrs. Henry Shol don, Rev. R. W. Bayless, Judge Wm, C. Aclii Jr., Simeon Dias, Alfred Vklona, John Makanani, Henry Waiau, Digby Sloggett. Tho musical personnel was ns fol lows. Sopranos Mrs. Wm. H. Rico Jr., Mrs. Clap per, Mrs. Alma Rogers, Mrs. Henry T. Sheldon, Mrs. E. S. Swan, Miss Hannah Sheldon, Miss Elinor Dale, Miss Lois Hunt. Altos Mrs. Adrian Englehard, Mrs. Rob crt F. Middleton, Mrs. Elliott F. Wood, Mrs. Charles Keahl, Miss Lottie Jordan, Miss Mary Morris, Miss Dorothy Jackson, Miss Estello Rowe, Miss Waudeo Cheek, Miss Ro salia Lovcll. Tenors William Stewart, St. Claire De Lacoy, Charles Keahl, J. C. Jamie son, Ralph W. Bayless, Lewis R. Jackson, Simeon Dlas. Basse.y H. D. Sloggett, Henry Walau, Wm. Henry Rice Jr., Abraham Lima, Timothy Montgomery, Alfred Akiona, John Makanani, Wm. C. Achi Jr. Pianist Mrs. William Groto. Directress Mrs. Ralph W. Bayless DREDGING COMPLETED AT AHUKINI HARBOR Tho Hawaiian .Dredging Co. com' plcted the dredging of Ahukinl last week and the dredger returned to Honolulu Thursday. Over one thousand yards of ma terial was removed from the bot-o- f tho harbor during the operation of tho dredger. A minimum depth of 35 feet is maintained throughout tho cntiro dredged portion. Tho area dredged Is one thousand feet from the breakwater following a line parallel to tho wharf and then follows a line of practically the same length curving to a point on the shore opposite tho end of tho breakwater. It is now possible for steamers as big as tho Wilhelmina to uso Ahu- - klni hrabor, which ought to remove any objections that tho Inter Is- land havo in putting either the Kl- - lauea of the Mauna Kca on the lo cal run when the Haleakala arrives. DAtLY MAIL SERVICE FOR EAST KAUAI The post office department an- nounces that beginning Jauuary 9 there will bo a daily mall Bervlco to Hanalei from Llhue, excepting Sunday and Monday. This will end a long fight that tho east side of the island had been making to secure dally service to that part of Kauai. man, Leilanl Scott. Tho Prophets Charles Scrlbner, Mortimer Lyd- - gato, Timothy Montgomery, Hen- ry Wedemoyer, Kazu Yamasaki, Tho Shepherds Solomon Tsou, Charles Ishll, C. Corezan, Charles Wood, James C. Clapper, Arthur Sloggett. The Kings Simeon Dias, Henry Malina, John Makanani. Tho Cherubs Harrelt Locke, Helen Rico and Mary Salisbury. OF HOLDS to A. A. on F. J. on Tho Kauai Chamber of Commerce held Its regular meeting at tho Tip Top Cafe last evening and the biggest turnout of the year mark ed tho last meeting in 1922. Over 90 members turned out to hear Prof. A. A. Hauck, president of Punahou school, and F. J Doll- inger, of Kauai high school, and they wero rewarded by hearing two of the most addresses that have boon delivered before the chamber this year. President Hauck was the first speaker and he took for his subject He told tho chamber that tho duties of present day edu cation Inf preparing tho children for the future wero fourfold. The first was to educate them along physical lines, so that their bodies would be prepared to take up the struggle when they went out into the world. The second duty was to give them a working of the English language so that In the future their thinking and reading would bo in that language, Tho third duty was to develop a civic attitude among the children so that when they became of age they would perform their duties as citizens in an manner; and the fourth was to teach them to earn a living. He then told tho chamber that It was a good sign for the future of education when bodies similar to the chamber wero taking an Inter- est in it. President HaucU's address was de- livered in an unusually manner and his words made a dis- tinct on the members. F. J. Dollinger, who followed Mr. Hauck, then told what Is being done at the Kauai high school along the local children. Mr. Dollinger opened his talk with an invitation to the members of the chamber to visit tho high school and inspect it so as to receive first Kapaa and Wuilua residents who in the past have been forced to suffer shortages in their water supply, due to tho heavy de- mand for water In the early morn- ings and evenings, will no doubt bo interested in the of Fred Mcndcs that the work of a supply of wat- er, sufficient to meet tho needs of is expected to start early next year. Plans for the work havo already been submitted to th of Public Works In Honolulu and bids will probably bo called for soon. Kapaa and iWallua aro at present supplied with only ono line, and Walpoull and Wailua residents aro always of empty pipes, tho demand from those nt the head of the line taking all the water dur ing certain periods of tho day. The present plans for the now water system call for two lines lead- ing from tho same source, ono lino for Kapaa users and nnother for Waipauli and Wailua, thus insuring all residents with an adequate sup- ply. A third line will probably bo built to supply the Hawaiian Can neries Co., as tho pineapple cannery during tho height of tho canning season in the summer months re quires an enormous quantity of wat er ,for uso in connection with their canning For those who may bollevo that three lines' leading from tho same source of supply might tend to exhaust tho supply or at least to diminish it, Meudes states that tho present supply avail- able all the year around, is suffici- ent to eupply a district with three times the present of Ka- walhau. Tho last $C0,000 for tho of an adequate water supply for Kapaa. COMMERCE MEEI6 OF YEAR Ninety Members Turn Out Hear Professor Hauck Education; Principal Dollinger Talks School Problems Thursday Interesting "Education." complete knowledge intelligent Interesting impression developing Kapaa Water Supply Increased Next Year temporary announcement Supervisor developing Kawalhau, Department complaining operations. Supervisor population legislature appropriated development BIG Speak hand knowledge as to what Is being done. Ho then bocamo specific where President Hauck had been general, and told that the school was work ing along a fourfold plan. The first plan was that tho nchool was preparing tho scholars who In tended to take up collego courses, for that work In Its academic de- partment. The second plan was to develop the local girls, who prefer red that course along- - the linos of domestic science and domestic art. This course prepared them as houso wives and home builders. The third plan wus to develop boys industrially and technically, with a four year manual training course. Tho fourth plan was to develop girls and boys for n commercial career with a four year commercial course. Mr. Dolllnger's talk gave many members of the chamber a new light on tho work that has been done at the high school and many favorable comments were heard from various members. At the business session, which followed tho banquet, a motion was introduced to have tho chair ap- point a committee to devise a suit- able memorial to tho late J. M. Lyd-gat- An amendment was added to tho first motion that the board of supervisors bo petitioned by tho chamber to change the name of Wal-lu- a Park to J. M. Lydgato Park as a memorial to Mr. Lydgate, as it was thru his efforts that this park was obtained for the public of Ka uai. Both the motion and tho amend nient passed unanimously. Rev, R. W. Bayless, who was the delegate to tho recent civic convon tion in Honolulu from tho Kauai Chamber of Commerce, rendered an Interesting report on tho convention. Jack Horner gavo as part of tho entertninincnt, two solos that wero well received. Noll Molor entertain ed at tho piano between tho courses. PERSONALS G. P. Wilcox was among tho pas sengors arriving Friday morning. Mr. nnd Mrs. II. Rohrig of Hono lulu aro spending tho Christmas Hol- idays at their old homo In Liltuc. Judgo J. L. Hjorth of Llhue, re turned from a brief vacation spent In Honolulu. Mrs. F. M. Crohoro arrived on Thursday morning on the Kinau to spend tho holidays with her daughter, Mrs. W. C. Scrlbner of Llhue. Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Longstreth, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Lane of Lihuo returned this morning from Hono- lulu where they spent Christmas with their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Christian spent Christmas In Honolulu. They returned to their homo in Hunamau-l- u this morning. Dr. Yanaglhira, of Kapaa, accom- panied by his daughter, returned from Honolulu" last Friday morn- ing. Mr. nnd Mrs. A. Robinson and Mr. and Mrs. Sinclair Robinson, of Makaweli, who returned from, tho mainland on tho Maul last Tuesday, arrived on tho Kinau Thursday morn- ing. Miss Wanda Cheek, Mokihana dis- trict nurse, and Miss Wightman, nurso at Koloa hospital, returned Friday morning from Honolulu where thoy havo been attending tho Emorson nutrition institute. Judge Alexander Lindsay Jr. camo over from Honolulu Friday morn- ing and Is spending the holiday per-io- d with tho Faya's at Kokaha. Miss Mabol Wilcox, Miss Estello Roe and Mrs. C. K. Lyman of Llhue, and Miss Mabel MIna, of Makaweli, all of whom havo been attending tho Emerson nufrltion institute in Honolulu, returned on tho Kinau last Thursday morning. Political Plot Puzzles Public KAWAIHAU LADS SAID TO BE AFTER CARLOS LONG'S SCALP Nevor let It be said that politicians nre quiet In Kawalhau, as It Is al ways opan season In that district The latest plot brewing that dls trlct Is of Island wide interest, for it hinges on tho very Important po sltlons of Kauai tax assessor, tho deputy tax assessor for Kawalhau and the district magistrate of Wat moa. Tho first Btep In the action re gards tho appointment of tho de puty tax assessor for Kawalhau, who will ho appointed by Carlos Long, tnx assessor for tho Island. The Kawalhau precinct club has en- dorsed K. MaBunaga for the posi- tion, and It Is understood that ac- cording to political custom It is ne- cessary for tho candidate for a dls-trl- office to be endorsed by tho precinct club. The rumor has gone abroad that Long does not Intend to appoint Masaunaga, but that Hopii, the oth- er candidate, will be his selection. Kawalhau Republicans nre not slow in stating that if Long does so they will go out after his scalp, as he Is a Democratic holdover in the o as tax assessor and that a good Republican should replace him. It is rather hard to seo where tho district Magistrate of Walmea comes in at first glance, but this comes on another angle. Judge Hoggaard Is a good Republican, but ho is in danger of losing his position, fol lowing along the policy of Chief Justice Peters In appointing to the district courts, There- fore the Kawalhau politicians figure that If the judge is removed it might not be a bad idea to remove tho Democratic holdover in the tnx assessor job and replace him with somo good Republican, say Judge Hofgaard, for instance. Tho Kawalhau men claim that Deputy Sheriff Crowell Is bo hind tho movement to removo Judge Hofgaard, although Crowell strenu ously denies this. uroweii is deputy tax assessor ns well as deputy sheriff and it is claimed that If Horgaard succeeds Long that Crowell will hold only ono position jjfter tho appointment. ong is now registered as a Re licun, but tho Information is giv Oft- - out from Kawalhau that ho was appointed under a Democratic admin Istrntlon and that ho also has been a candidate' for office on tho Demo cratic ticket. In tho meantime tho story has spread all over tho Island and ninny nnd various conjectures aro being madfc as to tho final outcome. How over, n tno affair should fall to come to a head, thero Is no doubt that Kawalhau will have a now sensation to spring tho following week. INMATES OF MAHELONA HOSPITAL ENJOY XMAS Thru tho kindness of many good friends of tho Maholona Memorial hospital, the Inmates of that histi tution had an enjoyable Christmas with a treo .appropriate exercises and music and everything that goes to make tho Yuletldo a time of Joy For sovoral days past, cars havo been arriving at tho hospital, de- positing packages and bundles that were destined to, make those hearts glad. FILIPINOS PLAN BIG CELEBRATION SATURDAY The Filipino Rizal day committee announces that plans for tho Fili pino National celebration at Wal poull are complete. The morning program will bo given over to patriotic exercises, while tho afternoon will bo glvon over to sports, Carpentero, tho Fili- pino lightweight champion of the Islands, Is billed to meet an oppon- ent not yet named, Lopez and Cor- - iilllio will meet in a four round bout as will Rojos and Tomas. Tho all Filipino baseball team will meet tho team In tho other sports of the afternoon. Foresters AH Set For New Years Day MANY ENTRIES ARE IN FOR THE BIG RACING PROGRAM Roman Race Featured AFTERNOON'S SPORTS WILL BE VARIED AND PLEASING IN NUMBER Entries for the Foresters big rac- ing meet and day of sports at Wal- poull race track next Monday aro" practically complete. Sixteen races are down on tho cards and the For- - estors will havo a busy tlmo run- ning them so ns to get finished bo-for- e dark. John Fernandez, who is general chairman for tho Foresters, an- nounced today that thero will bo no long waits botweon races and the Lihuo band will be on hand to snap things up while the horses are going to tho post. Two races on the card aro excit ing more Interest than any of tho others, these two being tho mile open and the five-eighth- s open. Din ner Bell, Golden Spray and Sky Boy will meet In the mile .and these three - horses havo the rail birds scratching their heads trying to fig-ur- e tho winner. There certainly can bo no shortage of stop-watche- s on tho island, as whenever the horse from the enemy camp goes out for a work all the stable boys, trainers and Jockeys for tho other horses appear with watches and clocks him as he takes his spin around tho track and then watches aro compared and hnn.la wag over tho result. Old Golden Spray Is said to bo due for a come- back as he flashed tho mile in good stylo yesterday. Both Dinner Bell and Sky Boy look good and no doubt they will have their back-er- s when tho big race conies off. Tho other race that is causing comment is tho five-eight- of a mile with Silver Dust, Fireman, Din-ne- r Bell and Kapaa Girl as tho en- tries. The first contenders were on- ly Silver Dust and Fireman, but tho nddltion of Dinner Bell and Kapaa Girl to tho entries gives the race a new angle. Silver Dust took tho measure of Fireman tho last tlmo they met, but Fireman's backers are looking for tho Kapaa horses to lead tho Fernundez mare, while tho Japanese racing fans are backing Dinner Bell to finish abend of them both. Kapaa Girl Is given only an outside chanco by most of tho fans but there nre plenty of backers for G win's mare. Tho first raco sounds like a poul try show instead of a horse race ns tho three entries are James Spald- ing's Chicken, Johu Molina's Turkey, and Jules Rapoza's, Duck. The- - entries to date are. as follows: 1. 4 mile Babies. Chicken, Spal- ding. Turkey Malina. Duck Rapo-za- . 2. -3-- 8 milo free for all. Sliver Dust, Fireman. 3. -3-- 4 mile freo for all. Dinner Bell, Sky Boy, Prohibition. 4. mllo ladles race. fi. 2 mile Portuguese; Kapaa Girl, Black Bird, Hanamaulu Girl. C 2 mile Japanese. Koloa Girl. Walpoull, 7. mllo for throe year olds. Manu Kauai, Golden Shower, Sir Walter. 8. 2 mile Filipino. Post entries. 9. 4 milo girls raco. 10. mllo post entries. 11. 1 mllo mule race. 12. 8 free for all. Dinner Bell. Silver Dust, Kapaa Girl, Fireman. 13. 1 mile freo for all. Dinner Bell, Sky Boy. Golden Spray. 14. Cowboy relay post entries. 15. Roman race. Ben Corbett nnd Ortega. EPISCOPAL SERVICES There will bo a celebration of tho Anglican communion at tho resi dence of J. H. Hall, Lihuo, "at 7:30 p.m., December 28th. Celebrant, tho Episcopal priest from Wnimea. Rev. M. E. Carver. Mr. and Mrs. A. Horner Sr. arriv ed last Thursday morning to spend the holidays with thoir sons, Albert Jr. and Foster, of Kapaa and

Christmas Tableaux Annual Cantata OF COMMERCE Political ... · 5 h w. wilcox 1mjj1 established 1904. vol. 18. no. 52. lihue, kauai, territory of hawaii, tuesday, december 26, 1922

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    3

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Christmas Tableaux Annual Cantata OF COMMERCE Political ... · 5 h w. wilcox 1mjj1 established 1904. vol. 18. no. 52. lihue, kauai, territory of hawaii, tuesday, december 26, 1922

5

H W. WILCOX 1MJJ1

ESTABLISHED 1904. VOL. 18. NO. 52. LIHUE, KAUAI, TERRITORY OF HAWAII, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1922 SUBSCRIPTION RATES, $2.50 PER YEAR 5 CENTS PER COPY

Christmas Tableaux

Presented to Throng

'ARMORY IS CROWDED TO DOOROBY PEOPLE OF ALL

NATIONS

Christmas Carols Sun.q

ALL TABLEAUX AND SOLOSPLEASE THE ENTIRE

AUDIENCE

Tho over new and wondprfulBtory of the birth of .esus of Nazareth In Bethlehem was told lastnight nt th'u Lllnio Armory by aseries of tableaux. More than 800

people crowded Into tho armory andthe annual Christmas production farexceeded all the audience's fondestexpectations.

Tho singing of the Christmas carols by the entire audience was anadded touch and to help those whosememories had failed them, the wordswore flashed on the screen. All joined In singing tho sweet old melodiesthat have como to be a very partof Christmas itself.

Tho first tableu represented theprophets and tho prophecy accordingto Isaiah, was read by ThomasVance. The second tableau was thoAnnuclation and tho Christmas storywas road also by Thomas Vance.

Tho third tableau, the Herald Angels, was one of the most strikingof the evening, tho costuming andposing being very unusual.

The song and tableau, tho ThreeKings of the Orient, was by far thobest received of them all. The trionumber which was sung by tho threekings was an old Christmas carol,"Wo Three Kings of Orient Are."This song was rendered by SimeonDlas, Henry Malina, and John Makariani, who played tho three kings,was1' greatly enhanced by the wonderful costumes worn by the sirgers.

Tho fourth tableau portrayed thoshephords awaking and following thestar of Bethlehem. This was followed by a number by the cantata chorus.

Tho sixth tableau was the. Madoii'na nnd child, and a solo "Sleep My

Jesu Sleep," was sung by ElinorDale during this number. Mrs. Ma

bel Jensen made a very strikingMadonna.

The manger scene with Mary andJoseph and three little cherubsaround the manger was the seventhtableau, while tho Adoration, thelast tableu made the most beautifulpicture of them all.

Too much credit cannot bo giventho committeo which was headedby Miss Edith Rico and Miss EdithHanson, for the wonderful successof the Christmas tableau.

The program committee for thetableau was Mrs. H. D. Sloggett,Miss Edith Hanson, Mrs. FrankCrawford, Mrs. Alma Rogers andRev. It. W. Bayless.

Others who contributed to thosuccess of tho evening wero W. Hall,Nell Locke and W. H. Rico tlr.

. Tho program was as follows:Community Singing.The Prophecy (according to Isa-

iah).1 Tableau: The Projihets.

Solo: "O Jerusalem", Alma Rogers2 Tableau: The Annunciation.

Tho Christmas Story (Luko 2:8-14- )

Thomas Vanco.Hark the Angels Sing: Community

Singing.3 Tableau: Tho Herald Angels.

Tho First Noel: Community Singing.

4 Tableau: Tho Shepherds.' Christians Awake: Cantata Chor-

us,5 Song and Tableau: Three Kings

of Orient.O, Little Town of Bethlehem: Com-

munity Singing.C Tableau: Madonna and Child.

Sleep My Jesu Elinor Hale.Silent Night, Holy Night: Com-

munity Singing.7 Tableau: The Manger Scene.

Come, All Ye Faithful: CommunitySinging.

8 Tableau: Tho Adoration.Accompanist Frances Allen.Violinist Mabel Watorhouso.Mary Mabol JensenJoseph Thomas MorganTho Angel Gabriol

Lyndall JacobsTho Herald Angels

Margaret Sloggett, Mabel Kuhl- -

Annual Cantata

Pleases Large Crowd

BEST PRODUCTION EVER, ISTHE GENERAL

VERDICTThe Christmas cantata, "Tho

Coming of the King," rendered atLihuo Memorial Parish houso onSunday evening, wns a musical treatthat will long bo remembered bythe largo audience that sat enthrall-ed throughout the rendition of thisfamous cantata.

.Tho complete program of solo andchorus work was rendered in thatpleasing and artistic manner forwhich this community is becomingfamous and showed long and pains-taking preparation.

Much credit is duo Mrs. Ralph W.Bayless, conductress, and Mrs. Wil-liam Grote, pianist, for tho splerdlduuecess attained in this (master-piece. These ladles are both recog-nized as musicians of a high orderr.nd tho musical personnel selectedby them for the occasion did themfull credit.

Tho soloists were Mrs. Almu Rognrs, Mrs. Adrian Englehard, MrsElliott Wood, Miss Elinor Dale, Mrs,Win. Henry Rice, Mrs. Henry Sholdon, Rev. R. W. Bayless, Judge Wm,C. Aclii Jr., Simeon Dias, AlfredVklona, John Makanani, Henry

Waiau, Digby Sloggett.Tho musical personnel was ns fol

lows.Sopranos

Mrs. Wm. H. Rico Jr., Mrs. Clapper, Mrs. Alma Rogers, Mrs. HenryT. Sheldon, Mrs. E. S. Swan, MissHannah Sheldon, Miss Elinor Dale,Miss Lois Hunt.

AltosMrs. Adrian Englehard, Mrs. Rob

crt F. Middleton, Mrs. Elliott F.Wood, Mrs. Charles Keahl, MissLottie Jordan, Miss Mary Morris,Miss Dorothy Jackson, Miss EstelloRowe, Miss Waudeo Cheek, Miss Rosalia Lovcll.

TenorsWilliam Stewart, St. Claire De

Lacoy, Charles Keahl, J. C. Jamieson, Ralph W. Bayless, Lewis R.Jackson, Simeon Dlas.

Basse.yH. D. Sloggett, Henry Walau, Wm.

Henry Rice Jr., Abraham Lima,Timothy Montgomery, Alfred Akiona,John Makanani, Wm. C. Achi Jr.

Pianist Mrs. William Groto.Directress Mrs. Ralph W. Bayless

DREDGING COMPLETEDAT AHUKINI HARBOR

Tho Hawaiian .Dredging Co. com'plcted the dredging of Ahukinl lastweek and the dredger returned toHonolulu Thursday.

Over one thousand yards of material was removed from the bot-o-f

tho harbor during the operationof tho dredger. A minimum depthof 35 feet is maintained throughouttho cntiro dredged portion.

Tho area dredged Is one thousandfeet from the breakwater followinga line parallel to tho wharf and thenfollows a line of practically thesame length curving to a point onthe shore opposite tho end of thobreakwater.

It is now possible for steamers asbig as tho Wilhelmina to uso Ahu- -

klni hrabor, which ought to removeany objections that tho Inter Is-

land havo in putting either the Kl- -

lauea of the Mauna Kca on the local run when the Haleakala arrives.

DAtLY MAIL SERVICEFOR EAST KAUAI

The post office department an-

nounces that beginning Jauuary 9

there will bo a daily mall Bervlcoto Hanalei from Llhue, exceptingSunday and Monday.

This will end a long fight thattho east side of the island had beenmaking to secure dally service tothat part of Kauai.

man, Leilanl Scott.Tho Prophets

Charles Scrlbner, Mortimer Lyd- -

gato, Timothy Montgomery, Hen-ry Wedemoyer, Kazu Yamasaki,Tho Shepherds

Solomon Tsou, Charles Ishll, C.Corezan, Charles Wood, JamesC. Clapper, Arthur Sloggett.

The KingsSimeon Dias, Henry Malina,John Makanani.

Tho CherubsHarrelt Locke, Helen Rico andMary Salisbury.

OF

HOLDS

to A. A.

on F. J.

onTho Kauai Chamber of Commerce

held Its regular meeting at tho TipTop Cafe last evening andthe biggest turnout of the year marked tho last meeting in 1922.

Over 90 members turned out tohear Prof. A. A. Hauck, presidentof Punahou school, and F. J Doll-inger, of Kauai high school, andthey wero rewarded by hearing twoof the most addressesthat have boon delivered before thechamber this year.

President Hauck was the firstspeaker and he took for his subject

He told tho chamberthat tho duties of present day education Inf preparing tho children forthe future wero fourfold. The firstwas to educate them along physicallines, so that their bodies wouldbe prepared to take up the strugglewhen they went out into the world.The second duty was to give thema working ofthe English language so that In thefuture their thinking and readingwould bo in that language, Tho thirdduty was to develop a civic attitudeamong the children so that whenthey became of age they wouldperform their duties as citizens inan manner; and the fourthwas to teach them to earn a living.He then told tho chamber that Itwas a good sign for the future ofeducation when bodies similar tothe chamber wero taking an Inter-est in it.

President HaucU's address was de-

livered in an unusuallymanner and his words made a dis-

tinct on the members.F. J. Dollinger, who followed Mr.

Hauck, then told what Is beingdone at the Kauai high school along

the local children. Mr.Dollinger opened his talk with aninvitation to the members of thechamber to visit tho high schooland inspect it so as to receive first

Kapaa and Wuilua residents who

in the past have been forced tosuffer shortages in theirwater supply, due to tho heavy de-

mand for water In the early morn-

ings and evenings, will no doubt bo

interested in the of

Fred Mcndcs that thework of a supply of wat-

er, sufficient to meet tho needs ofis expected to start early

next year.

Plans for the work havo alreadybeen submitted to thof Public Works In Honolulu andbids will probably bo called for soon.Kapaa and iWallua aro at presentsupplied with only ono line, andWalpoull and Wailua residents aroalways of empty pipes,tho demand from those nt the headof the line taking all the water during certain periods of tho day.

The present plans for the nowwater system call for two lines lead-ing from tho same source, ono linofor Kapaa users and nnother forWaipauli and Wailua, thus insuringall residents with an adequate sup-

ply. A third line will probably bobuilt to supply the Hawaiian Canneries Co., as tho pineapple canneryduring tho height of tho canningseason in the summer months requires an enormous quantity of water ,for uso in connection with theircanning

For those who may bollevo thatthree lines' leading from thosame source of supply might tendto exhaust tho supply or at leastto diminish it, Meudesstates that tho present supply avail-able all the year around, is suffici-ent to eupply a district with threetimes the present of Ka-

walhau.Tho last

$C0,000 for tho of anadequate water supply for Kapaa.

COMMERCE

MEEI6 OF YEAR

Ninety Members Turn Out Hear ProfessorHauck Education; Principal

Dollinger Talks School Problems

Thursday

Interesting

"Education."

complete knowledge

intelligent

Interesting

impression

developing

Kapaa Water Supply

Increased Next Year

temporary

announcementSupervisor

developing

Kawalhau,

Department

complaining

operations.

Supervisor

population

legislature appropriateddevelopment

BIG

Speak

hand knowledge as to what Is beingdone.

Ho then bocamo specific wherePresident Hauck had been general,and told that the school was working along a fourfold plan.

The first plan was that tho nchoolwas preparing tho scholars who Intended to take up collego courses,for that work In Its academic de-

partment. The second plan was todevelop the local girls, who preferred that course along- - the linos ofdomestic science and domestic art.This course prepared them as housowives and home builders. The thirdplan wus to develop boys industriallyand technically, with a four yearmanual training course. Tho fourthplan was to develop girls and boysfor n commercial career with a fouryear commercial course.

Mr. Dolllnger's talk gave manymembers of the chamber a newlight on tho work that has beendone at the high school and manyfavorable comments were heard fromvarious members.

At the business session, whichfollowed tho banquet, a motion wasintroduced to have tho chair ap-

point a committee to devise a suit-able memorial to tho late J. M. Lyd-gat-

An amendment was added totho first motion that the board ofsupervisors bo petitioned by thochamber to change the name of Wal-lu- a

Park to J. M. Lydgato Park asa memorial to Mr. Lydgate, as itwas thru his efforts that this parkwas obtained for the public of Kauai. Both the motion and tho amendnient passed unanimously.

Rev, R. W. Bayless, who was thedelegate to tho recent civic convontion in Honolulu from tho KauaiChamber of Commerce, rendered anInteresting report on tho convention.

Jack Horner gavo as part of thoentertninincnt, two solos that werowell received. Noll Molor entertained at tho piano between tho courses.

PERSONALS

G. P. Wilcox was among tho passengors arriving Friday morning.

Mr. nnd Mrs. II. Rohrig of Honolulu aro spending tho Christmas Hol-idays at their old homo In Liltuc.

Judgo J. L. Hjorth of Llhue, returned from a brief vacation spentIn Honolulu.

Mrs. F. M. Crohoro arrived onThursday morning on the Kinauto spend tho holidays with herdaughter, Mrs. W. C. Scrlbner ofLlhue.

Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Longstreth,Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Lane of Lihuoreturned this morning from Hono-lulu where they spent Christmaswith their parents.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Christianspent Christmas In Honolulu. Theyreturned to their homo in Hunamau-l- u

this morning.Dr. Yanaglhira, of Kapaa, accom-

panied by his daughter, returnedfrom Honolulu" last Friday morn-ing.

Mr. nnd Mrs. A. Robinson andMr. and Mrs. Sinclair Robinson, ofMakaweli, who returned from, thomainland on tho Maul last Tuesday,arrived on tho Kinau Thursday morn-ing.

Miss Wanda Cheek, Mokihana dis-

trict nurse, and Miss Wightman,nurso at Koloa hospital, returnedFriday morning from Honoluluwhere thoy havo been attending thoEmorson nutrition institute.

Judge Alexander Lindsay Jr. camoover from Honolulu Friday morn-ing and Is spending the holiday per-io- d

with tho Faya's at Kokaha.Miss Mabol Wilcox, Miss Estello

Roe and Mrs. C. K. Lyman of Llhue,and Miss Mabel MIna, of Makaweli,all of whom havo been attendingtho Emerson nufrltion institute inHonolulu, returned on tho Kinaulast Thursday morning.

Political PlotPuzzles Public

KAWAIHAU LADS SAID TO BEAFTER CARLOS LONG'S

SCALP

Nevor let It be said that politiciansnre quiet In Kawalhau, as It Is always opan season In that districtThe latest plot brewing that dlstrlct Is of Island wide interest, forit hinges on tho very Important posltlons of Kauai tax assessor, thodeputy tax assessor for Kawalhauand the district magistrate of Watmoa.

Tho first Btep In the action regards tho appointment of tho deputy tax assessor for Kawalhau,who will ho appointed by CarlosLong, tnx assessor for tho Island.The Kawalhau precinct club has en-

dorsed K. MaBunaga for the posi-tion, and It Is understood that ac-

cording to political custom It is ne-

cessary for tho candidate for a dls-trl-

office to be endorsed by thoprecinct club.

The rumor has gone abroad thatLong does not Intend to appointMasaunaga, but that Hopii, the oth-er candidate, will be his selection.Kawalhau Republicans nre not slowin stating that if Long does so theywill go out after his scalp, as heIs a Democratic holdover in the o

as tax assessor and that a goodRepublican should replace him.

It is rather hard to seo where thodistrict Magistrate of Walmea comesin at first glance, but this comeson another angle. Judge HoggaardIs a good Republican, but ho is indanger of losing his position, following along the policy of ChiefJustice Peters In appointing

to the district courts, There-fore the Kawalhau politicians figurethat If the judge is removed itmight not be a bad idea to removetho Democratic holdover in the tnxassessor job and replace him withsomo good Republican, say JudgeHofgaard, for instance.

Tho Kawalhau men claim thatDeputy Sheriff Crowell Is bohind tho movement to removo JudgeHofgaard, although Crowell strenuously denies this.

uroweii is deputy tax assessorns well as deputy sheriff and it isclaimed that If Horgaard succeedsLong that Crowell will hold onlyono position jjfter tho appointment.

ong is now registered as a Relicun, but tho Information is giv

Oft-- out from Kawalhau that ho wasappointed under a Democratic adminIstrntlon and that ho also has beena candidate' for office on tho Democratic ticket.

In tho meantime tho story hasspread all over tho Island and ninnynnd various conjectures aro beingmadfc as to tho final outcome. Howover, n tno affair should fall tocome to a head, thero Is no doubtthat Kawalhau will have a nowsensation to spring tho followingweek.

INMATES OF MAHELONAHOSPITAL ENJOY XMAS

Thru tho kindness of many goodfriends of tho Maholona Memorialhospital, the Inmates of that histitution had an enjoyable Christmaswith a treo .appropriate exercisesand music and everything that goesto make tho Yuletldo a time of Joy

For sovoral days past, cars havobeen arriving at tho hospital, de-

positing packages and bundles thatwere destined to, make those heartsglad.

FILIPINOS PLAN BIGCELEBRATION SATURDAY

The Filipino Rizal day committeeannounces that plans for tho Filipino National celebration at Walpoull are complete.

The morning program will bogiven over to patriotic exercises,while tho afternoon will bo glvonover to sports, Carpentero, tho Fili-

pino lightweight champion of theIslands, Is billed to meet an oppon-ent not yet named, Lopez and Cor- -

iilllio will meet in a four roundbout as will Rojos and Tomas.

Tho all Filipino baseball teamwill meet tho team Intho other sports of the afternoon.

Foresters AH Set

For New Years Day

MANY ENTRIES ARE IN FORTHE BIG RACING

PROGRAM

Roman Race Featured

AFTERNOON'S SPORTS WILL BEVARIED AND PLEASING IN

NUMBER

Entries for the Foresters big rac-ing meet and day of sports at Wal-poull race track next Monday aro"practically complete. Sixteen racesare down on tho cards and the For- -

estors will havo a busy tlmo run-ning them so ns to get finished bo-for- e

dark.John Fernandez, who is general

chairman for tho Foresters, an-nounced today that thero will bono long waits botweon races andthe Lihuo band will be on hand tosnap things up while the horses aregoing to tho post.

Two races on the card aro exciting more Interest than any of thoothers, these two being tho mileopen and the five-eighth- s open. Dinner Bell, Golden Spray and SkyBoy will meet In the mile .and thesethree - horses havo the rail birdsscratching their heads trying to fig-ur- e

tho winner.There certainly can bo no shortage

of stop-watche- s on tho island, aswhenever the horse from the enemycamp goes out for a work all thestable boys, trainers and Jockeysfor tho other horses appear withwatches and clocks him as he takeshis spin around tho track and thenwatches aro compared and hnn.lawag over tho result. Old GoldenSpray Is said to bo due for a come-back as he flashed tho mile in goodstylo yesterday. Both Dinner Belland Sky Boy look good and nodoubt they will have their back-er- s

when tho big race conies off.Tho other race that is causing

comment is tho five-eight- of amile with Silver Dust, Fireman, Din-ne- r

Bell and Kapaa Girl as tho en-tries. The first contenders were on-ly Silver Dust and Fireman, but thonddltion of Dinner Bell and KapaaGirl to tho entries gives the racea new angle. Silver Dust took thomeasure of Fireman tho last tlmothey met, but Fireman's backers arelooking for tho Kapaa horses tolead tho Fernundez mare, while thoJapanese racing fans are backingDinner Bell to finish abend of themboth. Kapaa Girl Is given only anoutside chanco by most of tho fansbut there nre plenty of backersfor G win's mare.

Tho first raco sounds like a poultry show instead of a horse race nstho three entries are James Spald-ing's Chicken, Johu Molina's Turkey,and Jules Rapoza's, Duck.

The-- entries to date are. as follows:1. 4 mile Babies. Chicken, Spal-

ding. Turkey Malina. Duck Rapo-za- .

2. -3-- 8 milo free for all. SliverDust, Fireman.

3. -3-- 4 mile freo for all. DinnerBell, Sky Boy, Prohibition.

4. mllo ladles race.fi. 2 mile Portuguese; Kapaa

Girl, Black Bird, Hanamaulu Girl.C 2 mile Japanese. Koloa Girl.

Walpoull,7. mllo for throe year olds.

Manu Kauai, Golden Shower, SirWalter.

8. 2 mile Filipino. Post entries.9. 4 milo girls raco.

10. mllo post entries.11. 1 mllo mule race.12. 8 free for all. Dinner Bell.

Silver Dust, Kapaa Girl, Fireman.13. 1 mile freo for all. Dinner

Bell, Sky Boy. Golden Spray.14. Cowboy relay post entries.15. Roman race. Ben Corbett nnd

Ortega.

EPISCOPAL SERVICESThere will bo a celebration of tho

Anglican communion at tho residence of J. H. Hall, Lihuo, "at 7:30p.m., December 28th. Celebrant, thoEpiscopal priest from Wnimea. Rev.M. E. Carver.

Mr. and Mrs. A. Horner Sr. arrived last Thursday morning to spendthe holidays with thoir sons, AlbertJr. and Foster, of Kapaa and

Page 2: Christmas Tableaux Annual Cantata OF COMMERCE Political ... · 5 h w. wilcox 1mjj1 established 1904. vol. 18. no. 52. lihue, kauai, territory of hawaii, tuesday, december 26, 1922

TH E GARDENIssued Every Tuesday

KENNETIl O. IIOITKK

TUESDAY

ChristmasAgain the Spirit of Christina is in the

air. There in a softening of hearts one to-

wards another; there is a new flash of

happiness in the eyes; a new firmnessis felt in the grip of onr daily hand-shake-

something again seems to whis-pe- r

to us that we are in the midst of a

season so sacred that it is vot to he com-

pared with any other time f year.

From that time utmost two thousandyears ago when one whose birth we arenow celt beating stood upon the Mountand gave to humanity a new rule a Hold-e- n

Huh- - the. approach of Christmas findsthe whole, world with a song upon itslips .Men may war against men; diseasemay sweep vast sections and. the grimreaper may swing his scythe with an un-

failing hand, yet the approach of Christ-

mas brings back joy to the hearts of the

stricken, bidstcrs them up for whatever

fate may have in store, and makes them,

for the season, as light and happy-hearte-

as the children who romp about ourfeet.

There is a something about the Christ-

mas season it has not been given man to

understand. Changed conditions, a greatcr desire to live and to be of service to

those about us; a hope and. a prayer forgreater blessings of health and prosper-ity for all hifnwnity those fall upon us

in a shower along about this time of year,and yet tve pass thru it still unable to

fathom its mystery. Wc know, somehow,some way, that it is the spirit of theMaster of all mankind coming into ourhearts we. seem to feel that His smileis being shed upon us, and that wc arcreceiving a benediction of happiness whichfills our hearts to the fullest.

With the arrival of the Yuletide sea-

son once again we leant to take this metli-o- d

of thanking in our own feeble way allthose to whom this greeting may come

for the cheer and helpfulness they havepassed, on to us during the year soonclosing. Wc leant to Iwpe that this hasbeen and a happy year forthem we want to extend to them ourprayer that the year to come may be equal-

ly so. We are passing this way but once.

If we have said or done that which wouldin a measure return the kindness shownus, we are glad. If wc can say or do inthe future the things that will lightenthe heart of those about us, we sliall be

happy.May Providence continue to shield and

bless yon and yours. May your Christmasbe a happy, a merry, a contented one.And may you be spared to celebrate manymore of them.

('AlvHFl'L, NOW!

During December and January the Unit-

ed Slates government is to pay back to thepeople of this country millions, of dollars in

redemption of War Savings stamps bought

five years ago. Several Ihousand dollars of

the general sum will come to Kauai.These savings represent a considerable

part of the savings of our people and as sav-

ings should be carefully guarded. The mon-

ey paid by the government should be immed-

iately reinvested where it will start working

again to bring in dividends to the investor.And, for the very reason that most of Ihe

holders of War Savings stamps will reinvest

their money in some other dividend paying

proposition, their money is in danger.For, already, dishonest promoters are

at work getting ready to harvest their crop

of suckers from among those to whom the

government is making payments. All sortsof fake stocks' and bonds, promising big re-

turns, will soon flood the market, and worth-

less, although pretty paper will be foisted

upon an unsuspecting public.So be careful how you reinvest your

money. Don't expect to find a safe invest-

ment that will pay you extra large interestreturns, for you can't get somnthing for noth-

ing in this obi world, you know. Detler takeless interest and keep your capital than takepromises of getting rich quick and lose your

ull. If you are in doubt about the value of

making an investment ask any banker and

take his advice. For we are sure he will ad-

vise you right.

TFIK HARDEN I SLA NT), TUESDAY, DEO. 20. 1H22

ISLANDManaging Editor

DEC.

A SEXSIHLE SENTENCEIn the city of Cleveland a few weeks ago

a speeder appeared before a judge on acharge of having run down and so badly in-

jured a little girl that she died a few hoursafter the accident. The judge heard Ihe evi-

dence in the case, and there could be nodoubt but the auto driver was going fasterthan the law allows or safety warrants, andthen the judge imposed a novel sentence.

Instead of levying a fine, which recklessauto drivers usually care little about; orsentencing him to the workhouse, that hisfriends could get him out of a day or twolater, he sentenced the speeder "o attend thefuneral of the little girl he had killed by hiscarelessness. And he deputized two policemento go along to that funeral and see that thespeeder was (here and witnessed it all. Andwe wonder what could have touched himmure than the tears of the heart broken fath-

er and mother, and Ihe little brother of thedead child? We wonder if anything couldhave shown him as plainly the misery andheartaches that follow reckless driving, no

matter how well you understand the mach-

ine. We wonder if, when he started out thenext time, he could wipe from his mind thatpicture of woe and misery, or if it didn'tseem to loom up on the road ahead of himas his auto rolled along.

At any rate, we commend the sentenceto our own judges anil juries. A fine caneasily be paid. A sentence to jail can be laidout. But nothing can wipe the picture of a

funeral from the mind. Jt might: not be abud idea for Kauai auto drivers who areinclined to be reckless to keep that Cleve-

land sentence in mind.

About the only thing worth less than aGerman mark is a man's chance of beingboss in his own house.

If both the wets and drys think theyhave gained a victory, why everybody oughtto be happy.

One pretty good way to relieve trafficcongestion would be to sell automobiles forcash only.

Lots of fellows save up something for arainy day and then give it all to a bootleg-

ger for a wet night.

A Kentucky fanner licked two aviatorswho landed in his field. That's what you callswatting the fliers.

It isn't hard to remember the time when

the average family considered mother's hair-

brush very useful in bringing up the childrenin the way they should go.

Sometimes it's hard for a father to giveup his daughter in marriage that he almost,

gives up 1 rying.

Nothing makes a defeated candidatemadder than to have to return to work when

the election is over.

We. may not be tilde to slop the argu-

ments over the boundary lines in butwe can help this section by fixing up some

of the dihtpitaled fences along our publichighways.

t

Save Time and Expense

though you cannot find timeEVEN ullow yourself the expense of

frequent trips to Honolulu, youcan keep In constant touch withthe stock market thru the Invest-ment department of the Trent TrustCompany. Inquiries and orders mtybe made by mail or radio, and willreceive as prompt ai d const ientiousattention as they would if you wereto deal in person.

ii m, in .i

So to serve that we may continue tto serve

Dr. T. L. Morgan

OSTEOPATHIC'PHYSICIAN

Telrphone I54LOffice on Wm. Hyde Rice Prcmiid

EMe Offict tl Y.M.C.A. HomeTuMtlayi and ThurKlaya, 9 A.M. to 12 M.

Dr. Justin C. SmithRESIDENT DENTIST

Office Hours:8 a. m. to 12 m.

1 p. m. to 4:30 p. m.

Telephone 150

LIHUE, KAUAI

VPT

JEWELEIRS31

Everything in theSilver and QoUl Line

llich Cut Glass1 and jirl Goods

1 Sftttrchandisc of ihrBest Quality Only

Ho F Wnctournnsura

oi& (U0 Ltd.Leading Jeacleri

P. O. BOX 342 HONOLULU

Alexander&

BaldwinLimited

Sugar FactorsCommission Merchants

Insurance Agents

AGENTS FORHawaiian Commercial & Sugar

Company.Haiku Sugar Company.Paia Plantation.Maul Agricultural Company.Hawaiian Sugar Company.Kahuku Plantation Company.McBryde Sugar Company.Honolua Ranch.Kauai Railroad Company.Kahulul Railroad Company.Kauai Fruit & Land Company.

WAIMEAHOTEL

Headquarters forTRAVELING MEN AND

TOURISTS

COMFORTABLE ROOMSand

GOOD MEALS

R. KANZAKI, Prop.Telephone 132--

PROTECTOR

tube j2'kX. U.S.PATENT S

USERS OF

C0FF1ELD TIRE

PROTECTORS'

State they are getting from 50

per cent to 150 per cent moremileage from their tires thanbefore the Coffields were in-

stalled.

Try a Pair and beConvinced

PRICES ON APPLICATION TO

J. H. CATTON

t AgentMakaweli, Kauai

FALSE ECONOMY

Not one of the th usands of employers who came to griefas u result of the dishonesty of employees during the pastyear suspected, a dishonest slrenk when the men were hired,if it had been suspected they would not have been hired andIherf would have been no necessity for this nd.

Unless your employees are bonded, and bonded all thetime, you "are in constant danger of a loss which may blarge enough to cripple you financially. Would it not bethe better part of economy to spend a few dollars a year forbonding your employees than to run the everlasting, nene-rackin- g

risk of losing hundreds, perhaps thousands.

WATERHOUSETRUST CO., LTD.

HONOLULU

THE WISEST, MOST DELIGHTFUL

CHRISTMAS GIFT OF ALL

In the stockings of the children, let each find

a little bank book, In which a savings account is

begun wth a dollar at kast.

You will find it will delight them as nothingel.se could. From that time forth "Havings" willbo play. You inculcate In them, in the happiestfashion, the qualities of thrift and prudence thatmake tho SUCCESSFUL man.

In this conservatively managed bank theirmoney will increase steadily, for we give 4 percent interest, compounded semi-annuall-

Sty

Waimea Branch, Kauai

Collection Offices atKOLOA ELEELE MAKAWELI KEKAHA

If yon are not now receiving the REX-AL- L

MONTHLY MAGAZINE, please sendyour name for mailing list. The magazinehas recently been enlarged and improved bythe addition of stories by prominent writersand pictures of current events.

This Service is Absolutely Free

The Rexall Store

Benson, Smith & Co., Ltd

Service Every Second

Uox 42G Honolulu, T. H.

B iff Distributors ll j

1L viL territry f hawa" Mljm Get our latest price. Jm

6

Page 3: Christmas Tableaux Annual Cantata OF COMMERCE Political ... · 5 h w. wilcox 1mjj1 established 1904. vol. 18. no. 52. lihue, kauai, territory of hawaii, tuesday, december 26, 1922

AT

SPORTSOahu Golfers Tryout

Wailua Club's Course

Francis Brown, who holds thenmuteur championship of the Is-

lands and Alec Bell, the Pro. at tluOuhu Country Club, arrived for a

two day stay last Friday momir.jon the Claudine.

They were mot at tho boat by

James Spalding,, who acted cs Ifcjlrchief Lost and after a breaUraulat tho Valley House, they immedi-

ately left for Wailua to try out tl.elo(ial course.

A foursome was made up, JimSpalding and Francis Brown, play-

ing Alec Bell and Ed Hunter of theAudit Company, who was on KauaiSpalding and Brown won tho fir.itnine holes, three up and two to g.

For the first nine holes, Brown

turned in a 40 and Spalding a 41.

Bell's score was 43 while Hunter'swas 44.

Spalding took the first hole start-

ling everyone by sinking a lotiiputi for a 3. He had driven over therailroad track a little off line tothe right on his first, and his 'secondput him on the edge of the green.Brown drove straight for the holewith a good long drive near thetrack. It took him two to get o.ihowever and he also sank a Ion,'putt for a four. Hunter was wellon near the pin in three and alsjgot a four while it took Bell a fivjas he overshot a mashie on his sec-

ond shot after driving off well.Bell took the second with a 3,

while all the others took a four. Noone was on the green in one, al-

though everyone made distanceenough in their drives. A good approach dead to the pin gave Bellhis 3.

Bell and Brown halved the thirdwith a 4, although Brown had anopportunity to sink a long putt fora 3, as he was on in 2. Hunter andSpalding each took 5s. Neither Bellnor Brown drove an exceptionallylong ball on this hole but theyplayed their second shots perfectlyBrown getting on the green and Be:i

getting just outside a wire on thafar side.

Four 4s were the result of thefourth. Hunter got the best posi-

tion on the drive as both Bell andBrown drove even with the green,

but went too far to the right andlanded in the sand, Brown landingnear the top of the steps, while Bell'swas not so high. It took both mentwo more to get on the green andone to sink. Both Spalding and Hun-

ter were on in two but both tooktwo putts.

The new fifth was a Waterloo forthe visiting players, all three tak-

ing a 6 while Jim Spalding took a

5. Spalding drove his ball just to

the edge of the green. Bell over estimated the distance and laudedon the beach behind the green,

Brown also over-sho- t but was justoft the green. Hunter hooked into

the rough behind the screen on thetop left. Bell had difficulty on tl.egreen as his ball was sunk Into theBoft sund. Ha got on in three how-

ever, but was on the side of thegreen nearest the tee and it took

him three putts to get up the hill

and into the cup. Brown also had

trouble getting on the green and also

took three putts. Spalding's rolled

off the green and down into the

sand to the right and it took him

three to get down. Hunter had the

same trouble and it took him three

nutts to sink.Brown wou the sixth with 4. Ho

drove down into the valley with his

first and was on the green .n two

Two DUtts put him down. Bell took

,i good sixth after driving well buthim trouble and hisa bad lie gave

second was a short shot while his

third was just short of the green

Spalding was on iu three and took

two putts to sink. Hunter got a

nice drive and on his bo con d drove

into the rough to the left of the

fairway.Spalding won the seventh with a

4. Brown using bis mid iron drove

just below the green but it took

him two to get on. Bell drove over

the hill to the fourth fairway and

his second overshot the green

took him three more to sink. Spald

Ing drove nearly as far as Brown

and was on in two. Two putts put

him down but he had a good chance

for a 3. Hunter hooked his drive

and his second was u the sand abov

the green, and it took him four to

sink. i

Hunter and Brown halved theeighth, both getting 4s. Brown drovanot quite to the green and a littlato the left, he was on in two an 1

two putts put him down .Hunterr'.icod near the lahala tree on hisdrive, hut a nice approach put himon and down In four. Spalding hook-

ed his drive and it took him threjmore to get on. A missed putt caus-

ed him a six. Bell drove to the rightof the two peaks and It took twomore to get on. Two putts put himdown.

Brown drove to the .railroad trackjust to the left of the fairway. Haunderestimated the distance to thegreen on his second and it tookhim three to get on. Two puttssunk. Spalding got a nice drive butwas still off tho greon on three. Anapproach dead to the pin on hisfourth gave him a G. Bell was slight-ly past the green in three and wasdown in five.

Hunter took four to get on thegreen and then two putts to sink.

On the second round Brown tooka 40, while Bell repeated with a 43,

end Hunter followed with a 44. JimSpalding lost his ball . on the sixthand did not finish the hole.

FIRST ROUND123456789

1 Brown 44446454 640Spalding 34545546 541Bell 53446655 543Hunter 44546564 641

SECOND ROUNDBrown 63453753 541Spalding 5 4547x66 7 xxBull 54554554 643Hunter 54454665 644

FRANCIS BROWN SETSWAILUA COURSE RECORD

Francis Brown set the course record at Wailua for nine and eigh-

teen holes when he turned in a 36

for nine holes and a 76 for eighteen.Alec Bell was not far behind himwhen he handed in a 38 for nineiclels and a 77 for eighteen. As both

these scores were made playing thenew fifth there is no doubt thatthey will stand for some time.

The scores:irst Round

BrownBellSecond RoundBrownBell

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

43453654 64044433655 438

43434544 63653464534 639

REDSKINS ARE GUESTS

T'tl.

T'tl.

AT A PAKE DINNER

The members of the Makawelibaseball team were guests at a chopsui dinner last week, the planta-

tion acting as hosts for the occa-

sion. Those who partook of thepake kaukau were Damkrogcr, Mar- -

callino, Nakashima, Wramp, Kruse,K. Yamase, S. Yamase, Ah Nee,Hamada, Watase, Naito, Conant andAuld.

No More

This Year

TIIU GARDEN ISLAND TUESDAY. DEC. 20. 1!22

,

Alec. Bell Mak es

"9

J'

Recommendationsfor Wailua Course

After playing over the Wailuacourse, both Alec Bell and FrancisBrown expressed themselves favorably as to the possibilities of . thelocal links.

Francis Brown stated that he be-

lieved that It could be made Into oneof the sportiest nine hole coursesthat he has seen, and Bell was ofthe same opinion, and at the sametime made several recommendationsto James Spalding as to the changes that should be made.

His first recommendation was tochange the position of the cup ontho new fifth. Ho said that thecup should be placed where thefence posts are now on the sidenear the tee. Placing the cup onthe table made the hole too diffi-

cult, lie ulso said that the hole onthe side nearest tho Blxth tee shouldbe filled and that the green shouldbo built so as to completely fillthis space.

On the seventh hole he said thatthe green should be brought backinto the space Just below the oldtee for the fifth hole, where therewould be a slight upward slope onthe side away from the tee.

Bell commented particularly onthe present seventh green and saidthat the construction was wrongfrom two standpoints. First, thegreen was small and there was no-

thing In the construction to permita player to pitch his ball on thogreen with any assurance that itwould stay there, and tho secondwas that' the ground around thegreen being all sand penalized abold player, who would play rightup to the green and perhnps rolloff the green.

By moving the green to the spotthat he recommneded these abovefaults would be removed and at thesame time there would be a penaltyin the form of rough ground behindthe green as a penalty overshooting.

On the first hole he recommend-ed that it be lengthened by placingthe green back of the present greenjust below the second tee. Ho alsosuggested the moving of the firsttee back near the gate so as to addabout 100 yards on to the hole.

The second tee would then bemoved makal as well as away fromthe second green, making this holea full Iron shot. Part of the hill behind the second hole should also beput in better shape according, sothat a long shot rolling across thegreen would not put the player intotrouble.

Among other recommendations by

Bell were: first penalizing one stroketo lift out of the railroad trackwhen playing either the first orninth hole. Second moving the ninthgreen nearer the track so as totake it off the line of the firsthole when the hole Is lengthened.Third sodding the makal side of thesand hill on the sixth so that a

long drive would roll down thefairway and not stay In a hole In

If you are not already convincedof the superiority of LIHUE SODAover all other drinks legally avail-able, and have not yet formed thehabit of keeping a case on hand foryour convenience and that of yourfriends, this is our last chance thisyear to convince. "Next year" is along time to postpone doing any-

thing. Order a case or two nowand begin the New Year with agood habit formed.

Lihue Ice & Electric Power Go., Ltd.

KAUAI HIGH WINS FROMST. LOUIS GLEE CLUB BY

THE SCORE OF 7 TO 0

Kauai high school defeated the St.

Louis Glee Club football team on

Christmas day nt Lihue Park by thescore of 7 to 0. after one of themost exciting games of the year.

Kauai scored in the second quar-ter by a wide end run by Paul Ricewho was downed on the 1 yard lineputting them in position to score.Montgomery then bucked it over.On the try for the one point Mont-gomery drop-kicke- neatly betweenthe posts.

The St. Louis gang opened up inthe last quarter with short forwardpasses and carried the ball about50 yards down the field to Kauai's8 yard line and they had four downsto make tho touchdown in, but theend of the quarter came before theycould put the ball over.

The high school team wus unusu-ally successful with forward passes.Bill Moragne snagging two almostimpossible catches out of the air.The school played better ball againstSt. Louis than tliny did against theVets on Thanksgiving day.

St. Louis was handicapped by theabsence of backfield men and theywere forced to use their other linemen or green players in the back-fiel-

and this may account whyKauai high v.)3 able to sot awaywith their pass-.-- so well. Only threeof the St. Louis first team playedwith the Glee Club.

Jack Hjorth u::d Waldomar Chris-tian were in the St. Louis lineup,while Moi i Lydgate and Ernt stWedemeydr played with the highschool .

Tho game was a remarkably cleanone, both sides playing exception-

ally good football. The St. Louisboys arc to be congratulated on

their sportsmanship, as at no timein the game did they dispute u de-

cision of any of the officials, whichis exceedingly unusual with a in.it-ir-

team. The only penalties calledIn tho game were for offside.

that sand as at present. Fourth, tonot increase the number of holes toeighteen but to improve the presentnine and put them in first classshape.

Siyngle HolinessTim How are you getting nlong

at home while your wife's away?Jim Fine. I've reached the height

of efficiency. I can put on my socksnow from either end. American Mu-

tual Magazine.

TOURING CAR

New Price

$508.00HERE

F.O.B.

This is the lowest price atwhich the FordCar has ever sold, and withthe many new improve-ments, including the oneman top, it is a bigger valuethan ever before.

Buy now. Terms if desired.

WAIMEA MOTORSNAWILIWILI GARAGE

Authorized Ford Dealers

Hluslttug

all mtr frmtiUi

a Siappy Nnu Irar

C. B. HOFGAARD & CO,, LTD.

DETROIT

Touring

Page 4: Christmas Tableaux Annual Cantata OF COMMERCE Political ... · 5 h w. wilcox 1mjj1 established 1904. vol. 18. no. 52. lihue, kauai, territory of hawaii, tuesday, december 26, 1922

Who Got the Money?l?y MARQUIS JAMES

(From American Legion Weekly)

(Continued from last week)This increase was sorely needed

and it is not half enough. The sec-

tion now has 150,000 contracts inhand, which is not all it hopes tohave by any means. It took twoyears to audit 15000 of these, selec-ting generally simpler and smallercontracts. At this rate it would re-

quire 20 years to firish the job. Atthe pace the section is going now,though it has only 14 years of workahead of It. Doubling the force mightcut this into seven years. But if vewait that long legislation will benecessary to lift the statutes oflimitation or debtors will go free ofpayment and crooks free of jail. Theprincipal Air Service contracts arenot in the hands of the section, tho'a concerted move is gathering toplace them there. At present theyare being checked by auditors 'n tl eAir Service. It is urged that theaudit section, which was not con-

cerned with tho making of any con-

tracts, should take over the AirService transactions as we!l as allrecords of the liquidation piriod dur-

ing which the fcovrnmetit's losseswere greatest. With this additionalwork coining on the budget allowedthe section leaves much to bo desired.

In addition to recovering millionsfor the Treasury the contract auditsection's work throws a ;eiietratinglight in the situation which sur-

rounded Uncle Sam, the world'sgreatest, richest and easiest custi-mer- ,

when he strode into the mar-

kets of his citizenu and spent fif-

teen billion dollars. It was not t,n

idle shopping tour. !t was a buyingexpedition forced by war, a warwhich meant life or death, a warwhich victory uloue could stand be-

tween the keepers of those martsand ruin at the hands of a Germanindemnity collector. One would thinkthat common decency, and if notthat the instinct of self preservation,would have prompted those who

.sold war materials to a.'k i fairprice and nothing more. Such wasnot the case and to what extentthe findings of tie contract audit

.section is evidence that requires no

interpretation. The government paidextortionate prices and the contractors reaped exorbitant profits, aeeryone knows ,and that was budenough. But now we learn trat on

top of that, either by accident or by

design, Uncle Sam was mulcted formany millions more. Several thousand contracts, closed and settled,are reopened as if by chance, and1146,000,000 is found to be due thegovernment. Pick up almost any

contract almost anywhere, shake itand the money rolls out tho pc l-

ine's money."The findings of the contract audit

section," said Congressman Roy O.

Woodruff of Michigan in a speechIn the House, "form a positive andtangible basis for action by the De-

partment of Justice." This statementhas been borne out by tho subse-

quent indictments in the lumber andOld Hickory powder .plant sale cas-

es on evidence produced by the con-

tract audit section. Mr. Woodruffwent on to predict that there ulti-

mately would be recovered by Uie

army auditors "$750,000,000 whichwas wrongfully and fraudulently

taken from the government by thosewar contractors whose operationshave, incident to the audit of theircontracts, indicated unmistakablecriminal dishonesty."

A few typical cases handled by

the contract audit section will dis-

close the nature of some of the re-

velations that are being made almostdaily. Names of firms are not giv-

en because the collections have not

been made.A manufacturer had two contracts

for the same product. In one contract

he was to use government mater-

ial, in the other contract . his own

material. He us;d government ma-

terial in both contracts, pocketing

the difference of $700,000. Tho case

is now a subject for correspondence

between the audit section and the

contractor.A contractor purchasing supplies

and delivering them on his own con-

tracts with the government was re-

imbursed on the basis of certifi-

cates made by the government in-

spector at the point of purchase. The

contractor substituted forged certi-

ficates for the original ones there-

by increasing the amount paid him

by the government.A contractor drew large quanti-

ties of material from the govern-

ment to be accounted for in finish-

ed products. An audit revealedworth not accounted for. The

case is being prepared for trans-

mittal to Department of Justice.A contractor manufactured copper

shell bands from government ma-

terial.. The contract provided for

all scrap should bo the contractor's

property. The contractor adopted a

novel method of manufacture. He

rolled the metal into sheets andpunched out the circular bands likedoughnuts. Each sheet yielded morescrap than It did metal for thebands.

A contractor who had been fur-

nished with material for usie ona contract had a surplus on handwhen the contract was completed.He sold the government its own ma

terial for a good stiff price andthen purchased it back for n figureconsiderably less, thus getting thematerial for nothing and a good lit-

tle rest-eg- besides.The Story of the CantonmentsSo much for a few contracts that

have come to the notice of the armyauftitors. Lot us now look at a fewother contracts which have not asyet been favored with the attentions of this clean-u- p squad. Let usfirst turn to a group of contractswith whose results every soldier andnearly every citizen is familiarthe sixteen great cantonments inwhich the national army was mobilIzed and trained. These cantonmentscost $20G,G32,020, which figure hasbeen subject to most searching investigation by the House committee on war expenditures headed byRepresenative William J. Graham ofIllinois. The evidence fills thousandsof closely printed pages, and condudes with the finding that wasteextravagance and graft in the construction of these cantonments haverobbed the taxpayers of the UnitedStates of $78,500,000, or an averageof close to $5,000,000 per cantonment. In other words, what the comnnttee figures the sixteen campsshould have cost is in the neighborhood of $128,100,000.

Before we touch on the detailsof some of the cantonment, powder,nitrate, ammunition and other con-

tracts, it may be worth while tosketch in a word the means bywhich the various industries wereable to run "corners" on their par-

ticular commodities and activitieswhen Uncle Sam entered the market as the world's greatest customerWhen the war came the cabinetwas designated as the Council ofNational Defense, and under it operatcd a large advisory commissionwhich was charged with establishing contact with the various Industries. The leaders of all lines wereapproached. These industries hadpowerful and compact organizationsand their job was to sell. The government had no such organization,and in the stress of war was ableto form only the merest makeshift;and the government's job was tobuy. Hence the advantage was withthe seller with his vastly superiororganization, and close groups oflumbermen controlled tho lumberproblems, construction men the con-

struction problems, steel corporations the steel problems; powderplants powder, meat packers meatleather dialers leather, and so onCompetition gave away to the clos-

est combination, directly contraryto the legal economic policy of (In

United States since tho enactmentof the first of the anti-trus- t laws in1S00. An unorganized and unprepar-ed government stood at the mercyof an organized and prepared seriesof industrial groups; a war was on.we had to take what we could get;there was no way out and thereyou are.

While official criticism has beenvisited upon those in the govern-

ment service who handled the can-

tonment construction, which the Gra-

ham committee says cost the gov-

ernment $78,500,000 more than itshould have, whatever the waste,whatever the extravagances andfraud, whatever the unreasonableconcessions wrung from the UnitedStates by an organized industry, inthis instance the fact remains thatwith some few exceptions tho campswere built and built on time. If asmuch could be said for some of theother war efforts these pues wouldtell a different story, perhaps.. Thedraft law was enacted in May, 1317.

and the government's camp commit-tee went to work. It spent $2oC,-000,00-

and the Graham investigat-ors says this $7S, 500,000 too much.Nevertheless when the first of Sep-

tember rolled around there stoodthe camps and the new army hada place to sleep. It was the samearmy, let it be said, that fought inFrance without an Ainorican fightingplane over its head, though a bil-

lion dollars was spent to providesuch planes; tho same army thatadvanced to battle under barragesallied shells fired from allied gunsthough the Liberty bond buyersgave up three-quarter- s of a billiondollars to the shell makers and halfa billion to the gun manufacturers.

(Continued next week)U3M

THE HARDEN ISLAND, TUESDAY, DEC. 26, 1922

THE LIHUE STi

Undressed Du'Js, .Jointed Dells, Character Dolls, Bisque Dolls, Dressedins, .lu.eiine Hooks, Tainting and Drawing Books, History Hooks, Travel

liooks, Fiction Hooks, Gaines, Dominoes and Blocks, Checkers, Metal Con-

struction and Wood Toys, Tinker Toys, Iron and Steel Toys, Kitchen Cab-

inets and Toy Dishes, Tea Sets, Cooking Sets, Metal Toys, Celluloid Toys,Wooden Toys, Animals and Stuffed Toys, Friction Toys, Mechanical Toys,l ull Toys, Musical Toys, Savings Banks, Marbles, Tops, Horns, Harmonicas,Drums, Top Guns, Air Rifles, Drawing Slates, l'aiuts, Balls, Tree Decora-tions, Tree Ornaments, Trees, Celluloid Battles and Toys, Rubber Toys,Children's Chairs and Rockers, Velocipedes, Hand Cars, Kid-die. Cars, Barrows, Carts, Wagons, Rocking Toys, l'apeteries, Albums, l'eucilSets, Decorated Christmas Taper, Tags, Cards, Seals, Labels, Christinas andNew Year's Greeting Cards and Folders, Christmas Tree Candles; TaperGarlands, Tinsel, Bells, Artificial Snow, Toy Tistols, Shoo Flys, Soap Blow-ers, Teddy Bears, Santa Claus Masks, Telephones, l'istol llolsters andBelts, Choo-Cho- Cars, Jump Ropes, Toy Brooms, Baby Swings, Go-Cart-

Bicycles, Garden Tools, Sand Tails and Shovels, Tool Chests, Iron andSteel Trains, Roller Skates, Etc., Etc.

inBurhams Clam Boulliou, Libby's Boullion Cubes, Whole Clams, Minced

Clams, Clam Chowder, Cream Cheese, Edam Cheese, Chili Cheese, SwissCheese, Limburger Cheese, Maclaren Cheese, Jack Cheese, Grated Cheese,Kelly's Mango Chutney, Daw-Se- n Chutney, American Biscuit Co.'s Crack-ers and Cakes, Arnott's Cakes and Cookies, Marshmallow Cream, Anchovies,Anchovy Taste, Caviar, Fish Flakes, Luncheon lladdies, Kippered llerring,Carlo llerring, Beardsley's Boneless llerring, Rick's Mackarel, Red AlaskaSalmon, Findon lladdock, Kippered Snacks, Imported Sardines, Smokedand in Oil, Sardines in Tomato Sauce, Sardine Taste, Rubidoux Tuna, Fan-cy Blue Flag Crabs, Red Jacket and Sea Crest Lobsters, Blue Toint, Mary-

land aud Tarrot Oysters, Dunbar and Boiled Shrimps, Canned Apricots,Blackberries, Cherries, Fruit Salad, Grapes, Teaches, Tears,l'ineapples, Raspberries, Dried Apples, Apricots, Currants,Dales, Figs, Teaches, Trunes, Raisins, Rosario Marmalade, IXL Jams,Kellys I'apaia and Tineapple Marmalade, Libby's Teach, Apricot, Straw-berry and Blackberry Jam; Tauls Apricot, Teach, Loganberry, Strawberryand Raspberry Jam; "Thee" Blackberry, Teach and Tlum Jam; AssortedJellies; Marasca Cherries; Underwood's Deviled Chicken and llain; IXLLiver Taste; Enchilades and Tamales; Tate do Fois Gras; R&R BonedChicken; Heinz Mince Meat and Tlum Tudding; Libby's Mince Meat; R&lil'lum Tudding; Olives; Chow-Chow- ; Relishes; Condiments; National Bis-

cuit Co. Crackers and Cakes; Tickles.

InCIGARS: Americus, Alhambra, Burns, Caswell Club, Champagne, Chan-

cellor, El Caniino Real, 101 Dallo, El Talencia, El Tovar, Jean Valjean,La Corrcgidora, La Insular, Optimo, Owl, Vamp, Van Camp, "J.D.", VanDyke, Vega del Rey.

CIGARETTES: Camel, Caporal, Capstain, Chesterfield, Fatima, HerbertTareyton, Home Run, La Marquise, Lucky Strike, Melachrino, Milo Violets,Murad, Old Mill, Omar, One Eleven, Tall Mall, l'hillip Morris, RichmondStraight Cut, Three Castle.

SMOKING TOBACCO: Blue Boar, Cross Cut, Craven Mixture, CurveCut, Dukes Mixture, Durham, Edgeworth, Five Brothers, Good Smoke, Her-

bert Imperial Cube Cut, E. C. C. Mixture, John Cotton,' TrinceAlbert, Red Indian, Tuxedo, Union Leader, U. S. Marine, Velvet.

Tipes, Touches, Cigar and Cigarette Holders, Cigarette Cases.

nf""1""1 "m'M

H01UDA1Now on Display are More Extensa

Remembrances for Young

Toys, Dolls and Holiday Specialties

Automobiles,

Specialties Grocery Department

Loganberries,Strawberries,

the Tobacco Section

Tyeyton,

Lihue Store

Than Ei

AND GOOD Th

Imperial Candy Co. Gooc

CHOCOLATES

In Decorated and Fancy Boxes

Sweet Meat, Milk, Opera, Smart Set,La Supreme, Brazil Nut, Glace Nut,Black and White, Societie Girl, Fruitand Nut, Scenic, Mountain, ImperialRed, Imperial Girl, Caramel Nougat,Swiss Milk, La Rose, Chewing, Milkand Vanilla, Chocolate Cherries, Al-

gonquin, True Fruit.

4.

0

Glassies, Drops, Assget Mixed, Spiced Hearts, Buiton Beans, Spiceded, Cinnamon Balls, SquaresAlmond Chocolates, (

colates, Walnut Nougatine, Dusty Rcolates, Honey Nougat Chocates, I

20c

CE1

Appleju, BudweiserBeverage, DiamondApple Juice,

Cliquot ClubGinger Ale,

LoganberryCocoa, Chocolate,

NilAlmonds, Wall

berts, Ilazt

AssortedSanded Lemon

JellyBaked Jelly Droji

PeanutTop Tingaling

Specialat TWENTY

Cremetails,

White"Thez"

JUMBO JELLY BElA. B. GUM DROTKI t

Drinkable Things,Beverage, Wielanl"A" Cider, Marlde Menthe, MartGinger Ale, RooRock Ginger AllJuice, Tinectar,Coffee, Tea.

IN THE SHOE i

New Lines of Mens, Hp

Shoes Just

OUR MEAT MARKET is in reBy every Arrival of Ahe S

Kauai's IE

Page 5: Christmas Tableaux Annual Cantata OF COMMERCE Political ... · 5 h w. wilcox 1mjj1 established 1904. vol. 18. no. 52. lihue, kauai, territory of hawaii, tuesday, december 26, 1922

DAand

PHOTO

SUPPLIES

Send for Catalogue

Special Attention to Mail Order

Honolulu Photo Supply Co."EVERYTHING PHOTOGRAPHIC"

1059 Port Street, HonoluluP. O. Box 2999

The Bank of Hawaii Ltd.

LIHUE BRANCH

BANKING HOURS :

9 A. M. TO 3 P. M.

HonoluluBusiness

CollegeIt now prepared to

Teach

GREGG SHORTHANDRATIONAL TOUCH

TYPEWRITINGAMERICAN

BOOKKEEPING SERIESBy

CORRESPONDENCE

Terms ReasonableWrite for Catalog

.

1176 Fort Street

M. TANAKANAWILIWILI

PLUMBING and SHEETMETAL WORK

Plumbing Supplies and SheetGlass for Sale

Tel. 36 P.O. Box 163, Llhue

Honolulu Paper Co.

Limited

Wholesale Paper Dealers

and Stationers.(

821-82- 3 Alakea Street

HONOLULU, HAWAII.

CALIFORNIA FEED CO.LIMITEDDealers in

Hay, Grain and Chicken 8upplls 1

80LE AGENTS rUHInternational Stock, Poultry Foodand other specialties. Arablo forcooling Iron Roofs. Petaluma In--

i cubators and Brooders.f King's Special Chick Food

P.. O. Box 452 Honolulu

JUS. F. MORGAN

Company, LimitedStock and Bond Brokers, Real

Estate Agents and RealtyAuctioneers.

No. 180-18- Merchant StreetP. O. Box 594HONOLULU

A

NOTICE TO MOTOR VEHICLEOWNERS

In pursuance to Act 19S, SessionLaws of 1921 of the Territory of

Hawaii and Ordinance 1? of thebounty of Kauai, all owners of mo-

tor vehicles are hereby notified thattaxes on such vehicles shall be-

come due and payable at the Coun-

ty Treasurer's Office in Lihue, onthe first day of January, 1923, andmust be paid before the first dayof March following.

Application blanks for registrationcan be obtained from the Treasur-er's Office. These blanks should beproperly filled out in duplicate nafiled with the Treasurer, togetherwith money to cover taxes and onedollar for number plates. In deter-mining the weight of used cars thaihave already been weighed and arenot altered, refer to 1922 Motor e

Tax Receipt. New cars mustoa weighed and certificates otweight must accompany applicationbefore such weights can be accept-ed.

No numbers will be reserved un-

der any circumstances and the firmperson to pay his tax will be thenoldcr of Number as ournumbers will begin with 40,000.i umbers will be Issued consecutive-ly . ,

NOTICE OF SALE: Wat.never anyautomobile, motorcycle .r powpr-drive- n

vehicle is sold, it shall beu.e duty of the seller to withinforty-eigh- t hours notify the Treas-urer of the county ot said sale, giv-

ing the name and address of theold owner and the registration number of the vehicle, if any, and thename and address of the new owner, provided, however, that regularlylicensed dealers may give notice tothe Treasurer upon Monday ot allsuch sales made by them during theprevious calendar week. "Notice ofTransfer" blanks can be obtainedfrom the Treasurer's office.

DEALER'S NUMBER PLATEScan be obtained from the CountyTreasurer at five dollars for eachpair.

Number plates for publicly ownedvehicles, except those owned by theFederal and Territorial governmentcan be had at the Treasurer's Officeupon making application for thesame.

For further particulars in reference to penalty, etc., refer to Act198 of the 1921 Session Laws ofthe Territory ot Hawaii and Ordainance 17 of the County ot Kauai

K. C.County of Kauai.

(Dec.l2-19-26-Jan.-

AHANA,Treasurer,

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

ESTATE OF TOICHl MORITANotice Is given to all creditors of

Toichl Morita, deceased, to presenttheir claims with proper vouchersor duly authenticated copies thereofeven if the claim is secured by mortgage, to me either at my residencein Kapaa, T. H., cr by mall addressed to me at P. O. Box 1), KapaaT. H., within six months from date

If not presented within six monthsthey will be barred and I will notbe authorized to pay thein.

Kapaa, Kauai, T. H., December20th, 1922.

MIDORI MORITA.Administrator

of the Estate of ToichlMorita, Deceased.

Llye A. Dickey,Attorney for Administrator.

SALESMAN WANTEDSulesman to sell on commission and

part salary, automobile and radiosupplies, etc. Good opportunityfor experienced and reliable man.Write full particulars, state experience and enclose commercialreferences to Room 322, 24 Califor-

nia St., San Francisco, Cal.

THE GARDEN ISLAND TUESDAY, DEC. 2C, 1922

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT-TERRIT- ORY

OF HAWAIIAt Chambers i i In Probate

In the Matter of the Estate of MonChong Seto, otherwise known asSeto Mon Chong, of Hahapepe, Ka-

uai, Deceased.Probate No. 872

NOTICE TO CREDITORSLetter ot Administration have

been Issued to D. W. Fun, otherwiseknown as Ah Fun, County ot Kauai,as Administrator of the Estate ofMon Chong Seto, otherwise knownas Seto Mon Chong, late of saidHanapcpe, County of Kauai, Terri-tory of Hawaii, and all creditors ofsaid deceased, or of his estate, arehereby notified to present theirclaims, with proper vouchers, or dulyauthenticated copies thereof, evenif the claim is secured by mortgageupon real estate, to the said Admin-istrator, or to Philip L. Rice, attor-ney for said Administrator, at thelatter's office in Lihue, said County, within six months from the dateof this notice, which is the dateof the first publication hereof; oth-

erwise, such claim, if any, shall beforever barred.

All persons indebted to the saidestate are hereby notified to makepayment to the said Administratorin person or at the office of his

Dated, Lihue, Kauai, T. H., December 12, 1922.

D. W. FUN,Administrator,

Estate, Mon Chong Seto,otherwise known as SetoMon Chong, Deceased.

Philip L. Rice,Attorney for Administrator.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFIFTH CIRCUIT, TERRITORY

OF HAWAIIAt Chambers In Probate

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATEOF JOHN MORTIMER LYD-GAT-

DECEASED.

ORDER FOR NOTICE OF HEAR

ING PETITION FOR PROBATEOF WILL

A Document purporting to be theLast Will and Testament of JohnMortimer Lydgate, deceased, havingon the 16th day ot December A. D.

1922, been presented to said Pro-

bate Court, and a Petition for theProbate thereof, and for Issuance of

Letters ot Administration with theWill annexed to Bishop Trust Company, Limited, having been filed byHelen Elwell Lydgate.

IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ThatSaturday, the 20th day ot January,A. D. 1923, at 9:00 o'clock A. M.,

of said day, at the Court Room otsaid Court, at Lihue, County of Kaual, T. II., be and the same herebyis appointed the time and place forproving said Will and hearing Baid

application.Dated at Lihue, T. H., December

16, 1922.BY THE COURT.

J. C. CULLEN,Lyle A. Dickey, Clerk

Attorney for Petitioner.(Dec.19-2G-Jan.2-9- )

CLASSIFIED ADSPARTNER WANTED

Partner wanted for large scale beeand honey industry. Mail inquiries to P. O. Box 2387, Honolulu

2L

GOLF CLUBS FOR SALEA number ot second hand golf clubs

for sale. See K. C. Hopper, Garden Island office.

FOR SALEOne Ingeco engine, 1 horsepower.

Price reasonable. Phone 62-- tf

Must Sell at OnceSADDLE MARE (with Colt) AND SADDLE

Animals may seen in Mr. Kinney's pasture,

Hanapepe, and the saddle at Mr. Pugh's house,

Eleele. They are the property of Miss Antoni-ett- e

Kelley, formerly of Eleele school, who is

leaving for the mainland.

Best Offer for Outfit Will be Accepted

Inquire at Garden Island Office

IN THE MATTER OF THE PETITION OF ASAO SHIMIZU FOR

CHANGE OF NAME

DECREEOn consideration of the petition

of ASAO SHIMIZU for a decreechanging his name to ASAO ITO,and there appearing to me to begood reasons for granting the same

NOW, THEREFORE, by virtue ofthe authority in me by law vested,and thereunto enabling, I, W. R.FARRINGTON, Governor of theTerritory of Hawaii, do hereby or-

der and decree that the name ofASAO SHIMIZU be and hereby ischanged to ASAO ITO, and that acopy of this decree be published forat least four consecutive weeks inthe "GARDEN ISLAND," a news-paper of general circulation In theTerritory of Hawaii, published atLihue, Kauai, in said Territory.

Dated, October 24th, A. D. 1922,at Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii.

W. R. FARRINGTON,Governor of Hawaii.

NOTICE OF ATTACHMENTtBy virtue of a Writ of Attach

ment issued by the Circuit Courtot the Fifth Circuit, Territory ofHawaii, in a suit of WaterhouseTrust Company, Limited, Receiverof the Hawaii Bank of Commerce,Limited vs. Philip K. Contrades Jr.,I have attached subject to a demandto be proved, at tho hour of 9 A.M.on the 28th day of November, 1922,all the right, title and interest ofWillie Hepa in Land Patent GrantNo. 7614, lot Kapaa Homesteads,County of Kauai, Territory of Hawaii, area 24.19 acres and all theright, title and interest ot DavidK. Kane in one acre, 10 perchesof land at Moloaa, County ot Ka-

uai, Territory of Hawaii.WM. HENRY RICE,

Sheriffof the County of Kauai,Territory of Hawaii.

tf.

NOTICE OF ATTACHMENT

By virtue of a. Writ of Attach-ment iHsued by the Circuit Courtot the Fifth Circuit, Territory ofHawaii, in a suit of WaterhouseTrust Company, Limited, Receiverof the Hawaii Bank of Commerce,Limited, vs. Philip K. Contrades Jr,.I have attached subject to a de-

mand to be proved at the hourof 9 A. M., on the 28th day of, No-

vember, 1922, all the right, titleml interest of Philip K. Contrades

Jr., in the land described In LandGrant 7914, Lot 88 Kapaa Home-steads, County of Kauai, Territoryof Ha wall,, area 27.64 acres.

WM. HENRY RICE,tf . Sheriff

of the County of Kauai,Territory of Hawaii.

Tr3e"MarV

Kapaia Garage Co.KAUAI

General Automobile Repairing

and Machine Work

BATTERY WORK A SPECIALTY

AGENTS FOR

U. S. TIRES

EXIDE BATTERIES

Tel. 288 L

Phone 291 A

KAPAIA,

P. O. Box 236, Llhue

P. O. 27

Koloa GarageAUTOMOBILE REPAIRINGDealers in Tires and Accessories

ACETYLENE WELDING A SPECIALTY

FIRST CLASS WORK GUARANTEED

PABCOLIN

Bos

This is an inexpensive enamelled floor covering whichhas qualities peculiarly its own. The enamel is baked ontothe surface till it is a part of the material, just like the en-

amel on a high class automobile.If it is kept waxed to preserve the surface it will wear

for years. It will wear wonderfully well anyhow.We will send samples and estimates.If you will send a plan of your floor with the correct

dimensions of angles and jogs we will send the PABCOLINall cut ready to put in place.

This splendid inexpensive flour covering is only onedollar a square yard.

LEWERS & COOKE, LTD.169-17- South King St., P. O. Box 2930, Honolulu

A balanced t ire is as strong in all parts as in any one partRoyalCord Tires are balanced t.ires.

United States Rubber Export Co. Ltd.

The von Hamra-Youn- g Company, Ltd., Kapaa

A United States Tire

ft

Page 6: Christmas Tableaux Annual Cantata OF COMMERCE Political ... · 5 h w. wilcox 1mjj1 established 1904. vol. 18. no. 52. lihue, kauai, territory of hawaii, tuesday, december 26, 1922

Who Got the Money?Ily MARQUIS JAMES

r.iTTCT pr Tjnf qr iaiFi51TI BiHP ilTF 'trim rxi.Tiymfc ipincrt.rTt-nirign- "iiE'ui'-- i' JifBL.i."

(From American Legion Weekly)

(Continued from last week)This Increase was sorely needed

and it Is not half enough. The sec-

tion now has 150,000 contracts Inhand, which is not all it hopes tohave by any means. It took twoyears to audit 15000 of these, selec-ting generally simpler and smallercontracts. At this rate it would re-

quire 20 years to firish the job. Atthe pace the section is poin now,though it has only 14 years of vcrkahead of it. Doubling the force in'iBf.tcut this into seven years. Hut if vewait that long legislation will benecessary to lift the statutes of

limitation or debtors will go free ofpayment and crooks free of jail. Theprincipal Air Service contracts arenot In tl hands of the section, tho'a concerted move is gathering toplace them then:. At present theyare being checked by auditors 'n theAir Service. It is urged that theaudit section, which was not con-

cerned wit'i tho making of any con-

tracts, should take over the AirService transactions as we!l as allrecords of the liquidation piriod dur-

ing which the j,avrnmenfs losseswere greatest. With this additionalwork coining on tho budget allowedthe section leaves much to bo desired.

In addition to recovering millionsfor the Treasury tha contract auditsection's work throws a penetratinglight in the situation which sur-

rounded Uncle Sam, the world'sgreatest, richest ar.d easiest custi-mer- ,

when he strode into the mar-

kets of his citizen:! and spent fif-

teen billion dollar. It was not t.n

idle shopping tour. !t was a buyingexpedition forced by war, a warwhich meant life or death, a warwhich victory alone could stand be-

tween the keepers of those martsand ruin at tho hands of a Germanindemnity collector. One would thinkthat common decency, and if not

that the instinct .f self preservation,would have prompted those who

sold war materials to u.k i fairprice and nothing more. Such was

not the case and to what extentthe findings of tie contract audit

.section is evidence that requires no

interpretation. The government paid

extortionate prices and the contract-

ors reaped exorbitant profits, ae ev-

eryone knows ,and that was bdenough. But now we learn trat on

top of that, either by accident or by

design, Uncle Sam was mulcted formany millions more. Several thou-

sand contracts, closed and settled,

are reopened as if by chance, and1116,000,000 is found to be due thegovernment, Pick up almost any

contract almost anywhere, shake it

and the money rolls out tho pub-

lic's money."The findings of the contract audit

section," said Congressman Roy O.

"Woodruff of Michigan in a speech

in the House, "form a positive andtangible basis for action by the De-

partment of Justice." This statement

has been borne out by tho subse-

quent indictments in the lumber and

Old Hickory powder .plant sale cas-

es on evidence produced by the con-

tract audit section. Mr. Woodruffwent on to predict that there ulti-

mately would be recovered by iuearmy auditors "$750,000,000 which

was wrongfully nud fraudulently

taken from the government by those

war contractors whose operations

have, incident to the audit of theircontracts, indicated unmistakable

criminal dishonesty."A few typical cases handled by

the contract audit section will dis-

close the nature of some of the re-

velations that are being made almost

dally. Karnes of firms are not giv-

en because the collections have not

been made.A manufacturer had two contracts

for the same product. In one contract

he was to use government mater-

ial, in the other contract . his own

material. He used government ma-

terial in both contracts, pocketing

the difference of $700,000. The case

Is now a subject for correspondence

between the audit section and the

contractor.A contractor purchasing supplies

and delivering them on his own con-

tracts with the government was re-

imbursed on the basis of certifi-

cates made by the government in-

spector at the point of purchase. The

contractor substituted forged certi-

ficates for the original ones there-

by increasing the amount paid him

by the government.A contractor drew large quanti-

ties of material from the govern-

ment to be accounted for in finish-

ed products. An audit revealedworth not accounted for. The

prepared for trans-

mittalcase is being

to Department of Justice.

A contractor manufactured copper

shell bands from government ma-

terial.. The contract provided for

all scrap should be the contractor's

property. The contractor adopted a

novel method of manufacture. He

rolled the metal into sheets andpunched out the circular bands likedoughnuts. Each sheet yielded morescrap than it did metal for thebands.

A contractor who had been fur-

nished with material for use on

a contract had a surplus on handwhen the contract was completed.Ho sold the government its own ma-

terial for a good stiff price andthen purchased it hack for a figureconsiderably less, thus getting thematerial for nothing and a good lit

tie rest-eg- besides.The Story of the CantonmentsSo much for a few contracts that

have come to the notice of the armyauflitors. Let us now look at a few-othe- r

contracts which have not asyet been favored with the attentions of this clean-u- squad. Let usfirst turn to a group of contract?with whose results every soldier andnearly every citizen is familiarthe sixteen great cartonments inwhich the national army was mobilized and trained. These cantonmentscost $200,032,020, which figure hasbeen subject to most searching investigation by the House committee on war expenditures headed byRepresenative William J. Graham ofIllinois. The evidence fills thousandsof closely printed pages, and con

dudes with the finding that wasteextravagance and graft in the con

struction of these cantonments haverobbed the taxpayers of the UnitedStates of $7S,500,000, or an averageof close to $3,000,000 per cantrnment. In other words, what the com

mittee figures the sixteen campsshould have cost is in tho neighborhood of $128,100,000.

Before we touch on the detailsof some of the cantonment, pbwder.nitrate, ammunition and other contracts, it may be wortli while to

sketch in a word the means bywhich the various industries wereable to run "corners" on their particular commodities and activitieswhen Uncle Sam entered the market as the world's greatest customer,W'hen the war came the cabinetwas designated as the Council ofNational Defense, and under it operated a large advisory commissionwhich was charged with establish-ing contact with the various indus-tries. The leaders of all lines wereapproached. These industries hadpowerful and compact organizationsard their job was to sell. The gov-

ernment had no such organizath n,

and in the stress of war was ableto form only the merest makeshift;and the government's job was tobuy. Hence the advantage was withtho seller with his vastly superiororganization, and close groups oflumbermen controlled the lumberproblems, construction men the con-

struction problems, steel corpora-

tions the steel problems; powderplants powder, meat packers meat,leather dc alers leather, and so on.Competition gave away to the clos-

est combination, directly contraryto the legal economic policy of theUnited States since the enactmentof the first of the anti-trus- t laws inlSOO. An unorganized and unprepar-ed government stood at the mercyof an organized and prepared seriesof industrial groups; a war was on.we had to take what wo could get;there was no way out and thereyou are.

While official criticism has beenvisited upon those in tho govern-

ment service who handled the can-

tonment construction, which the Gra-

ham committee says cost the gov-

ernment $78,500,000 more than itshould have, whatever the waste,whatever the extravagances andfraud, whatever the unreasonableconcessions wrung from the UnitedStates by an organized industry, in

this instance tho fact remains thatwith some few exceptions tho campswere built and built on time. If asmuch could be said for some of theother war efforts these paf;es would

tell a different story, perhaps.. Thedraft law was enacted in May, 1317.

and the government's camp commit-

tee went to work. It spent ?2u

and tho Graham investigat-

ors says this $7S,500,0u0 too much.Nevertheless when the first of Sep-

tember rolled around there stoodthe camps and the new army hada place to sleep. It was the samearmy, let It be said, that fought in

France without an American fightingplane over its head, though a bil-

lion dollars was spent to providesuch planes; the same army thatadvanced to battle under barragesallied shells fired from allied gunsthough the Liberty bond buyersgave up three-quarter- s of a billion

dollars to the shell makers and halfa billion to tho gun manufacturers.

(Continued next week)

THE GARDEN ISLAND, TUESDAY, DEC. 26, 1922

THE :LIHUE SIX

on Display are More Extensit

Remembrances for Young

Toys, Dolls and SpecialtiesUndressed Do'Js, Jointed Dells, Character Dolls, Bisque Dolls, Drowsed

lions, .lu.i'niu' iitiou.;, Painting and Drawing Books, History Books, TravelHooks, Ficliou Hooks, Games, Dominoes and Blocks, Checkers, Metal Cou-

nt mil ion and Wood Toys, Tinker Toys, Iron and Steel Toys, Kitchen Ca-binet and Toy Dishes, Tea Sets, Cooking Sets, Metal Toys, Celluloid Toys,Wooden Toys, Animals and Stuffed Toys, Friction Toys, Mechanical Toys,l ull Toys, Musical Toys, Savings Hanks, Marbles, Tops, Horns, Harmonicas,Drums, Top Guns, Air Rifles, Drawing Slates, l'aiuts, Halls, Tree Decora-

tions, Tree Ornaments, Trees, Celluloid Rattles and Toys, Rubber Toys,Children's Chairs and Rockers, Automobiles, Velocipedes, Hand Cars, Kid-

die Cars, Harrows, Carts, Wagons, Rocking Toys, Papeteries, Albums, l'eucilSets, Decorated Christmas Paper, Tags, Cards, Seals, Labels, Christmas andNew Year's Greeting Cards and Folders, Christmas Tree Caudles, PaperGarlands, Tinsel, Hells, Artificial Snow, Toy Pistols, Shoo Flys, Soap Blow-

ers, Teddy Hears, Santa Claus Masks, Telephones, Pistol Holsters andBelts, Cboo-Cho- Cars, Jump Ropes, Toy Brooms, Baby Swings, Go-Cart-

Bicycles, Garden Tools, Sand Fails and Shovels, Tool Chests, Iron andSteel Trains, Roller Skates, Etc., Etc.

Specialties in Grocery DepartmentBurhaius Clam Boulliou, Libby's Boullion Cubes, Whole Clams, Minced

Clams, Clam Chowder, Cream Cheese, Edam Cheese, Chili Cheese, SwissCheese, Limburger Cheese, Maclareu Cheese, Jack Cheese, Grated Cheese,Kelly's Mango Chutney, Daw-Se- n Chutney, American Biscuit Co.'s Crack-

ers and Cakes, Arnott's Cakes and Cookies, Marshmallow Cream, Anchovies,Anchovy Haste, Caviar, Fish Flakes, Luncheon Uaddies, Kippered Herring,Carlo Herring, Heardsley's Boneless Herring, Rick's Mackarel, Red AlaskaSalmon, Findon Haddock, Kippered Snacks, Imported Sardines, Smokedand in Oil, Sardines in Tomato Sauce, Sardine Haste, Rubidoux Tuna, Fan-

cy Blue Flag Crabs, Red Jacket and Sea Crest Lobsters, Blue Point, Mary-lau- d

and Parrot Oysters, Duubar and Boiled Shrimps, Canned Apricots,Blackberries, Cherries, Fruit Salad, Grapes, Loganberries, Peaches, Pears,Pineapples, Raspberries, Strawberries, Dried Apples, Apricots, Currants,Dates, Figs, Peaches, Prunes, Raisins, Rosario Marmalade, 1XL Jams,Kellys Papaia and Pineapple Marmalade, Libby's Peach, Apricot, Straw-berry and Blackberry Jam; Pauls Apricot, Peach, Loganberry, Strawberryand Raspberry Jam; 'Thee" Blackberry, Peach and Plum Jam; AssortedJellies; Marasca Cherries; Underwood's Deviled Chicken and Ham; IXLLiver Paste; Enchilades and Tamales; Pate de Fois Gras; R&R BonedChicken; Heinz Mince Meat and Plum Pudding; Libby's Mince Meat; R&R

Plum Pudding; Olives; Chow-Chow- ; Relishes; Condiments; National Bis-

cuit Co. Crackers and Cakes; Pickles.

In the Tobacco SectionCIGARS: Americus, Alhambra, Burns, Caswell Club, Champagne, Chan-

cellor, El (.'amino Real, El Dallo, El Palencia, El Tovar, Jean Valjean,La Corregidora, La Insular, Optimo, Owl, Vamp, Van Camp, "J.D.", VanDyke, Yoga del Rey.

CIGARETTES : Camel, Caporal, Capslain, Chesterfield, Fatima, HerbertTareylon, Home Run, Lit Marquise, Lucky Strike, Melachrino, Milo Violets,Murad, Old Mill, Omar, One Eleven, Pall Mall, Phillip Morris, RichmondStraight Cut, Three Castle.

SMOKING TOBACCO: Blue Hoar, Cross Cut, Craven Mixture, Curve

Cut, Dukes Mixture, Durham, Edgeworth, Five Brothers, Good Smoke, Her-

bert Taeyton, Imperial Cube Cut, E. C. C. Mixture, John Cotton,' PrinceAlbert, Red Indian, Tuxedo, Union Leader, U. S. Marine, Velvet.

Pipes, Pouches, Cigar and Cigarette Holders, Cigarette Cases.

Lihue Store

TUTOLUDAINow

Holiday

Than Eil

AND GOOD Tk

Imperial Candy Co. Gooqs

CHOCOLATES

In Decorated and Fancy Boxes

Sweet Meat, Milk, Opera, Smart Set,La Supreme, Brazil Nut, Glace Nut,Black and White, Societie Girl, Fruitand Nut, Scenic, Mountain, ImperialRed, Imperial Girl, Caramel Nougat,Swiss Milk, La Rose, Chewing, Milkand Vanilla, Chocolate Cherries, Al-

gonquin, True Fruit.

0

Glassies, Lemon Drops, Assoget Mixed, Spiced Jelly Hearts, Bunton Baked Beans, Spiced Jelly Drop-ed- ,

Cinnamon Balls, Squares,Almond Top Chocolates, Tingaling C

colates, WTalnut Nougatine, Dusty RI

colates, Honey Nougat Chocvates, LI

20cat CI

Appleju, BudweiserBeverage, DiamondApple Juice, Cremetails, Cliquot Club

Ginger Ale, White"Phez" Loganberry

Cocoa, Chocolate,

Almonds, Wainberts, Hazel

AssortedSanded

Peanut

SpecialTWENTY

JUMBO JELLY BICJ

A. B. GUM DROPS

Drinkable Things,Beverage, Wielan"A" Cider, Martde Menthe, MartiGinger Ale, RooiRock Ginger AlJuice, Pinectar,Coffee, Tea.

IN THE SHOENew Lines of Mens, V

Shoes Jus

OUR MEAT MARKET is in rBy every Arrival of he

Kauai's I

Hi

Page 7: Christmas Tableaux Annual Cantata OF COMMERCE Political ... · 5 h w. wilcox 1mjj1 established 1904. vol. 18. no. 52. lihue, kauai, territory of hawaii, tuesday, december 26, 1922

)RE'S LINES7: GOODSe and Assorted This Seasoner Before

MINGS TO EAT

Fresh from the Factory

ASSORTED

In Sanitary Packages

Little Jacks, Fairy Mints, Sunbeam

Kisses, Rainbow Kisses, Sunshine

Drops, Fruit Tablets, Opera Stick,

Rainbow Mixed, Satin Finished Mix-

ed, Imperial Marsh mallows, After

Dinner Mints.

TSnits, Brazil, Fil- -

and Pecanso

in Bulkted Cuts, Belmont Raspberries, Mid- -

ilt l'eanuts, Monster (lum Drops, Bos- -

reanut Brittle, Satin Finished Mix- -

White Caps, Walnut Top Chocolates,colates, Turkish Taste, Vanilla dio-des Chocolates, Milk Dip Crisp Cho- -

iliiglrnVIarshmallow Chocolates.

in BulkENTS per PoundSIN'S, PLAIN MIXED

GROCERS MIXED 20c

Too, for the Tablenil Beverage, "Bevo" Beverage, "Pablo"

uclli Cider, Motts Cider, Macombersii and Manhattan Xon Alcoholic Cock- -

od Beer, Birch Beer, Sarsaparilla ; A Itand Water, Welch's drape Juice,

uncrusli Orange Juice.

DEPARTMENTWomen's and Children'sst Received

OF

TTTE GARDEN ISLAND Tt'ESDAY, DEC. 2C,. 1022

Better

for Old

In the Hardware DepartmentUNIVERSAL" PEARL HANDLE Cake Knives, Cold Meat Folks, Per-

ry Spoons, Salad Forks, Salad Sets, Sugar Shells, Cheese Servers, ButterKnives, Knives and Forks; "UNIVERSAL" Percolators, Casseroles, Eaiue-quins- ,

Trays, Beverage Shakers, Vacuum Bottles, Beef Carvers, Came Carv-ers, Bird Carvers, Knives and Forks; M'YREX" Casseroles, Pie Plates,Bread Puns, Utility Dishes, Cake Dishes, Baking Dishes, Ramekins; CUTSUNBURST & CORNET PATTERN Wine Classes, Cocktail Classes, GrapeJuice Classes, Tumblers, Fruit Saucers, Berry Bowls, Nappies, Water Jugs,Sundae Glasses, Sugars and Creams, Water Seis; Special Ivory ami Poly-chrome Electric Lamps; 20 Piece Table Sets; Glass Candle Sticks; Vases;Glass Ware; Crockery; SPECIAL MT. VERNON WHITE WARE in 51Piece Dinner Sets at $12.50, 100 Piece Sets at 21.50 or by the Single Ar-ticle; Straight Razors, Safety Razors; Pocket and Hunting Knives; HuntingAxes; Aluminum Ware; ELECTRIC Curling Irons, Chafing Dishes, Toast-ers, Irons No. U and No. 0, Water Heaters, Tea Kettles, Grills, HeatingPads, Plates, Waffle Irons; Manicure Sets, Scissor Sets, Flashlights, Flash-light Lanterns, Victrolas and Records, Pocket Watches, Wrist Watches,Watch Chains, Fobs, Ornamental Clocks, Carpenter Tools, Baseballs andBats, In-doo- r Balls and Bats, Volley Balls, Trunks, Suit Cases, TravelingBags, High Chairs, Dining Chairs, Straight Chairs, Arm Rockers, SewingRockers, Dining Tables, Card Tables, Stands, Chiffoniers, Dressers.

In the Dry Goods DepartmentFancy Handkerchiefs, Linen Handkerchiefs, Silk Handkerchiefs, Lace

and Embroidered Handkerchiefs, Sweaters, Wraps, Waists, Dresses, Lin-gerie, Silk Hose, Fancy Ribbons, Scarfs, Wool Coats, Rugs, Curtains, Im-ported Laces and Embroideries, Dress Goods, Dress Patterns, Perfumes,Toilet Preparations, Scented Soaps, Face Powders, Cuticle Sets, FaceCreams, Combs, Hair Ornaments, Jewelry; CHILD'S Knit Sets, Booties,Toques, Jazz Caps, Rompers, Suits, Bonnets, Spreads, Blankets, Robes,Sweaters, Coats, Wash Suits, Dresses, Napkins, Table Cloths, Table Dam-

ask, Cut Glass, Jardinieres; KOA Ash Trays, Blotter Pads, Book Racks,Calabashes, Cribbage Boards, Card Boxes, Coasters, Crumb Trays, Darners,Egg Cups, Glove Boxes, Handkerchief Boxes, Jewel Boxes, Napkin Rings,Necktie Holders, Paper Weight, Pin Trays, Pipe Racks, Imported Perfum-ed Pottery, CLAR1DGE SHOP Handpaiuted China, Smoking Sets, andStands; METAL Ash Trays, Books Ends, Fern Dishes; LANDSUN Bowls,Vases, Rose Jars, Statuettes, Smoking Stands; HAWAIIAN Curios, Souve-nirs, Calendars, Greeting Cards and Novelties; Wash Ties, Windsor Ties,Four-in-llan- d Ties, Belts and Buckles," Golf Slirils, Sport Shirts, NegligeeShirts, Army and Fancy Wooleif Shirts, Pajamas, Socks, Garters, Sus-

penders; Panama, Straw and Felt Hats; Caps, Soft and Laundered Collars,Boys' Shirts, Sweater Coats, Knit Jackets, Worsted Jerseys, Bathing suitsfor Men, Women and Children, Men's Handkerchiefs, Cuff Buttons, CuffLinks, Stick-pins- , Finger Rings, Collar Buttons, Collar Pins.

Ukuleles, Guitars and Violins.

In the Japanese DepartmentSilk Embroidered Kimonos for Ladies and Children; Silk Embroidered

Jackets; Silk Baby Quilts; Cushion Covers; Crepe Kimonos for Ladies amiChildren; Silk Crepe; OH ton Crepe; Challis; Kimono Goods; Obi's; FancySlippers; Lacquered Handkerchief and Glove Boxes; Sewing Boxes; JewelBoxes; Silk Lined Basket Bags; Embroidered Handbags; Leather Hand-bags; Lacquered Trays; Flower Pots; Flower Vases; Framed Pictures;Waste Baskets; Mirror Stands;' Parasols; Pin Cushions; Ivory Brooches;Ivory Necklaces; Pearl Necklaces; Glass Necklaces; Ivory Ornaments;Fans; Lamp Shades; Sewing Baskets; Place Cards; Name Cards; Tableand Stand Covers; Dressed Dolls: Silk Scarfs; Silk Handkerchiefs; IvoryCigar and Cigarette Holders; Ash Trays; Match Holders; Papetries andCorrespondence Cards; Local View Postcards; Writing Paper and Envel-opes; Albums; Fountain Pens; Eversharp Pencils; Pencil Boxes; DeskCalendars.

eceipt of ICE HOUSE GOODSS.S. Hyades at Port Allen

Emporium

Remembrances

Hanamaulu Store

Supervisors HoldRegular Meeting

The Conrd of Supervisors of theCounty of Kauai heltl its regularbusiness meeting at Its office on

Friday, December ir, 1922. at 9

clock a.m., for the purpose otap- -

proving n budget of expendituresfor salaries, payrolls, and for pub-

lic improvements for 1923, besidesthe transaction of other businessmatters that came before it.

Present: II. D. Wishard, chairman; T. liramit, J. I. suva, reu

Meniles. A. Menefoglio.The board at once took up the

onsideration of a budget of Expenditures for salaries, etc for1023. and after having worked on

the matter continuously up to almost adjournment, by vote, unanimously approved the following bud-

get of expenditures, namely:Salary, supervisor $ 4,500.00

Mileage supervisors 800.00

Incidentals, supervisors 1,200.00

Salary, attorney 3.G00.00

Incidentals, attorney 300.00

Salary, auditor 3,000,00

Incidentals, auditor 2.500.00

Salary, clerk 3,000.00

ilary, deputy clerk 1,500.00

Incidentals, rlerk 850.00

Salary, treasurer 3,000.00

Incidertals, treasurer 3,000.00

Auditing county books 200.00

Hoard child welfare 7,200.00

ounty law library 50.00

Discount and interest 400.00

District pounds 200.00

Expenses of election 4,250.00

Freightage 500.00

Official bond premium 600.00

Public parks 1,000.00

Weights and measures 250.00

Salary, sheriff 3,600.00

lncidi ntals, sheriff 3,200.00

Salary. I). S. Waimea 2,100.00Pay of police, Waimea 4,920.00Sllary D. S., Koloa 2,040.00

Pay of police, Koloa 3,000.00

Salary P. S., Lihue 2,400.00

Pay of police, Lihue 4,400.00

Salary D. S., Kawaihau 2,040.00

Pay of police, Kawaihau 3,960.00

Salary D. S., Hanaloi 1,800.00

Pay of police, Ilanalci 3,000.00

Special pay of police 4,440.00oroner's inquest 1,500.00

Automobile plates 800.00

Salary, examiner of

xpensesBureau of identification

alary, D. M., WaimeaDistrict court and jail, '

WaimeaSalary, D. M KoloaDistrict court and jail

Koloaalary D. M.. Lihue

Salary D. M

District court and jail,

ilary D. M.,

District courtII ;ma lei

and

clerk of circuitcourt

courtilary.

of circuit

officercircuit court

Jail,

Expenses, circuit courtLaw books, fifth circuitSupport, court

dependenciesprobation officer

and maintenance

.witnessesCounty jailWater works:

PuukapeleWaimeaKckahaKalaheoOmaoLawaiKoloaKapaaAnaholaMoloaaIlaralel

county

Incidentals, engineer

chauffeurs

Kawaihau

KawaihauIlanalci

Salary,

Salary, reporter

probation

Juvenile

Expenses,Support

prisonersExpenses

Salary, engineerSalary, assistant county

engineercounty

County road machineryItoads and bridgesHospitals:

WaimeaEleeloKoloaLihueKealiaKilauea

County building,janitor's services

County lot and buildingEire department,

WaimeaKapaa

Pension, K. Tuuki

of

1,500.00

1,750.001,440.00

1,000.00

1,440.00

500.001,500.001,440.00

500.00960.00

100.00

2,220.00

2,220.00

1,800.007,500.00

400.00

1,000.00500.00

6.000.001,000.007.000.00

250.001,000.00

200.002.500.00

500.00500.00

5,000.001,500.00

500.00500.00SOO.OO

3.600.00

2,400.00

3,000.00

25,00'i.00

88,10".00

1 SOO.OO

600.00

600.002,400.00

600.00600.00

400.004,000.00

50.00

$720.00

Total $273,000.00

A demand (No. 20J) for super

viscors' mileage for $60 was approv

.i riimt the account bearing thesame title.

50.00

a ,1, .nisinil i So. 62C7) from theIniutapu under the will of A. S

Wilcox for the purchase of oneshare In the Ilaena Hut for $400was approved against the appropri-ation for public parks.

A request (P.2085) from Mrs.Louise D. Orote, teacher at the Ke-pa- a

school for the building, at acost of $23.75, of an addition tothe Kapaa school garage granted.

A request (P.20S6) was receivedfrom the county sheriff for appro-priations for the use of his depart-ment for next year; and another one(P.20S6) for a 500 gallon tank forstorage of water for the use of thenew Koloa court house and thejailor's cottage were filed.

request (P.20S7) was receivedfrom the county clerk for appropriations needed for his departmentfor the coming year were filed.

Upon the motion of Mr. Men ifig- -

llo, secorded by Mr. Brandt, thesum of sixteen thousand, t venty- -

five and 52 100 dollars ($10,025.52)to be paid out of the available mon-eys in the General Fund, and thesum of one thousand, one hundredeighty-on- e and dollars ($:,.!.- -

02) to be paid out of the moneysavailable in the Permanent Imp'ove- -

mont Fund in the county treasurywas set aside, as additional appro-priations for the uses and purposesas follows: "

OilingRoadsOilingRoadsOilingOilingRoads

Waimea.

GENERAL FUNDroads, Waimea 1,076.30and bridges, Waimea 2, k-- "."

roads, Koloa 1.4:10.78

and bridges Koloa 3,;:"' .83

roads, Kawaihau 20

roads, Hanalel 2.291.S.1

and bridgesHanalel

County lots and builings

PERMANENT IMP.Macadam, WaimeaMacadam, HanalelNew school pipe line

53.fr2

42.70

$1,181.02The county engineer by

vote was full1. To order a meter for the use

of the Koloa water works.2. To purchase a truck for the

county gasoline engine.3. To a new bridge ut

Hanakaape, Koloa

4,198.18

$16,025.52

1.084.43

unanimousauthority:

constructlanding.

4. To purchase one Ford truckfor Lihue and one Ford truck fr

5. To purchase one asphalt heaterfor Koloa.

979.84

FUND

given

Emily Kealoha strip of land, atKapaa for public road (P.20C3). Mr.Menefoglio moved that in order tosecure a better fire protection tolife and property that the boardvote to favor the exchange of thisstrip of land with any public landthe Territory may think advisable.and that the commissioner of publiclands be recommended to set asldothis strip of land for road purposes,ard being seconded by Mr. Mendestho motion carried.

At 1:00 o'clock P. M the meetingadjourned.

TEACHERS' PENSIONSThe teachers' pensions, according

to the present law, promise a re'duction as time goes on. At presenta teacher contributes one per centof hla or her salary and tho terri-tory sets aside a certain amount. Ittho pensions amount to more thantho money provided for them, theyare scaled pro rata, according tothe funds available.

There are fourteen teachers onthe pension roll at present. Eachreceives $600 per year this amountsto $8.4t) for the year.

We understand that there are ap-

proximately 175 teachers contributing to the pension fund. For figuringpurposes, suppose that each teachercontributes $20 per year to the fund.This amounts to $3500. "When thoact was put into operation therewere quite a number who joinedbut it is doubtful if many have Join-

ed since. As the present contributorsgo on the retired list and draw outand not put in it seems probablethat pensions will dwindle.

When the law was passed it wasconsidered quite unsatisfactory butsomething to meet the demand andit would be improved as time wenton.

As at present all teachers aregiven tho same pension but all do

not pay the same toward it. Furtherthe teachers should have to paymore and draw a pension pro ratato what each contributes. It acts asa pension and an Insurance for thoteachers and the teacher must bewilling to bear his or her part to-

ward that end. '

II. H. 11ROD1E.

Send your magazine orders (newor old) to the K. C. Hopper NewsAgency, Lihue, and they will bepromptly attended to. Phone 22. L.

Adv.

Page 8: Christmas Tableaux Annual Cantata OF COMMERCE Political ... · 5 h w. wilcox 1mjj1 established 1904. vol. 18. no. 52. lihue, kauai, territory of hawaii, tuesday, december 26, 1922

New Year's DayCelebration

Under the Auspices

of

COURT WAIALEALE of the ANCIENT

ORDER OF FORESTERS

Horse Racing Bulldogging Steers

Children's Games and Races

Football

A BIG DAY OF SPORTS

WAIPOULI RACE TRACK

January 1st, 1923

Admission 50 cents; Children 25 cents

That Delicious and

most satisfying

refreshment

ICE CREA

r

i.V.

( D I FFEREXT V LA Y KS )

and

PURE FRESH CREAM

from the

HONOLULU DAIRYMEN'S ASSOCIATION

Received Twice a Week

R. KANZAKIAgent for Kauai

of Honolulu(EUROPEAN PLAN)

When you are in Honolulu you will find theBlaisdell Hotel the place for comfort and modernconvenience. It lias an excellent central location,is near the theaters and has the many advantagesof the down-tow- hotel. $1.50 per day up.

The Childs Restaurant in the same buildingcombines the various attractive features of high-clas- s

modern service, and reasonable prices.

Fl

It is advisable to makeADVANCE RESERVATIONS

J. F. CHILDS, Proprietor

M

THE BLAISDELL

I

THE QAftDEK ISLAND, TUESDAY, DEO, 26, 1922

UNIVERSITY EXTENSION LETTER

YOUR GARDEN THIS MONTH.Where green manuring of garden

plots has not already been done, notime should be lost in preparing thesoil by turning under plenty ofcoarse barnyard manure. A cdblcyard of manure (16 2

yard manure. A cubic yard of ma-

nure for eut'd square rod, or fortytons per acre, Is the least that shouldbe applied. It probably would bewell to add about 10 pounds fit phos-

phate to each cubic yard of manureat the time of application. This maybe in the form of either of revert-ed or acid phosphate.

He very careful in December andduring the rainy months not to workyour land when It is too wet. Bet-

tor let the weeds grow father thanruin your soil by working it too wet.The soil should be turned over a

and third time in December the milk and thoroughly. Alum

and January before planting the gar-dc-

It Is good practice to plant on

raised beds nt this time of year toinsure the best drainage possible.

Cold flames and flats. A numberof garden crops which thrive betteri nlhe spring instead of now maybe started now in cold frames or in

flats placed in a protected posi-

tion nnd thus gain a month or so in

the maturii g of crops. A cold frameis a box with a glass cover, theglass serving to hold some of thesun's heat inside and the resultingwarmth hastening the germinationof seeds and early growth of seed-

lings and cuttings.Some o fthe crops which may be

started in this way are artichokes,asparagus, celery, chard, cl.ayote, cu-

cumbers, egg-plan- tomatoes andothers.

WHITE WASH IS GOOD PAINTWhite wash is the cheapest of

all paints, and for certain purposesit is the best. Lime, which is thebasis of white wash, makes a verysanitary coating, and is probablyto be preferred for and theinterior of the and otherbuildings. The following directionsfor making white wash are takenfrom Farmers' Bulletin 474, "TheUse of Paint on the Farm," whichgives several oilier white wash for-

mulas for interior and exterior use.Write us if you want a copy of thisbulletin.

Ordinary white wash This Is madeby slacking about 10 pounds of quicklime with 2 gallons of water.

The lime is placed in a pail andthe water poured over it, afterwhich the pail Is covered with anold piece of carpet or cloth and al-

lowed to stand for about an hour.With an insufficient amount of wat-

er the lime is "scorched" and notconverted into hydrate; on the oth-

er hand too much water retards theslacking by lowering the heat.

Scorched lime is generally lumpyand transparent, hence the use of

the proper amount of water forslacking and an after addition of

water to bring it to a brush consist-ency.

It has been found by experience in

Hawaii that a very attractive tintmay be obtained in white wash by

mixing a suitable amount of com-

mon cane molasses, putting in

enough until the desired tint is ob-

tained.official government formula

for a really superior white wash isas follows:

Investments Suitable for

Estate Fundsare usually offered first d Trosl companies. This gives suchorganizations ;i choice of ilic most desirable securities, andtheir great Inning power enables iheiu to make purchases moreadva iilageously than the individual.

Consider this when naming vour Executor and Trustee.

Bishop Trust Company, Ltd.

924 Bethel' St. Honolulu Telephone 6177

62 pounds (1 bushel) lump lime or100 lbs limoid; 40 pounds table salt;3 pounds rice flour; 2 pounds glue;1 pound whiting.

Sluck the lime and allow it totool thoroughly. Mix the other In-

gredients with hot water and thenadd the slacked lime or limoid. Thinthe mixture to the desired consist-ency with hot water and apply thewhite wash hot. Molasses could beadded to give a color tint.

For exterior use on buildings,fences, etc., here Is a good formu-la:

62 pounds quick lime (slack In 12gallons hob water); pounds commontable salt, and 1 of zinc sul-phate dissolved in 2 gallons of boil-ing water; 2 gallons skimmilk.

Pour the salt and zinc sulphateinto the slacked lime and then add

second mix

cellarsstables

The

pound

added to a white wash prevents i

from rubbing off. Use one ounce ofalum to each gallon of white wash.We are indebted to the Nebraskaexperiment station for much of thisinformation.

ANOTHER WORLD RECORDLady Jewell, a white leghorn hen

in the state of Washington, has re-

cently set a new world record inegg laying, 335 eggs in 365 days.The best previous record was 324

eggs by a California white leghornhen. This Is running pretty closeto perfect efficiency.

HAVE YOU GOT AN OLDDE LAVAL?

The De Laval Separator Co. Isoffering a prize of $25 to the ownerof the oldest "De Laval" In eachstate or territory. If you have an oldone send word to E. O. Hall & Sons,Honolulu, stating date of purchase,serial number and size of the machine, and anything you can aboutits history and its service.POULTRY GRADES IN GEORGIA

A very Important advance has re-

cently been made in Georgia in theestablishing of standard poultrygrades by the state bureau of mar-kets and agreed to by wholesalersand dealers in the state. It is a matter to which dealers and producersin Hawaii should give attention, asthe industry is increasing considerably.

Here are the four grades established in Georgia on the part ofthe buyers and producers:

1. Friers young chickens, 1 to1 2 pounds live weight.

2. Stags young chickens, bothmale and female, 2 2 pounds andover, live weight.

3. Hens it was agreed that good

fat hens weighing over 4 poundsshould bring 2 cents per pound morethan hens weighing under 4 pounds

4. Roosters all which are not included in grade 1 and 2 above.

No special classification is madefor broilers because of limited demand. Likewise turkeys, geese nadducks are not classified. The higherprice offered for four pound hensshould encourage the growing of a

better type of table fowl to takeadvantage o fihis premium.

The Honolulu market would beconsiderably improved is soma standard of grading such as given abovecould be agreed upon by buyers andsellers. We will be very glad toreceive and publish comments fromproducers and dealers in Hawaii,

What do you think about it?

v i v I

N I li' I M

i n 1

v ' :

FTEEN YEARS EXPERIENCE IN SETTLING AND MANAGING ESTATES1

, f t ' I.U nini

USE MORE MILMilk is essential to health and

growth. ,

Milk is a muscle building food.Milk is a bone and teth building

food; it contains an abu: dance ofcalcium and phosphorous .necessaryto both bone and teeth. j

It is a protective food promotinghealth because it contains threekinds of vitamines: One of whichprevents a peculiar eye disease andmay play a part in preventing rick-

ets; another of which promtes thegrowth and prevents berl-berl- , a

Kauai Views

Phone

paralysis;which scurvy.

contains necessary

in blood is, therefore, y

especially in

anemia.its products are

which a family cando without. Increase in

Its products thereforebe viewed unfavorably

Is proved Increaseis proportion to increaso

commoditiesand less nutritional

That Christmas Portrait Needs1 Suitable

FRAMEIt fs really remarkable how much better even

best pictures look iu correct frames. Letxhow you effect that nn folic frame canproduce.

W. SENDA

Kodak Film, Finishing

Hanapepe Chop Sui House and BakeryChop Sui Served Daily

Special Chop Sui Dinners Prepared to OrderHONOLULU ICE CREAM IN BAKERY

Mr. and Mrs. Ma Lum, Props.Telephone 239-- ITanapepe O. Box

YUEN KEE CAFEKAPAA, KAUAI

Genuine Chop Suey on Order by Phone

Pies Cakes and Confectionery Catering

52GOUR ICE CREAM

O.

Waimea Stables, Ltd.AT WAIMEA and NAWILIWILI

Most Famous Garage on Kauai.

place to get transportation to

The Barking Sands, Olokele CanyonWaimea Canyon, Kokee CampsKukuiolono Park, Wailua Falls

Hanalei and Haena Cavesautomobiles are comfortable, our drivers are re

liable and have us for many years,know every of country.

We Rent Ford Cars Without Driversrun stage between Llhue and Kekaha

three round trips weekdo draylng and hauling by trucks all over the Island.

A. GOMEZ, Mgr.WAIMEA BRANCH

43--

of course -Hawaiian Kona the BestWe don't need to tell

Just wanted youto form good habitof asking your grocer forKona Coffee with thelabel In one pound pack-ages or pound

WHOLESALf

form of and the other of

preventsMilk proteins

the andvaluable, cas-

esMilk and the foods

least afford tocost of

milk andshould notunless it that the

out ofof other of the same

worth.

a

the uhthe art

J.

F. 104

TRY

-

P. Box 42

The

The

Ourbeen with and

Inch the

We the I'noper

We

Tel.

youthat

the

red

five cans.

the

the

CLEM GOMES, Mgr.NAWILIWILI BRANCH

Tel. 492--

is

AMFACSPECIAL

Kona CoffeeTHE CHOICE OF THE PICK

aMsaMsaapaMBaWMat'lteiasH ft

DISTRIBUTORS

Buy a Sffiywi

and Bank the difference.Nawiliwili Garage

Page 9: Christmas Tableaux Annual Cantata OF COMMERCE Political ... · 5 h w. wilcox 1mjj1 established 1904. vol. 18. no. 52. lihue, kauai, territory of hawaii, tuesday, december 26, 1922

RE'S LINES OF

GOODSI

4

and BetterBefore

jjVGS TO EAT

resh from the Factory

ASSORTED

In Sanitary Packages

Little Jacks, Fairy Mints, Sunbeam

Kisses, Rainbow Kisses, Sunshine

Drops, Fruit Tablets, Opera Stick,

Rainbow Mixed, Satin Finisbed Mix-

ed, Imperial Marslnnallows, After

Dinner Mints.

Brazil, Fil- -

1 Tecans

n

0

BulkCuts, Belmont Raspberries, Mid- -

eanuts, Monster Jum Drops, Bos- -

anut Brittle, Satin Finisbed Mix- -

ite Caps, Walnut Top Cbocolates,lutes, Turkish Taste, Vanilla Cho- -

Chocolates, Milk Din Crisp Cho- -

fcgrf ra,Iarshniallow Chocolates.

BulkITS per Pound

f, PLAIN MIXEDrocers mixed 20c

"oo, for the Tableeverage, "Bevo" Beverage, "Pablo"H Cider,' Motts Cider, Maconibersnd Manhattan Xon Alcoholic Cock-pr- .

Birch Beer. Sarsanarilhi : A--7 '

S--

nd Water, Welch's Crape Juice,crush Orange Juice.

DEPARTMENTfomeg's and Children's

Received

i atv -

TITE GARDEN ISLAND IEO. 2(1. 1022

Assorted This Season

Remembrances for Old

&eipt of ICE HOUSEVS. Hyades Port Allen

Tt'ESTUY.

In the Hardware Department"UXIVEUSAL" PEARL HANDLE Cake Knives, Cold Meat Forks, Ber-

ry Spoons, Salad Forks, Salad Sets, Sugar Shells, Cheese Servers, ButlerKnives, Knives and Forks; "CM VKUSAL" Percolators, Casseroles, Eame-quins- ,

Trays, Beverage Shakers, Vacuum Bottles, Beef Carvers, Came Carv-ers, Bird Carvers, Knives and Forks; "PVREX" Casseroles, Pie Plates,Bread Pans, Utility Dishes, Cake Dishes, Baking Dishes, Ramekins; CUTSUNBURST & CORNET PATTERN Wine Classes, Cocktail Classes, CrapeJuice Classes, Tumblers, Fruit Saucers, Berry Bowls, Nappies, Water Jugs,Sundae Classes, Sugars and Creams, Water Sets; Special Ivory and Poly-chrome Electric Lamps; 20 Piece Table els; Class Candle Sticks; Vases;Class Ware; Crockery; SPECIAL MT. VERNON WHITE WAKE in 51Piece Dinner Sets at $12.51, 100 Piece Sets at 21.30 or by the Single Ar-ticle; Straight Razors, Safety Razors; Pocket and Hunting Knives; HuntingAxes; Aluminum Ware; ELECTRIC Curling Irons, Chafing Dishes, Toast-ers, Irons No. y and No. G, Water Heaters, Tea Kettles, Crills, HeatingPads, Plates, Waffle Irons; Manicure Sets, Scissor Sets, Flashlights, Flash-light Lanterns, Victrolas and Records, Pocket Watches, Wrist Watches,Watch Chains, Fobs, Ornamental Clocks, Carpenter Tools, Baseballs andBats, In-doo- r Balls and Bats, Volley Balls, Trunks, Suit Cases, TravelingBags, High Chairs, Dining Chairs, Straight Chairs, Arm Rockers, SewingRockers, Dining Tables, Card Tables, Stands, Chiffoniers, Dressers..

In the Dry Goods DepartmentFancy Handkerchiefs, Linen Handkerchiefs, Silk Handkerchiefs, Lace

and Embroidered Handkerchiefs, Sweaters, Wraps, Waists, Dresses, Lin-gerie, Silk Hose, Fancy Ribbons, Scarfs, Wool Coats, Rugs, Curtains, Im-ported Laces and Embroideries, Dress Coods, Dress Patterns, Perfumes,Toilet Preparations, Scented Soaps, Face Powders, Cuticle Sets, FaceCreams, Combs, Hair Ornaments, Jewelry; CHILD'S Knit Sets, Booties,Toques, Jazz Caps, Rompers, Suits, Bonnets, Spreads, Blankets, Robes,Sweaters, Coats, Wash Suits, Dresses, Napkins, Table Cloths, Table Dam-ask, Cut Class, Jardinieres; KOA Ash Trays, Blotter Pads, Book Racks,Calabashes, Cribbage Boards, Card Boxes, Coasters, Crumb Trays, Darners,Egg Cups, Clove Boxes, Handkerchief Boxes, Jewel Boxes, Napkin Rings,Necktie Holders, Paper Weight, Pin Trays, Pipe Racks, Imported Perfum-ed Pottery, CLAR1DOE SHOP llandpaiuted China, Smoking Sets, andStands; METAL Ash Trays, Books Ends, Fern Dishes; LAXDSUN Bowls,Vases, Rose Jars, Statuettes, Smoking Stands; HAWAIIAN Curios, Souve-nirs, Calendars, Greeting Cards and Novelties; Wash Ties, Windsor Ties,Four-i- u lland Ties, Belts and Buckles,' Coif Slirils, Sport Shirts, NegligeeShirts, Army and Fancy Wooleif Shirts, Pajamas, Socks, Carters, Sus-penders; Panama, Straw and Felt Hats; Caps, Soft and Laundered Collars,Boys' Shirts, Sweater Coats, Knit Jackets, Worsted Jerseys, Bathing suitsfor Men, Women and Children, Mens Handkerchiefs, CuTf Buttons, CuffLinks, Stick-pins- , Finger Rings, Collar Buttons, Collar Pins.

Ukuleles, Guitars and Violins.

In the Japanese DepartmentSilk Embroidered Kimonos for Ladies and Children; Silk Embroidered

Jackets; Silk Baby Quilts; Cushion Covers; Crepe Kimonos for Ladies andChildren; Silk Crepe; (Hton Crepe; Challis; Kimono Goods; Obi's; FancySlippers; Lacquered Handkerchief and Clove Boxes; Sewing Boxes; JewelBoxes; Silk Lined Basket Bags; Embroidered Handbags; Leather Hand-bags; Lacquered Trays; Flower Pots; Flower Vases; Framed Pictures;Waste Baskets; Mirror Stands; Parasols; Pin Cushions; Ivory Brooches;Ivory Necklaces; Pearl Necklaces; Glass Necklaces; Ivory Ornaments;Fans; Lamp Shades; Sewing Baskets; Place Cards; Name Cards; Tableand Stand Covers; Dressed Dolls; Silk Scarfs; Silk Handkerchiefs; IvoryCigar and Cigarette Holders; Ash Trays; Match Holders; Papotries andCorrespondence Cards; Local View Postcards; Writing Paper and Envel-opes; Albums; Fountain Pens; Eversharp Pencils; Pencil Boxes; DeskCalendars.

GOOD

jmporium Hanamaulu Store J

Supervisors HoldRegular Meeting

The rionrd of Supervisors of theCounty of Kaunl held Us regularbusiness meeting nt Its office onFriday, December IS, 1922, at 9

o'clock a.m., for the purpose ofvapproving n budget of expendituresfor salaries, payrolls, and for put)lie improvements for 1923, besidesthe transaction of other businessmatters that came before It.

Present: II. V. Wlshard. chair-man; T. llrandt, J. I. Silva, FredMendes, A. Menefoglio.

The board nt once took up theconsideration of a budget of Ex-

penditures for salaries, etc. for1023, and after having worked onthe matter continuously up to al-

most adjournment, by vote, unani-mously approved the following bud-

get of expenditures, namely:Salary, supervisor $ 4,500.00

Mileage supervisors 800.00

Incidentals, supervisors 1,200.00

Salary, attorney 3,000.00Incidentals, attorney 300.00Salary, auditor 3,000,00Incidentals, auditor 2.500.00Salary, clerk 3,000.00

Salary, deputy dork 1,500.00

Incidentals, clerk 850.00

Salary, treasurer 3.000.00Incidertals, treasurer 3,000.00Auditing county books 200.00

Hoard child welfare 7,200.00County law library 50.00

Discount and interest 400.00District pounds 200.00Expenses of election 4,250.00Freightage 500.00

Official bond premium 600.00rublic parks 1,000.00

Weights and measures 250.00

Salary, sheriff 3,600.00Incidentals, sheriff 3,200.00Salary, D. S. Waimea 2,100.00l'ay of police, Waimea 4,920.00Sllary D. S., Koloa 2,040.00Iay of police, Koloa 3,000.00Salary D. S., Lihue 2,400.00l'ay of police, Lihue 4,400.00

Salary D. S., Kawaihau 2,040.00Pay of police, Kawaihau 3,960.00Salary D. S., Hanalel 1,800.00Pay of police, Hanalel 3,000.00Special pay of police 4,440.00Coroner's inquest 1,500.00Automobile plates 800.00Salary, examiner of chauffeurs

1,500.00Expenses

Bureau of identification 1,750.00Salary, 1). M., Waimea 1,440.00District court and Jail,

Waimea 1,000.00Salary, D. M., Koloa ' 1,440.00District court and jail

Koloa 500.00Salary D. M., Lihue 1,500.00Salary D. M., Kawaihau 1,4,40.00

District court and jail,Kawaihau 500.00

Salary I). M., Hanalel 960.00District court and jail,

Hanalel 100.00Salary, dork of circuit

court 2,220.00Salary, reporter of circuit

court 2,220.00Salary, probation officer of

circuit court 1.800.00Kxpenses, circuit court 7,500.00Law books, fifth circuit 400.00Support, Juvenile court

dependencies 1,000.00Expenses, probation officer 500.00Support and maintenance

prisoners G.000.00

Expenses witnesses 1,000.00County jail 7,000.00

Water works:Puukapelo 250.00Waimea 1,000.00Kckaha 200.00

Kalaheo 2,500.00

Omao 500.00

Lawai 500.00

Koloa 5,000.00Kapaa 1,500.00

Anahola 500.00

Moloaa 500.00

Haralei 800.00Salary, county engineer 3,600.00Salary, assistant county

engineer 2,400.00

Incidentals, county en-

gineer 3.000.00

County road machinery 25,00'00Hoads and bridges 88,10".00

Hospitals:Waimea l.WO.OO

Eloele CO0.00

Koloa G00.00

Lihue 2,400.00

Kealia 600.00

ivit:llH.n COO.OO

County building,janitor's services 400.00

County lot and building 4,000.00

Fire department,Waimea 5000Ivnnn:i 50.00

Pension, It. Puuki $720.00

Total $273,000.00

A demand (No. G206) for superviscors' mileage for $60 was approv

lust tin' account bearing the.same title.

A demand (No. 6267) from thetrustees under the Will Of A. S

Wilcox for the purchase of oneshare in the Haena Hul for $400was approved against the appropri-ation for public parks.

A request (P.2085) from Mrs.Louise D. Orote, teacher at the Kc-pa- a

school for the building, at acost of $23.75, of an addition tothe Kapaa school garage granted.

A request (P.20S6) was receivedfrom the county sheriff for appro-priations for the use of his depart-ment for next yeur; and another one(P.20SG) for a 500 gallon tank forstorage of water for the use of thenew Koloa court house and theJailor's cottage were filed.

A retiuest (P.2087) was receivedfrom the county clerk for appropri-ations needed for his departmentfor the coming year were filed.

Upon the motion of Mr. Men :fig-llo- ,

secoi-de- by Mr. Brandt, thesum of sixteen thousand, t venty-fiv- e

and dollars ($l(i,0,r.52)to be paid out of the available mon-eys In the General Fund, and thesum of one thousand, one hundredeighty-on- e and dollars ($:,.1.-02- )

to bo paid out of the moneysavailable in tl.o Permanent Improve-ment Fund in the county treasurywas set a.side, as additional appro-priations for the uses and purposesas follows:

GENERAL FUNDOiling loads, Waimea 1,076.30Roads and bridges, Waimea ISOiling roads, Koloa 1.4:16.78Hoads and bridges Koloa 3,:!V .8--

Oiling roads, Kawaihau 20"Oiling roads, Hanalei 2,291.8.1

Hoads and bridgesHanalel 4,198.18

County lots and builings 979.84

$16,025.52PERMANENT IMP. FUND

Macadam, Waimea 53.92Macadam, Hanalei 42.70New school pipe line 1,084.40

$1,181.02The county engineer by unanimous

vote was given full authority:1. To order a meter for the use

of the Koloa water works.2. To purchase a truck for the

county gasoline engine.3. To construct a new bridge at

Hanakaape, Koloa landing.4. To purchase one Ford truck

for Lihue and one Ford truck forWaimea.

C. To purchase one asphalt heaterfor Koloa.

Emily Kealoha strip of land , atKapaa for public road (P.2003), Xr.Menefoglio moved that in order tosecure a better fire protection tolife and property that the boardvote to favor the exchange of thisstrip of land with any public landthe Territory may think advisable.and that the commissioner of publiclands be recommended to set asidothis strip of land for road purposes,ard being seconded by Mr. Mendesthe motion carried.

At 1:00 o'clock P. M., the meetingadjourned.

TEACHERS' PENSIONSThe teachers' pensions, according

to the present law, promise a re'duction as time goi s on. At presenta teacher contributes one per centof his or her salary and the terri-tory sets aside a certain amount. Ifthe pensions amount to more thanthe money provided for them, theyare scaled pro rata, according tothe funds available.

There are fourteen teachers onthe pension roll at present. Eachreceives $600 per year this amountsto $8.40 for the year.

We understand that there are ap-

proximately 175 teachers contribut-ing to the pension fund. For figuringpurposes, suppose that each teachercontributes $20 per year to the fund.This amounts to $3500. "When theact was put into operation therewere quite a number who joinedbut it is doubtful if many have Join-

ed since. As the present contributorsgo on the retired list and draw outand not put in it seems probablethat pensions will dwindle.

When the law was passed it wasconsidered quite unsatisfactory butsomething to meet the demand andit would be improved as time wenton.

As at present all teachers aregiven the same pension but all donot pay the same toward it. Furtherthe teachers should have to paymore and draw a pension pro ratato what each contributes. It acts asa pension and an insurance for theteachers and the teacher must bewilling to bear his or her part to-

ward that end.II. II. HHODIE.

Send your magazine orders (newor old) to the K. C. Hopper NewsAgency, Lihue, and they will bepromptly attended to. Phone 22.L.

Adv.

Page 10: Christmas Tableaux Annual Cantata OF COMMERCE Political ... · 5 h w. wilcox 1mjj1 established 1904. vol. 18. no. 52. lihue, kauai, territory of hawaii, tuesday, december 26, 1922

TIP TOP-IC-S

DOUG HAS NEW PICTURETHAT BEATS 'EM

If

ALL

You Don't Like a Laugh, StayAway From the "Nut;" It It

a Scream

Of Course There May Be a Plot;But Do Not Worry, For It

l Painless

For downright hilariousness norsense, "The Nut" takes the barbed-wir- e

bath sponge. It is a DouglasFairbanks conglomeration of eightreels of wild-eye- foolishness of a

kind which threaten to strain ribsand fracture whala-bon- a stays andit comes to the Tip Top theater nextSunday night.

As to the plot that doesn't mat-

ter so much. "The Nut" is a lovestory, but of the Fairbanks brand,and even the love scenes are purecomedy.' From the moment the hero, Chas.Jackson, grandson of President An-

drew Jackson, if you please, wakesone bright morning in his Green-wich Village apartment until l.e

marries the girl of his choice a fewdays later in a New York policecourt, there is super action of thetriple-compoun- type.

The Nut is well named, for anut has a pechant for inventingthings which do not work the waythey "are planned is the hero, andthe trouble he ;ots M.nwlf into try'ing to help the girl of his heart outof some of her pet schemes can-

not be described in words. It takespictures and Fairbanks to do it

Certainly Fairbanks has employedsome startling innovation in creating comedy. Wax figures, fireworhs,incenae which put everyone to sleepas well as some of his own comical"inventions" are used with knockout effects.

There is Just a silver thread ofseriousness in the picture, represented by the "mission" in life ofthe heroine, charmingly played byMargueriate La Motte, who inlievesthat children of the sluni3 given refined influences a few hours a daywill grow better men and women

"The Nut" does not aspire to thepretentiousness of "The Three Muskctters," The Mark of Zorro," andsimilar historical or l

Fairbanks creations. It is strictlymodern and strictly laugh provoking.

H

it

"NICE PEOPLE" STORYOF JAZZ-MA- WORLD,

COMING TO TIP TOP

William De Mille has gone the lim-

it in the production of "Nice Feopie," a Paramount screen story of

the present jazz-ma- world, featur-

ing Wallace Reid, Bebe Daniels, JuliaFaye and Conrad Nagel, which willbe at the Tip Top theater Wednes-day, January 3.

Not that Do Mille has done anything improper. He has, however,drawn some exceedingly strong pic

tures to put over his idea that "nicepeople" have higher ideals and conduct themselves differently than theaverage d smart-set- .

Let it be said here 1 that "NicePeople" is timely inasmuch as therehas been much smoke and a littlefire in the press recently concerningsmoking in theaters. Smokers and

s will agree after theyhave seen "Nico People" that neverin screen history have so many cigarettes been consumed in the makingof a feature.

Cocktail drinking, promiscuous kissing. cran shooting, the wearing ofdaring feminine clothes and the daring situations into which young girlsplunge themselves quite as a matterof course in these days may holdthe majority vote, but none the lessare not the ways of "nice people"is the lesson which De Mille hastaught in this production, althoughwithout resort to heavy drama, for"Nice People" is essentially a com-

edy.Bebe Daniels has the strongest role

of her career, and likewise the lead

role of the picture, although WallaceReid also figures prominently.

GRIFFITH'S LATEST PICTUREGREATEST OF THEM ALU

Unusual interest atiaches to theopening of the coming engagemi ntin this community of D. W. Grif-

fith's great spectacle, "Way DownEast," which will be seen for thefirst time here on Saturday, Decem-

ber 30 and Monday, January 1st, atthe Tip Top theater. "Way DownEast" will be presented here for aperiod of two days.

If such be possible, this latest mas-

terful production by the genius of

the screen bids fair to eclipse eventhe enormous vogue enjoyed by "TheBirth of a Nation." Now being offer-ed in the leading cities of the land,"Way Down East" is attracting cap-

acity throngs and seats are soughtweeks in advance.

Miss This

The first on

THE GARDEN ISLAND DEC. 20, 1922

This picturization of the famousstage success furnished by Lottie BlairBaker and Joseph" Orismer goesmuch farther than the original tale.Mr. Griffith has begun where theyhalted. He has not made it a provincial thing; attempting to ex-

plain nothing he has welded a

theory of eternal love, and in sodoing has removed his people fromtime and period. Possessed of avision and mentality too great tobe handicapped by anythirg, hehas brought forth an epic far morethan clever it has the ring ofgenius. The simple fun of plainpeople is brought forth in greatermeasure than the stage play version could ever hope to attain andoffers keen contrast to the suf-

fering and woe of Anra Mooroher hopes and struggled. Probablythe greatest cast of capable players ever assembled for a motion

picture production was engagedin the making of this work and it

ends in a thrilling climax of spectacular scenes amid the veenr.gflaws of a New England blizzardand the explosive breaking of a

river ice gorge, all of which en

thrall ns only a Griffith effort can

move auiiienc(S. ine tenner lini-

ments, the tragic episodes, thelaughable situations and the stir-rint- r

scenes are accentuated by un

usual orchestral accompanimentpronounced the most ambitious yetattempted in the theater.

Made for

Hawaii

"LEHUA"Typewriting

Non-smuttin- Clear-cu- t im-

pressions. Makes up to 20

copies in one operation.

Write for Free Sample.

News & Ltd.

Bishop St., Honolulu

CARPENTEROFilipino light-weig-ht champion

of Hawaii

TO FIGHTat the

RIZAL DAY CELEBRATION

on Saturday, December 30, 1922 at 4:30 p. m.

at

WAIPOUL1 RACE TRACK

Don't

Time Kauai

TUESDAY,

Carbon

Hawaiian

Thrum's,

3 3d

i

VA

IP TOP THEATRE

I .

27

They call it "Trouble" but ' youwill find three smiles for everytear.

More than n comedy more thana drama a poignant heart holder,wiih the Kid as orpliant, plumber,witness, farmer, through five reels

and

LM in;

mm

r . xkMmm'jsxs.x.

in T,l"$. Pi I

loves a lady who loves

a hobby and when he pt: --

sues her troubles pws'jshim. Yet he overcomeseverything in his inim-itable wcy r.r.d "rhe r.uKproves to be s real red-rV- ,

blooded men.

EE

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER

JACKIE in

"TROUBLE 99

that are gladsome and sadsome, andregular ad-some. Here's the onlytrouble you'll enjoy.

Wallace Beery and Gloria Hopehead the big supporting cast. And

Queenie, Jack's pup ,is ther eall thetime tryii'g to steal the picture.

Saturday Monday

D.-W- Griffith's great spectacle

Way Down East "

$$mmw

COOGAN

Sunday

If you don't like toaway from "The Nut."there mayworry, for

laugh, BtayOf course

be a plot, but don'tit is painless.

WEDNESDAY, JAN. 3

Wallace Reidin

"NICE PEOPLE"

Coming Friday and Saturday, Jan. 12 and 13Willi I: something snappy, romantic, exciting,full of tense action, bubbling over with Ro-

mance, chivalry and glamor? Well, here it is

DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS

"The Mark of Zorro"

AT AUCTIONOne 1920

Essex Touring Carin good condition

TJfl

will be Sold at Auction in front of

the County Building at 1 2 m.,

January 6th to satisfy creditors.

Page 11: Christmas Tableaux Annual Cantata OF COMMERCE Political ... · 5 h w. wilcox 1mjj1 established 1904. vol. 18. no. 52. lihue, kauai, territory of hawaii, tuesday, december 26, 1922

3

RADIOSUPPLIES

Now is the time for dealers to sell receiving setsand radio supplies

Prepare for the rush and make quick profits

Catalogs and trade prices on application to

NEUSTADT CO.24 California Street, San Francisco, Cal.

WE SELL TO DEALERS ONLY

Lumber - Paints - Oils

Millwork of all Kinds

Building MaterialsPlumbing Fixtures

HardwareCement

Merchandise Department

Kauai Railway CompanyPORT ALLEN

P. O. Box 142 Phone 85 W

A Complete Guardianship of Power

In any plant there are almost in-

numerable points at which powercan be wasted. It is the most diffi-

cult element in the world to car-

ry any distance without appreciableloss.

vJohns-Manvill- power specialtiesare the result of a deliberate attemptto save power. Johns-Manvill- e boil' rcements conserve power at itssource. Service Sheet No. 60 pre-

vents joint leakage and Johns-Manvill- e

insulation prevents waste thruradiation.

Honolulu Iron Works Co.Agent in Hawaii for Johns-Manvlll- Power Specialties.

A Christmas present that will be appreciated

SUBSCRIPTIONto a gootl Magazine or Periodical

FISHER'S NEWS AGENCY, P. O. Box 3263

Noil receipt of copies MOXKY WOFUXDKD

THE GARDEN ISLAND, TUESDAY, DEC. 20, 1922

County Y. M. C. A. Committee Meet

The members of the KauaiY. M. C. A. committee were the

dinner guests of Doctor and Mrs.Waterhouse last Thursday evening.

After all had enjoyed the excellent dinner the members assembledfor a short business session.

The holding of the annual coun-ty convention was set for enrly inMay. A nominating committee wasappointed to report at the next reg-

ular meeting on committeemen forthe ensuing year. Philip Rice waaappointed secretary pro tern.

Mr. Watada, assistant county secretary, gave a verbal report outlin-ing his work of the past two weeks.He spoke of the helpful resultsfrom charting the boys, the organiz-ation in outlying communities of Y

Clubs and Sunday schools, and ofthe interest which is being displayed throughout the county by theolder Japanese, among whom localcommittees are being formed to backup the work.

Mr. Locke), executive secretary,gave a brier report of the workwhich has been done during thepast year. He exhibited a map show-ing 23 communities on the islandwhere Y. M. C. A. work ia beingcarried on. Thirty-on- e cluba havebeen organized during the year, to-

taling a membership of more than400. Seventy-fiv- boys attended thecounty older boys' conference; fivenight schools have been established with an enrollment of over 100.

The observance of Father and Sonweek with James Taylor as speakerresulted in four banquets, two illus-

trated lectures and three churchgatherings. The Influence for a bet-

ter understanding between the menand the boys of the island will be

In outlining plans forthe future, Mr. Locke spoke of thecontemplated observance of ThriftWeek, January 17 to 23, with a thruthe year follow up inwith the school and authorities, theterritorial' older boys conference,grammar school track meet andsummer camps. An interesting dis-

play of pictures showing the variedactivities promoted in the last 12

months were shown.Chairman Waterhouse read sever

al letters which had been writtenby local people commenting on thework done by the Y. M. C. A.

T. Brandt, tnasurer, In his re-

port for the fiscal year, stated thatthe year has begun with an over-draft of S2.S00; during the year

had been secured from inter-ested supporters and $2,060.50 real-ized from the sale of the Y. M. C.

A. house ut Hleele. That after mak-

ing all authorized disbursements an Jpaying all bills the overdraft forthe year would only be about $500.

Chairman H. 1). Sloggett cf thefinance committee presented the following budget for the coming year:Salaries, 2 secretariesAuto expenses, 2 carsHouse rentSummer camp equipmentPrintingOffice supplies and postageTelephone and cablesConference and conventionsSummer schoolAssociation menBooksOffice helpIncidentals

Estimated deficit

1300

300

300

150

125

100

100

100

100

75

75

$7300500

$7800After a unanimous adoption of the

budget the dates. January 813 werenamed as the time in which a coun-

ty wide opportunity would be giventhe many friends of the work toshare in this phase of'it.

The chairman then introducedProf. A. A. Huuck, president ofPunahou school, who gave a veryinteresting talk on the "gang spir-it" and of the great work the Y.

M. C, A. is doing in providing oppor-

tunities for the proper exercise ofthe "gang spirit" and the directionof the energies of boys and youngmen toward better things.

The meeting adjourned at 8:46p.m.

PHILIP L. KICE,Secretary Pro Tempore.

Second Round"Waiter, I came in yesterday for

a steak. "

"Yes sir. Will you have the sametoday?"

''Why, I might as well, if no oneelse is using it." Jack Canuck.

You Are Missing It! !What?

Real Pleasure and Entertainment that is Yours

FREE, if You Own a RADIO SET

Our Aeriola Senior selling for only i7." complete,are giving great satisfaction

Owners of these sets on Kauai are hearing the pro-grams from Honolulu every night and some are evenlistening in on the doings from the liig mainland sta-

tions with good results

Think of being able to sit at home and hear music,news and lectures by the best artists and entertainers

in the country

Sets Sold on Easy TermsPKICKS SAMi: AS HONOLULU

Come in and let u's give you a demonstration any noon.Kvening demonstrations by appointment.

Electric Shop of KauaiTelephone Building

Phone .,!i2 LLihue, Kauai

Dr. Dunn's MountainHouse For Sale

The Mountain Place of Dr. Win. T. Dunn,at Puukapcle is for sale. This prop-

erty consists of1 House - - - 14 x 241 House - - 12 x 161 Kitchen - - 8x10

(All separate buildings)Anyone interested can secure keys from

Mr. Davidson at Hofgaards StoreW'aimea

$1,200.00WILL BUY Till: OUTFIT

$4,500

75

1

'- - "-- ' -

EACOCK LEI

QUALITY XMAS GIFTSBeautiful Peacock Leis

Japanese Fine Silk Kimonos

Ichinose Dry Goods StoreTelephone 291-- Koloa

Rattan FurnitureNewest and Latest Designs

Made to Your Order

Telephone 223 L

Prices Extremely Reasonable

Visit Our Display Room

KAPAIA STORE

The FamousXKW Z FA LAND BUTT Kit

MAILEAlways fresh because it sellsso rapidly that fresh stocks are

constant lv received

PURE - SMOOTH - SWEET - RICH

Ask your grocer

Metropolitan Meat Market

WUOLKSALK DISTIUBUTOKSHonolulu

Theo. H. Davies & Co., Ltd.HONOLULU and HILO

Post

Sugar Factors and Commission MerchantsIMPORTERS OF GENERAL MERCHANDISE

ienera1 Hardware

a

Office, Llhut.

Builders' Hardware, Crockery, Glassware, Silverware, SportingGoods, Fishing Tackle, Firearms, Ammunition, Safes, Refrig-

erators, Spark rings, Flashlights, Paints, Varnishes,brushes. Oils, Greases, Harness, Saddlery, Roofing,

Trunks, Suit Cases, Etc., Etc.

GroceriesFancy anil Staple Lines, Feed, Etc.

Dry Goods 1

Shoes, Toilet Supplies, Stationery, Etc., Etc.

Insurance AgentsWriters of Fire, Marine, Compensation, Automobile and Miscel-

laneous Insurance l'alicies

Agents ForCanadian-Australia- n Royal Mail Steamship Line

Upon application Information will be cheerfully furnished in regardto any other lines In which you may be interested.

Page 12: Christmas Tableaux Annual Cantata OF COMMERCE Political ... · 5 h w. wilcox 1mjj1 established 1904. vol. 18. no. 52. lihue, kauai, territory of hawaii, tuesday, december 26, 1922

4.

KAPAA NOTES

4.

Mr. and Mrs. David W. Koyes,who left hero two years ago, return-ed last week to spend the holidaysnt their former home. Mr. Keyeswas formerly a contractor hero.

Deputy Sheriff Hano and his offi-

cers, aided by Prohibition OfficerBettencourt, made one of the larg-

est hauls of illicit liquors in thisdistrict early last Saturday morn-

ing at Wallua Kal. Shlnlchi Oku-mur- a

was the name given by theJapanese when arrested. Fifty gal-

lons of clear white okolehau, BO

gallons of mash and a complotestill was discovered on the prem-

ises. The Japanese was chargedwith manufacturing and having Illicit liquor in his possesion and wasfined $125 and costs in the districtcourt by Judge Ekekela, Saturday,

S. Nakamura, another Japaneseof Wallua, was arrested with sixgallons of oko in his possession. Hegot off with a fine of $100 andcosts.

The rebuilding of the road fromthe Wallua homesteads to Kapaaproper has already passed Camp 18,

and progressing rapidly. It Is expected that the remainder will bo

finished not later than Februaryof next year.

Mr. and Mrs. A. Horner Sr. arrivedhere last week to spend Christmaswith their sons, Albert and FosterHorner and their families. Theyintend to return to Honolulu on Wed-

nesday.

The community Christmas treegiven last Sunday for the young

sters at the Hawaiian hall broughtout a largo crowd of mothers andtheir children. This treat is givenannually by local people, aided by

tho teachers of the Kapaa Sundayschool class1.

Tho St. Louis Glee Club entertained nt tho Hawaiian Hall with a con-

cert, followed by a dance at theKapaa Hall on Saturday evening.Both the concert and dance waswell attended.

MAKAWELI HOLDS BIGCHRISTMAS TREE PARTY

Makawell plantation held its annual Christmas tree celebration In

tho Community House last Saturday evening and over sixteen hundred men, women and children werepresent at the exercises.

Christmas treo celebrations will

be held in the outside camps thatwere unable to attend tho Com-

munity House party. Tonight therewill be a tree in Camp 2, tomorrownight at Camp 5, and Thursday nightat Camp 8.

LUMBER SCHOONERARRIVES AT AHUKINI

The steamer, Wilmington, fromPuget Sound, with a million footof lumber for Llliuo plantation, ar-

rived at Ahuklnl this morning.

LIBRARY ASSOCIATIONANNUAL MEETING

Tho membership of thot Kauai Pub-

lic Library Association will hold itsfirst annual meotlng In MoklhunaHall, Lihue, January 11, 1923 at2:30 p. m.

Library matters 6f vital import-ance to the island will bo underdiscussion and a 100 per cent inmembership attendance is expect-

ed. U. W. Bayless, Secretary.

LIGHT SIX112" W.B., 40 H.P.

Touring , $1290Roadster (3 Pass.) $1290Coupe-Roadste- r $15G0

Sedan $1930Disc Wheels, extra $35

MODELS AND

TIHHK

TilE tJARDEtf ISLAND TUESDAY, DEC. 2G, 1922

AND THE

The Honorable Editor Mr. GardenIsland Paper,Llhuc, Kauai.Honored Dear Sir: Preaso Honor-

ed Mr. Editor mo tso much troubledls Christmas. Eberyman sabo

tso many gurra Christian.I lrlko glmo my smarll boy an smarllgirl gurra Christmas Tsreo alrsamohaolo Christmas. My yarda one gurratsree stop. I spcek my kako tsomorro mo catch dls tsreo nlrsamohaolo. My kako go slreep tso happy.Mornirg tsimo get up go yardacatch tsreo; tsreo air broke somocow cum nlto tsimo an air broke.Honored Mr. Editor preaso you spookFl Honorable Mr. Supervisor,

Christmas tsimo tso muchtrouble ho nstra lraw nlrsamo noth-

ing, cow eat tsreo nn my kako, hit-tee- n

alrgetha, cry air day tso muchho-us-

You sabo lrst week I spcek I rito

Kilauea Musical

Proves Success

A vory sueo, ssful performance ofnn operetta entitle;!, "Sun-Ris- o Land"was given by tho teachers and schol-

ars of Kelauea school, under thedirection of Mrs. Irvine, on Satur-day, December 10, In the tho Kilaueamoving picture hall.

When tho curtain was drawn upthe stage presented a vory pret-ty appearance from tho varied colors of the Japanese costumes ofthe performers, many of whom haddifferent colored umbrellas and fans.The effect was Increased by a back-ground of scenery painted by Mr.Irvine.

The operetta consisted of an ac

ENDU

HAPAIKOSAN ESTRAY

ORDINANCE

PRICES IN

SPECIAL SIX119" W.B.,

Touring $1035

Roadster $1005

Club RoadsterCoupe $2315

Sedan $2520

Disc Wheels, extra $33

COHD HQl'l I'M UNT

S.

how ono polrlceman put cow cala-boo- s

insl? Preaso you excuse modls week, dls Christmas an I no lrlkospook how my fron telrfon polrlce-ma- n

ato clock morning tsimo anspook "PreaBe you cum my houseprcnty cow stop insl" "Polrlcemanspeck "Alrlto I cum now." Tscnclock my frcn go posta offic cumback tsimo ho nana polrlcemandriva air cow on top road. He tslnkso ho gurra polrlceman put cow

calaboos insl. By by lreereo moretswelv clock dls polrlconien cummy frcn's house spook "I nana airpraco 110 see cow no see horse, wasmarra you telrfon mo cow stopyou yarda?"

Prcase excuse I no lrlke speekdls tsimo dls polrlceman maybesogurra fren dis cow boss so no putcow Insl calaboos. Preaso excuse nexttslmc I make more lrong Ietta.

HAPAOIKOSAN.

count of a visit made by a Japan-ese girl to England and who on herreturn to Japan relates her Impressions to her friends .contrastingthe houses, manners and customs ofEnglish with those of her nativeland, from n Japanese point ofview. The story which she tollsher companions and their commentsas she proceeds Is vory nmusingand entertaining.

At intorvnls during thoseveral songs, dances and chor-

uses wore given and were so wellrendered that there wore many en-

cores.An umbrella song and dance In

which the performers danced andsang as they changed thepositions of their umbrellas was en-

thusiastically encored. A fan dancewas also very given and

for Hawaii

Honolulu

29 1

proof of qualityThroughout tins world Sludebaker cars are in use

today. Yet (lie sale- of repair parts from accidents as well asservice, averaged only 7.01) per car during (he first seven monthsof J!)l2.

Despite the fact that motorists are buying Sludebakcrs atthe rate of cars a year, or twice as many as last year,yet the sales of repair parts are less than they were for (he sajuuperiod three years ago.

Economy tests recently conducted by the City and Countyof Honolulu have pioved in a remarkable way the superior econo-

my, in gas consumption and entire upkeep, of the Sludebaker.The surprising way in which Sludebakers recently have come thrubad accidents, with comparatively small damage to themselves,have demonstrated to island motorists the marvelous sturdinessand honesty of Sludebaker const met ion.

HONOLULU

50 H.P.

$1G35

STANDARD

UEKKTANIA at ALAl'AT

BIG SIX126" W.B., 60 H.P.

Touring $2105

$2250Coupe $2940Coupe $3100Sedan $3100Sedan Special $3335

Ichinose, Kauai Agent, Koloa. Phone

perform-ance

gracefully

effectively

Distributors

lL",(m0

Speedster

SpeedsterSpeedster

SOCIAL NOTES

MRS. MIDDLETON, MRS. CARTERARE JOINT HOSTESSES

Mrs. Robert MIddleton and Mrs.Sam Cnrter wore hostesses at twovery delightful bridge partlos at thohomo of Mrs. Cnrter in Hanamululast week. Tho first was on Tues-day and tho second on Thursday af-

ternoon. Attractive prizes weroto those holding tho two

highest scores, as well as the lowscores.

MRS. A. I. MARCALLINO HASCHRISTMAS PARTY

Mrs. A. I. Marcalllno entcrtninedtho children of Makawell with a veryenjoyable Christmas party at herhomo last Sunday evening.

a butterfly dance by the small chil-

dren was exceedingly pretty and hadto bo repeated. Mrs. Akana tooktho principal character and hersinging and dramatic ability weregreatly appreciated. Mrs. Lowls ac-

companied the songs and danceson the piano.

BORNROSS At Jackson, Miss., Nov. 30y

1922, to Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Ross,a daughter Betty May.

KoloaPlantation

StoreWholesale and Retail Groceries

Dry Goods of all DescriptionsGeneral Plantation

Supplies

HOTEL LIHUE(The Fairview)

pCwenty-tw- o Elegant Roomsin Main Building

Throe Airy Cottages

Cuteinc Unexcelled in Coun-try Districts

W. H. RICE, Jr.Proprietor

S. HARRY OKA, Prop.

December 20,

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,

TERRITORY OF HAWAII

In tho Mntter of tho Drawing of

GRAND and TRIAL Jurorsat the 1923 Term

ORDER FIXING TIME AND PLACEOF DRAWINGS AND DIRECT-

ING PUBLICATION OF NO-

TICE .THEREOFIT IS HEREBY ORDERED that

drawings of the names of personato serve as GRAND and TRIAL

Jurors at the 1923 Term of thisCourt be held at 9:30 o'clock A. M

SATURDAY, January 20th, 1923, Inthe Courtroom of this Court In theCounty Building, at Llhue, County

of Kauai, and the Notice thereof bo

given at least ono week's publica-

tion in the Garden Island, a news-

paper of general circulation, printed

and published at Llhue, In this Cir-

cuit.Dated, Lihue, Kauai, T. H Decem-

ber 19th, 1922.WILLIAM C. ACHI, JR.,

(Seal.) Judge,Circuit Court, Fifth Cir-

cuit, Territory of Ha-wal- l.

Attest: J. C. CULLEN,Clerk.

(Dec.l9-2C.- )

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

ESTATE OF SEICHO KIYABU,DECEASED.

Notlco is hereby given to all per-

sons having claims against the Es-

tate of Seicho Klyabu, deceased, topresent the same, with proper vou-

chors, if any exist, to SABURO ISA,administrator of said Estate, at hisplace of residence in Kekaha, Ka-

uai, T. H within six months aftertho first publication of this notice,

t, tho 19th day of December,1922, or tho same will bo foreverbarred; and all those indebted tosaid estate to nako payment with-

out fall.Dated, Llhue, Kauai, T. H., De-

cember 19th, 1922.SABURO ISA.

Administratorby the Estate of SeichoKlyabu, deceased.

Kapaa, Kauai, T. H.

DR. SAU CHANG.

Drugs, Toilet ArticlesEastman Kodaks

Honolulu Dairymen's Ice Cream

Garden Island Drug Store

AnnouncementDuo to my recent Illness, I wish toannounce a postponement In tho op-

ening of my Lihue office, and alsoa temporary closing of my Kapaaoffice until furthor notice.

1922.

YEE

KilaueaMidnight FolliesSupper commences at 1 0 o'clock p. m.

December 31, 1922

Dancing, 12.01 o'clock, January 1, 1923

Table Reservations with Supper - - $2.50General Admission - - . - - - 1 .00

4

3?