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From San Pra nchjee:Wilbelmlna, Aug. I.
For San Francisco; 3:30Lurlina, Aug. 4.From Vancouver:
Niagara, August 12. " " J V I V I I J v IS" II I I I I I - I IFor Vancouver: EeitioV
Marama, August 11.
Upi
ill!
i
Evpnin? Bulletin. Va. 1SS2. No. r,i2iHawaiian Star. Vol. XXII. No. MG3
i9udU u Ll$)uu IkuilLUJU'
.OO o oo o o o o
BRUSSELSOO OO
REPORTS B
TO JOIN AND IFCRUISER PANTHER IS SUNCt- -
GOEOEN AND BRESLAU
FIERCE FIGHTING Jl BE
Associated Press Service by Federal Wireless
oo
SAN FRANCISCO, CaL, August 5. Telegraphic dispatchestoday from the theater of war in Europe say that theFrench naval squadron in jthe Mediterranean sea has sunkthe German cruiser Panther and captured the German,cruisers Goeben and Breslau. I
BRUSSELS, Belgium. August 5. The Belgian minister.of war. today declared that the Belgian forces are success-fully cbmbatina' the German invasion of the country and
United
................
PACSES. HONOLULU, TEKUITOKY
OO
oo OO
OO
OO
OO
r-- i r r rrressBritish
mines..French German British
HULL, merchantmen
that the. losses arelrifling as compared with those Mob Wrecte German EmbaBSV
)UUi) "iBlsuubwuZnltk;"'
Mr U mm MMmmELGIANS HAVE REPULSED GERMAN
ENGLAND NEUTRALITY IMPOSSIBH
v of; thfo afFsffi:' ? :: '
; i ST.PETERSBURG,; Pussia--yi- a August 5. A mob, infuriated through' thefhopre Liege ' last ninht. ; :'
f NEW YORK. N. rY.. AunUSL frOm Belaium Th0!.aiithnriH allino hn'iho !riiipKH hnilu a Rnian fnnfrtiaii,,irf! thp; k that the Gerrpans ye captured Vie set fire to embassy, shot the head and body, the authbrities lalrrf the
inwnni lirnPnTail 15crilsn rPnnriPn in HP fin , ,ThArmnk fnxnnrl nn nntiinnA hniiMnrlAiii hi ik fri tin Win hi nnH I
"
' ' - : . fn efroo uh it --A ac lhht ci hm fko . 1" --. , L'u TTv'
members ;pf the irnbfidcalflagiW t6 , dowrr tj?e ! 1agles ,
rH embassyxim? erif wo .f'toifevwiffiffi 1
USWaYORK; AtidUst mmmikh iqvl'w.reck embassy successful
destroyer sunk, carrying down' 30 men. remain;: says thalyMing'. oi.
der rescued. ., ; ? -- i?. i -- : ,.A ..: .J . : .;: ;,;rK,:1. t .ii. ii I,! ,"i ,!') I CCATTI C lAfnoU C lT"-- i OnnniiUn AAiiAnnmAnt linn turn cilKirvin- -
mm.
TAKEN;
SON S
kot expected!S O VF Mill
Wife cfi President in Serious. Cqrwitian Physician v 4i
";Hope. ;
Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, wife of I
the president' of theStates, who is expected to j
live through the night. I
1Associated Press by red. Wireless.WASHINGTON, C Aug. 5-- Late
this afternoon. It became known thatfor two days Mr.-Wilso- n has beenpartially unconscious and steadilygrowing The . White Housephysicians have abandoned hopeher and it is feared she will be unableto survive the night
WASHINGTON, ,D. X. Aug. 5. Mrs.Woodrow Wilson, wife : of : pres-ident Is declared to be In a critically illcondition at the White House. Thepresident is transacting olfjeial
from his wife's Theirdaughters have been called home. Acomplication, of nervous ..disorders,
which Mrs. Wilton has sufferedsince latt March, Is given as the cause
her ten'sus illness now. :
ington
o--o
in
ncfe:- -'
iscxtected.
TODAY'S MAJOR
LEAGUE RESULTS
NATIONAL LEAGUE.;J At New York New 3, Chi
cago 0. -
At BostonBoston 4, Pittsburg 0.At Philadelphia Philadelphia. 5,
Cincinnati u v v : I
At -r- ooklyn-r-SL' Louis 4, Brooklyn
cago 4.
2. .
Detroit4, v.: :.
Louis
3,
Hoy
W L. Pet62 34 .64854 44 .551
Boston 53 45 .541Louis 50 47 .515
51 49 10................ 47 .485
New York 43 55 .43932 .320
New .............. 53 37 .59052 45 .536
Louie ............... 52 47 25'Boston . 45 16.
. 45 48 .484.............. 51 .46341 49 .45639 52 .429
Knaanaanaanaann .v 8
12 OF HAWAII, WEDNESDAY, 5, 11)14. 12 PACES.
o--o
JU
OO
'Wffi$0$$tfps All Eumpeoo oo..'; o o--o oo Orr
LGIUH Anifruetmm mmaI
i i r i r-- i i i --.LASSociaxea ;
Eng., Aug. 5. The cruiser has sunk the Hamburg-America- n steamerLuise,.which found
A towing a large steamer, has under the Island of
fortress.Eng., Aug. 5. Several German whose crews have declared
prizes of war the British government.
Belgian'
"rlotfiri'Hrt'ntnf hin'" Morio hu urorinH fhamans investing hera
rT
tho nf,.,'.'report, arid through stabbedabout the
IMP I'Tinin thKAimh a nnintinnfire. : nitifro fKo oro im v . V 1
OnsurrcdrihousandermirowsLice:, OcIgiiirrL;-:- uf wonilOJr'ndiholSteti
-- A'a5,The,boilers
; i .. T P i" ; J
similar attempt .(theiiAustriinif proved .owing .
strong police;prbtdctioti. ' '!
has nfRJWu8H 57Tt7THe,riewspapa:!i;e'Pcijpie'-- vo British'trbeps
i t .. t " i- .. -- 4 1 Aimnof Uniinht '
not
5
weaker. -
for
the
bus-iness bedside.
from
for
York
' ,
mi
mostly
.wun i k.k., iiaoiu, nuyuoi i n& vaiiauiaii yuiti iiiiiiii uwuyiii juuiiiuwere being built in a local shipyard for the
PARIS, France, August 5. war office announces that the Belgians have anni-hilated two regiments of Prussian Ohlans. , ,V
BRUSSELS, Belgium, August 5. French troops, supporting neutrality, enteredthe'province of Hainault to the Belgian in opposition to the Germans.
The Belgian in the province of Liege have repulsed the advance. Bel-
gian batteries destroyed a German pontoon bridge the Meuse,A but the (in-vaders at Maastricht. ': 'yr:-:-
Vancoiiyer-Mo- b
, , ' ; rf,. VANCOUVER, B. C, August 5. An excited mob today assaulted .'.the. German,consul- -,
At ch-Ph- u."?"."cm: . ate here "and fpre' the imperial eagle. -;r
At Cleveland
'
wasn' 'lunuun, tngiana, Augusi o.--T- wenty-oneruerm- an
., '5arresxeo
-- ?. vpnn- -
c v. v ..;-- fcipally British naval centers.j - in important ,
York 14, Detro: iThe report that Viscount ..Morley, president of the tocal council; and Burns,At New
At SL St Louls 10, Boston; v dent of theIdcaF 'governmeht boards had resigned isconfir
They StandAMERICAN LEAGUE.
PhiladelphiaWashington ............
.............!St'Detroit
50
Cleveland .............. 68
NATIONAL LEAGUE. I
YorkChicagoSt.
48PhiladelphiaCincinnati 44Brooklyn .PitUburg ;
sugar.
ACOUST
nservice reaerai
LONDON, Amphion Kbenigin
was planting
gunboat, anchored Guernsey
are reservists beenby
; Londonrtftuiinor Crh'nrhce fiormone (Inrmnn omhaccu
ftmM prllnba
golcj
..The..were,
D.
:o
i na9 ihulines which Chilean navy.
--The
havejoin army
forts Germanacross river
later crossed
down
Cleveland spies nave. Deen,. - r:-;--
.
John presi- -
Chicago
i : Earl has been appointed to succeed Visco unt Morley and Walter. RuncIman to succeed Burns. y ...
::
DOVER, England, August .5. Reports of a big naval were received here:with the arrival of the German steamer Franz Horn this afternoon. The steamer report-- "ed firing audible from many directions. Nothing was seen of the hostile vessels. -
Sweden, August 5. The announces that if Sweden :
finds herself unable to preserve neutrality, she will join Russia, Great BritainFrance. iyyyy :
;
ian Gunners Ca
7ft)
Beauchamps
engagement
STOCKHOLM, government
nnonading Invaderoyy' BRUSSELS," Belgium,! August 5. The minister of war has: announced; that ; from thefortifications in Liege the Belgiari.gunners. are vigorously-cannonading'the- ' German in-- ?
vaders. A German officer taken prisoner: said that the J Belgian resistance amazed ,theGerman staff. - " vv'va :yy yviy--
PORTLAND, Maine, August 5. Heavy firing at sea has ' been heard here seemingly,, from the vicinity of Seguin island, about 25 miles south.
SUBMARINE TENDER ALERT. --
The United States navy sabnlarinett Sugar Jumped up from 3.29c 8 tender Alert, Lieut Bruce U Canadatj to 3.51 c yesterday, according 8 commanding, has arrived at the port2 tTSSwe: V 5 trim San Francisco. The Alert Is2 NCISC0; :t"h,ir 5 !ooked a tt "mother ship" forSugar: 96 degrees test : .tt Previous ht submarines to be stationedquoUUon. 3.29c. 88 8 here. Honolulu will be the home oftt8a8 88tt888t28a the Alert for some time to come. Oth--
" ,er officers in the little vessel are: En- -Por Rent Store 40x30, office room,'
shop 45x24; '15-roo- m house. .signsi P. W. Scanland. Frank J. Lowry,V For Sale 11 acres land; lot on Mil- -'
p A. Surgeon Reynolds Harden. AsStler str. j Paymaster R. E. A. Lambert Chief
H. E. HENDRICK. Machinist C. J. Collins, PaymasterMerchant and Alakea. Phone 2648. Clerk H. F. Wight. '
, .
..
-
.
oy wireiessjj
v.
.
.
.
..
.
." - -
'-
"
"t"-'- V-- vy-
f ' CALLING HOME THE RE-- -: ' SERVIST8. : j ? 5 4
r "On 7 Is 4page today a striking4- - article dealing with the STATUS4 OF SOLDIERS in i tha Unitedf States wh are subjects of the --f
--f foreign counties Involved In the--f EUROPEAN WAR, ; tt It by the --f4 author of "HONOLULU IN WAR-- 4
TIME,", the article In yesterday's4 Star-Bulleti- n thai attracted such 4f atention. '
;:-- V v.":..-- f
4 The N EWS ALL1 the news 44 and FIRST, In the CTAR-C'JL- - 44 LETIN. - v-"-.- w. 4
V
OO
I:'-- '
: ,r-- '. ' f .customs, this morning, received froa yjQXXTWashington, D. C, tha folio wins' cabledispatch signed tiy,W. P. Malburn, as-
sistant secretary of the treasury I .Trealdent haa issaed a formal nen-traiit- y
proclamation. Will be published, in treasury decisions Direct erery person la your employ to observeneutrality; laws.' ;
-r
- Commenting 'on the matter, (Collector , Franklin said . that . the full .de-tails regarding tts president's actionwill be ia tta trc-r-- ry de--
OO
o--o
OO
OO
PIHCE FIVE CENTS
OO . OO
TROOPS
SWEDEN RUSSIA
Ivhbs
mubXuCUicdJGArsatisindeavinhg
Attacksl:Gerima;tt
BRITISH WAR OFFICE CALLS if
FOR VOLUNTEERS; MAY SEfiiriirrimiiihi in i.iikJii. l in
Associated Press Service by Federal Wireless'
s.J
LONDON, England, August 5. The British war, officek
?
has called for volunteers, which taken -- to indicate t thatRritlch lonrl foroe mil) ha eani nn on nsnni4',Ht 4 4U n. '
i iwjii iuiiu ivi vbg niu uc otui uil ail CA(JCUUIU( IU liiC UUIitinent. '
.' V -
Premier Asquith announced today that tomorrow he willj ask the House of Commons for the appropriation of .an-- .viiii nan u u uu a a u ciiici uciiuv ijkn. . . v
The report that Viscount Morley,. .lord president
. . of ;th;i i i I -
uuunuii, ana junn ourns,, presioenroi me local governmentboard, had resigned4 iV confirmed. They did not agree with :
Britain's stand for the maintenance - of- - Belgian neutrality1 !1
and the British ultimatum onthe ubiecti :;
LONDON, England, August 5; The British governraent : .
plans to assume control of aH ood supplieslln .the BHUsh rf :
isies lo preyeni exioriipnaie prices. r , :'.- -:
Britain Grabs TuriiA BaWfiirp'iLONDON, .England, Jua'ust':S:-4Th- e Britfsh-obv- ern
Turkish 1 battleships, 1 one of which.: is completed a andvvt 1other. nearlyiGCompiete.Triey 'Will-be- , riamec; the AgiricoL
, : WASHINGTON, D. C, August 5.r-Pres- ident Wilsonhas;-- .offered.the European' Powers the 'good offices of thel!.XTt 51ed States in the hope of some peaceful settlementany other act to avert needless hardship in war-timV- .v ;;;
State department advices today report that mobs. haviVdestroyed the German embassy in St. Petersburg. pii'.Xr. 5
Russian embassy at Berlin. One German employe isVrc'pc:
ed killed.-- ' : - ,
Pacific Vessels May be Needed Vf'
port here has received 'orders from the treasury depcrtr!' tin Washington to compile the tonnage records pf dKArr,;;i- - -
merchant vessels iri the coastwise ' trade which tH".can :
available for pbssibfe service in the Atlantic.
I miiio, riauuc, huuuoi v;,"iuc raiidiaii ujuoc liavc -
rested 42 Germans of both sexes as spies." - v-- :
LONDON,: England, August searching G:rman j domiciles today found q uantities of bombs end .riC.:
Several arrests , have been made. ;
tmormnn rnr r.nsr nntfnnrnn amlzSAN FRANCISCO, Cal., August 5. The Germcn jcr
Eastern squadron has sailed northward from Tsinatau. Itidestination is unknown. The German Lloyd liner viFfir V
Eitel fnederich is accompanying as an auxiliary. ; ri;NEW YORK, N. .Y., August 5. Tvelve thousand ;rc::r
ists are here without moneyr employment or transp:j::ti:and are unable to join their respective colors in vilrc;They are trying to find some means of getting to ihtlthome countries. - - ; y'-:- y -- )
Cc5c5' Ccf, Germany Isolated y r .'; '.: ?NEW YORK, fJ. Y., August 5. All direct cables to .Ger- -,
many from the United States have been cu east lof ;,theff i .t l ruv : in uvi iiiupiu - rM ii n npin c n r-- .... , ! i
Germany is completely isolated. y
ncre.
il
is
Ihrchanlrnen ConfiscatedV'
i i
;
:
iv ...
BERLIN, Germany, Aug. he Information coming fromol a riot in which the German embassy was destroyed U not bill evd
fl
Several German . merchantmen In British water havji been tfJifj-c- J
prlzesjr war, Inctuding the farla Leonhardt In .the Thafnes and:v, tgla, which ' waa carrying 73 ervists and a large; cargo of fpo2.u.. ?v
v: Xf'.ir- - ' '"'-;'-"
TOKIO, Japan, Aug. 5ACount Okuma,Japanese premier, In a ,strtment Issued tcday riys that If Japan Is compelled to Intervene-t- o ;rcctBritish ccbnles, she will not send a naval or military expedition prope.- - i :.v Ss'tyVt-fri'S:- ' '
' O- 'r:
f t
"i;
-!
f
)I
i
TWO
BERLIN, Germany, August 5. German banks are re-
ported to commandeered Russian deposits.
Relief Ships Sail Tomorrow. WASHINGTON, D. C Aufl. 5.
which will carry (8,000,000 in goldabroad, will not be able to sail until
The cruiser North Carolina willfunds, the North Carolina going to
xaB7
have
Americans in the southern part of the continent, while the Tennessee viirelieve the necessities in northern countries.
CONSTANTINOPLE, Turkey, Aug. 5-- Turkey has formally closed theCosphorus. and the Dardanelles straits, as she has declared neutrality and
. will not permit the sea-passag- es to be used for the war vessels of any
Germany Invades Hollandf ' tTJLPURG, Holland, $ GermanAug. forces have invaded Holland at
thlc point.
WASHINGTON, D. C-- Aug. 5.;, tlon bill two, Congress promptly granted President Wilson's request for the
appropriation of $2,500,000 for the reliefr The government plans to send
; atonora In: New York the $10,000,000Kronprinzessln Ceclle, which put back from the European coast and tookrefuge at --Bar Harbor, Maine.-- .. The cutter Androscogain was this
Inn h rTjrtla (rfilUPC.
V ' iNEW .YORK. N. VJ Aug. 5. TheMorgana Paris housa $5,000,000 inericans in Europe who cannot get their travellers etiecka ana ptner forms or
' " negotiable paper cashed.' 'Assurances are given by the Bank of France thatmore gold can be had if It Is needed.
FRENCH SINK GERMAN GUNBOAT' . PARIS. France. Auaust 5 --A number of individual naval actions between
l . thaiFrench and German vessels arereceived word that the famoua German gunboat Panther, the warhlp"whoseBDDaarance In Alaeclras a few yean
- was In action with a French cruiserwasaunk. .
: ''--' ; ' ': .
';
'.. '.
GERMANS SINK BRITISH MINE LAYERLONDON. Enoland. Auaust SThe
will
were directorsxo
nlThe
turn
is
- m
i
--The American cruiser v Tennessee,for relief of distressed Americans
tomorrow. ;:also sent Europe' reliefthe money
passing an appropria
Americanscutters deliver
In carried by the German
afternoon assigned the duty
Bank France given J. Pierpontgold on to relieve distressed Am--
rumored. The Havas. has
nearly general war,the of Algiers yesterday and
between
- - - - r
7 ...wn,wr..
ai Mn T IS. .STTrrrj the
Germany and England. took today and resulted in the sinkings of aBritish mine by the German fleet. The British torpedo boat Path-finder was pursued by "the German ships but escaped.
iCreat Britain formally declared .war against Germany r o'clocklast night. Admiral Sir John Jellicoe wa fllven aupreme commandof .the British --fleet, with the rank of admiral. - '
. J
ABANDONS FLIGHT FORNEW YORK, Ni Y., August 6 Lieutenant Porte of the . British navy.
Who expected pilot 4he America in transatlantic . flight, de-
cided yesterday to return Cngland as reservist. He expects sail to--,
night the JLusltanla. . ''""..,"' : '.. 'vCHICAGO BOARD MEMORIALIZES WILSON . !
WASHINGTON, p. C August -- 5 At a meeting of the Chicago Boadi4 of
Trade held yesterday the directors decided to memorialize President Wsonto' uie m Influence iwith the ifovernments of GennWGreatrlUiol France
. i -- at- ..... v.n.o.4 l m ruMiMlH full A4I aO.TOAffttUffalrise W prlp ,o)iodstuffr
Unless some. stepaara Uken' 'C -
to request the Chamber; Oom
Ena ins ointr nnun nuwvcfsclared not contraband eT.WarAtmbrmkr
u throughout Europe'result in much
In this direction. f- :..;Steos also taken by the
. wnmrrm fif tntJn tea oeuiio
Mediterranean Sea with
abroad.
hat
newsageney
ago precipitated
first ..engagement
1
layer
sevenVice
PORTE flGHT
hydroplane
"suffering.
siansplace between $25W00O and .$40,000,000 the credit ;the .forelgrti ex- -
'chance to be used to facilitate the export of gralri.,(,, ' ' ' i,n 1
,
This action was decIded.upon.foUowijnariejormaiJfsuiaa.ox..jjcmation by President Wilson yesterday, declaring the :neutraHty.oMhe .Unrted
j
k tit v i. w. ' r
--j THY SP.fUJTS OF' GERMANYCALLED OUT,CERLIN, Germany, August of,the German force Is pro- -
ceedlna smoothly and quietly;:-Militar- y trains are being aent.awaonly atr!-h- t. There Is much enthuJiasm. ; All Indication the pdpular; vjave;
f enthusiasm for war. is snown in me racs x eignty vnwn ;......; have joined the colors In addition to the regular-army-. - j ,- -
t addition, the Boy Scouts Alliance. Germany k Issued, call to
the youth of the country, requesting them to hasten to the assistance fthe
Fatherland act in some capacity, either as bicycle service or a gathefeM
cf the crops now awaiting harvest. addition, allyUnlyeralty students inave. 'teen called to the colors., :,j ;
y-H'J.i- 0.y.lf::-- ;
' Af.CASSADORS INSTRUCTED TO RETURN .
LONDON, England,. August 5. Events moved rapidly yesterday andtMs morning found Great Britain and Germany formally at war, an ulti--tnVstum from Downing street addressed to Berlin being followed 'seven
- . . m i - I . 4 f 'ut -o clock .oy a Tormai getipruBn vi
ht teuton at Berlin was a counterGermany. German ambassador
heme at once, while the British
'
.
a
'
emergency
of
to
off
- .
Tn ITIIU- -
' '
to
of
to of
Of
ofto
In
'
at
part theat uonaon innamuassaoor uernn " nu
. .food stuffs advanc--- ,
LONDON, ngland, Auaust mob gathered outside the '.GernjanCrr.tsiry, Carlton Howe Terrace, here, nishtrosned. and heattdMfiS'ikrally hurled stones, breaking window in the , v - v
TEXT BRITISH DECLARATION AVAR, ' v '
LONDON," Ensla'nd," August 5. Following her decUfaVlort' rf"thecrltlah foreign issued the following public atatement: s.--- ) :i- ..
-- Owing to the summary rejection by the German 8qvernmn1: of theby His Majesty Bovernment that the neutrality ofBelglum
retltcted. Hiss Maesty'. ambassador Berlin has receivel .nl..:pas.II retoected His Malesty'a ambassa has declared to the German .govern,
rnent that a state of war exists between Great Britain Germany from',e,eV
It was frst' reported that Germany had 'declared, war .upon, .Great,;
Britain, but this Uter to bean error,due toiaaitake.in aaUte.menW;en:eJdmS,lt becam UactlcaPcerta.nty hai Em--
k. int th Eurooean war. retail prices of food Jumped
to war prices. In Liverpool the pricesfftv cer cent ana wwt 7 Tfna suppiy .gainst a scarcity. Some of the atorea aoW I aarly In
tJdaV forced to close their dpora, to low were their etocks.
M Gllxgow famine already threatens. An Indication of the Increasewhich Jumped from to twelve cents .
In food prices la shown by augar,a P"n . . - mfthiiratlon la well under way 'the .nation will
able to throw a force two hundred thousand men across thela being to.
nel at a lew num, ,wnvgether.
A great transport --brought
stations of conseqqence are being operated of...sl"nal corp. and all private wireless .Ution. have been part ally dl-- ef.'v
,,tm eoatt of Entland and Scotland U llned'wlth grealthlMiehl. and a day and night watch
preach of dirigibles.
F. E. DAVIS & CO., LTDi
BANKRUPTCY COURT
a! petition order and subpoena, Is- -
4y Judge --Charlea F.Semons, summoning F. Davis &
no Ltdi of this city to appear In theTTi' i Aort in answer to charges
ankruptcythiarnorningwere
25ic?5 --S and Hamilton . ofand Holmes Drug
CalifornU, ftemarx and the Illinois
if V stated to the record of theonLJ;th; tlocalompany in, debtcase the amounts of
oiv3.ii. ' of the firm havemembersUvely. Thebeen notiSed to appear. iugust 24."
the
be to withIpr
By
revenue tj tc the corvgold
ofcredit
acoast
.naval
r
oecnwnr
Th4 W n m
place
tote a
on
to
;
In pf
na ownat
xn general. were
OF OF
cf'office
at
was found
me sxorcout
...of
fleet
bynien
--tk.
fj
E.
of
of
--will bemalntalnedfor ,tht ap-- I
mmTemperature 6,a. m.. 79: & a. ro.
81; 12 noon, 82; mlnln)um last nlgbt,.' ,f7. -
. . v i- .' -.
; Wind a, vl, E-10;-1; 8 a. tn.; E-2- 4 ;10 a.-- m, E-1- 5; 12 noon, E-1- 2; move-ment past 24 hours, 36. v
Barometer at 8 a. mi 29.99; dew-- ,point at 8 a. zxl. 70; relative humidity,8 a. m, CS; absolute humidity, S a..m
' " " " "7.667., Total rainfall during p.st 24 hours,trace. ,v
'
A meeting of the members of theHumane ;Society, scheduled for 9 1 30
uuwi tvuc m5i(:nWuoBuauaepiem-.Blght,'a- s
HOKOLtJLU BTABULLETIff, yEftftffip..yTj ACOnST., in. v.
ROillMBYAO CLUB'S VORI.
Organization Hears From Live; Wires, Inclucurig grazier-- - .
Dinner Tomorrow' Night
"That three miles and a half ofroad" on the ether side Is passable andwill be in good shape. Thfs Is thereport of the Aid club committee andit was accepted with the usual una-
nimity at the nooii session today. Thenew belt road "hr the vicinity of thecannery is "what's the matter withthe belt road," at the present time.
Today's program of the Ad club wasvaried. Three young ladies from theBostonians rendered a few songs tillIt was a question whether the clubdidn't prefer the songs. Then Dr.McLaren gave some live running firehumor, winding up. with a good boostfor Hawaii and the Ad club. CharlieFrailer was given a welcome homeand gave a short talk on the Torontoconvention. He did not tell the wholestory v
and the dub will hear more ofit at a later session. Frazier says thathe found the Honolulu Ad club' uniqueIn Its capacity to do" things. Otherclubs are, trying it but, none of themany he ran" across had quite the gin-
ger of this club. ; ' ; '; X'Thursday ' night, tomorrow.' is: the
dinner to talk oyer the accounting sys-tem "of the territory and counties.- - Abanner crowo hr expected' M ttye ill
ba genea;;i JXt weekWuirsdaM Is Iionolulttf kly 4t (whichtime 'the proWemof "taking" care of i
the men of the army win, be up foraiscussion. ,2 r : .... a.
HAP USED IN THE
JOSEPH A. flflVLE
The prosecution in .the case- - of? JosAv Doyle, idragging throughph now
.-
.A - i A
iae-- leaerai couri iqpaue. .secona iime,tha lintrodueed ,a map aeUag" focth allhe. nooks and; crannies in the board--
sjsted the prpiecujtipn out theducted by .the defendant,-an- 4 aroundwhiCfh la .woven much fit the eyldfencdthus far brought, out in the .trials "
Assisumi .Liainci .Aiiqrney J. v.Xho'mpsph claims the credit' fromj thedesigner's standpoint; . Bailiff,
t Sii?ieiBmllk I placed lie blaaboara: iaHd'frame' !ri eiEtcev and1 'Attorney" : ClaudiusMcBnrdef attbrnet ' fdr the 'defehsel 'assisted the prdsiciuidh:ltl laVihg'bnt thefloor plan of the establishment' ' The'assistant district attorney BVldehtlymade a good' job of the map .from'thfe'fact that those witnesses, who thus! faraave been called ; appear r to recbgniiethe location of the lanais and rooms;
Mrs. Viola. Lukens. better known as"Mrs.Doyle .No. 3,". took .? the -- staridthis morning) was subjected tobut , brief examinations by . the prose-cution and the defense. 1 AlexanderNahaolelua, who says he lives at Waiklkl. testified regarding an Incidentwhen the present Mrs. Doyle is alleg- -
ed"to have applied at his residence forboard .and room, Ma Sung Kwan, whonn to a month and a half ago used to
msnes at tne iJoyie estaDiisnment, wascalled as a witness ror tne prosecutlon.
Prom the manner in which' the witnesses are being called and the speedy--m !Tf n V in -- Mrhirh --t'f are"T)eln s1 disposed of, indications are that botbthedefense and the prosecution .will ifesttheir cases at an early date, and thatjLhe case will go to tbe jury much soon-er than it did da: the first trial. Qourtadjourned at noon, being continued'unitil 8:30 o'clock tolnorrow morning '
ferrtHSRiivlnun fjuitkUi ijfj
WWMMMmm tract
Jif i
Chase s. Desky,-- sales agent for theMclnerny .Park tract, reports, amongthe week's real- - estate sales, the pur-
chase .pf lot 8 by severalofficers of the 2d Infantry sta-
tioned at Fort Shatter.1 Mr. -- Desky, states " that business Isvery brisk, notwithstanding the Euro- -'
pean crlsis.r. He 'also believes thatHawaii will suffer, little, if any andthat the near future will witness.' awave of prosperity which will pervadethe entire territory.- - '. -- r. i
As evidence ; that" his " "opinions areshared by" others, he cites the factthat people are continuing to make investments in land with .the expectation--
of erecting permanent homes.; -:::
. .......', .
t Another postponement has ; beenmade In the lnjunotlcn nroceedinrsbrought against, Ubby; JicNelllfe Ltb--by Company bv, the Kapiolani estate..It la postponed "for one month! Thesuit is one to restrain .the comoanyfrcw continuing the use, of a drainpipe .which, ;lt is alleged, runs overthe property1 of the estate. ' 1 ;
-- capt! w. v. kolb, n. g. h.:Whether the metf of ! Company D are
rvidd witTi uniforms or not. I want
.gaUery 'practice .only uriH be.
declaration of war on ofldean the rooms and yard and wash
lasthouse.
and
five
and
o'clock this morning, was .postponedythem to show' up at the armors to- -'
PllUlflliCHARLES A. RICE
: FORMALLY FILEDt ', ': ' - -
Many, Influential Republicans'ori List Wdorsing His Can- - V
!
fJidacy'for Delegate ;
The nomination papers cf CharlesA. Rice.' candidate for the Republicannpmlnailon for delegate to Congress,were filed this, afternoon;
On the list indorsing Senator Ricefor delegate are many prominent busi-
nessmen and. the list also shows thename of a number. of influential Ha-walia-
who carry weight in the Re-
publican party.The signatures are as follows:Alexander Lindsay. Jr.. K. A. Mott-Smit-
T. M. Church. Fred T. P. Wat-erhous- e.
D. ; K. Hoapili, Sr., JamesWakefield. J." A. Akina. James K. Lota,Albert Horner, George G. Guild, JohnH. Soper, George H. Robertson, GeorgRodiek, J. F. C. Hagens, James Mc-
Lean, W. H. Charlock. Albion F.ni.t. 'r Th rr.it x t i..i r
Angus? Frank Andrade,'
J M
Dowsett. Wm. Yap Kwai Fong. J. D.Marques. Arthur Kahaawinui, F. C.Atherton,, Manuel J. rSerpa, F. D. Low -
tying
JMawae, I Auu o Australian' met.Amana, J?aoakalani, anchor behind the breakwater.Jr Thprnpson. predicted the
iL AhakueJO, Noble, AntoJ in seek-ni- o
Castro C. M. A. St.' ponx present
K. conflict in ; Britain isAki6nat John Waterhouse, J. P. CookeH. M. yon Hol!t,JE.Ov White,, Ed wardPFogaxty. k.'Ri.chards, Wong'Tin .iohg'A,:; L."; MacKa,ye Lui'!fY,aT --- '' i. I.. - ; t ' v . j
PAPULAR CLOSED
UNTIL FAMOUS
PLAYERS APPEAR
5.' A Xatipn's Perilt-aphctopla- made'was to hae
eewil-4aL- t nr'HqBfar heater,uradatfrfdaSV anl-sltfirdaV- 'of this
wfeejc, mil ljee, jh? ajvoilablyitlelayeai'sanoiafeed at' a
This --theater wili clcsed fo al- -
teraUoitwifendinu the open tnr of feamBlaic'a.FamousoPlayBhract Wedne;dayintowi rtnnlngi at Yd Liberty
1 fllll: till i l lv". flllLr ai l LiV l
;
I
rAssorlatfiVl Ptpm Tiv FhI. "Wlwtpugf.1 r
-- u. I' ukcuiMATAM'-- nc ., vv .m ,
wnaieDanKmg ana currency commit-- .tee today xn the final nominainorw maae wuscn Tor tneFederal Reserve Board. The nomina
of Paul-Warburg- against whoma fight has been made of hismembership In.the firm of Kuhn, Loeb
Co was confirmed, and thealso favorably on
the name of Frederick A. Delano, whoi. president of the Monon route raroad well-know- n Chicago capital1st man of affairs. 4
T I.T. .
--W. WAtrcify ahdVointy en--
filneerill; subniltbjs firit jnobthlyrsjnext
vrk.X1H. . R. .JOHNSON, travelling stew
ard for the K. Is through passenger the liner Maru that
at r Honolulu from the Orientthis morning.
JOHN W, CATHCART. city andattorney, who returned from
three months --vacation yesterday, wasat his today outlining the prose-cution work of .his office.
J. C- - COHEN, candidate for mayoron the Republican ticket, appearat four, political meetings in the remaining days of the week to speakthe. interests his candidacy.
W, W. THAYER, secretary of territory, left for HIlo yesterday. He willappear- - before the board of supervis-ors there in the interests the settle-ment of the Front street widening pro
"' 'ject,"-'--- . -
CHARLES R. FORBES, who assumes the duties superintendent ofnublic works 15. was a departing passenger on the Mauna Kea forHilo' this morning. - Mr, Forbesremain on the tBig ? Island ten
JOSHUA'D. TUCKER, commisionerof public lands left for the Big Islandon the Mauna ; Kea this morning forvisits to Kawaihie. and South
At the rWaimea courthouseat noon tomorrow he will sell at aus- -
tlon , three acre home-stead lots of the Walmea townsite.
C. GOODRICH, for yearsidentified with the Toyo Kisen Kaishaas in Its seevral liners whohas been acting In the capacity offar eastern representative, is pas- -
seneer for the mainland in the ShinyoMarp. -- .Mr. .
may aeciae 10
t. W . i ' ;
Rin bipp bai i v ijHinivn hprf. RmvililU IUUL llfLLl Ulllli lUllLllLiUllll
LFIfRMAY
RESULT FROM WAR
IHIlOUGH EUROPEiHi i 5 i ;
I
British Tonnage May BeTakenby, Government for Use in .
ihe Transport, Service
Honolulu may et be brought faceto face with coal amine of no meanproportions. ,
For some years past the bulk of theiuei nas oeen mio me islands by means cf British tonnage.
t
coming from the continent of Aus--
tralia.A European nar that to date has
succeeded in up a large numberof vessels flying the Union Jack isnow expected to result in awithdrawal of the fleet of freighterswhich heretofore have been operatingIn the Pacific in the capacity of trampcargo J
But one vessel of fair tonnage isnow believed to be well within theranee of th islnmls with nshipment of coal. This vessel is the
, Strathblane and it bears about 5600I tons of coal to the of the Inter- -
! "'ana steam navigation company.. Over at Kahulul. Alaui, the little Ahverican barkentine Hawaii, with about!
' rayed against Germany, Honolulu wjllyet feel the pinch '"because 'of a dis -
tinct shortage of fuel.: ' '..
" .
j ' That coal if brought from British ,J Columbia or Japan will.soar in pricela c,pnrlIlv, tworrt ;
,,iV,eoPbrta!a . ample
.for,
. Irequiren'.enis.. ,i ne constant1 1 - I
dim --iucreabing "uemanus upon thestore is a tpatter that Is causing localimporters much grave concern.
BRITISH CONSUL SAWNO WARLIKE MOVte IN
TRAVEL IN THE ORIENT
4I saw no indications of impendingconflict between Great Britain, Rus
I
siai and Germany, while Iri Jnnan. AtinemeeT leaving roiconama oennd
;on' July' 27, m friendly telatioris .e-- f
ianng between1 the great potv'ers hadot,been!eVere.,''remarked' His'Bri- -
L. S. Gordon who returheu' frrfm'aj
rey, Amos Abraham A. ot nues atAhlo, M. Cv W.Sam Kaeo,k William ) It is. that with" wlth-A- .
John. A. drawal' freightersD. V. Forstex, ing a friendly during the
C. Piianaia,;M..'A. Kane. WiUiam which Great ar--
Manuel
V
be
RIP
IIU 1
uy,
passedDy Kresiaeni
tionbecause
& finallycommittee passed
and aand
T. aIn Shinyo
called
county a
office
will
inof
of
ofA.gust
willdays.
WaimeaKohala.
a number of
LACEY
Durser
a
Goodrtcn
a
imponeu
general
carriers.
Hav.nlian
order
IJieueui.
eeks! at Japan.w th
yru --can offenmo-commen- t .coaeaniogtthe troubiia for'' I 'haverange- - of't the actual newsfordays; added 'Mr; Gordon ,., : .
, A? number ft cables, and. letters awaitul i.' th . TritlK i .rrtnta rr . . anmd anil. 'tivat-itheinorL- ) l.Tfeeseiwere aellv-- '
wj' lvMUJUi wuubvuio uuiwi'iH r
who. visited the vessebat daylight.that
t.hadbentate 1iasles,(who will. this evening' take; passagein the Shinyo blaru for the coast; pay--
ing' the fine' of f 0O imposed-ib-
federal immigration authorities a!TOnaItTv forv traveling r between4 tkirn
American ports .in a foreign.
PALMER WOODS STILL
CflR nFl
rainier vruuus ucv
.ir.elUdll ll&Viy HV (till auuuuuirj ud44acy-4hi- s week.- - 1
'I have; not maae up ray. mma. fsaw inis morning, wncuer 10 run vrncr. i; 1 expect i.oeciae aeimneiy :
j1 ! krace woW
mean an .upsetting of 'previous ;calcu--
lations,- - aside from being a party4fight between him and I L.?ilcCahdless for the nomination, it would nodoubt have some strong Influence- - taithe Rice-Kuhl- o feature of the race,as Woods unquestionably would drawheavily from Kuhio's support, ."- -
CARD OF THANKS.
Sung. HI .and "desireto express their sincerest thanks tothe many kind friends who extendedtheir sympathies and tendered flow-ers at the time of their late bereave-ment in the death of their mother.advertisement.
A married man who owns an auto-mobile is in a position to acquire alot of experience.
FURNISHED HOUSES. ' '
m bungalow, piano and garage,!10th ave. and Maunaloa ave., Kai-ls- el
mukl. Mr. H. Ruger, R. C. Stackable,phone 2442. 5924-3- t
HONOLULU SHOE CO.
NOTICE OF ASSIGNMENT.
The Honolulu Shoe Co. having made)an asignment to the undersigned forthe benent of its creditors, notice ishereby given that all claims due thecompany are payrblc only to the un-- j
illJas. H. Love. CITY TRANSFER CO.
i .i- t - i . M ' I . i . . T." I ' ; " i : " I v t
TQ HELD
tJl S' M a a a X X K a
The Rice campaign committeewill hold a rally at ThomasSquare tonight commencing at S
a o'clock. There will be a numbera of g-o- d speakers, among them.a Chas. A. Rice, W. H. Rice, T. M.a Chuich, Lorrin Andrews, Judgea Alex. Lindsay. Jr., C. H. Olson.
A. D. fastro. James Wakefield. J.A. Akina. Wm. Mossman, Ed.Towse, E. A. Douthitt and Col-
onel" Ziegler. It is especially de--
sired that as many voters of thefourth district as is possible will acome to the meetnig. The een- - aeral public Is cordially invited. a
:- s x y. a g a y ,g a. a; X a
, ..T T t
TO AND I
FROM THE !
Special Wireless to Merchants f! Exchange .
!
(, t Wednesday, August 5.RfTViSallcH Aiipi.at' Ti S S Afflrt- -
; r TT11 I n .Inn loin)ovnwDV o.fij ! i q a
i. . . 'SAN August
-- ,5ft n .. s .j inrn iinnrv.wv w.i u.port SAN LUIS Sailed, August 4
S. Santa Rita forjlonolulu.Aerogram.
U. S. A. T. Login arrives from Ma-nila Thursday, 6 a. m., and proceedsto San Francisco same afternoon;meeting strong trade -- winds.
t PASSEXGEKS BOOKED
. Per Matson Navigation steamer Mai iwu., uue t xiu--
l1:"Kameo ,Hioki, MraJr- - roiSO. ,Jrs. y&i. McMahon
: Smith,' MrsvThos.'J. irDyv;Koyaj .escner, Mrs.f d ,riQ'' 'iff ' ftW'
rtu.'irr i 1
Mn. Xf.X, Tayl9r,jviiss Anne v. xezsen, j. u. uon- -
salves
PASSENGERS ARRIVEDy TA m i V C O OU!
V , . ?ulr S
sUf as d1lssenger,tW&,.a- - .?J"fBs "nnue, rara.
ifiToe Britlsh fConsulstated heffYfmoriyffVnlfrm"1
bottom
CONSIDERING RUNNINGFRATFQHIP
--y,V,,rr,"'
Sf'sH,lyJ "IK,"'..1
and
Chang family
BE AT
VESSELSISLANDS
FRANCISCrt-Sail- ed.
;5(?luiuMA''
Smith;,MJsB,.B.
.roiporiB?-ur'nenoinin- : it,; u. s. Aior
uui iwi jiaunoyu w
Summers, H. E. WesterveltMrs: H
Jff IM.1, J'V SIX1 fVf ri.fyJi.cui.Iii-- , imvter A. Westervelt. For San Francisco: Miss Clara A. Arbogast, S. Aka-mats-
E. E. Allen, Mrs. E. E. Allen,Wllhelm Carnap, J. I. C. Clarke, H. E.Clarke, Chi Hao Fel. Chang. TienTsal, Peter T Dzen, J. Danerl, MrsJ. Danerl, T. J. Dalton, Mrs. T. J. Dal
itoB, Miss J. Fair, Mrs. A. M. Frost,. .T - f--. A. Bonnell Fullerton,- T n.aana T T w r.rocno 3la.
erlne A. Wo--ff Hlm. K.lwmW. ProtA Inokuchi, Max ! Jones,r Leopold Ja
rT XXP X : TrOinaArf ? tff-l-' M a TV ft .
kita ReV a w. Koehler, Mrs. C. ;W.Koehler, G. L Kothny, K. Kitagawa,y. Kuroda, MiKushU-Fre- d A. Lewis,Miss K, G. Lyons, ;Rev,P.vP. Mediing.
K p--;
Medling and 4 children.I. V Morgan. Dr. H. A. Maeer.
n: Naeaoka" Paul Nolze. K. Otani. T.Okada, Rj" RocesX Roces,5: Mrs.! J.W.t Ragsdale, M rs. Xhas. H.-- Skwyef rMiss Carlotta Sawyer, Miss :N.ton, A. E. Schwabacher, Mrs: A. E.Schwabacher, C. T. 3hlpmanfr Mrs. --CT. Shipman, Miss Doris Shipman, C.P. Williams, , M .C-- P, WiUiams, J)r.J. Westerdijk, Mrs. S. Werntx, MissD. Williams, William Wbyte, Dr. F.B. Whitmore, Mrs. F. B. Whltmoreand 3 children, P. ;Yamanaka, Mrs S.Yoshida.
Marama Sailed from Suva.The Canadian-Australasia- n liner Ma
rama with a few cabin and secondclass passengers ;' from Sydney and .
Auckland, Is reported by cable' to T. !
H. Davies & Company, as MlUng' from '
Suva fcr Honolulu last evening. Thevessel will arrive here one day behlad j
the regular schedule. The Maramahas about 100 tons of Australian pro-
ducts for discharge at this port.
.tatrn a M a t-- - -
lexan Away iiiana runm. , ' 1
At the rate that mainland cargo 13 J
being discharged from the Amerirnn- -
Hawaiian freighter Texan that rc3- -
will.be dispatched from 'Monoljlu :
for Balboa, '.by the way of Island pons !
cn Friday evening. The" Txan . willabout C0.00Q, cases, of Dines in
addition to a full shipment of sugar.
Hyade. Loading at Hilo. vThe Matson steamer Hvari-r- , U to- -
flay completing cargo at Hilo. destine!fnr San Francisca The veasM v illsteam for the coast with about 7000ton3 of island products. ...
0 mm m
deTsigned. V All persons having claims! The master's renort approving theagainst the' company will present final accounts of Cecil Brown as ex--;them to ;he undersigned at once J. ecutor of the will of Maria ChapmanM. McCHESNEY, Assignee, 1C Mer- - was Died in the circuit court ye3ter-chan- t
street. 5924-1- 1 day. :'
Phone W81
mm bv
COLLISION
A ragged gash in the solid stwlstem at the bow of the Toyo KisenKaisha liner Shlnyo .Maru several feetin extent and some laches below thwater line was an object of much in-
terest to hundreds of spectators athe big vessel steamed to a berth atPier 7 about 8 o'clock this morning.
The turbines in the Shinyo .Maruare declared to have failed to respondto the orders from the bridge and acollision was inevitable. The hugeliner is said to have crashed on thelong Yokohama breakwater while un-der partly reduced speed, the forceof the impact tearing away about sixfeet of bow, turning the pond erousteel plates back from the stem as ifthey were made of cardboard.
The vessel was put back and a sur-vey held by the Japanese represen-tatives of Lloyds. This procedureserved to delay the Shinyo ft;r 24hours. The vessel was permitted
to Honolulu and San Fran-cisco. 'It was freely predicted thismorning that the" vessel will enter adrydock at the coast and should thisbe the case, it is barely possible thatthe Shinyo Maru will be obliged tomiss one trip to the Orient. The acci-dent Is believed will at leas dis-arrange the ! present ' trans-Pacifi- c
steaming schedules followed by theT. K. K. vessels.' '
. No blame Is attached to Comman-der H. S. Smith, a veteran in theT. K. K. line, according to the reportof the finding of . the board of sur-vey.
An attempt was made to regainsome of the time lost at Yokohama,the Shinyo bringing up to Honoluluquarantine anchorage at daylight thismorning.
A call was made at Keelung, For-mosa, on the homeward voyage, atwhich the vessel was supplied witnmany thousand cases of tea.
, The vessel brought 15 cabin, 4 sec-ond class- - and ,111 Asiatic 'Steeragopassengers, for. Honolulu. u Japanesemade up the entire number of Asia-tics for this port. ,4 ; v'Y ;.,.i' The Shinyo Maru Is sailing, for SanFrancisco at 5 o'clock .this .eveningfaking 76 cabin, 42 ,secopd class and149 "Asiatic;1 steerage paasengprs.
' ' While at'iHjonoluluV aeyefal, undreatbns 61" Orlehtal ,'cargo. 'Ml b,ej dis-charged' The Vessel is carrying a, largothrough ' cargb' Including much' rawsilk and tea, valued at more than$1,000,000.
The Shinyo Maru will take the nextTOtrtr-destTne- d for nieTnararaiid.
1e7STr-Furth- r Delayed. ianj.'Ihe-Uni- ted .States army
JjOgan from5ManIlavby way f Nagasaki is' further delayed in its arr.valat licmolultt according to latefwirllessreceived in thi3 city to lay. the Io?
ontiedK)Ut
5 o clock In the"; evening, while atthe Japanese port, the vessel was sup-
plied with several thousand .tons ofcoal. .
' '.' ' ' ; ' '
West. Virginia's Position.- Through her Poulsen wireless equip-
ment, the cruiser -- West Virginia thismorning at 11:2(1 o'clock reported herposition to the local Federal Wirelessstation, as follows: Latitude 25.28north, longitude 15.12 .west' .'.
i A' meeting of r thQ -- membera, of ;theboard of directors " of the Mid-Pacif- ic
Carnlval ha3 been called for 1:30o'clock -- tomorrow afternoon. 1
ou Can DoT iAmi- - 'Avriui :
Tour BestOnly Avlieii brain .anij
IhmIv. tm pwjiicrl :nourr
ft?4 J Jc V
r., : A...y - ' - FOOD--matlo from rh'oico wlieat
ami barley fcjitains --alltin nutriiiiPiit of 'tlies--?
ra i ns, and : fam ishi's inTH-rft'- ct lKiIancf the eliinents Xattm neoils furprojKT nonrisIiinent in"tin wav.
(risjy c ilsy to iYitildicirais to taste!
There's a Reason",--
iGrape-Wiit- e
bv Grocers andStores..
,Ui3PUbU tjii.
Shel
rcr
take
GUI
.
7
f -
'
RICEMill Harbor Officer Carter reports hav-ing found eight sailors and marines Th, CLARIONfrom the United States troisers SouthDakota and West Virginia in making
IS OROVING, SAY COM HOI; HE CLEAR OF WAR, HIS EXPECTED HAWAII PARTYhis
tomeans
the
rounds
mainlandof
The
transportation.
of themen
by
usual
thewill
first
hauntsbe
availablereturned
of de-serters. PHOENIX
Agency for
HOSE'tlSJ
THIS ADHERENTS NEED NOT FIGHT SAYS C. H. FEI ANNOUNCEMENT HAS ARRIVED
Steady Progress Made onOahu Shwn by Crowds of
' Voters at Meetings
What will prove to be one of tbelargest mass meetings of the earlyprc-prima- ry campaign will be held thisevening in Thomas Square by the par-
tisans of Charles A. Rice, candidatefor the nomination at the primariesfor Delegate to Congress. The west-ing mill begin about 7: 3U o'clock to-
night and W. "W. Chamberlain willpreside. Besides iir. Rice a numberof the best speakers in the city willappear on tbe platform in behalf ofthe caadldgcy of Claries A. Rice asdelegate.
In the Fifth district last eveningthere were two meetings, of whichthat at Liliha aad School streets wasthe principal orrb. Here both Mr.
. Rice and his father, W. H. Rice, Sr.,were given a most enthusiastic greet-ing by the many Hawaiian presentAltogether about 300 persons attendedthe meeting and all of the speakers
' . were given Interested attention.Most of the speeches at this meet-
ing were made in Hawaiian, but the.' ones made in English by Charles A.
Rice and A.' D. Castro were enthusi-astically received and punctuatedwith applause. Doth of these talks
Hawaii.
STREET
The
5
Scientist in Territory's EmployHas Renounced Allegiance
to Austrian Empire :
Joseph F. Rock, botanist of the Col-lege of Hawaii, sails today fromSan Francisco on the Manoa for Ho-nolulu. Mr. Rock left Hawaii themiddle of last September on botan-ical tour the world In the in
of tbe College of andthe Board of Agriculture and Forestry. , He has made valuable collections of seeds suitable for propagation in Hawaii in the Philippines, India, Thibet, Ceylon and elsewhere,which have been forwarded from timeto time to the nursery of the Boardof Agriculture and Forestry, and hasmade critical studies of Hawaiianplants in the large herbaria of Eu-rope.
.
The at the Bota-nical Garden and Museum at Dahlem,near Berlin, Germany, where Dr. Hil-lebrand- 's
herbarium ts located, wereparticularly generous in giving to theCollege of Hawaii specimens' of manyrare plants collected by '" Dr. Hille-bran- d,
and afforded Mr. -- Rock, everyfacility i in the out of hisstudies, as a result of which he discovered that many of : the ' plants 'collected by him should be described asnew species.. ' . v. '
. A
Prof. Dr.: AI Heimrl, the great Austrian botanist, has done Mr.- - Rock
were straight to the point, aecentuat-- j the honer of dedicating a hew genusing the fact that the next two years in his name. A treeu discovered bywill be crises years for Hawaii, dur- - HUIebrand on Kauai and called by
'ing which a strong, healthy and ener-'hi-m Pisonia; Sandwichensis,;' Heimrlgetic representative should be "on the decides on examining the. ripe fruits,
Job" continually at Washington; s - i,which, until collected by Mr; Rock. 1. want your support, remarked . were unknown, 10 De sumcienuy ais
Mr. Rice In conclusion, --and if l itpi tinct fro mother Pisonia to be rectit I promise you will work for you ,n a new genus which 'he callsat Washington to the best of my abU- -' Kockia. In recognition-o- f the very
v lty and will be on the Job all the valuable work done by Mr. Rock Intime x
" i botany, and the tree will beCheers greeted this announcement .MB,U'
and the geaerar Impression -- was that, f' .Charles Rice had "made good" at the' Kocf Q a few weekameeting. at Harvard University, Cambridge;
j Mass., studying the Hawaiian mate--whrthSLhJ,TiPSS, BtfU rial In the herbarium there.?nr?vnuZn !l?eild; Shortly before leaving Hawaii Mr.Thompson Uw vJ.0 aMn, in,u7n? J Jt,
. Z e Zri lpe,ecniT wee citizen,.. renouncing his ;; allegiencef tol e?e;ag :libr4 emperor Austria so he IsClarence H. Olson ' A. airected by the call to .wni of-- .Alexander Lindsay, Jr.,.V. A. ' Akina, I".
and were all given a cordial eceptloi. l
Interets
aaround
terests Hawaii
Royal
carrying
Hawaiian
V
mans and Aufetrians..
Senator She'ppard TexasIn 'ftpite of thb 'that lt.r.alned'duced a bIR' tnaKinglt a 'ihisdemeanor
1 rtuch ofthe time at meetlng.md any public service corporation' to'' 'lhft'' liphtu 'impo ' nn ooniint j I ctaJ:
i
'
uioe present, wny. a .yoie, jor, unanes at Masten LaKe, Sulllva"'K Rice .fofJOelegate ,to; Congress jwas.'-'ly- , ame 1? yan enji"j
a vote ilepubllcan prosperity and thunder shower the campthe beat ofr
r
FORT
:- -
or
!
6factthl for
nut'
for
'::'rr.'
during !awaa lnvad- -
by.Iare black,bear. : t:.'
1 Prof, liiram Birigham ;;
r t Vil TtnfvaraUtf,v , y r
M f WiU Lecture on .f i
in Peru rUnder the auspices of the
UNIVERSITY CLUB "
On Friday Evening August. 21.at 8U5 sharp, at the, ;
OPERA HOUSE ;
; Entire proceeds to Tuber-culosis Section of Leah I Home.
v
''.. : tickets-t25- c to ;; On ; sale at Promotion Com-- ,
raittee Rooms on and i afterMonday, .August 17.
' $4.00 a year :: - .
'
Biahop Trust Co., Ltd. ;
Best Store for Oriental Goods; JAPANSSE BAZAAR
i 0$P. CATHOLIC CHURCH
CoitSiEsluioity SilverSpecial Offering - i,i
Means a larger bank ccont. For a very limited period the famousFlower De Lux pattern tin be sold on the following basis: '.
Tea Spoons $4.3, dor. , Salad Forkt .....i:.$80 dot.Dessert Spoons ...... W.Q dor., " Table Forks ....... "..$8.60 doz.Soup Spoons . . ..... .$8,0 doz.' Table Knives ..... .$12.00 doz.
S ': ,-
'' OTHER SPECIALS ' S- '
A1 Plated Teaspoons . f.10c Each
Plated Salt or Pepper Shaker. i ................. . .25c eachPlated Caster Set ....... . . eachSolid , Silver Tepooj f I . . 50c eachThere are-sever- hured items In Silverware Just at interesting.Inspect the window Jhd Inside displays. ;
DIMOND & CO.j LtdHouse Houwares . .
i
authorities
I
noi6fGer
near--
fd
I
go
$i.oo .
I
$100
53-6- 5 King Street;
Intro
boys
Recollection of Boxer UprisingRevived With Arrival of
Visitor to Honolulu
"There is not the slightest possi-bility that China will become involv-ed In the present European crisis. Theempire is rapidly advancing under,and the people appear entirely satisfied with the of President made last the who return theYuan Shih-Ka- i. have been norumors nor indications that China willtake a hand."
This statement was made by C. H,Fei, graduate of Yale and Oberlinuniversities and at present affiliatedwith the Young Men's Christian Asso--jelation of Peking, who is at the head '
t
WiilBe Candidate S.ana Remained
of
thatrepresentatives turned
announcement, public incut, party, withThere
that seek
held
of four Chinese students i -- Having served fourthwho Honolulu the Shin--1arrived on cf the house of
Mam i route to Uves twomainland where nter east- -they VQterg and if u b gatIs.era and Pacific coast that vou rive me
The personnel of party is T. N.'SUnt)ort th'rd term.Lee, who will enter College,Iowa; Y. M. Chen, Butler College, Indtana; Peter T. Tren, University ofIllinois, and T. T. Chong, University
Chen itheare graduates of the Nanking, China,university; Mr. Tien; of uni-versity and Mr. Chang of theJapan,v nni versity. - hile. in collegeIn the United States they intend tospecialize in such subjects as agriculture, mining , and
- TrTr.J''e useiucii u i DOfl tutj aukvuu a aa
to China secure positions with thegovernments . 1
i; ?
Mr. Fei was 'graduated from Oberlin in . 1906 from Yale a year later, ne navmg taaen special course
I
Thea
II will
aa
this thewill t has
Ia
II
Lee and
B had
and
anda
- . aI. A.- - -- " 1 t.v vu mu
So 11a ra ther nn a.v.1 wweur Ul - a
a that university. . iot,' I v k a 5 k
arrival In thls;:lty W. A. Bow en.taken by to the Pall
and other of interest In andabout Honolulu, and later made a
inspection of the local Y. M.C. A. building. Fei goingthe mainland his health. Wheninterviewed this aside frommaking a regarding China'sattitude toward the European situa-tion, he, that. Y. M. C. A. worka the. empire is rapidly coming tothe front and ; is doings remarkablework. all i; .. '
!(
With the visit 'to of Mr.Fei there awakened a ' recollectionof a certain period of the Boxer uprising which has an exceedingly localatmosphere. , . i the; time of taef up-
rising, v.Mr- - F.el a boy.; Hewas interested ; in' worK ; tne
missionaries in China. ahdbecame a personal friend of a sister ofPercy M. Pondher husband and down1
Boxer shares
extent
study
Boxers
District Monsarrat Im--jposed 'SO M.
Filipino, foundbrutally a
MeDuffle andmemters of are
hometreatment failed,
called coroners' Jury today.
Hashimoto, guestplace nihtj
shotsvrata
being Hasni- -
effect:
police, monthsAug. Stone
complaining witness
paper,
Companyplaced under
investigationCaptain MtDuffio
largewindow King
police reportmissteg
answer chargebefore
for Sheba Home Japanpolitical News motes vyitn who
Behind Main Tourist
Norman Watkms. well-know- n Sheba, promoter ofmember of house party recently toured re- -
terms, to Honolulu on Japaneseconfirmed report lie would be Shinyo morning.
to succeed hin?lf. liner members ofpolicies
railway
ofRepublicans of district,announce nominationas "a representative
Republican ticket at primaryelection to on Septeml-e- r
of party districtin member representa-y- o
morning, en te record ,3
colleges.- -
fact0rv.
Central
Tokio,
etui
points
lines.,
other than tountiringly
of as be returns toto of
of Republican platform
Peking
forestry,
promises,
pledgesCalifornia.
thorough
Detectives
arraigned
solicitation
WATKINS.'Considerable caused
In Republican circles todayreport Liliha street
Charles A. night toWillie Crawford,
candidate reDresentative fromdistrict, attempted
meeting purposes.After speakers finished,'Crawford is reported have taken
stump talked
an1 ! Ivllt
atic
Theman her
for but
lasttwo
.38
hasThe
casehas
-- for
whowere
hasby
Theing the
and
the
busi- -
ness and thefor two has the
the that thisalso
did not
"At
forthe
be
the
fQr
voutthe for
by
Mr.for
the or,
that will for
of South
of
thoseMay.
aand that Ha- -
out
wasby
Rice lastwho
for"T r fifth
tnehad
and for, bis qwn can- -
W.
are
he
ror
his
Westeryeltsa
directors Kapiolanl Ma- -
tprnitv tojdidafcy; fblldwlnp up ian at-- me'et- -
1UJS Kin uviu nv itwAAAvr
IJZZl 7thio- - crowd morning at o'clock-Oberl-personal rflllSHP,nv rrflVfnH-- .
opcuvei 01 me nf thAw,r m,., ,u iiWUIJ8- -
Politician territorial jury, scheduled forIs graduate hnon 1t
automobile
is to
statement
Honolulu
Atjwaatbut
American
on
as
is
years meet Wednes- -
s a Democrat. I of week.nrth district.
MornMoib
rAftflvA m ty
a t a,
ne anu 11'Vi I tlx
mi report.I a
a
fto
aof Of is not
.;? t.
" the ; and 10 on ata were
the now toI i- - it ;
? a 1 w euaica u menand in j at 1-- 8
, iu 01 w w 1, of of thebe
uc em uu. u ivr w of a '
the set- - at aof a of 20
1.. v v- .- w,m n hlrt K7 tn. I or be
of 1
a. wasof
of
ffili1was
the
12.
-
.:
2 the
the
theman
His
thethe
the
ask
thethe
the
the
daughters,
LOCAL GENERAL
run for thetne He--
tne
WAfn
WILL PREPARECITIZENSHIP
readsnewspapers;
'papers
F.Clemons
rrTJ ;wS Associatidn;
sterns simple '
aay. UlaanDed. )
OOOTnares tneLU.tiUt lj.'nntnfiltod and knowled&e
Jlngr 2Sslqf thegllsgUaiehd,drfthfi lifakifii'a'net'gain institutions .Honolulu1:8 points. was- - himself, for citizenship
city, who, withj recess sal 50 tt li. examination, by mea4sawere ifnea &etw4en nrocess."
ansl.'-Sensi- ng the board been- - the 'Mr. rei ana aispaicuea p.u? iuffi. nwiu christian Association. orgaqiza- -
coast .with messages fr0mtt;ianwag steady; recssat loTon investigatingloans 'in. uow; can and,
uiuaruuu nieans helpingsucceeded Oahu opened between citizenshin.
reacning the workasges delivered rintc. bands? recovered loss. for shares,ox'.uv American -- consu! gahization
that. interim, the lots, then recovered for ntIr6 Bituation meansattacked little mission advance
tlement. Mr. the 1-- 8 In 14.50.citizens me UnUedoomko
sentence days vponTIsdono,guilty beating woman.'
Captain Detectivesseveral his busy
his
the
afternoon
tiial re-- iUi itheforcess
lots and 145
Co.announced or
the morning.
- DR.in up a is I lo Honolulu on the yes--
have engaged in a system- - anstealing of More ad trip to the .
machines are j "
at - :. HIRAM BINGHAM, the' is vis- -- - and explorerjvWho
As a taking E ISSther Rees died at Queen's !f?yesterday afternoon. young wo
, ' from tothe hospitalto regain consciousness. Sheriff Rose
a
at a weddingtook onis alleged to fired froma revolver,, object of
Katoka, a couhtrjitan.moto been placed under
shots not
The- celebrated Pringle libelbeen through
court waabon-tlnue- d
until Samis alleges scurilous remarks
through a Hawaiian - newshimself..
Fase. private of -
2d beenarrest pending .
of j of acharge of breaking a plate giass
on ajeweler. roth- -
stoie. . ,
Chinese Koreans placed
in which ofgambling, Dis
FromTnose
Interest GrouD
S. Hawaiiof Japan,
liner Mamcandidate brings eight
says:earnest many
fourtli
candidate
12
make nosay work thepassage suchnecessary carry the
Messrs"NORMAN
comment
from meeting
effect thata
Kfr" to
Is
to
AND
thit
commented
morning,
officehouse from
ALIENS
Closing shade; firdcess,aaaea, iu
jeducated
Irarlaieacoming,
Ewa, presenting
citeduim?r-- 1
27.25thesa ways
vuoiy.iseVea
wnere-- part
choro.TVlpnhnn .eAtt"i,Uill'uus ..Bau
90 three responsibilitiesat 18 unequal
onHawaiian Commercial
a dividend of000, stock sheet '
GEORGE HERBERT returnedrounding gang Wilhelmina
to been xemaybicycles. pleasure
awaiting ownersstation.
professor'poison,
Hospital drjng
Schoolhave
dragging
culated
JohnInfantry,
premisesstreet
from
Forty
towhen
anti-Kic- e
body
fctpadv
advanced
Sugar
this
past two days suffering from a
MAURICE McMAHON who, withthe members of his family, have beenspending the past several months Inthe Cruz mountains, is expected to return i to Honolulu in thenoa Tuesday morning.
J. F. ROCK," territoral botanist whohas been a number btmonths a took hlra first,to Himalayas and then to Europe,Is to on theliner Manoa, arriving here about August 10th.
HENRY W. KINNEY, superintendent 'of instruction, leftHilo in the this morningto investigato the purported need otnew schoolhouses on the Island.
Kinney win attend tomorrow'smeeting or the
; PROF. SHIGETAKA SHIGA, of theUniversity at Toklo, Japan,
has been visiting in Honolulu forpast three weeksr departed for
the mainland on Shinybru.' en route to Washington, ; D. C
under arrest 'last nieht hv nffirera he win attend thefrom detective department through I of Americanists. v Professortheir attorney asked more time j also to visit Mexico
to South cities and. returning to Japan, -- will go to Texas,
strict Magistrate Monsarrat this where he will erect for the Japaneseing.- - case has continued government a monument in memory.
r until Friday morning. of of; the Alamo. ".
in May but remained tothe Philippines China.
Rev. and Mrs. D. Westerveltand Master Andrew Westervelt, ofHonolulu, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Wester-velt Bend, Ind., and Chicago,and their two Mil-
dred Helene Westervelt, andAlice G. Summers South Bend,the members of the touring 'partyarrived today.
All of them highly of theirtrip and are' as pleased with its re-
sults as were who came homelast Promoter Sheba says thatthe been great success in
measures will W
for.
He will resume duties as editorof the Hawaii Shlnpo.
The H..E. and MissSummers will remain shortin Hawaii and leave, for their
' " '.
The of theHnm havp heipn
jwith attend nt business. . '
I: of day
i8(!r m.mbn..i.f meetingthe who grandof . The used the
were
said
along
who
two ago, will able that willIs day next
M.FOR,
"Every few days one locals inthe saying so and sohas taken out his :abAmerican 'citizeri: and frequent intervals groups appear: JpdgaC. to their examma- -
.' rked Paul f Sner,-- ! generalsecretary 'bf Young Chris- -
mofntng.higher yester- - 7 "H-- lilt;
1-- 8 than ives-- 1 is, iuc ucuci
.4;i- -
that
takerema
tlan this
lowerf20ft and ror man pi ,11m- -
vraA diation Scanto(: hSfi
'b'oara. of Ifc'anunchanged in land,
this hrfr ,aayr.hUdrpH. 'scifd:
outbreak, went, has by Young Men'smena Tbg
to: in is 'whatmissionartea,' teumg .01 -- meir jgamng deviseAlter x. v" me of
Fei his companion decline forTientsin, me waeri--i saies nuares 41.0, fall edathe but Oie 50 catlonal department will the or
m.uw. committee tostory goes In the in. 10thfe and Derfectshares and closed net
Pond's sister shares atiTw-t- jo
Magistrate
staffalleged
extenaeamainland.
polite, PROP.
home
rushed
the
arrestdid serious
which
thecir
concerning
"of
Hous- e-
nnd fn "f" . lur"as well asIn
the
15c, $30,
thatalter
than12 now
not--
edof
thai
fourover
that
D.
Rice
fo:
on
P.
Ma.next
toron trip that
thebooked Matson
public fotKea
county
Imperial
thethe Ma- -
ccn--
the ferencefor and
American
morn-- .Tne been
the
visitand
and Mis3
who
trip has
timethen
homes.
Y. C. A.
first' an.at
before
tlc-B,"-
the"1 Meft's;
than
B.at
Onodolncl Boards
;nreepeni.
uuaruswere
three
being sale SUtes may
street
take
taughtsharespoint
shares board.
Dusiness
resultslight
illness
Santa
absent
return
Mauna
BigMr.v
Hawaii
who
today
'here annual
Shiga plansbefore
heroes
others
Misses
speak
nrifified
the privileges of .the franchise.
Some matrimonial bonds are very
V!
CBS. A. RICEMEETINGS
Wednesday evening, 7:30 o'clockAt Thomas Square. '
SPEAKERSCharles A. Rice. W. II. Rice, Sr., J. A. Akina, .Uexander Lindsay,
Jf., William Mossiran, Clarence 11. Olson, A." 1). Castro, Arthur ui,
Lorrin Andrews, VA Towse, A. St. C. Piianai. IVter Haron,T. M. Church. C. Kanekoa, M. J. Serpa, M. J. Pierreira, L. It. Ma-deir-
and others.
Everybody Invited
Save Your Plants and TreesrK()3"l)Er?Ti:UCTI()X I?Y INSKCT.
1.
frrnrrrn
AISSENATK OF LKA1),
KitluT 1us(m1 011 the .shrubbery or uwl as wet spray,will kill nil phuit-destroyiir- j; btijrs.
tim
r0-('KN- T CANS.1
Call and iret free booklet.
il i Kibv
enson-Smit- h
M I;
11
a
'?
irexall Store .. ,;EVEN I X i K'i ITKiTl L 41:1. r.
. Port and Ilote reef
For sale
The
f ;. : cl o
For sale immediately: Pleasanton Hotel
Das Kaiserlich Deutsche Konsulat erhielt heutenachfolgehdes Telegramm von der Kaiserlich Deut-sche-n
Botschaft in Washington:
"Deutschland befindet sich im Kriegszustandmit.Russland und Frankreich; Mobilmachungerfolgt, Militaerpflichtige haben entsprech-- .end ihrer Mdbiimachiingsordre zu handeln'
, 1. t t i 1
1
; ;
AUe DeutschenflVlilitaerpflichtigen der deutschen Armee undMaiipe einscbliesslich Reservisten, jedoch unter Ausschluss de3 ,
Landstunries werden Merdurch aufgefordert, sich xmverzu eglichin die Heimat . zurueckzubegeben. Naehere Auskunft wird lm?Kaiserlich Deutschen Konsnlat, Hackfeld Building, Honolulu,bereitwilligst erteilt. :": :
-V--:;.-:.: '. X :
- X Kaiserlich DeutscherKorisuI,
4 , rouu HOKOLTJLTJ BTAB-BULLETINWEDNDA- AUdtST 5'1914.?.
"RILEY H. ALLEN
WEDNESDAY AUGUST 5, 1014 mainland is wont to view from an empire-wid- e
, 'standj.M)int shrink almost to municipal propor--
Jicligiom circa, ichich occupy the sphere lions." - I
that rational interpretation fail to Occupy, 1
regard icith a xtmpathy baxed on community of difficulty is presented of securing the arrival of the Japanese liner Shin- - j American occupation. Dr. Victor G' n . the Heiser. director of bureau, isvisitor Hongkong, aneed. hpencer. ..
?v -. ... . to the arduous Vo amg undergo exponeuce of.pio- - gr";h naval base Jnly 14. visitor at Honolulu today while a
: .'"'; purring with no hope ultimately owning - Ranging from great new battle-- through passenger the Toyo Kisec
r THE DMOUS lit XICO CDTLCOK
1 In the overwhelming interest of Europeanwar news, a nnei mspaten yesterday from Sal-till- o,
(
Mexico, hardly received attention fromthe trading public and yet it conveyed news ofone of the most important developments in theMexican situation since Huerta quit the presi-dency. .
Negotiations for a peaceful transfer of Mex-
ico City from the Huerta faction still in powerto the Constitutionalists have failed. Carbajal, Hucrta's successor, liau laid down termsthat Carranza declines to entertain. The con-sequence is that Gen. Villa and his army, nowgrown to the formidable proportions of 70,000Cghting-men;- ( will ; inarch on the capital andtake by force what they have failed to get bypeaceful agreement n ; '. .; "
Had Mexico City been transferred peaceful-ly to the Constitutionalists, it is almost certainthat President Wilson ' would have recognizedthe new government and begun preparationsto withdraw the America troops from VeraCnir. Two weeks ago . President Wilson'splan, according to the dispatches sent out fromWashington, was to agree tacitly to an abso-lute dictatorship established by Carranza, withthe . explicit understanding ' that Carranzawould immediately proceed to put into effecttheagrarian and election reforms demanded bythe president ' v
; Uut President Wilson has also let it beknown that If Mexico City is occupied by vio-
lence, intoxreiion 'by American trops fniayt till lie necessary i'cstertlay's Uevelopmentstherefore'.' raise'; ;hc question 1 as ;;to whetherI Inerta's j abdication has ; really . 'removed theI .irrier to American recognition? j :J v'
His success in, ousting, JUuertaven ! thoughIfirp-- 1 cdfcc to
Hongkong;c ilr. Wilson and- - his plans for Mexico
Kut the inoral; triuinpli' of Hhei not yet vill notCity ocinp:ed? Jiot; bya lijUitary ' dictatorr Lo enforces his j'rders liUie; Iwyonet, butly a prtidcTitjr. a d aims broad enoush "to rule iy reason and
igli.t.
i' fC3 leasi::s
A striking suggestion upon public policy in Hawaii comes from Dr. Victor S. Clark,f ;rmer commissioner of here. On
iturday the Star-Bulleti- n published excerptsf rom an article he has written which appearsin The Outlook for July 2o. In closing the ar-ticle he says: '
: '.Although Hawaii is in the hands of an hon--
t government and "upright ; business men;.hos collective influence is toward social andvditical letterment, the centralization of in
i . . trial control deters the 1 best1 class of imnil- -
ration, ospicially of : people with' small capila!,-fron- the mainland of the United States.
to general sentiment in the Territory,t!.e writer believes that the present policy ofalienating public lands in fee simple ; mightv, lseiyoe cnangeu 10 a policy 01 leasing intmall subject to cultivation and residence .to actual settlers. AnyI dicyct)f absolute alienation will probably re-
sult in tire absorption of the small holdingsthus. created into the large estates; and the ter-ritory is meantime losing valuable asset thatc eight to be a source of permanent revenue.Leasing open to the objection that it mightcreate a strong party of government lease-- I
; Iders, constantly jockeying for special privi-Jcpx-- s.
'But if the leasing law were a federalf tatute, like ' the present Territorial Home-- t
Jcad Iaw, danger would be minimized.The objection to alienation in fee simple isnot alone that does not prevent the ultimate
of the public lands by large pro-
prietors and .Hawaii already has the evil ofdummy but that it permits toogreat 'latitude in evasion of existing regula-tions, for sub-leasin-g to Asiatic; aliens, thuscausing the Caucasian of homeA
i lead . t ; Y"Enough of the land of the territory re
quires irrigation to make land and water
YrtfxL public may have toJrjv back the water on the islands in order toAssure its
and equitable distribution 1 connec-
tion with both land and j water it should be
!orne in mind thatra small country can, 'more ownership than big
Dr. Clark's suggestion
their land fee simple. If the government hip Triumph 11.500 with
merely" leases the land, will probably haveadd its offer of some
such agricultural credit for set-
tler; otherwise the would-b- e small farmernot likely risk his chances of: livelihood. He
nrefer land plantation Britishcorporation that will assure him a market
goods lalwr.
LET NOT CEASE
The storV battle land and
GREAT BRITAIN VETERAN HEALTH
READY FOR VAR OFFICIAL HERE
THE FAR EAST FROM PHILIPPINES
Great Britainweeks
The is today service ofwill- -
at
ofit
to toas
isto
neavy a rma snueniines caDable
tnrougnwater at twenty-fiv- e
hour, at Hongkong,to little gunboat Moorhen of
possessing a ma- -
will to lease from some chine guns, the flag is declaredorfor his his
of by sea in Eu
i
That hasbeen
the with fed the the
the
thetons, its
uuurnowpr send- -
ingthe
tons few
, . t,oy omcers ine rvninvo uwell at al Asiaticporta.
the Shinyo Maru called atJuly a few
prior breaking offriendly between Great Brit-ain, Kuss;a, France and Germany.British vessels scattered,roe cannot but bring to Hawaii the Utmost along the coast of Asia from Hongkong
' ii i a a - . i w . i'rvi-..- tconcern iimi me Ktvnesi regret, mis cosmo- - we norm jhhi nemei.poliUh . itv nnmlKT in it, population xuls JZl cus,of every country..! Euroj)e Strife, cruisers gunboats and other war craftNot a few these subjects have been placed to best advant- - couraging to following his presiuln i,n flio ihni nntifitv according to the observation of Heiser passed
. , . ? . those "who reached Honolulu ini iiey arerpairiouc to tne, core; mey are reauy shinyo Maru.
answer the call of their country's need." j n was at Yokohama thatThe Utjited States, bv formal rrangemenU were completed the
' dismanUfng of a number of the small- -
and by natural logic, remains neutral. Though vessels, especially those statfonedthe battle-tid-e honrlv rises higher on the shores in Hvers of north and south china.
Europe and the frontiers shake with march- - "f1114, fleA: fe ff' on
. ' July 14 the following:lug armies,,, the united Mates stands friendly, ,-- tn
' Alacrity,, despatch boat, tons,the iKdligerents of loth sides. ; N far as Jia- - 4 gns. 2000 Lh. p., Comdr. a. coch- -
waii is ' c)ncerned,. this should hold rane, Kobe. Weihaiwei.(Twl in nriir-.Hivo- lv finiall' mtiumifv ; Atlas, admiralty tug, 615 tons, 1400
Friends may without sacrificing honor or ,j tons 900 npatriotism int the slightest degree hold each p.,.ll Comdr. v. r. Brandon, Weihai-ethe- r
in mutual respect though their countries ' weL
iro if war. I Britomart, gunboat. 710 tons. h.p., IJcot. Comdr. P. B. Prcston-Thom- -
4In enforcing our policy of self-defens- e, with as. Hongkong,4 ' Cadmus. BriUsh sloop. 1070 tons. i.n I'lpflr fnnsfifnif and Honn hands vp nrasn
i lie en
an
to
34
cr
n 1 h. 1400 f.d, CapUin M. S. Fitztnir said Emperor Wilhelm yesterday vangtse.in his ringing speech to lieichstag. : cherub, water tank
"The northern coasts of France are defense- - tens, 340 b, p.
les. If aless coasts, rwe could not stand ,aside. I. so in-.- ,.
nr.KM-uii'L,.- .i,VUIIC( WHO)
lonneii tue rrencn umoassauon -- i inai, busaot pr4 l.hi' p.. 7500 r.OUIIJVVV V Utl IIUMV'MV HWI'I"M W' ...... .,
I'--,
oe ' kth aiVALi Ynir.'ha, ' Chelmer. B.
., C
m,u, wi. ni.;,:aiM'iy;iiunaiii " ; "V lt 'i tl. 7500 fHouse 'tf v Commons. ' - Belgian i neutrality, Eiidind. Honekone.
S93
fo
(UHO
beH. T.
it was j ihe. military victories Jaranfeea. br5;tivatt;Vmust be preserved.,?,li - M jFame t. b:d.; Lt1 cdmdrrc. M.'rf -- .'
to:administration
VompTete.,1 beuntil;Mcxirkis
Wliojrliarac
al:c"ei;t c:esteads
land
immigration
(
,
Contrary
requirements,
a
is
this
itrequisition
homesteading
dqwpulationneighborhoods.
.:Uultimateh
economical develop-ment
jrovernment a
farming-spac- e
the
FRIENDSHIP
EDITOR
i.
proclamation
H-.u- iue..4ivc4amuuu ui iiigu. prwm Hamnshirei1ll0'.850',t6n4' 21OO0 f: d..ciples' that nation ? and ' nation1 aaro inow locked gns, .capta'n"!. w ferant"'!'inhetlitruitgle:'t;.i ' V1
Ml'
1?DAT IDE "S.CGAR BEET. GEDiifEB; THINK
What f iiTflr-lm- ti irrti'prH thinlr nf ill i
outlooW; for their; industbacr;
Cotndt
tons;MarryattAYangtaft. i,
tons.
cratlC tariff law.18 SUOWn COld,. calm tlgures Minotaur. armored cmiaer (flagshioin the department agriculture; SdIni,1!rat T'u: iel:2: J?'
.:-r--v . v' ; 27.000 h.p.Capt-R- . aKidjileir'Vlad- -
area sugar beets planted 1914was tveatock. -per less than 1913, to? Moorhen, river gunboat iso tons,
520,G00 acres. In "Idaho and Utali : Con?dr Alan
greater area was planted year than j .Newcastle, second class v cruiser,year, but the other states there was de-- tons, turbine. 22000 , captcrease. The area for!913 was alKutNnboatJ ton8
per of area planted for the entire h. Ueut Comdr. MalcolmStates. table shows 'detail the Yangtse.
area planted the two years: I T. B. tons. 4
h. ti.. F.
b. tons.(aliforniah .... . .... .109,500 13S,300 w.Colorado . , .... . . 146,100 183,100 , river 85 tons, 2
L! . ? wns.-- 40 h. p.. Lt J,Jlichigan .Ohioutah
s
i. .t.
interesting.
United l?. ..520,600
FROM AURORA
Kennet,
1914 1913 Riwetl,Acres: nibble,
vomar. nainm.Robin, .gunboat
25,900 2300 Comdr. Fleetwood- -
Other
States
Acres.
IdahoNasn,.
litXX Roaario, submarine,19,00041,900
AURORA, HU July 10. Inspired the theoryof an. eastern professor that needs more"old-fashion- ed love," Making Club"
beeff organixed by number girls.Old-fashione- d love! The kind that used to go
cn in sitting-room- , with lights turned
Comdr.
Comdr.
Snipe,
Comdr.
upstairs; Comdr.went with sleigh-ride- s husking-bee- s
"80Clables,, picnics; kind thatsomehow enough true enough tIH.1MSl1J:
all merely until di-- Honakong.court get: around to your
fnr rrJrlu AiitvM if AJ 't
little promot V work old-fashion-ed hive--
making, thtre an maid in thatpart Illinois!
Sugar prices are already up and fromEngland comes that famine ficures are
nrevailimr there. Kvprv lindiratinnr: r,vhts are nri vatelv that P?,n.t8 1 furthw advances
nendeni mrnl Pntpm;,V --nf 01 European war andv--
and adequate
r,,?
or
foreign markets is realized.
66,900
Xapoleon or Wellington emergethis mighty European conflict:
r jumpin
. . . f' . . .
. . .
. . . . .
Weleoine, stranger.
and that in Hawaii, questions, that out your European
effect home
Some
!
IS
IN
someprepared for eventualities
far east following
Herbert
inof
the machine
now stationedthe
180 and
represented the
WhenYokohama, Japan, 27, but
the actualrelations
war were
vum
involved 1U
of will thelinfpr
the
the
tofeeling
tlii
maurTee
ilii
andHongkong.
tlUV
pr.
Sey- -
.Liejut.
very
very
k h.in,j.7$00 T. Lieut? 5.' M
Kinsha, 816 120 .;pv,'Conidr.
..Merlin, eorveyinr ship. 1070
a bulletin of ofThe of
cent in and amountedabout a
this lastin a &w f. d
harvested91 cent 240 Mur-Unite- d
The in rav.
in
states
550 tuns.'pr. o. 7500 f. d Lieut
Weihaiwei.590 7300 f. d- -
V
T
orvi 1 west River.Arr"" f ship for
V
the worldthe Love has"
a ."of,
the the
31,200 ,1400 C h.- - pr. Lieut40,600 A. Cromie, Hongkong.
Sandniner, gunboatvWXV0M ow I. A. S.Hwtton. Hongkong.
635,100 river gunboat
000
690
.
f rnnd f n
ion for
of
'j
;
i . ii 1 1 - - , . i
asts
1
little
'
for
days
men
river
. r... uin ur
mt s--w w
S
f
I.
;y 1
" - i. D. U - -- J
d,
f .
! P d
'
up
d.. f. A.'
!
1L .v.f
, inI.
in
P" U
.
wp
2
v - ' A. H.II t.
.v
. .....?
980 tons.
OP ftrWi ' ' river tons, 2. 2400 h.'
,
'
j' S3 tons. 2 guns.
on"
I. u. VAJIUUt. Hit Ik. . iA awell-Sco- tt Yangtse.
receiving ship. 4630 tons, 6runs. Commodore A. R. Anstruther.C M. Hongkong
180 tons. 2 euns,R00 I h. p.. S. P. B.Russell. Yangtse. ,
Thistle, gunboat ,710 tons. 900 h. p..Lt. -- Comdr. G. P. L. Page, Wei-baiwe- i.
vtons, 12
low and poppa and momma !- - h- - p-- a. & Susmann,
that and :
usk. t a d.. tons. 7500 f. d..and and the 6 Lieut Weihaiwei.
good and '
last life long not thevorce could fs?! H2E
won't
newsalready
owned thethprphv
the
the, map..
yPjVyv
the true extentand
willfrom.
Get
indicated
!
fightingknots
days
reported
the
the
Uk
Tamar,'
Teal, river gunboat,
TriumpK, battleship, 11.883the
Maxwell.
seemed
old
going
aunboat tons. 2 fruns
tmi
j, . i ,
Yangtse.
HOUSES FOR RENT; FURNISHED.
Manoa Valley :.... 3 bedrooms12th Avenne ...... ... .3 bedroomsTantalus ...u;;.;.vrv,..3 bedroomsLunalilo St V.;.i;V;,.-....iT.'.- 2 bedroomaPalolo. Valley -- road ......... V.3 bedroomaProspect Streets ...... , ... . . .3 bedrooma-;V
:'N f --
: UNFURNISHED. ;t- -'Lunalilo St r. , . i . ... . . . bedroomaYoun? ................ ... .Ji bedroomsWilhelmlna Ttl? : : . . . . . . . .:2 bedroomaAloha Lane ,:. . .' . . ..2 bedroomsAuld Lane 3 bedroomsKalihU opp. Kaa. Road . . ..3 bedroomaPalolo Hill . . . . ; . ... : . .. . 3 bedroomstlll2 Klnati 3 bedrooms
A veteran In the health departmentof the Philippine islands, having; join
insettlers
of in
tracts,
Kaisha liner Shinyo Maru bound forthe mainland on extended vacationleave.
Before Dr. Heiser left Manila, thePhilippine commission had confirmed
appointment of Major Edward Lyman Munson, medical corps of theUnited States army, as acting directorof health during the absence of Dr.Heiser in the United States and Eu-rope. The appointment was made byGovernor-genera- l Harrison upon therecommendation of the secretary ofthe interior.
Major Munson is recognized alongwith Dr. Heiser as among lead-ing sanitation experts of the world.
Dr. Heiser stated this morning thatthere was no political significance at-
tached to his trip to the mainland.He has hopes of remaining some timein Great Britain and the continent,although the late news of a generalEuropean war were not entirely en- -
go home to outfi age ent plans. Dr. the
tofor
710
900
Du
J
tuj
-,t,.
f
H..
rx.
deoot
by
to
siaiu
195
St
IV.
the
the
several hundred passengers, also officers and members of the crew of theShinjo Maru yesterday, enabling thatvessel to enter the port without theusual delay Imposed at quarantine.The big was at a berth shortlyafter 8 o'clock this morning.
Dr. Heiser paid an official call uponGovernor Pinkham today. He wasalso shown many courtesies by Dr.F. E. Trotter, in charge of the fed-
eral quarantine and public health ser-vice at Honolulu. ;
D. P. R. ISENBERG: During a
visit which I made to Germany quitea while ago, innumerable predictionswere made regarding a cricis such ashas involved nearly all Europe.
n p. R. ISENBERG: The presentcrisis in Europe hits me pretty hard. '
hive two brothers and orotners- -
--1aW in the German army. Three areptalns and one is, a lieutenant;
' li-- W. THAYER: l.hope to have560 'tons;' guns the Froqt street affair, aettled
18
be
Ueut
Lieut
kind
.ftr-c- t.
vessel
two
fore 1'fcet back from tuio. ine wxaraof supervisors will hold a meeting forthe'ebnsiderata of the proposals inlino uiau.
A-
SXM BLAIR h propose ,to brmgMonte ,Cart?r , ?nd his company oimusical 'coraedUiia tothis city.with-in'- (
a 'fehort time. Whether they. wllopen1 at the Opera Housej . or ppt la, ainatter 'to be .deciied at a lates tdate..
."y ; f - .;' ..,. ? : 'l . ...
A. TjRICEi j During the pastmontnj 1- - had ' an iopportunlty-t-o :visitand. Inspect several large mainland Y.
M.4,A.s. The local assdclatlonhow.eyer, la well "abreast of thosa organl-taion- s
which hare assunied-place- s tu.
' K 1 ' " ;::the front rank. - -
JOEL COHEN v Ye Liberty Thea-ter will continue to be the home ofstar feature pictures notwithstandingthe rupture between the ownera ofthe theater and the present lessee. Wehave arranged for the presentation ofa series of novel photoplays. .
C G. BOCKUS: The day of thegrass skirts in Hawaii is paupand.wedon't see them any more unless wego to the museum. It seems to meentirely unnecessary and unwise tosend out to the world a poster show-ing a woman wearing such a skirt ': Itla . too bad the different posters werenot. submitted .to popular vote to determine the best, one, and even nowDimond &: Company could do a nicepiece of advertising by having, say, athousand tickets printed with whichto vote on th several, poster8. 1 amsure if this 'were 1 done. : the presentwinner would not remain a winnerlong. ; '..
;.
800 h. p., Lieut Comdr. A. J. Iandon,
Woodcock, gunboat 130 tons, 2 guns.550 h. p., Lt Comdr. M.'B. R., Blackwood, Yangtse.
: Woodlark, gunboat 150 tons. 2 guns.550 h., p., Lt Comdr. Robin AW" Uoyd,Yangtse. '
Yarmouth, second class cruiser. 4800tons, Capt H. L. Cochrane, Weihaiwei.
Suomarines;T. 36. D. J. McGillewie, Ueut.
C. 37, J. A. Gaimes, LieutC. 38, R. K. C. Pope, LieutT.,B. 035, Lieut Handley.T. B. 036, Ueut Wiles.T. B. 037, Ueut W'yndham-Quin- .
T. B. 038. Ueut Sevmour..
i.. ...... .......
.165.00
. 35.00
.45.00
. 35.00
.35,0060.00
.....145.0035.0030.0017.0016.0025.003o.oo............. 30.00
IF YOU HAVCANY PROPERTIES FOR SALE, CONFER WITH USVS MAY HAVE A PURCHASER. .
GUARDIAN THUCT. CO LTD-- , Second Floor! Dank of Hawaii Btdg.
rr
Fitted Suitcases, and
Other Leather Goods
The fitted suit rax are f nrsileather, with the toilet articles of finotdesign ami most useful assortment, foreither sex.
We also have Thermometers, inleather cass, for travelers. They .areusually indispensable for long trips. -
Then there are Auto Cases, titu-- d withnjuiretl toilet artirls. One style hasthe various fittings on a roll of softleather, which, when rolled and tied,cau be.-place- handily most any when.
VVICH MAN & CO.- Jewell
r
rs WW
For the purpose of determining the public haring will be held at 1 the funrns anu eiuog s.ae cenaui fu-- . government nursery, King rtreet,. aternment lands as1 forest reserves, with i..--10 c,ock Wednesday morning. Au-tri- ctspecial regard to reserve in the dis- -
of Puna. Hawaii, containing an Kst 19, by Governor Pinkham andarea of about 3S1 acres and known as the members of the board of commia-th- e
"Olaa Forest Park Reserve," a sioners of agriculture and forestry.
what wUl become of M;
:fterouaie: :.
1 Make sureKat
; ;--propel
?!: desire;-pr- to
" ;: dualified f( dralyour will accuiateljr torsecure 4hese benefil&o
4 Tnfnrmafmn rAvM-- i
4
' i.i
HOWARD
.
STAKD Tlia TEST..TCHES
VTEma JEWELRY C0. Ltd.: 113 Hotel St
waternousc
AA 1 UOl
Real Estate forWe have for sale a nioden lwnie jn College
Hills, situated on a lOOxO. House con-
sists of livingnxun, library, lanai, conserva-tory, three bedrmuns, kitchen pantry, bath,etc. laundry and servants pirters.
If you are looking for a bme inHills, this property will attracj you.
rartieulars at onr oftice.i
Cor. Fort and .Merchant Stsi
19
lot
College
"Waterhouse Tiust
1
I
a
5
8 nc'
la
Cm
r i
A U A 1
i
- i
'";
Now there areHalf Sections
in. widein"Y. & E." FilingDevices --especiallysuitable for privateoffices and home use.
IN CONVENIENT STOCKS.
MAY WE SHOW THEM t
HAWAIIAN NEWS CO,
LIMITED.
In the Young El .'g.
.a .siiaiHavaw m. i
THE von HAMM-YOUN- Q CO,LTD., Honolulu. '
V, Agonts" v
VISIT THE NEW STORE OF
RfcGAL SHOESC6lt FO RT AND HOTEL ST.
i New Styles In
-- H A
P A N A A AAM Mainlaid.Prltes.-- -. ..L
HUKUKUUA CO.Hot st., corijfaes;rn:
Agents fod HARLE11CVVID$DTRTORCVtLES and SUPPLIES.
UUT MU1UH CUSkilled Mechanics for . aii , Rerialr ,
Pauahf nr Fort SL 2051
P, H. BURNETTE
Commissioner of Deedi for Californiand New York; NOTARY PUBLIC;
D-aw- s Mortgages, , Deeds, Bills ofSale, Leases, Wills, etc. Attorney for
. tht District Courts, 79 MERCHANT, STREET, HONOLULU, Phone' 1846.
II. nil.
v. -- " .-
IF YOU WISH TO ADVERTISE INNEWSPAPERS ' - .
Anywbere, at Any Time, Call on orV Write
E. C D AKE'Si A D V E RTIL ... G
AGEI..V124 Sansofne 8treet v .San; Francisco
i rr m Ii i m i n
Art PicturesHONOLULU PICTURE FRAMING A
SUPPLY CO.
Itetbal RU nr. Hoti Po4infl2
Dust WithWIZARD Polish
fiARRERE Phone S2971
HONOLULU DRY GOODS CO.
GRAND TWO WEEKS' SALE NOWtures,
; ONlecta.17 Hotel SL Opp. BIJou Theater
J. W. Kershrer' Vulcanlzer
Correct Price IEHfn 6L Opp. Ubrary.
YEE YI CHANCHINESE R E 8 T A U R A NTChop Sucy and other Chinese diahea
served at reasoanble prices.Ill HoU I Street, Near Maunaksa
(onatalrs)
m. e: silva,The Leading .
UNDERTAKER & EMBALMERCor. Kukui and Nuuanu Sts.Tel. 1179 night call 2314 or 2160
HONOLULU BTAR-BULLETI- lf WED.KSDAV, Aj iil rT 3 IMJ FIVE
KEEP YOUR
STOMACHIn good condition
on the
VO Y A C.E
by drinking our
PURE MILKdelivered on steamers
to your order.
Honolulu Dairymen'sAssociation
Phone 1542
New Willow
Chairs and
RockersCoyne Furniture Co.Alexander Young Bldg.
1053 to 1059 Bishop St.
DISTINCTIVE MILLINERYImported and' Domestic
MISS POWERBoston Block
Safety Blades;Resharpened better than new. We
Grind Anything.HONOLULU GRINDING CO.1115 AtaRea. opo. Y. M. C. A.
Put Your Poultry Problems;r up to the
T CALIFORNIA, FEED CO.Alakca, corner Queen.
They will tell you the trouble.
MBMT .raTAUoyrunimn v
'J9il..
PMi's
"trnjiCLtirr:- iEAOOAJAirTEm',H Hnd M
GOODYEAR TIRrs ni I
GUARANTEE VULCANIZING I
840 Alaket St. . Phone 4688
BARGAIN COUNTER PRE-MIU- M
SALE NOW ON ATi CITY MERCANTILE CO. ,
24 Hotel BL, nr. i"t Phone 4206
. . : BRAZILIAN TANGOPUMPS"' '''A ..vk' F0RvMEN
f 3 AHS5.50
MclNERNY SHOE STOREFort, above King
Equal V,ttr; the
Sterling mark
on Silver.
.PACIFIC ENGINEERINGCtMPANY, LTD.
Consulting, Designing and Con-structing Engineers.
Bridges, Buildings, Concrete StrucSteel Structures, Sanitary Sys--t
mi, Reports and Estimates on Pro--'
Phone 1045. !
HAWAIIAN PICTURES, STATION- -
ERY, PICTURE FRAMING,OFFICE SUPPLIES.
ARTS AND CRAFTS 8HOP1122 Fort 8t
ffljll.lB.WJM
The GiganticSlaughter Sale
Is still on at 152 Hotel Street: M. R. BEN N ;
Anti 'Tfirrrtm iMr. and Mrs. J. If. Maxanv nter- -
tained at a very enjoyable dance lastSaturday evening, in honor of theirdaughter, Miss Hazel Maxam, who hasrecently returned from the coast. i
Their pretty' new bungalow was most!attractively decorated for the occa- -
sion. Gay colored Japanese lanternswere strung from the street to theentrance which was hung with a large
.American flag. Inside, the rooms werenuea wun maiaen nair rerns ana greaimasses of American beauty roses ef- -
lectively arranged. The walls werehung with trailing vines of maile .
expected
the coast
which made a charming background, j Mr Mrg rhpgtor Hunn thedouble quintette of Hawaiian musi- - popuiar Honolulu people are leav-cian- s
rendered excellent music, and a ng the fslandg to raake tneir hnm6most delightful evening was enjoyed. jn Porto Rlco wi, depart thp ,At eleven o'clock delightful refresh-jpa- n
at ncon tomorrow wheneVernents were served. the transport sails.Among present were: Mr. and t
Mrs. T. Vaughan. and Mrs. J. J. V.iffW was hostessCarey Captain and Mrs. R. lnfornial ast Wei.
:ir ana airs, i. j .r.w.v.and Airs. Jonn nuKnes, Air. nu.
Mrs. G. Basham, Mr and Mrs. M. Mon-crle- f.
Mr. Mrs. E. M. Mr.and Mrs. Young. Mr. J. Cleary; theMisses Hare' Maxam Sady y Lrt- -
i" 6ne . Charlotte Bennett NettieI?thel Fennel. Madge Irwin, Emma !
nianchard, Elizabeth Rors. U McMin- -
Inam; Messrs Jack Carey, F. l)entsey.W whkoij. ay-""l- 'J. ev. G. Warren . 4
'W. Hughes, F. Thomas, Myers, ur.H. Farreli,' Judge V. J, Robfnson,'
the IJot an hostess.'! , ... rJ,
'
V..
! Mr.' and Mrs,, J. Morton Riggs en-
tertained a large number of, theirfrfends ai their home on King streetlast Saturday evening celebratingthpfr flftopnth wedding anniversary.The house was filled with an abundance of flowers ani ferns, many ofwhich been sent by their friendsduring the day.
The guests were invited to supper,after which darc'ns was enjoyed dur-ing the remainder of the evening. Forthose who were not tempted by thelively music to indulge in the terpsi- -
rhorean, art, here, were cards. It wasa very ; tovely,, affair
'and .all present
dKtlSrSMrndmrecei number of batf--ttful piH-fS.P- ? tfass commentoj-atln- g
CdTfoX Whllthey
gcod
'rRafVertv 'vaV1 hWilliam afannina
mehj
esent efe:':"PI Wocteft; Colons
J. P. Reynolds, Major aniMrs. A. Conklin; Mr. and Mrailainerir ffctflaniscn Hall and.Major' '
Mra.iCoe '.flf .:!- - i , . , .
The dic-r-s cf the Country club , will1o nnerUA Ma tnnih nnH iho Utrht.
Will butti brightly welcoming thmembers thMr pnitst vhn ttpn.i '
i
i
1' pn"' ? j
' Kothing is more disagreeable than ahome infested with vermin. Destroy onthem with Stearns Electric Hat andRoach Paste, thesUndard exterminatorfor thirtj-fiv- e years. --r- v r '
4lkillij)ff rata, mice and cockroaches-liifii'singj-e
night Does not blow away
tKe'brldw li
Jrth :orrciri'iand Mrfej rvvnifam
Nuuanu
,Maior:,T"'.r'T"."cct mnni;reoeiying:R)g(jid'ij.:-;tT(-
1U
John.vffi?U?.u?JI'f?r partyooaxd
LjikePQariJer8; ready for nser nothing to
....
tmix.' BUBONIC. PLA.GC13Rats. mlr andpraa the tmti of thin dradfulu. which brine frooa infeetad ngini;
To avoid extermint theaepestsrcnaina Stearna' Eat and
t iTwo .ix; 8oU Teulw. .V.rwheri
! STEARNS ELECTRIC PASTE CO.Chlcaro. S.
&LIMITED.
Turn disc to
the dance this evening. Notices ofthe affair have been sent out to allmembers and it is that manywill be in attendance tonight.
.t v
Judge and Mrs. S. H. Kinssburvexpect to sail for on the next
andA who
Qnor
thoseDr Mrg HaroM atF. Ben- -
fln ,)rldge party pnnew,Mr.
and Wood
Uod
McCan
T:J.and
had
w
S
and
bnd
U.
Manna Kinzstnirv hari nimnorito S1n(i sonm t.;me n San Franciscoater which she was to deuart forItajy where sne would visit her broth- -
er However, in view of the prpsentconduiong 5n p;urope. the latter part ofthe tri. may omltted
nesf1nv trternccn. The rooms wereprettily decorated with magenta ger-rn'um- s
and ferns, and a number ofinteresting "rubbers'.' were enioved.Those present were: . Mrs. William
. W5.UiainsPn j,rg iJamea Ixuehertv,Mrs- - Fred Damon. Mrs. Schmidt,M Richardson, Mrs. FrankArmstrong. Mrs. Harry Gray. Miss,
-
,A wedding whichwill fake place at'.Ai
w.. y
r-v- ioyw-- aiif1
a'Bei i'1 'Mr JosephthR
fl. wan: gara.J'aveI . ' 'MI'I .
toMexico. vvnue
cock,roadie dia
thr br atincth
by
; A.
little
trs
be.
G.
.,,!.
wu
nfl If O Atcrnr r r I rr Lr nf nnin h
atKlcple Highlands. Kauai, is that ofMiss,, Mabel t)ugu'di Hastle, daughterof Mrs. William Hastle. and CantainGeorgeiPaker Leayitt. Roth the brldpand CToom-tn-b- e are Well-kriow- rt inHcno'ulu, where they ' have mafriends. .
' ' " '
' 'v VC
Among the, various parties touringthe islands is tho one at present onKaui consisting of Miss Clara M. PoleKauai consisting of Miss Clara M. Doleand Miss Olivej Rowell and their'aunt.Mlss Adelaide Rowell of Rrooklyn. nndMr. W. E. Rowell of Honolulu. MissDole is a sister of Judge Charles S.Dole of Lihue. and was born in Wai-me- a,
where spent the first twelveyears of her life. --.
,The .M,isses Dorothw ani Olivo Rn v- -
;ouwr.s f,.he.i Jujjg?,,. whiV,'
alJPany,'w,t" '.I
thelfw'f ' wunwT ?
&mmPVW hive
- fye Hs reoen
s.uprierwrvedjj'.)! h t
thn" IoVSTvrl r.Tn J J jk lovel; c'utglasi . compote and a de--earner wiin glasses,: respecuveTy. - Miss iiFfoTeafce'i Shiftman.
,'.Bcf heW 'tne low score for the ladies,presented with a ' beautiful silk
scarf and Mr, Castendyk was awardeda set. of military brushes as the gentleman's consolation - prize.
Later, the tables were cleared awajmc music uoys piayea ior aancing.
which continued : throughout the re
Mrs Benjamin W. Atkinson was hostess at a delightfully Informal bridge
Saturday afternoon in honor of Mrs.William P.Wooten who departs on thetransport Thursday for Major ' Woot-en'- s
Hew station in Washington Bar- -
racks, ;G. Mrs. Wooten. who is a'very beaiitif Ul "and ' charming woman,ha3vwbn' :a great many admiringMends during hef residence' Hono-lulu and it was with' the keenest reg-ret' that they bade her farewell;''-'- n --
- Captain and Mrs. Benjamin H. Wat- -
Ttiri8 entertained t a delfghtfufand informal' supper on Sunday even- -
lnS m neir attractive quarters atFort Shafter.
Those who enjoyed the pleasant eve- -
of Ilor- -
Horlick's Malted Milk
Special for Friday andSaturday, 25c lb.
A' delicious kiss containing- - ton'-e- centlick's Malteit Milk making them liealthfulas delightful.
We received a very large shipment esixnially forthis occasion : they wil l be sold on Friday and Satur-day .only for Twenty-liv- e Cents the Pound.
See the Window
Henry May
Leading Grocers
K2ZfiS&8XXX8X3(X'M ;
CALLLNQ PATS, . k8 .FOR HONOLULU X
Jjc. " ' KMonday Punabon. MakikL 9i
8 Tietdaia Waikikl. Kapiolanl XPark. KalmukI, Palolo. First KTuesday Fort Rugtr.
Wednesdays Nuuauu, Puunui, M
Pacific Heights. First and third KWednesday, above Nuuanu Xbridge; second and fourth Wed- - W
s nesdays, below bridge; fourth KS Wednesday. Pacific Heights; first
and third Wednesdays. Alewa RHeights. Kj
I? Thursdays The Plains Ka Fridays Hotels and town, 8
fourth Friday. Fort Shafter, first KZ Friday. 8if Manoa. Colleee Hills, first and H4 third Friday. &
Saturdays Kalihl. third and sf fourth Saturdays; Kamehameba K
S Schools, last Saturday.Fort Shafter Calling day ev- - 8
ery Friday.8 8K Note The telephone number of 5
ita.SKiSf 'iZ.irSZiCleave. Chapain' and Mrs. O. J.iW.Scott. CaptaUi ar,d Mrs. Joseph C. KayfLieuL-an- a Mrs. i, DN-m-
and Mrs. R4Wert . Ave, 'Lieut,Mrs., EWge
t, f fftufr Tr imMrs. FredflA UM i irIxnganecker, a.v.:FredenhaJl: L
. .
' .. ot. i jugnn. a ttnua
i: i ' i " i i -
land q. Wcvt ad Mrs. Johit R. U;lbcaW f6r th,..,, ofJ ,
cItlgS aiiu Liicui. aiiu i... -
A. Harker.v 1 v
Miss Laola Booth and Mis3 Mar-jori- e
Rooth, accompanied by theiraunt, Mrs. C. H. Schmidt, spend-
ing several delightful weeks on Ha-
waii the guesU of Mr. John T. Ra-
ker.
Mr. and Mrs. M. C Carroll depart-ed recently for Los Angeles, wherethpv will make their home. Mrs. Carroll rfs previAug to: her;, marriage,Miss i'CarmenYWaiOf. tWs city., ...
r V -
Miss Ha
J"f'- - f f'U ,uL ' ' :
...i- - ..u it i I :
turned Jo her adtiein oran
coi itrhere she rtudied, music1 f
" "'Krdgef.'bflast;
axsreat j WWl landwas qutte
to Wit 5
dewttire i 4tii 7, Islands sahaji
AlbsoIiuitelyPMFeThBonlyBakinfj Powder
Royal Grape Cream Tartar
BakingPowderwill
.SUPERVISORS
rOTiAbqiirnprovementg,von,,tJiGf
:Vr,,,mK
citslial.tttrniH. ..KprriandrJaOc.XjHcasverai,on,hp(.spRnt.
(Prnfessor!.Wbilai iMaxaMrirwas'
favoritarftnvyxjoayePtsets e'xtpnslve-- ..twnwriUprtmnWn .1usi'r.rTWus
u)ess l .Wl1 tAf -
cannot beiftfavdentrdlftthec. K&r'r'
joickJ by her Mr. Fitzpat- - neicU7?:.,PuvrrapntlJltxlulh,.laif,ifilga)oar'd an'' the
t6 n with niece, ann(uncef It.
r "t5 :!on atid
'he..ber Uh'elr.V.IVltoU,,anu left
'V ik,!.."JC.-DV-yl- were a P"way 01
this,XUectric
Co.,
llAr thio
he
nair
'"D.
In
very
&
and
are
as
TZyJ.Ll OTA
under
tie Miss
ii.e
ffnne unierwa'i
fromweek
4"u Mrs.
Jlilo and.warueu
fioacb
the
Gee.
start her M Hir rK Hb
Letter "Tmcf
gapuH- tiM0.PHi - 1
m.W.i Hawaii
entire' party-Jsltedi- f i the. :tb?cattGf ofKllfttfea andnalsQ r.ftther'IKJinis.oi lnieressw I
! )
lfi a A Vf o U o vrm-- r Poltwtn nnrli.Tai ouu iutov iiai j uoiunm uuutheir daughter, Frances, on the I
Matsonia last Wednesday for a trip j
on the mainland. They had consider-ed going on to Europe but this willundoubtedly be out of the questionnew. They expect to return to Hono-lulu about December.
;': J AMiss Gladys iiruger acd Miss Sybil
Winter expect to leave , Honolulu on !
the Manchuria, sailing September 8.1to visit Mrs. W.,, Walker, who is atpresent inieYorkitwUh,( , her two J
sons,' George and Knox , Walker..P. , .'itHe 'JtitrH '
.
Dr. and Mrs;W. T. yMonsarrat haveissued' invitations, foryf large dancewhich; will take;place at'the CountryClub tomorrow- - Evening:4' '
.
'.,, l
' Mr. and jfjrs. jF. J. Hare left recent-ly for San' Francisco whefe they willmake their home; -
Mr.-an- Mrs, Gerrit P. Wilder, en-- 1
tertained a number of the younger setlast evening at a very enjoyable en-
tertainment consisted of a swimand supper, followed by a
.'..Mr. and Mrs. Leslie C. Clark, whobeen visiting in California for
the past two months, will leave Sanon tne Mongolia. Saturday,
arriving In' Honolulu a week from Fri-
day.v
Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Lowrey were din-
ner hosts last week, entertaining in-
formally for fourteen.
Dr. and Mrs. C. B. Cooper have goneup on Tantalus for a month.
FREAK SHIPSfORTHE CANAL
Freak ships for the 'Panama tradeare said to be in course of construc-tion for some Swedish shipownerswho expect thereby to cut dowTrtolls:
the regulations compartmentswater ballast do not count in meas-
urement, and in the new ships for car-rying iron ore from Chile to. Europethese compartments are to be madevery large and deep, leaving just roomfor the ore, which will ballast the la-
den ship so that the water compart-ments can be left empty and .they. willbe as valuable for buoyancy as any partof the interior space. As a result ItIs estimated thn these vessels, six oreight of which are' to be " willcarry 16,000 tons and pay no higheftolls than an ordinary ship carrying5000 tons. Springfield Republican.
Marriage isn't necessarily a failure.One always has a fighting chance, v -
made fromof
, Read the LabelAlum not
make rood
,--fno t,y
JfKS.on th:meu4en4
Royal Baking Powder Cook Book sent.r Honolulu,
WITH
Afte'r hrarip; .rgjimrnts on both'sides of the liibestinn. the .bcahl of
. v . . . j. .
scusstonWouldfty,
change the building frrjXTn ti frc-d- ii sucha way as tp al.Uwflmpiwvemeiits. tobe made to structiues without requir-ing the entire when improv-fHi- .
to conform totho provisirns othe building law.
This building law wns passed ev-er- ai
years ago. It states' that aftrits, passage, a building cannot be im-
proved unless the Improvement andthe building itself are made to coin-ll- y
with the reiuirt'menls of the or;f.
rtrtrnlKholI
.
The amrndmenf wai prepared withiik? wwm viewer mawmn 'i; posanie
Mpcanir.
Jf. iJLbepJ p,kja Ifcat ttho, la ihoirW' btr
KW. dMITntTflfJWthe brdlnteicf'
) ADramjK leemaaic t.niicagp.Frederlck.iL. Wendlpr v( ct M 'toul8.
victed of using the "third tb dpfranflef the Darrland Wil- -
pon .,fCrcantllet4BencY, uiwere -
fined $1000 and sentenced to ttyears imprisonment
"r" L '"VLh .mT
InlUhis
fP r?4 --ri1planned. This
Ifor.
uncle, D. A. chapd,frfckV'Whf journeyed mayokdprJd1dMinn.p spend, his ctherwisejmd finally
sailed
whichdance.
have
Francisco
PANAMA
Underof
built,
Awtttierbpefatlon!
Fort
Klag St, next to Young Bldg.
free on request,Hawaii.
Address box 583;
FATHER OF. 19 CHILDRENWEDS TIMID MAID OF 18
' "ty latest Mcll iCLAKKSVILi Tenn.. MartFrt E.:'; --
Hail seventy-nin- e years qf age," the -- vfather of nfnetern rhlldren, and Miss
house
ahJ
nuiden lmarried here at .,
Jrr. ' J
Tie cirp!e eloped from Lyon CounKy..Miss Fnighan frrmi hef parent! '
and Hall from his children.During the cercrrony the brido sup
joited the bridegroom, who walks witha hevy cine. Hall, weak from fearr.f pursuit by his army of children, fre-quently ursed Judge Jarrell to makebasts with the ceremony, !.
After the knot had been tied hoplanted a klrs on the rosebud lips1 ofhis child bride, and the couple departed arm in arm for a suite In a local
' -.hotel . . - -
".t .t:The rcsDonsibility which falls on;
Ine 'chiirth Mh the ,'pWehl Vris'is W : "Knrope will ;forai --"the topiRf o r'Hd' 'l i'u-
dress whlchJJpv. WiJliani Henry. FryAf.. i . 'm . t . 1 1 1 1 ' I
superjnienaeni 01 me .una . ltstdns In ' Hawaii.' will deTlvef 4 In thrf"Mcthodlstthufch-thi- s evening. . ..... v r4n..'i
ittWaiMf WcU Tried1 RkSi ,;
'illiS. W1VSL0WS 5C0T23NU SYKTl
T?or taking pictures in the shadeor in the house, for color-val-
ue
pi c t u res wi t h a ray s c r ee n ;
for. alT pictures where the lightis not tf ng 1 enough tor nap-sho- ts
you ' ; need the KodakMetal Tripod for best results.3 sizes: $ i.6o, $2.50 and 3.25.
-- Others iip to $5.50.
Km been wd br toilliea of totfhen tot iheir duklrwawhile lhiBg. with peitect tuctrm. ft mhrm mm m!Ly Mia. cinm wnd co&c and iTtfia ImI ruauli io
The. Sr-- by Druarv He mr-an- d aii or
Lsed fur mar than thre enarstiea.
Street
with
1874 lf7l
Honolulu Photo Supply Co.
Expert
Baggage
healthjul
NOTHINKERED.
xjf,eigbt!t
jiagistrato
Movers
promptness
Telephones
furniturePrices Reasonable
handled
Union - Pacific pansier
PHONE 2295 BEACHES ;
Hustace- - Pecli Cbeii ltd.ALL KINDS OP ROCK AND SAND FOR CONCRETE WORK. .' ''- - "
' FIREWOOD. AND COAUW ,- '' .' . :
. 9S QUEEN STREET. : ? r ' - : ' 5 Pv Ov T,OX 513
'
Ml
'Ml!
t':
.11!
y .
r j.;
Y'-A
v
--.
V
r
r .
I?
I
U
Ili
MARINE
r 7I i -
:
NT
Agents
HAWAII
"With war 'flogs strain
, iauuutnT, YOljriUi I -- not
wife from Iiarin : 'don'tleave vour family with-.ou- t
lirliH jt nave a
while and lniy a farm.
,'
' ' .1.f'Start-Savin- NOW!''
n 3
S 9
Al
Baldwin.... . . yLimited.
; Sugar Factors ) jjjComVnissIon. Merchantsand insurance Agents
. i , Assnta for .
Eawsilan Commercial ft 8oxf,
Haiku Enpir Compaoj. ;
Paia Plantation.Maul Agricultural Company.Hawaiian Sugar Company.:Kahukn Plantation Company. '
, llcBryde Sugar Co Lid.- -, r' "-- ,
Kanolui Railroad Company.K&u&i Railway kmaay. ,
Ka.uai Prult & LantT Co, Lti, Hoaolua Ranch. :,
. i r'- L.
Fire Insurance,.''THE
B. p. DiilirIidin.Co.;; 1 ; LIMITED.
. General Agent ferc Hawaii: .Atlas Assurance Company of
London, New York Under.' writers' Agency; Providence
Washington Insurance Co.4th floor Stangenwald Building.
Ments VantedHOME INSURANCE CO. OF HAWAIILtd O'Neil Bldg, S6 King St, cor.FbrtSL " "
THE YOKOHAMA SPECIE'
- BANK, LIMITED.'
- v --- : Ten.' - ;
Capital subscribed. 8,000,000v. Capital paid up....... .50,000.000. Reserve fund 18,900,000
K. AWOKI..... .Local Manager
LET ME RENT OR SELL 1
YOUR PROPERTY. ;
Havs Calla Every Day.
J. Pv. VVflson,; f25 Fort St hori?S6e
elillihttangewald Bdlg, 1C2 Merchant St
. STOCK AND BOND BROKtAS
Members Honolulu Stock and Bond" rvrhanoe " -- V'mi
STlin nruJETiv r.in:s inrr TOPAV'S XE1VS T(l!
FIRE
AUTOMOBILE
UFO
Established In 1151.
BISHOP & CO.BANKERS.
Commercial a sd. Travelers' Let-- ;'
Ktert of Credit issued on the1
Bank of 'California and H
the ' London Joint ;i
8tock Bank,4
Ltd., London t
Correspondents for the Ameri-can Express Company and
Thos. Cook & Son.
Interest Allowed on Term andSavings Bank Deposits.
m3AMS:
LIMITED
et-:aell- K. N.'i 4 K. Letter! tf
TrJifinoEt the worti'
',-- ! . ... - V
Cable Transfers cl
C. Brewer & Co., (Limited)
tUGAfJ FACTORS, , COMMIS.V'-- SION MERCHANTS, SHIP.
PING AND INSURANCEAGENTS, FORT ST, HONO.
List of Officer and Directors:E..F. Bishop .. . . . . . .PresidentG. H. Robertson . .i ......... ;
Vlce.President and Manager
ru ivcib. oecreiary '. E u Rs.Rois....;.. Treasurer
G. R. Carter.....) )C.
' H.'nooke. .....) ?
J. R. Gait . . . ....DirectorsIL--A. Cooke ...'.)A. Gartley .......)D. G. May ....Auditor ;
For Sale$16002 bedroom house, artesian st,
. near Pu.iahou School: lot 53x105.
P. E.jR. STBATJCHWalty Bldg. . J4 8. King St
FOR. RENTNev furnished cottage .... a. i $32.50New cottage ........ 27.50Five-bedroo-m house . 30.00
Two-bedroo- m ttts.ge ...... . . . 15.00Neat cottags in town 2 bedr'ms 22.00Neat cottage ic Aown, 2 bedr'ms 25.00
. J.:H. Schnack, tr Real Estate. V..U
Brewer Buildins:. Telephone 3633
Six children were killed ' when thewagon in which theywere. ridingwa3struck by a train of the Boston VndMaine Railroad at Rochester, N. H.
Herman P, Borcher and Ceorg.- - Hof-melst- cr
of Pittsburg worrv arrested In j
connection with, fie disappearance offS5,(K)0 from the Colonial Trust Co. -
HOKdliTTtU BTAMULtETINf AVE iXESIIy, AUG 1ST H, 1014.
Honolulu Stock Exchange
Wednesday," August 3.
' MERCANTILE Bid AskedAlexander&Baldwin, Ltd.C. Brewer & Co
SUGAR.Ewa Plantation Co 18 18Haiku Sugar Co. 9TV5 110Haw. Agri. Co. 100 ....Haw. C. & Sugar Co.... 27 27Haw. Sugar Co. 27 28Honokaa Sug. Co. . . .C . 3 4rHonouiu Sugar Co 90Hutchinson Sug. Plan. CoKekaha Sugar Co. ...... '
Koloa Sugar CoMcBryde Sugar Co.. Ltd. 3U 3
14 14 U21 2
20 2011
'
97A 110100 123
18 18V460 65
204
Oahu Sugar CoOlaa Sugar Cov Ltd. ...Onomea Sugar Co. ......Paauhau Sug. Plan. Co..Pacific Sugar .MillPaia Plantation Co. .....Pepeekeo Sugar Co. ...Pioneer Mill Co. ........Waialua Agri. CoWalluku Sugar CoWaimanalo Sugar Co. ...Walmea Sugar Mill Co..
MISCELLANEOUS.Haiku P.-- P. Co., Pfd..Haiku Ft.&Pkg. Co., Com.Haw. Electric Co. 168 175Hawaiian Irr. Co. LtdHak. Pineapple A 3
Hilo Ry. Co.. pfd!Hilo R. R. Co., Cora.. .Hllo Ry. Co. pfdHono. B. & M. Co.," Ltd . . 16Hon. Gas Co. pfd. 103IEon.. Gas Co., com 105Hono. R. T. & L. Co ....Inter-Islan- d S. N'av. Cor.. i2V2Mutual Teleihone Co. , 18 . AO
Oabu Ry. & land Ca.; 125'
130Pahang Rubber; Co.f . . . . . .Tanjong Olok Rub. Co.. ; : r ... . 20
BONDS.Flamakua Ditch Co 6at"
', ': ' ; : ' ,
H, C. & S. Co. 6sHawalisn Irr.. Co. "c'j"' '?'Haw. Ter. 4s, Ref. 1905..Haw. Ter. 5s, Pub. Imp..Haw. Ter. Pub. Imp. 4s..Haw. Ter. 4s.....Haw. Ter. 3 s.Hilo R.R.Co. 6sls3iie '01 80Hilo R.R.Co. R.&E.Con.6s.Honokaa Sug. Co. 6s ... .Hon. Gas Co. Ltd. 5s. .Hon. R.T.&L.CO. 6s 103Kauai Ry. Co. 6s ..Kohala Ditch Co. 6s.... ..McBryde Sugar Co. 5s.. .. 95Mutual Tel. 6s' ..... 101Natomas Con.' Cs ..Oahu Ry. & Land Co. 5s. 100 101Oahu Sugar Co. 6s...... ...Olaa Sugar Co. 6s...... . 59 65Pacific Guano & P. CoJ 6s 101 J4 .'. i ..V
cjugar will UO. 68 624,San Carlos Mill. Co. 6s. ... . .Wafoliin A rr'yf ' fir-- . t. !
-
' Sales :" Between feoardsr--10,, 20. 60
Mut' TeL Co'. 15? ifMi inn . 9X1 . Uentenant' Seth'
Onomea,; public-.- hearlpg (wlU.be,h(eld B. G. Cullum;Mth5 Co., ; yPyPV-'iiOt,- , Territory ,an4tthe 8re-.detalle- to
rn , of Commissioners , of. Session ales 25. 23. 15 Oahu
A.,M., office
- ' I::. r "Sug. Co UKiUO. 5. 5 H L & S Cn .
27V$; 20 Oahu , Sug.. Co., i 50, 50110p,( 5 uoyerTiment ursemM'iiinginey makes,a;plg
. treet and. County Ho1aw ofMcBryde, 3; 33 Olaa. 2
DIVIDENDS. V--
Aug. S. Co.
sugar Quotation:-- . 96 deareeaor 70.35 per
i .....
Stisar 3:513-4-c"
Beets 9s 5 3-4- d
Henry Waterhouse Trust. . . Ltd. -, i r-- .
Members Honofula Stock Bond!- - -txcnangt
r0nT A"D MERCHANT STREET8 1
Telephone 1203
J. F: MORGAN CO., LTD.
BROKERS 'Information Fvirhtshed and
..
MERCHANT STREET STAR BtDG.Phona-1572- .
FIVE DROWN AS RESOLT.
:
OF GIRL'S FOOLISH ACTION
By Latest Mall - :
ALAUHJj.'STEP.. N. The at"tempt of Miss Annie Burins, a student
the New England conservatory ofmusic in uoston, to climb a rowboat In which sister.' Mrs.Minnie Mills Merrinnck,latter's two children her. younger
Dorothy BUrrans of UUca, N.caused the drowning all five. Thoaccident occurred in Natlcook Lake inSouth Merrimack.
i .'-.The party for an outmg.
, Burrans . was swlmminjtwnue her sister and three children rowed slowly about in atomed boat Two MissBurrans remained ashore.. .
When young woman .thestern or boat and tried 'to-clim- b
in, it went under.. The young onshore reiched the scene too late to be
assistance. of them, Bur-rans nearly his life In trying to lo-cate the bodies. 5
. : r ;
GEN. TANAKER AT MT. VERNON.
" t By Latest Mail J t, Vr WASHINGTON, D. ' C Gen.
Tanaker of Japanese army, whoIs makiag a tour of the world, went5iount . today paidto memory, of Washington. Hemade trip on the naval .
Sylph, as the guest of the governmentand accompanied by AmbassadorChinda ?nd of the Japanese em-bassy and representatives of State,
ar iuja .Navy ueiwinraeius. ; - ..jK Rear Admiral B. A; of the naryrepresented Secretary
DAILY. REMINDERS :
Round the island tn auto 15.00.Lewis Stables. Phone 2141. adver-tisement
Jim Qulnn and Manuel Reis arenow located at the Young Hotel AutoStand, opposite Young Hotel. Phone2511. advertisement
Courtland Hotel, where com-fortable rooms and excellentare under the management of Mrs.H. E. Palmer. advertisement.
All the newest songs dancetunes are oi yicior records, and theBergstrom Music. Co. has all the new-
est Victor records. Ask them to playone of the newest pieces for you.
Henry May & Co., Ltd., will havea special on Friday ind Satur- -
day of Horlick'S Malted Milk Kisseswhich are healthful as well as de
lightful. Only 25 cents the poundfor those two days' See the window.
Flowers at funerals are really silentpleas for favor above. The mostbeautiful bouquets and wreaths, min-gled sympathetic feeling, are tobe secured at the florist shop of Mrs.E. M. Taylor, on Hotel street, oppositethe Young cafe.
savings in the price of men'strousers at the Ideal Clothing Co. thisweek as there is a one week's saleof their entire trousers stock at greatly reduced prices. Save cn clothingallowance by getting a new pair ofpants very cheaply.
You must have some in lifej for which you money, but haven'tany. You can save enough, if youonly start. After you start, the regular weekly adding to the store comeseasy. Start a savings account thisweek with the Bank, of Hawaii.' All war ne'ws gets . to the other
Islands viai Mutual Wireless whichgets the news there while It is news.Isn't; p hint to you to use the Mu- -
r tul ;"Vrele8s when your news mustbeL4deifterjed while It is news?wireless" rsn"t botnered by slow steam- -
or railroad trains.
a special occasion a nice din- -
ner you eat a little too much toppedriff XL-- h t nn mur-- smnkinir the
I
aches. Shac relieves advertisement.
A beautiful girl is one who is pretty doesn't know it.
BY AUTHORITYFOREST RESERVE HEARING.
. uisiricx oiunaisian? 01 nwa,;;tV I
Notice is. hereby given that underIhe' provisions: o(.;Ciapter 28 or the
.- i m ' w j m
Uct 6 6t e.Seft Ujm uni1 Act. 4 of .the Session a
I ture imd r?8tyoii,Wednesday,f the .j I, ... i a. i m 1
CommissioBcr8t,.pf Agri.cuJture; . and
tmrfr Jst Sen-ni- a.:.' ,rir..; o.nicnht n
50. Ewa, 50, 20; 10, by;. the, M,,cheney and Cav-- l50, Hr C. &S. 27 25, 15 Oabu tb,e, aIry, the Mounted SerV-Suf- f.
Co.14 50 Oahu Sup- - iixif AgricuJ
in , the.. jpf the Board oil14;
50,piaa, .2; 50, H, & f orestry, ho la the Cay-Co- ..
27J4; 5 Mat. Tei Co., 18: in the, jCUyj of po)Q team, both., .these pfScers
C. .15.
Latestwbi, a.3i-c- , ton
Co.
and
STOCKLoans
Made.
H.
ofinto
were herof South the
andniece, Y.,
of
had gone outMiss
theflat bot
brothers .of
the graspedthe- -
men
of One Fredlost
Maj.'- ,-
theto
vernon Suid tributethe
the yacht
wasEtaff
them
Fiskthe of the navy.'
Thecustne
and
sale
from
with
Big
objectneed
the
this
Mutual
ers
On.
hpflrl
and
-- 18; .10,
Board
sJ 4th57
xiuiuju,.iu;cutue.we-ueuiwu- vi stana-o- y , piayera. ,. - , ,.r
tnety.
J. Mc- -
1st
limiia apa .sewng : apari as ra ioresireserye r of certain-- . government lands: I
U1UIO' UiUUCUUUIT.':.Ul.LUC XJlSllllt UlPuna,; island, of-H- a wall, to be knownas tne -- ULiAA UKiusr-tAKi- v unSlTfccnlia )fl38tafceei, mbrdl Is7) H ' 'I ? M
?A man ind?(i(ti4r.rIti!rjn?oi tH iafillands tirnnnspH fn"hp 9tt nnnrt" anforest reserve4 are on file In the office!nf ' the : Snnrlnnrtnt' nf FnrpRrv In I
Honolulu, where;they;are open to theiucsyt;cuuu ui tut: yuuiic.
At the said time and place all persons who so desire will be given fullopportunity to be heard upon the subSect matter of this notice and to present evidence and arguments In per--
son. by proxy, or by letter, either FORIor auaiinst tne setting apart or me8a.,d lands afT;Ie . .
' ZZ.,;" ":- . tm-- '
' voune- -
RESOLUTION NO. 191.
Be'it Resolved by the Board of Su- -
pervlsors of the City and County ofHonolulu, Territory of Hawaii, thatthe sum of - TWELVE THOUSANDFIVE HUNDRED AND 3EVENTYAND 83-10- 0 ($12,570.83) DOLLARS beand the same appropriatedout of all moneys in the General Fundof the Treasury for the following accounts:Sanitary sewer, King and Kai- -
11 streets . . . . ..... ... . . . .$3,S00.00vaLer
dBiiauuu jn.imj iiuuie, maina iuu.vj i
tiiyvusts examining iines- - i
es itianeone ana Kaiiuaj.. 20.00Maintenance of Mayor and
"Board of Supervisors' "mobile, not pro rated 226.46Maintenance of iwlice force,
material and supplies .... 574.82Burial of indigent dead, not"pro grated. 693.80
expenses (includingMaternity Home) not prorated . 285.50
Recording (J. T. Taylor) 10.00Country Supervisor's trans-- '' portation ; . ..... ..... 22.50Remodeling Treasurer's office 396.43Maintenance of parks, payroll .2.50
Presented byWM. H McCLELLAN,
Supervisor.Honolulu, August 1914. ;
' At a regular meeting of the BoardOf. Supervisors of the City and Countydf Honolulu, held on Tuesday, Aug-us- t
4. 1914, the foregoing Resolutionwas passed of First Reading and ordered to print on the following voteof said board: '
'Ayes: Hardesty, Markham, Mc- -
Clellan, PaCheco, Wolter. Total 5.Noes: None. :Absent, -- not vc-ting- : Petrie.
Total 2.: K. ntJFFANDEAU,
Deputy City and County Clerk.
FEAR FORESTER
MARGOLIN HAS
BEEN DROWNED
Was Well Known in Hawaii,Where he Investigated
Eucalypts
Ixjuis Margolin, who made an in-
vestigation of eucalypts .for theBoard of Agriculture and Forestryabout 1911, the result being a bulletinentitled "Eucalyptus Culture in Ha-waii," would appear to have come toan untimely and tragic end. RalphS. Hosmer, superintendent of Fores-try, in yesterday's mail received aletter from C. S. Ju.dd, a Honoluluman attached to the federal forestservice, in which the writer says:
"I am very' much shocked to readthe enclosed in last night's paper andI know that you will be the same. ItIs too bad, for he was a fine fellow."
The enclosure mentioned was thefollowing San Francisco dispatch ofJuly 2:
"A reward of $1000 has been offered for information concerning thefate of Louis Margolin, a member ofthe United States forest service, whodisappeared in the Sierra national forest June 19. The reward was offeredby L. N. Margolin, a hat manufac-turer of New York and a brother ofthe missing man. The forest servicealso offered $200 for the recovery ofMargolin's body,
"The day Margolin disappeared hehad started from a forest rangercamp on Dinkey creek for anothercamp ,on . Patterson mountain, 12miies away. Soon afterward a terri- -
flC Btorm broke, and It is feared hewas drowned':. !
Mr. . Margolin had a good manyfriends in this territory from his mis- -
sion here already mentioned.
i nnm nrnnrnn rf rLUbML UrriUCnO UCI
SOUGHT-AFTE- R DETAILS
TO SERVICE SCHOOLS
The details for the service schoolsfor next year have just "been receivedat army headquarters. They carrythe names of several officers of the.local garrison who have been orderedto Leavenworth and Riley.
aIry "alid Capaln -- Herschel Tupes, 1stIhfantry,' have! . heen 'detailed to the"V "pi,R.rlrei. ,a
, ,4kr smu-n- AffirAa--"c"-- . 7
thft.etaiL.., ... . . ?- r-
Tne .designation. of CuUam and Che-- "
The , 4tn cavairy.omcers gave, inprannual ' regirmentaj.dinner at , Haleiwalast I11S1IL. i i UKI B ..M. O, kUWVIlVreiresentatlon--. frpm.tho. regiment and
rflflenferal Carterl and 2d' Lieut. R D.McDonald, cavalry.
- " B- -
VACATIONERS DOWNTHE PENINSULA HAD
BIG TIME AT "0PERY"
In these days cf summer vacation- -
2 . 1. AU Iftll.. n VnmA aA virk itiaJJ. . v --vtri
IMCnB rinwn nr rh p.ninsla theother "night there was. a one-nig-ht
SftqwvcjirnnccpecpiBor' nousesaround Dconaunctd lft. greatest suc- -
sters; why, they found it grand. Theprogram follows as outlined ; on thehandbill:
For One " Night Only,Oatka Opera Honse.
July 31. 1914. ' '
The Peninsula Players Present"THE SLEEPING BEAUTY"
- In Four Parts.Part I The Christening.Part II King's Orders. '
Part III When Fifteen Years HasCome.
Part IV After a Hundred Years.Cast of Characters.
Baby PrIncess ..Katherlne Forbe3....Adelaide Ewing
(Jgod Fairy ...Margaret SharpPrJucggg .... Marion ForbesKing ....... Alvln SmithPages ...............
...Frances Forbes. Burrows SmithTheodore Forbes, Stage Manager.N. B. Come early and bring your
chairs as there will be standing roomonly.
WANTED.
A good draftsman, Apply 511 Stan- -f
genwald building. 5924-3- 1
LOST.
Dividend warrant No. A9476 dated Oct14,1911, drawn by Waialua Agricultural Co., Ltd.. on The Bank of Ha-
waii. Limited, payable to the orderof P. L. Weaver, trustee, for $30.Payment of said warrant has beenstopped. 5924-l- t
Dividend warrant No. A7674. datedJuly 15. ' 1911, drawn by" WaialuaAgricultural Co.. Ltd on The Bankof Hawaii. Limited, payable to theorder of P. Ifc Weaver, trustee, for$7.50. Payment of said warrant has
nesiaes pincers oi. ine flip, iqertjwere", present .: Major-gener- al H.Carter. Lleutenantcolonel B.bdn'ald'. Lieut J.'G. Pillow, aide to
The Capitol, Honolulu. Aug. 5, lVl.J.il;L.;Uf Tt.tafiA the
is hereby
anu sewer raiea ....c t . ii. onrtftrtl53-- rairy
auto- -
Hospital
fees
4,
Cox,
v been stopped. " : :' 592 l it
Fdu trvWHITE LEGHORNS
(Acclimated)
CLUB STABLESLIMITED.Tel. 1109
A VICTOR TUNE ON AVICTROLA
makes these Summer eveningsmore enjoyable. And If its aDance tune! welkyou know!BERGSTROM MUSIC CO- - Ltd.
SALE OF MEN'S TROUSERSAl! this Week-- Big
Savings.
IDEAL CLOTHING CO., LTD.Hotel St.
FUNERAL' WREATHSAND BOUQUETS
MRS. E. M. TAYLOR, FloristHotel St, opp. Young Cafe
PURE ICE CREAM
RAWLEY'SFort nr. Beretanla Phone 4225
Extra LargeChiffoniers
AILEY'S FURNITURE STOREAlakea St.. near King.
Don't Miss This Chance.CROWN BICYCLES ONLY $30.
HONOLULU CYCLERY CO.180 South King St
For the Latest if Style . Hats. for. - Ladles a nd - Gentlemen--;
- Come and See Us. :; i
hi. '
... ' K, UYEDAi. t
,,1028, Nuuanu St.,,
' ;uiii i
FORD STAND r
Phone 4770 ''i -- ' UNION STi' NEAR HOTEL ' I :!
i I -
" .1 '" ' " II '
f V SPECfAL ; 8ALE ' -n.
,,:, Glass, Unen; and Ponaes, Walstism. ::'.. :vi ;,'.. .4 1
:n A TEE CHAN &' CO. ' "-'- . ;
'" . ' '. ',1 i
MXHESNEY COFFEE CO.COFFEE ROASTERS.
Dealers in Old Kona CoffeeMERCHANT ST. HONOLULU
H. HACKFELD & CO.Limited.
Sugar. Factors, Importers, and y-
: .Commission Merchants. '
HONOLULU. .. .r I
FOR ICE COLD DRINKS AND14 ICE CREAM, TRY THE
HAWAIIAN DRUG CO.Hotel, and Bethel Streets .
HIRE'SPINEAPPLE
DI8TILLED WATERCONSOLIDATED SODA WA.WATER WORKS CO, LTD.
601 Fort St Phone 2171
NOWATER-LOGGE- MEAT
.We Sell - Island Product Only
Metropolitan Meat MarketPhone 3445
Grindstones- - i i
Lewers & Cooke, Ltd.
Home CafeGOOD MEALS.
Beretanla and Emma
I i w
Masonic Tempi
YeeMy Calendar
MONDAYHawaiian Lodgo No. 21. Stat- -
ed; 7:30 p. m.TUESDAY:
Honolulu Lodgci Na 4W; Spe-- -
cial. Third Degree; 7:30 p. m.
WEDNESDA- Y-
THURSDAYConsistory; Special; 5 p. in.
Lcl Aloha Chapter. O. E. S.;Stated; 7:30 p. m.
8CHOFIELD LODGE
THURSDAY.Work in Third Degree.
SATURDAY.
All vlsitlnr members of theorder are cordially latlted to at-
tend meetlnxa of local lodges.
HONOLULU LODGE NO. t, MODERN ORDER OF PHOENIX.
Will meet at their home, cornBeretanla and Fort streets, everyThursday evening at 7:30 o'clock.
G. C. LEITHEAD, Lader.J. W. LLOYD. Secretary.
HONOLULU1 LODGE,' 61 6i B. P. O. E.Honolulu Lodge wo.616. ,B. P, O. Elks.
; meets In their hall, onKing St, near Fort,every Friday' evening.Visiting Brothers arecordially Invited tofattend. .
U ANDREWS, E.R,H. DUNSHEE, Sec.
Wm. McKlNLEY LODGE, No. 2.. K. of P.
Meets every 1st and 3d Tues-day Evening-a- t 1:30 o'clock InK. of P. Hall, cor. Fort andBeretanla. Visiting brothers
cordially invited to attend.W. V. KOLB. C. C.L. B. REEVES, K. R, S.
X i ST AUTC STAN D
rr.Phone i innt
CHEAP RATES
, 4 ' i 1 I I i
PONGEE SUITSDRY-CLEANE- D
j. j , FRENCH .LANDRYIt i a VhoheM431
. .tillKEE-- ; LQX .CARBONS
do BETTER work, and for alonger time. ,
ARLEttJH'ti.
"HEYWOOD SHOES. WEARAnd wear longer than you ex--.,
pect for $4.50 and $5.
MANUFACTURERS' 8H0E CO.Limited.
LOOK FOR THE .WHITS WINGS
IF YOU WAN A TAXI2500 . Phone
Silva's Toggery,!'Llmltsd.
THE STORE FOR GOOD ;
CLOTHES"Elks' Building King Stmt :
Basketry500 Specimens
HAWAII A SOUTHSEAS CURIO CO.
Young Building
LUSCIOUS QUENCHING
ZEM-ZE- M
HONOLULU SODA WATER Co.
Only 2 gears In mesh In thssimple
F R I S B I E M O T O. R
S to 75 h.p. Ironclad guarantee.HONOLULU IRON WORKS Co.
MONUMENTSand all kinds of marble workcleaned and repaired- - by expertworkmen at reasonable prices.Call for Zimmerman at " '
J. C. AXT ELL'S. .
Alakea Street
STAK-BrLLETI- X IVE TOUTODAY'S EVS TODAt
v.
pEVEK
BO DOUBLE ILL'. Showsi. if ' ;-- " er Nightly
LAST WEEK IN THIS HOUSE OF SAMUEL BLAIR'S GREATER PHOTC-PLAY- S.
Week Commencing7:30 and 9:15.England's Famous Society Star. Sequel to Chelsea TT'.O
Matinee JLtLLIE LANGTRY, in LAURA SAWYER, in MatineeTodayj His Neighbors Wife Hour Before Dawn Wed. and
4
ZJ
Good, . ft-'-
Coffee,
V ( fee. The r best
tasted, made in
ever invented; -... . , ,
'
with - t n-- e
.rr vv estingnouseer
icn n tn r- - - - i
U 3 AXIS YRa 1
t ri c-C-o.
PHONE 3431in
l 1:1
AUDirCOTTPAyy
E24 tCTHEL STREET ' ;
.
P. O.-Bo- x 448.' Telephone 2035 .!
''.' '.'. ."' ,.,'. .':.JBecftlon, filvenT for alpiplify- -
ln3 ,eVx tyttematizlng,' ? office f
work: ''All business xonflden- - '
i. Conducts all classes of Auditsand I nvettl actions, "d furnishes Reports on all kinds 'of Sirnanclal WorlC,t -- T .w 1 "
ChandeliersElectric jFixtures Installed
ALL WORR ABSOLUTELY" guaranteed. ALL MAN-
NER OF ELECTRIC WORKSATISFACTORILY ANDREASONABLY a HANDLED.
V ' 1135 'FORT STREET:"
t- - .': .... V ' .
-- GOODS
King St. Auto StandLatest cVraTMl ' Pnoftr 400
Sam McMillan,- - Sam Peters- - . Antone Rodrlflues ;
IP
r
By the of. lulu jn A t , mc
("Honolulu in war-Tlm- e, an ar-ticle In Star-Bulleti- n
and America's neutral-ity and some events of history pertin-ent at the present time aroused greatinterest among the readers of 'thispaper. The article by thesame author is of even greater localinterest because of the calling out ofthe German reservists in Hawaii bythe German consul.)
Anent the calling out of the Germinreserves, ,tne taken from thecircular notice issued by the
of State in in 1901,Is . '' T1ie .given below is be-lieved to be correct yet It is not to beconsidered official, as it relates to thelaws and of a foreign coun- -
"A German sublect Is liable to mili-tary service from the time he has com-pleted f the 17th year of his age untilbla 45th year, active service lastingfrom the of his yearto the end of his year. . ? :
"A German -- who -- beforehe,is:17, years, old; or .before he hasbeen iftctuiliy called upon to appearbefore, the, military may.after a residence In the .United Statesof five years and after due
return to on a visit, buthis rlght.to' remain in his former homeis denied by and he may beexpelled after a brief sojourn on theground that he left Germany merelyto evade military service. It Is notsafe for a person who has once beenexpelled to return to Germany without
to do so In advance. A per-son who has his militaryservice and nas reached his 3 1st: yearahd become an American citizen niay
; '"'t "'.the United
0Utes the German States providethat Oerman subjects --'who "have j ;become citizens of th United Statesshall aa such upon theirreturn w if they resided in
J-B-ut American nf Qet- - J
uiau uinu jo iiaijic wj uiat auu uuuisu' A
offense against German law " Jlrf!,
before always . thelimitations of the laws of
rterTbe iwas enrolleda 'recruit iti the standing army; Ujh'e
ntgTBted while "on service or While nfora it
naving an, .iuanmea igave or Deing;mthe reserve, ne after reoelv- -
icaused dec's- -
afM 4itijuu... .ui,
part of Germany aince ourtreaties with the other , German
It
be fce
todecline
ana ODiamea ug bo iruuithe .governor
''The ofthat evidence of American
a former subjectt
is furnished by. apassport shall be' by ; a
showingfive residence In . the : uniteaStstea, lanrder Ihetreaty condition . of five years' tresi- -
dence "may" as afact of record..- - - ,
former -- eubject against , whomis an sentence.fears tlipon return
for an offense' German 1 law,may .of his na-
tive .state for relief, but " this Government act
the; :
A where a native offailed to respond to a call, is
by Secretary .of State .Fish in a' to Mr; HPaVis,
to '.:' t i t anenry Mumuour, nuuve or rrua
leave of absence,for a year and camoo ".the ' United States. He
beyond the of.In .the of 1S70. when the
war began, andserves were called out was summonedby o present himselffor duty on pain being declared a
- of the proclamation him at He
respond, .but appears thenafterwards to have
a naturalized hedid at Cleveland Ohio, 'June,' 1874;in the following he return
45TAR-BULLETJ- N, ,WEft2E3DA Y;
B Two
One
An
Elec
Calling German ResercesAuthor Yesterday's Jntereslmg Hibno-- ,
War-tim- e,
appearing yesterday'sdiscussing
following
following,Depart-
ment WashingtonInteresting:
Information
regulations
beginning 20th36th
emigrates
authorities,
naturaliza-tion, Germany
Germany,
permissioncompleted
safely'Teturn'to Germany'frrhentfetfeB'ibtwteen
aod
be.rWognizedGermany'
naturalized
committed'emigration.satlhg
Germany,d
uave-ef-abseiie- e limited-tim- e,
emigrated
jiataralita-tip- n
StMssburg.
certificate"
separately
outstanding'molestation
pelition'ihe sovereign
intermediary-I- n
petition.'particular
;July,:i875;
Knowledge
September
HONOLULU AUGUSTS, ioitf
i3r.n'.!,Je.'J.'tl,l&-'- i - V
Out TheArtfcrfef
operated as a renunciation his natbut also, though less clear-
ly, that he was not entitled to thebenefit of the provisions lot the; treatyof 1868 against prosecution fcr of-fenses occurring after emigration.
In reporting the case to the .Department of state Mr. Davis, who was min-ister to Germany, expressed the opin-ion that, during the three years Inwhich the German may e mservice, his departure might properlybe held to biin liable td punish-ment for desertion, and that a similarrule . apply w here '.the'were actually called out';- - ;but that intime of peace, ' the reserveswere not on duty the 'members werefree to emigrate to the United States.
Mr. Fish, after an examination o?the correspondence heading up totreaty, of the debates in the diet, andof circulars of the ministers ofjustice and of Interior of July 5and 6, ,1868, expressed the conclusionthat a person "having served the re-quired three, years and being placedon .the reserve rolls, having emigrated
.in time peace, when no existing obrligations to perform military serviceexisted, and having become naturaliz
five years, and who. terntinrartl flarmartV 'Infinvtn ! I
after
oricu;
to
American
tojecteddetentionif return topenmssum
Imperialre
quireof
appear
against
cannot as
noted
remained
summer
deserted.
or
which
render
might reserves
when"
although
'said:
believe
or
Patrons of the will thelast of the clever Irishoperetta, "Peg this even-ing by jthe Juver-il-e Thatremarkable little opera comique givesplace to "The Million Dollar Girl."the funny ' comic opera whichwill presentedand for the balance of the week.
Many specialties are being prepar-ed this comic opera, which in
respects is the entertain-ing one the Bostonians have
these specialties willa by Mfes
In "Peg ocharmed the
with the matinee ofthis afternoon Manager Samuel BlJiris a double bill at Ye
in good faith after a residence j Liberty Theater. is the bannerIn of Blair's oc- -
' V0Mrr ttT cPancy of Ye Liberty and. iricidenti!-'e- d
19 tn L 21nu: the doub,e hm it1 the final weekfP ot present stay in this house,the terms the treaty from .a ii..- - r T1 , ,
. mrn r. . . I XJCi W Ii IS liltluV Im one of the features. is a se
Mbllgatlofl arlse8a. quel to "Chelsea 7750." It is a ,x,wei
company.esthe
dancing
New Yorkproduction
presented
clock
lanraFish, Peters playing char- - failed keep
Mumbour's leave Nortona limited time: time a! Lillie husband's aslong .Jeave , givenFith to iout
; w at I uniform bear conse-pt-th- e,
country, inquired," .this appear Iquences .Doctor Norton,.Fish, "whether .it in of "His Neighbor's in accepted '
hen.permau.law Wife," production. It sence as signal
ure' could clrcum- - dramatic has'crei- - offer Isstancea .back constitute" a a sensation both in Europe band, when lmuorm
at tense steps' verandi. ,
obtained. Even if th' afford Mrs. LanetrvJia stjlendlooffense1 tunity display wonderfuT of
'actually.i play 'that geance.-n- e itemigration Mumbour's remembered'as 'suffering
T.not returns becoiti 'Presented "His . wife
aii . m amr . i r,: nnr vtna xurtdra rri in t n a inI v : rishas coTifclnsion,' jidWever, Mr.'
UAder' circumstances ' SkSffiSSi SiVn ZniSl, .first.ri,,air.:t; ; i..ti1;"ryij to secure plstolis with
ndk''call service public decided dlfferenWy.proclamation requiring appearance, bf nadv' faith this
broTOout;ne is liabito : ImproperlymJa BMil.MntaKhiAiili.finui. 'Via ' - " V ' L. . -
it a--yuuiajimcMi upvu'iB . 01 opinion
iwhlch
that it advisable make Mum-bour's case' or
future similar decisionStates negotiated, made: seems bettprsehs, natives province, .under with foreign
.circumstances, refer - ioInconvenience possible , which surrfinnH
German authorities regretting decision, it.they without havln- - to these' surroundings
toat
authorftles' 'Wurtemberg
citizenship ofWurtemberg
supplementedduly-authenticat-
yearslulfillment.of
there
presenting
Prussia
' .Minister:Qermany,'m .
a
expiration
Franco-Germa- n re--i
proclamationof
reached Pittsburg.'not
determined to
in
ofuralization,
active
of
WUI
Neigh-i-has-ibroug- ht
S-SSC-'
hto assume
;t me
Ti
! German authoritiesfollow In futUTe."
KAIMUKI .
.PRESENTtBERGER'WITHj LOYING CUP
: Resident f KaimukI ;
of toseveral hundred gathered
LIHaokalanl ." night in
Bijouperformsoce
Kildare,"Bostonians.
evening
manypresent-
ed.Thorn
Kildare," Hellen
Commencing
presenting
attraction successfulrPtTn"StiSJ!
illia7iof
givenby
WP 70th parti; Henri Bef-- I Vnn , mftV'Eer.
ed a
see
o'
be
of be
ed of
lltlftf
which
return
home
husband.consents. When
drama Sawver i Realizingpromise
knowingLangtry.'one
actresses American
have, Libertyobserved meantime
Frohmanto, waiting
militarytechnical situations
carryingwilr-prbbably-
. snoots.of
Llbierty.'
ln5"iu't
m bn
circumstances
,f
a
circumstances
communication
unfortunate
surrounding
good This causes
'Complete beimmigra-
tion commissioners in
iorl8rvance anniversaryKapellmeister
Kapellmeister
JUDSON
"PEG O' KILDARE" BIDS ADIEU
can
lar
was
JOU
with herfor
Shefor the
for
.be the pre
ticsupervision
soon theis
take
&
BILL FOR
FINAL WEEK AT VE
telfJlSS'S10
him hishis
her thehis ten
Tothe
his
ful, but the tenhas
said Mr. that the herfor and that
but the was the life will beand was the Las she to, hus
him go be Ye the,"I will
Mr. be the title the has ab--by that M that has
any, one hts and he hus--
and ted as. snethe wit 'aa!in,AmeHca.',?The': out oh the'
aur.h waw tnw oooor- - 'sees thefigure.' andUetyj.fairlyconterapJateayan her art and be his ven-- .
Pi'?'
ion.
;not one 13 mat tneto. be ohe the yet -- the his, sin
vto and in at Ye pon His
,(..ii. morrar- - nmnnt
case for thethis an"11' His
-- He his and
fcrtnnately injured.
ChelseaLioertyZrfZ: tbew his child-wh- new-doubl- bill opening
Into dr-- ;
his caseafteiPSO" have not the
nottest that
will bewere citl-- ! but in
at thatmay sub- - --the
to. thiby the thesought! and
the
that
"A
who'
case,
his
the
did
the
thethe
that thewill ir
RESIDENTS
HANDSOME
districts Honolulu the numberIn" the
last 'ob- -
formost
Onesong
Missthe with song
ThisMr.
his
This
4of
been
part
ful with has
don.will
fall-- ,
best
Inv
'theand
and
tnlghL- -' Wednesday.
(IIIVtlfipHI III
SAVS ffll'ETTIcooperation
the territory theregulating the
says
TONIGHT
DOUBLE OFFERING
LIBERTY
reconciliation
the
the
will
leading
liver.
issuance of certificates playhfrth Lorn in this coun-- 1 "darky.songs. ; .
' ' ' I A ago fromI ii' w rvf ' has made
other! a from at press club this city.
of of inbirth
w tr ue uicooperate newspapermen with
Wv tt struments old time southern
luktlftst IS vpara iMitsp ... . .. u.
a
a a a a
a
...
a of
fo
V
m6In-- ihe
the Hawaiian t Band. Th a affair 'J ,..!. " Burglars to up..T-ni-
rfx 5 gafe the Tostofflce-- at Garfield,
laimukl dmnroWniPnt nrth": flZ gesuons, your aeierminauon jenforce the territorial of $27'sembly . of 'was taste- - of
r with flowers, palms tmc?tes of Sne?S toL,. U"? Americanland
memberand flags - joint commisison,
avoid the, the perpetra- - d arp? of as incident tp the amiled thehonor, RVstm- - lt
: J'Sentv p!' , .... .
Years, Berger- - was practical experience territory
time of peace, he obtained to 71 as prima facie proof, of
leave;
be-come citizen,
ofIn until late hour.
tomorrow
audience
forfeited
starts
the
Id
Tawn ?ttfe?"yi.WlieiL ron.lHjh.lf.. " t --- o ; narmt t inn ciiiztiu- -
DR. OF.CHICAGO
Hellen.
punish- -
aDout
ap-na- n
claimingshipi especially when such persons ,
of Asiatic origin. . ,
,4It seems to bureau that it mayWILL .VISIT IM HnWiftl'HI II -- Possible to work out some
! cates may issued and used with a,of the UnivePsitV of a ot ftisfaction
or R. j. ; Pratt of --the Honolulu . , ' " Ju7 Vt '
the offer at this timeIron and 'Dr. J. B. Prattjpresident of the board of health, -- .inn , c?nslfta f t0
visi tr wrtT,niT No.1 1908. a coov which is
to the issuance of certificatesand condemned to a.year's imprls-;ej- i n1lIch been Reived hlrL Identity to .persons of Chinese de-J- r,
fwrtini Wring stav her ant C0uld you;110t adopt a some-- fIntended to .i ,t what aimilar remlaticn a view
1 fait Germany . indefmitely. tin4L,tl renewim:
uuuuursstld acquaintances
,Ue vaKcu UDkeep
T "of
ill ?h,ntrfV l TlnS TT Honolulu residents who born in the Hawaiianthe .University of ChIcaeoare stantly provided with a certificate, the
cumsiaces indicated that object in to something In the vay photograph on which would representnaturalized in the. Unlted;cf a and for him. the holder at an nearly.
States gain protection against - t m 'enough current to insure ready identi- -proseroticn .for failing to obey thej Lena TlronSLt 18 'months old child, ficationr'
of 1870. he should re--; taken to : the1 in Phila-- " The section referred to in the clrcu-tur- n
to Germany. - The German phia supposedly sufferin-frot- n recites that the minimum age aternment took the ground not only theria. After child died
"
it was which the certificates of identitv shallthat his admission or declaration 6f that her illness' due to a issued to children born of Chinesew9Lf intent jo return;;to beaa lodged-i-n her throat t- - In the Hawaiian --Islands shall
LULU AT BI
has connectedname more than two years, "WildIrish Rose." will sing ballad
last time this evening.Plans being made Miss Con-
nie West to appear an estheticdances will firstsented the Forvears Miss West has studied
in New York underdirect of Mile. ElolseGausle, and as as engage-ment of the Bostonians closed hereshe exDects to toto in big thereto be this winter Cohan
Harris- -
IS
?(?rni!
communicating
to change resolve.he goes to the home of neighbor,tells that captain. has ruined
ind giving her until oto elope .with him or he would
kill her save her husband's life she 4
Captain reaches home wifefronts him with the Heconfesses, but makes an earnest p'.ei
forgiveness. In this is successfated hour of o'clock
Dassed. that sheIt was true, House leading to to elope
of absence was acters. 'with Doctorof greatest her
one, the stsge everia result, resolves., herthe intent to allow known also shown band's and
not week. She herself.'role
prpvlded she refusedreturn, under tens play, that f9r her
Telate weil inoffense date leav
Norton believingto is out threat
make the menreso- - -- captain realizes
Mhers.
"suchIs
the
iiiereiore,
In
ascribe
'.and'
school
federal
Cm-- a
Hill
was to
is not' fatally andthe tht follows the
picture 4s said to show Mrs. Langttyheight' of her power as , an
American 'actress.. stated,' 7750" will con-
tinue at tonight and tomor- -
ttet comes row. theto-bi- d him matinee
BILLY ;
IS- -
By MailCHICAGO Billy old time
who has played withall the companies of
and who has appeared beforethe royalty of .Europe With his banjo,died at hospital here cirrhosis ofthe Born in Cincinnati in 1861,
turned early to the' stage where hismusical talent soon won him a placeamong the stars of minstrelsy.made several pf the world andon occasions of
and use of requested !h Ira .and sin the oldfhv Aalfttica
try. few years he' retired theThovc'r Vretarv tcrH. stage and since then his
tory,VrecelVed letter A. Cam!-- , home the in
nettL today in euier umhis stringedwhich he states will
nndhil and raelo--
that thp hlirpflllfor thp tif!
,xic nas iucpices of dub.' .
"V attempted. blowcan-te- d ninnA VkI actives ana oy to N,
in, ana bllt faUed: They rifled the. casheorts to stat- - awerhall school
fully decorated ofu tne PanaraamJ to maximum stroke of Dralvsia at Pan- -
by tion fraud an and is not tto-nco-howeverfeature "selection being ?;
limits which t0 jeave the
1869, in to L"u ance. even
offered persons.v..niipns.
are
thebe plan
:'Drr!iinit' beCagolnT rouCh;grCeter
consmWorks bf S. bureau
v0fcx9a"in,sfttentioxi J?.
Dav a'of enclosed.
ed Geraany.ed
hishfk
thTmllorit, Sr
ire- - ,i,.Mm. withand children Asiatic descent
islands con- -are graduatesstates, nre--nts paring plan
teccmine reception dinner early age
ansummons when was hospital
g;ov-.'d- el dfphthe
a,found beAmerica
which
this
arein
by several
the
by
Instead
conaccusation.
for he
Doctor
AsYe
by
BAXTER, OLD-TIM- E
v MINSTREL, CALLED
LatestBaxter,
minstrel nearlyminstrel
America
he
Hetours
Several rubers Europe
commissioner-general- ,
QVv
jparents
uiob. umicu .uiiuci aua- -
the press
Jl tneK v.y
the
' ,
when conttiniDtion cuiuni, over -- 350 daily in theUnited States: Neglected
L Jdiejnd chronic disorderst vrrrt lhttiiealtnui& influencewhich alkies tubercular serinsthe .mastery. ... .The greatest treatment that scienceaffords is courage, rest, sunshineand Scott's Emalstah. ' "
, Scott's 'Erneton, contains purecod liver oil to cUrify and enrich the
wasted tissue and fortify the resistive -
lorces to tnrovr on ojseasc germs.Strengthen YOUR tuns with
Scott's cmuiiion-- asInA Im.
mrtant to nedecL - C
its mmrOt W mmrm mgakm Au
Z ScattS
7 m
11
O O
H,Jl.i
R K. LA NO 1UKSEXTS THE FAMOUS
It fi I ft ig.
ll;jViM!.J
.'t
JUVENILE
LAST TIME TONIGHTTHE BRAND NEW IRISH OPERETTA
0'Three Nights, Starting Tomorrow
The Tuneful European Success
Tf'IWf w
1
r
'v
i 't- -"-- 7": T
La
ma
JiilL
DlJ I.
..!..;.v.- -
ate
111 III IM
feg I0LDA1E
mi
Poprjlar,uwmT Priw to moot the popnlar demand:!Kcserfed vOrciustra Seats, 50c; noservwl I)ress' CircleSeats, 30c; Keserved (Jalleiy Seats, 1.jc.
Matinee Kescrved Seats, uOc; Children, 2oc; GeneralAdmission, 2oC.
: USE THE PHONE THE NUMBER IS 3937.
-r ';.-:.- .V ','
ANNOUNCEMENT9s
McRae Universal Feature
Pen!Has been delayed in transit. Date of exhibition will be advertisedlater. Theater will be closed to make extensive-repair- s and altera-tions preparatory for .WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11 with"THE TWO SERGEANTS" (Six Reels). (Sam lilair Famous PhotoFilm.) :
r3
Delivered safely on board any steamer leaving this port. Yon takeno risk when you deal with '
, ; . ,
Honolulu --Cbnstruction & Dxaying Co., Ltd.: , . . . .. PHONE 4381 ' '.' ' " ;
Keep your securities lr a safe in our.' ' Deposit Vault." ' ,f
HAWAIIAN TRUST CO., LTD.t :
" 23. FORT .STR E ET : 2 V r '
EIGFIT
Fres SodeMADE BY AN EXPERT.
Love's Bakery
Por noro . than aquartor of a cen-tury SHAC hao loonthe favorite rone dytor hoa&acho andneuralgia.TaotoloQD-Cortai- il12 aosog-2-5 oontoAsk your draggiot?
for SMC
SPOTSImperfections on your - mirrorcan b removed by reellverlng.
OLE)i.' ;. ,
and worn out mirrors mad tolook '
NEWPhono 1897 Silvering Depart-
ment
Sharp Signs188 Merchant Street
... t,
Classes Supplied
Factory on the Premise.
Botton Building ::fT Over May &
1
Fort Street
C3.
' IV V r
' RICHELIEUPEARLS ,';
n Strands of Variegated Colorsand Shapes.
WALL4 & DOUGHERTY
HONOLULU
CITY TAXI STAND
PHONE S43S
Finest Meats --
Lowest PricesAuto Delivery
C. Y. HOP WO MEAT MARKETOpposite Fishmarket
MEAT MARKET & GROCERY
Phone 3451C. Q. Y E E HOP & CO.
SEE OURCHANGES OF RATESHONOLULU AUTO k
- . TAXI CO. .,- -.
Behn & Bedford, Mgrs.J939 Phonea 1005
PURE4 AND FRESHMilk, Cream and Butter.
PHONE 3622.
CITY DAIRY
DO IT ELECTRICALLY
Hawaiian Electric Co.
STAINnrLLETlXGnTSOUTODAY'S At" '
i--
raciiers
PROGRESSIVES
WILL ORGANIZE
FOR CAMPAIGN
re-
sult
. k - m . ..v- - v j . i w I .
tO Be have been The day after congressReplaced by
Central
The first meeting program:Central Committee the Progressiveparty has been called for Tuesday,August 11, which meeting the chair-man, secretary and treasurer will beelected, and the provisional commit-tee, which hitherto lias conducted theaffairs the party will, be dissolved.
Although a few precincts have notyet cast their votes for the territorial :
central committeemen their bal-
lots will be received and counted, upto. the date of the meeting, it , is notlikely that there will be any change
the following list, who are appar-ently elected. ."- -
Oahu: A.L.;C. Atkinson, Howard,M. Ballon, David Kalauokalanl. and :
J; U. Joseph. Hawaii: T.,Guard. Hilo;
OLD SOLDIERS
GOING BACK TO
lambs
HONOLULU AUiiUST
TENTATIVE PUNS MADE
INTERNATIONAL NAVAL
Aug. theconference the
state, war and navy,has been prepared
the assemblage Hampton Koadsand Francisco way
the Canal the greatfleet which in-
vited Congress partici-pate the the
the Canal and thePanama-Pacifi- c Inter--
rmtirmsil CoDiea Hr.nr.riExposition.just completed
dispatched the powers will follow fleet one(for presentation the dreadnoughts now under,
which they accredited. construction com-- 'Duujtfti sugui tuaugca,
the the official
Sr.
February 1915ships Hampton Roads.
February naval repre-sentatives the
February The president willRoads and there
review the fleet, after whichfleet will the
March The bat-tleship, will for theCanal.
March The president arrivesColon.
The fleetpass the canal.
March Ceremonies'
Chas. Kauhaihao, Hamakua; Geo. '.
Kamauoha,- - Kona; Maui: .Thurstori R.! March 13. The president sails forHinckley, Haiku, and. Hen- - San Francisco battleship.ntrig, Haiku. ' March 14.--T- he fleet! leaves 'Balboa,'
Kauai one proceeding San Francisco.out sufficient votes have not yet been Match president
warrants the announce- - San .. 'y
inent any name. The original invitations therltlme powers send vessels par
- i - -
ih Pavntrv1'
H fnrrlqAh rimnrtapid Depends
George I
Charlie
sheep,
1011.
Asof a between sec-
retaries of a ten-tative program
into by
of Panama of,
of toin of
Panamaopening of
Hieaaruiolra ru r.- -&suui, ui"U.program adjourns
j in !
, to I exueeted( iu ia ,
ofof
at
cf
In
of
of
mis
foreignat
20. Foreignto be received pres-
ident In22.
proceed tocombined
proceed Isthmusof Panama
5. on adepart Panama
,10.
atMarch. 12.
' ' !throughat Balboa,
P. 6r Panama.- -
'
William on al 'J
; Is --entitled to member, to ; "23.wrhe arrives at
received to ...of " i to ma- -
0m ' to toticipate In events the
the Canal and theSan Francisco exposition werein September far, favorableresnonses have- - been received fromtwelve viz.: Argentine Re
Austria -
Great Britain, Italy,Japan, Russia Sweden
is certain 'that doesmeans represent the tota
nqmber; of for isknown that btHef governments?
' fnrtheii.
Correspondence r ?BVaUiQl plans, fpf tneseKPMnpnFT n Aue.r5.--r toteignify., their, intenuon to panic
m r 'If . .l I'.J M lli.'f.n,.th transnari Lrieah will . :tarrjTi .awa pate.-n- h- 1
auite an anDrefclable tart of. the,Sch07V "Tftetr 'decision wxu be nastenea Dy
Held garrison ;ior "arecnarse at uuiflr,v;nuKii n un--u i.uc.ov--Franci3co--C- 9 lrt 'aW'c-f-.'whlc- Uire' department has iut, dispatcTie... i'. n"f : nsti :ii frm. tfiA American embaasies ana legations
. ttr frcit (th;-lstt,iel- d
the
So
are
Artillery, 30 Wii'ttte 1st Infantry anl to r thefive, fjpra the Infantry. ?Jany pT berif lD3wtesA Le' otlir m lhelr - ,life. and
nr,A tvbJAo ff.hr nan 111 bo anstr. thirds' theif,frnni H,n lairre- -
been
these
Cuba
FlrstIM
Jy ?of recruits, M;jthe
to
lO-l- o,
-.
olsteamlnfc. raditrs. much
upon Jhe ansvers id theser ? - a 3 i a. r a. ill a M
ts at SchofleIdi'vc eploa aJ .r"vB7r";.as caud-rria-ny to .return, to ?
STAR-BULLETI- WEDNESDAY, ";
ARE
FOR
DISPLAY AT SAN FRANCISCO
WASHINGTON",
PrOVlSIOnal CommitteeTerritorial
Committee
by
fSpCclaVtar-Bjilti- n
threeauesUon.n'oriommissloned. andsj.afcopd
haeslgnation Sllt. RoaVathin their present or- -
show--ga- nihaTe.B .but representativezatJons. lm,,, tnKslrom each Gallon ; It is
AD;0Ir! CrVlU,i that tbeater havalert rwill.be,? I ?Tnore nuroerousir fttaqA-pM- uiif fPvt. 1st W ftt-rth- e ,Broalier.8tateV Italy-- already has
1st Class Joseph O. Myers. ? unofficially Bignlfiedr an 'Intention-t- o4th Cavalry CpL John end a comnlete sauadron of three
Band; Sgt. Leon Dunlap. Troop A; flne cruisers under command of anSgt. Edward H. Ohle, Troop A; Pvt. admiral, and It may be that this offerJames k. ciark, iToop u; sgt. Joseph wm mark the proportion of represenM. Patrick, Troop D; Sgt. John F. De tation cf the other navies. : The speedSwan, Troop E; Sgt Arthur Leasure, requirements of the-lon- cruise fromTroop F; Pvt. Barney Jahoda, Troop Roads to the Golden GateF; Pyt Thomas Troop F; wllLbe rather severe, so much so in- -
Sgt. Peter . T. Kink. Troop K; Sgt deed as bar from participation InMathew Troop K; ' Horsesho- - the great voyage any of the little guner Viktor Rockovskl, Troop' K; Sgt boats . which . form the only BtrengthSidney Severena Troop M; Wagoner of some of the small states.Gregory Granger, Trcop M. ' " The aecond question relating to the
1st Field ,! .Artillery Sgt,'"
Ray1', S.' aixe of : th vessels , Is asFleming, Battery A; Cook Bruce Cl indlcalnr the, ; possibility 'bf passingSnoots, Battery A; Pvt, Carl D. Brar-- l thenl ln;palri or eyen triplets throug'hton, Battery A; CpL 'William Car-- the great locks the Panama Canalroll,": Battery B ; v Pvts, : manyel De-- and ' thereby. ? saving valuable time.Souza,'- - Joseph Bye. Albert G. Lesco,! Also' It assist naval comtnan- -
William J. Stark. Battery B; Set Ar-- bf the, international fleet In ar- -
thur C. Phillips, Cpls. Georxei H. Oat- - ranging . Itinerary by . informinghout AdolDh Schlie. William McSuT-- k him of. the probabte ability of thelivan Battery C; Mechanics Hairy B." units to neavy weatner conai
'
Osborne. kWllliam: P.- - Bat-- : tion8- -?
' ' '
V.:N -
tery C; Pvt Harry Goldln,, Battery C; I No less important Is the thfrd qi.e"s- -
Pvt Gurney D. Zachary. Battery C. l relating- - to the - coal endurance1st Infantry Cpl. Max Kessel. 01 lhe vessels? i the .navy, department
Band: Frank Golla. Band: Set must be advised df the maximum dlsJames H. Turner. CdIs. Clarence De- - tance which each ship can make withhart Lee R, Brewer, Co. A: Set. Jas..fu11 bunkers of coal in order to planLynch. Co. B; Sgt Gustav Arnold. Co. for fresh stipplies at the proper pointC: Set. JamM Hardlnr. C,n Ti-- . rni.,U la believed that If the navies rep- -
Melvln Tjier, Pvt. Albert Hicks, Co. I re8entedt f001?"86 6nly modern large--
D: Cpl. Fritx Waldenberger, Pvt , Buea BUlia' 11 WUI 00 Pssue to uiukbGlenn McCollum. Dennie Scaggs. Co. i wuo ,iwiea irom Hampton
Cpls. Homer Routt Thomas Har- - roaa!. i won witnoat swp.,,. m welev. Co. F: - Cook Henrv Pvt cana ireQ - BuPPes ,OI coal wm oeGuss Bapp. John W. Howard, Co. G;Cpls. Fench Burkhart Ogden A. Mc-Clun- g,
Arvide B. Bloomdahl, Co. H:Pvts. John E. Moran, Cecil E. Statzer,Co. H ; Pvt H. Powell. Co. :Sgt Chester McVeigh. Co. L: f Pvt:Lester Gear, Co. L: Cpl. An--
"
gel, Col Mf Cook Charles, Ward. Co. l
even
Pvt
t5Kein
theand the.
coun-- 'ty by use ofand
a offour
old, The boybut
his, and legs arewas by
Thewith by medical
5
for
San
hasby Act
the
greatare
aooui
by
the
and
13.
greatof Panama
Bentlast.
,France.
andSnain. thisnot ant
naval
'the
a
W
derhit
E; ;
taxen but even then it may impose asevere , upon the small vesselsto make the run from Balboa to. San
' 2,189 miles, and some ofthem may be to put in for coalat Pichllinque, the coalingstation in of to takefuel froni in Bayon the west toast of Mexico. Some offh,!!f; ?eV a!Pln , the naval vessels of ; the larger
25th Pvts. MIIm. Trrv : . 1 . . JL.. j -tjr,. ; -- "w. according w Amencan sianuaras, inUllml."!..Co. G; I 'this muter of coal endurance,C6.; C: Pvt Jmpj n ,a..,- - k . aJaL-- U&' Co' H:Cpl. Mose Co. I. home defense and short cruises.
. I Because floating Ice on ChesapeakeTRANSFORMING' DWARF ! Bay makes, it impossible
or Gavs &l ume on coal. T0 NORMAL PROPORTIONS other and order to guard
- - i against delay in the ofBy Latest Mail ; short crowded program, for--
ALTOON'A. Penn., The Blair elgn naval vessels have been requestedmedical society the thy-
roid glands of Istransforming young dwarf Holli-daysbur- g,
Jules Schroeder, yearsInto normal proportions.
is suffering from undertreatment armslengthening it said membersof the society Wednesday night.
experiment is being watchedInterest the
dispatchin-
ternational
celebration com-pletion
president
Territorial
rendezvous
Washington.
Hampton
to
president,
president
Francisco.
opening
countries,public, Hungary,
Germany",tortugal,It
participants
eimplx swatting develop--
ceWDrattonanATinACKSi
ekpected
XtjViwT presented
Reddinj,
HamptonMclntlre,
trTuohey,
important
Shearburn.
tne,rnn
strain
Francisco,obliged
AmericanLower California,colliers Magdelena
?ceInfantry
Smith,
sometimes
supplies,execution
gretinism
to assemble, several days ? at leasf inadvance of the date of February 10,mentioned in the memorandum. Theircommanding officers With their staffswill be the guest3 of tue United Statesgovernment as will be the special navalrepresentatives invited to attend. Thepresence of the latter will relieve thediplomatic body in Washington fromthe obllgition to be present at Ham p--
vrv
attend the opening ceremonies of thePanama-Pacifi- c exposition in SanFrancisco, now fixed for Febrmry 20,without possibility of postponement.The foreign naval contingent will bebrought to Washington on a passengersteamer especially chartered for thepurpose, and tneir stay in oapinlwill necessarily be very short as theymust be in Hampton roads again onthe anniversary of Washington's birth-day, when President Wilson will re-view the fleet as it nasses through the
thiS cvinn
and to various theto governments. 0f
and bepieie mat time
it
the
meet
on
Pvt
Rrartl.
and
the
the
of,
It is planned to divide the interna-tional fleet into four sections for pas-sing through the Panama canal andas at least two of the average-size- d
warships can be accommodated in thethousand foot locks at one time, theentire fleet could be locked through inabout two day's time. The features ofthe big parade through the cnal willbe the old battleship Oregon, on thebridge of which will, stand AdmiralClark, who commanded the ship in herfamous run around South America dur-ing the Spanish-Americi- n war alsoSecretary Daniels, and many other no-
tables, and the tiny launch Louise, oneof the first, boats to be employed bythe French; canal builders nd whichhas been by an act of congress madea gift tothe French' government tocommemorate the completion of tuecanal.j (Very 'soon the officials here will tikeup the 'arrangement of a program forthe' exercises which . are to take placeat Balboa; to' commemorate the formalopening of the waterway but so far noattempt has been made to outlinethem beyond the delivery of an ap-propriate address by President
ORDERS OF THEHAWAIIAN DEPT.
Special Ordere ,'
.:
I ; iri Privatev RoycerJjl' Irvin, ,. Company A, 1st ' Infantry, Schofield Bar
itTi-iwli-i .aroed to this m .I T .i"- i " . lrJL,I . yrou'y una survey- -
reporiHisc.ron arnvai 10 iue uepan- - ana.ment 'adjutant fox.duty as orderly to third
t, .Jl - :'.cii... tinme comraanumg H ftutrai, x; iroi. na- - wasUrtgaaer-jn?,,-- s , flg ; ;er capable teach bottt. iim house. But were better Fannie H. in Atlantic
"Tter being- - bo i public , mer and winter could4vailabW ahd xti beipigrimpracticai)ie ,
t":as"slgtir this ' aojdieri, ta an y VprgkhNration tbr rfttlonsr the QuartetrdasterCorbs Will-- Drovide-- , suitable ."buattersand 'p8himUt WsrwtJni rate j
oVif.tib permay whllpothlauty:'- -
'The Quartermaster Corps , win rnr-'nis- h
" the. necessary transportation.Ifhe' journey. uecessanr.foT the pub-H- e'
servlce.t; .vfj. 'j;, .':.L'4' '"; '
I'i" Sergeant Luther. .M.,VBils; Company E, 2nd Infantry; la relieved tromfurther 'duty at-.cthes- headquarters,
"wlrl 'proceed t ort Shaftef,' H.T., reporting on to his commanding duty.
The Quartermaster Corps will furnish the necessary transportation. The
is necessary for the publicservice.', .v ' '.'
3. Private Nathaniel Latture, Company K, 25th Infantry, Schofield Bar-racks,- H. T.i . is transferred to theQuartermaster Corps, at that post.(D. Q. M. 4097-320- ).
4. Upon arrival In this city pursuant to instructions contained in let-
ter from the office of the surgeon gen- -
pmI 'riatPiifJiilv 22.1914. Emma I
Woods,' nurse. Army Nyrie Corps, will, j
Droceed to the; Department Hospital;reporting on arrival to the command-- : jlng officer, for duty.
The travel directed is inthe military , service, '
.
IF CHILD IS CROSS. . , 5
FEVERISH AND SICK
Look Mother ! i If tongue Is eoat3,cleanse little bow els , vf Itli "Call.
: fornla Sjrop. of Figs, .
Children love' this' "fruit laxative,'and nothinr else cleanses the tender stomach, liver and bowes so nice
A child aimply . will not stop playingto empty the bowels, and the results, they become tightly clogged withwaste, liver gets 1 sluggish, stomacnsours, then your one Decomeacroas, half-sic-k, feverish, eat.sieep or act naturally, breath is bad,system full of cold, has sore throat,stomach-ach- e or diarrhoea. Listen,Mother! See if tongue is coated,give a'teaspoonful of "California Syr-up of FlgB," and in a few hours allthe constipated waste, sour bile andundigested food pastes out of the iys- -
tem, and you have a well, playful childagain. ;
Millions of inothere give "CaliforniaSyrup of Figs" because it 4s perfectlyharmless; children love it, and it never fails to act on the stomach, liverand bowels. ; .
Ask your druggist for a :60-ce- nt bot--
Ue of "California Syrup of Figs,"which has full directions for: babies,children of alt ages; and for grown-ups-,
plainly printed on the bottle. Bewareof- - counterfeits aold., here.; Get t thegenuine, made . hr."CalifOrnla. Flg Syrup CompanyJ' Refuse any other kindwith : contempt --advertisements ' -
An eight week season of free municlpal moving' picture shows was
In St Louis. : The performance,made possible by the appropriation cf$2,000 by the Municipal Assembly, will
lon waicn is lonanaus in view be given nirMcly in tie public l-r- ks
of the fact that they are expected' to aa playrcurji cf ty? city.
nnI . t a I
I 1
I js 1
I .riiu'
The Safety Tread, .
..IB
nm
Safety FirstYour tires are the life of your car. The
rubber is the life of your tires it mustbe resilient and buoyant.
A unit moulded Goodrich tire embodies33 years of experience in rubber manu-facturing. This is why Goodrich Tireswear longer and are "Best in the LongRun."
The Goodrich "Safety Tread" is theaccepted standard by which all othersafety treads are judged.
! not lMl(ivcI l)v liirje (HsruiintM on other tin's. Tlirvvast iiioic him Uhh rich, ntid do not j;iv' vou the mileage.CoiniKire these prices with other makes:
Safety Tread i Safety TreadSIZK PRICES SIZK PRICES30x3 $12.65' f '
IUAV2 T $35 CO'
30x3'2 17.00 35r4''2 38.0532x3' 2 18.10 i 3Sx4'2 37.10 ,
33x4 355 37x5 44.4534x4 26.05 38x5J,2 67.30
y i . ,
Setamam Carriage Go.Distributors for the Territory of Hawaii.
TEACHERS, SALARIES rs n'ueh as 166 a year: most COnA woman has told me that la the elgh- -
TODAY, AMD-YESTERDA-
Y fJwyntyurj
; -- T'.4 iwork. Yet for live years in succisslou a wefe In addition to.' In 1851 femaW teachers-ro-t Rsummet one family of three adujf Irish paupers the usual branches she could teachschools got theirvboard and aa average" was receiving thf Wa"lhscah'-lJiitfn;'lench- logic, astronomy and6f $1.97 a week for ;thlrtV-t- h reft- hours, fmiivalpnt: from' thro in .ttAt tfmoa . '.'v., , . -
rrk eitvv nfmnrv ' aiso .nivigauou
and
Miss
?t,-nt-
s-
from
board and never more until, to could earn. It was true that " ?,year of the war. The school ye"ar one could get more from the? taWa' in been she gotfrom 104 to 132 d?ys, and a teach the than wUcba $1.25 a week and board.
wauan t " ' enough to wages then L'ckstrom, Mon-- ''sometlmea'cartf. ttS.''e1ad;-b-AiKi- i klns-- thly.
is
arrival .
officer-fo- r
journey
necessary
dont
then
T
Inaugu-rated
roaos,
not"
literally,w.hlc, rnenhad evicted,
almshouse in'tlie schdotes
duaTters
imJf
t a uni mm-. mm
.1 Jin . ass""-- I t m m
'
.
t
j l
"; r
, ,!
;
f
;
:
' :
f
1
-
44- -J
ZtftL3 of Quality
In refining the selected Californiacrude from which Red Crown is made,skilled and experienced men have1 attheir command every facility known tothe industry; By combining the best ineach of theseihree factorsmen, mater-ial and equipment Red Crovvn hasbeen made so thoroughly uniform andreliable as to deserve the designation:'The Gasoline of Quality." It is not a
mixture, but a straight distilled refineryproduct the best Gasoline the StandardOil Company can make.
Watch for the Red Crown Sign.
Standard Oil Company(California)Honolulu.
r"',' !'
4i
!!,:;. .J 'I i ll liAr r 1