10
SUGAR 96 Test Centrifugals. 4.25, I J, U. S. WEATHER BUREAU. OCTOBER 13 t Last 24 hour rainfall .00; Temperature, max. 83; min. 76; Weather, Fresh trades and clear. $85j 88 Analysis Beets, 10s tOJd; Per Ton Established Jalj 3, 1836. VOL. XXXIX., NO. 6933. HONOLULU, HAWAII TERRITORY, FRIDAY, OCTOBER i4, 1904. PRICE FIVE CENTS. jir ft Wi OYAMA I T U U THE- JUfi! FINDS BOYD GUILT? OF EMBEZZLEMENT AAAAAAAAAA' -- A A AAA A A A A A A A A A A KUROPATK If! IS 'I J Stealings Public Counts Based Upon His While Chief Clerk of Land Office. DRIVEN BACK. A ' - ' i n ! ,4 Private Bills Conveniently Paid With Public Money Boyd Taken In Charge by Police But Released on Bail. Center and Left Go Rearward Under Pressure. The Battle Continues. Russia Admits Big Losses, GENERAL OKUSAKIND STAFF. THIS GENERAL DEFEATED GENERAL COUNT KELLER'S ATTEMPT TO RETAKE THE MOTIENLING: THE BUILD- ING IS THE TEMPLE OF KWANTU, CLOSE TO THE SCENE OF THE BAT-TL- E. " " Black and White. .r to over $1500, which he said were given for the payment of his personal bills. Mahaulu acted as his agent, drawing his salary for him, while he was ab- sent at Washington. He was to pay Mrs. Boyd $125 and expend $25 ' more for paying small bills, the balance to be applied to lifting defendant's evi- dences of debt in the Land Office safe. Among these evidences exhibited by the (ASSOCIATE PBZ88 CABIBAMS., , ST. PETERSBURG, Oct 14. General Kuropatkin reports that Edward S. Boyd, former Commission-ero- f Public Lands, was found guilty of embezzlement of public moneys by .a jury before Judge Robinson yester- day afternoon. His convection accord- ing to the form of the verdict em- braced all three counts of the Indict- ment on "which he was tried, which charged him with embezzlement re- spectively of $675, $2500 and $1532.50. The Jury was absent only ten min-- : utea, ' ' This case referred only to the time -- when Boyd was secretary and sub-age- nt in the Land office. Whereas the" aggregate amount of his embezzlements as now found by the Jury Is $4727.50, prosecution the previous day were some creased fury. The forces engaged exceed those in the battle before Liaoyang. General Oku's forces have captured 25 Russian guns. Continued Japanese successes are reported. CONSULAR DETAILS OF THE FIGHTING IN THE NORTH liquor store bills, and of these Boyd now testified that Mahaulu had exceed- ed Instructions in the amount thus ex- pended. He doubted If so much of his left wing has been ordered back to the main position. TKe center has been forced back. Russian losses are considerable. Ku- ropatkin stays in the thickest of the fighting. A JAPANESE VICTORY. LONDON, Oct. 14. The press regards the battle as a Japa- nese victory. " - BATTLE STILL ON. liquors had been consumed at his house. When shown a certain receipt he stat- ed that he had given Mahaulu his check for the bill it represented. This state- ment caused one of the warmest inci- dents of the trial when Mahaulu after the shortage discovered In the depart Washington, Oct. 13th, 1904. To Japanese Consul Honolulu. ; v Marshal Oyama's report runs as follows: ment attributed to the years In which '."he filled that position and subsequently -- A Jrthat of Commissioner Is about $30,000 ZFor part of . the balance Stephen Ma- - : haulu, who was next highest officer to Boyd in both capacities, is under In dictment, as Boyd himself is for other ward was put on the stand in rebuttal. Another statement of Boyd also figured prominently In the same way. He was telling about a check for $581 and said $60 of it wa3 for a payment on land at Lahaina for his wife, anotlier sum for a certain purpose stated and the bal- ance he could not .say for what. THE REBUTTAL. Stephen Mahaulu, called in rebuttal by the prosecution, denied that Boyd had ever deposited his own money with him to pay his (Boyd's) obligations, also said Boyd left no money with him when he went to Washington. Witness testified regarding a number of I. O. U.'s shown him saying they represented MUKDEN, Oct. 14. The battle is still in progress. JAP CRUISERS ACTIVE. TSINGTAU, Oct. 14. Ships arriving report having been stopped by Japanese cruisers off Chefoo and this port. AFTERNOON ; REPQRT. TSINGTAU, Oct. 13. The German steamer Emma, coal laden- - "large sums gone missing while he "w35 Near Pensiho the enemy's counter attacks from all sides were entirely repulsed. On Wednesday our right army sent one detach- ment to Shikiatotze eight miles north of Pensiho to cut the enemy's retreat. The central and left columns of bur right army occupied on Wednesday several eminences in the northeast of Yentai mines, and are now vigorously pursuing the enemy. Our central army commenced operations on Tuesday night and gained on Wednesday morning the heights a few miles east of Yentai, capturing two field guns and eight ammunition wagons, and while pursuing the enemy captured also field guns with ammunition wagons numbering eleven Uiead of the department. i For embezzlement of public moneys Tjy an officer having" their legal custo dy the penalty Is Imprisonment at hard rr.r- a to not exceeding ten ed, is, attempting to run the Port Arthur blockade. The Russians tauvi - - are offering fabulous prices for cargoes. years or a fine riot exceeding five times tho amount embezzled. Therefore for at Sanhuaishishin besides 150 prisoners. Pursuit by our right and ) ST. PETERSBURG, Oct. 13. Oyama's forces are advancing money taken from the Land Office funds the present conviction on three counts by Boyd which, In any of the cases, against the right of Kuropatkin and are attempting to turn the Rus- sian flank. The War Office is not verv confident over the outcome central armies is progressing successfully, and on Wednesday the enemy's detachment with artillery being enveloped they were panic Boyd might be sentenced- - to Imprison were never repaid. On being shown a receipted bill, Ma ment for thirty .years or payment of stricken at a place twelve miles east of Yentai, while the rest were haulu at once said that Boyd gave him a check for that bill. It had been left retreating northward in disorder. Our left army, since Tuesday lying around the office and got in among night, was continuously attacking the enemy posted near the rail of the present battle. ' ST. PETERSBURG, Oct." 13. General Stpessel reports that the Russians from the Port Arthur garrison have recaptured Signal Hill from the Japanese and the bombardment of the interior forts is becoming more violent. TOKIO, Oct. 13. The battle of Mukden continued with in the other exhibits shown. He told Dep way within ten miles north of Yentai. The central column of our uty "Attorney General Peters about it when that official was holding an In- vestigation, but so much interest was left army, after repulsing the enemy's strong force, occupied Lantz- - chies, five miles northwest of Yentai on Wednesday afternoon, cap being taken in the I. O. U.'s, etc., that his remark was not noticed. Mr. Chillingworth cross-examin- ed him long and severely on this item. Ma haulu, when asked how he remember turing sixteen guns. Thereupon we immediately pursued, the ene- my retreating in disorder. We captured four more guns. During the pursuit, the enemy twice made a desperate counter attack, but was each time repulsed with heavy losses. The right column of our left army, while pursuing the enemy near Shilihs, captured five guns ed the incident, said "there was no stenographer there" on that occasion, ja. fine of $23,637.50. V THE CLOSING INCIDENTS. I "Mr. Chillingworth began his closing -- address to the Jury for the defendant at 2:45. ending at 3:36, when Attorney General Andrews closed for the Terri- tory at 4 o'clock. in an address ending Judge Robinson's instructions to the Jury were concluded" at 4:20. when the Jury retired to consider their verdict. They returned at 4:30 with the follow- ing verdict: "We the jury in the above entitled defendant guilty as cause find the charged in the indictment." Mr. Chillingworth noted exceptions-t- the verdict and gave notice of mo- tion for a new trial. Saturday at 10 Judge Robinson set o'clock a. m. for sentence. Judge Robinson, after a conference General and Mr. with the Attorney Chillingworth following adjournment bail bond on of the court, fixed Boyd's bail for appear- ance appeal at $7000. His for trial, under all the indictments as there had teen at another investiga- tion of the matter. Mr. Chillingworth TAKAHIRA. ft" f and five ammunition wagons. i i i The significance of this dispatch can only be realized when it is took up the "stenographer" matter and harassed the witness about It until at length the Attorney General raised the objection, which was sustained, that the question had been asked and an shown by comparison of reliable maps that the Japanese are facing the Russians in a line across about seventy-fiv- e miles of difficult countrv and that the great attempt of the Russians to cut the lines swered repeatedly. Mahaulu, being questioned on the of Kuroki's communication with supplies coming from the Yalu river has been defeated. The Russians sent a force to Pensiho to bunch of Boyd's checks, singled out one for $60. saying that was a payment on cut these communications. Pensiho is a town thirtv-hv- e miles due 4 s .'"ft- v . ' t i east of Liaoyang and is on the road over which all of Kuroki's land at Lahaina for Mrs. Boyd. This was a contradiction of Boyd's evidence that the payment in question was in- -j supplies would have to pass. This point is directly in Kuroki's rear. From here one road runs through Motien Pass to Liaoyang eluded in the $5S1 check. 9 Mr. Andrews produced a large money while another goes northward through very difficult country to Muk'den, traversing the mountains in which the Yentai coal mines v.ao- - Dieces of paper, which i 0 . .. jare located. Mahaulu laentmea as ine revepicitie iw in the sum of Boyd obtained a bond $7000, with George H. Robertson as sure- ty, early last nigh.t and was released from custody pending his appeal. LAST DAY'S PROCEEDINGS. Boyd took the stand again yesterday examination in his morning, for redirect own defense. He produced his paid While cables of a week ago were to the effect that Mukden ,t- -w ' J ." - J L I. O. U.'s and the like kept in the Land Office safe. Witness was asked to look through the contents of the bag and see if there were any other I. O. U.'s on page 2.) would soon be evacuated by the Russians this dispatch shows them to be fighting at points twenty-fiv- e or thirty miles south of Mukden and over fifty miles to the southeast.. if KoMr tn Ptenhen Mahaum amuu.w. DUKE OF CON NAUGHT IN WHY THE BALTIC FLEET IS SAILING FOR THE FAR EAST i if ? i t 4i i ii i i 1 AUTOMOBILE COLLISION j (ASSOCIATED PRESS OABXQBAXfJ EDINBURG, Oct. 14 The Duke of Connaught was thrown collision yesterday. He soon recovered out of an automobile in a consciousness and was not seriously hurt.. ST. PETERSBURG, October 3, 2 and several false starts, it is believed a. m. Announcement is made that J that the squadron la at last on the Emperor Nicholas will visit Reval on J eve of Its departure upon its long Tuesday to bid farewell to the Baltic j journey. A division in the Admiralty E. S. BOYD, THE CONVICTED EMBEZZLER. squadron. After months of preparation (Continued on rage tj.

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Page 1: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu · SUGAR 96 Test Centrifugals. 4.25, I J, U. S. WEATHER BUREAU. OCTOBER 13 t Last 24 hour rainfall .00; Temperature, max. 83; min. 76; Weather, Fresh

SUGAR 96 Test Centrifugals. 4.25, IJ, U. S. WEATHER BUREAU. OCTOBER 13

t Last 24 hour rainfall .00; Temperature, max. 83;min. 76; Weather, Fresh trades and clear.

$85j 88 Analysis Beets, 10s tOJd; Per Ton

Established Jalj 3, 1836.

VOL. XXXIX., NO. 6933. HONOLULU, HAWAII TERRITORY, FRIDAY, OCTOBER i4, 1904. PRICE FIVE CENTS.

jir ftWiOYAMA I TU UTHE- JUfi! FINDS BOYD

GUILT? OF EMBEZZLEMENT AAAAAAAAAA' -- A A AAA A A A A A A A A A A

KUROPATK If! IS

'I JStealingsPublic

Counts Based Upon His

While Chief Clerk ofLand Office.

DRIVEN

BACK.A

'

-

'

i

n! ,4

Private Bills Conveniently Paid With PublicMoney Boyd Taken In Charge by Police

But Released on Bail.

Center and Left GoRearward Under

Pressure.

The Battle Continues.Russia Admits Big

Losses,

GENERAL OKUSAKIND STAFF. THIS GENERAL DEFEATED GENERALCOUNT KELLER'S ATTEMPT TO RETAKE THE MOTIENLING: THE BUILD-ING IS THE TEMPLE OF KWANTU, CLOSE TO THE SCENE OF THE BAT-TL- E.

"" Black and White..r

to over $1500, which he said were givenfor the payment of his personal bills.Mahaulu acted as his agent, drawinghis salary for him, while he was ab-

sent at Washington. He was to payMrs. Boyd $125 and expend $25 ' morefor paying small bills, the balance tobe applied to lifting defendant's evi-

dences of debt in the Land Office safe.Among these evidences exhibited by the

(ASSOCIATE PBZ88 CABIBAMS., ,ST. PETERSBURG, Oct 14. General Kuropatkin reports that

Edward S. Boyd, former Commission-ero- fPublic Lands, was found guilty

of embezzlement of public moneys by.a jury before Judge Robinson yester-

day afternoon. His convection accord-

ing to the form of the verdict em-

braced all three counts of the Indict-

ment on "which he was tried, whichcharged him with embezzlement re-

spectively of $675, $2500 and $1532.50.

The Jury was absent only ten min-- :

utea, ' '

This case referred only to the time--when Boyd was secretary and sub-age- nt

in the Land office. Whereas the"

aggregate amount of his embezzlements

as now found by the Jury Is $4727.50,

prosecution the previous day were some

creased fury. The forces engaged exceed those in the battle beforeLiaoyang. General Oku's forces have captured 25 Russian guns.Continued Japanese successes are reported.

CONSULAR DETAILS OF THEFIGHTING IN THE NORTH

liquor store bills, and of these Boydnow testified that Mahaulu had exceed-ed Instructions in the amount thus ex-

pended. He doubted If so much of

his left wing has been ordered back to the main position. TKe

center has been forced back. Russian losses are considerable. Ku-

ropatkin stays in the thickest of the fighting.

A JAPANESE VICTORY.

LONDON, Oct. 14. The press regards the battle as a Japa-

nese victory. "

- BATTLE STILL ON.

liquors had been consumed at his house.When shown a certain receipt he stat-ed that he had given Mahaulu his checkfor the bill it represented. This state-ment caused one of the warmest inci-

dents of the trial when Mahaulu afterthe shortage discovered In the depart Washington, Oct. 13th, 1904.

To Japanese Consul Honolulu. ; v

Marshal Oyama's report runs as follows:ment attributed to the years In which

'."he filled that position and subsequently--A

Jrthat of Commissioner Is about $30,000

ZFor part of . the balance Stephen Ma- -

: haulu, who was next highest officer to

Boyd in both capacities, is under In

dictment, as Boyd himself is for other

ward was put on the stand in rebuttal.Another statement of Boyd also figuredprominently In the same way. He wastelling about a check for $581 and said$60 of it wa3 for a payment on land atLahaina for his wife, anotlier sum fora certain purpose stated and the bal-ance he could not .say for what.

THE REBUTTAL.

Stephen Mahaulu, called in rebuttalby the prosecution, denied that Boydhad ever deposited his own money withhim to pay his (Boyd's) obligations,also said Boyd left no money with himwhen he went to Washington. Witnesstestified regarding a number of I. O.U.'s shown him saying they represented

MUKDEN, Oct. 14. The battle is still in progress.

JAP CRUISERS ACTIVE.

TSINGTAU, Oct. 14. Ships arriving report having been

stopped by Japanese cruisers off Chefoo and this port.

AFTERNOON ; REPQRT.

TSINGTAU, Oct. 13. The German steamer Emma, coal laden- -

"large sums gone missing while he "w35

Near Pensiho the enemy's counter attacks from all sides wereentirely repulsed. On Wednesday our right army sent one detach-

ment to Shikiatotze eight miles north of Pensiho to cut the enemy'sretreat. The central and left columns of bur right army occupiedon Wednesday several eminences in the northeast of Yentai mines,and are now vigorously pursuing the enemy. Our central armycommenced operations on Tuesday night and gained on Wednesdaymorning the heights a few miles east of Yentai, capturing two fieldguns and eight ammunition wagons, and while pursuing the enemycaptured also field guns with ammunition wagons numbering eleven

Uiead of the department.

i For embezzlement of public moneys

Tjy an officer having" their legal custo

dy the penalty Is Imprisonment at hardrr.r- a to not exceeding ten ed, is, attempting to run the Port Arthur blockade. The Russians

tauvi - -

are offering fabulous prices for cargoes.years or a fine riot exceeding five timestho amount embezzled. Therefore for at Sanhuaishishin besides 150 prisoners. Pursuit by our right and) ST. PETERSBURG, Oct. 13. Oyama's forces are advancingmoney taken from the Land Office fundsthe present conviction on three counts by Boyd which, In any of the cases, against the right of Kuropatkin and are attempting to turn the Rus-

sian flank. The War Office is not verv confident over the outcomecentral armies is progressing successfully, and on Wednesday theenemy's detachment with artillery being enveloped they were panicBoyd might be sentenced- - to Imprison were never repaid.

On being shown a receipted bill, Mament for thirty .years or payment ofstricken at a place twelve miles east of Yentai, while the rest werehaulu at once said that Boyd gave him

a check for that bill. It had been left retreating northward in disorder. Our left army, since Tuesdaylying around the office and got in among

night, was continuously attacking the enemy posted near the rail

of the present battle. '

ST. PETERSBURG, Oct." 13. General Stpessel reports thatthe Russians from the Port Arthur garrison have recaptured SignalHill from the Japanese and the bombardment of the interior fortsis becoming more violent.

TOKIO, Oct. 13. The battle of Mukden continued with in

the other exhibits shown. He told Dep

way within ten miles north of Yentai. The central column of ouruty "Attorney General Peters about itwhen that official was holding an In-

vestigation, but so much interest was left army, after repulsing the enemy's strong force, occupied Lantz- -

chies, five miles northwest of Yentai on Wednesday afternoon, capbeing taken in the I. O. U.'s, etc., thathis remark was not noticed.

Mr. Chillingworth cross-examin- ed himlong and severely on this item. Mahaulu, when asked how he remember

turing sixteen guns. Thereupon we immediately pursued, the ene-

my retreating in disorder. We captured four more guns. During thepursuit, the enemy twice made a desperate counter attack, but waseach time repulsed with heavy losses. The right column of our leftarmy, while pursuing the enemy near Shilihs, captured five guns

ed the incident, said "there was nostenographer there" on that occasion,

ja. fine of $23,637.50.

V THE CLOSING INCIDENTS.

I "Mr. Chillingworth began his closing-- address to the Jury for the defendant

at 2:45. ending at 3:36, when Attorney

General Andrews closed for the Terri-

tory at 4 o'clock.in an address endingJudge Robinson's instructions to the

Jury were concluded" at 4:20. when the

Jury retired to consider their verdict.

They returned at 4:30 with the follow-

ing verdict:"We the jury in the above entitled

defendant guilty ascause find thecharged in the indictment."

Mr. Chillingworth noted exceptions-t-

the verdict and gave notice of mo-

tion for a new trial.Saturday at 10

Judge Robinson seto'clock a. m. for sentence.

Judge Robinson, after a conferenceGeneral and Mr.

with the AttorneyChillingworth following adjournment

bail bond onof the court, fixed Boyd's

bail for appear-

anceappeal at $7000. His

for trial, under all the indictments

as there had teen at another investiga-tion of the matter. Mr. Chillingworth TAKAHIRA.ft"

f and five ammunition wagons.iii

The significance of this dispatch can only be realized when it is

took up the "stenographer" matter andharassed the witness about It until atlength the Attorney General raised theobjection, which was sustained, thatthe question had been asked and an

shown by comparison of reliable maps that the Japanese are facingthe Russians in a line across about seventy-fiv- e miles of difficultcountrv and that the great attempt of the Russians to cut the linesswered repeatedly.

Mahaulu, being questioned on the of Kuroki's communication with supplies coming from the Yaluriver has been defeated. The Russians sent a force to Pensiho tobunch of Boyd's checks, singled out one

for $60. saying that was a payment oncut these communications. Pensiho is a town thirtv-hv- e miles due4 s .'"ft- v . ' t

i east of Liaoyang and is on the road over which all of Kuroki'sland at Lahaina for Mrs. Boyd. Thiswas a contradiction of Boyd's evidence

that the payment in question was in- -j supplies would have to pass. This point is directly in Kuroki'srear. From here one road runs through Motien Pass to Liaoyangeluded in the $5S1 check.

9Mr. Andrews produced a large money while another goes northward through very difficult country toMuk'den, traversing the mountains in which the Yentai coal minesv.ao-- Dieces of paper, which i

0 . .. jare located.Mahaulu laentmea as ine revepicitie iw

in the sum ofBoyd obtained a bond$7000, with George H. Robertson as sure-

ty, early last nigh.t and was released

from custody pending his appeal.

LAST DAY'S PROCEEDINGS.

Boyd took the stand again yesterdayexamination in hismorning, for redirect

own defense. He produced his paid

While cables of a week ago were to the effect that Mukden,t- -w ' J

." - J

L

I. O. U.'s and the like kept in the LandOffice safe. Witness was asked to lookthrough the contents of the bag and see

if there were any other I. O. U.'son page 2.)

would soon be evacuated by the Russians this dispatch shows themto be fighting at points twenty-fiv- e or thirty miles south of Mukdenand over fifty miles to the southeast..if

KoMr tn Ptenhen Mahaum amuu.w.

DUKE OF CON NAUGHT IN WHY THE BALTIC FLEET IS

SAILING FOR THE FAR EAST

i

if

?i

t4iiii

i

i

1

AUTOMOBILE COLLISIONj

(ASSOCIATED PRESS OABXQBAXfJ

EDINBURG, Oct. 14 The Duke of Connaught was thrown

collision yesterday. He soon recoveredout of an automobile in a

consciousness and was not seriously hurt..

ST. PETERSBURG, October 3, 2 and several false starts, it is believeda. m. Announcement is made that J that the squadron la at last on theEmperor Nicholas will visit Reval on J eve of Its departure upon its longTuesday to bid farewell to the Baltic j journey. A division in the AdmiraltyE. S. BOYD, THE CONVICTED EMBEZZLER.squadron. After months of preparation (Continued on rage tj.

Page 2: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu · SUGAR 96 Test Centrifugals. 4.25, I J, U. S. WEATHER BUREAU. OCTOBER 13 t Last 24 hour rainfall .00; Temperature, max. 83; min. 76; Weather, Fresh

sun pacific commerciax ,otvertt3ee, hontolotu, oqtober 14, jg2

code Jeft with Mahaulu, intended toapprise him of any danger arising outBURIAL AT OBERLIN OF MRS.

WESTERVELT AND DAUGHTER vt r TTHjf CELEBRATED Ba 0 ALT.great weakness she could not be seen,

rj A

IfcJl Aa innmumi

AUARAE!TE

V AA A Ian

AWV OEFEOIHATE

T

r

We have just received a splendid new stockall sizes of roll-to-p desks, flat desks,

desks, typewriter desks and tables.Also a hew stock of the celebrated Macey

bookcases.

H. fiackfeldSELLING

.,.T

I j HoppLeading Furniture Dealersf

of a visit of the Auditor lii his absence.saying that the document left absolutely no question of Boyd's knowledge thatthere was a shortage in his cash at thetime he went to Hilo. The showdownof I. O. U,s and other papers of. likepurport was not a part of the case hadit not been for Boyd's swearing that,after the B. H.' Wright incident, thewhole system of advances of publicmoney on salaries. was abolished in theLand Office. It was entirely immate-rial what might have been done beforeBoyd's time in office, he having admit-ted on the stand that the practices hehad maintained were directly (contraryto law and that he knew it. J

Boyd's statements of having kept de-

posits of his own money In Mahaulu'shands had been disproved. His explanation of the $581 check was absurdand proved false by Mahaulu's singlingout ' of the 560 check. The AttorneyGeneral was not resting strongly uponMahaulu's credibility, but in that andoiher parts of his evidence the clrcumstances all tended to show he told thetruth. V

Mr. Andrew's, referring to Boyd's attempts o make Mahaulu out as thethief of the moneys in question, said, itthat were true Boyd knew it beforehe . was made Commissioner, knew itwhen he went to Hilo and to Washington. Yet on his leaving the office forthe absences mentioned he had not onlyleft Mahaulu In charge of the Land Office funds but had made him the dis--burser of his (Boyd's) salary and givenhim entire control of his private flnances., ' He acted on the theory thata man who stole- Government moneywas the right man to entrust his ownprivate money with. Not only that,but Boyd appointed the man he knewto be a thief, according to his presentattitude toward Mahaulu, to succeedhimself as cashier of the Public LandsOffice..

Mr. Andrews made a few strong renflections on the public, consequences ofallowing such misappropriation andprivate conversion of public money togo unpunished. He concluded by sayingthat there could not be a doubt in theminds of the jury that the defendanthad been proved an embezzler of publicmoneys on all three counts of the indictment.

'

DANGERS IN

A SANDSTORM

SAN BERNARDINO, Oct. 6. Mr.and Mrs. William Barrows Al Sikes,George Metcalf and two others, whilecoming across the desert from LasVegas, Nev., were overtaken sixtymiles out from Daggett by a furioussandstorm, which-fo- r forty-eig- ht hqursblew a perfect hurricane, subjectingthe parties to a terrible experience.The sharp-pointe- d particles beat uponthem as though from a blast furnace.The canvas vhich they used as ashield was riddled and the skin ontheir faces and hands rut until it bled.

While plunging, one of the horseswas maimed, and, falling with abroken leg, was smothered to death.Metcalf got out of the wagon to cutthe harness from the dying animal,and while groping his way, back tothe wagon lost his way. Only thehowling of his dog saved him. By ithe located his party. His face wasterribly lacerated by the sand duringthe short time he was exposed.

During the height of the storm theparty could not see more than a footaway. Before it struck them, it re-

sembled a great bank of sand, loom-ing high in the air, an almost per-fectly straight line forming the topof the embankment. As the storm en-

veloped themt the whinnyings of thehorses were . pitiful, each particle ofthe sand striking therri with the stingof a pin thrust.

After standing the force of the blowfor several hours, the canvas over thewagon was riddled with holes, and theprospectors got out blankets to shieldthemselves, but even through thesethe sand pelted." Oil prospectors report that this wasthe heaviest sandstorm they everknew. During the time that it ragedthe appearance of many sections ofthe desert .was completely altered, highsand hills that had stood as landmarks for years being leveled or bornemiles away. Trails were completelyobliterated, and county and Govern-ment sign boards were blown downand completely lost.

Impure BloodWhen the blood is pure and the

bowels are regular, there need be butlittle fear of sickness. Keep two grandmedicines in the house; and use themwhen you first begin to feel poorly.Recovery will be prompt, and serioussickness prevented.

Mr. Fred Pierce, who resides at South Ter- -race, Adelaide, So. Australia, sends this leUter with his photograph:

" For some years I have been a boundaryrider on some of the far northern sheep anacattle stations. I had severe attacks of in- -i

isestion, and my Wood would often pet veryimpure. My skin would be covered with

' blotches, and my general health greatly af-fected. Whenever these attacks would comeI would procure Ayer's Sarsaparilla endAyer's Fills. I always found that the Sarsr-paril- la

would quickly purify my blood andstrengthen my digestion; while the pillswouid correct my constipation and bilious-ness."

arsaparillaThere are many imitation Sarsaparillas.

Prepared by Dr. J. C Ayer C., Uwell, Miu, U.S. A.

The OberUn (O.) Tribune says:

The burial service over the remains of

Mrs. Louise C Westervelt. brought

from Honolulu. Hawaii, and of Alice

Lorena Westervelt her infant child, washeld last Saturday forenoon at 10 o'clock

in Westwood Cemetery. Rev. D. Brad-sha- w,

pastor of the First church reada portion of scripture closing with thebeautiful description of Joys of theRedeemed, as partially outlined in thebook of Revelation. Rev. C. N. Pondspoke comfortingly and feelingly of thedeparted ones. After prayer the urn inwhich the ashes of the cremated bodyhad been placed, was lowered withwhite ribbons into the grave, while

Dr. Bradshaw repeated the ordinaryfuneral service. . ,

Mr, Pond's address Is here given in'

full. :

It is very especially and particularlya service of love that has gathered ushere today. On all customary occasionsof this nature,, however .tender andreverent they may be made, there isone purpose of utility that must besubserved. The living must bury theirdead from, their sight. But no suchpurpose has brought us hither.

The precious dust of little Alice, twoyears old, had been resting in thebosom of mother earth twenty years inthe middle East. The ashes of Alice'smother, brought hither in this sacredfuneral urn, could find no more beautiful 'resting place than the Paradiseof the Pacific, the fair island whereshe spent her latest years. But thehusband and father has brought tne .

one hundreds of miles from the Eastand the other thousands of miles over )

sea and land from the West that they I

might for love's sake be together in-

terred in the home cemetery at Ober-Un. -

This is the expression of mother love,of conluieai affection and filial andfamily attachment, all of them being ;

but streams from that fountain of all, .

the love of God. In that sentiment (

made operative every day, our depart-- j

ed friend Louise Clark "Westervelt, wasreared, as the daughter of Rev. andMrs. George Clark. Well do I remem-ber Mr. Clark's fervor and devotion.He seemed to me in a very unusualdegree to combine the ardor and con-

viction of the --evangelist with thecrudent knowledge and wisdom of aman of the world. Growing up In thisspirit, our Louise ever was true to it.I had an occasion to experience thepervasive influence of her kindness andhospitality when I passed a night anda day In "her island home on Maui,fourteen years ago. Because of her

THE JURY FINDSGUILTY OF

(Continued from Page 1.) i

longing 'to Boyd the amounts of whichhad come out of public funds and neverbeeiv repaid. ' S

xt- - Phnitn-nrf- h nhleoted to evl- -

dence on the subject unless the prosecu

tion filed every paper as an exhibit.The objection was sustained. Mr. Andrews did not consider the matter ofsufficient materiality for al3 that trou-

ble and withdrew the sack. Mr. Chil-lingwor- th

made sarcastic remarks onthe "dramatic display," and the courtInstructed the Jury to ignore the bagincident.

THE CLOSING ARGUMENT.

Shortly after the court resumed at 2

p. m., tne Closing arguments 10 me jurjlwere niaue.

Mr. Chill ingworth reminded the jurythat they were the sole judges of thefacts and that the defendant was beingtried by them exclusively under thecharges in the Indictment, which ac-

cused him of embezzling three specificsums of money from the Territory ofHawaii. The evidence had shown themthat a great deal of looseness existedin the business of the Land Office, whichhe was not called on to defend butwhich should not be taken into accountagainst the defendant. It was a condi-tion, according to the evidence, thathad obtained under the defendant's

jpredecessors. Counsel asked why it hadtaken the authorities so long to find outthe defalcations in the Land Office, j

paying some attention in his remarks I

to the Auditor's responsibility. He re- -ferrPd to dPfalratirma. in... nfc 0rort- 1

Iments, mentioning that of PublicWorks, when Deputy Attorney GeneralFleming, Mr. Andrews being tempora-rily absent from the room, got up andobjected , to his going outside of theevidence.

Judge Robinson, who had been look-ing into law books, said he had notheard the remarks objected to, but witha few soothing words asked Mr. Chil-lingworth to proceed.

Mr. Chillingworth was soon againchecked with an interruption on thesame point by Mr. Fleming. At aboutthat instant the Attorney General re-

turned; when Mr. Chillingworth pro-tested against members of the Attor-ney General's office bobbing up withInterruptions while the head" of the de-partment was present conducting thecase. Mr. Andrews did not interfereand defendant's counsel called thejury's nt'tention to the "unseemly in-terruptions" and then picked up anewthe thread of his remarks.

He laid great stress on Mahaulu'svolunteer statement that there was nostenographer present when, as he testi- -

But . her thoughtful hospitality, in allthe little careful plans for the happiness of my brother and myself, herguests, made us feel that although, shewas invisible, we were encompassed byher love and care. Simular was theinfluence that went forth from her dur-ing all the years. Shut in as she hasbeen by physical limitation, yet therehas radiated from her home the in-

fluence of trust, of faith and of friend-ship whose value has been felt andknown in more continents than one.

The Master of all worlds has variedforms of service. Some he equips forgreat enterprises. With a nerve thatnever troubles, a sinew of steel, and astrength that never seems to wane,

. these great leaders push on the giantEnterprises of God's car of Providence.Then there is the great mass of aver-age workers who perform the tasks ofthe work-a-da- y world. With steadyapplication and sturdy power they car-ry on the activities of nations and ofcontinents.

But there is another class whose ser-

vice Is different. They are feeble; theysuffer; they are sick. Their service isnot to do but to bear. They patientlyendure; they become the refiners of so-

ciety, they teach us. gentleness andpatience, and tender affection. Theyare just as needful as are. the strongor the seemingly more highly favored.They fuflfil the beautiful thought ofthe master poet:

"His state is kindly.Thousands at his bidding, speed and

post.O'er land and ocean without rest.They also serve who only stand aud

wait." .; t

Such was the service of our dearfriend. Born in 1850, graduated in 1870,a bride in 1873, the bride of death in1904. Through these fifty-fo- ur years ithas not been granted to serve in thefullness of eQuipment and strength butwith patience, gentleness, resignationand love. And no one can feel thatthis service has been for naught.

All of us who have known our Louisehave been blessed and helped by herInfluence. There is an inspiring faithand a contagion of trust that has ex-

tended its influence afar. We scarceneed to offer the prayer that our broth-er may be hefped and sustained. Wescarce need to offer this prayer becausealready it is answered. He is sustain-ed and he is helped. But we do praythat Divine Grace may be given himin enlarged measure and that fromthis open grave receiving this preciousdust and these sacred ashea now unit-ed in their final resting place in thisconsecrated ground, he and all of usmay go about the. work of life withadded inspiration and a new sense ofthe love of God which gave and whichalso has taken away.

BOYDEMBEZZLEMENT

fled, he told Mr. Peters that Boyd gave

evidencea of public money taken byBoyd. He accused Mahaulu, in this asiu other parts of his evidence, of sup- -Pressing facts in favor of Boyd, it waswhen he saw the check in ,court thatMahaulu, as counsel viewed it, inventeda story to show that he had nothing todo with the bringing of a false ex-

hibit into court.Mr. Chill ingworth reviewed portions

of the evidence, arguing therefrom thatthere was really none but Mahaulu'son which defendant could be convicted.As he had been left alone in conduct-ing the defense he urged the jury torecall anything he might have omittedwhich bore on the innocence or guiltof the defendant, as it was their dutyto weigh all the evidence. He felt as- -

Lsured that they were gentlemen whowould render no snap Judgment. Mr.Chillingworth closed with an assertion (

01 nis own Dener that tne defendantwas innocent.

Attorney General Andrews did notwaste a word on preliminary observa-tions, but taking the chief exhibits ofdocumentary evidence in his handsplunged directly at the gist of the case.It is doubtful if ever a case of suchimportance was more tersely and effec-tively summed up at any bar of justice.There were no rhetorical fireworks Inthe Attorney General's address, unlesssome apt remarks on the consequencesto the country of slack dealing withpublic money might be so described, buta sedulous hammering out of bald factsand a nailing to the counter of spuriouscoin of extenuation for malfeasance 'ofpublic trust.

The Attorney General displayed thereceipts for mihltc monpv trint rindnever reached the public treasury andreminded the jury that the defendant,as sub-age- nt of lands, was responsibleu,,utM lue specmc lerms 01 me law Kimfor the collection and custody of allpublic money due the Territory in hisdistrict. There was a simple and ex-cellent system in the Land Office forthe collection of dues. A regular formof receipt was provided, having a stubfor recording the details of each col-lection. Boyd, instead of using thisform, had a special billhead printed, bymeans of which land rentals might becollected and no record of the transac-tion be preserved In the office. Mr. An-drews displayed to the jury the blankreceipt leaf, untorn from the book andfolded back to conceal it from a cursoryview, the number of which correspond-ed with that of the billhead receipt forone of the sums shown in this case tohave never reached the Treasury. Thecontradiction of Boyd's statement thathe had not taken up the cash businessafter returning from Hilo on September24 until October 1, by a memorandumof a deposit in the Treasury made outin his own handwriting and signed byhimself under date of September 28 thesame year, was duly treated. Boyd'sadmission of having made all the en-

tries in the cash book, excepting whenhe was absent from Honolulu, fixed hisresponsibility apart from the legal factthereof. '

Mr. Andrews took up Boyd's . cipher

1'

On November 1st our entirebusiness will be removed fromthe location at. King and Bethelstreets, which we have occupiedfor over 25 years, to Nos. 1053and 1059 Alexander Young Build- -ing:.

Made in therichest,matched,figured quarteredoak.

... 5

r 1

& Co , Ltd.AGENTS.

. t .

1

II

Iii?

T

T

!

?

OLD NUMBERS, MATTER

T

ItttttiDO WELL TO COMMUNI- -

SO TIREDtTet you tosa about all night, unable tosleep. It's your nerves that are untrun?. Weak nerves are starved

nerves and you therefore need something to nourish and put vim and vitalIty Into them. For this particular dutyHosteler's Stomach Bitters Is highlyendorsed by physicians. It is also ble

in cases of POOR APPETITE,INSOMNIA. INDIGESTION. DYS-PEPSIA, WEAK KIDNEYS. BILIOUS-NESS AND MALARIA. FEVER ANDAGUE. We hope youH try it at once.

. HOSTETTER'S

STOMAfCH - BITTERS

Have You- - Tried

The PALACE

Goods?Delicious fruits and vegetables

of the very finest quality. Theycome to the table any time inthe year as delicious as when

Just picked.Every variety is the choicest

that grows.Every can sold with our

money-bac- k guarantee.

Packed by Lewin-Mey- er Co.,

San Francisco.

.Your Grocer ha them.

E. J. WALKER,. Wholesale Agent, Fort Street.

THE KEW. FRENCH REMEDY.

THERAPION.Sy, iwd ta Um CouOoauloi UoaptUl or Itinera,

iKUa. Jotoart. ViipMu, and othr, eonmMi asm AmUimrmtM to to obt la mtteUM ci tfa

Ir'ixl. and xiiinwiw vrarrthlng hitherto XDploT4.THERAPIOH NO. I mainUlnit if wort,fcwwaad ud rvputatloa lor Urshall of Um kidT, ptlaa to th back.

. Cdr4 HUmoU. SOrdln prompt wtofr'Jotir wUirtsd twsadtoa b been powartoaa.l4"HFfAPlON No. 2 fortanpurit erf Ua Moos,t'iry. punpte, sputa, blotcho, pains and rvalttacfJ (otnta, rouV, rhau&iatUia, ft alidueaaas lor whichi;a has bean to much a fashion to employ marcory.teraapartUa c. to tba dsafemction of suSarers' totsfed ruin of health. This preparation purloaa UmLnaa aystam through tha blood, and thoroughlypiminatea all poisonous matter fro to. the bodj.

NO 3 foe xhution, alaay.ianiisa. and aii diatntasing ooostiquanoas of

f afipatloa. worrr. orwork, 4c. It uuhumtrprtapotrwtofMlOrtagrtrwisBad mroe taIjaoa auffertnc from tha enervating Uifluaooea oi

laataenca in iwniinMiw iiiiiki, iiJj KrolOM throughout. U worW.

ea in Knfland. ta. M. aad 4a. oo. in oraaratata bkrh of the throe numbaro la

ad ooear IBM um warn - unv.W - tt.I.i-- K I3ilM IHlWfflt Rtll&D fMswaita svttars on a rad ground) affixad as everyMris package by order of Hte Maaaty a Boax

I wtaotA uca iimT

nstflaveEoofo new goods.

Clearance sal for the balance of themonth at e

FUKTJRODA'SHotel St., No. 28 to 32.

Gents Furnishing Goods and Ladies"Kimonas sold at a sacrifice. .

f NEW YORKuses vastly ' more writing ma-chines than any other city onearth and the last census shows

78 Per Cent.Remington. The voice of ex-

perience decides for theREMINGTON

TYPEWRITER.

I J. He Harrison, Agent.Hotel Street.

BEGINNING TO-DA- T, SEPT. 26,

FASHION RESTAURANTon Bethel street, rear of the Postofflce,will serve LAGER BEER with noon

lunch.MEALS 25c

The Miller Candy Co.Will open today with a full line ofFresh Home Made Candies across the'street from the Testaurant, Hotel street.

'ame and see the Candy Made.

OLDf PLANTERS

THE HAWAIIAN GAZETTE CO. HAS, AT CONSID-

ERABLE EXPENSE, SUCCEEDED IN COMPLETINGA LIMITED NUMBER OF SETS OF PLANTERSMONTHLIES FROM VOL. I OF 1882 UP TO THEFIRST OF THE PRESENT YEAR.

OF THE EARLIER NUMBERS, LONG SINCE OUTOF PRINT, MANY ISSUES WERE ENTIRELY EX-

HAUSTED, MAKING IT NECESSARY TO RESET ANDREPRINT ALL SUCH NUMBERS, THUS ADDING MA-

TERIALLY TO THE COST. THIS EXTRA EXPENSEWAS MORE THAN JUSTIFIED, HOWEVER, BY THEVALUABLE NATURE OF MUCH OF THE MATTER

? CONTAINED IN THESETHAT CANNOT 3E FOUND ELSEWHERE THAN INTHESE BOOKS AND THAT IS VALUABLE REALLYBEYOND PRICE TO THE PLANTATION INTERESTS.

THESE PLANTERS ARE UNIFORMLY BOUNDIN FULL LAW SHEEP, GIVING THEM AN ATTRACT-

IVE APPEARANCE IN ADDITION TO THEIR DURA-

BILITY.ANYONE DESIRING A COMPLETE SET, OR ANY

t PART OF A SET, WOULDCATE WITH THE GAZETTE CO. AT AN EARLYDATE, AS THERE ARE BUT VERY FEW SETS AVAIL-

ABLE AT THE PRESENT TIME, AND IN ORDER TOCOMPLETE MORE SETS IT WILL BE NECESSARYTO RESET AND PRINT MORE BACK NUMBERS,

THUS INCREASING THE COST STILL MORE.

Page 3: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu · SUGAR 96 Test Centrifugals. 4.25, I J, U. S. WEATHER BUREAU. OCTOBER 13 t Last 24 hour rainfall .00; Temperature, max. 83; min. 76; Weather, Fresh

We Guarantee the

GUNN CASES POLITICS OFFERINGSmmAT BEACHRoller-bearin- g non-bindi- ng doors,

removable (to clean or replace brok-en glass) by simply unhooking.' Nounsightly iron bands oi protruding

enato DePw recently warned young men not to pursue wealth, buthigher and nobler ideals," which evoked the retort that "man would look wellgoing to do his family marketing with a bunch of high and noble ideals as col-lateral Look well he might, but how he would feel, we can only conjecture.

In making the offerings hereunder listed, however, we are certainly notpursuing wealth and possibly some of those "higher and nobler ideals' are tbends in view.

Be that as it may, it calls for mighty little "Collateral" to obtain values socha

WE OFFER FOR THIS WEEK.

shelves, bections so nicely joinedtogether the appearance is that of a

W ti. c.: 1 T3l,--4case entitled to use the trademark ofthe Grand Rapids Furniture Asso

Republican Orators Vie

With SoundingSea.

ciation, which means the best,Remember, in buying from us you

get the best Sectional Case made andat the lowest price. e set the casesup and guarantee satisfaction. Beingagents, we carry stock and shall bepleased to have you inspect the manypoints of superiority in this mostT SIZE KQV perfect system. .

COYNE FURNITURE CO., LTD. Union and Hotel Streets.

A rousing Republican rally was held

In the first precinct of the Fourth dis-

trict last night. The meeting was held

at the second house beyond the Wal-ki- ki

Inn and was attended by a good

crowd. The surroundings were mostpicturesque for a political meeting. Onone side the waves beat loudly on thesea wall and on the other the heavy

I0,ooo yds TORCHON LACE EDGINGwith INSERTION to match in all width.

ON SPECIAL SALE.

5 CEBITS A YARD.

NORMANBiE LACESwith INSERTION to MATCH from 3 to 6 inches wide.About 6000 yards on sale at

IO CEFJTS A YARD.

CHURCH SOCIAL

pend primarily upon how the shipsthemselves stand the test of actualsailing, and, secondly upon develop-ments in the Far East. Should allgo. well with the squadron on the voy-age and Rear-Admir- al Wiren be ableto strike a telling blow at AdmiralTogo, even if half his ships go to thebottom, the Baltic squadron will behurried on with all speed possible. Ifdelects develop in the vessels . or ifWiren fails utterly the squadron can,at the worst, return and" await thecompletion of other ships now build-ing. Nothing, it is argued, will belost and much may be gained by themere departure of the squadron; andthe fact that it may have to be reck-oned with later may make AdmiralTogo wary about risking his shipswhen the time comes for Rear-Admir- al

Wiren's sortie, and thus givethe latter a better opportunity to es-cape.

No official dispatches from, the frontwere published on Sunday. The mili-tary situation, so far as the public isinformed, remains unchanged. Num-berless stories are afloat regarding im-portant commands with the new armyand the disposition of various promi-nent officers whose names have beenmentioned in connection therewith,but nothing; conclusive has yet beengiven out. It is merely evident thatpreparation for the dispatch of freshtroops is being pushed as rapidly . aspossible. It is understood that thesecond disvision of the guards regi-ments is already under orders to goto the front.

; s. :

RHEUMATISM is a stubborn dis-ease to fight but Chamberlain's PainBalm has cured t many times and willdo ; so whenever opportunity offers.This remedy is a general family lini-

ment and not only does it quickly re-

lieve rheumatic pains but it also cureslame back, stiff neck, soreness of themuscles and stiffness of the joints. Itis antiseptic and when applied to cuts,bruises, burns or scalds, heals suchwounds without maturation and In lesstime than by any other, treatment, and,unless the Injury ig very severe, willnot leave a scar. For sale by all deal

A BIG SUCCESSfronds of coacoanuts and palms formeda canonv while the

V ghostly glare ofnumerous torches added a peculiar

The October social of the Centralcolor to the scene.' Pacific Import Co., Ltd,

PROGRESS BLOCK, FORT STREET.

E. Faxon. Bishop was received withconsiderable applause and delivered hisusual speech with Its "beware of freelances." As a, variation he wound uplast night by advising the voters tovote a straight ticket "whether CharTO LET. tley Hustace liked it or hot o You Suffer !Jack Dowsett was popular as usualand in a careful speech showed howthe Republican platform was superior

NICE COZY COTTAGE of . Parlor,Diningroom, 2 Bedrooms, Kitchen andBath. Electric lights and servants'quarters,, etc. Mosquito-proo- f. To bevacated Oct. 31. 1904. Rent, 515.00.

toHhose of its opponents. E. "W. Quinnwas well received and promised. If

4"

foul Nervousness? !Yes! Then why not take a glass of

elected to serve the people. LilikalanlELEGAXT CORNER TWO-STOR- Y

- .made a rousing speech in Hawaiian.

DWELLING of 7 Bedrooms, Reception Other speakers were: "W. W. HarriRoom, Parlor, Dining-roo- m and Kitchen. Large attic; good dry cellar; ser Carlos A. Long, Frank Andrade, John

C. . Lane. R. W. Aylett and Frank

Union church held in the SundaySchool rooms last night was attendedby over two hundred persons, a largercrowd than usual. The arrangementswere excellent and everyone reporteda good time, one woman expressing itaptly as being "extra sociable."

After the company had . assembledand spent a few minutes in talking orgetting acquainted the following pro-

gram was rendered: .

Piano Solo .Mrs. J. J. LeckerRecitation... Miss Florence LeeVocal Solo Mrs. Stanley LivingstonRecitation ...Miss Ray Bell

Following the program there was aguessing contest. The contestants wereseated at four tables. At the first thecontest was "Jumbled Cities," at thesecond "Jumbled Animals." at thethird "A Floral Love Story" eachquestion being answered by the nameof a flower and at the fourth "A FloralWedding."

After the contests the Kawaiahaoglrl3 were given letters which theyplaced on a blackboard making theHawaiian motto, "Ua Mau Ke Ea o

ka Aina 1 ka Pono." A curtain wasthen drawn aside revealing the Ha-

waiian flag while the girls sang , "Ha-

waii Ponol." tf

PRIMO QER!rants quarters, etc. Nice large yard.

ers. Benson, Smith & Co., Ltd., AgentsRent reasonable. ;

Further particulars of

'WILL E. FISHER. for Hawaii. at meal times. You will find it invigoratig and it will makeyou sleep well. It is' easy to take.

Gandall. ;

WHY THE BOCFLEET IS SAIL

Agent, 180 Merchant street. PACIFIC LODGE NO. 822,

t -- Sold by all

t LIQUOR DEALERS; HOTELS AND BARS.. . tiA. F. & A. M.

FOR THE FAB EAST THERE WILL BE A SPECIALmeeting of Pacific Lodge No. 822, F.& A. M., at Masonic Temple, THIS

AT AUCTIONSATURDAY, OCT. 22, 1904,

AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON,At my salesroom, 180 Merchant slree

ff will ofier for sale at auction

v4 ELEGANT LOTSON

PacificJkights

36FRIDAY EVENING, Oct. 14th, 1904,

at 7:30 o'clock.WORK IN FIRST DEGREE.

(Continued from Page 1.)

has existed thoughout the period ofpreparation regarding the advisabilityof sending out the squadron, but with

Members of Hawaiian Lodge, Lodgele Progres, and all sojourning brethren Price, 10c. Per Copy; Per Annum, $1.00; Foreign, $125.are fraternally invited to attend.

By order of the R. W. M.E. P. CHAPIN,

Secretary.Bv order of C. W. Booth. Esq.. I will

THEoffer for sale at auction WITHOUT

The refreshments, consisting of coffee,sandwiches and cake, "like motherused to make" were then served andat the close the curtains was againdrawn revealing the Stars and Stripeswhile the audience arose and sang the"Star Spangled Banner."

CJMIT or RESERVELOTS 71, 72, 73 and 74, of Pacift

Hishts.Electric light and telephone facilitiesSize of each lot 100x200 feet.- - ; Each

tat contains 20.000 square feet.Makai ol the residence of C. C. von

Elanim, Esq., and immediately in tnerininitv of other fine residences, posses- - AND

sing an unexcelled panoramic view ofHonolulu and surroundings.

Terms One-thi- rd casH- - balance larr ond two vears at 6 per cent interest.

the decision to double the size of theManchurian army and press the warwith vigor, the logic of those who formonths have insisted that every avail-

able ship should be dispatched to theFar East has finally prevailed.

The argument that no complete vic-

tory over the Japanese is possible un-

less the command of the sea is wrest-

ed from, them could, not be overcome,and though much yaluable time hasbeen lost and the moment seems in-

auspicious, it is officially intimatedthat an irrevocable decision has beentaken to dispatch the Baltic fleet, evenif the Port ' Arthur squadron shouldbe annihilated before its arrival there.It Is realized that the squadron which,on paper, is about equal in fightingstrength to the Japanese fleet, will bemuch better able to encounter themnow than in the spring, after theJapanese ships have had all winter toclean, repair and refit.

JigsiOTllfwiislWater, piped upon the lots. Terraced

nd planted with shade and iruu trees.Titi jmaranteed. ."Water in abun A MONTHLY MAGAZINE

dance will be furnished to residents on

ReallyFine Umbrellasand All NewWith our elegant new stock

just to hand, money that youpay now for an umbrella iswisely laid aside for a rainyday.

The frames are strong andthe handles very handsome.

Prices for ladies' and gentle-men's sizes range from 75c. to$10.00.

iHere are a few specials, plain and

fancy handles. , .

LADIES' SIZES.

Boleased for Poverty.Kawabara Katsutaro was released

from Oahu Prison yesterday, on takingthe poor man's oath, by Albert F. Judd,United States Commissioner. He wasconvicted of illicit distilling done nearHilo and sentenced to imprisonment fornine months and payment of a fine of5600. The nine months was served andservice for default of the fine begun.Other Federal prisoners have made ap-

plication for discharge under the poorman's oath. -

- ' .

Merchant to Meet.The directors of the Merchants' As-

sociation will submit resolutions to the

the Heights at prices not to exceeanntromrApnt rates. OF

Parties desiring to visi the lots upon application will oe conveyed tneietree of charge.

Further particulars of

WILL E, FISHER,Auctioneer.

Forestry, Entomology and AgricultureIssued Under the Direction

, OF THE

BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF AGRICULTURE

AND FORESTRY.AT AUCTION

MONDAY, OCT. 34, I94at 1 cvcrunc-K- . NOON.

association this afternoon which de-

fine the area for the federal buildingsite. "The chief difference betweenthese resolutions and those adopted bythe Chamber of Commerce is the Mer-

chants' area has Nuuanu street in-

stead of Fort as the Ewa boundary ofthe tract. - ' -

Copies now on sale at all book stores

At my salesroom, 180 Merchant street,$2.25, $2.50

Mercerized, $1.25.Gloria Silk, $1.50.Fine Italian Gloria,

and $3.do. tUnion Silk, $3.00.

y order of David uayion, .esq..vnaA nf th TCamalo Sugar Co., Ltd., 3

N

While hopes are still entertainedthat Port Arthur may be able to holdout until the appearance of the Balticfleet, the question of the" fall of thatstronghold does not, apparently, entergreatly into the calculations of theAdmiralty. The only thing expectedof the Port Arthur squadron is tobreak out of the harbor and inflict asmuch damage as possible upon Ad-

miral Togo's fleet. Such ships as es-

cape are expected to make their wayt Vladivostok, where the repairs onthe cruiser Bogatyr are understood tohave bien practically completed andthoue on the Rossia and Gromobol are

rill offer for sale at public auction tkntire property or ine

Kamalo Sugar Co., Ltd. of the Hawaiian Forester and Agricul-turist, a monthly magazine of forestry,

ADDRESS ALL COMMUNICATIONS TO ,

W. M. QIFFARDMONOJJAHV KDITOt

P. O. 'BOX 308? HONOLULU, H, f.

For business relating to aavertl8fngor subscription addressHaw auan Gazette Co., Ltd., Publishers,

p. O. Box 208. Honolulu, Hawaii.

eltuate n the Island of Molokai, Terentomology and agriculture, issued un

GENTLEMEN'S SIZES.Fine Mercerized, Hercules Frame,

$1.50.Italian Gloria, $2.00, $2.25 and

$2.50.Union Silk, $3.50.

der the direction of the Board of Comrritory of Hawaii, unless Booner

f at private sale.This property is admirably situated

for a sugar plantation or stock rank. mlssioners of Agriculture and Forestry.Price 10 cents a copy, $1.00 per year by

Cher la an abundance 01 wwer.mail to any address. Subscriptions re-

ceived at the Gazette office.Further particulars of J. Alfred Ma--

neanng completion.' The question of the war in the FarEast will depend upon the Issue of asea fight after the arrival of the Baltic Si

ooa and J. kuuiuw- -Usaitnee, or

WILL E. FISHER,- AUCTIONEER.

Gains: East ? -- For Sale .by

ALL, BOOK AND XfEWS DEALERS.

Extra Size, 30 Inch Umbrellas,$3 00. .

EHLIgBS- FORT STREET.

St. Andrew's FairGiven by

The Woman's Guild

fleet. Vladivostok, although ice-bou- nd

in winter for commercial ships, caneasily be kept open for a fleet of warvessels by means of rs. Ifthe Japanese fleet is caught in some-

what weakened conditions and theBaltic ships are able to win a victory,

IF SO, WHY NOT USETHE ONLY DOUBLE TRACKTel. Main 339. Residence TeL White 53.

RAILWAY between the Missouri RiverMrs. E. M.Taylor and Chicago.

THREE TRAINS DAILYVIA THE SOUTHERN PACIFIC,FLORIST.

Alexander Young Building.Fresh flower seed just arrived by

S. S. Alameda,UNION PACIFIC AND CH1CAL.O& NORTHWESTERN RYS.

Good PrintingAlwoyo

A Profitable InvestmentOverland Limited. Vestibuled.

LA CORRECTA Leaves San Francisco at 10:00 a. m.SMOKEThe most Luxurious Train in the World

officials here hold that other problemswill solve themselves and with Japa-nese communication severed, the Jap-anese army on the mainland will be atthe mercy of Russia.

This boldly announced programmeseems to stake the whole issue uponsea fighting. The Japanese ships, itmust be remembered, have been In act-

ive service for seven months. No mat-ter how greatly the efficiency of theguns and the speed of the-vessel- s havebeen impaired, the crews of Admiral

Electric Lighted Throughout- - Buffet

On the Cathedral Grounds,

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15th,From 12 a. m. to 6 p. m.

GRAND BAZAARSpecial New England Lunch

served from 12 to 2.

the best Clear Havana Cigar.

$3.50 per box up. Try them.

MAW ATT AN TOBACCO CO,smoking cars with barber and bath,Booklovers" Library, Dining Cars, Stand-ard and Compartment Sleeping Cars andObservation Cars. Less than three daysto Chicago without change.Corner King & Bethel Sts.

Eastern Express. Vestibuled. For the Best, go toFOR-- San Francisco at 0:00 p. m 1

Through Standard and Tourist Sleeping j Togo's ships have enjoyed the prestigerare to Chicago. Dining Cars, rree of continuous victories, while opposedReclining Chair Cars.

SWELL MILLINERY' GO TO .

Miss Power's MillinerT ParlorsBoston B iilding, Fort Street

luw Hawaiian uaLwiiw iiU. iAtlantic Express. Vestibuled.

Good Music.New Games for the Children.Admission 25 c.Lunch and Admission 75 c.

HAVE TOUR PIANO TUNED BY

the "Well-kno- vn and Reliable PianoMaker.

Office with Ccyne Furniture Co.. Ltd.,

Leaves San Francisco at 9:00 a. m.Standard and Tourist Sleepers. Ffr

ersonaily Conducted Excursions a l. is 4 TTi- - : (t

to them will be a fleet of brand-ne- w

ships, more or less untried, and noneof which have fired a shot in actualwarfare, and whose crews have neveryet been under fire. .

The Associated Press hears, how-ever, that important conditions areattached to the programme outlinedabove. According to this informationthe Baltic fleet will be started forthe Far East, but the continuation ofthe voyage to its destination will de- -

Wednesdays, Thursdays andsisLS cieahiss m dteiss bexsFort Street, opposite Star Block.

LADIES' AND GENTS' CLOTHINGCLEANED AT LOWEST

PRICES.Phone White 2362.

Union street. Phone Main 415.

The best of everytmng.R. R. RITCHIE,

A. P. C. Chicago & NorthwesternRy 617 Market Street (Palace Ho-

tel), San Francisco.

G.on Installments at $7.00 ......... .1Pianos sold

per month.

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tdim: lirtTH P AM AHA British and Thibetan merchants atTH PACIFIC Distress 1 ne rraciiic iiaruwinc wu,,their free convenience. Merchandise

--

The trade of the United States with purchased by Thibetans from Indi isCanada is shown from the sianapoim. permitted to be transported along exCommercial Advertiser Jifter Eatingof the Lmtea crates in a. ri stiT1c, routes and arrangements art to BOLE AGENTS FOR THE CELEBRATED

Nausea between meals, belching, vomiting', flatulence, fits of nervous head

tables included in the Annual Report mafle fof openingr mart9 in futUreof the Chief of the Bureau of Stas-- j other prosperoU3 commercial places,tics, just made public by the Depart- -

j Arrangerrients are also provided for toment of Commerce and Labor, while aUer objectionable features In thetables also received by the Bureau of .

preCeding. treaties. '

WALTER G. SMITH, EDITOR ache, pain in the 6tomacn, are aUsymptoms of dyspepsia, and the longer

OCTOBER 14 it is neglected the harder it is to cure it.FRIDAY Statistics from the Canadian govern

Every

Stove

Guaranteed

Hood's SarsaparillaJUSTICE TRIUMPHANT.

Sizesand

Pricesand PillsOur courts and juries are rising to the

Radically and permanently cure itemergency and instead of treating em

It 13 provided that no further dutiesshall be levied upon merchandise afterthe tariff shall be agreed upon by GreatBritain and the Thibetans. On theroute between the Indian frontier andthe places mentioned above no customsstations are to be established. ThibetIs to repair any dangerous passes uponthe road, In order to facilitate the trav

strengthen and tone the stomach andother digestive organs for the natural

bezzlement In' office as an indiscretion

they are giving it the discipline of law.

It is but a short time since Kumalaeand Enoch Johnson were convicted of

ment present a picture of that tradefrom the Canadian standpoint. Curious-

ly, while the two statements relate to

the same trade and are presented forfiscal years which terminate in eachcase on June 30, the figures of valuesdiffer materially.

The statement of the United Statesexports to Canada for the fiscal year

ending June 30, 1904, shows a total of

J131.2T4.346 while the Canadian state-

ment of imports from the United... i a 1 A r. Anlw VtA

performance of their functions., Best of material and workmanship. Mad in every style x3Accept no substitute for Hood'i

size known to modern stove construction.conspiracy to defraud the Territory and I had dyspepsia twenty-fiv- e years &neling of merchants thereon and thetrt imorisonment. Their too different medicines but got co help Repairs always on hand. .,prevention of difficulties. Thibet Is to

appoint native officials at the placesDUVtiiVV V

but their guilt wascases are on appealmentioned, and the officials appointed

ontil I began taking Hood's Sarsaparilla.Have taken four bottle8 of this medicineand can now eat almost anything, sleepwell, have no cramps in; my stomacn. noburning and no distress." Mss. Whliam

SoScI OsiStates wnicn snouia incuuC bv Great Britain at those nlaces nrarticles classified as exports from the tQ haye thglr correspondence wlth theUnited States to Canada, shows a total G. Babrett, 14 Olney St., Providence, R. 1.

value of such Imports of $143,010,578,

. established to the satisfaction of a jury

of good men.Now comes Edward S. Boyd to th?

bar to receive his deserts. He was one

of the most brazen of the thieves whom

the Legislature and a former Repub-

lican Territorial Committee forced into

the Territorial administration. His. present conviction Is based upon his

Hood's Sarsaparilla promises trImperial Resident and other Chineseofficials forwarded through the nativeofficials. Similar officials are to be ap-

pointed at other flourishing places

PRICES RANGE FROM $9.00 UPWARD.

COR. FORT AND MERCHANT STREETS.cure ana keeps tne promise.or a total iweive nuinuu uuuo 0v , -

than the United States statement ofexport values of presumably the saine which may be opened to trade andarticles. - Ah examination or tne Cana the same course adopted. SPARKLING"

dian' and United States figures for 1Owing to the neglect to fulfill theobligations of formr treaties and the

stealings before he was promoted to theoffice of Land Commissioner and while

he was chief clerk. The, court hasn'tother years also shows a material dif-

ference of statement. In the fiscal Heptoi Split if A CHANGE FOR THE BESTcommission of hosuile acts recently,tro faiion 11 n the Question of his sub year 1903 the Canadian figures of im Thibet agrees to pay an Indemnity ofsequent misdemeanors, but there j ports from the United States exceed by ,

2f500000 ln tnree yearly lngtailments, S The most ideal LIVER.charges enough to keep it busy for some

STOMACri and BOWEL RE- - EVioico i-- t rvsnve mnnyns iuc tne first payment to be made on Jan- -States showing exports to Canada, and j uary 1906 Thg plaee for the paymenttime to come. t GULATOR and TONIC

ERAGE.L Effervescine. Palatable

Plainly the law is having its inningsnvur in this Territory, but there was ana no

this is true of the figures tor xne diui of thjj IndemnIty lg to be determinedyear 1902. j later.. In order to secure the perform- - guaranteed harmless. It will im--

mediately, relieve and cure Bil-liousn-

Constipation, Indices- -This fact that, the Canadian atate- - -

ance Qf the provisions' mentioned. Brita long time that It sat palsied on thewoolsack watching the acquittal of ras-M- u

h a of their peers. Those ment 01 wipun i'"" s-- r- isn troops are to continue to occupyc tion " and Headache from any

cause, overindulgence in eating,exceeds In total the statement or ex- -the Chumbi valley for three yearg unJ J ' -

were bad days for good citizenship.

Whenever this paper rang the alarm ports irora me umieu , tn the trading places are satisfactorilyda for the corresponding period of time estabUshed and tne indemnity is palabell the thieves laughed, their benefi

Some people get into a rut. They use kerosene lamps justbecause they've always used them. In the early days ofthe kerosene lamp many people stuck to the tallow candlein just the same way. I you are one of these don't youthink a change for the best should be made "right now sothat you will have all the more chance to enjoy the comfortsand conveniences of electricity. Cost is just about the sameas kerosene unless burned recklessly. ,

We will be pleased to give you an estimate.

1 A HEPT0L SPLiriis not an unusual aevexopmenx n com- - .

ln . fun In case tne indemnity is notclaries of the press slavered with rage,paring the export figures of the United England will continue in occursthe then Territorial Republican Com U Occasionally before breakfast or

other meals insures eood health.mittee gave them new testimonials and States with the Import figures of other tlon of Cnumb, AU fortg between thecountries. In many cases the figures of

( Indian frontier and Gyangtse on routesall bands joined to get the, Advertiser cm

the Importing country, which include traversed by merchants from the In X Directions : Contents of oneterior of Thibet are to be demolished.only the articles exported from the

(

United States to that country, show a !(! Dottie tor Adults; dnmc while et-- t?

fervescing. i1 The provision of the treaty which haslarger total of value than do the figures f aroused the hostility of Russia and

indicted for libel. Fortunately for jus-

tice that day has passed. Stealing is

not glossed over, political parties havethe grace to clean their tickets, Juriesdo their duty, higher standards appear

in the local government and in Repub-

lican pqiitics.; It Is a result worth thelong battle against villainy which pre-

ceded IU

of the United States in stating thevalue of the same articles when ex

China l3. contained in the IXth article.This provision is to the effect thatwithout the consent of Great Britain

Price 15 cts.display.

occ our winuow 44Hawaiian Electric Co., Ltd.

Office King Street near Alakea 'Phone Main 390.v

tported. A striking illustration of thisgeneral fact is found In - some figuresrecently compiled by the Bureau ofStatistics, which showed the total im- -

no Thibetan territory shall be sold,leased or mortgaged to any foreign j Mister Drag Co.power whatsoever, and that no such

from the United States ofportatlons vor shall be nermitted tn concernLAWN GRASSES. AGENTS.

FOBT STREET.The native grass,' commonly used for

each country of the world In 1902, save ltself with the government of ThibetIn a few exceptional cases where fig- - j or any other affairs connected there-ure- s

of 1901 were the latest available with No such power ls to be permit-record- s.I

ted to send either official or non-offici- al

A summarization of these national persons to Thibet, no matter in what 3statements of imports from the United

LADIES' IMPERIALLACE NO. 66

This is the shoe-fo- r long ser-vice, stylish build and smallprice.

It is made of the best kid, golfcut, patent tip and dull top, mil-itary heek welt sole which is notto heavy for dress, and invisible

1

lawns in this city is tenacious but notbeautiful. Perhaps If the U. S. Experi-

ment Station would help, it would be

possible to get a lawn grass equallydependable with the manienie and bet-

ter looking. There are a score of plots

In a well-kno-'" Connecticut nursery

given over, eacfr to a distinctive orna-

mental grass. Why not have such anacreage at the Experiment Station, so

cctrlcpursuit they may be engaged, to as-

sist in the conduct of Thibetan affairs.No foreign power is to be permitted toconstruct roads or railways or - erecttelegraphs or open mines In Thibet,and in the event of Great Britain'sconsenting to another power construct- -

States in 1902 shows a grand total ofthe world's imports from the UnitedStates of $1,590,000,000, while the UnitedStates statement of the value of ex-

ports to all countries of the world inthat year was $1,360,000,000, a difference Bronzes01 o imuion aoiiars, or i per cent lrlE, rnnds A rrwnw mtn v liivn iiiarv 1L iid 111 L

larger when stated as imports by the ' proof It is very elastic and easy fitting.or erecting telegraphs, Great Britainthat all kinds may be triea in misclimate and the best picked out for lawnpurposes?

It is a little matter but It might go

far to improve the looks of the town. In ordering mention No. 66.

MANUFACTURERS' SHOE CO., LTD., Fort St.

Unique designs in all thelate effects, selected withespecial care according tothe needs of the market

We want you to see oursplendid assortment.

PRICES RANGE FROM rm n ei 11 a

$12.00

Here is the kind of thing Hawaii,as a tourist resort, has to contendwith:

.Jamaica by Atlas Line ser-

vice. . Sailing every Saturday.$40 one way; $75 round trip, in-

cluding stateroom accommoda-tion and meals.

Twenty-fiv- e days' cruise, $125

per adult. Including Jamaica,Colombia, Costa Rica, and Ni-caragua. ..

Send for illustrated bookletsbefore deciding "Winter plans.

Hamburg-America-n Line, 37

TO World's News Daily.

will make a fun examination on herown account for carrying out the ar-

rangements proposed. No real prop-erty or land containing minerals orprecious metals In Thibet Is to bemortgaged, exchanged, leased or soldby any foreign powers. The- - treaty Isin two drafts Chinese and Englishand the English draft is to be regard-ed as authoritative. Like most of themore- - recent treaties, therefore, thiswith Thibet looks to an extension ,ofmarkets, which is really the policy be-

hind most of the diplomacy and warsof more modern times.

VERESTCHAGIN'S VANITY.

The vanity of the late VerestchaginIs revealed in some letters recently pub-

lished, in which he speaks of his visitsto Vienna. In one of these he directsthat the receipts for three days of theexposition of his. pictures in that cityshould be given to the fund for victimsof the Ring theater fire, but only oncondition that this fact be given all pos-- i

sible publicity in the newspapers. In

$250,000crvuna.;t to Note the beauty in our

show window.days cruise, visitingTwenty-fiv- e

various countries of the world thanwhen stated as exports by the UnitedStates. :

Another illustration of this generalfact, that imports are always valuedhigher than the corresponding articleswhen exported, is found in the factthat the total valueof importationsof all countries of the world for whichrecords are available is shown by thereport of the Chief of the Bureau ofStatistics, Just issued, at $11,809,23$,-0- 0,

while the exports of all countries,which, of course, must form the im-

ports, were valued for the correspond-ing year at only $10,514,932,000, a differ-ence Of $1,354,699,000, or J13 per centlarger when stated as imports thanwhen stated as exports.

While the. figures of the . Canadiangovernment and those of the UnitedStates differ somewhat as to he valueof the commerce passing between them,they sufficiently agree to show that thegrowth of that commerce has been veryrapid. Exports from the United Statesto Canada have Increased, accordingto the figures of the United States,from twenty-fou- r million dollars in1854 to $131,000,000 in 1904, a period offifty years. Most of this growth, how-ever, 'has occurred In the last decade.From 1854 to 1894, a period of fortyyears, the increase, as shown by thefigures of the Bureau of Statistics, wasbut thirty-tw- o million dollars, thefigure for 1S94 being fifty-si- x milliondollars; while from 1S94 to 1904 a ten

four foreign countries, for $125. Twelve

Hi.

F. 4 CO,, LTD,days' trip from San Francisco to Ha-

waii and. return $135. No wonder we

are not in the running.A

Fort Street

STARTlivi

another he begs the recipient to com-mend him for a Nobel prize, since hisachievements surely were greater thanthose of Bertha Von Suttner.

a account today. Interest paid

Na wonder Eddy Boyd drove a fasthorse and a rubber-tire-d buggy when

all he needed to do when he wantedcas3 was to take it out of the Gover-nment till and leave an I. O. U. Theonly. wonder is that he didn't drive atouring car and keep a private yacht.Looking back at the chances he had hemust be surprised at his own modera-

tion...

St. Petersburg reports that the WarOffice is not confident of Russian suc

4 1- -2 p.

Wonderful how fresh Halibut adds to the enjoyment of agood dinner. A lot of these splendid fish came in the Sonoma.

ORDER BY TELEPHONE.

Metropolitan Meat Co., Ltd.Telephone Main 45.

i

cess. That is where the War Office ls f

PADEREWSKI'S FINGER HURT.

Paderewski met with a singular acci-

dent,, while playing at Melbourne,writes the London Express Sydneycorrespondent. During a rapid passagethe little finger of his right hand caughtin the keys and the flesh was torn.Although the distinguished pianist suf-fered great pain and the finger bledfreely, he stuck pluckily to his per-

formance to the end of the piece. Therecital which was to have followed hadto be postponed.

SING LOY CO.

PACHEC05- -tlU PLATES

years' period, the increase was seventy-fiv- e

millions. In the forty years priorto 1894 exports from the United Statesto Canada Increased thirty-tw- o mil-lion dollars; in the ten years subse-quent to 1S94 they increased seventy--

per aVinum and your money can bewithdrawn on demand

$1. to $5000accepted on one account

Further particulars at

Phesds Saviags, Ssildisg asd Lo&a

Judd Building,Honolulu, T. H.

HENRY E. POCOCK,Cashier.

GUARANTEE CAPITAL. $2co,ooo.oo.PAID IN CAPii.-vL- , $1,300,000.00.

like other people.1

Those large reenforcements Kuropat-ki- n

had were probably sacred images.But the Japs are great ikon-oclas- ts.

1

Mahelona could do more on the policeforce for his pet project than he couldln the Legislature.

HThe erratic movements of the Baltic

fleet suggest that Captain "Weisbarth is- navigating It.

All persons having claims against thefirm 'of Sing Loy Co., late of Kingstreet, Honolulu, are requested to pre-

sent the same to the undersigned with-in thirty days from date.

THEO. H. DA VIES & CO., LTD.,Assignee of Fire Claim.

Honolulu, October 13th, 1904. 6923

five millions.

THE THIBETAN TREATY.

Bradstreets has a review of theThibetan treaty, an instrument whichdeals almost exclusively with ques-tions of trade. According to a trans-lation published in British journals, ithas been framed to embody an agree-ment upon ten clauses explaining orInterpreting objectionable and doubtful

Nobody ever hurt his country, his STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING.party or himself by voting for the best

The Expert DentistTor Honest Work at Low PriceF. L. FERGUSON, D. D. S.

Manager.Na 215 Hotel street, in front of Tounfl

Building.

New RestaurantJUST OPENED.

iTerythlng New and First CI&u.THE KAIULANI

1HS Fort St.. oppo. Club Stable.

PANAMA HATSNew line just received

"atGLOBE CLOTHING COUP ANT

HU1 St EftT SatktL

A Man and His Hair is soon partedif he does not take proper care of it.

Pachecho's Dandruff Killer will saveyour hair and keep your scalp free fromall impurities.

Sold by all Druggists and at UnionBarber Shop. Tel. 232 Main.

HONOLULU BREWING & MALTINGCO., LTD.

There will be a meeting of the stock

HORSE SHOEING !

W. W. Wright Co., Ltd.have opened a horse-shoei-ng departmentin connection with their carriage shop,

etc. Having secured the services of afirst-cla- ss shoer, they are prepared to doall work intrusted to them in a first- -

man.:

"Whatever you do at the polls don'tsplit your conscience.

. 1

Don't be a knocker. Bulletin.Don't be a sucker.

Good wine needs no foreign label.

points In the treaties of 1890 and 1893

which have not been carried out by theThibetans. It is now agreed, in con-formity with the first clause of thetreaty of 1S90, that the Thibetans willreerect boundary stones at the Sikkimfrontier. The Thibetans further agreeto establish marts at Gyangtse andGartok. in addition to Patung, for thepurpose of mutual trading between the

holders of the Honolulu Brewing &Malting Co.. Ltd., at the company's office, on Queen street, at 2 o'clock p. m.,Saturday, Oct. 15. 1904.

L. SCHWEITZER,Secretary.

Union Street., oppo. Pacific Club.

llrst Clan Accommodation tor Boarland Lodgin.

1121 and 1188 UaloB CtrMfcHonolulu, Oct 12, 1904. 6922 I class manner.

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THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, OCTOBER 14, 1504. 5

were beinjr sent out quietly to India allthe time, and every preparation was Bishop & Co., Bankers

ESTABLISHED IN UX3.EWS OP THE WORLD FROM

THE LATEST COAST FILES7.

Mormon Ambitions Burglar's Clearing House.

Bitten by an Alligator Another War Scare.

The Bacillus of Youth Mont Pelee.

being made for a long campaign.; CATS IN CHOP SUET.

PITTSBURG, Oct. 6. Cats in Pitts -uui5 uiixy resi easier today ry reasonof the announcement by E. U. Thompison, an agent of the Western Pennsyl

, vania Humane Society, that Chinesej who are caught killing animals and us- -ins the meat as an ingredient for chopenav Via st .a

affectindlLnceinregarrto6" cru- -1 saue against tnem. Evidence of thepractice is said to be in the possessionor the humane society, which will enter a complaint of cruelty against cer- -tain Chinese.

parv T . T ,,..xix.TACOMA, Oct. 6. The German bark

Alderberan, which just arrived herefmm nt-a'-w- r ctHmt Aonuiw xiiciiiiiiiut,!!wnaie twelve miles off Cane Flattprv.f -

lue '"i, w" m "w or .tne tug Lomeat the time. No one had noticed thewhale, which seemed to have beeneuner plowing its way just beneaththe surface or ai n.irin. -rise to blow. The fnrpl nf tLwas so great that the crew thoughtthe vessel had struck a rock, and cametumbling out of the forecastle. Someof the) sailors began sliding down thetowiine to tne tug. The impact sentme vessel on her beam, and some time sease of the blood and that, if Dr. Wil-elaps- ed

before the panic subsided. The Hams Pink Pills are so eood for the

(From Coast Files.)SALT LAKE, Oct 3-- Resident Jo--

seph F. Smith of th TVfnrmnn rhurrhhas made an address to the Mormonsof Washington Countv that has causeda sensation among the GentiVs of theState. The address was delivered atthe regular conference of the St.George Stake.' President Smith, " An-thony H. Lund, one of his counselors,and Apostle Hyrum M. Smith, President Smith's son, went from Salt Laketo attend the conference. In his address President Smith spoke of the opoosition the Mnrmnn rhurrh h ' m.t,u'" via uiuti viiQitu.He compared Utah with Tudea, where,he said the same general conditionsexisted. In counseling the Mormons asto their temporal affairs ' he said: "The

: .. v..... Tr sro uuynumes ana iana. we snouia not sento tnem nor aid them, as they are theenemies of the kingdom of God. I havenever sought to be a vast land owner,but I have never sold an inch of trround. , n ,w an ciitiuj kji uuu 3 wuin.. .

President Smith offers an explanationof his statement by saying he learnedmany of the "Mormons were movingaway and he advised them to remain ftand "not-t- sell out their homes anlands, to their enemies

St. George is more than one hundredmiles from the railroad and the population of the region surrounding it is almost entirely Mormon. It has beenclaimed for some time past that Mor--mon leaders were making addresses inremote portions of the State along thelines followed by President Smith in hisspeech at St. Georee. The Mormonquestion has become more acute thanfor years past, because of the Smootcase and the formation of an anti- -church party in the State.

'DANA'S OLD HOME.GLENCOVE (L.I.), October 4. Do--

soris, the tarnous estate ot tne lateCharles A. Dana for over a quarterof a century, the place of wonderful ber 6. The captain of the British steam-horticultu- ral

and arboricultural collec- -' er Sibun, which arrived here today, re--

' 11s .won KKOWS

WHAT ONE OF THE SEXnTfTlVP'PTrrk TO HER

, GREAT TOY

--Mrs. JJe Long Finds that the Indescribable Pains of Rheuma--tism .Can be Cured Through"'!t.ae xxooa.

1

Mrs. E. M. De Long, of No. 160 West, Broadway, Council Bluffs, Iowa, found! hor.t.ic ..'.I 7, " 7 Z --

U,ryneUma-wo,i. 1U "e winter 01 isae. sne gavetne doctr a chance to help her, which I

ne aled to improve, and then she did I

RODlA tlllnlrlncy a n ,1 1 . . t m.uvi eavciuucuiiuk ui i

uer own. ene was so sucessful that sheauiy IO ten tne story of

her escape from suffering"My brother-in-law- ," she says, "was

enthusiastic on the subject of Dr. Wil"amS Plnl P1119 Purifier Of theDlood' and when I was suffering etreme pains in the joints of my ankles,knees, hips wrists and elbows, and thedoctor was giving me no relief, I be- -,

eran to reflect that rheumatism is a di

blood, they must be irood for rheuma.tism and worth a trial.

"I was in bed half the time, sufferingWith na n that annt Kft tv. j.um,v UC UvSVI 1UCU Wone who nas never had the disease. Itwould concentrate sometimes in one setof joints. When it was in mv feet Icould not walk, when it was in my el- -bows and wrists I could not even drawthe relets over my body. I had suf- -

fd in thiswly for weeks befor, Ioegan using Dr. Williams' Pink Pills,Two weeks after I began with them Iexperineced relief and after I had taken

w cumeiy; weu. 10 manesure 1 continued to use them about twoweeks loneer and thpn stnnnpd nltn' - -

gether. For several years I have hadno reason to use them for myself, but IIiavo recommended them tn others aaan excellent remedy."

Dr. Williams' Pink. Pills furnish theblood with all the elements that areneeded to build up healthy tissue.strong muscles and nerves, capable ofbearing the strain that nature puts up- -on them. They really make new bloodand cure all diseases arising from disorders of the blood or nerves, such-a- s

sciatica, neuralgia, partial paralysis,locomotor ataxia, St. Vitus' dance,nervous prostration, anaemia and allforms of weakness in either male orfemale. They are sold by all druggists.ooooooooooooovolume of business is already .passingover the Seattlo-Sitk- a cable, and thereceipts during September, the, first fullmonth of operation, amounted to morethan $2000.

TO CURE TUBERCULOSIS..ST. LOUIS (Mo.), Oct. 4. At the sec

ond day's session of the Congress onTuberculosis Dr. E. J. Harrick of To--!ronto, Canada, declared that there werethree precautions to be taken whichwould assist greatly in the fight of thesystem against disease germs. Theprincipal one of the three, he said, wasa liberal use of cold-wat- er baths. Hisadvice to those who fear consumptionis to take frequent cold baths. Theother means of prevention mentionedare use of much fat meat and .vut-o- f-

door life. .

Governor Garvin of Rhode Isla-i- d

spoke of the sanatoriums in his Stateto isolate consumptive persons. He saidthe Government should care for thoseafflicted with the disease.

Among . other speakerr were Dr.Charles E. Hughes of St. Louis. "Oyer450 people die daily in the United States 1

from this disease," said Dr. Hughesin his address, "and one of the mostdangerous means of diffusion of tuber- -

Iculosis is through the pawn shops and J

second-han- d clothing institutions oflarge cities."

In the following resolution, whichwas adopted, the main purposes forwhich the congress convened are outlined:

"Resolved, That it is the sense of theAmerican International Congress of Tu-

berculosis that it is the imperative dutyof all civilized governments to take im- -

medite action for the arrest of . thespread of this scourge. And, further.that it Is the sense of this congressthat every government should appointa commissioner of the public healthwith a seat in the Cabinet, empoweredwith adequate' authority and means tosuppress tuberculosis.

Much discussion arose over the ques- -tion of establishing municipal sana- -

toriums, as an outgrowth of which thefollowing resolution was adopted:

"Resolved,' That it is the duty of gov- -ernment authorities to promote the establishment and maintenance of municipal sanatoriums in which the tuber- -cular patients may be isolated from I

their relatives and the public, andwhere they may be placed under suitable conditions for the cure or arrestof the disease." ,

6. W. LINCOLN

Contractor and Buildera

Has resumed business at Alakea Stopposite the Occidental Hotel. All kinds

r - t. i :u: i: :m tworK in mc uunuuiy iinc wiu ocfaithfully done.

E

Please give me a trial. Estimatescheerfully gien.

NOTICE.

ANT WOMAN OR GIRL NEEDINGelp or advice, is invited to communi- -

jate, either in person or by letter, withEnsign L. Anderson, matron ofche Salvation Army Woman's Indus- -irial Home, Young street, between Ar-tesian and McCully streets,, rnauktide. Honolulu.

, Ml II J. . ' -- - -V'nii co to vrnr. KarKor waolr affa..., O - L , v j .w.... VU.

weeK, Dopmg uub snampoo win coreyour dandruff. But the dandruff con-tinues to form as badly as ever. Thetrouble is you do not go at it fa thev!rTit WAV. TVi iiMiln ii Tt4"yoa mast enre it before your dandruffitMI avovili'cqnnAQ Simula nm!.

- ? A 1 .wui never urrng m aDoac

Ayer's Hair Vi 01This splendid hair preparation cures

dandruff because it cures the diseaseof the scalp, and then the dandruffsoon disappears for good.

AyervS Hair Vigor will prevent dandruff, and at the same time it willkeep your hair soft and glossy.Prepared by Br. J. CAyer Cv, Lowell, Mtsi U. S.

HOLLISTER DRUO C-O- Agent.s

To arrive by S. S. Alameda

. $1.25 a box, at .

GERTZ BROS.: Phone White 3231.All order delivered free.

Extraordinary'Bargains

For Men, f f f . 1 f f f f m f . f

My entire haberdash-ery stock is being sacri-- .,

flced at absolute cost.Now is the time to buy.Nothing withheld ev-

erything on sale.,.,.... .

I. LevingstonsYoung Building.

q u si rmm 011

NOW:' OPEN i:AT

((apiofani ParkTHE AQUARIUM WILL BE OPEN

am Week days from 10 o'clock a. m. toI p. m. and from 7 to 9:30 o'clock p. wu

On Sundays it will open at 1 p. m.ADMISSION will be FREE on

Thursdays. On other days a chargeWill be made of 10 cents to adults andI cents to children under fourteen yearsfef age.

SHE DOUGLAS

A fr'TT' '..; ' . . . -

f ' I . - 1

to

, -- -x j

.... :i:- "o--- . ;' 'r? iff."- - "

m, ' 'fiiV.H if

3X

BATH, THE PLUMBER. in

!SH 33 Street, opposite You Hotel.PHONIC L

CHICHCSTER'S ENCLISH ' fa-

EF1HYR0YAL, PILLSV SAFE. Ali.T.ri1M. I.il. "i" ''r,'"1t5

tor GHIVHtAI '

vln KEI n Cold metalllo boxM.I with Wu riWK. 1 e .i nrr.

Unmgnrom MabotHatioa u lmlt-ttnm-

Buy "t Tovr PrncgiM. r ! 4e.lunpi fbr rartlcalan. Te.tlm.niU hiud "Relief fr l,dle,u. Utur. JJ--

,u.il. lO.OoO Tlimnml. W

r. . I'kl.kMlraCkoiKUl'. ' Kj

teta thte pper. MxIImb ttMre. Him.

BANKING DEPARTMEIC3Transact business in all departstasSs

of banking.Collections carefullj attends ta.Exchange bought and sold.

Commercial "and Traveler Lett? rjCTrPrM A Issued n Ttanlr nt ra If ftmh. .

and n. m. Rothschild A itaicorrespondents: The Bank of Qa3

Sydney, Ltd., London.

Drafts and cable transfers on ColzaJP throuh the Hongkong

Shanghai Banking Corporation k9Chartered Bank of India, Australia i

--nmA .. m...i.Phv. f a t- -w " a Mw Alllti 4.AU 'i h" wvui"

Pany.

Interest allowed on term deposits althe following rates per annum, via:

Seven days' notice, at 2 pe centThree months, at 3 per cent.Six months, at Z!t per cent.Twelve months, at 4 per cent.

TRUST DEPARTMENT.Act as Trustees under mortgagesManage estates, real and personal.Collect rents and dividends.Valuable papers, wills, bonds, .

received for safe keeping.ACCOUNTANT DEPT.

Auditors for corporations and jrBrate firms.

Books examined and reported on.Statements of affairs prepared.Trustees on bankrupt or InrolT3

estates.Office, 924 Bethel street.SAVINGS DEPARTMENT.

Deposits received and interest allowed at 4 ner cent Der annum. Incordance with rules and regulations,copies or wmcn may be obtainea aapplicationINSURANCE DEPARTMENT

Agents for FIRE, MARINE. LITIS.ACCIDENT and (EMPLOYERS' LIA-BILITY INSURANCE COMPANIES,

Insurance Office, 924 Bethel Street.

The Danger; of

Loss By FireMay be far reaching. There

are things in every homewhich no amount of insur-

ance can replace heirlooms,keepsakes, valuable papers,

'etc.Care may be avoided and

absolute safety assured byleaving them in a safe de-

posit vault of

Hawaiian Trust

Co., Ltd.

rt StreetHONOLULU.

WM. G. IRWIN & CO LTD.Wm. G. Irwin.. President and Manage?jonn d. Spreckels.. First Vice-Preside- nt

W. M. Glffard... Second Vice-Preside- nt

Whitney, Jr TreasurerRichard Ivers Secretary

c Lovekin... Auditor

AGENTS FOR THEOceanic Steamship Corsp&STf

AGENTS FOR THEScottish Union & National InsurajM

Company of Edinburg.Wilhelma of Magdeburg General In

surance Company.Associated Assurance Company vi

Munich & Berlin.Alliance Marine & General Assuraa

Co., Ltd., of London.Royal Insurance Company of lifer--

pool. Alliance Assurance Company viLondon.

Rochester German Insurance Company of N. Y.

WM. G. IRWIN & CO LTUAGENTS FOR

Western Sugar Refining Co., EasFrancisco, Cal.

Baldwin Locomotive Works, Philadelphia, Pa.

Newall Universal Mill Co., Mannfacturers of Isational cane BnreaaeTNew York, N. Y.

FarafDne Paint Company, San FramCisco, Cal.

Ohlandt & Co., San Francisco, CaLPacific Oil Transportation Co., E

Francisco, CaL

C. BREWER & CO., LTD.Sugar Factors and Commission

Merchants.LIST OF OFFICERS.

C. M. Cooke. President; George B.Robertson, Manager; E. F. Bishop,Treasurer and Secretary; CoL ,W. F,Allen, Auditor: P. C. Jones, C. EE.

Cooke, G. R. Carter, Directors.

vojoy 2.

Liquor Dealers.

Nuuanu and Merchant Sts.

Phone Main 308.

Honolulu Candy Co.New England Bakery

J. OSWALD LUTTED,Hotel Street. Manager. ,

1 ceiving stolen property : TxvcuuciiU iT7mun,, 1

I 1 T . ! T.': 1 .,1 sicui, lAiuiju hi Samue, Epstein. The witkT mnwho are in the furniture business inoutlying districts. . The principal com- -

PIaininS witness" was F. J. Magerstadt,; , Kmtfir

QV," P T facrprstafJt- -

When the sweatbox was placed in oper- -ation, Isen is reported to have weak- -ened and to have disclosed the allegedconspiracy.

BITTEN BY AN ALLIGATOR.NEW YORK, October 4-- The keep- -

ers foueht desperately with Critto, tnelargest of twenty-seve- n alligators in thethe menagerie in Central Park today

" . ..when the saurians were transferredfrom summer to winter quarters. WithtwQ mn at his head ad two othersbehind him the alligator was lifted fromthe cround.

a nroH Kir th tn.irh d hi keeners. -sV-

;u-,rand before they !-out o The inclosure he had

trPPA himlf of the rone about hisia With onen mouth he started to--ward Keeper Cook, who, with a yellot alarm, jumped into, a pona, out nutbefore Cntto had taken a bite out ot hisIPC. rrittn a finallv ronmiered and '

j 1 j

transferred.FOR CATS AND DOGS.

If NEW ORK, October 4. One hun- -

clred drinking basins for cats and dogswere padlocked to lamp posts in variousparts of the city todav. The nucleusfor the fund with which they were pur-

chased was contributed by Mrs. MinnieMaddern FiskeI

The ocietyffor the Prevention ofCruelty to Animals wished to have basins orovided tlurine the hot weather,but were 'delayed by the necessity ofgetting permits. The basins are of iron,painted and bronied and are plainlymarked with the society's name. Theyare attached to trees or lamp posts bystrong "chains fastened with a padlock.Arrangements have been made with Dr.Woodbury for the men of the street-cleanin- g

department to keep the basinscleaned and filled with fresh water.

MONT PELEE IN ERUPTION.KINGSTOWN (St. Vincent), Octo- -

ports that when the steamer passed the 1

island of Martinique, on September30th, Mont Pelee was in furious erup--tion. The spectacle was witnessed bythose on bord thre ilbu,n at!?:kJ" me nronung 01 ic u itt ,

"clouds and balls of fire. This accountsfor the dust clouds renorted to have

. i 3 4.1. 4ViAseen .ycw uuuBuuulvvinawara iwaiiu.PARROTS HAVE APPENDICITIS.

SYRACUSE (N. Y.), October 6.

The discovery that the parrot is subjectto appendicitis, has been" made at Canandaigua. It was reveald at an au-

topsy upon a dead parrot, and the rev-

elation came as a great surprise to anumber of physicians. One of the par-rots in the big aviary on the estate ofMrs. Mary S. Thompson, on the north-eastern extremity of the village, diedafter a comparatively brief illness, andfor the purpose of ascertaining the causeof death a oost mortem examination wasmade This proved clearly that the birddied from appendicitis. The superin-tendent of the aviary, who performedthe autopsy, found seed in thebird's appendix.

ANOTHER WAR SCARE.

LONDON, October 2. A sensationhas been created here by certain remarks

by declaring that, without doubt, therewould De a war Detween ungiana anaT? ucri'i novf cnrinnr T f i er tni rr 1 It 1 c

private opinion, diu aiso tnat 01 iora

Ifiiilt"rem.t, t.

tions that were one of that great editor'schief interests in life, is to become thehome of Harrold T. White cf Brook- -lyn Heights. Harrold White marriedMiss Ruth Uriderhill, Charles A. Dana'sgranddaughter. Mr5. Dana, the widowof the editor, has been dead about eightmonths. tiL property has just beendivided and the Whites take the quaintand celebrated Dosoris.

The Dana place is on an island out !

in the sound, connected with the main ,

land by a causewav. Dosoris is notthename of the Dana place alone, butof the entire district. The island of f

the Dana property is known as Dana'sisland. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dana alsohave a house on. Dana's island. This,it is understood, has not been affectedby the division of the property.Whether all the famous collections oftrees, by far the greatest ever gath-ered in America, has passed to Har-rold White is not stated, but it prob-ably will go with the old house.

BURGLAR'S CLEARING HOUSE.CHICAGO, October 3. Burglary and

sale of the proceeds on up-to-d- busi-

ness lines has been revealed by the confession to Inspector Shippy of the Chi

cago-aven- ue police division of one offive second-han- d storekeepers. They arealleged to have discovered likely, places

rob, "tipped" these places to burglars

wnaie appeared oadiy injured and ca- -en r,una t&etu . and ship as if" STI'mUy lt dIved and

w3.o occil I1U more.e .1THE BACILLUS OF YOUTH. i

PARIS, Oct. 6. Professor Metchni- -

koh s new youtn bacillus, based onPasteur's theory of the existence ofbeneficent as well as onluHons ml--crobes. contlnuM tn AW.t- -' hitf

. . .

slve lnterest in the scientific world.Metchnikoff is indifferent to this feel- -ing. tie is certain ne has discoveredthe long sought secret of indefinitelone-vff- Tn o cfatomant t, v,a " - ; Or wvww bviiVl b bVUajsaid:

"Thus far we have simply declaredthat this rptnprlv deetrnva ivViamight call the intestinal flora which arenotoriously abundant in pernicious microbes. In this way we arrest thegradual putrefaction of our bodies.

"I prefer for my solution a specialkind of coagulated milk, but it is hardto obtain. A substitute consists of ordinary milk boiled and skimmed. Tothis is added a' quantity of my Bul-garian bacilli, abounding throughoutthe Balkans. The taste is agreeable,but sugar may be added to suit partic-ular palates. Two bowls at a tempera-ture of 72 degrees should be . takendaily. If taken regularly many yearsmay be added to one's life, while theremedy is also an almost certain curefor dyspepsia and anemia."EGYPTIAN PRINCE IN AMERICA.

j

NEW YORK, Oct. 5. Prince AzizHassan, first cousin of the Khedive ofEgypt, arrived today on the Hamburg-America- n

liner Princess Irene. He willgo immediately to St. Louis for the ex-

position.The Prince is portly, fair and ex-

tremely agreeable of manner. He re-

fused,

to say anything about the condi-tion of European politics, but said good-natured- ly

whenever asked for an ex-pression of opinion . about Americanwomen: "I like them, yes, very much,and I am sorry my stay in this coun-try will not be long. I am not herefor fortune."

Prince Hassan looks more like a Ger-man than an Egyptian. He wears amustache like Emperor William. Aftera visit to the fair the Prince will goto San Francisco and then ship for theseat of war.

"But all for fun," he says. "I am notlooking for trouble."

THE ALASKAN CABLE.

WASHINGTON. Oct. 4. GeneralGreely today received a dispatch fromMajor Edgar Russel of the Signal Corpaannouncing that the Burnside, whichhas been engaged in laying a cablefrom Valdez, Alaska, buoyed the east-ern cable end at the mouth of Sitkaharbor on Monday afternoon. It willprobably require several days to makethe shore-en- d connections in the narrow passage of Sitka harbor and throwopen the cable to the commercial world.

This completes the Alaska telegraph j

system, which has been under con- - J

struction for the past three years, dur-- J

ing which time about 4000 miles of landlines and submarine cable have been .

constructed and laid, and it bringsNome and Behring straits regions intodirect communication with the United .

States over an route.This system is the first submarine ca- - !

ble of American manufacture, and itsleneth is sufficient to extend from New- -foundalnd to Ireland. A considerable

. j

Hi

a'"

OI

t.'iaffliii

a

MAY VISIT HONOLULU. aa

and then acted for them in disposing of concerning Anglo-Russia- n relations, at-th- e

stolen property. The gang is alleged . tributed to Sir Walter Lawrence, pri-t- o

have conducted a clearing-hous- e, 1

secretary to Lord Curzon. He waswhere all stolen property was checked . . . . ,

off and to have maintained a secret de-- ! staying at a country nouse quite recem-nncitnr- v.

from which the plunder was ; f, when he electrified a dinner partyremoved to different second-han- d stores,where it was sold as "damaged by tire

' i

Just before it adjourned Saturday, tneGrand Jury indicted the tollowing on tvitcnener ana an 01 nis omciais m m-fi- ve

charges each of burglary and re-- dia, and he added that many big guns

I

'i THE NEW i6,ooo TON BATTLESHIP OHIO WHICHi a a a a a.a aa a a.aa a

--a

gTirvr $fgs'HSSs'sS!MSS5'S L as . .aX " KX R s $r s a a a;aja,a a" a. "a a a 'aa. a t k a a a a

Page 6: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu · SUGAR 96 Test Centrifugals. 4.25, I J, U. S. WEATHER BUREAU. OCTOBER 13 t Last 24 hour rainfall .00; Temperature, max. 83; min. 76; Weather, Fresh

JU. .iU...........

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL...

"ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, OCTOBER 14, 190

3REALTY TRANSACTIONSSPECIAL SALE'FOE--

REPULSINGLet any man who la weak, broken down, old

and decrepit In physical weakness, full ofpains and aches, gloomy, despondent andcheerless any man who wants to be strongerand younger than he feels let him come a.n4

! i

T

Two Weeks OnlyBEGINNING OCTOBER 1

I

JfiPAKESE

Genera! Stoessel on theLate Port Arthur

Assault,

Entered for Record Oct. 13, 1904.

Kittie E Ashley to James W Pratt.. PAK Kato to E Sumino.. ............ ..PAJ Alfred Magoon to Richard H

Trent Tr : ...... ..AMMary. C Widdifleld to Robert W

Shingle Tr ........ ....Tr SaleLee Quon to Lee Shin Kee.,. ...PAJane Mist by atty to Western &

Hawn Invst Co Ltd i .AMGear, Lansing & Co by Creditors to

David W Anderson ..Apptmt TrKuna and wf to Henrietta Amoe--

hiona . . . 1

Must have room for new goods on way.

LADIES' SILK JACKETS, $5.00; now.. $4- -

Cotton Crepe Kimonos, former price $1.50; now. .$1.20

FIGURED CREPE GOODS, former price 20c yard;... . ic v'ardnow - .

SILKS, former price 40c. yard; now 32c. yard.

CURIOS AT GREATLY REDUCE PRICES.

All other goods in like proportion. These prices hold good till

Oct. 15th only.FINEST OF CHINA.

I

o

tell me how he feels, andif I say that I can cure him

. I will forfeit $1,000 if I fail.I don't want money that

I don't earn. I don't neelit, and am not affer it.But I am after the dollarsthat are now going wrongIn the quest of healtk.Look at all these poorwrecks of humanity thatare spending all they earnon drugs dope that Isparalyzing their vital or-gans that have spent allthey have earned for yearwithout gaining a pound cfstrength for the hundredsof dollars wasted

That is the money that Iam after, because for everydollar I take I can give athousand per cent interest.I have cured so many casesright here that I can provemy claims to you, but ifthat proof is not enoughI'll give you the names ofmen right near you whereyou are. Is that fair?

isp m is sd ;!f i

o

ST. PETERSBURG, Oct. 5, 6:20 P. M.Emperor. Nicholas has at last receiv-

ed General Stoessel's official report ofthe desperate four days' assault of thebesiegers upon Port Arthur from Sep-

tember 19th to September 23d, fromwhich it appears that the unofficial re-

port from Chef oo was by no means ex-

aggerated. The Japanese displayedfrenzied r bravery, but they lost 10,000

men, and their only success was thecapture of two redoubts guarding thewaterworks. " '

They prepared for the assault by ageneral bombardment, and then launch-

ed their attacks simultaneously fromthe north and west." Night and daythey fought under cover of a continual

1120 Nuuanu St. Just mauka of Hotel St.

THE SWELL TURNOUTS

Recorded Oct. 5, 1904.

E C Greenwell (Mrs) to W C Achi;Can L; R P 27&0, Holualoa, N Kona,Hawaii. B 257, p 496. Dated July 12,1904.

Chong Lung to Lau Choon; BS; lease-hold and bldgs, Koiuiu, Honolulu, Oa-h- u;

$1100. B 265, p 216. Dated Aug 26,1904.

Est of William L Wilcox by Exor toElizabeth K Meyer; D; int in Ap 5,

Kul 5011, Ap 4, Kul 2710 and Kul 1210,

Kalihi, Honolulu, Oahu; $500. B 258,p 409. Dated Aug 30, 1904.

Iosia Keawe to Hawn Realty & Matu-rity Co Ltd; M; R P 3700, Kul 3361,Niumalu, Kauai; $132. B 262, p SO. Dat-ed Oct 5, 1904.

"-

THE HONEY BEE'S STING.A French naturalist named Phi sal ix

has been making some minute investi-gations of the nature of the ioison ofthe honey bee's sting, and announcesthat it contains three separate princi-ples, one convulsive, one stupefying andone inflammatory. To the fact thattwo of these Ingredients in some de-gree neutralize each other, he ascribesthe great rarity of deaths from beestings, and it is possible that occa-sional deaths, particularly those at-tended by convulsions, may be explain-ed by some exceptional variation in thetoxic properties of the injected matter.

ALL COME FROM

0Hawaiian Carriage Mfg.

ei!

Most of the belts that I am selling now are to men who have be"nsent here by their friends whom I have cured. I think that is thebest evidence that my business ?s a success from the standpoint ofcures, as well as on the dollar side.

Just lately I have received letters of praise from these men:James P. Daniels, 709 Devlsadero street, San Francisco. He was

cured of a back trouble of 12 years standing.J. M. Gaskill, 220 Chestnut ave., Santa Cruz, Cal., who says I cured

him of Indigestion, Constipation, Nervousness and Lumbago fromwhich he had suffered 15 years.

Wherever you are, I think I can give you the name of a man Inyour town that I have cured. Just send me your address and letmetry. This is my twenty-fourt- h year in the business . of pumping newvim into wornout humanity xnd I've got cures in nearly every townon the map.

Write to me. I've got a nice book on' men that I'll send sealed,free, if you inclose this ad.

COMPANY, LTD,

RUBBER TIRES SOLD AND

PUT ON.

Dt?TJATT?Twr. PATNTTNG AND TRIMMING CARRIAGES.O

'

I

eivuiuuii - ;

All orders promptly attended to.

425 Queen Street, rear of Judiciary Building. Phone Main 47.

bombardment from their siege guns,and finally reached the redoubts on thenorth side, but only after the defensesthere were completely demolished byshell fire from the west. ;

The Japanese efforts were directedchiefly against the commanding posi-

tion on High mountain, which facesPigeon bay, slightly south of Fort Etse.The mountain is 500 feet high, and if ithad fallen its position would have giv-

en a tremendous lever against the chainof inner defenses. The carnage therewas terrible and culminated September22d, when the Japanese succeeded inreaching and occupying the "Russianarmored shelter trenches, whence theyexpected undoubtedly to storm thesummit. During the night Lieutenant

i

8 DR. M. G. McLAUGHLIN, 906 Market St., San Francisco.

-

Honolulu,1!istoricPoggorsky of the navy, at the head ofa detachment of volunteers, descendedjupon the trenches and blew them upWith nvroxylin bombs, producing apanic among the besiegers, who fled,leaving the mountain side strewn withdead.

IN FOREIGN LANDSor in your native land when you are away from home, theSEMI-WEEKL- Y GAZETTE will be found a most welcomevisitor; giving as it does a condensed summary of . all thelocal news of the Islands and Honolulu.

Subscribe before you s( art on your travels and you won'tneed to "wonder what is happening at home" while you areaway.

Price 50 cents per month ov $5.00 per year postpaid to anypart of the United, States. Foreign postage extra.

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE CO., LTD.PUBLISHERS.

65 South King St. Honolulu, Hawaii.

OR A CENTURY OF

HAWAIIAN EVOLUTION. The Japanese then abandoned furtherattempts, but after a day or two torecuperate, according to General Stoessel's second dispatch, dated September30th, .they resumed the bombardment4 T of the city and outer works and began

MADEto construct zigzag; approaches, to geta nearer point, from which to launchtheir next assajalt.

T

e'--

4

imI

t :

1:'

c

I

ft

t

MILWAUKEE FAMOUSPhone 88.

The loss of the water works is notconsidered vital, as there is a freshwater lake and numerous wells, aswell as a condensing apparatus withinthe defenses.

General Stoessel recommends General Kondratenko, Lieutenant Poggorsky. Colonel Irman of the artillery and tnfiM)iitH"'-'3r'frir- i- mil'Captain Sychaff of the Fifth SiberianRegiment for the St. George Cross, ft

The complete repulse of the Japanese

This valuable record of the most important events lathe History of Honolulu for the past hundred years wascompiled and published at great expense in 1899.

Its historical and descriptive articles are by the verybest recognized authorities on Island matters and arehanded from absolutely impartial standpoints.

It is finely illustrated and contains portraits and bio-

graphical sketches of the principal business and profes-

sional men of the Islands.This is a publication that no student of Hawaiian His-

tory can afford to be without. A limited number of copies

still for sale by The Hawaiian Gazette Co., Ltd.

has evidently greatly inspired the garrison of Port Arthur. General Stoesselsays the gallantry of the) Russian troopswas beyond praise, and adds that the

riOST POP U LAPUBLICATION

garrison will hold out to the last dropof . blood. General Stoessel adds thatpractically nothing remained of the water works redoubts when the surviving

I iiiiiMiiiiiii iV" iMMiinry '1 ' d'mi tuiiii1'"

W. C. Peacock & Co.,LIMITED

Substantial Cloth Binding

Russian evacuated them.General Stoessel's dispatch, which

was dated September 30th, says: "Aft-er bloody assaults from the 19th to the23d of September there has been com-parative tranquility around the fort-ress. On the night of September 23d theJapanese, after being repulsed by Lieu-tenant Poggorsky, fled in panic. Theyare now working very actively and areapproaching by a tunnel and intrench-ment- s.

The bombardment was main-tained both upon the forts and thebuildings within the fortress.

"We make sorties frequently, drivingback the enemy. The repulse of the

50c per CopyIS H 30 CENTS EXTM. 15 Per Gent DiscountPOSTAGE

ylast attack was especially due to Lieu-tenant Poggorsky, General Kondraten-ko, Colonel Irman and Captain Sychaff. One Week OnlyThe spirit of the troops is heroic.Wounded men are every day returningfrom the hospitals to the ranks. We

WHICH DO YOU PREFER?

IMPORTED SOAP MADE FROMCLAYor

pray God for victory and for the healthof your majesty."

, . . , EXTRA HEAVYi vreiiera--i isioessei s report createa greatand revived hope in his(rejoicing the fortress. After the

the storming operations theVENETIAN--WAR-Honolulu Soap Works

Green marbleized outside, white inside. Tea Kettles, Berlin Kettles, Pudding-- Pans, Pie Plates, Jelly Cake Pans,Dish Pans, Collanders, Wash Basins,Ladles, Basting Spoons, Pails, CoveredMADE FROM TALLOW?Buckets, Tea and Coffee Pots, Coffee

War Office here would not be surprisedif the Japanese changed their plan to aregular engineering siege.

--f-

Where to Spend Sunday.The most attractive day's outing is

that afforded by the excursion downthe railroad line. The . HALEIWALIMITED, a first class train, f leavesHonolulu every Sunday morning at 8:22o'clock making the run in two hours,the rate for round trip being only $2. 00.From 10:22 a. m. until 8:10 p. m. is'

o FRED L. WALDRON, Agent.Bpreckels Block. o o Biggans. ;

So Tti LEWIS & CO., LTD.169 KING STREET.ese Jrrices

240 2 Telephones 24t

, WAR NEWS, CHURCH NEWS, SPORTING NEWS,GENERAL NEWS AND ALL THE LATEST WORLD'SNEWS BY CABLE.

MISCELLANEOUS, LITERARY AND HUMOROUSSELECTIONS, PUNGENT PARAGRAPHS OF THEBYSTANDER.

INTERESTING READING TO SUIT EVERY,TASTE, AND , WITHAL. A CLEAN PUBLICATIONADMISSABLE TO THE FAMILY CIRCLE.

spent at the beautiful HOTEL HA-LEIWA, with fresh and salt waterbathing, tennis, golf, drives and walks,shooting or fishing, and you are back

We are positively going out of business. This is positivelyour last week.

even- -iu iown at ju:io o'clock in theIng.

Gillman HouseBoquet Cigars

B2AVER LUNCH ROOMSB. t. BOLIB,

Linen Collars, all sizes, 20c; now...,Socks, all sizes, 15c; now 2 pairs for...............Ladies' Hose, all sizes, 35c ; now. . ...................Golf Shirts, all sizes, $1.25 ; now.1,000 Neckties, regular price, 50c. each ; now. ........Silk Handkerchiefs, regular price 60c. each; nowSilks, regular price, 50c. yard; now.................

. IOC

,15c.20c. pair.

75C

.25c. each.

.40c. each.

.25c.

7Business Hen's Lunch.

All the business men in the city willhave an opportunity offered them topartake of one of those good ed

New England lunches like motherused to make at the St.. Andrew's Fairon Saturday next from 12 to 2 on theCathedral grounds. Admission includ-ing lunch 75 cents." Twenty-fiv- e youngladies will have the lunch in charge.

'

Baggs "And so poor Daggs is dead.I never got a chance to bid him good-b- y.

The first thing I do when I get toheaven will be to say how sorry I was "Faggs "But suppose he didn't get toheaven?" Baggs "Then you teJl himfor me." Town Topics.

Dr. Hicks HeshglowGives the face the natural pink glow

of health. With a magnifs'ing; glasit cannot be detected. Call for a FREETRIAL as a sample at Miss Wynn'sHair Dressing Parlors, Bethel street.

Y. MAN SING1117 NUUANU STREET.

HASHIONABIF DRESS-MAKER

LADIES' UNDERWEAR,fresses made to order. Sewing guara-

nty. If the stitches break I willrepair without extra rharr.

-- at-

Published by the ,

awaiian Gazette Co.,Limited.

65 S. King St., Honolulu, Hawaii.IWAKAMI & COMP'Y,

Robinson Block.Hotel Street,f

Page 7: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu · SUGAR 96 Test Centrifugals. 4.25, I J, U. S. WEATHER BUREAU. OCTOBER 13 t Last 24 hour rainfall .00; Temperature, max. 83; min. 76; Weather, Fresh

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAi; ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, OCTOBER 14, tgof.

A 9km PTv BP" r v mvmThe Wef!-Dress- ed Man Has ai Advantagethat is Always with Him.

cw3;ur ;j.nC:; vAitKrKUNl.- I

W a"m """" '" "" "uMu'gt!wj!iI --v; ; .'.s x ' , P

SI- -- ' ' j B

Yet few men are really Wcll-dreese- d that is in theSTEIN-- B LOCH Meaning" of the word Well. If everyMerchant Tailor gave as much attention to details inone suit as these great Wholesale Tailors give to everysuit or overcoat that leaves their shops, he would haveto charge such prices that only Careless Spenders couldmeet the Bills. Being limited in means, the merchanttailor has not the facilities that great shops and unre-stricted resources can supply :

Our Spring and Summer assortments of STEIN-BLOC- H

SMART CLOTHES show this superiority withbrilliant clearness.

Their Fabrics are from the best of the foreign and do-

mestic weavers. Their patterns are of the most modernand fashionable colors and contrasts. Their style is cleancut and "different." Their quality is that of the famousSTEIN-BLOC- H standard, and is signed with this label:

' TmmniMmm-''laj- f --"- II. "I II WIHH ! Ml I'WII' tUlil'llii fflBnl i"Iii "111 H in a x

$

Merchant and Fort Streets,

Tattorneys for ""''f? 'ANTONIO P. C. R. SPINOLA. Castle & Withihgton,

! AUTHORITY,MORTGAGEE'S NOTICE OF INTEN-

TION TO FORECLOSE AND OFSALE. -

SIBERIA IS .: ff :'- IN A HURRY ' Wtr'te' : I)

11 1-- 3 MILE TO 15 MILE ROAD,PUNA, HAWAII.

Vft i f..7yProposals wlll.be received at the of

mortgagee.Dated Honolulu, September 30, 1904.

HENRY SMITH, TRUSTEE,Mortgagee.

The premises covered by said mort-gage consist of:

All the undivided one-thi- rd . interestof the mortgagor in and to that certainpiece or parcel of land situate on Lilihastreet, Honolulu, Oahu, portion ofRoyal Patent number ISO (Grant) toKekuapanio, together with all his un-divided one-thir-d . interest in and tothose houses and furniture situatedthereon, being the same that were con- -'veyed to him by deed dated February26, 1901, recorded liber 217, page 362.

.'. 6311 Sept 30, Oct 7, 14, 21

flee of the Superintendent of PublicWorks, Honolulu, until 12 o'clock noonof Oct. 31, 1904, for Constructing a Sec

. tion of New Road, 11 1-- 3 mile to 15

After being in dry dock at San Fran-cisco for some weeks the Pacific Mailliner Siberia .arrived in port yesterdaymorning from San Francisco, havingleft that port at 1 p. m. Saturday, Oc-

tober 7. It was not expected that theSiberia would sail before the ISth ofneSct month so the passenger bookingson the big steamer were exceedinglylight. Most of the passengers were

mile road, Puna. Hawaii- -

Notice is hereby given that by virtueof a power of sale contained in a cer-tain mortgage made by Antonio P. C.R. Spinola, of -- Honolulu, Oahu, Terri-tory of Hawaii, to The Portuguese Mu-

tual Benefit Society of Hawaii, a cor-pora tion incorporated and existing un-der the laws of Hawaii, dated June 4th,1901, and recorded in the Office of theRegistrar of Conveyances in said Ho-nolulu in book 226, on pages 38, 39 and40, and of a power of sale contained in acertain mortgage made by the said An-

tonio P. C. R. Spinola to the said ThePortuguese Mutual Benefit Society ofHawaii, ' a corporation as aforesaid,dated November 25, 1903, and recordedin the Office of the said Registrar in

CAP r y Z&7Af Sfrf"Plana and soecifications are on file

at the office of the Asst. Supt. of PubI. iX H ti Z K K tii y. a :

ards. Agent Public Works, .Hilo. Ha TEXAN GOESMORTGAGEE'S NOTICE OF INTEN-

TION TO .FORECLOSE AND OFFORECLOSURE SALE.wail, copies of which will be furnished

Intending bidders on receipt of $5.00, TO ORIENTwhich sum will be returned, to bidder Ii accordance with the provisions of

a certain mortgage made by S. K.after he has deposited his bid and re Ka-n- e (now deceased) to Henry Smith,turned the plans and specifications, Trustee, dated October 8, 1901, recorded

SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 2. Thesteamer Texan of the American-Hawaiia- n

line is to carry contraband ofTwnneoia mncH anhmitted on blank

sick on the way down so that a merecorporal's guard turned out in the bigdining room for meals. As it is thereis plenty of room without crowding.

There was . nothing of interest on thevoyage down- - though the weather wasextremely bad a heavy, beam sea pre-vailing throughout the trip. The Si-

beria will have, to hustle on this voy-age as she is off schedule and is tomake the round trip to the Orient Insixty days iastead of the usual sixty-five- .,

Manila will be cut out this tripbut Shanghai win be visited. That

Book 231, on pages 328 to 331, thesaid mortgagee, The Portuguese MutualBenefit Society of Hawaii, intends toforeclose each of the said mortgages fora breach of the conditions therein nam-ed, that is to say, as to the first of saidmortgages, non-payme- nt of principal

forms, which will be furnished by the

COAST SURVEYBOAT IN PORT

Like an unexpected- - visitant fromthe skies the coast survey steamer Pat-terson dropped anchor in port yester-day afternoon. She has been in Alas-kan waters for some three months be-

ing principally engaged in the work ofmaking surveys for the new coalingstation at Kiska in the western partof the Aleutian Islands. During "herstay in those waters she encounteredfoggy and stormy weather which al-

though common in that neighborhoodwas unusually severe this season. ThePatterson expected to go to San Fran-cisco before coming here but it wasfinally decided to come direct to Ho-

nolulu. She made most of the voyageunder sail, being barkentine rigged.

The Patterson is in need of a thor-ough overhauling and will be givenone at once." She will take on coal-her-

and remain in Island waters allwinter doing survey work where it isneeded and that means' a lot of work.It is expected that Kamalo Pointandsome of the other uncharted menaceto navigation in the islands will beproperly charted by the steamer. Sheis an old wooden vessel and is wellknown on this ocean. Her length Is176 feet, beam 29 feet and draught 1

feet while her displacement is S50 tons.She looks like a sloop of war of thesixties.

The steamer carries forty-nin- e pettyofficers and men beside the following-officers- :

..;..- - - ;s

Captain J. F. Pratt; EexecutiveOfficer, H. W. Rhodes; Watch OfTi-ce- rst

A. L. Jiacomony, A., R: Hunter;Aides, H. L. Beek, J. W. Maupin, E. C.Craft, P. C. Whitney: Deck Officer. B.Lu Collins; Surgeon, Dr. J. II. Egbert:Chief Engineer, G. Berg; Draughts-man, R. G. Christen.

war to the Orient. The big vessel sail-

ed yesterday for Seattle and along thewater front it was thought that thevessel was making her regular tripnorth to load general merchandise for

closed in a sealed envelope, endorsed"Proposal for Constructing Section of and interest when due, and as to the

second of said mortgages,

in liber 227, page 182, notice is herebygiven that the mortgagee intends toforeclose the same for condition broken,to wit: non-payme- nt of interest andprincipal when due.

Notice is likewise given that afterthe expiration of three weeks from thedate of this notice, the property coveredby said mortgage will be advertised forsale at public auction, at the auctionrooms of Jas. F. Morgan, in Honolulu,on Saturday, the 22nd day of October,

of Interest when due;New Road from 11 1-- 3 mile to 15 mileNew York.Notice is further given that the prop

road. Puna, Hawaii.",, Yesterday it became known that theport will be fcut out on the return triperty covered by the said mortgages andhereinbelow described (both mortgages however. 'Iri order to make up time Texan has been chartered and will loadEach proposal must contain the full

naiof the party or partits making the liner wasdispatched af five o'clock merchandise at the northern port forare upon the same property) will be ports in China and Japan. The chartersold at public auction at the auctionthe-sam- e and must be accompanied by

a certified check of 5 per cent of thelast night. She brought only four pack-ages of freight for this port but has agood through cargo. She took several

ers of the Texan are Waterhouse &Company of Seattle. There has been agreat demand for freighters in the

1904, at 12 noon of said day. jFurther particulars can be had of

Castle & Withington, attorneys . formortgagee.

rooms or James a morgan, jvaanu-man- u

street, Honolulu, aforesaid, onSaturday, the 12th day of November,amount of the proposal, payable to C

nacVa ?pq nf ten from this nor to the -

A. D. 1904, at 12 o clock noon or said Orient. This does not mean that Ha- - : "ortb- - as a large-amoun- t of merchan-wa- ii

de has been lying at Seattle awaitingis exporting tea to its nativeS. Holloway, Superintendent of PublicWorks, as surety that if the proposal day. '

shipment to Japan. In the past shipThe property to be sold hereinabovebe accented a contract will be entered

referred to, is the following: All ofthat certain piece or parcel of land

haunts but that an inferior shipment .

is being returned. ' : I

Sixteen cabin passengers came to thisport on the Siberia. Among her through i

passengers was Chalmers A. Graham, j

into." .."" '.'- -' ."'- -:'

"' ' :'

No Droposal will be entertained un

owners have hesitated to risk their ves-sels in the Oriental trade because offear of Russian warships.

The chartering of the Texan showsthat American shipowners are no long

'situate at Kamakela, off Liliha street.furnished by theless made on blanks

Asst. Sunt, of Public Works, and E. er fearful of the naval vessels of Rusand fronting on vineyard ; street, insaid Honolulu, being- a. 'part of theland described in Royal Patent No.1985, Land Commission Award No.6245, Apana .1, and more particularly

Richards, and delivered at the office offormerly connected with the Honolulu s

Iron Works but now travelling for alubricating oil firm. . j

O. W. Heim is with Samuels, Sam- - t

sia. The Texan has been plying be-tween this coast and New York for

the Supt. of Public Works previous toi some time. She has a capacity fordescribed as follows: :

12 o'clock noon on the day - specified.

Dated Honolulu, September 30, 190OHENRY SMITH, TRUSTEE,

Mortgagee.

The premises covered by said mort-gage consist of: .

Those certain pieces or parcels of landsituated at Kekio Tract, Waikiki-ka- i,

Honolulu, Oahu, more particularly de-scribed as follows:

Beginning at the East corner of Lot15, being the North of Lot 14, on LemonRoad, and running as follows, to wit:

S. 59 V. true 100 feet along Lot 14,N. 32 45' W. true 92 feet along Lemon,N. 44 35' E. true 101 feet along Ha-moha-

S. 32 45' E. true 113.5 feet alongLemon Road to initial point, containingan area of 10275 square feet, and knownas Lots 15 and 16 in a map of KekioTract, recorded in liber 162, page 278,being premises conveyed to mortgagorby deed of Geo. Lucas. Commissioner,

Commencing at west corner of thisThe Superintendent reserves the right

lot at angle of road twenty-fiv- e feetmore than 12,000 tons of freight. Theagents of the steamer here state thatthey do not know-- whether she is char-tered for one or more trips to the Ori-ent,

uels & Co. of Yokohama.The Misses Alice, Elizabeth, Grace,

Martha and Mattie Bnjwn are daught-ers of a prominent California bankeron a pleasure trip.

Mrs. L. C. Logan Is the wife of the

wide and running:(1) N. 53 30' E. true 102 feet along

to reject any. and all bids. , :

a S. HOLLOWAY, ,

Suoerintendent of Public Works. road; '

The immense price that the Japanese(2) S. 36 10' E. true 75 feet alongDepartment of Public Works, Oct. 11. commander of the battlesh'p Ohio. She are willing to pay in order to get freight

is accompanied by two daughters. j ffom this country Is responsible for theKoiulu; .6921l&ot.' ..';. (3) S. 53 50' W. true 102 feet along chartering of the Texan.lot 2; thence18 MILE ROAD, OLAA, PUNA, HA- - (4) N. 36 10' W. true 75 feet along

road to initial point, and being thesame premises that were conveyed to

Manchuria Wont Come,Copies of the new winter schedule of

the Pacific Mail and Occidental & Ori-

ental Steamship Companies have beenreceived In Honolulu and show somechanges In the schedule now existing.The most important of these Is thatthe Manchuria will sail on her next

t Remains In Mongolia.Captain W. P. S. Porter, a veteran

Commander in the Pacific Mail service,tsto return In the big liner Mongolia.When he took Captain Rinder's place atthe last sailing of the Mongolia it wasrumored that he would be succeeded

the said Antonio P. C. R. Spinola bydeed of Elizabeth K. Nahaolelua and

dated February 21st, 1901, recorded inliber 217, page 358.

6911 Sept S0t Oct 7, 14. 21 .

Echo's .Long .Trip.SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 3. Some anx-

iety is felt for the barkentine Echo,owned by the Simpson Lumber Com-pany of this city, and now out thirty-fiv-e

days from Honolulu for SouthBend, Or. The Echo is noted as a fast

Kia Nahaolelua,' her husband, datedJune 27. 1891, and recorded in the officeof said Registrar in Book 141, on page ESTATE E. F. CAMERON.196, excepting, however, from the said upon the return of the steamer by Cap- - vessel, desnite this slow passage. Some outward trip on November 15th InstifcfcO.

of November 3rd and that she will cutland as conveyed to the said mortgagorand as hereinabove described by metes tain Rinder, who had remained ashore j t ime ago the Ecno Went from Astoria

on account of illness. out both Honolulu and Manila fromuut yesteraciy , to Cape Town, thence to Newcastle,and bounds, a strip of land containing

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFIRST CIRCUIT, TERRITORYOF HAWAII AT CHAMBERS INPROBATE.

In the Matter of the Estate of Edward

word came from the office of Generalan area of 1597 square feet convey her schedule on the entire round trip.

After this voyage she will call regularManager Schwerin that Captain Porterwas to be retained as commander of theMonsrolia. Captain Rinder will remain

Aus., to Honolulu and back to Astoria,handling several cargoes, and all in thegood time of eight. months and tivnty-seve- n

days. She is commanded by Cap-tain Young.

ly at this port. The reason for this ac-tion on the part of the company is

ed by said mortgagor to the Minister ofthe Interior by deed dated May 13, 1900,

and recorded in the Office of said RegF. Cameron, late of Honolulu, Oahu,

not known but It Is probable that it iscaused by an adjustment of scheduleistrar in Book 209, on page 385, and In

said last mentioned deed more fully de to meet the dropping of the Gaelic.scribed.

Order for Notice of Hearing Peti-- I as master of the steamer Algoa. It wastion for Probate of Will. ! rumored , that Captain Zeeder would

A document purporting to be the Last j take the Algoa, but he i3 to resumeWill and Testament of Edward F. Ca- -j command of the City of Para, whichmeron, deceased, having on the 29th ; has been laid up here for an overhaul-da- y

of September A. D. 1904, been pre- - j ing. Captain McLean, having recover-sente- d

to said Probate Court, and a j ed from a severe illness, has again tak-petiti- on

for the probate thereof, and for j en command of the steamer City of

Terms: Cash in United States Gold The schedule is laid out up to July, ls05,and shows that the Doric and Opticare to be kept on the run till that dateCoin; deeds at expense of purchaser.

For further particulars apply to An- -

Minnesota on Way.. The mammoth steamer Minnesota,built for James J. Hill's Great North-ern line connecting Puget Sound withthe Orient, has finally left the Atlan-tlc- e

coast and her first stop on thisside will be in San Francisco. A tele- -

at least.gee, room 611, Stangenwald Building, the issuance of Letters Testamentary Sydney. Chronicle. Enterprise la Sighted.Honolulu aforesaid, or to James F.Morgan, auctioneer aforesaid.

Dated at Honolulu, Oahu, October 13, New Coast Line. gram reports that the Minnesota leftSAN DIEGO, Oct. 6. A new steam- - I Norfolk, Va.. last Oct. 2. She will be

to Agnes Cameron having been, filed byAgnes Cameron.

It is hereby ordered that Monday, the7th day of November, A. D. 19C4, at 10o'clock a. m., of said day, at the court

1904.

THE PORTUGUESE MUTUAL BENE ship line is to be established between

WAH. -

J -

Proposals will be received at the of-

fice of the Supt. of Public Works, Ho-

nolulu, until 12 o'clock noon of Oct 31.

1904, for Extending and widening 18

Puna, Hawaii, T. H.mile road. Olaa,Plans and specifications are on file

at the office of the Asst. Supt. of..Publlo

Works. Honolulu, and with E. E. Rich-

ards, .Agent Public Works. Hilo, Ha-waipop-

of which will be furnishedintending bidders on receipt of $5.00,

which sum will be returned to the bid-

der after he has deposited his bid andreturned the plans and specifications;

Proposals must be submitted on blankforms, which will be furnished by theAsst. Supt. of Public Works and en-

closed In a sealed - envelope, . endorsed"Proposal for Extending and Widen-

ing 18 mile road, Olaa, Puna, Ha-wai-

' '".....Each proposal must contain' the full

name of the party or parties makingthe same and must be accompanied by

a certified check of 5 per cent of theamount of the proposal, payable to C.

S. Holloway, Superintendent of PublicWorks, as surety that If the proposalbe accepted a contract will be enteredInto. .

No proposal will be entertained un-

less made on blanks furnished by theAsst. Supt. of Public Works and E. E.Richards, and delivered at the office

of the Supt. of Public Works previousto 12 o'clock noon on the day specified.

The Superintendent reserves the rightto reject any and all bids.

. C. S. HOLLO WAT,

Superintendent of Public Works.Department of Public Works, Oct. 11.

1904. . 6821

FIT SOCIETY OF HAWAII,Mortgagee.

By' its Attorney, Antonio Perry.6923 Oct. 14, 21, 28, Nov. 4, 11.

the largest steamer to enter the Pa-cific, having a length of 608.6 feet,breadth of 73.5 feet, and depth of 41.5feet. She was built at New London,Conn., and her grcs3 tonnage is 21,-00- 0.

.MORTGAGEE'S NOTICE OF INTEN

TION TO FORECLOSE AND OFFORECLOSURE SALE.'

room of said court, at Honolulu, Oahu, I British Columbia and Mexican ports,be and the same hereby is appointed principal owners of the "nebe-Wil- l.the time and place for provmg saidf ing Andrew TVeip & Co of Scotlandand hearing said application. make San Diego aU PlannedtoIt is further ordered, that notice

! The wil runallmg port. companythereof be given, by publication, oncewith a capacity ofsteamshipsa week for three successive weeks, in modern

4500 ton freight, fifty first clas pas-newspa-

the Pacific Commercial Advertiser, apublished in toe English .

sengers and 300 to 400 steerage pas-langua- ge,

the last publication to be not sengers. The boats will run semi-le- ss

than ten days previous to the time j monthly.therein appointed for hearing. The first boat will leave Victoria the

. Dated at Honolulu, September 29th, ; first week in January.T '1904.

VT. J. ROBINSON, I Grew for the Ohio.

In accordance with the provisions of

The Siberia sighted the steamer En-terprise of the Matson line with theoil ship Marion Chilcott in tow Wednes-day morning. They should make portthis morning. The towing of shipsfrom San Francisco to this port is un-usual. - ,

:

Shipping Notes.The schooner W. H. Marston sailed

for San Francisco yesterday morningwith sugar.

The shipsJEdward Sewall and B ir ga-lore arrived at De'aware BreakwaterWednesday-wi- th Hawaiian sugar.

The bunch of laborers that the cruiserBuffalo is to take to Midway did notcome on the Siberia but will arrjvon the Mongolia.

It is understood that yaPtain Rinder,formerly of the Mongol!., bat now mas-ter of the Algoa, will tke the Koreaduring Captain Seabury's vacation iaDecember.

The bark Olympic arrived from SanFrancisco yesterday morning- - Shebrought two passengers and a generalmerchandise cargo. The voyage tooktwenty days. .

a certain mortgage made by Piipii Ka-au- a

(k) to Henry Smith, Trustee, datedNovember 5, 1901, recorded In liber

0, page 33. notice is hereby given thatthe mortgagee Intends to foreclose the

The battleship Ohio went into commissame for condition broken, to wit: non Third Judge, First Circuit Court, f

6911 Sept. 30, Oct. 7, 14, 21 j

A Heavy Sea Tow.The large Matson Navigation Com-

pany's steamer Enterprise sailed fromSan Francisco Sunday evening, Oct, 2.

for Hilo and Honolulu with a generalcargo of merchandise. With her clearedthe ship Marion Chilcott, - which hasbeen converted into an oil carrier. Theship was towed by the Enterprise tothe islands.

-Boston Corning Here.

The United States protected cruiserBoston has been ordered to Honoluluinstead of returning to San Francisco,as was expected, after her trip to Mag-dale- na

bay, where she was sent for tar-get practice. No reason is assignedfor the change.

sion last week and came to an anchor- -payment of interest and principal whendue.

Notice is likewise given that after CITY MESSENGER SERVICE. age in San Francisco bay oft Folsom-- .1 t street wharf. The crew for the bat- -

tleship came down from Mare Islandthe expiration of three weeks from thedate of this notice, the property coveredby said mortgage will be advertised forsale at public auction, at the auction

Should you want a messenger in ahurry, ring up the City Messenger Ser-vice, TeL Main 78. Office, Fort street,near Hotel. All orders promptly at-

tended to by food, reliable messengers.M. J. SANTOS,

I Manager.

rooms of Jas. F. Morgan, in Honolulu,

Oct. 4. "Within a few weeks the war-ship will be given a trip outside theHeads to test her ordnance. She willthen return to San Francisco and willremain until further orders are re-

ceived. ,

on Saturday, the 22nd day of October,1904. at 12 noon of said day.

Further particcl?xs can be had of

Page 8: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu · SUGAR 96 Test Centrifugals. 4.25, I J, U. S. WEATHER BUREAU. OCTOBER 13 t Last 24 hour rainfall .00; Temperature, max. 83; min. 76; Weather, Fresh

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL, ADVERTISER, HOHOXtiTO

THIS DAY Castlo;:' GooSief- -t tc!.DOINGS HONOLULU.

Ruction Commission Herchanti

THEC00RTS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1904AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M., SUGAR FACTORS.f 1904 1

UE4 CR0P

7VMiss Nettie Blackmore, Minneapolis,

tells how any young woman may be per-manently cured of monthly pains by taking-Lydi- a

E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound- "Young Women: I had frequent headaches of a severe natore.

dark spots before my eyes, and at my menstrual periods I suffereduntold agony. A member of the lodge advised me to try !Lydia E.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, but I only scorned good advice andfelt that my case was hopeless, but she kept at me until I bought abottle and started taking it. I soon had the best reason in the world tochange my opinion of the medicine, as each day mjr health improved, andfinally Iwas entirely without pain at my menstruation periods. I am mostgrateful." Nettie 'Bulckmobe, 23 Central Ave., Minneapolis, Minn.

; Painful Periods M

by irregularity or womb displace- - j

are quickly and permanently overcome by Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound. The above letter Is only one of hundreds ofthousands which prove this statement to be a fact. MenstruationIs a severe strain on a woman's vitality, if it is painful something

rirtTi fnirfl namotins to deaden the nain. but removethe cause perhaps it is causedments, or tne aeveiopmenr 01 a minor. uaicvtr is, .

E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is guaranteed to.cure lu 4

If there is anything1 about your case about which you would like specialadvice, write freely to MrB. Pinkham.' She will treat your letter as strictlyconfidential. She can surely help you, for no person in America1 can speakfrom a wider experience in treating female ills. She has helped hundreds ofthousands of women back to health. Her address is Lynn, Mass., and herdvice is free. You are very foolish if you do not accept her kind invitation.

AGENTS FORThe Ewa Plantation Co.The Waialua Agricultural Co., Ltd?yThe Kohala Sugar Co. , ,

The Waimea Sugar Mill Co. VThe Fulton Iron Works, St. Louis.The Standard Oil Co.The George F. Blake Steam Pumps.Weston's Centrifugals.The New England Mutual Life Insur-

ance Co., of Boston.The Aetna Insurance Co., of Hart-

ford, Conn.The Alliance Assurance Co., of Lon-

don.

& CO.

Limited

Merchant TailorsWaity Building, King St.

Phone Blue 2741

American and ForeignVoretcado

HONOLULU IRON WORECOMPANY.

Machinery, Black Pipe, GalTffflPipe, Boiler Tubes, Iron aad Steel, Engineers' Supplies.

Office Nuuanu street. .

Works Kakaako.

BEST FOUNTAIN PFNSWe have a splendid new line of

Waterman's "Ideal" and the Parker"Lucky Curve" in all shapes andsizes.

Hawaiian News Company.Bishop Street. Merchant St.

JOHN NEILL(Late of Catton. Neill & Co., Ltd.)

Machinery Bought, Sold and RepairedShip and General Blacksmithing;

135 Merchant Street. I

PERFECTION

Beretanla St near Emma.All kinds of HOME BAKING sta3from only the BEST MATERIALS.

Tel. Blue 211.

Roofs RepairedBY i

WM. T. PAT Y.

Carpeatry of all kinds attea4e EaGive us z call.

SMOKE

GENERAL ARTHUR CIGAH3

Gusst-Eaxi- n Cigab Co.,' DlBTBIBCTOR.

AH PAT & CO.103 South King, near Alak.

MERCHANT TAILORS.Expert cutter, formerly wltk J. E5.

Tregloan. ; Cleaning and repalrlxg aspecialty.

Phone Blue I4C P. O. Sax B

Eiwong Yuen Ming 60.; 8 and 88 N. King Street.

Importers and Dealers In CaimomSilks, Fine Mattings, Teas. Ebony Trnlture. Bamboo Stools. Rattan AjtemChairs. .

Grass Linens, and color, at Try lastPrteea,

Courteous treatment.Prompt attention. 'Best Quality and lots mora al

CUHSQLI0A1ED SODA WATER WritPHONE MAIN 7L

COTTON BROS. & CO.ENGINEERS AND GENERJLX. E?3

TRACTORS. 4"Plans and Estimates furnishe

classes or Contracting Work.Boston Block, Honolulu.

ALL KINDS OP

Ooochrear Bubbor Co.R. H. PEASE, President,

Ban Francisco, CaL, XJ. 6, St

Details of Another Case. i"Deab Mrs.' Pinkham: Ignorance and

carelessness is the cause of most of the suffer-ings of women. I believe that if we properlyunderstood the laws of health we would all bewell, but if the sick women only knew thetruth about Iiydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable

Compound, they would be saved much suffer-ing and would, soon be cured.

44 1 used it for five months for a local diffi-

culty which had troubled me for years,and for which I had spent hundreds

Choice New ApplesJUST ARRIVED.

I will sell at my salesroom, 847 Ka-ahuma- nu

street,100 boxes Apples: Rhode Island Green-

ings, R. W. Pearmains, Extra Fancy.

JAS. F. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER.

Huction SaleUnder foreclosure of mortgage, I will

sell at my salesroom, Kaahumanustreet, '

"

ON SATURDAY, OCT. 15.AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON,'

the following described property:1

An undivided one-nin- th of the landdescribed in Royal Patent (Grant) 2340

to T. C. Wilmington at Hikiaupea,Ka'upo, Island of Maui, containing anarea of 20.02 acres.

2An undivided one-nin- th of all of that

piece or parcel of land situate at Ka-palam- a,

Honolulu, Island of Oahu, con-taining an area of 5000 square feet be-

ing a portion of the land described inL. C. A. No. 4034.

3An undivided one-nin-th of a parcel of

land containing an area of 1500 squarefeet situate at Kaluaauau, Kalihi, Ho-nolulu, being a portion of Apana 2,Royal Patent ,2076 L. C. A. 85 F. L.

4An undivided one-nin- th of the land

situate at Kiki, Kamoiliili in said Ho-

nolulu described in Royal Patent 720 L.C. A. 1360, 2 apanas containing an areaof 1.10.

5An undivided one-nin- th of the land

described in Apana 2, Royal Patent 6648

L. C. A. 1268 situate at Kiki, in saidHonolulu containing an area of 59-1- 00

acre.6

An undivided one-nin- th of the landdescribed in Royal Patent 3579 L. C. A.5240 and 5364, situate at Maulukikepa,in said Honolulu containing an area of3.01 acres.

7An undivided one-eightee- of the

land described in Royal Patent 41S4 L.C. A. 9001 at Waiaka, Honolulu, Islandof Oahu, 4 apanas containing an areaof 3.53 acres.

.8An undivided one-nin- th of a poition

of Apana 1, R. P. 4S34 L. C. A. 1273 atKapaakea, Honolulu, Island of Oahu,containing an area of 2.60 acres.

9

An undivided one-nin- th of the landdescribed in Royal Patent No. 4932 L.C. A. 1274, situate at Piliamoo, Honolulu, Island of Oahu, containing anarea of 3.38 acres.

10An undivided one-nin- th of the land

decribed in Royal Patent No. 4972 L.C. A. 1748, situate at Kanewai, Manoa,Honolulu, Island of Oahu, containingan area of 7.44 acres.

11An undivided one-nin- th of the land

described in Royal Patent No. 3829 L.C. A. 1272 situate at Waikiki, Honolulu,Island of Oahu, 3 apanas, containing anarea of 53-1- 00 acre.

12

An undivided one-nin- th of a parcel ofland at Koaka, Lahalna, Island ofMaui, described in R. P. 2658 L. C. A.6800, and containing an area of 54-1- 00

acre and conveyed to W. H. Cummingsby deed of Y. Ahin and wife, dated May6, 1898, and recorded in Book 186 atPage 102 in the office of the Registrarof Conveyances in Honolulu.

An undivided one-nin- th of two par-cels of land at Kauaula, and Hanaia,Lahalna, Island of Maul, described inR. P. 2710 L. C. A. 6873 and containingan area of 57-1- 00 acre, and conveyed bydeed of Y. Ahin and wife to W. H.Cummings dated May 6, 1898, and re-

corded in Book 186, at Page 112 In theoffice of the Registrar of Conveyancesin Honolulu.

14An undivided interest in land at Po--

laiki, Lahalna, part of the land described in Apana 4, of R. P. 25 L. C. A.364, and described in deed of II. Tor-be- rt

and wife to William H. Cummings,dated February 10, 1899, and recorded InBook 189 at Page 344 in the office of theRegistrar of Conveyances in Honolulu.

15All of the right, title and interest of

John H. Cummings and George Mark-ha- m

on the Sth day of November, A. D.1902 at the time of their making saidmortgage, in and to an undivided one-nin- th

share or interest in and to all ofthe property (other than that abovementioned) or whatever kind and na-ture and wherever situated which be-longed to William H. Cummings, fatherof said John H. Cummings at the timeof his death.

Terms cash in United States GoldCoin. Deeds at expense of purchasers.

JAS. F. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER.

FR SHLEThe Cooper Tract,

MANOA.Arrangements now complete. We

build you a house to your own plan.Just pick out your location, we do therest. But our Deeds are exclusive,making an exclusive community.

We cannot sell a lot for any otherpurpose than a home. No stores, wash-house- s,

or saloons possible.It is to be a locality entirely built up

of the homes of responsible citizens.Such a community means Heal'h

Morally, Mentally, Physically.That's where you want a home. Isn't

it?Further particulars of

JAS. F. MORGAN,8 'tlTO'TH' Pt.

Burglary Trial On Be

fore JudgeGear.

Joe Caspino and Kamelo, burglary in

the first degree, was on trial all daybefore Judge Gear. Deputy AttorneyGeneral Prosser for the prosecution;J. W. Cathcart and J. L. Kaulukou forthe defense. The jury are as follows:F. J. Dutra, F. E. Blake, H. P. Roth,H. A. Parmelee, A. C. Dowisett, G. D.Mahone, Chas. Hummel, C. J. Ludwig-se- n,

A. Nelson, J. F. Soper, E. Bennerand C. F. Merrifleld.

INSURANCE CASE.

Judge De Bolt is still engaged withthe trial of Kwong Lee Yuen Co. vs.Alliance Assurance Co., one of theChinatown fire cases, for which a jury,was empaneled on Wednesday. Ballou& Marx for plaintiff; Robertson &

"Wilder for defendant.The following named constitute the

Jury: W. M. Buchanan, E. S. Cunha,Henry Gehring John A. Baker, A. R.Gurrey Jr., John Kldwell, John Isaac,"Winfred H. Babbitt, Albert Lucas,Chas. S. Crane, Wm. Mutch and E. G.

Carrera.NOW. DEMANDS LEGACY.

Mrs. Mary Downey gives notice toSchweitzer, executor of the last willof Samuel Sachs, deceased, that shewithdraws her relinquishment of thelegacy to her in said will, and nowinsists upon payment of the legacy Inpursuance of the terms of the will.

DEMURRERS FILED.In the suit of Ellen Albertina Poly- -

blank, trustee, vs. David Kawanana-ko- aet al., demurrers of Jonah Kala- -

nianaole and Elizabeth K. Kalaniana-ol- ehave been filed by their attorney,

C. W. Ashford. They deny tne jurisdiction of the Circuit Court at Chambers or any judge thereof. A misjoind-er of parties plaintiff is alleged, in thatStella Keomailani Cocket, for whomthe plaintiff named is trustee, is notmade either plaintiff or defendant. Itis also alleged as a misjoinder that theTerritory of Hawaii has been joinedas a party defendant, whereas neitherthe Circuit Court at Chambers or anyjudge thereof has authority to takecognizance of the matters alleged nst

the Territory of Hawaii. Another misjoinder stated is the namingof Abigail W. Kawananakoa and Eli-zabeth K. Kalanianaole as parties de-

fendant, whereas the bill fails to showany interest of them or either of themin the cause of action, if any there be,set forth In the complaint. Finally, itis alleged that the complaint does notstate facts sufficient. to constitute acause of action.

COURT NOTES.Judge Robinson's jurors are excused

until 10 o'clock Monday morning.Judge De Bolt granted a divorce to

Caroline Bailey against Harrison SBailey on the ground of non-suppo- rt.

J. Lightfoot appeared for libellant; tbelibellee made no appearance.

W. O. Smith, executor of the will of

FOUNDED IN HONOUR.No doubt yoa have seen in the

papers such announcements asthis concerning some medicine orother: "If, on trial, you writethat this medicine has done youno good we .will refund yourmoney." Now, we hare neverhad reason to speak in that wayconcerning the remedy named inthis article. In a trade exten-ding throughout the world, no-body has ever complained thatour medicine has failed, or askedfor the return of his money. Thepublic never grumbles at hon-estly and skillfully made "bread,or at a medicine which reallyand actually does what itwasmade to do. The foundations ofWAMPOLE'S PREPARATIONare laid in sincerity and honour,the knowledge of which on thepart of the people explains itspopularity and success. There isnothing to disguise or conceal.It was not dreamed out, or dis-covered by accident: it was stu--

. died out, on the solid principles01 applied medical science. It 13palatable as honey and containsall the nutritive and curativeproperties of Pure Cod LiverOil, extracted by us from freshcod livers, combined with theCompound Syrup of Hypophos-phite- s

and the Extracts of Maltand "Wild Cherry. This remedyis praised by all who have em-ployed it in any of the diseasesit is recommended to relieve andcure, and is effective from thefirst dose. In Anemia, Scrofula,Nervous and General Debility,Influenza, La Grippe, and Throatand Lung Troubles, it is a spe-cific. Dr. Thos. Hunt Stuckysays: "The continued use of itin my practice, convinces methat it is the most palatable,least nauseating, and best prep-aration now on the market."You can take it with the assur-ance of getting well. One bottleproves its intrinsic value.vf " Youcannot abe disappointed in it."Sold by all chemists everywhere.

- fM- v tify.4ivvi ind

Jft tWi--- - '

"When tea Is new It is best.

We have Just received a full vari-

ety of selected China and Japan

teas in packages or bulk as you

prefer.

It Is all of the new 1904 crop and

of very fine quality.

BMAUCO,, IiTIV

The Popular Grocery Store.TELEPHONES

Retail 22 Wholesale 92

When

You Buy

LINO LEUMremember that it is not cheap unless It is good.

- Good linoleum . must be thick.Thin stuff will wear through in ashort time, but the real materialwill last a lifetime.

"We carry several grades at pricesfrom 90c. to $1.50 a square yard, aceording to the pattern all good.

" it wouldn't pay you or us eitherto carry cheaper gTades

In our excellent new stock aresplendid inlaid and print patternsPlain also.

Lowers & Cooke, Ltd.277 S. King Street.

We Will Finish

the Summer

Kodak Pictures

Bring in the rolls of films

which you took during vacationdays.

We will develop and print, ormake pictures if you have hadthe developing done. -

Best possible results obtained.Enlargements if you wish.You can enjoy your vacation

over again.2

, HonoluluPhoto-Suppl- y Go.

Fort Street.

i SFITNo lady or gentleman will weara misfit coat or gown.

A misfit coat of paint is

a lasting worry.

. Take no chances; but get'a coat of paint upon your house

that fits well and in harmony with

the surroundings. Paint that looks

well, wears well and all's well !

When put on by

Stanley Stephenson,THE PAINTER.

Tfconc 426. 137 King St

S. S. Signs are painted by an up-to-d-

Signographist.

The Famousf.

Beersguaranteed absolutely pure.

NEW ViCTOR MCOKDSWe have now on hand over 2000

aewr Victor Talking Machine Rec-nrd- s.

A fine chance for a new selection.Bergstrora mnsic Co., Ltd.

Odd Fellows' Building.

The Official and Commercial RecordB30 a long felt want. Published Mon-days and Thursdays.

I am now enjoying the best of health, and am most grateful, and onlytoo pleased to endorse such a great remedy." Miss Jennie I ISdwabds,604 H St, N. W., Washington; D. C

Mrs. Pinkham, whose address is Lynn, Mass will answer cheer-fully aad without cost all letters addressed to her by sick women. .

i

I'r.

flfl HTM III Mlrl V iXLLl. CiiLLUM V JJL

My life forces were being sapped,I was daily losiner my vitality.

T J IT1 Plnlrham's "VlrtablH ft 0nmr,letelv, and

for Wahiawa and Pearl City. , Theyreport the road around the island ingood condition. J. G. Rothwelf hasbeen at Haleiwa for ten days on amuch needed rest. His ideas of "restare however confined purely to menrtal" lassitude, as in other respects hehas been leading a most strenuous life,what with shooting, fishing and golf,he has hardly had time to sit down.'Never having had a club In his handsuntil a week ago, he has brought hisscore well down within the sixties andwTill be down on Sunday to try and winthe cup. These contests in a cleanout of door sport are an excellent thingfor the young men of this communitygiving them exercise which they other-wise would not get.

--f-

IT IS DANGEROUS to neglect acold. Pneumonia Is one of the mostdangerous and fatal diseases. It alwaysresults from a cold. Chamberlain'sCough Remedy will quickly cure a coldand perhaps prevent an attack ofpneumonia. It Is In fact made espe-

cially for that ailment and has becomefamous for its cures over a large partof the civilized world. It counteractsany tendency of a cold toward pneumo-nia. Can you afford to neglect yourcold when so reliable a remedy can behad for a trifle? For sale by all deal-ers. Benson, Smith & Co., Ltd., Agentsfor Hawaii.

MACFARLAE & CO., LTD.Sole Agents for Hawaiian Islands.

Hoopli.Silva, has filed an Inventory ofthe estate. The real property consistsof 2 1-- 2 acres of land In Manoa Valley,and the personalty notes and mort-gages amounting to $2988.10.

Mrs. Keluia Mary Puuki petitionsthat she be appointed guardian of theproperty of her daughter, Mary Kahai,which consists of real estate .valuedat $4122.50. The daughter vjolns inthe petition, nominating her mother asguardian. i

C. J. McCarthy has filed his oath ofoffice as a jury commissioner for theFirst Judicial Circuit for the year1904.

THIRD TOURNAMENT --

HALEIWA COPj

(

HALEIWA, Oct. 13 The thirdtournament for the Haleiwa challengecup will take place on" the sixteenthand from present bookings at Haleiwathere will be more contestants for thehandsome trophy than in any previousmatch. Dr. Hubert Wood of Waialuahas been fortunate In placing his nametwice on the cup. If he wins it againit will become his permanent property,but as he made a 48 at the last matchhe will in the future be handicappedon that basis which will necessitatehis doing very much better playingthan he has done of late to win. Theplayers of the Haleiwa Golf Club havefor some reason .all fallen off in theirplaying of late, with the possible, ex-

ception of Oswald Mayall who playsat times a brilliant but a very erraticgame. It is hoped that C. W. CaseDeering will be back from Hawaii intime to participate. He gives prom-ise in his play of being able with alittle practise to give any Oahu players a close rub. All of the long grasshas been cut on the Haleiwa links,and the putting greens have beengreatly improved since the last con-test. The dance at Haleiwa Saturdaynight will-b- largely attended, onelolly party of sixteen gotten up by DrAiford C. Wall having already engagedrooms

Governor and Mrs. Carter with Secretary A. L. C. Atkinson and someindium sjjm .uuuuuy nignt whu niau-- i

ager Fred. Church leaving on Tuesday

i

Page 9: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu · SUGAR 96 Test Centrifugals. 4.25, I J, U. S. WEATHER BUREAU. OCTOBER 13 t Last 24 hour rainfall .00; Temperature, max. 83; min. 76; Weather, Fresh

HACKFELD'S PRIZES local brevities. is YODR COUGH BETTER ?

FOB ABTISTIC AOS,Why don't you cure it? There isn't

any reason why you should not cureit if you take a quick, safe, pleasantremedy like the well-know- n

PUTNAM'SCHERRY COUGH

Wiiy lot Buy MowThe Aquarium is open evenings

from 7 to 9:30.

W. Lucas has returned from thecoast. '

The Buffalo's band will play at Wai-ki- kl

today. .-

The Buffalo's crew had boat drill yes-terday morning,

J. Bath, tfee plumber, returned fromthe Coast on the Siberia.

The ship Nfttherly. well known here,is now at Delagoa Bay, South Africa.

The Jap who Jumped overboard from

I

Great interest has been aroused ng

the young ladies belonging tothe T. . W. C. A. by an opportunitywhich H. Hackfeld & Co. have afford-ed them to make money in an easy "andfascinating way for the associationfund. ,

The proposal of Messrs. Hackfeld. &Co. as shown in the letter herewith la

EyesExamined

L W. JORDAN & Co.

COMFORTThis remedy has the largest sale in

the islands and can be found In mostevery family medicine chest. It is apreparation full of merit. Every dropof it is good. It is designed for onepurpose to cure coughs and colds.Try it today if you wish to cure yourcough quickly with this safe, pleasantremedy.

25 and 50 cents bottles.

so arranged tnat originality will be re-

warded rather than mechanical skill,and in. deciding on the points ol meritthe poorest drawer has equally as good

the Sheridan was returned to the vessel.

ARE SHOWING IN THEIR WINDOWMrs. W. Porter Boyd returns to

GREATER advancement has beenmade in the optician's business than inanv other. A few years since, specta-cles were han ed over the counter likeordinary merchandise, but today the ser-vices of a fully qualified optician areessential in order to determine by ascientific examination of each eyewhat are the correct glasses.

Shanghai next week after a long visithere.

Mrs. Mary Gann's dancing class willmeet at the Young Hotel this after-noon at 2.

Berger is to take a turn at leadingthe Golden Gate Park band while at A. N. SANFORD,

OPTICIAN.San Francisco. IN GREAT VARIETY.

a show as the best. -

Honolulu, Oct. 11, 1904.Mrs. H. C. Brown, Secretary Y. "VV. C.

Association.Dear Madam: Messrs H. Hackfeld

& Co. are greatly interested In the an-nouncement, made in yesterday, morn-ing's paper that T. W. C. A, memberswill earn a dollar In some unique wayfor the benefit of the association, andhave authorized us to make the fol-lowing offer:

For the best illustrated original ad-vertisement on Heinz Food Products

- either Heinz Baked Beans,' SweetPickles, India Relish, Tomato Soup, orMince Meat a prize of fj.50; for 'thesecond best $2.00; and $L00 for each ac

Pacific Lodge will hold a special meetFort Street.ing this ; evening at 7:30 o'clock with Boston Building.

OverTHE ONLY

QERM-PROO- F

May Jt Co--work in the first degree.R. J. Herrey, brother of Q, H. Berrey

of this city, died of apoplexy at Staun Fire Insuranceton, Va., a few days ago. REFRIGERATORThe Hawaiian Association Football

Made is theLeague meets Monday evening at the The B. F. Dillingham Co., Ltd.Honolulu Scottish Thistle club. General Agents for Hawaii.66 P 99 Atlas Assurance Company of London,

Phoenix Assurance company of London. ,

New York Underwriters' Aeencv.Providence Washington Insurance Com--ft

pany.It Is the only make that can boast Phoenix Insurance company of Brook

cepted Illustrated advertisement, ex-

cepting first and second best.JFor the best illustrated advertisement5 Golden Gate Flour $3.50; for the

second best $2.00; and $1.00 for eachaccepted advertisement, excepting thefirst and second best.

In form, advertisements must benearly square and not less than sixInches in diameter.

The following will be the points ofmerit governing the contest.

3 points for originality of design.3 points for originality of wording.2 toints for adantabilitv to sublect.

of the REMOVABLE ICE. lyn.

ALBERT RAAS, Manager.'nsurance Department Office, Fourth

The charge of embezzlement againstFrank Woodbridge in police court hasbeen nolle prossed as he Is now inthe Circuit Court on the same charge.

Clinton J. Hutchins has withjdrAwnfrom the Democratic ticket as acan-didate for representative. from theFourth. Business Interests are thecause.

The Chautauqua Literary and Scien-tific Circle meets every Friday at 3 p.m. In the parlor of the Central Unionchurch. All who would like to Join arecordially Invited to attend.

Charity ball at Progress hall tomor-row evening given by the CatholicBenevolent Union of Hawaii. Ticketsare only 50 cents and can be had fromany of the members or at the door.

There were only three casea in thepolice court yesterday, two boys were

Have you ever thought that this Floor, Stangenwald Building.i

CHOICE STOCK TOURISTS' WORK PROMPTLY ATTENDED TOclaim is the secret and success of con-

structing a cleanable, pure and germ-pro- of

refrigerator? For years it wasconceded that the non-remova- ice

Per S. S. Nevadan, Oct. 15 MilchCows, Driving Horses and Thoroughbred Chickens, personally selected by C. 15S Beretania Street. Phone Blue 3552. Opposite Hawaiian Hot4&

mtwmmmansmmmmmtmummmmmmmtmtmmmmmmmmmmKmmmmmmtmmmammmtmmmmmmmmMmmmmu milium1H. Bellina.compartment was an Ideal culture farm' Club Stabloefor germs. Now no fear need be enter

2 points for superiority of drawing.. We will be pleased to give any fur-ther information at our office. Hopingthat this, contest will prove of Inter-est and profit to your "association mem-bers, we are,

j Tours very truly,Pioneer Advertising Co.,

CHAS. R. FRAZIER.

Fort above Hotel St., Telephone Maintained for this great menace to health. FRED PHILP & BRO.--109up for truancy. They were discharged None, other than the GURNET, has

the REMOVABLE ICEwith a reprimand. Lau Gun, chargedwith having che fa tickets, will be Oahu Icr & Harnessmakert and Saddlers.

Trunks and Valises neatly andpromptly, repaired.Electric Co.

tried today.

In Plllkla.BOOTH WOULD SELL

Waverley Block, Bethel StrceM. F. Mendonca, a Portuguese who Ice delivered to any part of the city.

W. W. DImond & Go., Ltd.DISTRIBUTORS.51-5- 3 King Street.

keeps a store on Pauoa road near XuuVVATEH BY IVIEASUBEMEflT Island orders promptly filled. Tel. Blueanu avenue, was arrested last night US 1. P. O. Box 60a Office: Kewalo.charged with assault with a Headlyweapon. He is said to have fired a re"Xo, I don't intend to make the Leg- -

volver five times in the direction of2 JS EsS) 0some boys Wednesday night. Augussays. C. S"W. Booth. "I made one based

upon thi Interest I was getting from Silva was arrested for assault and battery. Jno. Muny Is charged with sellIng liquor without a license. o Aorlc2'o Boat

WHEN USING

THE UNITED STATES ROTARY WASHERSThis is the lightest running machine on the market. The clothes are turn-ed back and forth through the hot soap-su- ds and cleaning them withoutrubbing them to pieces. '

This is our second shipment and parties who have used these machinesspeak very highly of them.

THEO. H. DAVJES & CO., LTD.HARDWARE DEPARTMENT

the sale of water to private parties,but it was turned down. Now if the"Water Works people want my supply

;: tisy can get it at so much a thousand' gallons and only pay for what theyCor bin on Mongolia.

Major General Henry C. Corbin willbe a passenger on the Mongolia arriv- take. I am open to a proposition like

: this. I will sell water at a price based ing here on the 19th. He is on his way $3.50 SHOE FOR WOMENto the Orient to assume command ofupon the cost of pumping and put inthe Military Division of the Philippines.. $50,000 worth of pipe at my own expensesucceeding General Wade. Hackfeldto carry it down to the mains. But I& Co.; the agents of the Pacific Mailshan't ask the Legislature to do any

thing. The negotiation must come Company received a cablegram lastnight stating that the vessel had left DELICACIES READY FOR THE TABLE- -

San, Francisco on time. ,

from the other side."if. :

BUSINESS LOCALS. KEMR &: 0 LTD. isliopiand Company s Goods: Death Before Work.

AGENTS FbR HAWAIIAN ISLANDS,For ladies facial massage ring up Akana, a Chinaman whose betterMain 227. s 5Whalf decided that he must work instead LOS ANGELES.

All kinds of Fruits, Jams, Tellies and Preserves. Strictly pareof loafing around his Kalihi residence,embroideries at Whitney & Marsh's.

declared he would die first and punc and wholesome and retain the natural flavor of the fresh fruit.Philip L. Weaver, attorney-at-la- w, UNDERWOOD WRITING MACHINES.tured his skin with a penknife. Nocan be found at 79 Merchant street. Every bottle guaranteed fresh.loe most popular enup m ww ivi serious results followed although the

police patrol wagon went to the sceneThat the Underwood visible writ-ers are growing in popularity isunquestioned.good work. Try the Imperial Shaving

' Parlors. of the narrowly averted tragedy.An office with the use of telephone Is Tel. Blue 251E.Corner Beretania Av. and Alakea St.f

Fell Through Window.offered for rent. See our classified ad 1il8lill!PV-- sit "fo1t,'T,h- -

vertisements.A typewriter is wanted for a well A drunk, who was unable to keep his

feet, fell through a window at J. Hopp

13 MACHINESwere received by us on laststeamer, and we have more on theway. Some of these v ere alreadyordered, and the balance have allbeen sold during: the two daysthey, have been on view, and willall be delivered during the presentweek.

known wholesale house. See classified FOR RENTadvertisements today. & Co.'s store at midnight last night.A good second-han- d piano Is offered He was slightly cut about the face,

M 1 ..net wt I' r O ft ltt COTTAGESTWO OF CAMPBELL'S PAWAARENT REASONABLE.lar9 call at the Union Grill.

Fall Goods ComeA lot of choice apples just arrivedwill be sold in lots to suit purchaser

f Better call and investigate, and place your order for one of the nextlot ' .

No matter what machine you may have used, or are now using, tneone 3'ou will eventually use is the UNDERWOOD.

at Morgan's auction rooms today at 10 Trooping In Ouro'clock.Modern improvements good neighborhood. Call or address

W. IS. CAMPBELL1634 YOUNG STREET, : : : : NEAR PUNAHOU.

PEARSON & POTTER CO., ITD- - 4A11 persons having claims against the--trm of Sine Loy Co., late of King Art 931 FORT STREET.Street, are requested to present themat once to Theo. H. Da vies & Co., Ltd.

trows, cows, cows, to arrive mis weesper Nevadan. also a number of fine

1 H H H H H H H H EE D H H H B D B-B- -H D H H H- -driving horses and thoroughbred vchick- -ens. See advertisement. Club Stables,

B-flE

Ek

T A '

ASK THE BARTENDER TO MAKEThe Art Department of X. S. SachsDry Goods Co. is rich in a beautiful 1At no time in the history of this storenew stock of art materials and finding

have we had so beautiful a stock orfor fancy works. Special bargains in pil RECEIPTart novelties as at the present and theYOU A o

BETH ES DA WATERlow tops and covers this week.

1

mt

as

n:1et

ts

department is in charge of an experiXaoa Soda makes a healthful drinkenroll lddv fust from the Coast. Theand invigorating tonic. It is the prince

of table waters and makes a deliciouslemonade. Sold at all first-cla- ss barsand drug stores Macfarlane & Co. are

very latest art materials and findings

are ready for your fancy work.Here are bargain offers on Cushionagents for thi3 Territory.

Tops for this week:Fine Lithograph Tops, new subjects. It is piquant and delightful to the taste and

to the health.

j FOR fMWilder Steamship Co.Inter-Islan-d Steamship Co.

Oahu Railway & Land Co.

25c. up.St. Andrew's Fair.Today will complete all the arrange Tinted Cushion Tops, new designs.

35c. up.ments for the Fair. All the tents areCrepe Cushion Tops. Jap. designs, 3oc.

Tapestry Cushion Tops, fine quality,going up and the ladles in charge aredoing everything possible to make the Carrera & Company. Ltd,

17 Hotel Street. Agents. Phone Main 219.

BBI

IS

S3t

Ci

E

60c.scene one to be remembered. The Cishion Bags ready to slip the pillowgates will open at twelve sharp and in as follows: For Sale atthe business men will be met by a Fancy Tinted Cushion Bags, 33c.

Roman Stripe Cushion Bags, 35c.

Embroidered Cushion Bags, 50c.

Beautiful new line of stamped linens awaited Gazette Co.J). Landoconsisting of doylies, squares and cen-

ters in all sizes. '

General full line of Art Goods.See our Art Window displays on Fort New lines of 6!

Von-Ho- lt Block, King Street,

--a B W B B-- B g-- P g-H-- H-P W H g-g-- W-B -H-- HjLstreet.

bevy of pretty girls dressed in whitewho will do their best to attend to alltheir wants in the lunch line. Dufingthe lunch hour the Ellis quintet clubwill furnish music. Tou get the New

JPngland. home made lunch, a chatth the pretty girlswith any amount

of good music all for 75 cents. Mentake advantage of the rare opportun-ity and secure your tickets at once.They are on sale at the BergstromMusic Co.'s, Wall. Nichols Co.'s, Hob-TO- n

Drugs Co.'s and Wichman's.

Shirtsv Hats and TiesS. SCHS DRY GOODS CO. AdvertisFull lines of TRUNKS and VALISES at 1024, Fort Street, (I. Q

j

O. F. new. building) and 152 Hotel Street. 1LIMITED.Corner Fort and Beretanla Streets.

Page 10: evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu · SUGAR 96 Test Centrifugals. 4.25, I J, U. S. WEATHER BUREAU. OCTOBER 13 t Last 24 hour rainfall .00; Temperature, max. 83; min. 76; Weather, Fresh

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, OCTOBER 14, 1934.318B'!.

HONOLULU STOCK EXCHJUSSE.

G0VE10San Francisco For Honolulu: E. R-Ba-

th.

A. H. Cole, Mrs. A. H. Cole, S.II. Dowsett, A. Enos, Mrs. A. Enos,W. Lucas, Misss M. McAuslan, J. Mi-

chaels, Miss Mary L. Perry Max

Halstead & Co., IM.STOGK AND

Canadian--Anstralian Royal Mail LineSteamer running in connection wl tk tae Canadln-PaeLfi- e Railway Co.

2 at Honolulu on or about the following dates:

Honojulu, Oct. 13, 1904.

XAMX OF STOCK, Capft&l. Val..BiA. AlkFOR VANCOUVER.

1904

MIOWERA .OCTOBER 19

MOANA .NOVEMBER 16

AORANGI DECEMBER 14

rOIl FIJI AND AUSTRALIA.1904

&ORANGI . OCTOBER 22

SIOWERA .......".....NOVEMBER 19

3IOANA ..DECEMBER 17

trough tickets Issued to all points

THEO.GENERAL.

Pacific Mail S. S. Co.,S. S.

of the above companies will call at Honolulu and leave this portthe dates below mentioned: ,

SAN FRANCISCO. FOR 3AN FRANCISCO.. - OCTOBER 1 DORIC OCTOBER 18

BOND

BROKERSLOAK3 NEGOTIATED

illsm&ers Hosolsfa Sfcdt iztBond ExcSacfc

THE

enry

Waterliousg

TrilSt CO., Unite!

For RentCottage ' Emma St .$30.00 .

Steamersmn or about

TOMSIBERIA ...

MONGOLIA .CHINA ...... .. NOVEMBER 1DORIC ....... NOVEMBER 1COPTIC ..DECEMBER 3KOREA ........ DECEMBER 10GAELIC .DECEMBER 20

100 SOO .....

30 23!'SS3i100 10100 67H

20 27! '

100 118 ...a) 16

ioo .ao 2060 12

10010020 4

100 . 9320 2720 ... 820 J .....

100 .... ISO

50100 ..... 250100100 150100 125100 52100 .....100 ... . 150

100 .....100 100 ... .

100 102100

100 7010 ...

10020

105.

a m m

"ico

"ioo1U0

Mkkcantll.C. Brewer A Co. -- . -- n.ooo.ooo

&T7SAK. ; ' I

5X00,000Haw. Agricultural.... 1,200,000H;r.w. Com. AbugarCo. 2S12,7!W17 li t i 2.000,000Hooomu 750,000Bonokaa 2,000,000Haixa 600,000Kahuku 600,000Kihei Plan. Co., Ltd., 2,500,000Kipahulu 180,000

600,000Mc Bryde 8ng. Co.,Ltd. 1,500,000uanu sugar uo....... 8,600,000Onome.... . . . ...... . 1,000.000Ookala 500,000Olaa Sugar Co., Ltd.. 5,000,000Olowalu 150,000Paauhau SugPlanCo 6,000,000Pacific ...... 500,000Paia 7o0,000Pepeekeo 750,000Pioneer 2,750,000Waialca Agri. Co, ... 4,500,000Wailuku . 700,000Waimanalo

8rAjcBHir Cos.

Wilder 8, 8. Co.-- . . 500.000Inter-Islan- d a 8. Co.. 600,000

MtSCKIXABSOCl.Haw. Electric Co ...... 500,000H. K. T. A L. Co., Pd.H.K.T.4L. Co.. C iwoVobb"Mutual Tel. Co 150,000O. &. A Li. Co 4,000,000HlloB. B.Co l.uOO.OOO

Bonds.Haw. GoT't, 5 p. c...Haw. Ter., 4 p. 0. (Fire

Uiainu).Hllo R. K. Co.. 8 p. c.Hon. K. T. A L. Co.,

0 p. oEwa Plant., 0 p. eO. B. A L. Co., 6 p. C . .Oahu Sugar Co., 6 p. c.Olaa Sugar Co., 6 p. c.WaialuaAg. Co., 6.p.c.Kahuku p. oPioneer MU1 Co. 6 p.c.Paia 6p. c. ............Haikun p. cHawaiian Sugar 6 p. c.Hawn. Coml. Sugar

Co. S p.SALES BETWEEN BOARDS.

Sixty-seve- n McBryde, $4; 60 Olaa,$3.75; 20 H. R. T. & L. Co. Com., $65.

TIDES, SUN AND MOON.

For further information apply to

H. HACKFELD & COMPANY, LTD., AGENTS.

ooqnio Otba rraofa I b . Oo.The fine passenger steamers of th lahereunder::- -

FROM SAN FRANCISCO.ALAMEDA ..v. . OCTOBER 14

VENTURA ...OCTOBER 26

ALAMEDA NOVEMBER 4

SLERRA .....NOVEMBER 16r y,a. .oiiinr nf th

" Gandall Lane ..... 1 r''" Gandall Lane ..... 23" Aloha Lane ....... 18.00

" Anapuni St 26.25

' Kalihi . .......... 12.00

Xli WUUrVUVU TVlbU Miv urn ..p - -pared 'to issue, to intending passeng ers, Coupon Through Tickets by anyrailroad, from San Francisco to all points In the United States, and fromNew York by any steamship line to all European ports.

." FOR FURTHER PARTICULARS, APPLY TO' WM. G. IRWIN & CO., LTD.

--mmmv,jWMWIsffflWWBWWP " -

American-Hawaiia- n Steamship Company.'SJircct Monthly Service Between New York and Honolulu via

Pacific Coast.THE SPLENDID NEW STEEL STEAMERS 2 2 2 3 S

5 g 53 S 5 3 all J g g S

a.m. t Ft. i p.m. i p.m. a.m. i Sets.M 10 4.15 1.7 4 30 10.24 10.44 5.515.40 749T 11 5.00 1.8 5.10 10.58 11.86 5.55 5. 39 8.09

p.m.W 12 5.45 1.8 5 52 11 37 ia.2 5.C5 5. 89 8.01T 13 6.35 1.7 6 42 .. 1 85 5.65 5.37 9 53

a.m.'F 14 7.30 1.7 7.51 o.iO 2.48 5 5.88 10 488 15 4.29 1.5 9.25 1.11 3.57 5.56 5.88,11 338 16 9.32 1-- 6 10.54 2.19 O.Ou 5.50 5.85 a.m.

p.m. a.mhi 17 10 3 1.4 6.44 3.45 5.67 5.34 0.29

FROM NEW YORK TO HONOLULUVIA PACIFIC COAST.

S. S. Nebraskan, to sail about.... Oct. 8

S. S. Arizonan, to sail about.. ..Nov. 1

Freight received at all times at theCompany's wharf, 41st street, SouthBrooklyn.FROM SAN FRANCISCO TO HONO

LULU DIRECT.R s. Nevadan. to sail...... Nov. 9

H. HACKFELD &C. T. MORSE, General Freight Ag

craacme u ransier

Industrial School Pleases

Him Conditionof Roads.

Governor Carter was at his officeyesterday afternoon, after returningfrom his outing on the Koolau side ofthis island. To an Advertiser reporterhe spoke of his jaunt along with sev-

eral matters of public policy under hisconsideration, j

"In going around the Island. I paidparticular attention to the road. Thereis some talk of relocating the roadfrom Heeia to Kalae, which takes overthe hills through Macfarlane's ranch,Ahuimanu. The change would save amile and give us a better road.

"Out of Kaahumanu the road is pret-ty bad. There are, places where thesea meets the land wash. The questionis whether to build a road back in-

land or keep on building embankments."The Boys industrial School, just

the other side of Kahuku, pleased megreatly. Mr. Gibson has done splen-didly. There are one hundred boys.In addition tohe three buildings erect-ed by the Government, the boys havebuilt a blacksmith shop a carpentershop, a two-sto- ry barn and a windmillover the spring. , They have wired thebuildings for electric light, terracedthe ground and planted taro patches.They do their own coolting and wash-ing, besides milking the cows.

"It is really fine. There are a hun-dred boys, who have a chance to beput straight again by a regular lifeand habits.

"The road into Ewa district is get-ting into fine shape. They have asmuch money as any other district ahdought to have the best roads.

"One thing I find still going on isa lack of appreciation on the part ofsome of the road boards of the factthat the last Legislature passed thatcitizen labor law. Only last monthpay rolls have had to be- - sent backbecause it was evident that the lawhad not been observed. It seems neces-sary that an example should be madeof some of them. There Is a penaltyof $10 for every man employed contra-ry to the law."

The Governor spoke of the liquorquestion on Kauai. Some of the deal-ers, he Intimated,' might forfeit theirlicenses if responsibility was found at-taching to them for the' Illicit trafficon that island. Licensees were expect-ed to aid the police in suppressing thelawless traffic.

With regard to the Lahalnaluna wat-er controversy the Governor thinks thequestion so complicated that compro-mise ' is preferable to litigation thatwould probably be mending. , ' ,'

j. .'

Alameda Due Today.The "yacht" Alameda will, if all pre-

dictions do not fail, stick her nosearound Diamond Head at 6:02:57.333o'clock this morning. This Informa-tion is ,j;iven that those who are accus-tomed to set their clocks by her wnisilemay know just how to regulate theirtimepieces. She will bring a very lightmail this time because of the Siberia.The passenger list is also light. How-ever those little things do not lessenInterest In her arrival.

.. Howard Resumes Unties. tAfter being absent for thirty! flays

Captain H. Z. Howard, superintendentof the Oceanic Steamship Company,resumed his duties last week. CaptainHoward, during his' vacation, made avisit to his old home in Connecticut,which he had not seen for over twentyyears. He also visited the large- - East-ern cities.

SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE.

ARRIVED.Thursday, Oct. 13.

Stmr. Xilhau. W. Thompson, fromKauai ports, 4:55 a. m.

Am. bk. Olympic, Evans, from SanFrancisco, 9 a. m.

U. S. S. Patterson, Pratt, from DutchHarbor, 12:30 p. m.

P. M. S. S. Siberia, Smith, from SanFrancisco, 8 a. m.

Stmr. J. A. Cummins, Searle, fromWaimanalo and Koolau ports, 5:25 p. m.

Schr. Ada, from Kauai .ports, S:30p. m.

DEPARTED.Stmr. Mikahala, Gregory, for Kauai

ports, 5:25 p. m.P. M. S. S. Siberia, Smith, for the

Orient, 5:15 p. m. ,

Schr. W. II. Marston, Curtis, for SanFrancisco, 11 a. m.

Stmr. Maui, Bennett, for Maui andHawaii ports, 2 p. m.

"DUE TODAY. rO. S. S. Alameda, Dowdell, from San

Francisco, 7:45 a. m.M. S. S. Enterprise, Yunggren, tow-

ing sp. Marion Chilcott, due.SAIL TODAY.

WILL CALL FORWe pack, haul and ship yourDealers in stove, wood, Coal'

Storage in Brick Warehouse, 126

First quarter of the moon Oct. 15th.Times of the tide are taken from the

United States Coast and Geodetic Sur-vey tables.

The tides at Kahulul and Hllo occurabout one hour earlier than at Hono-lulu.

Hawaiian standard time Is 10 hours30 minutes slower than Greenwichtime, being that Of the meridian of 157degrees thirty minutes. The time whis-tle blows at 1:30 p. m., which la thesame as Greenwich, 0 hours 0 minutes.Sun and moon are for local time forthe whole group.

METEOROLOGICAL RECORD.

Issued by the U. S. Weather BureauOffice Every Sunday Morning.

I Schwabache-- , Mrs. Max-Schwabac- her,

Dr. St p. G. Walters, Mrs. St. D. G.; Walters, W. S. Ward. . For. Yokoha-ma: O. W. Hein, Eyrie Pinchard, Master Geo. Pinchard, Mrs. G. M. Pinch-ard. For Nagasaki: Misg M. Knox,Mrs. J. C. Thompson. For Shanghai:

I Miss L. Finley, Miss Nanon Grey, Mrs.C. D. Hagerty. For Hongkong: ilissAlice Brown, Miss Elizabeth Brown,Miss Grace Brown, Miss MarthaBrown, Miss Mattie L. Brown, MajorJ. F. Case, Mrs. J. F. Case and child,Mrs. C. S. Coy, Mrs. A. M. Glenn, C.A. Graham, T. Hodgson, W. Imel, Pat-rick J. Kearney, S. R. Lewis, Mrs. IC.xLogan and two daughters,. Geo. E.Lorenz, Arthur P. Moran, : Mrs. M.Morrison, S. Splro, Miss Margaret Ste-vens, Mrs. C. W. Vance and maid,.Geo. S. Wilson,

Per bark Olympia, Oct. 13, from SanFrancisco Mr., and Mrs. Otto Berndt."

...

VESSELS IN PORT.

ARMY AND NAVY.U. S. S. Iroquois, Niblack, station

vesseL -

U. S. Training Cruiser Buffalo, Ever-ett, Midway and Alaska, Sept-- 30.

U. S. Coast Survey Steamer Patter-son, Pratt, Dutch Harbor, Oct. 13.

MERCHANT VESSELS.

Erskine M. . Phelps, Am. sp., Graham,Philadelphia, Aug. 3L,

Fairpovt, Br. pp., Armstrong, Hamburg,Oct. 4.

Mohican, Am. bk., Kelly ,

Oct. 7. r.' '

Olympic, Am. bk., Evahs, San Fran--cisco, Oct. 13. .

-

Paul Isenberg, Ger. bk., Janssen, Ham-burg, Sept. 25.

Santiago, Am. . bk., Anderson, SanFrancisco, Aug. 28.

. .The Kaila.

Mails are due from the followingpoints as follows:

San Francisco Per Alameda, today.Yokohama Per Doric, Oct. 18.

Victoria Per Miowera, Oct. 19.Sydney Per Miowera, Oct. 19.

Mails will deoart as follows:San Francisco Per Doric, Oct. '18.Sydney Per Aorangi, Oct. 22.

Yokohama Per Mongolia, Oct. 20.Victoria Per Miowera, Oct. 19.

'

U. S. WEATHER BUREAU.

Alexander Young' Building, Honolulu,T. II.

Thursday, October 13, 8 p. m.Mean temperature 80.v

Maximum temperature S3. v

Minimum temperature 76. .

Mean., barometer 30.03.Rainfall, 24 hours ending 8 p. m. .0.Relative humidity 8 fe.. m.," 59 per

cent; S p. m., 59 per cent.Mean absolute humidity 6.063 grs. per

cubic foot.Prevailing direction of wind E.Average wind velocity, miles per

hour 12.Average cloudiness, in tenths 1.

ALEX. McC. ASHLEY,Section Director, in Charge.

Classified Adycrtlscmcnts,

WANTED.A COMPETENT typewriter for promi-

nent wholesale house; References re-

quired. "B," this office. ' 6923

WANTED IN EXCHANGE.A GOOD typewriter for a Syracuse

double-barr- el hammerless shot gun.Particulars at Advertiser office. 6909

ROOMS AND BOARD.SUITABLE for two gentlemen or mar-

ried couple, home cooking. Termsreasonable. Mrs. Winter, 1141 Adamslane. 6912

AT WAHIAWA, ten dollars per week,"two dollars per day. Stage meets

3:15 p. m. train from Honolulu atPearl City, on Tuesdays and Fridays.Address Mrs. Caroline Rhodes, atPeatf City. Phone King 67.

FOR RENT.TWO furnished rooms, each suitable for

two people, at 1124 Adams lane. Elec-tric lights and telephone. Also roomsat lowest rates at Helen's Ccrt. 6878

COTTAGES; Christley lane, off Fort St.Rent reasonable. Apply Wong KwaL

OFFICES FOR RENT."THE STANGENWALD," only fire-

proof office building in city.

, FOR SALE.GOOD second-han- d piano; cheap. Ap-

ply Union Grill. 6922

ONE phaeton and harness, all in goodcondition, $25. One Cypher's incuba-tor and brooder, . also a few choicePlymouth Rock and Brown Leghorncocks. Apply W.' G. Needham, Arm-strong street, College Hills. 6921

A FIRST-CLAS- S restaurant, doing agood business. Very centrally locat-ed. Particulars address "Restaur-ant," this office. 6914

COMPLETE set bound volumes Plant-ers' Monthly. 22 vols., 1882 to 1904.Uniform binding: full sheep. Price$175.00. Address P. M., care GazetteCo. 6903

DRESSMAKING.PLAIN sewing and dressmaking at SO

School street, near Nuuanu. 6920

JOIN THE RELIEF ANDBURIAL ASSOCIATION.

I Membership fee $3.00Endowment to the Relief Fund.... .50

No monthly cues nor yearly assess-ment.

H. II. Williams and Mrs. E. C. Wil-ia- ms

are the undertakers of the Reliefnd Burial Association.No. 1127 Fort street, opposite Club

J. F. Morgan. President; C J. Campbell, Vice-Preside- nt; J. L McLean, Sec-

retary; A. F. Clark, Treasurer; N. E. Gedge, Auditor; Frank Hustace, Ma-nager. .

SS-o-stsice-eo- ls: Co., XtL.

In Canada. United States aad Europe.

H. DAVIES & CO., LTD.AGENTS- - -

Occidental OrientalCo.

nf ArrTTTTRTA OCTOBER 29

COPTIC ...NOVEMBER 6

KOREA NOVEMBER 19

GAELIC NOVEMBER 26

SIBERIA ...... . i . .NOVEMBER SO

MONGOLIA ..DECEMBER 13

line will arrive and leave this port

FOR SAN FRANCISCO.ALAMEDA OCTOBER 19

SLERRA OCTOBER 25

ALAMEDA " .NOVEMBER 9

SONOMA NOVEMBER 15

above steamers, the agents are pre- -

And each month thereafter.Freight received at Company's wharf,

Greenwich street.FROM HONOLULU TO SAN FRAN-- ;

CISCO VIA PUGET SOUND.S. S. Nevadan, to sail... Oct. 18

FROM SEATTLE AND TACOMA VIA. SAN FRANCISCO.

S. S. Nevadan, from Seattle Nov. 1

S. S. Nevadan, from Tacoma....Nov. 2

COMPANY, LTD, AGENTS.ent. '

T"

YOUR BAGGAGE.

goods and save you money.

and kindlings. ,

King Street. Phone Main 58.

63 QUEEN STREET

Branch of Hustace, Peck Co.,Ltd."' 7

Street.

Professional Gards

ATTORNEY-AT-LA- W.

PHILIP L. WEAVER. Law. office, 79Merchant street. Cases in real prop-- 9erty not accepted.

ARCHITECTS.W. MATLOCK CAMPBELL Office 1034

Young street.

ENGINEERS.ARTHUR C. ALEXANDER. Survey- -

or and Engineer. 406 Judd Bldg.; P.O. box 732.

INSURANCE.THE MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE

CO. OF NEW YORK.S. B. ROSE, Agent : : ; Honolulu.

MASSAGE.LADIES' FACLVL MASSAGE. By

telephoning Main 227 you can secureservices of expert operator at yourhomes.

MUSIC.MRS. ANNA B. TUCKER.

Teacher of Pianoand Voice.High School grounds," Emma street.

OCULIST AND AURIST.DR. WM. G. ROGERS Rooms 33 and

34, Young building. Phone Main 18.

TYPEWRITERS.BOUGHT, sold, rented and repaired atRemington Typewriter office, Hotel St.

HAWAII SHINPO SHA.THE PIONEER JAPANESE PRINT-ln- g

office. The publisher of HawaiiShinpo, the only daily Japanese paperpublished in the Territory of HawaiL

C. SHIOZAWA. Proprietor.Y. SOGA, Editor.

Editorial and Printing Office 103?Smith St., above King. Phone Main 48.

, DBAX.SBS IH -

Flroiwood, 0bovc ond Stoom CoealAlso White and Black Sand. Telephone Main 295.

WINDTHWUt.

mean - '. .& 8 a3 6 g S3 S

Q o a a a 5 g

8 2 29.f0 82 73 .Co! 78 2 S 6M 3 29.P3 84 72 00: 75 HE 8T 4 29.95 83 74 T j 72 6 X 8W 5 29.98 82 73, .01! 69 4 KB 10T. 6 29.97 84 75 T I 67 2 X 11F 7 80.02 84 75 OOi 64 6 NB 118 8 80.0 4 83 75 T 80 7 MX 7

Union Express Go.63 Queen

Having baggage contracts with the following steamship lines:Oceanic Steamship Co. Pacific Mail Steamship Co.Occidental & Oriental Steamship Co. Toyo Kaisen Kaisha Sfeamship Co.

We check your baggage at your homes, saving you the troubleof checking on the wharf.

TT- andS;.e movine ' Telephone MAIN 86.

AVaikiki (furnished)15.00

House Kinau St. (furnished)50.00

Cor. Merchant and Fort Sts., Tel. Main 313.

7-Mc-INT YRE BUILDING-- T

FOR SALE. House and 5 acres landunder cultivation, at Wahlawa. FORRENT Furnished house on Beretaniastreet. Property cared for, rents col-

lected, Abstracts and general Real Es--tate business. Money loaned and In-

vestments recommended.W. L. HOWARD, s

OHAB. BREWER & CO.SHEW YOEK LIHE

Bark Nuuanu " sailing frorF;a,New York to Honolulu on oftabout Nov 15th. FREIGHTTAKEN AT LOWEST RATES.

For freight rates apply toCHAS. BREWER & CO.,

27 Kllby St., Boston, orC. BREWER & CO., LTD.,

Honolulu. ;.

'F. T. P. Waterhouse A. Water

The Watertonse Co.

FOR RENTOffice with use of telephone, good

central location. , ' t

Agents for American Insurance Co.and the Waterhouse Investment Co.,Ltd.

Office, 932 Fort street.

The bet way to form thesaving habit is to put a few

dollars in .he MUTUAL

BUILDING AND LOAN

SOCIETY every month. Your

small savings will thus grow

until you have a nice capital

accumulated. Office, 938 Fort'Street.

P3 RENT.LARGE HOUSE ON BERET ANIA

STREET Next to Hospital; Urooms. Rent, cheap.

Also, RESIDENCE LOTS for sale atKapahulu and Puunui on easyterms.

Apply to W. W. CHAMBERLAIN,6864 Room 206, Judd. Bldg.

$37.00TO VOLCANO ANDRETURN.STOPOVERS ALLOWED.

.RICHARD H. TRENT,General Agent

938 Fort Street

Harrison Mutual Burial Association of Honolulu

Ha? over 2.800 members. Has burie

102 memoers aunnp me im j

Note: Barometer readings are cor-rected for temperature, Instrumentalerrors, and local gravity, and reducedto sea level. Average cloudiness statedIn scale from 0 to 10. Direction of windIs prevailing direction during 24 hoursending at 8 p. m. Velocity of wind Isaverage velocity In miles per hour.

ALEX. McC. ASHLEY, .

Section Director, in Charge.

Small Passenger ElevatorFOR SALE

PUMP PIT OR PRIVATE RESI-DENCE. PERFECTLY NEW.

1 Reedy Passenger Elevator completewith hydraulic engine, and necessarycables, overhead sheaves, platform andpassenger car 4x4.

No reasonable offer refused. If necessary the hydraulic engine can be soldseparate from the car should the enginealone be wanted.

Apply to office of theS. N. CASTLE ESTATE, LTD.,

Stangenwald Building.

Bargains at KaimukiAAA

$475 ?SO , down, balance in $iomonthly instalments WITHOUT IN-

TEREST, will buy you a beautiful, wellimproved lot of r5,ooo sq. ft, at Kaimu-

ki, same affords a fine, unobstructedview and is provided with . water andready for building; worth $750. Alsofor rent at $18 per mon. some neat

cottaees. J. H. SCHNA.CK.

NOTICE

THE PACIFIC

Commercial AdvertiserXntered at the Post Office at Honolulu,

T. H., as second class matter.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES:Per Year $12.00Bix Months... 6.00

Advertising rates on application.

Published every morning except Sundayby the

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE CO., LTD.,.Von Holt Block No. 63 South King St.

A. W. PEARSON, Manager.

RAlLVVAYdLAND CO.

TIME TABLEOctober 6, 1904.

OUTWARD.For Waianae, Waialua, Kahuku and

Way Stations 9:15 a. m., "3:20 p. m.For Pearl City, Ewa Mill and Way

Stations 1:30 a. m. 9:15 a. m.,11:05 a. m-- , 2:lh p. m., 3:20 p. m.,3:15 p. m., J9:30 p. m.," tll:15 p. m.

INWARD.Arrive Honolulu from Kahuku, Wal-al- ua

and Waianae 8:36 a-- 5:31p. m

Arrive Honolulu from Ewa Mill andPearl City tT: 46 a. m., 8:36 a. m.,10:38 a. m., 1:40 p. m., 4:31 p. m.,5:31 p. m.. 7:30 p. m.

, Daily. '

t Sunday. Excepted.t Sunday Only.

G P. DENISON. F. C. SMITH,1Supt. G. P. & T. A.

Hawaiian Realty and Maturity Co.,Limited.

Real Estate, Mortgage, Loans andInvestment Securities.

Homes built on the installment plan.Home Office: Mc In tyre Bldg.. Hono-

lulu. T. H. L. K. KENTWELL,General Manager.

Stmr. JIauna Loa, Simerson, for Maui,Kona and Kau ports, 12 m.

DUE TOMORROW.Stmr. Kinau, Freeman, from Hllo and

way ports, a-- m.Stmr. Likelike, Naopala, from Maui

and Molokai ports, p. m.

PASSENGERS.Booked to Arrive.

Per S. S. Alameda, October 14, fromSan Francisco J. M. Fuller, F. W.Swanton and wife, Miss Stodder, MissK. Keiley, F. S. Knight, wife and child,Miss Mary. McLean, Miss L. Aheong,Mrs. G. F. Bush and child, Mrs. C. L.Smith and child. Rev. J. Grace, Rev.Bridge, Miss P. Swanton. F. H. House,A. H. Hoffit, J. A. Scott, J. S. Rock.

Arrived.Per P. M. S. S. Siberia, Oct. 13 from

The undersigned hereby notifies thepublic that he is the sole and originalowner of trade mark "Bromo Pop" forheadache and tired feeling. Any personusing this mark or purporting to be themanufacturers of same will be prose-cuted according to law.

ARCTIC SODA WORKS,1L R. De Sa.

Honolulu. T. TT.. Bant. 7th. 1U. W2

its organization. tmiucs -

tificate in Class A, entitling you to ai

its benefits,J. H. TOWNSEND. Secretary- -Stables.