8
iV It' i i i s . : ! 1 . V - 7 ; t ; MAILS From San Francli Gt Northern, Mar. 31. For San rranciac Gt. Northern, April 4. Frem Vancouver: Makura, April ID. For Vancouver: Matura. March 1U Evening Bulletin. Eat. 1882. No. 6434 Hawaiian Star. Vol. XXIII. No. 747'. NEUTRALS LOSING HEAVILY, RESULT OF DIVER RAIDS Submarine Campaign Since March 1 TakeS 70,000 Tons Toll; Third Non-Combata- nt AUSTRIANS TAKE ITALIAN POSITIONS, DRIVEN OUT Back-and-f- orth Fighting oh Isonzo Front; Russians are Still on Offensive f Associated Pros y redtral Wlrslew LONDON, England, .March. The new submarine campaign of the: Central. 'Powers, 'formally latimr from March 1, is taking heavy toll of neutral7 shipping.-'- ; ; . Germany and Austria announced tliat after March 1 "they would consider ' all armed merchantmen as of the status of warships and would sink them .without warning. .Since that time an aggregate ton- nage of 70,000 has been destroyed and .much more crippled. , Of the destroyed .vessels, about a third of the tonnage has been of neutrals. The casualties from the explo- sion of the steamer Sussex, now tinder investigation by the belliger- ents and the. United States, will not exceed 50, according to today's es- timates. ;- ;:'.;.-- .. " - . The British steamer Engineers, from Philadelphia,', car- rying meat and oil, is among the latest victims. This' vessel was tor- pedoed but no casualties' arc rc-.poft- - . i ' ; :TheVPritish' steamer Empress of M idland, from New- - York for, Caf-dif- f, has been . sunk,: also 'without casualties;- - : '.. - - .' " TSC A f J D I NAV I ATI 7CD"U MTR I ES- .LOSERS IN UNDER-SE- A WAR COPENHAGEN. Denma rk, '. March 28 According to figures made public today, since "the Eu- ropean war .opened . 96 Norwegian vessels have been crippled - and sunk by Submarines or blown up by floating mines. - On these , 77 liave been lost. The Swedish ves- - V sels lost number 40 and in connec-- t ion with the blowing up of th ;se 128 lives have been lost. - SAY BRITISH AUXILIARY ANDES SANK THE 6REIF - LONDONV England' March 28. The British ; cruiser Andes h credited with sinking the German . raider Greif in the North Sea en- gagement on February 29, news or which has' just been made public. The Andes is declared to have dodged torpedoes ann gone to tlv: rescue of. the British - steamer. Al- - ' cantara. : ,'. ,- l ;. . ; ."v" The Empress .of Midland, re-- i erred to above is of 2224 tons, ' owned by the Canada Steamship Line, with a home i port at New- castle. The Manchester Engineers is of 4302 tons, owned by the Man- chester Liner Company, home port ' Manchester. ' v- - . The Andes is a converted cruiser of 15,600 tons, built in -- 1913," used as a passenger vessel previous to '.the; war: ''';.' GERMAN MISSILES WERE AIMED AT CAMP AND DEPOT BERLIN, Germany. March 28. There la' heavy fighting today south of St. Eloi and the adjacent country. German flyers today bombarded - .the. new harbor petroleum depot of the Allies at Salon Ikl. They also drop-pa- d bombs on a new camp north of the town." . V.V ; On the east front, the Russians to- day drove fresh masses of men : against the German lines at PostaTy, ; but the attackers were wlthstoodh and ' severe losses inflicted on the . ' ' "" ' "" "" ' enemy. U. S. ASKS WHETHER GERMANY HIT SUSSEX WASHINGTON', D C, March 28. The United States has made inquiry as to whether a German submarine torpedoed the steamer Sussex. After a cabinet . meetinit today Secretary I jtnsins announced that the inquiry 'has probably reached Berlin already. .( .. Additional , and ; overnight tele-- J graph news on Page 9. y MIS NEW YORK STOCK MARKET TODAY Following are the doting prices of atocka on the. New York market to- day, sent by the Associated Press over the Federal Wireless: Yester-Toda- y, day Alaska Gold 20'4 20'B American smeixer a ,ww t American Sugar Rfg. .. . 110 110'4 American Tel. & Tel... 130 130' '2 American Copper ... Atchison Baldwin Loco Baltimore A. Ohio... Bethlehem Steel . . . Calif. Petroleum ... Canadian Pacific ... 86 86 103'2 103' 2 105. 88 98 470 462 23 ', a 22' '4 168 168 M. & SI P. (St. Paul) 94 944 Colo. Fuel & Iron 45'z 45 Crucible Steel 90 87ra Erie Common 37'4 37'a General Electric 167 143'2 General Motors t Great Northern Pfd. ... 122 12178 Inter. Harv N. J. 1102 110V8 Kennecott Copper ..... 55. 55 Lehigh R. R. 77 77H New York Central.. l05'4 105i Pennsylvania" 56 58 Ray Conaol. 23 23H Southern Pacific 98 98' Studebaker 143 142 Tennessee Copper .... 53'2 52 Union Pacific 133 133s8 U. 8. Steel 84'2 843 U. 8. Steel Pfd......... 117 117 Utah ... . . .. 80 81 Western Union- - 90' 90 Westinghouse 65'2 654 Bid. f Unquoted. . - r-- r- GERMAN AIRMEN OVERSALllKI, BOMBS DEADLY Drop Missiles on Allies' Base, Killing and Wounding ; ;Many Civilians r '"11 " " -- ';'.' 1 ' ? LONDON. EnsMarch 28. A sernl- - cfficil despatch. says that fire Ger man aeroplanes early today bombard- ed Salonikt, killinsr IS civilians and wounding 21. including a Greek offi- cial. Two of the Cerman aeroplanes are, declared to have been lost in the raid. . . :v.v , NO CHANGE ON VERDUN H:. FRONT TODAY, SAYS PARIS Vrrw by Federtl Wirlei tAssoclatd Frarce, March 28. There is no change today in the Verdun sit- uation. East of the Meuse the line is calm, but on the west are out- breaks of artillery fire. ' AUSTRIANS TAKE TRENCH - BUT ITALIANS RETAKE IT ROME, Italy, ilarch 28. Tba Aus-trian- s today made an attack on the Italian positions at Val Piccolo, taking an Italian trench, but the Italians counter-attacked- . ' reconquering the trench and taking Austrian trenches elsewhere. v. .':v ; ;' . j GERMAN OFFICIAL I CABLEGRAMS I GEItMAN HEADQUARTERS RE- PORT, March 27 The British today exploded an extensive mine near SL Eloi, south of Ypres, damaging the German position for more than 100 meters' length, and causing losses to the company which occupied the posi- tion. , " Northeast and east of Vermelles there w.gMuccessful mine-comba- ts in which tneHcermans captured prison- ers. NearLa Bassee and northeast of Albert the British attack was impeded by fire from our guns. During the la3t few days the British have again shelled Lons. Fire com- bats in the Argonnes and Meuse sec- tor only temporarily abated. ' On the east the Russians have re- heated wjth preac violence the attacks against Field Marshal von Hinden-burg'- s front The attack against the German lines northwest of Jacobstadt engaged an amount of soldiers and ammunition up to now unheard of. On the east front the Russians have suf- fered a loss proportionate to numbers engaged, while they have nowhere been successful. The Germans made counter attacks with Prussian regiments near Mokry-cz- e in order to : recover artillery ob- servation posts. This task was com- pletely fulfilled by the brave German troops, who caytured 21 officers and 2140 soldiers and many machine guns. German aircrait have bombarded the railroad station at Duenaburg and rail- road lines elsewhere. w ADMIRALTY REPORT. GERMAN ADMIRALTY REPORT, March 27. On March 25 British naval forces attacked along the north part of the north Friesian coast. TMs at- tack failed completely, as reported by headcuarters. - Two German armed patrol boats were destroyed by British men-of-wa- r. German naval aeropianes attacked the British ships, which were hit several 14 PAGES-- IK XOU J Jr, TERRITORY OF HAWAII, TI RS DAY. MARCH 28f VJUl 14 'AUKS 1064 there Three Leaders Who Hope to Eliminate Gen. Villa; Country Where Hides wpff )..f-- y Jm-!k- w M P li? I Left above Maj.-Ge- n. Frederick I f Tt ' Funston, commanHirg the puni- - i 1 atrz 5 ! tive expedition. Center and right j j t ' i Two presidents whose govern- - j J "'. V ; mcnts are cooperating Woodrow ' r, Wilson and Venustiano Carranza. t Committee Against j Tfliiinp-llnSiiffrair- fi Prohibition Now . (Associated Press fey FeftTJ Wireless WASHINGTON, D. ('.,. March 2S By- - a- - vote -- of--ta lia-hin- e- " today: the ' house. Judiciary com- - inittee oted to postpone indefi- - nitely the consideration of .all f suffrage and prohibition propos- - f ala which are before it f 4 - ' ' - ': SSedI But Despatches Indi- - . cate Would-b- a Monarch May Fight to Finish (Special Cable to Liberty News.) SHANGHAI, China, March 28 Reports from Peking continue to carry the news that Yuan Shih-Ka- i wHl re- sign for a "consideration.." but this !s not officially confirmed. At the pres- ent time the revolutionises are seeking to have Li Yuan Hung, nt, named as the new president ; According to the leaders of the re- publican movement the present vice-preside- nt is noi in favor of Yuaa's policies, and if Yuan should resien they believe that Li Yuan Hung would carry out the republican policies as advanced by progressive revolut'on-ists- . Will Fight to Finish. (Special Cable to Nippu Jiji.) TOKIO, Japaa. March 28. Accord- ing to the latest despatch from Peking Yuan Shih-K- ai Las announced thai he will not abdicate at any cost It is reported that the revolutionists re- fused 10 pay him $10,000,000 annually if he would resign as Yuan now states that he will not re- new the offer, but will fight to holJ his position. It is thought here that his abdica- tion is only a ijuestion of time, and that there is no other way out but res- ignation 'at the present time, with the revolutionists gainiug strength eveiy day in south China. SIR EDWARD ARSON TO COME BACK TO AssocifctM Press hj Federsi Wireless 1 LONDON. Eng.. March 28. The health of Sir Edward Carson, former of the coalition cab- inet, has been restored, and he will make his return to Parliament by pre- siding over the conservatives of the war committee, according to newspa- per announcement times and one destroyer heavily dam- aged. Of the German naval forces which were sent immediately, only the tor- pedo boats reached the retreating en- emy during th ni.sht of March 2.. One torpedo ioat has not yet UVI tu9rez. Opif Z Or Peking presidentand PUBLIC attorney-genera- l . lAasociabjd Prew Service by Federal Wireless. EL PASO, Texas, March 23 A rmy officials and men familiar with the country south of the border and Gen. Pancho Villa's ability to carry on guerilla warfare are pessimistic as to the possibilities for capturing Villa. Unless he Is taken in a week, it wil t perhaps be months before he la ferreted cut in th mountains.' The p ursuit wil) be hampered, if not halted, unlets the railroads are available as l ines of communication. ; WASHINGTON, D. C. March 2. Chie'f of Staff Geii. Scott today Indian.xrhiefs of Arls ona to make .enlistments as guides and scouts to assist the U. S. army of ficials over-the-count- ry in which Villa is now hiding. ,;'.' " : : ' OFF. M. HATCH AS NEW SUPERVISOR Other Members of Board De- lighted; Chamber of Com- merce Pleased, Too Approval of the mayor's selection of F. M. Hatch as supervisor to fill the vacancy left by the resignation of Rob- ert VV. Shingle was voiced everywhere today. "Mr. Hatch has the cordial good wishes of the Chamber of Commerce, I am sure," declared Raymond C. Brown, secretary of the organization. "His reputation as a man of ability is well established in the community. ' . ,4He is the sort of man we need on the board," asserted Ben Hollinger, suiervisor. "I sent him a special delivery letter urging him to accept yesterday about 15 mmutes before he called on the mayor to notify him of his acceptance of the appointment so you know how I feel about him," said Daniel Logan, supervisor. "I'm for him." announced William Larsen, supervisor. And so it was with every member of the city administration. Why Mayor Made Choice. Mayor Lane, in a few short sen- tences, gave his reasons for appoint ing Mr. Hatch to the place on the board. "He is a man whose standing m the community is unquestioned," he said. "Francis M. Hatch has been of inestimable sem'ce to the territory and to the city in the years that he has lived here. He has connections with businessmen and with territorial officials that will prove of immense benefit to the city. Hi recommenda-- t Continued on page three RICHARD WALTON TULLY, CREATOR OF "BIRD OF PARADISE," IS COMING Richard Walton Tully, author and playwright creator of "The Bird of Paradise," will arrive on the liner Great Northern next Friday for a brief stay in Hawaii. Tully's spectacular success with the Hawaiian production has aroused in- terest throughout the country. On this trip he is reported to be looking for new "local color" and material. He wants phoUs of good-lookin- g hula girls for one thing. Tully does not in- sist so much upon technical accuracy of detail in dress and dancing as upon grace and good looks. "The Pird of Paradise" may be ent here some day. Meanwhile Tully may put out a new poduction. pi fie THINKS FILIPINOS EciTizSi Pablo Manlapit Says Country- men Might Return Home if Given Independence That practically all of the Filipinos in Hawaii would return to iheir na- tive islands if accorded self-governme- nt is the declaration of Pablo Manlapit, editor of Ang Sandata, a local Filipino newspaper, when asked today for his opinion rekard'ng the effects of Federal Judge C. F. dem- ons' decision extending- - to Filipinos the privilege of Aemriei:?i citizenship. "You must bear in mind," says Mr. Manlapit "the fact that there are only a few Filipinos in Hawaii who could qualify as American citizens. There (Continued on page two) 2964 k Grand Total Brought By Hill Liners When the Hill liner Great Northern riorks hfr at If) o'clock Friday morn- - '. ing and lands the 330 passengers in all classes she is bringing from San Francisco and Los AngeleB (San Pe- dro), she will have carried to Hono- lulu since she made her first regular call here December 3. a grand total of 2771 passengers. Including the 193 brought by her sister ship, the Northern Pacific. Feb- ruary 22, in her special cruise here for the Carnival, the imposing totai is 2964 passengers, only 36 less than 3000. Friday's arrival will be the last can here of the palatial Hill liner until next winter, as she will go back cn her old run from San Francisco to Flavel (Portland) next month, the schedule calling for semi-weekl- y trips of the Great Northern and Northern Pacific between the two coastwise porta. The Great Northern will say au re-vo- ir to Honolulu at 4 o'clock the after- noon of next Tuesday, April 4, when she will sail for San Francisco, not to return here until November or De- cember. She will carry out every pound of freight which can be crammed Into her hold, more than 2000 tons, and the local agents, Fred ) L. waldron. Ltd., believe her outgoing j passenger list will be close to capa--1 city. r'i rV ts4Mm ?:30 j -- &mi Edition FIVK SENATE DEMOCRATS IN CAUCUS AND FINANCE COMMITTEE VOTE DOWN INTERNAL REVENUE PLAN Upper House Will Consider Favorable Report Next Week-T- hen Goes to Lower House For Agreement On New Feature fSpe-i.-- U Star-Bul!e- ti u cibl-- 1 WASHINGTON. t. i'.. Matili JX i Mt. ,. ihv ..s.-:!,kmi- atvt aruinctit..f Democrat', (.ami:- - ;m,j ovjMnithv work, the Kitchn frec-Mi- ar repeal hilt c:in'n wit!: hut one aim u-:t- ut that which timtU the period of" extension ot i'w pies:nt u, iT-.t- !uiv. The Kitehiu hiil. eori't- - ti ni h with an ouhiht rej,e;il. ' ot the etanse which W"-:- l 1 ;uf stitr or th lie - i:t M 1, ' will Ik rej.Mrtil from eonunitto- - to the senate next week w iilj an amenit-the- nt providing that snar on ilu- - free ! -- t on May 1. T'JO. .; - Fhc Demovratic cauctie' on the hill were enled tlav. Thi; Democrats ef the "pjir ltouse agreed iti their caucus t? amend t!ie Kitehiu hill hy limiting the extension of the tariff vriod. with-th- !uty at one eettt per pound. T .J:iy t. 1(J0. The caucus decided this aut then discussed the prows;il to increase the tariff a .haU'cCeut r ntorc to ti;et additional revenue. Th; plan of internal revenue taxation, cither hy a consumption tax or an excise tax, was al considered briefly and. then dropped. It was considered improhahlo that the consumption la plan would meet with much favor and the excise tax plan was vigor- ously opjxjsed from the heinnintj. ' . ' - The' vole on the phai to limit the tariff extension to V)20 was car- ried hy 23 to 7. i . Following the caucus action, the senate finance committee met. tliii ' aften:oon, resuming consideration. .of the. hill. The proposition' for A consumption or an excise tax was overwhelmingly rejected, as it had Iicch in the caucus, The fimnce cotnmitte.' ultimately rejtrteil all sug-- . gestions for special taxes on sugar anil ordered a fawrahle report o the house hill, with the amendment linuting the supens6-- j of the ir- - sugar clause to May .1,. 1V20. NTp.' otlier., feature are Jfiv3y-,- l iuihi rqwrt which will he .brought up before the senate, says Chairman Simmons ! of' the finance conimittee. some time next week, i ' ; t. 'j.A:,' ' . ; c. s. aliu: irr. : JAPANESEFETE i FOR .... NEW HfflE Japanese Woman's Home is Project Now Taking Shape; Funds to Be Raised Announcement was. made today of plans for a home e women, funds to beraispd by a number of public-spiriUr- u men and- women of the As a rrayps of securing funds, and also as prevent in - itself novel and pictureBe, there will be given a big fete on th grounds 'of the ' Royal Hawaiian hotel during, the afternoon and evening of May 5 and 6. It will be called the "Cherry Blossom Fete and will be given with a wealth of Nipponese setting, dances, costuming, etc.- - The' executive committee in charge of arrangements consists of Mrs. John E. Baird, chairman; Mrs. E. L. S. Gordon, Mrs. Hind, Mrs, F. W. Phisterer. Mrs. A. A. Young. Deacon- ess Spencer and Rev. P. T. Fukao of Trinity Mission, other committees I have also been named .and are busy o nthe arrangements. The home is to be called the St Hil- da's Home, and will be for a rest home for Japanese women, where they may go to secure instruction, to make their headquarters if they live cutside the city and are here for a day, ?nd where they may secure ad' vlna rl AnfiQr!itrin in V i - w 11 a traufl ' No location has yet been settled irxm. The plans for the Cherry Bio om Fete arc elaborate and it promises to be an unusual sf.cial evert ps well as a philanthropic enterprise of much value. The final returns of the bowling charrpionship arrived today, showing the V. S. Naval Training Station iv first place, Honolulu second. Fort Mc- Dowell third and San Jose fourth. The navy boys won four straight from Sacramento in the last fceru:j;. Robert Chung won the medal for high place man in the hexathlon whn he defeated Victor Kahn fcr fir3t place in the boys' events by a scom of 552 to 549. Kahn made a high jump of 5 feet 3 inches, which het tered the mark made by the winner of the senior event The Knights of Kamehameha will hold a meeting this evening in the!? clubrooras. Ben Hosea wtll play 4 i eo!o cn the steel guitar and Robert Kula will give a reading. A debate "Resolved. That Fat Men Get More Enjoyirent Out of hJe Than Lean Men." will be one of the features. ,W. S. Fook has the affirmative and A, Kalai the negative. t - i prick rEVT SUGAR SITUATIONS VIEWED WITH GOOD DEAL OF SATISFACTION HERE The action of the senate caucus and finance cotnm ttee in limiting the sus- pension. 'of the; free sugar clause to May I.U920, has net depressed Ha- waii's sugar men. On the contrary, the situation is regarded' by some of the best informed of them with much satisfaction. While decision on the period to May 1, 1929, is not outright repeal of "free sugar," it gives four years' leeway, 'and most of the local sugar men think that there will br at least cne Republican Congress be- fore that time, with the probability that the protecticn will be made per- manent. The Kitchin bill is expected to b passed by the senato in a.bout tho , shape it comes from the finance com- mittee, after which; it ' gqcs to th? house. If the bouse refuses to con- cur in the amendment, the situation might-.be overclouded, but it Ms thought here that the house will prob- ably yield. ;. . The fo; lowing correspondence from Washington was written, of course, be- fore the bill reached, the senate, but it is interesting as showing th sfntiirent of the nouse, expressed in the report, upcn the necessity for re-tenti- of the sugar duty. , ' , ,1 By C. S. ALBERT V : (Special Star-Bullet- in CcrMpandesca) WASHINGTON, D. C.Th(. bill to prevent su.ar from lcing. plaretl on the-fre- e list May I formally came int . and parsed the house under the most favorable auspices.., It was returned 1 from th ways and means committee with a tinanimous report Republicans and Democrats to the last man joined hands in urging the repeal of that 'ob- noxious section of the Underwood- - Simmons tariff act The long-draw- n out discussion of" the i cstof lice , appropriation bill do-la- d of the measure saving one cent per hundred pounds protection for It went over for action several r'ays lyond the period figured by the leaders. ' .' . When reported to the house It was annonn-e- d that the bill probably would lroiilit up. for debate and action on March 2. Some time ago it was, a)prove'd by a "Democratic caucus and its .assai;e guaranteed. The re- port, ' wliich was signed by every men- - her of ihe ways and means committee, follows: The free-suga- r provisions of para-grar- hs 177 and 178 of Schedule E of the tarifT act of October 3, 1913," pro vide that on and after May 1, 1916, sugar, tank bottoms, sirups of cane juice, melada, concentrated meiada, concrete and concentrated niolassea, molas.s, su.ijar drainings and sugar sweepings, maple sugar and maple sir- up, gluccae or grape sugar, and sugar, cane in Its natural state, or unmanu- factured, shail be admitted free ' of duty into the United States. The proposed bill repeals the free-suga- r :;rovisicns of exlatln law. Th9 effect of its enactment will be to Iea the preaent rates cf duty cn sugar asi iContlnaed oa pte two)

Tons Fighting Isonzo Front; Russians li? · ert VV. Shingle was voiced everywhere today. "Mr. Hatch has the cordial good wishes of the Chamber of Commerce, I am sure," declared Raymond

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Page 1: Tons Fighting Isonzo Front; Russians li? · ert VV. Shingle was voiced everywhere today. "Mr. Hatch has the cordial good wishes of the Chamber of Commerce, I am sure," declared Raymond

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; MAILSFrom San Francli

Gt Northern, Mar. 31.For San rranciac

Gt. Northern, April 4.Frem Vancouver:

Makura, April ID.For Vancouver:

Matura. March 1U

Evening Bulletin. Eat. 1882. No. 6434Hawaiian Star. Vol. XXIII. No. 747'.

NEUTRALS LOSING

HEAVILY, RESULT

OF DIVER RAIDS

Submarine Campaign SinceMarch 1 TakeS 70,000 TonsToll; Third Non-Combata- nt

AUSTRIANS TAKE ITALIANPOSITIONS, DRIVEN OUT

Back-and-f- orth Fighting ohIsonzo Front; Russians are

Still on Offensive

f Associated Pros y redtral WlrslewLONDON, England, .March.The new submarine campaign

of the: Central. 'Powers, 'formallylatimr from March 1, is taking

heavy toll of neutral7 shipping.-'- ;;

.

Germany and Austria announcedtliat after March 1 "they wouldconsider ' all armed merchantmenas of the status of warships andwould sink them .without warning.

.Since that time an aggregate ton-

nage of 70,000 has been destroyedand .much more crippled. ,Of thedestroyed .vessels, about a third ofthe tonnage has been of neutrals.

The casualties from the explo-sion of the steamer Sussex, nowtinder investigation by the belliger-ents and the. United States, will notexceed 50, according to today's es-

timates. ;- ;:'.;.-- .. " -

. The British steamerEngineers, from Philadelphia,', car-rying meat and oil, is among thelatest victims. This' vessel was tor-pedoed but no casualties' arc rc-.poft-

- . i' ;

:TheVPritish' steamer Empress ofM idland, from New- - York for, Caf-dif- f,

has been.sunk,: also 'without

casualties;- - : '.. - - .'"

TSC A f J D I N AV I ATI 7CD"U MTR I ES-

.LOSERS IN UNDER-SE- A WAR

COPENHAGEN. Denma rk,'. March 28 According to figuresmade public today, since "the Eu-

ropean war .opened . 96 Norwegianvessels have been crippled - andsunk by Submarines or blown upby floating mines. - On these , 77liave been lost. The Swedish ves--

V sels lost number 40 and in connec-- tion with the blowing up of th ;se

128 lives have been lost. -

SAY BRITISH AUXILIARYANDES SANK THE 6REIF

- LONDONV England' March 28.The British ; cruiser Andes h

credited with sinking the German. raider Greif in the North Sea en-

gagement on February 29, news orwhich has' just been made public.The Andes is declared to havedodged torpedoes ann gone to tlv:rescue of. the British - steamer. Al- -

' cantara. : ,'. ,-l ;. .

; ."v"

The Empress .of Midland, re--ierred to above is of 2224 tons,

' owned by the Canada SteamshipLine, with a home i port at New-

castle. The Manchester Engineersis of 4302 tons, owned by the Man-

chester Liner Company, home port' Manchester. ' v- - .

The Andes is a converted cruiserof 15,600 tons, built in -- 1913," usedas a passenger vessel previous to

'.the; war: ''';.'GERMAN MISSILES WEREAIMED AT CAMP AND DEPOT

BERLIN, Germany. March 28.There la' heavy fighting today southof St. Eloi and the adjacent country.

German flyers today bombarded- .the. new harbor petroleum depot of

the Allies at Salon Ikl. They also drop-pa- d

bombs on a new camp north ofthe town." . V.V

; On the east front, the Russians to-

day drove fresh masses of men: against the German lines at PostaTy,; but the attackers were wlthstoodh

and ' severe losses inflicted on the.

' ' "" ' "" "" 'enemy.

U. S. ASKS WHETHERGERMANY HIT SUSSEX

WASHINGTON', D C, March 28.The United States has made inquiryas to whether a German submarinetorpedoed the steamer Sussex. Aftera cabinet . meetinit today SecretaryI jtnsins announced that the inquiry

'has probably reached Berlin already.

.( .. Additional , and ; overnight tele-- Jgraph news on Page 9.y

MISNEW YORK STOCK

MARKET TODAY

Following are the doting prices ofatocka on the. New York market to-

day, sent by the Associated Press overthe Federal Wireless:

Yester-Toda- y,

dayAlaska Gold 20'4 20'BAmerican smeixer a ,ww tAmerican Sugar Rfg. .. . 110 110'4American Tel. & Tel... 130 130' '2

American Copper . . .

AtchisonBaldwin LocoBaltimore A. Ohio...Bethlehem Steel . . .

Calif. Petroleum ...Canadian Pacific ...

86 86103'2 103' 2

105.88 98

470 46223 ', a 22' '4

168 168M. & SI P. (St. Paul) 94 944

Colo. Fuel & Iron 45'z 45Crucible Steel 90 87raErie Common 37'4 37'aGeneral Electric 167 143'2General Motors tGreat Northern Pfd. ... 122 12178Inter. Harv N. J. 1102 110V8Kennecott Copper ..... 55. 55Lehigh R. R. 77 77HNew York Central.. l05'4 105iPennsylvania" 56 58Ray Conaol. 23 23HSouthern Pacific 98 98'Studebaker 143 142Tennessee Copper .... 53'2 52Union Pacific 133 133s8U. 8. Steel 84'2 843U. 8. Steel Pfd......... 117 117Utah ... . . .. 80 81Western Union- - 90' 90Westinghouse 65'2 654

Bid. f Unquoted.. - r-- r-

GERMAN AIRMEN

OVERSALllKI,

BOMBS DEADLY

Drop Missiles on Allies' Base,Killing and Wounding ;

;Many Civilians r '"11" "-- ';'.' 1 '

? LONDON. EnsMarch 28. A sernl--

cfficil despatch. says that fire German aeroplanes early today bombard-ed Salonikt, killinsr IS civilians andwounding 21. including a Greek offi-cial. Two of the Cerman aeroplanesare, declared to have been lost in theraid. . . :v.v ,

NO CHANGE ON VERDUN H:.FRONT TODAY, SAYS PARIS

Vrrw by Federtl WirleitAssoclatdFrarce, March 28. Thereis no change today in the Verdun sit-uation. East of the Meuse the line iscalm, but on the west are out-breaks of artillery fire. '

AUSTRIANS TAKE TRENCH- BUT ITALIANS RETAKE IT

ROME, Italy, ilarch 28. Tba Aus-trian- s

today made an attack on theItalian positions at Val Piccolo, takingan Italian trench, but the Italianscounter-attacked- . ' reconquering thetrench and taking Austrian trencheselsewhere. v. .':v ; ;' . j

GERMAN OFFICIAL I

CABLEGRAMS I

GEItMAN HEADQUARTERS RE-PORT, March 27 The British todayexploded an extensive mine near SLEloi, south of Ypres, damaging theGerman position for more than 100meters' length, and causing losses tothe company which occupied the posi-tion. , "

Northeast and east of Vermellesthere w.gMuccessful mine-comba- ts inwhich tneHcermans captured prison-ers. NearLa Bassee and northeast ofAlbert the British attack was impededby fire from our guns.

During the la3t few days the Britishhave again shelled Lons. Fire com-bats in the Argonnes and Meuse sec-tor only temporarily abated.' On the east the Russians have re-

heated wjth preac violence the attacksagainst Field Marshal von Hinden-burg'- s

front The attack against theGerman lines northwest of Jacobstadtengaged an amount of soldiers andammunition up to now unheard of. Onthe east front the Russians have suf-

fered a loss proportionate to numbersengaged, while they have nowherebeen successful.

The Germans made counter attackswith Prussian regiments near Mokry-cz- e

in order to : recover artillery ob-

servation posts. This task was com-pletely fulfilled by the brave Germantroops, who caytured 21 officers and2140 soldiers and many machine guns.

German aircrait have bombarded therailroad station at Duenaburg and rail-road lines elsewhere.

w ADMIRALTY REPORT.GERMAN ADMIRALTY REPORT,

March 27. On March 25 British navalforces attacked along the north partof the north Friesian coast. TMs at-tack failed completely, as reported byheadcuarters. -

Two German armed patrol boatswere destroyed by British men-of-wa- r.

German naval aeropianes attacked theBritish ships, which were hit several

14 PAGES-- IK XOU J Jr, TERRITORY OF HAWAII, TI RS DAY. MARCH 28f VJUl 14 'AUKS

1064

there

Three Leaders Who Hope to EliminateGen. Villa; Country Where Hides

wpff )..f--y Jm-!k-w M

P li?I Left above Maj.-Ge- n. Frederick

I f Tt' Funston, commanHirg the puni- - i 1 atrz 5! tive expedition. Center and right j j

t'

i Two presidents whose govern- - j J "'. V; mcnts are cooperating Woodrow '

r,

Wilson and Venustiano Carranza. t

Committee Against jTfliiinp-llnSiiffrair-fi

Prohibition Now

. (Associated Press fey FeftTJ Wireless

WASHINGTON, D. ('.,. March2S By- - a-- vote -- of--ta lia-hin- e-

" today: the ' house. Judiciary com- -

inittee oted to postpone indefi- -nitely the consideration of .all

f suffrage and prohibition propos- -

f ala which are before it f4 - ' ' - ':

SSedIBut Despatches Indi- -

. cate Would-b- a MonarchMay Fight to Finish

(Special Cable to Liberty News.)SHANGHAI, China, March 28

Reports from Peking continue to carrythe news that Yuan Shih-Ka- i wHl re-

sign for a "consideration.." but this !snot officially confirmed. At the pres-ent time the revolutionises are seekingto have Li Yuan Hung, nt,

named as the new president; According to the leaders of the re-

publican movement the present vice-preside- nt

is noi in favor of Yuaa'spolicies, and if Yuan should resienthey believe that Li Yuan Hung wouldcarry out the republican policies asadvanced by progressive revolut'on-ists- .

Will Fight to Finish.(Special Cable to Nippu Jiji.)

TOKIO, Japaa. March 28. Accord-ing to the latest despatch from PekingYuan Shih-K- ai Las announced thai hewill not abdicate at any cost It isreported that the revolutionists re-

fused 10 pay him $10,000,000 annuallyif he would resign asYuan now states that he will not re-

new the offer, but will fight to holJhis position.

It is thought here that his abdica-tion is only a ijuestion of time, andthat there is no other way out but res-ignation 'at the present time, with therevolutionists gainiug strength eveiyday in south China.

SIR EDWARD ARSON TOCOME BACK TO

AssocifctM Press hj Federsi Wireless 1

LONDON. Eng.. March 28. Thehealth of Sir Edward Carson, former

of the coalition cab-inet, has been restored, and he willmake his return to Parliament by pre-siding over the conservatives of thewar committee, according to newspa-per announcement

times and one destroyer heavily dam-aged.

Of the German naval forces whichwere sent immediately, only the tor-pedo boats reached the retreating en-emy during th ni.sht of March 2..One torpedo ioat has not yet

UVI

tu9rez.Opif

ZOr

Peking

presidentand

PUBLIC

attorney-genera- l

. lAasociabjd Prew Service by Federal Wireless.EL PASO, Texas, March 23 A rmy officials and men familiar with

the country south of the border and Gen. Pancho Villa's ability to carry onguerilla warfare are pessimistic as to the possibilities for capturing Villa.Unless he Is taken in a week, it wil t perhaps be months before he laferreted cut in th mountains.' The p ursuit wil) be hampered, if not halted,unlets the railroads are available as l ines of communication. ;

WASHINGTON, D. C. March 2. Chie'f of Staff Geii. Scott todayIndian.xrhiefs of Arls ona to make .enlistments as guides

and scouts to assist the U. S. army of ficials over-the-count- ry inwhich Villa is now hiding. ,;'.' " : : '

OFF. M. HATCH AS

NEW SUPERVISOR

Other Members of Board De-

lighted; Chamber of Com-

merce Pleased, Too

Approval of the mayor's selection ofF. M. Hatch as supervisor to fill thevacancy left by the resignation of Rob-ert VV. Shingle was voiced everywheretoday.

"Mr. Hatch has the cordial goodwishes of the Chamber of Commerce,I am sure," declared Raymond C.Brown, secretary of the organization."His reputation as a man of ability iswell established in the community. '

.

,4He is the sort of man we need onthe board," asserted Ben Hollinger,suiervisor.

"I sent him a special delivery letterurging him to accept yesterday about15 mmutes before he called on themayor to notify him of his acceptanceof the appointment so you know howI feel about him," said Daniel Logan,supervisor.

"I'm for him." announced WilliamLarsen, supervisor.

And so it was with every memberof the city administration.Why Mayor Made Choice.

Mayor Lane, in a few short sen-tences, gave his reasons for appoint

ing Mr. Hatch to the place on theboard. "He is a man whose standingm the community is unquestioned," hesaid. "Francis M. Hatch has been ofinestimable sem'ce to the territoryand to the city in the years that hehas lived here. He has connectionswith businessmen and with territorialofficials that will prove of immensebenefit to the city. Hi recommenda-- t

Continued on page three

RICHARD WALTON TULLY,

CREATOR OF "BIRD OF

PARADISE," IS COMING

Richard Walton Tully, author andplaywright creator of "The Bird ofParadise," will arrive on the linerGreat Northern next Friday for a briefstay in Hawaii.

Tully's spectacular success with theHawaiian production has aroused in-

terest throughout the country. Onthis trip he is reported to be lookingfor new "local color" and material.He wants phoUs of good-lookin- g hulagirls for one thing. Tully does not in-

sist so much upon technical accuracyof detail in dress and dancing as upongrace and good looks.

"The Pird of Paradise" may be enthere some day. Meanwhile Tully mayput out a new poduction.

pi

fie

THINKS FILIPINOS

EciTizSiPablo Manlapit Says Country-

men Might Return Home ifGiven Independence

That practically all of the Filipinosin Hawaii would return to iheir na-

tive islands if accorded self-governme-nt

is the declaration of PabloManlapit, editor of Ang Sandata, alocal Filipino newspaper, when askedtoday for his opinion rekard'ng theeffects of Federal Judge C. F. dem-ons' decision extending- - to Filipinosthe privilege of Aemriei:?i citizenship.

"You must bear in mind," says Mr.Manlapit "the fact that there are onlya few Filipinos in Hawaii who couldqualify as American citizens. There

(Continued on page two)

2964 k GrandTotal Brought

By Hill LinersWhen the Hill liner Great Northern

riorks hfr at If) o'clock Friday morn- - '.

ing and lands the 330 passengers inall classes she is bringing from SanFrancisco and Los AngeleB (San Pe-

dro), she will have carried to Hono-lulu since she made her first regularcall here December 3. a grand totalof 2771 passengers.

Including the 193 brought by hersister ship, the Northern Pacific. Feb-ruary 22, in her special cruise herefor the Carnival, the imposing totaiis 2964 passengers, only 36 less than3000.

Friday's arrival will be the last canhere of the palatial Hill liner untilnext winter, as she will go back cnher old run from San Francisco toFlavel (Portland) next month, theschedule calling for semi-weekl- y tripsof the Great Northern and NorthernPacific between the two coastwiseporta.

The Great Northern will say au re-vo- ir

to Honolulu at 4 o'clock the after-noon of next Tuesday, April 4, whenshe will sail for San Francisco, notto return here until November or De-

cember. She will carry out everypound of freight which can becrammed Into her hold, more than2000 tons, and the local agents, Fred )

L. waldron. Ltd., believe her outgoing j

passenger list will be close to capa--1

city.

r'i rV

ts4Mm ?:30j --&mi Edition

FIVK

SENATE DEMOCRATS IN CAUCUS

AND FINANCE COMMITTEE VOTE

DOWN INTERNAL REVENUE PLAN

Upper House Will Consider FavorableReport Next Week-T- hen Goes to

Lower House For AgreementOn New Feature

fSpe-i.-- U Star-Bul!e- ti u cibl-- 1

WASHINGTON. t. i'.. Matili JX i Mt. ,. ihv ..s.-:!,kmi- atvtaruinctit..f Democrat', (.ami:- - ;m,j ovjMnithv work, the Kitchn frec-Mi- ar

repeal hilt c:in'n wit!: hut one aim u-:t- ut that which timtUthe period of" extension ot i'w pies:nt u,iT-.t- !uiv.

The Kitehiu hiil. eori't- - ti ni h with an ouhiht rej,e;il. '

ot the etanse which W"-:- l 1 ;uf stitr or th lie - i:t M 1, '

will Ik rej.Mrtil from eonunitto- - to the senate next week w iilj an amenit-the- nt

providing that snar on ilu- - free ! -- t on May 1. T'JO. .; -

Fhc Demovratic cauctie' on the hill were enled tlav. Thi;Democrats ef the "pjir ltouse agreed iti their caucus t? amend t!ieKitehiu hill hy limiting the extension of the tariff vriod. with-th- !utyat one eettt per pound. T .J:iy t. 1(J0. The caucus decided this autthen discussed the prows;il to increase the tariff a .haU'cCeut r ntorcto ti;et additional revenue. Th; plan of internal revenue taxation, citherhy a consumption tax or an excise tax, was al considered briefly and.then dropped. It was considered improhahlo that the consumption laplan would meet with much favor and the excise tax plan was vigor-ously opjxjsed from the heinnintj. ' . ' -

The' vole on the phai to limit the tariff extension to V)20 was car-ried hy 23 to 7. i .

Following the caucus action, the senate finance committee met. tliii '

aften:oon, resuming consideration. .of the. hill. The proposition' for A

consumption or an excise tax was overwhelmingly rejected, as it hadIicch in the caucus, The fimnce cotnmitte.' ultimately rejtrteil all sug-- .gestions for special taxes on sugar anil ordered a fawrahle report othe house hill, with the amendment linuting the supens6-- j of the ir- -

sugar clause to May .1,. 1V20. NTp.' otlier., feature are Jfiv3y-,- l iuihirqwrt which will he .brought up before the senate, says ChairmanSimmons ! of' the finance conimittee. some time next week, i '

; t. 'j.A:,' '. ; c. s. aliu: irr. :

JAPANESEFETE

i

FOR....

NEW HfflE

Japanese Woman's Home isProject Now Taking Shape;

Funds to Be Raised

Announcement was. made today ofplans for a home e women,funds to beraispd by a number ofpublic-spiriUr- u men and- women of the

As a rrayps of securing funds, andalso as prevent in - itself novel andpictureBe, there will be given a bigfete on th grounds 'of the ' RoyalHawaiian hotel during, the afternoonand evening of May 5 and 6. It willbe called the "Cherry Blossom Feteand will be given with a wealth ofNipponese setting, dances, costuming,etc.- -

The' executive committee in chargeof arrangements consists of Mrs.John E. Baird, chairman; Mrs. E. L.S. Gordon, Mrs. Hind, Mrs, F. W.Phisterer. Mrs. A. A. Young. Deacon-ess Spencer and Rev. P. T. Fukao ofTrinity Mission, other committees I

have also been named .and are busyo nthe arrangements.

The home is to be called the St Hil-

da's Home, and will be for a resthome for Japanese women, wherethey may go to secure instruction, tomake their headquarters if they livecutside the city and are here for aday, ?nd where they may secure ad'vlna rl AnfiQr!itrin in V i - w 1 1 a traufl '

No location has yet been settled irxm.The plans for the Cherry Bio om

Fete arc elaborate and it promises tobe an unusual sf.cial evert ps wellas a philanthropic enterprise of muchvalue.

The final returns of the bowlingcharrpionship arrived today, showingthe V. S. Naval Training Station ivfirst place, Honolulu second. Fort Mc-

Dowell third and San Jose fourth.The navy boys won four straight fromSacramento in the last fceru:j;.

Robert Chung won the medal forhigh place man in the hexathlon whnhe defeated Victor Kahn fcr fir3tplace in the boys' events by a scomof 552 to 549. Kahn made a highjump of 5 feet 3 inches, which hettered the mark made by the winnerof the senior event

The Knights of Kamehameha willhold a meeting this evening in the!?clubrooras. Ben Hosea wtll play 4 i

eo!o cn the steel guitar and RobertKula will give a reading. A debate"Resolved. That Fat Men Get MoreEnjoyirent Out of hJe Than LeanMen." will be one of the features. ,W.S. Fook has the affirmative and A,Kalai the negative. t - i

prick rEVT

SUGAR SITUATIONSVIEWED WITH GOOD DEAL

OF SATISFACTION HERE

The action of the senate caucus andfinance cotnm ttee in limiting the sus-pension. 'of the; free sugar clause toMay I.U920, has net depressed Ha-waii's sugar men. On the contrary,the situation is regarded' by some ofthe best informed of them with muchsatisfaction. While decision on theperiod to May 1, 1929, is not outrightrepeal of "free sugar," it gives fouryears' leeway, 'and most of the localsugar men think that there will brat least cne Republican Congress be-fore that time, with the probabilitythat the protecticn will be made per-manent.

The Kitchin bill is expected to bpassed by the senato in a.bout tho ,

shape it comes from the finance com-mittee, after which; it ' gqcs to th?house. If the bouse refuses to con-cur in the amendment, the situationmight-.be overclouded, but it Msthought here that the house will prob-ably yield. ;. .

The fo; lowing correspondence fromWashington was written, of course, be-

fore the bill reached, the senate,but it is interesting as showing thsfntiirent of the nouse, expressed inthe report, upcn the necessity for re-tenti-

of the sugar duty. , ' , ,1

By C. S. ALBERT V :

(Special Star-Bullet- in CcrMpandesca)WASHINGTON, D. C.Th(. bill to

prevent su.ar from lcing. plaretl onthe-fre- e list May I formally came int .

and parsed the house under the mostfavorable auspices.., It was returned 1

from th ways and means committeewith a tinanimous report Republicansand Democrats to the last man joinedhands in urging the repeal of that 'ob-noxious section of the Underwood- -

Simmons tariff actThe long-draw- n out discussion of"

the i cstof lice , appropriation bill do-la- d

of the measuresaving one cent per hundred poundsprotection for It went over foraction several r'ays lyond the periodfigured by the leaders. '

.' .

When reported to the house It wasannonn-e- d that the bill probablywould lroiilit up. for debate andaction on March 2. Some time ago itwas, a)prove'd by a "Democratic caucusand its .assai;e guaranteed. The re-port, '

wliich was signed by every men- -

her of ihe ways and means committee,follows:

The free-suga- r provisions of para-grar- hs

177 and 178 of Schedule E ofthe tarifT act of October 3, 1913," provide that on and after May 1, 1916,sugar, tank bottoms, sirups of canejuice, melada, concentrated meiada,concrete and concentrated niolassea,molas.s, su.ijar drainings and sugarsweepings, maple sugar and maple sir-up, gluccae or grape sugar, and sugar,cane in Its natural state, or unmanu-factured, shail be admitted free ' ofduty into the United States.

The proposed bill repeals the free-suga- r

:;rovisicns of exlatln law. Th9effect of its enactment will be to Ieathe preaent rates cf duty cn sugar asi

iContlnaed oa pte two)

Page 2: Tons Fighting Isonzo Front; Russians li? · ert VV. Shingle was voiced everywhere today. "Mr. Hatch has the cordial good wishes of the Chamber of Commerce, I am sure," declared Raymond

iSBWltfllillilOflAii y-liB- IP

(Continued from pa one)

Vlhfired products In foil forte and ef- -

: feet. .... ;; The ct of August 5. 190V provided

- tlx on sugar not above No.? 16 Dutchstandard in color and testinp by thepolarlscope not above 75 ie freer,, of.O.Si of 1 cent ier pound, and i or rreryadditional degree shown by tbe po--.

larlscopic test .035 of 1 cent pen pouadi Additional;. and on all sugar abcrve No.

"16 Dutch standard In color, or jwhlch.had gone through a process of'efln-lng- ,

2.9 cents per pound. ,

The act of October 3, 1913, ren icedthe sugar rates of the act of 190$ ap-proximately 25 per; cent, eliminated

I tha Butch standard test, and m adethe tax on sugar testing by the po lri-teco-

not above 75 degrees 0.71 0(1I cent ; perv pound, and "for 'every a4 dl-tlon- al

degree shown by the polarisaip-tf- c

test 0.026 of 1 cent per pound adli-tlonr.- L

' s

y The greater portion of the imports,of "dutiable sugap comes from. Cubit,and (s 8Z or 36 degree unrefined sugar.- -

! During the fiscal year ended June30, 1915, the present, tax on the arti--;cles covered by tlvo paragraphs effect-- .ed by the lree-sug- ar provisions

1 amounted to $49,555,361.28. distributedas follows: - '

. . .

j Bugar ................ . $49,244,128.34Molasses ............... 241,593.25Maple sugar and sirup

S Birup cane, In its naturalstate or unmanufactured

Sirup, refinedglucose .

Grape sugar

r i

37,984.83

29.090.701,966.11

593.994.06

M - --

?; Total ............... $49,555,361; U The . amount . of the drawback paidon imported supir used In the refinedugar txportefldurlng the same pe-

riod was $5rt,17329. Therefore theliet revenfeyleld to the governmentduring tra fiscal year. 1915 from sugarand tbvother articles provided for

in the jara.raphs affectedfree-BUg- ar provision, was1879. '

. ..

i Had the normal conditiens existingat the time of the passage of the actcf October 3, 1913, not been disturbedby' the European war, It would notbare been necessary, to continue, thepresent rates of duty on sugar afterMay 1. 1916.- This legislation is made necessaryin order that the treasury may . havethe benefit cf the revenue receiptsfrom sugar to assist in meeting thedecline in customs and postal receipts,due to the disturbed conditions resulttng from the European war.: and alsoto assist In meeting the decline in or-dinary internal-revenu- e receipts. - ,

Your committee, therefore, recom-mends that the free-sug- ar provision ofparagraphs 177 and 178 of he sugarschedule of the act of October 3. 1913,be repealed, in-ord- that -- the pres-ent rates of duty upon sugar and itkindred products may remain in fullforce and effect, to the end that, thetreasury may not under existing international .trade conditions be deprived.of the receipts, from sugar . -

rioRtilft'G' Ofi 'CHAWdE' .i i t

Uncertainty over the final disposi-;1o- n

of ' sugar legislation in Washlng-t- m

Is not only greatly diminishingtile volume of trading in local sugarsfxks, but is having, day by day,dcH easing effect on the market Thismeaning's 'change sheet shows thatOla. McUryde, Pioneer, Oahu Sugar.Hawi alian Coromerclar : and , Ewa- - allthe tissues traded in during the last24 flours have experienced fraction-a- l

HJclines. No .issues show anygains, and the quotations in the casesof . even the . neglected stocks showemail fractional weaknesses.

T-- o British steamship Masunda hasbeen sunk. All aboard were saved.-1

" ' Jf ' '. . i ix- v- -i - f-- :' -- r:

' ;

. lit Bread,Caltc.Can(ly,

'.V Me Quart, Brick i I":V. ; W Delivery. UnUr j : SZ&S I U

... ' '"..-"---'-- - " V.;'; .'1

i..-- .. .'

,:. V- - j f

i, - - -i - '. i'

H

v-

v

a

i

x

MARCH 28 I

1 I

Comnuttee From OohilfemMeis Leaving Tomorrow for. Hilo

To Welcome Visitors

Bound f jr Hilo, where they will takean active; part, in assisting the Hilonobles in eutertaining Imperial JPoten- -

tate j. Putnam Stevens and visitingShriners when they, reach HUo. Thurs-- i

day.inonung. aa group of xronjinentnobles of Aloha Temple will leave to-- .morr w. morning on the Mauna Kea,headed by Potentate 'Thomas F. Wall.

Tlie Shriners win not .reach. Honolulu.' until 11 o'clock Fridar Jnornlns,ac ending - to ' - Potentate ' Wall thisaf jernoons the Great Northern's ailic." time from Hilo has been .set for Io'clock Friday morning, an hour Later'Jian schednle. es an accommodationto the entertainment committee.,;:,,

i A royal welcome will, be., extendedthe Imperial Potentate and his delega-tion. The Arab Patrol of Aloha Tem-ple will be at the. dock here tq extend--

them :a:greetmg",rof true Hawaiiansplendor.

PABSflSWlLL;.

Honolulu's NpvVest Legal ffrmia oeqjn Business dnoruy

After First of Month

t Honolulu's newest legal firm is nowIn process of organization, and short-ly after the first of April AttorneyRobert W, Brcckqns, former U. S.' attorney here, and Judge Charles F.Farsons of the fourth circuit court,Hilo, will for ma partnership withoffices in the Spreckels building, Fortstreet . , s .

I Judge Parsons' terra of office is ex-pected to end almost any day, now,the name of-Ctem- eot ICQulnn ,bavuing been sent to the senate by Pre-sident Wilson to succeed him.. . Attor-ney Breckons said-toda-y: that he ex-pected : JjJge v Parsons la ,Hopoluluabout' April a, and thaV the partner,ship would. go, into .effect at. once.;

Both Mr.-Brecko- and Judge Par-sons, are well known- - throughout theislands. Judge --Parsons haa-be- en onthe fourtli circnlt bench for the last11- - years, havinr ! been appointed in

George Edward Aiken, for moretban. fifty years prominent. In. musicalcircles tn.' New York and Boston. '.hahas Just- died at, the Mount Vetoni N.x. hQspHa.1, iaged 82. JUe bad chargeof the music at the funeral of Oen- -erai-'GranttV-- ' i

iTh cosditlon; iof ; the Winter WheatIn,, Ohio on, March Is iypnat t percent, or normal by the state' crop re- -

JtEfslallfliti

': K Each school ciild wfio was --a giieiof ffie HonoTuIu Star-Bulleti- n

last- - rri&y.;t(Brioon at 'the :iMeHy ;Theater,'

is in-

vited to writi a fetter describing what feature he or she most'enjoyei'-- -:; :y, ,?y-- v vyr:. vy, y . . ;.. y.

v. Six Prizes "are offeretf--thr- ee fof ihe girlsthree for the

boys, respectively . v 'y ;.. . ; y ,

y; Content Uoses April ;10th. :Write your letter now ad- -

dress it Editor, t--i

V.

HONOLULU STAB-BULLETI- N, TUESDAY, lblG.l

".

WC tTORE CVERYTHINQ.. -- JAM E H. LOVE -

AVE MAKUFACTDRE

WiLD ANIMALCOOKIES

LOVE'S BISCUIT AND BREAD

(Continued from page one)

are only a few who can read or writetheir own dialects. If they have sucha alight knowledge of theirlanguage, how could they qualify inthe English language tests or on theprinciples of the American constitu- -

tionr .

. -

'-

CO.

native

Sir. Manlapit mentkn hlmseif, C.C Ramirez, graduate of Northwestern University; B. Tv Makapagal and

few other Filipinos who probablyconld Qualify as citizens, "but, headds, - to be 'an American citizenmeans that 'the Filipino would haveto . renounce.bis .native country.Hopes to Return Home.

"I fully believe that the Filipinoflag will be revived, it is my intention to remain in Hawaii as long asFam 8ubject'to the protection of theUnited States, but if the Filipinos aregiven then I shall re-

turn to my native country and remain there.".

He says that the "forming of a cit-t-r

zenship club here was a splendid idea,and ope .appreciated by the Filipinos.It Is teaching the Filipinos to becomegcod citizens, he 'believes; citizens ofthe,PhllippIne8. but Hot of America.

Mr. Manlapit-estimate- s that thereare now about 8800 Filipinos on thepayrolls of the various plantations.and of this number only about 10 percent speak the English language.

"Of the 10.000 male Filipinos in Hawaii."" he says, 4 not more than 1000would desire American citizenship.

"As for me, I have my own countryto serve, and I think that the otherFilipinos feel the same. I do notwent American citizenship. , I am amemberVof the National Guard, thatis true, and I will fight for the National Guard as long as I am subjectto the sovereignty of ?the. UnitedStates. Bat If the Filipiubfl are giventheir independence I shall return tothe islands." - - -

f. i 1 " ' i --f17.PLANS.AND, EVENTS I

::.ATH0N0LULU!S"Y"

Rev. A. A Ebersole will- - talk to themembers of hir Bible class at 6:45this4 evening. ,on . the , subject . ,of"Family, ;Marriage andiDivorce." IThisa the aecond of the talks on "WhatJesus HaS..tQ. Say: Aboitt.Soclal PtQb--

ems.' All thinking men ,of the. cityare ..reauested. to be present at themeeting in Cooke Han. 1

The final debate of ihe intermediatedepartment of the Y.. M. C. A. will beheW on. Wednesday evening in CookeHall - when '-

- two - members of ; taeKnights fit Kamehameha wlirbeettheGet Ready Club duo in a djscurionon "Resolved, that money spent fornational defense could be used in abetter way." The Get Ready Club.willhave the negative. Two medals winbe awarded to: the winners. The pubic is invited to be present at the final

debate. ''--- -

Now Attorney. ,

Strati in RingAnother Republican" basilmrled bis

hat into the- - rbift This l time It Isnopeother 'than Att6ief George A.

Davis, who today anViolnced ; withmuch, emphasis that raVfwill'be outfor senator from Oahu' tiis fall. '

.Attorney Davis declares he is thestaunchest of G. Q P. members. ;

, "This fall; I expect to. poll , a bigHawaiian, vbte," says Judge Davis. .

Judge Davis says he is confident hewiu .be elected and that he can ' seea seat ; In , the upper house awaitmshis coming. ' He. received many felici-tations today 'upon the announcementof his candidacy. 4 .

VESSELS TO ANDy: FROM THE 1SLAHDS

(Special Wirfleaa to Merchants', - Exchang

-- .Tuesday, March 28.NAGASAKMalled, Mar.; 21: U. S.

A. T. 'Thomas, for Honolulu.NAG ASAKI SaOed, "Mar. 27 : U. S.- A. T. Logan, for Honolulu.

PORT ALLEN-rSaile- d, slt. 2V. Schr.Louse for Sail Francisco (not from

- Kahului as reported); V , V

SAN FRANCISCO Arrived. Mar.23,: 11 4a." ta.; S. S.,Wiliielmina, hence

Mar.-22- .. r'.A.... '. .'v'k. FRANCISCO-aUe- d, Mar, 23,

- ?t3 pcii: S. S.' Tenyo :Maru,-fo- r

.,il5io;uinr v ... f ., yr-r- -

- ' ---st

. 1 3 j j

.j.-i'- i Li

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CITY TRANSFER COUPaH-P- HONE-12SI.. .

ALOHA!What to See

(For the benefit. of tourists and ar-rivals from the mainland. the Star-Bulleti- n

publishes a brief directory ofa few of the scenic and historical at-

tractions of Hawaii. Additional de-tails will be given on inquiry at therooms of the Hawaii Promotion Com-mittee in tee A;eanuer Toung hotelbuilding.)Take Waikikl Car.

Aquarium.Surfing and bathing at WaiklkL

Take KallhJ Car.Bishop Museum, daily except Wed-- '

nesday. --

NFortOShafter;A .

, Moanalua Gardens.Ten Minutes' Walkfrom Business Center.

Old Royal Palace.Old Throne Room.Old Coral Church. "

, Old Mission Houbo.King Lnnalilo'a. Tomb.Washington Place.

Outside the City. -

Walks in Tantalus Hills.The Pali, by motor. ,v ,

Coral Gardens, 12 miles by auto,'daily. ;

HalelwaHotel, by motor or railWahlaxra Hotel, by motor or ralLPearl Harbor, naval station.

On Other. Islands. '

Volcano Tla" Hilo, ,by steamersWednesday and Saturday.

Haleakala on Maul, by steamer,Wednesday,, Saturday, Mondayand Friday. --

Waimea Canyon, Kauai, by steam-er, Monday. Tuesday,' Thursday.

WILDER EXPECTS

G. 0. P. SHUT ATS

Those "bi. the know" at San Fran-

cisco believe with Secretary of theInterior Franklin- - K. -- Lane, who has.been visiting, in the Bay. City, that afinA srraD ia in Drosoect lor me Kepublican national convention at Chi-

cago this'summer, according to JudgeA. A.; Wilder,, who returned this morning in the Matsopla. from p. trip io mecoast on legal business.

.DemocraU' San Francisco . exnect a. biz scrap among the Republicans "at Chicago," ays the judge. "IfRoosevelt is not nominated there willbe another split like that In mz wunthe Proeres8ives doing the splitting,and If he does get the nomination.the Old Guard will buck." - , ;

3

"

Judge .Wilder said that SecretaryLane made several speechea in SanFrancisco. ;. , telling , commercial andCivic ? organizations "before which hespoke that the Democratic admlnistra- -

tion ia in lavor oi peace, prosperuyand preparedness,"

As to what the nature of the legalbusiness .was that Called him; to thbcoast, Judge Wilder djd, not say. liesaid he "and R. W.- - Shingle completedit in a day and a half, '.Both, went 2

-.on the Great NorttierH.v -

TYPING ONflWlSHED; ., ,

NO MEMORIAL TONIGHT

Typing on the proposed memfcrial tothe governor requesting a special ses-

sion of the legislature has not yetbeen completed and consequuently itwill not come before the committeeor the board tonight i, "I iateud to apepint Mr. Hatch, thenew' member of the board, a raerabejrof., the . special memorial; committeeand expect that ihe will, be of conslderable assistance in framing .the , finaldTaftiQthe memorial," said the mayorthis morning, "hence I am not at 'allsorry that the work Is progressing soslowly. - ; '', .v

.MQnthjy. bonuses, of. 5 per cent, willbe paid the ,5,50.0 operators of the Yale& Towne' Co. of Stanford, as long astho present wave of prosperity; Jasta.

Isaac Rogers, newspaper man ofGalesburg, Mich., who gained fame as"The Galesburg Liar from.his whim-eic- al

y?.rns, died at Galesburg, aged79. ;..' . ... :.' "

, The Senate naval affairs commit-tee unanimously reported bill appro-priating $2,065,000 to equip PugetSound Yard for battleship constructi-on.-'' v- - :;';.: ...

A huge vein of phosphorus has beendiscovered near the mouth of theRiver - Eitrella.' near :Rip , de 'Janeiro.The deposit will bo mined as govern-men- t

property. "

. ; ." '.' ,

Gen Alvaro Obregon, commander-in-chie- f

of Carrania troops in Mexicowqs married at Hermosillo to Senor- -

ita Maria TaD-St-daught- of a wealthy Scnora rancher, , .

Earl Levi, passenger, and XharleMatthews,; xpress: . measeager.iarethought, to. have, beea . klijed when asnqwsllde carried the express and baggage car of a Denver . & Rio .Grandetrain into the Gunnison river .' near

A draft for 2800 was rerelvH "fcv

Secretary; of State Hugo .' with a re--Quest that it be added - to thA NewYork Slate "Ccnsck-no- e Fund." '

' 1 - ' uc 1i- . . . i

Willi w mumA personally conducted trip to the summit of

"The Largest Extinct Crater in the World"' v '' '''" "- i :

Leaving Wednesday, March 29th,j Returning April 1st,

LATER DATES ARRANGED

For Information Inquire i it i i ii.

Hawaii Promotion Committee

u 4yk rhk- - t

D A N C E.RECORDS

?) A- - 77::.v.

l , ::

v--.

- ... ..;

PAN.CE, AND THE WO RLDDAN C E S W I T H Y O U

And all the world seems to recognize that theVictrola is the one instrument for furnishing thebest dance music. , "

Victor Dance Records only are used By. Mr...ahd Mrs. Vernon Castle, the most famous dancingteachers in the world, and they pronounce themperfect: ; '

,:4-,'i-- '

;

Come in' and hear some Victor 'dance musicand you'll agree it is perfect in every respect.'

: ViaroWs $15 ta $300. Victors $10 ta $160. Easy terms, if -

debited.

Bfrgstrom Music Co;Victor

1020-102- 2 Fort" St. Honolulu

linn rvc - ir 1 1

In many places on tiro IHxon's Orapliiteproducts arp the best of friction, for

,.'...'

No. 677 Graphite Grease for the gear case, (lives muchbetter results than any other oil or plain grease. Itwill not leak like others. 5 and 10-l- b. cans.

No. 5 Graphite Cup Grease for grease cups. A little be-

tween the leaves of your auto springs will make yourcar ride 50 per cent easier. In stock in 1 pound cans.

Dixon's Motor Graphite fo'r the of the motorsof motor boats and In1-- lb cans.

Lumber and yBldg.'Kaferials

...

Distributors

aiitomobiltvpreventive example:

lubricationautomobiles, inotorcvcles.

A fine line of Auto Wrenches,

Pliers, etc., carried in stock.

..a. u .... w

..... t .. - vl .

' "!

.' . . . .

1 i

169-177- ;- ; ;

' South Kins: Street

i

r

Page 3: Tons Fighting Isonzo Front; Russians li? · ert VV. Shingle was voiced everywhere today. "Mr. Hatch has the cordial good wishes of the Chamber of Commerce, I am sure," declared Raymond

r

ISTilVPARTED BYif-

LUSH FORCE

Two Arrests Made After 18rTins of Dope are Discovered'

l -- Hidden in Trunk

As the result of the watchfulnessof; Custom Inspector Johnny" Oil-- !

velra, who saw the trunk comingashore from the Sonoma and becamesuspicious of jts contents, a seizureof.) 18 tins of opium wis made about3:20 yesterday afternoon by BoardingOfficer Lewis D. Reeves and CustomsInspector Gilbert, McXicolL

The story In a morning paper thatthe cpium was concealed in a bale pfboy is incorrect. The drug was in atrunk. The IS tins were in the trunkenclosed in two large cigarette boxes,around which hay was stuffed. v

After Inspector onveira notifiedDeputy Collector TL J. Taylor, Inspect-or, McNicoll and Boarding OfficerReeves trailed the trunk, following itto iwilef. -- where Yee Mun Wal, towhom the opium was being sent by O.Nordman. porter and freight, clerk dnthe steamer, runs a store and amuse-ment concession. ; " "'As soon as "ee Mnn Wal entered his

place of business, coming on a bicyclefollowing the transfer man, he wasarrested and the trunk , opened, theqpjunv being found Inside it. Y

w Meanwhile, i II. v S. Marshal J. J.Srniddy prepared a warrant for Nor.i-man'- a

arrest, after' Mr. Taylor badrequested him-t- o do so. Nordmanwas arrested.' at Pier .10. The twoarrests were made simultaneously. 1

SThe Chinese was, released after' he- furnished $2500 bond. ; Nordman was

unable to secure J 1000 bond and wasleft behind when the liner tailed. Hespent the night in Jail:; HeJs a part-Tahitin- n,

has an excellent record, andhas been in the Oceanic line's employ20 years. - This la thev first offense jcnargea againsi njm. .

U. S. Commissioner George S.1 Cur-ry will hear the cases either nextThursday or Friday afternoon.- - -

, 0 mm m

P gH PNEUMONIA INDUCED - M

U V BY.,USE OE'.ALCOHOL

U WASHINGTON, D. C --"Alco-K hoi is the handmaiden of pneu- -

pi monia, which produces 10 per &fpi cent' of the deaths in the United

States, says a public' health ser. .

vice bulletin Just issued. . "ThisU Is no exaggeration. 'The liberal "

Ef and continuous user of alcoholic XSi drink is peculiarly susceptible tobi the Jisease" '

Hotel St.

zr.t '

f V

ISIlPifl

Personally Conducted ToLi

Under Direction of L de Vis-Nort- on

-- Wins Praise'

I. de Vis Norton returned from Hawaii this morning after completing thefirst personally conducted tour of theyear. He was loud in praise of thecourtesy shown the tourists by thecitizens of Hawaii, and inasmuch ased to conduct another tour on Saturday. t ; I .

ed conduct another tour on Saturday... "The tour to. the volcano was a suc-cess from , start to finish," said Mr.Norton, today. "We had a smooth tripgoing and coming, and perfect weather added ; to the pleasure. The volcano was more spectacular; than in1912, and altogether there was not asingle 'expression "of dissatisfactionfrom the merry; party, j""There were splendid lava flows in

every direction and .more, fountainsthan I have ever seen before. Thewhole eppearance of the volcano isawe-inspiri- at this time, and theparty could not see enough of thesteaming cracks and sulphur banks

The party Wfed Rainbow Falls,and the members proved, to be verymuch interested in the legends in connectiod with th!tfaterfalL' We wentthrough the lava tube, and at nightthe. party. visited the edge of the crat-er where the purple, violet and greencolors could be discerned Membersof the party state that they, never willforget their trip to the crater."1i Rudolph',; Heidexch- :ieInie;)made his first visit; to", the volcanowith the party, and when seen todayhe stated that he 'recommended thetrip .ta everyone. "I never believed"that the, trip could 'be. so interesting.As for accommodations I was agree- -

ably surprised. 1 1 shall not delay long' "

eluded. ' "" ''""' " : ":

TP-

; FOp SALE AUTOMOBILES.

E. M. F. 1912 model, been' run only 17,000 miles. Capt Hinkle,

Fort Armstrong, Tel. 4908.6434-- 3t - '

FOR RENT FURNISHED' ROOMS.11 l.'.'H i") llii IHW

TNlcely furnished room in. new andK .modern home, close, in; suitable forg I couple. Phone 409 J.

v" .aecta-Konge- e iv-- i

. A double fold; softfin i s h ed - cJ o tKc in s P?)strl f3ed effects, K fast colors

Price, 30c per yardt

Agatha Percales36 inches wide in smartSpring

;

Patterns...- - '

Special Value at 15c per yd:

TKEW IDEAS IN MIDDYv H?. --BLOUSES-A

i,. Same Smart, ' Comfy Gar- -

ments as ever, but with natty i :

new touches. '' : ;

X. M I

III

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SAGHS' ;:

Near Fort' - ;'v'.,t: '', ' I,. ;

r Rearing" wasfiaoT In supreme courttodajron.a petltlop for the. reinstatetnentlpf Jfajrry; T, jMUIs as a .memberof the local bar.'

M. T. Moses has been appointedmanager of a branch of the Scfcu-ma- n

Carriage Company which haiteen otened at Hiio.

Important business will be trans-acted at an, adjourned meeting ofShriners in the Masonic temple at7:30 o'clock this evening.

The final accounts of Bruce Cart-wrigh- t,

executor of the estate of Ben-jamin Brightwell. late of Honolulu,were approved yesterday by CircuitJudge Vhitney.

A declaration of intention' to become an American citizen has beenfljed in federal court by Albert .Wal-ter, a native of Sweden and a sailorby occupation.

A handsome clock with two faces iito be hung from the ceiling in themain hall of the Capitol building. Thclock vill be encased in a frame ofcarved mahogany.

Announcement of the engagementof his daughter, Esther, to Aaron A.Soong has been made by SIu Uu. Ilr.Soong is a clerk in Bishop & Company's branch bank at Schofield Barracks.

The night letter service of the Marcbnl Wireless Company between Ha-waii and Alaska has been reestablished. The messages now will berelayed -- through the company's Seattle station.

William Kahoiokai and John An-drews, charged with the theft of ahack from a Japanese cabman severalnights ago, have been bound over toa grand juty to be tried before thecircuit court if indicted.

Ham , Xichi, a Korean boy, wabrought to the emergency hospitalyesterday morning suffering from r.

fractured arm, received while wrestling w(th one of his playmates. Nichiis a student at the Kaiulani school,

A meeting of the Buckeye Club willbe held at 7:30 o'clock this eveningat the residence of Mr. and, Mrs. W'.D. Westeryelt, Waikiki. Members arereminded , to leave the street car atthe next to the last station: from tljeterminus. .

A handsome new pipe organ hasbeen , installed In the church of theSacred Hearts, Pun ahou; , and wastried. out last night, for the first time.The organ - wa purchased - in SanFrancisco by. flev.; Father Stephen, cu-

rate jOf, the' church - ; v, ., -

Under bond in the sum oi $5000, theBishop Trust Company yesterday wasappointed by Circuit Judge Whitneyaa executor of the estate of JohannesF. Eqkardt,,late superintendent of theQueen 'a hospitaL . An Inventory willbellied in.?i days. "

I ;

:n'.A meter Is registering the amount

of water, running: front a thirty-second

of an lnch,,leak: under 40, pounds, theusual, pressure m the jrindow; of thewater department office.- - It. amountsto .15 gallons an hour or 360 gallons, a

Invitations have been " sent out byAloha .temple, for the big Shriner re-ception and dance., with which, thelocal nobles of. the fez will honor Im-perial; Potentate J. Putnam, Stevensand' party.-wn- will arrive on Friday.The dance is 'on .the .nignt or April 3,

In conformity with an oral decisionrendered on March 8, the wpremecoqrt today ordered that theTtempor- -

ary writ, of prphibitloni.lssued on February19 In. the case, of Queen UUu-okala- nl

agalnsV,Crpuit Judge ; Stuart,Delegate Kuhio et al be vacated, andthat the petition for a .; writ --be dismissed, ',' . :. . . . ,. ;

' ,

. .. . .

A petition for the administrationot,the' estate of John K . Aylett, lateof Honolulu, has boen filed, in circuitcourt .by R. W, Aylett, the father. Thepetition asks .thaV Louisa K. Aylett.widows be appointed executrix. Thereare-1- 2 heirs .and .the estate is valuedat 22.75, representing V wages due:from the city, and ounty.

The Buckeye Club meeting thisevening at the home of Mr., and Mrs.Westervelt. Wraiklkl,' Is In the natureof a farewell repeptlon for Mr. andMrs. W. A, Bo wen. orior'to their departure for the "East, and also 'as anopportunity for meeting stranger, Ohlp- -ans. in ine city, i nose auenqing arereminded, that , the place, to -- leave thestreet car line is. the. next to the laststop betore the terminus.. , . .

t:

POLICE COURT DOINGSAND NOTATIONFOUND

ON STATION BLOTTER

! Itagakl. a Japanese back driver, wasfined 25 and costs "yesterday Jnpolice court on a Charge of heedlessdriving. Itagaki is alleged to havecaused the collision on March 2 between BS Sizemore, who rode a motor- -

Cycle, and J. Borges.'who was on &bicycle.

, Japanese and Chinese metr weretaken n a raid made by the policeSunday afteraoonin the Cakaakodistrict ,the captives', five in number,b.eing booked al, the, police, station, onchefa charges.' The men . were " captured near.an old salt pond, off Plikois'treet as they were nearing the thouseof a Chinese, who' "was "reported tothe police, as a chefa banker. Theyare Doanl. 'Ah ' Kup, KobayashL - AhSee and NakataL- - The rcases-- ' werePostponed imtil tomorrow morning.

J The Frost Steel & Wire Co., Ltl.,of Hamilton, with $8,000,000 caruial,was incprporateat Attawat- -

A (

egg!Prof. Jared G. Srfrith designs

' From College of HawaiiFaculty

That the College of Hawaii is determined to get more results from itsanimal husbandry courses is madeevident in the resignation of Prof.Jared G. Smith, who has been teaching the agronomy courses at the col-

lege for the past year.' His resignation has been accepted by. the president and regents.Form Stumbling Block.

ilr. Smith says that the regents ofthe college were not satisfied withbis work as professor of. agionomy,and that he was asked to resiei.. Asregards the wcrk of tLe college, hebelieves that the' agrtcultui'a! coursesshculd be directed largely, toward tit-ling studenta for plantation work, aspractically all of the stud nts arelooking forward to enUihig soiaebranch of the sugar business. He' declares that the stumbling block atthe college is the farm. The day hasnot yet come, be adds, when studentshere, demand instruction In dairjng,poultry raising, pig feeiin and ethersimilar lines.

He points out that tb? college nowhas a very small number of students.In spite of the fact that it offers moreto the-- young men and women of Ha-

waii than many other mainland "insti-tutions. The college is splendidlyequipped, he maintains, and adds thstit. has been a surprise to him thatmore young people do not take advantage of its opportunities, ilr.Smith adds that bis relations with tl)e.regents and faculty have been mostpleasant and that he regrets leavingthe institution on that account.

In the absence of President Dean,Chairman Farrington of the board ofregents made the following state-ment today:

"Pam cure' that the officers of theCollege of Hawaii have the kindestfeeling for Prof. Jared G. Smith. Thegist pf the whole thing to my mindis that the college has to get greaterresults from its course in agricultureMr. Smith has been very frank in hisstatement' of. his beliefs, and to beequally frank I think President Dean,who is the head of the Institution,feels that more vigor and what I callsteam Is required in the general agri-cultural branches, --which is, after all,the biggest problem the college hasto face, as 'it has always been thegreatest problem facing every newlvestablished college of agriculture andmechanic, arts.".

J-ii-i-- '. ...

Bhtp TARGET

According to orders issued at theheadquarters of the National Guard,thev regular season for known dis-tance' rifle pistol practise will beginon June 2, 1916, lasting until Novem-ber. 26.

Qualifications are announced as fol-

lows: vFor the 1st Infantry and 1st Separ

ate Company, Engineers, the regulararmy qualification course will be followed; for the 2nd, 3rd and'4th . Regiments of Infantry and the 1st SeparateCavalry, the Instruction practise andrecord practise will follow along thelines given for organized militia, prac-tise, .

All who qualify as sharpshooters orexpert rifliemen, regular army course.or .the organized .militia course, maybe given clqng distance practise. : Inthe regular army course, riflemen whohave : qualified during, the precedingseason will 'be flven: ammunition asfollows: Expert riflemen, 100 rounds;sharpshooters, 130 rounds ; marksmen,'1C7 rounds. .; " v

In the, militia course no instructioncourse Is .required, but qualifiedmarksmen or higher may fire the In:struction course vthrough once at theirown discretion. ..r , ,.;

WANTED STOLEN HAT

f PLEANEDJ' NABBED BYv WAITING POLICEMAN

.arrtl ix i; ,

His desire to get a stolen Panamahat cleaned led S. Kamahele into theclutches of city detectives . Sundaymorning. He was given a sentenceof six cnonths in jail yesterdarby thecourt. .

Kamahele took the hat from a Jap-anese, and in turn took it to a hatcleaner with therequest that it berenovated. In the meantime the de-

tectives had got into touch with allthe hat cleaners in town, and whenKamahele appeared at the place men-tioned he was asked to return a few-hour- s

later. He returned to find him-self confronted by an officer, who ledhim down to the, station and booked.him for. larceny.

ROYALS WIN FROMNORMAL AGGREGATION

A game of indoor baseball whichwas played at the Normal schoolgrounds,- - .yesterday aftetnoon iventdown on the credit book of the Royalschool players when they defeated thetracker jack Normals 8 to 5. The gamew as exciting trom . start to ; finish.Both sides were, uhabJe(jto score untilthe fifth inning. "V ' "

Jacob Zenimura. captain andof the JJoyalists, hurled.his, opponents tq five hits. 'Chan i

Mi

A 4L

rt AT ST, A WT A T . TTTT TT T T A TTTQ ,B T tl m n T;'-.- T ATTTS

J5abbittTs Xaptha Soap, use with hot or cold water ; .

Electro Silicon, an unrivalled Polish for gold or Vilver. . .Koyal racaroni, very nutritious, made in a clean facton-.- .

TRY ELKHORN KRAFT CHEESE MILD AND IN Y3 and Mb Tins. ......

HENRY MAY & CO., LTD., Leading Grocers.

Spills( Continued from pace one)

tions will be listened to by the sjilBtantial iortion of our citizenship.

He brings to the service of the citya fnnd of inforajation and experiencethat will prove of great help to thesupervisors. He is an attorney andthe board needs a legal mind at times.To my mind the city; is to be congrat-ulated on having obtained the servicesof a man. who has held asmany highpositions in government service ;is lusMr. Hatch.Electric: Light Committse.

Theew upfeviso is slated for thechairmanship o? the electric light conii--

mittee and a place oo the special com-mittee appointed to, draw.' up a menyorial to' the governor eettlng forth thereasons 'for a social .session of thelegislature. Other committee placeshave not been' cetennlned on as yet- -

Charles N. Arnold has resigned fromthe electric light committee and hasbeen appointed- - c hairman of the roadcommittee but there are still. severalcommittee vacancies. to be. piled.. Mr. Hatch was first, brought to theattention of the mayor by. a: letter published in the (Star-Bulleti- n in which heexpressed ' the c pinion 'that the cityshould Jiave the right to levy its pwntaxes and set its own rate.Long pecord' of Service

Mr. Hatch or Judge Hatch as he isalmost invariably , referred to, by theold-timer- s, has had a long record ofpublic service snd though in recentyears he has not been active in 'localanairs, he has always been keenly in-

terested in the "progress of "Honolulu.".He came to the islands In 1878 and

for almost all ot the first' 2d years of,

his residence 'letoted himself to thepractise of law. He pever.held ofliceunder, the monarchy but was Vice-preside- nt

of Ihe .provisional, govern-ment ojt Hawaii, minUter of prelgnaffairs of the, republic under PresidentDole, .and one.Xf the . signers .of, thetreaty of annexation. He remainejd inWashington as . the foreign . ministeruntil annexation, and .then Teturned tHawaii., resuming his law .practise. '.

President Roosevelt appointed, him'associate justice of. the territorial su-- f

preme court, where he serjred ; withdistinction, resignlng'on account of ,

ilj--

health. He later became the repre-sentativV- of

.the) planters' associationin.Washlngton, alsrf resigning. this .position to return to Honolulu. :

In. Politics Mr.. Hatch .Is .a. Republican, though he comes from an. old-lin-e

Democratic taraily, hla - grandfatherhaving been . a 'Jackson , Dejmocrt."Sinca annexation be has been a consistent ' supporter of ' Republicanism,though Jn local, affairs he takes a rather, independent view and is for etn- -

ciency first

of the Normal team handled the pillin areat form until the seventh, whenhe weakened and was replaced, by Leode.P.oo. ,

Follcfwmg is the line-u- p of the twoteams:

Rovals Jacob, n: Chlng. ss: JackK., If; Ah Won, 2b; Kiyoshif, lbj-A- hl

Chin, cf; Tln Hau, rf; Tamuba. .?&;;J. Kong, c. v .

Normals Tuck Chan. Roo,tvib! Chen, c-l- b: Aketa. ss: John K,3b; KaL 2b; Yoshima, cf; Henryr If;Rudolph, rf. ; ...

. . it. Ii. jc.Royals ... 8.11 jo.Normals 12

EVERYTHING'

Avoid Bein

TOr

STired

Two Pairs of Glassesi ?' : if!?'; .

ff '',A '

Keep young, Look young

Wear glasses that looklike those worn by yourtwenty-fiv- e year old son

or daughter.

KRYPTOKS

are the ideal douLTe visionlenses, and loolv just like

' the single vision ' glasses.

COME AND SEE THEM. m ' .,r- - ' '.

WALL i'DOlXmiYX 1 - Optical Department

I - - I

m

..." '1 . . L' i. ii is. f

m M w

III , WV J- -

I- -

.t --oc

........ 'pkrMELLOW

to -1

Firnily "Linked" :;

"'.. v. i-- ,;' ', y- ' V;'is man who wears the Link Sack,one of the newest, most dashing. nov-fc,4.- Vi

.

elties m . .. ; - .... . . .;, -- . .

ColleAdlergian

The link-butto- n lets the wide lapel to) I '.longer and more graceful and.give an ' V

added fit to the waist; t'- '

Among the Spring and Summer fab--

ries "shown are Tweeds, Serges, ;'

Dull Iron Greys, "Deep Kicli Browns ;

Spring Freehs, Plaidsj' Stripes, 'Checksand Mixtures. ".

' ' ' " r '

!

Come and selectyour choice r at

r1 i

Corner Hbtet and' Sts.

i .1... c..j,.,:s

Sendyour portraitto your mother,Just remember thatnothing othejr thanyour own self will :

give her the samepleasure. .

cakes for10c tlie.box3

Turnthe.mtle disc

the

Clothes v: . f-

;'..-- -

Cassi- - '

X

io'rt'

Portraits, Island Views, Developing and Printing.

Page 4: Tons Fighting Isonzo Front; Russians li? · ert VV. Shingle was voiced everywhere today. "Mr. Hatch has the cordial good wishes of the Chamber of Commerce, I am sure," declared Raymond

FDTJR

m I' "ii'in in ly ,. ,i ii ii i i.

RILEY H. ALLENTUESDAY. . . . .MARCH 28, 1916.

WHAT ABOUT THE COLLEGE OFHAWAII?

In resigning from the fnrultv of.tlu College.nf Hnwnii nt thp reouest of the collesre officials.Ppftfownr' .Inrtl (J SmiKprurfiK inviffea

public discussion of the'kihdl'of agriculturaltraining which the coltetre Should; irive its'

(I y ;

pupils.He himself takes the attitude that the col-

lege work should he directed "mainly to-

ward fitting students to enter plantation work."The-anima- l husbandry courses at the collegehe does not regard as important, or their re- -

Ruitn as jusiiiicaiiuri in ine vijijmihms jm rn iin--m

in the curriculum.He says that "it has seemed to me that in-

struction should follow the lines indicated bythe:principal industries of Hawaii, that thefirst aim should be to satisfy the educationalrequirements of the young men who expect togrow more sugar per acre at less cost, more andbetter pineapples, coffee, rice and other crops,"andthat "the day may come when students de-m- a!

instruction in dairying, poultry raising,pig-Tee-d ing and other similar lines, It will4bea good day for Hawaii when ' that' demandnrises, but it has not arisen and may not foranoiher generation."

For the failure of the courses to attract morestudents, 'several causes are doubtless contrib-utory, none of which is rrobf Jthat the coursesshould 'not be given. One, of tfiese causesitseems obvious, is explained in Prof; Smith'sown; frank statement that 'I have neither theaptitude nor the enthusiasm necessary to be-

come a highly successful instructor. Iought not to have attempted to become ateacher," and his further statement, as publish- -

ea tins mornjng, tnat l am noi an animai nus--

UBUurv riuiiusiUM uuu uu nut ijiuit ui.-ii-n- c-

miuute knowledge of dairy problems, feed-in- g,

etc. v'.--v: '

Tlie college is still young; it is pioneering theway? and it is facing problems which agricul-tural institutions on the mainland do not haveto face. Chief of these, from the standpointof fretting students in the animal , husbandrycourses, is the fact that Hawaii's industrial At-

tention is centered olmosTjWslriaiTOnrsuga production But Ls yerfjact is what

"

ntaly?3 vitally necessary for some agency to

w' lfnWjfti1 firm vnf strenMhnowthe . highly-develope- d production ' of aword-stapl- e bringing high prices might con-

ceivably some day be Hawaii's weakness. Anyblow to sugar now hits ;the; whole territoryhard. - j .'.;y;y':; v;

The pros and cons pC diversified farminghave leen thrashed out long ago. Each dis-

cussion has resulted in the conclusion that Ha-

waii should have more of such fanning. Thereshould be more opportunities in agriculture forthe small land-holde- r. The fact is self-evide- nt

ancfjis beyond the stage of debate.Oovernor . Pinkham 's .timely jiigufes a ; few

months ago , showed the startlingly smallamount of public land available for entry andthe smaller amount suitable for cane-growin- g.

Tliat focused attention on the necessity forpioneer ' education in makingthe most of whatHawaii has.--

'

K ; ,

President Dean of the College Hawaii andPresident Waterhouse of the board of agricul-ture and forestr' in a detailed statement uponthe present status of diversified farming showedthat J outside of cane and pineapples no crophas proved itself a likely staple for Hawaii.

Tliat also focused attention upon the neces-sitylf- or

making the most of what Hawaii has.Tliat dairying and pig-breedi- ng are not con-

siderable industries now is one of the best pos-siblereaso- ns

for the College of Hawaii to underta-

ke!-the problem of pioneer education alongthese lines.- - The demand for milk and buttercontinues to grow; the demand for pork andbacoa continues to grow. And .there are, otherreasons aside from the normalituation. U- -

MAINLAND ARRIVALS

v ON LATEST STEAWEft

IrL R, IL . Spurgeon and MissGrace, Spurgeon arrived today fromthe coast. ..

' .':?am It rtnntptt unit ltr TVi wcott

arrived in the Matsonia this morningfrcm "San. Francisco.

L. Abies, a well known real estateand insurance man of this c?ty, return-ed cn the Ma! sen la today after a tripto the mainland. .

II. A. Walker, a former Honolulan,errived on the Matsonia todav fromithe mainland He I another membercf the Comei Pack Club, having been 'tngaged.jalusintfss in Ihjwiiinit fur.

s V

HONOLULU STAR-BULLKTI- N; TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 101(5.

EDITORready the question of increasing the home pro-

duction of the commodities ilawaii consumesis occupying the attention of civil and militaryauthorities. Should Hawaii ever become iso-

lated from the mainland through exigency of

war, home production of foot! supplies will be

highly important:This is looking far into the future, of course,

but the College of Hawaii is also looking farinto the future. Its animal husbandry coursesare the small beginnings of what ultimatelymay mean independent prosperity for hundredsof the ''little fellows." It is not neglecting thonnortunitv to train-pupil- s for work on theplantations, as its record will show. College ofIlawaii students are making good on the plan-

tations. But that is no reason why it shouldcease its ambitious efforts to broaden the field

of labor.What the College of Ilawaii needs, as the

Star-Bulleti- n has remarked before, is more pub-

licity throughout the territory for the goodwork it is doing. Much is going on at thisyoung institution of which the general publicknows nothing. Publicity for its ambitions andthe results it is already getting will attractmore students; publicity for the opportunitiesit offers will attract more students.

If tlie resignation of one of the faculty drawswidespread attention to what the college is do-

ing and trying to do, the result should be ofmore than passing value.

tH '- SUPERVISOR HATCH.

" Mayor Lane's selection of Judge Hatch tofill the Shingle vacancy on the board of super-visors brings to the board a capable lawyer, aman long in public life, and one who has someoutspoken Ideas on city government and thefinancial situation in which the municipal offi-

cials find themselves.The mayor says that it was an interview with

Judge Hatch printed in the Star-Bulleti- n

which first attracted his attention to the pos-

sibility of getting hipa upon the board. In thatinterview Mr. Hatch said: .

"I think it is absurd to expect the city goYernmntto carry out the immense contract of building peraacent streets and roads on this Island with the smallrevenues available. Some plan wiiereby money shouldbe borrowed to pay, say, 40 per cent of the cost, and aspecial road tax levied for the balance, ought to beadopted. --Thave iWen looWrfg ovef same statistics ofcities on the mwin land, and I "find that most of thempay two or. three itimea as heavy taxes as Honolulu,and they have to pay state taxes on top of municipalrates. You will find the figures in the World Al-

manac. I refer especially to commission governmentu cities. One city . pays as high as 6 per cent.". , Judge Hatch enters city-- officialdom withoutany conceivable end but that of public service.It is not an easy position and the city's finan-

cial tangle makes it . harder. The people ofHonolulu cannot expect that the new memberwill immediately find a way to build a hundredmiles of good roads, construct' a new city hallor enlarge the water and sewer systems. Per-hay- s

the worth of his' experience will be thatit helps to make the public realize how pressingly important. is the city's business, and how"essential is the cooperation of the citizens inperforming it, '

-

;n,

"It is authoritatively announced in Wash-ington" if it is conclusively shown that a Ger-

man submarine sank the Sussex, Germany willdisavow the act, make reparation, and punishthe .commander. How history does repeattseiir .?;V;.

The Congress Democrats continue to do theirniairi business in closed caucus, which of courseis in accord with the administration's princi-ple of "conducting the people's affairs in sightof the nation."

President Yuan Shih-Kai'- s twenty principaladvisers may be beheaded. It doesn't pay toguess wrong in China. That's why they haveno candidates for jobs in the weather bureau.

Will Villa be required to salute the flag!

'Yuan ' queue is to beat it.'ihetast.yeftfHMr more..' Mm. J. Walkerla with him. i i

'William A." Lombard, a member ofthe Bohemian Club of San Francisco,arrived this morning on the Matsoniato visit the islands.

CapL F. G. .Snow of Glen wood,Ha-waii, returned to the? Islands 1 tv '

morning in the Matsonia. Mr. :

came back with him. w

Dr. Washington Dodge a aurvivcrof the Titanic disaster, arrived on theMatsonia today from San Francisco.Mrs. Dodge is with him. . ; -

Mr. and Mrs. H. Dumont of NewYcrk City returned to Honolulu todaycn the Matsonia for an Indefinite stay.They .have visited Honolulu severaltiaesla past eara.',Mr. Dumont is

.a prominent -- businessmanYork, V: v.v

of Nw

Mr. and Mrs Robert W. Chingle returned to Honolulu thi3 corning Inthe Matsonia. M!rs. Shingle has justjcome from the home of her sister.'Princess .At!tail Kawananakca ia

atiijiiit;:i, v. : 13 convaic.-ccn- ttr a rccr" re tt-.- -'; cf t- - '

a v.

by T,

streetningdlall

1

I I I w

-

V"i""

"3 frcn' ? riven

. rt V3. 1 .: i

HRESS01 L

BILL INDORSED

BY COMITEE

Indorsement of the bill before Con-

gress appropriating money for thestablishment of experiment stationsm engineering at state and territorialcolleges was made by the Chamber ofCommerce committee on agricultureat a meeting held for tliat purios?yesterday: The directors of thechamber will requested to urge tbpassage of tile bill, through DelegateKalanianaole.

Tl.e hill provides f6r'an annual approjiriation of $1.1,0"" for each sMtcr terr.tnrial college, to be expended

by a supervisor at each station un-

der the direction of the secretary o;the interior. 'I he money is to hused to conduct original research, ver-ity experiments and compile data Kengineering and the otner branchesof the mechanical arts. Several orthe subjects for research suggestedare: Industrial pursuits, writer huuplies as to jKjtability and econom.cdistribution, sewage purification ariiits ultimate inoi tensive disposal,economic disposal of urban and manu-facturing wastes, flood protection,architecture, road building and eng.-neer.n- g

problems connected withttausportation, manufacturing ;m-- l

public utilities.The College of Hawaii wou'd

benefit by the passage of the bill.

PERSONALITIES

HON. RALPH P. QITAKLES. asso;ciate justice of the supreme court, issuffer. ng an attack oi rheumatism.

WADE WARREN THAYER, secre-tary of the territory, is planning toshortly leave .Honolulu for a vacationon the mainland.

HENRY W. KINNEY, superintend-ent of public instruction, who hasbeen touring Japan, will return to Ho-

nolulu on April 3.

JUDGE JOHN V. KALUA, formercircuit judge of Maui, arrived in townthis morning on the Mauna Kea fromhis home in Wailuku. ' -

K. NIIDATE, late of Tokio, a news-pape- r

man from the Japanese capital,has joined the staff of the HawaiiShinpo as night editor.

GEORGE S. RAYMOND, territorialpublic school inspector, will return toHonolulu on April 3 from an inspec-tion of tho Kauai schools.

J. U. SMITH, fonner Hilo attorneyand now a resident of Forest Grove,Ore., has announced himseH as a candidate for senator An that 4 "ate.

L V

! JAMlwkBAR WRIGrcnaxpctato lea ye forMh Orient in the (ChinaMail steamer China on May '28 for atour of Japan, China, Manchuria andKorea.

JEFF JlcCARX, former district at-torney here, lis a candidate for

Judge In Nashville, Tenn.,to information received byGeorge A. Davis.

' E. . K. ("DUDIE": IffLERT whohas been visiting relatives in Guate-mala, V will return ?to Honolulu nextFriday in the steamer Great North-ern, accompanied by his sister.

H. A. BALDWIN, the Maui senator,and Mrs. Baldwin arrived in Honol-ulu- Sunday jnd will shortly sailfor the mainland for a visit of severalmonths. They may also visit PortoRico.

MRS. CLEM K. ; QUINN, wife ofAttorney C. K. Quinn, and Miss Mil-

dred "Quinn and maid leave on theM a unakea, sailing tomorrow for Wai-me- a,

Hawaii, to be the house-guest- s

of Mrs. Sam Parker, Jr.

BANANAS TO BE HAD

ALMOST FOR ASKJNG

Owing to the inability of shipiers toget bananas to .the coast at me pre-sent time, about 700 buacneY of thefruit are thrown into JtaeWcal mar-ket each week, says XJ Longley ;superintendent of the territorial mar-keting division. Longley adds thatretail purchasers can now buy thefruit at about half cost from most ofthe city dealers, and that a bunchof bananas may now be bought forabout 35 cents.

C. C. RAMIREZ: The HllplnoMission is steaduy plugging along anddoing very good wort. We shall doail we can towcrd aiding local Fili-pinos to become good American

W. E. PIETSCH: The new GospelHall in Beretania street is, 1 believe,filling one of Honolulu s most urgentneeds. We are also conducting a series of noon shop meetings which are j

becoming very po;miar.

BERTRAM G. R1VENIURGH: I

surpose I will be going over to Kauaisoon. 1 understand that the governorIntends to ask Mr. Forbes and me tojourney there with him to lock intothe complaints of the Kapaa

BEN KAHALEPUNA: Althoughthe circuit court has no money forjury trials, Judge Stuart's court ising kejt busy by divorce proceedings.We had four yesterday. Perhaps Ho-

nolulu's "Baby Week." will show par-

ents the niista!:e8 of maital pilikias.

AL3ERT P. TAYLOR: We are re-

ceiving many requests for slides fromall sections of the world. It seemsas though every lecturer is anxious totalk on Hawaii. In the last mail fourrequests for slides were received fromBoston, and others came from NewYork, St Louis and many other points.

A. M. CRISTY, first deputy cityattorney:- - Manoa assessment ordi-nance is being delayed by various le-

gal questions that have to be decided,and the request of the attorney forthe Manoa improvement associationthat the work progress slowly butsurely rather than with a rush.

VITAL STATISTICS

BORN.

OH1RA In Honolulu, March 20, 191K,to Mr. and Mrs. Ichfmatau Ohira, N.Kukui street, a daughter ShizuyiOhira.

DIED.

FUKOSHIMAIn the Queen's hos-pital, Honolulu. March 27, 1916,Wn icli i Fukosbima of Kailua, Ha-waii, married, coffee planter, a native of Hiroshima-ken- , Japan, 47years old.

NAKAFUJI In Honolulu, Kakaako.March 27, 1916, Kamitaro Nakafuji,male, married, 44 years of age.

KALI LI In Honolulu, at the LunaliloHome, John Kalihi, widower, age 73.

SHEE In Honolulu, at the BeretaniaSanitarium, March 27, 1916. SayLcong Shee, female, married, age45 yaars.

MARRIED.

ROBERTS-RILE- Y In Honolulu. Men.27, 1916, Robert H. Roberts andMiss Maria ; Riley, Rev. Samuel K.KamaiopOt, assistant pastor of the

vKaqmakflpttL-hurch- , Palama, offi- -

l elating; .VTltoesses, William Hilorand Mrs.r William Hilo.

idANE-FCAANAXN-A In Honolulu.

March 27, 1916, J. K. Ioane andMrs. Sarah Kaanaana, Rev. SamuelK. KamaiopllL' assistant pastor of

--the Kaumakapill church, - Palama,officiating. Witnesses, CharleManu and Henry Kanuha.

AKANA-MAHUK- A In Honolulu,March 26, 1916, Walter Akana andMrs.. Elizabeth Mahuka, Rev. Fath-er Stephen J.'Alencagtre, curate ofthe Catholic church of the SacredHearts,- - Punahou, officiating. Wit-nesses, Hattie You Chang and Ftdele Torres.

KAINA-KEKAHUN- A In Honolulu,March 26, 1916, John Kalna andMiss Mary Kekahuna, Rev. H. H.Parker, pastor of the Kawaiahaochurch, officiating. Witnesses, Ka-wa- ha

and Alonzo Kemalia.HENRY-MORS- E In Honolulu, March

25, 1916, George Oscar Henry, age50, to Lulu Wakefield Morse, age 42.Ceremony performed by Rev. W. D.Westervelt.

BENSON-CARTE- S In Honolulu.March 25, 1916, Frank A. Benson,age 24, to Mabel L. Carter, age ' 19.Ceremony performed by Pastor Da-vid C. Peters.

KITAGAWA-YOKOT- A In Honolulu,March 24.C19I6, YukichI Kitagawa,age29, to Akl Yokota, age 29. Cere-mony, performed by Rev. TeichiHorl.

MARRIAGE LICENSES.

B. H. Choy, Chinese8. W. Ijoo, Chinese . .

The Great, Lakes are expected to beopen for navigation earlier than usualthis year. Immense grain cargoes arewaiting transportation.

AT NOONSaturday, April 1, 1916.The iine Mercer premises at Ocean View. Kaimuki.

' costing $26,000, "will be sold at auction at the rooms ofJas. F. Morgan Company, Limited, Merchant Street.

The rooms are all large, splendid sleeping accommo-datioiiS- j

Ver attractive living room, dining room, etc.,lino sen-nut-s' quarters,' garage, tennis court.

Seldom does ithe opportunity occur of securing asplendid property like Nanea Villa at a figure much be-- I

dv; the original cost: S - -

uardian; ust Gom Ltd.Adz:i:trators Estate John Byron Mercer.

.26

.19

ROYALBaking Powderis indispensable tothe preparation ofthe finest cake, hot-bread- s,

rolls andmuffins.

the

most

aridtastyhot

has cj& stwBSTinnunrENo other baking powder equals it instrength, purity and

Kmymi Ok Bk-MO-O fftea ffM.S4 Nmt tn4 Addrtu.

'

Bs $t9Homlmlm, Hawaii, r Kyl Bikini tvmiw Vtw TK U.S.A. ,

Frederico Alphonao Peirt, minister John McGrath, am escaped lunatl.frpm Peru, called at the White House . attempted to force his way into' Gotto1 give President Wilson his formalfate well. Minister Pezet his reHlgne4because his government' is unabl t&pay hi' salary,

1-

! i i 1

McCall's

bodyguard tha5 t ffovernor.

A inKaimuki

A charming home of 5 rooms (2 bedrooms), almost new and thoroughly modern, with city improvements, screened. - t

.

350 feet from carline.Lot 75x120 feet.

Nice .lawn, large .enough outdoor comfortbut uot tOo to keep in good at srnalt la-- ;

.bor; large shade trees, etc,, ; ,

CrSOnnnnTK $200

fl (O o s113

: v

are.

Horrigan,

large

down.

Telephone 3477.

iRUi.'ir'ilriigriiiriio

Palolo boy).Wilder

Wallace Silver that wearhas perpetual areagents for this Wonderful Tableware

and can show you some Beautiful Patterns. ..;"!T7'

Hotel SL

road (includes yard1563 (servants)..,..

Furnished;;. ,!? 1$

Unfurnished770 Kinau streetWalaUe road (bet 7th and 8th aves)..1317 Makiki st. (reduced rent)1877 Kalakaua ave.1675 Kalakaua ave. (In rear)1675 Kalakaua ave. (April 5, 1916)1266 Matlock ave1225 Wilhelmina Rise

LOT ft.

Malces

lightest

delicious

biscuit

wholesomeness.

ernor in , M

to

home Gotol

$30.00 month.

guarantee.

...3

.13

S

' a

;n

'

.

Populart r r-f r r f iW-

T

-- '

4. . .

22222

'

3 1 40.00j

32.50

30.0020.0012JM2S.0025A22.00

are authorized by owner, of a.prettylittlaHome on Tenth Ave. to dispose of it at a cozarloV - 't :t

. erably less figure than was asked for it aishort' ' ';

ao-o-.

75x20 Very prettv tawn.bearing; dustlesa side of the street.

ofiice Boston,

for

per

PlateWe

Bedroom125.00

1OJ.00

We the

time

trees In

HOUSE Well built, convenient An attractiveproposition for the man who it looking for a nice home at a verymoderate figure. $2200. Easy terms.

Henry Waterhouse Trust Co., Ltd.Stocks. Bonds, Real Estate, Insurance.

(dward

ui.n

order

resists

Jewelers.

Several dice fruit

anf very cool.

Phone 1283 .4

Vhi

1

11

V

Page 5: Tons Fighting Isonzo Front; Russians li? · ert VV. Shingle was voiced everywhere today. "Mr. Hatch has the cordial good wishes of the Chamber of Commerce, I am sure," declared Raymond

' Sv

AsirniArBABT

WEEK? AGAIN BE

GIVEN NEW DATE

If tfeld During - Week of April

24, Mai Interfere With

. amirigShrew": Wnether Honolulu's proposed --Baby

Weekf. shall be postponed outxf cour-tesy to those whd 'are: preparing aproduction ot The Taming of theShrew" to-b- held, during the weekof ApYU 24, will be the principal topicof discussion i at a meeting of theBaby Wfsk! committee heads at the

Palama Settlement at 1$ o'clock to-

morrow" morningThose in charge ot the theatrical

production have requested that "BabyWeek" be held either daring the weekbeginning April 10. or, the one be-

ginning May 11, for the reason, it hasbeen jitated, that many of those whoare working pn the welfare campaignalso are Interested in The . Tamingof the Sh?ew!." '

,

iMrtJame?A, TUth, chairman oftie publtelty?emmittee for the cam-

paign said today that many of thewomen engaged in the campaign arein favor of holding "Baby Week" asrlfiiially planned; that la, during the

weekof April 2L "- ") Tomorrow's meeting will bring forth

repor from the committee heads onthe work which has been done to date.A complete lt of the committees, ap-

pointed ysXardar,appears elsewherein today t ortfcrSUH3nllette'

Arrangements for lectures by vari-ous physician and i settlement work-ers will , ba made- by . Mrs. Walter P.Frear. , These 'lectnrea are . to formone or 'tb principal features of "Baby

- Week. The Palama Settlement housewill be usedjfor the lectures,- - and tworooms In the settlement house',, willbe avttiUbtei-'-for-lecture- s in foreign

V iaagnSseav-Tw- othafef rooms In thesettlement house will be placed. at. thedisposal of the chairman of commit--

' '

tees.f

SEES TWO WAYS

FOR IMLU'S

"As I sea the municipal situation.thera are only two ways in whichIlor lulu ii 'going s to getlIVefc.fricienCiovernmenC', said C OLoc k us ' today. "One of . these is forstick 'rncn-a- s E. D.jTenney, E. FaxonEish p, f. M,. 5wansy and others toacc : t-- - icftyM office." They aboutthe" t jsiest-men'"w- have and, the.busyit an 4 is the "man v'who does v: things.They will b able to settle these problems .wita which the present ooara isCian'Jestly 'enable to cope. ; :

j Tit second way is for the city toadort the commission-manage- r rormof gavernment. get a.real live: busi-ness 'man for city manager, pay him

salary that is commensurate 1 with' his brains and cut" his ' office loosefroci ; peanut politics. . Give ? him "a

let him run the road deiartment Instead of having It run by men, whoare' to tfet' it fob tecause they arevotera or tontrol voters..? ;

. . "The nreseiit sTstem of ' electinr' supervisors ' is, to my mind," wrong andIt has broken down invariably. , For

; the amount of money that is spenthere. Honolulu is not getung anytning

OFiGIIi PSECIRCT

DAl'L OUT BOARD

Eft ren rood men of the Eighth Preclnci Republican Club last night inmeeting assembled did condemnscore and bawl out" the membershipof the board of supervisors. Thereare bout 300 Republican voters in theprecinct. Fourteen were present

'- lit a loos aeries of resolutions tMboard is declared, among other things.to he the choice of the Democratic,sot the Republican voters of the cityand ibis fact is supposed to be provenby the statement that it has "ignoredthi party organization, i the partypledges and platform and the welfare

Oriental

A Question

cf 'Beaatj:

is alway aquestion cfcompletion.With a pcr-cornplcx- ica

younvrrnme nature S

renders to the sljn a cxr rcHnea,"" 'jcarJy'whlie appnrzncz the per--

i XI beauty. lLcHrg end rc'resl in' 5,rTjcy-rcssx- . ' 1, use C5 years. ,

Send 13c (jrttlcldze? : itrhl t. irorr-- ; & scn

t

'

'

.;

- -- at wDUw.wt i.evv Yo.SiCIJy

FEMAYFIPID

OPPOSITIONIN

HI. C. PACHECO

Former Supervisor's FriendsTalk of Him as Candidate

for Mayor

Politics and TaOre DOlitlcs are boiling up in the local Democratic kettle.

The latest is that Chairman M. C.Parhero of the Democratic territorialcentral tommittf may. be a candidatefor mayor..

Behind ' the jiossible candidacy iswhat the McCundless Boufbons callthe defection of Ex-May- or Fern fromtheir wing. When he filed as a candi-date for delegate to the national convention, with their slate already filled,they charged that he went over to tneMcCarthy-Plnkhar- a wing and were

wroth. Some of them arenow planning to hang it on joe inthe fall campaign, and they expect torun an opposition man to his mayor-alty campaign. Pacfceco is one ofthose suggested for the position.

Parh'eco'B experience as a memberof the board of supervisors, his eightyears' presidency of the San Antoniosociety, and hla chairraansnip oi tnemunicipal charter convention are be-i- n

nrsed as lualiflcations. Also, inthe last election he ran fat ahead ofFern in votes. He was something likefive or six hundred Votes ahead, run-

ning in a field of 14 supervisorial candidates, while Fern was opposingLane for mayor. Pacbeco s friendspoint, to this :s proof, ot his vole-gettin- g

ability and : say that If he ranagainst Fern in the primaries this fallthe ex-may- or will sustain a second de

fCASCARETS FOR

HEADACHE, COLDS,

LIVER, BOWELS

Enjoy Life! Don't Stay Bilious,Sick, Heaaacny ana

Constipated ;

Get Rid of Bad Breath, SourStomach, Coated Tongue, .,.

Indigestion ,

Get a 10-ce- nt box now,Tt. tin! rascareta liven yourA -

liver, .clean your thirty feet of bowelsand sweeten your, stomach. You eatone or two; like candy, before goingto bed and in the morning your neaala clear, tongue ' is ; clean, stomachaweet, breath right and cold gone. Get

wr from vntir drnsaist and enjoyjthe nicest, gentlest liver and bowelcleansing you ever expenencea,carets stop sick headache, biliousness.indigestion, bad breatn ana consuptlon. $,':

; Mothers tehould give s whole Cas-car- et

to cross, bilious; sick, feverishchildren any . time.; They are harm-less and never gripe or sicken.- - Adv.

LOSAROELES ,

TRAFFIC fflWHERE

Members of the Los Angeles (California) Traffic Association iook- - atrio to Hawaii" last Friday; after--

noctCrhich lasted 10 or 12 minutes.wth tha i!stflnce or rrea j. hbj- -

ton. Pacific , coast representatfte oftha iwai Pmmntion committee, thoseof the organization were treated tosome real Hawaiian music ana nuia- -

hula dancing.The following clever notice was

ont out nrtnr to the "visfL ' : ' '' '

"A day in Hawaii witn glimpses oiparadise. Ukulele players will be onhnd Leia for everyone present. Anddon't forget native Girls in the dances of the Islands will entertain in runRegalia. Let nothing prevent v yourattendance. Singers will delight uswith native songs." -- 1 ' '

Th ranitAl letters. In the foregoing announcement read Hula Girls.'The program also contains the no-

tice that "Paradise has been transfer-red for today to 524 South Springstreet," and goes on to say that Mr,Halton is offering "stereoptlcon viewsof wondrous beauty with an explana-tory ' 'UIk-- "' i

of ? the community , in general." By

"their Incompetence, and extrava-gapc- e'

the supervisors have disgracedthe Republican p?rty the resolutionsdeclare, and they are called on toresign in order that better men msybe selected and the voters given achance to see what real Republicanscan ao for the county. ' ;

Lorrln Andrews presided at themeting. After the adoption . of theresolutions' a committee waa selectedto attend tonight's board meeting andprotest ; against r the supervisors ac-

tion in the Lnsitana street improve-ment project. ' . ' vw"

HOPE TO SEE DUKE.

, . Harry Steiner writes from New Ha-ven that the Yale college swimmingteam invited Duke Kahanamoku togive the boys an exhibition of his tal-

ents while en tour in the East

HONOLTTLTT RTAK BTTTXETTK. ? TUESDAY, MATJCIT 28, 191G

!' - ll - .. , . J. ; - - V . ,:

m m mm.-- mm mm igW 1 1 I I BMBBBSSW .SISW M Hi 1

M

.. .... -. . - : - I .

'.

': X .

.

A

The Greatest

Mew

for

Values Ever

Dresses shown for today at this exctionally low price. All sizes.

1

New Lot Received on Matsonia all sizes

Ermhhst SuitsShown onlv here. Made of dainty Ginghams, in

models for morning wear.

Emiery 5These are the regular 35c Vega Silk

ent quality and pertect wearing.

ir mil

Hose exc

airtWaists on Sa

Page 6: Tons Fighting Isonzo Front; Russians li? · ert VV. Shingle was voiced everywhere today. "Mr. Hatch has the cordial good wishes of the Chamber of Commerce, I am sure," declared Raymond

Uuluu' U JJlij

r.IATSOWIA BRINGS

RECORD CARGO

HMDSunnging tne largest rnrgo ever

com in k to Honolulu d!rm from 8anFrancisco In any Matson steamer, theMatsenla, Capt. Charles rteron,flocked about 8 o'clock this morningM Pier 15. with 7064 tona of freightin her Hold and 120 cabin possengerslining her decke. T

'In addition to the record-breakin- g

freight orgo the; Matsonia brought 46automobiles, of uhlth 30 are for Honolulu and J 8 for Tiilo. Several hadto be left. behind on the dock at SanFrancisco, although all the freight of- -

t xerlng was cleaned up. The Matso- -' nlua Incoming freight, while a new

record for Honolulu, Is small com- -

jftred to that taken on her last outward trip from thla port, when it wasclose to jo.ooo tons.

Lat year the jfatsonla brought6Zmj to rj00 tons from San Franciscoregularly each trip, but today's Incom-ing freight nets a new record. It Isbelieved to be also a record for freightcoming here direct from San Francisco on steamers , of any, line, although American-Hawaiia- n steamershave recently brought big cargoesfrom the Northwest, these Including,however, much New York cargo.

Included In today's big cargo are1C26 tons of feed for Honolulu andMllo, 314 tona of hay, 1053 tona ofrMneni nnd 6(55 tons of fertUir.This lefri 4Q06 tons . of ' generalfreight rn r fnovh to fill nearly40 freight-rrs- . There are 800 billacif Lvi'n ..ifvompanylng ' the cargo.Kreij'H U r IU no'ulti was 5625 tona

V ahd'or JIllo 1430.. .

- Rome of the Matsonla'a passengersdid not enjoy life at all the first twodays out. A stiff breete was run intoImmediately after leaving San Fran-cesco.; strong westerly wlnda and arc ugh sea. according to Capt. Peter-sen, laid many, of the passengers lowTIu rMav and Friday,' but after Frl-- C;

y the steamer ran into a calm, andpllghtfui weather was enjoyed on

te remainder of the voyage. .

(Steaming time from San Francisco.kaa 6 days, 19 hours and 42 minutes.

Steerage passengers coming overwere 13. Chief Steward "Cy" WiJ-rnar- th

said there were two newly-marrie- d

couples aboard, Mr. and Mrs. D.)t. Bishop of San Francisco and Mr.ahd Mrs. J; F. Brown ot Denver. Mr.Hrown is a stepson of Harold L. Mor-ris, the noted angler and game flrher- -

man now visiting here. V ,v

, A number of Honolulans and formerresidents returned. r

t't Per Matson. str. Matsonia, from SanFrancisco, today: U C. Able,4. DavidAtkins, Mr. Auten, Mrs. Autzen.E

V. Austin, W. A. Beer, Ms.W. A,Jleer, George A. Belayeft. Mrs. George

. A. Belayeff. Mrs. O. J. Bettts Mrs. M.Jj. Bettis, D, H. Bishop,. Mre D. II.nishon, Arthur Bloch, Mrs., Arthn

rnicch Miss Ida Boyd. L! P. Erassy,Mrs. L. P. Brassy, J. F. BfownMrftiJ. F. Brown, Miss C. Burbidge.i MIbs

; Carpenter, ; Mra. Edward ' Carpenternnd nurse, H. H. Carter, Mrs. H. HCarter, J. ,S. Chamberlain Mrs. J. 8.Chamberlain, Miss Annie ChalmersT. A. Chase. Mrs. J. A. Chase, HaroldCreesman, Miss Marian Crewman. DcAVashlnglon Dodge, Mrs. WashingtonDodge, 8, II. Dowsett, Mrs. 3. II.powsett, MIrb Kthel Dowsett,-11- . Du- -

mcnt, Mra. H. Dumont, Mrs. HenryDutton H. V. KdaalU Mrs. Mary RFoster, Mrs. R. D. Grant, Miss R. 12.

Grant, Mrs. H. T. Harper, Mrs. C. H.Harold. ; V. Hartmau, F. It Heath,MrsF. R. Heath, Mis Irene Hcidge-den- ,

Mrs. K. H. Hodgeden, D. F. Hop

"

.Makikt C

"

ave. .4.,...,...Sat . it. . .2

2C31 Puunul ave. ..2School st. - . . ... X . ; . . .X2

1232 Kallhl at .V.i.. .'.2Cottage .Walk, . School st.T. i . .2Gandall lane, Emma at......Store Beretanta and ats.Store, 11S1 Alakea st.... ..... ....

wis

V w" I I J 'VJ I "'I I

Dice Rattle AsLocal Men Roll

Cubes OnJudge Wilder and BobV Ship-;gl- e

Decide Fate of DummyStowaway on Matsonia

Transferring a 'dummy stowawayfrom the Matsonia towas an enlivening feature of life onboard the Mataonia. according to offi-cers of the steamer, who said Judy-- A.

A. Wilder and Robert W. Shinglewere the, chief conspirators. Thrliner arrived from San Francisco thismorning.

Fashioned by "Chips," the ship'scarpenter, from a large piece 6f ood,a woden figure about the size of anaverage man waa carved out. An oldsuit of clothes was donated to garbthe "stowaway, and then Judge Wil

and "Dob" Shingle, according tni"";O. n.: Spalding," the ship's surgeon. !Sr umV

nuuua. uicc tu ee wuicu ruouiu 4inethe honor of naming the dummy.

Mr. manipulated the littlecubes better than the Judge andthe contest ,'lle named the dummy

Wilder," a large ribbonbearing Mr. Wilder's name wrnpinned to the chest of dummy.The Judge accompanied his "Htow- -

away" to the Wilhelmlna, and ina touching little speech "wished" itupon the latter ship.

The dummy waa a striking creature.He had. whiskers of oakum and hishead waa created from a lard pail.To say least, he did not reserablathe - v K

'a - ,

ASANO'SSONJOHEADT. K. K. OFFICE1 STAFF

"t8n,wl froin

t Special Cable' to Hawaii Shinpo4- - TOKIO. Japan. March 28.

R.' Asano, a son of PresidentAeano of the Toyo Kisen Kaisha f

f 8teamship Company, has been 4' appointed head of the branch4- - office in San Francisco. 8. tTogo, 44 former captain of the" Tenyo 44 Maru, has been made Inspector 44 of freight shipments for the com- - 44 T)any ln the same office. Togo 44 will pflBB through Honolulu on 44 the Shinyd' Mara early In' April, 44 Asano probably .coming on the 44 steamer after that time. 4

kins, Mrs. ' D. F. Hopkins: Jacob G.Kamm, Mrs. Jacob G, Kamm, H. K.Kerr, Miss H, Lathrop, Miss Louifielivlstre, William A. Lombard, E. C.Mayo, E. F. McCrahty, Mrs.; E.F. McCarthy, W. McCallum, B. J. Mc-Mulle- n,

Mrs. B. J. McCallum, Julius"McVicker, Mrs. Julius McVicker, Mrs.S, R. Mlckelsen, Miss MargueriteMoore, Albert Newman,d, AlbertKewtnand, arl Patterson;- - J T. PhilUp, Walter Pierson, Mrs.' WalterFierBon, Miss Grace Post, Mrs. MaryIVvPoBt, Arthur Prausnltt, Harry

J. .P.Schieleln, Dr. H. J.Schlogeter, Mra; B. F,,Schoen and. In-

fant' Master "Arthur Schoen, MasterClyde Schoen,; Miss B.; U 8chulte,It W, Shingle, Mrs. R. W. Shingle.Capt F. O. Snow, Mrs. F. G. Snow,Mlaa, Spurgeon, Mrs. R. H.

J2. Squires, Mrs. C. E.Squires, W- - H Stone, Mrs. Dr. A. E.

Teaff, Miss Irene Tufts,E.' Tyner, Mra.' E.3Tyner, Mrs. D.Vogel. H A. Walker, Mrs. J Walker.

Waller, Miss Ace Veb-Eter,vM- ra.

Ace WebBter, Miss ArleneWebster, Miss A. E. Welch, A S.Whitbeck, Mrs. H. Wldman,, MissMabel L Wilcox, Judge A. A, Wilder,Mra. U ; Marshall. Miss N. Johnson,Mr. and Mrs. T. Hj'Simmons. 2

of Mrs. fBecr.i-- i r

11 m 1 ii 1.

' ' kwiimFurnished

Atea Heights ..; Bedrooms 85.00

Kuuanu ave. ,.5 l ....I. 150.00

Pacific Heights ..... ... .3 ...... 125.00

Wilder "Wyllie ..

.;'.

..2Emma

Shingle

"Judge

Judge.;

Prince,

Waller,

chil-dren

Unfurnished

wit

'pRISCO BRANCH

Spurgeon.'C.

&ykesv,CV--

40.fJ0

100.00

t

,'i ...,. 25.00

......20.00

.$35.00

Business Offices in of Hawaii, Boston and. vt; , ..keolanl Bldgs..

T7fUfXl ITT XI XT rVi h

50.00

v-.- .-

CAPITAL UBPLUS(over)$ 4oOfOOOftfi

Ship

18.0020.00

15.50

40.00

Bank Kaul-- ,

iJ II II I III ' "l.l " ii.il ml.

4

m

i i:iLvi

III

FR

1 rVa'i

BOOKINGS HEAVY

;om s. f. io

Heavy bookings on Matscn steam-ers for this sunirjer, from San Fran-cisco to Honoliil.i, have-bee- n made inadvance by tourists and Californiannwho are ilannln4 vacation voyages tothe Isles of Pe2ce, according to ChiefSteward "Cy" Ullmarth of the Mat-aonia, tn tort tidav tix3in Han Fran-cisco.

"i for a lrfrjre olnmo of touristbuslnPoo to Honolulu this summer,"nays "Cy.". "Ou our next trip, we willhave i rartirally a capacity passengerlist, not of Honolulans returning,either, but tourists and Californlanswho have made up their minds to

Ilawnii Xei for their vacationstoderDr.

wen

and

the

over

the

Mr.

.......

i.lki'

loo1'

martli renorta San Franciscohotels lull up, and predicts that moretourists v. ili come to Honolulu ..thisgumnipr on tihiia of t"he Matson linethan in many years. Ho says boojclni?s are excellent at thp San Fran-cisc- (

offices of the Matson NavigationConiftany.

A new folde:', attractively arrangedand printed, tell ng of the delights ofthe islands as a tourists' paradise, hasjust been issued by the company, andgives a great deo! of Information aboutHonolulu, Kila tea volcano, and other.places oi scenic worth.

HARBOR NOTES

SatJirday tho Xiatson freighter Hilr- -

frj nIan Seattle Xwr. Huno--

next

Mra.'

Grace

.,5

lulu.

T"he Matson iiner Matsonia brought18 basta of mail to Honolulu from SanFrancisco this mornins.

the Oceanic liner Sierra, from thisport, March 21, arrived San Fran-cisco at 10 o'clock yesterday morning.

The Matscn steamer Manoaat o'clock last, night from Ka-hul- ul

and sailed at noon today fromPior 16 .for San Francisco.

f

at

8

Due today or tomorrow from SanFrancisco is the T. K. South Ameri-can. Jiner Selyo Maru. She will sailfrom here to Yokohama direct. "

i At 7 o'clock Sunday night the Mat-eo- n

steamer. Enterprise, sailed ' fromiHilo for San Franciaco, according tpthe .Mauna.Kea s trli. report today. '

Advices received by the Inter-Isfan- d

are that the American steamer Yuca-tan will be here April 4 for bunkercoal, probably, from San FTancisco- -

' Due about April 10 from Manila lathe transport Logan, r from ManilaMarch 21. She will sail for San Fran-cIbc- o

on the day-- she arrives here.

- Bringing a cargo" of coal from Mu-rora- n

for. the Inter-Ialand- ,. the Japan-ese steamer Mandasan Mara is ex-

pected to arrive Friday or Saturday.

X large fom --masted bark waspassed by the Matson, steamer Manoa'yeatepday, standing to toward liahu-- J

lul as the Manoa was going our, rromthat . --rport ; -

There were three bidders yester-day afternoon when bids were openedat the custom-hous- e for painting andrepairing the roof of the. Marine Hos-pital, public health service.?,'' ' A

' ,. ,v V

At 5 o'clock this afternoon theAmerican-Hawaiia- n steamer MexicanIs due to sail from H Ho for San Fran-Cisc- o

with 13,700 ton b of Island sugarfor transshipment by rail to easternrefineries. 4 v

The quartermaster's office expectsthe traneport Thomas to arrive aboutApril 4 from the Philippines. She leftNagaskaJ March 21. The Thomas willarrive in the morningxand sail theafternoon of April 4. .. . . ;

'

. .. , ,, ; :

On her last trip to San Francisco,from this port, a stowaway named Ed

vJHcCarthy was found on boafd the U. 4

5. army transport, anerwan. , lie .saiahe deserted here from the City ofPuebla --because 'he coffee was always

: f I, i. i' ,:.

Freight brought In this morning bythe Manna Kea Included an auto, 11cords of wood, ffve crates of vegeta-bles, 18 bags of cabbage, 63 bundlesof shook s, , 88 , bundles of hides, 171

. parcels of sundries and. 50, bales bfbags. i . ' . ., ;

' Fears for the safety Of the Ameri-can steamer Rio Pasig of Manila;which was here last fail, are felt. 8h-le- ft

Vladivostok for Puget Sound, butIs many, days overdue. .The Rio Pasigis the only ,decp-6e-a steamer in theworld manned by Filipino offleers andcrew, , v'V. ? --: ',

t While the-T- . K K. South Americansteamer Selyo Mara, expected late to-day or tomorow from San Francisco,was steaming from Valparaiso to theCalifornia port a baby boy was tornto Mrs. Philip Lang, travel!:::;; ca t!:sateamer with her husband, v.ho is tnAmerican tcltiien. ' T! ' -- : ster

Yar' , t.:,'. ;i fccrr. c

a" Japanese -- sv' t t -Susr aw:

Is rt; :;' !

of the T'bags; -.

13.000; Y."

668; Per:Hakalau, 17;

v

4 U J ...

1 1 WEST SAILS

"2l0l!?,ff-i-

TO NEW VORK

Turtles Are Orjly Food Off the- Coast of Mexico; Filipinos 1

Get Sublimely "Stewed"With its Filipino crew lyin?

"stewed in the fo'castJe slniinsomething ahout a bamboo tree, thishappy state bavin? been attainedfrom rum ?;iven them to withstand thrisora of Atlantic inter wenther, theschooner A. J. West arrived at ..MewYork from Marfla a few weeks' ago,according to the New YortL World. .

The West left Honolulu August 2,after repairing a few of the 'manyleaky 3)iots in r hull. yh- - arrivedhere August 8, with several pails tornto shreds and the wash of the seasthe scuppers could not carry offsoaked into the nold.Sailed 22,292 Miles to Go 11,520..Captv Chapman .Ugured that bo

sailed the ehuEger for tho West !asa gasoline auxiliary S7St miles incovering the 4S'o r,iihs from Manilato Honolulu; Jy)2 mil?s t get tromHonolulj to Balboa, whicfi is 1220miles on the chart, and .'?t'."0 miles tocover the steamer course of L'.'tiu

mllen from Colon lo New Yori., :illtold, 22.29'-- ntllo to make ll.'l'O.

After leaving Honolulu lust August,the West ran into the doldriims tor37 days after !eatinK u; lo SocorroIsland, off the rist cofiHt of Mexico.

The Kicker was resorted io again,but it coughed and fussed, so thatonly 300 miles were covered durinsthose 37 days. Then south or Socorroanother storm was encountered.

All the provisions except riee worespoiled and for reveral weeks a smallboat 'was used to catch green turtles.The first was hat pooned. Then' it wasdiscovered hat'tlie turtles were asleepoif the Purfaco, so ihe others wereklmply turned on their backs and lift-ed into the boat.Turtle Soup Thrice Oaify.

This 13 whetc Charley, who won'tbe two years old until July S, came inhandy. He had learned to walk onshipboard anl lie and bis little, elderbrother, Ira. k opt a 'close watch-- ' forturtles. A chair such as a sword fish-

erman uses was rigged up in the bowfor Charley and when he saw a turtlehe Wew the bosun's whistle, while Irashouted, "Turtle ahoy, pop!"' Seventurtles were ca,ght t one time andIra almost fell overboard in the ex-

citement AH were tired oft turtlesoup and turtle steak and trutle hashexcept the youngsters, who cried formore turtles most of the way to NewYork.Couldn't Stand up.

Balboa was reached January 1. TheWest had to be drydocked at Colonfor repairs and her cargo of mahoganyunloaded. There all hands wentashore and they had 1)een at sea solong they staggered all over the place.Charley. could iiot Btand up ashore.

The nine Filipinos were fine sailorsuntil three" days before the West arrtted "aUNewrYork. Then they hadtheir first taste of cold, weather. ButCipt. Chapman, at Celon,4iad laid Ina supply 6 gin. Even with! that "undertheir, belts they could keep only 10minutewatchea for two days. By thethird morning the gin had producedsuch a wonderful effect that they keptno watches:',. ' iS s ' i:

Kaiwlki, 8928; jvukaiau. 7132; Hama- -

kua, 9480 ; Paauhau,-- 1 9000 ; Honokaa,7000 ; Punaluu,; 7430; Hoauapv, 1776!

Bringing a larps ahmber of' passen-gers, including 61 i cabin, fotr ,waycabin and 3t deckr the Inter-tslan- d

steamer Mauna Kea arrived from fliloand way ports at 7:09 this morning.She brought back the Hawaii ToursCompany ? personally-conducte- d excur-sion. -- IGveryone going was delightedJfcith. the , trip, reiorting fine weatherevery day and Kilauea volcano esie-ciall- y

active.

Due to arrive Sunday, probably Hnthe morning, from San Francisco, Isthe' American-Hawaiia- n steamer Texan, with 1600 tens tof New York cargo,brought to San" Francisco "on 'the Ho-nolul-

via Magellan, nd trans-shipped. The Texan will carry 13,500tons of island sugar, back to San Fran-cisco.- v(

She is believed . by the localagents 'to have.ne other: freight-tha- n

her New York cargo.fof .Honvlulu. r.' '' ; - .- -'

''Sailing at 4 yesterday afternoon for

San Francisco, the Oceanic steamerSonoma took one passenger and, 94ton of freight from. Honolulu.. Ouigoing freight Included 90 case ofhoney, 6 bags of, coffee and 20 casesof canned pines for Auckland; 40Q

cases of canned pines for Wellington,N: Z.; 6 cases of canned pines forDunedin, N. Z., and 100 cases of bot-

tled beer for Noumea, New Caledonia.

Three days after he reached SanFrancisco in the Oceanic steamer So-

noma," Capt Creeltnan, the veteransea --captain, who 'passed the wintervisiting In Honolulu, died, according4a word brought here yesterday bvCapt J. D. Trask of the Sonoma.Capt. Creelman was a great friend ofCapt J. It Macaulay, territorial pilotat this port. Capt Creelman was sec-ond, mate on the ship which broughtthe lite J. & Atherton ' to Honolulumanjr; years ago. H xi-- .

,-.- ; ; r;uLj;.,,, j e

Fire caused damage estimated at?C,000 to the munitions; plant of theGeneral Electric Co., at Schnectady,N. Y.. ---

""OCRATtC f'

r.- - ; cf t

ITING .NOTICE.

Democratic Clubi i : trict will

1 ca Thurv. ! "15, Et,7:30

l. j earnestly

JULIUS W. ASCII..Secretary.

Honolulu .Stock Exchange' Tuesday. March

MKTCANTTLE. '

Alex&naer Baldwin, Ltd.C. Brewer & Co

SUGAR.Hwa Plantaticn Co......Haiku Sugar Co. .Hawaiian Agricultural Co.Hawaiian C. & S. CoHawaiian Sugar CoHonokaa Sugar CoHonotr.u Sugar CoHutchinscn S. Plant. CoKahuku Plantation Co. .

Kekaha Sugar CoKoloa Su?ar CoMcflryde Sugar CoOahu Sugar CoOlaa Sugar Co.. LtdOnomea Sugar CoPaauhau S Plant. CoPaciric Sugar. MillPala Plantation CoPepeekeo Sugar CoPioneer JLill CoSan.Carlos Mill. Co.. Ltd.Waialua Agr. CoWalluku Sugar Co

MISCELLANEOUS.Haiku F. & P. Co.. Pfd..Haiku F. & P. Co.. Com..Hawaiian Electric Co...Hawaiian Pineapple Co. .

'lo R. R. Co, PfdH:io R. R. Co.. ComHen. H. M. Co., Ltd . .

Hon. (Jas Co., LidHon. R. T. & 1j. Co. .....Inter-Ialan- d S. Nav. Co..M utual Telephone C;i . . .

O.ihu R. & L. CoPahang Rubber CoTan jeng Olok Rub. Co. . .

COND3.Hamakua Ditch Co. 6a..Hawaiian lrr. Co. 6s....Haw. Terr. 4 Kfd 1H03Haw. Ter. Pub. Imp. 4a..Haw. Ter. 4 V4aHaw. Ter..-SV&..-

.

Hilo It R. Co. S"r, Issue1901

Hlllo R. R. Co. Ref &.Extn. Con. 6s.. .......

Honokaa Sugar Co. 6',, . . .

Hon Gas Co., Ltd., .Is..Hen. 'it T. Co. C',

Kauai Ry. Co. 6sMcBryde Sugar Co. s. . .

Mutual Telephone 6sOahu It & L. Co. h'AOahu ,S. Co. 6s (redem-- '

able at 102 at maturity)Olaa 'Sugar. Co.' 6rrPac. Guano A Fer. Co. 6sPacific Sugar Mill Co., 6sSan Carlos Mill Co. 6..

Ttld. Asked

32 33.... 260

49i... 499 !'.

fiij .. .1 T ........ 19011 m;34 ZAKlT- - IT.H

60-- n 2'9; ........ 2t;i

4;4

4f 4'!.

.r,o

114

2ti4 2)- -

21 i!?-- ,

4u ....

.... n

.... 7Vi

:,9 6.".

Iu010:1 ....lu.100

luOU106103 107

MP. ioa

,

Between Boards: Sales: ,'00, 70,70. 225. 108. 400, 115, 315, 50, 200, 30Olaa, 17; 250, 100, J5 McBryde,13 ; 200 McBryde, 13 ; 80, , $0Pioneer, 47; 100, 50. 35 Pioneer,46; 300, 20, 70 Oahu Sugar Co.,34; 20, H. C. & S. Co., 49; 30Mutual Telephone Co., 20ft. I

Session Sales: 15 Ewa, 33; 5, ISH. C. & S. Co., 49; 100 Oahu SugarCo., 34; 23 Hon. Gas Co., 115; $3000Olaa 6s, 10314; 5, 5 Oahu SugarCo., 344. .

Lateat sugar quotation: 96 deg. teat,5.71 cents or $114.20 per ton. f

Simar.'As a 5.71ctsHcnryUVaterhouse Trust Co;"'v ': Ltd. lMMaanbert Honolulu StoOt and Bond

'

i 'Cxehanga. riFort end Merchant ttraeta

Tftlapnow 1208

PASSEXGEUS BOOKED

Per --Mataon str. Manoa, from SanFrancisep! farch 28 A Andrews, ,Df.J.,AndrewsHMrs. J. Andrews, H.x A.Baldwin, 'Mrs. II. A. Baldwin, F. W.Baxter, Mrs. F. W, Baxter, V. L. Berg-strom- ,

C. C. Crozler, C M. Cobeca,Mrs. F. M. ColletU, Mrs. F. J. Craln.H. Cllne, Mt. H. Cllne. Miss A. T.Eaton, .iiss F, P. Fisher, Mrs. F. C.Fry, Mr. and Mrs. Glovacchinl W. O.Goodrich, Mrs. W. O. Goodrich, MissL. Goodrich, Mrs. W. A. priffln, Mrs.A. A., Hpbson, Miss Z. M. Hummel, J.F.' Hurberg, A. B. Hodson, Dr. A. O.Holmes, Mrs. A. O. Holmes, Mrs. A.E. King, R. M. Kingman, S. M. LowreyivUlra.'S.M. Lowrey, M. Levy, Mrs.M: Levy, B. Lymer, Mrs. C. Mc-Phe- e,

Miss E. P. Noweil, R. Patterson,Mrs. R. Patterson, Mrs. C. A. Peterson, II. P Jlohlnson, Jr., W. Lw Stan-ley, R. Stone, C, II. Taylor, Miss G. E..Vanderh oof, M iss E. Van Dy ke, M IssF.";Wetmore, E. Wolff, Miss Webster.Mra. Rf M. Kingman..

The Mexican Minister of Financewill ; present to General Carranza aproposal to decree a moratorium fortwo years, applying to debts due toholders, of naortgagea throughout thelepublic. v ' ;

'V '"' l' i'..'.1

TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY

WANTED TO RENT.

Unfurnished house, 3 or 4 bedrooms,Punahou preferred, for beginningApril; state rent and particulars.Address Box 340, Star-Bulleti- n

v 6434 3t

FOR SALE

i-

Overland roadster, perfect conditionat a sacrifice. Inquire H. C. Hurl-but- ,

Royal Hawaiian Garage.6434 6t

Buick, small "Six," Al condition; run800 miles. Apply 45 North King.

iyr"s '. ': : v - 6434 tf ' ' -

FOR RENT.

Light housekeeping and single room.Ganzel Place, 112 Vineyard, cr. Fort

, 6434 tfCottage for rent Phone 1643.

6434 --St

IfYou Ar.ePJannJngaTripwhether a brief vacation jor an' MteudeU .touf, a fewcents' n dnv will onaolo Vuu to f ravel 5ritli n care-fre- e

mind. ' .- :L. '. , r:

" Ict ns explain to you In fnll the advantase of anjAKTXA Tourists' Ua,as:e iolicy and its slight cost.; i '

It indemnities you ngain&t loss from fire, theft, etc,in custody of Hailroad, Express Company;1 Steamship, .

Hotel or Chtl)hon.e, anywhere in the worli .

Gastle & Gopke, Ltd.. Generatr Inaurance Agents - -

AlexanderV.V. Jt jl '

BaldwinUmfttd.

Sugar FactorsCommission Merchantand' Irlsurance Agenti

' - - r

Aftnta forHawaiian Commercial A Saga

Co. " - ' w'Haiku Sugar Company. .

Pala (Plan tatloa.- - 'Maul Agricultural Company.

Hawaiian Sugar: Company.

Kahuku Plantation CompanyHcBryde Sngar Ctxj Ltd.-- .'

Kihnlal Railroad-Company- .

Kau&l JUUway Company;Kauai Fruit 4 Land Co. LUHonolua Ranch.

r

mmm:Alt .tiiJMB. F. Dillingham Co.!

1 -::: 'ijMiTCD;-;.?-:- i

General Aganta for Hawaii:Atlaa Assurance Company ofLondon, Ntw, York. Undcrwrlrt .Agtncy J Provide ncr.Waah

Ington Insurance Co. i w4th floor, ftangenwald Building.

J. F. MORGAN CO., LTD.' " Wv

: STOCK fBOKRInformation Furnlahad' and Laana

;.Mada.. ; --'

.:-- 'Merchant Strtat r-- Star Building

FOR-REN- T'

Electriclty.gas! sdreena ra.fa!I houses.Neat house f IU t" :

Kew furnished cottage; $30.house; fine location; $2ST !

J. H-- SCIWACKiahvimarxu, tt' ,Telephone842

MEAT MARKET

mm 3451Vc yeI'hoV, A fco.

1 'jJMic,

3633

CITY MILL. COMPANY, LTaimporters --nf bst lumher and bnildmtnatarlali. Prices Iow. and we gitfour order prompt attention whetherlarge .or: amalL We bre huilt hna-Ired-a

of honeaea In this city witn perCad flatfafactioa. If yon want to lrai'ttSBUjt. tl. ! ; ;:, - V

HOME INSURANCE COQF HAWAII,

II KINQ bTREET CORNER ORT.

: t BA8KEARYBeautiful Seuth'8ea Baaketa juat received. HA-WAII A SOUTH SEASCURIO CO Young Bldg.wBuy on Bishop Street1

-' NXs K ' t 5 ' i' !'

.:'.'' .,' -'

'

- '

(

Accounts ofTomihdrid Children

kept 'conrulonttal rirnf snb-jc- ot

to tlioir order; ' "v.'Children may open sav- -inprs ncebimts.4 Parentswho desire to open ad-eomi- ts"

in" the nmne --.ofchildren, suhject to orderof the parents, may lo xFor our women 1 patrons,we liave )rovideViV writ-ing room equipped" 'withstationery and private

" ' 'phone.f

BANK OF HAWAII, LTD. J

Cor." Fort and merchant.

Sanl?:: offTTTf r tl XI '

taauea K. N. A K. Ltttare of

CrIl AiUiTravtlarV thckiaValllbl throuVhaut W worli.

'Cable Transfersfit i rf aer;txt Lowest Hates

Brewsr.i r. j

SUGAR FACTORSCOMMISSION MERCHANTS. AND IN3UR, (

iV tlANCE AGENTS I .r.

FORT ST, HONOLULU, T. H.

List of Officer and Directors: ;VLi Ti-- BISHOP. ; . .'.PreaideatO. IL ROBERTSON. . A ....' ..Tlee-Preafde- nt and. UanaierSL IVKnS ...Socrelary "

B. A. R. BOSS. i . . .TreaaurtrO. B. CABTB.......'iDtreetofC. H." COOKBT.. ..... DirectorJ. B. GALT.4.. ........Director '

R. A. COOKE.. .......DirectorA, QARTLET. .DirectorTX Q. MAT:;.........7Andlt0J

; BISHOP & CO.SANKERS

Pay '4 yearly en SavtofS Da- ' : i

f-- - J! T " " t -

THE YOKOHAMA SPECIEianiv UMrtEOi , ; '

'' "'."' t.. '. ,"''-"- f" n.Capital hacrC)d ..48,000,000C&fttal ptI4 np... ..SO.ood.oooBeaene ttind ........20,000,009 -

S. AWOK1, Local Manager

f A ' "f "HAWAIIAN TRUST

" CO,

Carries onBualneaa In all Itsbranchea.

y FOR SALE$2000 ed room house on Matloclc

ave nr. Pliltoi; 60x83; . modern con.Yeniencea. This property has to beboU at a sacrifice to close an estate,whose owner refused $3500 for It threeyears ago. ,

$J00( The beautiful residence atthe N.W. corner of Wilalae and lltaave Kaljiukl. with a comi dwelling; ' grounds are 200x

2i. Garage, outhouses, fine manienlelawn, fruit trees, etc. . t

P. E--R. STRAUCH

Waity Bids.

LTa--

Treat

odious

Africa has IS Inhabitants -- to thesquare mile and North America baaonly one more to the mile.

74 S. Kinc SL

-- !...4 .

Page 7: Tons Fighting Isonzo Front; Russians li? · ert VV. Shingle was voiced everywhere today. "Mr. Hatch has the cordial good wishes of the Chamber of Commerce, I am sure," declared Raymond

vV'V

TheaterDirecticn. (Phone 2373)

9 Phil J. ByrneHONOLULU'S HOME OF HAPPINESS

This Afternoon, 2:30 Prices 10, 20, 30 Cents.Pictures- - "Sinking cf Emden,' ..r" Juggernaut" and

Some Universal Films

TONIGHT AT 7:45-Vaudev- iI!c and PicturesCONTINUED AND EMPHATIC SUCCESS OF

JACK LA VIER POST MASON(Talkative Trapezist) (Prince of Balladists)

TONIGHT and THIS AFTERNOONWILL BE ABSOLUTELY THE LAST OPPORTUNITYAFFORDED THE RESIDENTS OF HONOLULU OFWITNESSING TEE REMARKABLE PICTURE

Sinking of the Emshowing genuine pictures of the World-Famou- s GermanCruiser "The Emden," as she now lies battered, andbeached at Cocos Island; also showing the Australiancruiser "Sydney" in action. The Australian navy enter-ing Sydney Heads. Everything in this great naval spec-ta- fi

is real. $1000 will be" given to any, local charity ifthe picture shown is not genuine. This picture was takenby permission of the Australian naval authorities at acost of over $5000, and indorsed by government. Alsothe last nicht anomatinee of -- r ; -

a Juggernaut99-

A picture that k now famous in Honolulu Depicting themost realistic f cenes a wirole train crashing througha bridge into' ttho turbulent waters below no words canvohvey to patrons this wonderful f&nsation. See it andthen you Mil believe it. Weare not exaggerating. v ' : -

(Wednesday)' Commencing at Matinee, Another Big 4

Ah

V

Feature Film.

Featuring EOWIN ARD EN and MAINE PfELDING--The Eagle'a Netatanda alor the forembst 'photbrpiay

West frontier life efnee the pictures were made inthe heart the'Colorado-- Rockies the famousGartfen", the. Cods' country.abounds .thrills and great dramatic 'climaxes and telsl the realstory the West most Impelling way. "The Eagle'a Nest"marks new. achievement motlcru pfciUre masterpieces.

Evening Prices. .13, and; Cents..

Special assortment PONGEE SILK SHIRTS; Extra fine

Fd

v.

"-

ZT

quality, $&bU

SHOTENHotel Street

SpecialEalSmmsCarafe with Tumbler coverStcck Limited

iirf lat.f ITfVJlllll lllll IUIIIITHE HOUSE OF HOUSEYARIST- -

53-6- 5 KING STREET. HONOLULU

... ; '

'"

5

v '' - RO.--4. ... a of

.: ofof It

inof In a :

.a in " V ' ;x,, . .. v-- 20 50

V M

. to v v i-

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0

1JDN0LT7LTJ STAR-BULLETI-N, , TUESDAY, MARCII 1016.

BillANARTCOURSE

Well Known Local MamGoingto Australia in Sumnjeivand

to New York Next Fall

L. Ycung Conxthers, vlcc-princii)- al

tcr five years of the Honolulu Schoolfor Beys, is receiving the congratula-tions cf his many friends on the factthat at the close of his school yearhe Is to go to Australia, where, underthe able and critical tutelage ofMa4ame .Nellie .Melba, he will preparehimself for a thorough art and danc-ing ceurse in Xew Ifork the comingfall.

Ever since coming to Honolulu Cor-rethc- rs

has been actively connectedwith almost every amateur theatricaland ballet performance given underthe auspices of the many societies andorgcnizatlons which produce such per-

formances. His special ability liesin the novel and artistic designing ofcostumes and scenery and the train-ing cf dancers.

Correthers is a native of Ixmisiana,attended college at the University ofSewanee, enlisted in the army andwas transferred about eight years agoto the Hawaiian islands. He will bemissed from Honolulu and his workas "Lucentio" in the coming produc-tion of the "Taming of the Shrew.'perhaps his last appearance beforethe footlights in Honolulu, wiU bewatched with interest.

It was thought at first that Correth-ers would remain in the city after theexpiration of his five-ye- ar contractwith the Honolulu School for Boys, aBhe was one of the fewi candidates be-

ing considered for the position ofprincipal of the .'new vocational andcontinuation school being inauguratedby the Y. Sf. C. A. But when the

came from Ufadame MelbaCcrrethers decided in favor of an art-istic 'career.

The spectacular, photo-dram- a "TheJuggernaut," and the Australian navalfeature,. "The Sinking, of . the. Emen,"will conclude a successful engagementat the National theater tonight.j Jack lAiViee, the "talkative trapez-ist," and Post Mason, "balladjst,- - willcontinue wtthHhe changeofrc'sramicommencing with' Wednesday matinee,snowing a popular western photo-pla- y.

The Eagle'a liest", This film not,only abounds In "thrills, but has abeautiful story, pictured in a mountainsetting. -- :,.. --

;

I Before starting west as an emigrant,Philip Dane gives deeds ol 'all hisproperty .to his friend Geoffery Mil-ford- ."

Upon parting Milford gives Mrs,Pane a' peculiarly carved whip as afarewell present : s On, the way .Westthe travelers are massacred by In?dians Mrs.,Dane's little boy being theonly .survivor. The , boy is found and.adopted , by the Sllsbees, who oufld ahome in the mountains which theycall the "Eagle's Nest."' In the mean,time Milford hears ot'the massacreand believing all dead appropriates theDane Meeds. Twenty years pass andMilford and his daughter are locatedto --Sacramento. ..,; .

f On ft trip; in thp: mountains I.Iilford's4aughter Rose .Tneets with an accidentand ii rescued; by.;Jaclt Trail the sonof. Dane.'Thes "cntiry df . Rose tintoltheplot complicates it hut helps tor unrav-el -- the i Jjnyiteryt Real Indians,- - tealcowboys and a teal western camp ;aresome of the features that gives thepicture, an atmosphere that could notbe imitated by artificial accessories.

'

: v :, ' i'i

MHOThere will be a dinner-danc- e at

Heinie s Tavern tonight In honor pfthe passengers and offleets of, th?iB. i which arrived fromthe coast this morning.

There will be three lucky numberdances at 11, 11:43 and 12:30 o'clockrespectively. Don't miss them." Mr.Marti and Miss Thomson will entertain. Adv.

MOANALUA JAPANESEGARDEN IS OPEN

Coairecnclng Friday, March 31st.Ihf! Jimanpse Garden at Moanaluawill b open to the public on Fridays,Saturday and Sundays of each; week.

AdV.

Program" beginning 1:30 p. m. until

Evening (two shows), 6:30 and 8:J0SPECIAL PROGRAM FOR TODAY

T AND EVENING: . -

i Th Confcssicn" (two-pa- rt dranxi),Biosraph.

Boxcar Trap" (drama), Ka- -

"All on Account of Towser" (com-edy I, Viiagraph.

"For His Mother" (drama), Edison.t

- T

pyyY.5i.ci

JarTett's Squad Will Be FirstPenitentiary Team to. PFay

. in Any Y. M. C. A.

For the Arst time in the history ofthe Y. M. . C, A. a prison team willcontest with association athletes with-in the portals of the asscciation. Thisafternoon at o'clock the volley ballteam from Oahu prison wm meet tneYoung Businessmen's team of the Y.M. C. A. in the games hall.

The game this afternoon will bethe first game scheduled on the. trav-eling tour of the prison squad, and asthey have been beaten on their homecourt and as this is their first gameof the away from home series, thecontest should prove to beexciting.

The squad wilfbe accompanied, byWilliam Jarrett, who will act as coach.Mr. Jarrett has taken a deep interestin the sport at the prison and statesthat the players have practised forthe matches with the other teams ofthe city. A large crowd is expectedto be in attendance at the games hallthis afternoon. .

WILL START BUILDING .

FUND BY STAGING BIG ,

CHERRY BLOSSOM FETE

With a view to raising funds withwhich to start the building of St. Hil-

da's, house., the prpposed home forJapanese girls in Honolulu, the wom-

en of the Episcopal churches 'of thecity are planning a typical cherryblossom fete. The fete will be heldop: the lanais' and In the grounds ofthe. Royal Hawaiian hotel, . Hotelstreet, on the afternoons and eveningsof " May 5 and 6. Special attractionswiir.be contributed by the local Jap-anese communrty. v

HAVfrAUAN BfAfiD AT

THOMAS SQUARE TONIGHT

Beginning at ,7:30 tonight the Ha-

waiian band will give a public con-

cert in Thomas square. The programfor. the evening will lie as follows: .

America.March Big Ben. ,(new) . . .Thos. VlenOverture Morning, Noon and Night

SuppeDescriptive Grandfather's Clock

(new) V.. ...L- - G. CastleGrand Selection Maritana. .WallaceHawaiian Songs Hawaiian Band

Glee Club. iSelection Siegfeld Follies 1915..,.

............. ii U A. Hi. .1

Waltz Les Sirens WaltentutolOne-Ste- p Marchr-Th- o Swettest Girl

in Monterey ....... . H PaleyAloha Oe; Hawaii Ponpi.The Star Spangledj,Bann.?r.iV

I DAILY REMINDERS ' I

Bound the' island In ' auto, 4.00Lewis Stabler J Phone 2141. Adr.

Corsets correctly fitted. The GoodwinShop, Rms. 21-2- 2, Pantheon Bid. Adv.. Have your portrait made; for yourmother --at . Parkins' Studio, Hotelatreet, near ForL:? tHave you seen the' latest designs insport shirts? They are on display atthe Ideal on Hotel street

. For that new Easter-sui- t, for neck-wear: and other important accessoriesyou will be most pleased If you go , tothe . Clarion. ,

";

7 :If you are not using gas "in your

house, delay now longer. Call 3424and ask the Honolulu Gafi Cdmpany'rrepresentative to call. .

Some household , helps and sometempting delicacies in the "Wednes-day Special" list of Henry May & Co.this week. Call up ;i27f. " !

'. Automobile 'owner :': can preventmany of their lubrication, troubles bytho use of Dixos famous graphite.Sold by Lewers & Cooke. .

A

. Don't forget thO' big clearing saleat Canton Dry Goods CoV, Hotel street,near Fort. Big bargains In women'sshoes and men's furnishinflV Adv.

Men who l:ke individuality in teirdress are taking a deal of Interest :.ithe .new "link button sack suit," aCollegian' clothes product, shown atthe Clarion.

f The small - farmer needs morechickens as well . as more . publicity.He will, get the former if he uses, aPetaluma incubator . Ask the Califor-nia! Feed Company about it v ;.

In buying flowers be sure to getthem fresh so that they will give hap-piness that much longer. For safetyin this and for a wide choice go toMrs. E. M. Taylor's, opposite YoungCafe.' .

";

"Bits of Verse - from. Hawaii,", adainty book of verse collected andpublished, by C. J..Wright is on saleat all leading book stores , and curiostores. It makes an interesting souve-nir of the IslandsJ Adv.

WOMEN LISTEN TO REASON

You who suffer, why do you hesi-tate to try what has removed the suf-ferings of others? That'-goo- d 'old-fashion-

remedy, made ' from rootsand herbs Lydia E.-- Pinkham's Vege-table Compound has stood "the test.It has no rival in overcoming the ail-ments peculiar to your sex. Whyshould it not do for you what It hasdope for others? Give it' a chance.

'

Adv. ' '

CARD OF THANKS.

:WMri.CJW.' Renear Jde6ircs(td expresshi sincere thankpto the many friends

ho; so- - kindry hVpe4-,t- o hcrVin1effort Bis" 'wife durinffjlitr' long.IU-Wess- ,.

'and a!w his ' heartfeUv'appr-clatrc- n

for th,e nuny tokfti of aym-path- y

which he has received Adv.

Volcano KILAUEAIn All Her Glory

s'r,!

Picturesloving

Other Scenes cf Great InterestBishop Hall. Oahu College.

Friday Evening, March 31. at& o'clock prompt, . Admission.?i and 50 cent:

, Hotel St. near Fort

WKolesomeNo one has ever eome toharm or formed a bad.habit through ice creamand ice cream sodas. Andwe take particular painsin choosing the ingred-

ients and combining themjso that you can be assur-ed of the purity and wiiole-someiiess.- of

the

drinks you get atour Soda Fountain

Rawley's pure Ice Creamin bulk or in bricks to takehome. . .. .

r The fredy-slidih-g tcord v

inDackadjusbitseTmqtioh'Jor postare-ravoi- dt

'iogitram on Vclomc ;orshoulders and ensuringalways ; - ,Absolute Comfortv Avoid irnitafions I They"are all inferior. ' Look forthe! words SHIRLEY

. PRESIDENT stamped on :

the buckles. In this wayyou will be sure of gettingAe genuine j poods light,cooV strong and supremelycornfortahle,unconditi6nally

.' guafanlteed by the makers;

Tte C X. Ea'sarton'Mfg.Co.

J SHirley, Maia U. A.

''

For Sale Everywntro.J

4 . . v

n

. ;f "I

t, j, jryiThe fioh?o of 4

"?W

JESSE 'I

"11A 5-A-

ct Drama of Stagel Life, 'Xfarrrin With It GoodLesson' to Girls ' v

'-- 'iltfi Chapter of

PATHE NEAt OF u

PRICES . . . . ........ ...10, 20, 30 CENTS '

BOX SEATS h v.f ?. ;h M CENTS

rThe Shuberts Present

Rob ertWarwick

0 llpis

--..to .- ..,

"THE FLASH OF AN

1 AUo; J"WHO PAYS"

: 3rd -

; COMING WEPNESPAY, ."Froqi the Valley of the Miss- -

. , ing."Ai'tvbnderful Fox production.Matiree .2:15

-; EynJng .. .....7:15v Featdre ............. .V... 8:15

TCf t"t Y

lomgkit7:40. --P.M.

LASKEY COMPANY PRESENTS

a

Episode

ifStage-Stnit- k

,,Up-to-tHe-ut- e,, ixcitiigWEEKLY THENAVY

EMERALD'1

"The Pit

.... ... ...:

: .;

w.

LATTIME

HILE exteitsive renoVa tibris

made at old 1ofcftin,! vewillserve our pat:fipins';riext d 6 or ,

: 908 Fort St.

"Where Quality Reigns"

PHONE 2295 BEACHES

i

Hastace-Pec-li G6.vlitd; ALL Kltfna OF ROQK AND 8AND FOR CONCRETE WORK." . ,

x.t 9? ? FIREWOOD AND COAL, - : ' ? n.' 13 QUEEN STREEt r-- - F O. BOX2

Fort Street

T

Dreadful

If you want a bigger ana oet-t- er

hitch with" less trouhle use

I;r I,

p.

mikmEmm )

Let us give you particulars;

California Feed Co.,LTD.

Our-lin-e of Silk Kimonos

J

t

our

m v w - ..' f

'N

Mwdmi6adis.r:m:o.i3.t'"iS Gomplete and low in price.

and

apanese Jisazaar "Opp. Catholic C3inrch

Page 8: Tons Fighting Isonzo Front; Russians li? · ert VV. Shingle was voiced everywhere today. "Mr. Hatch has the cordial good wishes of the Chamber of Commerce, I am sure," declared Raymond

EIGHT

L.

$30- -

confirm whatPIGURES repeatedly

Goodyeartold

users far outnumber theusers of any other brand of tires.

Out of 353,859 tires countedin 71 principal cities, 75,631were Goodyear.

This shows a Goodyear preferenceof 21 per cent with close to 200 tirebrands for buyers to choose from.

What else can it mean except thatGoodyear users have found as youwill find that Goodyear Tires costless because they go farther, and lastlonger, and give less trouble ?

(jOOIEART I RE S

ojjf lo getfrom GoodytarScnict Station Dealer Eetyherc )

1 Goodyear No-Ho- ck Tireii are fortified againat :' Rim-cuttin- g By our No- -

Rim-C- ot feature. I

Blow-o-ut oar OnAir Curt, . "

Loose Treadi By ourt Rubber Rivets, jInsecurity By our Multi-- J

pit Braided Piano Wirtf But, .

Puncrcit" asd Skiddingdj nor I niCK

For Sale by

Weatlier Tread.

Auto Service andh Sopply -- Co., Ltd

';.-- ' V ;V : Sole Distributors

Merchant and Alakea Sts. r Phone"At Ye Sign of Ye Free Air."

'Ii r -- :;::v.',v,i:,v

'By

uouoi.J.'

4688

Good TeethGood Health,Good Spirits

Good teeth enable youto chew your food J This

h i.

gives good digestion the I,

foundation of good Health, 5

good Spirits, v ;V

? , V sji Care for your teeth with H :

' i A the delicious and efficient n

Volcano o Kilawea;

V PERSONALLY CONDUCTED EXCURSION

Leaving Saturday Next, April 1st, at 3 p. m.Make Your Reservations NOW

--NO EXTRA CHARGES--

Hawaii Tours Co.--$30

? Merchant Street f Next to Post Office

HONOLULU STAR-BULLETI- N, TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 191G.

BELGIAN SUGAR

CROP SHORT OF

NEEDED TONNAGE

In Russia Production Likely toBe Less Than One Quarter

Annual Consumption

That BelgiunVs sugar crop will fallunder the requirements of that' war-ridde- n

country by about 27,000 tons,and that only of Russia's ."4 refin-eries are in working order, is the in-

teresting foreign news contained inWillett & Gray for March 16. Excepts follow:Raws.

"Influenced by a steady and con-tinuous demand for refined sugars,both locally and for export, the mar-ket has continued strong and advanc-ing. As we went to press last weekcost and freight quotations were 4cfor prompt. ic for April and 4Vicfor .May shipment. The strength ofthe market is shown in the fact thatadvances made were in eighths, sayfrom f.39c to 5.52c to 5.64c to 5.77c to5.8!'c, or totaling an advance of 50loint8 for the week.

. ' Porto Ricos sold today at 5.64c, anadvance of 37 points. Philadelphiajaid 5.71c for Porto Ricos.

"Full-dut- y sugars have also beenactive and at advancing prices, lastsales being at 4c c.i.f.. New York.Peru8 and San Doniingos comprise thechief sales.Buying For Export.

Among the recent sales of rawswere purchases by European opera-tors of ,12,000 tons Cubas for imme-diate. March and April shipments tocover purchases of granulated for ex-por- t.

The prices paid for these rawsugars were 4.70c c.&f. (5.72c) and

ic c.&f. (5.77c).As we go to press the market is

very strong, with sales at 4c c.&f.(5.8ic) for any position.

The Atlantic Port figures continueto show large meltings (70,000 tons)and with receipts only about sufficientto cover the meltings ,(72.526) tonsthe refiner's stocks are not able toincrease materially.Cuba.

"The weekly tabled figures thisweek were bullish, receipts being 134,-04- 9

tons or 24,830 tons less than thoseof last week. The total exports, 57,-85- 4

tons, were comiaratively small,13,326 tons being consigned to Eu-rope. nd according to Mr. llimely,12,000 teas to New Orleans, leavingonly 32.528 tons for Uie United StatesAtlantic, ports, which is only aboutone-hal- f a week's meltings at the ratethat the Atlantic refineries have beenworking lately. Stocks in the islandare increased considerably, in conse-quence, and, now stand at 535,350tons, gainst 384,000 tons last year.On March 13 there were 183 centralsgrinding, compared with 174 corres-ponding date last year. Visible pro-

duction to March 11 was 1,373,460tons, against 964,715 tons last yearand 1,177,352 tons in 1914.

Our. latest cable advices coveringthe weather In the island for the weekstate that rains have occurred inthe western ' provinces and someIn Oriente province, which is morefavorable than the previously existingdry weather conditions.Java.

"Our regular monthly cable givesexperts in February of 45,000 tons, allto Asiatic ports. The last exports toEurope were in October, 1915.Belgium.

'The production of the 1915-1- 6 cam-paign is placed at 120.000 tons, whilethe stock at the end of the campaignyear Is placed at about 53.000 tons to-

gether 173,000 tons, whereas require-ments are figured about 200,000 tons.The deficit could be imported fromHolland but the Dutch export valuesare above the maximum prices al-

lowed In Belgium by the German au-

thorities.France.

"The government has arranged topay beet factories 19.65 fat the parof exchange) per ton for beets for thecoming campaign.Russia.

"Only 15 of the 54 beet factories areIn working order. a5d the productionof these 15 factories is less than one-quart- er

of the usual annual consump-tion.Refined.

"The refined market has closelyfollowed raws, and quotations haveadvanced to 6.90c, regular terms, anadvance of 40 points for the week.The demand locally has been fairlyactive, although restricted in manycases by refiners, who are reluctantsellers.

"The export demand has been brisk,and in addition to the usual daily bus-iness in moderate size lots, the follow-ing round lots have been placed:March 0, 3500 tons at 5.55c; March11. 2000 tons at 5.60c; March 13. 1000tons at 5.65c and March 15.tons at 5.80-S."-90- c. The above lotsare for various shipments up to May.and quotations net cash, in bond, f.o.b.New York.

"The announcement is made thatthe English commission has enteredinto a contract with the American torefine raws for them to the extent of50,000 tens, extending into a period ofseveral months.

"As we go to press quotations are.Federal 7.00c and others 6.90c. War-ner is. still withdrawn.

"Delays la shipments are stilly con-siderable. American is today ship-pings orders placed about February25. Howell is prompt on straight carsof fine granulated by all rail routesbut- - ether grades are three to fourweeks behind. Arbuckle is about aweek delayed on city deliveries andslightly more on out of town cars. Fed-eral is a week to ten days behind andWarner about a week.. "Advances were made In both caneand beet in other parts of the coun-try. Michigan beet is quoted at 6.80cbasis in favorable-- territory, .

'" - V. v.

S Honolulu Construction & Draying Co., Ltd.

Service First

ARMY &NAVYFori Staffer flofo

r Special Str-Bal!tl- ii CorrpondncFORT SHAFTER. March 27. The

Theodore Roosevelt Auxiliary to theUnited Spanish War Veteraus. No. I.will bold their dance, which was post- -

Ioned Troni St. Patrick's lay. onTuesday evening at the hall of theFrancis W. .Mansfield Camp, V. S. WarVejerans at Fort Shafter. Over 5iktickets have been sold and an unusual-ly large crowd is expected. The bestmusic in Honolulu has been engagedand a fine evening is promised to all.Busses will meet all cars to carry theguests from Honolulu to the dancehall. A good time is expected for theladies of the various committees haveworked hard to make the dance a suc-cess. Refreshments will be servedduring the evening.

3KT

The Engineer Company at the fortunder command of Lieut. Paul S.Reinecke is busy this week putting ina concrete bridge over the streamwhich is in the gulch between themain post and the cantonment. Here-tofore the various wooden bridgeshave been washed away when thestream became swollen after heawrains, but no such thing will happen infuture, as the bridge now under con-struction is particularly strong andwill be of such height that the waterwill not rise over it. The bridge hasa 22-fo- ot span, will be five feet wideand 10 feet high. At present it is nec-essary to go down steps to reach thepath, but Lieut Reinecke will build upthe approaches so that it will be levelwith the main road and one can walkdirect from the road across the bridge.The bridge will j be completedwithin another week.

Second Lieut. William C. Rose, L'ndInfantry, has received a cable fromthe war department transferring himfrom the L'nd Infantry io the 18th In-

fantry. Lieut. Rose h;is been In the2nd Infantry since 1911, but for thepast year has been rm duty at thePanama-Pacifi- c exposition in SanFrancisco. Later he went on leave f'.rseveral months and returned for dutyon the March transiott, and since hisreturn has been on duty with Com-pany D. The lieutenant will returnon the May transport when he willJoin his new regiment which is nowserving on the Mexican border.

3ST 3SrLieut Frederick A' Itarker, 2nd In-

fantry, has received information fromthe war department that his requestfor a year's extension' in Hawaii hasbeen approved. The1-- lieutenant willnot return to the mainland until No-

vember, 1917. This is the second ex-tension that has been granted LieutBarker and when completed will givehim five years in Hawaii.

A notice has been sent out to thevarious posts that the Japanese Car-den-s

in Moanalua Park, which at pres-ent are closed for repairs, will afterMarch Slst be thrown open to visitorson Friday, Sana day and Sunday ofeach week, and i nly on these days.

Orders recently received give thedates of target practise for the 2ndInfantry. The 2rd Battalion will com-mence its practise on May 1st andwhen completed will be followed bythe 3rd Battalion. The 1st Battalionwill go on last

3B-- SST

Lieut. Arthur T. Dalton, 2nd Infan-try has been retailed as officer Jncharge: of the school for cooks andbakers, relieving Capt James E. Bell,commissary, 2nd Infautry.

BUILDNC PERMITS.

Francis Gay, owner. Location.Kalihi Valley. Dwelling. K. Ha-mad- a

and T. Shiroaka, builders. Esti-mated cost $855.75.

M. Ota, owner. Location, lower sideof King street. 250 feet-Ew- a from Mc-Cul- ly

street Dwelling. J. Holmberg.architect M. Ota. builder. Estimatedcost ?550.

T. Tsuji, ow ner. Location, Ewa sideof Kapalama lane, 300 feet maukafrom King streot Two dwellings. T.Tsuji, builder and architect. Estimat-ed cost lioso:

Framond Hron, owner. Location,Ewa side of Circle lane, 150 feet mau-ka from Beretanla street Dwelling.K. Nakatanl, builder and architect.Estimated cost, $1380.

Ernest Ik, cwner. Location, makai side of Kinau street, 40f feet Wai- - !

kjki from Victoria street. Residcnrc. I

Y. T. Char, architect City Mill. Co.,builders. Estimated cost, $3lC0.

Mow Wong, owner. Location, Kapi-ola- ni

tract, makai bide of Campbellavenue, 1000 feet south from Kapahu-l- u

road. Dwelling. Chang Chan, ar-chitect. River Mill Co., builders. Es-timated cost, $970.

' Department of Justice agents havediscovered secret stores of arms alonthe Canadian border..

The town of Selbyyille, DeL, wasalmost totally wiped out by fire thatcaused $100,000 damage,. r

Crzzzizizi Ert?Eyt inflaacd by

a m mm a

TT Just Ejt Comfort. AtYW Drum't 50c per Bottle. Esta CjiCztaiiTubctSSc TatZltltzZjiTTSSu

Pi(

PRACTICAL FURNITURE AND PIANO MOVERS

HA URGES

ENGINEER CORPS

TO BECOME FIT

Ursine them to fit themselves asguardsmen so that they might, if theoccasion should ever arise, be able towork side by side with the regularsof the United States army. GovernorPinkbam last night spoke to the 50members of the 1st Separate Companyof Engineers. X. (I. H.. at a smokerheld after the company inspection inthe armory.

Capt. Charles R. Forbes also spoketo his men. calling upon them to re-

spond to the details of drill and punc-tuality which mean so much for fit-

ness in the higher work of the guard.He suggested that within a short timethey would be Riven practise in ion-too- n

building, topography w:ork andfield work. Last night's was the firstfederal inspection that the companyhas undergone as it was organizedonly last autumn.

Col. C. S. Lincoln, who made the in-

spection, also inspected the staff off-

icers of the guard.

CIVIL WAR VETERANCOMES AS CLERK TO

ARMY HEADQUARTERS

Vincent It. Marsh, veteran clerk inthe western department army head-qufirte-

at San Francisco for manyyears, has been transferred tci thiscity for duty in the local headquarters.He will leave San Francis;- - Tor Hono-lulu soon. Marsh was a commissionedolficer of volunteers in the Civil War,making a fine record. j

Joseph A. McAree of Haverhill was'

held for the grand jury under $2,t)0'bond on the charge of manslaughterin connection with the death of MissAndover,. James Diquino. two and one-hnl- f

years old' wns burned to death in hiscrib at his home in Brideeoort

SAN FRANCISCO

Bellevue HotelGeary and Taylor Sti.

Strictly First-Cla- ss

Built of concrete anditeel. Private bath toevery room; 12 minutesfrom Exposition; head-quarters for island resi-

dents; Bates, $2 perday and up; Americanplan, i per day and up.

PHONE 4 9 8 1 General Offices, 65 S. Queen SU

'

1 !i Mmi... ''i

L

means giving aand care to foods

Phone 34G3

f

Do You Want a Servant?There is a servant who

is always efficient. Thisservant will cook your mealsfor you, quickly and withoutwaste or lost motion, yourkitchen will be safe fromdirt, from soot and fromashes. Your meals will besplendidly prepared withoutloss of time and withoutworry on your part.

This servant wants lesswages than the on e no woccupying the same place.The name of this servant isG AS the modern fuel.

For further particulars, call3424.

Honolulu Gas Co., Ltd."You will be pleased; with our service."

Do Not Cut Your Cuticle !

If you do, it will only grow thicker and more unsightly than ever.Instead use

This removes at once all surplus cuticle without cutting. WhenCUTEX Is applied with, a manicuring stick wrapped with cotton, thdead cuticle instantly becomes loosened and may be wiped off withhand or towel. It is absolutely harmless and its regular use willprevent rough and ragged growth of cuticle and keep the nails inhealthy,!' normal condition. Bottles :

J 25 cents, 50 cents arid $1Teach your children to care for their nails.Children's Manicuring Outfits, 25c.Free samples of "Cutex" may be had at

Benson, Smi th & Co., Ltd.The Bexall Store "Service Every Second"Fort and Hotel Streets j - . ; Phone 1297

Open Evenings Until 11:15

Securing rapid,growth in chicks

great

Remedies and ;

healthy

deal of thoughtarid remedies.

Foodsoffer a great variety, so that the suitable medicine or food can be had for every

condition ,

Ash for "New Poultry Wrinkles" FREE

.Ufoibnii Feed .Co., .

.Distributors for HawaiiP. 0. Box 247