14
r r jr ir ir ir jr ir r ir if k k p ir inrm U. S. WEATHER BU-REA- U, 5 SUGAR-- 96 Test Dec. 26-L- ast Centrifugals, 3.67c.; 24 hours' rainfall, T. Per Tnn ST? 40 SS Temperature, max.70, Analysis Beets, IOs. If min. 61. 7 variable. Weather, 3-4- d. Per Ton, $82.-4- 0. y jl jl j j jt j jt j jt j JtjK jt o j j j j j jiji j js jijt js j VOL. VI, NO. 313. HONOLULU, HAWAII TERRITORY, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1908. FOURTEEN PAGES. Entered Jsn. 19, 1903. t Honolulu, Hu Ho4 Clm Matter. Under Act of Covgr of Mrcb t 17. HE HAW 1 CASTRO ORDERS CLAUS SPRECKELS, THE SUGAR KING, IS DEAD VENEZU ELANS TO WORK AT THE TACKLE DUTCH I Man Who Made History j CAP TOL in Hawaii Record a Great One. I I Cables to' Venezuela to Attack the Blockading Ships Evidently Has no Knowledge of Recent Events at Home. Breckons' Case Coast i ii-t..A- :'jf: wise . Legislation Frear's Work 2 (Associated Press Cablegrams.) CARACAS, December 27. A cablegram has been received here from former President Castro ordering an attack to be made on the Dutch warships. AMERICAN ENVOY RESIGNS I I I I Associated Tress Cablegram.) SAN FRANCISCO, December ,26. Clans Spreckels died at half-pas- t four o'clock this morning. Rudolph Spreck- - els and John D. Spreckels, with the latter s daughters, were at the bed- side, and the ethers were summoned. Rudolph and C." A. Spreckels are named as executors in the wilL to serve under a bond of half a million dollars. The income of the estate is stated to exceed a quarter of a million dollars a year. There are matters that seed immediate attention. The will is in possession of the widow. It pro-Tid- es for all the children and disposes By Ernest G. Walker. (Mail Special to the Advertiser.) WASHINGTON, D. C., Dec. 14. Gov. Walter P. Frear is about concluding his annual visit to Washington in the in- terest of Hawaiian affairs. He has been very busy for ten days, consulting with Secretary of the Interior Garfield and ROME, December 27. Ambassador Griscom is reported to have resigned. ' BIGGY'S SUCCESSOR NAMED THE LATE CLAUS SPRECKELS a ! other cabinet officials, attending hoar- - MMV MM cf an estate of possibly fifty million dollars. The ovening of the will is to rected to Lis life-wor- He saw oppor- tunities on the Pacific Coast for the de- velopment of a great sugar .industry, I ' with tropical islands within . easy reach p i i ' thirty tunnels cut in the solid rock, ings at the Capitol, and looking out Tor still brings the water to the plantation the many matters here which concern laterals. his large insular constituency. He now His holdings rapidly increased until expects to conclude his work here m Spreekels became the undisputed Sugar King of Hawaii. With his power as a time to leave for New York day after take place on Monday. as a source or raw material ami compe Claus Spreckels, the Sugar King, the tition ia finished products cut off by news of whose death came to Honolulu mountains and deserts. He bought an planter came also power politically. In tomorrow and to sail from San Fran- - interest in a small local refinery and i financial ways he made himselt ot suctt hr cable yesterday, was for years cigco f Honolulu about a week later. Jli;ti1.i soon worked up a large and profitable ' service to the King and government . intimately connected with the political businegg The he bought out the' that for year he stood as the power The Governor had a very and industrial history of Hawaii. He 0ther stockholders and became the sole "behind the throne, making and umnak- - tory talk with the President SAN FRANCISCO, December 27. Police Sergeant J. B. Cook, property clerk, has been appointed to succeed the late Chief Biggy. . PITTSBURG'S MUNICIPAL SCANDAL " PITTSBURG, December 27. It is reported that there will be forty mora arrests in the Council bribery case. , BEACH HARGIS JURY DISAGREES satisfac-an- d was was up to the time of his death, still proprietor. With improved machinery ing Cabinets. Spreckels, Kalakaua and shown, several days in advance of its onnected in many important ways and the magic of his personal .direction I uiDson in ine oruer oi power namea, pulbiication the President's generous with the commercial and industrial life jwviL recommendations with reference to Ha waa nnt ,nnntin.A to tsm of the Islands, and he had, during the satisfied. He knew that he. was not ' '- - thirty-tw- o years since he first extended using the best methods. He resolved , waii in his annual message to Congress. He has been in touch with the army and navy authorities so a's to inform Lis interest to the Mid-Pacifi- rendered to master the whole art of sugar-mak- - I ' 1 1 I I I 1 1 1 111 : v ;n,1trv mg and then make a fresh start. He'l.lll I rhr llr himself as fully as may be about the UULLLUL Ul plans of those departments respective great terv.ee v 6 ( mU &t & tQ of this Territory. Europe. There, already a rich man, he Claus Spreckels was born in Lam- - put on the rough clothes of a eommon ly: for sending soldiers and for improv IRVINE, Kentucky, December 27. The jury in the case of Beach Hargis, accused of the murder of his father, has disagreed. DEWEY IS SEVENTY-ON- E stedt, Hanover, Germanv, in 1S28, mi- - laborer and secured employment m a re&nery at Magdeburg. He worked for crating to the United States in 1S4G. ; ing Pearl Harbor. The Governor has been much impressed during this visit ! with the assured and increasing promi- nence of Honolulu as a Midpacific City HAWAII PLANS Pres. Gilmore Addresses Farm- ers' Institute at Annual Meeting. It was wan a uesire iu e3cai.e time he had become famiijar w;th every forced military duties that every man detail of the refinery process. is supposed to go through in the vater- - it became evident to him that Cali- - because of its new importance as a mili- tary and navy center. iand that vounr Spreckels came to fornia was not yet ready for the beet nf sugar industry, and he resolved to de- - America, and he was an illustration WASHINGTON, December 27. Admiral Dewey celebrated his birthday yesterday. SCALDED TO DEATIf A few nights ago he was a dinner gtUfgt of. Secretary Garfield, along with vote his energy for the time to cane. the process of natural selection by At the annual meeting of ihe Farm- ers' Institute held last evening in the rooms of the College of Hawaii, John W. Gilmore, president of the institu- tion, delivered a lecture on the plans and outlook of the college. With enlarged tables showing . the three different courses provided and plans of the proposed new, buildings in Manoa Vallev. tn aid Mm illus Gov. Regis Post, of Porto Rico and the territorial governors of Alaska, Arizona and New Mexico and several officials of the departments who have to do with territorial affairs. The Governor participated in several talks at the Treasury Department re- garding the proposed change of site for He put up the California refinery in 1863, enlarge the small wooden build- ing four times in three years, and then replaced it with the immense brick building wjth a capacity of eight hun- dred barrels per day which now looms over the Potrero of San Francisco. At that time, it took three weeks to make hard sugar. Spreckels invented new processes by which the time was re- duced to twenty-fou- r hours. He intro- duced the modern cube and crushed su- - which the most energetic, the most en- terprising and the most resourceful ele- ments of the population of Europe have leen sifted out for the benefit of the United States. Most of the good peo- ple of Lamstedt were satisfied to do as they were told, and they have made no further mark on the history of the world. Almost Penniless, but Ambitious. SAN FRANCISCO, December 26. By the bursting of a steam tube in tha engineroom of the Chronicle one man was fatally scalded. ' STRIKERS FIGHT MARSHAL'S POSSE It was trations,. President Gilmore spoke of the Honolulu public building DANVILLE, Kentucky, December 26. Two were killed and a dozen fatally injured in a fight between striking miners and a TJ. 3. Marshal's posse. - : . PORTUGAL'S NEW MINISTRY The more ambitious youth, however, gars to the American market. At first secured a steerage passage to America, he bought most of his ray materia in landing at Charleston in 1846 with Ihe Philippines, but when the Hawai- - three dollars in one pocket and a huge ian Reciprocity Treaty was negotiated slice of the beet sugar industry of Ger- - in 1S76, he saw that. a revolution was many in the other. He did not know impending in the' Pacific Coast refining at that time what it was that his other industry. , pocket contained. He only knew that Became Friend of Kalakaua. there was a fortune in it of some kind, . which could be brought to light by vig- - . A year previous to this he had been , ti .tnVtJ.i .nrtlnir in a " Honolulu as a visitor and he had as the origin and work of the college, finally decided to abandon efforts to The college itself is one of many State secure the Irwin site. It was found on and Territorial institutes whose foun- - the whole impractical to make the dation was permitted by an act passed Lincoln's change, which would have involved during presidency. This act arranged for the sale of public lands great delay in erecting the building. A at fifty cents an acre minimum, the competition for the preparation of plans proceeds of which sales were devoted for the new huMil3g ha3 been author- - to foundation funds for the colleges. . , The main theme of Mr. Gilmore's This, the Governor believes, will lecture was that the college is out- - a least save eight months' time in LISBON, Portugal, December 26. A new ministry has been formed. TAFT ON THE LINKS grocery store for hiaboard. In the ? capitalist and a man of affairs looked four dol- - "to the possibilities of Hawaii from a second month he was earning lars a week; in the third, another grocer fin" IT'i? JlCW, f that,.time b'9 was r,avin? him eizht dollars, and son Spreckels was living growing its present quarters and the beginning the work of construction. If government appropriation. He point- - the supervising architect had prepared ed out that it was very desirable that . Plans m his office lfc would bave been the college buildings should be located on the Manoa land, as the institute is . many months before he could have mainly agricultural and the class reached the Honolulu project. Then it late? Honolulu, a cleric with Hackfeld & had eighteen months he bought v:. ,.i .i -- a , 'Co., and he was able to inform his --President-elect Taft took part In a AUGUSTA, Georgia, December 26.- - golf game yesterday. i,; r, it a flriaW father of the chances for profitable in vestment Hawaii. In Mr, in 18,6, in Charleston until 1853, when he went x-.- i- i 'in ,or c. Spreckels came to Honolulu for busi- - rooms and laboratories should be js regarded as an advantage that the !?ineretl!hilLretgrTing' ThiCh Plas should be prepared in Honolulu, fnl nf nil " where the architects will better under- - . 7 v-:- A- r-i- ; ness, lie became a close friend of the BURNS WAS BEATEN One point on which the lecturer laid stand the character of building needed great stress was the fact that mate- - jn that climate. It was pointed out ress iii iutr same uusincfij. i u w fornia was alreadv calling him The K.ing' negotiated k with the Hawaiian for control of their Pinters a secunng rush of the fortv-niner- s had not yet subsided. He landed in San Francisco Product an.d made arrangements to be- - come a planter himself on a grand ; k-- , hn in whir-l- , Potman nai xor inTeiiigent experimental worK to the Treasury Department that the in agricultural lines had been or-- architects who prepared the plans for SYDNEY, December 26. Johnson was the winner in the prize fight in the fourteenth round, at which point the police stopped the fight. There were 20,000 people present. , "v., V 1 : Vic tnn n, mania nf n J lllal 3U1 ill l Alia 11 ii v tiuik iii-- ' -v . Becoming of the fact that the ,. ., . . , . i aware aerea ana mere was nownere to put the army buildings at Honolulu pro-i- t after it arrived. "All machinery ceeded on the theory that the buildings ior experimental purposes mat Has were for a cold instead of in a semi- - V lillianies lO Oltve nvniuiiuu livm ian. " - Legislature of 1862, in legislating In Minin&r raisht be a gamble in those .7, f , . ,, , . . settlement of the personal claims of the been bought or that is to be bought," tropical country. ft uu. aliis against the crown lands, had omit said Mr. Gilmore, "will have utility The Governor has been devoting ARRESTED FOR CONTEMPT. SAN FRANCISCO, December 26. Captain Wirschuleit was placed under arrest by the United States marshal in this city today, being charged with con- tempt of court in Honolulu. ana bo u "- -g ted to provide for the Princess Ruth, fail to make preclvels made money, half.ister of Ramehameha IV, he fifty thousand dollar, and then-h- e look-- , fr hpr thousand ed about for somethine biecer. To a - value, ay that l mean machines, both much time to the consideration of the mechanical and electrical for testing, new public land bill, which has been will be such that outside engineering introduced in Senate and House. He interests will be able to use them for and Mr. McClellan had a talk with Sen-actu- work and the college will be ator Foraker, chairman of the Commit-abl- e to afford complete and technical- - tee on the Pacific Islands and Porto dollars her claim against the govern menr. I'ressing tins claim ne was awarded the lands of Wailuku, and on 3 8 1 Wirschuleit was the mate of the oil steamer Kosecrans when Archibald this grant wa established the planta MeKinnon wyas murdered by John Wynne. He was subpoenaed to appear as a ly correct calibration." tion of the Hawaiian Commercial and witness, but went to the Coast and refused to obey the process issued from man with the. traditions of Lamstadt, , Hanover, still fresh in his mind, the object that loomed largest first was naturally a brewery. Spreckels bought , one. It flo'urished so well that in a few years he was able to dispose of his investment for sev-?nty-fi- thousand dollars. ' First Sugar Ventures. There are two classes of students admitted to the college regular stu Sugar Companv. He secured the ser Judge Dole's court. A warrant for his arrest on a charge of contempt of court Rico, about that measure and also about the bills 'for the two electrical fran- chises on the island of Maui. They also had a hearing on the same bills before the House Committee today. The Conservation Congress also re dents, who are admitted on presenta was issued some time ago in this city and sent to San Francisco for service. vices of Herman Schussler, a celebrated engineer, who planned the great irri- gation system installed at a cost of tion of disploma from the High School, Oahu College or the Normal half a million dollars. This canal, near- - School, over sixteen vears old; and ceived some of the Governor s atten THE CASE OF GOMPERS. WASHINGTON, December 26. President Roosevelt has issued a state Then at last his attention, was di-,l- y thirty miles long, carried thn.ugh special students of eighteen years and tion durinsr the past week, ne and ' 1? KKI f Ii 3? 3? it? ? 1? 9?? 9? t? t? 9? Jf t? t? & & t if over who wish to take up a special ex-Go- Carter, Delegate Kalanianaole, course but are not given a diploma Hon. F. M. Hatch, Mr. George B. Mc-aft- er the course is finished. Clellan and W. G. Cooke, of New York, ment in regard to the applications which have been made for pardon tot Gompers, Morrison and Mitchell. He states that on account of the fact that the matter is still before the courts he is unable to take any action toward! A high standard of efficiency is re- - were deleeates thereto from the Terri- - quired for entrance to the college, in torv. Ex-Go- and Mrs. Carter came granting a pardon nor can he even express an opinion on the subject. order that it shall not duplicate any here a few days ago and have been of the work done in the institutions stopping at the Shoreham. Apart from mentioned, but may begin higher up his duties as delegate to the Conserva- - -- t- FIGHT WITH TERRORISTS. ' MOSCOW, Russia, December 26 Baron Catte, the Chief of the Imperial and take students directly on from the tion Conarresn Gov. Carter claims that .11 ! .1 point where they left off in school. hi3 visit to Washington is personal. Secret Service Bureau, was killed today in a pitched battle with revolutionists. To the work that the college and The Department of Justice has the the faculty lias already done, and to report of Special Assistant W. A. Harr the hopes which he, the board of re- - on the investigation of District Attor- - gents and the faculty hoped to do in nfv Breckons, but it was stated today the future, Mr. Gilmore spoke strong- - that the Attornev General has not vet Iv and feelingly. After he had fin- - found timp in om'nvpr thp naners. shed he answered several questions The bill to allow Hawaii special ship that were asked bv those in the audi Many others were killed and wounded in the affray, which took place in ai suburban villa. The efforts of troops of soldiers and artillery were needed to drive the terrorists from their refuge. . FALLIERES ROUGHLY HANDLED. PARIS, December 26. Yesterday a cafe waiter attacked President Fal-lier- es in the street and pulled his beard. He was otherwise uninjured. . : CHOLERA AT ST. PETERSBURG. ST. PETERSBURG, December 26. There were thirty-on- e new cases of cholera and thirteen deaths yesterday. The hospitals have 225 cholera cases. NEW YORK, December 26 Henry Poor, a prominent banker of this city, has assigned. His liabilities amount to over three million dollars. . ST. PETERSBURG, December 26. The Czar gave a Christmas audience to Sarah Bernhardt. ence and concluded the evening by conducting those present through the building and giving them a practical illustration of the narrow confines in which the work is now bound and the necessity for more room and a differ- ent location. ping privileges under the Coastwise laws has received a setbaek through the action of Senators Perkins, of Califor- nia, and Piles of Washington, in asking that it be recommitted to the Serate Committee on Commerce for further consideration. This was don because of cablegrams from Honolulu declaring that people out ther? no longer desired the legislation. The bill was on th Senate calendar and but for the cabled r Manager Hertsche of the Moana Hotel hns issued personal invitations bv mail for the annual New Year's Eve rpquest probably would have passed the - tm n ball to be given at the Moana Decern- - Senate this week. ber 31. Cards are to be presented at Delegate Kalanianaole has btr-- prom-th- e dancing hall. (Continued on Page Two.) THE UNOCCUPIED SPRECKELS HOME IN HONOLULU. if V

evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu · rrjririr ir jr irr ir if k k p irinrm U. S. WEATHER BU-REA-U, 5 SUGAR--96 Test Dec. 26-L-ast Centrifugals, 3.67c.; 24 hours' rainfall, T. Per Tnn

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Page 1: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu · rrjririr ir jr irr ir if k k p irinrm U. S. WEATHER BU-REA-U, 5 SUGAR--96 Test Dec. 26-L-ast Centrifugals, 3.67c.; 24 hours' rainfall, T. Per Tnn

rr jr ir ir ir jr irr ir if k k p ir inrmU. S. WEATHER BU-REA- U,

5 SUGAR-- 96 TestDec. 26-L-ast Centrifugals, 3.67c.;24 hours' rainfall, T. Per Tnn ST? 40 SSTemperature, max.70, Analysis Beets, IOs. Ifmin. 61. 7

variable.Weather,

3-4- d. Per Ton, $82.-4- 0.

y jl jl j j jt j jt j jt j JtjK jt o j j j j j jiji j js jijt js jVOL. VI, NO. 313. HONOLULU, HAWAII TERRITORY, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1908. FOURTEEN PAGES. Entered Jsn. 19, 1903. t Honolulu, Hu Ho4Clm Matter. Under Act of Covgr of Mrcb t 17.

HE HAW 1 CASTRO ORDERSCLAUS SPRECKELS, THESUGAR KING, IS DEAD VENEZUELANS TOWORK AT THE

TACKLE DUTCHIMan Who Made History j

CAP TOLin Hawaii Record

a Great One.I

I

Cables to' Venezuela to Attack the BlockadingShips Evidently Has no Knowledge of

Recent Events at Home.Breckons' Case Coast

iii-t..A- :'jf: wise . Legislation

Frear's Work2(Associated Press Cablegrams.)

CARACAS, December 27. A cablegram has been received here from formerPresident Castro ordering an attack to be made on the Dutch warships.

AMERICAN ENVOY RESIGNS

I

I

I

I

Associated Tress Cablegram.)

SAN FRANCISCO, December ,26.

Clans Spreckels died at half-pas- t fouro'clock this morning. Rudolph Spreck- -

els and John D. Spreckels, with thelatter s daughters, were at the bed-

side, and the ethers were summoned.Rudolph and C." A. Spreckels are

named as executors in the wilL toserve under a bond of half a milliondollars. The income of the estate isstated to exceed a quarter of a milliondollars a year. There are matters thatseed immediate attention. The will isin possession of the widow. It pro-Tid- es

for all the children and disposes

By Ernest G. Walker.(Mail Special to the Advertiser.)

WASHINGTON, D. C., Dec. 14. Gov.Walter P. Frear is about concluding hisannual visit to Washington in the in-

terest of Hawaiian affairs. He has beenvery busy for ten days, consulting withSecretary of the Interior Garfield and

ROME, December 27. Ambassador Griscom is reported to have resigned.'

BIGGY'S SUCCESSOR NAMEDTHE LATE CLAUS SPRECKELS a

! other cabinet officials, attending hoar- -MMV MMcf an estate of possibly fifty milliondollars. The ovening of the will is to

rected to Lis life-wor- He saw oppor-tunities on the Pacific Coast for the de-

velopment of a great sugar .industry,I

' with tropical islands within.

easy reachp i i

'thirty tunnels cut in the solid rock, ings at the Capitol, and looking out Torstill brings the water to the plantation the many matters here which concernlaterals. his large insular constituency. He now

His holdings rapidly increased untilexpects to conclude his work here mSpreekels became the undisputed Sugar

King of Hawaii. With his power as a time to leave for New York day after

take place on Monday.as a source or raw material ami compe

Claus Spreckels, the Sugar King, the tition ia finished products cut off bynews of whose death came to Honolulu mountains and deserts. He bought an planter came also power politically. In tomorrow and to sail from San Fran- -

interest in a small local refinery and ii financial ways he made himselt ot suctthr cable yesterday, was for years cigco f Honolulu about a week later.Jli;ti1.i soon worked up a large and profitable ' service to the King and government .

intimately connected with the political businegg The he bought out the' that for year he stood as the power The Governor had a veryand industrial history of Hawaii. He 0ther stockholders and became the sole "behind the throne, making and umnak- - tory talk with the President

SAN FRANCISCO, December 27. Police Sergeant J. B. Cook, propertyclerk, has been appointed to succeed the late Chief Biggy.

.

PITTSBURG'S MUNICIPAL SCANDAL"

PITTSBURG, December 27. It is reported that there will be forty moraarrests in the Council bribery case. ,

BEACH HARGIS JURY DISAGREES

satisfac-an- d

waswas up to the time of his death, still proprietor. With improved machinery ing Cabinets. Spreckels, Kalakaua and shown, several days in advance of itsonnected in many important ways and the magic of his personal .direction I uiDson in ine oruer oi power namea, pulbiication the President's generous

with the commercial and industrial life jwviL recommendations with reference to Hawaa nnt ,nnntin.A to tsmof the Islands, and he had, during the satisfied. He knew that he. was not

' '-

-thirty-tw- o years since he first extended using the best methods. He resolved ,

waii in his annual message to Congress.He has been in touch with the armyand navy authorities so a's to informLis interest to the Mid-Pacifi- rendered to master the whole art of sugar-mak- - I ' 1 1 I I I 1 1 1 1 1 1

: v ;n,1trv mg and then make a fresh start. He'l.lll I rhr llr himself as fully as may be about theUULLLUL Ul plans of those departments respectivegreat terv.ee v 6 ( mU &t & tQof this Territory. Europe. There, already a rich man, he

Claus Spreckels was born in Lam- - put on the rough clothes of a eommon ly: for sending soldiers and for improv

IRVINE, Kentucky, December 27. The jury in the case of Beach Hargis,accused of the murder of his father, has disagreed.

DEWEY IS SEVENTY-ON- E

stedt, Hanover, Germanv, in 1S28, mi- - laborer and secured employment m are&nery at Magdeburg. He worked forcrating to the United States in 1S4G. ;

ing Pearl Harbor. The Governor hasbeen much impressed during this visit

! with the assured and increasing promi-

nence of Honolulu as a Midpacific City

HAWAII PLANS

Pres. Gilmore Addresses Farm-

ers' Institute at AnnualMeeting.

It was wan a uesire iu e3cai.e time he had become famiijar w;th everyforced military duties that every man detail of the refinery process.is supposed to go through in the vater- - it became evident to him that Cali- - because of its new importance as a mili-

tary and navy center.iand that vounr Spreckels came to fornia was not yet ready for the beetnf sugar industry, and he resolved to de- -

America, and he was an illustration

WASHINGTON, December 27. Admiral Dewey celebrated hisbirthday yesterday.

SCALDED TO DEATIfA few nights ago he was a dinner

gtUfgt of. Secretary Garfield, along withvote his energy for the time to cane.the process of natural selection by At the annual meeting of ihe Farm-

ers' Institute held last evening in therooms of the College of Hawaii, JohnW. Gilmore, president of the institu-tion, delivered a lecture on the plansand outlook of the college.

With enlarged tables showing . thethree different courses provided andplans of the proposed new, buildingsin Manoa Vallev. tn aid Mm illus

Gov. Regis Post, of Porto Rico and theterritorial governors of Alaska, Arizonaand New Mexico and several officials

of the departments who have to do withterritorial affairs.

The Governor participated in severaltalks at the Treasury Department re-

garding the proposed change of site for

He put up the California refinery in1863, enlarge the small wooden build-ing four times in three years, and thenreplaced it with the immense brickbuilding wjth a capacity of eight hun-dred barrels per day which now loomsover the Potrero of San Francisco. Atthat time, it took three weeks to makehard sugar. Spreckels invented newprocesses by which the time was re-

duced to twenty-fou- r hours. He intro-duced the modern cube and crushed su- -

which the most energetic, the most en-

terprising and the most resourceful ele-

ments of the population of Europe haveleen sifted out for the benefit of theUnited States. Most of the good peo-

ple of Lamstedt were satisfied to do asthey were told, and they have madeno further mark on the history of theworld.

Almost Penniless, but Ambitious.

SAN FRANCISCO, December 26. By the bursting of a steam tube in thaengineroom of the Chronicle one man was fatally scalded.

'

STRIKERS FIGHT MARSHAL'S POSSEIt wastrations,. President Gilmore spoke of the Honolulu public building

DANVILLE, Kentucky, December 26. Two were killed and a dozen fatallyinjured in a fight between striking miners and a TJ. 3. Marshal's posse. -

:.

PORTUGAL'S NEW MINISTRY

The more ambitious youth, however, gars to the American market. At firstsecured a steerage passage to America, he bought most of his ray materia inlanding at Charleston in 1846 with Ihe Philippines, but when the Hawai- -

three dollars in one pocket and a huge ian Reciprocity Treaty was negotiatedslice of the beet sugar industry of Ger- - in 1S76, he saw that. a revolution wasmany in the other. He did not know impending in the' Pacific Coast refiningat that time what it was that his other industry. ,

pocket contained. He only knew that Became Friend of Kalakaua.there was a fortune in it of some kind, .which could be brought to light by vig- - .

A year previous to this he had been, ti .tnVtJ.i .nrtlnir in a " Honolulu as a visitor and he had as

the origin and work of the college, finally decided to abandon efforts toThe college itself is one of many State secure the Irwin site. It was found onand Territorial institutes whose foun- - the whole impractical to make thedation was permitted by an act passed

Lincoln's change, which would have involvedduring presidency. This actarranged for the sale of public lands great delay in erecting the building. Aat fifty cents an acre minimum, the competition for the preparation of plansproceeds of which sales were devoted for the new huMil3g ha3 been author- -to foundation funds for the colleges. . ,

The main theme of Mr. Gilmore's This, the Governor believes, willlecture was that the college is out- - a least save eight months' time in

LISBON, Portugal, December 26. A new ministry has been formed.

TAFT ON THE LINKSgrocery store for hiaboard. In the ? capitalist and a man of affairs looked

four dol- - "to the possibilities of Hawaii from asecond month he was earninglars a week; in the third, another grocer fin" IT'i? JlCW, f that,.time

b'9was r,avin? him eizht dollars, and son Spreckels was living

growing its present quarters and the beginning the work of construction. Ifgovernment appropriation. He point- - the supervising architect had prepareded out that it was very desirable that .

Plans m his office lfc would bave beenthe college buildings should be locatedon the Manoa land, as the institute is . many months before he could havemainly agricultural and the class reached the Honolulu project. Then it

late? Honolulu, a cleric with Hackfeld &hadeighteen months he boughtv:. ,.i .i -- a , 'Co., and he was able to inform his

--President-elect Taft took part In aAUGUSTA, Georgia, December 26.- -

golf game yesterday.i,; r, it a flriaW father of the chances for profitable investment Hawaii. In Mr,in 18,6,in Charleston until 1853, when he went

x-.- i- i 'in ,or c. Spreckels came to Honolulu for busi- -

rooms and laboratories should be js regarded as an advantage that the!?ineretl!hilLretgrTing' ThiCh Plas should be prepared in Honolulu,fnl nf nil " where the architects will better under--. 7 v-:- A- r-i-; ness, lie became a close friend of the BURNS WAS BEATEN

One point on which the lecturer laid stand the character of building neededgreat stress was the fact that mate- - jn that climate. It was pointed out

ress iii iutr same uusincfij. i u w

fornia was alreadv calling him The K.ing' negotiatedkwith the Hawaiian

for control of theirPinters asecunngrush of the fortv-niner- s had not yetsubsided. He landed in San Francisco Product an.d made arrangements to be- -

come a planter himself on a grand; k--, hn in whir-l- , Potman

nai xor inTeiiigent experimental worK to the Treasury Department that thein agricultural lines had been or-- architects who prepared the plans for

SYDNEY, December 26. Johnson was the winner in the prize fight in thefourteenth round, at which point the police stopped the fight. There were20,000 people present. ,

"v.,V 1 : Vic tnn n, mania nfn J lllal 3U1 ill l Alia 1 1 ii v tiuik iii-- ' -v .

Becoming of the fact that the,. ., . . , . i awareaerea ana mere was nownere to put the army buildings at Honolulu pro-i- t

after it arrived. "All machinery ceeded on the theory that the buildingsior experimental purposes mat Has were for a cold instead of in a semi- -

V lillianies lO Oltve nvniuiiuu livm ian. " -Legislature of 1862, in legislating InMinin&r raisht be a gamble in those .7, f, . ,, , . . settlement of the personal claims of the been bought or that is to be bought," tropical country.ft uu. aliis against the crown lands, had omit said Mr. Gilmore, "will have utility The Governor has been devoting

ARRESTED FOR CONTEMPT.SAN FRANCISCO, December 26. Captain Wirschuleit was placed under

arrest by the United States marshal in this city today, being charged with con-

tempt of court in Honolulu.

ana bo u "--g ted to provide for the Princess Ruth,fail to make preclvels mademoney, half.ister of Ramehameha IV, hefifty thousand dollar, and then-h- e look-- ,fr hpr thousanded about for somethine biecer. To a -

value, ay that l mean machines, both much time to the consideration of themechanical and electrical for testing, new public land bill, which has beenwill be such that outside engineering introduced in Senate and House. Heinterests will be able to use them for and Mr. McClellan had a talk with Sen-actu-

work and the college will be ator Foraker, chairman of the Commit-abl- e

to afford complete and technical- - tee on the Pacific Islands and Porto

dollars her claim against the governmenr. I'ressing tins claim ne wasawarded the lands of Wailuku, and on

3

8

1

Wirschuleit was the mate of the oil steamer Kosecrans when Archibaldthis grant wa established the planta MeKinnon wyas murdered by John Wynne. He was subpoenaed to appear as aly correct calibration."tion of the Hawaiian Commercial and witness, but went to the Coast and refused to obey the process issued from

man with the. traditions of Lamstadt,, Hanover, still fresh in his mind, the

object that loomed largest first wasnaturally a brewery. Spreckels bought

, one. It flo'urished so well that in a fewyears he was able to dispose of his

investment for sev-?nty-fi-

thousand dollars. '

First Sugar Ventures.

There are two classes of studentsadmitted to the college regular stuSugar Companv. He secured the ser

Judge Dole's court. A warrant for his arrest on a charge of contempt of court

Rico, about that measure and also aboutthe bills 'for the two electrical fran-chises on the island of Maui. Theyalso had a hearing on the same billsbefore the House Committee today.

The Conservation Congress also re

dents, who are admitted on presentawas issued some time ago in this city and sent to San Francisco for service.

vices of Herman Schussler, a celebratedengineer, who planned the great irri-gation system installed at a cost of

tion of disploma from the HighSchool, Oahu College or the Normal

half a million dollars. This canal, near- - School, over sixteen vears old; and ceived some of the Governor s atten THE CASE OF GOMPERS.WASHINGTON, December 26. President Roosevelt has issued a state

Then at last his attention, was di-,l- y thirty miles long, carried thn.ugh special students of eighteen years and tion durinsr the past week, ne and' 1? K K I f Ii 3? 3? it? ? 1? 9?? 9? t? t? 9? Jf t? t? & & t if over who wish to take up a special ex-Go- Carter, Delegate Kalanianaole,

course but are not given a diploma Hon. F. M. Hatch, Mr. George B. Mc-aft- er

the course is finished. Clellan and W. G. Cooke, of New York,ment in regard to the applications which have been made for pardon totGompers, Morrison and Mitchell. He states that on account of the fact thatthe matter is still before the courts he is unable to take any action toward!A high standard of efficiency is re- - were deleeates thereto from the Terri- -

quired for entrance to the college, in torv. Ex-Go- and Mrs. Carter came granting a pardon nor can he even express an opinion on the subject.order that it shall not duplicate any here a few days ago and have beenof the work done in the institutions stopping at the Shoreham. Apart frommentioned, but may begin higher up his duties as delegate to the Conserva- -

--t-

FIGHT WITH TERRORISTS. '

MOSCOW, Russia, December 26 Baron Catte, the Chief of the Imperialand take students directly on from the tion Conarresn Gov. Carter claims that.11

! .1

point where they left off in school. hi3 visit to Washington is personal.Secret Service Bureau, was killed today in a pitched battle with revolutionists.To the work that the college and The Department of Justice has the

the faculty lias already done, and to report of Special Assistant W. A. Harrthe hopes which he, the board of re-- on the investigation of District Attor- -

gents and the faculty hoped to do in nfv Breckons, but it was stated todaythe future, Mr. Gilmore spoke strong- - that the Attornev General has not vetIv and feelingly. After he had fin- - found timp in om'nvpr thp naners.shed he answered several questions The bill to allow Hawaii special ship

that were asked bv those in the audi

Many others were killed and wounded in the affray, which took place in ai

suburban villa. The efforts of troops of soldiers and artillery were needed todrive the terrorists from their refuge.

.

FALLIERES ROUGHLY HANDLED.PARIS, December 26. Yesterday a cafe waiter attacked President Fal-lier- es

in the street and pulled his beard. He was otherwise uninjured.. :

CHOLERA AT ST. PETERSBURG.ST. PETERSBURG, December 26. There were thirty-on- e new cases of

cholera and thirteen deaths yesterday. The hospitals have 225 cholera cases.

NEW YORK, December 26 Henry Poor, a prominent banker of this city,has assigned. His liabilities amount to over three million dollars.

.

ST. PETERSBURG, December 26. The Czar gave a Christmas audience

to Sarah Bernhardt.

ence and concluded the evening byconducting those present through thebuilding and giving them a practicalillustration of the narrow confines inwhich the work is now bound and thenecessity for more room and a differ-ent location.

ping privileges under the Coastwiselaws has received a setbaek through theaction of Senators Perkins, of Califor-nia, and Piles of Washington, in askingthat it be recommitted to the SerateCommittee on Commerce for furtherconsideration. This was don becauseof cablegrams from Honolulu declaringthat people out ther? no longer desiredthe legislation. The bill was on thSenate calendar and but for the cabled

r Manager Hertsche of the MoanaHotel hns issued personal invitationsbv mail for the annual New Year's Eve rpquest probably would have passed the

- tmnball to be given at the Moana Decern- - Senate this week.ber 31. Cards are to be presented at Delegate Kalanianaole has btr-- prom-th- e

dancing hall. (Continued on Page Two.)THE UNOCCUPIED SPRECKELS HOME IN HONOLULU.

if

V

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THE SUNDAY ADVERTISER, DECEMBER 27, 1908.2

OF

UNDERWEAR- -IIUSLJ1MLAB4thILL BEGIN MONDAY, JAN.

I WORKMM Hau's Safes and VaultsREV. E.T. SIMPSON

IS NOW II CANON

Gift of $10,000 for Endowmentof a Canonry in St,

Andrew's.

AT W CAPITOL

(Continued from Page Qne.)ised a hearing before the Senate Com-mittee on claims after the holidays ona bill to vote compensation to theQueen on the crown lands in Hawaii.

The Washington Times in a recent

Aftermath. ABSOLUTELY FIRE AND BURGLAR-PROO- F.

The walls of this safe are filled with a special fire-pro- of

composition that prevents all heat from passing through to

the inside.. v

The perfect construction' . of every detail makes it im--

pervious to the drill and chisel of the cracksman. If you see

the Safe itself, you'll see why it is so Superior to ethers.

is sometimes shrouded with regrets.4 Our stock of

Silk Pajamas, due to arrive a month ago, reached us Bishop Restariek has appointed theRev. E. T. Simpson as canon of St.Andrew's cathedral. This appoint-ment is to fill the vacancy made bythe removal of the Rev. AlexanderMackintosh from the Islands. The

last week. They're good for a present at any time,

issue has the following account of thegovernment's cooperation in plans forsending laborers to Hawaii:

"Through a meeting held in the of-fice of the Secretary of the Interior, theUnited States has given its moral sup-port to a plan of the Hawaiian gov-ernment to Americanize' the laborof the Islands. The meeting was at-tended by Secretary Garfield, GovernorFrear of Hawaii, Ernesto Fabri, former-ly a partner of J. P. Morgan, and now

especially if you wish to remember some one you have

overlooked.Bishop has been promised $10,000 to-

wards the endowment of the canonrywhich is to be attached to the Ha

L Hackfeld & CO.; Ltd.waiian pastorate. The name of theproposed donor is not given. The in-

terest of the amount promised is atonce available towards the support ofl( Juvenile HARDWARE DEPARTMENT.

secretary of the' society of Italian im-migrants at New York, and John J. D.Trenor, agent of the board of immigra-tion of the Territory of Hawaii.

"Some ninety-si-x per cent, of theagriculture of the Islands is devoted tosugar. The labor comes from all na-tionalities, but includes a preponderanceof Orientals, chiefly Japanese.

"The desire of the government is tointroduce a class of men and womenwho shall remain permanent residentsand build a strong foundation, on anAmerican basis, for the great prosperity

Suft (&3oesconvenient for Lads and Lassies traveling to and from

the other Islands at .the close of the school term.

Rather swell, and inexpensive.

the canonry.With Canon Mackintosh's removal

from the Islands, under the statutesof the cathedral, he ceases to be acanon of St. Andrew's cathedral,though, with the Bishop's permission,which he has, he will still be entitledby courtesy to the title of canon.

SUDDEN DEATH OF

GEORGE DILLIfUM1

.which Hawaii is destined to enjoy afterthe Panama Canal " is opened. The is- -

lands will lie directly in the path ofthree-quarter- s of the commerce of tneworld, and a future is in store for thismost Deautitul spot in tne i'aeinc orwhich its early colonists never dreamed.

"The plans of the government to at-

tract American labor are not fullv form- -

George Dillingham, for a number ofyears editorial writer on the ParadisePum FJJcllEveBMiny9 Ltd. of the Pacific, was found dead in his I ulateJ' ut in their r(uSh outline they

x iv. 13- 'appear to offer inducements superior toroom in. me jos xugeies uunuiug, . aZ,Z, ever. before held out to the work

I Wm. W.- DimOND & gCO., Ltd. H

f in,,., 1

ing man and his family. For example,each certified man on arrival will beassigned a plot of land, on which thegovernment will erect a substantialhouse for his occupancy. Fires neverare used for heating on the island, butthe laborer will be supplied free withfuel for cooking, medicines, hospitalservice, and other likely necessitieswhich 'he could not otherwise easilyprovide for himself. At the end ofthree years, provided he has servedfaithfully, the house and lot will be-come the laborer's own property.

"The work of cultivation is that towhich the immigrants most desired areaccustomed at home. Italians are thefavored race, partly because of the sim-ilarity of the climate to their own. An-other reason is, as stated. thSt they aYeaccustomed to work in the fields; anda third, which appeals to "the Italianleaders in th" United States, is thatthey deprecate the tendency of this na-turally open air people to swarm totheAmerican cities and there suffer thedisease and death which are incidentto the close life of great municipalities.

Fort street, yesterday morning. It issupposed that he died either Thursdaynight or Christmas Day. He was lastseen alive Thursday night: On Fridaythe servant whose duty it was to takecare of his room knocked at his room,but, getting no response and findingthe door locked, supposed he did notwant to be disturbed and-di- d nothingfurther. He ' had made an appoint-ment to be at the office of the Para-dise of the Pacific on Christmas day,but nothing especial was thought of itwhen he did not keep it. But whenhe did not appear at the office yester-day morning, inquiry was made wherehe lived, and he was found dead inbed.

Dillingham was fifty-fou- r years ofage. He was a son of Captain JohnDillingham of Chelsea, and a cousin ofB. F. Dillingham. He came to theIslands about eighteen years ago fromSan Diego, and had been bookkeeperfor the Pacific Hardware Company andlater manager of the Hawaiian Car-riage Manufacturing Company. Fornine years he had been with the Para-dise of the Pacific. He leaves no fam-ily. Before coming to the Islands hehad been many years in journalism,lie was once citv editor of the Oil

WHILE WISHINGIT HOLDS GOODIt

OUR CUSTOMERSA Bottle of Perfume from

j BENSON, SMITH & CO., LTD.New YearHappy Each immigrant will cost the govern-ment about $100 for transportation.

"Contrary to what may b? the popu-lar notion, the American sugar trust

Is as acceptable for New Years as Christmas.

WE THANK THEM ALL ODORS ALL MAKES( lty Derrick. His funeral took place : has no holdings in the Hawaiian Is-fro- m

the undertaking parlors of II. H. ; lands. It buys the product, in the formFOR THEIR Williams at 2 o'clock yesterday of raw sugar, but the plantations areowned and managed by stock com-panies, whose investors represent capi-tal in all parts of the world. Onlv onesugar refinery is maintained, on the Is-

land of Oahu. The Hawaiian planters

LIBERAL PATRONAGE

DURING THE PAST YEAR.GILMAN'S TABLE RECOVERED.Hon. Goiham D. Gilman's koawood

table has been recovered from the i are fearful of anv reduction of thewreck of the Henry M. Whitney off j American duties on sugar, for they sayHell Gate, New York, and has arrived that the cost of freight on a ton ofin Boston. Tt is now in the hands-o- f sugar to New York is $11.50, whilea cabinetmaker being repaired at the Porto Kican and Cuban sugar comesexpense of the insurance company, but here at something like $1.50 a ton. Anywas probablv not in order by Christ- - further reduction of the sugar duties,

SILVA'S TOGGERYI niastime, as was hoped by its recip- - the Hawaiians say, would wipe out their Sgrf CarKing Street.Elks Building. Phone 651. lent. industrv. "

.fM ft-- 4 "RS "

mPPJ wid&jrf&L $HWE WILL BE PLEASED TO HAVE YOUR ORDER

FOR MEATS, POULTRY OR DELICATESSEN OR

FRUITS. '

OR

AT

METROPOLITAN MEAT CO., LTD.

Phone 45.

Holiday Enlarging and Printing.NEW YORK IN 2000.

StraSger What's the excitement over there?Citir en Greatest discovery of the age! Workmen digging into the

ami iron strata have just come upon a vein of real dirt!

Page 3: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu · rrjririr ir jr irr ir if k k p irinrm U. S. WEATHER BU-REA-U, 5 SUGAR--96 Test Dec. 26-L-ast Centrifugals, 3.67c.; 24 hours' rainfall, T. Per Tnn

THE SUNDAY ADVERTISER, DECEMBER 27, 1908.

v ffiipHi I THE SHALL FARMER

JC Vftf a Va Wars U "sSSSf' - Jt-- j $ f'?f'X "0?a . ' ,"'.n i

Nuuanu Avenue

Nuuanu Avenue

School Street ..

Quarry Street .

35.C0 i .;ffVS flf Rrpgfesi

22.50 i 1 M

Can secure our assistance in endeavoring to find a market forhis products. We are engaged in the business of sellingGroceries, Provisions and numerous articles required by thefarmer for the daily use of his family. We believe we may beable at the same time to sell his products; some of them any-way if not all.

If the farmer will let us know what he has to sell, whenit will be ready for market, how packed and how tobe shipped, with probable quantities in each shipment; giveus in advance all the information he can; we will at once startinvestigating the market conditions and advise him of same.

We sell to family consumers throughout the Islands forCASH, money with order, and many acknowledge that theyare saving money eyery month. We want the farmersfamily trade and will sell their products for CASH also, so asto furnish the necessary "GOLD LUBRICANT" to keep thefarm running smoothly. No order too small or too large forus to undertake. -

Get the CASH HABIT in buying and selling.

THEO. F. LANSING. Commission Merchant,

Importer, Jobber and Retailer.93 and 95 King Street,

P. O. BOX 351. ' Honolulu.

Kicau StreetK jf f as

? MARINE REPORT. iLunalilo Street (furnished) 40.00

Alapai Street 10.00

;!: r' i& fc? (55 (,58

(From San Francissco Merchants Ex-change.)

Saturday, December 26.San Francisco Sailed, Dec. 24. bk.

R. P. Rithet, for Honolulu; Dec. 25, S.S. Texan, for Honolulu; Dec. 26, schr.W. H. Marston, for Hilo. Arrived,Dec. 25. 3 p. m., S. S. Nippon 3Iaru,hence Dec. 19. -

"CirnKi -ij. - -i&m

Two fine bargains in Makiki Dis-

trict at $2650 and $1800 PORT OF HONOLULU.

ARRIVED.Friday, December 23.

O. S. S. Alameda, Dowdell, from SanI

VATERHOUSE TRUST"M0N0POLE RED TOPCHAMPAGNE

MOST DELICIOUS CHAMPAGNE OF THE AGEOLD GOVERNMENT PLANTATION CIGARS Only the very best of

Porto Rican tobacco used in the manufacture of the cigars. All sizes andcolors. '

LEWIS & CO., LTD.U9 KING STREET SOLE AGENTS FOR HAWAII TELEPHONE 240

FORT AND MERCHANT STREETS

HEW LIGHTHOUSE FOR

For Ren ROADSTEADHONOLULU STOCK EXCHANGE LOCAZi OFFICE OF THE UNITED

STATES WEATHER BUREAU.Honolulu, Thursday, Dec. 24, 1908.Honolulu, Thursday, Dec. 24, 1908.Lieut.-Command- Moses, U. S. N,

of the lighthouse bureau, may leave for THERMO. WIHIiB2NAME OF STOCK.Kahului on the Mauna Kea next Tues-- 1

Francisco, 7 a. m.P. M. S. S. Siberia, Dixon, from Yo-

kohama. 9:30 o'clock.Str. Ke Au Hou, from Kauai, 7 am.'Str. Noeau, from Kauai, S:30 a. m.Am. sp. Wm. P. Frye, from San Fran-

cisco (in ballast), 10:55 a. m.Bktn Irmgard, Schmidt, from San

Francisco, 4 p. m.

DEPARTED.Wednesday, December 23.

M. N. S. S. Hyades, for Makaweli, 9p. m.

Thursday, December 24.Schr. C. A. Thayer, for Sound, 9 a. m.Str. Kinau, for Kauai, 5:10 p. m.

Saturday, December 26.S. S. Siberia, Dixon, for San Fran-

cisco, 10 a. m.

PASSENGERS.Arrived.

Per bktn Irmgard, from San Fran-cisco, Dec. 25. Mr. and Mrs. Smith,Mr, Heney, Mr3. Byrne and six children.

Per S. S. Alameda, from San Fran-cisco, Dec. 25. Frank Bourn, Mrs.Bourn, George C. Carty, A. L. Chase,Miss B. Chase, Mrs. Sam Codling, E.

saeks coffee, 1000 sacks rice, 2000 casesof canned pineapples, 1000 bundles ofhides and about 5000 bunches of ba-

nanas.The Alameda leaves next Wednesday

morning for San Francisco.Dix Is Due.

The transport Dix whch sailed fromNagasa"ki on December 10 is due andpossibly might be regarded as some-what late. She is out seventeen daystoday. She is, however, a slow boat ofthe big tramp kind and may come intoday. The Japan Times, referring tothe arrival of the Dix at Nagasaki fromManila, says the transport brought aletter of thanks from 5675 Americanbluejaekts for the kindness and hosp-itality they received during their visitto Yokohama and Tokio. In the letterthey state that the good will shownto them during their stay in Yokohamathey will never forget, and that thewelcome meeting at Hibiya park wasthe best ever received -- by American

aoSto2.aST

3

Mercantile.C. Brewer & Co

See ao.Ew..Haw, Agricultural

Capital.Paid Up Val. Bid. A 8k

J2.000.000 1100 200

3,000,000! 2U 281 iWO.OOO! 100 155 1702sl2,755i IOC ....2,00 000 20 5 38

750,000 IOC'

2.000,000 .... us500,1)00 100 .....

2.000.000 20

Haw Com it Co

Building oncorner ofNuuanu andQueen Streets,known as the"Red FrontStore."

day to inspect the coast of Maui be-

tween Kahului-an- d Puniewa for a suit-

able location for a new lighthouse. Atpresent the great roadstead before Ka-

hului has but one government light andthat on the point near Nakalele be-

tween Kahului and Honolua landing.The light at Kahului is a private oneand this is not strong enough for suchan important shipping point.

The new light may be located at

Maw sugar uoHonomu ...MHonokaa ..Haiku

aKB

KB

91

5B

Hutchinson Sug Flau

500.000 20w

KahukuKeknha Sugar 160.800,000

500.000lOOjlOOi

iSOO 29-9- 8 75 70 72 .00 72

1901 30.C4 79 67 73 .01 88

1902800072 63 68 .05 66

1908 30 CO 78 65 72 T 82

(904 30 00 77 65 71 T 81

1905 30 07 79 72 76 T 69

4906 30-0- 2 76 70 73 .T8 70

1907 80.02 79 70 74 T 71

1908 30.04 70 61 68 T U

lJzaZ 76 67 72 3 75

McBryde SurCo Ltd..160

27K

147:

2754uanu sugar Co....Onomea ...Puniewa and this with the one on the J sailors.

2020202020;

lOOj

Ookala

,500,0f)0!voo.ooo!1,000.000;

500.000!5,000.0001

150.0QC5,000.000!

.12

10

1

14

KBOlaa Sugar Co LtdOlowalu . ..Paanhaa Bug Plan Co 60

Dexter, C. Freeland, H. J. Priedlander,Mrs. FriedlanderMiss, Lydia Gibbons,Herbert Green,. J. Charles Green, Geo.Dowdell, Jules Dillier, Mrs. Green, M.M. Hill, Mrs. Hill, Miss Myrtle Hodge,Leon HoniSberger, Stanley Kennedy, T.

Siberia In and Out.The Pacific Mail Steamship Siberia

arrived from Japan at 10 a. m. Christ-mas Day and departed for San Fran-cisco at 10 a. m. yesterday with a large

500.000! 1O0750.000! 100

Kl750,000) 100135Bislnp Trust Co., Ltd. Z,750,000j

4.500,000

racinc ..hfepeekeo ..

Pioneer ... , ...Waialua Agri CoWailaku ,

Watmanalo.....Walmea8ugar Mill

Miscellaneous

7573SE. and NE. "

WM. B. STOCKMAN.ftoctioa Director.

opposite point will be of great assist-ance to mariners. In time CaptainMoses hopes to get authority to replaeeKahului 's private light with a stronggovernment lantern.

Irmgard a Dry Boat."For three trips the barkentine frm-gar- d

has not been pumped and she hasnot in that time taken in an inch ofwater, said Captain' Schmidt of thetrim barkentine yesterday. "She isom of the finest wooden vessels that

1,500,000! 100252.000! 100(175

NO. 924 BETHEL STREET 125,000: 43

TIDES. SUN AND MOON.Inter-Islan- d 8 8 Co.... 1251W.000!500.000!Hw Kieetric Co...

14H RT4 LCoPfdSlalstead & Co.. Ltd. 0

100

100loo100

10loo:100!

loo

ofj1.150,000

lSOOOOi

9 '

a -09 ao

sails in the Pacific. Her best time was 60,000 o 2ma

r co comSJt Tel CoNahiku Rubber Co.Nhhiku Rubber CoORAL CoHilo K R Co

WitStJ 5

number of passengers from here. TheSiberia discharged a laige quantity ofmerchandise for Honolulu. Among thepassenger was an Italian Count tour-ing the world. One of the Honolulansleaving was James Wilder who willmeet his wife in the east. Princess

left for New York to beaway about a year and a half, a portionof the time to be spent in Europe. Alarge number of friends bade her fare-well. Her sister Beatrice Campbell, ac-companied by Miss Marjorie Freeth,was also a passenger. She will entera California school. The Princess wasaccompanied by Mrs. Reeves. Mr. J.

J i4a Bsess. f30 Us4.000-00- 110 a.m.' F.T.m d m. a m i tRJe1.000.000:

303 miles in 23 hours and 40 minutesrunning time, which was logged on thelast trip up to the Coast. Comingdown the best davs' run was 260 miies.

21 2. 34 2 0, 2.00 7.45 9 45 6 35 5 25 4.47Honolulu Brewing AMalting Co Ltd . 20400.00oj

400,000:2024

22 S 10! : 1 2.45 8.22 10. K4 6 85 1 .26; 5.4ftI !

STOCK AND EOND

BROKERS2320

Ami Outand near the islands she logged 11, 12 23 8.50. 2 2 8.32, 9 00 ll.2c 6 36 5.26 Pets.standing

C. Leake, T. J. Lesher, Miss'L. Lloyd,Miss J. C. Locke, C. J. McCarthy, O.B. McKay, H.-- S. Martinez, Mrs. Mar-tinez and child, T. A. Miller, Jno. Ot-tes- ,'

MrsOtten, Geo. Reno, D. B. Doby,Mrs. J. W. Saunders, Miss Saunders,Walter Scribner, Miss C. M. Sullivan,J. E.. Thompson, A. K. Tiernan, Mrs.Tiernan, Mrs. L. Tiernan, Miss GertrudeTopham, L. H. Underwood, HarryWhite.

Per str. Mauna Kea, from Hilo, Dec25. E. F. Blane, Mrs. Blane, MasterBlane, A. Williams, Mrs. J. Finney, J.H. Brown, Dr. Jno. Pinto, C. Casten-dyk- e,

C. Hubur, C. M. V. Watson, M.R. Jamieson, H. Corman, L. Kew, V. F.Jones, Master F. Clinton, E. Stiles, R.B. Anderson, A. Lewis Jr., A. B. Lind-say, M. McMahon, E. Hedeman, R. P.Quarles, W. F. Johnson, G. E. Lucas,W. E. Bal, W. A. Kinney, R. Kearns,W. S. Edings, Jas. T. Taylor, J. Light-foo- t,

S. Fujimoto, Mrs. M. E. Folk.Departed.

Per P. M. S. S. Siberia, for San

and 13 knots an hour."

IfV

IfV

8

24 4.80 2 2 4.301The Irmgard arrived Christmas af 9.44 12.00 644 5 57 ft 5tpml I I

naw riiieappie 10. ....BoxD8

Haw Ter 4 p c (FireClaims)

Haw Ter 4 pel1905

Haw Ter 4 pcHaw Ter 4 DC

315.000

6004 00ternoon from .San Francisco with a gen 2 2 5.20 10 26 13.48 6 87 5.V7 8.02eral cargo of about 900 tons and eight

25 5.10!

26 5.55!

27 6.40

1.000,0001,000,000

2-- 0 6iJ 1.12 11. 18'67 5.28 9 0I I

passengers, making the tnpm thirteenand a half days. "The vessel passed

LOANS NEGOTIATES

XtmBn Sosotoia Stoez ulExcinx

.Haw Ter pc 1 8 7 40! 2 C5 6 87.5.23 10. ISthrough some nasty weather, the first 101

1044,000

1000,000225,000!

200,000!

half of the voyage experiencing a heavy

Tarn McGrew was given a big sendofl!and went away laden with leis. Mr.McGrew will return to Paris where hewill enter a firm of architects. TheHawaiian band was present when theSiberia left.NOTES

Supply to Pass By.The United States auxiliary naval

ship Supply, now the station ship atGuam, is to be relieved shortly bv the

cai Beet sug & KelCo6pc

FUikuttpcHamakua Ditch Co

Upper Oitch 6 p c....Haw Com & ugar

Co 5 pcHaw rugar 6 p c ......)Hilo R R Co pc

northwester. On. deck she broughtabout 20,000 feet of lumber, 300 casesAlbert F. Afong of oil and ,240 bales of hay. l.sn.coc

825.000Among the passengers was Mr. bmith. l.fHjP.000

New moon Dec. 23 at 1:26 a. m.The tides at Kahului and Hilo occur

About one hour earlier than at Hono- -. 'Sara.Hawaiian standard time is 10 htura

4 minutes slower than Greenwichtee, being that of the meridian of 157letrrees thirty minutes. The timevblstle blows at 1:30 p. m., which laae aame as Greenwich 0 hour 0 mln-tte- a.

Sun and moon are for local tlmto tfc whol amtru.

connected with the Crockett sugar re- - Honokaa Sug o 0 p c 101

finerv. MOD K X L CO S p C

Kahuku 6 u c

300.000647.000

15,000;2.000.000!2,000.000!

WjO 0001

McKryde Sug Co 6 p c WJ4Francisco, December 26. Li L Hard-ing, Col. Spalding, C. B. Wells,Mr. Halvorsen, Mr. McCann, Princess

832 FOBT SSEET

Ji J" Ji

STOCK AND BOND BROKER

Lsmbr ZZoaoIsIa Stock

100

i6ik1U0

Christmas Eve on Alameda.The Alameda arrived bright and ear

1,250.000ly C hristmas morning with a large num-ber of passengers and about a thou

IIhaL Uo 8 p COabu 9ugar Co 5 p c.Olaa Sngar Co 8 p c...Pncific ougar Mill

Co 8Paia tt p cPioneer Mill Co 8 p c.Waialua Ag Co 5 p c.

gunboat Concord and go to Puget Soundto undergo an extensive overhauling.On her return to Guam, the Coacordwill go to Puget Sound for repairs. TheSupply will pass through Honolulu.

Contrary to expectation the cruiserRainbow, formerly the flagship on theAsiatic station, will not go to Mare

!1Msand tons of general merchandise. Thepassengers had an enjoyable time. For

Kawananakoa, Mrs. Reeves, Mr. Tot-tenham, Tarn McGrew, Miss Winni-fre- d

C. Wheeler, H. R. Berry, FrancisB. Smith, L. M. Cohn and wife, T.Costello and wife, A. C. Beach andwife, Misses Ada and Irene Brougher,

105"

450,000!37,500

1.250,000!1.5OG.00O!

iChristmas Eve the officers had the din

METEOROLOGICAL RECORD.Mued Every Sunday Afornlng by theLoc Office. U. S. Weather Bureau.ing room beautifully adorned for the

Island, and conequentlv Honolulu willholidav festivities. The decorations Wharton Thurston, D. W. Cooke, Wal 23.15 paid. f39 per cent. paid.THERM.not receive a visit from the vessel. The WINDwere done under the oversight of Chief

Steward Carleton and were a credi1 to--; 9 ntiRainbow has been ordered to remain

on the Asiatic station and the hospitalReal Estate

HAWAIIAN DEVELOPMENT CO.

LIMITED

aothe Oceanic company. The dinner wassumptuaus. There was also a Christmas ae istree, placed in the ladies' saloon, so t

5S

Session Sales.None.

Between Boards.140 Oahu Sug. Co.. 27.625; 30 Ewa,

26.125; 20 Waimea, 50.

Notice.No sessions of the Exchange Friday,

December 25 (Christmas Day), andSaturdav. December 26.

that it-w- as visible from all decks. Itwas filled with tiny incandescentF. S. McSTOCICEB - - HABAf

ter A. Fischer and wife, Wm. F. Me-Ge- e

and wife, Geo. F. Drake, Alex.Cross, L. Hope Robertson, A. HopeRobertson, Miss Robertson, Miss G.Robertson, L. F. Moulton and wife,Miss Beatrice Campbell, Mrs. A.Whitnev, Harrv Griswold, SamuelPoorman, C Bo'lte, W. D. Wahlworth,Miss Anna D. Wahlworth, Leeds Gu-lic- k,

W. W. Harris, E. F. Blaine, Mrs.Blaine, Master Blaine, S. O. Fry, MissM. Jorgensen, K. Ito, wife and twochildren, Miss B. Helen Skelly.

Booked to Depart.Per M. N. S. S. Hilonian, for San

lamps. Captain Dowdell presided overthe Christmas feast.STANGENWAIaD BUILD IN

Cable Address: Develop

! i

8 .2'3n.H! Ti e4 1 17 79 7 M ISM 2- St 14 78 r.rt .30 82 7 IST 22 0. 12 78 fM 1 tH 7 t a 12W 2v:w.i:: 77 fi7 .03 f 5 tt nT 24 30. 75 84 .24") 7 7F 25 30.i0' 70 81 .80 62 4 MK 158 21S0..04 70 61 .T 'U 3 vm 14

i I

Among the passengers were J. CharlesGreen, a wealthv advertising man of

1 California, accompanied by Mrs. Green,P. O. Box 253

Union Electric Co.

ship Kelief has been assigned as hospi-tal ship for Olongapo naval station.The Tris, now on the Asiatic stationhas been ordered home via Honolulu,to b1 fitted out as the parent "ship forthe Pacific torpedo fleet.

Shipping Notes.reorge Dowdell. son of Captain Dow-

dell of the O. S. S. Alameda, arrived onthat liner and will visit here for a shorttime.

The following sugar is reported onHawaii ready for shipment: Olaa 476,Wainaku 790O, Punaluu 4469, Honokaa4500.

The Alameda brought 343 sacks ofmail, considerable Wells-Farg- o expressmatter and had forty-eigh- t cabin

Miss Lydia Green and Master Green,and their chauffeur, for Mr. Green Koolau Railway

TIME SCHEDULEbrought bis big Thomas touring earto motor over all the islands. They Francisco, Dec. 29. Captain Tullett,tt BERETANIA STREET.

Telephone SIS.

Note. Barometer readings are cor--ect- ed

for temperature. InstrumentalMTors, and local gravity, and reducedjo sea level. Average cloudiness state!n scale from 0 to 10. Direction ofwind Is prevailing direction during 24hours ending at 8 p. m. Velocity of

are stopping at tne loung. JeonHonisberger is here on a business tripEoum Wiring - Bells - Dry CUi

Bpeeisi attention to installing priTt

Mrs. Tullett and two children, Mrs. J.S. Sharp and infant. Miss Jennie F.Stevenson, Mrs. Podmore, H. Podmore,Sam Souza, C. H. Brown, Mrs. Tom-linso- n.

THE MAILS.

DAILY, EXCEPT SATURDAY.SUNDAY AND HOLIDAYS

Leave Kahana for Punaluu,Hauula, Laie, Kahuku and

and incidentally to keep a Christmasdinner engagement which his wife hadarranged for him with a loeal friend. wind Is average velocity in miles pee

our. T indicates trace of rain.telephones ana ceaem repair wore

ASSESSMENT NO. 9.A. K. Tiernan ami wire are irom an

Wav Stations at 12:00 M. WM. B. STOCKMAN,Section Direo.Francisco, accompanied by .Mr. Her-

man's mother from Salt Lake. They Arrive Kahuku at 1:00 P.M.The big four-maste- d American shiplias been ealled in the Returning:Leave Kahuku for Laie, Hau-

ula.. Punaluu, Kahana and

came on a Pasure tnp and may visit Wm, P Frye. arrived from San Fran- -Harrlaon Mutual Burial Association, Mrs. j. w. Saunders, wifevol(ano.th(. eisH.() in on Christmas. Day. todue Detember 15, 1903; delinquent of Captain Saunders of the P. M. S. S. joa,j a ear?0 of SUgai-

- for Xew York.

Mails aie due from the followingpoints as follows:San Francisco Per Korea. Dec. 23.Yokohama Per China, Jan. 2.Vancouver Per Makura, Jan. 8.Colonies Per Aorangi, Jan. 6.

Mails win depart for the following

Way Stations at 1:45 P.M.Jann.rv IS. 1909. Pavable at the of-- I Manchuria, and Miss launders, wno

See of the : Townsend Undertaking spent a season here, have returned for The A.-H- . freighter Texan sailed fromSan Franeisco for Honolulu on Christ-mas day. She will load sugr for Te- -the winter.

Arrive Kahana at z:ioSATURDAY, SUNDAY

AND HOLIDAYSParlors, King and Alakea streets.

As to freight the Alameda brought

Oahu RailwayTIME TABLE

OUTWARDTmr Waianae, Waialua, Kahuku and

Way Stations 9:li a. m., 1.20 p m.For Pearl City, Ewa Mill and Waj;

Stations 17:30 a. m., 9:15 a. m,11:15 a. m., 2:15 p. m., 5:15 p. m.,

t9:30 p. m., til p. m.Tor Wahiawa "8:li a. m. and 1:11

Jiuanteec. The chartered steamer Pieithe usuai nsorimr.,i ux ' ades leaves the Sound January 1 for points as follows:

San Francisco Per Alameda, Dt-c-. CO. 'Leave Kahana for Punaluu,T T , t 1 1 J

gOOdS, including a large aiiiyuut v. Honolulu.' Yokohama Per Korea, Dec. 23.fruits.

Some new. machinery arrived for theHawaiian Pineapple Company plantat Iwilei. '

TRANSPORT SERVICE.Biiford, sailed from Hon. for Manila,

Dec. 15.Besides the auto of Mr. Green a huge a. so.INWARD.

Arrive Honoiuia from Kahuku, Waneven-seate- d Studebaker machine arriv- - j Crook, at" San Franeisco.

ed for Captain Castner, Constructing DjXf sailed from Nagasaki for Hon.,

Miles HotelNE. Corner Jones and O'Farrel Sts.

SAN FRANCISCOnELEN K. NEEDHAM, Prop.

SAM. LACKLAND, Mgr.Entirely new. Eighty-fiv- e rooms,

well-furnishe- d and modern. Suiteand single.

Caters to Hawaiian Island cus-

tom. Poi served daily. Porters atall steamers from Hawaii.

Rates Reasonable

Dec. 10 alua and Waianae S:!! a. m t:llI, m.

ancouver fer Aorangi, Jan. 0.Colonies Per Makura, Jan. 8.

VESSELS IN POST.(Anny and Navy.)

Iroquois, U. S. station tug, Moses.(Merchant Vessels.)

Alameda. Am. s.s., Dowdell, San Fran-cisco, Dec. 25.

Helene, Am. schr., Johnson, GraysHarbor, Dec. 7.

Hilonian, Am. s.s., Johnson, San Fran-eisco, Dec. 21.

Irmgard, Am. bktn, Schmidt, San Fran-eisco, Dec. 25.

Arrive Honolulu from Ewa Mill and

Iiauuia, Liaie, xvacuitu auuWay Stations at 11:00 A.M.

1:32 P.M.Arrive Kahuku at 11:53 A.M.

2:15 P.M.Leave Kahuku for Laie, Hau-

ula, Punaluu, Kahana andWav Stations at 12:40 P.M.

3:00 P.M.Connections are made at Kahuku

with the O. R. & L. Co.'s 9:15 a. m.

train from Honolulu, and the 2:20 p. m.

train, which arrives in the city at 5:30P' m'

JANUARY 1, 1909.

J. J. Dowling,Superintendent.

E. S. Pollister,Gen. Passenger & Freight Agt.

Pearl City 17:4 a. rn., 8:I a. m.,10:88 a. m., "1:40 p. m., 4:tl p. m..

C:S1 p. m., 7:M p. m.

Sherman at San Francisco.Sheridan, sailed from Manila for Hon.. via Nagasaki, Dec. 14.Thomas, at San Francisco.

--4THE TELL-TAL- E.

Mrs. Jawback Do you know I camevery near not marrying you?

Mr. Jawback Sure but who toldyou about It? Cleveland Leader.

Arrive Honolulu from WabJawa1:24 a. m. and 6:X1 p. m.

The Halelwa Limited, a two-ho- ur

Quartermaster, V. S. A., who is ineharge of the cantonment constructionwork at Leilehua. Captain Castnerfound that the work necessitated theuse of an automobile almost constantly,and Jim Quinn, the veteran chauffeur,has carried the party of army officersbetween Honolulu and Leilehna almostdailv. The officers decided that itwould be better to get a machine andmade a requisition for one. This Stude-baker is the second official auto assign-ed to the War Department here, thefirst being one now used by Major Win-low- ,

Engineer Corps.For return freight the Alameda will

have about 6000 sacks of sugar, 1000

NewMathilda, Nor. s.s.. Kjerland,castle, Dec. 22.

train (only first-cla- ss tickets honored),leave Honolulu every Sunday at 8:81a. m.; returning, arrives in Honoluluat 10:10 p. m. The Limited stops only,at Pearl City and Waianae.

Send Your SuitTo the

EAGLE DYEING ANDCLEANING WORKS

fftlepaem. 67S. FOET BTWBT

Nuuanu, Am. bk., Josselvn, New York,Dec 14.

St. Katheriue. Am. bk., Saunders, SanFrancisco, Dec. 9.

Wm. P. Frye. Am. sp., Murphy, SanFraneisco, Dec. 25.

Dally. tEx. Sunday. tSunday Only.Mining has been the foundation of

the world's riches from the beginningf time. BUY

STOCK. BUY IT NOW!

The bars of indecision exclude manymen from the pleasant Gardens of Sue-ces- s.

Climb over! BUY ' ' MAY-FLOWER" STOCK. BUY IT NOW!

. P. DENISON. F. C. SMITH,Superintendent. O. P. & T. A.

Page 4: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu · rrjririr ir jr irr ir if k k p irinrm U. S. WEATHER BU-REA-U, 5 SUGAR--96 Test Dec. 26-L-ast Centrifugals, 3.67c.; 24 hours' rainfall, T. Per Tnn

THE SUNDAY ADVERTISER, DECEMBER 27, 1908.

SUNDAY ADVERTISEREDITOR

Commercial NewsO. SMITH - '.

By Charles L. Bhodes.WALTER

ZZTTZ ; ; T : : : December 27SUNDAY ;..

be fairly described as the greatest man whoThe late Claus Spreckels may

.t lived in Hawaii, and one of the greatest foreign-bor- n citizens of the

with the original John Jacob AstorT,itJ States, ranking in this latter class

Jt Jt Jffand the defects of his qualities may be ad- -

That ho had the faults of his guild

nutted without impairing the respect which is his due as a man who con

ouered circumstances and rose high. Born a German peasant, he went penni- -

Jess to a land, the language of which he could not speak, and wnere ne as

favors but the chance to work, and in thirty years became a captain of industry

Md a financier whose fame was to spread in all the marts of trade. The genius

The Children's Christmas.The Usual Carper.A Dissolving View.Garfield's Prospects.Kinney and Hughes.His Kalakaua Dollar.The Cninaman's Glass Eye.

the task could hardly nave oeenseeded to do this waa Napoleonic; though

.v- - -- n;rnnn which Mr. Soreckels found. His career was

r--r r ir r r im r r

At the present price of sugar, 3.67 cents per pound, it is said that the dis-

parity between the New York price and the London price is the greatest ithas ever been. ' .

London beets are quoted at ten shillings three farthings, which is equiva-lent to 4.12 cents a pound in New York, cost, freight and insurance, duty paid.This is .45 of a cent a pound, or $9 a ton.

Pay to Ship to London.. At the differetfee in price it would pay Cuban planters better to sell in

London. That they are not doing it probably grows' out of the reason why thedisparity is so great. Last year's Cuban crop was much below the normal, dueto the draught. Few planters made money. Many of them went behind. It isunderstood that the refiners have advanced money on the present crop. Natur-ally they are getting it at prices largely fixed by themselves.

Time of Year for Low Prices. 'It is also true that this is the period of the year when sugar is likely to

be the lowest, and the disparity the greatest. The fruit season is over and theconfectionery for the Christmas season has long been made. The demand forrefined sugar is therefore at its lowest point. Cuban sugars are beginning tocome in, in large quantity. There are considerably more centrals at work nowin Cuba' than at the same date last year. It is practically unbroken experiencofor a number of. years, that the price ef sugar is ,lower at this time in the yearthan at any other time of the year.

Light Business for the Week. .

Business on the Stock Exchange was light in quantity but without anymarked changes of quotation during the week. The Christmas season inter-vening made the week a short one. On Thursday the 'Exchange adjourneduntil Monday. Both Oafm and Ewa sagged off a little on Thursday on thesale of small lots. On Wednesday there was a sale, of 25 shares of Paauhau at$19.50. Olaa is selling at $4,625; Hawaiian Pineapples are quoted steadily at$23, with more or less sales; and on Tuesday 50 shares of Pioneer sold at$140. The market for bonds continues strong, though 'the only sales reportedduring the week were $2000 of Hilo Railroad at $92.50; $1000 of Honolulu RapidTransit at $106.50, and $5000 of Waialua 5 per cents at par.

Hilo Railroad Extension.,C. H. Kluegel, engineer of thev Public Works Department, has been given

. It has remained for some transient visitors to Honolulu to establish What,for a great while to come, will be known as one of the most beautiful customsof this tropic capital the Children's Christmas. For the scene that moistenedas well as' gladdened eyes at Bishop Park, was not a mere dissolving view uponthe screen of one day's history it was the founding of an institution in whichHonolulu is sure to take the kind' of pride that carries with it the pledge ofperpetuity. As the poor children marched across the lawn past the beautiful;ree and received their gifts and then dispersed laughing and shouting down thebreezy, sunshiny street, there was hardly a looker-o- n' among Honolulu menand women who did not say that the Children's Christmas must keep coming."We spend hundreds of dollars for fireworks on the Fourth," said one, "andwe don't get half the satisfaction that this is giving the town. I don't knowwho are who paid the expenses of the free festival, but I shouldike to thank them and say that we'll do it ourselves next year and every

year hereafter." And so we will; and in time the Children's Christmas willbe as fixed as our habit of giving. leis to those who go down' tp the sea in

a leave of absence without pay for a time to permit him to go to Hilo to selectthe line for the extension of the Hilo railroad, for a part of the way at least,,toward Hakalau. Mr. Kluegel leaves on TuesUay. He has had wider experi-ence in railroad building in this Territory than probably any other engineer

ships and of playing our island music while their argosies drift out of Para-dise on even keels.

inthe Territory.A Start Will Be M&de. . i

.

"We expect to make a start on this extension of the Hilo railroad," saidB. F. Dillingham, "right away, and we shall cet to Hakalau some time and

- There are those who think that the large sum which generousvisitors spent on a Christmas tree for children, in the Bishop lot in

v front of the Young Hotel, might better have been used in morepractical charity. Star.And "there are those V. who ought to be hanged on Christmas trees. They

acnieveu sc m - -

not merely a revelation of his own manhood but also of the gigantic oppor-

tunities which a new, free country like the United States raises up" before the

wan who knows how to master them.M

" ficrff5 Inventions That Are Certain

By Thomas A. Edison in New York Times.

jJJJJt ! J J v J J J J v

the most advance in science and inven-

tionThe next era will mark wonderfulthat the world has ever known or toped; for. jVvast will that advance be

tiat we can now have scarcely any conception of. its. scope, but already a great

many of the inventions of the futnre are assured. It is only of those which ITegard as practical certainties that I speak here.....

Kirst Within the next twenty or thirty years and it will start within the

next two or three concrete architecture will take enormous strides forward;

the art of molding concrete will be reduced a(science of perfection and

what ia equally important, of cheapness; there "will rise up a large number of

gifted architects, and through their efforts cities and towns will spring up in

this count rv beside which Turner's picture of ancient Kome and Carthage will

rale into nothingness and the buildings of the Columbia exposition will appear

common. But gTeat expense will not attend this; it will be done so that the

poor will be able to enjoy houses more beautiful than the rich now aspire to,

id the man earning $1.50 a day, with a family to support, will be better

loused than the man of today who is earning $10. :f .will be so' that the characters: t Second Moving picture machines perfected

will not only move, i but will speak, and all the accessories and effects of the

stage will be faithfully produced on the living picture stage. This, of course,

will not be done as well as on the' regular stage, but its Btandard will approach

cry near to that, and the fact that such entertainment will be furnished for

five cents will draw vast numbers of the working classes. The result will be that

the masses will have tho advantage of the moral of good drama, they will find

n inexpensive and improving way of spending the evening, and the death knell

at the saloon will be sounded. ' '

Third In perhaps fifteen or twenty years depending on the financial con-

dition of the country the locomotive will pass almost altogether out of use,

and all our main .trunk railways will be operated by electricity.- Fourth A new fertilizer will spring into existence, containing a large per-

centage of nitrogen. This will be drawn from the air by electricity, and will

1 Tised to increase the arability of the land. Even now this is done to a large

extent in Sweden.Fifth All our water power will be utilized by electricity to an extent now

almost unthought of, and will be used with great advantage, both industrially'

and for railroads.',

. Sixth A successful aerial navigation will be established perhaps for mails

and will. achieve a sound, practical working basis. L "; ' Seventh We shall be able to protect ourselves against environment by theuse of serums and things of that sort so: that the general state of health will

improve and the average span of life will increase by a large percentage. The

grand fight which is being made against-tuberculosi-s and catcer will reach. a

Successful culmination and those diseases will be entirely mastered. . t

Eighth A new force in nature, of some sort or other; will be discoveredfcy which many things not now understood will be explained. We unfortunatelylave only five 6ense if we had eight we'd know more.

Ninth We will realize the possibilities of our coal supplies better, andjrill learn how to utilize them so that 90 per cent, of the efficiency will not be

thrown away, as it is today.j t 'Finally, let it be said, hardly any piece of machinery now manufactured ismore than 10 per eent: perfect. As the years go on this will be improved upontremendously; more automatic machinery will be devised, and articles of com-

fort and luxury, will be produced in enormous numbers at such 'small cost that

then on to Paauhau, a distance of forty-fiv- e miles. The financial arrangementsare practically all made." "

Long-Expecte- d Extension.Though a railway from Hilo to reach the entire sugar-producin- g region of

are the people who carp at charity because it isn't "practically" organizedso that two-third- s of the receipts may be used to pay the salaries of its managers.

the Hilo and Hamakua coasts has been looked upon for many years merely as8 8 58

I guess the report that Kepoikai is in the mucilage is true. He sent his a matter of time, time has dragged itself out for one reason and another for agreat many .years, far beyond the expectations of many not over-optimisti- e

men. A franchise secured by H. B. Gehr .some years-- ago only lapsed by non-fulfilme- nt

of its terms something over a year ago, so that the way has not beenclear for a longer period than that for the Hilo railroad.

resignation to Washington in care of tbe Governor to be used if it had to beto save him from removal and it has, I hear, been used. There were variouscharges against Kepoikai on file there when the fun began and a lot 'morecame on, all of them tending to show that if the Maui judge had about fifteenqualities that he lacked, and lacked twenty-fiv- e or thirty qualities he had, hemight become fourth or" fifth choice'for preferment to the Circuit beneh. It is

, . Great Sugar-Producin- g Region.The region proposed to be traversed is one that produces a great deal of

said to have struck Attorney-Genera- l Bonaparte that he could do better by the sugar. 'Ih sugar production between H1J0 and Hakalau for 1908 was in theMaui bench than that. But, of course, he will have to take the consequences,for a rumor reaches me that Senator1 Coelho intends to get the Hawaiian Senateto pass a, vote 6f want of confidence in him.

8 ,

"VNfe all remember James R. Garkell, who was here last summer, fie made.friends who wiiriast him, as any elekn-minde- competent and tactful gentle-man might expect to do. 'Well, a Washington politician said the other day thatGarfield is being trained to succeed: Taft in the Presidency eight years fromnow. - He will, perhaps, be sent to govern the Philippines for awhile and then

neighborhood of 60,000 tons. In addition to that, there is a large homesteadpopulation in this region, and an immense amount of travel. Between Hiloand Laupahoehoe there are said to be about forty Japanese stages in constantoperation, so great is the travel. '

( Plan Concrete Bridges. .- j. .. :; y;

Mr Dillingham expresses the hope that though this is a region involvingexpensive construction and many bridges, that they will be able to constructreinforced concrete bridges.,

Death of Claus Spreckels.The death of Claus Spreckels removes a man who had a large part in the

development of the sugar industry in these Islands. As refiner on the Coastand the organizer of plantations on these Islands, at one time he waa lookedon. and not without reason, as the Sugar King of Hawaii. And yet in thematter of actual output, those days, as compared with the present, were thedays of small things. . ;

(Continued on Page Elgnt.);

come back into the cabinet as Attorney-Genera- l and be given every chance to letthe country get acquainted' with him.. While it is a rather new thing for oneadministration to provide for another)' the American people, judging from theTaft electoral figures are not scared abfaut it; and they are going to like Garfieldfor himself. . However, there is a man in New York named Hughes, who, islooming large on the horizon. Perhaps he may break the continuity.

. ? 8 i8Speaking of Hughes, I hear that' William A. Kinney came back from his

mainland trip with a wish, in his system that Hughes were a Democrat. Heheard him speak and was impressed by the mental and moral bigness of theman. Kinney had tried to get into a Republican rally,. but there wasn't stand

11 classes will be; able to enjoy the benefits of thenxv l

These are some of the inventions which the world -- is awaiting which it is

ture of seeing realized. Just how they wijl be realized is'wbat-th- e inventorsf; 'axe working now to determine. "

:

ing room. The Honolulan appealed to a doorkeeper, saying he was from here Small Talk jhad come 5000 miles, etc., to listen JLp some good politics so word was passedto the front; and after awhile an official reached Kinney by the cellar routeand escorted him to the platform, where he sat, one lone Democrat, close tothe footlights at a Eepublican mass-meetin- b,ut looking respectable enough topass for a pillar of the Grand Old Party. Hughes heard about him, and whenhe reached the platform and had been presented to the crowd, he bowed firstto the chairman, then to Kinney and then to the audience. It was prettyneirrly all up then with the of the Democratic Territorial Committee, and after he heard the speech, if he hadn't had a rabbit foot fromBourbon county, Kentucky, in his vest, he would have gone Eepublican byan immense majority.

8 8 08 t8They tell a tale of a tourist who went away from here some years ago with

a Kalakaua dollar, which had been given him in change at the Hawaiian Hotel.He couldn't pass it in Asia, Europe or North --America and was mad. But heknew he should come back here some day and he made up his mind to compelthe Hawaiian to take back that coin whether it wanted to or not. So awhileago he arrived and offered the same old dollar at the same old place. The

The Oldest Living ThingPearson's Weekly. . .

Jft S& 4 t sJl t s$ 1 j st st st st st St st t St St St St St t t w--

California is excited just now because its "big trees" best known overtere through a wine advertisement are to be cut down.

The desecration is not because they are dangerous, but simply and solelyon account of their value as timber. Each of them is "a mine of lumber," andro most of them are to be felled. However, one group, situated in MariposaCounty, is to be preserved. v

These mastodons of the vegetable kingdom measure as much as a hundredfeet in girth at the bottom, and are between 300 and 400 feet tall, so that theyeasily take precedence over every other ' 11virtg: on earth as regards meresize. .'..(.-"- ,

It has recently been asserted, too, that. they are also the oldest of livingthings. But this is not quite correct. Many of them undoubtedly date back tothe time of Abraham and the Egyptian "shepherd kings. " Yet even theseare quite "giddy young things" compared with certain of the cypress treesot Mexico.

One of this family, standing in Chepultepec, has been proved by expertsfa forestry to be certainly not less than 6260 years old. To it, therefore, must

e accorded the distinction of being absolutely the oldest thing left alive uponthe earth today.

The most patriarchal tree in Britain, it is claimed, is the famous Cowthorpeoak, in Yorkshire, which is over 1600 years old. Next to it comes the Green-dal- e

oak, near Welbeck Abbey, estimated to be 1"00 years of age. This latteris, however, now a mere shell, supported by props, its hollow interior being sobadly decayed that a coach has been driven through it.

Dumorey's oak, in Dorsetshire, blown down in 1703, was found, by carefullycounting the concentric rings, to be not less than 2000 years old.

1

clerk asked him if he hadn't made a mistake, but the stranger fluffed up andwas ready to fight rather than take the old disc back. The clerk was quicklycowed, however, and the victor began telling how no hotel clerk could bluffJiim. Tossibly he would be telling the yarn yet if he hadn't learned that aKalakaua dollar is now worth $1.50.

tj?8 8 8 8

An old and respected Chinese resident who has been in the Islands forover thirty years recently fell in love with a Hawaiian widow of about thirty--

five winters and asked her to become his wife. She refused, and as often theChinaman begged her to relent and name the happy day. Finally she becameexasperated and declared that she did not want to marry a man with only oneeye. The Chinaman sought several of his haole friends and asked if the defeat

JAMES BROWN Still more fortifications for Oahu! Bishop Restarick hasjust created a new Canon. '

:

- C. M. COOKE Claus Spreckels was a very vital influence in the develop-ment of the sugar industry of these Islands. - -

E. D. TENNEY I am convinced that Rudolph Spreckels is waging thisfight for reform in San Francisco with only the sincerest and most unselfishmotives. t . . ,

PAT GLEASON The All-Star- s will be here in a month now. We oughtto hand those fellows a string of beating to make a hole in their record ofJapanese victories. .'.-.- ,

JUDGE MAHAULTJ You just wait until that race to Haleiwa. I shallput on those golf knickers of mine and leave the whole field strung out likethe tail of a comet.

ROBERT ANDERSON I was surprised to see how quickly the youngsterstook to the new game. We ought to have a miglrty good team to play theAlameda on the next trip.

"DOC" MONSARRAT I have seldom enjoyed anything so much as thewalking match. I think the press is doing a great work in boosting these events,and I hope to see more of them. .

JOHN A. McCANDLESS What the Judiciary building needs is anotherstory. The foundations are abundant. for it. The architecture of the buildingwill permit of it.- And the room Is needed.

ARCHIE S. GUILD When I was in Glasgow a few weeks ago, I paid sixshillings (a dollar and a half) for a fresh pineapple; and it was not to be com-pared in quality or flavor to the Hawaiian pineapple.

W. B. McCORMICK Tt is being demonstrated more and more clearly atWahiawa that there is more money in pineapples where a limited area is givenintensive cultivation than where less care is bestowed on more acres.

JOHN M. MARTIN What W. R. Castie, Jr., said about Harvard 's viewson the question of sport appealed to Win ifme. you can, do your best to winby all fair means, but stop there and don't go an inch' beyond. I think thatthere ought to be more of such ideas in Honolulu.

JOHN SMITH It's about time that Honolulu got rid of that unsightlywall aroimd the High School grounds. It disfigures the lower end of Emmastreet. Jiist compare that part of the block with Emma Square, across thoway, which also was an eyesore until the fence was removed.

WALTER E. WEEDON The drought prevailing in so manr" sections ofthe Islands has held back vegetation, and with it insect life, so that the plovermigrating here find difficulty in making a living. T looked at some sent to themarket from Kona the other day. Their plumage was lustreless, and theywere in poor flesh.

TREASURER CAMPBELL No more of the bonded debt of the Territorycan be reunded at a lower rate until the Organic Act is amended. But theroare a lot of four and a half per cent, bonds which could be refunded at a lowerrate of interest and save ten thousand dollars a year if the Organic Act isamended as proposed' by Governor Frear.

HENRY EASTON T think we ought to have an automobile excursionround the island on New Year's Day. Many of the Elks would like to get inon something of the sort. For about ten dollars apiece we ought to be able tomake the trip and have lunch and dinned Tt would certainly appeal to manypeople who can not. make up their minds what to do on that holiday

CtCi"aCetf,'e""cac,;aCatf V r c r j? jc u &

The Truth About HoraceDenver Times.

A

could not be remedied. They promised to help him, and finally he was placedin possession of a glass eye and instructed how to wear it. This operation tooksome time, but the optic was finally adjusted by a physician, and then he wentto the home of the widow and again declared his love for her. He was now aman with two eyes. The widow looked at the new eye, threw her head highand said: "WSiat you take me for? You think I want husband with onepake eye and one haole eye? You go hololiolo. you make my eye shame." Toadd to his discomfiture, the Chinaman dropped his eye on the ground and ithivered into unpatchable pieces.

DR. ATCHEKLEY The Advertiser remarks that I am rejoicing because Dr.Koch had not contradicted the theory propounded by me. To prevent anv mistakeit is said that the note to a published circular was added by myself and written inmy own hand writing. If replies are permitted. I should like to correct this bydeclaring that both statements as to the subject and hand-writin- are utterlywrong, that T neither wrote nor inspired the footnote. ' As for the theory itselfneither the Advertiser nor the Advertiser's medical adviser nor anvone elsecan tlispute it.

v . , st .jt s st st s st st st st st st st st st st st st stwisdom.

"O, thou goodly jug!" '

. Professor Ferrero, the Turin historian, who recently came to America toleliver a course of lectures in Boston, has told us all about it.

And now the question naturally arises, "What about Omar Khavvaml"

4 fc J J "w J J & & & 3 Jt & & 0 J J J v J & o

O temporal O mores!Which, being interpreted, means press agenting has gone to the dogs since

Jlorace died.Our poor, pale, puny press agents of today, with their anemic street car

jingles and their faded yarns about philanthropic actresses, must bow tbe headin hame before the shade of old Horace him of the placid fatness, the mildsmile and the myrtle wreath.

For, 2000 years ago, Horace wrote verses to advertise benignant Falemiansnd mellow Caecuban for his employer, a wealthy wine merchant. And so de-

cidedly did he "make good" that his advertisements have been kept beforethe public ever since, schoolboys being taught to con such inspiring passages as:

"Now, my companions', is the time to carouse, now to beat the groundwith a light foot.

"Quickly produce, Lyde, the hoarded Caecuban and make an attaek upon

Page 5: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu · rrjririr ir jr irr ir if k k p irinrm U. S. WEATHER BU-REA-U, 5 SUGAR--96 Test Dec. 26-L-ast Centrifugals, 3.67c.; 24 hours' rainfall, T. Per Tnn

THE SUNDAY ADVERTISER, DECEMBER 27, 1908.

? X? X X X" X X X X X X X X X JO Xs .V ,-- j,' X4 X' X" X1 XLOCAL BREVITIES.

ICLDIIS SPRECKELS,besieged by the Carthaginians in hiscapital, sailed away by night and car-ried havoc to the gates of Cathage.Perhaps, not- - being a classical scholar,he iust acted according to the liffht ofThe celebrated Drevfus case at the

I"nature. - At any rate, instead of lying j

down and asking the trust to dictate j

i t

. frit

SUGAR IE. DEAD

(Continued from Fnge One.)kingdom for yearii It was through therefus.vl of the then Attorney GeneralHarcweli and the Minister of the In-

terior Mott-Smit- h to grant the Haikuwa'.er rights to Spreckels that their res-

ignations were called for and the Wil-

der ministry appointed, a fact whichillustrates the influence exercised by theSuar King over the King of the land,while the selection of the late S. G.

'4.

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Af

'''A"a'ar

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' -

r r. kiiliuri at lilt-- I .a i ijjv u iuoiauvi. ' ' j

Spreckels,. is an indication that while he

'AA

!s-

its terms, he .lumped across tne conti-nent to Philadelphia with five milliondollars in his pocket and there builtthe largest refinery in the world. Hewas now in a position to fix prices inthe trust 's own market. He eould sellhis sugar produce by the most improve imethods at a better'profit than the trustcould, at the points upon which it de-

pended for its chief returns, and theprofits so obtained would allow him tomark time in California while his com-

petitors were going ahead there at aloss. The trust studied the propositionfor. a time and then capitulated. Itbought out the Philadelphia refineryand left Spreckels in control of tnebusiness of the Pacific Coast.

Beet Sugar Interests.. And now the time had come for thenew advance of which he had dreamedwhen he put on the overalls of a work-

man at Magdeburg in 1867. The condi-

tions in California had become suchthat the beet-suga- r industry might beestablished there with success. Experi-ments in a small way with imperfectmachinery had proved" that the schemewas practicable. Mr. Spreckels built atWatsonville the largest beet-suga- r fac-tory in the United States. It was open-

ed in 1888, and paid a dividend thefirst year. By 1S97, its aggregatedividends had amounted to one hundredand seventeen dollars per one hundred-dolla- r

share. In that year Mr. Spreck-els bought out the minority stockhold-ers, paying them three hundred dollarrper share for stock that had cost onehundred dollars.

This was only the beginning. In1896, another visit to Europe in searchnf thA very latest German methods was

ArA

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REAR OF CLAUS SPRECKELS' SAN FRANCISCO MANSION AFTER THE EARTHQUAKE.S Jt & S J J . J 3 v t v . t . 4 ,4 4 . J , vt ,4 v4 St 4 S , t S

EE

Ei3

FUTfollowed by the construction at Salinas

desired those in power to be nis tnendshe at the same time used his influencein the appointing of able men, Mr. Wil-der being judged by the Hawaiian his-

torian as the ablest administrator thekingdom ever had.

In many ways Mr. Spreckels wasidentified with the political movementsduring the reign of Kalakaua. It washe who supplied the bullion for the firstKalakaua coinage, while at his personalremonstrance with the King the billintending to grant a charter to a Lousi-an- a

lottery concern was withdrawn af-ter the second reading in the Legisla-ture of 1SS4.

In JSSfi the friendship between theKing and Mr. Spreckels came to anend, and during the session of theLegislature in that year there weretwo parties struggling for control theSpreckels party, led' by the Ministry,and the King's party, which favoredthe floating of a loanon the London market. At that timethe government was indebted toSpreckels for $0)0,000. The Ministrywas defeated and the Sugar King leftthe Islands in disgust. The debt toSpreekels was paid off the followingyear.

During the period of the Provision-al Government, Mr. Spreckels' workedconsistently in opposition to the an-

nexation sentiment and was stronglyopposed to the final consummation ofthe negotiations between the Republicof Hawaii and the United States. Hisbelief was that for the interests ofthe sugar planters the right to regu-

late their own immigration laws andthe right to contract labor wa3 ofgreater importance than the certaintyof the free market of the UnitedStates, although it seemed at that timethat the reciprocity treaty which hadexisted in force since 187G would beabrogated by the United States Sen-

ate. "He endeavored to secure theunited effort of the planters againstannexation, but in this was not suc-

cessful. To embarrass the govern-ment, he issued a demand in May,18P-0-, for the immediate repayment ofsome $95,000 due the Spreckels Bank-by- ?

the government.. This politicalmove was met by the prompt raisingnf i.a niAnpv 'hp rennvment of Ihe

ITof the most gigantic Deet-suga- r piaui.in the world. The Watsonville factoryhad been almost as large as the othertwo California establishments combin-.- A

Tfio R'alinas refinery was a third

Gem theater Monday and Tuesday.The Japanese Association for Higher

Wages will hold a meeting this even-ing at the Asahi theater, Maunakeabtreet. -

George Powdell, a son of CaptainPowdell of the A?ameda, came withbis father on this trip for the roundvoyage.

Auctioneer Steven officiated asSanta Claus at the Salvation Armyhome Christmas Eve. He carried thepart well- -

The Guild and "Woman's Auxiliaryof St, Andrew's cathedral will be held

n Monday, January 4, in the Sundayschool room. :

All visiting members of the Orderof Kastern Star are requested to sendtheir names to the secretary as pernotice published today. '

Xews came by the Siberia fromJapan that on December 15 at Tokio aboy was born to Mr. and Mrs. C. Shi-ozaw- a,

formerly of Honolulu.The Elks propose to provide funds

to keep up each year the MalihiniChristmas Tree, so happily inaugurate!,on Christmas Day by some visitingtourists.

Members of the Men's League ofCentral Union church --will have chargeof the services at Oahu Frison thismorning. Theodore Richards will playthe organ and sing. Charles Renearwill speak. i

F. M. Hatch, representing thePlanters' Association, presented astatement of the eapifal invested andirturns secured in the sugar industrytf Hawaii, to the Ways and Means

' Committee, which isvconsidering the

tariff.The news of Claus Spreckels' death

reached the Advertiser early Saturdaymorning but as no paper was issuedfrom this office on that day, a smallextra containing the Spreckels dispatchand some other cablegrams was dis-

tributed.The Democratic Territorial Commit-

tee ha3 cabled Champ Clark askingthat the amendments to the OrganicAct affecting the land laws,, as well asother amendments, be held up 'untilfurther information concerning themcan be secured and .further considera-tion given them.

Rev. Frank Fitz, headmaster of Ali-iola- ni

College, and previously to thatconnected with St. Andrew's cathe-dral, is to leave January 2 for Boston,to accept a call for work with theSociety of. St, John the Evangelist,commonly known as the CowleyFathers. He' has been for years a no-

vitiate of the order. L. R. Blackmailwill succeed him as headmaster of Ali-iolan- i.

During the first week of January,pupils of Mr. Hugo llerzer will beheard in a song recital at Castle Kin-

dergarten. 'Those tak,ing part will beMiss Irmgard Schaefer. Miss EllaWight, Miss Constance Restariek, MissKaipu Senna, Mrs. Hugo Herzer, Mas-

ter Vernon Tennev, Mr. Christian Jen-

kins and Mr. Henry Clark. Followingthis, Mr. Herzer will give a series ofthree monthly recitals, .introducingother promising voices.

There will be no issue of the Eng-

lish edition of ,the Hawaii Shinpj to-da- v,

the subscribers' to that paper toreceive the anniversary number duringthe week instead. This special numberis to be of forty pages and will beissued to mark the publishing by theBhinpo of its four thousandth number.For this number short artiejes by anumber of the. prominent men of thecity have been written, in addition towhich will be reproduced a large num-

ber of rare Japanese pictures and fac-

similes bf the signatures of some ofthe leading men of the Japanese Em-

pire. An edition of five thousand copies--will be printed.

.5 . M

rrroatfr than nil the others put togeth- -

er, including the one at Watsonville. j

It cost two million seven hundred and j

fifty thousand dollars. It devouredthree 'thousand tons of. beets per day.That meant thirteen thousand dollarsfor the farmers. Mr. Spreckels had re-

fused to begin its construction untilthose farmers had contracted to keepnearly twenty-fiv- e thousand acres plant-ed in beets for a series of years. Thebeet fields that supply it with raw ma-

terial stretch for nine miles in onedirection and five miles in the other.It takes one thousand two hundred bar-

rels of petroleum a day to keep themachinery running.

His Railroad Enterprises.While others had experimented In

beet-suga- r culture in California, it wasthe Spreckels enterprise that made ita success on a grand scale, and similar-ly, while others had made ineffectualdabs at the handcuffs of railroad mo-nnnn-

llmt fpttpred the industry of

They are the highest-grad- e safes made today; every inchof material used is thoroughly tested by experts and every detailof their, construction is under their personal supervision.

Hall's Safes and Vaults are absolutely fire proof. Notfire-pro-

of S0m6timS, but all the time, even under thefiercest heat imaginable for days and days, as has been proven in

the Baltimore, Cleveland and San Francisco fires.

It's in the construction of the safesand the fire-pro-of quality

of the wall-fillin- g, a perfect non-conduct- or of heat.

They are burglar-proo- f; the high quality of materials used

"and the skill employed in their construction make them impervious

to the drill and chisel of the cracksman. A burglar rarely wastestime trying to open a Hall Safe. .

Come and see them, and judge for yourself.

the state, Mr. Spreckels wrenched j

loan and the political check causingthe Sugar King to again leave Hawaiiin anger, stating that he would neverreturn to the" Islands until Queen

was again seated on thethrone. He had been a warm partisanof the deposed ruler, and in that timeof great political excitement, whenfeeling ran high, it is stated thatthreats against his life had also beenmade here.

The Deserted Spreckeis Mansion.In leaving Honolulu as he did, Mr.

Spreckelj demonstrated his own faithin the belief that the Condition henamed for his return might be somedav met with, by simply closing up hisbeautiful mansion on Punahou streetand refusing to either sell or lease it.The house has been opened since thattime, however, once on the occasion ofa visit here of his son, John D.Spreckels, and later, a few years ago,when the Sugar '.King and his wifereturned to pay a visit to Honolulu.The mansion, erected on a tract ofPunahou property purchased fromOahu College, was for many years thenct rrivotp rpsidence in the city, be

them off. The -- merchants and iarmersof California had been trying to raisemonev'for a competing railroad throughthe San Joaquin valley. They neededabout six million dollars in all.- - Sub-

scriptions had been dribbling in, but itseemed exceedingly doubtful whetherthe amount could be raised. , But ClausSpreckels shook up the community bytaking five hundred thousand dollarsworth of stock and making two of hissons subscribe one hundred ,- thousanddollars each. Later, he lent the com-

pany another million. Nothing couldstop the enterprise after that. The Val-- 1

ley Road was hauling freight out ofFresno in 1896. Eventually it was soldto the Santa Fe, and San Francisco hada second Eastern connection.

Oceanic Steamship Line.Long before this, the Oceanic Steam-

ship Company, owned" "by the Spreckelsfamily, had been carrying the trade, ofSan Francisco to the Pacific Islands andAustralia. Alone it had been keepingthe American flag flying in the SouthPacific, and it furnished the proof thatAustralia was nearer to England b,yway of American than by way of theSuez Canal.

There are other vast Spreckels en-

terprises: electricity, gas, journalismand what not. But enough has beenaairJ in show the fashion in which thev

Hardware Department.v

5 BUSINESS LOCALS.ing only, second, to-th- at of the King'spalace. For yeaTS, until the hundredsof palms and' other trees set out by

An Eastern Star lodge pin has beenlost and a reward will be paid for its

enterprises, involving the risk and the I

use of millions, were the results of anunbending determination on his partnot to be victimized by monopoly, andwhile they ultimately turned out to beprofitable, they identified him with thepublic good.

United States. Starting with a cap-

ital mainly consisting of brains andenergy, his forward and upward pathhad been steadily opened with unwav-ering purpose, with iron will and withconcentration in the' community wherehis first success originated. Othercapitalists of the Pacific Coast trans-ferred their investments and estab-lished their homes far away from thescenes of their early accumulations.Mr. Spreckels, who had been really atthe head of them all, though far-reachi-

as his enterprises and trans-actions have been, centered his opera-

tions in the State of which he hadbecome a citizen, and though large

Absolutely fearless as he was,'though deliberate and cautious, he had

(

broken down all opposition to his vastprojects and had never failed. In the .

he had ever been among the. most ap-

proachable of men. His benefactions,though unheralded, were innumerable,and no genuine cause ever appealed tohim in vain. As a single example outnf the hundreds, it may be noted that

ing with the King for the Control ofthe city wharves, the city waterworksand the city lighting franchise, in ex-change for which he had agreed torenew tne loan he had made to theKingdom of $600,000 and increase itto a million. The King, for the firsttime in their relations, had demurred.They were good friends yet, however,and partners against the admirals intbe card game.

In the course of the play, whileBerger's Royal Hawaiians played ont-sid- e,

Spreckels had dealt to him ahand containing three kings, an aceand one smaller card. Turning it to-

wards one of the admirals, he remark-ed: "If this were poker I have thswinning hand here."

T"he admiral had thrive aces in-h- i

own hand and jestingly offered to bet,at the same time showing his hand.

"My four kings would still winover your aces, " said Spreckels.

"Where is the fourth king!" askedKalakaua.

"I am the fourth king," answeredthe Sugar. King, while just then, asKalakaua rose, angered at beingslighted, the Berger musicians struckup "God Save the King" and Spreck-els bowed to the band leader.

Kalakaua broke up the game endleft the house, attended by Colonel(Jeorge Macfarlane, his chamberlain.

when, some years ago, the streets of

are conducted and to give some idea ofthe manner of man that stood behindthem. With all his American energy,Claus Spreckels has never lost the char-acteristics of his fatherland. Althoughhe came to this country as a boy, andhas lived here for over half a century,he always spoke with a marked Ger-man accent. He had the German char-

acteristics, too: streaks of idealism,and sentimentality, alternat-

ing with others of combativeness," ob-

stinacy and something very like malice.He was a most generous and affection-ate fat hoi- until some things happenedto displease him, and then his familywas split in two, or rather three, andits dissensions were blazoned throughthe courts. These things shadowed theclose of a life of incalculable useful-ness, but they could not impair thevalue of the services that his life hasrendered to the community. Whetherthere was peace in the red sandstonepalace on Van Ness Avenue or not.there is happiness in thousands ofhomes that owe their existence to thetireless activity of the. grizzled sugarking.

His Great Aids to Hawaii.Dnrincr thp manv years that Mr.

San Francisco were tilled witn tneunemployed and a hundred thousandInllnrs were needed for their relief, at

the owner grew so as to praciicunyhide the residence, the white three-stor- y

house of the' Sugar King wasone of the things pointed out to, tour-

ists as a Honolulu landmark. Duringthe period of excitement referred toabove, in 1 893, a placard was discov-

ered hanging on one of the now pad-

locked gates of the property, the warn-

ing .consisting of a skull and cross-bone- s,

across which, written in redink, were the words: "Gold and sil-

ver can not stop lead." This, addedto the chagrin of being thwarted po-

litically, resulted in the departure on

the next Oceanic liner to leave forSan Francisco of the whole Spreclcldfamily. .

Last Visit to Honolulu.Twice since then has Mr. Spreckels

visited this' city, both visits beingpaid in 1905. these visits were paidr.artlv in connection with the renewalsof the contract the sugar planters ofHawaii had entered into for the saleof their entire product to the Spreck-

els refinerv. In the winter of 1904 anattempt was made to secure betterterms, the former agreements having

York prices lessbeen based on New3-- 8 of a cent a .pound. No termscould be arranged to satisfy both par-

ties, however, and they result was theestablishing by the Hawaiian plantersof their own refinery at Crockett.

Spreckels' Sugar W?r.

In the meanwhile, during the time

that Mr. Spreckels dominated thesuo-a- r circles of the Hawaiian Islandsand was the center about wbieh ragedmuch of the political agitations of thereigns of Kalakaua and Liliuokalam,his interests on the mainland had grownimmensely. .

o., ofier tliA organization or tne

a meeting called to raise the amount, J

enough in his capacity and in nis Bus-

iness to have been recognized through-out the world, he was distinctivelyknown as the leading capitalist of theWest.

Mr. Spreckels had always been notedfor fidelity to his friends. Towardshis employes he was a kind master,and strikes on the part of bis men

were almost unknown. He was a mantrue to his word, who, without affect-

ed hurnanitarianism or pretense of anykind, never disregarded the welfare ofthe community in which he lived nor ofmankind in general.

His personal life was simple, pureand domestic, and it is not out ofplace to add that he was much indebt- -

Claus Spreckels was the nrst to con-

tribute. "I can not make a speech,"he said; "put me down for five thou-

sand."The Spreckels Family.

Besides his aged widow, there areleft to mourn for him his four sonsand one daughter. The sons are JohnD. Spreckels, well known here; 0.

Spreckels. known familiarly as"Gus"; Adolph B. Spreckels. treas-urer nf the Western Sugar Refining

Teturn to this office.A handkerchief containing money,'

found on the street yesterday, awaitsan owner atthis office." He who hesitates is lost. Grasp the

BUY MAY-

FLOWER"present

STOCK. BUY IT NOW!

. Wines and liquors at the Royal An-

nex, Nuuanu avenue and Merchant,8undv. Lunch 23c, dinner 50.; beer

. JOe. a glass.The big annual sale of ladies' mus-

lin underwear will begin Monday. Jan-tiar- v

4, at the X. S: Sachs Dry Goods

Co. Ltd. Get ready for it.'Captain Josselvn of the bark Xmi-am- i

will tell some sea stories at theY M C. A. Tuesday night, December

V at 7:30 o'elock. All are invited.Tree.

Dr. Hoffmann has moved his resi-

dence from his downtown office to hisformer home on Liliha street. Hishouse phone number will be 1537 untilthe new telephone list is published. '

Our Mine will be developed with all"the energy and celerity that moneyand brains can apply. PVXJFLOWER" STOCK. BUY IT .OW !

. ''Benjamin" clothes are recognizedeverywhere as the acme of clothingstvle, good taste, fit and comfort.They appeal to the man who wants

distinctiveness in his clothes. See

them at the Kash Co., Ltd. v

Hall's safes are the highest-grad- e

safes made today. They are absolute-ly fire and burglar-proof- , as has beenproven time and again by the severest

of tests. Call and b?t us . show you.

H. Hackfeld & Co., Lt., "hardware de- -

partiaent. '

WOULD YOUMARRY IF SUITED?Matrimonial paper conta.n.ng adver-

tisements of.marriageable people fromall sections of the United States, Can-

ada and Mexico mailed sealed free.Through its "columns you can make

acquaintances and Unamany pleasanta congenial companion. G. Gunnels,Toledo, Ohio.

NowvfoT New Year's dinner. Youmust have the incomparable Monopole

, (red top) champagne, and those Old

Government Plantation cigars, always'just the right smoke all sizes and'color. Lewis & Co., Ltd., sole agentsfor Hawaii. 169 King street; telephone240. Ring us up when ready with theNew Year's order. '

Spreckels has been identified with theCompany and vice president of several rsugar industry ot these islands, .ms

k has been alons the lines of theThat night the two consulted. Thonext morning a loan bill was intro-duced into tbe Legislature, and, innpite of Spreckels' opposition, thmeasure carried and Colonel Macfar- -

lona loff nn flio Jipvf stfnmpp fnr T.ATI.

large corporations; ana ruuioij.uSpreckels, who has very recently beenin Honolulu and who must have ar-

rived at Ins father's deathbed only a

few hours before the end.

The Quarrel With Kalakaua.

Tim incidents in connection with

solid and permanent improvement ofplantation conditions and in the busi-

ness conditions of the Islands them-

selves. Hawaii's wealth has beenlargely increased through him, busi-

ness processes systematized, advancesin civilization promoted through thehrnad views, definite methods and de

From that time on. for a couple ofyears, there was active hostility be

Sugar Trust, its promoters looked overd.,vv Mountains into the rich pre the quarrel between Claus Spreekels j

ed to his wite, tne moiner i"children, who, to all t he qualities thatcould mould and adorn a home, hasadded a fine and discriminatingwisdom.

In carrying out his plans, Mr.Spreckels "moved along lines longthought out in advance of their exe-

cution and with unerring prescience.Every difficulty and every obstruc-tion," with very few exceptions, hadbeen anticipated and met. "When thetime was ripe and the exactions ofrailroad corporations were felt by him,as thev were also felt by the people

of California, he did not hesitate toorganize a railroad corporation thatbrought freight, rates to afigure. When .he failed to obtain asatisfactory contract for the lightingof his home in San Francisco, hefounded and established a lighting andpower company which spread its ser-

vice and brought theover the cityrival corporation to terms. These two

serves on the Pacific Coast and thoughtthey would like to annex them Theyinvited Spreckels to sell out. He de-

clined. Then the trust subsidized the

American Sugar Refinery of San Fran-

cisco to drive him but of business. The. iTO milfl sell at a loss

and King Kalakaua. annmigurelated by those who were

present and knew the facts, havenever been published. They are these,showing that events of historic im-

portance can originate in things of nomoment in themselves.

The Kins, Claus Spreckels and twoadmirals visiting in port, an Americanand a Britisher, were engaged in a

tween Kalakaua and Claus Spreckels.The latter returned his decorations.Later. Colonel Macfarlane and Spreck-els chancing to moot in New York, thlatter stated th:t. h was anxious t.

make up with the Hawaiian monarch.He was told that Kalakaua, too. wareadv for a reconciliation, and there-upon Spreckels wired to San Fran-cisco to h;ive the Alameda held nnt'ilhe could reach the Coat to sail forHonolulu.

Other things interfered with thistrip, however, and it was not until ayear later that the rival kings shookhands and resumed their friendship.

ah'-- j

''and have its deficits made up by the

cision of character shown by him inhis operations here. It is true thatthere were legal controversies withwhich he was connected, but thesehave long since ceased, and now, atthe close of his wonderful career, hislabors are comprehended, and at theperiod of his last visit to Honolulu,Mr Spreckels received the practicallyunanimous respect, and affection ofHonolulans, irrespective of party, classor sect.

He was easily the first crtizen ofCalifornia and beyond any man. had

been identified with the unequaled de-

velopment of tbe western part of the

Eastern profits of the trust.having no such resource, would,-hav- e

to go under. It was the usual trustprogram, and was supposed to be in-

fallible. But Spreckels was not theusually helpless opponent. "Perhaps he

f Afrnthoe.los. tne

game of euchre at the home or a mu-

tual friend, in 1SS6. The relations be-

tween the two principal charactershad been strained a trifle that after-

noon, Spreckels having been negotiatnad rea'i iuc.

tyrant of Syracuse, who, when he was

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THE SUNDAY ADVEETISEE, DECEMBEE 27, 1908.5

I

toons of popcorn, colored candles and

Whitney & Marsh, Ltd.1

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DATS IN HONO--LULU.

1

Mondays Punahou, M&noa 5

Height- - College Hills, Ma-kl- kl. 5

ItTuesdays Walkikl, Kaplolanl

A Park, Kaimukl and Palolo.Wednesdays Nuuanu and Puu-nu-l.

Above Nuuanu bridge,first and third Wednesdays:below, second and fourth.

Thursdays The Plains. .Fridays Town and Hotels. KS&turdays KallhL ttSaturdays Kalihi; Kameha-meh- a

Schools (third and. fourth Saturdavs of month.

mt pt4 st p!5 8

tide at Waikiki," and before separat- -

the guests 'Auld LangSvne,' to piano accompaniment. Souvenirs were sprigs of holly ia knots ofgreen satin ribbon. Among those in-

vited were Deaconess Sands, Mrs. W.L. Howard, Mrs. G. W. R, Kins:, Mrs.E. J. Lord, Mrs. R. J. Green, Mrs. M.Mack, Miss A. M. Felker, Miss IdaPoston, Miss Serretf and Miss JessieThompson.

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egin

JANUARY 2nd

Kaai's Hawaiian qnintet will furnishmusic. Among the fortunate few in-

cluded in the invitations to meet Mrs.Andrews are Major and Mrs. Win-slo-

Captain and Mrs. Moses, Dr. andMrs. Collins. Dr. and Mrs. CharlesBrvant Cooper and Lieutenant Chiltonof "Fort Shafter.

v&

Mips -- Josephine Locke, the well-know- n

elocutionist, is now in Honolulu, having arrived on the Alamedaon Christmas Dav. She is at presenta guest at the Conrtland.

v

Dr. and Mrs. Hoffmann have movedinto their own residence at tne neaa

j J JAmong the notable social events of

the week was the luncheon given incompliment to Mrs. .Walter Frear andMrs. Corwin Rees by Mrs. C. C. Parksand her sister, Miss' Trear. The func-tion was given at the AlexanderYoung Hotl on Tuesday last, andwas unique and one of the most artis-tic affairs that has ever taken placein Honolulu. Owing to the nearnessof Christmas, all the decorations tend-ed to imbue one with the holidayspirit. The place cards were miniatureboxes of "holly, tied-wit- red ribbon,and dainty eupids peering out of thecorner. Red poinsetta. growing in ahandsome jardiniere, formed the cen-

terpiece, while Hawaiian holly scat-

tered over tfc table gave a most sea-

sonable effect. Santa Claus wands,tied with red ribbon, were used as

; left on the Siberia to their honeymain1ani1Fnn fhtt

rjiiiiiirnlittr tir-few r v

nLadies' Tan o

Oxford!.

Welt

tinsel. Each of -- the fair guests wasprespnted with a red carnation lei,

b:ie the men . received leis of greenraaile. Santa Claus bonbons were used-plac-e

cards, aod the dinins-roo-

was fragrant with pine and holly.; i& fc? w'j Mr. and Mrs. James Kennedy enter-- 'taiced in honor of Mr. and Mrs. D. W. j

Cooke last Tuesday. The table was j

' most artistically arranged with its j

numerous fragrant roses, sparkling cut j

glass and beautiful silver. Among those''present were Mr. end Mrs. FrederickLowrey, Mr. and Mrs. C. Hedeman, Mr.and Mrs. Z. K. Myers and Mr. DerwentKenned v.

Kunalu. the country home of Mr. andMrs. James B. Castle, was the sceneof much merriment at the Christmasdinner which was given by the fairhostess. Beautiful roses were used ev-

erywhere in great profusion, and a deli-cious repast was served. Among theinvited guests were Dr. and Mrs.Brinekerhoff, Mrs. Allan White, MissParis, the Misses White, Mr. AndrewAdams, and-- Count de S. Canavarro.

Monday evening Mr. and Mrs. D. W.Cooke of Chicago entertained at theMoana Hotel in honor of Mr. and Mrs.Fred Smith. The dinner was mostelaborate, red being chosen as the colorscheme. After dinner coffee and liq-

ueurs were served' on the lanai.

Mr. and Mrs. Eben. Low were thehost and hostess at a large Christmasdinner. Over twenty guests were pres-ent.

Miss Marion Roth was united in.mar-riag- e

to Mr. Ed. Duisenberg by the Rev.Mr. Bliss, Friday. Mr. Bruce Cart-wrig- ht

Jr. asted as best man. Only thefamily and a few intimate friends werepresent at the ceremony. Miss Rothwas one of Honolulu's most popular so- -

i ciev girls. The happy young couple

r

Mr. and Mrs. Mason F. Prosser gavea Christmas dinner at which there weresix guests, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Lucas,Miss Mumford of Kauai, Miss Hard-awa- y,

Mr. Robbins Anderson and NMr.Smith. - The round table had exquisitefloral decorations and the rooms werefilled with Christmastide embellish-ments. After the dinner, the Christ-mas tree was besieged and a veritableSanta Claus appeared with Mrs. Clausand distributed gifts with a lavishhand. The novelty of a Virginia reelfollowed. inJS tJB

Mrs. Egbert Roberts of Los Ange-les, who has been visiting her son, A.P. Taylor, for several weeks, will re-turn home on the Alameda next Wed-nesda- v.

J &The most elaborate dinner of the

week was the one given ChristmasEve by Mr. and Mrs. C. W. CaseDeering at their home on King street.A tiny Christmas . tree was placed outhe table, forming the centerpieee.This tree was decorated with orna-ments and candles. The presents forthe guests were placed at the base ofthe tree, but were cleverly concealedby Christmas berries. To each pres-ent was attached a broad red satinribbon ornamented with holly, which

requested to pull one of the ribbons,and a most satisfactory result follow-ed, for it was found that Santa Claushad been most generous in his remem-brances. Mrs. Deering looked stun-ning in a Parisian creation of real laceover. pink. Wreaths of dainty roses soand appliqned bowknots of baby rib-bon added greatly to the effect ofthe gown. Mrs. Alexander G. Hawes, toJr., wore a black dotted net overwhite satin, and Mrs. Collins lookedpicturesque in palest green satin,, withsequins of gold. Those present wereDr. and Mrs. Victor Collins, Mr. andMrs. A. G. Hawes; Mr. and Mrs. Clif-ford Kimball, Miss Jessie Kaufman,Mr. Anderson and Cleg-hor- n.

4 4 4There will be a gala scene Tuesday,

December 29, when twenty-fiv- e of Ho-

nolulu'sL.

young debutantes will act ashostesses at the ball to be given atthe Alexander Young Hotel in honorof the young society bachelors of thiscity. The original ,date was set forJanuary 4, but has been changed onaccount of several of the younghostesses leaving for the mainland inthe first week of January.

t&, Mr. Robert W. Shingle is receivingthe congratulations of his manyfriends' since the announcement of hisengagement to .Miss Muriel Campbell.Miss Campbell is the daughter of thelate James Campbell and sister of the1 i 1 "T 17" r,nnlroo '

One of the new styles for Spring,1909. PEICE $3.50.i

T 3 A f rr llr Z swere host and hostess at a pretty',dinner on Saturday evening week. Theguests were Mrs. Herman Ashley Rob-ertson. Captain Falls and Lieutenantand Mrs. Winters.

', w

Trince Francesco Reistighiser ofTtalv is registered at the MoanaHotel.

Mr. and Mrs. George Davies haveinvitations out for a large, supper tobe given in the private dining-roo- ofthe Moana Hotel on New Year's Eve.

v

Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Wells announcethe engagement of 'their daughterLaura to Mr. W. IH. B. Fowler, a

abroad. The first part of the yearwill be spent in Cairo, the rest of thewinter in Sicily, the Holy Land andGreece. The spring and summermonths will be occupied in visitingEngland and Scotland and the rest of,the tour will be devoted to sightseeinggenerally in Europe.

On Tuesday evening Miss Krupp en-

tertained at dinner in honor of Mr.and Mrs. James Cockburn, at the Mo2 it .1.1 i:j n

anufacturcrs' Shoe uSTo" iuc oon iam.i.u ....v.. .ponvemrs. these wands were orderedfrom the Coast-an- d represented dear The marriage will not takeplace forold Santa, with his rack on his back, some time, as this popular young girlon the wav to gladden the hearts f j will sail from New York, with her pa-tb- e

little ones. Mrs. Parks and Miss ' rents, January 7. for a two years' trip if

Mrs. Herman Ashley Robertson hasjssned Invitations to a dinner to be!given this evening at the Moana Hotelia honor of Mrs. Fhilip Andrews. Mrs.Andrews has been visiting : herparents, Captain and Mrs. AndrewFuller, for . the past four or fivemonths. This handsome and vivaciousyoung matron has been the recipient!

f ranch social attention during hersojourn, and will be greatly missedafter her departure. She goes on thetransport Sheridan, which sails thefrst week in January. A number offarewell luncheons, bridge teas andEisners are being planned in her honor.The affair tonight will be especiallytnjoyaMe, for Mrs. Eobertson is notedfor tever leaving anything undonethat "will add to the eomfort and en-

joyment of her guests. The roundtable will be decorated in 'crimsonixoras and handsome eilveY cande-

labra, . with dainty red silk shades.

AN1TUAI. JANUAET SALE

O- f-

LADIES MUSLIN

TJNDEEWEAE

WILL BEGIN

MONDAY, JANUAEY -- 4

Sse Our Ad on Page Two

N. S. SACHS DBY GOODS CO,LTD.

Cor. Tort and Beretaaia Sts.

r V; a rlwas stretched to each guest's place,the table being-beautifu- lly

.Mm i.!t,. were

Froar made charming hostesses, theformer looking particularly well in awhite lingerie, gown. Miss Frear wasbecomingly elad in white silk, withtouches of blue; Mrs. .Walter Frearnever looked more charming than onthis occasion in her Copenhagen-blu- efrock, with a hat in the same 6hade;Mrs. Corwin Rees' white empire gown,with large .white bat 'covered .withplumes, with long black velvet ties,suited her to perfection; Mrs. Dunningwas stunning in a black and stripedchiffon, embroidered in rosebuds, em-

pire effect with touches of green, alarge black hat completing the cos-

tume; Mrs. Forster wore gray silk,trimmed in real lace. Mrs. Winter,wife of Lieutenant Winter, was hand-somely frocked in a lingerie gown,trimmed in Maltese lace; Mrs. Her-

man Ashley Robertson was fascinatingin one of'Turrill's famous creations;Mrs. Wadhams, who is one of Hono-lulu's great favorites, looked chic ina heavilv-embroidere- d white silk prin-cess- e

robe. During luncheon, musicwas furnished by one of the local quin- -

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STREET

CSS S3 Q

cently occurred in Mr. Buchly's homemake it impossible for the choral orother work to proceed very soon. Ourable musical director has signified hisintention of retiring altogether fromthe work, but we hope he will recon-siderth- is

and for a, few months havesome other member substitute for him.The delightful semiannual musicaliust given under Mr. Bnchly's direc-tion filled the musical circle's part ofthe program for several months, andwhen the time comes round again,comeone will substitute for a littlewhile until Mr. Buchly feel3 like re-turning to his musical work for us.

Dr. and Mrs. Charles Bryant Coopergave a delightful Christmas luncheonat,.their home in. Manoa Valley. Afragrant fir tree reaching to tb ceil-ing was placed in the drawing-roo- ,

and beautifully decorated. A realSanta Claus distributed the gifts be-fore luncheon, much to the delight ofthe many children that were present.The little tots were seated at small '

tables, where a hot luncheon was giventhem, the grownups being served amore elaborate repast in the dining-roo-

cr

Major, and Mrs. Winslow will ' oc-cupy the property formerly known asthe J. A. McCandless place at Makiki.The Major and his charming wife andtwo children have been living at theMoana Hotel for the past week, butwill move into their pretty home nextWednesday.

t8Cleghorn was host at a

most charming Christmas luncheon athis attractive beach residence, it be-ing principally a family party.

1

-- Whitney & Marsh announce theirannual sale of muslin underwear, tobegin next Saturdav.

1051 FORT

o c 3 CSS

Kilohana ArtLeague Notes

Mr. W. R. Castle Jr.'s talk 'onDickens to the members and theirfriends on Wednesday evening wasgreat treat. The Art League is muchindebted to those of Mr. Castle Js fam-

ily who made it possible to arrangethe affair. Those who could .not at-

tend regret that Mr. Castle's visit wasshort- - and also that the literary

circle did not have more time in whichnotify the members. v

Coffee was poured by Mrs. WeaverSr., Mrs. W. W. Hall sand MissBeatrice Castle. '

A large number attended and thehour for going home was unusuallylate for an Art League affair. Therewere many of Mr. Castle's old friendspresent, who so much enjoyed meet-ing him again that" time did notcount.

The literary committee .are Mrs. L.McCandless, Mrs. P, Weaver and

Mrs. Cox.

The third annual "Local Authors"literary evening will be given by theliterary circle on the evening of Jan-uary 7. The task of gathering thework of our local authors is especiallypleasing to the chairman of thiscircle.

'- t?

The program for the Saturday morn-ings during January, February andMarch is being prepared. Mr. Hitch-cock will contribute two pictorialmornings on art.

ti?8 t,ft8

The sad events which have so re- -

tet clubs, wnieh added greatly to .tne j Exquisite place cards, with handpaint-pleasur- e

0f the guests. I ed roses, were greatly admired. Be- -

in pink asters.

Mr. and Mjs, Swanzy and little MissSwanzy are spending the holidays atthe Volcano House, and are en.ioyingto the utmost the antics of MadamePele. .

Mr, and Mrs. Sam Wilder gave amost enjoyable but informal dinnerWednesday evening for Mr. Tarn Mc-Gre-

who sailed for Paris, France, onthe Siberia, yesterday. AmericanBeautv roses ornamented the . table.

' -sides the guests of honor those presentwere Dr. and Mrs. Ernest Waterhouse,Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Cooke of Chicago,Dr. and Mrs. James Judd, Mr. JamesWilder and Mr. Thurston of SanFrancisco. v

tjtLady Winifred Howard of England

is registered at the Moana Hotel andwill spend the winter in the Islands.

fcy

Mrs. J. W. Saunders and her hand-some daughter, Miss Dora Saunders,arrived on the Alameda and will spendthe winter months at the popular Mo-ana Hotel.

fcv

Mr. and Mrs. L. Tenney Peckfriends" at dinner on Christ-

mas Day at their beautiful home onWilder avenue. The center of thetable was occupied by a miniatureevergreen tree, decorated with fes- -

m - m iJ J JLieutenant Randolph, 20th Infantry,

of Fort Shafter. accompanied bv Mrs.Randolph and children, leaves for themainland on the January transport,having received a four months' leaveof absence. They will visit Lieuten-ant Randolph's home in Charlestonand will "later visit in tlje Northwest.Mrs. Randolph is the step-daught- ofColonel Heizenian, Medical Depart-ment, U. S. A.

Mrs. J. B. Reilly bf Waikiki cele-brated her sixtv-nint- h birthday De- -

ceniber 24 by a social tea. The birth- -

uav caKe was decorated witn red anayellow, the colors of the gentlemanwho presented it. Lady Kismet wasint-oduc- ed bv Mrs. Howard, and,

J though a deaf mute, proved to be averv interesting personaee. Thehostess read her latest poem, "Even- -

TO THE PUBLIC:.

We thank you for your generous patronage during the year now closing and solicit a continuance ofsame during the coming year.

Our stocks are still in excellent shape to meet most demands, while a great deal of goods are en routeand expected by early steamers.

Our representative will leave shortly for the Eastern markets to buy the" newest and best of thfe offer-ings for Spring and Summer seasons, which will insure our usual up-to-daten- ess.

With best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. We remain, v 7Yours truly

B. F. EHLERS & CO.

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THE SUNDAY ADVERTISES," DECEMBEB 27, 1908.

. I

? jp jc je k ? js iPtf4 " i t? r j . tc , . . j,TYROS TRY RUGBY GAME ANDSURPRISE THE OLDTIMERS

The Alameda Team Challenges Honolulu to a

Match Next Month Players ShowSpeed and Cleverness.

'awork in the back line and markedtheir mtn well, but Eickard's sidemade np for their lack of speed and

The Rugby game would soon commence,(Excitement was not very tense).Upon the field they punt the ball.(They cateh it, sometimes let it fall). experience in the back territory by theHat hark! What is that burst of sound? 1 splendid way in which their forwards(One prayer is lying on the ground). backed up when the ball was punted.

i' . f sill ia ---' v

- ift 'Sum M w W

L-t-ft twit ffiiiniim i n.mnr ifrjim 'tDi. - x- - 1 iiiix - mtiir rrilfatin nini r ifin .1 Vmini , rwn

After the game, Jerome stated thathe was considerable surprised at thewonderful turn of speed shown by theplayers He also said that the Ala-meda team was in good practise, asthe boys had been playing with theOlympics and Barbarians, and wouldbe ready to play a game against anAll Oahu team on Saturday, JanuaryIf!, the day after the next arrival ofthe vessel in Honolulu.

There will be another big practise fxnext Saturday at the same time, ami

'The ball is bust," they cry aloud,(a groan of anguish from the crowd)."How did.it happen!" someone cried,(Original and trite beside).The answer came both quick and

straight,(In fact it bore a woeful weight)."Upon the ball big Kellett sat,"(That ball was very, very flat).

It would be a gross exaggeration tosay that a large and enthusiastic crowdof Ruglyites turned out to take partin the first big practise game and teachthe young idea how to scrum and pass.But it is no exaggeration to say thata bunch of very enthusiastic learnersdid come out and played for over anhour with keen zest, getting better withevery play and putting to shame thejeering of a small gang of scoffers whostarted by laughing and ended by be-

ing interested.By three o'clock a straggling bunch

of lookers on, most of whom were super-

annuated players, was scattered over

some more speedy ones will turn out.Akina and Chi Bui have both statedtheir intentions of playing and theyshould both be towers of strength inthe serum. Mon Yin may play, and,if he does, will soon turn into theideal half-bac- quick, light andspeedy.

Jerome also told of a game in whichhe played recently on the' same sidewith Manager MeKenzie of the SantaClara baseball team. Husky Mac wasa perfect terror in the forward line.He would break throagh with greatimpetuosity and stat dribbling rushesthat often ended in a score. TheSanta Clara and Ste. Marv's bovs

A

f

AfA

AAthe bleachers while on the field and in

1 A 1 - 11 A. t H "

THE VANDERBILT CUP COMES TO AMERICA.George Robertson, an American, in an American-buil- t Locomobile ear'Xo. 16, winning the Vanderbilt Cup race on Ixing Island, October 24.

Lytle, American, driving an Italian car, Xo. 6, was second, and Luttgen, a German, driving a German car, Xo. 5 was third. Robertson's average was64 1-- 5 miles per hour for the 258 1-- 6 miles.

Iiae UUi 0 e ethe dressing rooms were a score or more i gtend to stav by it.of Highehool, Tunahou and Alnolani , '

Am,th ig piece of infor.boVs. j mation that comes via the Alameda

There was no sign of the Alameda j player is that the game is going aheadt, but Jerome nrned ur. bv the next' ;n Seattle. The University of Wash- -

5 & (3 $ $ $ itt fcr 3j i? t! 5 i& J

voice and was ably assisted by a corps tSf ,y jf jfi ryy ji j .acar and stated that, the dav uefore 'ngton has elected to adopt it nextof ihaving been a holidav, the rest of the y'ar. ami t""e j.h

team had to work and so could not ! Rugby championship series towardsthe end of the exposition. Teams will

LIKE WINNERSpossibly manage to come out.

About half time Bob Catton came- oa. the field and played in the back

line. He is an adept three-quarte- r andhis skill in running straight, tackling,fending off and passing neatly was aplend:d object lesson.

Elisha Andrews and Rickard pickedud and thev each started with twelve

of rooters who yelled their heads offfor the Mailes. X

The result of the Maile-Y- . M. C. A.game was 3 to 0 but it would havebeen less if the reds had had betterscoring ability. During the second halfthey threatened the Maile goal time andtime again only to shoot wide or havetheir shots balked by the clever goal-keepin- g

of Belser.There was an unpleasant incident in

the second game when a penalty kickwas given against the reds for a foulcharge in the goal area. Instead ofquietly stating their intention of pro-testing, the Y. M. C. A. (became shirtyand started to walk off the field, but

Sport Nofes I

The Marines defeated the Engineersfrom Waikiki camp yesterday after-noon at Kapiolani Park by three to two.This is a great victory for the Marinesalthough it seems probable that the En-gineers did not have their.,regular teamas they have been drafted to differentparts of the island for surveying work.

5

The final race meet exodus will takeplace on Tuesday by the Mauna Kea.This is the last chance to get to Hiloin time for the "big event and it ia

be taken there at the expense of theexposition, and it is more than proba-ble that the Hawaiian Islands will beinvited to send a representative teamto try conclusions with Stanford,Berkeley. Vancouver, Barbarians, Cast-aways, Olympics and other famousteams.

There is no doubt as to the enthu-siasm of the players While it is verydoubtful that Rugby will ever beginto transplant the intercollegiate andsoccer games, it forms a very pleasantnovelty, and, as Mr. Blanchard re-

marked, "It is excellent practise forboth eames and very good for thewind."

Only Chance for Reds Is ThatMailes Lose Their Game

Next Friday. BEFORE WE MOVE, AND

V,GET THE BENEFIT OF

LOW PBICES

were stayed by Sam Chillingworth, whodrew their attention to the fact that expected that the steamer will be wellmany people had paid for admission

Standing of Soccer League.P. W. D. Pts. For Agst.

Maile . 5 3 1 7 9 2Y. M. C. A 5 2 1 5 8 7Diamond Head.. 5 2 0 4 12 10Punahou ..5 1 2 4 4 13

The Punahous made' good on Fridayand handed it to the Diamond Headsby 2 to 1, but this clever victory will

GLOAMING KIDS

HAVE TO BRACE UP

men, which number was augmented tothe full fifteen before the game wasover. First the fofwards were putthrough scrum practise and then linedup for a regular game.

About half of them had played be-

fore and one would think that an at-tempt at a game would be a very

, straggly affair. Strangely enough thiswas not so. It was not Rugby of thecounty variety but it was Rugby andthere were little flashes of keen play-ing that wore admirable.

Henry Chi!l:ngworth was one of thetyros who playei in the bick line andhe very soon got jerry. He and Elishawith Bob Catton and a very -- fast run-ner in a blue sh'rtt name unknown, be-gan a series of runs that soon had theball in Rickard's territory., Andrewsmade the usual mistake of beginners inrunning sideways instead of forwards,but he lost, this habit towards the endand some of the passing bouts betweenhim and Henry were of the get therevarietv.

crowded with sportsmen going to watchthe ponies prance.

Waukenphast Ayres gave a ratherpeculiar reason for doping Burns towin. He said that Burns had shownhimself such a good business man thathe would inot be likely to take on John-son unless he thought he could beathim. What? With thirty thousand,win, lose, or draw in sight? Not much.

Don't forget that it rains all the

and they had the game coming to tbem.The protest is on a technical point

that' it is up to the referee to decide.Jt is a moot point as to whether thecharge was foul or not and is one ofthose disputes that can too easily ariseinsoccer.

A very excellent way out of thistrouble was suggested by a member ofthe Advertiser staff who said that whenat school in Canada, they had an inter-scholasti- c

soccer league and had a ruleframed for their own use. which readthat a referee should not give a penalty

not aid them to reach the championship A. M. DietzJJewelry Co.

Fort Street, Next to Arlelgh'g

The polished and polite press-agen- t

of the Cupid league, W. Tin Chong,

did not come through with his usualvery readable forecast of the Aala parkgames. But wcrd comes that he hasgone to another part of the island tospend the Christmas holidays.

1'erforce, therefore, we turn to the

rung on the ladder as the Mailes wontheir game with the Y. M. C. A. thusputting themselves well in the leadwith 7 points to the red shirt's 5. TheDiamond Heads and Punahous are nowtied ii third place.' The outlook is very bright for the,

time in Hilo, or nearly all the tunekick unless, in his opiniona goal would . and that the mud-lark- s will have a

the shot 'cinch, watcu your rancy swim a tewcertainly have resulted fromIt rivers before you bet on him.whieh was balked by the charge.

schedule and find that Samuel di Hop- - Mailes. They play the Diamond Heads be a good idea for the soccerAn admirable piece of work T.n'ki AoVita V id arp tin against th league to adopt this plan next year.i v' . .7 - - .... - next Friday and, unless the latter

Barnhartwill deliver a superior grade of ICE atf

Per Hundred2 Pounds

none ty tgan. an o.u piaver, ana r.n ; Aaas in the first ganie and that Gloam- -The ball make a much bett" thanhid, . showing theytok;ds wm hay mething t0 sav

been carriel down to the Andrews; did against the Punahous, they willthe Chi Bui aggregation. FINE WEATHER

FOR GOLFERSAs no games were piayea last oun- - nave little trou'Die in winning their

day the standing of the league remains game and taking the championship withthe same with the Aalas, White Soxand C. A. Cs. tieJ for first place with

t$t

John Hamilton, steward of the yachtHawaii, is still alive and rememberinghis island friends. He sends a veryartistic Christmas card and best wishesto all his friends, from Everett, Wash.

SMOKE AIDS LONG LIFE.There was gloom throughout the St.

Francis Home at 600 Fifth street to-

day, when it became. known among theaged inmates that Julia O'Brien, theoldest and most popular member of thelittle colony, had died during the firsthour of the morning. Julia O'Brienwas 103" years and eight months old.

To the" fact that she had smoked at

line, not by concerted passine. but byclever following up and dribbling bythe forwards, and was finally kickedover the sidelines bv an Andrews bi--

to save a core. Egan ran up, tookthe ball and threw it out at rightangles in the, proper way, right intothe hands of En Pue.who romped ov rfor a trv (touchdown). Meanwhile,

To Enjoy the Day

ORDER A RIQ FROMf

' The Club StablesFORT STREET Puone Main IN

A telephone message from headquar-ters states that the weather will befine at the Country club links today.Don't believe it? Well, sporting fore-

casts of this paper are usually prettygood. What about Johnson?

The big benzine buggy will be work- -

the forwards on the other side wt-r-J

nine points.The Punahous also bid fair to de-

feat the Y. M. C. As. in the next gameso that the latter have only a veryslim chance to win out. If by somefreak of fate the Mailes should lose tothe sparklers and the rising Punahousshould take defeat at the hands of thereds, then the Mailes and Y. M. C. As.would be tied. But this is not consid-

ered a very likely chance by" mosr ofthe fans and the Maiies come very nearhaving the championship already in

a percentage of .750. Wrhjle the Japshave .250 and the poor old Twilightsstill at the bottom with .000.

The Twilight- - have been doing some"

good practising and have some newplayers ?o that they may be able totrim the Drag'-nlets- . It is up to themto do this and start in to make thingsinteresting, which they can do if theywill onlv" buck up.

The Kidlet league will be busy againtoday at Atkinson park. They mayhave to find another diamond if the

ptandinc round getting their breath.The oldtimers on the bleachers roaredwith delight ard were keenly appre-ciative of as clever a piece of workas one could want to see anywliere.

The scrum was a stumbling-block for

ing as usual as also the chef who has I least five oipefuls of tobacco a day for.,,i.i .tt,o. t mra-- the last twentv-fiv- e years she attributed

the most inviting of repasts, not, tomention the usual recurrection delica

the forward. They, of course, could j

not divine th innr consciousness of j

cies which he so ably serves upit all at once, and the can as not .

t negotiations to lease the park their pockets. Many interested golfers who were notto the government come to anything. loHidingsher perfect nerves and placid tempera-ment. Since entering the institutionten years ago, Mrs. O'Brien had made ita practice of taking a smoke just he-for- e

retiring at six o'clock and anotherimmediately upon arising at seven nextmorning.

She was able to read the newspaperswithout glasses to the last, and tookkeen delight in discussing current mat

There was a goodly crowd out to see ' on the links on Christmas Daj' will gorow seemed" a trine nluctant . to gettheir heads down and burrow, but theygot on to this later and Rickard 's sidedid some excellent work in their ownterritory by keeping the bal in andTushing it down a ki dribble.

Andrews' side had the better team

ONE OF THE OFFICEES.Judge What brought you here?Tat Two policemen, your honor!Judge Drunk ftgain, I suppose?,'Pat Yes. sir; both av thim!

the games. 8o much so, in fact, that j out to find just where Andy McLarenSam Chillingworth was heard to remark j is. Some say that he started on hiswith a smile that the league would be j walk round the island and some thatdeclaring a dividend pretty soon. There j he did not. This question can only bewas plenty of noise and excitement too. settled 'by going out and interviewingKellett was there with the megaphone the genial professional personally. ters with the sisters and the doctors. J

Chicago Record-Her- a Id.

n ." i." JO S" J. ' i' V J' 8' ' ? ' " " ' ' J'" ' 8 8" ' h ' i' MIXED COMPOSITION.

For

OVAL AND SQUAREPICTURES.PRINTS ANDREPRODUCTIONS.

"Whistler" Old-Gol- d Framesfor colored subjects.

- n'

aI A

rA

AA'A

A

"Gimme a pound of sugar," snappedthe crabbed woman in the red sun-bonne- t.

"What will it be, madam?" askedthe rural storekeeper, who was slightlydeaf.

"Oh, T reckon it will b" a composi-

tion of n,l'l :rn' glucose5. That's whatit iiKvavs turns out to be when I buyt l:Ctf

And the next time the crabbed wo- -

'V i man in the red sunbounet came in thei . ...i.. . . ....... i :t. i.,:.,i,t,.t ,.l..rh-

Hill STOl I'KCI'P'T M-l- IMl-llll- .-l l."to take her ((rder.

Pacific Picture

Framing Co.

AfUAXL", BELOW HOTEL

A'A"a

I i-- :. s. -- i 1, .V t 4

r.

7

V

V

f

INSULTED HIM.

An extremely learned young lady,whde reading her book, had fallen off

a sharp c''!V. and l;:v injured and help- -

-- s on the sniids below. FinaKy. i'ipnswer to her cries, she saw the form NOTICE.

AAA'a

A

A

a cam iuhi.or. with a rniii his liaitel.over Order of the Eastern Star.

to iier rescue. MIO cianeii nei ii.tuuiand exclaimed fervently: ! All visiting members of the Order

"At lat ouie succor has arrived!", of Kfistern Star are kindly requestedThe fisherman turned and eyed her ; to send their name and address to

indi-"iantl- for a moment, and then : the undersigned as soon as possible.veiled down to her: j MRS. A. M. WERSTKR,

"It's a sucker I am, js it? Well. Secretary, Leahi Chapter No. 2.vou can stay just where you are!" , SKI Vida Villa.

A'ArA

BEFORE THE SPORT OF KINGS WAS DRIVEN OUT OFHONOLULU.KAPIOLANI PARK IN THE MONARCHY DAYS.t

& v" , J J ! . - & v ' ! J J J J J S J J J & C J X J.w v . k , , v v v v :

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it

THE SUNDAY ADVERTISER, DECEMBER 27, 1908.8

DOC

4. CilALMEES DETROIT "SO," 1909 KODEL, DID IT; 208 MILES A DAY FOR 100 CONSECUTIVE DAYS NO OTHER AUTOMOBILE EVER RAN AS FAR IN THE SAME LENGTH OF TIME TT IS A WORLD'S. n1rn at i rr.n nfrmrT nonon mm ctmDT'TimnTTC ipacit rx "i orui mtt.po a tav rrtTJ inn fnvefmTTITJT! TAVK TfVTT"P TOTT'MT TT? TX'xs

RECORD ON" SUNDAY, AUGUST 9, lyUo, Wtl AbSitixiii iu jmz ux uua wuuui uuu uxuv wo vx uuiuuu w Aiiijju a .isa j. v wj.ikj.uww j. jj .ww .ww...DAILY BETWEEN THE PONTCIIAB TRAIN HOTEL, DETROIT, AND THE HODGES HOUSE, PONTTAC AN EXACT DISTANCE OF 208 MILES A DAY, THERE WERE MANY WHO SAID THE TASK WAS TOO

BIG. THEY DID NOT KNOW THE CAR THAT HAD UNDERTAKEN THE TASK.

.ERFORMANCE IS THE TEST OF MECHANICAL FITNESS. The

IS? performances, of our "30" car prove conclusively the excellence ofthe distinctive mechanical features of our cars, such as the castingof the motor, clutch, and transmission into a single unit; , the en bloc

casting of the cylinders; the constant level splash lubricating system;' the two-bearin- g

crank-shaf- t, and the body suspended between the axles on a longwheel-base- .'

WHY TAKE A CHANCE?

CAN PUT IT DOWN as a general rule that whenever any one

YOU to "knock" another there is a reason for it. Don't forgetand whenever you hear any one 'knocking" somelfiing, whether

it is our automobile or somebody's sewing machine, remember thatthere is come reason for it. We have tried to get together all the reasons whyour competitors have been "knocking" us. There are tea reasons hy theyarc particularly "sore" at us.

FIRST We were the first to reduce the price so that a real motor carcould be bought at a fair price.

SECOND We were the first to announce our line for 1909, which neces-

sarily help up the sale at the end of the season of other unsold 1908 cars.THIRD We had the choice' of the best dealers in this country. Out of

a total of 4500 dealers in the United. States, 2611 applied for the agency ofour cars. We closed with 103 only-r-o- f the very best. The others are natur-

ally disappointed.FOURTH We sold our entire output of. 3000 cars in les3 than six week's

time. r ,...-FIFTH We are Just about fire' years in advance in producing our Thirty

for $1500, and it naturally meant a quick shift for other makers to get their'

COPY.

Detroit, Mich., U. S. A.,December 7. 1908. t

Sales Manager's Office.Messrs. E. O. Hall & Son.

Corner Fort and Kins Streets,Honolulu, T. H.

Gentlemen:In reply to your letter of November

23rd, Mr. E. R. Thomas is still verymuch interested in our concern. He isa member of the board of directors,and still has a large interest in theconcern. When Mr. Hugh Chalmersbought a certain amount of Mr.Thomas' stock he became president ofthis concern. Mr. Chalmers was VicePresident and General Manager of theNational Cash Register Company for anumber of years, and. on account ofbeing so well known he was madePresident of the E. K. Thomas-Detro- it

Company, and consequently the namewas changed, and the car named afterMr, Chalmers on account of his stand-ing throughout the country. This waspositively the only change that wasmade in the organization, except suchchanges as Mr. Chalmers made to im-prove the organization. The Chalmers-Detro- it

Fjrrty of today is the same carthat has been built for the last twoyears, and .which was called theThomas Forty.

Yours truly,(Signed) ,' CHALMERS-DETROI- T

MOTOR CO.LEE COUNSELMAN,

IC-- H. Sales Manager.

factories down to a basis where they could hope to come anywhere near produc-

ing a real motor car at such a price. We can therefore fairly say that our actionin producing this car ha brought . about an unlooked-fo- r revolution amongmost automobile makers. :

SIXTH We have been teaching the buying public that . $1500 is all theyshould pay for a car of the power of our Thirty, and we have gone further and

If you were having your life insured, would you take out a policy in acompany that had not already proved its stability?

Would you put money in a bank that had not proved it was sound?When you buy clothes, do you buy of a tailor .who has not" demonstrated

"that, he can make good clothes? ...In all your dealings, do you not favur the man who can prove that he has

made good?Then don't take a chance on an automobile. 0What is the use of taking a chance when you. can invest your money in

one that has already proved itself?'

The (CHALMERS-DETROI- T "30" has. proved itself. " 'IT IS NOT AN EXPERIMENT 857 USERS KNOW THAT IT IS NOT.The production of a $1500. car was not an afterthought with us. It was

not forced upon us by competition. It' is not a last year's higherpriced modelcut down to meet this year's demands for a lower --priced car.

Any unprejudiced engineer will tell you that in point of construction it isfar and away ahead of any other car on the market selling at anywhere nearits price. While we admit there are other good cars on the market we don'tclaim to make the only good car yet we know that our car is of higherrade --

construction than any other medium-price- d car, .'

Then, again, with the Chalmers "30", you don't have to experiment. Untilcars have run on the road and have been given every test, and until a sufficientnumber of cars are delivered, the manufacturer himself does not know forcertain what troubles are likely to come up.

We axe past the trouble stages, having given our cars every test that canpossibly be given to "them. We know they are right, and we will stand backof them.

"

7; ,- ';'

'-

t'

.

We believe that any one of the 857 Thirties we have already deliveredwould go this same 20,800 miles in 100 days just as this "Pontiac car" did.

The Chalmers-Detro- it "30," 1909 model, has been put to the test-b- y 857people and it has made good. ' J ; ,

Then why take a chance on a 1909 car that has not yet thoroughly proved'

itself? ' ,

taught them that $2750 is all they ought to pay for any automobile, unless theywant to own one of four .or five particularly high-price- d cars,

SEVENTH If we had not produced our Thirty for $1500, some companieswould still be trying to sell their two-cylind- er cars and their flimsily-constructe- d

four-cylind- cars at prices ranging from $1250 to $2500. We have forced thesecompanies to change their plans when they were not expecting to do it.

EIGHTH We have won so many victories, with both our Thirty andForty, that there is bound to be more or less feeling, or, we might say, jealousyamong other dealers on that account.

NINTH Our line of advertising has been such that we have preventedothers from selling their cars until our cars could be seen, and of course thathas held up sales for other dealers a big reason for feeling "sore'i at us.

TENTH We have done that which others said was impossible have pro-

duced a .high-grad- e, "classy" car at the average man's price-r-a- nd we did itso thoroughly and quietly that they didn't know about it until we were readyto make deliveries. N

"THE ONLY MAN WHO DOESN'T PRAISE THE CHALMERS 30' IS A MAN WHO DOESN'T OWN ONE."

THEZZZ O C O CUD O CTT3 O C . O CZD O C ; E7T70 C23 O CTD O C3OP O Q O C DOC 3

r

t? 1? j t? jf jf j? r jf t? & a? . jr & 1? t? t? a? t" t? t? " X" ' " " it? t? as" . jv . k j j? jKEPOIKAI TO

STEP DOWN

Sunday Advertiser(Entered at the PosUfflce In Honolulu,

. H. T., as aecond-clJL- ra matter.) -

Published Every Sunday Morningi By tbHAWAIIAN GAZETTE) CO.. LTD,i Yon Bolt Block. 5 South Kin St.j SUBSCRIPTION RATES:

Delivered by earner In city, per, month t 2S

failed to any address for one yearla the United States or Territoryot Hawaii S.00

m!2&

K??sr?r ) L"4' OVl 'f

4Classified Advertisements

WANTED.FURNISHED or unfurnished cottage

K ". r housekeeping rooms. H. Martinez,eare of Advertiser. 313

--FOR RENT.COTTAGES with board. Mrs. J. Caa- -

sidy. 2005 Kalia Road, Waikski. .8133

STRAYED. C'' V--v

'

"WHITE bull terrier, from 1009 King;

v fc--i ' V

SUBTRACTION AND ADDITION.

f, "When a stout person gives a seat to a thin person, nobody cares. But how different it is when a thin person gives a seat to a stout person. "

Wt J tt J J . it V J S Si J & J t J i J S J Jt J & J jijt & J$ J J Jfi t J Jt J J

street. .Name, "Jumbo"; slightlydeaf. Keturn or notify F. W. Car-ter. 313

'

. FOUND.HANDKERCHIEF containing money.. Apply at this office. 313

LOST.CRAY handbag, containing money,

" asd name of owner ou eards. Re- -

ward on return to this office. 8231

EASTERN STAR pin. Reward if re- -

turned to this office. 313

j : i

The indications from "Washington arethat Judge Kepoikai has resigned andthat a new appointment will shortly bamade.

Governor Frear, it is said, carried Ke-poika- i's

resignation with him when hewent to Washington, to be used in casethe administration took a somber viewof the charges made against Kepoikai.The hearing of the Waldeyer suit,which began in November, has stayedprpceedings and hermetically sealed In-

formation regarding the matter inWashington, as it was thought that caseought not to be complicated with achange in judgeship during its progress.It is over now, and things will move.

As soon as the case was finished thefact was cabled to Washington to re-lease the matter from the Operatior. o,fthe star and silence which had con-trolled it. .

Among other charges which haTbeen' made against Kepoikai, and theone that seems to have appealed moststrongly is the fact that an estate be-longing to two Japanese minors washeld in his court while the minorssuffered for want of it. and the Judgehimself borrowed a thousand dollarsof the estate frn the administrator onbis note without security, and did notpay it until the matter was exposed.

It is saTd that Judge S. B. Kingsburywill be Ppoiirted to succeed Kepoikai.

COMMERCIAL NEWSContinued From Fage Four.)

Reports continue of seasonable rainin different j.arts of the Islands,' break-ing droughts here and there that,though not 'much talked of, were feltwith more or less keenness. In thewatershed contributary to the Wahiawadam, while there have been no heavydownpours, there have been repeatedrains during the past month, and thewater in the reservoir, which at onetime was almost empty, is now stead-ily rising and is upward of forty feetdeep. The rains have been sufficientin Niuiauu valley to provide a season-able supply for the city, and to enablesluicing to le resumed at the uppernew dam.

Rains on Molokai.On Molokai there have been rains

mauka. though not much on the actualcattle ranges. Still the cattle are ingood condition and are not suffering.George P. Cooke, the new manager ofthe American Sugar 'onipany ranch,left, with his wife, on Christmas Dayfor the ranch of which J.e will imwhave complete charge.

Public Matters.Superintendent of Public Works

Marston Campbell has worked out vervcompletely plans for the coming bien-nial period for his department, for pre-sentation to the Legislature. Those inthe aggregate will call for appropria-tions amounting to about a million dol-lars.

Kapaa Lots to Be Sold.Land Commissioner Pratt has corn- -

NOTICE.

pleted his report on the Kapaa lots andhomesteads, and everything is nowready for the 'sale of lots there. Theland now proposed to be disposed of in-

cludes practically all the Kapaa landsexcept the cane lands.

New Special Agreement Sale.The Land Commissioner is advertis-

ing for sale the remainder of the lotsin the Pupukea-Paumal- u tract. "Thesewill be offered at auction at an upsetprice under the new agreement of saleadopted by the Governor. Under thisfive years' residence on the land is re-

quired, and title can not be acquireduntil the expiration of ten years.

"Want Kakaako Land.The United States Army Quarter-

master is seeking to secure from the

meal in which the seeds are crushed anddistributed through the substance of themeal, are said to make the most ideallybalanced food for livestock that isknown.

Hydrographic Survey.Through the efforts of Governor

Frear at Washington a complete hy-drographic survey of the Islands i3 tobe mdde.

Xhe following are the transactionsof the Stock Exchange during the week:

Monday 100 Olaa, 4.G23; $2000 HiloR. R. Con. 6s, 92.00; 120 Haw. Pineap-ple Co., 23.

Tuesday 10 Ewa, 26.123; 200 Haw.Pineapple Co., 23; 50 Pioneer, 140.

Wednesday 23 Paauhau, 19.50; 43Oahu Sugar' Co., 27.73; $1000 Hon. R.T. & L. Us, 306.50; '$3000 Waialua 5s,100.

Thursday 140 Oahu Sugar Co.',27.625; 30 Ewa, 26.125; 20 Waimea, 30.

There were no sessions of the Ex-change Friday, December 25 (ChristmasDay), nor Saturday, December 26.

HONOLULU RAPID TRANSIT &

LAND COMPANY.A ftemi-annua- l dividend of 3 per

ent on the Preferred stock and aqaarterlr dividend of 1 per cent on theCommon Ftock have been declared bythe Directors payable December 31,390S. The stock books will be closedto transfers from December SSth toDecember 31st inclusive.

WM. WILLIAMSON,Secretary, Honolulu Rapid Transit' &

Land Company. ' 8230

THAT WILL MAKE A LAEQT HAPPY OR THEHOME BEAUTIFUL.

DRAWN WORK,, CREPES, KIMONOS, SCREENS,

ETC., ETC.liishop Estate, either by purchase or

CLEMMNCE SALE DF

BEAUTIFUL MILLINERY

lease, land 111 Kakaako for coal storageand corral purposes.

New Election in Kauai County.The Supreme Court has decided that

there slyj rl be a new election in KauaiCounty for Auditor, the recount of thevotes for that office" giving a tie.

Trustee of Campbell Estate.IT. yi. von Holt has been appointed

trustee under the will of the late.Tames Campbell to succeed Mrs.Campbell-Parker- . R. w. Shingle has

BORN.Honolulu. Decemer 26,of M. J. Garrida, a'

GARRTDA Into the wifedaughter.

NUUANU, ABOVE HOTEL.

DIED.LfLTKALANI Tn Honolulu, Decemberbeen appointed guardian of the estate j

2-- , 19's, of '.pneumonia. Prince Al-fred Edward Kanihomauole, eldestson of Mr. and Mrs. E. K.

31i$s Tower, Honoluln '3 leading mil-

liner, anpi.'.tnces that there will be aclearance sale of trimmed hats for thenext few days to make room for thenew year's styles, wl.k--h she will se-

lect in person on the Coast.Jfiss Power will leave soon on a

InsiDCs trip to the Coast, and duringBr absence th? salesroom will be en-

tirely renovated. The clearance salegives adies of Honolulu opportunityof buying beautiful trimmed hats atgreatly-reduce- d prices.

iX

ot Mary Beatrice Campbell, youngestdaughter of the late James Campbell.

To Grind Algaroba Beans.C. W. Renear.has devised a machine

fer the purpose of grinding algarobaleans. A working model has been test-ed and seems to meet the requirements,and a larger mill is to be built at once.Algaroba beans, when ground into a

Thekaha.

and Jolam College, Niupaipai, under; Acting Governor Mott-Smit- h3--

tor-Re- v.

Bishop ."Willis. He was a mem- - day received a cablegram announcingber of the Kawaiahao church and Sun-- ; that Governor Frear and, Attornevday scliool and the Christian Endeavor

'

General Hemenwav returned to NewSociety. The funeral was held at 3 p. York yesterday and are on their waym. vesterday. interment in TCnw-iialin- ti,,--

young chief was born at Tlonn.i-Quee- n

street, in the old resi-o- f

His Maiestv Kincr Knlnl.-n-ndence . jLuiaivdlliland Queen Kapiolani, in the yearlSS2. i

lie was educated at the Royal School cemetery "j, : i j.

I!

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Tr-nTm- !r r r rSECOND SECTION 3 4;!' I'"0'"'"'''!' Z Wl It 1 1 I I I I I J 1 1 If Jr III H III Iff Z It mm wa-vraa- w

UHUini J. li Ii 11 II Itl II I I(1JEI!I V ItPAGES 9 TO 14. PAGES TOW , 9 14..Jit.ir je je t jfm Sktd"HONOLULU, lii v ciVitiLit 27. 1808.

f n ' k ' ' tf is r F ? i o t v p p rSTART THE

THE TREEif

cw Year THEJHLDRENV

Malihini Christmas Gifts Ar

Distributed in Bishop

Park.

WITH THE RESOLUTION OFBEING ON TIME WITH

EVERYTHING

Ycu can "best keep up to thatresolution by having the rightkind of

ii'r

It was a novel, bare-legge- d Christ- -

A CLOCK jmas-trc- e celebration which took place,in the pretty park opposite the Alex- - j

ander Young Hotel, Friday morning;bare-legge- d because few of the four- -

teen hundred boys and girls who VJ

passed by the tree and received gifts --

of candies, dolls and toys wore shoes j

or stockings. It was just one of thebeautiful summery, trade-wind- y days

IWe have an assortment of

them, one of which "will surelyplease you in style and price.

A- I

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in Honolulu in December which arethe envy of the snowclad, frosty main-- !

land- - celebrants.In the middle of the park rose a

beautiful pine tree fresh" from the :

summit of Tantalus, trimmed withChristmas toys and glittering tinsel.113 HOTEL STREET 1 lieneatn its branches were stacks of j nj,

toys and dolls and close by were ta-- 1

with fin nnrcoq stnA ant-;- i

.'tVt 1', W fi , . Vfi,M'4 . L- - -

V;feS ill LVi I : nvr ftu.,7irr;f-- .

v ir Tlif! fc iV. Ill LULOJ in I i5-

... . .. .mt ..M.Tfi fc, sA .,),- .- Ti 'MhdmVfiMm.. ,a.vii .j. v axm 4,& ...mxK.ffX r Jt lf 7i

diers, cloth dogs, horns, masks andpyramids of candy tied up in bags, asight upon which the hundreds oflittle folks greedily cast their eyes. , yAround this treasure-trov- e were the j

"Malihinis" whose absence from their j

1908 STYLES- ANT)

SPRING PATTERNS

NOW TO BE SEEN AT

i , Advertiser Photo.C THE ,,MAXIHNIS, CHRISTMAS TREE IN BISHOP PARK, OPPOSITE THE ALEXANDER YOUNG HOTEL.

v & ? v-- j j fc fc4 18 J & & & & & j j ,3 , & & & j St & v ,? fc4 St St St St St'Si St St St St St St St St St St St St St St Si

ed on to others who passed out bon

V. W. AHANA & CO., LTD.

snow-cla- d homes on the mainlandprompted them to spend their Christ-mas Day in Honolulu among the poorchildren. Nearby was the Hawaiianband, directed by Kapellmeister Ber-ge- r,

and close at hand was an autoin which was seated Ernest Kaai's Ha-

waiian quintet club. So there wa3good cheer, music and malihini smilesfor all the children who came.

A squad of police officers under

FASHIONABLE TAILORS.

bons.Mr. Jackson, the moving spirit in

the celebration, looked after the boys,gave them horns, patted them on thehead, blew horns himself and createdenthusiasm all along the line, for soonthe park was filled with the noise of

42 KINO STREET. PHONE 21

A COMING MISER.

A Sunday School teacher asked herscholars to each learn a verse to recitewhen they dropped their pennies atthe next missionary meeting, appro-priate for the occasion.

They all came prepared the nextSabbath, and the first little fellow, ashe dropped his penny, said, "Blessedis he that considereth the poor."

The second repeated, "He .thatgiveth to the poor lendeth to theLord."

The teacher was delighted, and as

Daily DaintiesPure California Wines; Nuts. Mince

Senior Captain Parker kept the crowds I norns and snouts. Mrs. Jackson ana

of Honolulans back from the fence j Mrs- - Bryan looked after the little girls

around the little park, and assisted in! and to each child gave a doll. And so

lining up the children out- - in the j laden with candy, dolls, horns, masks,street, two by two. With spectators,!0 he lower end of thepark grad- - omeat, Plum Pudding. Chestnuts, J--

ors. Cigars.LEWIS & CO, LTD.

Family Grocers and and ua,1y nIled- - bven aIter tne line 01young old, autos, carriages j

FOR WOMEN169 KINO STREET Telephone 240 prospective recipients 0f the malihini children who had received tickets pass-Sant- a

Claus, Bishop street was pack- - ed b7 there were many hoys and girls. . . .l 3 1 1 1 '11. X 1

the third, a very little boy, went for-ward, she whispered in his ear, "Now,Johnny, speak out loudly.'.'

Johnny, reluctantly dropping hispenny in ,the box, lisped, "The fooland hith money ith thoon parted.'"

r--"A young Irishman desirous of work

f ed, everyone in expectation. Everv outsiae wno oa wna learxm eyes

window in the great Alexander Y'oung uPon the scene- - A tourist noticed theirHotel and the parapet of the long

' 8rief and SoinS o Mr. Jackson said:IMPORTERSroof garden were lined with spectators. "If you wouldn't mind I'd like to buy

a hundred tickets, and " but Mr. ing his passage to America, applied to

By reason of its great popularity with fastidious youngmen and women, the Regal Shoe has become known asthe "Thoroughbred" Shoe. In our immense new stock of1909 Spring Regals are the best features of the smartest andnewest New York custom styles. They are "snappy" shoesthat cannot be found except in Regal Shoe Stores and thehighest process custom shops. REGALS ARE

$3.50 AND $4.00.

In the little park, photographers hadthe captain of a sailing vessel for! Jack son answered quickly, "Don'tput up stands and upon two of these j

Moving-Pictur- e Expert R. K. Bonine ! think about t send the kids in" and berth. Upon being told to get a rec-

ommendation, he secured the neces-sary paper, and was duly installed as ain they trooped and each received some

member of the ship's crew.Operated two machines and took hun-

dreds of feet of films of what can beused as one of the best promotion pic-

tures to be displayed on the mainland

As the ship was about to sail, the

EIML SMOE STOREcaptain found they were one handshort, and wishing to take advantage

AND S1GNE

of

Fashionable

. illinerya greensward and hibiscus Christ McCandless Building, King and Bethel Streets.of the flood tide, took a German sailor

from the wharf and gave him the job.This angered the Irishman, who kept

mas in Hawaii.From the upper part of the park to

his. eye open for a chance to get evenand past the tree and on to the lowerpark was a roped walkway. This led

One day, while the German was clean-ing the deck with a bucket and brush,a huge wave came aboard and carried

thing. The bags of candy gave outand buckets were brought out and thehats of the boys filled. There wassomething for everyone.

"Now, Captain Berger, play us some-thing lively play the Scout's Patrolmy favorite," said Mr. Jackson, andswinging his hat, he started the bandoff on another lively selection and theboys and girls shouted with him.

Then Judge Sanford B. Dole and Mrs.Dole came into the park and greetedthe malihinis and expressed theirthanks to them for providing such anovel treat to the young folks. JudgeDole mounted a table and spoke to thecrowd, referring to the generosity ofthe strangers, and he said somethingabout the Christian spirit. It was some-thing he hoped to see perpetuated. In

past the heavily-lade- n tables heapedthe German away, bucket and brushwith things to please the youngsters.and all.

The Irishman was an interested specThe "Malihini Christmas Tree"tator. and running down to the capwas gotten up by tourists who found

themselves, possibly for the first time, tain's cabin, he rapped sharply on thedoor. HI EN andfar away from their own homes, with

"Well," said the captain, wondering CLOTH! i Jwhat was no, "what's the matter?" BOY'SDUNN'S HAT

SHOP

an. outlook for a dismal day. A

Christmas tree for the roor was theresult of much thinking on their part.And so it was that Mr. and Mrs.

"Sa-ay,- " replied the Irishman,"whin I came aboard this ship yemade me git a ricommendation, didn tve!"Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. "J. J.

concluding, he asked for three cheersfor the good strangers, and the crowdresponded.

It was a sight to gladden the heartof stranger and resident alike to seethe cosmopolitan array of nearly fif

"I did." said the captain. "WhatBryan, Miss Margaret Bryan and Mr.Cassidy, assisted by the Misses Mur- -

of it?""Ye didn't make that Dutchman git

one, did 'e?"ihy of Helena, Montana, and BaronXMAS RED BEERY "No." said the captain: "Iess Molcareh, stood at the tables asdidn't."

"Well." veiled the Irishman exhosts. The band played, and at aHi

teen hundred children march past. Firstin line were some Portuguese, then Ha-waiian- s,

then Chinese, then Japanese,white children, colored, Porto Ricans,Spaniards, Koreans, and there werehealthful and crippled children, repre-sentatives of nearly all nationalities

(

V

; Negligee Shirts and Neckwear

Fancy Suspenders

Suitable for gifts; one pair in a box.

YEE CHAN & CO.King and Bethel.

signal Mr. Rath of the Palama Mission awa ' wit yergonecitedly "he'sbucket. "

TO ORDERstarred the head of the long Columninto the park, through the roped walk-

way to the tabies. Mrs. Moulton dis-

tributed candy and the children pass- -

here, guided to the tree by the repre- - A furnished or unfurnished cottagesentatives of the Salvation Army, the is wanted. See classified ads.MRS. E. M. TAYLOR, FloristMissions and Christian Settlements. !

tf 9? f t? & jo p & & & & ,g. jj. ,j. p jj. jj. jj. ftftftf"AHave You

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perfect eyesT Our exclusivebusiness is the preservation, aid,and comfort of defective eyesby the proper adjustment of

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A. N. SANFORD

Optician, Boston Building. . ,w v :. A MERRY CHRISTMAS

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Near PostofficeFOURTEEN HUNDRED CHILDREN OF HONOLULU RECEIVING CHRISTMAS GIFTS FROM THE HANDS

r OF GENEROUS TOURISTS, WHO PROVIDED THE "MALIHINIS' CHRISTMAS TREE." r

St St v! Ji J S St St StJ StJ c t w v c t v t v v t J J

nk 9

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THE SUNDAY ADVERTISES, DECEMBER 27, 1908.IO

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V. n.i.. yfmrrvemm. r.unr nC.CAROFTTIE WORLD;;

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Neglect in

TreatingImpaired Sight

occasionally leads to blindness.The services of an experiencedand capable optician will oftenrepair a weakness of vision. In

onr Optical Department is themeans to ..an end an opticianwho knows the what, where andsow of the sight.

1 F. Mil I CO. IllOPTICIANS

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"It's friendly iAIohafwas the first utteredgreeting my 73rd birth-

day received." sam- -

UEL L. CLEMENS.

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HAWAIIAN MANTELPIECE IN MARK TWAIN'S BILLIARD ROOM.

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of practical retirement. Theaters andhalls were not spacious enough to ac-

commodate the crowds that gathered to(

i li mi V t wont f ' a rMark Twain Happyin His New Homeusmess

The following is a letter from E. R.Thomas, President of the E. R. Thomas

Motor Co. of Buffalo, manufacturers of the

famous Thomas Flyer, who denies in toto

any active interest in the Chalmers-Detro- it

Co.:BUFFALO, U. S. A., December s, igo8.

Von Hamm-Youn- g Co., Honolulu, Hawaiian Is.

Gentlemen:

Our sales department has just called my atten-

tion to your letter of the 20th, also to item appearingin the Pacific Commercial Advertiser of Honolulu un-

der date of Friday, November 20th last, in which Iwas indeed surprised to see the statement that theChalmers-Detro- it $1500.00 car was made by the De-

troit Thomas factory. This statement was evidentlymade through an error on the part of the person mak-in- g

it who probably supposed that the E. R. ThomasDetroit Co. was still in existence. This, however, Is

not the fact as my active interest in the E. R. ThomasDetroit Co. ceased nearly a year ago, at which timethe Company was dissolvedand has not been in ex-

istence since. The Chalmers-Detro- it Co. was organ-

ized to take over the business of the E. R. ThomasDetroit Co., and although I still have a financial in-

terest in the Chalmers-Detro- it Co., I have no active

interest therein and have not had since its formation,

my entire time and attention being given to the active

management of the E. R. Thomas Motor Co., of thiscity.

- My reason for writing you is that I wish to pre-

vent any confusion on your part or that of your cus-

tomers as to the relationship existing between thisCompany and the Chalmers-Detro- it Co. As statedabove, they are entirely separate and distinct concerns.

operating along entirely different lines.

Trusting this may be sufficient to disabuse yourmind of any doubts remaining in this matter. I am,

. Yours very truly,

E. R. THOMAS MOTOR COMPANY.E. R. THOMAS, President.

H I l 11 1 lit 111 II. t l It 1 11 L. O. UC ' 1 1

coeds of this his last tour and the bookthat followed, "Following the Equ-ator." and other publications since, notonly paid all his debts, but left him ahandsome fortune, and once more he isenjoying a state of affluence and all bythe fruits of his own labors." After thislecture tour came the years of his res-idence in the various capitals ofEurope. Referring to these, Mr. Clem-ens said:

"I suppose you could call the dwell-ings we occupied in Europe our homes."While in England we lived on the out-

skirts of London, near the home of

among them shacks in Missouri andNevada, while establishments in Lon-don, Paris, Berlin, Vienna, Buffalo,New Haven and New York were lock-ed upon by him as home-- The last ofthese the one which he sought andestablished upon the termination of hislast lecture- - tour around the world,made necessary because of the sweep

Mark Twain in a serious mood! Can

the millions of readers who have fol-

lowed him through the pranks of"Huckleberry Finn" and "Tom Saw-

yer," thence en tour with "InnocentsAbroad," and so on down to the pres-

ent time, reconcile themselves to thisthought! Yet, such was the case se-

rious and thankful. Serious because

that earries a stock of the best

there is in the various lines dis-

played, for twelve months inevery year, is the one to pat-

ronize when quality is wanted.

With us the valne is represent-

ed by the price charged there's

hanncny here.

Then we spent twoing away at one fell swoop of all his i Mr. Gladstone.savings of a lifetime was in lower years in Paris, that house being one of

that season "when the most frivolous of ! Fifth avenue, New York, and hereus trv to concentrate our thoughts on New Yorkers had hoped that Markthe sterner problems of life; thankful j Twain would remain and live out hisbecause those brilliant faculties with ! life. About two years ago, however,which God so generously endowed him I Wanderlust proved too attractive, andare as sharp, keen and active this ! he started forth to found a home after

his own heart, and this he has done atH.F.II1XMD.Leading Jewelers

FOBT STREET

"The Glen," as his Connecticut estateis called.

Christmas as they were hlty-tw- o yearsago, when he reached man's estate.

Twain's New Hone.Mark Twain's new home stands on

an eminence that commands a sweep-ing view of the 180 acres of meadowand woodland that comprise his estate.Beautifullv shaded and velvety lawns,

Early Days in Missouri.There is more to be told of Mark

Twain's early days in Missouri than isto be found in the pages of "TomSawyer" or "Huckleberry Finn."

the finest in the gay French capital.Tts builder was both an architect andan artist and in designing and decorat-ing his home he gave full scope to histalents. The rooms were large, brightand cheerful and, the decorations were,among the most beautiful I have everseen. I dearly loved that house andseveral of its best features I haveembodied in this house as well as Icould that is, without marring itstreatment from an Italian viewpoint.

' Time Spent in Foreign Lands."Then there were two years in Vi-

enna and about the same time wasspent in Berlin. It was while we wereliving there in 1891 that Emperor Wil-

liam invited me to dine with him."Here I interrupted Mr. Clemens 's re-

miniscent mood to ask if what he hadwritten about that dinner was true.

"Yes, it's true," he replied, "theEmperor did all of the talking, butI suppose, that was all right, for if I

now that the old housedotted here and there by flaming flower Few, perhaps, kibed, and the angular and severe shrub-- 1 in Florida, Mon roe county, Mo., which

Seasicknes

Prevented

bery that characterizes the decorative ! had been gradually torn to pieces byof the general run of Italian ) relic-hunter- s under the belief that' it

gardens, stretch forth from the villa, j is Mark Twain's brithplace, is not thewhich is a replica of the Florentine j house where the humorous lecturerVilla. La Capponcina, which Mr. Clem- - j was born. The real birthplace is someen's late wife so dearly loved and distance away a two-stor- y woodenwhere two of the happiest years of j dwelling that was materially changedtheir lives were spent. La Capponcina ' after the Clemens family left it. Hereis now the home of D'Annunzio, the the author was born seventv-thre- e could entertain him in turn I wouldItalian poet.

One of the most recent dis-coveries of medical science is achemical combination of Men-thol and Valerianic Acid, theMenthol exercising a calminginfluence on the stomach andthe Valerianic Acid quieting thebrain. This preparation iscalled

years ago. With his parents, "Sam,"when but three years old, moved toHannibal, Mo., where the old home isstill standing at Hill and Main streets.Hannibal is the land of "Tom Saw-ver- "

and "Hnck Finn," and consider- -

The main building is a rectangularpavilion with wings on either side, thewalls of cream-colore- d stucco and thelow hanging Italian roof covered withcopper-colore- d tiles. Across one end isthe living room, with windows on three j ablv more than half the adventuressides and walls paneled in dark wood, i of these most popular American boysThe fine, big pipe organ, previously were taken from Mark Twain's ownin Mr. Clemens 's various homes, is! life. It was in 1870 that Mark TwainVALIDOL

feel that I had an equal right to doall the talking, too."

"In Florence," the humorist con-

tinued, " we spent about two years,and happy years they were. My wifedearly loved this villa, which com-

manded a beautiful view of the Pis-tori- a

Mountains and here it was that'Joan of Arc' was written. Then cameour removal to New York and the homewe -- . established at Fifth avenue andNinth street."

A Eemarkable Man.Time has dealt kindly with Mark

Twain. His complexion is ruddy, whichis accentuated by his shock of snowyhair and flowing mustache, as spotlessas the suit of all white clothes whichhe invariably wears while within doors.

built in the unlighted end of the room. moved to Buffalo, and there bought aIn the center is a huge fireplace, which home, shortly thereafter marryingMr. and Mrs. Clemens bought many j Miss Olivia L. Langdon of New York,years ago in Scotland. This room j but between Hannibal and the newopens on the Italian loggia, with a ' home on Delaware avenue, Buffalo,sweenine view of the beautiful rolling there werp vears of ceaseless wander- -

country. Here Mr. Clemens and his ing for Mark Twain. He had been a

If taken in time, will preventseasickness in over 75 per centf eases, and will always relieve

it.It is nsed by the recommenda-

tion of the ships' surgeons onthe racifie Mail and North Ger-man Lloyd lines. Sold by

printer's devil in Missouri, and for

A carload of the famous flyers left the

factory about the middle of December,

and is due here in two weeks. '

The von Hamm-You- ng Co.,Ltd. Agents

five years a pilot on the boats of theMississippi river. He served five His deepest black eyes are as bright

daughter spend much time together,although his study is remotely distantEntering the house by a main door-way in the central pavilion, the vis-

itor finds himself in a large, squarehall, with billiard-roo- to the rijfht,living-roo- to the left, and the en

weeks in the Confederate Army, and l ,3C! PVer:"his lansrhter auite

tnen rrieii goia mining in evaaa. iiebuilt a hack for himself there, which

as hearty and contagious and hismovements and conversation cannotfail to create the impression of a cease-les- s

activity of mind and body.could almost be stowed away in thefireplace of his present New Reddingtrance to the dining-roo- opposite the

main doorway. Three long windows j vila. This shack he graphically de- -Oil Hi 1, LIFTING THE HAT.in the dining room open on a terrace, scribes in "Roughing It" as a dwell-overlookin- g

the Italian garden. Here a ing built in-- a crevice, between tworocks. The roof was a canvas, left ! A voung man, not wishing to do any- -number of small spruce trees, resem- -Limited bling the cypresses of Italy, recall the open at one corner to serve as a chim- - thing that was not agreable to the lawsnew Cattle tumbled through the hole of etiquette, sent the following ques- -davs Mark Twain spent in his Floren

tine villa The ofiice of Mr. Clem- - every now and then, smashing his tion to the editor of a Kansas paper:ens's secretary, the kitchens and pan-- 1 furniture and disturbing his slumbers, ." Please tell me when and where are,tries or cum- - the rest of the first floor, j so he moved. After writing for the or is, the correct time for a gentlemanOn the second floor is Mr. Clemens's J Virginia City Territorial Enterprise, a to lift or remove his hat?" And herebedroom and study on one side of the j Nevada newspaper, he journeyed to is the reply he received:houe. the apartments of his family the Sierras, went to Honolulu the fol-- 1 "Without consulting authorities of Shirtwaist

lowing year, returned to America, etiquette in fact, giving it to yon olt- -

crossed the continent to New lork, hard, so to speak we should say atand in lSf7, sailed for Europe on the the following tunes and on the follow- -

and several guests' chambers on theother.

Why He is Thankful."You asked me why I am thank-

ful." said Mr. Clemens in an interviewQuaker City. "Innocents Abroadwas the result of this trip, and on hisreturn trip Mr. Clemens and MissLangdon met on the ship, and thjir

ing occasions respectively tue naishould be removed or lifted as circum-stances indicate: When mopping thebrow, when taking a bath, when eating,when going to bed" when taking up a

given a few weeks ago, as he hitched j

Kits rf li i r o tiAqror f f li nn.n I

fireplace, where hu- -e logs were merrilv l'1' JTlily followed.Mark Twain was an editor in Buffalo j collection, when having the hair trim- -

KIMONOS,

LADIES' COATS

SILK AND COTTON CREPE,

LACQUER-BRONZE- S.

BUY HERE.

l i. - ' i.meu, wnen oemg snampooeu, wuenstanding on the head."

AutosRepaired

by men who are experts in theiiline. No experiment work dont

', here by amateurs. Careful attention given every machine.

JHE von Hamm-Youn- g

Company, Ltd.

WE PUT

NEW RUBBER TIRES

ON OLD WHEELS

BABY CARRIAGES,GO CARTS,

INVALID CHAIRS,

IRISH MAILS,TRICYCLES.

J J

COYNEFURNITURE CO., LTD.

KNEW WHICH WAS WHICH.Johnny's mother gave him two five-ce- nt

pieces, one for candy, the otherfor the Sunday School collection.

Light-hearte- he was tossing thecoins in the air on his way to thechurch, when suddenly one eluded hisgrasp and disappeared through a cellargrating. Down on his knees he peer-ed into the dark pit, only to realize hisloss. Then lookiug thoughtfully firstinto his hand, next at the cellar stepshe remarked:

"Well, there goes the Lord'snickel!"

for about two years. Referring tothis period of his life he said:

"I could not live in Buffalo becauseof the frequency of fur overcoats."

In Hartford, Ct.In 1871 his comfortable home in

Hartford, Ct., was purchased, and therethe family lived for fifteen years. Herewere some of the happiest years of theauthor's life. He was idolized by hisneighbors and he was surrounded byevery comfort until thirteen years agofinancial ruin overtook him, and oncemore this wanderer was compelled tostart forth on a lecture tour, that hemight be able to settle with his credit-ors and begin life anew. As a meansto this end he elected to make aworld's lecture tour, and set forth as-

sured of the sympathy of every man,woman and child who had learned tolove him and look upon him as theone who had done more to perpetuate

BETHEL AND HOTEL.

cracking. "In the first place mywanderings are at end. I am home.After half a century of roaming aboutthe face of the earth, living here,there and everywhere, I have select-ed this beautiful spot, pitched my tentand here I shall end my days. As yousee, I am surrounded by many memen-toes of bygone days; many beautifulexamples of art are about me, somepriceless in value the gifts of dearfriend" others worthless, as far asthe valuation the world would placeupon them, but dear to me for associa-tion's sake, each recalling some sweet,memory of a pat, once dark, thenbright, dark again, but now as brightas one of my years could wish for. Asyou have found out, I am but a shortride from the hustle and bustle of NewYork, when duty calls mo hither, yet,in less than half an hour aftftr termi-nating my business or social liga-tions there. I can be in the center ofthis beautiful spot in the very heartof nature.

"I have roamed and rambled solng. so often settling down in what Ithought was to b niv home for alltime to come, yet instinctively feelingthat it was not the home I mostardently craved, that now. since mydream is realized, can yon wonder thatthis of all things should be that forwhich I am most thankful f

Twain's Various Homes. .

From then on Mr. Clemens chattedof the various homes he had had,

BLOSSOMS AND FKUIT.By and by the fragrant blossom

Upon the orchard treeMay turn into an apple large,

As sour as sour can be.Likewise the sweet girl babr

You dance upon your kn eMay at forty be a spinster

As tart as t;nt can be.

the literature of the New World than j

any other American author.Although a man of sixty at that time

he set forth with all the ardor andenthusiasm of a boy on his first out-ing in a woHd all strange. In manvways the task he had set for himself

Two rare beautiful coats of the Tung Dynasty.Ipukais, Poi and Cannibal Food Bowls Authen-tic Antiques.

Artistic Mats, Tapas, Fans, Baskets and Hats.Teco Pottery and Russian Brasses.

HAWAII & SOUTH SEAS CURIO CO.

ALEXANDER YOUNG BUILDING.(Under th Electri.c Sign Open Every Evening.)

SO ARE YOU."The professor says my bathing- -

was more dithcult than that of SirWalter Scott when he wrote some ofhis best-know- works while hamperedby a burden of debt.

Twain as a Lecturer.

suit is rather exiguous.""Is that a compliment!""I don't know. I'm going after the

ForDRY GOODS

Opposite Catholic Church Mark Twain's popularity as a lectur- - dictionary now." Kansas City Jour- - 3er had not suffered from his long years nal

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THE SUNDAY ADVERTISER, DECEMBER. 27, 1908. xr

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Terror to Dirt Anywhere

'

PAH

MM,

9pedition to Africa, visiting Legandaand ascending Rumenzori, the chief

j mountain of a range m equatorialVanity Fairture into the queen's presence withthese feathers upon her head, and itmeans that the aigret is stamped as un-fashionable throughout every rank insociety. Royalty has its undoubteddisadvantages, but something may bewritten also upon the other side of theslate. The power to make cruelty un-

fashionable is one to be envied, andevery country would be the better foran influence that is no less real ,be-cau- se

it has no coercive laws to back it.

Africa, between Lakes Albert Edwardand Albert Nyanza. It would seemthat a demand that the prince "go towork" is a little superfluous, unlessworking is considered to be inseparablefrom money-makin- And with moneythe duke seems to be very well sup-plied as things go nowadays in Italy.

The curious legal point has just beenmade in one of the London countynnnrta fJiat a wifo'a Hrpssps nr Tint

known, unhappy and harassed thenwhy do it? What a pity when theguests are glad to say "good-bye- " andthe hosts delighted td hear it!

In iie older countries the perfectionof country house hospitality is to leavethe guests entirely alone except for afew welVunderstood obligations, suchas punctuality at dinner. Every facil-ity is provided for a variety of amuse-ments, such as shooting, fishing, golf,or tennis, and the guest may avail him-self of them or not just as he pleasesand without the annoyance of specialinvitations. The number of obligationswith which the visitor is expected tocomply is reduced to the extreme mini-mum, and this seems to be the best wayto make him feel at home, always pro-vided that his enjoyment is really amatter of consideration to host andhostess.

necessarily her own absolute property,,but that they may only be given to herby her husband for her lifetime. Thequestion came up' in an action arisingout of a seizure under an execution ofdresses supplied to a Chelsea woman bya firm of dressmakers. The husbandcontended that the seizure was illegal,as he gave his wife the money to buythe dresses, and they were accordinglyhis property. The judge said that ithad been laid down by the late LordSt. Helier when he was Sir Francis.Teune, president of the divorce court,that if a man presented his wife witharticles of jewelry or clothing for useonly during his lifetime and only-t- beused as what was legally termed "para-phernalia," such articles did not be-

come the wife's absolute property.It seems that the legal: position is

this: the term paraphernalia includesall wearing apparel and ornaments suit-

able to the wife 's station in life whichare given to her only to be worn asornaments of the person only, but theterm does not include family jewels orgifts from strangers. A wife can notdispose of paraphernaJia in the lifetimeof her husband, nor can she dispose oftheTn by will. The husband, even dur-

ing his wife's lifetime; may sell or give,her naranhernalia to strangers, and

The Queen of Spain has been findingherself in hot water pretty often lately,and her predicaments are usually theTesult of her failure to understand thateven queens have to obey and that4thetyranny of etiquette is of the most ex-

acting kind. When Queen Victoria isin trouble she usually asks advice fromher uncle, King Edward, and this is al-

ways forthcoming in a few terse andvigorous precepts. The queen "was an-

noyed recently to find that Spanishcwurt precedent forbade her to enter-

tain any guests not of royal blood, andas she particularly desired to do this,she gave way to a fit of petulancewhich culminated in a letter of com-

plaint to King Edward. Her uncle'sreply was worthy of Machiavelli. He

.wrote, "Do not make enemies, and re-

spect other people's stupidity whennecessary. In time, if you are wise,you will get everything your own way."

The advice seems to be', good, butwhat a tremendous price to pay forgetting your o'wn way. The injunctionto be wise has an admirable seeming ofsimplicity, and there is, no doubt, noth-

ing but a lack of wisdom standing be-

tween most of iis and our pet desires.An admonition to become wise is oneof the colloquial commonplaces of to-

day, but on analysis it seems very muchon a par with a recommendation to addsix inches to our height or to cultivatea Roman nose or blue eyes. The godswho live forever have attended to thesematters for us, and they have distribut-ed wisdom in homeopathic doses, andnot without a suspicion of favoritism.

Queen Alexandra has issued a pub-

lic statement to the effect that she doesnot wear aigrets, and this, of course, isintended as a rebuke to a cruel andhorrible practice. The official state-ment means something more even than

At All (Grocers.

The Springfield Republican com-

ments on the sadness of social obliga-tions and deplores the pass to whichwe have come "when the guests areglad to say 'good-by- e' and the hostsdelighted to hear it":

It is' a curious thing, but about thistime of year there is nearly always awail rising' on the folly and discom-forts contingent on a visit to a countryhouse. Thank heaven, none of the woesunder which the wealthy and the socialclimbers croan affect those in moderatemeans. Such as visit their friends,knowing that at the most not more thantwo servants are kept, go with a freeheart, .for it is the rarest thing in theworld that visitors are obliged to tipthe domestics in such houses. It is thelarge establishments where there areservants galore, that compel the paying

".of tips from the butler to the groom.The man or woman who spends aweek's end at such a house finds thesetips a distinct drain on the purse, andwhen the guest is only of moderate for-tune, a severe one. Tere are theyoung things too, that visit. The girlasks her older and more experiencedfriends how much she ought to givethe butler, how much the maids. Sheis in doubt, too, whether her hostesswill ape the British fashions and notappear At all in the morning and inthat case what is she, the visitor, todo with herself? "Ought she to spendthe morning in her own room, or inthe library or music room or oughtshe v to keep out of sight in thegrounds?" There are the host andhostess, they have their woes also; theyhate the whole thing. At least it issaid house parties are voted a bore,but they pay off their social debts thatway. They can't or won't give enter-

tainments during the winter, and somerepayment must be made to those whoasked them to'musicals the last winter.

rt

The ear has been --unaccountably neg-lected in the reconstruction of the fe-male form divine," but this omission isto be rectified if we may trust currentrep'orts from Paris. Of what avail is itto model all other parts of the body ifan unsightly ear is allowed to defacethe proportions of the main structure?

There are two ways of rectifying themistakes of clumsy nature in the mat-ter of the ear. We can boldly attackthe offending organ itself or we canproduce the desired effect by modify-ing its environment. The woman witha long ear, for instance, can do won-ders by a judicious arrangement of thehair so as to hide its upper exuberance.But such mild measures, seem to laclcthe courage that distinguishes the mow-e-

toilet.The coloring of the ear should be at-

tended to at once. Nature has made asad mess here, and we have red, white,and yellow ears at every turn. Theydon't match the complexion, and as weknow exactly where the complexioncomes from, we may have recourse tothe same aids. But remember alwaysthat the lobes should be of a brightpink and the shell of the ear shouldfade away into a faint rose. It is sur-prising what a touch of pink on thelobe will do in the way of rejuvenation.But be careful! Paint may be cheap,but it should not be wasted.

Do it in this way: First pinch thelobe firmly and even painfully. Thenrub in some cold cream and wait until

m

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Uncle Sam Chooses

EwBBk

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paraphernalia are also liable for thehusband's debts. It, would be distinct-ly annoying to a wife to have herdresses seized at the instance of, say,the husband's. cigar merchant, but thatis how the English law stands today.The case recalls another decision givennot long ago, that money saved by awife out of her housekeeping allowancebecomes the property of the husband,he having given it to her for a specificpurpose and that purpose not havingbeen fully carried out. i .

It was the Empress Josephine, saysthe Springfield Republican, who intro-duced the lace handkerchinf becauseher teeth were not what they would

They are all sore tested as iar asthat. It means that no lady can ven

The Borden Condensed Milk Companyhasvbeen awarded the big Manila contractlor Pioneer Milk.

The first shipment comprises 1500 Cases,and there are many more to follow.

QUALITY was the Basis on which thismilk was chosen, in competition with manyothers.

Uncle Sam OUGHT TO KNOW. Hehas tried them all.

have been had she lived in this genera-tion of dentists. Whenever she laugh-

ed she would put her handkerchief toher lips and so set the style. In thepresent day the handkerchief is as lit-

tle in evidence as possible, and even asmall corner of it is not allowed toprotrude beyond the edge of the jacketpocket.

Thtre are few decorations for wo-

men in Europe, the most ancient ordercoming from the Austrian throne. It is

the decoration of the Star and Crucifix,and is given to women of high rank.Another is the Luisen, founded inmemory of the beautiful Queen ofPrussia, whom Napoleon insulted.This order is given to all classes ofwomen who commit any great self-sacrific- e.

A NURSERY RHYME TO DATE.

Ask Your Grocer for

. PIONEER .

the agony has abated. Now apply therouge and note how it brings out thecolor of the face. The, color of the faceshould, of course, be previously deter-mined upon.

Sometimes the ears protrude, andnothing can be more unsightly. In thiscase a nightcap should be worn withsmall pads so arranged as to press theears firmly against the head while sleep-ing. A few weeks will suffice.

Earrings, if worn at all, should bemade the subject of prayerful atten-tion. Thex suspended ring should beavoided by women with long ears, whowill find that those screwed on the lobeare much more becoming. Avoid dia-monds, because they compete with theeyes. Mrae. ..Bernhardt says: "Wearpearls and sapphires, but the diamondnever. The woman who wears a dia-mond in her ears will take the lustreout of her e.vs. " If the ears are ugly

and a brother or even a husband maybe trusted for a frank opinion do notwear earrings or anything else thatwill make ,the ear conspicuous. Rubiesgive an appr-aranc- of size, turquoisesproduce a blue or thin appearance, butpearls werr1 obviously created by naturefor the adornment of the-- female ear.Worr.pn with classic features and oncemore the brother or the husband maybe invoked for a verdict can safelywear large and even barbaric earrinep,but such iewels when misplaced are far

)

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TABLE BUTTERAre you satisfied with the kind you have? If not, we

you to step in and try our

Twinkle, twinkle little star,Now I know just what you are.I no longer wonder whatYou are made of, twinkling spot!

For, since Man's enormous brainworse than no jewels at all. Ears, likenosos, that. are too red are very difficultto treat. Diet will do a great deal tnfact, all that can bp done.

When tho beautiful ear has ben ob-

tained it should be taken care of andprotected alike from sun and wind.Veils should be red or brown.

DOCTOR'S BOOK FREETo any man or woman who will mail me this coupon I will send,

free (cldsely sealed), my finely-illustrate- d book regarding the causeand cure of disease. This book is written in plain language, and ex-

plains many secrets you should know. It tells how you can cure your-

self in the privacy of your own home without the use of drugs.Don't spend another cent on doctors and their worthless medicines.Nature's remedy cures to stay cured. You should know about it.If you suffer from weakness of any kind, rheumatism lame back,

sciatica, lumbago, debility, drains, loss of power, or stomach, kidney,liver or bowe) troubles, you must not fail to get this book.

Don't wait another minute.Cut out this coupon right now and mail it. I'll send the book

without delay, absolutely free.

For the quality and flavor, this butter cannot be equaled

in the market.We absolutely guarantee every block we sell.

Has produced the aeroplane,Father often skims the air,For the cream of knowledge there.

lie has specimens of Mars,'Jupiter, and lesser stars;While not long ago he soaredAnd the Polar Star explored.

Brother, with his latest pattern,Gyroscoped the rings of Saturn.Mother, darling, every year,Summers in a different sphere.

So, you are no-- mysteryTo a little child like me,For I know just what you are,Twinkle, twinkle, little star!

Blanche Elizabeth Wade in Sat-urda- v

Evening Post.

yee Mop Co.251Two Telephones.251

flux, and the intestinal dis- -

lers common to childhoodH ord

It may be. and of course it is, a per-fectly proper sentiment that MissElkins would be better advised to mar-ry an American, although if that younglady has set hpr mind upon marryingthe" Duke of the Abruzzi it is fairlycertain that she will do so. But tospeak of the duke as an improvidentand idle young nobleman is merelyabsurd and shows an ignorance of thefacts. Tie is only thirty-five- , but he hasalready made a record of industry ofwhich mwt men would be proud. Heis a captain in the Italian navy, whichbv itself Implies a somewhat strenuouslife, while it would be hardly an ex-

aggeration to say that he is the mostsuccessful explorer of the present day.At eighteen he traveled around theworld. Tie was the first to ascendMount Elias in Alaska, in 1SP7. Twovears later he made his great voyage tothe Arctic in the Stella Polare andreached a point twenty miles nearer tothe Pole than Xansen had done, while

be relieved quicklypermanently by OsteoI)

S. G. HALL M. D.1302 FILLMORE ST., COR. EDDY, SAN FRANCISCO.

Tlease send me, prepaid, your free, 100-pag- e illustrated book.V U J V win VI I 9 pathic treatment. Constipa

ART VALUES.

Artist I would like to paint that oldRosinante of yours. How much wouldyou charge me for two hours a day onhim?

Farmer One dollar, and in ten daysvon can keep the horse. FliegendeBlaetter.

tion of twenty years' standing can be entirely overcome, though

the curative process may require as many months as the. number

of years the disease has existed.

DR. F. SCHURMANN.HOURS 8 to 9 a. m.

4 to 6 m.p.OFFICE 224 Emma iuare.

Addres

u EPITAPH ON A BORE.

He was not for a time, but for allday. Punch.two years ago he accompanied an ex-- 1 1

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THE SUNDAY ADVEETISEE, DECEMEEE 27, 1908.12

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This cut represents one-o- f

our Varsity Suits, so popularwith young business men andcollege men who dress well.

, It is distinctly the young,man's suit, well-c- ut andgraceful in its .lines, but notextreme. Business men likeit as well as collegians.

"Benjamin" suits arerecognized everywhere as theacme of clothing style, goodtaste, fit, and comfort. Theyappeal to the man whowants Distinctivenessin his clothes.

All the style-correctne- ss

and exclusiveness of NewYork's most fashionable cus-

tom tailor are put into everysuit turned out.

Let us show'you one of them.

Vt-- . ; . J

WHAT IEG MEANT.

"Archihald saved the wiaow from drowning, you know, but lie couldn't save himself.""You surely don't mean that he lost his lifef""Not exactly. The widow married him."

,4 J & J J .1 v v v w s & . v . & 4 v" Jt & S &1

TfoX

COENEB OF FOET AND HOTEL STREETS.

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EUREKA V I & R A TORFOE ELECTRIC LIGHT CUEEENT.

This machine is . constructed especially for the individual to useat home, the physician in his office, the masseuse and the barber. Webelieve for all requirements it is the most satisfactory machine made.We challenge comparison. Over 10,000 of these machines in use.The speed may be graduated as desired while iti motion. Weight, twopounds. It is equipped with a complete motor1 and the workmanshipis the best. , EQUIPMENT. .

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OEIGIN OF THE SINKEE.

Name Due to Dick Marshall, the ThingItself to Jim Meschutt.

"The statement made in connectionwith- - the contemplated razing of thePutnam house that the popular sinkerhad its origin there must be correc-ted," said a reminiscent old New York-

er, "or the bones of t)ick Marshall,Oliver Hitchcock and Jim Meschuttwill never be easy in their gravesagain.

'Dick Marshall was the originalmaker and purveyor of the butter cakeas the proper thing to go with a cupof coffee, and he introduced it morethan sixty years ago at his place inSpruce street. -- As a youngster Ipatronized that establishment, and theman who baked the cakes was anotheryoungster named Oliver Hitchcock.

"I was working in a printing office

and getting $4 a week and looked withadmiring envy on Oliver Hitchcockdishing up Dick Marshall's sinkers on

order and getting $6 a week for it.Marshall was known to everybody asButtercake Dick, and that place of hisin Spruce street was certainly a mint.

"When J say that Oliver Hitchcockdished up the cakes I describe theprocess literally. The cakes were notthe light raised butter cakes known toPark row now which Oliver Jlitchcockin after years served at his own placeand made popular. Dick Marshall'scakes were short cakes, and instead ofbeing baked on order and served hotfrom the griddle they were kept instock in a kettle of melted butter anddipped out of it by a long handledskimmer to fill the orders.

"The specific gravity of these cakes,made with lard and stewed in butteras they were, was such that the namesinker, which early became their own,was easily suggested as most appro-priate, and it has continued to be theIopular name, although the quality ofweight was long ago eliminated.

"While Oliver Hitchcock popularizedthe butter cake as it is made and servedtoday h was not its originator. Thename of the father of it was once asfamiliar in the town as that of Del-monie-

It was Meschutt."Fred. Dave and Jim Meschutt had

first an eating house on the Bowery,but branched out until they had famedrt sorts of that kind in various parts oftown, one on Broadway at Howardstreet. At the original Bowery placethe Meehutts served coffee and cakes,the cakes being the same sort that DickMarshall was serving down in Sprucestreet.

"Jim Meschutt was a practical bak-er, and the soggy, greasy, indigestibleDick Marshall sinker didn't strike himas being just the thing to inflict oncustomers, so he evolved a recipe thatresulted in the production of a cakethat had no lard in it and that could bobaked and served direct from the grid-dle, to be buttered by the" customerhimself to suit his taste. These cakeswere a success from the start, and theMeschutt establishment abolished thehot butter kettle and the long handledskimmer.

"That is the butter cake that OliverHitchcock pushed into still greaterpopularity as a coffee and cake pur-veyor on his own hook and which isthe butter cake of commerce today.Every one who finds satisfaction in hisorder of coffee and cakes as they aremade and served today therefore oweshi.s thanks to Jim Meschutt. Tie wasthe father of it, as Dick Marshall wasthe father of the sinker that his shopserved to its courageous patrons fiftyyears ago." X. Y. Sun.

A FUTUEE ARRANGEMENT,f

"I canna' leave ye thus, Nancv,"agood old Scotchman wailed. "Ye 'retoo auld to work, an' ye couldna livein the almshouse. Gin I die, ye maunmarry anither man. wha 'II keep ye incomfort in yer auld age."

"Nav, nay, Andy," answered thegood sp'Uie. "I could na ' wed anitherman. for what wad I do wi' twa hus-bands in heaven?"

Andy pondered long over this, butsuddenly his face brightened.

"I hae it. Nancy," he cried. "Yeken auld John Clennnens? He's a kindman, but he is na' a member of thekirk. lie likes ye, Nancy, an' ginye 'II marry him, 'twill be all the samein heaven John's na' Christian."Success Magazine.

All in convenient and hand some carrying case.

JOS. SCHWARTZ,.Hawaii KING AND FOET STEEETSSole Agent for - - -

Can also be procured at the Waverley Barber Shop, Bethel Street.

HENPECKED CLUB.

For Eeform of Husbands Fallen UnderPetticoat Domination.

Of all the queer clubs that exist Inthe world you will find some of thequeerest in Lancashire. One of theseis called the ''henpecked" club. Asthe title indicates, the members areall males, and you can come acrossa club in almost every Lancashire townof any size.

The meetings are held as a rule insome bar parlor, and the discussionsare about members, and very often

who have the reputationof being henpecked. When evidencehas been brought to show that a par-

ticular man has allowed himself tocome under hi.s wife's thumb they taxhim with it in the place of meetimg.The president delivers a lecture on thedanger of a husband permitting hiswife to usurp his position as master,and when the others have indorsed hisremarks the person to whom thespeeches are addressed is warned thatif he continues to stand the henpeck-in- g

he will be made the subject ofa demonstration.

The announcement that a "henpeck-ed" club demonstration is to take placeis received in the district with mixed j

women condemn it, and the local police,recalling similar displays that led to

the evening appointed members of the j

club meet at a public house, wherethey arm themselves with all kinds ofhousehold ntensils; then, lod by con-certina players or a tin whistle band, I

thev start out and march along the !

crowded streets of the district.One man carries a broom, another a

swab, a thirl a shovel, or a coal scut-tle,, or a fender, or poker. Fire tongs,black-lea- d brushes, washtnbs, bucketseverything used in the home, in fact, iscarried shoulder high. 'As they marchalong to the music in front and thediscordant clanging of their baggagethey King snatches of songs; in whichth nam of the victim occurs often.

The mission of the verses, which havebeen specially composed for the occa-sion by a local poet, is to hold up thehenpecked one to ridicule, the reasonfor the demonstrators bearing thehousehold goods being, of course, to re-

mind him. that having fallen und'rettieoat government quickly he will

become the slavey.When they reach the cottage where

their victim resides they form a circlein front of the door and sing and clangtheir fencers and coal scuttles moreloudly th.m ever.

The man inside is invoked by thepresident during a halt in the pro-gram to "be a man" and join hisbrethren. Sometimes if he looks uponthe affair as more of a joke than any-thing else he des their bidding, andthey reform and march to headsuarterswith him at the head. Usually, how-ever, his wife appears instead with abucket of soapy water, which shepromptly throws over the demonstra-tors, or she quickly causes a clearancewith a hose pipe.

To the onlooker it is just an exhibi-tion for laughter and nothing more,but behind the scenes there is gener-ally a lot of trouble and heartaching.A good number of these "henpecked"demonstrations have sequels in policecourts. Sometimes it is an enragedvictim being charged with assaultinga demonstrator, but more often thannot the sequel shows a wife appealingto the magistrates for a separationorder.

NEW PAETS.The Customer When I bought a car

from you a few weeks ago you saidyon would be willing to supply a newpart if I broke anything.

The Motor Agent Certainly, sir.What can I have the pleasure of pro-viding yon with?

The Customer I want a pair of newankles, a floating rib, a left eye, threeyards of cuticle, a box of assorted fin-

gernails, four molars, and a funny-bone- .Pick-Me-U-

Newly-We- d Husband The time hascome, dearest, when I shall have thepainful task of acquainting your fatherwith the fact that I am heavily indebt. j

Wife Don't mind that. I'm surehe'll give yon the sympathy of a com-- j

panion in adversity. Fliegende Bluet- -

ier. '

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It was certainly a good messengerwho brought the news to your bousethat Aycr's Sarsaparilla makes theblood "rich and red." This meansao much to those who are thin, pale,

' feeble, weak, and nervous. AfterAyer's Sarsaparilla Las cured you,carry the glad message to a friend orneighbor.

rcrli3js you suffer from the effectsof a warm climate. Prolonged warmweatlier seriously impairs the strengthof many people. The digestion isalow, and tlo liver becomes sluggish.Impurities ia the blood accumulateand cause that feeling of downhearted-nes- s

and depression.

arsaparillais of the greatest use in such cases.Its purifying, strengthening, and up-

building properties will be of inesti-mable value to you.

d now made, Ayer's Sarsa-parilla contains no alcohol.

There are many imitationSarsapariilas.

Be sure you get AYER'S."P 9r.j tj Dr. J. C. Ar 4 C-- . ltmP U .

HOLLTSTET? PKFO CO.. AOENTS.

toich'One of kindness

Makes the whole world kin.'

Clears the atmosphere of agrouch and brings harmony to

the home.

Honolulu Gas Co.,

LIMITED

Bishop Street.

HONOLULU IRON WORK1COMPANY.

Machinery, Black Pipe, OalvaniMdripe, Boiler Tnbee, Iron and SteeL Eafineers' Supplies,

OFFICE liuuann 8treet.WOBE-- S Kakaako.

'PTJEITAN" and "EOSE"CEEAMEBY BUTTEE

Large, fresh sh:pment just in.

Henry May & CO., Ltd.Phone 22

DIPLOMATICChild Suppose I called you a mean

old P'g "what would happen?Governess I should tell your father,

and he would punish you.Child And if I only thought it? sGoverness No harm so long as you

don't say it.Child Then I only think it Life.

LONO-NEEDE- D INVENTION."What is this peculiar key on your

typewriter? I never saw it on any.before. "

"Hist! My own invention. When-- !

ever you can 't spell a word, you pressthis key and it makes a blur." Boston Transcript.

... ... -HER EEWAED.

Professor (to his aged cook) Yonhave now been twenty-fiv- e years in myservice, Regina. As a reward for yourfidelity I have determined to name thebug I recently discovered after you I

Fliegende Blaetter..

A QUESTION OF RELATIVE MEEIT.A little boy of eight years, attending

school away from home, wrote a letterto his sister, from which the followingextract is taken: I

"We had a spelling-matc- h in school'today, and I spelled all the boys downij 1 r . i ii' ) J 'r i. . t- - 'i i.nnu won uie Jifuuic. i ue iKiiucai,ur.

WHAT IT WILL DO.

A woman buys a sewing ma-

chine for what it will do; not asan article cf furniturj. A mancarries a watch to tell him thetime; net ns an investment ofsurplus capital. The same prin-ciple when o;i3 is ill. We wantthe medicine or the treatrr.ntwhich will relieve and cure. Thefriend in need must be a friendindeed, something, or somebody,with a reputation. There ehouldbe no k icsswork n treating dis-

ease. People hiwe the right toknow what a medicine andwhat it will do, before they takeit. It must have behind it anopen record of benefit to othersfor the same diseases, a seriesof cures that proves its meritand inspires confidence. It isbecause it has such a record thatWAMPOLE'S PREPARATIONis bought and used without hesi-tation or doubt. Its Good Xameis the solid basis for the faiththe people have in it ; and a goodname has to be earned by gooddeeds. It does what yon have aright to expect it to do. It ispalatable as honey and containsall the curative properties of pureCod Liver Oil, combined with theCompound Syrup of Hypophos-phite- s

and the Extracts of Maltand Wild Cherry. In Scrofula,Anemia, Nervous and GeneralDebility, Influenza and Wasting

.Complaints, it is to be thoroughlyrelied upon. Doctor J. L. Car-ric- k

says: "I have had remark-able success "with it in the treat-ment of Consumption, ChronicBronchitis, Catarrh and Scrofu-lous Affections. It is of specialvalue in nervous prostration andde"-ave- d nutrition ; it stimulatesthe appetite and the digestion,promotes assimilation, and entersdirectly into the circulation withthe food. I consider it a marvel-ous success in medicine." Everydose effective. "It cannot dis-appoint you." Sold by chemists.

Nothing better than our xla Water is made. It has

all of the vim of Yellow Stone Geyser and absolutelypure.

Consolidated Soda Water Works Co., Ltd.' G. S. LEITHEAD, Manager.

Phone 71.

One complete motor in alumi-num case, ebonized handle.

Eight-foo- t covered transmis-sion cord, with plug to fit into

,any electric light socket.One large, soft rubber appli-

cator.One soft rubber

scalp and skin applicator.One extra small soft rubber

eye and face applicator.One nine-fingere- d soft rubber

scalp applicator. ,

One hard rubber body appli-cator.

One revolving fan for dryingthe hair.

MPPLEB

Innes Lillie,

1:

andBEAUTIFUL FRUIT.

SPLENDID CONDITION.

Robert

Robinson Building. Queen Street. Telephone 564.

JL.2mmm

IF" it

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THE SUNDAY ADVERTISER, DECEMBER 27, 1908.

PHILADELPHIA PIES.

TO WELSBeautifui satin damask towels with tiedfringe. Very fine Huck towels, with damask border and tiedfringe;; Fancy Huck towels, hemstitched.

"

A very fine and large assortment of bath towels.TABLE LINENS We have just received i fine line of

Table Damask and Napkins, in new patterns and all grades.COMFORTERS Sateen and Silkoli ne, in plain centers

and figured borders, and figured centers with plain borders.SHEETS, PILLOW CASES, and BLANKETS, all new.

Ask to see the PEARL WAISTS for Children. Theyare strong, handsome, and comfortable.

ing parts of the turkey and place 'ina saucepan with a pint of consommeand some sprigs of parsley tied arounda clove, a clove of garlic, two bayleaves and a little thyme, and add salt j

and white pepper-- - Boil one hour andstrain. Prepare in another saucepan j

two ounces of butter, a tablespoonfulof flour and a teaspoonful of corn-- 1

starch. Mix together thoroughly andadd the strained liquid. Stir this mix-ture with a spoon until boiling, reduceby boiling one quarter, pour in twowineglasses of cream and one ofsherry and boil fifteen minutes longer,add the juice of a lemon, and serve.

A Housewife's Recipes for DeliciousCrusts and Fillings.

Here are some recipes from the bubget of a New York woman who isfamous, among her friends for herpastry. They are really Philadelphiarecipes, for she was born and bred nearthat city and brought her cooking lorefrom there. Her piecrust is alwavs asuccess, it is deliriously tender, "andit never disagrees with the eater. Thefollowing rule will make double crustsfor five large pies:

Rich Piecrust.Take eight large cooking spoonfuls of

flour, five cooking spoonfuls of goodJe.af lard and a generous half teaspoon-fc- l

of salt. Mix thoroughly with thehands, first cooling the hands with coldwater and then wiping them very dry:After the ingredients are well blendedadd a little cold water to bind them

CAULIFLOWER.This vegetable, which a few years ag

was a luxury, is now cultivated by near-l- v

ail market parueners anil is vvithiu1 t . . . J! 1 . 1 . T .

J. ABADIE : - - Proprietor. j

Ladies and Gents' Washing Done First-clas- s.

Gloves and Ostrich Feathers..Wool and Silk Made Cleaner by a New French Process.Charges reasonable. Give us a trial. x

BERETANIA STREET : i : : 'PHONE 1491

tuc jutrdiia ui an nuuseiveepers. 11 ismost delicious vegetable, when properlycooked, and vile when improperly cook-ed, which generally means when over-cooked.

Remove all the large green leaveand the greater jart of the stalk. Putthe head down in a pan of cold waterwhich contains ,to each quart a tea-spoonf- ul

of salt and a teaspoon-lu- lof vinegar. Let it soak in this

water an hour or more. This is to draw

258fc.ri?r4 mG. I - - - tunr-- n- "iinn in T omilli i nt ii'i Ml ,Jt f - l'...:;.

THEIR OWN OF NO USE.out worms, if any should be hidden iathe vegetable. When ready to cook the Little Miss Dachshund (the day before Christmas) Please Mrs. Grey- -

together a very little will do. Rollthe crust out on a well-floure- d board,handling as little a3 possible.

This housewife doesn't believe inbutter for piecrust. She says she hassrver been able to make tender crustwith butter.

Green Tomato Pie.Her green tomato pies are considered

a novelty by some New Yorkers. Theyhave just a suggestion of tartness thatis very appetizing. Here is the waythe preserves for the pies are made:Take fifteen pounds of nice round greentomatoes," cut out the cores and allblemishes, then slice very thin. Tothis amount of tomatoes take ninepounds of granulated sugar, one-quart-

of a pound of green ginger, washed,peeled and cut very fine, and fourlemons, washed and cut in very thinslices. All the seeds must fy; taken out

cauliflower put it into a large stewpaa., hound, Mama wants to know if you'll kindly lend us a few of children'sstem end down and cover generously old stockings to hang up tonight!with boiling water. Add a tablespoon-fu- l

of salt and ejook with the coverof the saucepan partially off, boilin-- j

gentlv all the time. A large, comNC CiPICKLES OF VARIOUS KINDS.

pact head will require a full half-hou- r, Cauliflowers and Peppers Made Intosmall hea.is from 20 to 5 minutes. If ,. . m .jeucious w inter j&eusnes,

BEAUTIFUL PATTERNS

the flowers are Icose the heat pene-trates to all parts quickly. When com-pact a little extra time should be al-

lowed for the cooking, but the timemust never exceed the half-hou- r. Thecauliflower begins to deteriorate themoment it begins to be overcooked.Overcooking, which is very common,can be told bv the strong flavor and

Cauliflower makes a dainty and at-

tractive pickle. Break several fine,large heads into small flowerets of asuniform a size as possible. Place themin a kettle of boiling salted water nearthe back of the stove. When aboutready to boil remove the kettle anddrain the flowerets free from water.

tents

tablespoonfuls of grated horseradish ora few nasturtiums may be added. Some-times a tablespoonful of ground macemay be stirred into the filling of cab-bage. A tiny onion and a tinycucumber are little surprises to hide inthe centre of each mango.

For tomato mangoes select smooth,green tomatoes. Cut from each stem aslice suitable to serve as a eover. Re-move the seeds. Place the tomatoes ina keg or big pan in rows upright, andput a teaspoonful of salt in each

then pour cold water over them,and let them stand twenty-fou- r hours.Then drain them carefully and fill withthe following mixture: To every headof cabbage (minced) add half a tea-spoonf-

of powdered allspice, two table-spoonful- s

of whole mustard, and a table- -

A YARD.dark color. It makes the vegetable not Boil for fifteen minutes enough vinegaronly unpleasant to the eye ami palate, to cover them, after seasoning everybut indigestible also. If this vegetable three quarts of it with an ounce of nut-mu- st

be kept warm for any length of meg, an ounce of mustard seed andjialftime, cover the dish with a piece of an ounce of mace. Pour this spiced

01 the lemons. ,

Put this mixture over the fire withone pint of water and cook thirty min-utes, or until the tomatoes are clar.Take care they do not burn. Putthem np in tightly sealed glass cans un-

til wanted.Preserves made after-thi- s rule, but

with ripe tomatoes substituted for greenones, are excellent for table use. Ifthe red tomatoes are used the skinsmust be removed by scalding, for astomatoes ripen the skins grow tough.

Raisin Pie.If the mincemeat has given out unex-pectedl- v

and the family cry for some-- ,

thing of the kind, a raisin pie makesa satisfactory desert and can be pre- -

JAPANESE BAZARcheesecloth. In hotels and restaurants vinegar hot over the cauliflower, andit is better to blanch it, chill with colu seal in small jars. .water and then heat in salted boiling; Another method of pickling cauliwater when needed.

RICH BOUILLON FOR FIFTEEN. FORT, NEAR THE CONVENT.

snoonfu! of salt. Mix thoroughly.Stuff this mixture into the tomatoes,put on the tops and tie them tightlywith soft string. After placing themupright in a stone jar, cover with'coldvinegar and in a week they are readyfor iye. Add a few stuffed peppers toeach iar of tomato manaroes. to erive

flower is to plunge the flowerets intoscalding brine and let them cook threeminutes, drain on a sieve, sprinkle withsalt and dry. Then cover them withcold vinegar and stand in the sunshinefor two days. At the end of this timedrain and put' into stone iars. Cover

Cut seven pounds of lean and verypared in a very little while. Ihe m-- ; fresh beef (that from the UD(jer partpredknts for the filling are: One lem- - of the roun1 ig gUjtable), into smallVU'."'T TyX D:ts' or run " tbrough a meat chopper, with the following spiced vinegar: Tospoonful one-hal- f cup of seeded. MeIt the marrow from two pounds of every two quarts of vinegar add half

them a more peppery flavor. If thereis any sign of mold in one or twoweeks pour off the vinegar and addfresh, also a tablespoonful of chopped

rajsms. w:r mwiuj ilu iuF , marrow bone (h:nd shin) in a fryingof cold water and let them soak two I pan. in this cook half of the meat stir.hours. Beat the egg untrt light, add . rinjr it meanwhile, to a brown color.

a cupful of sugar, six blades of mace,half a tablespoonful of celery seed, twodozen "white nennercorns. a few nieces horseradish, which is believed by those

who ought to know to prevent mold.'...

A CUBAN OMELET.

In the meantime, pour eight pints of 0f red pepper, a tablespoonful of wholewater over the other half of the meat, mustard and an equal amount of cor- -

When the first meat is browned, add it iander seed. Let this boil five minutes,to the meat in the water: rinse out the then cover and set awav. In a week

ine-suga- anu ueai aaiu; meu mejuice and grated rind of the lemon, andthen the flour. Last, stir In the raisinsand the water in which they haye beenpoak'nz. and cook the The following recipe, wjiich has beenwiferl Thit fryiEg pan with a cup of watr' adJ scald UP PcWe and repeat twice if

. thig and , t the whoe graJuaiiy heat there is danger of molding.double boiler until it tried many times and always found demakes filling for one pie, Vzrrtiiciuuo, 13 Eiiru m 1 lie uuaiui puianc

ology in which it was dictated by theman who is an expert on omelets:

about five hours; then add a carrot cut Pickled Onions,in pieces, two small onions sliced, two' For pickling select the small buttonor three sprigs of parsley, three or four onions and cover them with strongstalks of celery (a tablespoonful of brine. If rather large, let them stand

tween two crusts.Pineapple Pie.

To make two pies grate one mediumsized pineapple. Beat to a creamy

"See now," he said, turning to thefrying pan and table on which were Now go to Haleiwa in automobiles, because the

froth a niece of butter about as large i celery seed tied in a bit of cheese cloth four days, changing the brine twice.road is in fine condition. Since the hotel secured

assembled the materials, "first it is tocut this ham (a small piece, perhapstwo ounces) in very little bits, like

as a large walnut, add the yolks of five may be substituted), a tablespoonful of .Heat them in another brine and boilecrns and suarar eaual in weight to the : salt, five or six v cloves, a sweet red three minutes, then throw into cold

small peas, and then to the frying pan, a license to sell at all times. Manager Bidgood

tserves the long cold bottle and small warm bird toand with it, after five minutes, thisgntd pineapple, and continue beating pepper pod, or three or four long chillitill the mixture is very light. Stir In peppers, and let cook two hours longer,one cupful o cream, the grated pine- - Drain off the broth and let stand in aapple and the whites of the eggs, beaten cool place over night; remove the fat,

Bermuda onion, minced and put m wbithe fat is well out of the ham, and all

water, allowing them to soak for fourhours. Drain and put into jars, sprink-ling as you put them in with white pep-percorns, whole mace and cloves. Coverwith hot vinegar, adding to every twoquarts half a cupful of sugar. Sealwhile hot. They will be ready for use

satisfied guests.vreheat and serve. The soup may beto a stiff froth. Bake with an under fry together; and I put to it a clove

of garlic, also fine minced; a Spanishpepper in slivers, a large tomato inslices, two okras, and then salt, whitepepper, a touch of cayenne and a spoon

clarified with white of egg, but it isrendered less rich by the process.Each pound of meat should yield agenerous pint of bouillon; add no waterduring the cookiDg, but add waterwhen the broth is finished to give thecorrect measure cooked below theboiling point (simmering) in a covereddish, there will be little loss by

ful of capers. After all is frying slow-ly 10 minutes it may be we add a cupof boiling water, and put it back to

m a month's time, out like nearly allpickles, they improve with age.

For another recipe cover the onionswith a strong brine, as usual, and letthem stand three days. Allow enoughvinegar barely to cover them come tothe boiling point, with a seasoning ofone or two blades of mace and somered peppers. After removing the onionsfrom the brine and thoroughly drainingMEXICAN WELSH RABBIT.

crust only. This pie is to be servedvery cold.

DELICIOUS USE OF. COLD TURKEY

Timbale of Turkey Take one-hal- f

pound of the white meat of. turkey,from which the skin and the sinewsbave been removed, and chop veryfine. Next pound it in a mortar to apulp. To this add little by little,when pounding. three sherry glasses ofcream, very cold, a little salt, whitepepper and the whites of five eggs.When it becomes a very fine, smoothpaste, press through a sieve and fill

with it ten little tin moulds that havebeen well buttered. Tlace these in apaueepan in an inch of water, coverthe saucepan and put in the oven forten minutes or longer, until the mix-

ture is firm enough to turn out of themoulds. Serve with sauce supreme.

Sauce Supreme Cut up the remain- -

I them, cover with the hot spiced vinegarrut a leaspoomui vi ouner 1U n- - . n;A1.g ara

HAWAIIAN SOUVENIRS

JEWELRY and WATCHESing ran and when it is heated add half

Onions and Green Tomatoes,small pieces,!a pound of ,hee.e cut ina tablespoonful of Mexican pepper pulp, For a pickle of green tomatoes anda half teaspoonful of mustard and a onions chop half a peck of onions topinch of salt. When the cheese has every peck of green tomatoes. Let themmelted add three or four tablespoonfuls stand in layers sprinkled with salt forof milk and a well beaten egg. Stir two days. Then measure enough vinegarconstantly until it thickens and serve to cover them and bring.it to the boil-o- n

crackejs or small squares of buttered ing point. While the vinegar is heating

stew till the omelet is made. For thattoday will be seven eggs, for we are sixpeople; and, when it is ready to fold, atlast into it we pour this filling I makenow; and we run to the table as ,we putit on the hot dish a meal so rich, sosubstantial, that naught else is neededsave a sweet.

"I will tell you also what can bedone with that filling. For Americansleave out the garlic, perhaps. It is toostrong. But put one more tomato or acup of stewed tomato from another day,and then stir in the eggs a scrambleyou call it and eat, also, hot. Andinto that you put some vegetable that isleft, always cut in little bits coldbeans or some corn or string beans,whatever there is, little carrots, any-thing; and always it is good.":

AN IDEA FOR THE BATHROOM.For a dressing room or bathroom a

toast.

1064 Fort St.. Culman

mix the two vegetables witn an ounceof cloves and an ounce of allspice, twoouncesof white mustard seed and fivelarge red peppers, shredded. Let thepickles cook up hard once and put itinto jars.

Pickled Peppers.Pickled peppers are desirable in put-

ting up a winter's supply of preservesand pickles, because they may be usedas dainty salad cups and mangoes, be

OUR good idea is to have India mattingput along the wall as a kind of dado.It may be fastened under the wainscotboard, but if it is being put up attersides being a good relish in themselves,

n - i . i . i i 1 v. ipuiu is Ulit'U, tx aiuaii au-.u- i umhi.

wav across near the stem end to re-- . F'eC m?Um VeVUt III Ibit

mat. A similar strip of beading runsso strong that a fresh willrme egg itkI around the room to hold the upper edgeoat on it. rinse them thoroughly? at a height of two and a half feet fromPut them into

fl

I

Ia stonein cold water. the floor. The advantage of India mat- -..: a i, .withiar and cover

been spiced with cinnamon, mace and j r . . 1

ti anu gives a light, clean appearance ijnurmeg to suit rue taste. 01 'l it awayin a cool, dry place.

A savory salad may be made by stufthe room. From the standpoint of com-

fort, cork carpet is decidedly the thingfor thbathroom or dressing room. ItDec 31st.cioses on fing these pickled peppers with tongue, I

I is narm 10 lue lcci jtuu en.-i-. i.-- 1 1 i . 1' t ii i 1 , . . 1 i ndressed with mavonnaise. J. Hopp & Co.

FURNITUREBring in Your Votes I

I

I

a Ill'Tt" V7tZlT H

or bathrooms because it is so cold to walk

encase the right hand in a glove. In ;up"""

.The supplies in the bathroom are no

th,s way sensitive fingers may be saved than q thefrom much irntat.on. kitchen. Besides its hot water bags.

Some Mangoes. h-l-s aml ittle ammonia, collodion, bme

Stuffed with spiced cabbage, pepper j water and sweet oH, a 1 per cent, solu-mango-

are an old-tim- e favorite. One jtion of carbolic acid, a box of absorbentway of preparing them is to mince three .cotton and a roll of bandages should begood-size- d heads of cabbage and add kept at hand. With these ready forto this a teaspoonful of powdered all-- j nse an accident, sueh as a burn or cut.spice, half a cupful of mustard seed and , may easily be treated, and pain sparedtwo tablespoonfuls of salt. Press the the victim. The acid solution is usefulmixture into the peppers either pickled j in all cases of injury because of itsor raw (provided the raw ones have j cleansing qualities. If a cut is to be

185 King StreetL. B. KERR & CO., ltd.

Alakea Streetbeen properly soaked m brine and rins-ed according to the directions justgiven). Put the tops on and fasten

treated the wound should first be wa?h-c- d

in clear water and then dipped inthe solution. After this paint it withcollodion. The latter stops the bleed- - ithem over the peppers with soft string. IPlace them upright in stone jars and ing and serves as a varnish to prevent

cover with cold vinegar. One or two the entrance of dirt.

Page 14: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu · rrjririr ir jr irr ir if k k p irinrm U. S. WEATHER BU-REA-U, 5 SUGAR--96 Test Dec. 26-L-ast Centrifugals, 3.67c.; 24 hours' rainfall, T. Per Tnn

JL.

THE SUNDAY ADVERTISER, DECEMBER 27, 1908.14

M"J,1"IJ ""WP MWIMH.WWM1L Lm ' rr-- "

...mm mm -J--

" ninTinriMmnirinitfr.. . mT' 7 iliiitffliri'lifiiilirirCHURCH SERVICES TODAYCHRISTMAS SERIESA VERY PLEASING

PRISONHUATPROGRAMC HR5TM1S5 Cups $1.75

ST. ANDREW'S CATHEDRAL 7 a. m., Holy Communion; 10 a. m., Sunday-school- ;

11 a.m., morning prayer. and sermon; 7:30 p. in., evening prayer andsermon. Hawaiian services: Morning prayer or Holy Communion, 9:30a. m.; Sunday-school- , 10:45 a. in. Cathedral clergy: The Et. Rev. H. B.Restaric-k- , Rev. E. T. Simpson, Rev. AV. H. Bliss. All the Sunday schoolsunder the Bishop will meet in the Cathedral at 3 p. m. for a Christmascarol service. The Bishop will make the address. Rev. E. T. Simpson willpreach in the morning; Rev. AT. H. Bliss in the evening.

ST. CLEMENT'S EPISCOPAL Holy Communion, 7 a. m.; Usborne, 11 a, m.and 7:30 p. m.

ST. ELIZABETH'S CHURCH (Episcopal) Pot wine, 7 and 11 a. m.; 7:30 p. m.

The Christmas entertainment of theJfwrinizi-'- l Church of Jesus Christ ofLatter Pay faints was held on Christ-mas evening. Elder AValler presiding.Following is the program:

Ilvrnn 121 f Saint's Harn) "To Us

Many cheer-inspirin- g services havebeen held, under the direction of Mr.

.lohn M. Martin, in Oahu Penitentiary,tut none of them surpassed the one

on Christmas Pay. The little onesfrom the Susannah Wesley Home tookthe met prominent part in the exer- -

PPOCESS OF, ' f 7 Cups $2.25a Child of Hope is Born" By All

lrayer Elder Ingham.Recitation "Hurrah for Our Sun-

day School" George AlbertsSong" (Zion's Praises, No. 19G)

"Welcome"Sunday School Children

Recitation "The Acorn"Emma Kaeo

Hesitation "The Bird's XmasStory" Minnie Ingham

Song "(Zion's Praises, No. 31)"Little Children Come and Learn"

Primarv Grade, Sunday School

CENTRAL UNION CHURCH 11 a. m., Morning AVorship: Continuation ofChrist mas' services. Sermon by the Minister "Unto Us a Child Is Born."Special music: Anthem "O, Little Town of Bethlehem" (Xeidlinger)the Choir. Offertory Solo "Our Saviour's Birth" (A'an de Water) Mrs.F. J. Hare. Carol "Sleep, Holy Babe" (Anon.) the Choir. 7:30 p. m.,Evening Worship: The Oratorio of the Messiah (Handel), by a combinedchorus, of 200 voices from the Normal and Kamehameha Schools; Mr. Stan-

ley Livingston, director. Soloists: Mrs. Alan AVhite (soprano), Mr. ArthurAVall (tenor), Mrs. AValter Hoffmann (alto), Mr. Chester Livingston

1 1 Cups 2.75

cises, winch inciu'iea reripiure recita-tions, readings, songs and flag-drill- .

Suitable addresses were made by Miss

Yarrow, Mr. Martin and Rev. John W.

Wadman, all of whom brought mes-

sages of good cheer for Christmas Day.The little poem which appeared inthe Christmas Advertiser, entitled"Though We Haven't Got Ice andSnow," was read by Mrs. Wadman,who also presided at the organ.

At the clos, the children of the Su-

sannah Weslev Home distributed ap

WLVE

. n

Eeeitat ion 4 The Shepherd 's Story ' '(baritone).

METHODIST CHURCH AA'adman, 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. "The Life ThatNow Is" will be Mr. AA'adman 's subject in the morning. Miss Gertrude

SIAngeline Voellerples and candies among the inmates, jDialoTiie "Twins"

Gardie Harbottle and Florence PaoaSong (Zion 's Praises, No. 63)

"Starlight and Song"Sunday School Children

Recitation "The Xmas Rose" ....Emily Ingham

Recitation "The First Xmas"E. O. Hall Ik Son, Ltd.

Annie Voeller

and after a song by the (J. I . (Quartetand a beautiful hymn by a number ofgirls from the Kainlani Ilome, a gen-

eral handshaking ensued and wishesfor a merry Christmas were freely andheartily exchanged. An 'excellent din-

ner was served the inmates, throughthe kindness of the High Sheriff,whose interest in the welfare of thepeople placed in his care is alwaysvery great.

Father Valentin held services earlierin the day.

LANSING WILL HELP

Flag ExerciseAmerica Phyllis TligginsEngland Helen InghamGermany Fanny AlbertsChina Sui ToungJapan Bernice KahanamokuGospel Messenger William Levy

Recitation "The Dressed Turkey": . . Eddie Dower

Recitation "The Bird's Xmas"...Nellie Moore

Song (Zion's Praises, No. 104)"Hark! Hark! the Song"

Sunday School ChildrenRecitation "Xmas Eve"

j.. Bernice KahanamokuRecitation "Merry Xmas"

Hattie KeolaHvmn M "Silent Niht"Distribution of Presents

FARMERHAWAIIAN

Hall will sing the offertory solo. In the evening at 7:30 Mr. AVadmanwill speak on "The Meaning of Life as Treated by David and Longfellow

A Companion and a Contrast." Both sermons will be suitable for theclosing Sabbath of the year. Mrs. Hare will sing at the evening service,and choruses of the Kawaiahao Seminary and Sussannah AA'esley Home willalso be given, while several Christmas carols will be sung by the con-

gregation.METHODIST CHURCH E. McKenzie, 11 a. m.; Hopwood, 7:30 p. m.

CHRISTIAN CHURCH MtKeever, 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m.

GERMAN LUTHERAN CHURCH Fel my, 11 a. m.; Sunday-schoo- l, 9:45 a. m.Holy Communion after the service.

KAWAIAHAO CHURCH Parker, 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. ra.KAUMAKAPILI CHURCH Lono, 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m.PORTUGUESE EVANGELICAL CHURCH Soares, 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m.CHINESE CHURCH 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m.REORGANIZED CHURCH OF LATTER DAY SAINTS Waller, services morn-

ing and evening. !

CATHOLIC CHURCH OF ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST Clement, S:30 a in., highmass, sermon, collection, Sunday-school- ; 4 p. m., rosary.

ROMAN CATHOLIC CATHEDRAL 6 and 7 a. m., low masses and noly Com-

munion, Portuguese instruction; 9 a. m., children's mass with Binging andcollection, Sunday School; 3 p. m., rosary, catechism.

CATHOLIC CHURCH OF ST. JOSEPH Moanalua, 11 a. m., high mass, sermon,English sermon; 10:30 a. m., high mass with native sermon; 2 p. m., rosaryand native instruction; 7 p. m., Portuguese sermon and Benediction ofthe Blessed Sacrament. During the week masses at 6 and 7 a. m.

ST. AUGUSTINE'S CHAPEL (R. C.) Waikiki, Valentin, services at 9 a. m.,mass with singing and English sermon.

SEVENTH DAY AD VENTIST 76 7 Kinaii street, Williams, 11 a. m.j 7:30 p. m.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY Room 1, Elite Building, 11 a. m.SALVATION ARMY 10:30 a. m. and 6 and, 8 p. m.SEAMEN'S CHAPEL Alakea street, 11 a. m. and 7 p.m.

SUPERIOR QUALITYAND LOW IN PRICE.

BIG ASSORTMENT.

Wall, Nichols Co., Ltd.ATBANDHAWAIIAN

Theo. F. Lansing, 93 and 93 Kingstreet, believes he can aid the pineappl-

e-growers and small fanners gen-

erally through the Islands by findinga market for their produce and dispos-ing of it to the best possible advan-tage. Farmers have complained thatthe California grower has a betterchance than they and the complaint isbased upon the absence of someone towork a little bit in their interests.Mr. Lansing announces the scope ofhis work in an advertisement in thisissue.

IMPERTINENT.Heiress (to hep military admirer)

THE CAPITOL GROUNDS

That Mr. Krause is very inquisitive.lie asked what my dowry amountedto. A HARD JOB.

Although Mr. Jones was taken at hisLieutenant Impertinent fellow! Andwhat did you tell himf Fliegende fare value bv his son and heir, there

If your stationer cannot supply you with

Whiting's Papeteries4

try the

American-Hawaii- an Paper and Supply Go.

Fort and Queen.

The band will play this afternoon atthe Capitol grounds, at 3 o'clock. Thefollowing is the program:

Part LOld Hundred

Overture Pot and Peasant. .. .SuppeChorus Tannhauser WagnerGloria Twelfth Mass MofcartSelection Christmas Neat

Part ILVocal Hawaiian Songs. .Ar. by BergerSelection Holy Days WilliamsIntermezzo Jolly Pleasure .... LinksFinale Ynletide Thurban

The Star Spangled Banner

Blaetter.were times when the youthful AVil- -

a quarrel on the corner. As usual,there was no policeman in sight, andthey were in a fair way to knock eachother's brains, out when I stepped be-tween and separated them."

"AA'eren't you afraid father!" ask-ed Mrs. Jones, in a quavering voice.

,"No, indeed. AA'hy should I be I"inquired Mr. Jones, inflating his chest.

"I guess there isn't anybody couldknock any brains out of my father!"

SEEING DOUBLE. 1 nam s admiring triDutes emDarrasseuI v: 1 11. :t

Robbie (at the opera) Mama, what 1 J 6does papa keep going out between the 1 had 1uite an encounter as I cameacts fori 1 home the valorous Mr. Jones

Mother Sh! He goes out for opera announced at the tea table. "Twoglasses. J udge. ' men, slightly intoxicated, were having said Willie proudly

11 l"i5Tvi-VVv;--.i- l II 11 II . II MU mLdti MmM tmM siw ti

will ring merrily for you next year if you invest in a block of "MAYFLOWER" stock this year. Themore you take, the more you'll make, and you'll make it before next Christmas. Investigate at once and

get in early. Buy liberally, buy all you can carry. Buy for an advance in price, or to hold for steady

dividends. In either case you'll make money and that is the chief end of investment. The shares are

practically a Christmas gift, at the present price.

r

BUY "MAYFLOWER" STOCK. BUY IT NOW! You won't collide with an opportunity like this every Christmas,

nor in a string of Christmases. You're buying into a real gold mine, one of the glittering links of California's golden chain

of rich producers a mine with a record back of it and a royal future ahead of it. Make me a Christmas visit and get theplain, square, unvarnished facts about the "MAYFLOWER." No trouble to explain; pleased to have you ask questions.

In fact you owe it to yourself to examine and cross-examin- e me before placing either your money or your confidence. Butcall and be sociable, seeing it's Christmas-tide- , whether you wish to talk "MAYFLOWER" or not. I am a new arrival with-

in your gates but I have my credentials. So has the "MAYFLOWER" for that matter. Come and I'll show you whatUncle Sam has to say about our property and yout OPPORTUNITY. And whatever he says, whether it's at Christmastime, or any old time, you can bank upon his say-s- o. BUY "MAYFLOWER" STOCK. BUY IT NOW!

9 piai

DOW, Fiscal Agent "Mayflower" MineGEO. M. SHAW,

AgentH1LO, HAWAII Office, Suite 51 St 52 Alexander Young Bldg